ruslan i lyudmila

entry8 galeri
    5.
  1. --spoiler--
    CANTO THE FOURTH
    Each morning as I wake from slumber
    To God I tender heartfelt praise
    That of magicians nowadays
    There is a marked decrease in number,
    And that they render now far less
    Precarious our marriages.
    In fact, their spells need not be dreaded
    By those of us but newly wedded.
    But there is witchery and guile,
    Blue eyes, a tender voice, a smile,
    A dimpled cheek, and all the rest,
    Which to avoid, I find, is best.
    The honeyed poison they exude
    Intoxicates; I dread, I fear them.
    Like me beware of staying near them,
    Embrace repose and quietude.

    O wondrous genius of rhyme,
    O bard of love and love's sweet dreaming,
    You who portray the sly and scheming
    Dwellers of hell and realms divine,
    Of this inconstant Muse of mine
    The confidant and keeper faithful!
    Forgive me, Northern Orpheus, do,
    For recklessly presuming to
    Fly after you in my tale playful
    And catching in a most quaint lie
    Your wayward lyre....

    My good friends, I
    Know that you heard about the evil
    Old wretch, the hapless sinner who
    In days of yore sold to the devil
    His own soul and his daughters' too;
    Of how through charity and fasting
    And faith and prayer sincere, long-lasting
    And penitence without complaint
    He found a patron in a saint;
    How, when the hour struck, he died,
    How his twelve daughters slept, enchanted.
    Stirred were we, yes, and terrified
    By visions strangely darkness-mantled,
    By Heaven's wrath, the Arch-fiend's fury,
    The sinner's torments. With enduring
    Delight and joy, let us confess,
    We eyed the chaste maids' loveliness,
    W^alked with them, sad of heart and weeping,
    Around the castle's toothy wall,
    Or stayed beside them, vigil keeping
    O'er their calm sleep, their peaceful thrall.
    We called upon Vadim, exhorted
    Him to come soon, and when the blest,
    The holy ones awoke, escorted
    Them to their father's place of rest.
    Yet had we been deceived and dare I
    The truth speak and misgiving bury?...

    Ratmir goads his steed on, his way
    Toward southern plains impatient making,
    Filled with the hope of overtaking
    Ludmila 'fore the end of day....
    The crimson skies turn slowly darker
    And vainly with his gaze he strains
    To pierce the haze that cloaks the plains
    And sleepy stream. A last ray sparkles
    Above the wood and paints it gold.

    By nighttime's dark, thick veil enfolded,
    Our knight rides past black, jutting boulders...
    Oh, for a place to sleep!... Behold!-
    A vale before him lies, an old
    Walled castle perching high above it
    Upon a cliff top; shadow-covered,
    At every corner turrets show.
    With all a swan's glide, smooth and slov
    Along the wall there walks a maiden;
    By twilight's faint ray lit is she,
    And on the soft air dreamily
    Her song floats, in the distance fading:

    "Night cloaks the lea; from far away
    The chilling winds of ocean carry.
    Come, youthful roamer, do not tarry;
    Take shelter in our castle, pray!

    "The nights in languid calm we spend,
    The days in feasts and merrymaking.
    Come, youthful wanderer, attend
    This fete of ours, to joy awaking.

    "We many are and beauties all;
    Our lips are soft, our speeches tender.
    Come, youthful wanderer, surrender
    And heed our joyous, secret call!

    "For thee, O knight, at birth of morning
    A farewell cup of wine we'll fill.
    Heed thou our summons with a will,
    Our gentle plea refrain from scorning.

    "Night cloaks the lea, from far away
    The chilling winds of ocean carry.
    Come, youthful roamer, do not tarry,
    Take shelter in our castle, pray!"

    He hears her in this manner greet him
    And hastens, tempted, to the gate
    Where other fair maids, smiling, wait,
    A throng of them come out to meet him
    Their eyes to his face glued, they seek
    To make him welcome. How entrancing
    Their speeches are, .the words they speak!...

    Two of them lead away his prancer.
    The castle enters he; en masse
    The fair young hermits follow. As
    One of his winged helm relieves him,
    Another 'thout his armour leaves him,
    A third removes his sword and shield.
    The garb of warfare's bound to yield
    To flimsier dress. But first the splendours
    Of a true Russian bath wait for
    The wayworn youth. In torrents endless
    We see the steaming water pour
    Into the silver tubs; it eddies
    And swdrls; swift fountains upward send
    Sprays that the warm air coolness lend,
    A breezy freshness; all's made ready
    To please and gratify the khan.
    Rich are the rugs that he lies on!
    Transparent wisps of steam curl o'er him;
    The maids, all half-nude loveliness,
    Around him crowd, a mute caress
    Hid in their downcast eyes, and for him
    Care with a wordless tenderness.
    Above him one waves birch twigs that
    Send off sweet scents, another, at
    His side stays put and waxes busy,
    The juice of spring's fresh roses using
    To cool his weary legs and arms
    And drown in aromatic balms
    His curly locks. Ratmir, enraptured,
    Forgets Ludmila, long since captured,
    And her once dreamt-of, longed-for charms.
    With languor filled and with desire,
    His roving eye agleam, he burns,
    All passion, and, his heart afire,
    For love and its fulfilment yearns.

    But now7 the baths he leaves, and, wearing
    Rich velvets, to a feast sits down,
    With the young sirens gladly sharing
    The wonders of the board. I own
    I am no Homer to be singing
    In lofty verse (not mine his pen
    The feasts of Grecian fighting men
    And their great goblets' merry ringing.
    No, like Parny I would that my
    Imprudent lyre might tender sigh
    O'er love's sweet kiss and sing the praises
    Of nude forms dimmed by night's soft hazes!..
    Lit by the moon the castle is;
    I see a chamber where, reclining
    Upon a couch, Ratmir sleeps, pining
    For love in dreamy languor. His
    Once pallid brow and cheeks are flaming,
    His lips, half-open, are aglow
    And seem to be in secret claiming
    Another's lips; he heaves a low,
    A moan-like, lingering sigh, and, seizing
    The quilt, with quickened, fevered breathing,
    To his breast presses it.... The door
    Squeaks open, moon beams streak the floor,
    A maid steals in.... Awake, Ratmir!
    Of sleep asunder tear the meshes!
    Night's every moment is too precious,
    Pray waste them not!... The maid draws near
    The sleeping knight with softest tread....
    His face, on hot down pillowed, blazes,
    The silk quilt's slipped from off the bed.
    She holds her breath and at him gazes,
    Entranced by what she sees, by this
    Limp, sensuous form now left 'thout cover:
    She's sanctimonious Artemis
    Beside her youthful shepherd lover.
    Then, gracefully and lightly she
    Puts on the couch a rounded knee,
    And o'er the lucky sleeper leaning,
    Sighs deeply, to his breathing listens,
    And rouses him from sensuous dreaming
    With passionate and fiery kisses....

    But stay! Beneath my slowing fingers
    The virgin lyre now turns still,
    My shy voice weaker grows—we will
    Leave young Ratmir, I dare not sing of
    Him more or in this vein go on:
    'Tis time, friends, to recall Ruslan,
    That stalwart staunch as he is fearless,
    That lover true, that gallant peerless.
    Exhausted by the mighty fray,
    Beneath the Head he now lies sleeping,
    But early morning's shining ray
    Already o'er the sky comes creeping,
    And turns the Head's thick locks in play
    To molten gold. Our young knight, blinking,
    So sharp's the light, from earthen bed
    Springs quickly up, and in a twinkling
    By his swift steed is onward sped.

    The days run on, the fields turn yellow,
    The leaves drop from the trees' bared crowns;
    The autumn wind's fierce whistling drow
    The winged songsters' music mellow.
    The nude brown hills are daily haunted
    By heavy fogs, for winter's near.
    But our young gallant knows no fear
    And, bv its icv breath undaunted,
    Heads northward. Daily now he meets
    Fresh barriers: now bravely fights he
    Another knight, now beats a mighty
    And awesome giant, now defeats
    Л crafty witch. One night he even
    As in a dream saw mermaids sit
    On swaying, mist-clothed branches lit
    By silver moonbeams. Closer driven,
    He watched them, full of wonder. They
    Said ne'er a word, but smiling slyly,
    Tried to enchant and to beguile him.
    By kind fate shielded, fast away
    The stalwart rode: they could not win him,
    Desire soundly slept within him;
    To find Ludmila was his goal:
    For he was hers-hers, heart and soul.

    Meanwhile, kept from the dwarfs advances
    Safe by the hat that she has on,
    Annoyed by no unwanted glances,
    For thus arrayed, she's seen by none,
    What does Ludmila?... Silent, teary,
    She walks the garden paths alone
    And pines for Prince Ruslan, her dearly
    Beloved spouse; then, to her home
    In far-off Kiev her thoughts flying,
    She brightens and, no longer sighing,
    Embraces father, brothers, sees
    Her youthful playmates in her dreams
    And her old nannies; separation
    And thralldom suddenly forgot,
    She's back among them all; but not
    For long does her imagination
    Bear her away with it, and soon
    Anew is she immersed in gloom....
    As for the lovesick villain's minions,
    His orders wordless they obey
    And search the castle, the pavilions.
    The grounds 'thout respite night and day.
    They shout, they rush about insanely,
    But all, let us admit it, vainly,
    For being an accomplished tease,
    The maid provoked them without cease.
    Before them suddenly appearing,
    She'd call out happily, "Yoo-hoo!"

    And spotting her as well as hearing
    Her voice, the slaves, a motley crew,
    Would run to catch her only to
    Seize upon empty air; her tinkling
    Laugh sounded as the cap she drew
    Down on her head, and in a twinkling
    Was gone.... Where she had passed, they knew,
    For signs of it, however fleeting,
    Were to be seen: from off a tree
    Ripe fruit might vanish, grass might be
    Left crushed and limp; that she'd been eating
    Or drinking or else resting there
    They could not help but be aware.
    A cedar or a birch provided
    The maid with shelter; on a bough
    She'd perch and try to doze, but how
    Could sleep come to a maiden blinded
    By endless tears, her heart grief-torn!...
    Against a tree trunk weakly leaning,
    She might sigh wearily and yawn
    And fall a prey to fitful dreaming....
    But when the new-born light of day
    Night's shadows drove away, and pearly
    The skies turned, 'neath the fall's cool spray
    She'd wash. The dwarf, one morning early,
    Saw, upward forced by hands unseen,
    The water play, then join the stream....
    Till darkness had anew descended
    And moonbeams the lone gardens combed,
    Of spirit sore, by none attended,
    Ludmila its far reaches roamed.
    At times the echoes would be bringing
    Her sweet voice closer, softly singing.
    Threads from a Persian shawl, a leaf
    Chewed through, a tear-stained handkerchief,
    A garland by her quick hands made
    Might be found lying in a glade.

    His passion and frustration mounting.
    All else save his piqued pride discountins
    The dwarf has but a single thought:
    That the young princess must be caught.
    Thus did famed Lemnos' hobbling smith,
    Accepting the connubial wreath
    From the unrivaled Aphrodite,
    Decide to snare her charms, delighting
    The laughing gods by showing them
    Of love the cunning stratagem.

    One day the maid sat bored and weary
    Inside a marble summer-house
    And gazed abstracted through the boughs
    Of trees by wind swayed at the cheery,
    Bloom-covered meadow just beyond.
    "My love!" she hears. Ruslan! The sound
    Of his dear voice. He's there, in person:
    His face, his form; but dull of eye
    And pale is he, he bleeds, his thigh
    Is gashed: a wound, a bad one. "Mercy!
    Ruslan, 'tis you!" And with a cry
    She flies to him, and, heartsore, shaking
    In tears, says to him, her voice breaking:
    "Ruslan, my husband, you are here
    And wounded, bleeding.... Oh, my dear!"
    Her arms go round him.... God in Heaven!
    What horror's this! She cannot stir,
    She's trapped, a net enmeshes her!...
    The cap falls off. Who is her craven
    And foul pursuer? Cold of limb,
    She hears: "She's mine!" Her gaze grows dim....
    The dwarf, none other! Quite defenseless
    Is she again; she sees his face
    And moans, but by the good Lord's grace
    Dreams now enfold her, she falls senseless.

    Poor child! What sight is there more chilling,
    More certain to provoke our rage!
    His brazen hand the puny mage
    Lays on the charms of young Ludmila.
    Is he-foul thought!-to taste of bliss?
    But hark! A horn sounds. What means this?
    A challenge to him? Yes! The midget's....
    Face shows cold fear. He quails, he fidgets...
    A louder blare! Back on her head
    The magic cap he puts, and, paling,
    Is off, his beard behind him trailing,
    To meet the fate that lies ahead.

    --spoiler--
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