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The Reading Club

编辑:chaxungu时间:2022-10-13 02:59:00分类:英语诗歌

by Patricia Goedicke

Is dead serious about this one, having rehearsed it for two weeks

They bring it right into the Old Fellows Meeting Hall.

Riding the backs of the Trojan Women,

In Euripides' great wake they are swept up,

But the women of the chorus, in black stockings and kerchiefs,

Stand up bravely to it, shawled arms thrash

In a foam of hysterical voices shrieking,

Seaweed on the wet flanks of a whale,

For each town has its Cassandra who is a little crazy,

Wed to some mystery or other and therefore painfully sensitive,

Wiser than anyone but no one listens to her, these days the terror

Reaches its red claws into back ward and living room alike,

For each town has its Andromache who is too young,

With snub nose and children just out of school

Even she cannot escape it, from the bombed city she is led out

Weeping among the ambulances,

And each community has its tart, its magical false Helen

Or at least someone who looks like her, in all the makeup she can muster,

The gorgeous mask of whatever quick-witted lie will keep her alive

At least a little longer, on the crest of the bloody wave,

That dolorous mountain of wooden ships and water

In whose memory the women bring us this huge gift horse,

This raging animal of a play no one dares to look in the eye

For fear of what's hidden there:

Small ragdoll figures toppling over and over

From every skyscraper and battlement hurtling

Men and women both, mere gristle in the teeth of fate.

Out over the sea of the audience our numb faces

Are stunned as Andromache's, locked up there on the platform

Inside Euripides' machine the women sway and struggle

One foot at a time, up the surging ladder

Of grief piled on grief, strophe on antistrophe,

In every century the same, the master tightens the screws,

Heightens the gloss of each bitter scene

And strikes every key, each word rings out

Over our terrified heads like a brass trumpet,

For this gift is an accordion, the biggest and mightiest of all,

As the glittering lacquered box heaves in and out,

Sigh upon sigh, at the topmost pitch a child

Falls through midnight in his frantically pink skin.

As the anguished queen protests, the citizens in the chorus wail

Louder and louder, the warriors depart

Without a glance backwards, these captains of the world's death

Enslaved as they are enslavers, in a rain of willess atoms

Anonymity takes over utterly: as the flaming city falls

On this bare beach, in the drab pinewood hall

The Reading Club packs up to go; scripts, coffee cups, black stockings

Husbands and wives pile into the waiting cars

Just as we expect, life picks up and goes on

But not art: crouched back there like a stalled stallion

Stuffed in its gorgeous music box is the one gift

That will not disappear but waits, but bides its time and waits

For the next time we open it, that magical false structure

Inside whose artifice is the lesson, buried alive,

Of the grim machinations of the beautiful that always lead us

To these eternally real lamentations, real sufferings, real cries.


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