爱尔兰 希尼 Seamus Heaney  爱尔兰   (1939~2013)
警察来访
Digging
玩耍的方式
Mid-Term Break
Personal Helicon
Drinking water
Sunlight
Follower
Strange Fruit
fishnet
Song
山楂灯
smithy
铁路儿童
goodnight
distance
Rain
horn
mama
结婚日
一九六九年夏天
The Otter
eyeshot
非法分子
Multiple poems at a time
outland poetry
The Grauballe Man
The Grauballe Man

The Grauballe Man

   Seamus Heaney

As if he had been poured
in tar, he lies
on a pillow of turf
and seems to weep

the black river of himself.
The grain of his wrists
is like bog oak,
the ball of his heel

like a basalt egg.
His instep has shrunk
cold as a swan’s foot
or a wet swamp root.

His hips are the ridge
and purse of a mussel,
his spine an eel arrested
under a glisten of mud.

The head lifts,
the chin is a visor
raised above the vent
of his slashed throat

that has tanned and toughened.
The cured wound
opens inwards to a dark
elderberry place.

Who will say ‘corpse’
to his vivid cast?
Who will say ‘body’
to his opaque repose?

And his rusted hair,
a mat unlikely
as a foetus’s.
I first saw his twisted face

in a photograph,
a head and shoulder
out of the peat,
bruised like a forceps baby,

but now he lies
perfected in my memory,
down to the red horn
of his nails,

hung in the scales
with beauty and atrocity:
with the Dying Gaul
too strictly compassed

on his shield,
with the actual weight
of each hooded victim,
slashed and dumped.

  
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