‘Comparison with that, I ask of amateurs?’
Do I say, like Elvire” . . .
XXXIII.
(Your husband holds you fast
Will have you listen, learn your character at last!)
“Do I say? — like her mixed unrest and discontent,
Reproachfulness and scorn, with that submission blent
So strangely, in the face, by sad smiles and gay tears, —
Quiescence which attacks, rebellion which endears, —
Say? ‘As you loved me once, could you but love me now!
‘Years probably have graved their passage on my brow,
‘Lips turn more rarely red, eyes sparkle less than erst;
‘Such tribute body pays to time; but, unamerced,
‘The soul retains, nay, boasts old treasure multiplied.
‘Though dew-prime flee, — mature at noonday, love defied
‘Chance, the wind, change, the rain: love, strenuous all the more
‘For storm, struck deeper root and choicer fruitage bore,
‘Despite the rocking world; yet truth struck root in vain:
‘While tenderness bears fruit, you praise, not taste again.
‘Why? They are yours, which once were hardly yours, might go
‘To grace another’s ground: and then — the hopes we know,
‘The fears we keep in mind! — when, ours to arbitrate,
‘Your part was to bow neck, bid fall decree of fate.
‘Then, O the knotty point — white-night’s work to revolve —
‘What meant that smile, that sigh? Not Solon’s self could solve!
‘Then, O the deep surmise what one word might express,
‘And if what seemed her “No” may not have meant her “Yes!”
‘Then, such annoy, for cause — calm welcome, such acquist
‘Of rapture if, refused her arm, hand touched her wrist!
‘Now, what’s a smile to you? Poor candle that lights up
‘The decent household gloom which sends you out to sup
‘A tear? worse! warns that health requires you keep aloof
‘From nuptial chamber, since rain penetrates the roof!
‘Soul, body got and gained, inalienably safe
‘Your own, become despised; more worth has any waif
‘Or stray from neighbour’s pale: pouch that, — ’t is pleasure, pride,
‘Novelty, property, and larceny beside!
‘Preposterous thought! to find no value fixed in things,
‘To covet all you see, hear, dream of, till fate brings
‘About that, what you want, you gain; then follows change.
‘Give you the sun to keep, forthwith must fancy range:
‘A goodly lamp, no doubt, — yet might you catch her hair
‘And capture, as she frisks, the fen-fire dancing there!
‘What do I say? at least a meteor’s half in heaven;
‘Provided filth but shine, my husband hankers even
‘After putridity that’s phosphorescent, cribs
‘The rustic’s tallow-rush, makes spoil of urchins’ squibs,
‘In short prefers to me — chaste, temperate, serene —
‘What sputters green and blue, this fizgig called Fifine!’“
XXXIV.
So all your sex mistake! Strange that so plain a fact
Should raise such dire debate! Few families were racked
By torture self-supplied, did Nature grant but this —
That women comprehend mental analysis!
XXXV.
Elvire, do you recall when, years ago, our home
The intimation reached, a certain pride of Rome,
Authenticated piece, in the third, last and best
Manner, — whatever fools and connoisseurs contest, —
No particle disturbed by rude restorer’s touch,
The palaced picture-pearl, so long eluding clutch
Of creditor, at last, the Rafael might — could we
But come to terms — change lord, pass from the Prince to me?
I think you recollect my fever of a year:
How the Prince would, and how he would not; now, — too dear
That promise was, he made his grandsire so long since,
Rather to boast “I own a Rafael” than “am Prince!”
And now, the fancy soothed — if really sell he must
His birthright for a mess of pottage — such a thrust
I’ the vitals of the Prince were mollified by balm,
Could he prevail upon his stomach to bear qualm,
And bequeath Liberty (because a purchaser
Was ready with the sum — a trifle!) yes, transfer
His heart at all events to that land where, at least,
Free institutions reign! And so, its price increased
Five-fold (Americans are such importunates!),
Soon must his Rafael start for the United States.
O alternating bursts of hope now, then despair!
At last, the bargain’s struck, I’m all but beggared, there
The Rafael faces me, in fine, no dream at all,
My housemate, evermore to glorify my wall.
A week must pass, before heart-palpitations sink,
In gloating o’er my gain, so late I edged the brink
Of doom; a fortnight more, I spent in Paradise:
“Was outline e’er so true, could colouring entice
So calm, did harmony and quiet so avail?
How right, how resolute, the action tells the tale!”
A month, I bid my friends congratulate their best:
“You happy Don!” (to me): “The blockhead!” (to the rest):
“No doubt he thinks his daub original, poor dupe!”
Then I resume my life: one chamber must not coop
Man’s life in, though it boast a marvel like my prize.
Next year, I saunter past with unaverted eyes,
Nay, loll and turn my back: perchance to overlook
With relish, leaf by leaf, Doré’s last picture-book.
XXXVI.
Imagine that a voice reproached me from its frame:
“Here do I hang, and may! Your Rafael, just the same,
‘T is only you that change: no ecstasies of yore!
No purposed suicide distracts you any more!”
Prompt would my answer meet such frivolous attack:
“You misappropriate sensations. What men lack,
And labour to obtain, is hoped and feared about
After a fashion; what they once obtain, makes doubt,
Expectancy’s old fret and fume, henceforward void.
But do they think to hold such havings unalloyed
By novel hopes and fears, of fashion just as new,
To correspond i’ the scale? Nowise, I promise you!
Mine you are, therefore mine will be, as fit to cheer
My soul and glad my sense to-day as this-day-year.
So, any sketch or scrap, pochade, caricature,
Made in a moment, meant a moment to endure,
I snap at, seize, enjoy, then tire of, throw aside,
Find you in your old place. But if a servant cried
‘Fire in the gallery!’ — methinks, were I engaged
In Doré, elbow-deep, picture-books million-paged
To the four winds would pack, sped by the heartiest curse
Was ever launched from lip, to strew the universe.
Would not I brave the best o’ the burning, bear away
Either my perfect piece in safety, or else stay
And share its fate, be made its martyr nor repine?
Inextricably wed, such ashes mixed with mine!”
XXXVII.
For which I get the eye, the hand, the heart, the whole
O’ the wondrous wife again!
XXXVIII.
But no, play out your rôle
I’ the pageant! ‘T is not fit
your phantom leave the stage:
I want you, there, to make you, here, confess you wage
Successful warfare, pique those proud ones, and advance
Claim to . . . equality? nay, but predominance
In physique o’er them all, where Helen heads the scene
Closed by its tiniest of tail-tips, pert Fifine.
How ravishingly pure you stand in pale constraint!
My new-created shape, without or touch or taint,
Inviolate of life and worldliness and sin —
Fettered, I hold my flower, her own cup’s weight would win
From off the tall slight stalk a-top of which she turns
And trembles, makes appeal to one who roughly earns
Her thanks instead of blame, (did lily only know),
By thus constraining length of lily, letting snow
Of cup-crown, that’s her face, look from its guardian stake,
Superb on all that crawls beneath, and mutely make
Defiance, with the mouth’s white movement of disdain,
To all that stoops, retires and hovers round again!
How windingly the limbs delay to lead up, reach
Where, crowned, the head waits calm: as if reluctant, each,
That eye should traverse quick such lengths of loveliness,
From feet, which just are found embedded in the dress
Deep swathed about with folds and flowings virginal,
Up to the pleated breasts, rebellious ‘neath their pall,
As if the vesture’s snow were moulding sleep not death,
Must melt and so release; whereat, from the fine sheath,
The flower-cup-crown starts free, the face is unconcealed,
And what shall now divert me, once the sweet face revealed,
From all I loved so long, so lingeringly left?
XXXIX.
Because indeed your face fits into just the cleft
O’ the heart of me, Elvire, makes right and whole once more
All that was half itself without you! As before,
My truant finds its place! Doubtlessly sea-shells yearn,
If plundered by sad chance: would pray their pearls return,
Let negligently slip away into the wave!
Never may eyes desist, those eyes so grey and grave,
From their slow sure supply of the effluent soul within!
And, would you humour me? I dare to ask, unpin
The web of that brown hair! O’erwash o’ the sudden, but
As promptly, too, disclose, on either side, the jut
Of alabaster brow! So part rich rillets dyed
Deep by the woodland leaf, when down they pour, each side
O’ the rock-top, pushed by Spring!
XL.
“And where i’ the world is all
This wonder, you detail so trippingly, espied?
My mirror would reflect a tall, thin, pale, deep-eyed
Personage, pretty once, it may be, doubtless still
Loving, — a certain grace yet lingers, if you will, —
But all this wonder, where?”
XLI.
Why, where but in the sense
And soul of me, Art’s judge? Art is my evidence
That something was, is, might be; but no more thing itself,
Than flame is fuel. Once the verse-book laid on shelf,
The picture turned to wall, the music fled from ear, —
Each beauty, born of each, grows clearer and more clear,
Mine henceforth, ever mine!
XLII.
But if I would re-trace
Effect, in Art, to cause, — corroborate, erase
What’s right or wrong i’ the lines, test fancy in my brain
By fact which gave it birth? I re-peruse in vain
The verse, I fail to find that vision of delight
I’ the Bazzi’s lost-profile, eye-edge so exquisite.
And, music: what? that burst of pillared cloud by day
And pillared fire by night, was product, must we say,
Of modulating just, by enharmonic change, —
The augmented sixth resolved, — from out the straighter range
Of D sharp minor, — leap of disimprisoned thrall, —
Into thy light and life, D major natural?
XLIII.
Elvire, will you partake in what I shall impart?
I seem to understand the way heart chooses heart
By help of the outside form, — a reason for our wild
Diversity in choice, — why each grows reconciled
To what is absent, what superfluous in the mask
Of flesh that’s meant to yield, — did nature ply her task
As artist should, — precise the features of the soul,
Which, if in any case they found expression, whole
I’ the traits, would give a type, undoubtedly display
A novel, true, distinct perfection in its way.
Never shall I believe any two souls were made
Similar; granting, then, each soul of every grade
Was meant to be itself, prove in itself complete
And, in completion, good, — nay, best o’ the kind, — as meet
Needs must it be that show on the outside correspond
With inward substance, — flesh, the dress which soul has donned,
Exactly reproduce, — were only justice done
Inside and outside too, — types perfect everyone.
How happens it that here we meet a mystery
Insoluble to man, a plaguy puzzle? Why
Each soul is either made imperfect, and deserves
As rude a face to match, or else a bungler swerves,
And nature, on a soul worth rendering aright,
Works ill, or proves perverse, or, in her own despite,
— Here too much, there too little, — bids each face, more or less,
Retire from beauty, make approach to ugliness?
And yet succeeds the same: since, what is wanting to success,
If somehow every face, no matter how deform,
Evidence, to some one of hearts on earth, that, warm
Beneath the veriest ash, there hides a spark of soul
Which, quickened by love’s breath, may yet pervade the whole
O’ the grey, and, free again, be fire? — of worth the same,
Howe’er produced, for, great or little, flame is flame.
A mystery, whereof solution is to seek.
XLIV.
I find it in the fact that each soul, just as weak
Its own way as its fellow, — departure from design
As flagrant in the flesh, — goes striving to combine
With what shall right the wrong, the under or above
The standard: supplement unloveliness by love.
— Ask Plato else! And this corroborates the sage,
That Art, — which I may style the love of loving, rage
Of knowing, seeing, feeling the absolute truth of things
For truth’s sake, whole and sole, not any good, truth brings
The knower, seer, feeler, beside, — instinctive Art
Must fumble for the whole, once fixing on a part
However poor, surpass the fragment, and aspire
To reconstruct thereby the ultimate entire.
Art, working with a will, discards the superflux,
Contributes to defect, toils on till. — fiat lux , —
There’s the restored, the prime, the individual type!
XLV.
Look, for example now! This piece of broken pipe
(Some shipman’s solace erst) shall act as crayon; and
What tablet better serves my purpose than the sand?
— Smooth slab whereon I draw, no matter with what skill,
A face, and yet another, and yet another still.
There lie my three prime types of beauty!
XLVI.
Laugh your
best!
“Exaggeration and absurdity?” Confessed!
Yet, what may that face mean, no matter for its nose,
A yard long, or its chin, a foot short?
XLVII.
“You suppose,
Horror?” Exactly! What’s the odds if, more or less
By yard or foot, the features do manage to express
Such meaning in the main? Were I of Gérôme’s force,
Nor feeble as you see, quick should my crayon course
O’er outline, curb, excite, till, — so completion speeds
With Gérôme well at work, — observe how brow recedes,
Head shudders back on spine, as if one haled the hair,
Would have the full-face front what pin-point eye’s sharp stare
Announces; mouth agape to drink the flowing fate,
While chin protrudes to meet the burst o’ the wave: elate
Almost, spurred on to brave necessity, expend
All life left, in one flash, as fire does at its end.
Retrenchment and addition effect a masterpiece,
Not change i’ the motive: here diminish, there increase —
And who wants Horror, has it.
XLVIII.
Who wants some other show
Of soul, may seek elsewhere — this second of the row?
What does it give for germ, monadic mere intent
Of mind in face, faint first of meanings ever meant?
Why, possibly, a grin, that, strengthened, grows a laugh;
That, softened, leaves a smile; that, tempered, bids you quaff
At such a magic cup as English Reynolds once
Compounded: for the witch pulls out of you response
Like Garrick’s to Thalia, however due may be
Your homage claimed by that stiff-stoled Melpomene!
XLIX.
And just this one face more! Pardon the bold pretence!
May there not lurk some hint, struggle toward evidence
In that compressed mouth, those strained nostrils, steadfast eyes
Of utter passion, absolute self-sacrifice,
Which, — could I but subdue the wild grotesque, refine
That bulge of brow, make blunt that nose’s aquiline,
And let, although compressed, a point of pulp appear
I’ the mouth, — would give at last the portrait of Elvire?
L.
Well, and if so succeed hand-practice on awry
Preposterous art-mistake, shall soul-proficiency
Despair, — when exercised on nature, which at worst
Always implies success, however crossed and curst
By failure, — such as art would emulate in vain?
Shall any soul despair of setting free again
Trait after trait, until the type as wholly start
Forth, visible to sense, as that minutest part,
Robert Browning - Delphi Poets Series Page 156