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полная версияWyndham Towers

Aldrich Thomas Bailey
Wyndham Towers

Полная версия

 
     Half toppled forward on the bended knee,
     Grasping with vise-like grip the other’s wrist,
     As who should say, Arouse thee, sleep no more!
     But said it not.  If they were quick or dead,
     No sign they gave beyond this sad dumb show.
     Blurred one face was, yet luminous, like the moon
     Caught in the fleecy network of a cloud,
     Or seen glassed on the surface of a tarn
     When the wind crinkles it and makes all dim;
     The other, drawn and wrenched by mortal throes,
     And in the aspect such beseeching look
     As might befall some poor wretch called to compt
     On the sudden, even as he kneels at prayer,
     With Mercy! turned to frost upon the lip.
 
 
       Thus much saw Nokes within the closet there
     Ere he drew breath; then backing step by step,
     The chisel clutched in still uplifted hand,
     His eyes still fixed upon the ghosts, he reached
     An open window giving on the court
     Where the stone-cutters were; to them he called
     Softly, in whispers under his curved palm,
     Lest peradventure a loud word should rouse
     The phantoms; but ere foot could climb the stair,
     Or the heart’s pulses count the sum of ten,
     Through both dread shapes, as at God’s finger-touch,
     A shiver ran, the wavering outlines broke,
     And suddenly a chill and mist-like breath
     Touched Nokes’s cheek as he at casement leaned,
     And nought was left of that most piteous pair
     Save two long rapiers of some foreign make
     Lying there crossed, a mass of flaky rust.
 
 
       O luckless carver of dead images,
     Saint’s-head or gargoyle, thou hast seen a sight
     Shall last thee to the confines of the grave!
     Ill were thy stars or ever thou wert born
     That thou shouldst look upon a thing forbid!
     Now in thine eye shall it forever live,
     And the waste solitudes of night inhabit
     With direful shadows of the nether world,
     Yet leave thee lonely in the throng of men—
     Not of them, thou, but creature set apart
     Under a ban, and doomed henceforth to know
     The wise man’s scorn, the dull man’s sorry jest.
     For who could credence give to that mad tale
     Of churchyard folk appearing in broad day,
     And drifting out at casement like a mist?
     Marry, not they who crowded up the stair
     In haste, and peered into that empty cell,
     And had half mind to buffet Master Nokes,
     Standing with finger laid across his palm
     In argumentative, appealing way,
     Distraught, of countenance most woe-begone.
     “See!—the two swords.  As I ‘m a Christian soul!”
      “Odds, man!” cried one, “thou ‘st been a-dreamin’, man.
     Cleave to thy beer, an’ let strong drink alone!”
 
 
       So runs the legend.  So from their long sleep
     Those ghosts arose and fled into the night.
     But never bride came to that dark abode,
     For wild flames swept it ere a month was gone,
     And nothing spared but that forlorn old tower
     Whereon the invisible fingers of the wind
     Its fitful and mysterious dirges play.
 
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