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Robert Browning - Delphi Poets Series

Page 226

by Robert Browning


  Fate’s secret from thy safeguard, — was it then

  That all these thunders rent earth, ruined air

  To reach thee, pay thy patronage of men?

  He thundered, — to withdraw, as beast to lair,

  Before the triumph on thy pallid brow.

  Gather the night again about thee now,

  Hate on, love ever! Morn is breaking there —

  The granite ridge pricks through the mist, turns gold

  As wrong turns right. O laughters manifold

  Of ocean’s ripple at dull earth’s despair!

  IX.

  But morning’s laugh sets all the crags alight

  Above the baffled tempest: tree and tree

  Stir themselves from the stupor of the night

  And every strangled branch resumes its right

  To breathe, shakes loose dark’s clinging dregs, waves free

  In dripping glory. Prone the runnels plunge,

  While earth, distent with moisture like a sponge,

  Smokes up, and leaves each plant its gem to see,

  Each grass-blade’s glory-glitter. Had I known

  The torrent now turned river? — masterful

  Making its rush o’er tumbled ravage — stone

  And stub which barred the froths and foams: no bull

  Ever broke bounds in formidable sport

  More overwhelmingly, till lo, the spasm

  Sets him to dare that last mad leap: report

  Who may — his fortunes in the deathly chasm

  That swallows him in silence! Rather turn

  Whither, upon the upland, pedestalled

  Into the broad day-splendour, whom discern

  These eyes but thee, supreme one, rightly called

  Moon-maid in heaven above and, here below,

  Earth’s huntress-queen? I note the garb succinct

  Saving from smirch that purity of snow

  From breast to knee — snow’s self with just the tinct

  Of the apple-blossom’s heart-blush. Ah, the bow

  Slack-strung her fingers grasp, where, ivory-linked

  Horn curving blends with horn, a moonlike pair

  Which mimic the brow’s crescent sparkling so —

  As if a star’s live restless fragment winked

  Proud yet repugnant, captive in such hair!

  What hope along the hillside, what far bliss

  Lets the crisp hair-plaits fall so low they kiss

  Those lucid shoulders? Must a morn so blithe,

  Needs have its sorrow when the twang and hiss

  Tell that from out thy sheaf one shaft makes writhe

  Its victim, thou unerring Artemis?

  Why did the chamois stand so fair a mark

  Arrested by the novel shape he dreamed

  Was bred of liquid marble in the dark

  Depths of the mountain’s womb which ever teemed

  With novel births of wonder? Not one spark

  Of pity in that steel-grey glance which gleamed

  At the poor hoof’s protesting as it stamped

  Idly the granite? Let me glide unseen

  From thy proud presence: well mayst thou be queen

  Of all those strange and sudden deaths which damped

  So oft Love’s torch and Hymen’s taper lit

  For happy marriage till the maidens paled

  And perished on the temple-step, assailed

  By — what except to envy must man’s wit

  Impute that sure implacable release

  Of life from warmth and joy? But death means peace.

  X.

  Noon is the conqueror, — not a spray, nor leaf,

  Nor herb, nor blossom but has rendered up

  Its morning dew: the valley seemed one cup

  Of cloud-smoke, but the vapour’s reign was brief,

  Sun-smitten, see, it hangs — the filmy haze —

  Grey-garmenting the herbless mountain-side,

  To soothe the day’s sharp glare: while far and wide

  Above unclouded burns the sky, one blaze

  With fierce immitigable blue, no bird

  Ventures to spot by passage. E’en of peaks

  Which still presume there, plain each pale point speaks

  In wan transparency of waste incurred

  By over-daring: far from me be such!

  Deep in the hollow, rather, where combine

  Tree, shrub and briar to roof with shade and cool

  The remnant of some lily-strangled pool,

  Edged round with mossy fringing soft and fine.

  Smooth lie the bottom slabs, and overhead

  Watch elder, bramble, rose, and service-tree

  And one beneficent rich barberry

  Jewelled all over with fruit-pendents red.

  What have I seen! O Satyr, well I know

  How sad thy case, and what a world of woe

  Was hid by the brown visage furry-framed

  Only for mirth: who otherwise could think —

  Marking thy mouth gape still on laughter’s brink,

  Thine eyes a-swim with merriment unnamed

  But haply guessed at by their furtive wink?

  And all the while a heart was panting sick

  Behind that shaggy bulwark of thy breast —

  Passion it was that made those breath-bursts thick

  I took for mirth subsiding into rest.

  So, it was Lyda — she of all the train

  Of forest-thridding nymphs, — ’t was only she

  Turned from thy rustic homage in disdain,

  Saw but that poor uncouth outside of thee,

  And, from her circling sisters, mocked a pain

  Echo had pitied — whom Pan loved in vain —

  For she was wishful to partake thy glee,

  Mimic thy mirth — who loved her not again,

  Savage for Lyda’s sake. She crouches there —

  Thy cruel beauty, slumberously laid

  Supine on heaped-up beast-skins, unaware

  Thy steps have traced her to the briery glade,

  Thy greedy hands disclose the cradling lair,

  Thy hot eyes reach and revel on the maid!

  XI.

  Now, what should this be for? The sun’s decline

  Seems as he lingered lest he lose some act

  Dread and decisive, some prodigious fact

  Like thunder from the safe sky’s sapphirine

  About to alter earth’s conditions, packed

  With fate for nature’s self that waits, aware

  What mischief unsuspected in the air

  Menaces momently a cataract.

  Therefore it is that yonder space extends

  Untrenched upon by any vagrant tree,

  Shrub, weed well nigh; they keep their bounds, leave free

  The platform for what actors? Foes or friends,

  Here come they trooping silent: heaven suspends

  Purpose the while they range themselves. I see!

  Bent on a battle, two vast powers agree

  This present and no after-contest ends

  One or the other’s grasp at rule in reach

  Over the race of man — host fronting host,

  As statue statue fronts — wrath-molten each,

  Solidified by hate, — earth halved almost,

  To close once more in chaos. Yet two shapes

  Show prominent, each from the universe

  Of minions round about him, that disperse

  Like cloud-obstruction when a bolt escapes.

  Who flames first? Macedonian is it thou?

  Ay, and who fronts thee, King Darius, drapes

  His form with purple, fillet-folds his brow.

  XII.

  What, then the long day dies at last? Abrupt

  The sun that seemed, in stooping, sure to melt

  Our mountain ridge, is mastered: black the belt

  Of westward crags, his gold could not corrupt,

  Barriers again th
e valley, lets the flow

  Of lavish glory waste itself away

  — Whither? For new climes, fresh eyes breaks the day!

  Night was not to be baffled. If the glow

  Were all that’s gone from us! Did clouds, afloat

  So filmily but now, discard no rose,

  Sombre throughout the fleeciness that grows

  A sullen uniformity. I note

  Rather displeasure, — in the overspread

  Change from the swim of gold to one pale lead

  Oppressive to malevolence, — than late

  Those amorous yearnings when the aggregate

  Of cloudlets pressed that each and all might sate

  Its passion and partake in relics red

  Of day’s bequeathment: now, a frown instead

  Estranges, and affrights who needs must fare

  On and on till his journey ends: but where?

  Caucasus? Lost now in the night. Away

  And far enough lies that Arcadia.

  The human heroes tread the world’s dark way

  No longer. Yet I dimly see almost —

  Yes, for my last adventure! ‘T is a ghost.

  So drops away the beauty! There he stands

  Voiceless, scarce strives with deprecating hands

  XIII.

  Enough! Stop further fooling, De Lairesse!

  My fault, not yours! Some fitter way express

  Heart’s satisfaction that the Past indeed

  Is past, gives way before Life’s best and last,

  The all-including Future! What were life

  Did soul stand still therein, forego her strife

  Through the ambiguous Present to the goal

  Of some all-reconciling Future? Soul,

  Nothing has been which shall not bettered be

  Hereafter, — leave the root, by law’s decree

  Whence springs the ultimate and perfect tree!

  Busy thee with unearthing root? Nay, climb —

  Quit trunk, branch, leaf and flower — reach, rest sublime

  Where fruitage ripens in the blaze of day!

  O’erlook, despise, forget, throw flower away,

  Intent on progress? No whit more than stop

  Ascent therewith to dally, screen the top

  Sufficiency of yield by interposed

  Twistwork bold foot gets free from. Wherefore glozed

  The poets — ”Dream afresh old godlike shapes,

  Recapture ancient fable that escapes,

  Push back reality, repeople earth

  With vanished falseness, recognize no worth

  In fact new-born unless ‘t is rendered back

  Pallid by fancy, as the western rack

  Of fading cloud bequeaths the lake some gleam

  Of its gone glory!”

  XIV.

  Let things be — not seem,

  I counsel rather, — do, and nowise dream!

  Earth’s young significance is all to learn:

  The dead Greek lore lies buried in the urn

  Where who seeks fire finds ashes. Ghost, forsooth!

  What was the best Greece babbled of as truth?

  “A shade, a wretched nothing, — sad, thin, drear,

  Cold, dark, it holds on to the lost loves here,

  If hand have haply sprinkled o’er the dead

  Three charitable dust-heaps, made mouth red

  One moment by the sip of sacrifice:

  Just so much comfort thaws the stubborn ice

  Slow-thickening upward till it choke at length

  The last faint flutter craving — not for strength,

  Not beauty, not the riches and the rule

  O’er men that made life life indeed.” Sad school

  Was Hades! Gladly, — might the dead but slink

  To life, back, — to the dregs once more would drink

  Each interloper, drain the humblest cup

  Fate mixes for humanity.

  XV.

  Cheer up, —

  Be death with me, as with Achilles erst,

  Of Man’s calamities the last and worst:

  Take it so! By proved potency that still

  Makes perfect, be assured, come what come will,

  What once lives never dies — what here attains

  To a beginning, has no end, still gains

  And never loses aught: when, where, and how —

  Lies in Law’s lap. What’s death then? Even now

  With so much knowledge is it hard to bear

  Brief interposing ignorance? Is care

  For a creation found at fault just there —

  There where the heart breaks bond and outruns time,

  To reach, not follow what shall be?

  XVI.

  Here’s rhyme

  Such as one makes now, — say, when Spring repeats

  That miracle the Greek Bard sadly greets:

  “Spring for the tree and herb — no Spring for us!”

  Let Spring come: why, a man salutes her thus:

  Dance, yellows and whites and reds, —

  Lead your gay orgy, leaves, stalks, heads

  Astir with the wind in the tulip-beds!

  There’s sunshine; scarcely a wind at all

  Disturbs starved grass and daisies small

  On a certain mound by a churchyard wall.

  Daisies and grass be my heart’s bedfellows

  On the mound wind spares and sunshine mellows:

  Dance you, reds and whites and yellows!

  WITH CHARLES AVISON.

  I.

  How strange! — but, first of all, the little fact

  Which led my fancy forth. This bitter morn

  Showed me no object in the stretch forlorn

  Of garden-ground beneath my window, backed

  By yon worn wall wherefrom the creeper, tacked

  To clothe its brickwork, hangs now, rent and racked

  By five months’ cruel winter, — showed no torn

  And tattered ravage worse for eyes to see

  Than just one ugly space of clearance, left

  Bare even of the bones which used to be

  Warm wrappage, safe embracement: this one cleft —

  — O what a life and beauty filled it up

  Startlingly, when methought the rude clay cup

  Ran over with poured bright wine! ‘T was a bird

  Breast-deep there, tugging at his prize, deterred

  No whit by the fast-falling snow-flake: gain

  Such prize my blackcap must by might and main —

  The cloth-shred, still a-flutter from its nail

  That fixed a spray once. Now, what told the tale

  To thee, — no townsman but born orchard-thief, —

  That here — surpassing moss-tuft, beard from sheaf

  Of sun-scorched barley, horsehairs long and stout,

  All proper country-pillage — here, no doubt,

  Was just the scrap to steal should line thy nest

  Superbly? Off he flew, his bill possessed

  The booty sure to set his wife’s each wing

  Greenly a-quiver. How they climb and cling,

  Hang parrot-wise to bough, these blackcaps! Strange

  Seemed to a city-dweller that the finch

  Should stray so far to forage: at a pinch,

  Was not the fine wool’s self within his range

  — Filchings on every fence? But no: the need

  Was of this rag of manufacture, spoiled

  By art, and yet by nature near unsoiled,

  New-suited to what scheming finch would breed

  In comfort, this uncomfortable March.

  II.

  Yet — by the first pink blossom on the larch! —

  This was scarce stranger than that memory, —

  In want of what should cheer the stay-at-home,

  My soul, — must straight clap pinion, well nigh roam

  A century back, nor once close plume, descry

 
The appropriate rag to plunder, till she pounced —

  Pray, on what relic of a brain long still?

  What old-world work proved forage for the bill

  Of memory the far-flyer? “March” announced,

  I verily believe, the dead and gone

  Name of a music-maker: one of such

  In England as did little or did much,

  But, doing, had their day once. Avison!

  Singly and solely for an air of thine,

  Bold-stepping “March,” foot stept to ere my hand

  Could stretch an octave, I o’erlooked the band

  Of majesties familiar, to decline

  On thee — not too conspicuous on the list

  Of worthies who by help of pipe or wire

  Expressed in sound rough rage or soft desire —

  Thou, whilom of Newcastle organist!

  III.

  So much could one — well, thinnish air effect

  Am I ungrateful? for, your March, styled “Grand,”

  Did veritably seem to grow, expand,

  And greaten up to title as, unchecked,

  Dream-marchers marched, kept marching, slow and sure,

  In time, to tune, unchangeably the same,

  From nowhere into nowhere, — out they came,

  Onward they passed, and in they went. No lure

  Of novel modulation pricked the flat

  Forthright persisting melody, — no hint

  That discord, sound asleep beneath the flint,

  — Struck — might spring spark-like, claim due tit-for-tat,

  Quenched in a concord. No! Yet, such the might

  Of quietude’s immutability,

  That somehow coldness gathered warmth, well nigh

  Quickened — which could not be! — grew burning-bright

  With fife-shriek, cymbal-clash and trumpet-blare,

  To drum-accentuation: pacing turned

  Striding, and striding grew gigantic, spurned

  At last the narrow space ‘twixt earth and air,

  So shook me back into my sober self.

  IV.

  And where woke I? The March had set me down

  There whence I plucked the measure, as his brown

  Frayed flannel-bit my blackcap. Great John Relfe,

  Master of mine, learned, redoubtable,

  It little needed thy consummate skill

  To fitly figure such a bass! The key

  Was — should not memory play me false — well, C.

  Ay, with the Greater Third, in Triple Time,

  Three crotchets to a bar: no change, I grant,

  Except from Tonic down to Dominant.

  And yet — and yet — if I could put in rhyme

  The manner of that marching! — which had stopped

  — I wonder, where? — but that my weak self dropped

  From out the ranks, to rub eyes disentranced

  And feel that, after all the way advanced,

 

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