Share:
  Guess poet | Poets | Poets timeline | Isles | Contacts

Robert Browning - The Ring And The Book - Chapter II - Half-RomeRobert Browning - The Ring And The Book - Chapter II - Half-Rome
Work rating: Low


1 2

WHAT, you, Sir, come too? (Just the man I’d meet.) Be ruled by me and have a care o’the crowd: This way, while fresh folk go and get their gaze: I’ll tell you like a book and save your shins. Fie, what a roaring day we’ve had! Whose fault? Lorenzo in Lucina,—here’s a church To hold a crowd at need, accommodate All comers from the Corso! If this crush Make not its priests ashamed of what they show For temple-room, don’t prick them to draw purse And down with bricks and mortar, eke us out The beggarly transept with its bit of apse Into a decent space for Christian ease, Why, to-day’s lucky pearl is cast to swine. Listen and estimate the luck they’ve had! (The right man, and I hold him.)                                         Sir, do you see, They laid both bodies in the church, this morn The first thing, on the chancel two steps up, Behind the little marble balustrade; Disposed them, Pietro the old murdered fool To the right of the altar, and his wretched wife On the other side. In trying to count stabs, People supposed Violante showed the most, Till somebody explained us that mistake; His wounds had been dealt out indifferent where, But she took all her stabbings in the face, Since punished thus solely for honour’s sake, Honoris causâ, that’s the proper term. A delicacy there is, our gallants hold, When you avenge your honour and only then, That you disfigure the subject, fray the face, Not just take life and end, in clownish guise. It was Violante gave the first offence, Got therefore the conspicuous punishment: While Pietro, who helped merely, his, mere death Answered the purpose, so his face went free. We fancied even, free as you please, that face Showed itself still intolerably wronged; Was wrinkled over with resentment yet, Nor calm at all, as murdered faces use, Once the worst ended: an indignant air O’ the head there was—’ tis said the body turned Round and away, rolled from Violante’s side Where they had laid it loving-husband-like. If so, if corpses can be sensitive, Why did not he roll right down altar-step. Roll on through nave, roll fairly out of church, Deprive Lorenzo of the spectacle, Pay back thus the succession of affronts Whereto this church had served as theatre? For see: at that same altar where he lies, To that same inch of step, was brought the babe For blessing after baptism, and there styled Pompilia, and a string of names beside, By his bad wife, some seventeen years ago, Who purchased her simply to palm on him, Flatter his dotage and defraud the heirs. Wait awhile! Also to this very step Did this Violante, twelve years afterward, Bring, the mock-mother, that child-cheat full-grown, Pompilia in pursuance of her plot. And there brave God and man a second time By linking a new victim to the lie. There, having made a match unknown to him, She, still unknown to Pietro, tied the knot Which nothing cuts except this kind of knife; Yes, made her daughter, as the girl was held, Marry a man, and honest man beside, And man of birth to boot,—clandestinely Because of this, because of that, because O’ the devil’s will to work his worst for once,— Confident she could top her part at need And, when her husband must be told in turn, Ply the wife’s trade, play off the sex’s trick And, alternating worry with quiet qualms, Bravado with submissiveness, quick fool Her Pietro into patience: so it proved. Ay, ’tis four years since man and wife they grew, This Guido Franceschini and this same Pompilia, foolishly thought, falsely declared A Comparini and the couple’s child: Just at this altar where, beneath the piece Of Master Guido Reni, Christ on cross, Second to nought observable in Rome, That couple lie now, murdered yestereve. Even the blind can see a providence here. From dawn till now that it is growing dusk, A multitude has flocked and filled the church, Coming and going, coming back again, Till to count crazed one. Rome was at the show. People climbed up the columns, fought for spikes O’ the chapel-rail to perch themselves upon, Jumped over and so broke the wooden work Painted like porphyry to deceive the eye; Serve the priests right! The organ-loft was crammed, Women were fainting, no few fights ensued, In short, it was a show repaid your pains: For, though their room was scant undoubtedly, Yet they did manage matters, to be just, A little at this Lorenzo. Body o’me! I saw a body exposed once . . . never mind! Enough that here the bodies had their due. No stinginess in wax, a row all round, And one big taper at each head and foot. So, people pushed their way, and took their turn, Saw, threw their eyes up, crossed themselves, gave place To pressure from behind, since all the world Knew the old pair, could talk the tragedy Over from first to last: Pompilia too, Those who had known her—what ’twas worth to them! Guido’s acquaintance was in less request; The Count had lounged somewhat too long in Rome, Made himself cheap; with him were hand and glove Barbers and blear-eyed, as the ancient sings. Also he is alive and like to be: Had he considerately died,—aha! I jostled Luca Cini on his staff, Mute in the midst, the whole man one amaze, Staring amain and crossing brow and breast. “How now?” asked I. “’Tis seventy years,” quoth he, “Since I first saw, holding my father’s hand, “Bodies set forth: a many have I seen, “Yet all was poor to this I live and see. “Here the world’s wickedness seals up the sum: “What with Molinos’ doctrine and this deed, “Antichrist’s surely come and doomsday near. “May I depart in peace, I have seen my see.” “Depart then,” I advised, “nor block the road “For youngsters still behindhand with such sights!” “Why no,” rejoins the venerable sire, “I know it’s horrid, hideous past belief, “Burdensome far beyond what eye can bear; “But they do promise, when Pompilia dies “I’ the course o’ the day,—and she can’t outlive night,— “They’ll bring her body also to expose “Beside the parents, one, two, three a-breast; “That were indeed a sight which, might I see, “I trust I should not last to see the like!” Whereat I bade the senior spare his shanks, Since doctors give her till to-night to live And tell us how the butchery happened. “Ah, “But you can’t know!” sighs he. “I’ll not despair: “Beside I’m useful at explaining things— “As, how the dagger laid there at the feet, “Caused the peculiar cuts; I mind its make, “Triangular i’ the blade, a Genoese, “Armed with those little hook-teeth on the edge “To open in the flesh nor shut again: “I like to teach a novice: I shall stay!” And stay he did, and stay be sure he will. A personage came by the private door At noon to have his look: I name no names: Well then, His Eminence the Cardinal, Whose servitor in honourable sort Guido was once, the same who made the match, (Will you have the truth?) whereof we see effect. No sooner whisper ran he was arrived Than up pops Curate Carlo, a brisk lad, Who never lets a good occasion slip, And volunteers improving the event. We looked he’d give the history’s self some help, Treat us to how the wife’s confession went (This morning she confessed her crime, we know) And, may-be, throw in something of the Priest— If he’s not ordered back, punished anew, The gallant, Caponsacchi, Lucifer I’ the garden where Pompilia, Eve-like, lured Her Adam Guido to his fault and fall. Think you we got a sprig of speech akin To this from Carlo, with the Cardinal there? Too wary, he was, too widely awake, I trow. He did the murder in a dozen words; Then said that all such outrages crop forth I’ the course of nature, when Molinos’ tares Are sown for wheat, flourish and choke the Church: So slid on to the abominable sect And the philosophic sin—we’ve heard all that, And the Cardinal too (who book-made on the same), But, for the murder, left it where he found. Oh but he’s quick, the Curate, minds his game! And, after all, we have the main o’ the fact: Case could not well be simpler,—mapped, as it were, We follow the murder’s maze from source to sea, By the red line, past mistake: one sees indeed Not only how all was and must have been, But cannot other than be to the end of time. Turn out here by the Ruspoli! Do you hold Guido was so prodigiously to blame? A certain cousin of yours has told you so? Exactly! Here’s a friend shall set you right, Let him but have the handsel of your ear. These wretched Comparini were once gay And galiard, of the modest middle class: Born in this quarter seventy years ago, And married young, they lived the accustomed life, Citizens as they were of good repute: And, childless, naturally took their ease With only their two selves to care about And use the wealth for: wealthy is the word, Since Pietro was possessed of house and land— And specially one house, when good days were, In Via Vittoria, the aspectable street Where he lived mainly; but another house Of less pretension did he buy betimes, The villa, meant for jaunts and jollity, I’ the Pauline district, to be private there— Just what puts murder in an enemy’s head. Moreover,—and here’s the worm i’ the core, the germ O’ the rottenness and ruin which arrived,— He owned some usufruct, had moneys’ use Lifelong, but to determine with his life In heirs’ default: so, Pietro craved an heir, (The story always old and always new) Shut his fool’s-eyes fast on the visible good And wealth for certain, opened them owl-wide On fortune’s sole piece of forgetfulness, The child that should have been and would not be. Hence, seventeen years ago, conceive his glee When first Violante, ’twixt a smile and a blush, With touch of agitation proper too, Announced that, spite of her unpromising age, The miracle would in time be manifest, An heir’s birth was to happen: and it did. Somehow or other,—how, all in good time! By a trick, a sleight of hand you are to hear,— A child was born, Pompilia, for his joy, Plaything at once and prop, a fairy-gift, A saints’ grace or, say, grant of the good God,— A fiddle-pin’s end! What imbeciles are we! Look now: if some one could have prophesied, “For love of you, for liking to your wife, “I undertake to crush a snake I spy “Settling itself i’ the soft of both your breasts. “Give me yon babe to strangle painlessly! “She’ll soar to the safe: you’ll have your crying out, “Then sleep, then wake, then sleep, then end your days “In peace and plenty, mixed with mild regret, “Thirty years hence when Christmas takes old folk”— How had old Pietro sprung up, crossed himself, And kicked the conjuror! Whereas you and I, Being wise with after-wit, had clapped our hands; Nay, added, in the old fool’s interest, “Strangle the black-eyed babe, so far so good, “But on condition you relieve the man “O’ the wife and throttle him Violante too— “She is the mischief!”                             We had hit the mark. She, whose trick brought the babe into the world, She it was, when the babe was grown a girl, Judged a new trick should reinforce the old, Send vigour to the lie now somewhat spent By twelve years’ service; lest Eve’s rule decline Over this Adam of hers, whose cabbage-plot Throve dubiously since turned fools’-paradise, Spite of a nightingale on every stump. Pietro’s estate was dwindling day by day, While he, rapt far above such mundane care, Crawled all-fours with his baby pick-a-back, Sat at serene cats’-cradle with his child, Or took the measured tallness, top to toe, Of what was grown a great girl twelve years old: Till sudden at the door a tap discreet, A visitor’s premonitory cough, And poverty had reached him in her rounds. This came when he was past the working-time, Had learned to dandle and forgot to dig, And who must but Violante cast about, Contrive and task that head of hers again? She who had caught one fish, could make that catch A bigger still, in angler’s policy: So, with an angler’s mercy for the bait, Her minnow was set wriggling on its barb And tossed to the mid-stream; that is, this grown girl With the great eyes and bounty of black hair And first crisp youth that tempts a jaded taste, Was whisked i’ the way of a certain man, who snapped. Count Guido Franceschini the Aretine Was head of an old noble house enough, Not over-rich, you can’t have everything, But such a man as riches rub against, Readily stick to,—one with a right to them Born in the blood: ’twas in his very brow Always to knit itself against the world, So be beforehand when that stinted due Service and suit: the world ducks and defers. As such folks do, he had come up to Rome To better his fortune, and, since many years, Was friend and follower of a cardinal; Waiting the rather thus on providence, That a shrewd younger poorer brother yet, The Abate Paolo, a regular priest, Had long since tried his powers and found he swam With the deftest on the Galilean pool: But then he was a web-foot, free o’ the wave, And no ambiguous dab-chick hatched to strut, Humbled by any fond attempt to swim When fiercer fowl usurped his dunghill top— A whole priest, Paolo, no mere piece of one Like Guido tacked thus to the Church’s tail! Guido moreover, as the head o’ the house, Claiming the main prize, not the lesser luck, The centre lily, no mere chickweed fringe. He waited and learned waiting, thirty years; Got promise, missed performance—what would you have? No petty post rewards a nobleman For spending youth in splendid lackey-work, And there’s concurrence for each rarer prize; When that falls, rougher hand and readier foot Push aside Guido spite of his black looks. The end was, Guido, when the warning showed, The first white hair i’ the glass, gave up the game, Determined on returning to his town, Making the best of bad incurable Patching the old palace up and lingering there The customary life out with his kin, Where honour helps to spice the scanty bread. Just as he trimmed his lamp and girt his loins To go his journey and be wise at home, In the right mood of disappointed worth, Who but Violante sudden spied her prey (Where was I with that angler-simile?) And threw her bait, Pompilia, where he sulked— A gleam i’ the gloom!                 What if he gained thus much, Wrung out this sweet drop from the bitter Past, Bore off this rose-bud from the prickly brake, To justify such torn clothes and scratched hands, And, after all, brought something back from Rome? Would not a wife serve at Arezzo well To light the dark house, lend a look of youth To the mother’s face grown meagre, left alone And famished with the emptiness of hope, Old Donna Beatrice? Wife you want Would you play family representative, Carry you elder-brotherly, high and right O’er what may prove the natural petulance Of the third brother, younger, greedier still, Girolamo, also a fledgeling priest, Beginning life in turn with callow beak Agape for luck, no luck had stopped and stilled. Such were the pinks and greys about the bait Persuaded Guido gulp down hook and all. What constituted him so choice a catch, You question? Past his prime and poor beside? Ask that of any she who knows the trade. Why first, here was a nobleman with friends, A palace one might run to and be safe When presently the threatened fate should fall, A big-browed master to block door-way up, Parley with people bent on pushing by And praying the mild Pietro quick clear scores: Is birth a privilege and power or no? Also,—but judge of the result desired, By the price paid and manner of the sale. The Count was made woo, win and wed at once: Asked, and was haled for answer, lest the heat Should cool, to San Lorenzo, one blind eve, And had Pompilia put into his arms O’ the sly there, by a hasty candle-blink, With sanction of some priest-confederate Properly paid to make short work and sure. So did old Pietro’s daughter change her style For Guido Franceschini’s lady-wife Ere Guido knew it well; and why this haste And scramble and indecent secrecy? “Lest Pietro, all the while in ignorance, “Should get to learn, gainsay and break the match: “His peevishness had promptly put aside “Such honour and refused the proffered boon, “Pleased to become authoritative once. “She remedied the wilful man’s mistake—” Did our discreet Violante. Rather say, Thus did she, lest the object of her game, Guido the gulled one, give him but a chance, A moment’s respite, time for thinking twice, Might count the cost before he sold himself, And try the clink of coin they paid him with. But passed, the bargain struck, the business done, Once the clandestine marriage over thus, All parties made perforce the best o’ the fact; Pietro could play vast indignation off, Be ignorant and astounded, dupe alike At need, of wife, daughter, and son-in-law, While Guido found himself in flagrant fault, Must e’en do suit and service, soothe, subdue A father not unreasonably chafed, Bring him to terms by paying son’s devoir. Pleasant initiation!                                 The end, this: Guido’s broad back was saddled to bear all— Pietro, Violante, and Pompilia too,— Three lots cast confidently in one lap, Three dead-weights with one arm to lift the three Out of their limbo up to life again: The Roman household was to strike fresh root In a new soil, graced with a novel name, Gilt with an alien glory, Aretine Henceforth and never Roman any more, By treaty and engagement: thus it ran: Pompilia’s dowry for Pompilia’s self As a thing of course,—she paid her own expense; No loss nor gain there: but the couple, you see, They, for their part, turned over first of all Their fortune in its rags and rottenness To Guido, fusion and confusion, he And his with them and theirs,—whatever rag With a coin residuary fell on floor When Brother Paolo’s energetic shake Should do the relics justice: since ’twas thought, Once vulnerable Pietro out of reach, That, left at Rome as representative, The Abate, backed by a potent patron here, And otherwise with purple flushing him, Might play a good game with the creditor, Make up a moiety which, great or small, Should go to the common stock—if anything, Guido’s, so far repayment of the cost About to be,—and if, as looked more like, Nothing,—why, all the nobler cost were his Who guaranteed, for better or for worse, To Pietro and Violante, house and home, Kith and kin, with the pick of company And life o’ the fat o’ the land while life should last. How say you to the bargain at first blush? Why did a middle-aged not-silly man Show himself thus besotted all at once? Quoth Solomon, one black eye does it all. They went to Arezzo,—Pietro and his spouse, With just the dusk o’ the day of life to spend, Eager to use the twilight, taste a treat, Enjoy for once with neither stay nor stint The luxury of Lord-and-lady-ship, And realise the stuff and nonsense long A-simmer in their noddles; vent the fume Born there and bred, the citizen’s conceit How fares nobility while crossing earth, What rampart or invisible body-guard Keeps off the taint of common life from such. They had not fed for nothing on the tales Of grandees who give banquets worthy Jove, Spending gold as if Plutus paid a whim, Served with obeisances as when . . . what God? I’m at the end of my tether; ’tis enough You understand what they came primed to see: While Guido who should minister the sight, Stay all this qualmish greediness of soul With apples and with flagons—for his part, Was set on life diverse as pole from pole: Lust of the flesh, lust of the eye,—what else Was he just now awake from, sick and sage, After the very debauch they would begin?— Suppose such stuff and nonsense really were. That bubble, they were bent on blowing big, He had blown already till he burst his cheeks, And hence found soapsuds bitter to the tongue, He hoped now to walk softly all his days In soberness of spirit, if haply so, Pinching and paring he might furnish forth A frugal board, bare sustenance, no more, Till times, that could not well grow worse, should mend. Thus minded then, two parties mean to meet And make each other happy. The first week, And fancy strikes fact and explodes in full. “This,” shrieked the Comparini, “this the Count, “The palace, the signorial privilege, “The pomp and pageantry were promised us? “For this have we exchanged our liberty, “Our competence, our darling of a child? “To house as spectres in a sepulchre “Under this black stone heap, the street’s disgrace, “Grimmest as that is of the gruesome town, “And here pick garbage on a pewter plate “Or cough at verjuice dripped from earthenware? “Oh Via Vittoria, oh the other place “I’ the Pauline, did we give you up for this? “Where’s the foregone housekeeping good and gay, “The neighbourliness, the companionship, “The treat and feast when holidays came round, “The daily feast that seemed no treat at all, “Called common by the uncommon fools we were! “Even the sun that used to shine at Rome, “Where is it? Robbed and starved and frozen too, “We will have justice, justice if there be!” Did not they shout, did not the town resound! Guido’s old lady-mother Beatrice, Who since her husband, Count Tommaso’s death, Had held sole sway i’ the house,—the doited crone Slow to acknowledge, curtsey and abdicate,— Was recognised of true novercal type, Dragon and devil. His brother Girolamo Came next in order: priest was he? The worse! No way of winning him to leave his mumps And help the laugh against old ancestry And formal habits long since out of date, Letting his youth be patterned on the mode Approved of where Violante laid down law. Or did he brighten up by way of change? Dispose himself for affability? The malapert, too complaisant by half To the alarmed young novice of a bride! Let him go buzz, betake himself elsewhere Nor singe his fly-wings in the candle-flame! Four months’ probation of this purgatory, Dog-snap and cat-claw, curse and counterblast, The devil’s self had been sick of his own din; And Pietro, after trumpeting huge wrongs At church and market-place, pillar and post, Square’s corner, street’s end, now the palace-step And now the wine-house bench—while, on her side, Violante up and down was voluble In whatsoever pair of ears would perk From goody, gossip, cater-cousin and sib, Curious to peep at the inside of things And catch in the act pretentious poverty At its wits’ end to keep appearance up, Make both ends meet,—nothing the vulgar loves Like what this couple pitched them right and left,— Then, their worst done that way, they struck tent, marched: —Renounced their share o’ the bargain, flung what dues Guido was bound to pay, in Guido’s face, Left their hearts’-darling, treasure of the twain And so forth, the poor inexperienced bride, To her own devices, bade Arezzo rot And the life signorial, and sought Rome once more. I see the comment ready on your lip, “The better fortune, Guido’s—free at least “By this defection of the foolish pair, “He could begin make profit in some sort “Of the young bride and the new quietness, “Lead his own life now, henceforth breathe unplagued.” Could he? You know the sex like Guido’s self. Learn the Violante-nature!                                     Once in Rome, By way of helping Guido lead such life, Her first act to inaugurate return Was, she got pricked in conscience: Jubilee Gave her the hint. Our Pope, as kind as just, Attained his eighty years, announced a boon Should make us bless the fact, held Jubilee— Short shrift, prompt pardon for the light offence, And no rough dealing with the regular crime So this occasion were not suffered slip— Otherwise, sins commuted as before, Without the least abatement in the price. Now, who had thought it? All this while, it seems, Our sage Violante had a sin of a sort She must compound for now or not at all: Now be the ready riddance! She confessed Pompilia was a fable not a fact: She never bore a child in her whole life. Had this child been a changeling, that were grace In some degree, exchange is hardly theft; You take your stand on truth ere leap your lie: Here was all lie, no touch of truth at all, All the lie hers—not even Pietro guessed He was as childless still as twelve years since. The babe had been a find i’ the filth-heap, Sir, Catch from the kennel! There was found a Rome, Down in the deepest of our social dregs, A woman who professed the wanton’s trade Under the requisite thin coverture, Communis meretrix and washer-wife: The creature thus conditioned found by chance Motherhood like a jewel in the muck, And straightway either trafficked with her prize Or listened to the tempter and let be,— Made pact abolishing her place and part In womankind, beast-fellowship indeed— She sold this babe eight months before its birth To our Violante, Pietro’s honest spouse, Well-famed and widely-instanced as that crown To the husband, virtue in a woman’s shape. She it was, bought and paid for, passed the thing Off as the flesh and blood and child of her Despite the flagrant fifty years,—and why? Partly to please old Pietro, fill his cup With wine at the late hour when lees are left, And send him from life’s feast rejoicingly,— Partly to cheat the rightful heirs, agape, Each uncle’s cousin’s brother’s son of him, For that same principal of the usufruct It vext him he must die and leave behind. Such was the sin had come to be confessed. Which of the tales, the first or last, was true? Did she so sin once, or, confessing now, Sin for the first time? Either way you will. One sees a reason for the cheat: one sees A reason for a cheat in owning cheat Where no cheat had been. What of the revenge? What prompted the contrition all at once, Made the avowal easy, the shame slight? Why, prove they but Pompilia not their child, No child, no dowry; this, supposed their child, Had claimed what this, shown alien to their blood, Claimed nowise: Guido’s claim was through his wife, Null then and void with hers. The biter bit, Do you see! For such repayment of the past, One might conceive the penitential pair Ready to bring their case before the courts, Publish their infamy to all the world And, arm in arm, go chuckling thence content. Is this your view? ’Twas Guido’s anyhow And colourable: he came forward then, Protested in his very bride’s behalf Against this lie and all it led to, least Of all the loss o’ the dowry; no! From her And him alike he would expunge the blot, Erase the brand of such a bestial birth, Participate in no hideous heritage Gathered from the gutter to be garnered up And glorified in a palace. Peter and Paul! But that who likes may look upon the pair Exposed in yonder church, and show his skill By saying which is eye and which is mouth Thro’ those stabs thick and threefold,—but for that— A strong word on the liars and their lie Might crave expression and obtain it, Sir! —Though prematurely, since there’s more to come, More than will shake your confidence in things Your cousin tells you,—may I be so bold? This makes the first act of the farce,—anon The stealing sombre element comes in Till all is black or blood-red in the piece. Guido, thus made a laughing-stock abroad, A proverb for the market-place at home, Left alone with Pompilia now, this graft So reputable on his ancient stock, This plague-seed set to fester his sound flesh, What did the Count? Revenge him on his wife? Unfasten at all risks to rid himself The noisome lazar-badge, fall foul of fate, And, careless whether the poor rag was ware O’ the part it played, or helped unwittingly, Bid it go burn and leave his frayed flesh free? Plainly, did Guido open both doors wide, Spurn thence the cur-cast creature and clear scores As man might, tempted in extreme like this? No, birth and breeding, and compassion too Saved her such scandal. She was young, he thought, Not privy to the treason, punished most I’ the proclamation of it; why make her A party to the crime she suffered by? Then the black eyes were now her very own, Not any more Violante’s: let her live, Lose in a new air, under a new sun, The taint of the imputed parentage Truely or falsely, take no more the touch Of Pietro and his partner anyhow! All might go well yet.                             So she thought, herself, It seems, since what was her first act and deed When news came how these kindly ones at Rome Had stripped her naked to amuse the world With spots here, spots there, and spots everywhere? —For I should tell you that they noised abroad Not merely the main scandal of her birth, But slanders written, printed, published wide, Pamphlets which set forth all the pleasantry Of how the promised glory was a dream, The power a bubble and the wealth—why, dust. There was a picture, painted to the life, Of those rare doings, that superlative Initiation in magnificence Conferred on a poor Roman family By favour of Arezzo and her first And famousest, the Franceschini there. You had the Countship holding head aloft Bravely although bespattered, shifts and straits In keeping out o’ the way o’ the wheels o’ the world, The comic of those home-contrivances When the old lady-mother’s wit was taxed To find six clamorous mouths in food more real Than fruit plucked off the cobwebbed family-tree, Or acorns shed from its gilt mouldered frame— Cold glories served up with three-pauls’ worth’s sauce. What, I ask,—when the drunkenness of hate Hiccuped return for hospitality, Befouled the table they had feasted on, Or say,—God knows I’ll not prejudge the case,— Grievances thus distorted, magnified, Coloured by quarrel into calumny,— What side did our Pompilia first espouse? Her first deliberate measure was, she wrote, Pricked by some loyal impulse, straight to Rome And her husband’s brother the Abate there, Who, having managed to effect the match, Might take men’s censure for its ill success. She made a clean breast also in her turn; She qualified the couple handsomely! Since whose departure, hell, she said, was heaven, And the house, late distracted by their peals, Quiet as Carmel where the lilies live. Herself had oftentimes complained: but why? All her complaints had been their prompting, tales Trumped up, devices to this very end. Their game had been to thwart her husband’s love And cross his will, malign his words and ways, So reach this issue, furnish this pretence For impudent withdrawal from their bond,— Theft, indeed murder, since they meant no less Whose last injunction to her simple self Had been—what parents’-precept do you think? That she should follow after with all speed, Fly from her husband’s house clandestinely, Join them at Rome again, but first of all Pick up a fresh companion in her flight, Putting so youth and beauty to fit use, Some gay, dare-devil, cloak-and-rapier spark Capable of adventure,—helped by whom She, some fine eve when lutes were in the air, Having put poison in the posset-cup, Laid hands on money, jewels, and the like, And, to conceal the thing with more effect, By way of parting benediction too, Fired the house,—one would finish famously I’ the tumult, slip out, scurry off and away And turn up merrily at home once more. Fact this, and not a dream o’ the devil, Sir! And more than this, a fact none dare dispute, Word for word, such a letter did she write. And such the Abate read, nor simply read But gave all Rome to ruminate upon, In answer to such charges as, I say, The couple sought to be beforehand with. The cause thus carried to the courts at Rome, Guido away, the Abate had no choice But stand forth, take his absent brother’s part, Defend the honour of himself beside. He made what head he might against the pair, Maintained Pompilia’s birth legitimate And all her rights intact—hers, Guido’s now— And so far by his tactics turned their flank, The enemy being beforehand in the place, That, though the courts allowed the cheat for fact, Suffered Violante to parade her shame, Publish her infamy to heart’s content, And let the tale o’ the feigned birth pass for proved,— Yet they stopped there, refused to intervene And dispossess the innocents, befooled By gifts o’ the guilty, at guilt’s new caprice: They would not take away the dowry now Wrongfully given at first, nor bar at all Succession to the aforesaid usufruct, Established on a fraud, nor play the game Of Pietro’s child and now not Pietro’s child As it might suit the gamester’s purpose. Thus Was justice ever ridiculed in Rome: Such be the double verdicts favoured here Which send away both parties to a suit Nor puffed up nor cast down,—for each a crumb Of right, for neither of them the whole loaf. Whence, on the Comparini’s part, appeal— Counter-appeal on Guido’s,—that’s the game: And so the matter stands, even to this hour, Bandied as balls are in a tennis-court, And so might stand, unless some heart broke first, Till doomsday.                 Leave it thus, and now revert To the old Arezzo whence we moved to Rome. We’ve had enough o’ the parents, false or true, Now for a touch o’ the daughter’s quality. The start’s fair henceforth—every obstacle Out of the young wife’s footpath—she’s alone— Left to walk warily now: how does she walk? Why, once a dwelling’s doorpost marked and crossed In rubric by the enemy on his rounds As eligible, as fit place of prey, Baffle him henceforth, keep him out who can! Stop up the door at the first hint of hoof, Presently at the window taps a horn, And Satan’s by your fireside, never fear! Pompilia, left alone now, found herself; Found herself young too, sprightly, fair enough, Matched with a husband old beyond his age (Though that was something like four times her own) Because of cares past, present, and to come: Found too the house dull and its inmates dead, So, looked outside for light and life.                                                     And lo There in a trice did turn up life and light, The man with the aureole, sympathy made flesh, The all-consoling Caponsacchi, Sir! A priest—what else should the consoler be? With goodly shoulderblade and proper leg, A portly make and a symmetric shape, And curls that clustered to the tonsure quite. This was a bishop in the bud, and now A canon full-blown so far: priest, and priest Nowise exorbitantly overworked, The courtly Christian, not so much Saint Paul As a saint of Cæsar’s household: there posed he Sending his god-glance after his shot shaft, Apollos turned Apollo, while the snake Pompilia writhed transfixed through all her spires. He, not a visitor at Guido’s house, Scarce an acquaintance, but in prime request With the magnates of Arezzo, was seen here, Heard there, felt everywhere in Guido’s path If Guido’s wife’s path be her husband’s too. Now he threw comfits at the theatre Into her lap,—what harm in Carnival? Now he pressed close till his foot touched her gown, His hand brushed hers,—how help on promenade? And, ever on weighty business, found his steps Incline to a certain haunt of doubtful fame Which fronted Guido’s palace by mere chance; While—how do accidents sometimes combine! Pompilia chose to cloister up her charms Just in a chamber that o’erlooked the street, Sat there to pray, or peep thence at mankind. This passage of arms and wits amused the town. At last the husband lifted eyebrow,—bent On day-book and the study how to wring Half the due vintage from the worn-out vines At the villa, tease a quarter the old rent From the farmstead, tenants swore would tumble soon,— Pricked up his ear a-singing day and night With “ruin, ruin;”—and so surprised at last— Why, what else but a titter? Up he jumps. Back to mind come those scratchings at the grange, Prints of the paw about the outhouse; rife In his head at once again are word and wink, Mum here and budget there, the smell o’ the fox, The musk o’ the gallant. “Friends, there’s falseness here!” The proper help of friends in such a strait Is waggery, the world over. Laugh him free O’ the regular jealous-fit that’s incident To all old husbands that wed brisk young wives, And he’ll go duly docile all his days. “Somebody courts your wife, Count? Where and when? “How and why? Mere horn-madness: have a care! “Your lady loves her own room, sticks to it, “Locks herself in for hours, you say yourself. “And—what, it’s Caponsacchi means you harm? “The Canon? We caress him, he’s the world’s, “A man of such acceptance,—never dream, “Though he were fifty times the fox you fear, “He’d risk his brush for your particular chick, “When the wide town’s his hen-roost! Fie o’ the fool!” So they dispensed their comfort of a kind. Guido at last cried “Something is in the air, “Under the earth, some plot against my peace: “The trouble of eclipse hangs overhead, “How it should come of that officious orb “Your Canon in my system, you must say: “I say—that from the pressure of this spring “Began the chime and interchange of bells, “Ever one whisper, and one whisper more, “And just one whisper for the silvery last, “Till all at once a-row the bronze-throats burst “Into a larum both significant “And sinister: stop it I must and will. “Let Caponsacchi take his hand away “From the wire!—disport himself in other paths “Than lead precisely to my palace-gate,— “Look where he likes except one window’s way “Where cheek on hand, and elbow set on sill, “Happens to lean and say her litanies “Every day and all day long, just my wife— “Or wife and Caponsacchi may fare the worse!” Admire the man’s simplicity, “I’ll do this, “I’ll not have that, I’ll punish and prevent!”— ’Tis easy saying. But to a fray, you see, Two parties go. The badger shows his teeth: The fox nor lies down sheep-like nor dares fight. Oh, the wife knew the appropriate warfare well, The way to put suspicion to the blush! At first hint of remonstrance, up and out I’ the face of the world, you found her: she could speak, State her case,—Franceschini was a name, Guido had his full share of foes and friends— Why should not she call these to arbitrate? She bade the Governor do governance, Cried out on the Archbishop—why, there now, Take him for sample! Three successive times, Had he to reconduct her by main force From where she took her station opposite His shut door,—on the public steps thereto, Wringing her hands, when he came out to see, And shrieking all her wrongs forth at his foot,— Back to the husband and the house she fled: Judge if that husband warmed him in the face Of friends or frowned on foes as heretofore! Judge if he missed the natural grin of folk, Or lacked the customary compliment Of cap and bells, the luckless husband’s fit! So it went on and on till—who was right? One merry April morning, Guido woke After the cuckoo, so late, near noonday, With an inordinate yawning of the jaws, Ears plugged, eyes gummed together, palate, tongue And teeth one mud-paste made of poppy-milk; And found his wife flown, his scrutoire the worse For a rummage,—jewelry that was, was not, Some money there had made itself wings too,— The door lay wide and yet the servants slept Sound as the dead, or dosed which does as well. In short, Pompilia, she who, candid soul, Had not so much as spoken all her life To the Canon, nay, so much as peeped at him Between her fingers while she prayed in church,— This lamb-like innocent of fifteen years (Such she was grown to by this time of day) Had simply put an opiate in the drink Of the whole household overnight, and then Got up and gone about her work secure, Laid hand on this waif and the other stray, Spoiled the Philistine and marched out of doors In company of the Canon who, Lord’s love, What with his daily duty at the church, Nightly devoir where ladies congregate, Had something else to mind, assure yourself, Beside Pompilia, paragon though she be, Or notice if her nose were sharp or blunt! Well, anyhow, albeit impossible, Both of them were together jollily Jaunting it Rome-ward, half-way there by this, While Guido was left go and get undrugged, Gather his wits up, groaningly give thanks When neighbours crowded round him to condole. “Ah,” quoth a gossip, “well I mind me now, “The Count did always say he thought he felt “He feared as if this very chance might fall! “And when a man of fifty finds his corns “Ache and his joints throb, and foresees a storm, “Though neighbours laugh and say the sky is clear, “Let us henceforth believe him weatherwise!” Then was the story told, I’ll cut you short: All neighbours knew: no mystery in the world, The lovers left at nightfall—over night Had Caponsacchi come to carry off Pompilia,—not alone, a friend of his, One Guillichini, the more conversant With Guido’s housekeeping that he was just A cousin of Guido’s and might play a prank— (Have you not too a cousin that’s a wag?) —Lord and a Canon also,—what would you have? Such are the red-clothed milk-swollen poppy-heads That stand and stiffen ’mid the wheat o’ the Church!— This worthy came to aid, abet his best. And so the house was ransacked, booty bagged, The lady led downstairs and out of doors Guided and guarded till, the city passed, A carriage lay convenient at the gate Good-bye to the friendly Canon; the loving one Could peradventure do the rest himself. In jumps Pompilia, after her the priest, “Whip, driver!—Money makes the mare to go, “And we’ve a bagful. Take the Roman road!” So said the neighbours. This was eight hours since. Guido heard all, swore the befitting oaths, Shook off the relics of his poison-drench, Got horse, was fairly started in pursuit With never a friend to follow, found the track Fast enough, ’twas the straight Perugia way, Trod soon upon their very heels, too late By a minute only at Camoscia, at Chiusi, Foligno, ever the fugitives Just ahead, just out as he galloped in, Getting the good news ever fresh and fresh, Till, lo, at the last stage of all, last post Before Rome,—as we say, in sight of Rome And safety (there’s impunity at Rome For priests, you know) at—what’s the little place? What some call Castelnuovo, some just call The Osteria, because o’ the post-house inn, There, at the journey’s all but end, it seems, Triumph deceived them and undid them both, Secure they might foretaste felicity Nor fear surprisal: so, they were surprised. There did they halt at early evening, there
Source

The script ran 0.033 seconds.