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lirik lagu ralph richardson - the rime of the ancient mariner

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it is an ancient mariner
and he stoppeth one of three
‘by thy long grey beard and glittering eye
now wherefore stopp’st thou me?

the bridegroom’s doors are opened wide
and i am next of kin;
the guests are met, the feast is set:
may’st hear the merry din.’

he holds him with his skinny hand
‘there was a ship,’ quoth he
‘hold off! unhand me, grey~beard loon!’
eftsoons his hand dropt he

he holds him with his glittering eye—
the wedding~guest stood still
and listens like a three years’ child:
the mariner hath his will

the wedding~guest sat on a stone:
he cannot choose but hear;
and thus spake on that ancient man
the bright~eyed mariner

‘the ship was cheered, the harbour cleared
merrily did we drop
below the kirk, below the hill
below the lighthouse top
the sun came up upon the left
out of the sea came he!
and he shone bright, and on the right
went down into the sea

higher and higher every day
till over the mast at noon—’
the wedding~guest here beat his breast
for he heard the loud bassoon

the bride hath paced into the hall
red as a rose is she;
nodding their heads before her goes
the merry minstrelsy

the wedding~guest he beat his breast
yet he cannot choose but hear;
and thus spake on that ancient man
the bright~eyed mariner

and now the storm~blast came, and he
was tyrannous and strong:
he struck with his o’ertaking wings
and chased us south along

with sloping masts and dipping prow
as who pursued with yell and blow
still treads the shadow of his foe
and forward bends his head
the ship drove fast, loud roared the blast
and southward aye we fled
and now there came both mist and snow
and it grew wondrous cold:
and ice, mast~high, came floating by
as green as emerald

and through the drifts the snowy clifts
did send a dismal sheen:
nor shapes of men nor beasts we ken—
the ice was all between

the ice was here, the ice was there
the ice was all around:
it cracked and growled, and roared and howled
like noises in a swound!

at length did cross an albatross
thorough the fog it came;
as if it had been a christian soul
we hailed it in god’s name

it ate the food it ne’er had eat
and round and round it flew
the ice did split with a thunder~fit;
the helmsman steered us through!

and a good south wind sprung up behind;
the albatross did follow
and every day, for food or play
came to the mariner’s hollo!
in mist or cloud, on mast or shroud
it perched for vespers nine;
whiles all the night, through fog~smoke white
glimmered the white moon~shine.’

‘god save thee, ancient mariner!
from the fiends, that plague thee thus!—
why look’st thou so?’—with my cross~bow
i shot the albatross

the sun now rose upon the right:
out of the sea came he
still hid in mist, and on the left
went down into the sea

and the good south wind still blew behind
but no sweet bird did follow
nor any day for food or play
came to the mariner’s hollo!

and i had done a h~llish thing
and it would work ’em woe:
for all averred, i had k!lled the bird
that made the breeze to blow
ah wretch! said they, the bird to slay
that made the breeze to blow!

nor dim nor red, like god’s own head
the glorious sun uprist:
then all averred, i had k!lled the bird
that brought the fog and mist
’twas right, said they, such birds to slay
that bring the fog and mist

the fair breeze blew, the white foam flew
the furrow followed free;
we were the first that ever burst
into that silent sea

down dropt the breeze, the sails dropt down
’twas sad as sad could be;
and we did speak only to break
the silence of the sea!

all in a hot and copper sky
the bl~~dy sun, at noon
right up above the mast did stand
no bigger than the moon

day after day, day after day
we stuck, nor breath nor motion;
as idle as a painted ship
upon a painted ocean

water, water, every where
and all the boards did shrink;
water, water, every where
nor any drop to drink

the very deep did rot: o christ!
that ever this should be!
yea, slimy things did crawl with legs
upon the slimy sea

about, about, in reel and rout
the death~fires danced at night;
the water, like a witch’s oils
burnt green, and blue and white

and some in dreams assurèd were
of the spirit that plagued us so;
nine fathom deep he had followed us
from the land of mist and snow

and every tongue, through utter drought
was withered at the root;
we could not speak, no more than if
we had been choked with soot

ah! well a~day! what evil looks
had i from old and young!
instead of the cross, the albatross
about my neck was hung

there passed a weary time. each throat
was parched, and glazed each eye
a weary time! a weary time!
how glazed each weary eye

when looking westward, i beheld
a something in the sky

at first it seemed a little speck
and then it seemed a mist;
it moved and moved, and took at last
a certain shape, i wist

a speck, a mist, a shape, i wist!
and still it neared and neared:
as if it dodged a water~sprite
it plunged and tacked and veered

with throats unslaked, with black lips baked
we could nor laugh nor wail;
through utter drought all dumb we stood!
i bit my arm, i sucked the blood
and cried, a sail! a sail!

with throats unslaked, with black lips baked
agape they heard me call:
gramercy! they for joy did grin
and all at once their breath drew in
as they were drinking all

see! see! (i cried) she tacks no more!
hither to work us weal;
without a breeze, without a tide
she steadies with upright keel!

the western wave was all a~flame
the day was well nigh done!
almost upon the western wave
rested the broad bright sun;
when that strange shape drove suddenly
betwixt us and the sun

and straight the sun was flecked with bars
(heaven’s mother send us grace!)
as if through a dungeon~grate he peered
with broad and burning face

alas! (thought i, and my heart beat loud)
how fast she nears and nears!
are those her sails that glance in the sun
like restless gossameres?

are those her ribs through which the sun
did peer, as through a grate?
and is that woman all her crew?
is that a death? and are there two?
is death that woman’s mate?

her lips were red, her looks were free
her locks were yellow as gold:
her skin was as white as leprosy
the night~mare life~in~death was she
who thicks man’s blood with cold

the naked hulk alongside came
and the twain were casting dice;
‘the game is done! i’ve won! i’ve won!’
quoth she, and whistles thrice

the sun’s rim dips; the stars rush out;
at one stride comes the dark;
with far~heard whisper, o’er the sea
off shot the spectre~bark

we listened and looked sideways up!
fear at my heart, as at a cup
my life~blood seemed to sip!
the stars were dim, and thick the night
the steersman’s face by his lamp gleamed white;
from the sails the dew did drip—
till clomb above the eastern bar
the h~rnèd moon, with one bright star
within the nether tip

one after one, by the star~dogged moon
too quick for groan or sigh
each turned his face with a ghastly pang
and cursed me with his eye

four times fifty living men
(and i heard nor sigh nor groan)
with heavy thump, a lifeless lump
they dropped down one by one

the souls did from their bodies fly,—
they fled to bliss or woe!
and every soul, it passed me by
like the whizz of my cross~bow!

‘i fear thee, ancient mariner!
i fear thy skinny hand!
and thou art long, and lank, and brown
as is the ribbed sea~sand

i fear thee and thy glittering eye
and thy skinny hand, so brown.’—
fear not, fear not, thou wedding~guest!
this body dropt not down

alone, alone, all, all alone
alone on a wide wide sea!
and never a saint took pity on
my soul in agony

the many men, so beautiful!
and they all dead did lie:
and a thousand thousand slimy things
lived on; and so did i

i looked upon the rotting sea
and drew my eyes away;
i looked upon the rotting deck
and there the dead men lay

i looked to heaven, and tried to pray;
but or ever a prayer had gusht
a wicked whisper came, and made
my heart as dry as dust

i closed my lids, and kept them close
and the b~lls like pulses beat;
for the sky and the sea, and the sea and the sky
lay dead like a load on my weary eye
and the dead were at my feet

the cold sweat melted from their limbs
nor rot nor reek did they:
the look with which they looked on me
had never passed away

an orphan’s curse would drag to h~ll
a spirit from on high;
but oh! more horrible than that
is the curse in a dead man’s eye!
seven days, seven nights, i saw that curse
and yet i could not die

the moving moon went up the sky
and no where did abide:
softly she was going up
and a star or two beside—

her beams bemocked the sultry main
like april h~~r~frost spread;
but where the ship’s huge shadow lay
the charmèd water burnt alway
a still and awful red

beyond the shadow of the ship
i watched the water~snakes:
they moved in tracks of shining white
and when they reared, the elfish light
fell off in h~~ry flakes

within the shadow of the ship
i watched their rich attire:
blue, glossy green, and velvet black
they coiled and swam; and every track
was a flash of golden fire

o happy living things! no tongue
their beauty might declare:
a spring of love gushed from my heart
and i blessed them unaware:
sure my kind saint took pity on me
and i blessed them unaware

the self~same moment i could pray;
and from my neck so free
the albatross fell off, and sank
like lead into the sea

oh sleep! it is a gentle thing
beloved from pole to pole!
to mary queen the praise be given!
she sent the gentle sleep from heaven
that slid into my soul

the silly buckets on the deck
that had so long remained
i dreamt that they were filled with dew;
and when i awoke, it rained

my lips were wet, my throat was cold
my garments all were dank;
sure i had drunken in my dreams
and still my body drank

i moved, and could not feel my limbs:
i was so light—almost
i thought that i had died in sleep
and was a blessed ghost

and soon i heard a roaring wind:
it did not come anear;
but with its sound it shook the sails
that were so thin and sere

the upper air burst into life!
and a hundred fire~flags sheen
to and fro they were hurried about!
and to and fro, and in and out
the wan stars danced between

and the coming wind did roar more loud
and the sails did sigh like sedge
and the rain poured down from one black cloud;
the moon was at its edge

the thick black cloud was cleft, and still
the moon was at its side:
like waters shot from some high crag
the lightning fell with never a jag
a river steep and wide

the loud wind never reached the ship
yet now the ship moved on!
beneath the lightning and the moon
the dead men gave a groan

they groaned, they stirred, they all uprose
nor spake, nor moved their eyes;
it had been strange, even in a dream
to have seen those dead men rise

the helmsman steered, the ship moved on;
yet never a breeze up~blew;
the mariners all ‘gan work the ropes
where they were won’t to do;
they raised their limbs like lifeless tools—
we were a ghastly crew

the body of my brother’s son
stood by me, knee to knee:
the body and i pulled at one rope
but he said nought to me

‘i fear thee, ancient mariner!’
be calm, thou wedding~guest!
’twas not those souls that fled in pain
which to their corses came again
but a troop of spirits blest:

for when it dawned—they dropped their arms
and cl~stered round the mast;
sweet sounds rose slowly through their mouths
and from their bodies passed

around, around, flew each sweet sound
then darted to the sun;
slowly the sounds came back again
now mixed, now one by one

sometimes a~dropping from the sky
i heard the sky~lark sing;
sometimes all little birds that are
how they seemed to fill the sea and air
with their sweet jargoning!

and now ’twas like all instruments
now like a lonely flute;
and now it is an angel’s song
that makes the heavens be mute

it ceased; yet still the sails made on
a pleasant noise till noon
a noise like of a hidden brook
in the leafy month of june
that to the sleeping woods all night
singeth a quiet tune

till noon we quietly sailed on
yet never a breeze did breathe:
slowly and smoothly went the ship
moved onward from beneath

under the keel nine fathom deep
from the land of mist and snow
the spirit slid: and it was he
that made the ship to go
the sails at noon left off their tune
and the ship stood still also

the sun, right up above the mast
had fixed her to the ocean:
but in a minute she ‘gan stir
with a short uneasy motion—
backwards and forwards half her length
with a short uneasy motion

then like a pawing horse let go
she made a sudden bound:
it flung the blood into my head
and i fell down in a swound

how long in that same fit i lay
i have not to declare;
but ere my living life returned
i heard and in my soul discerned
two voices in the air

‘is it he?’ quoth one, ‘is this the man?
by him who died on cross
with his cruel bow he laid full low
the harmless albatross

the spirit who bideth by himself
in the land of mist and snow
he loved the bird that loved the man
who shot him with his bow.’

the other was a softer voice
as soft as honey~dew:
quoth he, ‘the man hath penance done
and penance more will do.’

‘but tell me, tell me! speak again
thy soft response renewing—
what makes that ship drive on so fast?
what is the ocean doing?’

still as a slave before his lord
the ocean hath no blast;
his great bright eye most silently
up to the moon is cast—

if he may know which way to go;
for she guides him smooth or grim
see, brother, see! how graciously
she looketh down on him.’

‘but why drives on that ship so fast
without or wave or wind?’
‘the air is cut away before
and closes from behind

fly, brother, fly! more high, more high!
or we shall be belated:
for slow and slow that ship will go
when the mariner’s trance is abated.’

i woke, and we were sailing on
as in a gentle weather:
’twas night, calm night, the moon was high;
the dead men stood together

all stood together on the deck
for a charnel~dungeon fitter:
all fixed on me their stony eyes
that in the moon did glitter

the pang, the curse, with which they died
had never passed away:
i could not draw my eyes from theirs
nor turn them up to pray

and now this spell was snapt: once more
i viewed the ocean green
and looked far forth, yet little saw
of what had else been seen—

like one, that on a lonesome road
doth walk in fear and dread
and having once turned round walks on
and turns no more his head;
because he knows, a frightful fiend
doth close behind him tread

but soon there breathed a wind on me
nor sound nor motion made:
its path was not upon the sea
in ripple or in shade

it raised my hair, it fanned my cheek
like a meadow~gale of spring—
it mingled strangely with my fears
yet it felt like a welcoming

swiftly, swiftly flew the ship
yet she sailed softly too:
sweetly, sweetly blew the breeze—
on me alone it blew

oh! dream of joy! is this indeed
the light~house top i see?
is this the hill? is this the kirk?
is this mine own countree?

we drifted o’er the harbour~bar
and i with sobs did pray—
o let me be awake, my god!
or let me sleep alway

the harbour~bay was clear as glass
so smoothly it was strewn!
and on the bay the moonlight lay
and the shadow of the moon

the rock shone bright, the kirk no less
that stands above the rock:
the moonlight steeped in silentness
the steady weatherc~ck

and the bay was white with silent light
till rising from the same
full many shapes, that shadows were
in crimson colours came

a little distance from the prow
those crimson shadows were:
i turned my eyes upon the deck—
oh, christ! what saw i there!

each corse lay flat, lifeless and flat
and, by the holy rood!
a man all light, a seraph~man
on every corse there stood

this seraph~band, each waved his hand:
it was a heavenly sight!
they stood as signals to the land
each one a lovely light;

this seraph~band, each waved his hand
no voice did they impart—
no voice; but oh! the silence sank
like music on my heart

but soon i heard the dash of oars
i heard the pilot’s cheer;
my head was turned perforce away
and i saw a boat appear

the pilot and the pilot’s boy
i heard them coming fast:
dear lord in heaven! it was a joy
the dead men could not blast

i saw a third—i heard his voice:
it is the hermit good!
he singeth loud his godly hymns
that he makes in the wood
he’ll shrieve my soul, he’ll wash away
the albatross’s blood

this hermit good lives in that wood
which slopes down to the sea
how loudly his sweet voice he rears!
he loves to talk with marineres
that come from a far countree

he kneels at morn, and noon, and eve—
he hath a cushion plump:
it is the moss that wholly hides
the rotted old oak~stump

the skiff~boat neared: i heard them talk
‘why, this is strange, i trow!
where are those lights so many and fair
that signal made but now?’

‘strange, by my faith!’ the hermit said—
‘and they answered not our cheer!
the planks looked warped! and see those sails
how thin they are and sere!
i never saw aught like to them
unless perchance it were

brown skeletons of leaves that lag
my forest~brook along;
when the ivy~tod is heavy with snow
and the owlet whoops to the wolf below
that eats the she~wolf’s young.’

‘dear lord! it hath a fiendish look—
(the pilot made reply)
i am a~feared’—’push on, push on!’
said the hermit cheerily

the boat came closer to the ship
but i nor spake nor stirred;
the boat came close beneath the ship
and straight a sound was heard

under the water it rumbled on
still louder and more dread:
it reached the ship, it split the bay;
the ship went down like lead

stunned by that loud and dreadful sound
which sky and ocean smote
like one that hath been seven days drowned
my body lay afloat;
but swift as dreams, myself i found
within the pilot’s boat

upon the whirl, where sank the ship
the boat spun round and round;
and all was still, save that the hill
was telling of the sound

i moved my lips—the pilot shrieked
and fell down in a fit;
the holy hermit raised his eyes
and prayed where he did sit

i took the oars: the pilot’s boy
who now doth crazy go
laughed loud and long, and all the while
his eyes went to and fro
‘ha! ha!’ quoth he, ‘full plain i see
the devil knows how to row.’

and now, all in my own countree
i stood on the firm land!
the hermit stepped forth from the boat
and scarcely he could stand

‘o shrieve me, shrieve me, holy man!’
the hermit crossed his brow
‘say quick,’ quoth he, ‘i bid thee say—
what manner of man art thou?’

forthwith this frame of mine was wrenched
with a woful agony
which forced me to begin my tale;
and then it left me free

since then, at an uncertain hour
that agony returns:
and till my ghastly tale is told
this heart within me burns

i pass, like night, from land to land;
i have strange power of speech;
that moment that his face i see
i know the man that must hear me:
to him my tale i teach

what loud uproar bursts from that door!
the wedding~guests are there:
but in the garden~bower the bride
and bride~maids singing are:
and hark the little vesper bell
which biddeth me to prayer!

o wedding~guest! this soul hath been
alone on a wide wide sea:
so lonely ’twas, that god himself
scarce seemèd there to be

o sweeter than the marriage~feast
’tis sweeter far to me
to walk together to the kirk
with a goodly company!—

to walk together to the kirk
and all together pray
while each to his great father bends
old men, and babes, and loving friends
and youths and maidens gay!

farewell, farewell! but this i tell
to thee, thou wedding~guest!
he prayeth well, who loveth well
both man and bird and beast

he prayeth best, who loveth best
all things both great and small;
for the dear god who loveth us
he made and loveth all

the mariner, whose eye is bright
whose beard with age is h~~r
is gone: and now the wedding~guest
turned from the bridegroom’s door

he went like one that hath been stunned
and is of sense forlorn:
a sadder and a wiser man
he rose the morrow morn


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