英语巴士网

The Idle Shepherd Boys

分类: 英语诗歌 
 The valley rings with mirth and joy;

    Among the hills the echoes play

    A never never ending song,

    To welcome in the May.

    The magpie chatters with delight;

    The mountain raven's youngling brood

    Have left the mother and the nest;

    And they go rambling east and west

    In search of their own food;

    Or through the glittering vapors dart

    In very wantonness of heart.

    Beneath a rock, upon the grass,

    Two boys are sitting in the sun;

    Their work, if any work they have,

    Is out of mind——or done.

    On pipes of sycamore they play

    The fragments of a Christmas hymn;

    Or with that plant which in our dale

    We call stag-horn, or fox's tail,

    Their rusty hats they trim:

    And thus, as happy as the day,

    Those Shepherds wear the time away.

    Along the river's stony marge

    The sand-lark chants a joyous song;

    The thrush is busy in the wood,

    And carols loud and strong.

    A thousand lambs are on the rocks,

    All newly born! both earth and sky

    Keep jubilee, and more than all,

    Those boys with their green coronal;

    They never hear the cry,

    That plaintive cry! which up the hill

    Comes from the depth of Dungeon-Ghyll.

    Said Walter, leaping from the ground,

    "Down to the stump of yon old yew

    We'll for our whistles run a race."

    Away the shepherds flew;

    They leapt——they ran——and when they came

    Right opposite to Dungeon-Ghyll,

    Seeing that he should lose the prize,

    "Stop! " to his comrade Walter cries——

    James stopped with no good will:

    Said Walter then, exulting; "Here

    You'll find a task for half a year.

    Cross, if you dare, where I shall cross——

    Come on, and tread where I shall tread."

    The other took him at his word,

    And followed as he led.

    It was a spot which you may see

    If ever you to Langdale go;

    Into a chasm a mighty block

    Hath fallen, and made a bridge of rock:

    The gulf is deep below;

    And, in a basin black and small,

    Receives a lofty waterfall.

    With staff in hand across the cleft

    The challenger pursued his march;

    And now, all eyes and feet, hath gained

    The middle of the arch.

    When list! he hears a piteous moan——

    Again !——his heart within him dies——

    His pulse is stopped, his breath is lost,

    He totters, pallid as a ghost,

    And, looking down, espies

    A lamb, that in the pool is pent

    Within that black and frightful rent.

    The lamb had slipped into the stream,

    And safe without a bruise or wound

    The cataract had borne him down

    Into the gulf profound.

    His dam had seen him when he fell,

    She saw him down the torrent borne;

    And, while with all a mother's love

    She from the lofty rocks above

    Sent forth a cry forlorn,

    The lamb, still swimming round and round,

    Made answer to that plaintive sound.

    When he had learnt what thing it was,

    That sent this rueful cry; I ween

    The Boy recovered heart, and told

    The sight which he had seen.

    Both gladly now deferred their task;

    Nor was there wanting other aid——

    A Poet, one who loves the brooks

    Far better than the sages' books,

    By chance had thither strayed;

    And there the helpless lamb he found

    By those huge rocks encompassed round.

    He drew it from the troubled pool,

    And brought it forth into the light:

    The Shepherds met him with his charge,

    An unexpected sight!

    Into their arms the lamb they took,

    Whose life and limbs the flood had spared;

    Then up the steep ascent they hied,

    And placed him at his mother's side;

    And gently did the Bard

    Those idle Shepherd-Boys upbraid,

    And bade them better mind their trade.

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