Избранная лирика | страница 51



                    All lovely colours there you see,
                    All colours that were ever seen;
                    And mossy network too is there,
                    As if by hand of lady fair
                    The work had woven been;
                    And cups, the darlings of the eye,
                    So deep is their vermilion dye.
      V
                    "Ah me! what lovely tints are there
                    Of olive green and scarlet bright,
                    In spikes, in branches, and in stars,
                    Green, red, and pearly white!
                    This heap of earth o'ergrown with moss,
                    Which close beside the Thorn you see,
                    So fresh in all its beauteous dyes,
                    Is like an infant's grave in size,
                    As like as like can be:
                    But never, never any where,
                    An infant's grave was half so fair.
      VI
                    "Now would you see this aged Thorn,
                    This pond, and beauteous hill of moss,
                    You must take care and choose your time
                    The mountain when to cross.
                    For oft there sits between the heap
                    So like an infant's grave in size,
                    And that same pond of which I spoke,
                    A Woman in a scarlet cloak,
                    And to herself she cries,
                    'Oh misery! oh misery!
                    Oh woe is me! oh misery!'"
      VII
                    "At all times of the day and night
                    This wretched Woman thither goes;
                    And she is known to every star,
                    And every wind that blows;
                    And there, beside the Thorn, she sits
                    When the blue daylight's in the skies,
                    And when the whirlwind's on the hill,
                    Or frosty air is keen and still,
                    And to herself she cries,
                    'Oh misery! oh misery!
                    Oh woe is me! oh misery!'"
      VIII
                    "Now wherefore, thus, by day and night,
                    In rain, in tempest, and in snow,
                    Thus to the dreary mountain-top
                    Does this poor Woman go?
                    And why sits she beside the Thorn
                    When the blue daylight's in the sky