That bright Pentameron,
And his own vines again and chestnuts heard
Boccaccio: nor swift Elsa’s chime
Mixed not her golden babble with Petrarca’s rhyme.
39.
No lovelier laughed the garden which receives
Yet, and yet hides not from our following
eyes
With soft rose-laurels and low strawberry-leaves,
Ternissa, sweet as April-coloured skies,
Bowed like a flowering reed when May’s wind
heaves
The reed-bed that the stream kisses and
sighs,
In love that shrinks and murmurs and believes
What yet the wisest of the starriest wise
Whom Greece might
ever hear
Speaks in the
gentlest ear
That ever heard love’s lips philosophize
With such deep-reasoning
words
As blossoms use
and birds,
Nor heeds Leontion lingering till they
rise
Far off, in no wise over far,
Beneath a heaven all amorous of its first-born star.
40.
What sound, what storm and splendour of what fire,
Darkening the light of heaven, lightening
the night,
Rings, rages, flashes round what ravening pyre
That makes time’s face pale with
its reflex light
And leaves on earth, who seeing might scarce respire,
A shadow of red remembrance? Right
nor might
Alternating wore ever shapes more dire
Nor manifest in all men’s awful
sight
In form and face
that wore
Heaven’s
light and likeness more
Than these, or held suspense men’s
hearts at height
More fearful,
since man first
Slaked with man’s
blood his thirst,
Than when Rome clashed with Hannibal in
fight,
Till tower on ruining tower
was hurled
Where Scipio stood, and Carthage was not in the world.
41.
Nor lacked there power of purpose in his hand
Who carved their several praise in words
of gold
To bare the brows of conquerors and to brand,
Made shelterless of laurels bought and
sold
For price of blood or incense, dust or sand,
Triumph or terror. He that sought
of old
His father Ammon in a stranger’s land,
And shrank before the serpentining fold,
Stood in our seer’s
wide eye
No higher than
man most high,
And lowest in heart when highest in hope
to hold
Fast as a scripture
furled
The scroll of
all the world
Sealed with his signet: nor the blind
and bold
First thief of empire, round
whose head
Swarmed carrion flies for bees, on flesh for violets
fed.[1]
42.
As fire that kisses, killing with a kiss,
He saw the light of death, riotous and
red,
Flame round the bent brows of Semiramis
Re-risen, and mightier, from the Assyrian
dead,
Kindling, as dawn a frost-bound precipice,
The steely snows of Russia, for the tread
Of feet that felt before them crawl and hiss
The snaky lines of blood violently shed.