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            詩歌欣賞Done With

            時間:2025-11-18 23:41:05 詩歌

            詩歌欣賞Done With

              by Ann Stanford

            詩歌欣賞Done With

              My house is torn down——

              Plaster sifting, the pillars broken,

              Beams jagged, the wall crushed by the bulldozer.

              The whole roof has fallen

              On the hall and the kitchen

              The bedrooms, the parlor.

              They are trampling the garden——

              My mother's lilac, my father's grapevine,

              The freesias, the jonquils, the grasses.

              Hot asphalt goes down

              Over the torn stems, and hardens.

              What will they do in springtime

              Those bulbs and stems groping upward

              That drown in earth under the paving,

              Thick with sap, pale in the dark

              As they try the unrolling of green.

              May they double themselves

              Pushing together up to the sunlight,

              May they break through the seal stretched above them

              Open and flower and cry we are living.

              詩歌欣賞:Drinking With Someone In The

              As the two of us drink

              together, while mountain

              flowers blossom beside, we

              down one cup after the other

              until I am drunk and sleepy

              so that you better go!

              Tomorrow if you feel like it

              do come and bring your lute

              along with you!

              by Louis Simpson

              Trees in the old days used to stand

              And shape a shady lane

              Where lovers wandered hand in hand

              Who came from Carentan.

              This was the shining green canal

              Where we came two by two

              Walking at combat-interval.

              Such trees we never knew.

              The day was early June, the ground

              Was soft and bright with dew.

              Far away the guns did sound,

              But here the sky was blue.

              The sky was blue, but there a smoke

              Hung still above the sea

              Where the ships together spoke

              To towns we could not see.

              Could you have seen us through a glass

              You would have said a walk

              Of farmers out to turn the grass,

              Each with his own hay-fork.

              The watchers in their leopard suits

              Waited till it was time,

              And aimed between the belt and boot

              And let the barrel climb.

              I must lie down at once, there is

              A hammer at my knee.

              And call it death or cowardice,

              Don't count again on me.

              Everything's all right, Mother,

              Everyone gets the same

              At one time or another.

              It's all in the game.

              I never strolled, nor ever shall,

              Down such a leafy lane.

              I never drank in a canal,

              Nor ever shall again.

              There is a whistling in the leaves

              And it is not the wind,

              The twigs are falling from the knives

              That cut men to the ground.

              Tell me, Master-Sergeant,

              The way to turn and shoot.

              But the Sergeant's silent

              That taught me how to do it.

              O Captain, show us quickly

              Our place upon the map.

              But the Captain's sickly

              And taking a long nap.

              Lieutenant, what's my duty,

              My place in the platoon?

              He too's a sleeping beauty,

              Charmed by that strange tune.

              Carentan O Carentan

              Before we met with you

              We never yet had lost a man

              Or known what death could do.

              AND thou art dead as young and fair

              As aught of mortal birth;

              And form so soft and charms so rare

              Too soon return'd to Earth!

              Though Earth received them in her bed

              And o'er the spot the crowd may tread

              In carelessness or mirth

              There is an eye which could not brook

              A moment on that grave to look.

              I will not ask where thou liest low

              Nor gaze upon the spot;

              There flowers or weeds at will may grow

              So I behold them not:

              It is enough for me to prove

              That what I loved and long must love

              Like common earth can rot;

              To me there needs no stone to tell

              'Tis Nothing that I loved so well.

              Yet did I love thee to the last

              As fervently as thou

              Who didst not change through all the past

              And canst not alter now.

              The love where Death has set his seal

              Nor age can chill nor rival steal

              Nor falsehood disavow;

              And what were worse thou canst not see

              Or wrong or change or fault in me.

              The better days of life were ours

              The worst can be but mine;

              The sun that cheers the storm that lours

              Shall never more be thine.

              The silence of that dreamless sleep

              I envy now too much to weep;

              Nor need I to repine

              That all those charms have pass'd away

              I might have watch'd through long decay.

              The flower in ripen'd bloom unmatch'd

              Must fall the earliest prey;

              Though by no hand untimely snatch'd.

              The leaves must drop away.

              And yet it were a greater grief

              To watch it withering leaf by leaf

              Than see it pluck'd to-day;

              Since earthly eye but ill can bear

              To trace the change to foul from fair.

              I know not if I could have borne

              To see thy beauties fade;

              The night that follow'd such a morn

              Had worn a deeper shade.

              Thy day without a cloud hath pass'd

              And thou wert lovely to the last

              Extinguish'd not decay'd;

              As stars that shoot along the sky

              Shine brightest as they fall from high.

              As once I wept if I could weep

              My tears might well be shed

              To think I was not near to keep

              One vigil o'er thy bed—

              To gaze how fondly! on thy face

              To fold thee in a faint embrace

              Uphold thy drooping head

              And show that love however vain

              Nor thou nor I can feel again.

              Yet how much less it were to gain

              Though thou hast left me free

              The loveliest things that still remain

              Than thus remember thee!

              The all of thine that cannot die

              Through dark and dread eternity

              Returns again to me

              And more thy buried love endears

              Than aught except its living years.

              by W. H. Auden

              Perfection, of a kind, was what he was after,

              And the poetry he invented was easy to understand;

              He knew human folly like the back of his hand,

              And was greatly interested in armies and fleets;

              When he laughed, respectable senators burst with laughter,

              And when he cried the little children died in the streets.

              But this day especially,

              I need some extra strength

              To face what ever is to be.

              This day more than any day

              I need to feel you near,

              To fortify my courage

              And to overcome my fear.

              By myself,I cannot meet

              The challenge of the hour,

              There are times when humans help,

              But we need a higher power

              To assist us bear what must be borne,

              and so dear Lord,I pray

              Hold on to my trembling hand

              And be near me today.

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