您现在的位置是:首页 > 学科知识查询 > 英语百科 > 英语诗歌

The Clearing of the Land: An Epitaph

编辑:chaxungu时间:2022-10-13 02:55:46分类:英语诗歌

by Larry Levis

The trees went up the hill

And over it.

Then the dry grasses of the pasture were

Only a kind of blonde light

Settling everywhere

And framing the randomly strewn

Outcropping of gray stone

That anchored them to soil.

Who were they?

One in the picture, & one not, & both

Scotch-Irish drifters,

With nothing in common but a perfect contempt

for a past;

Ancestors of stumps & fallen trees & . . . .

One sits on a sorrel mare,

Idly tossing small stones at the rump

of a steer

That goes on grazing at tough rosettes

of pasture grass & switching its tail

In what is not yet irritation.

What I like, what I

Have always liked, is the way he tosses each small

Stone without thinking, without

A thought for anything, not aiming at all,

The easy, arcing forearm nonchalance

Like someone fly casting,

For this is what

He wanted:

To be among the stones, the grasses,

Savoring a stony self

That reminded him of no one else,

And on land where that poacher, Law,

Had not yet stolen through his fences,

The horse beneath him tensing

Its withers lightly to keep

The summer flies away,

And the woman in the flower-print dress hemmed

With stains

A half mile off

Is the authoress of no more than smoke rising,

Her sole diary & only publication,

From a distant chimney.

They have perhaps a year or two

Left of this

Before history begins to edit them into

Something without smoke or flies, something

Beyond all recognition.


上一篇:From All Day Permanent Red

下一篇:The Collar