登陆注册
35303600000007

第7章 NEW BIRTH(2)

But new was the horror of London that went on all the while That rich men played at their ease for name and fame to beguile The days of their empty lives, and praised the deeds they did, As though they had fashioned the earth and found out the sun long hid;Though some of them busied themselves from hopeless day to day With the lives of the slaves of the rich and the hell wherein they lay.

They wrought meseems as those who should make a bargain with hell, That it grow a little cooler, and thus for ever to dwell.

So passed the world on its ways, and weary with waiting we were.

Men ate and drank and married; no wild cry smote the air, No great crowd ran together to greet the day of doom;And ever more and more seemed the town like a monstrous tomb To us, the Pilgrims of Hope, until to-night it came, And Hope on the stones of the street is written in letters of flame.

This is how it befel: a workmate of mine had heard Some bitter speech in my mouth, and he took me up at the word, And said: "Come over to-morrow to our Radical spouting-place;For there, if we hear nothing new, at least we shall see a new face;He is one of those Communist chaps, and 'tis like that you two may agree."So we went, and the street was as dull and as common as aught you could see;Dull and dirty the room. Just over the chairman's chair Was a bust, a Quaker's face with nose cocked up in the air;There were common prints on the wall of the heads of the party fray, And Mazzini dark and lean amidst them gone astray.

Some thirty men we were of the kind that I knew full well, Listless, rubbed down to the type of our easy-going hell.

My heart sank down as I entered, and wearily there I sat While the chairman strove to end his maunder of this and of that.

And partly shy he seemed, and partly indeed ashamed Of the grizzled man beside him as his name to us he named.

He rose, thickset and short, and dressed in shabby blue, And even as he began it seemed as though I knew The thing he was going to say, though I never heard it before.

He spoke, were it well, were it ill, as though a message he bore, A word that he could not refrain from many a million of men.

Nor aught seemed the sordid room and the few that were listening then Save the hall of the labouring earth and the world which was to be.

Bitter to many the message, but sweet indeed unto me, Of man without a master, and earth without a strife, And every soul rejoicing in the sweet and bitter of life:

Of peace and good-will he told, and I knew that in faith he spake, But his words were my very thoughts, and I saw the battle awake, And I followed from end to end; and triumph grew in my heart As he called on each that heard him to arise and play his part In the tale of the new-told gospel, lest as slaves they should live and die.

He ceased, and I thought the hearers would rise up with one cry, And bid him straight enrol them; but they, they applauded indeed, For the man was grown full eager, and had made them hearken and heed:

But they sat and made no sign, and two of the glibber kind Stood up to jeer and to carp his fiery words to blind.

I did not listen to them, but failed not his voice to hear When he rose to answer the carpers, striving to make more clear That which was clear already; not overwell, I knew, He answered the sneers and the silence, so hot and eager he grew;But my hope full well he answered, and when he called again On men to band together lest they live and die in vain, In fear lest he should escape me, I rose ere the meeting was done, And gave him my name and my faith--and I was the only one.

He smiled as he heard the jeers, and there was a shake of the hand, He spoke like a friend long known; and lo! I was one of the band.

And now the streets seem gay and the high stars glittering bright;And for me, I sing amongst them, for my heart is full and light.

I see the deeds to be done and the day to come on the earth, And riches vanished away and sorrow turned to mirth;I see the city squalor and the country stupor gone.

And we a part of it all--we twain no longer alone In the days to come of the pleasure, in the days that are of the fight -I was born once long ago: I am born again to-night.

同类推荐
  • 善住意天子所问经

    善住意天子所问经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 潜书

    潜书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 明伦汇编官常典县尉部

    明伦汇编官常典县尉部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 麓堂诗话

    麓堂诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 文说

    文说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 坤道逆天

    坤道逆天

    天地初成,世间一切由乾、坤、巽(xun)、兑、艮(gen)、震、离、坎八道所支撑。乾道为天,坤道为地。六界盛传乾、坤等八道各化一物,得天独厚,各有异能。若能集得八件,便可上掌天、下控地。六界无不垂涎八宝,却无人知八宝实为何物。人界正派邪魔乱起。六界动荡不堪。他是一个不知名的小人物,却阴差阳错的卷入了正邪之争,成了牺牲品,为正邪两道所不容。他却游历天下,仗义江湖。多次遇险,却得神秘女子相救。闯地府九幽、破玉皇仙都、灭神王混沌。而这一切,仿佛都在一个人的安排中,他是谁,又有何目的。任他何人,我必逆天。.....
  • 俏皮丫头:恶魔校草吻上瘾

    俏皮丫头:恶魔校草吻上瘾

    『已完结』他被表白,拿着她当挡箭牌吻上去了她被伙伴误会和他有关系他低头吻住她她下楼梯摔跤被他救了不经意间双唇叠一起她过马路没看路,差点被撞一个转身初吻没了。四大美男各种撩妹方法,欢迎入坑
  • 许你七年,已忘勿恋

    许你七年,已忘勿恋

    试玉三日,辨材七年,向阳花开,泪影自哀。记得那年你笑靥如花,我却是莫名泪洒,泪珠闪烁出你眼中的光芒,是什么呢,是……是羡慕啊。记得那时有多美,恰似一湖春水,多羡慕你的可怜,你脚踩的地狱,忘了也只是天堂的倒影,我唇角的泪珠,却终究是时间的灰烬。许你七年,留我入骨的爱,解你痴心的毒,七年,已忘勿恋。
  • 太子栽了:娘娘是太监总管

    太子栽了:娘娘是太监总管

    她从默默无闻的江湖小子,华丽蜕变成赫赫有名的大内总管,从此皇宫江湖两不误,生财有道不是吹!可什么时候,皇帝,王爷,将军看她的眼神不对劲了,各个带着火热,买噶的,不是露馅了吧?这让她如何是好!
  • 十年你等着

    十年你等着

    她本是堂堂的潘氏千金,因为一次车祸她被误以为她不是真的潘氏千金,10年后她回来了,为了报仇。
  • 撩开民国黑幕

    撩开民国黑幕

    中国近代杰出记者黄远生(1885—1915,江西省九江县人),以犀利的文笔,充分展示了民国初年中国政局由皇权专制到民主宪政大转型的惊心动魄的历史。
  • 巅峰时代之崛起

    巅峰时代之崛起

    这是一个全新的世界,这个世界里不仅有帅到掉渣的魔法师,还有沉默不语却格外强大的的剑修,更有高大勇猛的人马族。诸天三千大道,亿万小道。这个世界一个异能者纵横,修炼者主宰,无数族群谁与争锋。一位少年正通往人生巅峰。
  • 商战

    商战

    本书重点阐述了商战中的四种常用战略形式,如防御战、进攻战、侧翼战和游击战,针对每一种形式又提出了三条应遵循的原则,以及如何在具体的商战中应用这些原则。本书分析了商战中的实际案例:可口可乐与百事可乐的战役,汉堡王与温迪斯对麦当劳的挑战以及DEC对阵IBM等。这些人们熟知品牌的案例在作者精心的组织下,使读者不仅加深了对本书中心思想的理解,而且学习了如何在实战中具体应用各种营销战略和策略的技巧。
  • 凤主山河:帝女花

    凤主山河:帝女花

    “我是妖孽,狐狸生的妖孽,你还要我吗?”苍穹之下,万物生长,儿女情长,鲜衣怒马。可这样的场景稍纵即逝。命运犹如被下了诅咒一般,伤痛一发不可收拾,淝水败战,家国易主。“熙宝,你忘了当年的承诺。”颤抖的双手抚摸着温润的白玉,上面刻着“虞美人主令”。看着虞美人众姐妹们,她举起令牌高喊:“江山随我姓,挥剑度万民!”
  • 十里洋场里的绝世才女张爱玲

    十里洋场里的绝世才女张爱玲

    她被上帝亲吻过,拥有绝世的才华;也被上帝玩弄过,文坛得意情场失意。