The Complete Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Poems, Plays, Essays, Lectures, Autobiography & Personal Letters (Illustrated). Samuel Taylor Coleridge. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
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isbn: 9788027230228
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The beauteous forms of Nature wrought,

       Fair trees and lovely flowers;

       The breezes their own languor lent,

       The stars had feelings which they sent

       Into those magic bowers.

      Yet, in his worst pursuits, I ween,

       That sometimes there did intervene

       Pure hopes of high intent:

       For passions link’d to forms so fair

       And stately, needs must have their share

       Of noble sentiment.

      But ill he liv’d, much evil saw

       With men to whom no better law

       Nor better life was known;

       Deliberately and undeceiv’d

       Those wild men’s vices he receiv’d,

       And gave them back his own.

      His genius and his moral frame

       Were thus impair’d, and he became

       The slave of low desires;

       A man who without self-controul

       Would seek what the degraded soul

       Unworthily admires.

      And yet he with no feign’d delight

       Had woo’d the Maiden, day and night

       Had luv’d her, night and morn;

       What could he less than love a Maid

       Whose heart with so much nature play’d

       So kind and so forlorn?

      But now the pleasant dream was gone,

       No hope, no wish remain’d, not one,

       They stirr’d him now no more,

       New objects did new pleasure give,

       And once again he wish’d to live

       As lawless as before.

      Meanwhile as thus with him it fared.

       They for the voyage were prepared

       And went to the seashore,

       But, when they thither came, the Youth

       Deserted his poor Bride, and Ruth

       Could never find him more.

      ”God help thee Ruth!” — Such pains she had

       That she in half a year was mad

       And in a prison hous’d,

       And there, exulting in her wrongs,

       Among the music of her songs

       She fearfully carouz’d.

      Yet sometimes milder hours she knew,

       Nor wanted sun, nor rain, nor dew,

       Nor pastimes of the May,

       They all were with her in her cell,

       And a wild brook with chearful knell

       Did o’er the pebbles play.

      When Ruth three seasons thus had lain

       There came a respite to her pain,

       She from her prison fled;

       But of the Vagrant none took thought,

       And where it liked her best she sought

       Her shelter and her bread.

      Among the fields she breath’d again:

       The master-current of her brain

       Ran permanent and free,

       And to the pleasant Banks of Tone

       She took her way, to dwell alone

       Under the greenwood tree.

      The engines of her grief, the tools

       That shap’d her sorrow, rocks and pools,

       And airs that gently stir

       The vernal leaves, she loved them still,

       Nor ever tax’d them with the ill

       Which had been done to her.

      A Barn her winter bed supplies,

       But till the warmth of summer skies

       And summer days is gone,

       (And in this tale we all agree)

       She sleeps beneath the greenwood tree,

       And other home hath none.

      If she is press’d by want of food

       She from her dwelling in the wood

       Repairs to a road side,

       And there she begs at one steep place,

       Where up and down with easy pace

       The horsemen-travellers ride.

      That oaten pipe of hers is mute

       Or thrown away, but with a flute

       Her loneliness she cheers;

       This flute made of a hemlock stalk

       At evening in his homeward walk

       The Quantock Woodman hears.

      I, too have pass’d her on the hills

       Setting her little water-mills

       By spouts and fountains wild,

       Such small machinery as she turn’d

       Ere she had wept, ere she had mourn’d

       A young and happy Child!

      Farewel! and when thy days are told

       Illfated Ruth! in hallow’d mold

       Thy corpse shall buried be,

       For thee a funeral bell shall ring,

       And all the congregation sing

       A Christian psalm for thee.

       Table of Contents

      Stranger! this hillock of mishapen stones

       Is not a ruin of the ancient time,

       Nor, as perchance thou rashly deem’st, the Cairn

       Of some old British Chief: ‘tis nothing more

       Than the rude embryo of a little dome

       Or pleasure-house, which was to have been built

       Among the birch-trees of this rocky isle.

       But, as it chanc’d, Sir William having learn’d

       That from the shore a full-grown man might wade,

       And make himself a freeman of this spot

       At any hour he chose, the Knight forthwith

       Desisted, and the quarry and the mound

       Are monuments of his unfinish’d task. —

       The block on which these lines are trac’d, perhaps,

       Was once selected as the cornerstone

       Of the intended pile, which would have been

       Some quaint odd plaything of elaborate skill,

       So that, I guess, the linnet and the thrush,

       And other little builders who dwell here,

       Had wonder’d at the work. But blame him not,