Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Home > Other > Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning > Page 60
Complete Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning Page 60

by Elizabeth Barrett Browning


  Till he stood discrowned, resigned! —

  But the reader’s voice dropped lower

  When the poet called him blind .

  XX

  Ah, my gossip! you were older,

  And more learned, and a man!

  Yet that shadow, the enfolder

  Of your quiet eyelids, ran

  Both our spirits to one level;

  And I turned from hill and lea

  And the summer-sun’s green revel,

  To your eyes that could not see.

  XXI

  Now Christ bless you with the one light

  Which goes shining night and day!

  May the flowers which grow in sunlight

  Shed their fragrance in your way!

  Is it not right to remember

  All your kindness, friend of mine,

  When we two sat in the chamber,

  And the poets poured us wine?

  XXII

  So, to come back to the drinking

  Of this Cyprus, — it is well,

  But those memories, to my thinking,

  Make a better oenomel;

  And whoever be the speaker,

  None can murmur with a sigh

  That, in drinking from that beaker,

  I am sipping like a fly.

  A RHAPSODY OF LIFE’S PROGRESS.

  “Fill all the stops of life with tuneful breath.”

  Poems on Man , by Cornelius Mathews .

  I.

  We are borne into life — it is sweet, it is strange.

  We lie still on the knee of a mild Mystery

  Which smiles with a change;

  But we doubt not of changes, we know not of spaces,

  The Heavens seem as near as our own mother’s face is,

  And we think we could touch all the stars that we see;

  And the milk of our mother is white on our mouth;

  And, with small childish hands, we are turning around

  The apple of Life which another has found;

  It is warm with our touch, not with sun of the south,

  And we count, as we turn it, the red side for four.

  O Life, O Beyond,

  Thou art sweet, thou art strange evermore!

  II.

  Then all things look strange in the pure golden æther;

  We walk through the gardens with hands linked together,

  And the lilies look large as the trees;

  And, as loud as the birds, sing the bloom-loving bees,

  And the birds sing like angels, so mystical-fine,

  And the cedars are brushing the archangels’ feet,

  And time is eternity, love is divine,

  And the world is complete.

  Now, God bless the child, — father, mother, respond!

  O Life, O Beyond,

  Thou art strange, thou art sweet.

  III.

  Then we leap on the earth with the armour of youth,

  And the earth rings again;

  And we breathe out “O beauty!” we cry out “O truth!”

  And the bloom of our lips drops with wine,

  And our blood runs amazed ‘neath the calm hyaline;

  The earth cleaves to the foot, the sun burns to the brain, —

  What is this exultation? and what this despair? —

  The strong pleasure is smiting the nerves into pain,

  And we drop from the Fair as we climb to the Fair,

  And we lie in a trance at its feet;

  And the breath of an angel cold-piercing the air

  Breathes fresh on our faces in swoon,

  And we think him so near he is this side the sun,

  And we wake to a whisper self-murmured and fond,

  O Life, O Beyond,

  Thou art strange, thou art sweet!

  IV.

  And the winds and the waters in pastoral measures

  Go winding around us, with roll upon roll,

  Till the soul lies within in a circle of pleasures

  Which hideth the soul:

  And we run with the stag, and we leap with the horse,

  And we swim with the fish through the broad watercourse,

  And we strike with the falcon, and hunt with the hound,

  And the joy which is in us flies out by a wound.

  And we shout so aloud, “We exult, we rejoice,”

  That we lose the low moan of our brothers around:

  And we shout so adeep down creation’s profound,

  We are deaf to God’s voice.

  And we bind the rose-garland on forehead and ears

  Yet we are not ashamed,

  And the dew of the roses that runneth unblamed

  Down our cheeks, is not taken for tears.

  Help us, God! trust us, man! love us, woman! “I hold

  Thy small head in my hands, — with its grapelets of gold

  Growing bright through my fingers, — like altar for oath,

  ‘Neath the vast golden spaces like witnessing faces

  That watch the eternity strong in the troth —

  I love thee, I leave thee,

  Live for thee, die for thee!

  I prove thee, deceive thee,

  Undo evermore thee!

  Help me, God! slay me, man! — one is mourning for both.”

  And we stand up though young near the funeral-sheet

  Which covers old Cæsar and old Pharamond,

  And death is so nigh us, life cools from its heat.

  O Life, O Beyond,

  Art thou fair, art thou sweet?

  V.

  Then we act to a purpose, we spring up erect:

  We will tame the wild mouths of the wilderness-steeds,

  We will plough up the deep in the ships double-decked,

  We will build the great cities, and do the great deeds,

  Strike the steel upon steel, strike the soul upon soul,

  Strike the dole on the weal, overcoming the dole.

  Let the cloud meet the cloud in a grand thunder-roll!

  “While the eagle of Thought rides the tempest in scorn,

  Who cares if the lightning is burning the corn?

  Let us sit on the thrones

  In a purple sublimity,

  And grind down men’s bones

  To a pale unanimity.

  Speed me, God! serve me, man! I am god over men;

  When I speak in my cloud, none shall answer again;

  ‘Neath the stripe and the bond,

  Lie and mourn at my feet!”

  O Life, O Beyond,

  Thou art strange, thou art sweet!

  VI.

  Then we grow into thought, and with inward ascensions

  Touch the bounds of our Being.

  We lie in the dark here, swathed doubly around

  With our sensual relations and social conventions,

  Yet are ‘ware of a sight, yet are ‘ware of a sound

  Beyond Hearing and Seeing, —

  Are aware that a Hades rolls deep on all sides

  With its infinite tides

  About and above us, — until the strong arch

  Of our life creaks and bends as if ready for falling,

  And through the dim rolling we hear the sweet calling

  Of spirits that speak in a soft under-tongue

  The sense of the mystical march:

  And we cry to them softly, “Come nearer, come nearer,

  And lift up the lap of this dark, and speak clearer,

  And teach us the song that ye sung!”

  And we smile in our thought as they answer or no,

  For to dream of a sweetness is sweet as to know.

  Wonders breathe in our face

  And we ask not their name;

  Love takes all the blame

  Of the world’s prison-place;

  And we sing back the songs as we guess them, aloud,

  And we send up the lark of our music that cuts

  Untired through the cloud

 
To beat with its wings at the lattice Heaven shuts;

  Yet the angels look down and the mortals look up

  As the little wings beat,

  And the poet is blessed with their pity or hope.

  ‘Twixt the heavens and the earth can a poet despond?

  O Life, O Beyond,

  Thou art strange, thou art sweet!

  VII.

  Then we wring from our souls their applicative strength,

  And bend to the cord the strong bow of our ken,

  And bringing our lives to the level of others,

  Hold the cup we have filled, to their uses at length.

  “Help me, God! love me, man! I am man among men,

  And my life is a pledge

  Of the ease of another’s!”

  From the fire and the water we drive out the steam

  With a rush and a roar and the speed of a dream;

  And the car without horses, the car without wings,

  Roars onward and flies

  On its grey iron edge

  ‘Neath the heat of a Thought sitting still in our eyes:

  And our hand knots in air, with the bridge that it flings,

  Two peaks far disrupted by ocean and skies,

  And, lifting a fold of the smooth-flowing Thames,

  Draws under the world with its turmoils and pothers,

  While the swans float on softly, untouched in their calms

  By humanity’s hum at the root of the springs.

  And with reachings of Thought we reach down to the deeps

  Of the souls of our brothers,

  We teach them full words with our slow-moving lips,

  “God,” “Liberty,” “Truth,” — which they hearken and think

  And work into harmony, link upon link,

  Till the silver meets round the earth gelid and dense,

  Shedding sparks of electric responding intense

  On the dark of eclipse.

  Then we hear through the silence and glory afar,

  As from shores of a star

  In aphelion, the new generations that cry

  Disenthralled by our voice to harmonious reply,

  “God,” “Liberty,” “Truth!”

  We are glorious forsooth,

  And our name has a seat,

  Though the shroud should be donned.

  O Life, O Beyond,

  Thou art strange, thou art sweet!

  VIII.

  Help me, God! help me, man! I am low, I am weak:

  Death loosens my sinews and creeps in my veins;

  My body is cleft by these wedges of pains

  From my spirit’s serene,

  And I feel the externe and insensate creep in

  On my organised clay;

  I sob not, nor shriek,

  Yet I faint fast away:

  I am strong in the spirit, — deep-thoughted, clear-eyed, —

  I could walk, step for step, with an angel beside,

  On the heaven-heights of truth.

  Oh, the soul keeps its youth

  But the body faints sore, it is tried in the race,

  It sinks from the chariot ere reaching the goal,

  It is weak, it is cold,

  The rein drops from its hold,

  It sinks back, with the death in its face.

  On, chariot! on, soul!

  Ye are all the more fleet —

  Be alone at the goal

  Of the strange and the sweet!

  IX.

  Love us, God! love us, man! we believe, we achieve:

  Let us love, let us live,

  For the acts correspond;

  We are glorious, and die :

  And again on the knee of a mild Mystery

  That smiles with a change,

  Here we lie.

  O Death, O Beyond ,

  Thou art sweet, thou art strange!

  A LAY OF THE EARLY ROSE.

  “ —— — discordance that can accord.”

  — Romaunt of the Rose.

  A rose once grew within

  A garden April-green,

  In her loneness, in her loneness,

  And the fairer for that oneness.

  A white rose delicate

  On a tall bough and straight:

  Early comer, early comer,

  Never waiting for the summer.

  Her pretty gestes did win

  South winds to let her in,

  In her loneness, in her loneness,

  All the fairer for that oneness.

  “For if I wait,” said she,

  “Till time for roses be,

  For the moss-rose and the musk-rose,

  Maiden-blush and royal-dusk rose,

  “What glory then for me

  In such a company? —

  Roses plenty, roses plenty,

  And one nightingale for twenty!

  “Nay, let me in,” said she,

  “Before the rest are free,

  In my loneness, in my loneness,

  All the fairer for that oneness.

  “For I would lonely stand

  Uplifting my white hand,

  On a mission, on a mission,

  To declare the coming vision.

  “Upon which lifted sign,

  What worship will be mine!

  What addressing, what caressing,

  And what thanks and praise and blessing!

  “A windlike joy will rush

  Through every tree and bush,

  Bending softly in affection

  And spontaneous benediction.

  “Insects, that only may

  Live in a sunbright ray,

  To my whiteness, to my whiteness,

  Shall be drawn as to a brightness, —

  “And every moth and bee

  Approach me reverently,

  Wheeling o’er me, wheeling o’er me,

  Coronals of motioned glory.

  “Three larks shall leave a cloud,

  To my whiter beauty vowed,

  Singing gladly all the moontide,

  Never waiting for the suntide.

  “Ten nightingales shall flee

  Their woods for love of me,

  Singing sadly all the suntide,

  Never waiting for the moontide.

  “I ween the very skies

  Will look down with surprise,

  When below on earth they see me

  With my starry aspect dreamy.

  “And earth will call her flowers

  To hasten out of doors,

  By their curtsies and sweet-smelling

  To give grace to my foretelling.”

  So praying, did she win

  South winds to let her in,

  In her loneness, in her loneness,

  And the fairer for that oneness.

  But ah, — alas for her!

  No thing did minister

  To her praises, to her praises,

  More than might unto a daisy’s.

  No tree nor bush was seen

  To boast a perfect green,

  Scarcely having, scarcely having

  One leaf broad enough for waving.

  The little flies did crawl

  Along the southern wall,

  Faintly shifting, faintly shifting

  Wings scarce long enough for lifting.

  The lark, too high or low,

  I ween, did miss her so,

  With his nest down in the gorses,

  And his song in the star-courses.

  The nightingale did please

  To loiter beyond seas:

  Guess him in the Happy Islands,

  Learning music from the silence!

  Only the bee, forsooth,

  Came in the place of both,

  Doing honour, doing honour

  To the honey-dews upon her.

  The skies looked coldly down

  As on a royal crown;

  Then with drop for drop, at leisure,

  They began to rain for pleasure.
>
  Whereat the earth did seem

  To waken from a dream,

  Winter-frozen, winter-frozen,

  Her unquiet eyes unclosing —

  Said to the Rose, “Ha, snow!

  And art thou fallen so?

  Thou, who wast enthronèd stately

  All along my mountains lately?

  “Holla, thou world-wide snow!

  And art thou wasted so,

  With a little bough to catch thee,

  And a little bee to watch thee?”

  — Poor Rose, to be misknown!

  Would she had ne’er been blown,

  In her loneness, in her loneness,

  All the sadder for that oneness!

  Some word she tried to say,

  Some no . . . ah, wellaway!

  But the passion did o’ercome her,

  And the fair frail leaves dropped from her.

  — Dropped from her fair and mute,

  Close to a poet’s foot,

  Who beheld them, smiling slowly,

  As at something sad yet holy, —

  Said “Verily and thus

  It chances too with us

  Poets, singing sweetest snatches

  While that deaf men keep the watches:

  “Vaunting to come before

  Our own age evermore,

  In a loneness, in a loneness,

  And the nobler for that oneness.

  “Holy in voice and heart,

  To high ends, set apart:

  All unmated, all unmated,

  Just because so consecrated.

  “But if alone we be,

  Where is our empery?

  And if none can reach our stature,

  Who can mete our lofty nature?

  “What bell will yield a tone,

  Swung in the air alone?

  If no brazen clapper bringing,

  Who can hear the chimèd ringing?

  “What angel but would seem

  To sensual eyes, ghost-dim?

  And without assimilation,

  Vain is interpenetration.

  “And thus, what can we do,

  Poor rose and poet too,

 

‹ Prev