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MADONNA DELLA VITA.

WHOSO will let him cast off the robe of his faith
And the crown of his hope and the sceptre of love,
And lie at the feet of the Lady of Death,

Enwrapt in the slumber no trouble of breath,

No tempest of joy or of sorrow can move.
Not thine be such rest, O my brother, my knight,

Who ownest the mighty ones' sinews and thews :
Not theirs and not thine to despair and refuse
The forefront of battle, the thickest of fight.

I charge thee by all thou esteemest of worth
Around thee and in thee, below and above,
By the hintings of heav'n from the lips of the earth
As she smiles in the clasp of the infinite love;
By that infinite love which around us lies light

As the ether, or grips like a stark fate austere ;

By the light and the darkness, the veil'd and the clear;

By the mystical glories of red and of white;

By the little we guess and the much we shall know
Of the meaning of things that bewilder us here
With fairness and foulness and gladness and woe :

I charge thee to stand, though bedew'd with the sweat That is blood, armour hackt, and upon thee the stains Of travail and conflict, and over thee pain's

Broad banner of dim, heavy purple, and wet

With the floods thou hast past through to come to this

place:

For the foe is alive yet, and nothing of grace

Must he have at thy hands till thou smite him to death; Thy foe who has vow'd to fordo her whose breath In the world's nostrils breath'd made it quicken, and lo! No longer red clay, but a glory and glow,

And a flame, which is God, whosoever gainsaith.

She stood in her splendour of beauty and grace
By Sokrates' side, and she breath'd on his soul
Till it would not be foil'd by the strange satyr-face,
The mask of the clay that was fain to control.
She smil'd on Gautama and kindled desire

For the fairer than fair, and her love was the fire,

The radiant, the lustral, that toucht him and caught The heart of the prince till it flam'd up one red In that light and its passion, and self lay all dead To rise never more, for the man was of those To whom hunger or fulness, or toil or repose, Or glory or shame, seeing God, matters not.

Her hand held the Christ's from the womb to the grave, Through the flow'rland of childhood that smil'd as he

stept,

On, on, through the wilds where the heather scarce kept One touch of God's purple, hoar hill, and lone cave; On, on to the heights that in sheer steepness frown'd, Jagged cliffs, black for awe of the elements' strife,

She led him unswerving, until he had found The terrible cruciform portal of life.

Thou didst pledge her, unknowing, when speechless thou lay'st,

In the milk of thy mother; and, later, in wine

Of the world's life that thrill'd through the young veins

of thine,

In the splendid excess that knew nothing of waste;

Thou did'st pledge her, 'mid horror and darkness, in brine

Of the terrible waters that swept over thee

Bedrenching and beating: then, scap'd from the flood, Didst thou stand by thy lady and look on that sea, And pledge her again, and the cup was thy blood.

Thy lady! thou know'st her: her eyes are the light
Of the world, and her heart is the fountain of joy,
And her lips are light-curv'd to a smile, never coy
But quickening and calming and grand is her height.
And stately her going, and wondrous the white

:

Of her brows; and her name-She hath many a

name,

As Love, Truth, Life, Sorrow; and whom she doth

claim

By the pledge he unshrinking redeems, he alone (Oh, pride for dishonour! oh, glory for blame !)

Shall know by which name she delights to be known.

TOO LATE.

I AM lying here with my head dropt low on your grave :

the sky

Is cloudless, pitiless blue: over all a quiet is shed,

A desolate quiet that broods like the passionless calm and dead

Of a heart that ne'er quicken'd its beats at the sound of beloved tread :

The sun strikes blindly down from its noonday height as

I lie

With my very soul crampt up in the spasms

of its agony.

I feel the slow, slight shudder of growing grass at my ear Stir through the dead-brown hair that was wont to be

so bright

For the royal crown of love, whose very shadow dropt

light

Around me until I stood made fair and transfigur'd quite,

And my face as an angel's was-O God of mercy, I fear The weight of my punishment now is greater than I can

bear.

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