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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sweet, – I do not fail.

      I sit upon a cypress bough,

      Close to the gate, and I fling my song

      Over the gate and through the mail

      Of the warden angels marshalled strong, —

      Over the gate and after you.

      And the warden angels let it pass,

      Because the poor brown bird, alas,

      Sings in the garden, sweet and true.

      And I build my song of high pure notes,

      Note over note, height over height,

      Till I strike the arch of the Infinite,

      And I bridge abysmal agonies

      With strong, clear calms of harmonies, —

      And something abides, and something floats,

      In the song which I sing after you.

      Fare ye well, farewell!

      The creature-sounds, no longer audible,

      Expire at Eden's door.

      Each footstep of your treading

      Treads out some cadence which ye heard before.

      Farewell! the birds of Eden,

      Ye shall hear nevermore.

      Flower Spirits.

      We linger, we linger,

      The last of the throng,

      Like the tones of a singer

      Who loves his own song.

      We are spirit-aromas

      Of blossom and bloom.

      We call your thoughts home, – as

      Ye breathe our perfume, —

      To the amaranth's splendour

      Afire on the slopes;

      To the lily-bells tender,

      And grey heliotropes;

      To the poppy-plains keeping

      Such dream-breath and blee

      That the angels there stepping

      Grew whiter to see:

      To the nook, set with moly,

      Ye jested one day in,

      Till your smile waxed too holy

      And left your lips praying:

      To the rose in the bower-place,

      That dripped o'er you sleeping;

      To the asphodel flower-place,

      Ye walked ankle-deep in.

      We pluck at your raiment,

      We stroke down your hair,

      We faint in our lament

      And pine into air.

      Fare ye well, farewell!

      The Eden scents, no longer sensible,

      Expire at Eden's door.

      Each footstep of your treading

      Treads out some fragrance which ye knew before.

      Farewell! the flowers of Eden,

      Ye shall smell nevermore.

[There is silence. Adam and Eve fly on, and never look back. Only a colossal shadow, as of the dark Angel passing quickly, is cast upon the Sword-glareScene. —The extremity of the Sword-glare

      Adam. Pausing a moment on this outer edge

      Where the supernal sword-glare cuts in light

      The dark exterior desert, – hast thou strength,

      Beloved, to look behind us to the gate?

      Eve. Have I not strength to look up to thy face?

      Adam. We need be strong: yon spectacle of cloud

      Which seals the gate up to the final doom,

      Is God's seal manifest. There seem to lie

      A hundred thunders in it, dark and dead;

      The unmolten lightnings vein it motionless;

      And, outward from its depth, the self-moved sword

      Swings slow its awful gnomon of red fire

      From side to side, in pendulous horror slow,

      Across the stagnant ghastly glare thrown flat

      On the intermediate ground from that to this.

      The angelic hosts, the archangelic pomps,

      Thrones, dominations, princedoms, rank on rank,

      Rising sublimely to the feet of God,

      On either side and overhead the gate,

      Show like a glittering and sustainèd smoke

      Drawn to an apex. That their faces shine

      Betwixt the solemn clasping of their wings

      Clasped high to a silver point above their heads, —

      We only guess from hence, and not discern.

      Eve. Though we were near enough to see them shine,

      The shadow on thy face were awfuller,

      To me, at least, – to me – than all their light.

      Adam. What is this, Eve? thou droppest heavily

      In a heap earthward, and thy body heaves

      Under the golden floodings of thine hair!

      Eve. O Adam, Adam! by that name of Eve —

      Thine Eve, thy life – which suits me little now,

      Seeing that I now confess myself thy death

      And thine undoer, as the snake was mine, —

      I do adjure thee, put me straight away,

      Together with my name! Sweet, punish me!

      O Love, be just! and, ere we pass beyond

      The light cast outward by the fiery sword,

      Into the dark which earth must be to us,

      Bruise my head with thy foot, – as the curse said

      My seed shall the first tempter's! strike with curse,

      As God struck in the garden! and as he,

      Being satisfied with justice and with wrath,

      Did roll his thunder gentler at the close, —

      Thou, peradventure, mayst at last recoil

      To some soft need of mercy. Strike, my lord!

      I, also, after tempting, writhe on the ground,

      And I would feed on ashes from thine hand,

      As suits me, O my tempted!

      Adam. My beloved,

      Mine Eve and life – I have no other name

      For thee or for the sun than what ye are,

      My utter life and light! If we have fallen,

      It is that we have sinned, – we: God is just;

      And, since his curse doth comprehend us both,

      It must be that his balance holds the weights

      Of first and last sin on a level. What!

      Shall I who had not virtue to stand straight

      Among the hills of Eden, here assume

      To mend the justice of the perfect God,

      By piling up a curse upon his curse,

      Against


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