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William Motherwell (Уильям Мазервелл) Cruxtoun Castle THOU gray and antique tower, Receive a wanderer of the lonely night, Whose moodful sprite Rejoices at this witching time to brood Amid thy shattered strength’s dim solitude! It is a fear-fraught hour,— A deathlike stillness reigns around, Save the wood-skirted river’s eerie sound, And the faint rustling of the trees that shower Their brown leaves on the stream, Mournfully gleaming in the moon’s pale beam: O, I could dwell forever and forever In such a place as this, with such a night! When o’er thy waters and thy waving woods The moonbeams sympathetically quiver, And no ungentle thing on thee intrudes, And every voice is dumb, and every object bright! * * * * * Relique of earlier days, Yes, dear thou art to me! And beauteous, marvellously, The moonlight strays Where banners glorious floated on thy walls — Clipping their ivied honors with its thread Of half-angelic light; And though o’er thee Time’s wasting dews have shed Their all-consuming blight, Maternal moonlight falls On and around thee full of tenderness, Yielding thy shattered frame pure love’s divine caress. * * * * * Light feet have trod The soft, green, flowering sod That girdles thy baronial strength, and traced, All gracefully, the labyrinthine dance; Young hearts discoursed with many a passionate glance, While rose and fell the Minstrel’s thrilling strain (Who, in this iron age, might sing in vain, — His largesse coarse neglect, and mickle pain!) Waste are thy chambers tenantless, which long Echoed the notes of gleeful minstrelsie, — Notes once the prelude to a tale of wrong, Of royalty and love. Beneath yon tree, Now bare and blasted,—so our annals tell, — The martyr queen, ere that her fortunes knew A darker shade than cast her favorite yew, Loved Darnley passing well, — Loved him with tender woman’s generous love, And bade farewell awhile to courtly state And pageantry for yon o’ershadowing grove, For the lone river’s banks where small birds sing, — Their little hearts with summer joys elate, — Where tall broom blossoms, flowers profusely spring; There he, the most exalted of the land, Pressed, with the grace of youth, a sovereign’s peerless hand. * * * * * William Motherwell's other poems:
Распечатать (Print) Количество обращений к стихотворению: 1265 |
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