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Elizabeth Barrett Browning - Aurora Leigh: Book OneElizabeth Barrett Browning - Aurora Leigh: Book One
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Of writing many books there is no end; And I who have written much in prose and verse For others` uses, will write now for mine,— Will write my story for my better self, As when you paint your portrait for a friend, Who keeps it in a drawer and looks at it Long after he has ceased to love you, just To hold together what he was and is. I, writing thus, am still what men call young; I have not so far left the coasts of life To travel inland, that I cannot hear That murmur of the outer Infinite Which unweaned babies smile at in their sleep When wondered at for smiling; not so far, But still I catch my mother at her post Beside the nursery door, with finger up, "Hush, hush—here`s too much noise!" while her sweet eyes Leap forward, taking part against her word In the child`s riot. Still I sit and feel My father`s slow hand, when she had left us both, Stroke out my childish curls across his knee, And hear Assunta`s daily jest (she knew He liked it better than a better jest) Inquire how many golden scudi went To make such ringlets. O my father`s hand, Stroke heavily, heavily the poor hair down, Draw, press the child`s head closer to thy knee! I`m still too young, too young, to sit alone. I write. My mother was a Florentine, Whose rare blue eyes were shut from seeing me When scarcely I was four years old, my life A poor spark snatched up from a failing lamp Which went out therefore. She was weak and frail; She could not bear the joy of giving life, The mother`s rapture slew her. If her kiss Had left a longer weight upon my lips It might have steadied the uneasy breath, And reconciled and fraternised my soul With the new order. As it was, indeed, I felt a mother-want about the world, And still went seeking, like a bleating lamb Left out at night in shutting up the fold,— As restless as a nest-deserted bird Grown chill through something being away, though what It knows not. I, Aurora Leigh, was born To make my father sadder, and myself Not overjoyous, truly. Women know The way to rear up children (to be just), They know a simple, merry, tender knack Of tying sashes, fitting baby-shoes, And stringing pretty words that make no sense, And kissing full sense into empty words, Which things are corals to cut life upon, Although such trifles: children learn by such, Love`s holy earnest in a pretty play And get not over-early solemnised, But seeing, as in a rose-bush, Love`s Divine Which burns and hurts not,—not a single bloom,— Become aware and unafraid of Love. Such good do mothers. Fathers love as well —Mine did, I know,—but still with heavier brains, And wills more consciously responsible, And not as wisely, since less foolishly; So mothers have God`s license to be missed. My father was an austere Englishman, Who, after a dry lifetime spent at home In college-learning, law, and parish talk, Was flooded with a passion unaware, His whole provisioned and complacent past Drowned out from him that moment. As he stood In Florence, where he had come to spend a month And note the secret of Da Vinci`s drains, He musing somewhat absently perhaps Some English question . . . whether men should pay The unpopular but necessary tax With left or right hand—in the alien sun In that great square of the Santissima There drifted past him (scarcely marked enough To move his comfortable island scorn) A train of priestly banners, cross and psalm, The white-veiled rose-crowned maidens holding up Tall tapers, weighty for such wrists, aslant To the blue luminous tremor of the air, And letting drop the white wax as they went To eat the bishop`s wafer at the church; From which long trail of chanting priests and girls, A face flashed like a cymbal on his face And shook with silent clangour brain and heart, Transfiguring him to music. Thus, even thus, He too received his sacramental gift With eucharistic meanings; for he loved. And thus beloved, she died. I`ve heard it said That but to see him in the first surprise Of widower and father, nursing me, Unmothered little child of four years old, His large man`s hands afraid to touch my curls, As if the gold would tarnish,—his grave lips Contriving such a miserable smile As if he knew needs must, or I should die, And yet `twas hard,—would almost make the stones Cry out for pity. There`s a verse he set In Santa Croce to her memory,— "Weep for an infant too young to weep much When death removed this mother"—stops the mirth To-day on women`s faces when they walk With rosy children hanging on their gowns, Under the cloister to escape the sun That scorches in the piazza. After which He left our Florence and made haste to hide Himself, his prattling child, and silent grief, Among the mountains above Pelago; Because unmothered babes, he thought, had need Of mother nature more than others use, And Pan`s white goats, with udders warm and full Of mystic contemplations, come to feed Poor milkless lips of orphans like his own— Such scholar-scraps he talked, I`ve heard from friends, For even prosaic men who wear grief long Will get to wear it as a hat aside With a flower stuck in`t. Father, then, and child, We lived among the mountains many years, God`s silence on the outside of the house, And we who did not speak too loud within, And old Assunta to make up the fire, Crossing herself whene`er a sudden flame Which lightened from the firewood, made alive That picture of my mother on the wall. The painter drew it after she was dead, And when the face was finished, throat and hands, Her cameriera carried him, in hate Of the English-fashioned shroud, the last brocade She dressed in at the Pitti; "he should paint No sadder thing than that," she swore, "to wrong Her poor signora." Therefore very strange The effect was. I, a little child, would crouch For hours upon the floor with knees drawn up, And gaze across them, half in terror, half In adoration, at the picture there,— That swan-like supernatural white life Just sailing upward from the red stiff silk Which seemed to have no part in it nor power To keep it from quite breaking out of bounds. For hours I sat and stared. Assunta`s awe And my poor father`s melancholy eyes Still pointed that way. That way went my thoughts When wandering beyond sight. And as I grew In years, I mixed, confused, unconsciously, Whatever I last read or heard or dreamed, Abhorrent, admirable, beautiful, Pathetical, or ghastly, or grotesque, With still that face . . . which did not therefore change, But kept the mystic level of all forms, Hates, fears, and admirations, was by turns Ghost, fiend, and angel, fairy, witch, and sprite, A dauntless Muse who eyes a dreadful Fate, A loving Psyche who loses sight of Love, A still Medusa with mild milky brows All curdled and all clothed upon with snakes Whose slime falls fast as sweat will; or anon Our Lady of the Passion, stabbed with swords Where the Babe sucked; or Lamia in her first Moonlighted pallor, ere she shrunk and blinked And shuddering wriggled down to the unclean; Or my own mother, leaving her last smile In her last kiss upon the baby-mouth My father pushed down on the bed for that,— Or my dead mother, without smile or kiss, Buried at Florence. All which images, Concentred on the picture, glassed themselves Before my meditative childhood, as The incoherencies of change and death Are represented fully, mixed and merged, In the smooth fair mystery of perpetual Life. And while I stared away my childish wits Upon my mother`s picture (ah, poor child!), My father, who through love had suddenly Thrown off the old conventions, broken loose From chin-bands of the soul, like Lazarus, Yet had no time to learn to talk and walk Or grow anew familiar with the sun,— Who had reached to freedom, not to action, lived, But lived as one entranced, with thoughts, not aims,— Whom love had unmade from a common man But not completed to an uncommon man,— My father taught me what he had learnt the best Before he died and left me,—grief and love. And, seeing we had books among the hills, Strong words of counselling souls confederate With vocal pines and waters,—out of books He taught me all the ignorance of men, And how God laughs in heaven when any man Says "Here I`m learned; this, I understand; In that, I am never caught at fault or doubt." He sent the schools to school, demonstrating A fool will pass for such through one mistake, While a philosopher will pass for such, Through said mistakes being ventured in the gross And heaped up to a system.                             I am like, They tell me, my dear father. Broader brows Howbeit, upon a slenderer undergrowth Of delicate features,—paler, near as grave; But then my mother`s smile breaks up the whole, And makes it better sometimes than itself. So, nine full years, our days were hid with God Among his mountains: I was just thirteen, Still growing like the plants from unseen roots In tongue-tied Springs,—and suddenly awoke To full life and life`s needs and agonies With an intense, strong, struggling heart beside A stone-dead father. Life, struck sharp on death, Makes awful lightning. His last word was "Love—" "Love, my child, love, love!"—(then he had done with grief) "Love, my child." Ere I answered he was gone, And none was left to love in all the world. There, ended childhood. What succeeded next I recollect as, after fevers, men Thread back the passage of delirium, Missing the turn still, baffled by the door; Smooth endless days, notched here and there with knives, A weary, wormy darkness, spurred i` the flank With flame, that it should eat and end itself Like some tormented scorpion. Then at last I do remember clearly how there came A stranger with authority, not right (I thought not), who commanded, caught me up From old Assunta`s neck; how, with a shriek, She let me go,—while I, with ears too full Of my father`s silence to shriek back a word, In all a child`s astonishment at grief Stared at the wharf-edge where she stood and moaned, My poor Assunta, where she stood and moaned! The white walls, the blue hills, my Italy, Drawn backward from the shuddering steamer-deck, Like one in anger drawing back her skirts Which suppliants catch at. Then the bitter sea Inexorably pushed between us both And, sweeping up the ship with my despair, Threw us out as a pasture to the stars. Ten nights and days we voyaged on the deep; Ten nights and days without the common face Of any day or night; the moon and sun Cut off from the green reconciling earth, To starve into a blind ferocity And glare unnatural; the very sky (Dropping its bell-net down upon the sea, As if no human heart should `scape alive) Bedraggled with the desolating salt, Until it seemed no more that holy heaven To which my father went. All new and strange; The universe turned stranger, for a child. Then, land!—then, England! oh, the frosty cliffs Looked cold upon me. Could I find a home Among those mean red houses through the fog? And when I heard my father`s language first From alien lips which had no kiss for mine I wept aloud, then laughed, then wept, then wept, And some one near me said the child was mad Through much sea-sickness. The train swept us on: Was this my father`s England? the great isle? The ground seemed cut up from the fellowship Of verdure, field from field, as man from man; The skies themselves looked low and positive, As almost you could touch them with a hand, And dared to do it they were so far off From God`s celestial crystals; all things blurred And dull and vague. Did Shakespeare and his mates Absorb the light here?—not a hill or stone With heart to strike a radiant colour up Or active outline on the indifferent air. I think I see my father`s sister stand Upon the hall-step of her country-house To give me welcome. She stood straight and calm, Her somewhat narrow forehead braided tight As if for taming accidental thoughts From possible pulses; brown hair pricked with gray By frigid use of life (she was not old, Although my father`s elder by a year), A nose drawn sharply, yet in delicate lines; A close mild mouth, a little soured about The ends, through speaking unrequited loves Or peradventure niggardly half-truths; Eyes of no colour,—once they might have smiled, But never, never have forgot themselves In smiling; cheeks, in which was yet a rose Of perished summers, like a rose in a book, Kept more for ruth than pleasure,—if past bloom, Past fading also.                   She had lived, we`ll say, A harmless life, she called a virtuous life, A quiet life, which was not life at all (But that, she had not lived enough to know), Between the vicar and the county squires, The lord-lieutenant looking down sometimes From the empyrean to assure their souls Against chance vulgarisms, and, in the abyss, The apothecary, looked on once a year To prove their soundness of humility. The poor-club exercised her Christian gifts Of knitting stockings, stitching petticoats, Because we are of one flesh, after all, And need one flannel (with a proper sense Of difference in the quality)—and still The book-club, guarded from your modern trick Of shaking dangerous questions from the crease, Preserved her intellectual. She had lived A sort of cage-bird life, born in a cage, Accounting that to leap from perch to perch Was act and joy enough for any bird. Dear heaven, how silly are the things that live In thickets, and eat berries!                                I, alas, A wild bird scarcely fledged, was brought to her cage, And she was there to meet me. Very kind. Bring the clean water, give out the fresh seed. She stood upon the steps to welcome me, Calm, in black garb. I clung about her neck,— Young babes, who catch at every shred of wool To draw the new light closer, catch and cling Less blindly. In my ears my father`s word Hummed ignorantly, as the sea in shells, "Love, love, my child." She, black there with my grief, Might feel my love—she was his sister once— I clung to her. A moment she seemed moved, Kissed me with cold lips, suffered me to cling, And drew me feebly through the hall into The room she sat in.                      There, with some strange spasm Of pain and passion, she wrung loose my hands Imperiously, and held me at arm`s length, And with two grey-steel naked-bladed eyes Searched through my face,—ay, stabbed it through and through, Through brows and cheeks and chin, as if to find A wicked murderer in my innocent face, If not here, there perhaps. Then, drawing breath, She struggled for her ordinary calm— And missed it rather,—told me not to shrink, As if she had told me not to lie or swear,— "She loved my father and would love me too As long as I deserved it." Very kind. I understood her meaning afterward; She thought to find my mother in my face, And questioned it for that. For she, my aunt, Had loved my father truly, as she could, And hated, with the gall of gentle souls, My Tuscan mother who had fooled away A wise man from wise courses, a good man From obvious duties, and, depriving her, His sister, of the household precedence, Had wronged his tenants, robbed his native land, And made him mad, alike by life and death, In love and sorrow. She had pored for years What sort of woman could be suitable To her sort of hate, to entertain it with, And so, her very curiosity Became hate too, and all the idealism She ever used in life was used for hate, Till hate, so nourished, did exceed at last The love from which it grew, in strength and heat, And wrinkled her smooth conscience with a sense Of disputable virtue (say not, sin) When Christian doctrine was enforced at church. And thus my father`s sister was to me My mother`s hater. From that day she did Her duty to me (I appreciate it In her own word as spoken to herself), Her duty, in large measure, well pressed out, But measured always. She was generous, bland, More courteous than was tender, gave me still The first place,—as if fearful that God`s saints Would look down suddenly and say "Herein You missed a point, I think, through lack of love." Alas, a mother never is afraid Of speaking angerly to any child, Since love, she knows, is justified of love. And I, I was a good child on the whole, A meek and manageable child. Why not? I did not live, to have the faults of life: There seemed more true life in my father`s grave Than in all England. Since that threw me off Who fain would cleave (his latest will, they say, Consigned me to his land), I only thought Of lying quiet there where I was thrown Like sea-weed on the rocks, and suffering her To prick me to a pattern with her pin, Fibre from fibre, delicate leaf from leaf, And dry out from my drowned anatomy The last sea-salt left in me.                                So it was. I broke the copious curls upon my head In braids, because she liked smooth-ordered hair. I left off saying my sweet Tuscan words Which still at any stirring of the heart Came up to float across the English phrase As lilies (Bene or Che che), because She liked my father`s child to speak his tongue. I learnt the collects and the catechism, The creeds, from Athanasius back to Nice, The Articles, the Tracts against the times (By no means Buonaventure`s "Prick of Love"), And various popular synopses of Inhuman doctrines never taught by John, Because she liked instructed piety. I learnt my complement of classic French (Kept pure of Balzac and neologism) And German also, since she liked a range Of liberal education,—tongues, not books. I learnt a little algebra, a little Of the mathematics,—brushed with extreme flounce The circle of the sciences, because She misliked women who are frivolous. I learnt the royal genealogies Of Oviedo, the internal laws Of the Burmese empire,—by how many feet Mount Chimborazo outsoars Teneriffe, What navigable river joins itself To Lara, and what census of the year five Was taken at Klagenfurt,—because she liked A general insight into useful facts. I learnt much music,—such as would have been As quite impossible in Johnson`s day As still it might be wished—fine sleights of hand And unimagined fingering, shuffling off The hearer`s soul through hurricanes of notes To a noisy Tophet; and I drew . . . costumes From French engravings, nereids neatly draped (With smirks of simmering godship): I washed in Landscapes from nature (rather say, washed out). I danced the polka and Cellarius, Spun glass, stuffed birds, and modelled flowers in wax, Because she liked accomplishments in girls. I read a score of books on womanhood To prove, if women do not think at all, They may teach thinking (to a maiden aunt Or else the author),—books that boldly assert Their right of comprehending husband`s talk When not too deep, and even of answering With pretty "may it please you," or "so it is,"— Their rapid insight and fine aptitude, Particular worth and general missionariness, As long as they keep quiet by the fire And never say "no" when the world says "ay," For that is fatal,—their angelic reach Of virtue, chiefly used to sit and darn, And fatten household sinners,—their, in brief, Potential faculty in everything Of abdicating power in it: she owned She liked a woman to be womanly, And English women, she thanked God and sighed (Some people always sigh in thanking God), Were models to the universe. And last I learnt cross-stitch, because she did not like To see me wear the night with empty hands A-doing nothing. So, my shepherdess Was something after all (the pastoral saints Be praised for`t), leaning lovelorn with pink eyes To match her shoes, when I mistook the silks; Her head uncrushed by that round weight of hat So strangely similar to the tortoise-shell Which slew the tragic poet.                              By the way, The works of women are symbolical. We sew, sew, prick our fingers, dull our sight, Producing what? A pair of slippers, sir, To put on when you`re weary—or a stool To stumble over and vex you . . . "curse that stool!" Or else at best, a cushion, where you lean And sleep, and dream of something we are not But would be for your sake. Alas, alas! This hurts most, this—that, after all, we are paid The worth of our work, perhaps.                                  In looking down Those years of education (to return) I wonder if Brinvilliers suffered more In the water-torture . . . flood succeeding flood To drench the incapable throat and split the veins . . . Than I did. Certain of your feebler souls Go out in such a process; many pine To a sick, inodorous light; my own endured: I had relations in the Unseen, and drew The elemental nutriment and heat From nature, as earth feels the sun at nights, Or as a babe sucks surely in the dark. I kept the life thrust on me, on the outside Of the inner life with all its ample room For heart and lungs, for will and intellect, Inviolable by conventions. God, I thank thee for that grace of thine!                                         At first I felt no life which was not patience,—did The thing she bade me, without heed to a thing Beyond it, sat in just the chair she placed, With back against the window, to exclude The sight of the great lime-tree on the lawn, Which seemed to have come on purpose from the woods To bring the house a message,—ay, and walked Demurely in her carpeted low rooms, As if I should not, hearkening my own steps, Misdoubt I was alive. I read her books, Was civil to her cousin, Romney Leigh, Gave ear to her vicar, tea to her visitors, And heard them whisper, when I changed a cup (I blushed for joy at that),—"The Italian child, For all her blue eyes and her quiet ways, Thrives ill in England: she is paler yet Than when we came the last time; she will die." "Will die." My cousin, Romney Leigh, blushed too, With sudden anger, and approaching me Said low between his teeth, "You`re wicked now? You wish to die and leave the world a-dusk For others, with your naughty light blown out?" I looked into his face defyingly; He might have known that, being what I was, `Twas natural to like to get away As far as dead folk can: and then indeed Some people make no trouble when they die. He turned and went abruptly, slammed the door, And shut his dog out.                       Romney, Romney Leigh. I have not named my cousin hitherto, And yet I used him as a sort of friend; My elder by few years, but cold and shy And absent . . . tender, when he thought of it, Which scarcely was imperative, grave betimes, As well as early master of Leigh Hall, Whereof the nightmare sat upon his youth, Repressing all its seasonable delights, And agonising with a ghastly sense Of universal hideous want and wrong To incriminate possession. When he came From college to the country, very oft He crossed the hill on visits to my aunt, With gifts of blue grapes from the hothouses, A book in one hand,—mere statistics (if I chanced to lift the cover), count of all The goats whose beards grow sprouting down toward hell Against God`s separative judgment-hour. And she, she almost loved him,—even allowed That sometimes he should seem to sigh my way; It made him easier to be pitiful, And sighing was his gift. So, undisturbed, At whiles she let him shut my music up And push my needles down, and lead me out To see in that south angle of the house The figs grow black as if by a Tuscan rock, On some light pretext. She would turn her head At other moments, go to fetch a thing, And leave me breath enough to speak with him, For his sake; it was simple.                               Sometimes too He would have saved me utterly, it seemed, He stood and looked so.                         Once, he stood so near, He dropped a sudden hand upon my head Bent down on woman`s work, as soft as rain— But then I rose and shook it off as fire, The stranger`s touch that took my father`s place Yet dared seem soft.                      I used him for a friend Before I ever knew him for a friend. `Twas better, `twas worse also, afterward: We came so close, we saw our differences Too intimately. Always Romney Leigh Was looking for the worms, I for the gods. A godlike nature his; the gods look down, Incurious of themselves; and certainly `Tis well I should remember, how, those days, I was a worm too, and he looked on me. A little by his act perhaps, yet more By something in me, surely not my will, I did not die. But slowly, as one in swoon, To whom life creeps back in the form of death, With a sense of separation, a blind pain Of blank obstruction, and a roar i` the ears Of visionary chariots which retreat As earth grows clearer . . . slowly, by degrees, I woke, rose up . . . where was I? in the world; For uses therefore I must count worth while. I had a little chamber in the house, As green as any privet-hedge a bird Might choose to build in, though the nest itself Could show but dead-brown sticks and straws; the walls Were green, the carpet was pure green, the straight Small bed was curtained greenly, and the folds Hung green about the window which let in The out-door world with all its greenery. You could not push your head out and escape A dash of dawn-dew from the honeysuckle, But so you were baptized into the grace And privilege of seeing. . . .                                 First, the lime (I had enough there, of the lime, be sure,— My morning-dream was often hummed away By the bees in it); past the lime, the lawn, Which, after sweeping broadly round the house, Went trickling through the shrubberies in a stream Of tender turf, and wore and lost itself Among the acacias, over which you saw The irregular line of elms by the deep lane Which stopped the grounds and dammed the overflow Of arbutus and laurel. Out of sight The lane was; sunk so deep, no foreign tramp Nor drover of wild ponies out of Wales Could guess if lady`s hall or tenant`s lodge Dispensed such odours,—though his stick well-crooked Might reach the lowest trail of blossoming briar Which dipped upon the wall. Behind the elms, And through their tops, you saw the folded hills Striped up and down with hedges (burly oaks Projecting from the line to show themselves), Through which my cousin Romney`s chimneys smoked As still as when a silent mouth in frost Breathes, showing where the woodlands hid Leigh Hall; While, far above, a jut of table-land, A promontory without water, stretched,— You could not catch it if the days were thick, Or took it for a cloud; but, otherwise, The vigorous sun would catch it up at eve And use it for an anvil till he had filled The shelves of heaven with burning thunderbolts, Protesting against night and darkness:—then, When all his setting trouble was resolved To a trance of passive glory, you might see In apparition on the golden sky (Alas, my Giotto`s background!) the sheep run Along the fine clear outline, small as mice That run along a witch`s scarlet thread. Not a grand nature. Not my chestnut-woods Of Vallombrosa, cleaving by the spurs To the precipices. Not my headlong leaps Of waters, that cry out for joy or fear In leaping through the palpitating pines, Like a white soul tossed out to eternity With thrills of time upon it. Not indeed My multitudinous mountains, sitting in The magic circle, with the mutual touch Electric, panting from their full deep hearts Beneath the influent heavens, and waiting for Communion and commission. Italy Is one thing, England one.                             On English ground You understand the letter,—ere the fall How Adam lived in a garden. All the fields Are tied up fast with hedges, nosegay-like; The hills are crumpled plains, the plains parterres, The trees, round, woolly, ready to be clipped, And if you seek for any wilderness You find, at best, a park. A nature tamed And grown domestic like a barn-door fowl, Which does not awe you with its claws and beak, Nor tempt you to an eyrie too high up, But which, in cackling, sets you thinking of Your eggs to-morrow at breakfast, in the pause Of finer meditation.                      Rather say, A sweet familiar nature, stealing in As a dog might, or child, to touch your hand Or pluck your gown, and humbly mind you so Of presence and affection, excellent For inner uses, from the things without. I could not be unthankful, I who was Entreated thus and holpen. In the room I speak of, ere the house was well awake, And also after it was well asleep, I sat alone, and drew the blessing in Of all that nature. With a gradual step, A stir among the leaves, a breath, a ray, It came in softly, while the angels made A place for it beside me. The moon came, And swept my chamber clean of foolish thoughts. The sun came, saying, "Shall I lift this light Against the lime-tree, and you will not look? I make the birds sing—listen! but, for you, God never hears your voice, excepting when You lie upon the bed at nights and weep." Then, something moved me. Then, I wakened up More slowly than I verily write now, But wholly, at last, I wakened, opened wide The window and my soul, and let the airs And out-door sights sweep gradual gospels in, Regenerating what I was. O Life, How oft we throw it off and think,—"Enough, Enough of life in so much!—here`s a cause For rupture;—herein we must break with Life, Or be ourselves unworthy; here we are wronged, Maimed, spoiled for aspiration: farewell, Life!" And so, as froward babes, we hide our eyes And think all ended.—Then, Life calls to us In some transformed, apocalyptic voice, Above us, or below us, or around: Perhaps we name it Nature`s voice, or Love`s, Tricking ourselves, because we are more ashamed To own our compensations than our griefs: Still, Life`s voice!—still, we make our peace with Life. And I, so young then, was not sullen. Soon I used to get up early, just to sit And watch the morning quicken in the gray, And hear the silence open like a flower Leaf after leaf,—and stroke with listless hand The woodbine through the window, till at last I came to do it with a sort of love, At foolish unaware: whereat I smiled,— A melancholy smile, to catch myself Smiling for joy.                  Capacity for joy Admits temptation. It seemed, next, worth while To dodge the sharp sword set against my life; To slip down stairs through all the sleepy house, As mute as any dream there, and escape As a soul from the body, out of doors, Glide through the shrubberies, drop into the lane, And wander on the hills an hour or two, Then back again before the house should stir. Or else I sat on in my chamber green, And lived my life, and thought my thoughts, and prayed My prayers without the vicar; read my books, Without considering whether they were fit To do me good. Mark, there. We get no good By being ungenerous, even to a book, And calculating profits,—so much help By so much reading. It is rather when We gloriously forget ourselves and plunge Soul-forward, headlong, into a book`s profound, Impassioned for its beauty and salt of truth— `Tis then we get the right good from a book. I read much. What my father taught before From many a volume, Love re-emphasised Upon the self-same pages: Theophrast Grew tender with the memory of his eyes, And Ælian made mine wet. The trick of Greek And Latin he had taught me, as he would Have taught me wrestling or the game of fives If such he had known,—most like a shipwrecked man Who heaps his single platter with goats` cheese And scarlet berries; or like any man Who loves but one, and so gives all at once, Because he has it, rather than because He counts it worthy. Thus, my father gave; And thus, as did the women formerly By young Achilles, when they pinned a veil Across the boy`s audacious front, and swept With tuneful laughs the silver-fretted rocks, He wrapt his little daughter in his large Man`s doublet, careless did it fit or no. But, after I had read for memory, I read for hope. The path my father`s foot Had trod me out (which suddenly broke off What time he dropped the wallet of the flesh And passed), alone I carried on, and set My child-heart `gainst the thorny underwood, To reach the grassy shelter of the trees. Ah babe i` the wood, without a brother-babe! My own self-pity, like the red-breast bird, Flies back to cover all that past with leaves. Sublimest danger, over which none weeps, When any young wayfaring soul goes forth Alone, unconscious of the perilous road, The day-sun dazzling in his limpid eyes, To thrust his own way, he an alien, through The world of books! Ah, you!—you think it fine, You clap hands—"A fair day!"—you cheer him on, As if the worst, could happen, were to rest Too long beside a fountain. Yet, behold, Behold!—the world of books is still the world, And worldings in it are less merciful And more puissant. For the wicked there Are winged like angels; every knife that strikes Is edged from elemental fire to assail A spiritual life; the beautiful seems right By force of beauty, and the feeble wrong Because of weakness; power is justified Though armed against Saint Michael; many a crown Covers bald foreheads. In the book-world, true, There`s no lack, neither, of God`s saints and kings, That shake the ashes of the grave aside From their calm locks and undiscomfited Look steadfast truths against Time`s changing mask. True, many a prophet teaches in the roads; True, many a seer pulls down the flaming heavens Upon his own head in strong martyrdom In order to light men a moment`s space. But stay!—who judges?—who distinguishes `Twixt Saul and Nahash justly, at first sight, And leaves king Saul precisely at the sin, To serve king David? who discerns at once The sound of the trumpets, when the trumpets blow For Alaric as well as Charlemagne? Who judges wizards, and can tell true seers From conjurers? the child, there? Would you leave That child to wander in a battle-field And push his innocent smile against the guns; Or even in a catacomb,—his torch Grown ragged in the fluttering air, and all The dark a-mutter round him? not a child. I read books bad and good—some bad and good At once (good aims not always make good books: Well-tempered spades turn up ill-smelling soils In digging vineyards even); books that prove God`s being so definitely, that man`s doubt Grows self-defined the other side the line, Made atheist by suggestion; moral books, Exasperating to license; genial books, Discounting from the human dignity; And merry books, which set you weeping when The sun shines,—ay, and melancholy books, Which make you laugh that any one should weep In this disjointed life for one wrong more. The world of books is still the world, I write, And both worlds have God`s providence, thank God, To keep and hearten: with some struggle, indeed, Among the breakers, some hard swimming through The deeps—I lost breath in my soul sometimes And cried "God save me if there`s any God," But, even so, God saved me; and, being dashed From error on to error, every turn Still brought me nearer to the central truth. I thought so. All this anguish in the thick Of men`s opinions . . . press and counterpress, Now up, now down, now underfoot, and now Emergent . . . all the best of it, perhaps, But throws you back upon a noble trust And use of your own instinct,—merely proves Pure reason stronger than bare inference At strongest. Try it,—fix against heaven`s wall The scaling-ladders of school logic—mount Step by step!—sight goes faster; that still ray Which strikes out from you, how, you cannot tell, And why, you know not (did you eliminate, That such as you indeed should analyse?) Goes straight and fast as light, and high as God. The cygnet finds the water, but the man Is born in ignorance of his element And feels out blind at first, disorganised By sin i` the blood,—his spirit-insight dulled And crossed by his sensations. Presently He feels it quicken in the dark sometimes, When, mark, be reverent, be obedient, For such dumb motions of imperfect life Are oracles of vital Deity Attesting the Hereafter. Let who says "The soul`s a clean white paper," rather say, A palimpsest, a prophet`s holograph Defiled, erased and covered by a monk`s,— The apocalypse, by a Longus! poring on Which obscene text, we may discern perhaps Some fair, fine trace of what was written once, Some upstroke of an alpha and omega Expressing the old scripture.                                Books, books, books! I had found the secret of a garret-room Piled high with cases in my father`s name, Piled high, packed large,—where, creeping in and out Among the giant fossils of my past, Like some small nimble mouse between the ribs Of a mastodon, I nibbled here and there At this or that box, pulling through the gap, In heats of terror, haste, victorious joy, The first book first. And how I felt it beat Under my pillow, in the morning`s dark, An hour before the sun would let me read! My books! At last because the time was ripe, I chanced upon the poets.                            As the earth Plunges in fury, when the internal fires Have reached and pricked her heart, and, throwing flat The marts and temples, the triumphal gates And towers of observation, clears herself To elemental freedom—thus, my soul, At poetry`s divine first finger-touch, Let go conventions and sprang up surprised, Convicted of the great eternities Before two worlds.                    What`s this, Aurora Leigh, You write so of the poets, and not laugh? Those virtuous liars, dreamers after dark, Exaggerators of the sun and moon, And soothsayers in a tea-cup?                                I write so Of the only truth-tellers now left to God, The only speakers of essential truth, Opposed to relative, comparative, And temporal truths; the only holders by His sun-skirts, through conventional gray glooms; The only teachers who instruct mankind From just a shadow on a charnel-wall To find man`s veritable stature out Erect, sublime,—the measure of a man, And that`s the measure of an angel, says The apostle. Ay, and while your common men Lay telegraphs, gauge railroads, reign, reap, dine, And dust the flaunty carpets of the world For kings to walk on, or our president, The poet suddenly will catch them up With his voice like a thunder,—"This is soul, This is life, this word is being said in heaven, Here`s God down on us! what are you about?" How all those workers start amid their work, Look round, look up, and feel, a moment`s space, That carpet-dusting, though a pretty trade, Is not the imperative labour after all. My own best poets, am I one with you, That thus I love you,—or but one through love? Does all this smell of thyme about my feet Conclude my visit to your holy hill
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