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+****The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Princess, by Tennyson****
+#2 in our series by Alfred Tennyson
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+The Princess
+
+by Alfred Tennyson
+
+January, 1997 [Etext #791]
+
+
+****The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Princess, by Tennyson****
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+
+
+The Princess
+by Alfred, Lord Tennyson
+
+
+
+
+PROLOGUE
+
+Sir Walter Vivian all a summer's day
+Gave his broad lawns until the set of sun
+Up to the people: thither flocked at noon
+His tenants, wife and child, and thither half
+The neighbouring borough with their Institute
+Of which he was the patron. I was there
+From college, visiting the son,--the son
+A Walter too,--with others of our set,
+Five others: we were seven at Vivian-place.
+
+ And me that morning Walter showed the house,
+Greek, set with busts: from vases in the hall
+Flowers of all heavens, and lovelier than their names,
+Grew side by side; and on the pavement lay
+Carved stones of the Abbey-ruin in the park,
+Huge Ammonites, and the first bones of Time;
+And on the tables every clime and age
+Jumbled together; celts and calumets,
+Claymore and snowshoe, toys in lava, fans
+Of sandal, amber, ancient rosaries,
+Laborious orient ivory sphere in sphere,
+The cursed Malayan crease, and battle-clubs
+From the isles of palm: and higher on the walls,
+Betwixt the monstrous horns of elk and deer,
+His own forefathers' arms and armour hung.
+
+ And 'this' he said 'was Hugh's at Agincourt;
+And that was old Sir Ralph's at Ascalon:
+A good knight he! we keep a chronicle
+With all about him'--which he brought, and I
+Dived in a hoard of tales that dealt with knights,
+Half-legend, half-historic, counts and kings
+Who laid about them at their wills and died;
+And mixt with these, a lady, one that armed
+Her own fair head, and sallying through the gate,
+Had beat her foes with slaughter from her walls.
+
+ 'O miracle of women,' said the book,
+'O noble heart who, being strait-besieged
+By this wild king to force her to his wish,
+Nor bent, nor broke, nor shunned a soldier's death,
+But now when all was lost or seemed as lost--
+Her stature more than mortal in the burst
+Of sunrise, her arm lifted, eyes on fire--
+Brake with a blast of trumpets from the gate,
+And, falling on them like a thunderbolt,
+She trampled some beneath her horses' heels,
+And some were whelmed with missiles of the wall,
+And some were pushed with lances from the rock,
+And part were drowned within the whirling brook:
+O miracle of noble womanhood!'
+
+ So sang the gallant glorious chronicle;
+And, I all rapt in this, 'Come out,' he said,
+'To the Abbey: there is Aunt Elizabeth
+And sister Lilia with the rest.' We went
+(I kept the book and had my finger in it)
+Down through the park: strange was the sight to me;
+For all the sloping pasture murmured, sown
+With happy faces and with holiday.
+There moved the multitude, a thousand heads:
+The patient leaders of their Institute
+Taught them with facts. One reared a font of stone
+And drew, from butts of water on the slope,
+The fountain of the moment, playing, now
+A twisted snake, and now a rain of pearls,
+Or steep-up spout whereon the gilded ball
+Danced like a wisp: and somewhat lower down
+A man with knobs and wires and vials fired
+A cannon: Echo answered in her sleep
+From hollow fields: and here were telescopes
+For azure views; and there a group of girls
+In circle waited, whom the electric shock
+Dislinked with shrieks and laughter: round the lake
+A little clock-work steamer paddling plied
+And shook the lilies: perched about the knolls
+A dozen angry models jetted steam:
+A petty railway ran: a fire-balloon
+Rose gem-like up before the dusky groves
+And dropt a fairy parachute and past:
+And there through twenty posts of telegraph
+They flashed a saucy message to and fro
+Between the mimic stations; so that sport
+Went hand in hand with Science; otherwhere
+Pure sport; a herd of boys with clamour bowled
+And stumped the wicket; babies rolled about
+Like tumbled fruit in grass; and men and maids
+Arranged a country dance, and flew through light
+And shadow, while the twangling violin
+Struck up with Soldier-laddie, and overhead
+The broad ambrosial aisles of lofty lime
+Made noise with bees and breeze from end to end.
+
+ Strange was the sight and smacking of the time;
+And long we gazed, but satiated at length
+Came to the ruins. High-arched and ivy-claspt,
+Of finest Gothic lighter than a fire,
+Through one wide chasm of time and frost they gave
+The park, the crowd, the house; but all within
+The sward was trim as any garden lawn:
+And here we lit on Aunt Elizabeth,
+And Lilia with the rest, and lady friends
+From neighbour seats: and there was Ralph himself,
+A broken statue propt against the wall,
+As gay as any. Lilia, wild with sport,
+Half child half woman as she was, had wound
+A scarf of orange round the stony helm,
+And robed the shoulders in a rosy silk,
+That made the old warrior from his ivied nook
+Glow like a sunbeam: near his tomb a feast
+Shone, silver-set; about it lay the guests,
+And there we joined them: then the maiden Aunt
+Took this fair day for text, and from it preached
+An universal culture for the crowd,
+And all things great; but we, unworthier, told
+Of college: he had climbed across the spikes,
+And he had squeezed himself betwixt the bars,
+And he had breathed the Proctor's dogs; and one
+Discussed his tutor, rough to common men,
+But honeying at the whisper of a lord;
+And one the Master, as a rogue in grain
+Veneered with sanctimonious theory.
+ But while they talked, above their heads I saw
+The feudal warrior lady-clad; which brought
+My book to mind: and opening this I read
+Of old Sir Ralph a page or two that rang
+With tilt and tourney; then the tale of her
+That drove her foes with slaughter from her walls,
+And much I praised her nobleness, and 'Where,'
+Asked Walter, patting Lilia's head (she lay
+Beside him) 'lives there such a woman now?'
+
+ Quick answered Lilia 'There are thousands now
+Such women, but convention beats them down:
+It is but bringing up; no more than that:
+You men have done it: how I hate you all!
+Ah, were I something great! I wish I were
+Some might poetess, I would shame you then,
+That love to keep us children! O I wish
+That I were some great princess, I would build
+Far off from men a college like a man's,
+And I would teach them all that men are taught;
+We are twice as quick!' And here she shook aside
+The hand that played the patron with her curls.
+
+ And one said smiling 'Pretty were the sight
+If our old halls could change their sex, and flaunt
+With prudes for proctors, dowagers for deans,
+And sweet girl-graduates in their golden hair.
+I think they should not wear our rusty gowns,
+But move as rich as Emperor-moths, or Ralph
+Who shines so in the corner; yet I fear,
+If there were many Lilias in the brood,
+However deep you might embower the nest,
+Some boy would spy it.'
+ At this upon the sward
+She tapt her tiny silken-sandaled foot:
+'That's your light way; but I would make it death
+For any male thing but to peep at us.'
+
+ Petulant she spoke, and at herself she laughed;
+A rosebud set with little wilful thorns,
+And sweet as English air could make her, she:
+But Walter hailed a score of names upon her,
+And 'petty Ogress', and 'ungrateful Puss',
+And swore he longed at college, only longed,
+All else was well, for she-society.
+They boated and they cricketed; they talked
+At wine, in clubs, of art, of politics;
+They lost their weeks; they vext the souls of deans;
+They rode; they betted; made a hundred friends,
+And caught the blossom of the flying terms,
+But missed the mignonette of Vivian-place,
+The little hearth-flower Lilia. Thus he spoke,
+Part banter, part affection.
+ 'True,' she said,
+'We doubt not that. O yes, you missed us much.
+I'll stake my ruby ring upon it you did.'
+
+ She held it out; and as a parrot turns
+Up through gilt wires a crafty loving eye,
+And takes a lady's finger with all care,
+And bites it for true heart and not for harm,
+So he with Lilia's. Daintily she shrieked
+And wrung it. 'Doubt my word again!' he said.
+'Come, listen! here is proof that you were missed:
+We seven stayed at Christmas up to read;
+And there we took one tutor as to read:
+The hard-grained Muses of the cube and square
+Were out of season: never man, I think,
+So mouldered in a sinecure as he:
+For while our cloisters echoed frosty feet,
+And our long walks were stript as bare as brooms,
+We did but talk you over, pledge you all
+In wassail; often, like as many girls--
+Sick for the hollies and the yews of home--
+As many little trifling Lilias--played
+Charades and riddles as at Christmas here,
+And ~what's my thought~ and ~when~ and ~where~ and ~how~,
+As here at Christmas.'
+ She remembered that:
+A pleasant game, she thought: she liked it more
+Than magic music, forfeits, all the rest.
+But these--what kind of tales did men tell men,
+She wondered, by themselves?
+ A half-disdain
+Perched on the pouted blossom of her lips:
+And Walter nodded at me; '~He~ began,
+The rest would follow, each in turn; and so
+We forged a sevenfold story. Kind? what kind?
+Chimeras, crotchets, Christmas solecisms,
+Seven-headed monsters only made to kill
+Time by the fire in winter.'
+ 'Kill him now,
+The tyrant! kill him in the summer too,'
+Said Lilia; 'Why not now?' the maiden Aunt.
+'Why not a summer's as a winter's tale?
+A tale for summer as befits the time,
+And something it should be to suit the place,
+Heroic, for a hero lies beneath,
+Grave, solemn!'
+ Walter warped his mouth at this
+To something so mock-solemn, that I laughed
+And Lilia woke with sudden-thrilling mirth
+An echo like a ghostly woodpecker,
+Hid in the ruins; till the maiden Aunt
+(A little sense of wrong had touched her face
+With colour) turned to me with 'As you will;
+Heroic if you will, or what you will,
+Or be yourself you hero if you will.'
+
+ 'Take Lilia, then, for heroine' clamoured he,
+'And make her some great Princess, six feet high,
+Grand, epic, homicidal; and be you
+The Prince to win her!'
+ 'Then follow me, the Prince,'
+I answered, 'each be hero in his turn!
+Seven and yet one, like shadows in a dream.--
+Heroic seems our Princess as required--
+But something made to suit with Time and place,
+A Gothic ruin and a Grecian house,
+A talk of college and of ladies' rights,
+A feudal knight in silken masquerade,
+And, yonder, shrieks and strange experiments
+For which the good Sir Ralph had burnt them all--
+This ~were~ a medley! we should have him back
+Who told the "Winter's tale" to do it for us.
+No matter: we will say whatever comes.
+And let the ladies sing us, if they will,
+From time to time, some ballad or a song
+To give us breathing-space.'
+ So I began,
+And the rest followed: and the women sang
+Between the rougher voices of the men,
+Like linnets in the pauses of the wind:
+And here I give the story and the songs.
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+
+
+A prince I was, blue-eyed, and fair in face,
+Of temper amorous, as the first of May,
+With lengths of yellow ringlet, like a girl,
+For on my cradle shone the Northern star.
+
+ There lived an ancient legend in our house.
+Some sorcerer, whom a far-off grandsire burnt
+Because he cast no shadow, had foretold,
+Dying, that none of all our blood should know
+The shadow from the substance, and that one
+Should come to fight with shadows and to fall.
+For so, my mother said, the story ran.
+And, truly, waking dreams were, more or less,
+An old and strange affection of the house.
+Myself too had weird seizures, Heaven knows what:
+On a sudden in the midst of men and day,
+And while I walked and talked as heretofore,
+I seemed to move among a world of ghosts,
+And feel myself the shadow of a dream.
+Our great court-Galen poised his gilt-head cane,
+And pawed his beard, and muttered 'catalepsy'.
+My mother pitying made a thousand prayers;
+My mother was as mild as any saint,
+Half-canonized by all that looked on her,
+So gracious was her tact and tenderness:
+But my good father thought a king a king;
+He cared not for the affection of the house;
+He held his sceptre like a pedant's wand
+To lash offence, and with long arms and hands
+Reached out, and picked offenders from the mass
+For judgment.
+ Now it chanced that I had been,
+While life was yet in bud and blade, bethrothed
+To one, a neighbouring Princess: she to me
+Was proxy-wedded with a bootless calf
+At eight years old; and still from time to time
+Came murmurs of her beauty from the South,
+And of her brethren, youths of puissance;
+And still I wore her picture by my heart,
+And one dark tress; and all around them both
+Sweet thoughts would swarm as bees about their queen.
+
+ But when the days drew nigh that I should wed,
+My father sent ambassadors with furs
+And jewels, gifts, to fetch her: these brought back
+A present, a great labour of the loom;
+And therewithal an answer vague as wind:
+Besides, they saw the king; he took the gifts;
+He said there was a compact; that was true:
+But then she had a will; was he to blame?
+And maiden fancies; loved to live alone
+Among her women; certain, would not wed.
+
+ That morning in the presence room I stood
+With Cyril and with Florian, my two friends:
+The first, a gentleman of broken means
+(His father's fault) but given to starts and bursts
+Of revel; and the last, my other heart,
+And almost my half-self, for still we moved
+Together, twinned as horse's ear and eye.
+
+ Now, while they spake, I saw my father's face
+Grow long and troubled like a rising moon,
+Inflamed with wrath: he started on his feet,
+Tore the king's letter, snowed it down, and rent
+The wonder of the loom through warp and woof
+From skirt to skirt; and at the last he sware
+That he would send a hundred thousand men,
+And bring her in a whirlwind: then he chewed
+The thrice-turned cud of wrath, and cooked his spleen,
+Communing with his captains of the war.
+
+ At last I spoke. 'My father, let me go.
+It cannot be but some gross error lies
+In this report, this answer of a king,
+Whom all men rate as kind and hospitable:
+Or, maybe, I myself, my bride once seen,
+Whate'er my grief to find her less than fame,
+May rue the bargain made.' And Florian said:
+'I have a sister at the foreign court,
+Who moves about the Princess; she, you know,
+Who wedded with a nobleman from thence:
+He, dying lately, left her, as I hear,
+The lady of three castles in that land:
+Through her this matter might be sifted clean.'
+And Cyril whispered: 'Take me with you too.'
+Then laughing 'what, if these weird seizures come
+Upon you in those lands, and no one near
+To point you out the shadow from the truth!
+Take me: I'll serve you better in a strait;
+I grate on rusty hinges here:' but 'No!'
+Roared the rough king, 'you shall not; we ourself
+Will crush her pretty maiden fancies dead
+In iron gauntlets: break the council up.'
+
+ But when the council broke, I rose and past
+Through the wild woods that hung about the town;
+Found a still place, and plucked her likeness out;
+Laid it on flowers, and watched it lying bathed
+In the green gleam of dewy-tasselled trees:
+What were those fancies? wherefore break her troth?
+Proud looked the lips: but while I meditated
+A wind arose and rushed upon the South,
+And shook the songs, the whispers, and the shrieks
+Of the wild woods together; and a Voice
+Went with it, 'Follow, follow, thou shalt win.'
+
+ Then, ere the silver sickle of that month
+Became her golden shield, I stole from court
+With Cyril and with Florian, unperceived,
+Cat-footed through the town and half in dread
+To hear my father's clamour at our backs
+With Ho! from some bay-window shake the night;
+But all was quiet: from the bastioned walls
+Like threaded spiders, one by one, we dropt,
+And flying reached the frontier: then we crost
+To a livelier land; and so by tilth and grange,
+And vines, and blowing bosks of wilderness,
+We gained the mother city thick with towers,
+And in the imperial palace found the king.
+
+ His name was Gama; cracked and small his voice,
+But bland the smile that like a wrinkling wind
+On glassy water drove his cheek in lines;
+A little dry old man, without a star,
+Not like a king: three days he feasted us,
+And on the fourth I spake of why we came,
+And my bethrothed. 'You do us, Prince,' he said,
+Airing a snowy hand and signet gem,
+'All honour. We remember love ourselves
+In our sweet youth: there did a compact pass
+Long summers back, a kind of ceremony--
+I think the year in which our olives failed.
+I would you had her, Prince, with all my heart,
+With my full heart: but there were widows here,
+Two widows, Lady Psyche, Lady Blanche;
+They fed her theories, in and out of place
+Maintaining that with equal husbandry
+The woman were an equal to the man.
+They harped on this; with this our banquets rang;
+Our dances broke and buzzed in knots of talk;
+Nothing but this; my very ears were hot
+To hear them: knowledge, so my daughter held,
+Was all in all: they had but been, she thought,
+As children; they must lose the child, assume
+The woman: then, Sir, awful odes she wrote,
+Too awful, sure, for what they treated of,
+But all she is and does is awful; odes
+About this losing of the child; and rhymes
+And dismal lyrics, prophesying change
+Beyond all reason: these the women sang;
+And they that know such things--I sought but peace;
+No critic I--would call them masterpieces:
+They mastered ~me~. At last she begged a boon,
+A certain summer-palace which I have
+Hard by your father's frontier: I said no,
+Yet being an easy man, gave it: and there,
+All wild to found an University
+For maidens, on the spur she fled; and more
+We know not,--only this: they see no men,
+Not even her brother Arac, nor the twins
+Her brethren, though they love her, look upon her
+As on a kind of paragon; and I
+(Pardon me saying it) were much loth to breed
+Dispute betwixt myself and mine: but since
+(And I confess with right) you think me bound
+In some sort, I can give you letters to her;
+And yet, to speak the truth, I rate your chance
+Almost at naked nothing.'
+ Thus the king;
+And I, though nettled that he seemed to slur
+With garrulous ease and oily courtesies
+Our formal compact, yet, not less (all frets
+But chafing me on fire to find my bride)
+Went forth again with both my friends. We rode
+Many a long league back to the North. At last
+From hills, that looked across a land of hope,
+We dropt with evening on a rustic town
+Set in a gleaming river's crescent-curve,
+Close at the boundary of the liberties;
+There, entered an old hostel, called mine host
+To council, plied him with his richest wines,
+And showed the late-writ letters of the king.
+
+ He with a long low sibilation, stared
+As blank as death in marble; then exclaimed
+Averring it was clear against all rules
+For any man to go: but as his brain
+Began to mellow, 'If the king,' he said,
+'Had given us letters, was he bound to speak?
+The king would bear him out;' and at the last--
+The summer of the vine in all his veins--
+'No doubt that we might make it worth his while.
+She once had past that way; he heard her speak;
+She scared him; life! he never saw the like;
+She looked as grand as doomsday and as grave:
+And he, he reverenced his liege-lady there;
+He always made a point to post with mares;
+His daughter and his housemaid were the boys:
+The land, he understood, for miles about
+Was tilled by women; all the swine were sows,
+And all the dogs'--
+ But while he jested thus,
+A thought flashed through me which I clothed in act,
+Remembering how we three presented Maid
+Or Nymph, or Goddess, at high tide of feast,
+In masque or pageant at my father's court.
+We sent mine host to purchase female gear;
+He brought it, and himself, a sight to shake
+The midriff of despair with laughter, holp
+To lace us up, till, each, in maiden plumes
+We rustled: him we gave a costly bribe
+To guerdon silence, mounted our good steeds,
+And boldly ventured on the liberties.
+
+ We followed up the river as we rode,
+And rode till midnight when the college lights
+Began to glitter firefly-like in copse
+And linden alley: then we past an arch,
+Whereon a woman-statue rose with wings
+From four winged horses dark against the stars;
+And some inscription ran along the front,
+But deep in shadow: further on we gained
+A little street half garden and half house;
+But scarce could hear each other speak for noise
+Of clocks and chimes, like silver hammers falling
+On silver anvils, and the splash and stir
+Of fountains spouted up and showering down
+In meshes of the jasmine and the rose:
+And all about us pealed the nightingale,
+Rapt in her song, and careless of the snare.
+
+ There stood a bust of Pallas for a sign,
+By two sphere lamps blazoned like Heaven and Earth
+With constellation and with continent,
+Above an entry: riding in, we called;
+A plump-armed Ostleress and a stable wench
+Came running at the call, and helped us down.
+Then stept a buxom hostess forth, and sailed,
+Full-blown, before us into rooms which gave
+Upon a pillared porch, the bases lost
+In laurel: her we asked of that and this,
+And who were tutors. 'Lady Blanche' she said,
+'And Lady Psyche.' 'Which was prettiest,
+Best-natured?' 'Lady Psyche.' 'Hers are we,'
+One voice, we cried; and I sat down and wrote,
+In such a hand as when a field of corn
+Bows all its ears before the roaring East;
+
+ 'Three ladies of the Northern empire pray
+Your Highness would enroll them with your own,
+As Lady Psyche's pupils.'
+ This I sealed:
+The seal was Cupid bent above a scroll,
+And o'er his head Uranian Venus hung,
+And raised the blinding bandage from his eyes:
+I gave the letter to be sent with dawn;
+And then to bed, where half in doze I seemed
+To float about a glimmering night, and watch
+A full sea glazed with muffled moonlight, swell
+On some dark shore just seen that it was rich.
+
+
+As through the land at eve we went,
+ And plucked the ripened ears,
+We fell out, my wife and I,
+O we fell out I know not why,
+ And kissed again with tears.
+And blessings on the falling out
+ That all the more endears,
+When we fall out with those we love
+ And kiss again with tears!
+For when we came where lies the child
+ We lost in other years,
+There above the little grave,
+O there above the little grave,
+ We kissed again with tears.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+
+At break of day the College Portress came:
+She brought us Academic silks, in hue
+The lilac, with a silken hood to each,
+And zoned with gold; and now when these were on,
+And we as rich as moths from dusk cocoons,
+She, curtseying her obeisance, let us know
+The Princess Ida waited: out we paced,
+I first, and following through the porch that sang
+All round with laurel, issued in a court
+Compact of lucid marbles, bossed with lengths
+Of classic frieze, with ample awnings gay
+Betwixt the pillars, and with great urns of flowers.
+The Muses and the Graces, grouped in threes,
+Enringed a billowing fountain in the midst;
+And here and there on lattice edges lay
+Or book or lute; but hastily we past,
+And up a flight of stairs into the hall.
+
+ There at a board by tome and paper sat,
+With two tame leopards couched beside her throne,
+All beauty compassed in a female form,
+The Princess; liker to the inhabitant
+Of some clear planet close upon the Sun,
+Than our man's earth; such eyes were in her head,
+And so much grace and power, breathing down
+From over her arched brows, with every turn
+Lived through her to the tips of her long hands,
+And to her feet. She rose her height, and said:
+
+ 'We give you welcome: not without redound
+Of use and glory to yourselves ye come,
+The first-fruits of the stranger: aftertime,
+And that full voice which circles round the grave,
+Will rank you nobly, mingled up with me.
+What! are the ladies of your land so tall?'
+'We of the court' said Cyril. 'From the court'
+She answered, 'then ye know the Prince?' and he:
+'The climax of his age! as though there were
+One rose in all the world, your Highness that,
+He worships your ideal:' she replied:
+'We scarcely thought in our own hall to hear
+This barren verbiage, current among men,
+Light coin, the tinsel clink of compliment.
+Your flight from out your bookless wilds would seem
+As arguing love of knowledge and of power;
+Your language proves you still the child. Indeed,
+We dream not of him: when we set our hand
+To this great work, we purposed with ourself
+Never to wed. You likewise will do well,
+Ladies, in entering here, to cast and fling
+The tricks, which make us toys of men, that so,
+Some future time, if so indeed you will,
+You may with those self-styled our lords ally
+Your fortunes, justlier balanced, scale with scale.'
+
+ At those high words, we conscious of ourselves,
+Perused the matting: then an officer
+Rose up, and read the statutes, such as these:
+Not for three years to correspond with home;
+Not for three years to cross the liberties;
+Not for three years to speak with any men;
+And many more, which hastily subscribed,
+We entered on the boards: and 'Now,' she cried,
+'Ye are green wood, see ye warp not. Look, our hall!
+Our statues!--not of those that men desire,
+Sleek Odalisques, or oracles of mode,
+Nor stunted squaws of West or East; but she
+That taught the Sabine how to rule, and she
+The foundress of the Babylonian wall,
+The Carian Artemisia strong in war,
+The Rhodope, that built the pyramid,
+Clelia, Cornelia, with the Palmyrene
+That fought Aurelian, and the Roman brows
+Of Agrippina. Dwell with these, and lose
+Convention, since to look on noble forms
+Makes noble through the sensuous organism
+That which is higher. O lift your natures up:
+Embrace our aims: work out your freedom. Girls,
+Knowledge is now no more a fountain sealed:
+Drink deep, until the habits of the slave,
+The sins of emptiness, gossip and spite
+And slander, die. Better not be at all
+Than not be noble. Leave us: you may go:
+Today the Lady Psyche will harangue
+The fresh arrivals of the week before;
+For they press in from all the provinces,
+And fill the hive.'
+ She spoke, and bowing waved
+Dismissal: back again we crost the court
+To Lady Psyche's: as we entered in,
+There sat along the forms, like morning doves
+That sun their milky bosoms on the thatch,
+A patient range of pupils; she herself
+Erect behind a desk of satin-wood,
+A quick brunette, well-moulded, falcon-eyed,
+And on the hither side, or so she looked,
+Of twenty summers. At her left, a child,
+In shining draperies, headed like a star,
+Her maiden babe, a double April old,
+Aglaïa slept. We sat: the Lady glanced:
+Then Florian, but not livelier than the dame
+That whispered 'Asses' ears', among the sedge,
+'My sister.' 'Comely, too, by all that's fair,'
+Said Cyril. 'Oh hush, hush!' and she began.
+
+ 'This world was once a fluid haze of light,
+Till toward the centre set the starry tides,
+And eddied into suns, that wheeling cast
+The planets: then the monster, then the man;
+Tattooed or woaded, winter-clad in skins,
+Raw from the prime, and crushing down his mate;
+As yet we find in barbarous isles, and here
+Among the lowest.'
+ Thereupon she took
+A bird's-eye-view of all the ungracious past;
+Glanced at the legendary Amazon
+As emblematic of a nobler age;
+Appraised the Lycian custom, spoke of those
+That lay at wine with Lar and Lucumo;
+Ran down the Persian, Grecian, Roman lines
+Of empire, and the woman's state in each,
+How far from just; till warming with her theme
+She fulmined out her scorn of laws Salique
+And little-footed China, touched on Mahomet
+With much contempt, and came to chivalry:
+When some respect, however slight, was paid
+To woman, superstition all awry:
+However then commenced the dawn: a beam
+Had slanted forward, falling in a land
+Of promise; fruit would follow. Deep, indeed,
+Their debt of thanks to her who first had dared
+To leap the rotten pales of prejudice,
+Disyoke their necks from custom, and assert
+None lordlier than themselves but that which made
+Woman and man. She had founded; they must build.
+Here might they learn whatever men were taught:
+Let them not fear: some said their heads were less:
+Some men's were small; not they the least of men;
+For often fineness compensated size:
+Besides the brain was like the hand, and grew
+With using; thence the man's, if more was more;
+He took advantage of his strength to be
+First in the field: some ages had been lost;
+But woman ripened earlier, and her life
+Was longer; and albeit their glorious names
+Were fewer, scattered stars, yet since in truth
+The highest is the measure of the man,
+And not the Kaffir, Hottentot, Malay,
+Nor those horn-handed breakers of the glebe,
+But Homer, Plato, Verulam; even so
+With woman: and in arts of government
+Elizabeth and others; arts of war
+The peasant Joan and others; arts of grace
+Sappho and others vied with any man:
+And, last not least, she who had left her place,
+And bowed her state to them, that they might grow
+To use and power on this Oasis, lapt
+In the arms of leisure, sacred from the blight
+Of ancient influence and scorn.
+ At last
+She rose upon a wind of prophecy
+Dilating on the future; 'everywhere
+Who heads in council, two beside the hearth,
+Two in the tangled business of the world,
+Two in the liberal offices of life,
+Two plummets dropt for one to sound the abyss
+Of science, and the secrets of the mind:
+Musician, painter, sculptor, critic, more:
+And everywhere the broad and bounteous Earth
+Should bear a double growth of those rare souls,
+Poets, whose thoughts enrich the blood of the world.'
+
+ She ended here, and beckoned us: the rest
+Parted; and, glowing full-faced welcome, she
+Began to address us, and was moving on
+In gratulation, till as when a boat
+Tacks, and the slackened sail flaps, all her voice
+Faltering and fluttering in her throat, she cried
+'My brother!' 'Well, my sister.' 'O,' she said,
+'What do you here? and in this dress? and these?
+Why who are these? a wolf within the fold!
+A pack of wolves! the Lord be gracious to me!
+A plot, a plot, a plot to ruin all!'
+'No plot, no plot,' he answered. 'Wretched boy,
+How saw you not the inscription on the gate,
+LET NO MAN ENTER IN ON PAIN OF DEATH?'
+'And if I had,' he answered, 'who could think
+The softer Adams of your Academe,
+O sister, Sirens though they be, were such
+As chanted on the blanching bones of men?'
+'But you will find it otherwise' she said.
+'You jest: ill jesting with edge-tools! my vow
+Binds me to speak, and O that iron will,
+That axelike edge unturnable, our Head,
+The Princess.' 'Well then, Psyche, take my life,
+And nail me like a weasel on a grange
+For warning: bury me beside the gate,
+And cut this epitaph above my bones;
+~Here lies a brother by a sister slain,
+All for the common good of womankind.~'
+'Let me die too,' said Cyril, 'having seen
+And heard the Lady Psyche.'
+ I struck in:
+'Albeit so masked, Madam, I love the truth;
+Receive it; and in me behold the Prince
+Your countryman, affianced years ago
+To the Lady Ida: here, for here she was,
+And thus (what other way was left) I came.'
+'O Sir, O Prince, I have no country; none;
+If any, this; but none. Whate'er I was
+Disrooted, what I am is grafted here.
+Affianced, Sir? love-whispers may not breathe
+Within this vestal limit, and how should I,
+Who am not mine, say, live: the thunderbolt
+Hangs silent; but prepare: I speak; it falls.'
+'Yet pause,' I said: 'for that inscription there,
+I think no more of deadly lurks therein,
+Than in a clapper clapping in a garth,
+To scare the fowl from fruit: if more there be,
+If more and acted on, what follows? war;
+Your own work marred: for this your Academe,
+Whichever side be Victor, in the halloo
+Will topple to the trumpet down, and pass
+With all fair theories only made to gild
+A stormless summer.' 'Let the Princess judge
+Of that' she said: 'farewell, Sir--and to you.
+I shudder at the sequel, but I go.'
+
+ 'Are you that Lady Psyche,' I rejoined,
+'The fifth in line from that old Florian,
+Yet hangs his portrait in my father's hall
+(The gaunt old Baron with his beetle brow
+Sun-shaded in the heat of dusty fights)
+As he bestrode my Grandsire, when he fell,
+And all else fled? we point to it, and we say,
+The loyal warmth of Florian is not cold,
+But branches current yet in kindred veins.'
+'Are you that Psyche,' Florian added; 'she
+With whom I sang about the morning hills,
+Flung ball, flew kite, and raced the purple fly,
+And snared the squirrel of the glen? are you
+That Psyche, wont to bind my throbbing brow,
+To smoothe my pillow, mix the foaming draught
+Of fever, tell me pleasant tales, and read
+My sickness down to happy dreams? are you
+That brother-sister Psyche, both in one?
+You were that Psyche, but what are you now?'
+'You are that Psyche,' said Cyril, 'for whom
+I would be that for ever which I seem,
+Woman, if I might sit beside your feet,
+And glean your scattered sapience.'
+ Then once more,
+'Are you that Lady Psyche,' I began,
+'That on her bridal morn before she past
+From all her old companions, when the kind
+Kissed her pale cheek, declared that ancient ties
+Would still be dear beyond the southern hills;
+That were there any of our people there
+In want or peril, there was one to hear
+And help them? look! for such are these and I.'
+'Are you that Psyche,' Florian asked, 'to whom,
+In gentler days, your arrow-wounded fawn
+Came flying while you sat beside the well?
+The creature laid his muzzle on your lap,
+And sobbed, and you sobbed with it, and the blood
+Was sprinkled on your kirtle, and you wept.
+That was fawn's blood, not brother's, yet you wept.
+O by the bright head of my little niece,
+You were that Psyche, and what are you now?'
+'You are that Psyche,' Cyril said again,
+'The mother of the sweetest little maid,
+That ever crowed for kisses.'
+ 'Out upon it!'
+She answered, 'peace! and why should I not play
+The Spartan Mother with emotion, be
+The Lucius Junius Brutus of my kind?
+Him you call great: he for the common weal,
+The fading politics of mortal Rome,
+As I might slay this child, if good need were,
+Slew both his sons: and I, shall I, on whom
+The secular emancipation turns
+Of half this world, be swerved from right to save
+A prince, a brother? a little will I yield.
+Best so, perchance, for us, and well for you.
+O hard, when love and duty clash! I fear
+My conscience will not count me fleckless; yet--
+Hear my conditions: promise (otherwise
+You perish) as you came, to slip away
+Today, tomorrow, soon: it shall be said,
+These women were too barbarous, would not learn;
+They fled, who might have shamed us: promise, all.'
+
+ What could we else, we promised each; and she,
+Like some wild creature newly-caged, commenced
+A to-and-fro, so pacing till she paused
+By Florian; holding out her lily arms
+Took both his hands, and smiling faintly said:
+'I knew you at the first: though you have grown
+You scarce have altered: I am sad and glad
+To see you, Florian. ~I~ give thee to death
+My brother! it was duty spoke, not I.
+My needful seeming harshness, pardon it.
+Our mother, is she well?'
+ With that she kissed
+His forehead, then, a moment after, clung
+About him, and betwixt them blossomed up
+From out a common vein of memory
+Sweet household talk, and phrases of the hearth,
+And far allusion, till the gracious dews
+Began to glisten and to fall: and while
+They stood, so rapt, we gazing, came a voice,
+'I brought a message here from Lady Blanche.'
+Back started she, and turning round we saw
+The Lady Blanche's daughter where she stood,
+Melissa, with her hand upon the lock,
+A rosy blonde, and in a college gown,
+That clad her like an April daffodilly
+(Her mother's colour) with her lips apart,
+And all her thoughts as fair within her eyes,
+As bottom agates seen to wave and float
+In crystal currents of clear morning seas.
+
+ So stood that same fair creature at the door.
+Then Lady Psyche, 'Ah--Melissa--you!
+You heard us?' and Melissa, 'O pardon me
+I heard, I could not help it, did not wish:
+But, dearest Lady, pray you fear me not,
+Nor think I bear that heart within my breast,
+To give three gallant gentlemen to death.'
+'I trust you,' said the other, 'for we two
+Were always friends, none closer, elm and vine:
+But yet your mother's jealous temperament--
+Let not your prudence, dearest, drowse, or prove
+The Danaïd of a leaky vase, for fear
+This whole foundation ruin, and I lose
+My honour, these their lives.' 'Ah, fear me not'
+Replied Melissa; 'no--I would not tell,
+No, not for all Aspasia's cleverness,
+No, not to answer, Madam, all those hard things
+That Sheba came to ask of Solomon.'
+'Be it so' the other, 'that we still may lead
+The new light up, and culminate in peace,
+For Solomon may come to Sheba yet.'
+Said Cyril, 'Madam, he the wisest man
+Feasted the woman wisest then, in halls
+Of Lebanonian cedar: nor should you
+(Though, Madam, ~you~ should answer, ~we~ would ask)
+Less welcome find among us, if you came
+Among us, debtors for our lives to you,
+Myself for something more.' He said not what,
+But 'Thanks,' she answered 'Go: we have been too long
+Together: keep your hoods about the face;
+They do so that affect abstraction here.
+Speak little; mix not with the rest; and hold
+Your promise: all, I trust, may yet be well.'
+
+ We turned to go, but Cyril took the child,
+And held her round the knees against his waist,
+And blew the swollen cheek of a trumpeter,
+While Psyche watched them, smiling, and the child
+Pushed her flat hand against his face and laughed;
+And thus our conference closed.
+ And then we strolled
+For half the day through stately theatres
+Benched crescent-wise. In each we sat, we heard
+The grave Professor. On the lecture slate
+The circle rounded under female hands
+With flawless demonstration: followed then
+A classic lecture, rich in sentiment,
+With scraps of thunderous Epic lilted out
+By violet-hooded Doctors, elegies
+And quoted odes, and jewels five-words-long
+That on the stretched forefinger of all Time
+Sparkle for ever: then we dipt in all
+That treats of whatsoever is, the state,
+The total chronicles of man, the mind,
+The morals, something of the frame, the rock,
+The star, the bird, the fish, the shell, the flower,
+Electric, chemic laws, and all the rest,
+And whatsoever can be taught and known;
+Till like three horses that have broken fence,
+And glutted all night long breast-deep in corn,
+We issued gorged with knowledge, and I spoke:
+'Why, Sirs, they do all this as well as we.'
+'They hunt old trails' said Cyril 'very well;
+But when did woman ever yet invent?'
+'Ungracious!' answered Florian; 'have you learnt
+No more from Psyche's lecture, you that talked
+The trash that made me sick, and almost sad?'
+'O trash' he said, 'but with a kernel in it.
+Should I not call her wise, who made me wise?
+And learnt? I learnt more from her in a flash,
+Than in my brainpan were an empty hull,
+And every Muse tumbled a science in.
+A thousand hearts lie fallow in these halls,
+And round these halls a thousand baby loves
+Fly twanging headless arrows at the hearts,
+Whence follows many a vacant pang; but O
+With me, Sir, entered in the bigger boy,
+The Head of all the golden-shafted firm,
+The long-limbed lad that had a Psyche too;
+He cleft me through the stomacher; and now
+What think you of it, Florian? do I chase
+The substance or the shadow? will it hold?
+I have no sorcerer's malison on me,
+No ghostly hauntings like his Highness. I
+Flatter myself that always everywhere
+I know the substance when I see it. Well,
+Are castles shadows? Three of them? Is she
+The sweet proprietress a shadow? If not,
+Shall those three castles patch my tattered coat?
+For dear are those three castles to my wants,
+And dear is sister Psyche to my heart,
+And two dear things are one of double worth,
+And much I might have said, but that my zone
+Unmanned me: then the Doctors! O to hear
+The Doctors! O to watch the thirsty plants
+Imbibing! once or twice I thought to roar,
+To break my chain, to shake my mane: but thou,
+Modulate me, Soul of mincing mimicry!
+Make liquid treble of that bassoon, my throat;
+Abase those eyes that ever loved to meet
+Star-sisters answering under crescent brows;
+Abate the stride, which speaks of man, and loose
+A flying charm of blushes o'er this cheek,
+Where they like swallows coming out of time
+Will wonder why they came: but hark the bell
+For dinner, let us go!'
+ And in we streamed
+Among the columns, pacing staid and still
+By twos and threes, till all from end to end
+With beauties every shade of brown and fair
+In colours gayer than the morning mist,
+The long hall glittered like a bed of flowers.
+How might a man not wander from his wits
+Pierced through with eyes, but that I kept mine own
+Intent on her, who rapt in glorious dreams,
+The second-sight of some Astræan age,
+Sat compassed with professors: they, the while,
+Discussed a doubt and tost it to and fro:
+A clamour thickened, mixt with inmost terms
+Of art and science: Lady Blanche alone
+Of faded form and haughtiest lineaments,
+With all her autumn tresses falsely brown,
+Shot sidelong daggers at us, a tiger-cat
+In act to spring.
+ At last a solemn grace
+Concluded, and we sought the gardens: there
+One walked reciting by herself, and one
+In this hand held a volume as to read,
+And smoothed a petted peacock down with that:
+Some to a low song oared a shallop by,
+Or under arches of the marble bridge
+Hung, shadowed from the heat: some hid and sought
+In the orange thickets: others tost a ball
+Above the fountain-jets, and back again
+With laughter: others lay about the lawns,
+Of the older sort, and murmured that their May
+Was passing: what was learning unto them?
+They wished to marry; they could rule a house;
+Men hated learned women: but we three
+Sat muffled like the Fates; and often came
+Melissa hitting all we saw with shafts
+Of gentle satire, kin to charity,
+That harmed not: then day droopt; the chapel bells
+Called us: we left the walks; we mixt with those
+Six hundred maidens clad in purest white,
+Before two streams of light from wall to wall,
+While the great organ almost burst his pipes,
+Groaning for power, and rolling through the court
+A long melodious thunder to the sound
+Of solemn psalms, and silver litanies,
+The work of Ida, to call down from Heaven
+A blessing on her labours for the world.
+
+
+Sweet and low, sweet and low,
+ Wind of the western sea,
+Low, low, breathe and blow,
+ Wind of the western sea!
+Over the rolling waters go,
+Come from the dying moon, and blow,
+ Blow him again to me;
+While my little one, while my pretty one, sleeps.
+
+Sleep and rest, sleep and rest,
+ Father will come to thee soon;
+Rest, rest, on mother's breast,
+ Father will come to thee soon;
+Father will come to his babe in the nest,
+Silver sails all out of the west
+ Under the silver moon:
+Sleep, my little one, sleep, my pretty one, sleep.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+
+Morn in the wake of the morning star
+Came furrowing all the orient into gold.
+We rose, and each by other drest with care
+Descended to the court that lay three parts
+In shadow, but the Muses' heads were touched
+Above the darkness from their native East.
+
+ There while we stood beside the fount, and watched
+Or seemed to watch the dancing bubble, approached
+Melissa, tinged with wan from lack of sleep,
+Or grief, and glowing round her dewy eyes
+The circled Iris of a night of tears;
+'And fly,' she cried, 'O fly, while yet you may!
+My mother knows:' and when I asked her 'how,'
+'My fault' she wept 'my fault! and yet not mine;
+Yet mine in part. O hear me, pardon me.
+My mother, 'tis her wont from night to night
+To rail at Lady Psyche and her side.
+She says the Princess should have been the Head,
+Herself and Lady Psyche the two arms;
+And so it was agreed when first they came;
+But Lady Psyche was the right hand now,
+And the left, or not, or seldom used;
+Hers more than half the students, all the love.
+And so last night she fell to canvass you:
+~Her~ countrywomen! she did not envy her.
+"Who ever saw such wild barbarians?
+Girls?--more like men!" and at these words the snake,
+My secret, seemed to stir within my breast;
+And oh, Sirs, could I help it, but my cheek
+Began to burn and burn, and her lynx eye
+To fix and make me hotter, till she laughed:
+"O marvellously modest maiden, you!
+Men! girls, like men! why, if they had been men
+You need not set your thoughts in rubric thus
+For wholesale comment." Pardon, I am shamed
+That I must needs repeat for my excuse
+What looks so little graceful: "men" (for still
+My mother went revolving on the word)
+"And so they are,--very like men indeed--
+And with that woman closeted for hours!"
+Then came these dreadful words out one by one,
+"Why--these--~are~--men:" I shuddered: "and you know it."
+"O ask me nothing," I said: "And she knows too,
+And she conceals it." So my mother clutched
+The truth at once, but with no word from me;
+And now thus early risen she goes to inform
+The Princess: Lady Psyche will be crushed;
+But you may yet be saved, and therefore fly;
+But heal me with your pardon ere you go.'
+
+ 'What pardon, sweet Melissa, for a blush?'
+Said Cyril: 'Pale one, blush again: than wear
+Those lilies, better blush our lives away.
+Yet let us breathe for one hour more in Heaven'
+He added, 'lest some classic Angel speak
+In scorn of us, "They mounted, Ganymedes,
+To tumble, Vulcans, on the second morn."
+But I will melt this marble into wax
+To yield us farther furlough:' and he went.
+
+ Melissa shook her doubtful curls, and thought
+He scarce would prosper. 'Tell us,' Florian asked,
+'How grew this feud betwixt the right and left.'
+'O long ago,' she said, 'betwixt these two
+Division smoulders hidden; 'tis my mother,
+Too jealous, often fretful as the wind
+Pent in a crevice: much I bear with her:
+I never knew my father, but she says
+(God help her) she was wedded to a fool;
+And still she railed against the state of things.
+She had the care of Lady Ida's youth,
+And from the Queen's decease she brought her up.
+But when your sister came she won the heart
+Of Ida: they were still together, grew
+(For so they said themselves) inosculated;
+Consonant chords that shiver to one note;
+One mind in all things: yet my mother still
+Affirms your Psyche thieved her theories,
+And angled with them for her pupil's love:
+She calls her plagiarist; I know not what:
+But I must go: I dare not tarry,' and light,
+As flies the shadow of a bird, she fled.
+
+ Then murmured Florian gazing after her,
+'An open-hearted maiden, true and pure.
+If I could love, why this were she: how pretty
+Her blushing was, and how she blushed again,
+As if to close with Cyril's random wish:
+Not like your Princess crammed with erring pride,
+Nor like poor Psyche whom she drags in tow.'
+
+ 'The crane,' I said, 'may chatter of the crane,
+The dove may murmur of the dove, but I
+An eagle clang an eagle to the sphere.
+My princess, O my princess! true she errs,
+But in her own grand way: being herself
+Three times more noble than three score of men,
+She sees herself in every woman else,
+And so she wears her error like a crown
+To blind the truth and me: for her, and her,
+Hebes are they to hand ambrosia, mix
+The nectar; but--ah she--whene'er she moves
+The Samian Herè rises and she speaks
+A Memnon smitten with the morning Sun.'
+
+ So saying from the court we paced, and gained
+The terrace ranged along the Northern front,
+And leaning there on those balusters, high
+Above the empurpled champaign, drank the gale
+That blown about the foliage underneath,
+And sated with the innumerable rose,
+Beat balm upon our eyelids. Hither came
+Cyril, and yawning 'O hard task,' he cried;
+'No fighting shadows here! I forced a way
+Through opposition crabbed and gnarled.
+Better to clear prime forests, heave and thump
+A league of street in summer solstice down,
+Than hammer at this reverend gentlewoman.
+I knocked and, bidden, entered; found her there
+At point to move, and settled in her eyes
+The green malignant light of coming storm.
+Sir, I was courteous, every phrase well-oiled,
+As man's could be; yet maiden-meek I prayed
+Concealment: she demanded who we were,
+And why we came? I fabled nothing fair,
+But, your example pilot, told her all.
+Up went the hushed amaze of hand and eye.
+But when I dwelt upon your old affiance,
+She answered sharply that I talked astray.
+I urged the fierce inscription on the gate,
+And our three lives. True--we had limed ourselves
+With open eyes, and we must take the chance.
+But such extremes, I told her, well might harm
+The woman's cause. "Not more than now," she said,
+"So puddled as it is with favouritism."
+I tried the mother's heart. Shame might befall
+Melissa, knowing, saying not she knew:
+Her answer was "Leave me to deal with that."
+I spoke of war to come and many deaths,
+And she replied, her duty was to speak,
+And duty duty, clear of consequences.
+I grew discouraged, Sir; but since I knew
+No rock so hard but that a little wave
+May beat admission in a thousand years,
+I recommenced; "Decide not ere you pause.
+I find you here but in the second place,
+Some say the third--the authentic foundress you.
+I offer boldly: we will seat you highest:
+Wink at our advent: help my prince to gain
+His rightful bride, and here I promise you
+Some palace in our land, where you shall reign
+The head and heart of all our fair she-world,
+And your great name flow on with broadening time
+For ever." Well, she balanced this a little,
+And told me she would answer us today,
+meantime be mute: thus much, nor more I gained.'
+
+ He ceasing, came a message from the Head.
+'That afternoon the Princess rode to take
+The dip of certain strata to the North.
+Would we go with her? we should find the land
+Worth seeing; and the river made a fall
+Out yonder:' then she pointed on to where
+A double hill ran up his furrowy forks
+Beyond the thick-leaved platans of the vale.
+
+ Agreed to, this, the day fled on through all
+Its range of duties to the appointed hour.
+Then summoned to the porch we went. She stood
+Among her maidens, higher by the head,
+Her back against a pillar, her foot on one
+Of those tame leopards. Kittenlike he rolled
+And pawed about her sandal. I drew near;
+I gazed. On a sudden my strange seizure came
+Upon me, the weird vision of our house:
+The Princess Ida seemed a hollow show,
+Her gay-furred cats a painted fantasy,
+Her college and her maidens, empty masks,
+And I myself the shadow of a dream,
+For all things were and were not. Yet I felt
+My heart beat thick with passion and with awe;
+Then from my breast the involuntary sigh
+Brake, as she smote me with the light of eyes
+That lent my knee desire to kneel, and shook
+My pulses, till to horse we got, and so
+Went forth in long retinue following up
+The river as it narrowed to the hills.
+
+ I rode beside her and to me she said:
+'O friend, we trust that you esteemed us not
+Too harsh to your companion yestermorn;
+Unwillingly we spake.' 'No--not to her,'
+I answered, 'but to one of whom we spake
+Your Highness might have seemed the thing you say.'
+'Again?' she cried, 'are you ambassadresses
+From him to me? we give you, being strange,
+A license: speak, and let the topic die.'
+
+ I stammered that I knew him--could have wished--
+'Our king expects--was there no precontract?
+There is no truer-hearted--ah, you seem
+All he prefigured, and he could not see
+The bird of passage flying south but longed
+To follow: surely, if your Highness keep
+Your purport, you will shock him even to death,
+Or baser courses, children of despair.'
+
+ 'Poor boy,' she said, 'can he not read--no books?
+Quoit, tennis, ball--no games? nor deals in that
+Which men delight in, martial exercise?
+To nurse a blind ideal like a girl,
+Methinks he seems no better than a girl;
+As girls were once, as we ourself have been:
+We had our dreams; perhaps he mixt with them:
+We touch on our dead self, nor shun to do it,
+Being other--since we learnt our meaning here,
+To lift the woman's fallen divinity
+Upon an even pedestal with man.'
+
+ She paused, and added with a haughtier smile
+'And as to precontracts, we move, my friend,
+At no man's beck, but know ourself and thee,
+O Vashti, noble Vashti! Summoned out
+She kept her state, and left the drunken king
+To brawl at Shushan underneath the palms.'
+
+ 'Alas your Highness breathes full East,' I said,
+'On that which leans to you. I know the Prince,
+I prize his truth: and then how vast a work
+To assail this gray preëminence of man!
+You grant me license; might I use it? think;
+Ere half be done perchance your life may fail;
+Then comes the feebler heiress of your plan,
+And takes and ruins all; and thus your pains
+May only make that footprint upon sand
+Which old-recurring waves of prejudice
+Resmooth to nothing: might I dread that you,
+With only Fame for spouse and your great deeds
+For issue, yet may live in vain, and miss,
+Meanwhile, what every woman counts her due,
+Love, children, happiness?'
+ And she exclaimed,
+'Peace, you young savage of the Northern wild!
+What! though your Prince's love were like a God's,
+Have we not made ourself the sacrifice?
+You are bold indeed: we are not talked to thus:
+Yet will we say for children, would they grew
+Like field-flowers everywhere! we like them well:
+But children die; and let me tell you, girl,
+Howe'er you babble, great deeds cannot die;
+They with the sun and moon renew their light
+For ever, blessing those that look on them.
+Children--that men may pluck them from our hearts,
+Kill us with pity, break us with ourselves--
+O--children--there is nothing upon earth
+More miserable than she that has a son
+And sees him err: nor would we work for fame;
+Though she perhaps might reap the applause of Great,
+Who earns the one POU STO whence after-hands
+May move the world, though she herself effect
+But little: wherefore up and act, nor shrink
+For fear our solid aim be dissipated
+By frail successors. Would, indeed, we had been,
+In lieu of many mortal flies, a race
+Of giants living, each, a thousand years,
+That we might see our own work out, and watch
+The sandy footprint harden into stone.'
+
+ I answered nothing, doubtful in myself
+If that strange Poet-princess with her grand
+Imaginations might at all be won.
+And she broke out interpreting my thoughts:
+
+ 'No doubt we seem a kind of monster to you;
+We are used to that: for women, up till this
+Cramped under worse than South-sea-isle taboo,
+Dwarfs of the gynæceum, fail so far
+In high desire, they know not, cannot guess
+How much their welfare is a passion to us.
+If we could give them surer, quicker proof--
+Oh if our end were less achievable
+By slow approaches, than by single act
+Of immolation, any phase of death,
+We were as prompt to spring against the pikes,
+Or down the fiery gulf as talk of it,
+To compass our dear sisters' liberties.'
+
+ She bowed as if to veil a noble tear;
+And up we came to where the river sloped
+To plunge in cataract, shattering on black blocks
+A breadth of thunder. O'er it shook the woods,
+And danced the colour, and, below, stuck out
+The bones of some vast bulk that lived and roared
+Before man was. She gazed awhile and said,
+'As these rude bones to us, are we to her
+That will be.' 'Dare we dream of that,' I asked,
+'Which wrought us, as the workman and his work,
+That practice betters?' 'How,' she cried, 'you love
+The metaphysics! read and earn our prize,
+A golden brooch: beneath an emerald plane
+Sits Diotima, teaching him that died
+Of hemlock; our device; wrought to the life;
+She rapt upon her subject, he on her:
+For there are schools for all.' 'And yet' I said
+'Methinks I have not found among them all
+One anatomic.' 'Nay, we thought of that,'
+She answered, 'but it pleased us not: in truth
+We shudder but to dream our maids should ape
+Those monstrous males that carve the living hound,
+And cram him with the fragments of the grave,
+Or in the dark dissolving human heart,
+And holy secrets of this microcosm,
+Dabbling a shameless hand with shameful jest,
+Encarnalize their spirits: yet we know
+Knowledge is knowledge, and this matter hangs:
+Howbeit ourself, foreseeing casualty,
+Nor willing men should come among us, learnt,
+For many weary moons before we came,
+This craft of healing. Were you sick, ourself
+Would tend upon you. To your question now,
+Which touches on the workman and his work.
+Let there be light and there was light: 'tis so:
+For was, and is, and will be, are but is;
+And all creation is one act at once,
+The birth of light: but we that are not all,
+As parts, can see but parts, now this, now that,
+And live, perforce, from thought to thought, and make
+One act a phantom of succession: thus
+Our weakness somehow shapes the shadow, Time;
+But in the shadow will we work, and mould
+The woman to the fuller day.'
+ She spake
+With kindled eyes; we rode a league beyond,
+And, o'er a bridge of pinewood crossing, came
+On flowery levels underneath the crag,
+Full of all beauty. 'O how sweet' I said
+(For I was half-oblivious of my mask)
+'To linger here with one that loved us.' 'Yea,'
+She answered, 'or with fair philosophies
+That lift the fancy; for indeed these fields
+Are lovely, lovelier not the Elysian lawns,
+Where paced the Demigods of old, and saw
+The soft white vapour streak the crownèd towers
+Built to the Sun:' then, turning to her maids,
+'Pitch our pavilion here upon the sward;
+Lay out the viands.' At the word, they raised
+A tent of satin, elaborately wrought
+With fair Corinna's triumph; here she stood,
+Engirt with many a florid maiden-cheek,
+The woman-conqueror; woman-conquered there
+The bearded Victor of ten-thousand hymns,
+And all the men mourned at his side: but we
+Set forth to climb; then, climbing, Cyril kept
+With Psyche, with Melissa Florian, I
+With mine affianced. Many a little hand
+Glanced like a touch of sunshine on the rocks,
+Many a light foot shone like a jewel set
+In the dark crag: and then we turned, we wound
+About the cliffs, the copses, out and in,
+Hammering and clinking, chattering stony names
+Of shales and hornblende, rag and trap and tuff,
+Amygdaloid and trachyte, till the Sun
+Grew broader toward his death and fell, and all
+The rosy heights came out above the lawns.
+
+
+ The splendour falls on castle walls
+ And snowy summits old in story:
+ The long light shakes across the lakes,
+ And the wild cataract leaps in glory.
+Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes flying,
+Blow, bugle; answer, echoes, dying, dying, dying.
+
+ O hark, O hear! how thin and clear,
+ And thinner, clearer, farther going!
+ O sweet and far from cliff and scar
+ The horns of Elfland faintly blowing!
+Blow, let us hear the purple glens replying:
+Blow, bugle; answer, echoes, dying, dying, dying.
+
+ O love, they die in yon rich sky,
+ They faint on hill or field or river:
+ Our echoes roll from soul to soul,
+ And grow for ever and for ever.
+Blow, bugle, blow, set the wild echoes flying,
+And answer, echoes, answer, dying, dying, dying.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+
+'There sinks the nebulous star we call the Sun,
+If that hypothesis of theirs be sound'
+Said Ida; 'let us down and rest;' and we
+Down from the lean and wrinkled precipices,
+By every coppice-feathered chasm and cleft,
+Dropt through the ambrosial gloom to where below
+No bigger than a glow-worm shone the tent
+Lamp-lit from the inner. Once she leaned on me,
+Descending; once or twice she lent her hand,
+And blissful palpitations in the blood,
+Stirring a sudden transport rose and fell.
+
+ But when we planted level feet, and dipt
+Beneath the satin dome and entered in,
+There leaning deep in broidered down we sank
+Our elbows: on a tripod in the midst
+A fragrant flame rose, and before us glowed
+Fruit, blossom, viand, amber wine, and gold.
+
+ Then she, 'Let some one sing to us: lightlier move
+The minutes fledged with music:' and a maid,
+Of those beside her, smote her harp, and sang.
+
+
+ 'Tears, idle tears, I know not what they mean,
+Tears from the depth of some divine despair
+Rise in the heart, and gather to the eyes,
+In looking on the happy Autumn-fields,
+And thinking of the days that are no more.
+
+ 'Fresh as the first beam glittering on a sail,
+That brings our friends up from the underworld,
+Sad as the last which reddens over one
+That sinks with all we love below the verge;
+So sad, so fresh, the days that are no more.
+
+ 'Ah, sad and strange as in dark summer dawns
+The earliest pipe of half-awakened birds
+To dying ears, when unto dying eyes
+The casement slowly grows a glimmering square;
+So sad, so strange, the days that are no more.
+
+ 'Dear as remembered kisses after death,
+And sweet as those by hopeless fancy feigned
+On lips that are for others; deep as love,
+Deep as first love, and wild with all regret;
+O Death in Life, the days that are no more.'
+
+
+ She ended with such passion that the tear,
+She sang of, shook and fell, an erring pearl
+Lost in her bosom: but with some disdain
+Answered the Princess, 'If indeed there haunt
+About the mouldered lodges of the Past
+So sweet a voice and vague, fatal to men,
+Well needs it we should cram our ears with wool
+And so pace by: but thine are fancies hatched
+In silken-folded idleness; nor is it
+Wiser to weep a true occasion lost,
+But trim our sails, and let old bygones be,
+While down the streams that float us each and all
+To the issue, goes, like glittering bergs of ice,
+Throne after throne, and molten on the waste
+Becomes a cloud: for all things serve their time
+Toward that great year of equal mights and rights,
+Nor would I fight with iron laws, in the end
+Found golden: let the past be past; let be
+Their cancelled Babels: though the rough kex break
+The starred mosaic, and the beard-blown goat
+Hang on the shaft, and the wild figtree split
+Their monstrous idols, care not while we hear
+A trumpet in the distance pealing news
+Of better, and Hope, a poising eagle, burns
+Above the unrisen morrow:' then to me;
+'Know you no song of your own land,' she said,
+'Not such as moans about the retrospect,
+But deals with the other distance and the hues
+Of promise; not a death's-head at the wine.'
+
+ Then I remembered one myself had made,
+What time I watched the swallow winging south
+From mine own land, part made long since, and part
+Now while I sang, and maidenlike as far
+As I could ape their treble, did I sing.
+
+
+ 'O Swallow, Swallow, flying, flying South,
+Fly to her, and fall upon her gilded eaves,
+And tell her, tell her, what I tell to thee.
+
+ 'O tell her, Swallow, thou that knowest each,
+That bright and fierce and fickle is the South,
+And dark and true and tender is the North.
+
+ 'O Swallow, Swallow, if I could follow, and light
+Upon her lattice, I would pipe and trill,
+And cheep and twitter twenty million loves.
+
+ 'O were I thou that she might take me in,
+And lay me on her bosom, and her heart
+Would rock the snowy cradle till I died.
+
+ 'Why lingereth she to clothe her heart with love,
+Delaying as the tender ash delays
+To clothe herself, when all the woods are green?
+
+ 'O tell her, Swallow, that thy brood is flown:
+Say to her, I do but wanton in the South,
+But in the North long since my nest is made.
+
+ 'O tell her, brief is life but love is long,
+And brief the sun of summer in the North,
+And brief the moon of beauty in the South.
+
+ 'O Swallow, flying from the golden woods,
+Fly to her, and pipe and woo her, and make her mine,
+And tell her, tell her, that I follow thee.'
+
+
+ I ceased, and all the ladies, each at each,
+Like the Ithacensian suitors in old time,
+Stared with great eyes, and laughed with alien lips,
+And knew not what they meant; for still my voice
+Rang false: but smiling 'Not for thee,' she said,
+O Bulbul, any rose of Gulistan
+Shall burst her veil: marsh-divers, rather, maid,
+Shall croak thee sister, or the meadow-crake
+Grate her harsh kindred in the grass: and this
+A mere love-poem! O for such, my friend,
+We hold them slight: they mind us of the time
+When we made bricks in Egypt. Knaves are men,
+That lute and flute fantastic tenderness,
+And dress the victim to the offering up,
+And paint the gates of Hell with Paradise,
+And play the slave to gain the tyranny.
+Poor soul! I had a maid of honour once;
+She wept her true eyes blind for such a one,
+A rogue of canzonets and serenades.
+I loved her. Peace be with her. She is dead.
+So they blaspheme the muse! But great is song
+Used to great ends: ourself have often tried
+Valkyrian hymns, or into rhythm have dashed
+The passion of the prophetess; for song
+Is duer unto freedom, force and growth
+Of spirit than to junketing and love.
+Love is it? Would this same mock-love, and this
+Mock-Hymen were laid up like winter bats,
+Till all men grew to rate us at our worth,
+Not vassals to be beat, nor pretty babes
+To be dandled, no, but living wills, and sphered
+Whole in ourselves and owed to none. Enough!
+But now to leaven play with profit, you,
+Know you no song, the true growth of your soil,
+That gives the manners of your country-women?'
+
+ She spoke and turned her sumptuous head with eyes
+Of shining expectation fixt on mine.
+Then while I dragged my brains for such a song,
+Cyril, with whom the bell-mouthed glass had wrought,
+Or mastered by the sense of sport, began
+To troll a careless, careless tavern-catch
+Of Moll and Meg, and strange experiences
+Unmeet for ladies. Florian nodded at him,
+I frowning; Psyche flushed and wanned and shook;
+The lilylike Melissa drooped her brows;
+'Forbear,' the Princess cried; 'Forbear, Sir' I;
+And heated through and through with wrath and love,
+I smote him on the breast; he started up;
+There rose a shriek as of a city sacked;
+Melissa clamoured 'Flee the death;' 'To horse'
+Said Ida; 'home! to horse!' and fled, as flies
+A troop of snowy doves athwart the dusk,
+When some one batters at the dovecote-doors,
+Disorderly the women. Alone I stood
+With Florian, cursing Cyril, vext at heart,
+In the pavilion: there like parting hopes
+I heard them passing from me: hoof by hoof,
+And every hoof a knell to my desires,
+Clanged on the bridge; and then another shriek,
+'The Head, the Head, the Princess, O the Head!'
+For blind with rage she missed the plank, and rolled
+In the river. Out I sprang from glow to gloom:
+There whirled her white robe like a blossomed branch
+Rapt to the horrible fall: a glance I gave,
+No more; but woman-vested as I was
+Plunged; and the flood drew; yet I caught her; then
+Oaring one arm, and bearing in my left
+The weight of all the hopes of half the world,
+Strove to buffet to land in vain. A tree
+Was half-disrooted from his place and stooped
+To wrench his dark locks in the gurgling wave
+Mid-channel. Right on this we drove and caught,
+And grasping down the boughs I gained the shore.
+
+ There stood her maidens glimmeringly grouped
+In the hollow bank. One reaching forward drew
+My burthen from mine arms; they cried 'she lives:'
+They bore her back into the tent: but I,
+So much a kind of shame within me wrought,
+Not yet endured to meet her opening eyes,
+Nor found my friends; but pushed alone on foot
+(For since her horse was lost I left her mine)
+Across the woods, and less from Indian craft
+Than beelike instinct hiveward, found at length
+The garden portals. Two great statues, Art
+And Science, Caryatids, lifted up
+A weight of emblem, and betwixt were valves
+Of open-work in which the hunter rued
+His rash intrusion, manlike, but his brows
+Had sprouted, and the branches thereupon
+Spread out at top, and grimly spiked the gates.
+
+ A little space was left between the horns,
+Through which I clambered o'er at top with pain,
+Dropt on the sward, and up the linden walks,
+And, tost on thoughts that changed from hue to hue,
+Now poring on the glowworm, now the star,
+I paced the terrace, till the Bear had wheeled
+Through a great arc his seven slow suns.
+ A step
+Of lightest echo, then a loftier form
+Than female, moving through the uncertain gloom,
+Disturbed me with the doubt 'if this were she,'
+But it was Florian. 'Hist O Hist,' he said,
+'They seek us: out so late is out of rules.
+Moreover "seize the strangers" is the cry.
+How came you here?' I told him: 'I' said he,
+'Last of the train, a moral leper, I,
+To whom none spake, half-sick at heart, returned.
+Arriving all confused among the rest
+With hooded brows I crept into the hall,
+And, couched behind a Judith, underneath
+The head of Holofernes peeped and saw.
+Girl after girl was called to trial: each
+Disclaimed all knowledge of us: last of all,
+Melissa: trust me, Sir, I pitied her.
+She, questioned if she knew us men, at first
+Was silent; closer prest, denied it not:
+And then, demanded if her mother knew,
+Or Psyche, she affirmed not, or denied:
+From whence the Royal mind, familiar with her,
+Easily gathered either guilt. She sent
+For Psyche, but she was not there; she called
+For Psyche's child to cast it from the doors;
+She sent for Blanche to accuse her face to face;
+And I slipt out: but whither will you now?
+And where are Psyche, Cyril? both are fled:
+What, if together? that were not so well.
+Would rather we had never come! I dread
+His wildness, and the chances of the dark.'
+
+ 'And yet,' I said, 'you wrong him more than I
+That struck him: this is proper to the clown,
+Though smocked, or furred and purpled, still the clown,
+To harm the thing that trusts him, and to shame
+That which he says he loves: for Cyril, howe'er
+He deal in frolic, as tonight--the song
+Might have been worse and sinned in grosser lips
+Beyond all pardon--as it is, I hold
+These flashes on the surface are not he.
+He has a solid base of temperament:
+But as the waterlily starts and slides
+Upon the level in little puffs of wind,
+Though anchored to the bottom, such is he.'
+
+ Scarce had I ceased when from a tamarisk near
+Two Proctors leapt upon us, crying, 'Names:'
+He, standing still, was clutched; but I began
+To thrid the musky-circled mazes, wind
+And double in and out the boles, and race
+By all the fountains: fleet I was of foot:
+Before me showered the rose in flakes; behind
+I heard the puffed pursuer; at mine ear
+Bubbled the nightingale and heeded not,
+And secret laughter tickled all my soul.
+At last I hooked my ankle in a vine,
+That claspt the feet of a Mnemosyne,
+And falling on my face was caught and known.
+
+ They haled us to the Princess where she sat
+High in the hall: above her drooped a lamp,
+And made the single jewel on her brow
+Burn like the mystic fire on a mast-head,
+Prophet of storm: a handmaid on each side
+Bowed toward her, combing out her long black hair
+Damp from the river; and close behind her stood
+Eight daughters of the plough, stronger than men,
+Huge women blowzed with health, and wind, and rain,
+And labour. Each was like a Druid rock;
+Or like a spire of land that stands apart
+Cleft from the main, and wailed about with mews.
+
+ Then, as we came, the crowd dividing clove
+An advent to the throne: and therebeside,
+Half-naked as if caught at once from bed
+And tumbled on the purple footcloth, lay
+The lily-shining child; and on the left,
+Bowed on her palms and folded up from wrong,
+Her round white shoulder shaken with her sobs,
+Melissa knelt; but Lady Blanche erect
+Stood up and spake, an affluent orator.
+
+ 'It was not thus, O Princess, in old days:
+You prized my counsel, lived upon my lips:
+I led you then to all the Castalies;
+I fed you with the milk of every Muse;
+I loved you like this kneeler, and you me
+Your second mother: those were gracious times.
+Then came your new friend: you began to change--
+I saw it and grieved--to slacken and to cool;
+Till taken with her seeming openness
+You turned your warmer currents all to her,
+To me you froze: this was my meed for all.
+Yet I bore up in part from ancient love,
+And partly that I hoped to win you back,
+And partly conscious of my own deserts,
+And partly that you were my civil head,
+And chiefly you were born for something great,
+In which I might your fellow-worker be,
+When time should serve; and thus a noble scheme
+Grew up from seed we two long since had sown;
+In us true growth, in her a Jonah's gourd,
+Up in one night and due to sudden sun:
+We took this palace; but even from the first
+You stood in your own light and darkened mine.
+What student came but that you planed her path
+To Lady Psyche, younger, not so wise,
+A foreigner, and I your countrywoman,
+I your old friend and tried, she new in all?
+But still her lists were swelled and mine were lean;
+Yet I bore up in hope she would be known:
+Then came these wolves: ~they~ knew her: ~they~ endured,
+Long-closeted with her the yestermorn,
+To tell her what they were, and she to hear:
+And me none told: not less to an eye like mine
+A lidless watcher of the public weal,
+Last night, their mask was patent, and my foot
+Was to you: but I thought again: I feared
+To meet a cold "We thank you, we shall hear of it
+From Lady Psyche:" you had gone to her,
+She told, perforce; and winning easy grace
+No doubt, for slight delay, remained among us
+In our young nursery still unknown, the stem
+Less grain than touchwood, while my honest heat
+Were all miscounted as malignant haste
+To push my rival out of place and power.
+But public use required she should be known;
+And since my oath was ta'en for public use,
+I broke the letter of it to keep the sense.
+I spoke not then at first, but watched them well,
+Saw that they kept apart, no mischief done;
+And yet this day (though you should hate me for it)
+I came to tell you; found that you had gone,
+Ridden to the hills, she likewise: now, I thought,
+That surely she will speak; if not, then I:
+Did she? These monsters blazoned what they were,
+According to the coarseness of their kind,
+For thus I hear; and known at last (my work)
+And full of cowardice and guilty shame,
+I grant in her some sense of shame, she flies;
+And I remain on whom to wreak your rage,
+I, that have lent my life to build up yours,
+I that have wasted here health, wealth, and time,
+And talent, I--you know it--I will not boast:
+Dismiss me, and I prophesy your plan,
+Divorced from my experience, will be chaff
+For every gust of chance, and men will say
+We did not know the real light, but chased
+The wisp that flickers where no foot can tread.'
+
+ She ceased: the Princess answered coldly, 'Good:
+Your oath is broken: we dismiss you: go.
+For this lost lamb (she pointed to the child)
+Our mind is changed: we take it to ourself.'
+
+ Thereat the Lady stretched a vulture throat,
+And shot from crooked lips a haggard smile.
+'The plan was mine. I built the nest' she said
+'To hatch the cuckoo. Rise!' and stooped to updrag
+Melissa: she, half on her mother propt,
+Half-drooping from her, turned her face, and cast
+A liquid look on Ida, full of prayer,
+Which melted Florian's fancy as she hung,
+A Niobëan daughter, one arm out,
+Appealing to the bolts of Heaven; and while
+We gazed upon her came a little stir
+About the doors, and on a sudden rushed
+Among us, out of breath as one pursued,
+A woman-post in flying raiment. Fear
+Stared in her eyes, and chalked her face, and winged
+Her transit to the throne, whereby she fell
+Delivering sealed dispatches which the Head
+Took half-amazed, and in her lion's mood
+Tore open, silent we with blind surmise
+Regarding, while she read, till over brow
+And cheek and bosom brake the wrathful bloom
+As of some fire against a stormy cloud,
+When the wild peasant rights himself, the rick
+Flames, and his anger reddens in the heavens;
+For anger most it seemed, while now her breast,
+Beaten with some great passion at her heart,
+Palpitated, her hand shook, and we heard
+In the dead hush the papers that she held
+Rustle: at once the lost lamb at her feet
+Sent out a bitter bleating for its dam;
+The plaintive cry jarred on her ire; she crushed
+The scrolls together, made a sudden turn
+As if to speak, but, utterance failing her,
+She whirled them on to me, as who should say
+'Read,' and I read--two letters--one her sire's.
+
+ 'Fair daughter, when we sent the Prince your way,
+We knew not your ungracious laws, which learnt,
+We, conscious of what temper you are built,
+Came all in haste to hinder wrong, but fell
+Into his father's hands, who has this night,
+You lying close upon his territory,
+Slipt round and in the dark invested you,
+And here he keeps me hostage for his son.'
+
+ The second was my father's running thus:
+'You have our son: touch not a hair of his head:
+Render him up unscathed: give him your hand:
+Cleave to your contract: though indeed we hear
+You hold the woman is the better man;
+A rampant heresy, such as if it spread
+Would make all women kick against their Lords
+Through all the world, and which might well deserve
+That we this night should pluck your palace down;
+And we will do it, unless you send us back
+Our son, on the instant, whole.'
+ So far I read;
+And then stood up and spoke impetuously.
+
+ 'O not to pry and peer on your reserve,
+But led by golden wishes, and a hope
+The child of regal compact, did I break
+Your precinct; not a scorner of your sex
+But venerator, zealous it should be
+All that it might be: hear me, for I bear,
+Though man, yet human, whatsoe'er your wrongs,
+From the flaxen curl to the gray lock a life
+Less mine than yours: my nurse would tell me of you;
+I babbled for you, as babies for the moon,
+Vague brightness; when a boy, you stooped to me
+From all high places, lived in all fair lights,
+Came in long breezes rapt from inmost south
+And blown to inmost north; at eve and dawn
+With Ida, Ida, Ida, rang the woods;
+The leader wildswan in among the stars
+Would clang it, and lapt in wreaths of glowworm light
+The mellow breaker murmured Ida. Now,
+Because I would have reached you, had you been
+Sphered up with Cassiopëia, or the enthroned
+Persephonè in Hades, now at length,
+Those winters of abeyance all worn out,
+A man I came to see you: but indeed,
+Not in this frequence can I lend full tongue,
+O noble Ida, to those thoughts that wait
+On you, their centre: let me say but this,
+That many a famous man and woman, town
+And landskip, have I heard of, after seen
+The dwarfs of presage: though when known, there grew
+Another kind of beauty in detail
+Made them worth knowing; but in your I found
+My boyish dream involved and dazzled down
+And mastered, while that after-beauty makes
+Such head from act to act, from hour to hour,
+Within me, that except you slay me here,
+According to your bitter statute-book,
+I cannot cease to follow you, as they say
+The seal does music; who desire you more
+Than growing boys their manhood; dying lips,
+With many thousand matters left to do,
+The breath of life; O more than poor men wealth,
+Than sick men health--yours, yours, not mine--but half
+Without you; with you, whole; and of those halves
+You worthiest; and howe'er you block and bar
+Your heart with system out from mine, I hold
+That it becomes no man to nurse despair,
+But in the teeth of clenched antagonisms
+To follow up the worthiest till he die:
+Yet that I came not all unauthorized
+Behold your father's letter.'
+ On one knee
+Kneeling, I gave it, which she caught, and dashed
+Unopened at her feet: a tide of fierce
+Invective seemed to wait behind her lips,
+As waits a river level with the dam
+Ready to burst and flood the world with foam:
+And so she would have spoken, but there rose
+A hubbub in the court of half the maids
+Gathered together: from the illumined hall
+Long lanes of splendour slanted o'er a press
+Of snowy shoulders, thick as herded ewes,
+And rainbow robes, and gems and gemlike eyes,
+And gold and golden heads; they to and fro
+Fluctuated, as flowers in storm, some red, some pale,
+All open-mouthed, all gazing to the light,
+Some crying there was an army in the land,
+And some that men were in the very walls,
+And some they cared not; till a clamour grew
+As of a new-world Babel, woman-built,
+And worse-confounded: high above them stood
+The placid marble Muses, looking peace.
+
+ Not peace she looked, the Head: but rising up
+Robed in the long night of her deep hair, so
+To the open window moved, remaining there
+Fixt like a beacon-tower above the waves
+Of tempest, when the crimson-rolling eye
+Glares ruin, and the wild birds on the light
+Dash themselves dead. She stretched her arms and called
+Across the tumult and the tumult fell.
+
+ 'What fear ye, brawlers? am not I your Head?
+On me, me, me, the storm first breaks: ~I~ dare
+All these male thunderbolts: what is it ye fear?
+Peace! there are those to avenge us and they come:
+If not,--myself were like enough, O girls,
+To unfurl the maiden banner of our rights,
+And clad in iron burst the ranks of war,
+Or, falling, promartyr of our cause,
+Die: yet I blame you not so much for fear:
+Six thousand years of fear have made you that
+From which I would redeem you: but for those
+That stir this hubbub--you and you--I know
+Your faces there in the crowd--tomorrow morn
+We hold a great convention: then shall they
+That love their voices more than duty, learn
+With whom they deal, dismissed in shame to live
+No wiser than their mothers, household stuff,
+Live chattels, mincers of each other's fame,
+Full of weak poison, turnspits for the clown,
+The drunkard's football, laughing-stocks of Time,
+Whose brains are in their hands and in their heels
+But fit to flaunt, to dress, to dance, to thrum,
+To tramp, to scream, to burnish, and to scour,
+For ever slaves at home and fools abroad.'
+
+ She, ending, waved her hands: thereat the crowd
+Muttering, dissolved: then with a smile, that looked
+A stroke of cruel sunshine on the cliff,
+When all the glens are drowned in azure gloom
+Of thunder-shower, she floated to us and said:
+
+ 'You have done well and like a gentleman,
+And like a prince: you have our thanks for all:
+And you look well too in your woman's dress:
+Well have you done and like a gentleman.
+You saved our life: we owe you bitter thanks:
+Better have died and spilt our bones in the flood--
+Then men had said--but now--What hinders me
+To take such bloody vengeance on you both?--
+Yet since our father--Wasps in our good hive,
+You would-be quenchers of the light to be,
+Barbarians, grosser than your native bears--
+O would I had his sceptre for one hour!
+You that have dared to break our bound, and gulled
+Our servants, wronged and lied and thwarted us--
+~I~ wed with thee! ~I~ bound by precontract
+Your bride, our bondslave! not though all the gold
+That veins the world were packed to make your crown,
+And every spoken tongue should lord you. Sir,
+Your falsehood and yourself are hateful to us:
+I trample on your offers and on you:
+Begone: we will not look upon you more.
+Here, push them out at gates.'
+ In wrath she spake.
+Then those eight mighty daughters of the plough
+Bent their broad faces toward us and addressed
+Their motion: twice I sought to plead my cause,
+But on my shoulder hung their heavy hands,
+The weight of destiny: so from her face
+They pushed us, down the steps, and through the court,
+And with grim laughter thrust us out at gates.
+
+ We crossed the street and gained a petty mound
+Beyond it, whence we saw the lights and heard the voices murmuring. While I listened, came
+On a sudden the weird seizure and the doubt:
+I seemed to move among a world of ghosts;
+The Princess with her monstrous woman-guard,
+The jest and earnest working side by side,
+The cataract and the tumult and the kings
+Were shadows; and the long fantastic night
+With all its doings had and had not been,
+And all things were and were not.
+ This went by
+As strangely as it came, and on my spirits
+Settled a gentle cloud of melancholy;
+Not long; I shook it off; for spite of doubts
+And sudden ghostly shadowings I was one
+To whom the touch of all mischance but came
+As night to him that sitting on a hill
+Sees the midsummer, midnight, Norway sun
+Set into sunrise; then we moved away.
+
+
+Thy voice is heard through rolling drums,
+ That beat to battle where he stands;
+Thy face across his fancy comes,
+ And gives the battle to his hands:
+A moment, while the trumpets blow,
+ He sees his brood about thy knee;
+The next, like fire he meets the foe,
+ And strikes him dead for thine and thee.
+
+
+So Lilia sang: we thought her half-possessed,
+She struck such warbling fury through the words;
+And, after, feigning pique at what she called
+The raillery, or grotesque, or false sublime--
+Like one that wishes at a dance to change
+The music--clapt her hands and cried for war,
+Or some grand fight to kill and make an end:
+And he that next inherited the tale
+Half turning to the broken statue, said,
+'Sir Ralph has got your colours: if I prove
+Your knight, and fight your battle, what for me?'
+It chanced, her empty glove upon the tomb
+Lay by her like a model of her hand.
+She took it and she flung it. 'Fight' she said,
+'And make us all we would be, great and good.'
+He knightlike in his cap instead of casque,
+A cap of Tyrol borrowed from the hall,
+Arranged the favour, and assumed the Prince.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+
+Now, scarce three paces measured from the mound,
+We stumbled on a stationary voice,
+And 'Stand, who goes?' 'Two from the palace' I.
+'The second two: they wait,' he said, 'pass on;
+His Highness wakes:' and one, that clashed in arms,
+By glimmering lanes and walls of canvas led
+Threading the soldier-city, till we heard
+The drowsy folds of our great ensign shake
+From blazoned lions o'er the imperial tent
+Whispers of war.
+ Entering, the sudden light
+Dazed me half-blind: I stood and seemed to hear,
+As in a poplar grove when a light wind wakes
+A lisping of the innumerous leaf and dies,
+Each hissing in his neighbour's ear; and then
+A strangled titter, out of which there brake
+On all sides, clamouring etiquette to death,
+Unmeasured mirth; while now the two old kings
+Began to wag their baldness up and down,
+The fresh young captains flashed their glittering teeth,
+The huge bush-bearded Barons heaved and blew,
+And slain with laughter rolled the gilded Squire.
+
+ At length my Sire, his rough cheek wet with tears,
+Panted from weary sides 'King, you are free!
+We did but keep you surety for our son,
+If this be he,--or a dragged mawkin, thou,
+That tends to her bristled grunters in the sludge:'
+For I was drenched with ooze, and torn with briers,
+More crumpled than a poppy from the sheath,
+And all one rag, disprinced from head to heel.
+Then some one sent beneath his vaulted palm
+A whispered jest to some one near him, 'Look,
+He has been among his shadows.' 'Satan take
+The old women and their shadows! (thus the King
+Roared) make yourself a man to fight with men.
+Go: Cyril told us all.'
+ As boys that slink
+From ferule and the trespass-chiding eye,
+Away we stole, and transient in a trice
+From what was left of faded woman-slough
+To sheathing splendours and the golden scale
+Of harness, issued in the sun, that now
+Leapt from the dewy shoulders of the Earth,
+And hit the Northern hills. Here Cyril met us.
+A little shy at first, but by and by
+We twain, with mutual pardon asked and given
+For stroke and song, resoldered peace, whereon
+Followed his tale. Amazed he fled away
+Through the dark land, and later in the night
+Had come on Psyche weeping: 'then we fell
+Into your father's hand, and there she lies,
+But will not speak, or stir.'
+ He showed a tent
+A stone-shot off: we entered in, and there
+Among piled arms and rough accoutrements,
+Pitiful sight, wrapped in a soldier's cloak,
+Like some sweet sculpture draped from head to foot,
+And pushed by rude hands from its pedestal,
+All her fair length upon the ground she lay:
+And at her head a follower of the camp,
+A charred and wrinkled piece of womanhood,
+Sat watching like the watcher by the dead.
+
+ Then Florian knelt, and 'Come' he whispered to her,
+'Lift up your head, sweet sister: lie not thus.
+What have you done but right? you could not slay
+Me, nor your prince: look up: be comforted:
+Sweet is it to have done the thing one ought,
+When fallen in darker ways.' And likewise I:
+'Be comforted: have I not lost her too,
+In whose least act abides the nameless charm
+That none has else for me?' She heard, she moved,
+She moaned, a folded voice; and up she sat,
+And raised the cloak from brows as pale and smooth
+As those that mourn half-shrouded over death
+In deathless marble. 'Her,' she said, 'my friend--
+Parted from her--betrayed her cause and mine--
+Where shall I breathe? why kept ye not your faith?
+O base and bad! what comfort? none for me!'
+To whom remorseful Cyril, 'Yet I pray
+Take comfort: live, dear lady, for your child!'
+At which she lifted up her voice and cried.
+
+ 'Ah me, my babe, my blossom, ah, my child,
+My one sweet child, whom I shall see no more!
+For now will cruel Ida keep her back;
+And either she will die from want of care,
+Or sicken with ill-usage, when they say
+The child is hers--for every little fault,
+The child is hers; and they will beat my girl
+Remembering her mother: O my flower!
+Or they will take her, they will make her hard,
+And she will pass me by in after-life
+With some cold reverence worse than were she dead.
+Ill mother that I was to leave her there,
+To lag behind, scared by the cry they made,
+The horror of the shame among them all:
+But I will go and sit beside the doors,
+And make a wild petition night and day,
+Until they hate to hear me like a wind
+Wailing for ever, till they open to me,
+And lay my little blossom at my feet,
+My babe, my sweet Aglaïa, my one child:
+And I will take her up and go my way,
+And satisfy my soul with kissing her:
+Ah! what might that man not deserve of me
+Who gave me back my child?' 'Be comforted,'
+Said Cyril, 'you shall have it:' but again
+She veiled her brows, and prone she sank, and so
+Like tender things that being caught feign death,
+Spoke not, nor stirred.
+ By this a murmur ran
+Through all the camp and inward raced the scouts
+With rumour of Prince Arab hard at hand.
+We left her by the woman, and without
+Found the gray kings at parle: and 'Look you' cried
+My father 'that our compact be fulfilled:
+You have spoilt this child; she laughs at you and man:
+She wrongs herself, her sex, and me, and him:
+But red-faced war has rods of steel and fire;
+She yields, or war.'
+ Then Gama turned to me:
+'We fear, indeed, you spent a stormy time
+With our strange girl: and yet they say that still
+You love her. Give us, then, your mind at large:
+How say you, war or not?'
+ 'Not war, if possible,
+O king,' I said, 'lest from the abuse of war,
+The desecrated shrine, the trampled year,
+The smouldering homestead, and the household flower
+Torn from the lintel--all the common wrong--
+A smoke go up through which I loom to her
+Three times a monster: now she lightens scorn
+At him that mars her plan, but then would hate
+(And every voice she talked with ratify it,
+And every face she looked on justify it)
+The general foe. More soluble is this knot,
+By gentleness than war. I want her love.
+What were I nigher this although we dashed
+Your cities into shards with catapults,
+She would not love;--or brought her chained, a slave,
+The lifting of whose eyelash is my lord,
+Not ever would she love; but brooding turn
+The book of scorn, till all my flitting chance
+Were caught within the record of her wrongs,
+And crushed to death: and rather, Sire, than this
+I would the old God of war himself were dead,
+Forgotten, rusting on his iron hills,
+Rotting on some wild shore with ribs of wreck,
+Or like an old-world mammoth bulked in ice,
+Not to be molten out.'
+ And roughly spake
+My father, 'Tut, you know them not, the girls.
+Boy, when I hear you prate I almost think
+That idiot legend credible. Look you, Sir!
+Man is the hunter; woman is his game:
+The sleek and shining creatures of the chase,
+We hunt them for the beauty of their skins;
+They love us for it, and we ride them down.
+Wheedling and siding with them! Out! for shame!
+Boy, there's no rose that's half so dear to them
+As he that does the thing they dare not do,
+Breathing and sounding beauteous battle, comes
+With the air of the trumpet round him, and leaps in
+Among the women, snares them by the score
+Flattered and flustered, wins, though dashed with death
+He reddens what he kisses: thus I won
+You mother, a good mother, a good wife,
+Worth winning; but this firebrand--gentleness
+To such as her! if Cyril spake her true,
+To catch a dragon in a cherry net,
+To trip a tigress with a gossamer
+Were wisdom to it.'
+ 'Yea but Sire,' I cried,
+'Wild natures need wise curbs. The soldier? No:
+What dares not Ida do that she should prize
+The soldier? I beheld her, when she rose
+The yesternight, and storming in extremes,
+Stood for her cause, and flung defiance down
+Gagelike to man, and had not shunned the death,
+No, not the soldier's: yet I hold her, king,
+True woman: you clash them all in one,
+That have as many differences as we.
+The violet varies from the lily as far
+As oak from elm: one loves the soldier, one
+The silken priest of peace, one this, one that,
+And some unworthily; their sinless faith,
+A maiden moon that sparkles on a sty,
+Glorifying clown and satyr; whence they need
+More breadth of culture: is not Ida right?
+They worth it? truer to the law within?
+Severer in the logic of a life?
+Twice as magnetic to sweet influences
+Of earth and heaven? and she of whom you speak,
+My mother, looks as whole as some serene
+Creation minted in the golden moods
+Of sovereign artists; not a thought, a touch,
+But pure as lines of green that streak the white
+Of the first snowdrop's inner leaves; I say,
+Not like the piebald miscellany, man,
+Bursts of great heart and slips in sensual mire,
+But whole and one: and take them all-in-all,
+Were we ourselves but half as good, as kind,
+As truthful, much that Ida claims as right
+Had ne'er been mooted, but as frankly theirs
+As dues of Nature. To our point: not war:
+Lest I lose all.'
+ 'Nay, nay, you spake but sense'
+Said Gama. 'We remember love ourself
+In our sweet youth; we did not rate him then
+This red-hot iron to be shaped with blows.
+You talk almost like Ida: ~she~ can talk;
+And there is something in it as you say:
+But you talk kindlier: we esteem you for it.--
+He seems a gracious and a gallant Prince,
+I would he had our daughter: for the rest,
+Our own detention, why, the causes weighed,
+Fatherly fears--you used us courteously--
+We would do much to gratify your Prince--
+We pardon it; and for your ingress here
+Upon the skirt and fringe of our fair land,
+you did but come as goblins in the night,
+Nor in the furrow broke the ploughman's head,
+Nor burnt the grange, nor bussed the milking-maid,
+Nor robbed the farmer of his bowl of cream:
+But let your Prince (our royal word upon it,
+He comes back safe) ride with us to our lines,
+And speak with Arac: Arac's word is thrice
+As ours with Ida: something may be done--
+I know not what--and ours shall see us friends.
+You, likewise, our late guests, if so you will,
+Follow us: who knows? we four may build some plan
+Foursquare to opposition.'
+ Here he reached
+White hands of farewell to my sire, who growled
+An answer which, half-muffled in his beard,
+Let so much out as gave us leave to go.
+
+ Then rode we with the old king across the lawns
+Beneath huge trees, a thousand rings of Spring
+In every bole, a song on every spray
+Of birds that piped their Valentines, and woke
+Desire in me to infuse my tale of love
+In the old king's ears, who promised help, and oozed
+All o'er with honeyed answer as we rode
+And blossom-fragrant slipt the heavy dews
+Gathered by night and peace, with each light air
+On our mailed heads: but other thoughts than Peace
+Burnt in us, when we saw the embattled squares,
+And squadrons of the Prince, trampling the flowers
+With clamour: for among them rose a cry
+As if to greet the king; they made a halt;
+The horses yelled; they clashed their arms; the drum
+Beat; merrily-blowing shrilled the martial fife;
+And in the blast and bray of the long horn
+And serpent-throated bugle, undulated
+The banner: anon to meet us lightly pranced
+Three captains out; nor ever had I seen
+Such thews of men: the midmost and the highest
+Was Arac: all about his motion clung
+The shadow of his sister, as the beam
+Of the East, that played upon them, made them glance
+Like those three stars of the airy Giant's zone,
+That glitter burnished by the frosty dark;
+And as the fiery Sirius alters hue,
+And bickers into red and emerald, shone
+Their morions, washed with morning, as they came.
+
+ And I that prated peace, when first I heard
+War-music, felt the blind wildbeast of force,
+Whose home is in the sinews of a man,
+Stir in me as to strike: then took the king
+His three broad sons; with now a wandering hand
+And now a pointed finger, told them all:
+A common light of smiles at our disguise
+Broke from their lips, and, ere the windy jest
+Had laboured down within his ample lungs,
+The genial giant, Arac, rolled himself
+Thrice in the saddle, then burst out in words.
+
+ 'Our land invaded, 'sdeath! and he himself
+Your captive, yet my father wills not war:
+And, 'sdeath! myself, what care I, war or no?
+but then this question of your troth remains:
+And there's a downright honest meaning in her;
+She flies too high, she flies too high! and yet
+She asked but space and fairplay for her scheme;
+She prest and prest it on me--I myself,
+What know I of these things? but, life and soul!
+I thought her half-right talking of her wrongs;
+I say she flies too high, 'sdeath! what of that?
+I take her for the flower of womankind,
+And so I often told her, right or wrong,
+And, Prince, she can be sweet to those she loves,
+And, right or wrong, I care not: this is all,
+I stand upon her side: she made me swear it--
+'Sdeath--and with solemn rites by candle-light--
+Swear by St something--I forget her name--
+Her that talked down the fifty wisest men;
+~She~ was a princess too; and so I swore.
+Come, this is all; she will not: waive your claim:
+If not, the foughten field, what else, at once
+Decides it, 'sdeath! against my father's will.'
+
+ I lagged in answer loth to render up
+My precontract, and loth by brainless war
+To cleave the rift of difference deeper yet;
+Till one of those two brothers, half aside
+And fingering at the hair about his lip,
+To prick us on to combat 'Like to like!
+The woman's garment hid the woman's heart.'
+A taunt that clenched his purpose like a blow!
+For fiery-short was Cyril's counter-scoff,
+And sharp I answered, touched upon the point
+Where idle boys are cowards to their shame,
+'Decide it here: why not? we are three to three.'
+
+ Then spake the third 'But three to three? no more?
+No more, and in our noble sister's cause?
+More, more, for honour: every captain waits
+Hungry for honour, angry for his king.
+More, more some fifty on a side, that each
+May breathe himself, and quick! by overthrow
+Of these or those, the question settled die.'
+
+ 'Yea,' answered I, 'for this wreath of air,
+This flake of rainbow flying on the highest
+Foam of men's deeds--this honour, if ye will.
+It needs must be for honour if at all:
+Since, what decision? if we fail, we fail,
+And if we win, we fail: she would not keep
+Her compact.' ''Sdeath! but we will send to her,'
+Said Arac, 'worthy reasons why she should
+Bide by this issue: let our missive through,
+And you shall have her answer by the word.'
+
+ 'Boys!' shrieked the old king, but vainlier than a hen
+To her false daughters in the pool; for none
+Regarded; neither seemed there more to say:
+Back rode we to my father's camp, and found
+He thrice had sent a herald to the gates,
+To learn if Ida yet would cede our claim,
+Or by denial flush her babbling wells
+With her own people's life: three times he went:
+The first, he blew and blew, but none appeared:
+He battered at the doors; none came: the next,
+An awful voice within had warned him thence:
+The third, and those eight daughters of the plough
+Came sallying through the gates, and caught his hair,
+And so belaboured him on rib and cheek
+They made him wild: not less one glance he caught
+Through open doors of Ida stationed there
+Unshaken, clinging to her purpose, firm
+Though compassed by two armies and the noise
+Of arms; and standing like a stately Pine
+Set in a cataract on an island-crag,
+When storm is on the heights, and right and left
+Sucked from the dark heart of the long hills roll
+The torrents, dashed to the vale: and yet her will
+Bred will in me to overcome it or fall.
+
+ But when I told the king that I was pledged
+To fight in tourney for my bride, he clashed
+His iron palms together with a cry;
+Himself would tilt it out among the lads:
+But overborne by all his bearded lords
+With reasons drawn from age and state, perforce
+He yielded, wroth and red, with fierce demur:
+And many a bold knight started up in heat,
+And sware to combat for my claim till death.
+
+ All on this side the palace ran the field
+Flat to the garden-wall: and likewise here,
+Above the garden's glowing blossom-belts,
+A columned entry shone and marble stairs,
+And great bronze valves, embossed with Tomyris
+And what she did to Cyrus after fight,
+But now fast barred: so here upon the flat
+All that long morn the lists were hammered up,
+And all that morn the heralds to and fro,
+With message and defiance, went and came;
+Last, Ida's answer, in a royal hand,
+But shaken here and there, and rolling words
+Oration-like. I kissed it and I read.
+
+ 'O brother, you have known the pangs we felt,
+What heats of indignation when we heard
+Of those that iron-cramped their women's feet;
+Of lands in which at the altar the poor bride
+Gives her harsh groom for bridal-gift a scourge;
+Of living hearts that crack within the fire
+Where smoulder their dead despots; and of those,--
+Mothers,--that, with all prophetic pity, fling
+Their pretty maids in the running flood, and swoops
+The vulture, beak and talon, at the heart
+Made for all noble motion: and I saw
+That equal baseness lived in sleeker times
+With smoother men: the old leaven leavened all:
+Millions of throats would bawl for civil rights,
+No woman named: therefore I set my face
+Against all men, and lived but for mine own.
+Far off from men I built a fold for them:
+I stored it full of rich memorial:
+I fenced it round with gallant institutes,
+And biting laws to scare the beasts of prey
+And prospered; till a rout of saucy boys
+Brake on us at our books, and marred our peace,
+Masked like our maids, blustering I know not what
+Of insolence and love, some pretext held
+Of baby troth, invalid, since my will
+Sealed not the bond--the striplings! for their sport!--
+I tamed my leopards: shall I not tame these?
+Or you? or I? for since you think me touched
+In honour--what, I would not aught of false--
+Is not our case pure? and whereas I know
+Your prowess, Arac, and what mother's blood
+You draw from, fight; you failing, I abide
+What end soever: fail you will not. Still
+Take not his life: he risked it for my own;
+His mother lives: yet whatsoe'er you do,
+Fight and fight well; strike and strike him. O dear
+Brothers, the woman's Angel guards you, you
+The sole men to be mingled with our cause,
+The sole men we shall prize in the after-time,
+Your very armour hallowed, and your statues
+Reared, sung to, when, this gad-fly brushed aside,
+We plant a solid foot into the Time,
+And mould a generation strong to move
+With claim on claim from right to right, till she
+Whose name is yoked with children's, know herself;
+And Knowledge in our own land make her free,
+And, ever following those two crownèd twins,
+Commerce and conquest, shower the fiery grain
+Of freedom broadcast over all the orbs
+Between the Northern and the Southern morn.'
+
+ Then came a postscript dashed across the rest.
+See that there be no traitors in your camp:
+We seem a nest of traitors--none to trust
+Since our arms failed--this Egypt-plague of men!
+Almost our maids were better at their homes,
+Than thus man-girdled here: indeed I think
+Our chiefest comfort is the little child
+Of one unworthy mother; which she left:
+She shall not have it back: the child shall grow
+To prize the authentic mother of her mind.
+I took it for an hour in mine own bed
+This morning: there the tender orphan hands
+Felt at my heart, and seemed to charm from thence
+The wrath I nursed against the world: farewell.'
+
+ I ceased; he said, 'Stubborn, but she may sit
+Upon a king's right hand in thunder-storms,
+And breed up warriors! See now, though yourself
+Be dazzled by the wildfire Love to sloughs
+That swallow common sense, the spindling king,
+This Gama swamped in lazy tolerance.
+When the man wants weight, the woman takes it up,
+And topples down the scales; but this is fixt
+As are the roots of earth and base of all;
+Man for the field and woman for the hearth:
+Man for the sword and for the needle she:
+Man with the head and woman with the heart:
+Man to command and woman to obey;
+All else confusion. Look you! the gray mare
+Is ill to live with, when her whinny shrills
+From tile to scullery, and her small goodman
+Shrinks in his arm-chair while the fires of Hell
+Mix with his hearth: but you--she's yet a colt--
+Take, break her: strongly groomed and straitly curbed
+She might not rank with those detestable
+That let the bantling scald at home, and brawl
+Their rights and wrongs like potherbs in the street.
+They say she's comely; there's the fairer chance:
+~I~ like her none the less for rating at her!
+Besides, the woman wed is not as we,
+But suffers change of frame. A lusty brace
+Of twins may weed her of her folly. Boy,
+The bearing and the training of a child
+Is woman's wisdom.'
+ Thus the hard old king:
+I took my leave, for it was nearly noon:
+I pored upon her letter which I held,
+And on the little clause 'take not his life:'
+I mused on that wild morning in the woods,
+And on the 'Follow, follow, thou shalt win:'
+I thought on all the wrathful king had said,
+And how the strange betrothment was to end:
+Then I remembered that burnt sorcerer's curse
+That one should fight with shadows and should fall;
+And like a flash the weird affection came:
+King, camp and college turned to hollow shows;
+I seemed to move in old memorial tilts,
+And doing battle with forgotten ghosts,
+To dream myself the shadow of a dream:
+And ere I woke it was the point of noon,
+The lists were ready. Empanoplied and plumed
+We entered in, and waited, fifty there
+Opposed to fifty, till the trumpet blared
+At the barrier like a wild horn in a land
+Of echoes, and a moment, and once more
+The trumpet, and again: at which the storm
+Of galloping hoofs bare on the ridge of spears
+And riders front to front, until they closed
+In conflict with the crash of shivering points,
+And thunder. Yet it seemed a dream, I dreamed
+Of fighting. On his haunches rose the steed,
+And into fiery splinters leapt the lance,
+And out of stricken helmets sprang the fire.
+Part sat like rocks: part reeled but kept their seats:
+Part rolled on the earth and rose again and drew:
+Part stumbled mixt with floundering horses. Down
+From those two bulks at Arac's side, and down
+From Arac's arm, as from a giant's flail,
+The large blows rained, as here and everywhere
+He rode the mellay, lord of the ringing lists,
+And all the plain,--brand, mace, and shaft, and shield--
+Shocked, like an iron-clanging anvil banged
+With hammers; till I thought, can this be he
+From Gama's dwarfish loins? if this be so,
+The mother makes us most--and in my dream
+I glanced aside, and saw the palace-front
+Alive with fluttering scarfs and ladies' eyes,
+And highest, among the statues, statuelike,
+Between a cymballed Miriam and a Jael,
+With Psyche's babe, was Ida watching us,
+A single band of gold about her hair,
+Like a Saint's glory up in heaven: but she
+No saint--inexorable--no tenderness--
+Too hard, too cruel: yet she sees me fight,
+Yea, let her see me fall! and with that I drave
+Among the thickest and bore down a Prince,
+And Cyril, one. Yea, let me make my dream
+All that I would. But that large-moulded man,
+His visage all agrin as at a wake,
+Made at me through the press, and, staggering back
+With stroke on stroke the horse and horseman, came
+As comes a pillar of electric cloud,
+Flaying the roofs and sucking up the drains,
+And shadowing down the champaign till it strikes
+On a wood, and takes, and breaks, and cracks, and splits,
+And twists the grain with such a roar that Earth
+Reels, and the herdsmen cry; for everything
+Game way before him: only Florian, he
+That loved me closer than his own right eye,
+Thrust in between; but Arac rode him down:
+And Cyril seeing it, pushed against the Prince,
+With Psyche's colour round his helmet, tough,
+Strong, supple, sinew-corded, apt at arms;
+But tougher, heavier, stronger, he that smote
+And threw him: last I spurred; I felt my veins
+Stretch with fierce heat; a moment hand to hand,
+And sword to sword, and horse to horse we hung,
+Till I struck out and shouted; the blade glanced,
+I did but shear a feather, and dream and truth
+Flowed from me; darkness closed me; and I fell.
+
+
+Home they brought her warrior dead:
+ She nor swooned, nor uttered cry:
+All her maidens, watching, said,
+ 'She must weep or she will die.'
+
+Then they praised him, soft and low,
+ Called him worthy to be loved,
+Truest friend and noblest foe;
+ Yet she neither spoke nor moved.
+
+Stole a maiden from her place,
+ Lightly to the warrior stept,
+Took the face-cloth from the face;
+ Yet she neither moved nor wept.
+
+Rose a nurse of ninety years,
+ Set his child upon her knee--
+Like summer tempest came her tears--
+ 'Sweet my child, I live for thee.'
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+
+My dream had never died or lived again.
+As in some mystic middle state I lay;
+Seeing I saw not, hearing not I heard:
+Though, if I saw not, yet they told me all
+So often that I speak as having seen.
+
+ For so it seemed, or so they said to me,
+That all things grew more tragic and more strange;
+That when our side was vanquished and my cause
+For ever lost, there went up a great cry,
+The Prince is slain. My father heard and ran
+In on the lists, and there unlaced my casque
+And grovelled on my body, and after him
+Came Psyche, sorrowing for Aglaïa.
+ But high upon the palace Ida stood
+With Psyche's babe in arm: there on the roofs
+Like that great dame of Lapidoth she sang.
+
+
+ 'Our enemies have fallen, have fallen: the seed,
+The little seed they laughed at in the dark,
+Has risen and cleft the soil, and grown a bulk
+Of spanless girth, that lays on every side
+A thousand arms and rushes to the Sun.
+
+ 'Our enemies have fallen, have fallen: they came;
+The leaves were wet with women's tears: they heard
+A noise of songs they would not understand:
+They marked it with the red cross to the fall,
+And would have strown it, and are fallen themselves.
+
+ 'Our enemies have fallen, have fallen: they came,
+The woodmen with their axes: lo the tree!
+But we will make it faggots for the hearth,
+And shape it plank and beam for roof and floor,
+And boats and bridges for the use of men.
+
+ 'Our enemies have fallen, have fallen: they struck;
+With their own blows they hurt themselves, nor knew
+There dwelt an iron nature in the grain:
+The glittering axe was broken in their arms,
+Their arms were shattered to the shoulder blade.
+
+ 'Our enemies have fallen, but this shall grow
+A night of Summer from the heat, a breadth
+Of Autumn, dropping fruits of power: and rolled
+With music in the growing breeze of Time,
+The tops shall strike from star to star, the fangs
+Shall move the stony bases of the world.
+
+ 'And now, O maids, behold our sanctuary
+Is violate, our laws broken: fear we not
+To break them more in their behoof, whose arms
+Championed our cause and won it with a day
+Blanched in our annals, and perpetual feast,
+When dames and heroines of the golden year
+Shall strip a hundred hollows bare of Spring,
+To rain an April of ovation round
+Their statues, borne aloft, the three: but come,
+We will be liberal, since our rights are won.
+Let them not lie in the tents with coarse mankind,
+Ill nurses; but descend, and proffer these
+The brethren of our blood and cause, that there
+Lie bruised and maimed, the tender ministries
+Of female hands and hospitality.'
+
+ She spoke, and with the babe yet in her arms,
+Descending, burst the great bronze valves, and led
+A hundred maids in train across the Park.
+Some cowled, and some bare-headed, on they came,
+Their feet in flowers, her loveliest: by them went
+The enamoured air sighing, and on their curls
+From the high tree the blossom wavering fell,
+And over them the tremulous isles of light
+Slided, they moving under shade: but Blanche
+At distance followed: so they came: anon
+Through open field into the lists they wound
+Timorously; and as the leader of the herd
+That holds a stately fretwork to the Sun,
+And followed up by a hundred airy does,
+Steps with a tender foot, light as on air,
+The lovely, lordly creature floated on
+To where her wounded brethren lay; there stayed;
+Knelt on one knee,--the child on one,--and prest
+Their hands, and called them dear deliverers,
+And happy warriors, and immortal names,
+And said 'You shall not lie in the tents but here,
+And nursed by those for whom you fought, and served
+With female hands and hospitality.'
+
+ Then, whether moved by this, or was it chance,
+She past my way. Up started from my side
+The old lion, glaring with his whelpless eye,
+Silent; but when she saw me lying stark,
+Dishelmed and mute, and motionlessly pale,
+Cold even to her, she sighed; and when she saw
+The haggard father's face and reverend beard
+Of grisly twine, all dabbled with the blood
+Of his own son, shuddered, a twitch of pain
+Tortured her mouth, and o'er her forehead past
+A shadow, and her hue changed, and she said:
+'He saved my life: my brother slew him for it.'
+No more: at which the king in bitter scorn
+Drew from my neck the painting and the tress,
+And held them up: she saw them, and a day
+Rose from the distance on her memory,
+When the good Queen, her mother, shore the tress
+With kisses, ere the days of Lady Blanche:
+And then once more she looked at my pale face:
+Till understanding all the foolish work
+Of Fancy, and the bitter close of all,
+Her iron will was broken in her mind;
+Her noble heart was molten in her breast;
+She bowed, she set the child on the earth; she laid
+A feeling finger on my brows, and presently
+'O Sire,' she said, 'he lives: he is not dead:
+O let me have him with my brethren here
+In our own palace: we will tend on him
+Like one of these; if so, by any means,
+To lighten this great clog of thanks, that make
+Our progress falter to the woman's goal.'
+
+ She said: but at the happy word 'he lives'
+My father stooped, re-fathered o'er my wounds.
+So those two foes above my fallen life,
+With brow to brow like night and evening mixt
+Their dark and gray, while Psyche ever stole
+A little nearer, till the babe that by us,
+Half-lapt in glowing gauze and golden brede,
+Lay like a new-fallen meteor on the grass,
+Uncared for, spied its mother and began
+A blind and babbling laughter, and to dance
+Its body, and reach its fatling innocent arms
+And lazy lingering fingers. She the appeal
+Brooked not, but clamouring out 'Mine--mine--not yours,
+It is not yours, but mine: give me the child'
+Ceased all on tremble: piteous was the cry:
+So stood the unhappy mother open-mouthed,
+And turned each face her way: wan was her cheek
+With hollow watch, her blooming mantle torn,
+Red grief and mother's hunger in her eye,
+And down dead-heavy sank her curls, and half
+The sacred mother's bosom, panting, burst
+The laces toward her babe; but she nor cared
+Nor knew it, clamouring on, till Ida heard,
+Looked up, and rising slowly from me, stood
+Erect and silent, striking with her glance
+The mother, me, the child; but he that lay
+Beside us, Cyril, battered as he was,
+Trailed himself up on one knee: then he drew
+Her robe to meet his lips, and down she looked
+At the armed man sideways, pitying as it seemed,
+Or self-involved; but when she learnt his face,
+Remembering his ill-omened song, arose
+Once more through all her height, and o'er him grew
+Tall as a figure lengthened on the sand
+When the tide ebbs in sunshine, and he said:
+
+ 'O fair and strong and terrible! Lioness
+That with your long locks play the Lion's mane!
+But Love and Nature, these are two more terrible
+And stronger. See, your foot is on our necks,
+We vanquished, you the Victor of your will.
+What would you more? Give her the child! remain
+Orbed in your isolation: he is dead,
+Or all as dead: henceforth we let you be:
+Win you the hearts of women; and beware
+Lest, where you seek the common love of these,
+The common hate with the revolving wheel
+Should drag you down, and some great Nemesis
+Break from a darkened future, crowned with fire,
+And tread you out for ever: but howso'er
+Fixed in yourself, never in your own arms
+To hold your own, deny not hers to her,
+Give her the child! O if, I say, you keep
+One pulse that beats true woman, if you loved
+The breast that fed or arm that dandled you,
+Or own one port of sense not flint to prayer,
+Give her the child! or if you scorn to lay it,
+Yourself, in hands so lately claspt with yours,
+Or speak to her, your dearest, her one fault,
+The tenderness, not yours, that could not kill,
+Give ~me~ it: ~I~ will give it her.
+ He said:
+At first her eye with slow dilation rolled
+Dry flame, she listening; after sank and sank
+And, into mournful twilight mellowing, dwelt
+Full on the child; she took it: 'Pretty bud!
+Lily of the vale! half opened bell of the woods!
+Sole comfort of my dark hour, when a world
+Of traitorous friend and broken system made
+No purple in the distance, mystery,
+Pledge of a love not to be mine, farewell;
+These men are hard upon us as of old,
+We two must part: and yet how fain was I
+To dream thy cause embraced in mine, to think
+I might be something to thee, when I felt
+Thy helpless warmth about my barren breast
+In the dead prime: but may thy mother prove
+As true to thee as false, false, false to me!
+And, if thou needs must needs bear the yoke, I wish it
+Gentle as freedom'--here she kissed it: then--
+'All good go with thee! take it Sir,' and so
+Laid the soft babe in his hard-mailèd hands,
+Who turned half-round to Psyche as she sprang
+To meet it, with an eye that swum in thanks;
+Then felt it sound and whole from head to foot,
+And hugged and never hugged it close enough,
+And in her hunger mouthed and mumbled it,
+And hid her bosom with it; after that
+Put on more calm and added suppliantly:
+
+ 'We two were friends: I go to mine own land
+For ever: find some other: as for me
+I scarce am fit for your great plans: yet speak to me,
+Say one soft word and let me part forgiven.'
+
+ But Ida spoke not, rapt upon the child.
+Then Arac. 'Ida--'sdeath! you blame the man;
+You wrong yourselves--the woman is so hard
+Upon the woman. Come, a grace to me!
+I am your warrior: I and mine have fought
+Your battle: kiss her; take her hand, she weeps:
+'Sdeath! I would sooner fight thrice o'er than see it.'
+
+ But Ida spoke not, gazing on the ground,
+And reddening in the furrows of his chin,
+And moved beyond his custom, Gama said:
+
+ 'I've heard that there is iron in the blood,
+And I believe it. Not one word? not one?
+Whence drew you this steel temper? not from me,
+Not from your mother, now a saint with saints.
+She said you had a heart--I heard her say it--
+"Our Ida has a heart"--just ere she died--
+"But see that some on with authority
+Be near her still" and I--I sought for one--
+All people said she had authority--
+The Lady Blanche: much profit! Not one word;
+No! though your father sues: see how you stand
+Stiff as Lot's wife, and all the good knights maimed,
+I trust that there is no one hurt to death,
+For our wild whim: and was it then for this,
+Was it for this we gave our palace up,
+Where we withdrew from summer heats and state,
+And had our wine and chess beneath the planes,
+And many a pleasant hour with her that's gone,
+Ere you were born to vex us? Is it kind?
+Speak to her I say: is this not she of whom,
+When first she came, all flushed you said to me
+Now had you got a friend of your own age,
+Now could you share your thought; now should men see
+Two women faster welded in one love
+Than pairs of wedlock; she you walked with, she
+You talked with, whole nights long, up in the tower,
+Of sine and arc, spheroïd and azimuth,
+And right ascension, Heaven knows what; and now
+A word, but one, one little kindly word,
+Not one to spare her: out upon you, flint!
+You love nor her, nor me, nor any; nay,
+You shame your mother's judgment too. Not one?
+You will not? well--no heart have you, or such
+As fancies like the vermin in a nut
+Have fretted all to dust and bitterness.'
+So said the small king moved beyond his wont.
+
+ But Ida stood nor spoke, drained of her force
+By many a varying influence and so long.
+Down through her limbs a drooping languor wept:
+Her head a little bent; and on her mouth
+A doubtful smile dwelt like a clouded moon
+In a still water: then brake out my sire,
+Lifted his grim head from my wounds. 'O you,
+Woman, whom we thought woman even now,
+And were half fooled to let you tend our son,
+Because he might have wished it--but we see,
+The accomplice of your madness unforgiven,
+And think that you might mix his draught with death,
+When your skies change again: the rougher hand
+Is safer: on to the tents: take up the Prince.'
+
+ He rose, and while each ear was pricked to attend
+A tempest, through the cloud that dimmed her broke
+A genial warmth and light once more, and shone
+Through glittering drops on her sad friend.
+ 'Come hither.
+O Psyche,' she cried out, 'embrace me, come,
+Quick while I melt; make reconcilement sure
+With one that cannot keep her mind an hour:
+Come to the hollow hear they slander so!
+Kiss and be friends, like children being chid!
+~I~ seem no more: ~I~ want forgiveness too:
+I should have had to do with none but maids,
+That have no links with men. Ah false but dear,
+Dear traitor, too much loved, why?--why?--Yet see,
+Before these kings we embrace you yet once more
+With all forgiveness, all oblivion,
+And trust, not love, you less.
+ And now, O sire,
+Grant me your son, to nurse, to wait upon him,
+Like mine own brother. For my debt to him,
+This nightmare weight of gratitude, I know it;
+Taunt me no more: yourself and yours shall have
+Free adit; we will scatter all our maids
+Till happier times each to her proper hearth:
+What use to keep them here--now? grant my prayer.
+Help, father, brother, help; speak to the king:
+Thaw this male nature to some touch of that
+Which kills me with myself, and drags me down
+From my fixt height to mob me up with all
+The soft and milky rabble of womankind,
+Poor weakling even as they are.'
+ Passionate tears
+Followed: the king replied not: Cyril said:
+'Your brother, Lady,--Florian,--ask for him
+Of your great head--for he is wounded too--
+That you may tend upon him with the prince.'
+'Ay so,' said Ida with a bitter smile,
+'Our laws are broken: let him enter too.'
+Then Violet, she that sang the mournful song,
+And had a cousin tumbled on the plain,
+Petitioned too for him. 'Ay so,' she said,
+'I stagger in the stream: I cannot keep
+My heart an eddy from the brawling hour:
+We break our laws with ease, but let it be.'
+'Ay so?' said Blanche: 'Amazed am I to her
+Your Highness: but your Highness breaks with ease
+The law your Highness did not make: 'twas I.
+I had been wedded wife, I knew mankind,
+And blocked them out; but these men came to woo
+Your Highness--verily I think to win.'
+
+ So she, and turned askance a wintry eye:
+But Ida with a voice, that like a bell
+Tolled by an earthquake in a trembling tower,
+Rang ruin, answered full of grief and scorn.
+
+ 'Fling our doors wide! all, all, not one, but all,
+Not only he, but by my mother's soul,
+Whatever man lies wounded, friend or foe,
+Shall enter, if he will. Let our girls flit,
+Till the storm die! but had you stood by us,
+The roar that breaks the Pharos from his base
+Had left us rock. She fain would sting us too,
+But shall not. Pass, and mingle with your likes.
+We brook no further insult but are gone.'
+ She turned; the very nape of her white neck
+Was rosed with indignation: but the Prince
+Her brother came; the king her father charmed
+Her wounded soul with words: nor did mine own
+Refuse her proffer, lastly gave his hand.
+
+ Then us they lifted up, dead weights, and bare
+Straight to the doors: to them the doors gave way
+Groaning, and in the Vestal entry shrieked
+The virgin marble under iron heels:
+And on they moved and gained the hall, and there
+Rested: but great the crush was, and each base,
+To left and right, of those tall columns drowned
+In silken fluctuation and the swarm
+Of female whisperers: at the further end
+Was Ida by the throne, the two great cats
+Close by her, like supporters on a shield,
+Bow-backed with fear: but in the centre stood
+The common men with rolling eyes; amazed
+They glared upon the women, and aghast
+The women stared at these, all silent, save
+When armour clashed or jingled, while the day,
+Descending, struck athwart the hall, and shot
+A flying splendour out of brass and steel,
+That o'er the statues leapt from head to head,
+Now fired an angry Pallas on the helm,
+Now set a wrathful Dian's moon on flame,
+And now and then an echo started up,
+And shuddering fled from room to room, and died
+Of fright in far apartments.
+ Then the voice
+Of Ida sounded, issuing ordinance:
+And me they bore up the broad stairs, and through
+The long-laid galleries past a hundred doors
+To one deep chamber shut from sound, and due
+To languid limbs and sickness; left me in it;
+And others otherwhere they laid; and all
+That afternoon a sound arose of hoof
+And chariot, many a maiden passing home
+Till happier times; but some were left of those
+Held sagest, and the great lords out and in,
+From those two hosts that lay beside the walls,
+Walked at their will, and everything was changed.
+
+
+Ask me no more: the moon may draw the sea;
+ The cloud may stoop from heaven and take the shape
+ With fold to fold, of mountain or of cape;
+But O too fond, when have I answered thee?
+ Ask me no more.
+
+Ask me no more: what answer should I give?
+ I love not hollow cheek or faded eye:
+ Yet, O my friend, I will not have thee die!
+Ask me no more, lest I should bid thee live;
+ Ask me no more.
+
+Ask me no more: thy fate and mine are sealed:
+ I strove against the stream and all in vain:
+ Let the great river take me to the main:
+No more, dear love, for at a touch I yield;
+ Ask me no more.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+
+So was their sanctuary violated,
+So their fair college turned to hospital;
+At first with all confusion: by and by
+Sweet order lived again with other laws:
+A kindlier influence reigned; and everywhere
+Low voices with the ministering hand
+Hung round the sick: the maidens came, they talked,
+They sang, they read: till she not fair began
+To gather light, and she that was, became
+Her former beauty treble; and to and fro
+With books, with flowers, with Angel offices,
+Like creatures native unto gracious act,
+And in their own clear element, they moved.
+
+ But sadness on the soul of Ida fell,
+And hatred of her weakness, blent with shame.
+Old studies failed; seldom she spoke: but oft
+Clomb to the roofs, and gazed alone for hours
+On that disastrous leaguer, swarms of men
+Darkening her female field: void was her use,
+And she as one that climbs a peak to gaze
+O'er land and main, and sees a great black cloud
+Drag inward from the deeps, a wall of night,
+Blot out the slope of sea from verge to shore,
+And suck the blinding splendour from the sand,
+And quenching lake by lake and tarn by tarn
+Expunge the world: so fared she gazing there;
+So blackened all her world in secret, blank
+And waste it seemed and vain; till down she came,
+And found fair peace once more among the sick.
+
+ And twilight dawned; and morn by morn the lark
+Shot up and shrilled in flickering gyres, but I
+Lay silent in the muffled cage of life:
+And twilight gloomed; and broader-grown the bowers
+Drew the great night into themselves, and Heaven,
+Star after Star, arose and fell; but I,
+Deeper than those weird doubts could reach me, lay
+Quite sundered from the moving Universe,
+Nor knew what eye was on me, nor the hand
+That nursed me, more than infants in their sleep.
+
+ But Psyche tended Florian: with her oft,
+Melissa came; for Blanche had gone, but left
+Her child among us, willing she should keep
+Court-favour: here and there the small bright head,
+A light of healing, glanced about the couch,
+Or through the parted silks the tender face
+Peeped, shining in upon the wounded man
+With blush and smile, a medicine in themselves
+To wile the length from languorous hours, and draw
+The sting from pain; nor seemed it strange that soon
+He rose up whole, and those fair charities
+Joined at her side; nor stranger seemed that hears
+So gentle, so employed, should close in love,
+Than when two dewdrops on the petals shake
+To the same sweet air, and tremble deeper down,
+And slip at once all-fragrant into one.
+
+ Less prosperously the second suit obtained
+At first with Psyche. Not though Blanche had sworn
+That after that dark night among the fields
+She needs must wed him for her own good name;
+ Not though he built upon the babe restored;
+Nor though she liked him, yielded she, but feared
+To incense the Head once more; till on a day
+When Cyril pleaded, Ida came behind
+Seen but of Psyche: on her foot she hung
+A moment, and she heard, at which her face
+A little flushed, and she past on; but each
+Assumed from thence a half-consent involved
+In stillness, plighted troth, and were at peace.
+
+ Nor only these: Love in the sacred halls
+Held carnival at will, and flying struck
+With showers of random sweet on maid and man.
+Nor did her father cease to press my claim,
+Nor did mine own, now reconciled; nor yet
+Did those twin-brothers, risen again and whole;
+Nor Arac, satiate with his victory.
+
+ But I lay still, and with me oft she sat:
+Then came a change; for sometimes I would catch
+Her hand in wild delirium, gripe it hard,
+And fling it like a viper off, and shriek
+'You are not Ida;' clasp it once again,
+And call her Ida, though I knew her not,
+And call her sweet, as if in irony,
+And call her hard and cold which seemed a truth:
+And still she feared that I should lose my mind,
+And often she believed that I should die:
+Till out of long frustration of her care,
+And pensive tendance in the all-weary noons,
+And watches in the dead, the dark, when clocks
+Throbbed thunder through the palace floors, or called
+On flying Time from all their silver tongues--
+And out of memories of her kindlier days,
+And sidelong glances at my father's grief,
+And at the happy lovers heart in heart--
+And out of hauntings of my spoken love,
+And lonely listenings to my muttered dream,
+And often feeling of the helpless hands,
+And wordless broodings on the wasted cheek--
+From all a closer interest flourished up,
+Tenderness touch by touch, and last, to these,
+Love, like an Alpine harebell hung with tears
+By some cold morning glacier; frail at first
+And feeble, all unconscious of itself,
+But such as gathered colour day by day.
+
+Last I woke sane, but well-nigh close to death
+For weakness: it was evening: silent light
+Slept on the painted walls, wherein were wrought
+Two grand designs; for on one side arose
+The women up in wild revolt, and stormed
+At the Oppian Law. Titanic shapes, they crammed
+The forum, and half-crushed among the rest
+A dwarf-like Cato cowered. On the other side
+Hortensia spoke against the tax; behind,
+A train of dames: by axe and eagle sat,
+With all their foreheads drawn in Roman scowls,
+And half the wolf's-milk curdled in their veins,
+The fierce triumvirs; and before them paused
+Hortensia pleading: angry was her face.
+
+ I saw the forms: I knew not where I was:
+They did but look like hollow shows; nor more
+Sweet Ida: palm to palm she sat: the dew
+Dwelt in her eyes, and softer all her shape
+And rounder seemed: I moved: I sighed: a touch
+Came round my wrist, and tears upon my hand:
+Then all for languor and self-pity ran
+Mine down my face, and with what life I had,
+And like a flower that cannot all unfold,
+So drenched it is with tempest, to the sun,
+Yet, as it may, turns toward him, I on her
+Fixt my faint eyes, and uttered whisperingly:
+
+ 'If you be, what I think you, some sweet dream,
+I would but ask you to fulfil yourself:
+But if you be that Ida whom I knew,
+I ask you nothing: only, if a dream,
+Sweet dream, be perfect. I shall die tonight.
+Stoop down and seem to kiss me ere I die.'
+
+ I could no more, but lay like one in trance,
+That hears his burial talked of by his friends,
+And cannot speak, nor move, nor make one sign,
+But lies and dreads his doom. She turned; she paused;
+She stooped; and out of languor leapt a cry;
+Leapt fiery Passion from the brinks of death;
+And I believed that in the living world
+My spirit closed with Ida's at the lips;
+Till back I fell, and from mine arms she rose
+Glowing all over noble shame; and all
+Her falser self slipt from her like a robe,
+And left her woman, lovelier in her mood
+Than in her mould that other, when she came
+From barren deeps to conquer all with love;
+And down the streaming crystal dropt; and she
+Far-fleeted by the purple island-sides,
+Naked, a double light in air and wave,
+To meet her Graces, where they decked her out
+For worship without end; nor end of mine,
+Stateliest, for thee! but mute she glided forth,
+Nor glanced behind her, and I sank and slept,
+Filled through and through with Love, a happy sleep.
+
+ Deep in the night I woke: she, near me, held
+A volume of the Poets of her land:
+There to herself, all in low tones, she read.
+
+
+ 'Now sleeps the crimson petal, now the white;
+Nor waves the cypress in the palace walk;
+Nor winks the gold fin in the porphyry font:
+The fire-fly wakens: wake thou with me.
+
+ Now droops the milkwhite peacock like a ghost,
+And like a ghost she glimmers on to me.
+
+ Now lies the Earth all Danaë to the stars,
+And all thy heart lies open unto me.
+
+ Now lies the silent meteor on, and leaves
+A shining furrow, as thy thoughts in me.
+
+ Now folds the lily all her sweetness up,
+And slips into the bosom of the lake:
+So fold thyself, my dearest, thou, and slip
+Into my bosom and be lost in me.'
+
+
+I heard her turn the page; she found a small
+Sweet Idyl, and once more, as low, she read:
+
+
+ 'Come down, O maid, from yonder mountain height:
+What pleasure lives in height (the shepherd sang)
+In height and cold, the splendour of the hills?
+But cease to move so near the Heavens, and cease
+To glide a sunbeam by the blasted Pine,
+To sit a star upon the sparkling spire;
+And come, for love is of the valley, come,
+For love is of the valley, come thou down
+And find him; by the happy threshold, he,
+Or hand in hand with Plenty in the maize,
+Or red with spirted purple of the vats,
+Or foxlike in the vine; nor cares to walk
+With Death and Morning on the silver horns,
+Nor wilt thou snare him in the white ravine,
+Nor find him dropt upon the firths of ice,
+That huddling slant in furrow-cloven falls
+To roll the torrent out of dusky doors:
+But follow; let the torrent dance thee down
+To find him in the valley; let the wild
+Lean-headed Eagles yelp alone, and leave
+The monstrous ledges there to slope, and spill
+Their thousand wreaths of dangling water-smoke,
+That like a broken purpose waste in air:
+So waste not thou; but come; for all the vales
+Await thee; azure pillars of the hearth
+Arise to thee; the children call, and I
+Thy shepherd pipe, and sweet is every sound,
+Sweeter thy voice, but every sound is sweet;
+Myriads of rivulets hurrying through the lawn,
+The moan of doves in immemorial elms,
+And murmuring of innumerable bees.'
+
+
+So she low-toned; while with shut eyes I lay
+Listening; then looked. Pale was the perfect face;
+The bosom with long sighs laboured; and meek
+Seemed the full lips, and mild the luminous eyes,
+And the voice trembled and the hand. She said
+Brokenly, that she knew it, she had failed
+In sweet humility; had failed in all;
+That all her labour was but as a block
+Left in the quarry; but she still were loth,
+She still were loth to yield herself to one
+That wholly scorned to help their equal rights
+Against the sons of men, and barbarous laws.
+She prayed me not to judge their cause from her
+That wronged it, sought far less for truth than power
+In knowledge: something wild within her breast,
+A greater than all knowledge, beat her down.
+And she had nursed me there from week to week:
+Much had she learnt in little time. In part
+It was ill counsel had misled the girl
+To vex true hearts: yet was she but a girl--
+'Ah fool, and made myself a Queen of farce!
+When comes another such? never, I think,
+Till the Sun drop, dead, from the signs.'
+ Her voice
+choked, and her forehead sank upon her hands,
+And her great heart through all the faultful Past
+Went sorrowing in a pause I dared not break;
+Till notice of a change in the dark world
+Was lispt about the acacias, and a bird,
+That early woke to feed her little ones,
+Sent from a dewy breast a cry for light:
+She moved, and at her feet the volume fell.
+
+ 'Blame not thyself too much,' I said, 'nor blame
+Too much the sons of men and barbarous laws;
+These were the rough ways of the world till now.
+Henceforth thou hast a helper, me, that know
+The woman's cause is man's: they rise or sink
+Together, dwarfed or godlike, bond or free:
+For she that out of Lethe scales with man
+The shining steps of Nature, shares with man
+His nights, his days, moves with him to one goal,
+Stays all the fair young planet in her hands--
+If she be small, slight-natured, miserable,
+How shall men grow? but work no more alone!
+Our place is much: as far as in us lies
+We two will serve them both in aiding her--
+Will clear away the parasitic forms
+That seem to keep her up but drag her down--
+Will leave her space to burgeon out of all
+Within her--let her make herself her own
+To give or keep, to live and learn and be
+All that not harms distinctive womanhood.
+For woman is not undevelopt man,
+But diverse: could we make her as the man,
+Sweet Love were slain: his dearest bond is this,
+Not like to like, but like in difference.
+Yet in the long years liker must they grow;
+The man be more of woman, she of man;
+He gain in sweetness and in moral height,
+Nor lose the wrestling thews that throw the world;
+She mental breadth, nor fail in childward care,
+Nor lose the childlike in the larger mind;
+Till at the last she set herself to man,
+Like perfect music unto noble words;
+And so these twain, upon the skirts of Time,
+Sit side by side, full-summed in all their powers,
+Dispensing harvest, sowing the To-be,
+Self-reverent each and reverencing each,
+Distinct in individualities,
+But like each other even as those who love.
+Then comes the statelier Eden back to men:
+Then reign the world's great bridals, chaste and calm:
+Then springs the crowning race of humankind.
+May these things be!'
+ Sighing she spoke 'I fear
+They will not.'
+ 'Dear, but let us type them now
+In our own lives, and this proud watchword rest
+Of equal; seeing either sex alone
+Is half itself, and in true marriage lies
+Nor equal, nor unequal: each fulfils
+Defect in each, and always thought in thought,
+Purpose in purpose, will in will, they grow,
+The single pure and perfect animal,
+The two-celled heart beating, with one full stroke,
+Life.'
+ And again sighing she spoke: 'A dream
+That once was mind! what woman taught you this?'
+
+ 'Alone,' I said, 'from earlier than I know,
+Immersed in rich foreshadowings of the world,
+I loved the woman: he, that doth not, lives
+A drowning life, besotted in sweet self,
+Or pines in sad experience worse than death,
+Or keeps his winged affections clipt with crime:
+Yet was there one through whom I loved her, one
+Not learnèd, save in gracious household ways,
+Not perfect, nay, but full of tender wants,
+No Angel, but a dearer being, all dipt
+In Angel instincts, breathing Paradise,
+Interpreter between the Gods and men,
+Who looked all native to her place, and yet
+On tiptoe seemed to touch upon a sphere
+Too gross to tread, and all male minds perforce
+Swayed to her from their orbits as they moved,
+And girdled her with music. Happy he
+With such a mother! faith in womankind
+Beats with his blood, and trust in all things high
+Comes easy to him, and though he trip and fall
+He shall not blind his soul with clay.'
+ 'But I,'
+Said Ida, tremulously, 'so all unlike--
+It seems you love to cheat yourself with words:
+This mother is your model. I have heard
+of your strange doubts: they well might be: I seem
+A mockery to my own self. Never, Prince;
+You cannot love me.'
+ 'Nay but thee' I said
+'From yearlong poring on thy pictured eyes,
+Ere seen I loved, and loved thee seen, and saw
+Thee woman through the crust of iron moods
+That masked thee from men's reverence up, and forced
+Sweet love on pranks of saucy boyhood: now,
+Given back to life, to life indeed, through thee,
+Indeed I love: the new day comes, the light
+Dearer for night, as dearer thou for faults
+Lived over: lift thine eyes; my doubts are dead,
+My haunting sense of hollow shows: the change,
+This truthful change in thee has killed it. Dear,
+Look up, and let thy nature strike on mine,
+Like yonder morning on the blind half-world;
+Approach and fear not; breathe upon my brows;
+In that fine air I tremble, all the past
+Melts mist-like into this bright hour, and this
+Is morn to more, and all the rich to-come
+Reels, as the golden Autumn woodland reels
+Athwart the smoke of burning weeds. Forgive me,
+I waste my heart in signs: let be. My bride,
+My wife, my life. O we will walk this world,
+Yoked in all exercise of noble end,
+And so through those dark gates across the wild
+That no man knows. Indeed I love thee: come,
+Yield thyself up: my hopes and thine are one:
+Accomplish thou my manhood and thyself;
+Lay thy sweet hands in mine and trust to me.'
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION
+
+
+
+So closed our tale, of which I give you all
+The random scheme as wildly as it rose:
+The words are mostly mine; for when we ceased
+There came a minute's pause, and Walter said,
+'I wish she had not yielded!' then to me,
+'What, if you drest it up poetically?'
+So prayed the men, the women: I gave assent:
+Yet how to bind the scattered scheme of seven
+Together in one sheaf? What style could suit?
+The men required that I should give throughout
+The sort of mock-heroic gigantesque,
+With which we bantered little Lilia first:
+The women--and perhaps they felt their power,
+For something in the ballads which they sang,
+Or in their silent influence as they sat,
+Had ever seemed to wrestle with burlesque,
+And drove us, last, to quite a solemn close--
+They hated banter, wished for something real,
+A gallant fight, a noble princess--why
+Not make her true-heroic--true-sublime?
+Or all, they said, as earnest as the close?
+Which yet with such a framework scarce could be.
+Then rose a little feud betwixt the two,
+Betwixt the mockers and the realists:
+And I, betwixt them both, to please them both,
+And yet to give the story as it rose,
+I moved as in a strange diagonal,
+And maybe neither pleased myself nor them.
+
+ But Lilia pleased me, for she took no part
+In our dispute: the sequel of the tale
+Had touched her; and she sat, she plucked the grass,
+She flung it from her, thinking: last, she fixt
+A showery glance upon her aunt, and said,
+'You--tell us what we are' who might have told,
+For she was crammed with theories out of books,
+But that there rose a shout: the gates were closed
+At sunset, and the crowd were swarming now,
+To take their leave, about the garden rails.
+
+ So I and some went out to these: we climbed
+The slope to Vivian-place, and turning saw
+The happy valleys, half in light, and half
+Far-shadowing from the west, a land of peace;
+Gray halls alone among their massive groves;
+Trim hamlets; here and there a rustic tower
+Half-lost in belts of hop and breadths of wheat;
+The shimmering glimpses of a stream; the seas;
+A red sail, or a white; and far beyond,
+Imagined more than seen, the skirts of France.
+
+ 'Look there, a garden!' said my college friend,
+The Tory member's elder son, 'and there!
+God bless the narrow sea which keeps her off,
+And keeps our Britain, whole within herself,
+A nation yet, the rulers and the ruled--
+Some sense of duty, something of a faith,
+Some reverence for the laws ourselves have made,
+Some patient force to change them when we will,
+Some civic manhood firm against the crowd--
+But yonder, whiff! there comes a sudden heat,
+The gravest citizen seems to lose his head,
+The king is scared, the soldier will not fight,
+The little boys begin to shoot and stab,
+A kingdom topples over with a shriek
+Like an old woman, and down rolls the world
+In mock heroics stranger than our own;
+Revolts, republics, revolutions, most
+No graver than a schoolboys' barring out;
+Too comic for the serious things they are,
+Too solemn for the comic touches in them,
+Like our wild Princess with as wise a dream
+As some of theirs--God bless the narrow seas!
+I wish they were a whole Atlantic broad.'
+
+ 'Have patience,' I replied, 'ourselves are full
+Of social wrong; and maybe wildest dreams
+Are but the needful preludes of the truth:
+For me, the genial day, the happy crowd,
+The sport half-science, fill me with a faith.
+This fine old world of ours is but a child
+Yet in the go-cart. Patience! Give it time
+To learn its limbs: there is a hand that guides.'
+
+ In such discourse we gained the garden rails,
+And there we saw Sir Walter where he stood,
+Before a tower of crimson holly-hoaks,
+Among six boys, head under head, and looked
+No little lily-handed Baronet he,
+A great broad-shouldered genial Englishman,
+A lord of fat prize-oxen and of sheep,
+A raiser of huge melons and of pine,
+A patron of some thirty charities,
+A pamphleteer on guano and on grain,
+A quarter-sessions chairman, abler none;
+Fair-haired and redder than a windy morn;
+Now shaking hands with him, now him, of those
+That stood the nearest--now addressed to speech--
+Who spoke few words and pithy, such as closed
+Welcome, farewell, and welcome for the year
+To follow: a shout rose again, and made
+The long line of the approaching rookery swerve
+From the elms, and shook the branches of the deer
+From slope to slope through distant ferns, and rang
+Beyond the bourn of sunset; O, a shout
+More joyful than the city-roar that hails
+Premier or king! Why should not these great Sirs
+Give up their parks some dozen times a year
+To let the people breathe? So thrice they cried,
+I likewise, and in groups they streamed away.
+
+ But we went back to the Abbey, and sat on,
+So much the gathering darkness charmed: we sat
+But spoke not, rapt in nameless reverie,
+Perchance upon the future man: the walls
+Blackened about us, bats wheeled, and owls whooped,
+And gradually the powers of the night,
+That range above the region of the wind,
+Deepening the courts of twilight broke them up
+Through all the silent spaces of the worlds,
+Beyond all thought into the Heaven of Heavens.
+
+ Last little Lilia, rising quietly,
+Disrobed the glimmering statue of Sir Ralph
+From those rich silks, and home well-pleased we went.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Princess, by Tennyson
+
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