Читаем The Adventures of Tom Bombadil полностью

I walked by the sea, and there came to me,as a star-beam on the wet sand,a white shell like a sea-bell;trembling it lay in my wet hand.In my fingers shaken I heard wakena ding within, by a harbour bara buoy swinging, a call ringingover endless seas, faint now and far.Then I saw a boat silently floaton the night-tide, empty and grey.'It is later than late! Why do we wait?'I leapt in and cried: 'Bear me away!'It bore me away, wetted with spray,wrapped in a mist, wound in a sleep,to a forgotten strand in a strange land.In the twilight beyond the deepI heard a sea-bell swing in the swell,dinging, dinging, and the breakers roaron the hidden teeth of a perilous reef;and at last I came to a long shore.White it glimmered, and the sea simmeredwith star-mirrors in a silver net;cliffs of stone pale as ruel-bonein the moon-foam were gleaming wet.Glittering sand slid through my hand,dust of pearl and jewel-grist,trumpets of opal, roses of coral,flutes of green and amethyst.But under cliff-eaves there were glooming caves,weed-curtained, dark and grey;a cold air stirred in my hair,and the light waned, as I hurried away.Down from a hill ran a green rill;its water I drank to my heart's ease.Up its fountain-stair to a country fairof ever-eve I came, far from the seas,climbing into meadows of fluttering shadows:flowers lay there like fallen stars,and on a blue pool, glassy and cool,like floating moons the nenuphars.Alders were sleeping, and willows weepingby a slow river of rippling weeds;gladdon-swords guarded the fords,and green spears, and arrow-reeds.There was echo of song all the evening longdown in the valley; many a thingrunning to and fro: hares white as snow,voles out of holes; moths on the wingwith lantern-eyes; in quiet surprisebrocks were staring out of dark doors.I heard dancing there, music in the air,feet going quick on the green floors.But whenever I came it was ever the same:the feet fled, and all was still;never a greeting, only the fleetingpipes, voices, horns on the hill.Of river-leaves and the rush-sheavesI made me a mantle of jewel-green,a tall wand to hold, and a flag of gold;my eyes shone like the star-sheen.With flowers crowned I stood on a mound,and shrill as a call at cock-crowproudly I cried: 'Why do you hide?Why do none speak, wherever I go?Here now I stand, king of this land,with gladdon-sword and reed-mace.Answer my call! Come forth all!Speak to me words! Show me a face!'Black came a cloud as a night-shroud.Like a dark mole groping I went,to the ground falling, on my hands crawlingwith eyes blind and my back bent.I crept to a wood: silent it stoodin its dead leaves, bare were its boughs.There must I sit, wandering in wit,while owls snored in their hollow house.For a year and a day there must I stay:beetles were tapping in the rotten trees,spiders were weaving, in the mould heavingpuffballs loomed about my knees.At last there came light in my long night,and I saw my hair hanging grey.'Bent though I be, I must find the sea!I have lost myself, and I know not the way,but let me be gone!' Then I stumbled on;like a hunting bat shadow was over me;in my ears dinned a withering wind,and with ragged briars I tried to cover me.My hands were torn and my knees worn,and years were heavy upon my back,when the rain in my face took a salt taste,and I smelled the smell of sea-wrack.Birds came sailing, mewing, wailing;I heard voices in cold caves,seals barking, and rocks snarling,and in spout-holes the gulping of waves.Winter came fast; into a mist I passed,to land's end my years I bore;snow was in the air, ice in my hair,darkness was lying on the last shore.There still afloat waited the boat,in the tide lifting, its prow tossing.Weary I lay, as it bore me away,the waves climbing, the seas crossing,passing old hulls clustered with gullsand great ships laden with light,coming to haven, dark as a raven,silent as snow, deep in the night.Houses were shuttered, wind round them muttered,roads were empty. I sat by a door,and where drizzling rain poured down a drainI cast away all that I bore:in my clutching hand some grains of sand,and a sea-shell silent and dead.Never will my ear that bell hear,never my feet that shore treadNever again, as in sad lane,in blind alley and in long streetragged I walk. To myself I talk;for still they speak not, men that I meet.
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Попаданцы / Фэнтези / Бояръ-Аниме