Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Matthew Arnold

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Delphi Complete Poetical Works of Matthew Arnold Page 9

by Matthew Arnold


  Thou canst not live with men nor with thyself —

  Oh sage! oh sage! — Take then the one way left;

  And turn thee to the elements, thy friends, 25

  Thy well-tried friends, thy willing ministers,

  And say: — Ye servants, hear Empedocles,

  Who asks this final service at your hands!

  Before the sophist brood hath overlaid

  The last spark of man’s consciousness with words — 30

  Ere quite the being of man, ere quite the world

  Be disarray’d of their divinity —

  Before the soul lose all her solemn joys,

  And awe be dead, and hope impossible,

  And the soul’s deep eternal night come on, 35

  Receive me, hide me, quench me, take me home!

  He advances to the edge of the crater. Smoke and fire break forth with a loud noise, and CALLICLES is heard below singing: —

  The lyre’s voice is lovely everywhere!

  In the court of Gods, in the city of men,

  And in the lonely rock-strewn mountain glen,

  In the still mountain air. 40

  Only to Typho it sounds hatefully!

  To Typho only, the rebel o’erthrown,

  Through whose heart Etna drives her roots of stone,

  To imbed them in the sea.

  Wherefore dost thou groan so loud? 45

  Wherefore do thy nostrils flash,

  Through the dark night, suddenly,

  Typho, such red jets of flame? —

  Is thy tortur’d heart still proud?

  Is thy fire-scath’d arm still rash? 50

  Still alert thy stone-crush’d frame?

  Doth thy fierce soul still deplore

  The ancient rout by the Cilician hills,

  And that curst treachery on the Mount of Gore?

  Do thy bloodshot eyes still see 55

  The fight that crown’d thy ills,

  Thy last defeat in this Sicilian sea?

  Hast thou sworn, in thy sad lair,

  Where erst the strong sea-currents suck’d thee down,

  Never to cease to writhe, and try to sleep, 60

  Letting the sea-stream wander through thy hair?

  That thy groans, like thunder deep,

  Begin to roll, and almost drown

  The sweet notes, whose lulling spell

  Gods and the race of mortals love so well, 65

  When through thy caves thou hearest music swell?

  But an awful pleasure bland

  Spreading o’er the Thunderer’s face,

  When the sound climbs near his seat,

  The Olympian council sees; 70

  As he lets his lax right hand,

  Which the lightnings doth embrace,

  Sink upon his mighty knees.

  And the eagle, at the beck

  Of the appeasing gracious harmony, 75

  Droops all his sheeny, brown, deep-feather’d neck,

  Nestling nearer to Jove’s feet;

  While o’er his sovereign eye

  The curtains of the blue films slowly meet,

  And the white Olympus peaks 80

  Rosily brighten, and the sooth’d Gods smile

  At one another from their golden chairs,

  And no one round the charmèd circle speaks.

  Only the loved Hebe bears

  The cup about, whose draughts beguile 85

  Pain and care, with a dark store

  Of fresh-pull’d violets wreath’d and nodding o’er;

  And her flush’d feet glow on the marble floor.

  EMPEDOCLES

  He fables, yet speaks truth.

  The brave impetuous heart yields everywhere 90

  To the subtle, contriving head;

  Great qualities are trodden down,

  And littleness united

  Is become invincible.

  These rumblings are not Typho’s groans, I know! 95

  These angry smoke-bursts

  Are not the passionate breath

  Of the mountain-crush’d, tortur’d, intractable Titan king!

  But over all the world

  What suffering is there not seen 100

  Of plainness oppress’d by cunning,

  As the well-counsell’d Zeus oppress’d

  The self-helping son of earth!

  What anguish of greatness

  Rail’d and hunted from the world, 105

  Because its simplicity rebukes

  This envious, miserable age!

  I am weary of it! —

  Lie there, ye ensigns

  Of my unloved pre-eminence 110

  In an age like this!

  Among a people of children,

  Who throng’d me in their cities,

  Who worshipp’d me in their houses,

  And ask’d, not wisdom, 115

  But drugs to charm with,

  But spells to mutter —

  All the fool’s-armoury of magic! — Lie there,

  My golden circlet!

  My purple robe! 120

  CALLICLES (from below)

  As the sky-brightening south-wind clears the day,

  And makes the mass’d clouds roll,

  The music of the lyre blows away

  The clouds that wrap the soul.

  Oh, that Fate had let me see 125

  That triumph of the sweet persuasive lyre!

  That famous, final victory

  When jealous Pan with Marsyas did conspire!

  When, from far Parnassus’ side,

  Young Apollo, all the pride 130

  Of the Phrygian flutes to tame,

  To the Phrygian highlands came!

  Where the long green reed-beds sway

  In the rippled waters grey

  Of that solitary lake 135

  Where Maeander’s springs are born;

  Where the ridg’d pine-wooded roots

  Of Messogis westward break

  Mounting westward, high and higher.

  There was held the famous strife; 140

  There the Phrygian brought his flutes,

  And Apollo brought his lyre;

  And, when now the westering sun

  Touch’d the hills, the strife was done,

  And the attentive Muses said: 145

  ‘Marsyas! thou art vanquishèd.’

  Then Apollo’s minister

  Hang’d upon a branching fir

  Marsyas, that unhappy Faun,

  And began to whet his knife. 150

  But the Maenads, who were there,

  Left their friend, and with robes flowing

  In the wind, and loose dark hair

  O’er their polish’d bosoms blowing,

  Each her ribbon’d tambourine 155

  Flinging on the mountain sod,

  With a lovely frighten’d mien

  Came about the youthful God.

  But he turn’d his beauteous face

  Haughtily another way, 160

  From the grassy sun-warm’d place,

  Where in proud repose he lay,

  With one arm over his head,

  Watching how the whetting sped.

  But aloof, on the lake strand, 165

  Did the young Olympus stand,

  Weeping at his master’s end;

  For the Faun had been his friend.

  For he taught him how to sing,

  And he taught him flute-playing. 170

  Many a morning had they gone

  To the glimmering mountain lakes,

  And had torn up by the roots

  The tall crested water-reeds

  With long plumes, and soft brown seeds, 175

  And had carved them into flutes,

  Sitting on a tabled stone

  Where the shoreward ripple breaks.

  And he taught him how to please

  The red-snooded Phrygian girls, 180

  Whom the summer evening sees

  Flashing in the dance’s whirls


  Underneath the starlit trees

  In the mountain villages.

  Therefore now Olympus stands, 185

  At his master’s piteous cries

  Pressing fast with both his hands

  His white garment to his eyes,

  Not to see Apollo’s scorn;

  Ah, poor Faun, poor Faun! ah, poor Faun! 190

  EMPEDOCLES

  And lie thou there,

  My laurel bough!

  Scornful Apollo’s ensign, lie thou there!

  Though thou hast been my shade in the world’s heat —

  Though I have loved thee, lived in honouring thee — 195

  Yet lie thou there,

  My laurel bough!

  I am weary of thee!

  I am weary of the solitude

  Where he who bears thee must abide! 200

  Of the rocks of Parnassus,

  Of the gorge of Delphi,

  Of the moonlit peaks, and the caves.

  Thou guardest them, Apollo!

  Over the grave of the slain Pytho, 205

  Though young, intolerably severe;

  Thou keepest aloof the profane,

  But the solitude oppresses thy votary!

  The jars of men reach him not in thy valley —

  But can life reach him? 210

  Thou fencest him from the multitude —

  Who will fence him from himself?

  He hears nothing but the cry of the torrents

  And the beating of his own heart.

  The air is thin, the veins swell — 215

  The temples tighten and throb there —

  Air! air!

  Take thy bough; set me free from my solitude!

  I have been enough alone!

  Where shall thy votary fly then? back to men? — 220

  But they will gladly welcome him once more,

  And help him to unbend his too tense thought,

  And rid him of the presence of himself,

  And keep their friendly chatter at his ear,

  And haunt him, till the absence from himself, 225

  That other torment, grow unbearable;

  And he will fly to solitude again,

  And he will find its air too keen for him,

  And so change back; and many thousand times

  Be miserably bandied to and fro 230

  Like a sea-wave, betwixt the world and thee,

  Thou young, implacable God! and only death

  Shall cut his oscillations short, and so

  Bring him to poise. There is no other way.

  And yet what days were those, Parmenides! 235

  When we were young, when we could number friends

  In all the Italian cities like ourselves,

  When with elated hearts we join’d your train,

  Ye Sun-born Virgins! on the road of truth.

  Then we could still enjoy, then neither thought 240

  Nor outward things were clos’d and dead to us,

  But we receiv’d the shock of mighty thoughts

  On simple minds with a pure natural joy;

  And if the sacred load oppress’d our brain,

  We had the power to feel the pressure eased, 245

  The brow unbound, the thoughts flow free again,

  In the delightful commerce of the world.

  We had not lost our balance then, nor grown

  Thought’s slaves, and dead to every natural joy!

  The smallest thing could give us pleasure then! 250

  The sports of the country people,

  A flute-note from the woods

  Sunset over the sea;

  Seed-time and harvest,

  The reapers in the corn, 255

  The vinedresser in his vineyard,

  The village-girl at her wheel!

  Fullness of life and power of feeling, ye

  Are for the happy, for the souls at ease,

  Who dwell on a firm basis of content! — 260

  But he, who has outliv’d his prosperous days,

  But he, whose youth fell on a different world

  From that on which his exiled age is thrown,

  Whose mind was fed on other food, was train’d

  By other rules than are in vogue to-day, 265

  Whose habit of thought is fix’d, who will not change,

  But in a world he loves not must subsist

  In ceaseless opposition, be the guard

  Of his own breast, fetter’d to what he guards,

  That the world win no mastery over him; 270

  Who has no friend, no fellow left, not one;

  Who has no minute’s breathing space allow’d

  To nurse his dwindling faculty of joy —

  Joy and the outward world must die to him,

  As they are dead to me!

  A long pause, during which EMPEDOCLES remains motionless, plunged in thought. The night deepens. He moves forward and gazes round him, and proceeds: — 275

  And you, ye stars,

  Who slowly begin to marshal,

  As of old, in the fields of heaven,

  Your distant, melancholy lines!

  Have you, too, survived yourselves? 280

  Are you, too, what I fear to become?

  You, too, once lived!

  You too moved joyfully

  Among august companions

  In an older world, peopled by Gods, 285

  In a mightier order,

  The radiant, rejoicing, intelligent Sons of Heaven!

  But now, you kindle

  Your lonely, cold-shining lights,

  Unwilling lingerers 290

  In the heavenly wilderness,

  For a younger, ignoble world;

  And renew, by necessity,

  Night after night your courses,

  In echoing unnear’d silence, 295

  Above a race you know not.

  Uncaring and undelighted,

  Without friend and without home;

  Weary like us, though not

  Weary with our weariness. 300

  No, no, ye stars! there is no death with you,

  No languor, no decay! Languor and death,

  They are with me, not you! ye are alive!

  Ye and the pure dark ether where ye ride

  Brilliant above me! And thou, fiery world, 305

  That sapp’st the vitals of this terrible mount

  Upon whose charr’d and quaking crust I stand,

  Thou, too, brimmest with life! — the sea of cloud

  That heaves its white and billowy vapours up

  To moat this isle of ashes from the world, 310

  Lives! — and that other fainter sea, far down,

  O’er whose lit floor a road of moonbeams leads

  To Etna’s Liparëan sister-fires

  And the long dusky line of Italy —

  That mild and luminous floor of waters lives, 315

  With held-in joy swelling its heart! — I only,

  Whose spring of hope is dried, whose spirit has fail’d —

  I, who have not, like these, in solitude

  Maintain’d courage and force, and in myself

  Nursed an immortal vigour — I alone 320

  Am dead to life and joy; therefore I read

  In all things my own deadness.

  A long silence. He continues: —

  Oh that I could glow like this mountain!

  Oh that my heart bounded with the swell of the sea!

  Oh that my soul were full of lights as the stars! 325

  Oh that it brooded over the world like the air!

  But no, this heart will glow no more! thou art

  A living man no more, Empedocles!

  Nothing but a devouring flame of thought —

  But a naked, eternally restless mind!

  After a pause: — 330

  To the elements it came from

  Everything will return.

  Our bodies to earth,

  Our blood to water,

  Hea
t to fire, 335

  Breath to air.

  They were well born, they will be well entomb’d!

  But mind?…

  And we might gladly share the fruitful stir

  Down in our mother earth’s miraculous womb! 340

  Well might it be

  With what roll’d of us in the stormy main!

  We might have joy, blent with the all-bathing air,

  Or with the nimble radiant life of fire!

  But mind — but thought — 345

  If these have been the master part of us —

  Where will they find their parent element?

  What will receive them, who will call them home?

  But we shall still be in them, and they in us,

  And we shall be the strangers of the world, 350

  And they will be our lords, as they are now;

  And keep us prisoners of our consciousness,

  And never let us clasp and feel the All

  But through their forms, and modes, and stifling veils.

  And we shall be unsatisfied as now, 355

  And we shall feel the agony of thirst,

  The ineffable longing for the life of life

  Baffled for ever: and still thought and mind

  Will hurry us with them on their homeless march,

  Over the unallied unopening earth, 360

  Over the unrecognizing sea; while air

  Will blow us fiercely back to sea and earth,

  And fire repel us from its living waves.

  And then we shall unwillingly return

  Back to this meadow of calamity, 365

  This uncongenial place, this human life;

  And in our individual human state

  Go through the sad probation all again,

  To see if we will poise our life at last,

  To see if we will now at last be true 370

  To our own only true, deep-buried selves,

  Being one with which we are one with the whole world;

  Or whether we will once more fall away

  Into some bondage of the flesh or mind,

  Some slough of sense, or some fantastic maze 375

  Forg’d by the imperious lonely thinking-power.

  And each succeeding age in which we are born

  Will have more peril for us than the last;

  Will goad our senses with a sharper spur,

  Will fret our minds to an intenser play, 380

  Will make ourselves harder to be discern’d.

  And we shall struggle awhile, gasp and rebel;

  And we shall fly for refuge to past times,

  Their soul of unworn youth, their breath of greatness;

  And the reality will pluck us back, 385

  Knead us in its hot hand, and change our nature.

 

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