Never so gloriously was Sleep attended
As with the pageant of that heavenly maid.
But to dwell on such subjects is sinful. The recollection of
them, with all their vanities, brings tears into my eyes.
Boccaccio. And into mine too ... they were so very
charming.
Petrarca. Alas, alas! the time always comes when we must
regret the enjoyments of our youth.
Boccaccio. If we have let them pass us.
Petrarca. I mean our indulgence in them.
Boccaccio. Francesco! I think you must remember Raffaellino
degli Alfani.
Petrarca. Was it Raffaellino who lived near San Michele in
Orto?
Boccaccio. The same. He was an innocent soul, and fond of
fish. But whenever his friend Sabbatelli sent him a trout from
Pratolino, he always kept it until next day or the day after,
just long enough to render it unpalatable. He then turned it
over in the platter, smelt at it closer, although the news of its
condition came undeniably from a distance, touched it with his
forefinger, solicited a testimony from the gills which the eyes had
contradicted, sighed over it, and sent it for a present to somebody
else. Were I a lover of trout as Raffaellino was, I think
I should have taken an opportunity of enjoying it while the
pink and crimson were glittering on it.
Petrarca. Trout, yes.
Boccaccio. And all other fish I could encompass.
Petrarca. O thou grave mocker! I did not suspect such
slyness in thee: proof enough I had almost forgotten thee.
Boccaccio. Listen! listen! I fancied I caught a footstep in
the passage. Come nearer; bend your head lower, that I may
whisper a word in your ear. Never let Assunta hear you sigh.
She is mischievous: she may have been standing at the door:
not that I believe she would be guilty of any such impropriety:
but who knows what girls are capable of! She has no malice,
only in laughing; and a sigh sets her windmill at work, van over
van, incessantly.
Petrarca. I should soon check her. I have no notion....
Boccaccio. After all, she is a good girl ... a trifle of the
wilful. She must have it that many things are hurtful to me
... reading in particular ... it makes people so odd. Tina
is a small matter of the madcap ... in her own particular
way ... but exceedingly discreet, I do assure you, if they will
only leave her alone.
I find I was mistaken, there was nobody.
Petrarca. A cat, perhaps.
Boccaccio. No such thing. I order him over to Certaldo
while the birds are laying and sitting: and he knows by experience,
favourite as he is, that it is of no use to come back before
he is sent for. Since the first impetuosities of youth, he has
rarely been refractory or disobliging. We have lived together
now these five years, unless I miscalculate; and he seems to have
learnt something of my manners, wherein violence and enterprise
by no means predominate. I have watched him looking
at a large green lizard; and, their eyes being opposite and near,
he has doubted whether it might be pleasing to me if he began
the attack; and their tails on a sudden have touched one another
at the decision.
Petrarca. Seldom have adverse parties felt the same desire
of peace at the same moment, and none ever carried it more
simultaneously and promptly into execution.
Boccaccio. He enjoys his otium cum dignitate at Certaldo:
there he is my castellan, and his chase is unlimited in those
domains. After the doom of relegation is expired, he comes
hither at midsummer. And then if you could see his joy!
His eyes are as deep as a well, and as clear as a fountain: he
jerks his tail into the air like a royal sceptre, and waves it like
the wand of a magician. You would fancy that, as Horace
with his head, he was about to smite the stars with it. There
is ne’er such another cat in the parish; and he knows it, a rogue!
We have rare repasts together in the bean-and-bacon time,
although in regard to the bean he sides with the philosopher of
Samos; but after due examination. In cleanliness he is a very
nun; albeit in that quality which lies between cleanliness and
godliness, there is a smack of Fra Biagio about him. What
is that book in your hand?
Petrarca. My breviary.
Boccaccio. Well, give me mine too ... there, on the little
table in the corner, under the glass of primroses. We can do
nothing better.
Petrarca. What prayer were you looking for? let me find it.
Boccaccio. I don’t know how it is: I am scarcely at present
in a frame of mind for it. We are of one faith: the prayers of
the one will do for the other: and I am sure, if you omitted my
name, you would say them all over afresh. I wish you could
recollect in any book as dreamy a thing to entertain me as I have
been just repeating. We have had enough of Dante: I believe
few of his beauties have escaped us: and small faults, which
we readily pass by, are fitter for small folks, as grubs are the
proper bait for gudgeons.
Petrarca. I have had as many dreams as most men. We
are all made up of them, as the webs of the spider are particles
of her own vitality. But how infinitely less do we profit by
them! I will relate to you, before we separate, one among the
multitude of mine, as coming the nearest to the poetry of yours,
and as having been not totally useless to me. Often have I
reflected on it; sometimes with pensiveness, with sadness never.
Boccaccio. Then, Francesco, if you had with you as copious
a choice of dreams as clustered on the elm-trees where the
Sibyl led Aeneas, this, in preference to the whole swarm of them,
is the queen dream for me.
Petrarca. When I was younger I was fond of wandering in
solitary places, and never was afraid of slumbering in woods
and grottoes. Among the chief pleasures of my life, and among
the commonest of my occupations, was the bringing before me
such heroes and heroines of antiquity, such poets and sages,
such of the prosperous and the unfortunate, as most interested
me by their courage, their wisdom, their eloquence, or their
adventures. Engaging them in the conversation best suited
to their characters, I knew perfectly their manners, their steps,
their voices: and often did I moisten with my tears the models
I had been forming of the less happy.
Boccaccio. Great is the privilege of entering into the studies
of the intellectual; great is that of conversing with the guides of
nations, the movers of the mass, the regulators of the unruly
will, stiff, in its impurity and rust, against the finger of the
Almighty Power that formed it: but give me, Francesco, give
me rather the creature to sympathize with; apportion me the
sufferings to assuage. Ah, gentle soul! thou wilt never send
them over to another; they have better hopes from thee.
Petrarca. We both alike feel the sorrows of those around us.
He who suppresses or allays them in another, breaks many
thorns off his own; and future years will never harden fresh ones.
My occupation was not always in making the politician talk
politics, the orator toss his torch among the populace, the
philosopher run down from philosophy to cover the retreat or
the advances of his sect; but sometimes in devising how such
characters must act and discourse, on subjects far remote from
the beaten track of their career. In like manner the philologist,
and again the dialectician, were not indulged in the review and
parade of their trained bands, but, at times, brought forward
to show in what manner and in what degree external habits
had influenced the conformation of the internal man. It was
far from unprofitable to set passing events before past actors,
and to record the decisions of those whose interests and passions
are unconcerned in them.
Boccaccio. This is surely no easy matter. The thoughts are
in fact your own, however you distribute them.
Petrarca. All cannot be my own; if you mean by thoughts
the opinions and principles I should be the most desirous to
inculcate. Some favourite ones perhaps may obtrude too
prominently, but otherwise no misbehaviour is permitted them:
reprehension and rebuke are always ready, and the offence is
punished on the spot.
Boccaccio. Certainly you thus throw open, to its full extent,
the range of poetry and invention; which cannot but be very
limited and sterile, unless where we find displayed much diversity
of character as disseminated by nature, much peculiarity of
sentiment as arising from position, marked with unerring skill
through every shade and gradation; and finally and chiefly,
much intertexture and intensity of passion. You thus convey
to us more largely and expeditiously the stores of your understanding
and imagination, than you ever could by sonnets or
canzonets, or sinewless and sapless allegories.
But weightier works are less captivating. If you had published
any such as you mention, you must have waited for their
acceptance. Not only the fame of Marcellus, but every other,
Crescit occulto velut arbor aevo;
and that which makes the greatest vernal shoot is apt to make
the least autumnal. Authors in general who have met celebrity
at starting, have already had their reward; always their utmost
due, and often much beyond it. We cannot hope for both
celebrity and fame: supremely fortunate are the few who are
allowed the liberty of choice between them. We two prefer
the strength that springs from exercise and toil, acquiring it
gradually and slowly: we leave to others the earlier blessing of
that sleep which follows enjoyment. How many at first sight
are enthusiastic in their favour! Of these how large a portion
come away empty-handed and discontented! like idlers who
visit the seacoast, fill their pockets with pebbles bright from the
passing wave, and carry them off with rapture. After a short
examination at home, every streak seems faint and dull, and
the whole contexture coarse, uneven, and gritty: first one is
thrown away, then another; and before the week’s end the store
is gone, of things so shining and wonderful.
Petrarca. Allegory, which you named with sonnets and
canzonets, had few attractions for me, believing it to be the
delight in general of idle, frivolous, inexcursive minds, in whose
mansions there is neither hall nor portal to receive the loftier
of the Passions. A stranger to the Affections, she holds a low
station among the handmaidens of Poetry, being fit for little
but an apparition in a mask. I had reflected for some time on
this subject, when, wearied with the length of my walk over
the mountains, and finding a soft old molehill, covered with
grey grass, by the wayside, I laid my head upon it and slept.
I cannot tell how long it was before a species of dream or vision
came over me.
Two beautiful youths appeared beside me; each was winged;
but the wings were hanging down, and seemed ill adapted to
flight. One of them, whose voice was the softest I ever heard,
looking at me frequently, said to the other:
‘He is under my guardianship for the present: do not awaken
him with that feather.’
Methought, hearing the whisper, I saw something like the
feather on an arrow; and then the arrow itself; the whole of it,
even to the point; although he carried it in such a manner
that it was difficult at first to discover more than a palm’s length
of it: the rest of the shaft, and the whole of the barb, was behind
his ankles.
‘This feather never awakens any one,’ replied he, rather
petulantly; ‘but it brings more of confident security, and more
of cherished dreams, than you without me are capable of
imparting.’
‘Be it so!’ answered the gentler ... ‘none is less inclined to
quarrel or dispute than I am. Many whom you have wounded
grievously, call upon me for succour. But so little am I disposed
to thwart you, it is seldom I venture to do more for them than
to whisper a few words of comfort in passing. How many
reproaches on these occasions have been cast upon me for
indifference and infidelity! Nearly as many, and nearly in
the same terms, as upon you!’
‘Odd enough that we, O Sleep! should be thought so alike,’
said Love, contemptuously. ‘Yonder is he who bears a nearer
resemblance to you: the dullest have observed it.’ I fancied
I turned my eyes to where he was pointing, and saw at a distance
the figure he designated. Meanwhile the contention went on
uninterruptedly. Sleep was slow in asserting his power or his
benefits. Love recapitulated them; but only that he might
assert his own above them. Suddenly he called on me to
decide, and to choose my patron. Under the influence, first of
the one, then of the other, I sprang from repose to rapture, I
alighted from rapture on repose ... and knew not which
was sweetest. Love was very angry with me, and declared
he would cross me throughout the whole of my existence.
Whatever I might on other occasions have thought of his
veracity, I now felt too surely the conviction that he would
keep his word. At last, before the close of the altercation, the
third Genius had advanced, and stood near us. I cannot tell
how I knew him, but I knew him to be the Genius of Death.
Breathless as I was at beholding him, I soon became familiar
with his features. First they seemed only calm; presently
they grew contemplative; and lastly beautiful: those of the
Graces themselves are less regular, less harmonious, less composed.
Love glanced at him unsteadily, with a countenance
in which there was somewhat of anxiety, somewhat of disdain;
and cried: ‘Go away! go away! nothing that thou touchest,
lives.’
‘Say rather, child!’ replied the advancing form, and advancing
grew loftier and statelier, ‘say rather that nothing of beautiful
or of glorious lives its own true life until my wing hath passed
over it.’
Love pouted, and rumpled and bent down with his forefinger
the stiff short feathers on his arrow-head; but replied not.
Although he frowned worse than ever, and at me, I dreaded him
less and less, and scarcely looked toward him. The milder and
calmer Genius, the third, in proportion as I took courage to
contemplate him, regarded me with more and more complacency.
He held neither flower nor arrow, as the others did; but, throwing
back the clusters of dark curls that overshadowed his
countenance, he presented to me his hand, openly and benignly.
I shrank on looking at him so near, and yet I sighed to love him.
He smiled, not without an expression of pity, at perceiving my
diffidence, my timidity: for I remembered how soft was the
hand of Sleep, how warm and entrancing was Love’s. By
degrees, I became ashamed of my ingratitude; and turning my
face away, I held out my arms, and felt my neck within his.
Composure strewed and allayed all the throbbings of my bosom;
the coolness of freshest morning breathed around: the heavens
seemed to open above me; while the beautiful cheek of my
deliverer rested on my head. I would now have looked for
those others; but knowing my intention by my gesture, he
said, consolatorily:
‘Sleep is on his way to the Earth, where many are calling
him; but it is not to these he hastens; for every call only makes
him fly farther off. Sedately and gravely as he looks, he is
nearly as capricious and volatile as the more arrogant and
ferocious one.’
‘And Love!’ said I, ‘whither is he departed? If not too late,
I would propitiate and appease him.’
‘He who cannot follow me, he who cannot overtake and pass
me,’ said the Genius, ‘is unworthy of the name, the most glorious
in earth or heaven. Look up! Love is yonder, and ready to
receive thee.’
I looked: the earth was under me: I saw only the clear blue
sky, and something brighter above it.
POEMS
I
She I love (alas in vain!)
Floats before my slumbering eyes:
When she comes she lulls my pain,
When she goes what pangs arise!
Thou whom love, whom memory flies,
Gentle Sleep! prolong thy reign!
If even thus she soothe my sighs,
Never let me wake again!
II
Pleasure! why thus desert the heart
In its spring-tide?
I could have seen her, I could part,
And but have sigh’d!
O’er every youthful charm to stray,
To gaze, to touch....
Pleasure! why take so much away,
Or give so much?
III
Past ruin’d Ilion Helen lives,
Alcestis rises from the shades;
Verse calls them forth; ’tis verse that gives
Immortal youth to mortal maids.
Soon shall Oblivion’s deepening veil
Hide all the peopled hills you see,
The gay, the proud, while lovers hail
These many summers you and me.
IV
Ianthe! you are call’d to cross the sea!
A path forbidden me!
Remember, while the Sun his blessing sheds
Upon the mountain-heads,
How often we have watcht him laying down
His brow, and dropt our own
Against each other’s, and how faint and short
And sliding the support!
What will succeed it now? Mine is unblest,
Ianthe! nor will rest
But on the very thought that swells with pain.
O bid me hope again!
O give me back what Earth, what (without you)
Not Heaven itself can do,
One of the golden days that we have past;
And let it be my last!
Or else the gift would be, however sweet,
Fragile and incomplete.
V
The gates of fame and of the grave
Stand under the same architrave.
VI
Twenty years hence my eyes may grow
If not quite dim, yet rather so,
Still yours from others they shall know
Twenty years hence.
Twenty years hence tho’ it may hap
That I be call’d to take a nap
In a cool cell where thunder-clap
Was never heard,
There breathe but o’er my arch of grass
A not too sadly sigh’d Alas,
And I shall catch, ere you can pass,
That winged word.
VII
Here, ever since you went abroad,
If there be change, no change I see,
I only walk our wonted road,
The road is only walkt by me.
Yes; I forgot; a change there is;
Was it of that you bade me tell?
I catch at times, at times I miss
The sight, the tone, I know so well.
Only two months since you stood here!
Two shortest months! then tell me why
Voices are harsher than they were,
And tears are longer ere they dry.
VIII
Tell me not things past all belief;
One truth in you I prove;
The flame of anger, bright and brief,
Sharpens the barb of Love.
IX
Proud word you never spoke, but you will speak
Four not exempt from pride some future day.
Resting on one white hand a warm wet cheek
Over my open volume you will say,
‘This man loved me!’ then rise and trip away.
X
FIESOLE IDYL
Here, where precipitate Spring, with one light bound
Into hot Summer’s lusty arms, expires,
And where go forth at morn, at eve, at night,
Soft airs that want the lute to play with ’em,
And softer sighs that know not what they want,
Aside a wall, beneath an orange-tree,
Whose tallest flowers could tell the lowlier ones
Of sights in Fiesole right up above,
While I was gazing a few paces off
At what they seem’d to show me with their nods,
Their frequent whispers and their pointing shoots,
A gentle maid came down the garden-steps
And gathered the pure treasure in her lap.
I heard the branches rustle, and stept forth
To drive the ox away, or mule, or goat,
Such I believed it must be. How could I
Let beast o’erpower them? When hath wind or rain
Borne hard upon weak plant that wanted me,
And I (however they might bluster round)
Walkt off? ’Twere most ungrateful: for sweet scents
Are the swift vehicles of still sweeter thoughts,
And nurse and pillow the dull memory
That would let drop without them her best stores.
They bring me tales of youth and tones of love,
And ’tis and ever was my wish and way
To let all flowers live freely, and all die
(Whene’er their Genius bids their souls depart)
Among their kindred in their native place.
I never pluck the rose; the violet’s head
Hath shaken with my breath upon its bank
And not reproacht me; the ever-sacred cup
Of the pure lily hath between my hands
Felt safe, unsoil’d, nor lost one grain of gold.
I saw the light that made the glossy leaves
More glossy; the fair arm, the fairer cheek
Warmed by the eye intent on its pursuit;
I saw the foot that, although half-erect
From its grey slipper, could not lift her up
To what she wanted: I held down a branch
And gather’d her some blossoms; since their hour
Was come, and bees had wounded them, and flies
Of harder wing were working their way thro’
And scattering them in fragments under-foot.
So crisp were some, they rattled unevolved,
Others, ere broken off, fell into shells,
For such appear the petals when detacht,
Unbending, brittle, lucid, white like snow,
And like snow not seen thro’, by eye or sun:
Yet every one her gown received from me
Was fairer than the first. I thought not so,
But so she praised them to reward my care.
I said, ‘You find the largest.’
‘This indeed,’
Cried she, ‘is large and sweet.’ She held one forth,
Whether for me to look at or to stake
She knew not, nor did I; but taking it
Would best have solved (and this she felt) her doubt.
I dared not touch it; for it seemed a part
Of her own self; fresh, full, the most mature
Of blossoms, yet a blossom; with a touch
To fall, and yet unfallen. She drew back
The boon she tender’d, and then, finding not
The ribbon at her waist to fix it in,
Dropt it, as loath to drop it, on the rest.
XI
Ah what avails the sceptred race,
Ah what the form divine!
What every virtue, every grace!
Rose Aylmer, all were thine.
Rose Aylmer, whom these wakeful eyes
May weep, but never see,
A night of memories and of sighs
I consecrate to thee.
XII
With rosy hand a little girl prest down
A boss of fresh-cull’d cowslips in a rill:
Often as they sprang up again, a frown
Show’d she disliked resistance to her will:
But when they droopt their heads and shone much less,
She shook them to and fro, and threw them by,
And tript away. ‘Ye loathe the heaviness
Ye love to cause, my little girls!’ thought I,
‘And what had shone for you, by you must die.’
XIII
Ternissa! you are fled!
I say not to the dead,
But to the happy ones who rest below:
For, surely, surely, where
Your voice and graces are,
Nothing of death can any feel or know.
Girls who delight to dwell
Where grows most asphodel,
Gather to their calm breasts each word you speak:
The mild Persephone
Places you on her knee,
And your cool palm smooths down stern Pluto’s cheek.
XIV
Various the roads of life; in one
All terminate, one lonely way
We go; and ‘Is he gone?’
Is all our best friends say.
XV
Yes; I write verses now and then,
But blunt and flaccid is my pen,
No longer talkt of by young men
As rather clever:
In the last quarter are my eyes,
You see it by their form and size;
Is it not time then to be wise?
Or now or never.
Fairest that ever sprang from Eve!
While Time allows the short reprieve,
Just look at me! would you believe
’Twas once a lover?
I cannot clear the five-bar gate,
But, trying first its timber’s state,
Climb stiffly up, take breath, and wait
To trundle over.
Thro’ gallopade I cannot swing
The entangling blooms of Beauty’s spring:
I cannot say the tender thing,
Be ’t true or false,
And am beginning to opine
Those girls are only half-divine
Whose waists yon wicked boys entwine
In giddy waltz.
I fear that arm above that shoulder,
I wish them wiser, graver, older,
Sedater, and no harm if colder
And panting less.
Ah! people were not half so wild
In former days, when, starchly mild,
Upon her high-heel’d Essex smiled
The brave Queen Bess.
XVI
ON SEEING A HAIR OF LUCRETIA BORGIA
Borgia, thou once wert almost too august
And high for adoration; now thou’rt dust.
All that remains of thee these plaits unfold,
Calm hair, meandering in pellucid gold.
XVII
Once, and once only, have I seen thy face,
Elia! once only has thy tripping tongue
Run o’er my breast, yet never has been left
Impression on it stronger or more sweet.
Cordial old man! what youth was in thy years,
What wisdom in thy levity, what truth
In every utterance of that purest soul!
Few are the spirits of the glorified
I’d spring to earlier at the gate of Heaven.
XVIII
TO WORDSWORTH
Those who have laid the harp aside
And turn’d to idler things,
From very restlessness have tried
The loose and dusty strings.
And, catching back some favourite strain,
Run with it o’er the chords again.
But Memory is not a Muse,
O Wordsworth! though ’tis said
They all descend from her, and use
To haunt her fountain-head:
That other men should work for me
In the rich mines of Poesie,
Pleases me better than the toil
Of smoothing under hardened hand,
With Attic emery and oil,
The shining point for Wisdom’s wand,
Like those thou temperest ’mid the rills
Descending from thy native hills.
Without his governance, in vain
Manhood is strong, and Youth is bold
If oftentimes the o’er-piled strain
Clogs in the furnace, and grows cold
Beneath his pinions deep and frore,
And swells and melts and flows no more,
That is because the heat beneath
Pants in its cavern poorly fed.
Life springs not from the couch of Death,
Nor Muse nor Grace can raise the dead;
Unturn’d then let the mass remain,
Intractable to sun or rain.
A marsh, where only flat leaves lie,
And showing but the broken sky,
Too surely is the sweetest lay
That wins the ear and wastes the day,
Where youthful Fancy pouts alone
And lets not Wisdom touch her zone.
He who would build his fame up high,
The rule and plummet must apply,
Nor say, ‘I’ll do what I have plann’d,’
Before he try if loam or sand
Be still remaining in the place
Delved for each polisht pillar’s base.
With skilful eye and fit device
Thou raisest every edifice,
Whether in sheltered vale it stand
Or overlook the Dardan strand,
Amid the cypresses that mourn
Laodameia’s love forlorn.
We both have run o’er half the space
Listed for mortal’s earthly race;
We both have crost life’s fervid line,
And other stars before us shine:
May they be bright and prosperous
As those that have been stars for us!
Our course by Milton’s light was sped,
And Shakespeare shining overhead:
Chatting on deck was Dryden too,
The Bacon of the rhyming crew;
None ever crost our mystic sea
More richly stored with thought than he;
Tho’ never tender nor sublime,
He wrestles with and conquers Time.
To learn my lore on Chaucer’s knee,
I left much prouder company;
Thee gentle Spenser fondly led,
But me he mostly sent to bed.
I wish them every joy above
That highly blessed spirits prove,
Save one: and that too shall be theirs,
But after many rolling years,
When ’mid their light thy light appears.
XIX
TO CHARLES DICKENS
Go then to Italy; but mind
To leave the pale low France behind;
Pass through that country, nor ascend
The Rhine, nor over Tyrol wend:
Thus all at once shall rise more grand
The glories of the ancient land.
Dickens! how often, when the air
Breath’d genially, I’ve thought me there,
And rais’d to heaven my thankful eyes
To see three spans of deep blue skies.
In Genoa now I hear a stir,
A shout ... Here comes the Minister!
Yes, thou art he, although not sent
By cabinet or parliament:
Yes, thou art he. Since Milton’s youth
Bloom’d in the Eden of the South,
Spirit so pure and lofty none
Hath heavenly Genius from his throne
Deputed on the banks of Thames
To speak his voice and urge his claims.
Let every nation know from thee
How less than lovely Italy
Is the whole world beside; let all
Into their grateful breasts recall
How Prospero and Miranda dwelt
In Italy: the griefs that melt
The stoniest heart, each sacred tear
One lacrymatory gathered here;
All Desdemona’s, all that fell
In playful Juliet’s bridal cell.
Ah! could my steps in life’s decline
Accompany or follow thine!
But my own vines are not for me
To prune, or from afar to see.
I miss the tales I used to tell
With cordial Hare and joyous Gell,
And that good old Archbishop whose
Cool library, at evening’s close
(Soon as from Ischia swept the gale
And heav’d and left the dark’ning sail),
Its lofty portal open’d wide
To me, and very few beside:
Yet large his kindness. Still the poor
Flock round Taranto’s palace door,
And find no other to replace
The noblest of a noble race.
Amid our converse you would see
Each with white cat upon his knee,
And flattering that grand company:
For Persian kings might proudly own
Such glorious cats to share the throne.
Write me few letters: I’m content
With what for all the world is meant;
Write then for all: but, since my breast
Is far more faithful than the rest,
Never shall any other share
With little Nelly nestling there.
XX
TO BARRY CORNWALL
Barry! your spirit long ago
Has haunted me; at last I know
The heart it sprung from: one more sound
Ne’er rested on poetic ground.
But, Barry Cornwall! by what right
Wring you my breast and dim my sight,
And make me wish at every touch
My poor old hand could do as much?
No other in these later times
Has bound me in so potent rhymes.
I have observed the curious dress
And jewelry of brave Queen Bess,
But always found some o’ercharged thing,
Some flaw in even the brightest ring,
Admiring in her men of war,
A rich but too argute guitar.
Our foremost now are more prolix,
And scrape with three-fell fiddlesticks,
And, whether bound for griefs or smiles,
Are slow to turn as crocodiles.
Once, every court and country bevy
Chose the gallant of loins less heavy,
And would have laid upon the shelf
Him who could talk but of himself.
Reason is stout, but even Reason
May walk too long in Rhyme’s hot season.
I have heard many folks aver
They have caught horrid colds with her.
Imagination’s paper kite,
Unless the string is held in tight,
Whatever fits and starts it takes,
Soon bounces on the ground, and breaks.
You, placed afar from each extreme,
Nor dully drowse nor wildly dream,
But, ever flowing with good-humour,
Are bright as spring and warm as summer.
Mid your Penates not a word
Of scorn or ill-report is heard;
Nor is there any need to pull
A sheaf or truss from cart too full,
Lest it o’erload the horse, no doubt,
Or clog the road by falling out.
We, who surround a common table,
And imitate the fashionable,
Wear each two eyeglasses: this lens
Shows us our faults, that other men’s.
We do not care how dim may be
This by whose aid our own we see,
But, ever anxiously alert
That all may have their whole desert,
We would melt down the stars and sun
In our heart’s furnace, to make one
Thro’ which the enlighten’d world might spy
A mote upon a brother’s eye.
XXI
TO ROBERT BROWNING
There is delight in singing, tho’ none hear
Beside the singer: and there is delight
In praising, tho’ the praiser sit alone
And see the prais’d far off him, far above.
Shakespeare is not our poet, but the world’s,
Therefore on him no speech! and brief for thee,
Browning! Since Chaucer was alive and hale,
No man hath walkt along our roads with step
So active, so inquiring eye, or tongue
So varied in discourse. But warmer climes
Give brighter plumage, stronger wing: the breeze
Of Alpine highths thou playest with, borne on
Beyond Sorrento and Amalfi, where
The Siren waits thee, singing song for song.
XXII
AGE
Death, tho’ I see him not, is near
And grudges me my eightieth year.
Now, I would give him all these last
For one that fifty have run past.
Ah! he strikes all things, all alike,
But bargains: those he will not strike.
XXIII
Leaf after leaf drops off, flower after flower,
Some in the chill, some in the warmer hour:
Alike they flourish and alike they fall,
And Earth who nourisht them receives them all.
Should we, her wiser sons, be less content
To sink into her lap when life is spent?
XXIV