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Tenantry

编辑:chaxungu时间:2022-10-13 02:55:22分类:英语诗歌

by George Scarbrough

Always in transit

we were always temporarily

in exile,

each new place seeming

after a while

and for a while

our home.

Because no matter

how far we traveled

on the edge of strangeness

in a small county,

the earth ran before us

down red clay roads

blurred with summer dust,

banked with winter mud.

It was the measurable,

pleasurable earth

that was home.

Nobody who loved it

could ever be really alien.

Its tough clay, deep loam,

hill rocks, small flowers

were always the signs

of a homecoming.

We wound down through them

to them,

and the house we came to,

whispering with dead hollyhocks

or once in spring

sill-high in daisies,

was unimportant.

Wherever it stood,

it stood in earth,

and the earth welcomed us,

open, gateless,

one place as another.

And each place seemed

after a while

and for a while

our home:

because the county

was only a mansion

kind of dwelling

in which there were many

rooms.

We only moved from one

room to another,

getting acquainted

with the whole house.

And always the earth

was the new floor under us,

the blue pinewoods the walls

rising around us,

the windows the openings

in the blue trees

through which we glimpsed,

always farther on,

sometimes beyond the river,

the real wall of the mountain,

in whose shadow

for a little while

we assumed ourselves safe,

secure and comfortable

as happy animals

in an unvisited lair:

which is why perhaps

no house we ever lived in

stood behind a fence,

no door we ever opened

had a key.

It was beautiful like that.

For a little while.