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Автор: Robert W. Service
Издательство: Ingram
Серия: Voyageur Classics
Жанр произведения: Контркультура
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781459700048
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      June 1914.

      The Bohemian Dreams

      Because my overcoat’s in pawn,

      I choose to take my glass

      Within a little bistro on

      The rue du Montparnasse;

      The dusty bins with bottles shine,

      The counter’s lined with zinc,

      And there I sit and drink my wine,

      And think and think and think.

      I think of hoary old Stamboul,

      Of Moslem and of Greek,

      Of Persian in a coat of wool,

      Of Kurd and Arab sheikh;

      Of all the types of weal and woe,

      And as I raise my glass,

      Across Galata bridge I know

      They pass and pass and pass.

      I think of citron trees aglow,

      Of fan-palms shading down,

      Of sailors dancing heel and toe

      With wenches black and brown;

      And though it’s all an ocean far

      From Yucatan to France,

      I’ll bet beside the old bazaar

      They dance and dance and dance.

      I think of Monte Carlo, where

      The pallid croupiers call,

      And in the gorgeous, guilty air

      The gamblers watch the ball;

      And as I flick away the foam

      With which my beer is crowned,

      The wheels beneath the gilded dome

      Go round and round and round.

      I think of vast Niagara,

      Those gulfs of foam a-shine,

      Whose mighty roar would stagger a

      More prosy bean than mine;

      And as the hours I idly spend

      Against a greasy wall,

      I know that green the waters bend

      And fall and fall and fall.

      I think of Nijni Novgorod

      And Jews who never rest;

      And womenfolk with spade and hod

      Who slave in Buda-Pest;

      Of squat and sturdy Japanese

      Who pound the paddy soil,

      And as I loaf and smoke at ease

      they toil and toil and toil.

      I think of shrines in Hindustan,

      Of cloistral glooms in Spain,

      Of minarets in Ispahan,

      Of St. Sophia’s fane,

      Of convent towers in Palestine,

      Of temples in Cathay,

      And as I stretch and sip my wine

      They pray and pray and pray.

      And so my dreams I dwell within,

      And visions come and go,

      And life is passing like a Cin-

      Ematographic Show;

      Till just as surely as my pipe

      Is underneath my nose,

      Amid my visions rich and ripe

      I doze and doze and doze.

      From “Book Four: Winter”

      IV

      A Lapse of Time and a Word of Explanation

      THE AMERICAN HOSPITAL, NEUILLY,

      January 1919.

      Four years have passed and it is winter again. Much has happened. When I last wrote, on the Somme in 1915, I was sickening with typhoid fever. All that spring I was in hospital.

      Nevertheless, I was sufficiently recovered to take part in the Champagne battle in the fall of that year, and to “carry on” during the following winter. It was at Verdun I got my first wound.

      In the spring of 1917 I again served with my Corps; but on the entry of the United States into the War I joined the army of my country. In the Argonne I had my left arm shot away.

      As far as time and health permitted, I kept a record of these years, and also wrote much verse. All this, however, has disappeared under circumstances into which there is no need to enter here. The loss was a cruel one, almost more so than that of my arm; for I have neither the heart nor the power to rewrite this material.

      And now, in default of something better, I have bundled together this manuscript, and have added to it a few more verses, written in hospitals. Let it represent me. If I can find a publisher for it, tant mieux. If not, I will print it at my own cost, and anyone who cares for a copy can write to me —

      STEPHEN POORE,

      12 bis, RUE DES PETITS MOINEAUX,

      PARIS.

      Michael

      “There’s something in your face, Michael, I’ve seen it all the day;

      There’s something quare that wasn’t there when first ye wint away.…”

      “It’s just the Army life, mother, the drill, the left and right,

      That puts the stiffinin’ in yer spine and locks yer jaw up tight.…”

      “There’s something in your eyes, Michael, an’ how they stare and stare —

      You’re lookin’ at me now me boy, as if I wasn’t there.…”

      “It’s just the things I’ve seen, mother, the sights that come and come,

      A bit o’ broken, bloody pulp that used to be a chum.…”

      “There’s something on your heart, Michael, that makes ye wake at night,

      And often when I hear ye moan, I trimble in me fright.…”

      “It’s just a man I killed, mother, a mother’s son like me;

      It seems he’s always hauntin’ me, he’ll never let me be.…”

      “But maybe he was bad, Michael, maybe it was right

      To kill the inimy you hate in fair and honest fight.…”

      “I did not hate at all, mother; he never did me harm;

      I think he was a lad like me, who worked upon a farm.…”

      “And what’s it all about, Michael; why did you have to go,

      A quiet, peaceful lad like you, and we were happy so? …”

      “It’s thim that’s up above, mother, tit’s thim that sits an’ rules;

      We’ve got to fight the wars they make, it’s us as are the fools.…”

      “And what will be the end, Michael, and what’s the use, I say,

      Of fightin’ if whoever wins it’s us that’s got to pay? …”

      “Oh, it will be the end, mother, when lads like him and me,

      That sweat to feed the ones above, decide that we’ll be free.…”

      “And when will that day come,