Michael Angelo. Генри Уодсуорт Лонгфелло. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Генри Уодсуорт Лонгфелло
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4064066435103
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       Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

      Michael Angelo

      Published by Good Press, 2020

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066435103

       Prologue at Ischia

       Monologue: The Last Judgment

       San Silvestro

       Cardinal Ippolito

       Borgo delle Vergine at Naples

       Vittoria Colonna

       Monologue

       Viterbo

       Michael Angelo and Benvenuto Cellini

       Fra Sebastiano del Piombo

       Palazzo Belvedere

       Palazzo Cesarini

       Monologue

       Vigna di Papa Giulio

       Bindo Altoviti

       In the Coliseum

       Macello de' Corvi

       Michael Angelo's Studio

       The Oaks of Monte Luca

       The Dead Christ

      Nothing that is shall perish utterly,

       But perish only to revive again

       In other forms, as clouds restore in rain

       The exhalations of the land and sea.

       Men build their houses from the masonry

       Of ruined tombs; the passion and the pain

       Of hearts, that long have ceased to beat, remain

       To throb in hearts that are, or are to be.

       So from old chronicles, where sleep in dust

       Names that once filled the world with trumpet tones,

       I build this verse; and flowers of song have thrust

       Their roots among the loose disjointed stones,

       Which to this end I fashion as I must.

       Quickened are they that touch the Prophet's bones.

      Prologue at Ischia

       Table of Contents

       The Castle Terrace. VITTORIA COLONNA, and JULIA GONZAGA.

      VITTORIA.

       Will you then leave me, Julia, and so soon,

       To pace alone this terrace like a ghost?

      JULIA.

       To-morrow, dearest.

      VITTORIA.

       Do not say to-morrow.

       A whole month of to-morrows were too soon.

       You must not go. You are a part of me.

      JULIA.

       I must return to Fondi.

      VITTORIA.

       The old castle

       Needs not your presence. No one waits for you.

       Stay one day longer with me. They who go

       Feel not the pain of parting; it is they

       Who stay behind that suffer. I was thinking

       But yesterday how like and how unlike

       Have been, and are, our destinies. Your husband,

       The good Vespasian, an old man, who seemed

       A father to you rather than a husband,

       Died in your arms; but mine, in all the flower

       And promise of his youth, was taken from me

       As by a rushing wind. The breath of battle

       Breathed on him, and I saw his face no more,

       Save as in dreams it haunts me. As our love

       Was for these men, so is our sorrow for them.

       Yours a child's sorrow, smiling through its tears;

       But mine the grief of an impassioned woman,

       Who drank her life up in one draught of love.

      JULIA.

       Behold this locket. This is the white hair

       Of my Vespasian. This is the flower-of-love,

       This amaranth, and beneath it the device

       Non moritura. Thus my heart remains

       True to his memory; and the ancient castle,

       Where we have lived together, where he died,

       Is dear to me as Ischia is to you.

      VITTORIA.

       I did not mean to chide you.

      JULIA.

       Let your heart

       Find, if it can, some poor apology

       For one who is too young, and feels too keenly

       The joy of life, to give up all her days

       To sorrow for the dead. While I am true

       To the remembrance of the man I loved

       And mourn for still, I do not make a show

       Of all the grief I feel, nor live secluded

       And, like Veronica da Gambara,

       Drape my whole house in mourning, and drive forth

       In coach of sable drawn by sable horses,

       As if I were a corpse. Ah, one to-day

       Is worth for me a thousand yesterdays.

      VITTORIA.