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Is fiction which makes fact alive, fact too? The somehow may be thishow. Writ down for very A B C of fact, In the beginning God made heaven and earth; From which, no matter with what lisp, I spell (710) And speak out a consequencethat man, Man,as befits the made, the inferior thing, Purposed, since made, to grow, not make in turn, Yet forced to try and make, else fail to grow, Formed to rise, reach at, if not grasp and gain The good beyond him,which attempt is growth, Repeats Gods process in mans due degree, Attaining mans proportionate result, Creates, no, but resuscitates, perhaps. Inalienable, the arch-prerogative (720) Which turns thought, actconceives, expresses too! No less, man, bounded, yearning to be free, May so project his surplusage of soul In search of body, so add self to self By owning what lay ownerless before, So, find so fill full, so appropriate forms That, although nothing which had never life Shall get life from him, be, not having been, Yet, something dead may get to live again, Something with too much life or not enough, (730) Which, either way imperfect, ended once: An end whereat mans impulse intervenes, Makes new beginning, starts the dead alive, Completes the incomplete and saves the thing. Mans breath were vain to light a virgin wick, Half-burned-out, all but quite-quenched wicks o the lamp Stationed for temple-service on this earth, These indeed let him breathe on and relume! For such mans feat is, in the due degree, Mimic creation, galvanism for life, (740) But still a glory portioned in the scale. Why did the mage say,feeling as we are wont For truth, and stopping midway short of truth, And resting on a lie,I raise a ghost? Because, he taught adepts, man makes not man. Yet by a special gift, an art of arts, More insight and more outsight and much more Will to use both of these than boast my mates, I can detach from me, commission forth Half of my soul; which in its pilgrimage (750) Oer old unwandered waste ways of the world, May chance upon some fragment of a whole, Rag of flesh, scrap of bone in dim disuse, Smoking flax that fed fire once: prompt therein I enter, spark-like, put old powers to play, Push lines out to the limit, lead forth last (By a moonrise through a ruin of a crypt) What shall be mistily seen, murmuringly heard, Mistakenly felt: then write my name with Fausts! Oh, Faust, why Faust? Was not Elisha once? (760) Who bade them lay his staff on a corpse-face. There was no voice, no hearing: he went in Therefore, and shut the door upon them twain, And prayed unto the Lord: and he went up And lay upon the corpse, dead on the couch, And put his mouth upon its mouth, his eyes Upon its eyes, his hands upon its hands, And stretched him on the flesh; the flesh waxed warm: And he returned, walked to and fro the house, And went up, stretched him on the flesh again, (770) And the eyes opened. Tis a credible feat With the right man and way. The Book! I turn its medicinable leaves In London now till, as in Florence erst, A spirit laughs and leaps through every limb, And lights my eye, and lifts me by the hair, Letting me have my will again with these How title I the dead alive once more? Descended of an ancient house, though poor, A beak-nosed bushy-bearded black-haired lord, Lean, pallid, low of stature yet robust, Fifty years old,having four years ago Married Pompilia Comparini, young, Good, beautiful, at Rome, where she was born, And brought her to Arezzo, where they lived Unhappy lives, whatever curse the cause, This husband, taking four accomplices, Followed this wife to Rome, where she was fled (790) From their Arezzo to find peace again, In convoy, eight months earlier, of a priest, Aretine also, of still nobler birth, Giuseppe Caponsacchi,and caught her there Quiet in a villa on a Christmas night, With only Pietro and Violante by, Both her putative parents; killed the three, Aged, they, seventy each, and she, seventeen, And, two weeks since, the mother of his babe First-born and heir to what the style was worth (800) O the Guido who determined, dared and did This deed just as he purposed point by point. Then, bent upon escape, but hotly pressed, And captured with his co-mates that same night, He, brought to trial, stood on this defence Injury to his honour caused the act; That since his wife was false (as manifest By flight from home in such companionship), Death, punishment deserved of the false wife And faithless parents who abetted her (810) I the flight aforesaid, wronged nor God nor man. Nor false she, nor yet faithless they, replied The accuser; cloaked and masked this murder glooms; True was Pompilia, loyal too the pair; Out of the mans own heart this monster curled, This crime coiled with connivancy at crime, His victims breast, he tells you, hatched and reared; Uncoil we and stretch stark the worm of hell! A month the trial swayed this way and that Ere judgment settled down |
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