Mountain idylls, and Other Poemspdf下载

Mountain idylls, and Other Poems百度网盘pdf下载

作者:
简介:Mountain idylls, and Other Poems
出版社:
出版时间:英文
pdf下载价格:0.00¥

免费下载


书籍下载


内容介绍

目录
版权信息
PREFACE
Mountain Idylls and Other Poems
Grandeur.
Nature's Child.
To the Pines.
Reflections.
Life's Mystery.
The Fallen Tree.
There is an Air of Majesty.
Think Not that the Heart is Devoid of Emotion.
Humanity's Stream.
Nature's Lullaby.
The Spirit of freedom is Born of the Mountains.
The Valley of the San Miguel.
To Mother Huberta.
Suggested by a Mountain Eagle.
The Silvery San Juan.
As the Shifting Sands of the Desert.
Missed.
If I Have Lived Before.
The Darker Side.
The Miner.
Life's Undercurrent.
They Cannot See the Wreaths We Place.
Mother.—Alpha and Omega.
Empty are the Mother's Arms.
In Deo Fides.
Shall Love, as the Bridal Wreath, Whither and Die?
Shall Our Memories Live When the Sod Rolls Above Us?
A Reverie.
Love's Plea.
Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust.
Despair.
Hidden Sorrows.
O, a Beautiful Thing Is the Flower That Fadeth!
Smiles.
A Request.
Battle Hymn.
The Nations Peril.
Echoes from Galilee.
Go, And Sin No More.
Gently Lead Me, Star Divine.
Dying Hymn.
In Mortem Meditare.
Deprive This Strange and Complex World.
The Legend of St.Regimund.
As The Indian.
The Fragrant Perfume of the Flowers.
An Answer.
Fame.
The First Storm.
Thoughts.
From A Saxon Legend.
Christmas Chimes.
The Unknowable.
The Suicide.
I Think When I Stand in the Presence of Death.
Hope.
Metabole.
前言
  PREFACE
  "Of making many books there is no end."—Eccles. 12:12.
  When the above words were written by Solomon, King of Israel, about three thousand years ago, they were possibly inspired by the existence even at that early period of an extensive and probably overweighted literature.
  The same literary conditions are as true to-day as when the above truism emanated from that most wonderful of all human intellects. Every age and generation, as well as every changing religious or political condition, has brought with it its own peculiar and essentially differing current literature, which, as a rule, continued a brief season, and then vanished, perishing with the age and conditions which called it into being; leaving, however, an occasional volume, masterpiece, or even quotation, to become classic, and in the form of standard literature survive for generations, and in many instances for ages.
  Poetry has always occupied a unique position in literature; and though from a pecuniary stand-point usually unprofitable, it enjoys the decided advantage of longevity.
  The mysterious ages of antiquity have bequeathed to all succeeding time several of earth's noblest epics, while the contemporaneous prose, if any existed, has long lain buried in the inscrutable archives of the remote past.
  The two most notable of these, the Iliad and the Odyssey, are believed to have been transmitted from generation to generation, orally, by the minstrels and minnisingers, until the introduction or inception of the Greek alphabet, when they were reduced to parchment, and, surviving all the vicissitudes of time and sequent political and religious change, still occupy a prominent place in literature.
  The Book of Job, generally accepted as the most ancient of writings, now extant, whether sacred or secular, was doubtless originally a primitive though sublime poetical effusion.
  The prose works contemporaneous with Chaucer, Spencer, and even with that most wonderful of literary epochs, the Elizabethan age, are now practically obsolete, while the poetical efforts remain in some instances with increased prominence.
  Someone, (although just who is difficult to determine,—though it savors of the Greek School of Philosophy,—)has delivered the following injunction: "Do right because it is right, not from fear of punishment or hope of reward." Waiving the question as to whether it is right or not to compose poetry, he who aspires in that direction can reasonably expect no material recompense, though the experience of Dante, Cervantes, Leigh Hunt, and others, proves conclusively that poets do not always escape punishment. In fact, about the only emolument to be expected is the gratification of an inherent and indefinable impulse, which impels one to the task with equal force, whether the ultimate result be affluence or a dungeon.
  The author of this unpretentious volume has long questioned the advisability of adding a book to our already inflated and overloaded literature, unless it should contain something in the nature of a deviation from beaten literary paths.
  Whether the reading public will regard this as such or not is a question for the future to determine, as every book is a creature of circumstance, and at the date of its publication an algebraic unknown quantity.
  It was not the original intention of the author to publish any of his effusions in collective form until more mature years and riper judgment should better qualify him for the task of composition, and should enable him to still further pursue the important studies of etymology, rhetoric, Latin and Greek, and complete the education which youthful environment denied.
  On the 17th of March, A.D. 1900, occurred an accident in the form of a premature mining explosion which banished the light of the Colorado sun from his eyes forever, adding the almost insurmountable barrier of total and hopeless blindness to those of limited means and insufficient education. At first further effort seemed useless, but as time meliorates in some degree even the most deplorable and distressing physical conditions, ambition slowly rallied, and while lying for several months a patient in various hospitals in an ineffectual attempt to regain even partial sight, the following ideas and efforts of past years were gradually recalled from the recesses of memory, and reduced to their present form, in which, with no small hesitation and misgiving, they are presented to the consideration of the reading public, which in the humble opinion of the author has frequently failed to receive and appreciate productions of vastly superior merit.
  Ouray, Colorado, March 15, 1901.
精彩书摘
  Dedicated to the mountains of the San Juan district, Colorado, as seen from the summit of Mt. Wilson.
  I stood at sunrise, on the topmost part
  Of lofty mountain, massively sublime;
  A pinnacle of trachyte, seamed and scarred
  By countless generations' ceaseless war
  And struggle with the restless elements;
  A rugged point, which shot into the air,
  As by ambition or desire impelled
  To pierce the eternal precincts of the sky.
  Below, outspread,
  A scene of such terrific grandeur lay
  That reeled the brain at what the eyes beheld;
  The hands would clench involuntarily
  And clutch from intuition for support;
  The eyes by instinct closed, nor dared to gaze
  On such an awful and inspiring sight.
  The sun arose with bright transcendent ray,
  Up from behind a bleak and barren reef;
  His face resplendent with beatitude,
  Solar effulgence and combustive gleam;
  Bathing the scene in such a wealth of light