The Complete Works: Poetry, Plays, Letters and Extensive Biographies. John Keats

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Complete Works: Poetry, Plays, Letters and Extensive Biographies - John Keats страница 113

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
The Complete Works: Poetry, Plays, Letters and Extensive Biographies - John  Keats

Скачать книгу

and very pleas’d she feels

      To have such splendour dance attendance at her heels.

LXVII

      For there was more magnificence behind:

      She wav’d her handkerchief. “Ah, very grand!”

      Cry’d Elfinan, and clos’d the window-blind;

      “And, Hum, we must not shilly-shally stand,

      Adieu! adieu! I’m off for Angle-land!

      I say, old Hocus, have you such a thing

      About you, feel your pockets, I command,

      I want, this instant, an invisible ring,

      Thank you, old mummy! now securely I take wing.”

LXVIII

      Then Elfinan swift vaulted from the floor,

      And lighted graceful on the window-sill;

      Under one arm the magic book he bore,

      The other he could wave about at will;

      Pale was his face, he still look’d very ill;

      He bow’d at Bellanaine, and said “Poor Bell!

      Farewell! farewell! and if for ever! still

      For ever fare thee well!” and then he fell

      A laughing! snapp’d his fingers! shame it is to tell!

LXIX

      “By’r Lady! he is gone!” cries Hum, “and I

      (I own it) have made too free with his wine;

      Old Crafticant will smoke me. By-the-bye!

      This room is full of jewels as a mine,

      Dear valuable creatures, how ye shine!

      Sometime to-day I must contrive a minute,

      If Mercury propitiously incline,

      To examine his scutoire, and see what’s in i,

      For of superfluous diamonds I as well may thin it.

LXX

      “The Emperor’s horrid bad; yes, that’s my cue!”

      Some histories say that this was Hum’s last speech;

      That, being fuddled, he went reeling through

      The corridor, and scarce upright could reach

      The stair-head; that being glutted as a leech,

      And us’d, as we ourselves have just now said,

      To manage stairs reversely, like a peach

      Too ripe, he fell, being puzzled in his head

      With liquor and the staircase: verdict found stone dead.

LXXI

      This as a falsehood Crafticanto treats;

      And as his style is of strange elegance,

      Gentle and tender, full of soft conceits,

      (Much like our Boswell’s,) we will take a glance

      At his sweet prose, and, if we can, make dance

      His woven periods into careless rhyme;

      O, little faery Pegasus! rear prance

      Trot round the quarto ordinary time!

      March, little Pegasus, with pawing hoof sublime!

LXXII

      Well, let us see, tenth book and chapter nine,

      Thus Crafticant pursues his diary:

      “’Twas twelve o’clock at night, the weather fine,

      Latitude thirty-six; our scouts descry

      A flight of starlings making rapidly

      Towards Thibet. Mem.: birds fly in the night;

      From twelve to half-past wings not fit to fly

      For a thick fog the Princess sulky quite;

      Call’d for an extra shawl, and gave her nurse a bite.

LXXIII

      “Five minutes before one brought down a moth

      With my new double-barrel stew’d the thighs

      And made a very tolerable broth

      Princess turn’d dainty, to our great surprise,

      Alter’d her mind, and thought it very nice;

      Seeing her pleasant, try’d her with a pun,

      She frown’d; a monstrous owl across us flies

      About this time, a sad old figure of fun;

      Bad omen this new match can’t be a happy one.

LXXIV

      “From two to half-past, dusky way we made,

      Above the plains of Gobi, desert, bleak;

      Beheld afar off, in the hooded shade

      Of darkness, a great mountain (strange to speak),

      Spitting, from forth its sulphur-baken peak,

      A fan-shap’d burst of blood-red, arrowy fire,

      Turban’d with smoke, which still away did reek,

      Solid and black from that eternal pyre,

      Upon the laden winds that scantly could respire.

LXXV

      “Just upon three o’clock a falling star

      Created an alarm among our troop,

      Kill’d a man-cook, a page, and broke a jar,

      A tureen, and three dishes, at one swoop,

      Then passing by the princess, singed her hoop:

      Could not conceive what Coralline was at,

      She clapp’d her hands three times and cry’d out ‘Whoop!’

      Some strange Imaian custom. A large bat

      Came sudden ‘fore my face, and brush’d against my hat.

LXXVI

      “Five minutes thirteen seconds after three,

      Far in the west a mighty fire broke out,

      Conjectur’d, on the instant, it might be,

      The city of Balk ’twas Balk beyond all doubt:

      A griffin, wheeling here and there about,

      Kept reconnoitring us doubled our guard

      Lighted our torches, and kept up a shout,

      Till he sheer’d off the Princess very scar’d

      And many on their marrow-bones for death prepar’d.

LXXVII

      “At half-past three arose the cheerful moon

      Bivouack’d for four minutes on a cloud

      Where from the earth we heard a lively tune

      Of tambourines and pipes, serene and loud,

      While on a flowery lawn a brilliant crowd

      Cinque-parted danc’d, some half asleep reposed

      Beneath the green-fan’d cedars, some did shroud

      In silken tents, and ‘mid light fragrance dozed,

      Or on the opera turf their soothed eyelids closed.

LXXVIII

      “Dropp’d my gold watch, and kill’d a kettledrum

      It went for apoplexy foolish folks!

      Left it to pay the piper a good sum

      (I’ve got a conscience, maugre people’s jokes,)

      To scrape a little favour; ‘gan to coax

      Her

Скачать книгу