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第8部分

Clarence Hawkes; has been blind since childhood; yet he finds in nature

hints of binations for his mental pictures。 Out of the knowledge and

impressions that e to him he constructs a masterpiece which hangs

upon the walls of his thought。 And into the poet's house e all the

true spirits of the world。

It was a rare poet who thought of the mountain as 〃the first dim outline

of God's plan。〃 That is the real wonder of the poem; and not that a

blind man should speak so confidently of sky and sea。 Our ideas of the

sky are an accumulation of touch…glimpses; literary allusions; and the

observations of others; with an emotional blending of all。 My face feels

only a tiny portion of the atmosphere; but I go through continuous space

and feel the air at every point; every instant。 I have been told about

the distances from our earth to the sun; to the other plas; and to

the fixed stars。 I multiply a thousand times the utmost height and width

that my touch passes; and thus I gain a deep sense of the sky's

immensity。

Move me along constantly over water; water; nothing but water; and you

give me the solitude; the vastness of ocean which fills the eye。 I have

been in a little sail…boat on the sea; when the rising tide swept it

toward the shore。 May I not understand the poet's figure: 〃The green of

spring overflows the earth like a tide〃? I have felt the flame of a

candle blow and flutter in the breeze。 May I not; then; say: 〃Myriads of

fireflies flit hither and thither in the dew…wet grass like little

fluttering tapers〃?

bine the endless space of air; the sun's warmth; the clouds that are

described to my understa