草餐
金雨田
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Dining on the Grass
By Jin Yu Tian
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野火燒不盡,春風吹又生 —— 草。年少時從文字裡領略到的,是生命的韌力。
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“E’EN a prairie fire it survives;
At a zephyr’s breath it revives.”
— such is the resilience of life in grass that I came to
appreciate when reading poetry in my youth.
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Now, I enjoy a scene of little children chasing one another and
romping around in the twilight on a neat and smooth lawn like a super-size
carpet. Soft, supple and genial, it
supports the kids’ lively movements and cushions their falls. Our happy children do belong to an era of
tender grass.
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只不過推前一步,他們老爸,卻屬於雜草環抱的前代。鑽進,穿出,草野得似火團,把身體炙得癢癢;爬爬,草還會在手腳甚至臉上留痕。那什麼都不算一回事的年月,鋤草、種木薯、拔草;而茅草根還能成為家中鍋裡的涼水呢。
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Just one generation ago, their fathers had to live amid weeds and
thistles. Those wild, scorching
prickly bushes they moved across made them itch all over, and the sharp
blades of the undergrowth would leave scars on their hands and feet and even
faces after they crawled through. Yet
nothing mattered in those days when weeding was done with a hoe or by bare
hands, as was the planting of cassava. Incidentally,
some of the unwanted grass roots went to the kitchen to make drinks in the
hot weather.
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真正地享受草地上夕陽下野餐,月照下看戲,是某次在美國的農村劇場。愛正襟危坐的,可買座位券,喜徜徉隨觀的,則購草坡票。
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It was on a “farm theatre” in the United States later that I
enjoyed for the first time a meal on the grass in the setting sun and then a
concert in the moonlight. Some of the
audience — lovers of propriety — had booked regular seats. Others who preferred to move about during
the performance had paid for places on the grassy slope. We dined on the grass.
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在草上進餐,快吃吧!有一天,草會在你上面進餐。遠遠舞臺上的音樂劇,不甚了了,但處在滿山坡或躺或坐或蹲的三三兩兩的觀眾群中,我念著雅克·卜列維的詩。
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Dine while you can, I told myself, for the grass would be dining
on you some day instead! The musical
on the stage was too far-off for my sight or hearing. Among the people all over the slope, either
reclining, sitting, or squatting on the grass in twos and threes, I intoned
lines by Jacques Prevert the French poet.
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我想,處在這個地少人多的國度,恐怕我們都難有機會對草回報,讓草在我們身上進餐了吧!
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This brought to mind my homeland. Given the land-scarce island, I
doubt whether we can ever possibly repay Nature’s kindness by allowing grass
to dine on us buried beneath.
(Tr.
by Allen Zhuang)
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原載新加坡《聯合早報》(13/11/2000);收入《不着地族/A Lift-Off People》(潘正鐳著、Allen Zhuang 英譯;Singapore: All Publishing House, 2002). It was first posted on 坡港英華/ SingaKong Chinese & English in December 2007; now it is re-posted here. |
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