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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vengeance, schemes on schemes, “not one

       “Fit to be told that foolish boy,” he said,

       “But only let Sordello Palma wed,

       “ — Then!”

      ’T was a dim long narrow place at best:

       Midway a sole grate showed the fiery West,

       As shows its corpse the world’s end some split tomb —

       A gloom, a rift of fire, another gloom,

       Faced Palma — but at length Taurello set

       Her free; the grating held one ragged jet

       Of fierce gold fire: he lifted her within

       The hollow underneath — how else begin

       Fate’s second marvellous cycle, else renew

       The ages than with Palma plain in view?

       Then paced the passage, hands clenched, head erect,

       Pursuing his discourse; a grand unchecked

       Monotony made out from his quick talk

       And the recurring noises of his walk;

       — Somewhat too much like the o’ercharged assent

       Of two resolved friends in one danger blent,

       Who hearten each the other against heart;

       Boasting there ‘s nought to care for, when, apart

       The boaster, all ‘s to care for. He, beside

       Some shape not visible, in power and pride

       Approached, out of the dark, ginglingly near,

       Nearer, passed close in the broad light, his ear

       Crimson, eyeballs suffused, temples full-fraught,

       Just a snatch of the rapid speech you caught,

       And on he strode into the opposite dark,

       Till presently the harsh heel’s turn, a spark

       I’ the stone, and whirl of some loose embossed throng

       That crashed against the angle aye so long

       After the last, punctual to an amount

       Of mailed great paces you could not but count, —

       Prepared you for the pacing back again.

       And by the snatches you might ascertain

       That, Friedrich’s Prefecture surmounted, left

       By this alone in Italy, they cleft

       Asunder, crushed together, at command

       Of none, were free to break up Hildebrand,

       Rebuild, he and Sordello, Charlemagne —

       But garnished, Strength with Knowledge, “if we deign

       “Accept that compromise and stoop to give

       “Rome law, the Cæsar’s Representative.”

       Enough, that the illimitable flood

       Of triumphs after triumphs, understood

       In its faint reflux (you shall hear) sufficed

       Young Ecelin for appanage, enticed

       Him on till, these long quiet in their graves,

       He found ‘t was looked for that a whole life’s braves

       Should somehow be made good; so, weak and worn,

       Must stagger up at Milan, one grey morn

       Of the to-come, and fight his latest fight.

       But, Salinguerra’s prophecy at height —

       He voluble with a raised arm and stiff,

       A blaring voice, a blazing eye, as if

       He had our very Italy to keep

       Or cast away, or gather in a heap

       To garrison the better — ay, his word

       Was, “run the cucumber into a gourd,

       “Drive Trent upon Apulia” — at their pitch

       Who spied the continents and islands which

       Grew mulberry leaves and sickles, in the map —

       (Strange that three such confessions so should hap

       To Palma, Dante spoke with in the clear

       Amorous silence of the Swooning-sphere, —

       Cunizza, as he called her! Never ask

       Of Palma more! She sat, knowing her task

       Was done, the labour of it, — for, success

       Concerned not Palma, passion’s votaress.)

       Triumph at neight, and thus Sordello crowned —

       Above the passage suddenly a sound

       Stops speech, stops walk: back shrinks Taurello, bids

       With large involuntary asking lids,

       Palma interpret. “‘T is his own foot-stamp —

       “Your hand! His summons! Nay, this idle damp

       “Befits not!” Out they two reeled dizzily.

       “Visconti ‘s strong at Milan,” resumed he,

       In the old, somewhat insignificant way —

       (Was Palma wont, years afterward, to say)

       As though the spirit’s flight, sustained thus far,

       Dropped at that very instant.

      Gone they are —

       Palma, Taurello; Eglamor anon,

       Ecelin, — only Naddo ‘s never gone!

       — Labours, this moonrise, what the Master meant:

       “Is Squarcialupo speckled? — purulent,

       “I ‘d say, but when was Providence put out?

       “He carries somehow handily about

       “His spite nor fouls himself!” Goito’s vines

       Stand like a cheat detected — stark rough lines,

       The moon breaks through, a grey mean scale against

       The vault where, this eve’s Maiden, thou remain’st

       Like some fresh martyr, eyes fixed — who can tell?

       As Heaven, now all ‘s at end, did not so well,

       Spite of the faith and victory, to leave

       Its virgin quite to death in the lone eve.

       While the persisting hermit-bee… ha! wait

       No longer: these in compass, forward fate!

      SORDELLO BOOK THE SIXTH.

       Table of Contents

      The thought of Eglamor’s least like a thought,

       And yet a false one, was, “Man shrinks to nought

       “If matched with symbols of immensity;

       “Must quail, forsooth, before a quiet sky

       “Or sea, too little for their quietude:”

       And, truly, somewhat in Sordello’s mood

       Confirmed its speciousness, while eve slow sank

       Down the near terrace to the farther bank,

       And only one spot left from out the night

       Glimmered upon the river opposite —

       A breadth of watery heaven like a bay,

      


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