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  • Текст песни Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 14 - Picture-Writing

    Исполнитель: Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
    Название песни: 14 - Picture-Writing
    Дата добавления: 04.12.2020 | 05:06:02
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    На этой странице находится текст песни Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - 14 - Picture-Writing, а также перевод песни и видео или клип.
    Picture-Writing

    In those days said Hiawatha,

    "Lo! how all things fade and perish!

    From the memory of the old men

    Pass away the great traditions,

    The achievements of the warriors,

    The adventures of the hunters,

    All the wisdom of the Medas,

    All the craft of the Wabenos,

    All the marvellous dreams and visions

    Of the Jossakeeds, the Prophets!

    "Great men die and are forgotten,

    Wise men speak; their words of wisdom

    Perish in the ears that hear them,

    Do not reach the generations

    That, as yet unborn, are waiting

    In the great, mysterious darkness

    Of the speechless days that shall be!

    "On the grave-posts of our fathers

    Are no signs, no figures painted;

    Who are in those graves we know not,

    Only know they are our fathers.

    Of what kith they are and kindred,

    From what old, ancestral Totem,

    Be it Eagle, Bear, or Beaver,

    They descended, this we know not,

    Only know they are our fathers.

    "Face to face we speak together,

    But we cannot speak when absent,

    Cannot send our voices from us

    To the friends that dwell afar off;

    Cannot send a secret message,

    But the bearer learns our secret,

    May pervert it, may betray it,

    May reveal it unto others."

    Thus said Hiawatha, walking

    In the solitary forest,

    Pondering, musing in the forest,

    On the welfare of his people.

    From his pouch he took his colors,

    Took his paints of different colors,

    On the smooth bark of a birch-tree

    Painted many shapes and figures,

    Wonderful and mystic figures,

    And each figure had a meaning,

    Each some word or thought suggested.

    Gitche Manito the Mighty,

    He, the Master of Life, was painted

    As an egg, with points projecting

    To the four winds of the heavens.

    Everywhere is the Great Spirit,

    Was the meaning of this symbol.

    Gitche Manito the Mighty,

    He the dreadful Spirit of Evil,

    As a serpent was depicted,

    As Kenabeek, the great serpent.

    Very crafty, very cunning,

    Is the creeping Spirit of Evil,

    Was the meaning of this symbol.

    Life and Death he drew as circles,

    Life was white, but Death was darkened;

    Sun and moon and stars he painted,

    Man and beast, and fish and reptile,

    Forests, mountains, lakes, and rivers.

    For the earth he drew a straight line,

    For the sky a bow above it;

    White the space between for daytime,

    Filled with little stars for night-time;

    On the left a point for sunrise,

    On the right a point for sunset,

    On the top a point for noontide,

    And for rain and cloudy weather

    Waving lines descending from it.

    Footprints pointing towards a wigwam

    Were a sign of invitation,

    Were a sign of guests assembling;

    Bloody hands with palms uplifted

    Were a symbol of destruction,

    Were a hostile sign and symbol.
    All these things did Hiawatha

    Show unto his wondering people,

    And interpreted their meaning,

    And he said: "Behold, your grave-posts

    Have no mark, no sign, nor symbol,

    Go and paint them all with figures;

    Each one with its household symbol,

    With its own ancestral Totem;

    So that those who follow after

    May distinguish them and know them."

    And they painted on the grave-posts

    On the graves yet unforgotten,

    Each his own ancestral Totem,

    Each the symbol of his household;

    Figures of the Bear and Reindeer,

    Of the Turtle, Crane, and Beaver,

    Each inverted as a token

    That the owner was departed,

    That the chief who bore the symbol

    Lay beneath in dust and ashes.

    And the Jossakeeds, the Prophets,

    The Wabenos, the Magicians,

    And the Medicine-men, the Medas,

    Painted upon bark and deer-skin

    Figures for the songs they chanted,

    For each song a separate symbol,

    Figures mystical and awful,

    Figures strange and brightly colored;

    And each figure had its meaning,

    Each some magic song suggested.

    The Great Spirit, the Creator,

    Flashing light through all the heaven;

    The Great Serpent, the Kenabeek,

    With his bloody crest erected,

    Creeping, looking into heaven;

    In the sky the sun, that listens,

    And the moon eclipsed and dying;

    Owl and eagle, crane and hen-hawk,

    And the cormorant, bird of magic;

    Headless men, that walk the heavens,

    Bodies lying pierced with arrows,

    Bloody hands of death uplifted,

    Flags on graves, and great war-captains

    Grasping both the earth and heaven!

    Such as these the shapes they painted

    On the birch-bark and the deer-skin;

    Songs of war and songs of hunting,

    Songs of medicine and of magic,

    All were written in these figures,

    For each figure had its meaning,

    Each its separate song recorded.

    Nor forgotten was the Love-Song,

    The most subtle of all medicines,

    The most potent spell of magic,

    Dangerous more than war or hunting!

    Thus the Love-Song was recorded,

    Symbol and interpretation.

    First a human figure standing,

    Painted in the brightest scarlet;

    `T Is the lover, the musician,

    And the meaning is, "My painting

    Makes me powerful over others."

    Then the figure seated, singing,

    Playing on a drum of magic,

    And the interpretation, "Listen!

    `T Is my voice you hear, my singing!"

    Then the same red figure seated

    In the shelter of a wigwam,

    And the meaning of the symbol,

    "I will come and sit beside you

    In the mystery of my passion!"

    Then two figures, man and woman,

    Standing hand in hand together

    With their hands so clasped together

    That they seemed in one united,

    And the words thus represented

    Are, "I see your heart within you,

    And your cheeks are red with blushes!"

    Next the maiden on an island,

    In the centre of an Island;

    And the song this shape suggested

    Was, "Though you were at a distance,

    Were upon some far-off island,

    Such the spell I cast upon you,

    Such the magic power of passion,

    I could straightway draw you to me!"

    Then the figure of the maiden

    Sleeping, and the lover near her,

    Whispering to her in her slumbers,

    Saying, "Though you were far from me

    In the land of Sleep and Silence,

    Still the voice of love would reach you!"

    And the last of all the figures

    Was a heart within a circle,

    Drawn within a magic circle;

    And the image had this meaning:

    "Naked lies your heart before me,

    To your naked heart I whisper!"
    Thus it was that Hiawatha,

    In his wisdom, taught the people

    All the mysteries of painting,

    All the art of Picture-Writing,

    On the smooth bark of the birch-tree,

    On the white skin of the reindeer,

    On the grave-posts of the village.
    Великий Дух, Творец,

    Вспыхивающий свет через все небеса;

    Великий Змей, Кенабик,

    С возведенным кровавым гребнем,

    Ползучая, смотрящая в небеса;

    В небе солнце слушает,

    И луна затмила и умирала;

    Сова и орел, журавль и ястреб,

    И баклан, волшебная птица;

    Безголовые люди, которые ходят по небу,

    Тела лежат пронзенные стрелами,

    Кровавые руки смерти подняты,

    Флаги на могилах и великие военачальники

    Захватывая и землю, и небо!

    Такие, как эти формы, которые они нарисовали

    На бересте и оленьей шкуре;

    Песни войны и песни охоты,

    Песни о медицине и магии,

    Все было написано этими цифрами,

    Для каждой цифры было свое значение,

    Каждая отдельная песня записана.

    Не забыта и песня о любви,

    Самое тонкое из всех лекарств,

    Сильнейшее заклинание магии,

    Опаснее войны или охоты!

    Так была записана песня о любви,

    Символ и толкование.

    Сначала стоит человеческая фигура,

    Раскрашен в самый яркий алый цвет;

    `T Это любовник, музыкант,

    А смысл такой: "Моя картина

    Делает меня сильнее других ".

    Затем фигура сидит, поет,

    Играя на волшебном барабане,

    И толкование: «Слушай!

    `T Ты слышишь мой голос, мое пение!"

    Затем сидит та же красная фигура

    В укрытии вигвама,

    И значение символа,

    "Я приду и сяду рядом с тобой

    В тайне моей страсти! "

    Затем две фигуры, мужчина и женщина,

    Стоя рука об руку вместе

    Их руки так сцеплены вместе

    Что они казались единым целым,

    И слова, представленные таким образом

    "Я вижу твое сердце внутри тебя,

    А щеки у тебя красные от румян! "

    Рядом девушка на острове,

    В центре острова;

    И песня, предложенная этой формой

    Было: "Хотя ты был на расстоянии,

    Были на каком-то далеком острове,

    Такое заклинание я наложил на тебя,

    Такая волшебная сила страсти,

    Я мог бы сразу привлечь тебя к себе! "

    Затем фигура девушки

    Спит, и любовник рядом с ней,

    Шепчет ей во сне,

    Сказать: "Хотя ты был далеко от меня

    В стране сна и тишины,

    Тем не менее, голос любви дойдет до вас! "

    И последняя из всех цифр

    Было сердце в круге,

    Нарисовано в магическом круге;

    И изображение имело такое значение:

    «Обнаженная лежит передо мной твое сердце,

    Я шепчу твоему обнаженному сердцу! "
    Так была эта Гайавата,

    Своей мудростью научил народ

    Все тайны живописи,

    Все искусство рисования,

    На гладкой коре березки,

    На белой шкуре оленя,

    На могильных столбах села.

    Смотрите также:

    Все тексты Henry Wadsworth Longfellow >>>

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