简介
首页

The Works of Thomas Hood

ODE TO ST. SWITHIN.
关灯
护眼
字体:
上一章    回目录 下一章

“the rain it raineth every day.”

the dawn is overcast, the morning low’rs,

on ev’ry window-frame hang beaded damps

like rows of small illumination lamps,

to celebrate the jubilee of show’rs!

a constant sprinkle patters from all leaves,

the very dryads are not dry, but soppers,

and from the houses’ eaves

tumble eaves-droppers.

the hundred clerks that live along the street,

bondsmen to mercantile and city schemers,

with squashing, sloshing, and galoching feet,

go paddling, paddling, through the wet, like steamers,

each hurrying to earn the daily stipend—

umbrellas pass of every shade of green,

and now and then a crimson one is seen,

like an umbrella ripen’d.

[pg 21]

over the way a waggon

stand with six smoking horses, shrinking, blinking,

while in the george and dragon

the man is keeping himself dry—and drinking!

the butcher’s boy skulks underneath his tray,

hats shine—shoes don’t—and down droop collars,

and one blue parasol cries all the way

to school, in company with four small scholars!

pride and humility.

unhappy is the man to-day who rides,

making his journey sloppier, not shorter;

aye, there they go, a dozen of outsides,

performing on “a stage with real water!”

a dripping pauper crawls along the way,

the only real willing out-of-doorer

and says, or seems to say,

“well, i am poor enough—but here’s a pourer!”

[pg 22]

the scene in water colours thus i paint,

is your own festival, you sloppy saint!

mother of all the family of rainers!

saint of the soakers!

making all people croakers,

like frogs in swampy marshes, and complainers!

and why you mizzle forty days together,

giving the earth your water-soup to sup,

i marvel—why such wet, mysterious weather?

i wish you’d clear it up!

why cast such cruel dampers

on pretty pic nics, and against all wishes

set the cold ducks a-swimming in the hampers,

and volunteer, unask’d, to wash the dishes?

why drive the nymphs from the selected spot,

to cling like lady-birds around a tree—

why spoil a gipsy party at their tea,

by throwing your cold water upon hot?

cannot a rural maiden, or a man,

seek hornsey-wood by invitation, sipping

their green with pan,

but souse you come, and show their pan all dripping!

why upon snow-white table-cloths and sheets,

that do not wait, or want a second washing,

come squashing?

why task yourself to lay the dust in streets,

as if there were no water-cart contractors,

no pot-boys spilling beer, no shop-boys ruddy

spooning out puddles muddy,

milkmaids, and other slopping benefactors!

a queen you are, raining in your own right,

yet oh! how little flatter’d by report!

[pg 23]

even by those that seek the court,

pelted with every term of spleen and spite.

folks rail and swear at you in every place;

they say you are a creature of no bowel;

they say you’re always washing nature’s face,

and that you then supply her,

with nothing drier,

than some old wringing cloud by way of towel!

the whole town wants you duck’d, just as you duck it,

they wish you on your own mud porridge supper’d,

they hope that you may kick your own big bucket,

or in your water-butt go sous! heels up’ard!

they are, in short, so weary of your drizzle,

they’d spill the water in your veins to stop it—

be warn’d! you are too partial to a mizzle—

pray drop it!

上一章    回目录 下一章
阅读记录 书签 书架 返回顶部