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A Forgiveness

    By Robert Browning



    I am indeed the personage you know.
    As for my wife, what happened long ago
    You have a right to question me, as I
    Am bound to answer.

    (“Son, a fit reply!”
    The monk half spoke, half ground through his clenched teeth,
    At the confession-grate I knelt beneath.)

    Thus then all happened, Father! Power and place
    I had as still I have. I ran life’s race,
    With the whole world to see, as only strains
    His strength some athlete whose prodigious gains
    Of good appall him: happy to excess,
    Work freely done should balance happiness
    Fully enjoyed; and, since beneath my roof
    Housed she who made home heaven, in heaven’s behoof
    I went forth every day, and all day long
    Worked for the world. Look, how the laborer’s song
    Cheers him! Thus sang my soul, at each sharp throe
    Of laboring flesh and blood, “She loves me so!”

    One day, perhaps such song so knit the nerve
    That work grew play and vanished. “I deserve
    Haply my heaven an hour before the time!”
    I laughed, as silverly the clockhouse-chime
    Surprised me passing through the postern-gate
    Not the main entry where the menials wait
    And wonder why the world’s affairs allow
    The master sudden leisure. That was how
    I took the private garden-way for once.

    Forth from the alcove, I saw start, ensconce
    Himself behind the porphyry vase, a man.

    My fancies in the natural order ran:
    “A spy, perhaps a foe in ambuscade,
    A thief, more like, a sweetheart of some maid
    Who pitched on the alcove for tryst perhaps.”

    “Stand there!” I bid.

    Whereat my man but wraps
    His face the closelier with uplifted arm
    Whereon the cloak lies, strikes in blind alarm
    This and that pedestal as, stretch and stoop,
    Now in, now out of sight, he thrids the group
    Of statues, marble god and goddess ranged
    Each side the pathway, till the gate’s exchanged
    For safety: one step thence, the street, you know!

    Thus far I followed with my gaze. Then, slow,
    Near on admiringly, I breathed again,
    And back to that last fancy of the train
    “A danger risked for hope of just a word
    With which of all my nest may be the bird
    This poacher covets for her plumage, pray?
    Carmen? Juana? Carmen seems too gay
    For such adventure, while Juana’s grave
    Would scorn the folly. I applaud the knave!
    He had the eye, could single from my brood
    His proper fledgeling!”

    As I turned, there stood
    In face of me, my wife stone-still stone-white.
    Whether one bound had brought her, at first sight
    Of what she judged the encounter, sure to be
    Next moment, of the venturous man and me,
    Brought her to clutch and keep me from my prey:
    Whether impelled because her death no day
    Could come so absolutely opportune
    As now at joy’s height, like a year in June
    Stayed at the fall of its first ripened rose;
    Or whether hungry for my hate, who knows?
    Eager to end an irksome lie, and taste
    Our tingling true relation, hate embraced
    By hate one naked moment: anyhow
    There stone-still stone-white stood my wife, but now
    The woman who made heaven within my house.
    Ay, she who faced me was my very spouse
    As well as love, you are to recollect!

    “Stay!” she said. “Keep at least one soul unspecked
    With crime, that’s spotless hitherto, your own!
    Kill me who court the blessing, who alone
    Was, am, and shall be guilty, first to last!
    The man lay helpless in the toils I cast
    About him, helpless as the statue there
    Against that strangling bell-flower’s bondage: tear
    Away and tread to dust the parasite,
    But do the passive marble no despite!
    I love him as I hate you. Kill me! Strike
    At one blow both infinitudes alike
    Out of existence, hate and love! Whence love?
    That’s safe inside my heart, nor will remove
    For any searching of your steel, I think.
    Whence hate? The secret lay on lip, at brink
    Of speech, in one fierce tremble to escape,
    At every form wherein your love took shape;
    At each new provocation of your kiss.
    Kill me!”

    We went in.

    Next day after this,
    I felt as if the speech might come. I spoke,
    Easily, after all.

    “The lifted cloak
    Was screen sufficient: I concern myself
    Hardly with laying hands on who for pelf,
    Whate’er the ignoble kind, may prowl and brave
    Cuffing and kicking proper to a knave
    Detected by my household’s vigilance.
    Enough of such! As for my love-romance,
    I, like our good Hidalgo, rub my eyes
    And wake and wonder how the film could rise
    Which changed for me a barbers’ basin straight
    Into, Mambrino’s helm? I hesitate
    Nowise to say, God’s sacramental cup!
    Why should I blame the brass which, burnished up,
    Will blaze, to all but me, as good as gold?
    To me, a warning I was overbold
    In judging metals. The Hidalgo waked
    Only to die, if I remember, staked
    His life upon the basin’s worth, and lost:
    While I confess torpidity at most
    In here and there a limb; but, lame and halt,
    Still should I work on, still repair my fault
    Ere I took rest in death, no fear at all!
    Now, work no word before the curtain fall!”

    The “curtain”? That of death on life, I meant:
    My “word,” permissible in death’s event,
    Would be, truth, soul to soul; for, other-wise,
    Day by day, three years long, there had to rise
    And, night by night, to fall upon our stage,
    Ours, doomed to public play by heritage,
    Another curtain, when the world, perforce
    Our critical assembly, in due course
    Came and went, witnessing, gave praise or blame
    To art-mimetic. It had spoiled the game
    If, suffered to set foot behind our scene,
    The world had witnessed how stage-king and queen,
    Gallant and lady, but a minute since
    Enarming each the other, would evince
    No sign of recognition as they took
    His way and her way to whatever nook
    Waited them in the darkness either side
    Of that bright stage where lately groom and bride
    Had fired the audience to a frenzy-fit
    Of sympathetic rapture, every whit
    Earned as the curtain fell on her and me,
    Actors. Three whole years, nothing was to see
    But calm and concord: where a speech was due
    There came the speech; when the smiles were wanted too,
    Smiles were as ready. In a place like mine,
    Where foreign and domestic cares combine,
    There’s audience every day and all day long;
    But finally the last of the whole throng
    Who linger lets one see his back. For her,
    Why, liberty and liking: I aver,
    Liking and liberty! For me, I breathed,
    Let my face rest from every wrinkle wreathed
    Smile-like about the mouth, unlearned my task
    Of personation till next day bade mask,
    And quietly betook me from that world
    To the real world, not pageant: there unfurled
    In work, its wings, my soul, the fretted power.
    Three years I worked, each minute of each hour
    Not claimed by acting: work I may dispense
    With talk about, since work in evidence,
    Perhaps in history; who knows or cares?

    After three years, this way, all unawares,
    Our acting ended. She and I, at close
    Of a loud night-feast, led, between two rows
    Of bending male and female loyalty,
    Our lord the king down staircase, while, held high
    At arm’s length did the twisted tapers’ flare
    Herald his passage from our palace, where
    Such visiting left glory evermore.
    Again the ascent in public, till at door
    As we two stood by the saloon, now blank
    And disencumbered of its guests, there sank
    A whisper in my ear, so low and yet
    So unmistakable!

    “I half forget
    The chamber you repair to, and I want
    Occasion for one short word, if you grant
    That grace, within a certain room yon: called
    Our ‘Study,’ for you wrote there while I scrawled
    Some paper full of faces for my sport.
    That room I can remember. Just one short
    Word with you there, for the remembrance’ sake!”

    “Follow me thither I” I replied.

    We break
    The gloom a little, as with guiding lamp
    I lead the way, leave warmth and cheer, by damp
    Blind disused serpentining ways afar
    From where the habitable chambers are,
    Ascend, descend stairs tunnelled through the stone,
    Always in silence, till I reach the lone
    Chamber sepulchred for my very own
    Out of the palace-quarry. When a boy,
    Here was my fortress, stronghold from annoy,
    Proof-positive of ownership; in youth
    I garnered up my gleanings here uncouth
    But precious relics of vain hopes, vain fears;
    Finally, this became in after-years
    My closet of entrenchment to withstand
    Invasion of the foe on every hand,
    The multifarious herd in bower and hall,
    State-room, rooms whatsoe’er the style, which call
    On masters to be mindful that, before
    Men, they must look like men and something more.
    Here, when our lord the king’s bestowment ceased
    To deck me on the day that, golden-fleeced,
    I touched ambition’s height, ’twas here, released
    From glory (always symbolled by a chain!)
    No sooner was I privileged to gain
    My secret domicile than glad I flung
    That last toy on the table gazed where hung
    On hook my father’s gift, the arquebus
    And asked myself, “Shall I envisage thus
    The new prize and the old prize, when I reach
    Another year’s experience? own that each
    Equalled advantage, sportsman’s, states-man’s tool?
    That brought me down an eagle, this, a fool!”

    Into which room on entry, I set down
    The lamp, and turning saw whose rustled gown
    Had told me my wife followed, pace for pace.
    Each of us looked the other in the face.
    She spoke. “Since I could die now” . . .

    (To explain
    Why that first struck me, know, not once again
    Since the adventure at the porphyry’s edge
    Three years before, which sundered like a wedge
    Her soul from mine, though daily, smile to smile,
    We stood before the public, all the while
    Not once bad I distinguished, in that face
    I paid observance to, the faintest trace
    Of feature more than requisite for eyes
    To do their duty by and recognize:
    So did I force mine to obey my will
    And pry no further. There exists such skill,
    Those know who need it. What physician shrinks
    From needful contact with a corpse? He drinks
    No plague so long as thirst for knowledge not
    An idler impulse prompts inquiry. What,
    And will you disbelieve in power to bid
    Our spirit back to bounds, as though we chid
    A child from scrutiny that’s just and right
    In manhood? Sense, not soul, accomplished sight,
    Reported daily she it was not how
    Nor why a change had come to cheek and brow.)

    “Since I could die now of the truth concealed,
    Yet dare not, must not die, so seems revealed
    The Virgin’s mind to me, for death means peace
    Wherein no lawful part have I, whose lease
    Of life and punishment the truth avowed
    May haply lengthen, let me push the shroud
    Away, that steals to muffle ere is just
    My penance-fire in snow! I dare I must
    Live, by avowal of the truth, this truth,
    I loved you! Thanks for the fresh serpent’s tooth
    That, by a prompt new pang more exquisite
    Than all preceding torture, proves me right!
    I loved you yet I lost you! May I go
    Burn to the ashes, now my shame you know?”

    I think there never was such, how express?
    Horror coquetting with voluptuousness,
    As in those arms of Eastern workmanship,
    Yataghan, kandjar, things that rend and rip,
    Gash rough, slash smooth, help hate so many ways,
    Yet ever keep a beauty that betrays
    Love still at work with the artificer
    Throughout his quaint devising. Why prefer,
    Except for love’s sake, that a blade should writhe
    And bicker like a flame? now play the scythe
    As if some broad neck tempted, now contract
    And needle off into a fineness lacked
    For just that puncture which the heart demands?
    Then, such adornment! Wherefore need our hands
    Enclose not ivory alone, nor gold
    Roughened for use, but jewels? Nay, behold!
    Fancy my favorite, which I seem to grasp
    While I describe the luxury. No asp
    Is diapered more delicate round throat
    Than this below the handle! These denote
    These mazy lines meandering, to end
    Only in flesh they open, what intend
    They else but water-purlings, pale contrast
    With the life-crimson where they blend at last?
    And mark the handle’s dim pellucid green,
    Carved, the hard jadestone, as you pinch a bean,
    Into a sort of parrot-bird! He pecks
    A grape-bunch; his two eyes are ruby-specks
    Pure from the mine: seen this way, glassy blank,
    But turn them, lo, the inmost fire, that shrank
    From sparkling, sends a red dart right to aim!
    Why did I choose such toys? Perhaps the game
    Of peaceful men is warlike, just as men
    War-wearied get amusement from that pen
    And paper we grow sick of, statesfolk tired
    Of merely (when such measures are required)
    Dealing out doom to people by three words,
    A signature and seal: we play with swords
    Suggestive of quick process. That is how
    I came to like the toys described you now,
    Store of which glittered on the walls and strewed
    The table, even, while my wife pursued
    Her purpose to its ending. “Now you know
    This shame, my three years’ torture, let me go,
    Burn to the very ashes! You, I lost,
    Yet you, I loved!”

    The thing I pity most
    In men is, action prompted by surprise
    Of anger: men? nay, bulls, whose onset lies
    At instance of the firework and the goad!
    Once the foe prostrate, trampling once bestowed,
    Prompt follows placability, regret,
    Atonement. Trust me, blood-warmth never yet
    Betokened strong will! As no leap of pulse
    Pricked me, that first time, so did none convulse
    My veins at this occasion for resolve.
    Had that devolved which did not then devolve
    Upon me, I had done, what now to do
    Was quietly apparent.

    “Tell me who
    The man was, crouching by the porphyry vase!”

    “No, never! All was folly in his case,
    All guilt in mine. I tempted, he complied.”

    “And yet you loved me?”

    “Loved you. Double-dyed
    In folly and in guilt, I thought you gave
    Your heart and soul away from me to slave
    At statecraft. Since my right in you seemed lost,
    I stung myself to teach you, to your cost,
    What you rejected could be prized beyond
    Life, heaven, by the first fool I threw a fond
    Look on, a fatal word to.”

    “And you still
    Love me? Do I conjecture well or ill?”

    “Conjecture, well or ill! I had three years
    To spend in learning you.”

    “We both are peers
    In knowledge, therefore: since three years are spent
    Ere thus much of yourself I learn, who went
    Back to the house, that day, and brought my mind
    To bear upon your action, uncombined
    Motive from motive, till the dross, deprived
    Of every purer particle, survived
    At last in native simple hideousness,
    Utter contemptibility, nor less
    Nor more. Contemptibility, exempt
    How could I, from its proper due, contempt?
    I have too much despised you to divert
    My life from its set course by help or hurt
    Of your all-despicable life, perturb
    The calm I work in, by men’s mouths to curb,
    Which at such news were clamorous enough
    Men’s eyes to shut before my broidered stuff
    With the huge hole there, my emblazoned wall
    Blank where a scutcheon hung, by, worse than all,
    Each day’s procession, my paraded life
    Robbed and impoverished through the wanting wife
    Now that my life (which means my work) was grown
    Riches indeed! Once, just this worth alone
    Seemed work to have, that profit gained thereby
    Of good and praise would how rewardingly!
    Fall at your feet, a crown I hoped to cast
    Before your love, my love should crown at last.
    No love remaining to cast crown before,
    My love stopped work now: but contempt the more
    Impelled me task as ever head and hand,
    Because the very fiends weave ropes of sand
    Rather than taste pure hell in idleness.
    Therefore I kept my memory down by stress
    Of daily work I had no mind to stay
    For the world’s wonder at the wife away.
    Oh, it was easy all of it, believe,
    For I despised you! But your words retrieve
    Importantly the past. No hate assumed
    The mask of love at any time! There gloomed
    A moment when love took hate’s semblance, urged
    By causes you declare; but love’s self purged
    Away a fancied wrong I did both loves
    Yours and my own: by no hate’s help, it proves,
    Purgation was attempted. Then, you rise
    High by how many a grade! I did despise
    I do but hate you. Let hate’s punishment
    Replace contempt’s! First step to which ascent
    Write down your own words I re-utter you!
    ‘I loved my husband and I hated who
    He was, I took up as my first chance, mere
    Mud-ball to fling and make love foul with!’
    Here
    Lies paper!”

    “Would my blood for ink suffice!”
    “It may: this minion from a land of spice.
    Silk, feather-every bird of jewelled breast
    This poniard’s beauty, ne’er so lightly prat
    Above your heart there” . . .

    “Thus?”

    “It flows, I see.
    Dip there the point and write!”

    “Dictate to me!
    Nay, I remember.”

    And she wrote the words.
    I read them. Then “Since love, in you, affords
    License for hate, in me, to quench (I say)
    Contempt why, hate itself has passed away
    In vengeance foreign to contempt. Depart
    Peacefully to that death which Eastern art
    Imbued this weapon with, if tales be true!
    Love will succeed to hate. I pardon you
    Dead in our chamber!”

    True as truth the tale.
    She died ere morning; then, I saw how pale
    Her cheek was ere it wore day’s paint-disguise,
    And what a hollow darkened ’neath her eyes,
    Now that I used my own. She sleeps, as erst
    Beloved, in this your church: ay, yours!

    Immersed
    In thought so deeply, Father? Sad, perhaps?
    For whose sake, hers or mine or his who wraps
    Still plain I seem to see! about his head
    The idle cloak, about his heart (instead
    Of cuirass) some fond hope he may elude
    My vengeance in the cloister’s solitude?
    Hardly, I think! As little helped his brow
    The cloak then, Father as your grate helps now!



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