There is a city, upbuilt on the quays
of the turbulent Arno,
Under Fiesole’s heights, thither
are we to return?
There is a city that fringes the curve
of the inflowing waters,
Under the perilous hill fringes the beautiful bay,
Parthenope, do they call thee? the
Siren, Neapolis, seated
Under Vesevus’s hill, are we receding to thee?
Sicily, Greece, will invite, and the Orient; or
are we turn to
England, which may after all
be for its children the best?
I. Mary Trevellyn, at Lucerne, to Miss
Roper, at Florence.
So you are really free, and living in
quiet at Florence;
That is delightful news; you travelled
slowly and safely;
Mr. Claude got you out; took rooms at
Florence before you;
Wrote from Milan to say so; had left directly
for Milan,
Hoping to find us soon; if he could, he would, you are certain.
Dear Miss Roper, your letter has made
me exceedingly happy.
You are quite sure, you say,
he asked you about our intentions;
You had not heard as yet of Lucerne, but told him of Como.
Well, perhaps he will come; however, I
will not expect it.
Though you say you are sure, if
he can, he will, you are certain.
O my dear, many thanks from your ever
affectionate Mary.
II. Claude to Eustace.
Florence.
Action will furnish belief, but will
that belief be the true one?
This is the point, you know. However, it doesn’t
much matter.
What one wants, I suppose, is to predetermine the
action,
So as to make it entail, not a chance belief, but
the true one.
Out of the question, you say; if a thing isn’t
wrong we may do it.
Ah! but this wrong, you see but
I do not know that it matters.
Eustace, the Ropers are gone, and no one can tell
me about them.
Pisa.
Pisa, they say they think, and so I follow to Pisa,
Hither and thither inquiring. I weary of making
inquiries.
I am ashamed, I declare, of asking people about it.
Who are your friends? You said you had friends
who would certainly know them.
Florence.
But it is idle, moping, and thinking, and trying
to fix her
Image once more and more in, to write the whole
perfect inscription
Over and over again upon every page of remembrance.
I have settled to stay at Florence to wait for
your answer.
Who are your friends? Write quickly and tell
me. I wait for your answer.
III. Mary Trevellyn to Miss
Roper. at Lucca Baths.
You are at Lucca baths, you tell
me, to stay for the summer;
Florence was quite too hot; you can’t move
further at present.
Will you not come, do you think, before the summer
is over?
Mr. C. got you out with very considerable trouble;
And he was useful and kind, and seemed so happy
to serve you.
Didn’t stay with you long, but talked very
openly to you;
Made you almost his confessor, without appearing to know it,
What about? and you say you didn’t
need his confessions.
O my dear Miss Roper, I dare not trust what you
tell me!
Will he come, do you think? I am really
so sorry for him.
They didn’t give him my letter at Milan, I
feel pretty certain.
You had told him Bellaggio. We didn’t
go to Bellaggio;
So he would miss our track, and perhaps never come
to Lugano,
Where we were written in full, To Lucerne across
the St. Gothard.
But he could write to you; you would
tell him where you were going.
IV. Claude to Eustace.
Let me, then, bear to forget her.
I will not cling to her falsely:
Nothing factitious or forced shall impair
the old happy relation.
I will let myself go, forget, not try
to remember;
I will walk on my way, accept the chances
that meet me,
Freely encounter the world, imbibe these
alien airs, and
Never ask if new feelings and thoughts
are of her or of others.
Is she not changing herself? the
old image would only delude me.
I will be bold, too, and change, if
it must be. Yet if in all things,
Yet if I do but aspire evermore to the
Absolute only,
I shall be doing, I think, somehow, what she will be doing;
I shall be thine, O my child, some way,
though I know not in what way,
Let me submit to forget her; I must; I
already forget her.
V. Claude to Eustace.
Utterly vain is, alas! this attempt at
the Absolute, wholly!
I, who believed not in her, because I
would fain believe nothing,
Have to believe as I may, with a wilful,
unmeaning acceptance.
I, who refused to enfasten the roots of
my floating existence
In the rich earth, cling now to the hard, naked rock that is left me,
Ah! she was worthy, Eustace, and that, indeed, is my comfort,
Worthy a nobler heart than a fool such
as I could have given her.
Yes, it relieves me to write, though I
do not send, and the chance that
Takes may destroy my fragments.
But as men pray, without asking
Whether One really exist to hear or do anything for them,
Simply impelled by the need of the moment
to turn to a Being
In a conception of whom there is freedom from all limitation,
So in your image I turn to an ens rationis
of friendship,
Even so write in your name I know not
to whom nor in what wise.
There was a time, methought it was but
lately departed,
When, if a thing was denied me, I felt
I was bound to attempt it;
Choice alone should take, and choice alone
should surrender.
There was a time, indeed, when I had not
retired thus early,
Languidly thus, from pursuit of a purpose
I once had adopted,
But it is all over, all that! I
have slunk from the perilous field in
Whose wild struggle of forces the prizes
of life are contested.
It is over, all that! I am a coward,
and know it.
Courage in me could be only factitious,
unnatural, useless.
Comfort has come to me here in the dreary
streets of the city,
Comfort how do you think? with
a barrel-organ to bring it.
Moping along the streets, and cursing
my day as I wandered,
All of a sudden my ear met the sound of
an English psalm-tune,
Comfort me it did, till indeed I was very
near crying.
Ah, there is some great truth, partial,
very likely, but needful,
Lodged, I am strangely sure, in the tones
of the English psalm-tune.
Comfort it was at least; and I must take
without question
Comfort, however it come, in the dreary
streets of the city.
What with trusting myself and seeking
support from within me,
Almost I could believe I had gained a
religious assurance,
Formed in my own poor soul a great moral
basis to rest on.
Ah, but indeed I see, I feel it factitious
entirely;
I refuse, reject, and put it utterly from
me;
I will look straight out, see things,
not try to evade them;
Fact shall be fact for me, and the Truth
the Truth as ever,
Flexible, changeable, vague, and multiform,
and doubtful.-
Off, and depart to the void, thou subtle,
fanatical tempter!
I shall behold thee again (is it so?)
at a new visitation,
O ill genius thou! I shall at my
life’s dissolution
(When the pulses are weak, and the feeble
light of the reason
Flickers, an unfed flame retiring
slow from the socket),
Low on a sick-bed laid, hear one, as it
were, at the doorway,
And, looking up, see thee standing by,
looking emptily at me;
I shall entreat thee then, though now I dare to refuse thee,
Pale and pitiful now, but terrible then to the dying.
Well, I will see thee again, and while
I can, will repel thee.
VI. Claude to Eustace.
Rome is fallen, I hear, the gallant Medici
taken,
Noble Manara slain, and Garibaldi has
lost il Moro;
Rome is fallen; and fallen, or falling,
heroical Venice.
I, meanwhile, for the loss of a single
small chit of a girl, sit
Moping and mourning here, for
her, and myself much smaller.
Whither depart the souls of
the brave that die in the battle,
Die in the lost, lost fight, for the cause
that perishes with them?
Are they upborne from the field on the
slumberous pinions of angels
Unto a far-off home, where the weary rest
from their labour,
And the deep wounds are healed, and the
bitter and burning moisture
Wiped from the generous eyes? or do they
linger, unhappy,
Pining, and haunting the grave of their
by-gone hope and endeavour?
All declamation, alas! though
I talk, I care not for Rome nor
Italy; feebly and faintly, and but with
the lips, can lament the
Wreck of the Lombard youth, and the victory
of the oppressor.
Whither depart the brave? God
knows; I certainly do not.
VII. Mary Trevellyn to Miss Roper.
He has not come as yet; and now I must
not expect it.
You have written, you say, to friends
at Florence, to see him,
If he perhaps should return; but
that is surely unlikely.
Has he not written to you? he
did not know your direction.
Oh, how strange never once to have told
him where you were going!
Yet if he only wrote to Florence, that
would have reached you.
If what you say he said was true, why
has he not done so?
Is he gone back to Rome, do you think, to his Vatican marbles?
O my dear Miss Roper, forgive me! do not be angry!
You have written to Florence; your
friends would certainly find him.
Might you not write to him? but
yet it is so little likely!
I shall expect nothing more. Ever
yours, your affectionate Mary.
VIII. Claude to Eustace.
I cannot stay at Florence, not even to
wait for a letter.
Galleries only oppress me. Remembrance
of hope I had cherished
(Almost more than as hope, when I passed
through Florence the first time)
Lies like a sword in my soul. I
am more a coward than ever,
Chicken-hearted, past thought. The
caffes and waiters distress me.
All is unkind, and, alas! I am ready
for anyone’s kindness.
Oh, I knew it of old, and knew it, I thought,
to perfection,
If there is any one thing in the world
to preclude all kindness
It is the need of it, it is
this sad, self-defeating dependence.
Why is this, Eustace? Myself, were
I stronger, I think I could tell you.
But it is odd when it comes. So
plumb I the deeps of depression,
Daily in deeper, and find no support,
no will, no purpose.
All my old strengths are gone. And
yet I shall have to do something.
Ah, the key of our life, that passes all
wards, opens all locks,
Is not I will, but I must.
I must, I must, and I do it.
After all, do I know that I really cared
so about her?
Do whatever I will, I cannot call up her
image;
For when I close my eyes, I see, very
likely, St. Peter’s,
Or the Pantheon façade, or Michel Angelo’s
figures,
Or, at a wish, when I please, the Alban hills and the Forum,
But that face, those eyes, ah,
no, never anything like them;
Only, try as I will, a sort of featureless
outline,
And a pale blank orb, which no recollection
will add to.
After all, perhaps there was something
factitious about it;
I have had pain, it is true: I have
wept; and so have the actors.
At the last moment I have your letter,
for which I was waiting;
I have taken my place, and see no good
in inquiries.
Do nothing more, good Eustace, I pray
you. It only will vex me.
Take no measures. Indeed, should
we meet, I could not be certain;
All might be changed, you know.
Or perhaps there was nothing to be changed.
It is a curious history, this; and yet
I foresaw it;
I could have told it before. The
Fates, it is clear, are against us;
For it is certain enough I met with the
people you mention;
They were at Florence the day I returned
there, and spoke to me even;
Stayed a week, saw me often; departed,
and whither I know not.
Great is Fate, and is best. I believe
in Providence partly.
What is ordained is right, and all that
happens is ordered.
Ah, no, that isn’t it. But
yet I retain my conclusion.
I will go where I am led, and will not
dictate to the chances.
Do nothing more, I beg. If you love
me, forbear interfering.
IX. Claude to Eustace.
Shall we come out of it all, some day,
as one does from a tunnel?
Will it be all at once, without our doing
or asking,
We shall behold clear day, the trees and
meadows about us,
And the faces of friends, and the eyes
we loved looking at us?
Who knows? Who can say? It
will not do to suppose it.
X. Claude to Eustace,-from Rome.
Rome will not suit me, Eustace; the priests
and soldiers possess it;
Priests and soldiers: and,
ah! which is the worst, the priest or the soldier?
Politics, farewell, however!
For what could I do? with inquiring,
Talking, collating the journals, go fever
my brain about things o’er
Which I can have no control. No,
happen whatever may happen,
Time, I suppose, will subsist; the earth
will revolve on its axis;
People will travel; the stranger will
wander as now in the city;
Rome will be here, and the Pope the custode
of Vatican marbles.
I have no heart, however,
for any marble or fresco;
I have essayed it in vain; ’tis
in vain as yet to essay it:
But I may haply resume some day my studies
in this kind;
Not as the Scripture says, is, I think,
the fact. Ere our death-day,
Faith, I think, does pass, and Love; but
Knowledge abideth.
Let us seek Knowledge; the
rest may come and go as it happens.
Knowledge is hard to seek, and harder
yet to adhere to.
Knowledge is painful often; and yet when
we know we are happy.
Seek it, and leave mere Faith and Love
to come with the chances.
As for Hope, to-morrow I hope
to be starting for Naples.
Rome will not do, I see, for many very
good reasons.
Eastward, then, I suppose,
with the coming of winter, to Egypt.
XI. Mary Trevellyn to Miss Roper.
You have heard nothing; of course I know
you can have heard nothing.
Ah, well, more than once I have broken
my purpose, and sometimes,
Only too often, have looked for the little
lake steamer to bring him.
But it is only fancy, I do
not really expect it.
Oh, and you see I know so exactly how
he would take it:
Finding the chances prevail against meeting
again, he would banish
Forthwith every thought of the poor little
possible hope, which
I myself could not help, perhaps, thinking
only too much of;
He would resign himself, and go.
I see it exactly.
So I also submit, although in a different
manner.
Can you not really come?
We go very shortly to England.
So go forth to the world, to the good
report and the evil!
Go, little book! thy tale,
is it not evil and good?
Go, and if strangers revile, pass quietly
by without answer.
Go, and if curious friends
ask of thy rearing and age,
Say, ’I am flitting about many years
from brain unto brain of
Feeble and restless youths
born to inglorious days:
But,’ so finish the word, ’I
was writ in a Roman chamber,
When from Janiculan heights
thundered the cannon of France.’