Скачать ноты "Symphony of Light and Shadow"
При нажатии на файл может появиться вопрос о разрешении всплывающих окон для сайта PrimaNota - нужно их разрешить, иначе скачивание не начнется.
-
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [1,04 Мб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [653,61 Кб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [185,37 Кб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [449,06 Кб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [431,08 Кб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [658,98 Кб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [299,68 Кб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [0,96 Мб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [654,11 Кб] -
Symphony_of_Light_and_Shadow.pdf [802,70 Кб]
текст песни (слова) "Symphony of Light and Shadow"
Part 2: Light and Shadow My mother bore me in the southern wild, And I am black, but oh! my soul is white. White as an angel is the English child, But I am black as if bereaved of light. My mother taught me underneath a tree, And, sitting down before the heat of day, She took me on her lap and kissed me, And pointing to the east began to say: "Look on the rising sun, -there God does live And gives his light, and gives his heat away; And flowers and trees and beasts and men receive Comfort in morning, joy in the noonday. And we are put on earth a little space That we may learn to bear the beams of love; And these black bodies and this sunburnt face Is but a cloud, and like a shady grove. For when our souls have learned the heat to bear The cloud will vanish, we shall hear his voice Saying: 'Come out from the grove, my love and care, And round my golden tent like lambs rejoice!' " Thus did my mother say, and kissed me; And thus I say to little English boy: When I from black and he from white cloud free, And round the tent of God like lambs we joy, I'll shade him from the heat till he can bear To lean in joy upon our father's knee; And then I'll stand and stroke his silver hair, And be like him, and he will then love me. Part 3: The Beautiful Changes One wading a Fall meadow finds on all sides The Queen Anne's Lace lying like lilies On water; it glides So from the walker, it turns Dry grass to a lake, as the slightest shade of you Valleys my mind in fabulous blue Lucernes. The beautiful changes as a forest is changed By a chameleon's tuning his skin to it; As a mantis, arranged On a green leaf, grows Into it, makes the leaf leafier, and proves Any greenness is greener than anyone knows. Your hands hold roses always in a way that says They are not only yours; the beautiful changes In such kind ways, Wishing ever to sunder Things and Thing's selves for a second finding, to lose For a moment all that it touches back to wonder. Part 6: The Dark Tarn Slipping my self As a bather strips his clothes Nightly I plunge Into the dark tarn, the lone, Ebon, glassy, deep, Sunk beneath cliffs of sleep. I stumble to it drowsily Up mazy slopes of dream, Then plunge, plunge and am Lost, immersed, drowned, Beyond reach of sight or sound, Of consciousness my spark Dowsed, douted, quenched in the dark. Slowly emergent To the cheerful light, The sunstream from on high, This not-I, once more I, Day's traffickings, day's loves, Resumes with sense and sight. But some day, ah, some day, As yet outwith my ken I shall sink to unplumbed deeps Beyond dredging net of men, From that underwater world of timeless sleep Never to rise, Never to rise to upper day again. Part 7: Indra Down to the sand-covered earth. Straw from the harvested fields soiled our feet; Dust from the high-roads, Smoke from the cities, Foul-smelling breaths, Fumes from cellars and kitchens, All we endured. Then to the open sea we fled, Filling our lungs with air, Shaking our wings, And laving our feet. Indra, Lord of the Heavens, Hear us! Hear our sighing! Unclean is the earth; Evil is life; Neither good nor bad Can men be deemed. As they can, they live, One day at a time. Sons of dust, through dust they journey; Born out of dust, to dust they return. Given they were, for trudging, Feet, not wings for flying. Dusty they grow-- Lies the fault then with them, Or with Thee? Part 8: Painting of a Communion In the Church of my fathers The table is spread only twice in the year, In May and November. With each recurring season, High springtide, the onset of winter, As I sit and partake, I look at the patient faces, Row upon row, lined with life's cares, and looking, In the clear white light refracted From the strips of snowy linen lining the pew-boards, Like the faces you see ranged in the Dutchman's paintings, Rembrandt, who loved humankind. Part 9: The daylight is dying The daylight is dying Away in the west, The wild birds are flying in silence to rest; In leafage and frondage Where shadows are deep, They pass to its bondage-- The kingdom of sleep And watched in their sleeping By stars in the height, They rest in your keeping, O wonderful night. When night doth her glories Of starshine unfold, 'Tis then that the stories Of bush-land are told. Unnumbered I told them In memories bright, But who could unfold them, Or read them aright? Beyond all denials The stars in their glories, The breeze in the myalls, Are part of these stories. The waving of grasses, The song of the river That sings as it passes For ever and ever, The hobble-chains' rattle, The calling of birds, The lowing of cattle Must blend with the words. Without these, indeed you Would find it ere long, As though I should read you The words of a song That lamely would linger When lacking the rune, The voice of a singer, The lilt of the tune. But as one halk-bearing An old-time refrain, With memory clearing, Recalls it again, These tales roughly wrought of The Bush and its ways, May call back a thought of The wandering days; And, blending with each In the memories that throng There haply shall reach You some echo of song.