Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Paracelsus: Part III: Paracelsus by Robert Browning
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Paracelsus: Part III: Paracelsus

    By Robert Browning



    Scene. Basil; a chamber in the house of Paracelsus. 1526.
    Paracelsus, Festus.



    Paracelsus.
    Heap logs and let the blaze laugh out!


    Festus.
    True, true!
    'T is very fit all, time and chance and change
    Have wrought since last we sat thus, face to face
    And soul to soul all cares, far-looking fears,
    Vague apprehensions, all vain fancies bred
    By your long absence, should be cast away,
    Forgotten in this glad unhoped renewal
    Of our affections.


    Paracelsus.
    Oh, omit not aught
    Which witnesses your own and Michal's own
    Affection: spare not that! Only forget
    The honours and the glories and what not,
    It pleases you to tell profusely out.


    Festus.
    Nay, even your honours, in a sense, I waive:
    The wondrous Paracelsus, life's dispenser,
    Fate's commissary, idol of the schools
    And courts, shall be no more than Aureole still,
    Still Aureole and my friend as when we parted
    Some twenty years ago, and I restrained
    As best I could the promptings of my spirit
    Which secretly advanced you, from the first,
    To the pre-eminent rank which, since, your own
    Adventurous ardour, nobly triumphing,
    Has won for you.


    Paracelsus.
    Yes, yes. And Michal's face
    Still wears that quiet and peculiar light
    Like the dim circlet floating round a pearl?


    Festus.
    Just so.


    Paracelsus.
    And yet her calm sweet countenance,
    Though saintly, was not sad; for she would sing
    Alone. Does she still sing alone, bird-like,
    Not dreaming you are near? Her carols dropt
    In flakes through that old leafy bower built under
    The sunny wall at Würzburg, from her lattice
    Among the trees above, while I, unseen,
    Sat conning some rare scroll from Tritheim's shelves
    Much wondering notes so simple could divert
    My mind from study. Those were happy days.
    Respect all such as sing when all alone!


    Festus.
    Scarcely alone: her children, you may guess,
    Are wild beside her.


    Paracelsus.
    Ah, those children quite
    Unsettle the pure picture in my mind:
    A girl, she was so perfect, so distinct:
    No change, no change! Not but this added grace
    May blend and harmonize with its compeers,
    And Michal may become her motherhood;
    But't is a change, and I detest all change,
    And most a change in aught I loved long since.
    So, Michal you have said she thinks of me?


    Festus.
    O very proud will Michal be of you!
    Imagine how we sat, long winter-nights,
    Scheming and wondering, shaping your presumed
    Adventure, or devising its reward;
    Shutting out fear with all the strength of hope.
    For it was strange how, even when most secure
    In our domestic peace, a certain dim
    And flitting shade could sadden all; it seemed
    A restlessness of heart, a silent yearning,
    A sense of something wanting, incomplete
    Not to be put in words, perhaps avoided
    By mute consent but, said or unsaid, felt
    To point to one so loved and so long lost.
    And then the hopes rose and shut out the fears
    How you would laugh should I recount them now
    I still predicted your return at last
    With gifts beyond the greatest of them all,
    All Tritheim's wondrous troop; did one of which
    Attain renown by any chance, I smiled,
    As well aware of who would prove his peer
    Michal was sure some woman, long ere this,
    As beautiful as you were sage, had loved . . .


    Paracelsus.
    Far-seeing, truly, to discern so much
    In the fantastic projects and day-dreams
    Of a raw restless boy!


    Festus.
    Oh, no: the sunrise
    Well warranted our faith in this full noon!
    Can I forget the anxious voice which said
    "Festus, have thoughts like these ere shaped themselves
    "In other brains than mine? have their possessors
    "Existed in like circumstance? were they weak
    "As I, or ever constant from the first,
    "Despising youth's allurements and rejecting
    "As spider-films the shackles I endure?
    "Is there hope for me?" and I answered gravely
    As an acknowledged elder, calmer, wiser,
    More gifted mortal. O you must remember,
    For all your glorious . . .


    Paracelsus.
    Glorious? ay, this hair,
    These hands nay, touch them, they are mine! Recall
    With all the said recallings, times when thus
    To lay them by your own ne'er turned you pale
    As now. Most glorious, are they not?


    Festus.
    Why, why,
    Something must be subtracted from success
    So wide, no doubt. He would be scrupulous, truly,
    Who should object such drawbacks. Still, still, Aureole,
    You are changed, very changed! 'T were losing nothing
    To look well to it: you must not be stolen
    From the enjoyment of your well-won meed.


    Paracelsus.
    My friend! you seek my pleasure, past a doubt:
    You will best gain your point, by talking, not
    Of me, but of yourself.


    Festus.
    Have I not said
    All touching Michal and my children? Sure
    You know, by this, full well how Aennchen looks
    Gravely, while one disparts her thick brown hair;
    And Aureole's glee when some stray gannet builds
    Amid the birch-trees by the lake. Small hope
    Have I that he will honour (the wild imp)
    His namesake. Sigh not! 't is too much to ask
    That all we love should reach the same proud fate.
    But you are very kind to humour me
    By showing interest in my quiet life;
    You, who of old could never tame yourself
    To tranquil pleasures, must at heart despise . . .


    Paracelsus.
    Festus, strange secrets are let out by death
    Who blabs so oft the follies of this world:
    And I am death's familiar, as you know.
    I helped a man to die, some few weeks since,
    Warped even from his go-cart to one end
    The living on princes' smiles, reflected from
    A mighty herd of favourites. No mean trick
    He left untried, and truly well-nigh wormed
    All traces of God's finger out of him:
    Then died, grown old. And just an hour before,
    Having lain long with blank and soulless eyes,
    He sat up suddenly, and with natural voice
    Said that in spite of thick air and closed doors
    God told him it was June; and he knew well,
    Without such telling, harebells grew in June;
    And all that kings could ever give or take
    Would not be precious as those blooms to him.
    Just so, allowing I am passing sage,
    It seems to me much worthier argument
    Why pansies,[1] eyes that laugh, bear beauty's prize
    From violets, eyes that dream (your Michal's choice)
    Than all fools find to wonder at in me
    Or in my fortunes. And be very sure
    I say this from no prurient restlessness,
    No self-complacency, itching to turn,
    Vary and view its pleasure from all points,
    And, in this instance, willing other men
    May be at pains, demonstrate to itself
    The realness of the very joy it tastes.
    What should delight me like the news of friends
    Whose memories were a solace to me oft,
    As mountain-baths to wild fowls in their flight?
    Ofter than you had wasted thought on me
    Had you been wise, and rightly valued bliss.
    But there's no taming nor repressing hearts:
    God knows I need such! So, you heard me speak?


    Festus.
    Speak? when?


    Paracelsus.
    When but this morning at my class?
    There was noise and crowd enough. I saw you not.
    Surely you know I am engaged to fill
    The chair here? that't is part of my proud fate
    To lecture to as many thick-skulled youths
    As please, each day, to throng the theatre,
    To my great reputation, and no small
    Danger of Basil's benches long unused
    To crack beneath such honour?


    Festus.
    I was there;
    I mingled with the throng: shall I avow
    Small care was mine to listen? too intent
    On gathering from the murmurs of the crowd
    A full corroboration of my hopes!
    What can I learn about your powers? but they
    Know, care for nought beyond your actual state,
    Your actual value; yet they worship you,
    Those various natures whom you sway as one!
    But ere I go, be sure I shall attend . . .


    Paracelsus.
    Stop, o' God's name: the thing's by no means yet
    Past remedy! Shall I read this morning's labour
    At least in substance? Nought so worth the gaining
    As an apt scholar! Thus then, with all due
    Precision and emphasis you, beside, are clearly
    Guiltless of understanding more, a whit,
    The subject than your stool allowed to be
    A notable advantage.


    Festus.
    Surely, Aureole,
    You laugh at me!


    Paracelsus.
    I laugh? Ha, ha! thank heaven,
    I charge you, if't be so! for I forget
    Much, and what laughter should be like. No less,
    However, I forego that luxury
    Since it alarms the friend who brings it back.
    True, laughter like my own must echo strangely
    To thinking men; a smile were better far;
    So, make me smile! If the exulting look
    You wore but now be smiling, 't is so long
    Since I have smiled! Alas, such smiles are born
    Alone of hearts like yours, or herdsmen's souls
    Of ancient time, whose eyes, calm as their flocks,
    Saw in the stars mere garnishry of heaven,
    And in the earth a stage for altars only.
    Never change, Festus: I say, never change!


    Festus.
    My God, if he be wretched after all


    Paracelsus.
    When last we parted, Festus, you declared,
    Or Michal, yes, her soft lips whispered words
    I have preserved. She told me she believed
    I should succeed (meaning, that in the search
    I then engaged in, I should meet success)
    And yet be wretched: now, she augured false.


    Festus.
    Thank heaven! but you spoke strangely: could I venture
    To think bare apprehension lest your friend,
    Dazzled by your resplendent course, might find
    Henceforth less sweetness in his own, could move
    Such earnest mood in you? Fear not, dear friend,
    That I shall leave you, inwardly repining
    Your lot was not my own!


    Paracelsus.
    And this for ever!
    For ever! gull who may, they will be gulled!
    They will not look nor think;'t is nothing new
    In them: but surely he is not of them!
    My Festus, do you know, I reckoned, you
    Though all beside were sand-blind you, my friend,
    Would look at me, once close, with piercing eye
    Untroubled by the false glare that confounds
    A weaker vision: would remain serene,
    Though singular amid a gaping throng.
    I feared you, or I had come, sure, long ere this,
    To Einsiedeln. Well, error has no end,
    And Rhasis is a sage, and Basil boasts
    A tribe of wits, and I am wise and blest
    Past all dispute! 'T is vain to fret at it.
    I have vowed long ago my worshippers
    Shall owe to their own deep sagacity
    All further information, good or bad.
    Small risk indeed my reputation runs,
    Unless perchance the glance now searching me
    Be fixed much longer; for it seems to spell
    Dimly the characters a simpler man
    Might read distinct enough. Old Eastern books
    Say, the fallen prince of morning some short space
    Remained unchanged in semblance; nay, his brow
    Was hued with triumph: every spirit then
    Praising, his heart on flame the while: a tale!
    Well, Festus, what discover you, I pray?


    Festus.
    Some foul deed sullies then a life which else
    Were raised supreme?


    Paracelsus.
    Good: I do well, most well
    Why strive to make men hear, feel, fret themselves
    With what is past their power to comprehend?
    I should not strive now: only, having nursed
    The faint surmise that one yet walked the earth,
    One, at least, not the utter fool of show,
    Not absolutely formed to be the dupe
    Of shallow plausibilities alone:
    One who, in youth, found wise enough to choose
    The happiness his riper years approve,
    Was yet so anxious for another's sake,
    That, ere his friend could rush upon a mad
    And ruinous course, the converse of his own,
    His gentle spirit essayed, prejudged for him
    The perilous path, foresaw its destiny,
    And warned the weak one in such tender words,
    Such accents his whole heart in every tone
    That oft their memory comforted that friend
    When it by right should have increased despair:
    Having believed, I say, that this one man
    Could never lose the light thus from the first
    His portion how should I refuse to grieve
    At even my gain if it disturb our old
    Relation, if it make me out more wise?
    Therefore, once more reminding him how well
    He prophesied, I note the single flaw
    That spoils his prophet's title. In plain words,
    You were deceived, and thus were you deceived
    I have not been successful, and yet am
    Most miserable; 't is said at last; nor you
    Give credit, lest you force me to concede
    That common sense yet lives upon the world!


    Festus.
    You surely do not mean to banter me?


    Paracelsus.
    You know, or if you have been wise enough
    To cleanse your memory of such matters knew,
    As far as words of mine could make it clear,
    That't was my purpose to find joy or grief
    Solely in the fulfilment of my plan
    Or plot or whatsoe'er it was; rejoicing
    Alone as it proceeded prosperously,
    Sorrowing then only when mischance retarded
    Its progress. That was in those Würzburg days!
    Not to prolong a theme I thoroughly hate,
    I have pursued this plan with all my strength;
    And having failed therein most signally,
    Cannot object to ruin utter and drear
    As all-excelling would have been the prize
    Had fortune favoured me. I scarce have right
    To vex your frank good spirit late so glad
    In my supposed prosperity, I know,
    And, were I lucky in a glut of friends,
    Would well agree to let your error live,
    Nay, strengthen it with fables of success.
    But mine is no condition to refuse
    The transient solace of so rare a godsend,
    My solitary luxury, my one friend:
    Accordingly I venture to put off
    The wearisome vest of falsehood galling me,
    Secure when he is by. I lay me bare
    Prone at his mercy but he is my friend!
    Not that he needs retain his aspect grave;
    That answers not my purpose; for't is like,
    Some sunny morning Basil being drained
    Of its wise population, every corner
    Of the amphitheatre crammed with learned clerks,
    Here OEcolampadius, looking worlds of wit,
    Here Castellanus, as profound as he,
    Munsterus here, Frobenius there, all squeezed
    And staring, that the zany of the show,
    Even Paracelsus, shall put off before them
    His trappings with a grace but seldom judged
    Expedient in such cases: the grim smile
    That will go round! Is it not therefore best
    To venture a rehearsal like the present
    In a small way? Where are the signs I seek,
    The first-fruits and fair sample of the scorn
    Due to all quacks? Why, this will never do!


    Festus.
    These are foul vapours, Aureole; nought beside!
    The effect of watching, study, weariness.
    Were there a spark of truth in the confusion
    Of these wild words, you would not outrage thus
    Your youth's companion. I shall ne'er regard
    These wanderings, bred of faintness and much study.
    'T is not thus you would trust a trouble to me,
    To Michal's friend.


    Paracelsus.
    I have said it, dearest Festus!
    For the manner, 't is ungracious probably;
    You may have it told in broken sobs, one day,
    And scalding tears, ere long: but I thought best
    To keep that off as long as possible.
    Do you wonder still?


    Festus.
    No; it must oft fall out
    That one whose labour perfects any work,
    Shall rise from it with eye so worn that he
    Of all men least can measure the extent
    Of what he has accomplished. He alone
    Who, nothing tasked, is nothing weary too,
    May clearly scan the little he effects:
    But we, the bystanders, untouched by toil,
    Estimate each aright.


    Paracelsus.
    This worthy Festus
    Is one of them, at last! 'T is so with all!
    First, they set down all progress as a dream;
    And next, when he whose quick discomfiture
    Was counted on, accomplishes some few
    And doubtful steps in his career, behold,
    They look for every inch of ground to vanish
    Beneath his tread, so sure they spy success!


    Festus.
    Few doubtful steps? when death retires before
    Your presence when the noblest of mankind,
    Broken in body or subdued in soul,
    May through your skill renew their vigour, raise
    The shattered frame to pristine stateliness?
    When men in racking pain may purchase dreams
    Of what delights them most, swooning at once
    Into a sea of bliss or rapt along
    As in a flying sphere of turbulent light?
    When we may look to you as one ordained
    To free the flesh from fell disease, as frees
    Our Luther's burning tongue the fettered soul?
    When . . .


    Paracelsus.
    When and where, the devil, did you get
    This notable news?


    Festus.
    Even from the common voice;
    From those whose envy, daring not dispute
    The wonders it decries, attributes them
    To magic and such folly.


    Paracelsus.
    Folly? Why not
    To magic, pray? You find a comfort doubtless
    In holding, God ne'er troubles him about
    Us or our doings: once we were judged worth
    The devil's tempting . . . I offend: forgive me,
    And rest content. Your prophecy on the whole
    Was fair enough as prophesyings go;
    At fault a little in detail, but quite
    Precise enough in the main; and hereupon
    I pay due homage: you guessed long ago
    (The prophet!) I should fail and I have failed.


    Festus.
    You mean to tell me, then, the hopes which fed
    Your youth have not been realized as yet?
    Some obstacle has barred them hitherto?
    Or that their innate . . .


    Paracelsus.
    As I said but now,
    You have a very decent prophet's fame,
    So you but shun details here. Little matter
    Whether those hopes were mad, the aims they sought,
    Safe and secure from all ambitious fools;
    Or whether my weak wits are overcome
    By what a better spirit would scorn: I fail.
    And now methinks't were best to change a theme
    I am a sad fool to have stumbled on.
    I say confusedly what comes uppermost;
    But there are times when patience proves at fault,
    As now: this morning's strange encounter you
    Beside me once again! you, whom I guessed
    Alive, since hitherto (with Luther's leave)
    No friend have I among the saints at peace,
    To judge by any good their prayers effect.
    I knew you would have helped me why not he,
    My strange competitor in enterprise,
    Bound for the same end by another path,
    Arrived, or ill or well, before the time,
    At our disastrous journey's doubtful close?
    How goes it with Aprile? Ah, they miss
    Your lone sad sunny idleness of heaven,
    Our martyrs for the world's sake; heaven shuts fast:
    The poor mad poet is howling by this time!
    Since you are my sole friend then, here or there,
    I could not quite repress the varied feelings
    This meeting wakens; they have had their vent,
    And now forget them. Do the rear-mice still
    Hang like a fretwork on the gate (or what
    In my time was a gate) fronting the road
    From Einsiedeln to Lachen?


    Festus.
    Trifle not:
    Answer me, for my sake alone! You smiled
    Just now, when I supposed some deed, unworthy
    Yourself, might blot the else so bright result;
    Yet if your motives have continued pure,
    Your will unfaltering, and in spite of this,
    You have experienced a defeat, why then
    I say not you would cheerfully withdraw
    From contest mortal hearts are not so fashioned
    But surely you would ne'ertheless withdraw.
    You sought not fame nor gain nor even love,
    No end distinct from knowledge, I repeat
    Your very words: once satisfied that knowledge
    Is a mere dream, you would announce as much,
    Yourself the first. But how is the event?
    You are defeated and I find you here!


    Paracelsus.
    As though "here" did not signify defeat!
    I spoke not of my little labours here,
    But of the break-down of my general aims:
    For you, aware of their extent and scope,
    To look on these sage lecturings, approved
    By beardless boys, and bearded dotards worse,
    As a fit consummation of such aims,
    Is worthy notice. A professorship
    At Basil! Since you see so much in it,
    And think my life was reasonably drained
    Of life's delights to render me a match
    For duties arduous as such post demands,
    Be it far from me to deny my power
    To fill the petty circle lotted out
    Of infinite space, or justify the host
    Of honours thence accruing. So, take notice,
    This jewel dangling from my neck preserves
    The features of a prince, my skill restored
    To plague his people some few years to come:
    And all through a pure whim. He had eased the earth
    For me, but that the droll despair which seized
    The vermin of his household, tickled me.
    I came to see. Here, drivelled the physician,
    Whose most infallible nostrum was at fault;
    There quaked the astrologer, whose horoscope
    Had promised him interminable years;
    Here a monk fumbled at the sick man's mouth
    With some undoubted relic a sudary
    Of the Virgin; while another piebald knave
    Of the same brotherhood (he loved them ever)
    Was actively preparing 'neath his nose
    Such a suffumigation as, once fired,
    Had stunk the patient dead ere he could groan.
    I cursed the doctor and upset the brother,
    Brushed past the conjurer, vowed that the first gust
    Of stench from the ingredients just alight
    Would raise a cross-grained devil in my sword,
    Not easily laid: and ere an hour the prince
    Slept as he never slept since prince he was.
    A day and I was posting for my life,
    Placarded through the town as one whose spite
    Had near availed to stop the blessed effects
    Of the doctor's nostrum which, well seconded
    By the sudary, and most by the costly smoke
    Not leaving out the strenuous prayers sent up
    Hard by in the abbey raised the prince to life:
    To the great reputation of the seer
    Who, confident, expected all along
    The glad event the doctor's recompense
    Much largess from his highness to the monks
    And the vast solace of his loving people,
    Whose general satisfaction to increase,
    The prince was pleased no longer to defer
    The burning of some dozen heretics
    Remanded till God's mercy should be shown
    Touching his sickness: last of all were joined
    Ample directions to all loyal folk
    To swell the complement by seizing me
    Who doubtless some rank sorcerer endeavoured
    To thwart these pious offices, obstruct
    The prince's cure, and frustrate heaven by help
    Of certain devils dwelling in his sword.
    By luck, the prince in his first fit of thanks
    Had forced this bauble on me as an earnest
    Of further favours. This one case may serve
    To give sufficient taste of many such,
    So, let them pass. Those shelves support a pile
    Of patents, licences, diplomas, titles
    From Germany, France, Spain, and Italy;
    They authorize some honour; ne'ertheless,
    I set more store by this Erasmus sent;
    He trusts me; our Frobenius is his friend,
    And him "I raised" (nay, read it) "from the dead."
    I weary you, I see. I merely sought
    To show, there's no great wonder after all
    That, while I fill the class-room and attract
    A crowd to Basil, I get leave to stay,
    And therefore need not scruple to accept
    The utmost they can offer, if I please:
    For't is but right the world should be prepared
    To treat with favour e'en fantastic wants
    Of one like me, used up in serving her.
    Just as the mortal, whom the gods in part
    Devoured, received in place of his lost limb
    Some virtue or other cured disease, I think;
    You mind the fables we have read together.


    Festus.
    You do not think I comprehend a word.
    The time was, Aureole, you were apt enough
    To clothe the airiest thoughts in specious breath;
    But surely you must feel how vague and strange
    These speeches sound.


    Paracelsus.
    Well, then: you know my hopes;
    I am assured, at length, those hopes were vain;
    That truth is just as far from me as ever;
    That I have thrown my life away; that sorrow
    On that account is idle, and further effort
    To mend and patch what's marred beyond repairing,
    As useless: and all this was taught your friend
    By the convincing good old-fashioned method
    Of force by sheer compulsion. Is that plain?


    Festus.
    Dear Aureole, can it be my fears were just?
    God wills not . . .


    Paracelsus.
    Now, 't is this I most admire
    The constant talk men of your stamp keep up
    Of God's will, as they style it; one would swear
    Man had but merely to uplift his eye,
    And see the will in question charactered
    On the heaven's vault. 'T is hardly wise to moot
    Such topics: doubts are many and faith is weak.
    I know as much of any will of God
    As knows some dumb and tortured brute what Man,
    His stern lord, wills from the perplexing blows
    That plague him every way; but there, of course,
    Where least he suffers, longest he remains
    My case; and for such reasons I plod on,
    Subdued but not convinced. I know as little
    Why I deserve to fail, as why I hoped
    Better things in my youth. I simply know
    I am no master here, but trained and beaten
    Into the path I tread; and here I stay,
    Until some further intimation reach me,
    Like an obedient drudge. Though I prefer
    To view the whole thing as a task imposed
    Which, whether dull or pleasant, must be done
    Yet, I deny not, there is made provision
    Of joys which tastes less jaded might affect;
    Nay, some which please me too, for all my pride
    Pleasures that once were pains: the iron ring
    Festering about a slave's neck grows at length
    Into the flesh it eats. I hate no longer
    A host of petty vile delights, undreamed of
    Or spurned before; such now supply the place
    Of my dead aims: as in the autumn woods
    Where tall trees used to flourish, from their roots
    Springs up a fungous brood sickly and pale,
    Chill mushrooms coloured like a corpse's cheek.


    Festus.
    If I interpret well your words, I own
    It troubles me but little that your aims,
    Vast in their dawning and most likely grown
    Extravagantly since, have baffled you.
    Perchance I am glad; you merit greater praise;
    Because they are too glorious to be gained,
    You do not blindly cling to them and die;
    You fell, but have not sullenly refused
    To rise, because an angel worsted you
    In wrestling, though the world holds not your peer;
    And though too harsh and sudden is the change
    To yield content as yet, still you pursue
    The ungracious path as though't were rosv-strewn.
    'T is well: and your reward, or soon or late,
    Will come from him whom no man serves in vain.


    Paracelsus.
    Ah, very fine! For my part, I conceive
    The very pausing from all further toil,
    Which you find heinous, would become a seal
    To the sincerity of all my deeds.
    To be consistent I should die at once;
    I calculated on no after-life;
    Yet (how crept in, how fostered, I know not)
    Here am I with as passionate regret
    For youth and health and love so vainly lavished,
    As if their preservation had been first
    And foremost in my thoughts; and this strange fact
    Humbled me wondrously, and had due force
    In rendering me the less averse to follow
    A certain counsel, a mysterious warning
    You will not understand but't was a man
    With aims not mine and yet pursued like mine,
    With the same fervour and no more success,
    Perishing in my sight; who summoned me
    As I would shun the ghastly fate I saw,
    To serve my race at once; to wait no longer
    That God should interfere in my behalf,
    But to distrust myself, put pride away,
    And give my gains, imperfect as they were,
    To men. I have not leisure to explain
    How, since, a singular series of events
    Has raised me to the station you behold,
    Wherein I seem to turn to most account
    The mere wreck of the past, perhaps receive
    Some feeble glimmering token that God views
    And may approve my penance: therefore here
    You find me, doing most good or least harm.
    And if folks wonder much and profit little
    'T is not my fault; only, I shall rejoice
    When my part in the farce is shuffled through,
    And the curtain falls: I must hold out till then.


    Festus.
    Till when, dear Aureole?


    Paracelsus.
    Till I'm fairly thrust
    From my proud eminence. Fortune is fickle
    And even professors fall: should that arrive,
    I see no sin in ceding to my bent.
    You little fancy what rude shocks apprise us
    We sin; God's intimations rather fail
    In clearness than in energy: 't were well
    Did they but indicate the course to take
    Like that to be forsaken. I would fain
    Be spared a further sample. Here I stand,
    And here I stay, be sure, till forced to flit.


    Festus.
    Be you but firm on that head! long ere then
    All I expect will come to pass, I trust:
    The cloud that wraps you will have disappeared.
    Meantime, I see small chance of such event:
    They praise you here as one whose lore, already
    Divulged, eclipses all the past can show,
    But whose achievements, marvellous as they be,
    Are faint anticipations of a glory
    About to be revealed. When Basil's crowds
    Dismiss their teacher, I shall be content
    That he depart.


    Paracelsus.
    This favour at their hands
    I look for earlier than your view of things
    Would warrant. Of the crowd you saw to-day,
    Remove the full half sheer amazement draws,
    Mere novelty, nought else; and next, the tribe
    Whose innate blockish dulness just perceives
    That unless miracles (as seem my works)
    Be wrought in their behalf, their chance is slight
    To puzzle the devil; next, the numerous set
    Who bitterly hate established schools, and help
    The teacher that oppugns them, till he once
    Have planted his own doctrine, when the teacher
    May reckon on their rancour in his turn;
    Take, too, the sprinkling of sagacious knaves
    Whose cunning runs not counter to the vogue
    But seeks, by flattery and crafty nursing,
    To force my system to a premature
    Short-lived development. Why swell the list?
    Each has his end to serve, and his best way
    Of serving it: remove all these, remains
    A scantling, a poor dozen at the best,
    Worthy to look for sympathy and service,
    And likely to draw profit from my pains.


    Festus.
    'T is no encouraging picture: still these few
    Redeem their fellows. Once the germ implanted,
    Its growth, if slow, is sure.


    Paracelsus.
    God grant it so!
    I would make some amends: but if I fail,
    The luckless rogues have this excuse to urge,
    That much is in my method and my manner,
    My uncouth habits, my impatient spirit,
    Which hinders of reception and result
    My doctrine: much to say, small skill to speak!
    These old aims suffered not a looking-off
    Though for an instant; therefore, only when
    I thus renounced them and resolved to reap
    Some present fruit to teach mankind some truth
    So dearly purchased only then I found
    Such teaching was an art requiring cares
    And qualities peculiar to itself:
    That to possess was one thing to display
    Another. With renown first in my thoughts,
    Or popular praise, I had soon discovered it:
    One grows but little apt to learn these things.


    Festus.
    If it be so, which nowise I believe,
    There needs no waiting fuller dispensation
    To leave a labour of so little use.
    Why not throw up the irksome charge at once?


    Paracelsus.


    A task, a task!

    But wherefore hide the whole
    Extent of degradation, once engaged
    In the confessing vein? Despite of all
    My fine talk of obedience and repugnance,
    Docility and what not, 't is yet to learn
    If when the task shall really be performed,
    My inclination free to choose once more,
    I shall do aught but slightly modify
    The nature of the hated task I quit.
    In plain words, I am spoiled; my life still tends
    As first it tended; I am broken and trained
    To my old habits: they are part of me.
    I know, and none so well, my darling ends
    Are proved impossible: no less, no less,
    Even now what humours me, fond fool, as when
    Their faint ghosts sit with me and flatter me
    And send me back content to my dull round?
    How can I change this soul? this apparatus
    Constructed solely for their purposes,
    So well adapted to their every want,
    To search out and discover, prove and perfect;
    This intricate machine whose most minute
    And meanest motions have their charm to me
    Though to none else an aptitude I seize,
    An object I perceive, a use, a meaning,
    A property, a fitness, I explain
    And I alone: how can I change my soul?
    And this wronged body, worthless save when tasked
    Under that soul's dominion used to care
    For its bright master's cares and quite subdue
    Its proper cravings not to ail nor pine
    So he but prosper whither drag this poor
    Tried patient body? God! how I essayed
    To live like that mad poet, for a while,
    To love alone; and how I felt too warped
    And twisted and deformed! What should I do,
    Even tho'released from drudgery, but return
    Faint, as you see, and halting, blind and sore,
    To my old life and die as I began?
    I cannot feed on beauty for the sake
    Of beauty only, nor can drink in balm
    From lovely objects for their loveliness;
    My nature cannot lose her first imprint;
    I still must hoard and heap and class all truths
    With one ulterior purpose: I must know!
    Would God translate me to his throne, believe
    That I should only listen to his word
    To further my own aim! For other men,
    Beauty is prodigally strewn around,
    And I were happy could I quench as they
    This mad and thriveless longing, and content me
    With beauty for itself alone: alas,
    I have addressed a frock of heavy mail
    Yet may not join the troop of sacred knights;
    And now the forest-creatures fly from me,
    The grass-banks cool, the sunbeams warm no more.
    Best follow, dreaming that ere night arrive,
    I shall o'ertake the company and ride
    Glittering as they!


    Festus.
    I think I apprehend
    What you would say: if you, in truth, design
    To enter once more on the life thus left,
    Seek not to hide that all this consciousness
    Of failure is assumed!


    Paracelsus.
    My friend, my friend,
    I toil, you listen; I explain, perhaps
    You understand: there our communion ends.
    Have you learnt nothing from to-day's discourse?
    When we would thoroughly know the sick man's state
    We feel awhile the fluttering pulse, press soft
    The hot brow, look upon the languid eye,
    And thence divine the rest. Must I lay bare
    My heart, hideous and beating, or tear up
    My vitals for your gaze, ere you will deem
    Enough made known? You! who are you, forsooth?
    That is the crowning operation claimed
    By the arch-demonstrator heaven the hall,
    And earth the audience. Let Aprile and you
    Secure good places: 't will be worth the while.


    Festus.
    Are you mad, Aureole? What can I have said
    To call for this? I judged from your own words.


    Paracelsus.
    Oh, doubtless! A sick wretch describes the ape
    That mocks him from the bed-foot, and all gravely
    You thither turn at once: or he recounts
    The perilous journey he has late performed,
    And you are puzzled much how that could be!
    You find me here, half stupid and half mad;
    It makes no part of my delight to search
    Into these matters, much less undergo
    Another's scrutiny; but so it chances
    That I am led to trust my state to you:
    And the event is, you combine, contrast
    And ponder on my foolish words as though
    They thoroughly conveyed all hidden here
    Here, loathsome with despair and hate and rage!
    Is there no fear, no shrinking and no shame?
    Will you guess nothing? will you spare me nothing?
    Must I go deeper? Ay or no?


    Festus.
    Dear friend . . .


    Paracelsus.
    True: I am brutal 't is a part of it;
    The plague's sign you are not a lazar-haunter,
    How should you know? Well then, you think it strange
    I should profess to have failed utterly,
    And yet propose an ultimate return
    To courses void of hope: and this, because
    You know not what temptation is, nor how
    'T is like to ply men in the sickliest part.
    You are to understand that we who make
    Sport for the gods, are hunted to the end:
    There is not one sharp volley shot at us,
    Which 'scaped with life, though hurt, we slacken pace
    And gather by the wayside herbs and roots
    To staunch our wounds, secure from further harm:
    We are assailed to life's extremest verge.
    It will be well indeed if I return,
    A harmless busy fool, to my old ways!
    I would forget hints of another fate,
    Significant enough, which silent hours
    Have lately scared me with.


    Festus.
    Another! and what?


    Paracelsus.
    After all, Festus, you say well: I am
    A man yet: I need never humble me.
    I would have been something, I know not what;
    But though I cannot soar, I do not crawl.
    There are worse portions than this one of mine.
    You say well!


    Festus.
    Ah!


    Paracelsus.

    And deeper degradation!
    If the mean stimulants of vulgar praise,
    If vanity should become the chosen food
    Of a sunk mind, should stifle even the wish
    To find its early aspirations true,
    Should teach it to breathe falsehood like life-breath
    An atmosphere of craft and trick and lies;
    Should make it proud to emulate, surpass
    Base natures in the practices which woke
    Its most indignant loathing once . . . No, no!
    Utter damnation is reserved for hell!
    I had immortal feelings; such shall never
    Be wholly quenched: no, no!


    My friend, you wear
    A melancholy face, and certain't is
    There's little cheer in all this dismal work.
    But was it my desire to set abroach
    Such memories and forebodings? I foresaw
    Where they would drive. 'T were better we discuss
    News from Lucerne or Zurich; ask and tell
    Of Egypt's flaring sky or Spain's cork-groves.


    Festus.
    I have thought: trust me, this mood will pass away!
    I know you and the lofty spirit you bear,
    And easily ravel out a clue to all.
    These are the trials meet for such as you,
    Nor must you hope exemption: to be mortal
    Is to be plied with trials manifold.
    Look round! The obstacles which kept the rest
    From your ambition, have been spurned by you;
    Their fears, their doubts, the chains that bind themall,
    Were flax before your resolute soul, which nought
    Avails to awe save these delusions bred
    From its own strength, its selfsame strength disguised,
    Mocking itself. Be brave, dear Aureole! Since
    The rabbit has his shade to frighten him,
    The fawn a rustling bough, mortals their cares,
    And higher natures yet would slight and laugh
    At these entangling fantasies, as you
    At trammels of a weaker intellect,
    Measure your mind's height by the shade it casts!
    I know you.


    Paracelsus.
    And I know you, dearest Festus!
    And how you love unworthily; and how
    All admiration renders blind.


    Festus.
    You hold
    That admiration blinds?


    Paracelsus.
    Ay and alas!


    Festus.
    Nought blinds you less than admiration, friend!
    Whether it be that all love renders wise
    In its degree; from love which blends with love
    Heart answering heart to love which spends itself
    In silent mad idolatry of some
    Pre-eminent mortal, some great soul of souls,
    Which ne'er will know how well it is adored.
    I say, such love is never blind; but rather
    Alive to every the minutest spot
    Which mars its object, and which hate (supposed
    So vigilant and searching) dreams not of.
    Love broods on such: what then? When first perceived
    Is there no sweet strife to forget, to change,
    To overflush those blemishes with all
    The glow of general goodness they disturb?
    To make those very defects an endless source
    Of new affection grown from hopes and fears?
    And, when all fails, is there no gallant stand
    Made even for much proved weak? no shrinking-back
    Lest, since all love assimilates the soul
    To what it loves, it should at length become
    Almost a rival of its idol? Trust me,
    If there be fiends who seek to work our hurt,
    To ruin and drag down earth's mightiest spirits
    Even at God's foot, 't will be from such as love,
    Their zeal will gather most to serve their cause;
    And least from those who hate, who most essay
    By contumely and scorn to blot the light
    Which forces entrance even to their hearts:
    For thence will our defender tear the veil
    And show within each heart, as in a shrine,
    The giant image of perfection, grown
    In hate's despite, whose calumnies were spawned
    In the untroubled presence of its eyes.
    True admiration blinds not; nor am I
    So blind. I call your sin exceptional;
    It springs from one whose life has passed the bounds
    Prescribed to life. Compound that fault with God!
    I speak of men; to common men like me
    The weakness you reveal endears you more,
    Like the far traces of decay in suns.
    I bid you have good cheer!


    Paracelsus.
    Proeclare! Optime!
    Think of a quiet mountain-cloistered priest
    Instructing Paracelsus! yet't is so.
    Come, I will show you where my merit lies.
    'T is in the advance of individual minds
    That the slow crowd should ground their expectation
    Eventually to follow; as the sea
    Waits ages in its bed till some one wave
    Out of the multitudinous mass, extends
    The empire of the whole, some feet perhaps,
    Over the strip of sand which could confine
    Its fellows so long time: thenceforth the rest,
    Even to the meanest, hurry in at once,
    And so much is clear gained. I shall be glad
    If all my labours, failing of aught else,
    Suffice to make such inroad and procure
    A wider range for thought: nay, they do this;
    For, whatsoe'er my notions of true knowledge
    And a legitimate success, may be,
    I am not blind to my undoubted rank
    When classed with others: I precede my age:
    And whoso wills is very free to mount
    These labours as a platform whence his own
    May have a prosperous outset. But, alas!
    My followers they are noisy as you heard;
    But, for intelligence, the best of them
    So clumsily wield the weapons I supply
    And they extol, that I begin to doubt
    Whether their own rude clubs and pebble-stones
    Would not do better service than my arms
    Thus vilely swayed if error will not fall
    Sooner before the old awkward batterings
    Than my more subtle warfare, not half learned.


    Festus.
    I would supply that art, then, or withhold
    New arms until you teach their mystery.


    Paracelsus.
    Content you, 't is my wish; I have recourse
    To the simplest training. Day by day I seek
    To wake the mood, the spirit which alone
    Can make those arms of any use to men.
    Of course they are for swaggering forth at once
    Graced with Ulysses' bow, Achilles' shield
    Flash on us, all in armour, thou Achilles!
    Make our hearts dance to thy resounding step!
    A proper sight to scare the crows away!


    Festus.
    Pity you choose not then some other method
    Of coming at your point. The marvellous art
    At length established in the world bids fair
    To remedy all hindrances like these:
    Trust to Frobenius' press the precious lore
    Obscured by uncouth manner, or unfit
    For raw beginners; let his types secure
    A deathless monument to after-time;
    Meanwhile wait confidently and enjoy
    The ultimate effect: sooner or later
    You shall be all-revealed.


    Paracelsus.
    The old dull question
    In a new form; no more. Thus: I possess
    Two sorts of knowledge; one, vast, shadowy,
    Hints of the unbounded aim I once pursued:
    The other consists of many secrets, caught
    While bent on nobler prize, perhaps a few
    Prime principles which may conduct to much:
    These last I offer to my followers here.
    Now, bid me chronicle the first of these,
    My ancient study, and in effect you bid
    Revert to the wild courses just abjured:
    I must go find them scattered through the world.
    Then, for the principles, they are so simple
    (Being chiefly of the overturning sort),
    That one time is as proper to propound them
    As any other to-morrow at my class,
    Or half a century hence embalmed in print.
    For if mankind intend to learn at all,
    They must begin by giving faith to them
    And acting on them: and I do not see
    But that my lectures serve indifferent well:
    No doubt these dogmas fall not to the earth,
    For all their novelty and rugged setting.
    I think my class will not forget the day
    I let them know the gods of Israel,
    Aëtius, Oribasius, Galen, Rhasis,
    Serapion, Avicenna, Averröes,
    Were blocks!


    Festus.
    And that reminds me, I heard something
    About your waywardness: you burned their books,
    It seems, instead of answering those sages.


    Paracelsus.
    And who said that?


    Festus.
    Some I met yesternight
    With OEcolampadius. As you know, the purpose
    Of this short stay at Basil was to learn
    His pleasure touching certain missives sent
    For our Zuinglius and himself. 'T was he
    Apprised me that the famous teacher here
    Was my old friend.


    Paracelsus.
    Ah, I forgot: you went . . .


    Festus.
    From Zurich with advices for the ear
    Of Luther, now at Wittenberg (you know,
    I make no doubt, the differences of late
    With Carolostadius) and returning sought
    Basil and . . .


    Paracelsus.
    I remember. Here's a case, now,
    Will teach you why I answer not, but burn
    The books you mention. Pray, does Luther dream
    His arguments convince by their own force
    The crowds that own his doctrine? No, indeed!
    His plain denial of established points
    Ages had sanctified and men supposed
    Could never be oppugned while earth was under
    And heaven above them points which chance or time
    Affected not did more than the array
    Of argument which followed. Boldly deny!
    There is much breath-stopping, hair-stiffening
    Awhile; then, amazed glances, mute awaiting
    The thunderbolt which does not come: and next,
    Reproachful wonder and inquiry: those
    Who else had never stirred, are able now
    To find the rest out for themselves, perhaps
    To outstrip him who set the whole at work,
    As never will my wise class its instructor.
    And you saw Luther?


    Festus.
    'T is a wondrous soul!


    Paracelsus.
    True: the so-heavy chain which galled mankind
    Is shattered, and the noblest of us all
    Must bow to the deliverer nay, the worker
    Of our own project we who long before
    Had burst our trammels, but forgot the crowd,
    We should have taught, still groaned beneath the load:
    This he has done and nobly. Speed that may!
    Whatever be my chance or my mischance,
    What benefits mankind must glad me too;
    And men seem made, though not as I believed,
    For something better than the times produce.
    Witness these gangs of peasants your new lights
    From Suabia have possessed, whom Münzer leads,
    And whom the duke, the landgrave and the elector
    Will calm in blood! Well, well; 't is not my world!


    Festus.
    Hark!


    Paracelsus.
    'T is the melancholy wind astir
    Within the trees; the embers too are grey:
    Morn must be near.


    Festus.
    Best ope the casement: see,
    The night, late strewn with clouds and flying stars,
    Is blank and motionless: how peaceful sleep
    The tree-tops altogether! Like an asp,
    The wind slips whispering from bough to bough.


    Paracelsus.
    Ay; you would gaze on a wind-shaken tree
    By the hour, nor count time lost.


    Festus.
    So you shall gaze:
    Those happy times will come again.


    Paracelsus.
    Gone, gone,
    Those pleasant times! Does not the moaning wind
    Seem to bewail that we have gained such gains
    And bartered sleep for them?


    Festus.
    It is our trust
    That there is yet another world to mend
    All error and mischance.


    Paracelsus.
    Another world!
    And why this world, this common world, to be
    A make-shift, a mere foil, how fair soever,
    To some fine life to come? Man must be fed
    With angels' food, forsooth; and some few traces
    Of a diviner nature which look out
    Through his corporeal baseness, warrant him
    In a supreme contempt of all provision
    For his inferior tastes some straggling marks
    Which constitute his essence, just as truly
    As here and there a gem would constitute
    The rock, their barren bed, one diamond.
    But were it so were man all mind he gains
    A station little enviable. From God
    Down to the lowest spirit ministrant,
    Intelligence exists which casts our mind
    Into immeasurable shade. No, no:
    Love, hope, fear, faith these make humanity;
    These are its sign and note and character,
    And these I have lost! gone, shut from me for ever,
    Like a dead friend safe from unkindness more!
    See, morn at length. The heavy darkness seems
    Diluted, grey and clear without the stars;
    The shrubs bestir and rouse themselves as if
    Some snake, that weighed them down all night, let go
    His hold; and from the East, fuller and fuller
    Day, like a mighty river, flowing in;
    But clouded, wintry, desolate and cold.
    Yet see how that broad prickly star-shaped plant,
    Half-down in the crevice, spreads its woolly leaves
    All thick and glistering with diamond dew.
    And you depart for Einsiedeln this day,
    And we have spent all night in talk like this!
    If you would have me better for your love,
    Revert no more to these sad themes.


    Festus.
    One favour,
    And I have done. I leave you, deeply moved;
    Unwilling to have fared so well, the while
    My friend has changed so sorely. If this mood
    Shall pass away, if light once more arise
    Where all is darkness now, if you see fit
    To hope and trust again, and strive again,
    You will remember not our love alone
    But that my faith in God's desire that man
    Should trust on his support, (as I must think
    You trusted) is obscured and dim through you:
    For you are thus, and this is no reward.
    Will you not call me to your side, dear Aureole?



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