Public Domain Poetry And Stories - In Memory of Aurelio Saffi by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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In Memory of Aurelio Saffi

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    The wider world of men that is not ours
    Receives a soul whose life on earth was light.
    Though darkness close the date of human hours,
    Love holds the spirit and sense of life in sight,
    That may not, even though death bid fly, take flight.
    Faith, love, and hope fulfilled with memory, see
    As clear and dear as life could bid it be
    The present soul that is and is not he.
    He, who held up the shield and sword of Rome
    Against the ravening brood of recreant France,
    Beside the man of men whom heaven took home
    When earth beheld the spring's first eyebeams glance
    And life and winter seemed alike a trance
    Eighteen years since, in sight of heaven and spring
    That saw the soul above all souls take wing,
    He too now hears the heaven we hear not sing.
    He too now dwells where death is dead, and stands
    Where souls like stars exult in life to be:
    Whence all who linked heroic hearts and hands
    Shine on our sight, and give it strength to see
    What hope makes fair for all whom faith makes free:
    Free with such freedom as we find in sleep,
    The light sweet shadow of death, when dreams are deep
    And high as heaven whence light and lightning leap.
    And scarce a month yet gone, his living hand
    Writ loving words that sealed me friend of his.
    Are heaven and earth as near as sea to strand?
    May life and death as bride and bridegroom kiss?
    His last month's written word abides, and is;
    Clear as the sun that lit through storm and strife
    And darkling days when hope took fear to wife
    The faith whose fire was light of all his life.
    A life so fair, so pure of earthlier leaven,
    That none hath won through higher and harder ways
    The deathless life of death which earth calls heaven;
    Heaven, and the light of love on earth, and praise
    Of silent memory through subsiding days
    Wherein the light subsides not whence the past
    Feeds full with life the future. Time holds fast
    Their names whom faith forgets not, first and last.
    Forget? The dark forgets not dawn, nor we
    The suns that sink to rise again, and shine
    Lords of live years and ages. Earth and sea
    Forget not heaven that makes them seem divine,
    Though night put out their fires and bid their shrine
    Be dark and pale as storm and twilight. Day,
    Not night, is everlasting: life's full sway
    Bids death bow down as dead, and pass away.
    What part has death in souls that past all fear
    Win heavenward their supernal way, and smite
    With scorn sublime as heaven such dreams as here
    Plague and perplex with cloud and fire the light
    That leads men's waking souls from glimmering night
    To the awless heights of day, whereon man's awe,
    Transfigured, dies in rapture, seeing the law
    Sealed of the sun that earth arising saw?
    Faith, justice, mercy, love, and heaven-born hate
    That sets them all on fire and bids them be
    More than soft words and dreams that wake too late,
    Shone living through the lordly life that we
    Beheld, revered, and loved on earth, while he
    Dwelt here, and bade our eyes take light thereof;
    Light as from heaven that flamed or smiled above
    In light or fire whose very hate was love.
    No hate of man, but hate of hate whose foam
    Sheds poison forth from tongues of snakes and priests,
    And stains the sickening air with steams whence Rome
    Now feeds not full the God that slays and feasts;
    For now the fangs of all the ravenous beasts
    That ramped about him, fain of prayer and prey,
    Fulfil their lust no more: the tide of day
    Swells, and compels him down the deathward way.
    Night sucks the Church its creature down, and hell
    Yawns, heaves, and yearns to clasp its loathliest child
    Close to the breasts that bore it. All the spell
    Whence darkness saw the dawn in heaven defiled
    Is dumb as death: the lips that lied and smiled
    Wax white for fear as ashes. She that bore
    The banner up of darkness now no more
    Sheds night and fear and shame from shore to shore.
    When they that cast her kingdom down were born,
    North cried on south and east made moan to west
    For hopes that love had hardly heart to mourn,
    For Italy that was not. Kings on quest,
    By priests whose blessings burn as curses blest,
    Made spoil of souls and bodies bowed and bound,
    Hunted and harried, leashed as horse or hound,
    And hopeless of the hope that died unfound.
    And now that faith has brought forth fruit to time,
    How should not memory praise their names, and hold
    Their record even as Dante's life sublime,
    Who bade his dream, found fair and false of old,
    Live? Not till earth and heaven be dead and cold
    May man forget whose work and will made one
    Italy, fair as heaven or freedom won,
    And left their fame to shine beside her sun.



Extra Info:
April 1890.


From "Astrophel and Other Poems" - 1904


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