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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“Far from the scene of one’s forlorn defeat

       “To sleep!” judged Naddo, who in person led

       Jongleurs and Trouveres, chanting at their head,

       A scanty company; for, sooth to say,

       Our beaten Troubadour had seen his day.

       Old worshippers were something shamed, old friends

       Nigh weary; still the death proposed amends.

       “Let us but get them safely through my song

       “And home again!” quoth Naddo.

      All along,

       This man (they rest the bier upon the sand)

       — This calm corpse with the loose flowers in his hand,

       Eglamor, lived Sordello’s opposite.

       For him indeed was Naddo’s notion right,

       And verse a temple-worship vague and vast,

       A ceremony that withdrew the last

       Opposing bolt, looped back the lingering veil

       Which hid the holy place: should one so frail

       Stand there without such effort? or repine

       If much was blank, uncertain at the shrine

       He knelt before, till, soothed by many a rite,

       The power responded, and some sound or sight

       Grew up, his own forever, to be fixed,

       In rhyme, the beautiful, forever! — mixed

       With his own life, unloosed when he should please,

       Having it safe at hand, ready to ease

       All pain, remove all trouble; every time

       He loosed that fancy from its bonds of rhyme,

       (Like Perseus when he loosed his naked love)

       Faltering; so distinct and far above

       Himself, these fancies! He, no genius rare,

       Transfiguring in fire or wave or air

       At will, but a poor gnome that, cloistered up

       In some rock-chamber with his agate cup,

       His topaz rod, his seed-pearl, in these few

       And their arrangement finds enough to do

       For his best art. Then, how he loved that art!

       The calling marking him a man apart

       From men — one not to care, take counsel for

       Cold hearts, comfortless faces — (Eglamor

       Was neediest of his tribe) — since verse, the gift,

       Was his, and men, the whole of them, must shift

       Without it, e’en content themselves with wealth

       And pomp and power, snatching a life by stealth.

       So, Eglamor was not without his pride!

       The sorriest bat which cowers throughout noontide

       While other birds are jocund, has one time

       When moon and stars are blinded, and the prime

       Of earth is his to claim, nor find a peer;

       And Eglamor was noblest poet here —

       He well knew, ‘mid those April woods he cast

       Conceits upon in plenty as he passed,

       That Naddo might suppose him not to think

       Entirely on the coming triumph: wink

       At the one weakness! ‘T was a fervid child,

       That song of his; no brother of the guild

       Had e’er conceived its like. The rest you know,

       The exaltation and the overthrow:

       Our poet lost his purpose, lost his rank,

       His life — to that it came. Yet envy sank

       Within him, as he heard Sordello out,

       And, for the first time, shouted — tried to shout

       Like others, not from any zeal to show

       Pleasure that way: the common sort did so,

       What else was Eglamor? who, bending down

       As they, placed his beneath Sordello’s crown,

       Printed a kiss on his successor’s hand,

       Left one great tear on it, then joined his band

       — In time; for some were watching at the door:

       Who knows what envy may effect? “Give o’er,

       “Nor charm his lips, nor craze him!” (here one spied

       And disengaged the withered crown) — ”Beside

       “His crown? How prompt and clear those verses rang

       “To answer yours! nay, sing them!” And he sang

       Them calmly. Home he went; friends used to wait

       His coming, zealous to congratulate;

       But, to a man — so quickly runs report —

       Could do no less than leave him, and escort

       His rival. That eve, then, bred many a thought:

       What must his future life be? was he brought

       So low, who stood so lofty this Spring morn?

       At length he said, “Best sleep now with my scorn,

       “And by tomorrow I devise some plain

       “Expedient!” So, he slept, nor woke again.

       They found as much, those friends, when they returned

       O’erflowing with the marvels they had learned

       About Sordello’s paradise, his roves

       Among the hills and vales and plains and groves,

       Wherein, no doubt, this lay was roughly cast,

       Polished by slow degrees, completed last

       To Eglamor’s discomfiture and death.

      Such form the chanters now, and, out of breath,

       They lay the beaten man in his abode,

       Naddo reciting that same luckless ode,

       Doleful to hear. Sordello could explore

       By means of it, however, one step more

       In joy; and, mastering the round at length,

       Learnt how to live in weakness as in strength,

       When from his covert forth he stood, addressed

       Eglamor, bade the tender ferns invest,

       Primæval pines o’ercanopy his couch,

       And, most of all, his fame — (shall I avouch

       Eglamor heard it, dead though he might look,

       And laughed as from his brow Sordello took

       The crown, and laid on the bard’s breast, and said

       It was a crown, now, fit for poet’s head?)

       — Continue. Nor the prayer quite fruitless fell.

       A plant they have, yielding a three-leaved bell

       Which whitens at the heart ere noon, and ails

       Till evening; evening gives it to her gales

       To clear away with such forgotten things

       As are an eyesore to the morn: this brings

       Him to their mind, and bears his very name.

      So much for Eglamor.


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