Читать книгу Donahoe's Magazine, Volume 15, No. 4, April, 1886 - Various - Страница 5

Musings from Foreign Poets

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THE PEARL AND THE SONG

From the German of Ebert

The million-tinted pearl of ocean

Lies shrined within its mortal shell,

And sails the deep in wavy motion,

Responsive to each tidal swell.


These songs of mine that shell resemble

Freighted with tears, in ebb and flow,

Like to the shell they float and tremble

On the wild ocean of my woe.


THE MODERN MUSE

From the Italian of Leopardi

While still a youth and all aflame

With fire poetic, I became

A pupil of the Muses nine;

One took my hand in kindly mood,

And led me to the inner shrine —

The secret workshop, where apart,

In silence and in solitude,

They wrought the marvels of their art.


The Muse then showed me, one by one,

And in minute detail outlined

The various tasks to each assigned;

I listened, marvelling much the while;

"Pray, Muse," I asked, "where is the file?"


She answered lightly as in scorn,

"The file is rusted and outworn,

'Tis used no more in prose or rhyme."

"But why not mend it if 'tis broken?"

Lightly again the words were spoken,

"The fact is, friend, we have no time!"


PRAYER OF THE POOR

From the French of Lamartine

O Thou who dost thine ear incline

Unto the lowly sparrow's nest,

And hear'st the sighs of flowers that pine

For dews upon the mountain's crest!


Divine Consoler of our woes!

Thou dost the hidden hand perceive

That on the poor a coin bestows

To buy the bread by which they live.


Thou givest, as Thou deemest best

To mortals, wealth or poverty,

That, springing from their union blest,

Justice might live and charity.


To know the hearts, be this Thy care,

Who thus their kindly gifts dispense,

That in the treasures they may share

Of Thy all-bounteous providence.


We know not those for whom we pray,

They are beheld of Thee alone;

Their right hand's gifts from day to day,

Are ever to their left unknown.


The plan to unite Paris and London with pneumatic tubes has been reported on favorably by French engineers, and submitted to the Government. It is proposed that two pneumatic tubes be laid, following the line of the Northern Railroad from Paris to Calais, thence across the channel to Dover, and following the line of the South-Eastern Railroad to London. Letters could thus be transmitted between the two capitals in one hour. Wagonets like those now used to transport telegrams from Paris are used, weighing ten kilograms and capable of carrying five kilograms weight of mail matter. Twenty pneumatic trains are to be started every hour.

Donahoe's Magazine, Volume 15, No. 4, April, 1886

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