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Our arms are those of Fiesole itself, The shield quartered with white and red: a branch Are the Salviati of us, nothing more. That were good help to the Church? But better still Not simply for the advantage of my birth (240) I the way of the world, was I proposed for priest; But because theres an illustration, late I the day, thats loved and looked to as a saint Still in Arezzo, he was bishop of, Sixty years since: he spent to the last doit His bishops-revenue among the poor, And used to tend the needy and the sick, Barefoot, because of his humility. He it was,when the Granduke Ferdinand Swore he would raze our city, plough the place (250) And sow it with salt, because we Aretines Had tied a rope about the neck, to hale The statue of his father from its base For hates sake,he availed by prayers and tears To pacify the Duke and save the town. This was my fathers fathers brother. You see, For his sake, how it was I had a right To the self-same office, bishop in the egg, So, grew i the garb and prattled in the school, Was made expect, from infancy almost, (260) The proper mood o the priest; till time ran by And brought the day when I must read the vows, Declare the world renounced and undertake To become priest and leave probation,leap Over the ledge into the other life, Having gone trippingly hitherto up to the height Oer the wan water. Just a vow to read! Engage to keep such vow inviolate, How much less mine,I know myself too weak, (270) Unworthy! Choose a worthier stronger man! And the very Bishop smiled and stopped the mouth In its mid-protestation. Incapable? Qualmish of conscience? Thou ingenuous boy! Clear up the clouds and cast thy scruples far! I satisfy thee theres an easier sense Wherein to take such vow than suits the first Rough rigid reading. Mark what makes all smooth, Nay, has been even a solace to myself! The Jews who needs must, in their synagogue, (280) Utter sometimes the holy name of God, A thing their superstition boggles at, Pronounce aloud the ineffable sacrosanct, How does their shrewdness help them? In this wise; Another set of sounds they substitute, Jumble so consonants and vowelshow Should I know?that there grows from out the old Quite a new word that means the very same And oer the hard place slide they with a smile. Giuseppe Maria Caponsacchi mine, (290) Nobody wants you in these latter days To prop the Church by breaking your back-bone, As the necessary way was once, we know, When Dioclesian flourished and his like; That building of the buttress-work was done By martyrs and confessors: let it bide, Add not a brick, but, where you see a chink, Stick in a sprig of ivy or root a rose Shall make amends and beautify the pile! We profit as you were the painfullest (300) O the martyrs, and you prove yourself a match For the cruellest confessor ever was, If you march boldly up and take your stand Where their blood soaks, their bones yet strew the soil, And cry Take notice, I the young and free And well-to-do i the world, thus leave the world, Cast in my lot thus with no gay young world But the grand old Church: she tempts me of the two! Renounce the world? Nay, keep and give it us! Let us have you, and boast of what you bring. (310) We want the pick o the earth to practise with, Not its offscouring, halt and deaf and blind In soul and body. Theres a rubble-stone Unfit for the front o the building, stuff to stow In a gap behind and keep us weather- tight; Theres porphyry for the prominent place. Good lack! Saint Paul has had enough and to spare, I trow, Of ragged run-away Onesimus: He wants the right-hand with the signet-ring Of King Agrippa, now, to shake and use. (320) I have a heavy scholar cloistered up Close under lock and key, kept at his task Of letting Fenelon know the fool he is, In a book I promise Christendom next Spring. Why, if he covets so much meat, the clown, As a larks wing next Friday, or, any day, Diversion beyond catching his own fleas, He shall be properly swinged, I promise him. But you, who are so quite another paste Of a man,do you obey me? Cultivate (330) Assiduous, that superior gift you have Of making madrigals(who told me? Ah!) Get done a Marinesque Adoniad straight With a pulse o the blood a-pricking, here and there That I may tell the lady, And hes ours! I was good enough for that, nor cheated so; I could live thus and still hold head erect. Now you see why I may have been before A fribble and coxcomb, yet, as priest, break word (340) Nowise, to make you disbelieve me now. I need that you should know my truth. Well, then, According to prescription did I live, Conformed myself, both read the breviary And wrote the rhymes, was punctual to my place I the Pieve, and as diligent at my post Where beauty and fashion rule. I throve apace, Sub-deacon, Canon, the authority For delicate play at tarocs, and arbiter O the magnitude of fan-mounts: all the while (350) Wanting no whit the advantage of a hint Benignant to the promising pupil,thus: Enough attention to the Countess now, The young one; tis her mother rules the roast, We |
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