The Complete Poetical Works of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Генри Уодсуорт Лонгфелло

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The Complete Poetical Works of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - Генри Уодсуорт Лонгфелло


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Table of Contents

      Take them, O Death! and bear away

       Whatever thou canst call thine own!

      Thine image, stamped upon this clay,

       Doth give thee that, but that alone!

      Take them, O Grave! and let them lie

       Folded upon thy narrow shelves,

      As garments by the soul laid by,

       And precious only to ourselves!

      Take them, O great Eternity!

       Our little life is but a gust

      That bends the branches of thy tree,

       And trails its blossoms in the dust!

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      Christ to the young man said: "Yet one thing more;

       If thou wouldst perfect be,

      Sell all thou hast and give it to the poor,

       And come and follow me!"

      Within this temple Christ again, unseen,

       Those sacred words hath said,

      And his invisible hands to-day have been

       Laid on a young man's head.

      And evermore beside him on his way

       The unseen Christ shall move,

      That he may lean upon his arm and say,

       "Dost thou, dear Lord, approve?"

      Beside him at the marriage feast shall be,

       To make the scene more fair;

      Beside him in the dark Gethsemane

       Of pain and midnight prayer.

      O holy trust! O endless sense of rest!

       Like the beloved John

      To lay his head upon the Saviour's breast,

       And thus to journey on!

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      THE SONG OF HIAWATHA [Notes from HIAWATHA follow]

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      Should you ask me, whence these stories?

      Whence these legends and traditions,

      With the odors of the forest

      With the dew and damp of meadows,

      With the curling smoke of wigwams,

      With the rushing of great rivers,

      With their frequent repetitions,

      And their wild reverberations

      As of thunder in the mountains?

       I should answer, I should tell you,

      "From the forests and the prairies,

      From the great lakes of the Northland,

      From the land of the Ojibways,

      From the land of the Dacotahs,

      From the mountains, moors, and fen-lands

      Where the heron, the Shuh-shuh-gah,

      Feeds among the reeds and rushes.

      I repeat them as I heard them

      From the lips of Nawadaha,

      The musician, the sweet singer."

       Should you ask where Nawadaha

      Found these songs so wild and wayward,

      Found these legends and traditions,

      I should answer, I should tell you,

      "In the bird's-nests of the forest,

      In the lodges of the beaver,

      In the hoof-prints of the bison,

      In the eyry of the eagle!

       "All the wild-fowl sang them to him,

      In the moorlands and the fen-lands,

      In the melancholy marshes;

      Chetowaik, the plover, sang them,

      Mahng, the loon, the wild-goose, Wawa,

      The blue heron, the Shuh-shuh-gah,

      And the grouse, the Mushkodasa!"

       If still further you should ask me,

      Saying, "Who was Nawadaha?

      Tell us of this Nawadaha,"

      I should answer your inquiries

      Straightway in such words as follow.

       "In the vale of Tawasentha,

      In the green and silent valley,

      By the pleasant water-courses,

      Dwelt the singer Nawadaha.

      Round about the Indian village

      Spread the meadows and the corn-fields,

      And beyond them stood the forest,

      Stood the groves of singing pine-trees,

      Green in Summer, white in Winter,

      Ever sighing, ever singing.

       "And the pleasant water-courses,

      You could trace them through the valley,

      By the rushing in the Spring-time,

      By the alders in the Summer,

      By the white fog in the Autumn,

      By the black line in the Winter;

      And beside them dwelt the singer,

      In the vale of Tawasentha,

      In the green and silent valley.

       "There he sang of Hiawatha,

      Sang the Song of Hiawatha,

      Sang his wondrous birth and being,

      How he prayed and how he fasted,

      How he lived, and toiled, and suffered,

      That the tribes of men might prosper,

      That he might advance his people!"

       Ye who love the haunts of Nature,

      Love the sunshine of the meadow,

      Love the shadow of the forest,

      Love the wind among the branches,

      And the rain-shower and the snow-storm,

      And the rushing of great rivers

      Through their palisades of pine-trees,

      And the thunder in the mountains,

      Whose innumerable echoes

      Flap like eagles in their eyries;—

      Listen to these wild traditions,

      To this


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