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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“Through this? A month since at Oliero slunk

       “All that was Ecelin into a monk;

       “But how could Salinguerra so forget

       “His liege of thirty years as grudge even yet

       “One effort to recover him? He sent

       “Forthwith the tidings of this last event

       “To Ecelin — declared that he, despite

       “The recent folly, recognized his right

       “To order Salinguerra: ‘Should he wring

       “‘Its uttermost advantage out, or fling

       “‘This chance away? Or were his sons now Head

       “‘O’ the House?’ Through me Taurello’s missive sped;

       “My father’s answer will by me return.

       “Behold! ‘For him,’ he writes, ‘no more concern

       “‘With strife than, for his children, with fresh plots

       “‘Of Friedrich. Old engagements out he blots

       “‘For aye: Taurello shall no more subserve,

       “‘Nor Ecelin impose.’ Lest this unnerve

       “Taurello at this juncture, slack his grip

       “Of Richard, suffer the occasion slip, —

       “I, in his sons’ default (who, mating with

       “Este, forsake Romano as the frith

       “Its mainsea for that firmland, sea makes head

       “Against) I stand, Romano, — in their stead

       “Assume the station they desert, and give

       “Still, as the Kaiser’s representative,

       “Taurello licence he demands. Midnight —

       “Morning — by noon tomorrow, making light

       “Of the League’s issue, we, in some gay weed

       “Like yours, disguised together, may precede

       “The arbitrators to Ferrara: reach

       “Him, let Taurello’s noble accents teach

       “The rest! Then say if I have misconceived

       “Your destiny, too readily believed

       “The Kaiser’s cause your own!”

      And Palma’s fled.

       Though no affirmative disturbs the head,

       A dying lamp-flame sinks and rises o’er,

       Like the alighted planet Pollux wore,

       Until, morn breaking, he resolves to be

       Gate-vein of this heart’s blood of Lombardy,

       Soul of this body — to wield this aggregate

       Of souls and bodies, and so conquer fate

       Though he should live — a centre of disgust

       Even — apart, core of the outward crust

       He vivifies, assimilates. For thus

       I bring Sordello to the rapturous

       Exclaim at the crowd’s cry, because one round

       Of life was quite accomplished; and he found

       Not only that a soul, whate’er its might,

       Is insufficient to its own delight,

       Both in corporeal organs and in skill

       By means of such to body forth its Will —

       And, after, insufficient to apprise

       Men of that Will, oblige them recognize

       The Hid by the Revealed — but that, — the last

       Nor lightest of the struggles overpast, —

       Will, he bade abdicate, which would not void

       The throne, might sit there, suffer he enjoyed

       Mankind, a varied and divine array

       Incapable of homage, the first way,

       Nor fit to render incidentally

       Tribute connived at, taken by the by,

       In joys. If thus with warrant to rescind

       The ignominious exile of mankind —

       Whose proper service, ascertained intact

       As yet, (to be by him themselves made act,

       Not watch Sordello acting each of them)

       Was to secure — if the true diadem

       Seemed imminent while our Sordello drank

       The wisdom of that golden Palma, — thank

       Verona’s Lady in her citadel

       Founded by Gaulish Brennus, legends tell:

       And truly when she left him, the sun reared

       A head like the first clamberer’s who peered

       A-top the Capitol, his face on flame

       With triumph, triumphing till Manlius came.

       Nor slight too much my rhymes — that spring, dispread,

       Dispart, disperse, lingering over head

       Like an escape of angels! Rather say,

       My transcendental platan! mounting gay

       (An archimage so courts a novice-queen)

       With tremulous silvered trunk, whence branches sheen

       Laugh out, thick-foliaged next, a-shiver soon

       With coloured buds, then glowing like the moon

       One mild flame, — last a pause, a burst, and all

       Her ivory limbs are smothered by a fall,

       Bloom-flinders and fruit-sparkles and leaf-dust,

       Ending the weird work prosecuted just

       For her amusement; he decrepit, stark,

       Dozes; her uncontrolled delight may mark

       Apart —

      Yet not so, surely never so

       Only, as good my soul were suffered go

       O’er the lagune: forth fare thee, put aside —

       Entrance thy synod, as a god may glide

       Out of the world he fills, and leave it mute

       For myriad ages as we men compute,

       Returning into it without a break

       O’ the consciousness! They sleep, and I awake

       O’er the lagune, being at Venice.

      Note,

       In just such songs as Eglamor (say) wrote

       With heart and soul and strength, for he believed

       Himself achieving all to be achieved

       By singer — in such songs you find alone

       Completeness, judge the song and singer one,

       And either purpose answered, his in it

       Or its in him: while from true works (to wit

       Sordello’s dream-performances that will

       Never be more than dreamed) escapes there still

       Some proof, the singer’s proper life was ‘neath

       The life his song exhibits, this a sheath

       To that; a passion and a knowledge far

       Transcending these, majestic as they are,

       Smouldered;


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