Ñàéò ïîå糿, â³ðø³, ïîçäîðîâëåííÿ ó â³ðøàõ ::

logo

UA  |  FR  |  RU

Ðîæåâèé ñàéò ñó÷àñíî¿ ïîå糿

Á³áë³îòåêà
Óêðà¿íè
| Ïîåòè
Êë. Ïîå糿
| ²íø³ ïîåò.
ñàéòè, êàíàëè
| ÑËÎÂÍÈÊÈ ÏÎÅÒÀÌ| Ñàéòè â÷èòåëÿì| ÄÎ ÂÓÑ ñèíîí³ìè| Îãîëîøåííÿ| ˳òåðàòóðí³ ïðå쳿| Ñï³ëêóâàííÿ| Êîíòàêòè
Êë. Ïîå糿

 x
>> ÂÕ²Ä ÄÎ ÊËÓÁÓ <<


e-mail
ïàðîëü
çàáóëè ïàðîëü?
< ðåºñòðaö³ÿ >
Çàðàç íà ñàéò³ - 1
Ïåðñîíàëüíûé ×ÀÒ Gudzyk
Ïîøóê

Ïåðåâ³ðêà ðîçì³ðó




Philip Sidney

Ïðî÷èòàíèé : 175


Òâîð÷³ñòü | Á³îãðàô³ÿ | Êðèòèêà

The Seven Wonders of England

I

Near  Wilton  sweet,  huge  heaps  of  stones  are  found,
But  so  confused,  that  neither  any  eye
Can  count  them  just,  nor  Reason  reason  try,
What  force  brought  them  to  so  unlikely  ground.

To  stranger  weights  my  mind’s  waste  soil  is  bound,
Of  passion-hills,  reaching  to  Reason’s  sky,
From  Fancy’s  earth,  passing  all  number’s  bound,
Passing  all  guess,  whence  into  me  should  fly
So  mazed  a  mass;  or,  if  in  me  it  grows,
A  simple  soul  should  breed  so  mixed  woes.

II

The  Bruertons  have  a  lake,  which,  when  the  sun
Approaching  warms,  not  else,  dead  logs  up  sends
From  hideous  depth;  which  tribute,  when  it  ends,
Sore  sign  it  is  the  lord’s  last  thread  is  spun.

My  lake  is  Sense,  whose  still  streams  never  run
But  when  my  sun  her  shining  twins  there  bends;
Then  from  his  depth  with  force  in  her  begun,
Long  drowned  hopes  to  watery  eyes  it  lends;
But  when  that  fails  my  dead  hopes  up  to  take,
Their  master  is  fair  warned  his  will  to  make.

III

We  have  a  fish,  by  strangers  much  admired,
Which  caught,  to  cruel  search  yields  his  chief  part:
With  gall  cut  out,  closed  up  again  by  art,
Yet  lives  until  his  life  be  new  required.

A  stranger  fish  myself,  not  yet  expired,
Tho’,  rapt  with  Beauty’s  hook,  I  did  impart
Myself  unto  th’  anatomy  desired,
Instead  of  gall,  leaving  to  her  my  heart:
Yet  live  with  thoughts  closed  up,  ’till  that  she  will,
By  conquest’s  right,  instead  of  searching,  kill.

IV

Peak  hath  a  cave,  whose  narrow  entries  find
Large  rooms  within  where  drops  distil  amain:
Till  knit  with  cold,  though  there  unknown  remain,
Deck  that  poor  place  with  alabaster  lined.

Mine  eyes  the  strait,  the  roomy  cave,  my  mind;
Whose  cloudy  thoughts  let  fall  an  inward  rain
Of  sorrow’s  drops,  till  colder  reason  bind
Their  running  fall  into  a  constant  vein
Of  truth,  far  more  than  alabaster  pure,
Which,  though  despised,  yet  still  doth  truth  endure.

V

A  field  there  is,  where,  if  a  stake  oe  prest
Deep  in  the  earth,  what  hath  in  earth  receipt,
Is  changed  to  stone  in  hardness,  cold,  and  weight,
The  wood  above  doth  soon  consuming  rest.

The  earth  her  ears;  the  stake  is  my  request;
Of  which,  how  much  may  pierce  to  that  sweet  seat,
To  honour  turned,  doth  dwell  in  honour’s  nest,
Keeping  that  form,  though  void  of  wonted  heat;
But  all  the  rest,  which  fear  durst  not  apply,
Failing  themselves,  with  withered  conscience  die.

VI

Of  ships  by  shipwreck  cast  on  Albion’s  coast,
Which  rotting  on  the  rocks,  their  death  to  die:
From  wooden  bones  and  blood  of  pitch  doth  fly
A  bird,  which  gets  more  life  than  ship  had  lost.

My  ship,  Desire,  with  wind  of  Lust  long  tost,
Brake  on  fair  cliffs  of  constant  Chastity;
Where  plagued  for  rash  attempt,  gives  up  his  ghost;
So  deep  in  seas  of  virtue,  beauties  lie:
But  of  this  death  flies  up  the  purest  love,
Which  seeming  less,  yet  nobler  life  doth  move.

VII

These  wonders  England  breeds;  the  last  remains  -
A  lady,  in  despite  of  Nature,  chaste,
On  whom  all  love,  in  whom  no  love  is  placed,
Where  Fairness  yields  to  Wisdom’s  shortest  reins.

A  humble  pride,  a  scorn  that  favour  stains;
A  woman’s  mould,  but  like  an  angel  graced;
An  angel’s  mind,  but  in  a  woman  cased;
A  heaven  on  earth,  or  earth  that  heaven  contains:
Now  thus  this  wonder  to  myself  I  frame;
She  is  the  cause  that  all  the  rest  I  am.

*  *  *

Thou  blind  man’s  mark;  thou  fool’s  self-chosen  snare,
Fond  fancy’s  scum,  and  dregs  of  scattered  thought:
Band  of  all  evils;  cradle  of  causeless  care;
Thou  web  of  will,  whose  end  is  never  wrought:

Desire!  Desire!    I  have  too  dearly  bought,
With  price  of  mangled  mind,  thy  worthless  ware;
Too  long,  too  long,  asleep  thou  hast  me  brought
Who  shouldst  my  mind  to  higher  things  prepare;

But  yet  in  vain  thou  hast  my  ruin  sought;
In  vain  thou  mad’st  me  to  vain  things  aspire;
In  vain  thou  kindlest  all  thy  smoky  fire:
For  Virtue  hath  this  better  lesson  taught,
Within  myself  to  seek  my  only  hire,
Desiring  nought  but  how  to  kill  Desire.

Íîâ³ òâîðè