The Complete Poems of Robert Browning - 22 Poetry Collections in One Edition. Robert Browning

The Complete Poems of Robert Browning - 22 Poetry Collections in One Edition - Robert  Browning


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For some wild thought which, but for me, were kept

       From out thy soul, as from a sacred star.

       Yet till I have unlocked them it were vain

       To hope to sing; some woe would light on me;

       Nature would point at one, whose quivering lip

       Was bathed in her enchantments — whose brow burned

       Beneath the crown, to which her secrets knelt;

       Who learned the spell which can call up the dead,

       And then departed, smiling like a fiend

       Who has deceived God. If such one should seek

       Again her altars, and stand robed and crowned

       Amid the faithful: sad confession first,

       Remorse and pardon, and old claims renewed,

       Ere I can be — as I shall be no more.

       I had been spared this shame, if I had sate

       By thee for ever, from the first, in place

       Of my wild dreams of beauty and of good,

       Or with them, as an earnest of their truth.

       No thought nor hope, having been shut from thee,

       No vague wish unexplained — no wandering aim

       Sent back to bind on Fancy’s wings, and seek

       Some strange fair world, where it might be a law;

       But doubting nothing, had been led by thee,

       Thro’ youth, and saved, as one at length awaked,

       Who has slept thro’ a peril. Ah! vain, vain!

       Thou lovest me — the past is in its grave,

       Tho’ its ghost haunts us — till this much is ours,

       To cast away restraint, lest a worse thing

       Wait for us in the darkness. Thou lovest me,

       And thou art to receive not love, but faith,

       For which thou wilt be mine, and smile, and take

       All shapes, and shames, and veil without a fear

       That form which music follows like a slave;

       And I look to thee, and I trust in thee,

       As in a Northern night one looks alway

       Unto the East for morn, and spring a joy.

       Thou seest then my aimless, hopeless state,

       And resting on some few old feelings, won

       Back by thy beauty, would’st that I essay

       The task, which was to me what now thou art:

       And why should I conceal one weakness more?

       Thou wilt remember one warm morn, when Winter

       Crept aged from the earth, and Spring’s first breath

       Blew soft from the moist hills — the blackthorn boughs,

       So dark in the bare wood; when glistening

       In the sunshine were white with coming buds,

       Like the bright side of a sorrow — and the banks

       Had violets opening from sleep like eyes —

       I walked with thee, who knew not a deep shame

       Lurked beneath smiles and careless words, which sought

       To hide it — till they wandered and were mute;

       As we stood listening on a sunny mound

       To the wind murmuring in the damp copse,

       Like heavy breathings of some hidden thing

       Betrayed by sleep — until the feeling rushed

       That I was low indeed, yet not so low

       As to endure the calmness of thine eyes;

       And so I told thee all, while the cool breast

       I leaned on altered not its quiet beating;

       And long ere words, like a hurt bird’s complaint,

       Bade me look up and be what I had been,

       I felt despair could never live by thee.

       Thou wilt remember: — thou art not more dear

       Than song was once to me; and I ne’er sung

       But as one entering bright halls, where all

       Will rise and shout for him Sure I must own

       That I am fallen — having chosen gifts

       Distinct from theirs — that I am sad — and fain

       Would give up all to be but where I was;

       Not high as I had been, if faithful found —

       But low and weak, yet full of hope, and sure

       Of goodness as of life — that I would lust

       All this gay mastery of mind, to sit

       Once more with them, trusting in truth and love.

       And with an aim — not being what I am.

       Oh, Pauline! I am ruined! who believed

       That tho’ my soul had floated from its sphere

       Of wide dominion into the dim orb

       Of self — that it was strong and free as ever: —

       It has conformed itself to that dim orb,

       Reflecting all its shades and shapes, and now

       Must stay where it alone can be adored.

       I have felt this in dreams — in dreams in which

       I seemed the fate from which I fled; I felt

       A strange delight in causing my decay;

       I was a fiend, in darkness chained for ever

       Within some ocean-cave; and ages rolled,

       Till thro’ the cleft rock, like a moonbeam, came

       A white swan to remain with me; and ages

       Rolled, yet I tired not of my first joy

       In gazing on the peace of its pure wings.

       And then I said, “It is most fair to me,

       “Yet its soft wings must sure have suffered change

       “From the thick darkness — sure its eyes are dim —

       “Its silver pinions must be cramped and numbed

       “With sleeping ages here; it cannot leave me,

       “For it would seem, in light, beside its kind,

       “Withered — tho’ here to me most beautiful.”

       And then I was a young witch, whose blue eyes,

       As she stood naked by the river springs,

       Drew down a god — I watched his radiant form

       Growing less radiant — and it gladdened me;

       Till one morn, as he sat in the sunshine

       Upon my knees, singing to me of heaven,

       He turned to look at me, ere I could lose

       The grin with which I viewed his perishing.

       And he shrieked and departed, and sat long

       By his deserted throne — but sunk at last,

       Murmuring, as I kissed his lips and curled

       Around him, “I am still a god — to thee.”

       Still I can lay my soul bare in its fall,

       For all the wandering and all the weakness

      


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