Rossetti Archive Textual Transcription
Document Title: Ballads and Sonnets (1881), proof Signature X (Delaware Museum, author's
first revise, partial copy)
Author: Dante Gabriel Rossetti
Date of publication: 1881 May 10
Publisher: F. S. Ellis
Printer: Chiswick Press, C. Whittingham and Co.
Issue: 3
The
full Rossetti Archive record for this transcribed document is available.
page: 305
- The Past is over and fled;
- Named new, we name it the old;
- Thereof some tale hath been told,
- But no word comes from the dead;
- Whether at all they be,
- Or whether as bond or free,
- Or whether they too were we,
-
20Or by what spell they have sped.
- Still we say as we go,—
- “Strange to think by the way,
- Whatever there is to know,
- That shall we know one day.”
- What of the heart of hate
- That beats in thy breast, O Time?—
- Red strife from the furthest prime,
- And anguish of fierce debate;
page: 306
- War that shatters her slain,
-
30 And peace that grinds them as grain,
- And eyes fixed ever in vain
- On the pitiless eyes of Fate.
- Still we say as we go,—
- “Strange to think by the way,
- Whatever there is to know,
- That shall we know one day.”
- What of the heart of love
- That bleeds in thy breast, O Man?—
- Thy kisses snatched 'neath the ban
-
40Of fangs that mock them above;
- Thy bells prolonged unto knells,
- Thy hope that a breath dispels,
- Thy bitter forlorn farewells
- And the empty echoes thereof?
page: 307
- Still we say as we go,—
- “Strange to think by the way,
- Whatever there is to know,
- That shall we know one day.”
- The sky leans dumb on the sea,
-
50 Aweary with all its wings;
- And oh! the song the sea sings
- Is dark everlastingly.
- Our past is clean forgot,
- Our present is and is not,
- Our future's a sealed seedplot,
- And what betwixt them are we?—
- We who say as we go,—
- “Strange to think by the way,
- Whatever there is to know,
-
60 That shall we know one day.”
page: [308]
page: [309]
page: [310]
page: [311]
- Turn not the prophet's page, O Son! He knew
- All that thou hast to suffer, and hath writ.
- Not yet thine hour of knowledge. Infinite
- The sorrows that thy manhood's lot must rue
- And dire acquaintance of thy grief. That clue
- The spirits of thy mournful ministerings
- Seek through yon scroll in silence. For these
- things
- The angels have desired to look into.
- Still before Eden waves the fiery sword,—
-
10 Her Tree of Life unransomed: whose sad Tree
- Of Knowledge yet to growth of Calvary
- Must yield its Tempter,—Hell the
earliest dead
- Of Earth resign,—and yet, O Son and Lord,
- The Seed o' the
W
woman bruise the serpent's
- head.
Transcribed Footnote (page [311]):
1 In this picture the Virgin Mother is seen
withholding
from the Child Saviour the prophetic writings in
which his
sufferings are foretold. Angelic figures beside them
examine
a scroll.
page: 312
- What masque of what old wind-withered New-Year
- Honours this Lady?
1
Flora, wanton-eyed
- For birth, and with all flowrets prankt and pied:
- Aurora, Zephyrus, with mutual cheer
- Of clasp and kiss: the Graces circling near,
- 'Neath bower-linked arch of white arms glorified:
- And with those feathered feet which hovering
- glide
- O'er Spring's brief bloom, Hermes the harbinger.
- Birth-bare, not death-bare yet, the young stems
- stand,
-
10 This Lady's temple-columns: o'er her head
- Love wings his shaft. What mystery here is read
- Of homage or of hope? But how command
- Dead Springs to answer? And how question here
- These mummers of that wind-withered New-
- Year?
Transcribed Footnote (page 312):
1 The same lady, here surrounded by the masque
of
Spring, is evidently the subject
by
of a portrait by Botticelli for-
merly in the
Pourtalès collection in Paris. This portrait
is
inscribed “Smeralda Bandinelli.”
- With Shakspeare's manhood at a boy's wild
- heart,—
- Through Hamlet's doubt to Shakspeare near
- allied,
- And kin to Milton through his Satan's pride,—
- At Death's sole door he stooped, and craved a dart;
- And to the dear new bower of England's art,—
- Even to that shrine Time else had deified,
- The unuttered heart that soared
against his
- side,—
- Drove the fell point, and smote life's seals apart.
- Thy nested home-loves, noble Chatterton;
-
10 The angel-trodden stair thy soul could trace
- Up Redcliffe's spire; and in the
world's armed
- space
- Thy gallant sword-play:—these to many an one
- Are sweet for ever; as thy grave unknown
- And love-dream of thine unrecorded face.
page: 314
- This is the place. Even here the dauntless soul,
- The unflinching hand, wrought on; till
in that
- nook,
- As on that very bed, his life partook
- New birth, and passed. Yon river's dusky shoal,
- Whereto the close-built coiling lanes unroll,
- Faced his work-window, whence his eyes would
- stare,
- Thought-wandering, unto nought that
met them
- there,
- But to the unfettered irreversible goal.
- This cupboard, Holy of Holies, held the cloud
-
10 Of his soul writ and limned; this other one,
- His true wife's charge, full oft to their abode
- Yielded for daily bread the martyr's stone,
- Ere yet their food might be that Bread alone,
- The words now home-speech of the mouth of God.
page: 315
- His Soul fared forth (as from the deep home-grove
- The father-songster plies the hour-long quest,)
- To feed his soul-brood hungering in the nest;
- But his warm Heart, the mother-bird, above
- Their callow fledgling progeny still hove
- With tented roof of wings and fostering breast
- Till the Soul fed the soul-brood. Richly blest
- From Heaven their growth, whose food was Human
- Love.
- Yet ah! Like desert pools that show the stars
-
10 Once in long leagues,—even
such the scarce-
- snatched hours
- Which deepening pain left to his lordliest
- powers:—
- Heaven lost through spider-trammelled prison-bars.
- Six years, from sixty saved! Yet kindling skies
- Own them, a beacon to our centuries.
page: 316
- The weltering London ways where children weep
- And girls whom none call maidens laugh,—
- strange road
- Miring his outward steps, who inly trode
- The bright Castalian brink and Latmos' steep:—
- Even such his life's cross-paths; till deathly deep
- He toiled through sands of Lethe; and long pain,
- Weary with labour spurned and love found vain,
- In dead Rome's sheltering shadow wrapped his
- sleep.
- O pang-dowered Poet, whose reverberant lips
-
10And heart-strung lyre awoke the Moon's eclipse,—
- Thou whom the daisies glory in growing o'er,—
- Their fragrance clings around thy name, not writ
- But rumour'd in water, while the fame of it
- Along Time's flood goes echoing evermore.
page: 317
- 'Twixt those twin
worlds,—the world of Sleep,
- which gave
- No dream to warn,—the tidal world of Death,
- Which the earth's sea, as the earth, replenisheth,—
- Shelley, Song's orient sun, to breast the wave,
- Rose from this couch that morn. Ah! did he brave
- Only the sea?—or did man's deed of hell
- Engulph his bark 'mid mists impenetrable? . . . .
- No eye discerned, nor any power might save.
- When that mist cleared, O Shelley! what dread veil
-
10 Was rent from thee, to whom far-darkling Truth
- Reigned sovereign guide through thy
brief age-
- less youth?
- Was the Truth
thy Truth,
Shelley?—Hush! All-
- Hail,
- Past doubt, thou gav'st it; and in
Truth's bright
- sphere
- Art first of praisers, being most
praisèd here.
page: 318
- The head and hands of murdered Cicero,
- Above his seat high in the Forum hung,
- Drew jeers and burning tears. When on the rung
- Of a swift-mounted ladder, all aglow,
- Fluvia, Mark Antony's shameless wife, with show
- Of foot firm-poised and gleaming arm upflung,
- Bade her sharp needle pierce that god-like tongue
- Whose speech fed Rome even as the Tiber's flow.
- And thou, Cleopatra's Needle, that hadst thrid
-
10Great skirts of Time ere she and Antony hid
- Dead hope!—hast thou too
reached, surviving
- death,
- A city of sweet speech scorned,—on whose chill stone
- Keats withered, Coleridge pined, and Chatterton,
- Breadless, with poison froze the God-fired breath?
Electronic Archive Edition: 1