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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Had banished! Afterward, the Legate found

       No change in him, nor asked what badge he wound

       And unwound carelessly. Now sat the Chief

       Silent as when our couple left, whose brief

       Encounter wrought so opportune effect

       In thoughts he summoned not, nor would reject,

       Though time ‘t was now if ever, to pause — fix

       On any sort of ending: wiles and tricks

       Exhausted, judge! his charge, the crazy town,

       Just managed to be hindered crashing down —

       His last sound troops ranged — care observed to post

       His best of the maimed soldiers innermost —

       So much was plain enough, but somehow struck

       Him not before. And now with this strange luck

       Of Tito’s news, rewarding his address

       So well, what thought he of? — how the success

       With Friedrich’s rescript there, would either hush

       Old Ecelin’s scruples, bring the manly flush

       To his young son’s white cheek, or, last, exempt

       Himself from telling what there was to tempt?

       No: that this minstrel was Romano’s last

       Servant — himself the first! Could he contrast

       The whole! — that minstrel’s thirty years just spent

       In doing nought, their notablest event

       This morning’s journey hither, as I told —

       Who yet was lean, outworn and really old,

       A stammering awkward man that scarce dared raise

       His eye before the magisterial gaze —

       And Salinguerra with his fears and hopes

       Of sixty years, his Emperors and Popes,

       Cares and contrivances, yet, you would say,

       ‘T was a youth nonchalantly looked away

       Through the embrasure northward o’er the sick

       Expostulating trees — so agile, quick

       And graceful turned the head on the broad chest

       Encased in pliant steel, his constant vest,

       Whence split the sun off in a spray of fire

       Across the room; and, loosened of its tire

       Of steel, that head let breathe the comely brown

       Large massive locks discoloured as if a crown

       Encircled them, so frayed the basnet where

       A sharp white line divided clean the hair;

       Glossy above, glossy below, it swept

       Curling and fine about a brow thus kept

       Calm, laid coat upon coat, marble and sound:

       This was the mystic mark the Tuscan found,

       Mused of, turned over books about. Square-faced,

       No lion more; two vivid eyes, enchased

       In hollows filled with many a shade and streak

       Settling from the bold nose and bearded cheek.

       Nor might the half-smile reach them that deformed

       A lip supremely perfect else — unwarmed,

       Unwidened, less or more; indifferent

       Whether on trees or men his thoughts were bent,

       Thoughts rarely, after all, in trim and train

       As now a period was fulfilled again:

       Of such, a series made his life, compressed

       In each, one story serving for the rest —

       How his life-streams rolling arrived at last

       At the barrier, whence, were it once overpast,

       They would emerge, a river to the end, —

       Gathered themselves up, paused, bade fate befriend,

       Took the leap, hung a minute at the height,

       Then fell back to oblivion infinite:

       Therefore he smiled. Beyond stretched garden-grounds

       Where late the adversary, breaking bounds,

       Had gained him an occasion, That above,

       That eagle, testified he could improve

       Effectually. The Kaiser’s symbol lay

       Beside his rescript, a new badge by way

       Of baldric; while, — another thing that marred

       Alike emprise, achievement and reward, —

       Ecelin’s missive was conspicuous too.

      What past life did those flying thoughts pursue?

       As his, few names in Mantua half so old;

       But at Ferrara, where his sires enrolled

       It latterly, the Adelardi spared

       No pains to rival them: both factions shared

       Ferrara, so that, counted out, ‘t would yield

       A product very like the city’s shield,

       Half black and white, or Ghibellin and Guelf

       As after Salinguerra styled himself

       And Este who, till Marchesalla died,

       (Last of the Adelardi) — never tried

       His fortune there: with Marchesalla’s child

       Would pass, — could Blacks and Whites be reconciled

       And young Taurello wed Linguetta, — wealth

       And sway to a sole grasp. Each treats by stealth

       Already: when the Guelfs, the Ravennese

       Arrive, assault the Pietro quarter, seize

       Linguetta, and are gone! Men’s first dismay

       Abated somewhat, hurries down, to lay

       The after indignation, Boniface,

       This Richard’s father. “Learn the full disgrace

       “Averted, ere you blame us Guelfs, who rate

       “Your Salinguerra, your sole potentate

       “That might have been, ‘mongst Este’s valvassors —

       “Ay, Azzo’s — who, not privy to, abhors

       “Our step; but we were zealous.” Azzo then

       To do with! Straight a meeting of old men:

       “Old Salinguerra dead, his heir a boy,

       “What if we change our ruler and decoy

       “The Lombard Eagle of the azure sphere

       “With Italy to build in, fix him here,

       “Settle the city’s troubles in a trice?

       “For private wrong, let public good suffice!”

       In fine, young Salinguerra’s staunchest friends

       Talked of the townsmen making him amends,

       Gave him a goshawk, and affirmed there was

       Rare sport, one morning, over the green grass

       A mile or so. He sauntered through the plain,

       Was restless, fell to thinking, turned again

       In time for Azzo’s entry with the bride;

      


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