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    Works of Alexander Pushkin

    Page 5
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      Neither shine with harness bright.

      For soon the stem enemy

      My harness whole shall take

      And the shoes of silver

      Tear he shall from feet mine light.

      Hence it is that grieves my spirit:

      That in place of my chaprak

      With thy skin shall cover he

      My perspiring sides.

      1833

      TO A BABE

      CHILD, I dare not over thee

      Pronounce a blessing;

      Thou art of consolation a quiet angel

      May then happy be thy lot...

      THE POET

      ERE the poet summoned is

      To Apollo’s holy sacrifice

      In the world’s empty cares

      Engrossed is half-hearted he.

      His holy lyre silent is

      And cold sleep his soul locks in;

      And of the world’s puny children,

      Of all puniest perhaps is he.

      Yet no sooner the heavenly word

      His keen ear hath reached,

      Than up trembles the singer’s soul

      Like unto an awakened eagle.

      The world’s pastimes him now weary

      And mortals’ gossip now he shuns

      To the feet of popular idol

      His lofty head bends not he.

      Wild and stem, rushes he,

      Of tumult full and sound,

      To the shores of desert wave,

      Into the widely-whispering wood.

      1827

      SONNET: POET, NOT POPULAR APPLAUSE SHALT THOU PRIZE!

      POET, not popular applause shalt thou prize!

      Of raptured praise shall pass the momentary noise;

      The fool’s judgment hear thou shalt, and the cold mob’s laughter —

      Calm stand, and firm be, and — sober!

      Thou art king: live alone. On the free road

      Walk, whither draws thee thy spirit free:

      Ever the fruits of beloved thoughts ripening,

      Never reward for noble deeds demanding.

      In thyself reward seek. Thine own highest court thou art;

      Severest judge, thine own works canst measure.

      Art thou content, O fastidious craftsman?

      Content? Then let the mob scold,

      And spit upon the altar, where blazes thy fire.

      Thy tripod in childlike playfulness let it shake.

      THE THREE SPRINGS

      IN the world’s desert, sombre and shoreless

      Mysteriously three springs have broken thro’:

      Of youth the spring, a boisterous spring and rapid;

      It boils, it runs, it sparkles, and it murmurs.

      The Castalian Spring, with wave of inspiration

      In the world’s deserts its exiles waters;

      The last spring — the cold spring of forgetfulness,

      Of all sweetest, quench it does the heart’s fire.

      1827.

      THE TASK

      THE longed-for moment here is. Ended is my long-yeared task.

      Why then sadness strange me troubles secretly?

      My task done, like needless hireling am I to stand,

      My wage in hand, to other task a stranger?

      Or my task regret I, of night companion silent mine,

      Gold Aurora’s friend, the friend of my sacred household gods?

      1830.

      SLEEPLESSNESS

      I CANNOT sleep, I have no light;

      Darkness ‘bout me, and sleep is slow;

      The beat monotonous alone

      Near me of the clock is heard.

      Of the Fates the womanish babble,

      Of sleeping night the trembling,

      Of life the mice-like running-about, —

      Why disturbing me art thou?

      What art thou, O tedious whisper?

      The reproaches, or the murmur

      Of the day by me misspent?

      What from me wilt thou have?

      Art thou calling or prophesying?

      Thee I wish to understand,

      Thy tongue obscure I study now.

      1830.

      QUESTIONINGS

      USELESS gift, accidental gift,

      Life, why given art thou me?

      Or, why by fate mysterious

      To torture art thou doomed?

      Who with hostile power me

      Out has called from the nought?

      Who my soul with passion thrilled,

      Who my spirit with doubt has filled?...

      Goal before me there is none,

      My heart is hollow, vain my mind

      And with sadness wearies me

      Noisy life’s monotony.

      1828.

      CONSOLATION

      LIFE, — does it disappoint thee?

      Grieve not, nor be angry thou!

      In days of sorrow gentle be:

      Come shall, believe, the joyful day.

      In the future lives the heart:

      Is the present sad indeed?

      ‘T is but a moment, all will pass;

      Once in the past, it shall be dear.

      1825.

      FRIENDSHIP

      THUS it ever was and ever will be,

      Such of old is the world wide:

      The learned are many, the sages few,

      Acquaintance many, but not a friend!

      FAME

      BLESSED who to himself has kept

      His creation highest of the soul,

      And from his fellows as from the graves

      Expected not appreciation!

      Blessed he who in silence sang

      And the crown of fame not wearing,

      By mob despised and forgotten,

      Forsaken nameless has the world!

      Deceiver greater than dreams of hope,

      What is fame? The adorer’s whisper?

      Or the boor’s persecution?

      Or the rapture of the fool?

      AT the gates of Eden a tender angel

      With drooping head was shining;

      A demon gloomy and rebellious

      Over hell’s abyss was flying.

      The Spirit of Denial, the Spirit of Doubt

      The Spirit of Purity espied;

      And a tender warmth unwittingly

      Now first to know it learned he.

      Adieu, he spake, thee I saw:

      Not in vain hast thou shone before me;

      Not all in the world have I hated,

      Not all in the world have I scorned.

      1827.

      HOME-SICKNESS

      MAYHAP not long am destined I

      In exile peaceful to remain,

      Of dear days of yore to sigh,

      And rustic muse in quiet

      With spirit calm to follow.

      But even far, in foreign land,

      In thought forever roam I shall

      Around Trimountain mine:

      By meadows, river, by its hills,

      By garden, linden nigh the house.

      Thus when darkens day the clear,

      Alone from depths of grave,

      Spirit home-longing

      Into the native hall flies

      To espy the loved ones with tender glance.

      1825.

      INSANITY

      GOD grant I grow not insane:

      No, better the stick and beggar’s bag;

      No, better toil and hunger bear.

      Not that I upon my reason

      Such value place; not that I

      Would fain not lose it.

      If freedom to me they would leave

      How I would lasciviously

      For the gloomy forest rush!

      In hot delirium I would sing

      And unconscious would remain

      With ravings wondrous and chaotic.

      And listen would I to the waves

      And gaze I would full of bliss

      Into the empty heavens.

      And free and strong then would I be

      Like a storm the fields updigging,

      Forest-trees uproot
    ing.

      But here’s the trouble: if crazy once,

      A fright thou art like pestilence,

      And locked up now shalt thou be.

      To a chain thee, fool, they’ll fasten

      And through the gate, a circus beast,

      Thee to nettle the people come.

      And at night not hear shall I

      Clear the voice of nightingale

      Nor the forest’s hollow sound,

      But cries alone of companions mine

      And the scolding guards of night

      And a whizzing, of chains a ringing.

      1833

      DEATH-THOUGHTS

      WHETHER I roam along the noisy streets

      Whether I enter the peopled temple,

      Whether I sit by thoughtless youth,

      Haunt my thoughts me everywhere.

      I — say, Swiftly go the years by:

      However great our number now,

      Must all descend the eternal vaults, —

      Already struck has some one’s hour.

      And if I gaze upon the lonely oak

      I — think: the patriarch of the woods

      Will survive my passing age

      As he survived my father’s age.

      And if a tender babe I fondle

      Already I mutter, Fare thee well!

      I — yield my place to thee. For me

      ‘T is time to decay, to bloom for thee

      Every year thus, every day

      With death my thought I join

      Of coming death the day

      I seek among them to divine.

      Where will Fortune send me death?

      In battle? In wanderings, or on the waves?

      Or shall the valley neighboring

      Receive my chilled dust?

      But tho’ the unfeeling body

      Can everywhere alike decay,

      Still I, my birthland nigh

      Would have my body lie.

      Let near the entrance to my grave

      Cheerful youth be in play engaged,

      And let indifferent creation

      With beauty shine there eternally.

      1829.

      RIGHTS

      NOT dear I prize high-sounding rights

      By which is turned more head than one;

      Not murmur I that not granted the Gods to me

      The blessed lot of discussing fates,

      Of hindering kings from fighting one another;

      And little care I whether free the press is.

      All this you see are words, words, words

      Other, better rights, dear to me are;

      Other, better freedom is my need....

      To depend on rulers, or the mob —

      Is not all the same it? God be with them!

      To give account to none; to thyself alone

      To serve and please; for power, for a livery

      Nor soul, nor mind, nor neck to bend:

      Now here, now there to roam in freedom

      Nature’s beauties divine admiring,

      And before creations of art and inspiration

      Melt silently in tender ecstasy —

      This is bliss, these are rights!...

      THE GYPSIES

      OVER the wooded banks,

      In the hour of evening quiet,

      Under the tents are song and bustle

      And the fires are scattered.

      Thee I greet, O happy race!

      I recognize thy blazes,

      I — myself at other times

      These tents would have followed.

      With the early rays to-morrow

      Shall disappear your freedom’s trace,

      Go you will — but not with you

      Longer go shall the bard of you.

      He alas, the changing lodgings,

      And the pranks of days of yore

      Has forgot for rural comforts

      And for the quiet of a home.

      THE DELIBASH

      CROSS-FIRING behind the hills:

      Both camps watch, theirs and ours;

      In front of Cossaks on the hill

      Dashes ‘long brave Delibash

      O Delibash, not to the line come nigh,

      Do have mercy on thy life;

      Quick ‘t is over with thy frolic bold,

      Pierced thou by the spear shalt be

      Hey, Cossak, not to battle rush

      The Delibash is swift as wind;

      Cut he will with crooked sabre

      From thy shoulders thy fearless head.

      They rush with yell: are hand to hand;

      And behold now what each befalls:

      Already speared the Delibash is

      Already headless the Cossak is!

      HYMN TO FORCE

      I am eternal!

      I throb through the ages;

      I am the Master

      Of each of Life’s stages.

      I quicken the blood

      Of the mate-craving lover;

      The age-frozen heart

      With daisies I cover.

      Down through the ether

      I hurl constellations;

      Up from their earth-bed

      I wake the carnations.

      I laugh in the flame

      As I kindle and fan it;

      I crawl in the worm;

      I leap in the planet.

      Forth from its cradle

      I pilot the river;

      In lightning and earthquake

      I flash and I quiver.

      My breath is the wind;

      My bosom the ocean;

      My form’s undefined;

      My essence is motion.

      The braggarts of science

      Would weigh and divide me;

      Their wisdom evading,

      I vanish and hide me.

      My glances are rays

      From stars emanating;

      My voice through the spheres

      Is sound, undulating.

      I am the monarch

      Uniting all matter:

      The atoms I gather;

      The atoms I scatter.

      I pulse with the tides —

      Now hither, now thither;

      I grant the tree sap;

      I bid the bud wither.

      I always am present,

      Yet nothing can bind me;

      Like thought evanescent,

      They lose me who find me.

      THE BLACK SHAWL

      I gaze demented on the black shawl,

      And my cold soul is torn by grief.

      When young I was and full of trust

      I passionately loved a young Greek girl.

      The charming maid, she fondled me,

      But soon I lived the black day to see.

      Once as were gathered my jolly guests,

      A detested Jew knocked at my door.

      Thou art feasting, he whispered, with friends,

      But betrayed thou art by thy Greek maid.

      Moneys I gave him and curses,

      And called my servant, the faithful.

      We went; I flew on the wings of my steed,

      And tender mercy was silent in me.

      Her threshold no sooner I espied,

      Dark grew my eyes, and my strength departed.

      The distant chamber I enter alone —

      An Armenian embraces my faithless maid.

      Darkness around me: flashed the dagger;

      To interrupt his kiss the wretch had no time.

      And long I trampled the headless corpse, —

      And silent and pale at the maid I stared.

      I remember her prayers, her flowing blood,

      But perished the girl, and with her my love.

      The shawl I took from the head now dead,

      And wiped in silence the bleeding steel.

      When came the darkness of eve, my serf

      Threw their bodies into the billows of the Danube.

      Since then I kiss no charming eyes,

      Since then I know no cheerful days.

      I gaze demented on the black shawl,

      And my cold soul is torn by
    grief.

      THE OUTCAST

      On a rainy autumn evening

      Into desert places went a maid;

      And the secret fruit of unhappy love

      In her trembling hands she held.

      All was still: the woods and the hills

      Asleep in the darkness of the night;

      And her searching glances

      In terror about she cast.

      And on this babe, the innocent,

      Her glance she paused with a sigh:

      “Asleep thou art, my child, my grief,

      Thou knowest not my sadness.

      Thine eyes will ope, and though with longing,

      To my breast shalt no more cling.

      No kiss for thee to-morrow

      From thine unhappy mother.

      Beckon in vain for her thou wilt,

      My everlasting shame, my guilt!

      Me forget thou shalt for aye,

      But thee forget shall not I;

      Shelter thou shalt receive from strangers;

      Who’ll say: Thou art none of ours!

      Thou wilt ask: Where are my parents?

      But for thee no kin is found.

      Hapless one! with heart filled with sorrow,

      Lonely amid thy mates,

      Thy spirit sullen to the end

      Thou shalt behold the fondling mothers.

      A lonely wanderer everywhere,

      Cursing thy fate at all times,

      Thou the bitter reproach shalt hear …

      Forgive me, oh, forgive me then!

      Asleep! let me then, O hapless one,

      To my bosom press thee once for all;

      A law unjust and terrible

      Thee and me to sorrow dooms.

      While the years have not yet chased

      The guiltless joy of thy days,

      Sleep, my darling; let no bitter griefs

      Mar thy childhood’s quiet life!”

      But lo, behind the woods, near by,

      The moon brings a hut to light.

      Forlorn, pale, trembling

      To the doors she came nigh;

      She stooped, and gently laid down

      The babe on the strange threshold.

      In terror away she turned her eyes

      And disappeared in the darkness of the night.

      THE CLOUD

      O last cloud of the scattered storm,

      Alone thou sailest along the azure clear;

      Alone thou bringest the darkness of shadow;

      Alone thou marrest the joy of the day.

      Thou but recently hadst encircled the sky,

      When sternly the lightning was winding about thee.

      Thou gavest forth mysterious thunder,

      Thou hast watered with rain the parched earth.

      Enough; hie thyself. Thy time hath passed.

      The earth is refreshed, and the storm hath fled,

      And the breeze, fondling the leaves of the trees,

      Forth chases thee from the quieted heavens.

     


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