Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Pan And Luna by Robert Browning
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Pan And Luna

    By Robert Browning



    Oh, worthy of belief I hold it was,
    Virgil, your legend in those strange three lines!
    No question, that adventure came to pass
    One black night in Arcadia: yes, the pines,
    Mountains and valleys mingling made one mass
    Of black with void black heaven: the earth's confines,
    The sky's embrace, below, above, around,
    All hardened into black without a bound.

    Fill up a swart stone chalice to the brim
    With fresh-squeezed yet fast-thickening poppy-juice:
    See how the sluggish jelly, late a-swim,
    Turns marble to the touch of who would loose
    The solid smooth, grown jet from rim to rim,
    By turning round the bowl! So night can fuse
    Earth with her all-comprising sky. No less,
    Light, the least spark, shows air and emptiness.

    And thus it proved when, diving into space,
    Stript of all vapor, from each web of mist,
    Utterly film-free, entered on her race
    The naked Moon, full-orbed antagonist
    Of night and dark, night's dowry: peak to base,
    Upstarted mountains, and each valley, kissed
    To sudden life, lay silver-bright: in air
    Flew she revealed, Maid-Moon with limbs all bare.

    Still as she fled, each depth, where refuge seemed
    Opening a lone pale chamber, left distinct
    Those limbs: mid still-retreating blue, she teemed
    Herself with whiteness, virginal, uncinct
    By any halo save what finely gleamed
    To outline not disguise her: heavenwas linked
    In one accord with earth to quaff the joy,
    Drain beauty to the dregs without alloy.

    Whereof she grew aware. What help? When, lo,
    A succorable cloud with sleep lay dense:
    Some pinetree-top had caught it sailing slow,
    And tethered for a prize: in evidence
    Captive lay fleece on fleece of piled-up snow
    Drowsily patient: flake-heaped how or whence,
    The structure of that succorable cloud,
    What matter? Shamed she plunged into its shroud.

    Orbed, so the woman-figure poets call
    Because of rounds on rounds, that apple-shaped
    Head which its hair binds close into a ball
    Each side the curving ears, that pure undraped
    Pout of the sister paps, that . . . once for all,
    Say, her consummate circle thus escaped
    With its innumerous circlets, sank absorbed,
    Safe in the cloud, O naked Moon full-orbed!

    But what means this? The downy swathes combine,
    Conglobe, the smothery coy-caressing stuff
    Curdles about her! Vain each twist and twine
    Those lithe limbs try, encroached on by a fluff
    Fitting as close as fits the dented spine
    Its flexible ivory outside-flesh: enough!
    The plumy drifts contract, condense, constringe,
    Till she is swallowed by the feathery springe.

    As when a pearl slips lost in the thin foam
    Churned on a sea-shore, and, o'er-frothed, conceits
    Herself safe-housed in Amphitrite's dome,
    If, through the bladdery wave-worked yeast, she meets
    What most she loathes and leaps from, elf from gnome
    No gladlier, finds that safest of retreats
    Bubble about a treacherous hand wide ope
    To grasp her, (divers who pick pearls so grope),

    So lay this Maid-Moon clasped around and caught
    By rough red Pan, the god of all that tract:
    He it was schemed the snare thus subtly wrought
    With simulated earth-breath, wool-tufts packed
    Into a billowy wrappage. Sheep far-sought
    For spotless shearings yield such: take the fact
    As learned Virgil gives it, how the breed
    Whitens itself forever: yes, indeed!

    If one forefather ram, though pure as chalk
    From tinge on fleece, should still display a tongue
    Black 'neath the beast's moist palate, prompt men balk
    The propagating plague: he gets no young:
    They rather slay him, sell his hide to calk
    Ships with, first steeped with pitch, nor hands are wrung
    In sorrow for his fate: protected thus,
    The purity we loved is gained for us. So did girl-Moon, by just her attribute
    Of unmatched modesty betrayed, lie trapped,
    Bruised to the breast of Pan, half god half brute,
    Raked by his bristly boar-sward while he lapped
    Never say, kissed her! that were to pollute
    Love's language, which moreover proves unapt
    To tell how she recoiled, as who finds thorns
    Where she sought flowers, when, feeling, she touched, horns!

    Then, does the legend say? first moon-eclipse
    Happened, first swooning-fit which puzzled sore
    The early sages? Is that why she dips
    Into the dark, a minute and no more,
    Only so long as serves her while she rips
    The cloud's womb through and, faultless as before,
    Pursues her way? No lesson for a maid
    Left she, a maid herself thus trapped, betrayed?

    Ha, Virgil? Tell the rest, you! "To the deep
    Of his domain the wildwood, Pan forthwith
    Called her, and so she followed", in her sleep,
    Surely? "by no means spurning him." The myth
    Explain who may! Let all else go, I keep
    As of a ruin just a monolith,
    Thus much, one verse of five words, each a boon:
    Arcadia, night, a cloud, Pan, and the moon.



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