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名人诗歌|For Louis Pasteur

来源:www.gdshsh.com 2024-07-13
by Edgar Bowers1

Who is Apollo? College student

How shall a generation know its story

If it will know no other? When, among

The scoffers at the Institute, Pasteur

Heard one deny the cause of child-birth fever,

Indignantly he drew upon the blackboard,

For all to see, the Streptococcus chain.

His mind was like Odysseus and Plato

Exploring a new cosplaymos2 in the old

As if he wrote a poemhis enemy

Suffering, disease, and death, the battleground

His introspection. Science and peace, he said,

Will win out over ignorance and war,

But then, the virus mutant in his vein3,

Death to the Prussian! and revenge, revenge!

How shall my generation tell its story?

Their fathers jobless, boys for the CCC

And NYA, the future like a stairwell

To floors without a window or a door,

And then the army: bayonet drill and foxhole4;

Bombing to rubble5 cities with textbook names

Later to bulldoze streets for; their green bodies

Drowned in the greener surfs of rumored6 France.

My childhood friend, George Humphreys, whom I still see

Still ten years old, his uncombed hair and grin

Moment by moment in the Hrtgen dark

Until the one step full in the sniper's sight,

His pastor7 father emptied by the grief.

Clark Harrison, at nineteen a survivor8,

Never to walk or have a child or be

A senator or governor. Herr Wegner,

Who led his little troop, their standards high

And sabers drawn9, against a panzer corps10,

Emerging from among the shades at Dachau

Stacked like firewood for someone else to burn;

And Gerd Radomski, listening to broadcasts

Of names, a yearlong babel of the missing,

To find his wife and children. Then they came home,

Near middle age at twenty-two, to find

A new reunion of the church and state,

Cynical11 Constantines who need no name,

Domestic tranquility beaten to a sword,

Sons wasted by another lie in Asia,

Or Strangeloves they had feared that August day;

And they like runners, stung, behind a flag,

Running within a circle, bereft12 of joy.

Hearing of the disaster at Sedan

And the retreat worse than the one from Moscow,

Their son among the missing or the dead,

Pasteur and his wife Mary hired a carriage

And, traveling to the east where he might try

His way to Paris, sTOPping to ask each youth

And comfort every orphan13 of the state's

Irascibility, found him at last

And, unsurprised, embraced and took him in.

Two wars later, the Prussian, once again

The son of Mars, in Paris, Joseph Meister

The first boy cured of rabies, now the keeper

Of Pasteur's mausoleumwhen commanded

To open it for them, though over seventy,

Lest he betray the master, took his life.

I like to think of Pasteur in Elysium

Beneath the sunny pine of ripe Provence

Tenderly raising black sheep, butterflies,

Silkworms, and a new culture, for delight,

Teaching his daughter to use a microscope

And musing14 through a wondersacred passion,

Practice and metaphysic all the same.

And, each year, honor three births: Valry,

Humbling15 his pride by trying to write well,

Mozart, who lives still, keeping my attention

Repeatedly outside the reach of pride,

And him whose mark I witness as a trust.

Others he saves but could not save himself

Socrates, Galen, Hippocratesthe spirit

Fastened by love upon the human cross.


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