Never was lady on earth
more true as woman and wife,
Larger in judgment and
instinct, prouder in manners and life.
She stood in the early
morning, and said to her maidens, “Bring
That silken robe made
ready to wear at the court of the King.
“Bring me the
clasps of diamond, lucid, clear of the mote;
Clasp me the large at
the waist, and clasp me the small at the throat.
“Diamonds to fasten
the hair, and diamonds to fasten the sleeves,
Laces to drop from their
rays, like a powder of snow from the eaves.”
Gorgeous she entered
the sunlight, which gathered her up in a flame,
While, straight in her
open carriage, she to the hospital came.
In she went at the door,
and gazing from end to end,—
“Many and low
are the pallets; but each is the place of a friend.”
Up she passed through
the wards, and stood at a young man’s bed;
Bloody the band on his
brow, and livid the droop of his head.
“Art thou a Lombard,
my brother? Happy art thou!” she cried,
And smiled like Italy
on him: he dreamed in her face—and
died.
Pale with his passing
soul, she went on still to a second:
He was a grave hard
man, whose years by dungeons were reckoned.
Wounds in his body were
sore, wounds in his life were sorer.
“Art thou a Romagnole?”
Her eyes drove lightnings before her.
“Austrian and
priest had joined to double and tighten the cord
Able to bind thee, O
strong one, free by the stroke of a sword.
“Now be grave
for the rest of us, using the life overcast
To ripen our wine of
the present (too new) in glooms of the past.”
Down she stepped to
a pallet where lay a face like a girl’s,
Young, and pathetic
with dying,—a deep black hole in the curls.
“Art thou from
Tuscany, brother? and seest thou, dreaming in pain,
Thy mother stand in
the piazza, searching the list of the slain?”
Kind as a mother herself, she touched his cheeks with
her hands:
“Blessed is she
who has borne thee, although she should weep as
she
stands.”
On she passed to a Frenchman,
his arm carried off by a ball:
Kneeling: “O
more than my brother! how shall I thank thee for all?
“Each of the heroes
around us has fought for his land and line;
But thou hast fought
for a stranger, in hate of a wrong not thine.
“Happy are all
free peoples, too strong to be dispossest,
But blessed are those
among nations who dare to be strong for the
rest.”
Ever she passed on her
way, and came to a couch where pined
One with a face from
Venetia, white with a hope out of mind.
Long she stood and gazed,
and twice she tried at the name;
But two great crystal
tears were all that faltered and came.