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 he knew a sometime deed again;

       So, could supply each foolish gap and chasm

       The minstrel left in his enthusiasm,

       Mistaking its true version — was the tale

       Not of Apollo? Only, what avail

       Luring her down, that Elys an he pleased,

       If the man dared no further? Has he ceased

       And, lo, the people’s frank applause half done,

       Sordello was beside him, had begun

       (Spite of indignant twitchings from his friend

       The Trouvere) the true lay with the true end,

       Taking the other’s names and time and place

       For his. On flew the song, a giddy race,

       After the flying story; word made leap

       Out word, rhyme — rhyme; the lay could barely keep

       Pace with the action visibly rushing past:

       Both ended. Back fell Naddo more aghast

       Than some Egyptian from the harassed bull

       That wheeled abrupt and, bellowing, fronted full

       His plague, who spied a scarab ‘neath the tongue,

       And found ‘t was Apis’ flank his hasty prong

       Insulted. But the people — but the cries,

       The crowding round, and proffering the prize!

       — For he had gained some prize. He seemed to shrink

       Into a sleepy cloud, just at whose brink

       One sight withheld him. There sat Adelaide,

       Silent; but at her knees the very maid

       Of the North Chamber, her red lips as rich,

       The same pure fleecy hair; one weft of which,

       Golden and great, quite touched his cheek as o’er

       She leant, speaking some six words and no more.

       He answered something, anything; and she

       Unbound a scarf and laid it heavily

       Upon him, her neck’s warmth and all. Again

       Moved the arrested magic; in his brain

       Noises grew, and a light that turned to glare,

       And greater glare, until the intense flare

       Engulfed him, shut the whole scene from his sense.

       And when he woke ‘t was many a furlong thence,

       At home; the sun shining his ruddy wont;

       The customary birds’-chirp; but his front

       Was crowned — was crowned! Her scented scarf around

       His neck! Whose gorgeous vesture heaps the ground?

       A prize? He turned, and peeringly on him

       Brooded the women-faces, kind and dim,

       Ready to talk — ”The Jongleurs in a troop

       “Had brought him back, Naddo and Squarcialupe

       “And Tagliafer; how strange! a childhood spent

       “In taking, well for him, so brave a bent!

       “Since Eglamor,” they heard, “was dead with spite,

       “And Palma chose him for her minstrel.”

      Light

       Sordello rose — to think, now; hitherto

       He had perceived. Sure, a discovery grew

       Out of it all! Best live from first to last

       The transport o’er again. A week he passed,

       Sucking the sweet out of each circumstance,

       From the bard’s outbreak to the luscious trance

       Bounding his own achievement. Strange! A man

       Recounted an adventure, but began

       Imperfectly; his own task was to fill

       The framework up, sing well what he sung ill,

       Supply the necessary points, set loose

       As many incidents of little use

       — More imbecile the other, not to see

       Their relative importance clear as he!

       But, for a special pleasure in the act

       Of singing — had he ever turned, in fact,

       From Elys, to sing Elys? — from each fit

       Of rapture to contrive a song of it?

       True, this snatch or the other seemed to wind

       Into a treasure, helped himself to find

       A beauty in himself; for, see, he soared

       By means of that mere snatch, to many a hoard

       Of fancies; as some falling cone bears soft

       The eye along the fir-tree-spire, aloft

       To a dove’s nest. Then, how divine the cause

       Why such performance should exact applause

       From men, if they had fancies too? Did fate

       Decree they found a beauty separate

       In the poor snatch itself? — ”Take Elys, there,

       “ — ’Her head that ‘s sharp and perfect like a pear,

       “‘So close and smooth are laid the few fine locks

       “‘Coloured like honey oozed from topmost rocks

       “‘Sun-blanched the livelong summer’ — if they heard

       “Just those two rhymes, assented at my word,

       “And loved them as I love them who have run

       “These fingers through those pale locks, let the sun

       “Into the white cool skin — who first could clutch,

       “Then praise — I needs must be a god to such.

       “Or what if some, above themselves, and yet

       “Beneath me, like their Eglamor, have set

       “An impress on our gift? So, men believe

       “And worship what they know not, nor receive

       “Delight from. Have they fancies — slow, perchance,

       “Not at their beck, which indistinctly glance

       “Until, by song, each floating part be linked

       “To each, and all grow palpable, distinct?”

       He pondered this.

      Meanwhile, sounds low and drear

       Stole on him, and a noise of footsteps, near

       And nearer, while the underwood was pushed

       Aside, the larches grazed, the dead leaves crushed

       At the approach of men. The wind seemed laid;

       Only, the trees shrunk slightly and a shade

       Came o’er the sky although ‘t was midday yet:

       You saw each half-shut downcast floweret

       Flutter — ”a Roman bride, when they ‘d dispart

       “Her unbound tresses with the Sabine dart,

       “Holding that famous rape in memory still,

       “Felt creep into her curls the iron chill,

       “And looked thus,” Eglamor would say — indeed

       ‘T is Eglamor, no other, these precede

      


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