Complete Poetical Works of Dante Gabriel Rossetti

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Complete Poetical Works of Dante Gabriel Rossetti Page 21

by Dante Gabriel Rossetti


  And then its echo told her all.

  O’er brows low-fall’n her hands she drew:- 580

  ‘O God!’ she said, as her hands fell too, -

  ‘The Warden’s sister of Holycleugh!’

  She rose upright with a long low moan

  And stared in the dead man’s face new-known.

  Had it lived indeed? She scarce could tell: 585

  ’Twas a cloud where fiends had come to dwell, -

  A mask that hung on the gate of Hell.

  She lifted the lock of gleaming hair

  And smote the lips and left it there.

  ‘Here’s gold that Hell shall take for thy toll! 590

  Full well hath thy treason found its goal,

  O thou dead body and damnèd soul!’

  She turned, sore dazed, for a voice was near,

  And she knew that some one called to her.

  On many a column fair and tall 595

  A high court ran round the castle-hall;

  And thence it was that the priest did call.

  ‘I sought your child where you bade me go,

  And in rooms around and rooms below;

  But where, alas! may the maiden be? 600

  Fear nought, - we shall find her speedily, -

  But come, come hither, and seek with me.’

  She reached the stair like a lifelorn thing,

  But hastened upward murmuring: -

  ‘Yea, Death’s is a face that’s fell to see; 605

  But bitterer pang Life hoards for thee,

  Thou broken heart of Rose Mary!’

  BERYL-SONG

  We whose throne is the Beryl,

  Dire-gifted spirits of fire,

  Who for a twin 610

  Leash Sorrow to Sin,

  Who on no flower refrain to lour with peril, -

  We cry, - O desolate daughter!

  Thou and thy mother share newer shame with each other

  Than last night’s slaughter. 615

  Awake and tremble, for our curses assemble!

  What more, that thou know’st not yet, -

  That life nor death shall forget?

  No help from Heaven, - thy woes heart-riven are sterile!

  O once a maiden, 620

  With yet worse sorrow can any morrow be laden?

  It waits for thee,

  It looms, it must be,

  O lost among women, -

  It comes and thou canst not flee. 625

  Amen to the omen,

  Says the voice of the Beryl.

  Thou sleep’st? Awake, -

  What dar’st thou yet for his sake,

  Who each for other did God’s own Future imperil? 630

  Dost dare to live

  ‘Mid the pangs each hour must give?

  Nay, rather die, -

  With him thy lover ‘neath Hell’s cloud-cover to fly, -

  Hopeless, yet not apart, 635

  Cling heart to heart,

  And heat through the nether storm-eddying winds together?

  Shall this he so?

  There thou shalt meet him, but mayst thou greet him?

  ah no! 640

  He loves, but thee he hoped nevermore to see, -

  He sighed as he died,

  But with never a thought for thee.

  Alone!

  Alone, for ever alone, - 645

  Whose eyes were such wondrous spies for the fate foreshown!

  Lo! have not We leashed the twin

  Of endless Sorrow to Sin, -

  Who on no flower refrain to lour with peril, -

  Dire-gifted spirits of fire, 650

  We whose throne is the Beryl?

  ROSE MARY: PART III

  A swoon that breaks is the whelming wave

  When help comes late but still can save.

  With all blind throes is the instant rife, -

  Hurtling clangour and clouds at strife,- 655

  The breath of death, but the kiss of life.

  The night lay deep on Rose Mary’s heart,

  For her swoon was death’s kind counterpart:

  The dawn broke dim on Rose Mary’s soul, -

  No hill-crown’s heavenly aureole, 660

  But a wild gleam on a shaken shoal.

  Her senses gasped in the sudden air,

  And she looked around, but none was there.

  She felt the slackening frost distil

  Through her blood the last ooze dull and chill: 665

  Her lids were dry and her lips were still.

  Her tears had flooded her heart again;

  As after a long day’s bitter rain,

  At dusk when the wet flower-cups shrink,

  The drops run in from the beaded brink, 670

  And all the close-shut petals drink.

  Again her sighs on her heart were rolled;

  As the wind that long has swept the wold, -

  Whose moan was made with the moaning sea, -

  Beats out its breath in the last torn tree, 675

  And sinks at length in lethargy.

  She knew she had waded bosom-deep

  Along death’s bank in the sedge of sleep:

  All else was lost to her clouded mind;

  Nor, looking back, could she see defin’d 680

  O’er the dim dumb waste what lay behind.

  Slowly fades the sun from the wall

  Till day lies dead on the sun-dial:

  And now in Rose Mary’s lifted eye

  ’Twas shadow alone that made reply 685

  To the set face of the soul’s dark sky.

  Yet still through her soul there wandered past

  Dread phantoms borne on a wailing blast, -

  Death and sorrow and sin and shame;

  And, murmured still, to her lips there came 690

  Her mother’s and her lover’s name.

  How to ask, and what thing to know?

  She might not stay and she dared not go.

  From fires unseen these smoke-clouds curled;

  But where did the hidden curse lie furled? 695

  And how to seek through the weary world?

  With toiling breath she rose from the floor

  And dragged her steps to an open door:

  ’Twas the secret panel standing wide,

  As the lady’s hand had led it bide 700

  In hastening back to her daughter’s side.

  She passed, but reeled with a dizzy brain

  And smote the door which closed again.

  She stood within by the darkling stair,

  But her feet might mount more freely there, - 705

  ’Twas the open light most blinded her.

  Within her mind no wonder grew

  At the secret path she never knew:

  All ways alike were strange to her now, -

  One field bare-ridged from the spirit’s plough, 710

  One thicket black with the cypress-bough.

  Once she thought that she heard her name;

  And she paused, but knew not whence it came.

  Down the shadowed stair a faint ray fell

  That guided the weary footsteps well 715

  Till it led her up to the altar-cell.

  No change there was on Rose Mary’s face

  As she leaned in the portal’s narrow space:

  Still she stood by the pillar’s stem,

  Hand and bosom and garment’s hem, 720

  As the soul stands by at the requiem.

  The altar-cell was a dome low-lit,

  And a veil hung in the midst of it:

  At the pole-points of its circling girth

  Four symbols stood of the world’s first birth, - 725

  Air and water and fire and earth.

  To the north, a fountain glittered free;

  To the south, there glowed a red fruit-tree;

  To the east, a lamp flamed high and fair;

  To the west, a crystal casket rare 730

  Held fast a cloud of the fields of air.
r />   The painted walls were a mystic show

  Of time’s ebb-tide and overflow;

  His hoards long-locked and conquering key,

  His service-fires that in heaven be, 735

  And earth-wheels whirled perpetually.

  Rose Mary gazed from the open door

  As on idle things she cared not for, -

  The fleeting shapes of an empty tale;

  Then stepped with a heedless visage pale, 740

  And lifted aside the altar-veil.

  The altar stood from its curved recess

  In a coiling serpent’s life-likeness:

  Even such a serpent evermore

  Lies deep asleep at the world’s dark core 745

  Till the last Voice shake the sea and shore.

  From the altar-cloth a book rose spread

  And tapers burned at the altar-head;

  And there in the altar-midst alone,

  ‘Twixt wings of a sculptured beast unknown, 750

  Rose Mary saw the Beryl-stone.

  Firm it sat ‘twixt the hollowed wings,

  As an orb sits in the hand of kings:

  And lo! for that Foe whose curse far-flown

  Had bound her life with a burning zone, 755

  Rose Mary knew the Beryl-stone.

  Dread is the meteor’s blazing sphere

  When the poles throb to its blind career;

  But not with a light more grim and ghast

  Thereby is the future doom forecast, 760

  Than now this sight brought back the past.

  The hours and minutes seemed to whirr

  In a clanging swarm that deafened her;

  They stung her heart to a writhing flame,

  And marshalled past in its glare they came, - 765

  Death and sorrow and sin and shame.

  Round the Beryl’s sphere she saw them pass

  And mock her eyes from the fated glass:

  One by one in a fiery train

  The dead hours seemed to wax and wane, 770

  And burned till all was known again.

  From the drained heart’s fount there rose no cry,

  There sprang no tears, for the source was dry.

  Held in the hand of some heavy law,

  Her eyes she might not once withdraw, 775

  Nor shrink away from the thing she saw.

  Even as she gazed, through all her blood

  The flame was quenched in a coming flood:

  Out of the depth of the hollow gloom

  On her soul’s bare sands she felt it boom, - 780

  The measured tide of a sea of doom.

  Three steps she took through the altar-gate,

  And her neck reared and her arms grew straight:

  The sinews clenched like a serpent’s throe,

  And the face was white in the dark hair’s flow, 785

  As her hate beheld what lay below.

  Dumb she stood in her malisons, -

  A silver statue tressed with bronze:

  As the fabled head by Perseus mown,

  It seemed in sooth that her gaze alone 790

  Had turned the carven shapes to stone.

  O’er the altar-sides on either hand

  There hung a dinted helm and brand:

  By strength thereof, ‘neath the Sacred Sign,

  That bitter gift o’er the salt sea-brine 795

  Her father brought from Palestine.

  Rose Mary moved with a stern accord

  And reached her hand to her father’s sword;

  Nor did she stir her gaze one whit

  From the thing whereon her brows were knit; 800

  But gazing still, she spoke to it.

  ‘O ye, three times accurst,’ she said,

  ‘By whom this stone is tenanted!

  Lo! there ye came by a strong sin’s might;

  Yet a sinner’s hand that’s weak to smite 805

  Shall send you hence ere the day be night.

  ‘This hour a clear voice bade me know

  My hand shall work your overthrow:

  Another thing in mine ear it spake, -

  With the broken spell my life shall break. 810

  I thank Thee, God, for the dear death’s sake!

  ‘And he Thy heavenly minister

  Who swayed erewhile this spell-bound sphere, -

  My parting soul let him haste to greet,

  And none but he be guide for my feet 815

  To where Thy rest is made complete.’

  Then deep she breathed, with a tender moan: -

  ‘My love, my lord, my only one!

  Even as I held the cursed clue,

  When thou, through me, these foul ones slew,- 820

  By mine own deed shall they slay me too!

  ‘Even while they speed to Hell, my love,

  Two hearts shall meet in Heaven above.

  Our shrift thou sought’st, but might’st not bring:

  And oh! for me ’tis a blessed thing 825

  To work hereby our ransoming.

  ‘One were our hearts in joy and pain,

  And our souls e’en now grow one again.

  And O my love, if our souls are three,

  O thine and mine shall the third soul be, - 830

  One threefold love eternally.’

  Her eyes were soft as she spoke apart,

  And the lips smiled to the broken heart:

  But the glance was dark and the forehead scored

  With the bitter frown of hate restored, 835

  As her two hands swung the heavy sword.

  Three steps back from her Foe she trod: -

  ‘Love, for thy sake! In Thy Name, O God!’

  In the fair white hands small strength was shown;

  Yet the blade flashed high and the edge fell prone, 840

  And she cleft the heart of the Beryl-stone.

  What living flesh in the thunder-cloud

  Hath sat and felt heaven cry aloud?

  Or known how the levin’s pulse may beat?

  Or wrapped the hour when the whirlwinds meet 845

  About its breast for a winding-sheet?

  Who hath crouched at the world’s deep heart

  While the earthquake rends its loins apart?

  Or walked far under the seething main

  While overhead the heavens ordain 850

  The tempest-towers of the hurricane?

  Who hath seen or what ear hath heard

  The secret things unregister’d

  Of the place where all is past and done,

  And tears and laughter sound as one 855

  In Hell’s unhallowed unison?

  Nay, is it writ how the fiends despair

  In earth and water and fire and air?

  Even so no mortal tongue may tell

  How to the clang of the sword that fell 860

  The echoes shook the altar-cell.

  When all was still on the air again

  The Beryl-stone lay cleft in twain;

  The veil was rent from the riven dome;

  And every wind that’s winged to roam 865

  Might have the ruined place for home.

  The fountain no more glittered free;

  The fruit hung dead on the leafless tree;

  The flame of the lamp had ceased to flare;

  And the crystal casket shattered there 870

  Was emptied now of its cloud of air.

  And lo! on the ground Rose Mary lay,

  With a cold brow like the snows ere May,

  With a cold breast like the earth till Spring,

  With such a smile as the June days bring 875

  When the year grows warm for harvesting.

  The death she had won might leave no trace

  On the soft sweet form and gentle face:

  In a gracious sleep she seemed to lie;

  And over her head her hand on high 880

  Held fast the sword she triumphed by.

  ’Twas then a clear voice said in the room: -<
br />
  ‘Behold the end of the heavy doom.

  O come, - for thy bitter love’s sake blest;

  By a sweet path now thou journeyest, 885

  And I will lead thee to thy rest.

  ‘Me thy sin by Heaven’s sore ban

  Did chase erewhile from the talisman:

  But to my heart, as a conquered home,

  In glory of strength thy footsteps come 890

  Who hast thus cast forth my foes therefrom.

  ‘Already thy heart remembereth

  No more his name thou sought’st in death:

  For under all deeps, all heights above, -

  So wide the gulf in the midst thereof,- 895

  Are Hell of Treason and Heaven of Love.

  ‘Thee, true soul, shall thy truth prefer

  To blessed Mary’s rose-bower:

  Warmed and lit is thy place afar

  With guerdon-fires of the sweet Love-star 900

  Where hearts of steadfast lovers are: -

  ‘Though naught for the poor corpse lying here

  Remain to-day but the cold white bier,

  But burial-chaunt and bended knee,

  But sighs and tears that heaviest be, 905

  But rent rose-flower and rosemary.’

  BERYL-SONG

  We, cast forth from the Beryl,

  Gyre-circling spirits of fire,

  Whose pangs begin

  With God’s grace to sin, 910

  For whose spent powers the immortal hours are sterile, -

  Woe! must We behold this mother

  Find grace in her dead child’s face, and doubt of none other

  But that perfect pardon, alas! hath assured her guerdon?

  Woe! must We behold this daughter, 915

  Made clean from the soil of sin wherewith We had fraught her,

  Shake off a man’s blood like water?

  Write up her story

  On the Gate of Heaven’s glory,

  Whom there We behold so fair in shining apparel, 920

  And beneath her the ruin

  Of our own undoing!

  Alas, the Beryl!

  We had for a foeman

  But one weak woman; 925

  In one day’s strife,

  Her hope fell dead from her life;

  And yet no iron,

  Her soul to environ,

  Could this manslayer, this false soothsayer imperil! 930

  Lo, where she bows

  In the Holy House!

  Who now shall dissever her soul from its joy for ever,

  While every ditty

  Of love and plentiful pity 935

  Fills the White City,

  And the floor of Heaven to her feet for ever is given?

  Hark, a voice cries ‘Flee,”

  Woe! woe! what shelter have We,

  Whose pangs begin 940

  With God’s grace to sin,

  For whose spent powers the immortal hours are sterile,

  Gyre-circling spirits of fire,

 

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