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England and Oxford (8) - Druckversion +- Sonett-Forum (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum) +-- Forum: Sonett-Archiv (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=126) +--- Forum: Sonette aus germanischen Sprachen (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=394) +---- Forum: Englische Sonette (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=818) +----- Forum: Autoren B (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=830) +------ Forum: Bowman, Archibald Allan (https://sonett-archiv.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=1121) +------ Thema: England and Oxford (8) (/showthread.php?tid=17690) |
England and Oxford (8) - ZaunköniG - 14.06.2008 England and Oxford I Line after line the tale beneath the pen Moves on, and rodent Time with tireless tooth Works o'er our portion, till one day forsooth We tread the cool gray shadow, ageing men. This change I mark, and sadly pondering then Catch the soul's murmur, accented with ruth: "Oh, let me hear upon the lips of youth `Eothen' and `Eothen' once again! " And Oxford, oh, do thou with soulful toil, While o'er our folk tumultuous ages throng, Mounted at night as o'er some priceless spoil, For us the fineness of this cult prolong, Still nurturing in our sweet English soil That glory from the Morningland of song. II Yet, Oxford, it is better thou should'st know That eyes which love thee in thy culture see The withering curse of long sterility. Rooted in England, thou hast ceased to grow Together with her growth. Thy waters flow Not with her broadening current to the sea. But murmuring their delicious melody They wander forth and wist not where they go. And thus thy fine-edged spirit, which in high Disdain hath never paltered with the pelf Of modern rapine, doth too often fly To endless erochets, wayward as an elf, Self-humouring and posturing and shy, And broods apart and lives unto itself. III None than thyself more royally to-day Hath given to England in her hour of need. In every field where England's children bleed Thine own haue there more richly bled than they. And Oxford still incarnadines the clay To such a sanctity as doth o'erplead The voice of censure, silenced by the deed Of the great heart that laid them where they lay. 'Tis their's, that murmur fluttering from the marge Of thither Acheron, where their Gares they ply In deathless death: "O Mother mine, enlarge Thy life to England's. Thou hast learned to die. But while thy life thou dost so grandly give, One thing thou lackest, Oxford; learn to live!" IV There is one source alone which can supply New life and impulse. 'Tis a voice that rolls Half inarticulate in English souls, From field and mine and factory, where they ply The single talent Fate did not deny, Their labour. Now they hear upon the shoals Of a sad life that there are other goals To man's existence than they yet descry; And, scarcely yet discerned, they deeply feel A presence over them, a haunting sense Of music in the world, whose echoes steal Unto them from the spheres, where in the immense Circle of night and day the planets keep Measure and watch, while mortals toil and weep. V Thine be it to direct their, steps aright Unto that bourne which, doth not cease to haunt. They cry for it, not knowing what they want, Or what for man is best—the use of sight; Some inkling of the precious power of light, To glorify a mean existence gaunt, And check the bitter self-inflicted taunt That nothing worthy calls them home at night. And thou can'st set them, questing, male them feel The nearness of true knowledge, where it lies In common things with which they daily deal, Yet ending in the Splendour of the skies; Or teach them. in shunned volumes to detect The simplicity of letters unsuspect. VI Yet — for the kindly Mother may not quit Her cloistered sanctuary, where from the height Of scholarship's remoteness day and night She strains truth's fabric—it is those who sit A season at her feet, and learn to fit Their spirits to her own, who must requite These lofty Bares, and earry out the light, And serve it round, and tend its burning, lit. But thine, O Kindly Mother, first to prove Thy ministers, and having chosen, tune, Bringing thy spirit o'er them, till they move Like one at thy behest — as to the moon, Passing soft influence from the quiet skies, The oceans with their weight of waters rise. VII One thing must be thine instant, anxious care, Which an thine honour thou dar'st not refuse. Long time our people now the habit lose Of speech consecutive (which man should wear Upon him like a garment, fit and fair) And through some faulting of the brain abuse Thought's flowing vesture of a thousand hues, Oft shorn to shreds, all fluttering in the air. I mark and grieve; for in this lost control We trace the weakness of these breathless times, When man no longer keeps his nature whole, Nor governs his spirit; and it chimes With the unruly in us, deadliest threat Our English liberty hath fronted yet. VIII It is not for art's sake this precious dower Of speech must be renewed, but for the sake Of life within. The expression doth not break Silence in vain, but with reflexive power To vitalize its source, and parting shower New riches an the donor. Thus we take Life's counterthrust upon our souls, and shake The vessel, lest by standing Being sour. All life's a language; but 'tis not enough To launch forth with it wildly into space, Adding one atom to the blinding drain, A pitiable froth-bell in the trough Of each new sause, wherein the striving race Tries issue with stern time—perchance in vain. |