An Introduction to the Study of Robert Browning's Poetry






My Star.

     All that I know
       Of a certain star
     Is, it can throw
       (Like the angled spar)
     Now a dart of red,                                            {5}
       Now a dart of blue;
     Till my friends have said
       They would fain see, too,
     My star that dartles the red and the blue!
     Then it stops like a bird; like a flower, hangs furled:      {10}
       They must solace themselves with the Saturn above it.
     What matter to me if their star is a world?
       Mine has opened its soul to me; therefore I love it.

— 10. Then it stops like a bird: it beats no longer with emotion responsive to loving eyes, but stops, as a bird stops its song when disturbed. —

The Flight of the Duchess.

       1.

     You’re my friend:
     I was the man the Duke spoke to;
     I helped the Duchess to cast off his yoke, too:
     So, here’s the tale from beginning to end,
     My friend!                                               {5}

— 2. I was the man: see vv. 440 and 847. He’s proud of the honor done him.

       2.

     Ours is a great wild country:
     If you climb to our castle’s top,
     I don’t see where your eye can stop;
     For when you’ve passed the corn-field country,
     Where vineyards leave off, flocks are packed,      {10}
     And sheep-range leads to cattle-tract,
     And cattle-tract to open-chase,
     And open-chase to the very base
     O’ the mountain where, at a funeral pace,
     Round about, solemn and slow,
     One by one, row after row,
     Up and up the pine-trees go,
     So, like black priests up, and so
     Down the other side again
     To another greater, wilder country,                {20}
     That’s one vast red drear burnt-up plain,
     Branched through and through with many a vein
     Whence iron’s dug, and copper’s dealt;
     Look right, look left, look straight before,—
     Beneath they mine, above they smelt,
     Copper-ore and iron-ore,
     And forge and furnace mould and melt,
     And so on, more and ever more,
     Till at the last, for a bounding belt,
     Comes the salt sand hoar of the great seashore,    {30}
   —And the whole is our Duke’s country.
       3.

     I was born the day this present Duke was—
     (And O, says the song, ere I was old!)
     In the castle where the other Duke was—
     (When I was happy and young, not old!)
     I in the kennel, he in the bower:
     We are of like age to an hour.
     My father was huntsman in that day:
     Who has not heard my father say,
     That, when a boar was brought to bay,              {40}
     Three times, four times out of five,
     With his huntspear he’d contrive
     To get the killing-place transfixed,
     And pin him true, both eyes betwixt?
     And that’s why the old Duke would rather
     He lost a salt-pit than my father,
     And loved to have him ever in call;
     That’s why my father stood in the hall
     When the old Duke brought his infant out
     To show the people, and while they passed          {50}
     The wondrous bantling round about,
     Was first to start at the outside blast
     As the Kaiser’s courier blew his horn,
     Just a month after the babe was born.
     “And,” quoth the Kaiser’s courier, “since
     The Duke has got an heir, our Prince
     Needs the Duke’s self at his side”:
     The Duke looked down and seemed to wince,
     But he thought of wars o’er the world wide,
     Castles a-fire, men on their march,                {60}
     The toppling tower, the crashing arch;
     And up he looked, and a while he eyed
     The row of crests and shields and banners
     Of all achievements after all manners,
     And “Ay”, said the Duke with a surly pride.
     The more was his comfort when he died
     At next year’s end, in a velvet suit,
     With a gilt glove on his hand, his foot
     In a silken shoe for a leather boot,
     Petticoated like a herald,                         {70}
     In a chamber next to an ante-room,
     Where he breathed the breath of page and groom,
     What he called stink, and they, perfume:
   —They should have set him on red Berold
     Mad with pride, like fire to manage!
     They should have got his cheek fresh tannage
     Such a day as to-day in the merry sunshine!
     Had they stuck on his fist a rough-foot merlin!
     (Hark, the wind’s on the heath at its game!
     Oh for a noble falcon-lanner                       {80}
     To flap each broad wing like a banner,
     And turn in the wind, and dance like flame!)
     Had they broached a cask of white beer from Berlin!
   —Or if you incline to prescribe mere wine,
     Put to his lips when they saw him pine,
     A cup of our own Moldavia fine,
     Cotnar for instance, green as May sorrel
     And ropy with sweet,—we shall not quarrel.

— 74. Berold: the old Duke’s favorite hunting-horse.

78. merlin: a species of hawk.

80. falcon-lanner: a long-tailed species of hawk, ‘falco laniarius’.

       4.

     So, at home, the sick tall yellow Duchess
     Was left with the infant in her clutches,     {90}
     She being the daughter of God knows who:
     And now was the time to revisit her tribe.
     Abroad and afar they went, the two,
     And let our people rail and gibe
     At the empty hall and extinguished fire,
     As loud as we liked, but ever in vain,
     Till after long years we had our desire,
     And back came the Duke and his mother again.
       5.

     And he came back the pertest little ape
     That ever affronted human shape;                       {100}
     Full of his travel, struck at himself.
     You’d say, he despised our bluff old ways?
   —Not he!  For in Paris they told the elf
     That our rough North land was the Land of Lays,
     The one good thing left in evil days;
     Since the Mid-Age was the Heroic Time,
     And only in wild nooks like ours
     Could you taste of it yet as in its prime,
     And see true castles with proper towers,
     Young-hearted women, old-minded men,                   {110}
     And manners now as manners were then.
     So, all that the old Dukes had been, without knowing it,
     This Duke would fain know he was, without being it;
     ‘Twas not for the joy’s self, but the joy of his showing it,
     Nor for the pride’s self, but the pride of our seeing it,
     He revived all usages thoroughly worn-out,
     The souls of them fumed-forth, the hearts of them torn-out:
     And chief in the chase his neck he perilled,
     On a lathy horse, all legs and length,
     With blood for bone, all speed, no strength;           {120}
   —They should have set him on red Berold
     With the red eye slow consuming in fire,
     And the thin stiff ear like an abbey spire!

— 101. struck at himself: astonished at his own importance.

119. lathy: long and slim.

       6.

     Well, such as he was, he must marry, we heard;
     And out of a convent, at the word,
     Came the lady, in time of spring.
   —Oh, old thoughts they cling, they cling!
     That day, I know, with a dozen oaths
     I clad myself in thick hunting-clothes
     Fit for the chase of urox or buffle               {130}
     In winter-time when you need to muffle.
     But the Duke had a mind we should cut a figure,
     And so we saw the lady arrive:
     My friend, I have seen a white crane bigger!
     She was the smallest lady alive,
     Made in a piece of nature’s madness,
     Too small, almost, for the life and gladness
     That over-filled her, as some hive
     Out of the bears’ reach on the high trees
     Is crowded with its safe merry bees:              {140}
     In truth, she was not hard to please!
     Up she looked, down she looked, round at the mead,
     Straight at the castle, that’s best indeed
     To look at from outside the walls:
     As for us, styled the “serfs and thralls”,
     She as much thanked me as if she had said it,
     (With her eyes, do you understand?)
     Because I patted her horse while I led it;
     And Max, who rode on her other hand,
     Said, no bird flew past but she inquired          {150}
     What its true name was, nor ever seemed tired—
     If that was an eagle she saw hover,
     And the green and gray bird on the field was the plover,
     When suddenly appeared the Duke:
     And as down she sprung, the small foot pointed
     On to my hand,—as with a rebuke,
     And as if his backbone were not jointed,
     The Duke stepped rather aside than forward,
     And welcomed her with his grandest smile;
     And, mind you, his mother all the while           {160}
     Chilled in the rear, like a wind to nor’ward;
     And up, like a weary yawn, with its pulleys
     Went, in a shriek, the rusty portcullis;
     And, like a glad sky the north-wind sullies,
     The lady’s face stopped its play,
     As if her first hair had grown gray;
     For such things must begin some one day.

— 130. urox: wild bull; Ger. ‘auer-ochs’. buffle: buffalo.

       7.

     In a day or two she was well again;
     As who should say, “You labor in vain!
     This is all a jest against God, who meant         {170}
     I should ever be, as I am, content
     And glad in his sight; therefore, glad I will be.”
      So, smiling as at first went she.
       8.

     She was active, stirring, all fire—
     Could not rest, could not tire—
     To a stone she might have given life!
     (I myself loved once, in my day)
   —For a shepherd’s, miner’s, huntsman’s wife,
     (I had a wife, I know what I say)
     Never in all the world such an one!               {180}
     And here was plenty to be done,
     And she that could do it, great or small,
     She was to do nothing at all.
     There was already this man in his post,
     This in his station, and that in his office,
     And the Duke’s plan admitted a wife, at most,
     To meet his eye, with the other trophies,
     Now outside the hall, now in it,
     To sit thus, stand thus, see and be seen,
     At the proper place in the proper minute,         {190}
     And die away the life between.
     And it was amusing enough, each infraction
     Of rule—(but for after-sadness that came)
     To hear the consummate self-satisfaction
     With which the young Duke and the old dame
     Would let her advise, and criticise,
     And, being a fool, instruct the wise,
     And, childlike, parcel out praise or blame:
     They bore it all in complacent guise,
     As though an artificer, after contriving          {200}
     A wheel-work image as if it were living,
     Should find with delight it could motion to strike him!
     So found the Duke, and his mother like him:
     The lady hardly got a rebuff—
     That had not been contemptuous enough,
     With his cursed smirk, as he nodded applause,
     And kept off the old mother-cat’s claws.

— 180. such an one: i.e., for a shepherd’s, miner’s, huntsman’s wife.

       9.

     So, the little lady grew silent and thin,
     Paling and ever paling,
     As the way is with a hid chagrin;                 {210}
     And the Duke perceived that she was ailing,
     And said in his heart, “‘Tis done to spite me,
     But I shall find in my power to right me!”
      Don’t swear, friend!  The old one, many a year,
     Is in hell; and the Duke’s self. . .you shall hear.
       10.

     Well, early in autumn, at first winter-warning,
     When the stag had to break with his foot, of a morning,
     A drinking-hole out of the fresh tender ice,
     That covered the pond till the sun, in a trice,
     Loosening it, let out a ripple of gold,                     {220}
     And another and another, and faster and faster,
     Till, dimpling to blindness, the wide water rolled,
     Then it so chanced that the Duke our master
     Asked himself what were the pleasures in season,
     And found, since the calendar bade him be hearty,
     He should do the Middle Age no treason
     In resolving on a hunting-party,
     Always provided, old books showed the way of it!
     What meant old poets by their strictures?
     And when old poets had said their say of it,                {230}
     How taught old painters in their pictures?
     We must revert to the proper channels,
     Workings in tapestry, paintings on panels,
     And gather up woodcraft’s authentic traditions:
     Here was food for our various ambitions,
     As on each case, exactly stated—
     To encourage your dog, now, the properest chirrup,
     Or best prayer to St. Hubert on mounting your stirrup—
     We of the household took thought and debated.
     Blessed was he whose back ached with the jerkin             {240}
     His sire was wont to do forest-work in;
     Blesseder he who nobly sunk “ohs”
      And “ahs” while he tugged on his grandsire’s trunk-hose;
     What signified hats if they had no rims on,
     Each slouching before and behind like the scallop,
     And able to serve at sea for a shallop,
     Loaded with lacquer and looped with crimson?
     So that the deer now, to make a short rhyme on’t,
     What with our Venerers, Prickers, and Verderers,
     Might hope for real hunters at length and not murderers,    {250}
     And oh the Duke’s tailor, he had a hot time on’t!

— 238. St. Hubert: patron saint of huntsmen.

247. lacquer: yellowish varnish.

249. Venerers, Prickers, and Verderers: huntsmen, light-horsemen, and guardians of the vert and venison in the Duke’s forest.

       11.

     Now you must know that when the first dizziness
     Of flap-hats and buff-coats and jack-boots subsided,
     The Duke put this question, “The Duke’s part provided,
     Had not the Duchess some share in the business?”
      For out of the mouth of two or three witnesses
     Did he establish all fit-or-unfitnesses;
     And, after much laying of heads together,
     Somebody’s cap got a notable feather
     By the announcement with proper unction                {260}
     That he had discovered the lady’s function;
     Since ancient authors gave this tenet,
     “When horns wind a mort and the deer is at siege,
     Let the dame of the castle prick forth on her jennet,
     And with water to wash the hands of her liege
     In a clean ewer with a fair towelling,
     Let her preside at the disembowelling.”
      Now, my friend, if you had so little religion
     As to catch a hawk, some falcon-lanner,
     And thrust her broad wings like a banner               {270}
     Into a coop for a vulgar pigeon;
     And if day by day and week by week
     You cut her claws, and sealed her eyes,
     And clipped her wings, and tied her beak,
     Would it cause you any great surprise
     If, when you decided to give her an airing,
     You found she needed a little preparing?—
     I say, should you be such a curmudgeon,
     If she clung to the perch, as to take it in dudgeon?
     Yet when the Duke to his lady signified,               {280}
     Just a day before, as he judged most dignified,
     In what a pleasure she was to participate,—
     And, instead of leaping wide in flashes,
     Her eyes just lifted their long lashes,
     As if pressed by fatigue even he could not dissipate,
     And duly acknowledged the Duke’s forethought,
     But spoke of her health, if her health were worth aught,
     Of the weight by day and the watch by night,
     And much wrong now that used to be right,
     So, thanking him, declined the hunting,—           {290}
     Was conduct ever more affronting?
     With all the ceremony settled—
     With the towel ready, and the sewer
     Polishing up his oldest ewer,
     And the jennet pitched upon, a piebald,
     Black-barred, cream-coated, and pink eye-balled,—
     No wonder if the Duke was nettled!
     And when she persisted nevertheless,—
     Well, I suppose here’s the time to confess
     That there ran half round our lady’s chamber           {300}
     A balcony none of the hardest to clamber;
     And that Jacynth the tire-woman, ready in waiting,
     Staid in call outside, what need of relating?
     And since Jacynth was like a June rose, why, a fervent
     Adorer of Jacynth of course was your servant;
     And if she had the habit to peep through the casement,
     How could I keep at any vast distance?
     And so, as I say, on the lady’s persistence,
     The Duke, dumb stricken with amazement,
     Stood for a while in a sultry smother,                 {310}
     And then, with a smile that partook of the awful,
     Turned her over to his yellow mother
     To learn what was decorous and lawful;
     And the mother smelt blood with a cat-like instinct,
     As her cheek quick whitened through all its quince-tinct.
     Oh, but the lady heard the whole truth at once!
     What meant she?—Who was she?—Her duty and station,
     The wisdom of age and the folly of youth, at once,
     Its decent regard and its fitting relation—
     In brief, my friends, set all the devils in hell free  {320}
     And turn them out to carouse in a belfry
     And treat the priests to a fifty-part canon,
     And then you may guess how that tongue of hers ran on!
     Well, somehow or other it ended at last,
     And, licking her whiskers, out she passed;
     And after her,—making (he hoped) a face
     Like Emperor Nero or Sultan Saladin,
     Stalked the Duke’s self with the austere grace
     Of ancient hero or modern paladin,
     From door to staircase—oh, such a solemn            {330}
     Unbending of the vertebral column!

— 263. wind a mort: announce that the deer is taken.

273. sealed: more properly spelt ‘seeled’, a term in falconry; Lat. ‘cilium’, an eyelid; ‘seel’, to close up the eyelids of a hawk, or other bird (Fr. ‘ciller les yeux’). “Come, seeling Night, Skarfe vp the tender Eye of pittiful Day.” ‘Macbeth’, III. II. 46.

322. fifty-part canon: “A canon, in music, is a piece wherein the subject is repeated, in various keys: and being strictly obeyed in the repetition, becomes the ‘canon’—the imperative LAW—to what follows. Fifty of such parts would be indeed a notable peal: to manage three is enough of an achievement for a good musician.”—From Poet’s Letter to the Editor.

       12.

     However, at sunrise our company mustered;
     And here was the huntsman bidding unkennel,
     And there ‘neath his bonnet the pricker blustered,
     With feather dank as a bough of wet fennel;
     For the court-yard walls were filled with fog
     You might cut as an axe chops a log—
     Like so much wool for color and bulkiness;
     And out rode the Duke in a perfect sulkiness,
     Since, before breakfast, a man feels but queasily,     {340}
     And a sinking at the lower abdomen
     Begins the day with indifferent omen.
     And lo! as he looked around uneasily,
     The sun ploughed the fog up and drove it asunder,
     This way and that, from the valley under;
     And, looking through the court-yard arch,
     Down in the valley, what should meet him
     But a troop of gypsies on their march?
     No doubt with the annual gifts to greet him.
         13.

     Now, in your land, gypsies reach you, only             {350}
     After reaching all lands beside;
     North they go, South they go, trooping or lonely,
     And still, as they travel far and wide,
     Catch they and keep now a trace here, a trace there,
     That puts you in mind of a place here, a place there.
     But with us, I believe they rise out of the ground,
     And nowhere else, I take it, are found
     With the earth-tint yet so freshly embrowned;
     Born, no doubt, like insects which breed on
     The very fruit they are meant to feed on.              {360}
     For the earth—not a use to which they don’t turn it,
     The ore that grows in the mountain’s womb,
     Or the sand in the pits like a honeycomb,
     They sift and soften it, bake it and burn it—
     Whether they weld you, for instance, a snaffle
     With side-bars never a brute can baffle;
     Or a lock that’s a puzzle of wards within wards;
     Or, if your colt’s fore foot inclines to curve inwards,
     Horseshoes they hammer which turn on a swivel
     And won’t allow the hoof to shrivel.                   {370}
     Then they cast bells like the shell of the winkle
     That keep a stout heart in the ram with their tinkle;
     But the sand—they pinch and pound it like otters;
     Commend me to gypsy glass-makers and potters!
     Glasses they’ll blow you, crystal-clear,
     Where just a faint cloud of rose shall appear,
     As if in pure water you dropped and let die
     A bruised black-blooded mulberry;
     And that other sort, their crowning pride,
     With long white threads distinct inside,               {380}
     Like the lake-flower’s fibrous roots which dangle
     Loose such a length and never tangle,
     Where the bold sword-lily cuts the clear waters,
     And the cup-lily couches with all the white daughters:
     Such are the works they put their hand to,
     The uses they turn and twist iron and sand to.
     And these made the troop, which our Duke saw sally
     Toward his castle from out of the valley,
     Men and women, like new-hatched spiders,
     Come out with the morning to greet our riders.         {390}
     And up they wound till they reached the ditch,
     Whereat all stopped save one, a witch
     That I knew, as she hobbled from the group,
     By her gait directly and her stoop,
     I, whom Jacynth was used to importune
     To let that same witch tell us our fortune.
     The oldest gypsy then above ground;
     And, sure as the autumn season came round,
     She paid us a visit for profit or pastime,
     And every time, as she swore, for the last time.       {400}
     And presently she was seen to sidle
     Up to the Duke till she touched his bridle,
     So that the horse of a sudden reared up
     As under its nose the old witch peered up
     With her worn-out eyes, or rather eye-holes,
     Of no use now but to gather brine,
     And began a kind of level whine
     Such as they used to sing to their viols
     When their ditties they go grinding
     Up and down with nobody minding;                       {410}
     And then, as of old, at the end of the humming
     Her usual presents were forthcoming
   —A dog-whistle blowing the fiercest of trebles
     (Just a seashore stone holding a dozen fine pebbles),
     Or a porcelain mouth-piece to screw on a pipe-end,—
     And so she awaited her annual stipend.
     But this time, the Duke would scarcely vouchsafe
     A word in reply; and in vain she felt
     With twitching fingers at her belt
     For the purse of sleek pine-martin pelt,               {420}
     Ready to put what he gave in her pouch safe,—
     Till, either to quicken his apprehension,
     Or possibly with an after-intention,
     She was come, she said, to pay her duty
     To the new Duchess, the youthful beauty.
     No sooner had she named his lady,
     Than a shine lit up the face so shady,
     And its smirk returned with a novel meaning—
     For it struck him, the babe just wanted weaning;
     If one gave her a taste of what life was and sorrow,   {430}
     She, foolish to-day, would be wiser to-morrow;
     And who so fit a teacher of trouble
     As this sordid crone bent well-nigh double?
     So, glancing at her wolf-skin vesture
     (If such it was, for they grow so hirsute
     That their own fleece serves for natural fur-suit)
     He was contrasting, ‘twas plain from his gesture,
     The life of the lady so flower-like and delicate
     With the loathsome squalor of this helicat.
     I, in brief, was the man the Duke beckoned             {440}
     From out of the throng; and while I drew near
     He told the crone—as I since have reckoned
     By the way he bent and spoke into her ear
     With circumspection and mystery—
     The main of the lady’s history,
     Her frowardness and ingratitude;
     And for all the crone’s submissive attitude
     I could see round her mouth the loose plaits tightening,
     And her brow with assenting intelligence brightening,
     As though she engaged with hearty good will            {450}
     Whatever he now might enjoin to fulfil,
     And promised the lady a thorough frightening.
     And so, just giving her a glimpse
     Of a purse, with the air of a man who imps
     The wing of the hawk that shall fetch the hernshaw,
     He bade me take the gypsy mother
     And set her telling some story or other
     Of hill and dale, oak-wood or fernshaw,
     To while away a weary hour
     For the lady left alone in her bower,                  {460}
     Whose mind and body craved exertion
     And yet shrank from all better diversion.

— 354. Catch they and keep: i.e., in their expression, or bearing, or manner.

407. level: monotonous.

439. helicat: for hell-cat? hag or witch.

454. imps: repairs a wing by inserting feathers; ‘impen’ or ‘ympen’, in O. E., means to ingraft. “It often falls out that a hawk breaks her wing and train-feathers, so that others must be set in their steads, which is termed ‘ymping’ them.”—The Gentleman’s Recreation, Part 2, Hawking, 1686.

       14.

     Then clapping heel to his horse, the mere curveter,
     Out rode the Duke, and after his hollo
     Horses and hounds swept, huntsman and servitor,
     And back I turned and bade the crone follow.
     And what makes me confident what’s to be told you
     Had all along been of this crone’s devising,
     Is, that, on looking round sharply, behold you,
     There was a novelty quick as surprising:          {470}
     For first, she had shot up a full head in stature,
     And her step kept pace with mine nor faltered,
     As if age had foregone its usurpature,
     And the ignoble mien was wholly altered,
     And the face looked quite of another nature,
     And the change reached too, whatever the change meant,
     Her shaggy wolf-skin cloak’s arrangment:
     For where its tatters hung loose like sedges,
     Gold coins were glittering on the edges,
     Like the band-roll strung with tomans             {480}
     Which proves the veil a Persian woman’s:
     And under her brow, like a snail’s horns newly
     Come out as after the rain he paces,
     Two unmistakable eye-points duly
     Live and aware looked out of their places.
     So, we went and found Jacynth at the entry
     Of the lady’s chamber standing sentry;
     I told the command and produced my companion,
     And Jacynth rejoiced to admit any one,
     For since last night, by the same token,          {490}
     Not a single word had the lady spoken:
     They went in both to the presence together,
     While I in the balcony watched the weather.

— 463. curveter: a leaping horse.

480. tomans: Persian coins.

490. by the same token: by a presentiment or forewarning of the same.

         15.

     And now, what took place at the very first of all,
     I cannot tell, as I never could learn it:
     Jacynth constantly wished a curse to fall
     On that little head of hers and burn it
     If she knew how she came to drop so soundly
     Asleep of a sudden, and there continue
     The whole time, sleeping as profoundly            {500}
     As one of the boars my father would pin you
     ‘Twixt the eyes where life holds garrison,
   —Jacynth, forgive me the comparison!
     But where I begin my own narration
     Is a little after I took my station
     To breathe the fresh air from the balcony,
     And, having in those days a falcon eye,
     To follow the hunt through the open country,
     From where the bushes thinlier crested
     The hillocks, to a plain where’s not one tree.    {510}
     When, in a moment, my ear was arrested
     By—was it singing, or was it saying,
     Or a strange musical instrument playing
     In the chamber?—and to be certain
     I pushed the lattice, pulled the curtain,
     And there lay Jacynth asleep,
     Yet as if a watch she tried to keep,
     In a rosy sleep along the floor
     With her head against the door;
     While in the midst, on the seat of state,         {520}
     Was a queen—the gypsy woman late,
     With head and face downbent
     On the lady’s head and face intent:
     For, coiled at her feet like a child at ease,
     The lady sat between her knees,
     And o’er them the lady’s clasped hands met,
     And on those hands her chin was set,
     And her upturned face met the face of the crone
     Wherein the eyes had grown and grown
     As if she could double and quadruple              {530}
     At pleasure the play of either pupil
   —Very like, by her hands’ slow fanning,
     As up and down like a gor-crow’s flappers
     They moved to measure, or bell-clappers.
     I said, “Is it blessing, is it banning,
     Do they applaud you or burlesque you—
     Those hands and fingers with no flesh on?”
      But, just as I thought to spring in to the rescue,
     At once I was stopped by the lady’s expression:
     For it was life her eyes were drinking            {540}
     From the crone’s wide pair above unwinking,
   —Life’s pure fire, received without shrinking,
     Into the heart and breast whose heaving
     Told you no single drop they were leaving,
   —Life that, filling her, passed redundant
     Into her very hair, back swerving
     Over each shoulder, loose and abundant,
     As her head thrown back showed the white throat curving;
     And the very tresses shared in the pleasure,
     Moving to the mystic measure,                     {550}
     Bounding as the bosom bounded.
     I stopped short, more and more confounded,
     As still her cheeks burned and eyes glistened,
     As she listened and she listened:
     When all at once a hand detained me,
     The selfsame contagion gained me,
     And I kept time to the wondrous chime,
     Making out words and prose and rhyme,
     Till it seemed that the music furled
     Its wings like a task fulfilled, and dropped      {560}
     From under the words it first had propped,
     And left them midway in the world,
     Word took word as hand takes hand,
     I could hear at last, and understand,
     And when I held the unbroken thread,
     The gypsy said:—

     “And so at last we find my tribe.
     And so I set thee in the midst,
     And to one and all of them describe
     What thou saidst and what thou didst,             {570}
     Our long and terrible journey through,
     And all thou art ready to say and do
     In the trials that remain:
     I trace them the vein and the other vein
     That meet on thy brow and part again,
     Making our rapid mystic mark;
     And I bid my people prove and probe
     Each eye’s profound and glorious globe,
     Till they detect the kindred spark
     In those depths so dear and dark,                 {580}
     Like the spots that snap and burst and flee,
     Circling over the midnight sea.
     And on that round young cheek of thine
     I make them recognize the tinge,
     As when of the costly scarlet wine
     They drip so much as will impinge
     And spread in a thinnest scale afloat
     One thick gold drop from the olive’s coat
     Over a silver plate whose sheen
     Still through the mixture shall be seen.          {590}
     For so I prove thee, to one and all,
     Fit, when my people ope their breast,
     To see the sign, and hear the call,
     And take the vow, and stand the test
     Which adds one more child to the rest—
     When the breast is bare and the arms are wide,
     And the world is left outside.
     For there is probation to decree,
     And many and long must the trials be
     Thou shalt victoriously endure,                   {600}
     If that brow is true and those eyes are sure;
     Like a jewel-finder’s fierce assay
     Of the prize he dug from its mountain tomb,—
     Let once the vindicating ray
     Leap out amid the anxious gloom,
     And steel and fire have done their part,
     And the prize falls on its finder’s heart;
     So, trial after trial past,
     Wilt thou fall at the very last
     Breathless, half in trance                        {610}
     With the thrill of the great deliverance,
     Into our arms forevermore;
     And thou shalt know, those arms once curled
     About thee, what we knew before,
     How love is the only good in the world.
     Henceforth be loved as heart can love,
     Or brain devise, or hand approve!
     Stand up, look below,
     It is our life at thy feet we throw
     To step with into light and joy;                  {620}
     Not a power of life but we employ
     To satisfy thy nature’s want;
     Art thou the tree that props the plant,
     Or the climbing plant that seeks the tree—
     Canst thou help us, must we help thee?
     If any two creatures grew into one,
     They would do more than the world has done;
     Though each apart were never so weak,
     Ye vainly through the world should seek
     For the knowledge and the might                   {630}
     Which in such union grew their right:
     So, to approach at least that end,
     And blend,—as much as may be, blend
     Thee with us or us with thee,—
     As climbing plant or propping tree,
     Shall some one deck thee over and down,
     Up and about, with blossoms and leaves?
     Fix his heart’s fruit for thy garland crown,
     Cling with his soul as the gourd-vine cleaves,
     Die on thy boughs and disappear                   {640}
     While not a leaf of thine is sere?
     Or is the other fate in store,
     And art thou fitted to adore,
     To give thy wondrous self away,
     And take a stronger nature’s sway?
     I foresee and could foretell
     Thy future portion, sure and well:
     But those passionate eyes speak true, speak true,
     Let them say what thou shalt do!
     Only be sure thy daily life,                      {650}
     In its peace or in its strife,
     Never shall be unobserved;
     We pursue thy whole career,
     And hope for it, or doubt, or fear,—
     Lo, hast thou kept thy path or swerved,
     We are beside thee in all thy ways,
     With our blame, with our praise,
     Our shame to feel, our pride to show,
     Glad, angry—but indifferent, no!
     Whether it be thy lot to go,                      {660}
     For the good of us all, where the haters meet
     In the crowded city’s horrible street;
     Or thou step alone through the morass
     Where never sound yet was
     Save the dry quick clap of the stork’s bill,
     For the air is still, and the water still,
     When the blue breast of the dipping coot
     Dives under, and all is mute.
     So at the last shall come old age,
     Decrepit as befits that stage;                    {670}
     How else wouldst thou retire apart
     With the hoarded memories of thy heart,
     And gather all the very least
     Of the fragments of life’s earlier feast,
     Let fall through eagerness to find
     The crowning dainties yet behind?
     Ponder on the entire past
     Laid together thus at last,
     When the twilight helps to fuse
     The first fresh with the faded hues,              {680}
     And the outline of the whole,
     As round eve’s shades their framework roll,
     Grandly fronts for once thy soul.
     And then as, ‘mid the dark, a gleam
     Of yet another morning breaks,
     And like the hand which ends a dream,
     Death, with the might of his sunbeam,
     Touches the flesh and the soul awakes,
     Then”—
              Ay, then indeed something would happen!
     But what?  For here her voice changed like a bird’s;   {690}
     There grew more of the music and less of the words;
     Had Jacynth only been by me to clap pen
     To paper and put you down every syllable
     With those clever clerkly fingers,
     All I’ve forgotten as well as what lingers
     In this old brain of mine that’s but ill able
     To give you even this poor version
     Of the speech I spoil, as it were, with stammering!
   —More fault of those who had the hammering
     Or prosody into me and syntax,                         {700}
     And did it, not with hobnails but tintacks!
     But to return from this excursion,—
     Just, do you mark, when the song was sweetest,
     The peace most deep and the charm completest,
     There came, shall I say, a snap—
     And the charm vanished!
     And my sense returned, so strangely banished,
     And, starting as from a nap,
     I knew the crone was bewitching my lady,
     With Jacynth asleep; and but one spring made I         {710}
     Down from the casement, round to the portal,
     Another minute and I had entered,—
     When the door opened, and more than mortal
     Stood, with a face where to my mind centred
     All beauties I ever saw or shall see,
     The Duchess:  I stopped as if struck by palsy.
     She was so different, happy and beautiful,
     I felt at once that all was best,
     And that I had nothing to do, for the rest,
     But wait her commands, obey and be dutiful.            {720}
     Not that, in fact, there was any commanding;
     I saw the glory of her eye,
     And the brow’s height and the breast’s expanding,
     And I was hers to live or to die.
     As for finding what she wanted,
     You know God Almighty granted
     Such little signs should serve wild creatures
     To tell one another all their desires,
     So that each knows what his friend requires,
     And does its bidding without teachers.                 {730}
     I preceded her; the crone
     Followed silent and alone;
     I spoke to her, but she merely jabbered
     In the old style; both her eyes had slunk
     Back to their pits; her stature shrunk;
     In short, the soul in its body sunk
     Like a blade sent home to its scabbard.
     We descended, I preceding;
     Crossed the court with nobody heeding;
     All the world was at the chase,                        {740}
     The court-yard like a desert-place,
     The stable emptied of its small fry;
     I saddled myself the very palfrey
     I remember patting while it carried her,
     The day she arrived and the Duke married her.
     And, do you know, though it’s easy deceiving
     One’s self in such matters, I can’t help believing
     The lady had not forgotten it either,
     And knew the poor devil so much beneath her
     Would have been only too glad, for her service,        {750}
     To dance on hot ploughshares like a Turk dervise,
     But, unable to pay proper duty where owing it,
     Was reduced to that pitiful method of showing it.
     For though, the moment I began setting
     His saddle on my own nag of Berold’s begetting
     (Not that I meant to be obtrusive),
     She stopped me, while his rug was shifting,
     By a single rapid finger’s lifting,
     And, with a gesture kind but conclusive,
     And a little shake of the head, refused me,—       {760}
     I say, although she never used me,
     Yet when she was mounted, the gypsy behind her,
     And I ventured to remind her,
     I suppose with a voice of less steadiness
     Than usual, for my feeling exceeded me,
   —Something to the effect that I was in readiness
     Whenever God should please she needed me,—
     Then, do you know, her face looked down on me
     With a look that placed a crown on me,
     And she felt in her bosom,—mark, her bosom—     {770}
     And, as a flower-tree drops its blossom,
     Dropped me. . .ah! had it been a purse
     Of silver, my friend, or gold that’s worse,
     Why, you see, as soon as I found myself
     So understood,—that a true heart so may gain
     Such a reward,—I should have gone home again,
     Kissed Jacynth, and soberly drowned myself!
     It was a little plait of hair
     Such as friends in a convent make
     To wear, each for the other’s sake,—               {780}
     This, see, which at my breast I wear,
     Ever did (rather to Jacynth’s grudgment),
     And ever shall, till the Day of Judgment.
     And then,—and then,—to cut short,—this is idle,
     These are feelings it is not good to foster,—
     I pushed the gate wide, she shook the bridle,
     And the palfrey bounded,—and so we lost her.

— 501. you: ethical dative; there are several examples in the poem, and of “me”; see especially v. 876.

586. impinge: to strike or fall upon or against; in the following passage used ethically:—

“For I find this black mark impinge the man, That he believes in just the vile of life.”—The Ring and the Book: The Pope, v. 511.

567-689. “When higher laws draw the spirit out of itself into the life of others; when grief has waked in it, not a self-centred despair, but a divine sympathy; when it looks from the narrow limits of its own suffering to the largeness of the world and the sorrows it can lighten, we can dimly apprehend that it has taken flight and has found its freedom in a region whither earth-bound spirits cannot follow it. Surely the Gypsy’s message was this—if the Duchess would leave her own troubles and throw herself into the life of others, she would be free. None can give true sympathy but those who have suffered and learnt to love, therefore she must be proved,—‘Fit when my people ope their breast’, etc. (vv. 592-601). Passing from the bondage she has endured she will still have trials, but the old pain will have no power to touch her. She has learnt all it can teach, and the world will be richer for it. The Gypsy Queen will not foretell what her future life may be; the true powers of self-less love are not yet gauged, and the power of the union of those that truly love has never been tried. ‘If any two creatures grew into one’, etc. (vv. 626-631). Love at its highest is not yet known to us, but the passionate eyes of the Duchess tell us it will not be a life of quiescence. Giving herself out freely for the good of all she can never be alone again,—‘We are beside thee in all thy ways’. The great company of those who need her, the gypsy band of all human claims. Death to such a life is but ‘the hand that ends a dream’. What was to come after not even the Gypsy Queen could tell.”— Mrs. Owen (‘Browning Soc. Papers’, Part IV. p. 52*).

712. had: past subj., should have.

753. that pitiful method: i.e., patting her palfrey.

784. And then,—and then: his feelings overcome him.

       16.

     When the liquor’s out why clink the cannikin?
     I did think to describe you the panic in
     The redoubtable breast of our master the manikin,      {790}
     And what was the pitch of his mother’s yellowness,
     How she turned as a shark to snap the spare-rib
     Clean off, sailors say, from a pearl-diving Carib,
     When she heard, what she called the flight of the feloness
   —But it seems such child’s play,
     What they said and did with the lady away!
     And to dance on, when we’ve lost the music,
     Always made me—and no doubt makes you—sick.
     Nay, to my mind, the world’s face looked so stern
     As that sweet form disappeared through the postern,    {800}
     She that kept it in constant good humor,
     It ought to have stopped; there seemed nothing to do more.
     But the world thought otherwise and went on,
     And my head’s one that its spite was spent on:
     Thirty years are fled since that morning,
     And with them all my head’s adorning.
     Nor did the old Duchess die outright,
     As you expect, of suppressed spite,
     The natural end of every adder
     Not suffered to empty its poison-bladder:              {810}
     But she and her son agreed, I take it,
     That no one should touch on the story to wake it,
     For the wound in the Duke’s pride rankled fiery;
     So, they made no search and small inquiry:
     And when fresh gypsies have paid us a visit, I’ve
     Noticed the couple were never inquisitive,
     But told them they’re folks the Duke don’t want here,
     And bade them make haste and cross the frontier.
     Brief, the Duchess was gone and the Duke was glad of it,
     And the old one was in the young one’s stead,          {820}
     And took, in her place, the household’s head,
     And a blessed time the household had of it!
     And were I not, as a man may say, cautious
     How I trench, more than needs, on the nauseous,
     I could favor you with sundry touches
     Of the paint-smutches with which the Duchess
     Heightened the mellowness of her cheek’s yellowness
     (To get on faster) until at last her
     Cheek grew to be one master-plaster
     Of mucus and fucus from mere use of ceruse:            {830}
     In short, she grew from scalp to udder
     Just the object to make you shudder.

— 793. Carib: a Caribbee, a native of the Caribbean islands.

       17.

     You’re my friend—
     What a thing friendship is, world without end!
     How it gives the heart and soul a stir-up
     As if somebody broached you a glorious runlet,
     And poured out, all lovelily, sparklingly, sunlit,
     Our green Moldavia, the streaky syrup,
     Cotnar as old as the time of the Druids—
     Friendship may match with that monarch of fluids;      {840}
     Each supples a dry brain, fills you its ins-and-outs,
     Gives your life’s hour-glass a shake when the thin sand doubts
     Whether to run on or stop short, and guarantees
     Age is not all made of stark sloth and arrant ease.
     I have seen my little lady once more,
     Jacynth, the gypsy, Berold, and the rest of it,
     For to me spoke the Duke, as I told you before;
     I always wanted to make a clean breast of it:
     And now it is made—why, my heart’s blood, that went trickle,
     Trickle, but anon, in such muddy driblets,             {850}
     Is pumped up brisk now, through the main ventricle,
     And genially floats me about the giblets.
     I’ll tell you what I intend to do:
     I must see this fellow his sad life through—
     He is our Duke, after all,
     And I, as he says, but a serf and thrall.
     My father was born here, and I inherit
     His fame, a chain he bound his son with;
     Could I pay in a lump I should prefer it,
     But there’s no mine to blow up and get done with:      {860}
     So, I must stay till the end of the chapter.
     For, as to our middle-age-manners-adapter,
     Be it a thing to be glad on or sorry on,
     Some day or other, his head in a morion
     And breast in a hauberk, his heels he’ll kick up,
     Slain by an onslaught fierce of hiccup.
     And then, when red doth the sword of our Duke rust,
     And its leathern sheath lie o’ergrown with a blue crust,
     Then I shall scrape together my earnings;
     For, you see, in the churchyard Jacynth reposes,       {870}
     And our children all went the way of the roses:
     It’s a long lane that knows no turnings.
     One needs but little tackle to travel in;
     So, just one stout cloak shall I indue:
     And for a staff, what beats the javelin
     With which his boars my father pinned you?
     And then, for a purpose you shall hear presently,
     Taking some Cotnar, a tight plump skinful,
     I shall go journeying, who but I, pleasantly!
     Sorrow is vain and despondency sinful.                 {880}
     What’s a man’s age?  He must hurry more, that’s all;
     Cram in a day, what his youth took a year to hold:
     When we mind labor, then only, we’re too old—
     What age had Methusalem when he begat Saul?
     And at last, as its haven some buffeted ship sees
     (Come all the way from the north-parts with sperm oil),
     I hope to get safely out of the turmoil
     And arrive one day at the land of the gypsies,
     And find my lady, or hear the last news of her
     From some old thief and son of Lucifer,                {890}
     His forehead chapleted green with wreathy hop,
     Sunburned all over like an Aethiop.
     And when my Cotnar begins to operate
     And the tongue of the rogue to run at a proper rate,
     And our wine-skin, tight once, shows each flaccid dent,
     I shall drop in with—as if by accident—
     “You never knew, then, how it all ended,
     What fortune good or bad attended
     The little lady your Queen befriended?”
    —And when that’s told me, what’s remaining?          {900}
     This world’s too hard for my explaining.
     The same wise judge of matters equine
     Who still preferred some slim four-year-old
     To the big-boned stock of mighty Berold,
     And, for strong Cotnar, drank French weak wine,
     He also must be such a lady’s scorner!
     Smooth Jacob still robs homely Esau:
     Now up, now down, the world’s one seesaw.
   —So, I shall find out some snug corner
     Under a hedge, like Orson the wood-knight,             {910}
     Turn myself round and bid the world goodnight;
     And sleep a sound sleep till the trumpet’s blowing
     Wakes me (unless priests cheat us laymen)
     To a world where will be no further throwing
     Pearls before swine that can’t value them.  Amen!

— 845. I have seen: i.e., in imagination, while telling the story.

864. morion: a sort of helmet.

884. What age had Methusalem: the old man forgets his Bible.

906. He also must be such a lady’s scorner: he who is such a poor judge of horses and wines.

910. Orson the wood-knight (Fr. ‘ourson’, a small bear): twin-brother of Valentine, and son of Bellisant. The brothers were born in a wood near Orleans, and Orson was carried off by a bear, which suckled him with her cubs. When he grew up, he became the terror of France, and was called “The Wild Man of the Forest”. Ultimately he was reclaimed by his brother Valentine, overthrew the Green Knight, his rival in love, and married Fezon, daughter of the duke of Savary, in Aquitaine.—‘Romance of Valentine and Orson’ (15th cent.). Brewer’s ‘Reader’s Handbook’ and ‘Dictionary of Phrase and Fable’.

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