The Poetical Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Volume 1. Browning Elizabeth Barrett

The Poetical Works of Elizabeth Barrett Browning. Volume 1 - Browning Elizabeth Barrett


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attribute, the evidence, and end,

      The consummation to the inward sense,

      Of beauty apprehended from without,

      I still call love. As form, when colourless,

      Is nothing to the eye, – that pine-tree there,

      Without its black and green, being all a blank, —

      So, without love, is beauty undiscerned

      In man or angel. Angel! rather ask

      What love is in thee, what love moves to thee,

      And what collateral love moves on with thee;

      Then shalt thou know if thou art beautiful.

      Lucifer. Love! what is love? I lose it. Beauty and love

      I darken to the image. Beauty – love!

[He fades away, while a low music sounds

      Adam. Thou art pale, Eve.

      Eve. The precipice of ill

      Down this colossal nature, dizzies me:

      And, hark! the starry harmony remote

      Seems measuring the heights from whence he fell.

      Adam. Think that we have not fallen so! By the hope

      And aspiration, by the love and faith,

      We do exceed the stature of this angel.

      Eve. Happier we are than he is, by the death.

      Adam. Or rather, by the life of the Lord God!

      How dim the angel grows, as if that blast

      Of music swept him back into the dark.

[The music is stronger, gathering itself into uncertain articulation

      Eve. It throbs in on us like a plaintive heart,

      Pressing, with slow pulsations, vibrative,

      Its gradual sweetness through the yielding air,

      To such expression as the stars may use,

      Most starry-sweet and strange! With every note

      That grows more loud, the angel grows more dim,

      Receding in proportion to approach,

      Until he stand afar, – a shade.

      Adam. Now, words.

SONG OF THE MORNING STAR TO LUCIFERHe fades utterly away and vanishes, as it proceeds

      Mine orbèd image sinks

      Back from thee, back from thee,

      As thou art fallen, methinks,

      Back from me, back from me.

      O my light-bearer,

      Could another fairer

      Lack to thee, lack to thee?

      Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

      I loved thee with the fiery love of stars

      Who love by burning, and by loving move,

      Too near the throned Jehovah not to love.

      Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

      Their brows flash fast on me from gliding cars,

      Pale-passioned for my loss.

      Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

      Mine orbèd heats drop cold

      Down from thee, down from thee,

      As fell thy grace of old

      Down from me, down from me,

      O my light-bearer,

      Is another fairer

      Won to thee, won to thee?

      Ah, ah, Heosphoros,

      Great love preceded loss,

      Known to thee, known to thee.

      Ah, ah!

      Thou, breathing thy communicable grace

      Of life into my light,

      Mine astral faces, from thine angel face,

      Hast inly fed,

      And flooded me with radiance overmuch

      From thy pure height.

      Ah, ah!

      Thou, with calm, floating pinions both ways spread,

      Erect, irradiated,

      Didst sting my wheel of glory

      On, on before thee

      Along the Godlight by a quickening touch!

      Ha, ha!

      Around, around the firmamental ocean

      I swam expanding with delirious fire!

      Around, around, around, in blind desire

      To be drawn upward to the Infinite —

      Ha, ha!

      Until, the motion flinging out the motion

      To a keen whirl of passion and avidity,

      To a dim whirl of languor and delight,

      I wound in gyrant orbits smooth and white

      With that intense rapidity.

      Around, around,

      I wound and interwound,

      While all the cyclic heavens about me spun.

      Stars, planets, suns, and moons dilated broad,

      Then flashed together into a single sun,

      And wound, and wound in one:

      And as they wound I wound, – around, around,

      In a great fire I almost took for God.

      Ha, ha, Heosphoros!

      Thine angel glory sinks

      Down from me, down from me —

      My beauty falls, methinks,

      Down from thee, down from thee!

      O my light-bearer,

      O my path-preparer,

      Gone from me, gone from me!

      Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

      I cannot kindle underneath the brow

      Of this new angel here, who is not thou.

      All things are altered since that time ago, —

      And if I shine at eve, I shall not know.

      I am strange – I am slow.

      Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

      Henceforward, human eyes of lovers be

      The only sweetest sight that I shall see,

      With tears between the looks raised up to me.

      Ah, ah!

      When, having wept all night, at break of day

      Above the folded hills they shall survey

      My light, a little trembling, in the grey.

      Ah, ah!

      And gazing on me, such shall comprehend,

      Through all my piteous pomp at morn or even

      And melancholy leaning out of heaven,

      That love, their own divine, may change or end,

      That love may close in loss!

      Ah, ah, Heosphoros!

Scene. —Farther on. A wild open country seen vaguely in the approaching night

      Adam. How doth the wide and melancholy earth

      Gather her hills around us, grey and ghast,

      And


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