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Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Page 33

by Elizabeth Barrett Browning


  Of the heaven-life on the whole,

  While we hear the forests budding

  To the music of the soul —

  Yet is it tuned in vain?

  Infant Voices passing.

  Rock us softly,

  Lest it be all in vain.

  Philosophic Voices passing.

  O we live, O we live —

  And this life that we perceive

  Is a great thing and a grave

  Which for others’ use we have,

  Duty-laden to remain.

  We are helpers, fellow-creatures,

  Of the right against the wrong;

  We are earnest-hearted teachers

  Of the truth which maketh strong —

  Yet do we teach in vain?

  Infant Voices passing.

  Rock us softly,

  Lest it be all in vain.

  Revel Voices passing.

  O we live, O we live —

  And this life that we reprieve

  Is a low thing and a light,

  Which is jested out of sight

  And made worthy of disdain!

  Strike with bold electric laughter

  The high tops of things divine —

  Turn thy head, my brother, after,

  Lest thy tears fall in my wine!

  For is all laughed in vain?

  Infant Voices passing.

  Rock us softly,

  Lest it be all in vain.

  Eve. I hear a sound of life — of life like ours —

  Of laughter and of wailing, of grave speech,

  Of little plaintive voices innocent,

  Of life in separate courses flowing out

  Like our four rivers to some outward main.

  I hear life — life!

  Adam. And, so, thy cheeks have snatched

  Scarlet to paleness, and thine eyes drink fast

  Of glory from full cups, and thy moist lips

  Seem trembling, both of them, with earnest doubts

  Whether to utter words or only smile.

  Eve. Shall I be mother of the coming life?

  Hear the steep generations, how they fall

  Adown the visionary stairs of Time

  Like supernatural thunders — far, yet near, —

  Sowing their fiery echoes through the hills.

  Am I a cloud to these — mother to these?

  Earth Spirits. And bringer of the curse upon all these.

  [EVE sinks down again.

  Poet Voices passing.

  O we live, O we live —

  And this life that we conceive

  Is a noble thing and high,

  Which we climb up loftily

  To view God without a stain;

  Till, recoiling where the shade is,

  We retread our steps again,

  And descend the gloomy Hades

  To resume man’s mortal pain.

  Shall it be climbed in vain?

  Infant Voices passing.

  Rock us softly,

  Lest it be all in vain.

  Love Voices passing.

  O we live, O we live —

  And this life we would retrieve,

  Is a faithful thing apart

  Which we love in, heart to heart,

  Until one heart fitteth twain.

  “Wilt thou be one with me?”

  “I will be one with thee.”

  “Ha, ha! — we love and live!”

  Alas! ye love and die.

  Shriek — who shall reply?

  For is it not loved in vain?

  Infant Voices passing.

  Rock us softly,

  Though it be all in vain.

  Aged Voices passing.

  O we live, O we live —

  And this life we would survive,

  Is a gloomy thing and brief,

  Which, consummated in grief,

  Leaveth ashes for all gain.

  Is it not all in vain?

  Infant Voices passing.

  Rock us softly,

  Though it be all in vain.

  [Voices die away.

  Earth Spirits. And bringer of the curse upon all these.

  Eve. The voices of foreshown Humanity

  Die off; — so let me die.

  Adam. So let us die,

  When God’s will soundeth the right hour of death.

  Earth Spirits. And bringer of the curse upon all these.

  Eve. O Spirits! by the gentleness ye use

  In winds at night, and floating clouds at noon,

  In gliding waters under lily-leaves,

  In chirp of crickets, and the settling hush

  A bird makes in her nest with feet and wings, —

  Fulfil your natures now!

  Earth Spirits. Agreed, allowed!

  We gather out our natures like a cloud,

  And thus fulfil their lightnings! Thus, and thus!

  Hearken, oh hearken to us!

  First Spirit.

  As the storm-wind blows bleakly from the norland,

  As the snow-wind beats blindly on the moorland,

  As the simoom drives hot across the desert,

  As the thunder roars deep in the Unmeasured.

  As the torrent tears the ocean-world to atoms,

  As the whirlpool grinds it fathoms below fathoms,

  Thus, — and thus!

  Second Spirit.

  As the yellow toad, that spits its poison chilly,

  As the tiger, in the jungle crouching stilly,

  As the wild boar, with ragged tusks of anger,

  As the wolf-dog, with teeth of glittering clangour,

  As the vultures, that scream against the thunder,

  As the owlets, that sit and moan asunder,

  Thus, — and thus!

  Eve. Adam! God!

  Adam. Cruel, unrelenting Spirits!

  By the power in me of the sovran soul

  Whose thoughts keep pace yet with the angel’s march,

  I charge you into silence — trample you

  Down to obedience. I am king of you!

  Earth Spirits.

  Ha, ha! thou art king!

  With a sin for a crown,

  And a soul undone!

  Thou, the antagonized,

  Tortured and agonized,

  Held in the ring

  Of the zodiac!

  Now, king, beware!

  We are many and strong

  Whom thou standest among, —

  And we press on the air,

  And we stifle thee back,

  And we multiply where

  Thou wouldst trample us down

  From rights of our own

  To an utter wrong —

  And, from under the feet of thy scorn,

  O forlorn,

  We shall spring up like corn,

  And our stubble be strong.

  Adam. God, there is power in thee! I make appeal

  Unto thy kingship.

  Eve. There is pity in THEE,

  O sinned against, great God! — My seed, my seed,

  There is hope set on THEE — I cry to thee,

  Thou mystic Seed that shalt be! — leave us not

  In agony beyond what we can bear,

  Fallen in debasement below thunder-mark,

  A mark for scorning — taunted and perplext

  By all these creatures we ruled yesterday,

  Whom thou, Lord, rulest alway! O my Seed,

  Through the tempestuous years that rain so thick

  Betwixt my ghostly vision and thy face,

  Let me have token! for my soul is bruised

  Before the serpent’s head is.

  [A vision of CHRIST appears in the midst of the Zodiac, which pales

  before the heavenly light. The Earth Spirits grow greyer and fainter.

  CHRIST. I AM HERE!

  Adam. This is God! — Curse us not, God, any more!

  Eve. But gazing so — so — with omnific eyes,

  Lift my soul up
ward till it touch thy feet!

  Or lift it only, — not to seem too proud, —

  To the low height of some good angel’s feet,

  For such to tread on when he walketh straight

  And thy lips praise him!

  CHRIST. Spirits of the earth,

  I meet you with rebuke for the reproach

  And cruel and unmitigated blame

  Ye cast upon your masters. True, they have sinned;

  And true their sin is reckoned into loss

  For you the sinless. Yet, your innocence

  Which of you praises? since God made your acts

  Inherent in your lives, and bound your hands

  With instincts and imperious sanctities

  From self-defacement. Which of you disdains

  These sinners who in falling proved their height

  Above you by their liberty to fall?

  And which of you complains of loss by them,

  For whose delight and use ye have your life

  And honour in creation? Ponder it!

  This regent and sublime Humanity,

  Though fallen, exceeds you! this shall film your sun,

  Shall hunt your lightning to its lair of cloud,

  Turn back your rivers, footpath all your seas,

  Lay flat your forests, master with a look

  Your lion at his fasting, and fetch down

  Your eagle flying. Nay, without this law

  Of mandom, ye would perish, — beast by beast

  Devouring, — tree by tree, with strangling roots

  And trunks set tuskwise. Ye would gaze on God

  With imperceptive blankness up the stars,

  And mutter, “Why, God, hast thou made us thus?”

  And pining to a sallow idiocy

  Stagger up blindly against the ends of life,

  Then stagnate into rottenness and drop

  Heavily — poor, dead matter — piecemeal down

  The abysmal spaces — like a little stone

  Let fall to chaos. Therefore over you

  Receive man’s sceptre! — therefore be content

  To minister with voluntary grace

  And melancholy pardon, every rite

  And function in you, to the human hand!

  Be ye to man as angels are to God,

  Servants in pleasure, singers of delight,

  Suggesters to his soul of higher things

  Than any of your highest! So at last,

  He shall look round on you with lids too straight

  To hold the grateful tears, and thank you well,

  And bless you when he prays his secret prayers,

  And praise you when he sings his open songs

  For the clear song-note he has learnt in you

  Of purifying sweetness, and extend

  Across your head his golden fantasies

  Which glorify you into soul from sense.

  Go, serve him for such price! That not in vain

  Nor yet ignobly ye shall serve, I place

  My word here for an oath, mine oath for act

  To be hereafter. In the name of which

  Perfect redemption and perpetual grace,

  I bless you through the hope and through the peace

  Which are mine, — to the Love, which is myself.

  Eve. Speak on still, Christ! Albeit thou bless me not

  In set words, I am blessed in hearkening thee —

  Speak, Christ!

  CHRIST. Speak, Adam! Bless the woman, man!

  It is thine office.

  Adam. Mother of the world,

  Take heart before this Presence! Lo, my voice,

  Which, naming erst the creatures, did express

  (God breathing through my breath) the attributes

  And instincts of each creature in its name,

  Floats to the same afflatus, — floats and heaves

  Like a water-weed that opens to a wave, —

  A full leaved prophecy affecting thee,

  Out fairly and wide. Henceforward, arise, aspire

  To all the calms and magnanimities,

  The lofty uses and the noble ends,

  The sanctified devotion and full work,

  To which thou art elect for evermore,

  First woman, wife, and mother!

  Eve. And first in sin.

  Adam. And also the sole bearer of the Seed

  Whereby sin dieth. Raise the majesties

  Of thy disconsolate brows, O well-beloved,

  And front with level eyelids the To-come,

  And all the dark o’ the world! Rise, woman, rise

  To thy peculiar and best altitudes

  Of doing good and of enduring ill,

  Of comforting for ill, and teaching good,

  And reconciling all that ill and good

  Unto the patience of a constant hope, —

  Rise with thy daughters! If sin came by thee,

  And by sin, death, — the ransom-righteousness,

  The heavenly life and compensative rest

  Shall come by means of thee. If woe by thee

  Had issue to the world, thou shalt go forth

  An angel of the woe thou didst achieve,

  Found acceptable to the world instead

  Of others of that name, of whose bright steps

  Thy deed stripped bare the hills. Be satisfied;

  Something thou hast to bear through womanhood,

  Peculiar suffering answering to the sin, —

  Some pang paid down for each new human life,

  Some weariness in guarding such a life,

  Some coldness from the guarded, some mistrust

  From those thou hast too well served, from those beloved

  Too loyally some treason; feebleness

  Within thy heart, and cruelty without,

  And pressures of an alien tyranny

  With its dynastic reasons of larger bones

  And stronger sinews. But, go to! thy love

  Shall chant itself its own beatitudes

  After its own life-working. A child’s kiss

  Set on thy sighing lips shall make thee glad;

  A poor man served by thee shall make thee rich;

  A sick man helped by thee shall make thee strong;

  Thou shalt be served thyself by every sense

  Of service which thou renderest. Such a crown

  I set upon thy head, — Christ witnessing

  With looks of prompting love — to keep thee clear

  Of all reproach against the sin forgone,

  From all the generations which succeed.

  Thy hand which plucked the apple I clasp close,

  Thy lips which spake wrong counsel I kiss close,

  I bless thee in the name of Paradise

  And by the memory of Edenic joys

  Forfeit and lost, — by that last cypress tree,

  Green at the gate, which thrilled as we came out,

  And by the blessed nightingale which threw

  Its melancholy music after us, —

  And by the flowers, whose spirits full of smells

  Did follow softly, plucking us behind

  Back to the gradual banks and vernal bowers

  And fourfold river-courses. — By all these,

  I bless thee to the contraries of these,

  I bless thee to the desert and the thorns,

  To the elemental change and turbulence,

  And to the roar of the estranged beasts,

  And to the solemn dignities of grief, —

  To each one of these ends, — and to their END

  Of Death and the hereafter.

  Eve. I accept

  For me and for my daughters this high part

  Which lowly shall be counted. Noble work

  Shall hold me in the place of garden-rest,

  And in the place of Eden’s lost delight

  Worthy endurance of permitted pain;

  While on my longest patience there shall wait

&
nbsp; Death’s speechless angel, smiling in the east,

  Whence cometh the cold wind. I bow myself

  Humbly henceforward on the ill I did,

  That humbleness may keep it in the shade.

  Shall it be so? shall I smile, saying so?

  O Seed! O King! O God, who shalt be seed, —

  What shall I say? As Eden’s fountains swelled

  Brightly betwixt their banks, so swells my soul

  Betwixt thy love and power!

  And, sweetest thoughts

  Of forgone Eden! now, for the first time

  Since God said “Adam,” walking through the trees,

  I dare to pluck you as I plucked erewhile

  The lily or pink, the rose or heliotrope

  So pluck I you — so largely — with both hands,

  And throw you forward on the outer earth,

  Wherein we are cast out, to sweeten it.

  Adam. As thou, Christ, to illume it, holdest Heaven

  Broadly over our heads.

  [The CHRIST is gradually transfigured, during the following phrases of

  dialogue, into humanity and suffering.

  Eve. O Saviour Christ,

  Thou standest mute in glory, like the sun!

  Adam. We worship in Thy silence, Saviour Christ!

  Eve. Thy brows grow grander with a forecast woe, —

  Diviner, with the possible of death.

  We worship in Thy sorrow, Saviour Christ!

  Adam. How do Thy clear, still eyes transpierce our souls,

  As gazing through them toward the Father-throne

  In a pathetical, full Deity,

  Serenely as the stars gaze through the air

  Straight on each other!

  Eve. O pathetic Christ,

  Thou standest mute in glory, like the moon!

  CHRIST. Eternity stands alway fronting God;

  A stern colossal image, with blind eyes

  And grand dim lips that murmur evermore

  God, God, God! while the rush of life and death,

  The roar of act and thought, of evil and good,

  The avalanches of the ruining worlds

  Tolling down space, — the new worlds’ genesis

  Budding in fire, — the gradual humming growth

  Of the ancient atoms and first forms of earth,

  The slow procession of the swathing seas

 

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