Edith Wharton

Here you will find theLong PoemLifeof poet Edith Wharton

Life

不,把我你的嘴唇,生活,再次倒the wild music through me -- I quivered in the reed-bed with my kind, Rooted in Lethe-bank, when at the dawn There came a groping shape of mystery Moving among us, that with random stroke Severed, and rapt me from my silent tribe, Pierced, fashioned, lipped me, sounding for a voice, Laughing on Lethe-bank -- and in my throat I felt the wing-beat of the fledgeling notes, The bubble of godlike laughter in my throat. Such little songs she sang, Pursing her lips to fit the tiny pipe, They trickled from me like a slender spring That strings frail wood-growths on its crystal thread, Nor dreams of glassing cities, bearing ships. She sang, and bore me through the April world Matching the birds, doubling the insect-hum In the meadows, under the low-moving airs, And breathings of the scarce-articulate air When it makes mouths of grasses -- but when the sky Burst into storm, and took great trees for pipes, She thrust me in her breast, and warm beneath Her cloudy vesture, on her terrible heart, I shook, and heard the battle. But more oft, Those early days, we moved in charmed woods, Where once, at dusk, she piped against a faun, And one warm dawn a tree became a nymph Listening; and trembled; and Life laughed and passed. And once we came to a great stream that bore The stars upon its bosom like a sea, And ships like stars; so to the sea we came. One wild pang through me; then refrained her hand, And whispered: 'Hear -- ' and into my frail flanks, Into my bursting veins, the whole sea poured Its spaces and its thunder; and I feared. We came to cities, and Life piped on me Low calls to dreaming girls, In counting-house windows, through the chink of gold, Flung cries that fired the captive brain of youth, And made the heavy merchant at his desk Curse us for a cracked hurdy-gurdy; Life Mimicked the hurdy-gurdy, and we passed. We climbed the slopes of solitude, and there Life met a god, who challenged her and said: 'Thy pipe against my lyre!' But 'Wait!' she laughed, And in my live flank dug a finger-hole, And wrung new music from it. Ah, the pain! We climbed and climbed, and left the god behind. We saw the earth spread vaster than the sea, With infinite surge of mountains surfed with snow, And a silence that was louder than the deep; But on the utmost pinnacle Life again Hid me, and I heard the terror in her hair. Safe in new vales, I ached for the old pang, And clamoured 'Play me against a god again!' 'Poor Marsyas-mortal -- he shall bleed thee yet,' She breathed and kissed me, stilling the dim need. But evermore it woke, and stabbed my flank With yearnings for new music and new pain. 'Another note against another god!' I clamoured; and she answered: 'Bide my time. Of every heart-wound I will make a stop. And drink thy life in music, pang by pang. But first thou must yield the notes I stored in thee At dawn beside the river. Take my lips.' She kissed me like a lover, but I wept, Remembering that high song against the god, And the old songs slept in me, and I was dumb. We came to cavernous foul places, blind With harpy-wings, and sulphurous with the glare Of sinful furnaces -- where hunger toiled, And pleasure gathered in a starveling prey, And death fed delicately on young bones. 'Now sing!' cried Life, and set her lips to me. 'Here are gods also. Wilt thou pipe for Dis?' My cry was drowned beneath the furnace roar, Choked by the sulphur-fumes; and beast-lipped gods Laughed down on me, and mouthed the flutes of hell. 'Now sing!' said Life, reissuing to the stars; And wrung a new note from my wounded side. So came we to clear spaces, and the sea. And now I felt its volume in my heart, And my heart waxed with it, and Life played on me The song of the Infinite. 'Now the stars,' she said. Then from the utmost pinnacle again She poured me on the wild sidereal stream, And I grew with her great breathings, till we swept The interstellar spaces like new worlds Loosed from the fiery ruin of a star. Cold, cold we rested on black peaks again, Under black skies, under a groping wind, And life, grown old, hugged me to a numb breast, Pressing numb lips against me. Suddenly A blade of silver severed the black peaks From the black sky, and earth was born again, Breathing and various, under a god's feet. A god! A god! I felt the heart of Life Leap under me, and my cold flanks shook again. He bore no lyre, he rang no challenge out, But Life warmed to him, warming me with her, And as he neared I felt beneath her hands The stab of a