The Complete Works. Robert Burns
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Complete Works - Robert Burns страница 63

Название: The Complete Works

Автор: Robert Burns

Издательство: Public Domain

Жанр: Зарубежная классика

Серия:

isbn:

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ the shades of ev’ning close,

      Beck’ning thee to long repose;

      As life itself becomes disease,

      Seek the chimney-nook of ease.

      There ruminate, with sober thought,

      On all thou’st seen, and heard, and wrought;

      And teach the sportive younkers round,

      Saws of experience, sage and sound.

      Say, man’s true genuine estimate,

      The grand criterion of his fate,

      Is not—Art thou high or low?

      Did thy fortune ebb or flow?

      Wast thou cottager or king?

      Peer or peasant?—no such thing!

      Did many talents gild thy span?

      Or frugal nature grudge thee one?

      Tell them, and press it on their mind,

      As thou thyself must shortly find,

      The smile or frown of awful Heav’n,

      To virtue or to vice is giv’n.

      Say, to be just, and kind, and wise,

      There solid self-enjoyment lies;

      That foolish, selfish, faithless ways

      Lead to the wretched, vile, and base.

      Thus, resign’d and quiet, creep

      To the bed of lasting sleep;

      Sleep, whence thou shalt ne’er awake,

      Night, where dawn shall never break,

      Till future life, future no more,

      To light and joy the good restore,

      To light and joy unknown before.

      Stranger, go! Hea’vn be thy guide!

      Quod the beadsman of Nithside.

      XCI. TO CAPTAIN RIDDEL, OF GLENRIDDEL. EXTEMPORE LINES ON RETURNING A NEWSPAPER

      [Captain Riddel, the Laird of Friars-Carse, was Burns’s neighbour, at Ellisland: he was a kind, hospitable man, and a good antiquary. The “News and Review” which he sent to the poet contained, I have heard, some sharp strictures on his works: Burns, with his usual strong sense, set the proper value upon all contemporary criticism; genius, he knew, had nothing to fear from the folly or the malice of all such nameless “chippers and hewers.” He demanded trial by his peers, and where were such to be found?]

      Ellisland, Monday Evening.

      Your news and review, Sir, I’ve read through and through, Sir,

      With little admiring or blaming;

      The papers are barren of home-news or foreign,

      No murders or rapes worth the naming.

      Our friends, the reviewers, those chippers and hewers,

      Are judges of mortar and stone, Sir,

      But of meet or unmeet in a fabric complete,

      I’ll boldly pronounce they are none, Sir.

      My goose-quill too rude is to tell all your goodness

      Bestow’d on your servant, the Poet;

      Would to God I had one like a beam of the sun,

      And then all the world, Sir, should know it!

      XCII. A MOTHER’S LAMENT FOR THE DEATH OF HER SON

      [“The Mother’s Lament,” says the poet, in a copy of the verses now before me, “was composed partly with a view to Mrs. Fergusson of Craigdarroch, and partly to the worthy patroness of my early unknown muse, Mrs. Stewart, of Afton.”]

      Fate gave the word, the arrow sped,

      And pierc’d my darling’s heart;

      And with him all the joys are fled

      Life can to me impart.

      By cruel hands the sapling drops,

      In dust dishonour’d laid:

      So fell the pride of all my hopes,

      My age’s future shade.

      The mother-linnet in the brake

      Bewails her ravish’d young;

      So I, for my lost darling’s sake,

      Lament the live day long.

      Death, oft I’ve fear’d thy fatal blow,

      Now, fond I bare my breast,

      O, do thou kindly lay me low

      With him I love, at rest!

      XCIII. FIRST EPISTLE TO ROBERT GRAHAM, ESQ. OF FINTRAY

      [In his manuscript copy of this Epistle the poet says “accompanying a request.” What the request was the letter which enclosed it relates. Graham was one of the leading men of the Excise in Scotland, and had promised Burns a situation as exciseman: for this the poet had qualified himself; and as he began to dread that farming would be unprofitable, he wrote to remind his patron of his promise, and requested to be appointed to a division in his own neighbourhood. He was appointed in due time: his division was extensive, and included ten parishes.]

      When Nature her great master-piece designed,

      And fram’d her last, best work, the human mind,

      Her eye intent on all the mazy plan,

      She form’d of various parts the various man.

      Then first she calls the useful many forth;

      Plain plodding industry, and sober worth:

      Thence peasants, farmers, native sons of earth,

      And merchandise’ whole genus take their birth:

      Each prudent cit a warm existence finds,

      And all mechanics’ many-apron’d kinds.

      Some other rarer sorts are wanted yet,

      The lead and buoy are needful to the net;

      The caput mortuum of gross desires

      Makes a material for mere knights and squires;

      The martial phosphorus is taught to flow,

      She kneads the lumpish philosophic dough,

      Then marks th’ unyielding mass with grave designs,

      Law, physic, politics, and deep divines:

      Last, she sublimes th’ Aurora of the poles,

      The flashing elements of female souls.

      The order’d system fair before her stood,

      Nature, well pleas’d, pronounc’d it very good;

      But ere she gave creating labour o’er,

      Half-jest, she tried one curious labour more.

      Some spumy, fiery, ignis fatuus matter,

      Such as the slightest breath of air might scatter;

      With arch alacrity and conscious glee

      (Nature may have her whim as well as we,

      Her Hogarth-art perhaps she meant to show it)

      She forms the thing, and christens it—a Poet.

      Creature, tho’ oft the prey of care and sorrow,

      When blest to-day, unmindful of to-morrow.

      A being form’d t’amuse his graver friends,

      Admir’d and prais’d—and there the homage ends:

      A СКАЧАТЬ