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Complete Poetical Works of Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Page 9

by Dante Gabriel Rossetti


  More than your wisdom can provide.’

  And Dante: “Tis man’s ancient whim

  That still his like seems good to him.’

  Also a tale is told, how once, 295

  At clearing tables after meat,

  Piled for a jest at Dante’s feet

  Were found the dinner’s well-picked bones;

  So laid, to please the banquet’s lord,

  By one who crouched beneath the board. 300

  Then smiled Can Grande to the rest: -

  Our Dante’s tuneful mouth indeed

  Lacks not the gift on flesh to feed!’

  ‘Fair host of mine,’ replied the guest,

  ‘So many bones you’d not descry 305

  If so it chanced the dog were I.’

  But wherefore should we turn the grout

  In a drained cup, or be at strife

  From the worn garment of a life

  To rip the twisted ravel out? 310

  Good needs expounding; but of ill

  Each hath enough to guess his fill.

  They named him Justicer-at-Law:

  Each month to bear the tale in mind

  Of hues a wench might wear unfin’d 315

  And of the load an ox might draw;

  To cavil in the weight of bread

  And to see purse-thieves gibbeted.

  And when his spirit wove the spell

  (From under even to over-noon 320

  In converse with itself alone,)

  As high as Heaven, as low as Hell,-

  He would be summoned and must go:

  For had not Gian stabbed Giacomo?

  Therefore the bread he had to eat 325

  Seemed brackish, less like corn than tares;

  And the rush-strown accustomed stairs

  Each day were steeper to his feet;

  And when the night-vigil was done,

  His brows would ache to feel the sun. 330

  Nevertheless, when from his kin

  There came the tidings how at last

  In Florence a decree was pass’d

  Whereby all banished folk might win

  Free pardon, so a fine were paid 335

  And act of public penance made, -

  This Dante writ in answer thus,

  Words such as these: ‘That clearly they

  In Florence must not have to say, -

  The man abode aloof from us 340

  Nigh fifteen years, yet lastly skulk’d

  Hither to candleshrift and mulct.

  ‘That he was one the Heavens forbid

  To traffic in God’s justice sold

  By market-weight of earthly gold, 345

  Or to bow down over the lid

  Of steaming censers, and so be

  Made clean of manhood’s obloquy.

  ‘That since no gate led, by God’s will,

  To Florence, but the one whereat 350

  The priests and money-changers sat,

  He still would wander; for that still,

  Even through the body’s prison-bars,

  His soul possessed the sun and stars.’

  Such were his words. It is indeed 355

  For ever well our singers should

  Utter good words and know them good

  Not through song only; with close heed

  Lest, having spent for the work’s sake

  Six days, the man be left to make. 360

  Months o’er Verona, till the feast

  Was come for Florence the Free Town:

  And at the shrine of Baptist John

  The exiles, girt with many a priest

  And carrying candles as they went, 365

  Were held to mercy of the saint.

  On the high seats in sober state, -

  Gold neck-chains range o’er range below

  Gold screen-work where the lilies grow, -

  The Heads of the Republic sate, 370

  Marking the humbled face go by

  Each one of his house-enemy.

  And as each proscript rose and stood

  From kneeling in the ashen dust

  On the shrine-steps, some magnate thrust 375

  A beard into the velvet hood

  Of his front colleague’s gown, to see

  The cinders stuck in the bare knee.

  Tosinghi passed, Manelli passed,

  Rinucci passed, each in his place; 380

  But not an Alighieri’s face

  Went by that day from first to last

  In the Republic’s triumph; nor

  A foot came home to Dante’s door.

  (RESPUBLICA - a public thing: 385

  A shameful shameless prostitute,

  Whose lust with one lord may not suit,

  So takes by turns its revelling

  A night with each, till each at morn

  Is stripped and beaten forth forlorn, 390

  And leaves her, cursing her. If she,

  Indeed, have not some spice-draught, hid

  In scent under a silver lid,

  To drench his open throat with - he

  Once hard asleep; and thrust him not 395

  At dawn beneath the boards to rot.)

  Years filled out their twelve moons, and ceased

  One in another; and alway

  There were the whole twelve hours each day

  And each night as the years increased; 400

  And rising moon and setting sun

  Beheld that Dante’s work was done.

  What of his work for Florence? Well

  It was, he knew, and well must be.

  Yet evermore her hate’s decree 405

  Dwelt in his thought intolerable: -

  His body to be burned, - his soul

  To beat its wings at hope’s vain goal.

  What of his work for Beatrice?

  Now well-nigh was the third song writ, - 410

  The stars a third time sealing it

  With sudden music of pure peace:

  For echoing thrice the threefold song,

  The unnumbered stars the tone prolong.

  Each hour, as then the Vision pass’d, 415

  He heard the utter harmony

  Of the nine trembling spheres, till she

  Bowed her eyes towards him in the last,

  So that all ended with her eyes,

  Hell, Purgatory, Paradise. 420

  ‘It is my trust, as the years fall,

  To write more worthily of her

  Who now, being made God’s minister,

  Looks on His visage and knows all.’

  Such was the hope that love did blend 425

  With grief’s slow fires, to make an end

  Of the ‘New Life’, his youth’s dear book:

  Adding thereunto: ‘In such trust

  I labour, and believe I must

  Accomplish this which my soul took 430

  In charge, if God, my Lord and hers,

  Leave my life with me a few years.’

  The trust which he had borne in youth

  Was all at length accomplished. He

  At length had written worthily- 435

  Yea even of her; no rhymes uncouth

  ‘Twixt tongue and tongue; but by God’s aid

  The first words Italy had said.

  Ah! haply now the heavenly guide

  Was not the last form seen by him: 440

  But there that Beatrice stood slim

  And bowed in passing at his side,

  For whom in youth his heart made moan

  Then when the city sat alone.

  Clearly herself; the same whom he 445

  Met, not past girlhood, in the street,

  Low-bosomed and with hidden feet;

  And then as woman perfectly,

  In years that followed, many an once, -

  And now at last among the suns 450

  In that high vision. But indeed

  It may be memory did recall

  Last to him then the first of all, -

&n
bsp; The child his boyhood bore in heed

  Nine years. At length the voice brought peace,- 455

  ‘Even I, even I am Beatrice.’

  All this, being there, we had not seen.

  Seen only was the shadow wrought

  On the strong features bound in thought;

  The vagueness gaining gait and mien; 460

  The white streaks gathering clear to view

  In the burnt beard the women knew.

  For a tale tells that on his track,

  As through Verona’s streets he went,

  This saying certain women sent: - 465

  ‘Lo, he that strolls to Hell and back

  At will! Behold him, how Hell’s reek

  Has crisped his beard and singed his cheek.’

  ‘Whereat’ (Boccaccio’s words) ‘he smil’d

  For pride in fame.’ It might be so: 470

  Nevertheless we cannot know

  If haply he were not beguil’d

  To bitterer mirth, who scarce could tell

  If he indeed were back from Hell.

  So the day came, after a space, 475

  When Dante felt assured that there

  The sunshine must lie sicklier

  Even than in any other place,

  Save only Florence. When that day

  Had come, he rose and went his way. 480

  He went and turned not. From his shoes

  It may be that he shook the dust,

  As every righteous dealer must

  Once and again ere life can close:

  And unaccomplished destiny 485

  Struck cold his forehead, it may be.

  No book keeps record how the Prince

  Sunned himself out of Dante’s reach,

  Nor how the Jester stank in speech;

  While courtiers, used to smile and wince, 490

  Poets and harlots, all the throng,

  Let loose their scandal and their song.

  No book keeps record if the seat

  Which Dante held at his host’s board

  Were sat in next by clerk or lord, - 495

  If leman lolled with dainty feet

  At ease, or hostage brooded there,

  Or priest lacked silence for his prayer.

  Eat and wash hands, Can Grande; - scarce

  We know their deeds now; hands which fed 500

  Our Dante with that bitter bread;

  And thou the watch-dog of those stairs

  Which, of all paths his feet knew well,

  Were steeper found than Heaven or Hell.

  ON REFUSAL OF AID BETWEEN NATIONS

  Not that the earth is changing, O my God!

  Nor that the seasons totter in their walk, -

  Not that the virulent ill of act and talk

  Seethes ever as a winepress ever trod, -

  Not therefore are we certain that the rod

  Weighs in thine hand to smite thy world; though now

  Beneath thine hand so many nations bow,

  So many kings: - not therefore, O my God! -

  But because Man is parcelled out in men

  To-day; because, for any wrongful blow

  No man not stricken asks, ‘I would be told

  Why thou dost thus;’ but his heart whispers then,

  ‘He is he, I am I.’ By this we know

  That our earth falls asunder, being old.

  A YOUNG FIR-WOOD

  These little firs to-day are things

  To clasp into a giant’s cap,

  Or fans to suit his lady’s lap.

  From many winters many springs

  Shall cherish them in strength and sap 5

  Till they be’marked upon the map,

  A wood for the wind’s wanderings.

  All seed is in the sower’s hands:

  And what at first was trained to spread

  Its shelter for some single head, - 10

  Yea, even such fellowship of wands, -

  May hide the sunset, and the shade

  Of its great multitude be laid

  Upon the earth and elder sands.

  FOR ‘OUR LADY OF THE ROCKS’ BY LEONARDO DA VINCI

  Mother, is this the darkness of the end,

  The Shadow of Death? and is that outer sea

  Infinite imminent Eternity?

  And does the death-pang by man’s seed sustain’d

  In Time’s each instant cause thy face to bend 5

  Its silent prayer upon the Son, while he

  Blesses the dead with his hand so silently

  To his long day which hours no more offend?

  Mother of grace, the pass is difficult,

  Keen as these rocks and the bewildered souls 10

  Throng it like echoes, blindly shuddering through.

  Thy name, O Lord, each spirit’s voice extols,

  Whose peace abides in the dark avenue

  Amid the bitterness of things occult.

  ‘VIRGIN OF THE ROCKS’ (LONDON) BY LEONARDO DA VINCI

  ON THE ‘VITA NUOVA’ OF DANTE

  As he that loves oft looks on the dear form

  And guesses how it grew to womanhood,

  And gladly would have watched the beauties bud

  And the mild fire of precious life wax warm:

  So I, long bound within the threefold charm

  Of Dante’s love sublimed to heavenly mood,

  Had marvelled, touching his Beatitude,

  How grew such presence from man’s shameful swarm.

  At length within this book I found pourtrayed

  Newborn that Paradisal Love of his,

  And simple like a child; with whose clear aid

  I understood. To such a child as this,

  Christ, charging well His chosen ones, forbade

  Offence: ‘for lo! of such my kingdom is.’

  MY SISTER’S SLEEP (1870 VERSION)

  She fell asleep on Christmas Eve:

  At length the long-ungranted shade

  Of weary eyelids overweigh’d

  The pain nought else might yet relieve.

  Our mother, who had leaned all day 5

  Over the bed from chime to chime,

  Then raised herself for the first time,

  And as she sat her down, did pray.

  Her little work-table was spread

  With work to finish. For the glare 10

  Made by her candle, she had care

  To work some distance from the bed.

  Without, there was a cold moon up,

  Of winter radiance sheer and thin;

  The hollow halo it was in 15

  Was like an icy crystal cup.

  Through the small room, with subtle sound

  Of flame, by vents the fireshine drove

  And reddened. In its dim alcove

  The mirror shed a clearness round. 20

  I had been sitting up some nights,

  And my tired mind felt weak and blank;

  Like a sharp strengthening wine it drank

  The stillness and the broken lights.

  Twelve struck. That sound, by dwindling years 25

  Heard in each hour, crept off; and then

  The ruffled silence spread again,

  Like water that a pebble stirs.

  Our mother rose from where she sat:

  Her needles, as she laid them down, 30

  Met lightly, and her silken gown

  Settled: no other noise than that.

  ‘Glory unto the Newly Born!’

  So, as said angels, she did say;

  Because we were in Christmas Day, 35

  Though it would still be long till morn.

  Just then in the room over us

  There was a pushing back of chairs,

  As some who had sat unawares

  So late, now heard the hour, and rose. 40

  With anxious softly-stepping haste

  Our mother went where Margaret lay,

  Fearing the sounds o’erhead - should they

  Have b
roken her long watched-for rest!

  She stooped an instant, calm, and turned; 45

  But suddenly turned back again;

  And all her features seemed in pain

  With woe, and her eyes gazed and yearned.

  For my part, I but hid my face,

  And held my breath, and spoke no word: 50

  There was none spoken; but I heard

  The silence for a little space.

  Our mother bowed herself and wept:

  And both my arms fell, and I said,

  ‘God knows I knew that she was dead.’ 55

  And there, all white, my sister slept.

  Then kneeling, upon Christmas morn

  A little after twelve o’clock

  We said, ere the first quarter struck,

  ‘Christ’s blessing on the newly born!’ 60

  PENUMBRA

  I did not look upon her eyes,

  (Though scarcely seen, with no surprise,

  ‘Mid many eyes a single look,)

  Because they should not gaze rebuke,

  At night, from stars in sky and brook.

  I did not take her by the hand,

  (Though little was to understand

  From touch of hand all friends might take,)

  Because it should not prove a flake

  Burnt in my palm to boil and ache.

  I did not listen to her voice,

  (Though none had noted, where at choice

  All might rejoice in listening,)

  Because no such a thing should cling

  In the wood’s moan at evening.

  I did not cross her shadow once,

  (Though from the hollow west the sun’s

  Last shadow runs along so far,)

  Because in June it should not bar

  My ways, at noon when fevers are.

  They told me she was sad that day,

  (Though wherefore tell what love’s soothsay,

  Sooner than they, did register?)

  And my heart leapt and wept to her,

  And yet I did not speak nor stir.

  So shall the tongues of the sea’s foam

  (Though many voices therewith come

  From drowned hope’s home to cry to me,)

  Bewail one hour the more, when sea

  And wind are one with memory.

  THE BLESSED DAMOZEL (1870 VERSION)

  The blessed damozel leaned out

  From the gold bar of Heaven;

  Her eyes were deeper than the depth

  Of waters stilled at even;

  She had three lilies in her hand, 5

  And the stars in her hair were seven.

  Her robe, ungirt from clasp to hem,

  No wrought flowers did adorn,

  But a white rose of Mary’s gift

  For service meetly worn; 10

  Her hair that lay along her back

 

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