Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning

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Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning Page 30

by Elizabeth Barrett Browning


  Transpierce the stars’ concentric rings, —

  The burden of his glory flung

  In broken lights upon our wings.

  [The chant dies away confusedly, and LUCIFER appears.

  Lucifer. Now may all fruits be pleasant to thy lips,

  Beautiful Eve! The times have somewhat changed

  Since thou and I had talk beneath a tree,

  Albeit ye are not gods yet.

  Eve. Adam! hold

  My right hand strongly! It is Lucifer —

  And we have love to lose.

  Adam. I’ the name of God,

  Go apart from us, O thou Lucifer!

  And leave us to the desert thou hast made

  Out of thy treason. Bring no serpent-slime

  Athwart this path kept holy to our tears!

  Or we may curse thee with their bitterness.

  Lucifer. Curse freely! curses thicken. Why, this Eve

  Who thought me once part worthy of her ear

  And somewhat wiser than the other beasts, —

  Drawing together her large globes of eyes,

  The light of which is throbbing in and out

  Their steadfast continuity of gaze, —

  Knots her fair eyebrows in so hard a knot,

  And down from her white heights of womanhood

  Looks on me so amazed, — I scarce should fear

  To wager such an apple as she plucked

  Against one riper from the tree of life,

  That she could curse too — as a woman may —

  Smooth in the vowels.

  Eve. So — speak wickedly!

  I like it best so. Let thy words be wounds, —

  For, so, I shall not fear thy power to hurt.

  Trench on the forms of good by open ill —

  For, so, I shall wax strong and grand with scorn,

  Scorning myself for ever trusting thee

  As far as thinking, ere a snake ate dust,

  He could speak wisdom.

  Lucifer. Our new gods, it seems,

  Deal more in thunders than in courtesies.

  And, sooth, mine own Olympus, which anon

  I shall build up to loud-voiced imagery

  From all the wandering visions of the world,

  May show worse railing than our lady Eve

  Pours o’er the rounding of her argent arm.

  But why should this be? Adam pardoned Eve.

  Adam. Adam loved Eve. Jehovah pardon both!

  Eve. Adam forgave Eve — because loving Eve.

  Lucifer. So, well. Yet Adam was undone of Eve,

  As both were by the snake. Therefore forgive,

  In like wise, fellow-temptress, the poor snake —

  Who stung there, not so poorly!

  [Aside.

  Eve. Hold thy wrath,

  Beloved Adam! let me answer him;

  For this time he speaks truth, which we should hear,

  And asks for mercy, which I most should grant,

  In like wise, as he tells us — in like wise!

  And therefore I thee pardon, Lucifer,

  As freely as the streams of Eden flowed

  When we were happy by them. So, depart;

  Leave us to walk the remnant of our time

  Out mildly in the desert. Do not seek

  To harm us any more or scoff at us,

  Or ere the dust be laid upon our face,

  To find there the communion of the dust

  And issue of the dust, — Go!

  Adam. At once, go!

  Lucifer. Forgive! and go! Ye images of clay,

  Shrunk somewhat in the mould, — what jest is this?

  What words are these to use? By what a thought

  Conceive ye of me? Yesterday — a snake!

  To-day — what?

  Adam. A strong spirit.

  Eve. A sad spirit.

  Adam. Perhaps a fallen angel. — Who shall say!

  Lucifer. Who told thee, Adam?

  Adam. Thou! The prodigy

  Of thy vast brows and melancholy eyes

  Which comprehend the heights of some great fall.

  I think that thou hast one day worn a crown

  Under the eyes of God.

  Lucifer. And why of God?

  Adam. It were no crown else. Verily, I think

  Thou’rt fallen far. I had not yesterday

  Said it so surely, but I know to-day

  Grief by grief, sin by sin.

  Lucifer. A crown, by a crown.

  Adam. Ay, mock me! now I know more than I knew:

  Now I know that thou art fallen below hope

  Of final re-ascent.

  Lucifer. Because?

  Adam. Because

  A spirit who expected to see God

  Though at the last point of a million years,

  Could dare no mockery of a ruined man

  Such as this Adam.

  Lucifer. Who is high and bold —

  Be it said passing! — of a good red clay

  Discovered on some top of Lebanon,

  Or haply of Aornus, beyond sweep

  Of the black eagle’s wing! A furlong lower

  Had made a meeker king for Eden. Soh!

  Is it not possible, by sin and grief

  (To give the things your names) that spirits should rise

  Instead of falling?

  Adam. Most impossible.

  The Highest being the Holy and the Glad,

  Whoever rises must approach delight

  And sanctity in the act.

  Lucifer. Ha, my clay-king!

  Thou wilt not rule by wisdom very long

  The after generations. Earth, methinks,

  Will disinherit thy philosophy

  For a new doctrine suited to thine heirs,

  And class these present dogmas with the rest

  Of the old-world traditions, Eden fruits

  And Saurian fossils.

  Eve. Speak no more with him,

  Beloved! it is not good to speak with him.

  Go from us, Lucifer, and speak no more!

  We have no pardon which thou dost not scorn,

  Nor any bliss, thou seest, for coveting,

  Nor innocence for staining. Being bereft,

  We would be alone. — Go!

  Lucifer. Ah! ye talk the same,

  All of you — spirits and clay — go, and depart!

  In Heaven they said so, and at Eden’s gate,

  And here, reiterant, in the wilderness.

  None saith, Stay with me, for thy face is fair!

  None saith, Stay with me, for thy voice is sweet!

  And yet I was not fashioned out of clay.

  Look on me, woman! Am I beautiful?

  Eve. Thou hast a glorious darkness.

  Lucifer. Nothing more?

  Eve. I think, no more.

  Lucifer. False Heart — thou thinkest more!

  Thou canst not choose but think, as I praise God,

  Unwillingly but fully, that I stand

  Most absolute in beauty. As yourselves

  Were fashioned very good at best, so we

  Sprang very beauteous from the creant Word

  Which thrilled behind us, God himself being moved

  When that august work of a perfect shape,

  His dignities of sovran angel-hood,

  Swept out into the universe, — divine

  With thunderous movements, earnest looks of gods,

  And silver-solemn clash of cymbal wings.

  Whereof was I, in motion and in form,

  A part not poorest. And yet, — yet, perhaps,

  This beauty which I speak of, is not here,

  As God’s voice is not here, nor even my crown —

  I do not know. What is this thought or thing

  Which I call beauty? Is it thought, or thing?

  Is it a thought accepted for a thing?

  Or both? or neither? — a pretext — a word?

  Its meaning flutters in me
like a flame

  Under my own breath, my perceptions reel

  For evermore around it, and fall off,

  As if it too were holy.

  Eve. Which it is.

  Adam. The essence of all beauty, I call love.

  The attribute, the evidence, and end,

  The consummation to the inward sense,

  Of beauty apprehended from without,

  I still call love. As form, when colourless,

  Is nothing to the eye, — that pine-tree there,

  Without its black and green, being all a blank, —

  So, without love, is beauty undiscerned

  In man or angel. Angel! rather ask

  What love is in thee, what love moves to thee,

  And what collateral love moves on with thee;

  Then shalt thou know if thou art beautiful.

  Lucifer. Love! what is love? I lose it. Beauty and love

  I darken to the image. Beauty — love!

  [He fades away, while a low music sounds.

  Adam. Thou art pale, Eve.

  Eve. The precipice of ill

  Down this colossal nature, dizzies me:

  And, hark! the starry harmony remote

  Seems measuring the heights from whence he fell.

  Adam. Think that we have not fallen so! By the hope

  And aspiration, by the love and faith,

  We do exceed the stature of this angel.

  Eve. Happier we are than he is, by the death.

  Adam. Or rather, by the life of the Lord God!

  How dim the angel grows, as if that blast

  Of music swept him back into the dark.

  [The music is stronger, gathering itself into uncertain articulation

  Eve. It throbs in on us like a plaintive heart,

  Pressing, with slow pulsations, vibrative,

  Its gradual sweetness through the yielding air,

  To such expression as the stars may use,

  Most starry-sweet and strange! With every note

  That grows more loud, the angel grows more dim,

  Receding in proportion to approach,

  Until he stand afar, — a shade.

  Adam. Now, words.

  SONG OF THE MORNING STAR TO LUCIFER.

  He fades utterly away and vanishes, as it proceeds.

  Mine orbed image sinks

  Back from thee, back from thee,

  As thou art fallen, methinks,

  Back from me, back from me.

  O my light-bearer,

  Could another fairer

  Lack to thee, lack to thee?

  Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

  I loved thee with the fiery love of stars

  Who love by burning, and by loving move,

  Too near the throned Jehovah not to love.

  Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

  Their brows flash fast on me from gliding cars,

  Pale-passioned for my loss.

  Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

  Mine orbed heats drop cold

  Down from thee, down from thee,

  As fell thy grace of old

  Down from me, down from me,

  O my light-bearer,

  Is another fairer

  Won to thee, won to thee?

  Ah, ah, Heosphoros,

  Great love preceded loss,

  Known to thee, known to thee.

  Ah, ah!

  Thou, breathing thy communicable grace

  Of life into my light,

  Mine astral faces, from thine angel face,

  Hast inly fed,

  And flooded me with radiance overmuch

  From thy pure height.

  Ah, ah!

  Thou, with calm, floating pinions both ways spread,

  Erect, irradiated,

  Didst sting my wheel of glory

  On, on before thee

  Along the Godlight by a quickening touch!

  Ha, ha!

  Around, around the firmamental ocean

  I swam expanding with delirious fire!

  Around, around, around, in blind desire

  To be drawn upward to the Infinite —

  Ha, ha!

  Until, the motion flinging out the motion

  To a keen whirl of passion and avidity,

  To a dim whirl of languor and delight,

  I wound in gyrant orbits smooth and white

  With that intense rapidity.

  Around, around,

  I wound and interwound,

  While all the cyclic heavens about me spun.

  Stars, planets, suns, and moons dilated broad,

  Then flashed together into a single sun,

  And wound, and wound in one:

  And as they wound I wound, — around, around,

  In a great fire I almost took for God.

  Ha, ha, Heosphoros!

  Thine angel glory sinks

  Down from me, down from me —

  My beauty falls, methinks,

  Down from thee, down from thee!

  O my light-bearer,

  O my path-preparer,

  Gone from me, gone from me!

  Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

  I cannot kindle underneath the brow

  Of this new angel here, who is not thou.

  All things are altered since that time ago, —

  And if I shine at eve, I shall not know.

  I am strange — I am slow.

  Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

  Henceforward, human eyes of lovers be

  The only sweetest sight that I shall see,

  With tears between the looks raised up to me.

  Ah, ah!

  When, having wept all night, at break of day

  Above the folded hills they shall survey

  My light, a little trembling, in the grey.

  Ah, ah!

  And gazing on me, such shall comprehend,

  Through all my piteous pomp at morn or even

  And melancholy leaning out of heaven,

  That love, their own divine, may change or end,

  That love may close in loss!

  Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

  * * * * *

  SCENE. — Farther on. A wild open country seen vaguely in the approaching

  night.

  Adam. How doth the wide and melancholy earth

  Gather her hills around us, grey and ghast,

  And stare with blank significance of loss

  Right in our faces! Is the wind up?

  Eve. Nay.

  Adam. And yet the cedars and the junipers

  Rock slowly through the mist, without a sound,

  And shapes which have no certainty of shape

  Drift duskly in and out between the pines,

  And loom along the edges of the hills,

  And lie flat, curdling in the open ground —

  Shadows without a body, which contract

  And lengthen as we gaze on them.

  Eve. O life

  Which is not man’s nor angel’s! What is this?

  Adam. No cause for fear. The circle of God’s life

  Contains all life beside.

  Eve. I think the earth

  Is crazed with curse, and wanders from the sense

  Of those first laws affixed to form and space

  Or ever she knew sin.

  Adam. We will not fear;

  We were brave sinning.

  Eve. Yea, I plucked the fruit

  With eyes upturned to heaven and seeing there

  Our god-thrones, as the tempter said, — not GOD.

  My heart, which beat then, sinks. The sun hath sunk

  Out of sight with our Eden.

  Adam. Night is near.

  Eve. And God’s curse, nearest. Let us travel back

  And stand within the sword-glare till we die,

  Believing it is better to meet death

  Than suffer desolation.

  Adam. Nay, beloved!

  We must not pluck death from the Maker’s hand,

  As erst w
e plucked the apple: we must wait

  Until he gives death as he gave us life,

  Nor murmur faintly o’er the primal gift

  Because we spoilt its sweetness with our sin.

  Eve. Ah, ah! dost thou discern what I behold?

  Adam. I see all. How the spirits in thine eyes

  From their dilated orbits bound before

  To meet the spectral Dread!

  Eve. I am afraid —

  Ah, ah! the twilight bristles wild with shapes

  Of intermittent motion, aspect vague

  And mystic bearings, which o’ercreep the earth,

  Keeping slow time with horrors in the blood.

  How near they reach ... and far! How grey they move —

  Treading upon the darkness without feet,

  And fluttering on the darkness without wings!

  Some run like dogs, with noses to the ground;

  Some keep one path, like sheep; some rock like trees;

  Some glide like a fallen leaf, and some flow on

  Copious as rivers.

  Adam. Some spring up like fire;

  And some coil ...

  Eve. Ah, ah! dost thou pause to say

  Like what? — coil like the serpent, when he fell

  From all the emerald splendour of his height

  And writhed, and could not climb against the curse,

  Not a ring’s length. I am afraid — afraid —

  I think it is God’s will to make me afraid, —

  Permitting THESE to haunt us in the place

  Of his beloved angels — gone from us

  Because we are not pure. Dear Pity of God,

  That didst permit the angels to go home

  And live no more with us who are not pure,

  Save us too from a loathly company —

  Almost as loathly in our eyes, perhaps,

  As we are in the purest! Pity us —

  Us too! nor shut us in the dark, away

  From verity and from stability,

  Or what we name such through the precedence

  Of earth’s adjusted uses, — leave us not

 

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