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      學(xué)習(xí)啦 > 學(xué)習(xí)英語 > 英語閱讀 > 英語詩歌 > 超級經(jīng)典的英文詩歌欣賞

      超級經(jīng)典的英文詩歌欣賞

      時間: 韋彥867 分享

      超級經(jīng)典的英文詩歌欣賞

        詩歌是人類的語言瑰寶,可以提高人的精神修養(yǎng)、藝術(shù)修養(yǎng)和語言修養(yǎng)。學(xué)習(xí)啦小編整理了超級經(jīng)典的英文詩歌,歡迎閱讀!

        超級經(jīng)典的英文詩歌篇一

        Stone Bird

        by Pattiann Rogers

        I remember you. You‘re the one

        who lifted your ancient bones

        of fossil rock, pulled yourself free

        of the strata like a plaster figure

        rising from its own mold, became

        flesh and feather, took wing,

        arrested the sky.

        You‘re the one who, though marble,

        floated as beautifully as a white

        blossom on the pond all summer,

        who, though skeletal and particled

        like winter, glimmered as solid as a bird

        of cut crystal in the icy trees.

        You are redbird—sandstone

        wings and agate eyes—at dusk.

        You are greybird—polished granite

        and pearl eyes—just before dawn,

        midnight bird with a reflective

        vacancy of heart like a mirror

        of pure obsidian.

        You‘re the one who flew down

        to that river from the heavens,

        as if your form alone were the only

        holy message needed. You were alabaster

        then in the noonday sun.

        Once I saw you rise without rising

        from your prison pedestal

        in the garden beneath the lime tree.

        At that moment your ghost

        in its haunting permeated every

        regality of the forest with light,

        reigned with disdain in thin air

        above the mountain, sank in union

        with the crosswinds of the sea.

        I remember you. You‘re the one

        who entered in through my death

        as if it were an open window

        and you were the sound of the serenade

        being sung outside for me, the words

        of which, I know now, are of freedom

        cast in stone forever.

        超級經(jīng)典的英文詩歌篇二

        Such a Good Dancer

        by Douglas Goetsch

        Desperate to be part of the night,

        we jerked like a bunch of spazzes

        to that screaming eunuch, Michael Jackson.

        Randi Muelbach kept remarking

        You're such a good dancer!

        drawing closer, letting me grab her

        saggy ass. My boogying was a sort

        of two-step hip gyration while holding

        my plastic cup of grain alcohol level.

        I had perfected the arm that remained still,

        kept it out like a bird feeder. Randi

        glued elbows to waist and swung

        forearms, hands and hips furiously.

        She was sweating something fierce.

        Her perfume was foul swamp flowers.

        From the futon on her floor I watched

        her pull her dress over her head.

        Fat and sadly flat-chested,

        legs already bluing with veins, thick

        knees knocked in, the way the back

        wheels of a Volkswagen buckle with a load.

        Disgusted with myself——two years

        in college and still a virgin——I would

        stick my dick in a girl and end that.

        As she stepped out of her underwear

        I said, After tonight I don't want us

        to ever talk again. OK?

        That's what I said.

        She looked down at me and said

        Sure, like it was nothing.

        Through the cinderblock walls

        I could hear that whole dorm writhing

        on a Saturday night. Even Kim Putnam,

        the born again who wore only long skirts

        and was losing her hair, was getting banged

        and moaning like a wild woman.

        Sometimes it sounded like a crowd

        ooh-ing and ahh-ing at a car accident;

        sometimes I heard the night as one fuck

        xeroxed and traveling room to room

        like a rumor, or luck——good or bad,

        either way, I wriggled and fought

        on top of Randi Muelbach,

        who kept whispering in my ear

        Such a good dancer.

        超級經(jīng)典的英文詩歌篇三

        Summer Holiday

        by Robinson Jeffers

        When the sun shouts and people abound

        One thinks there were the ages of stone and the age of

        bronze

        And the iron age; iron the unstable metal;

        Steel made of iron, unstable as his mother; the tow-

        ered-up cities

        Will be stains of rust on mounds of plaster.

        Roots will not pierce the heaps for a time, kind rains

        will cure them,

        Then nothing will remain of the iron age

        And all these people but a thigh-bone or so, a poem

        Stuck in the world's thought, splinters of glass

        In the rubbish dumps, a concrete dam far off in the

        mountain……

        超級經(jīng)典的英文詩歌篇四

        Suicide of a Moderate Dictator

        by Elizabeth Bishop

        This is a day when truths will out, perhaps;

        leak from the dangling telephone earphones

        sapping the festooned switchboards' strength;

        fall from the windows, blow from off the sills,

        —the vague, slight unremarkable contents

        of emptying ash-trays; rub off on our fingers

        like ink from the un-proof-read newspapers,

        crocking the way the unfocused photographs

        of crooked faces do that soil our coats,

        our tropical-wight coats, like slapped-at moths.

        Today's a day when those who work

        are idling. Those who played must work

        and hurry, too, to get it downe,

        with little dignity or none.

        The newspapers are sold; the kiosk shutters

        crash down. But anyway, in the night

        the headlines wrote themselves, see, on the streets

        and sidewalks everywhere; a sediment's splashed

        even to the first floors of apartment houses.

        This is a day that's beautiful as well,

        warm and clear. At seven o'clock I saw

        the dogs being walked along the famous beach

        as usual, in a shiny gray-green dawn,

        leaving their paw prints draining in the wet.

        The line of breakers was steady and the pinkish,

        segmented rainbow steadily hung above it.

        At eight, two little boys were flying kites.

        
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