Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Home > Other > Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning > Page 113
Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning Page 113

by Elizabeth Barrett Browning


  The first edition

  CONTENTS

  NAPOLEON III. IN ITALY.

  THE DANCE.

  A TALE OF VILLAFRANCA.

  A COURT LADY.

  AN AUGUST VOICE.

  CHRISTMAS GIFTS.

  ITALY AND THE WORLD.

  A CURSE FOR A NATION.

  PREFACE.

  These poems were written under the pressure of the events they indicate, after a residence in Italy of so many years that the present triumph of great principles is heightened to the writer’s feelings by the disastrous issue of the last movement, witnessed from “Casa Guidi Windows” in 1849. Yet, if the verses should appear to English readers too pungently rendered to admit of a patriotic respect to the English sense of things, I will not excuse myself on such grounds, nor on the ground of my attachment to the Italian people and my admiration of their heroic constancy and union. What I have written has simply been written because I love truth and justice quand meme,— “more than Plato” and Plato’s country, more than Dante and Dante’s country, more even than Shakespeare and Shakespeare’s country.

  And if patriotism means the flattery of one’s nation in every case, then the patriot, take it as you please, is merely the courtier which I am not, though I have written “Napoleon III. in Italy.” It is time to limit the significance of certain terms, or to enlarge the significance of certain things. Nationality is excellent in its place; and the instinct of self-love is the root of a man, which will develop into sacrificial virtues. But all the virtues are means and uses; and, if we hinder their tendency to growth and expansion, we both destroy them as virtues, and degrade them to that rankest species of corruption reserved for the most noble organizations. For instance, — non-intervention in the affairs of neighbouring states is a high political virtue; but non-intervention does not mean, passing by on the other side when your neighbour falls among thieves, — or Phariseeism would recover it from Christianity. Freedom itself is virtue, as well as privilege; but freedom of the seas does not mean piracy, nor freedom of the land, brigandage; nor freedom of the senate, freedom to cudgel a dissident member; nor freedom of the press, freedom to calumniate and lie. So, if patriotism be a virtue indeed, it cannot mean an exclusive devotion to our country’s interests, — for that is only another form of devotion to personal interests, family interests, or provincial interests, all of which, if not driven past themselves, are vulgar and immoral objects. Let us put away the Little Peddlingtonism unworthy of a great nation, and too prevalent among us. If the man who does not look beyond this natural life is of a somewhat narrow order, what must be the man who does not look beyond his own frontier or his own sea?

  I confess that I dream of the day when an English statesman shall arise with a heart too large for England; having courage in the face of his countrymen to assert of some suggested policy,— “This is good for your trade; this is necessary for your domination: but it will vex a people hard by; it will hurt a people farther off; it will profit nothing to the general humanity: therefore, away with it! — it is not for you or for me.” When a British minister dares speak so, and when a British public applauds him speaking, then shall the nation be glorious, and her praise, instead of exploding from within, from loud civic mouths, come to her from without, as all worthy praise must, from the alliances she has fostered and the populations she has saved.

  And poets who write of the events of that time shall not need to justify themselves in prefaces for ever so little jarring of the national sentiment imputable to their rhymes.

  ROME: February 1860.

  NAPOLEON III. IN ITALY.

  I.

  Emperor, Emperor!

  From the centre to the shore,

  From the Seine back to the Rhine,

  Stood eight millions up and swore

  By their manhood’s right divine

  So to elect and legislate,

  This man should renew the line

  Broken in a strain of fate

  And leagued kings at Waterloo,

  When the people’s hands let go.

  Emperor

  Evermore.

  II.

  With a universal shout

  They took the old regalia out

  From an open grave that day;

  From a grave that would not close,

  Where the first Napoleon lay

  Expectant, in repose,

  As still as Merlin, with his conquering face

  Turned up in its unquenchable appeal

  To men and heroes of the advancing race, —

  Prepared to set the seal

  Of what has been on what shall be.

  Emperor

  Evermore.

  III.

  The thinkers stood aside

  To let the nation act.

  Some hated the new-constituted fact

  Of empire, as pride treading on their pride.

  Some quailed, lest what was poisonous in the past

  Should graft itself in that Druidic bough

  On this green Now.

  Some cursed, because at last

  The open heavens to which they had looked in vain

  For many a golden fall of marvellous rain

  Were closed in brass; and some

  Wept on because a gone thing could not come;

  And some were silent, doubting all things for

  That popular conviction, — evermore

  Emperor.

  IV.

  That day I did not hate

  Nor doubt, nor quail nor curse.

  I, reverencing the people, did not bate

  My reverence of their deed and oracle,

  Nor vainly prate

  Of better and of worse

  Against the great conclusion of their will.

  And yet, O voice and verse,

  Which God set in me to acclaim and sing

  Conviction, exaltation, aspiration,

  We gave no music to the patent thing,

  Nor spared a holy rhythm to throb and swim

  About the name of him

  Translated to the sphere of domination

  By democratic passion!

  I was not used, at least,

  Nor can be, now or then,

  To stroke the ermine beast

  On any kind of throne

  (Though builded by a nation for its own),

  And swell the surging choir for kings of men —

  “Emperor

  Evermore.”

  V.

  But now, Napoleon, now

  That, leaving far behind the purple throng

  Of vulgar monarchs, thou

  Tread’st higher in thy deed

  Than stair of throne can lead,

  To help in the hour of wrong

  The broken hearts of nations to be strong, —

  Now, lifted as thou art

  To the level of pure song,

  We stand to meet thee on these Alpine snows!

  And while the palpitating peaks break out

  Ecstatic from somnambular repose

  With answers to the presence and the shout,

  We, poets of the people, who take part

  With elemental justice, natural right,

  Join in our echoes also, nor refrain.

  We meet thee, O Napoleon, at this height

  At last, and find thee great enough to praise.

  Receive the poet’s chrism, which smells beyond

  The priest’s, and pass thy ways; —

  An English poet warns thee to maintain

  God’s word, not England’s: — let His truth be true

  And all men liars! with His truth respond

  To all men’s lie. Exalt the sword and smite

  On that long anvil of the Apennine

  Where Austria forged the Italian chain in view

  Of seven consenting nations, sparks of fine Admonitory light,

  Till men’s eyes wink before convictions new.

  Flash in God’s justice to the world’s ama
ze,

  Sublime Deliverer! — after many days

  Found worthy of the deed thou art come to do —

  Emperor.

  Evermore.

  VI.

  But Italy, my Italy,

  Can it last, this gleam?

  Can she live and be strong,

  Or is it another dream

  Like the rest we have dreamed so long?

  And shall it, must it be,

  That after the battle-cloud has broken

  She will die off again

  Like the rain,

  Or like a poet’s song

  Sung of her, sad at the end

  Because her name is Italy, —

  Die and count no friend?

  Is it true, — may it be spoken, —

  That she who has lain so still,

  With a wound in her breast,

  And a flower in her hand,

  And a grave-stone under her head,

  While every nation at will

  Beside her has dared to stand,

  And flout her with pity and scorn,

  Saying “She is at rest,

  She is fair, she is dead,

  And, leaving room in her stead

  To Us who are later born,

  This is certainly best!”

  Saying “Alas, she is fair,

  Very fair, but dead, — give place,

  And so we have room for the race.”

  — Can it be true, be true,

  That she lives anew?

  That she rises up at the shout of her sons,

  At the trumpet of France,

  And lives anew? — is it true

  That she has not moved in a trance,

  As in Forty-eight?

  When her eyes were troubled with blood

  Till she knew not friend from foe,

  Till her hand was caught in a strait

  Of her cerement and baffled so

  From doing the deed she would;

  And her weak foot stumbled across

  The grave of a king,

  And down she dropt at heavy loss,

  And we gloomily covered her face and said,

  “We have dreamed the thing;

  She is not alive, but dead.”

  VII.

  Now, shall we say

  Our Italy lives indeed?

  And if it were not for the beat and bray

  Of drum and trump of martial men,

  Should we feel the underground heave and strain,

  Where heroes left their dust as a seed

  Sure to emerge one day?

  And if it were not for the rhythmic march

  Of France and Piedmont’s double hosts,

  Should we hear the ghosts

  Thrill through ruined aisle and arch,

  Throb along the frescoed wall,

  Whisper an oath by that divine

  They left in picture, book, and stone,

  That Italy is not dead at all?

  Ay, if it were not for the tears in our eyes,

  These tears of a sudden passionate joy,

  Should we see her arise

  From the place where the wicked are overthrown,

  Italy, Italy — loosed at length

  From the tyrant’s thrall,

  Pale and calm in her strength?

  Pale as the silver cross of Savoy

  When the hand that bears the flag is brave,

  And not a breath is stirring, save

  What is blown

  Over the war-trump’s lip of brass,

  Ere Garibaldi forces the pass!

  VIII.

  Ay, it is so, even so.

  Ay, and it shall be so.

  Each broken stone that long ago

  She flung behind her as she went

  In discouragement and bewilderment

  Through the cairns of Time, and missed her way

  Between to-day and yesterday,

  Up springs a living man.

  And each man stands with his face in the light

  Of his own drawn sword,

  Ready to do what a hero can.

  Wall to sap, or river to ford,

  Cannon to front, or foe to pursue,

  Still ready to do, and sworn to be true,

  As a man and a patriot can.

  Piedmontese, Neapolitan,

  Lombard, Tuscan, Romagnole,

  Each man’s body having a soul, —

  Count how many they stand,

  All of them sons of the land,

  Every live man there

  Allied to a dead man below,

  And the deadest with blood to spare

  To quicken a living hand

  In case it should ever be slow.

  Count how many they come

  To the beat of Piedmont’s drum,

  With faces keener and grayer

  Than swords of the Austrian slayer,

  All set against the foe.

  “Emperor

  Evermore.”

  IX.

  Out of the dust where they ground them;

  Out of the holes where they dogged them;

  Out of the hulks where they wound them

  In iron, tortured and flogged them;

  Out of the streets where they chased them,

  Taxed them, and then bayonetted them;

  Out of the homes where they spied on them

  (Using their daughters and wives);

  Out of the church where they fretted them,

  Rotted their souls and debased them,

  Trained them to answer with knives,

  Then cursed them all at their prayers! —

  Out of cold lands, not theirs,

  Where they exiled them, starved them, lied on them;

  Back they come like a wind, in vain

  Cramped up in the hills, that roars its road

  The stronger into the open plain,

  Or like a fire that burns the hotter

  And longer for the crust of cinder,

  Serving better the ends of the potter;

  Or like a restrained word of God,

  Fulfilling itself by what seems to hinder.

  “Emperor

  Evermore.”

  X.

  Shout for France and Savoy!

  Shout for the helper and doer.

  Shout for the good sword’s ring,

  Shout for the thought still truer.

  Shout for the spirits at large

  Who passed for the dead this spring,

  Whose living glory is sure.

  Shout for France and Savoy!

  Shout for the council and charge!

  Shout for the head of Cavour;

  And shout for the heart of a King

  That’s great with a nation’s joy!

  Shout for France and Savoy!

  XI.

  Take up the child, Macmahon, though

  Thy hand be red

  From Magenta’s dead,

  And riding on, in front of the troop,

  In the dust of the whirlwind of war

  Through the gate of the city of Milan, stoop

  And take up the child to thy saddle-bow,

  Nor fear the touch as soft as a flower of his smile as clear as a

  star!

  Thou hast a right to the child, we say,

  Since the women are weeping for joy as they

  Who, by thy help and from this day,

  Shall be happy mothers indeed.

  They are raining flowers from terrace and roof:

  Take up the flower in the child.

  While the shout goes up of a nation freed

  And heroically self-reconciled,

  Till the snow on that peaked Alp aloof

  Starts, as feeling God’s finger anew,

  And all those cold white marble fires

  Of mounting saints on the Duomo-spires

  Flicker against the Blue.

  “Emperor

  Evermore.”

  XII.

  Ay, it is
He,

  Who rides at the King’s right hand!

  Leave room to his horse and draw to the side,

  Nor press too near in the ecstasy

  Of a newly delivered impassioned land:

  He is moved, you see,

  He who has done it all.

  They call it a cold stern face;

  But this is Italy

  Who rises up to her place! —

  For this he fought in his youth,

  Of this he dreamed in the past;

  The lines of the resolute mouth

  Tremble a little at last.

  Cry, he has done it all!

  “Emperor

  Evermore.”

  XIII.

  It is not strange that he did it,

  Though the deed may seem to strain

  To the wonderful, unpermitted,

  For such as lead and reign.

  But he is strange, this man:

  The people’s instinct found him

  (A wind in the dark that ran

  Through a chink where was no door),

  And elected him and crowned him

  Emperor

  Evermore.

  XIV.

  Autocrat? let them scoff,

  Who fail to comprehend

  That a ruler incarnate of

  The people must transcend

  All common king-born kings;

  These subterranean springs

  A sudden outlet winning

  Have special virtues to spend.

  The people’s blood runs through him,

  Dilates from head to foot,

  Creates him absolute,

  And from this great beginning

  Evokes a greater end

  To justify and renew him —

  Emperor

  Evermore.

  XV.

  What! did any maintain

  That God or the people (think!)

  Could make a marvel in vain? —

  Out of the water-jar there,

  Draw wine that none could drink?

  Is this a man like the rest,

  This miracle, made unaware

  By a rapture of popular air,

  And caught to the place that was best?

 

‹ Prev