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

    By Robert Browning



    Scene. Colmar in Alsatia: an Inn. 1528.
    Paracelsus, Festus.



    Paracelsus
    [to Johannes Oporinus, his Secretary].
    Sic itur ad astra! Dear Von Visenburg
    Is scandalized, and poor Torinus paralysed,
    And every honest soul that Basil holds
    Aghast; and yet we live, as one may say,
    Just as though Liechtenfels had never set
    So true a value on his sorry carcass,
    And learned Pütter had not frowned us dumb.
    We live; and shall as surely start to morrow
    For Nuremberg, as we drink speedy scathe
    To Basil in this mantling wine, suffused
    A delicate blush, no fainter tinge is born
    I' the shut heart of a bud. Pledge me, good John
    "Basil; a hot plague ravage it, and Pütter
    "Oppose the plague!" Even so? Do you too share
    Their panic, the reptiles? Ha, ha; faint through these,
    Desist for these! They manage matters so
    At Basil, 't is like: but others may find means
    To bring the stoutest braggart of the tribe
    Once more to crouch in silence means to breed
    A stupid wonder in each fool again,
    Now big with admiration at the skill
    Which stript a vain pretender of his plumes:
    And, that done, means to brand each slavish brow
    So deeply, surely, ineffaceably,
    That henceforth flattery shall not pucker it
    Out of the furrow; there that stamp shall stay
    To show the next they fawn on, what they are,
    This Basil with its magnates, fill my cup,
    Whom I curse soul and limb. And now despatch,
    Despatch, my trusty John; and what remains
    To do, whate'er arrangements for our trip
    Are yet to be completed, see you hasten
    This night; we'll weather the storm at least: to-morrow
    For Nuremberg! Now leave us; this grave clerk
    Has divers weighty matters for my ear:
    [Oporinus goes out.
    And spare my lungs. At last, my gallant Festus,
    I am rid of this arch-knave that dogs my heels
    As a gaunt crow a gasping sheep; at last
    May give a loose to my delight. How kind,
    How very kind, my first best only friend!
    Why, this looks like fidelity. Embrace me!
    Not a hair silvered yet? Right! you shall live
    Till I am worth your love; you shall be pround,
    And I but let time show! Did you not wonder?
    I sent to you because our compact weighed
    Upon my conscience (you recall the night
    At Basil, which the gods confound!) because
    Once more I aspire. I call you to my side:
    You come. You thought my message strange?


    Festus.
    So strange
    That I must hope, indeed, your messenger
    Has mingled his own fancies with the words
    Purporting to be yours.


    Paracelsus.
    He said no more,
    'T is probable, than the precious folk I leave
    Said fiftyfold more roughly. Well-a-day,
    'T is true! poor Paracelsus is exposed
    At last; a most egregious quack he proves:
    And those he overreached must spit their hate
    On one who, utterly beneath contempt,
    Could yet deceive their topping wits. You heard
    Bare truth; and at my bidding you come here
    To speed me on my enterprise, as once
    Your lavish wishes sped me, my own friend!


    Festus.
    What is your purpose, Aureole?


    Paracelsus.
    Oh, for purpose,
    There is no lack of precedents in a case
    Like mine; at least, if not precisely mine,
    The case of men cast off by those they sought
    To benefit.


    Festus.
    They really cast you off?
    I only heard a vague tale of some priest,
    Cured by your skill, who wrangled at your claim,
    Knowing his life's worth best; and how the judge
    The matter was referred to, saw no cause
    To interfere, nor you to hide your full
    Contempt of him; nor he, again, to smother
    His wrath thereat, which raised so fierce a flame
    That Basil soon was made no place for you.


    Paracelsus.
    The affair of Liechtenfels? the shallowest fable,
    The last and silliest outrage mere pretence!
    I knew it, I foretold it from the first,
    How soon the stupid wonder you mistook
    For genuine loyalty a cheering promise
    Of better things to come would pall and pass;
    And every word comes true. Saul is among
    The prophets! Just so long as I was pleased
    To play off the mere antics of my art,
    Fantastic gambols leading to no end,
    I got huge praise: but one can ne'er keep down
    Our foolish nature's weakness. There they flocked,
    Poor devils, jostling, swearing and perspiring,
    Till the walls rang again; and all for me!
    I had a kindness for them, which was right;
    But then I stopped not till I tacked to that
    A trust in them and a respect a sort
    Of sympathy for them; I must needs begin
    To teach them, not amaze them, "to impart
    "The spirit which should instigate the search
    "Of truth," just what you bade me! I spoke out.
    Forthwith a mighty squadron, in disgust,
    Filed off "the sifted chaff of the sack," I said,
    Redoubling my endeavours to secure
    The rest. When lo! one man had tarried so long
    Only to ascertain if I supported
    This tenet of his, or that; another loved
    To hear impartially before he judged,
    And having heard, now judged; this bland disciple
    Passed for my dupe, but all along, it seems,
    Spied error where his neighbours marvelled most;
    That fiery doctor who had hailed me friend,
    Did it because my by-paths, once proved wrong
    And beaconed properly, would commend again
    The good old ways our sires jogged safely o'er,
    Though not their squeamish sons; the other worthy
    Discovered divers verses of St. John,
    Which, read successively, refreshed the soul,
    But, muttered backwards, cured the gout, the stone,
    The colic and what not. Quid multa? The end
    Was a clear class-room, and a quiet leer
    From grave folk, and a sour reproachful glance
    From those in chief who, cap in hand, installed
    The new professor scarce a year before;
    And a vast flourish about patient merit
    Obscured awhile by flashy tricks, but sure
    Sooner or later to emerge in splendour
    Of which the example was some luckless wight
    Whom my arrival had discomfited,
    But now, it seems, the general voice recalled
    To fill my chair and so efface the stain
    Basil had long incurred. I sought no better,
    Only a quiet dismissal from my post,
    And from my heart I wished them better suited
    And better served. Good night to Basil, then!
    But fast as I proposed to rid the tribe
    Of my obnoxious back, I could not spare them
    The pleasure of a parting kick.


    Festus.
    You smile:
    Despise them as they merit!


    Paracelsus.
    If I smile,
    'T is with as very contempt as ever turned
    Flesh into stone. This courteous recompense,
    This grateful . . . Festus, were your nature fit
    To be defiled, your eyes the eyes to ache
    At gangrene-blotches, eating poison-blains,
    The ulcerous barky scurf of leprosy
    Which finds a man, and leaves a hideous thing
    That cannot but be mended by hell fire,
    I would lay bare to you the human heart
    Which God cursed long ago, and devils make since
    Their pet nest and their never-tiring home.
    Oh, sages have discovered we are born
    For various ends to love, to know: has ever
    One stumbled, in his search, on any signs
    Of a nature in us formed to hate? To hate?
    If that be our true object which evokes
    Our powers in fullest strength, be sure 't is hate!
    Yet men have doubted if the best and bravest
    Of spirits can nourish him with hate alone.
    I had not the monopoly of fools,
    It seems, at Basil.


    Festus.
    But your plans, your plans!
    I have yet to learn your purpose, Aureole!


    Paracelsus.
    Whether to sink beneath such ponderous shame,
    To shrink up like a crushed snail, undergo
    In silence and desist from further toil,
    and so subside into a monument
    Of one their censure blasted? or to bow
    Cheerfully as submissively, to lower
    My old pretensions even as Basil dictates,
    To drop into the rank her wits assign me
    And live as they prescribe, and make that use
    Of my poor knowledge which their rules allow,
    Proud to be patted now and then, and careful
    To practise the true posture for receiving
    The amplest benefit from their hoofs' appliance
    When they shall condescend to tutor me?
    Then, one may feel resentment like a flame
    Within, and deck false systems in truth's garb,
    And tangle and entwine mankind with error,
    And give them darkness for a dower and falsehood
    For a possession, ages: or one may mope
    Into a shade through thinking, or else drowse
    Into a dreamless sleep and so die off.
    But I, now Festus shall divine! but I
    Am merely setting out once more, embracing
    My earliest aims again! What thinks he now?


    Festus.
    Your aims? the aims? to Know? and where is found
    The early trust . . .


    Paracelsus.


    Nay, not so fast; I say,
    The aims not the old means. You know they made me
    A laughing-stock; I was a fool; you know
    The when and the how: hardly those means again!
    Not but they had their beauty; who should know
    Their passing beauty, if not I? Still, dreams
    They were, so let them vanish, yet in beauty
    If that may be. Stay: thus they pass in song!


    [He sings.]


    Heap cassia, sandal-buds and stripes
    Of labdanum, and aloe-balls,
    Smeared with dull nard an Indian wipes
    From out her hair: such balsam falls
    Down sea-side mountain pedestals,
    From tree-tops where tired winds are fain,
    Spent with the vast and howling main,
    To treasure half their island-gain.


    And strew faint sweetness from some old
    Egyptian's fine worm-eaten shroud
    Which breaks to dust when once unrolled;
    Or shredded perfume, like a cloud
    From closet long to quiet vowed,
    With mothed and dropping arras hung,
    Mouldering her lute and books among,
    As when a queen, long dead, was young.


    Mine, every word! And on such pile shall die
    My lovely fancies, with fair perished things,
    Themselves fair and forgotten; yes, forgotten,
    Or why abjure them? So, I made this rhyme
    That fitting dignity might be preserved;
    No little proud was I; though the list of drugs
    Smacks of my old vocation, and the verse
    Halts like the best of Luther's psalms.


    Festus.
    But, Aureole,
    Talk not thus wildly and madly. I am here
    Did you know all! I have travelled far, indeed,
    To learn your wishes. Be yourself again!
    For in this mood I recognize you less
    Than in the horrible despondency
    I witnessed last. You may account this, joy;
    But rather let me gaze on that despair
    Than hear these incoherent words and see
    This flushed cheek and intensely-sparkling eye.


    Paracelsus.
    Why, man, I was light-hearted in my prime
    I am light-hearted now; what would you have?
    Aprile was a poet, I make songs
    'T is the very augury of success I want!
    Why should I not be joyous now as then?


    Festus.
    Joyous! and how? and what remains for joy?
    You have declared the ends (which I am sick
    Of naming) are impracticable.


    Paracelsus.
    Ay,
    Pursued as I pursued them the arch-fool!
    Listen: my plan will please you not, 't is like,
    But you are little versed in the world's ways.
    This is my plan (first drinking its good luck)
    I will accept all helps; all I despised
    So rashly at the outset, equally
    With early impulses, late years have quenched:
    I have tried each way singly: now for both!
    All helps! no one sort shall exclude the rest.
    I seek to know and to enjoy at once,
    Not one without the other as before.
    Suppose my labour should seem God's own cause
    Once more, as first I dreamed, it shall not baulk me
    Of the meanest earthliest sensualest delight
    That may be snatched; for every joy is gain,
    And gain is gain, however small. My soul
    Can die then, nor be taunted "what was gained?"
    Nor, on the other hand, should pleasure follow
    As though I had not spurned her hitherto,
    Shall she o'ercloud my spirit's rapt communion
    With the tumultuous past, the teeming future,
    Glorious with visions of a full success.


    Festus.
    Success!


    Paracelsus.
    And wherefore not? Why not prefer
    Results obtained in my best state of being,
    To those derived alone from seasons dark
    As the thoughts they bred? When I was best, my youth
    Unwasted, seemed success not surest too?
    It is the nature of darkness to obscure.
    I am a wanderer: I remember well
    One journey, how I feared the track was missed,

    So long the city I desired to reach
    Lay hid; when suddenly its spires afar
    Flashed through the circling clouds; you may conceive
    My transport. Soon the vapours closed again,
    But I had seen the city, and one such glance
    No darkness could obscure: nor shall the present
    A few dull hours, a passing shame or two,
    Destroy the vivid memories of the past.
    I will fight the battle out; a little spent
    Perhaps, but still an able combatant.
    You look at my grey hair and furrowed brow?
    But I can turn even weakness to account:
    Of many tricks I know, 't is not the least
    To push the ruins of my frame, whereon
    The fire of vigour trembles scarce alive,
    Into a heap, and send the flame aloft.
    What should I do with age? So, sickness lends
    An aid; it being, I fear, the source of all
    We boast of: mind is nothing but disease,
    And natural health is ignorance.


    Festus.
    I see
    But one good symptom in this notable scheme.
    I feared your sudden journey had in view
    To wreak immediate vengeance on your foes
    'T is not so: I am glad.


    Paracelsus.
    And if I please
    To spit on them, to trample them, what then?
    'T is sorry warfare truly, but the fools
    Provoke it. I would spare their self-conceit
    But if they must provoke me, cannot suffer
    Forbearance on my part, if I may keep
    No quality in the shade, must needs put forth
    Power to match power, my strength against their strength,
    And teach them their own game with their own arms
    Why, be it so and let them take their chance!
    I am above them like a god, there's no
    Hiding the fact: what idle scruples, then,
    Were those that ever bade me soften it,
    Communicate it gently to the world,
    Instead of proving my supremacy,
    Taking my natural station o'er their head,
    Then owning all the glory was a man's!
    And in my elevation man's would be.
    But live and learn, though life's short, learning, hard!
    And therefore, though the wreck of my past self,
    I fear, dear Pütter, that your lecture-room
    Must wait awhile for its best ornament,
    The penitent empiric, who set up
    For somebody, but soon was taught his place;
    Now, but too happy to be let confess
    His error, snuff the candles, and illustrate
    (Fiat experientia corpore vili)
    Your medicine's soundness in his person. Wait,
    Good Pütter!


    Festus.
    He who sneers thus, is a god!


    Paracelsus.
    Ay, ay, laugh at me! I am very glad
    You are not gulled by all this swaggering; you
    Can see the root of the matter! how I strive
    To put a good face on the overthrow
    I have experienced, and to bury and hide
    My degradation in its length and breadth;
    How the mean motives I would make you think
    Just mingle as is due with nobler aims,
    The appetites I modestly allow
    May influence me as being mortal still
    Do goad me, drive me on, and fast supplant
    My youth's desires. You are no stupid dupe:
    You find me out! Yes, I had sent for you
    To palm these childish lies upon you, Festus!
    Laugh you shall laugh at me!


    Festus.
    The past, then, Aureole,
    Proves nothing? Is our interchange of love
    Yet to begin? Have I to swear I mean
    No flattery in this speech or that? For you,
    Whate'er you say, there is no degradation;
    These low thoughts are no inmates of your mind,
    Or wherefore this disorder? You are vexed
    As much by the intrusion of base views,
    Familiar to your adversaries, as they
    Were troubled should your qualities alight
    Amid their murky souls; not otherwise,
    A stray wolf which the winter forces down
    From our bleak hills, suffices to affright
    A village in the vales while foresters
    Sleep calm, though all night long the famished troop
    Snuff round and scratch against their crazy huts.
    These evil thoughts are monsters, and will flee.


    Paracelsus.
    May you be happy, Festus, my own friend!


    Festus.
    Nay, further; the delights you fain would think
    The superseders of your nobler aims,
    Though ordinary and harmless stimulants,
    Will ne'er content you. . . .


    Paracelsus.
    Hush! I once despised them,
    But that soon passes. We are high at first
    In our demand, nor will abate a jot
    Of toil's strict value; but time passes o'er,
    And humbler spirits accept what we refuse:
    In short, when some such comfort is doled out
    As these delights, we cannot long retain
    Bitter contempt which urges us at first
    To hurl it back, but hug it to our breast
    And thankfully retire. This life of mine
    Must be lived out and a grave thoroughly earned:
    I am just fit for that and nought beside.
    I told you once, I cannot now enjoy,
    Unless I deem my knowledge gains through joy;
    Nor can I know, but straight warm tears reveal
    My need of linking also joy to knowledge:
    So, on I drive, enjoying all I can,
    And knowing all I can. I speak, of course,
    Confusedly; this will better explain feel here!
    Quick beating, is it not? a fire of the heart
    To work off some way, this as well as any.
    So, Festus sees me fairly launched; his calm
    Compassionate look might have disturbed me once,
    But now, far from rejecting, I invite
    What bids me press the closer, lay myself
    Open before him, and be soothed with pity;
    I hope, if he command hope, and believe
    As he directs me satiating myself
    With his enduring love. And Festus quits me
    To give place to some credulous disciple
    Who holds that God is wise, but Paracelsus
    Has his peculiar merits: I suck in
    That homage, chuckle o'er that admiration,
    And then dismiss the fool; for night is come.
    And I betake myself to study again,
    Till patient searchings after hidden lore
    Half wring some bright truth from its prison; my frame
    Trembles, my forehead's veins swell out, my hair
    Tingles for triumph. Slow and sure the morn
    Shall break on my pent room and dwindling lamp
    And furnace dead, and scattered earths and ores;
    When, with a failing heart and throbbing brow,
    I must review my captured truth, sum up
    Its value, trace what ends to what begins,
    Its present power with its eventual bearings,
    Latent affinities, the views it opens,
    And its full length in perfecting my scheme.
    I view it sternly circumscribed, cast down
    From the high place my fond hopes yielded it,
    Proved worthless which, in getting, yet had cost
    Another wrench to this fast-falling frame.
    Then, quick, the cup to quaff, that chases sorrow!
    I lapse back into youth, and take again
    My fluttering pulse for evidence that God
    Means good to me, will make my cause his own.
    See! I have cast off this remorseless care
    Which clogged a spirit born to soar so free,
    And my dim chamber has become a tent,
    Festus is sitting by me, and his Michal . . .
    Why do you start? I say, she listening here,
    (For yonder Würzburg through the orchard-bough!)
    Motions as though such ardent words should find
    No echo in a maiden's quiet soul,
    But her pure bosom heaves, her eyes fill fast
    With tears, her sweet lips tremble all the while!
    Ha, ha!


    Festus.
    It seems, then, you expect to reap
    No unreal joy from this your present course,
    But rather . . .


    Paracelsus.
    Death! To die! I owe that much
    To what, at least, I was. I should be sad
    To live contented after such a fall,
    To thrive and fatten after such reverse!
    The whole plan is a makeshift, but will last
    My time.


    Festus.
    And you have never mused and said,
    "I had a noble purpose, and the strength
    "To compass it; but I have stopped half-way,
    "And wrongly given the first-fruits of my toil
    "To objects little worthy of the gift.
    "Why linger round them still? why clench my fault?
    "Why seek for consolation in defeat,
    "In vain endeavours to derive a beauty
    "From ugliness? why seek to make the most
    "Of what no power can change, nor strive instead
    "With mighty effort to redeem the past
    "And, gathering up the treasures thus cast down,
    "To hold a steadfast course till I arrive
    "At their fit destination and my own?"
    You have never pondered thus?


    Paracelsus.


    Have I, you ask?
    Often at midnight, when most fancies come,
    Would some such airy project visit me:
    But ever at the end . . . or will you hear
    The same thing in a tale, a parable?
    You and I, wandering over the world wide,
    Chance to set foot upon a desert coast.
    Just as we cry, "No human voice before
    "Broke the inveterate silence of these rocks!"
    Their querulous echo startles us; we turn:
    What ravaged structure still looks o'er the sea?
    Some characters remain, too! While we read,
    The sharp salt wind, impatient for the last
    Of even this record, wistfully comes and goes,
    Or sings what we recover, mocking it.
    This is the record; and my voice, the wind's.


    [He sings.]


    Over the sea our galleys went,
    With cleaving prows in order brave
    To a speeding wind and a bounding wave,
    A gallant armament:
    Each bark built out of a forest-tree
    Left leafy and rough as first it grew,
    And nailed all over the gaping sides,
    Within and without, with black bull-hides,
    Seethed in fat and suppled in flame,
    To bear the playful billows' game:
    So, each good ship was rude to see,
    Rude and bare to the outward view,
    But each upbore a stately tent
    Where cedar pales in scented row
    Kept out the flakes of the dancing brine,
    And an awning drooped the mast below,
    In fold on fold of the purple fine,
    That neither noontide nor starshine
    Nor moonlight cold which maketh mad,
    Might pierce the regal tenement.
    When the sun dawned, oh, gay and glad
    We set the sail and plied the oar;
    But when the night-wind blew like breath,
    For joy of one day's voyage more,
    We sang together on the wide sea,
    Like men at peace on a peaceful shore;
    Each sail was loosed to the wind so free,
    Each helm made sure by the twilight star,
    And in a sleep as calm as death,
    We, the voyagers from afar,
    Lay stretched along, each weary crew
    In a circle round its wondrous tent
    Whence gleamed soft light and curled rich scent,
    And with light and perfume, music too:
    So the stars wheeled round, and the darkness past,
    And at morn we started beside the mast,
    And still each ship was sailing fast.


    Now, one morn, land appeared a speck
    Dim trembling betwixt sea and sky:
    "Avoid it," cried our pilot, "check
    "The shout, restrain the eager eye!"
    But the heaving sea was black behind
    For many a night and many a day,
    And land, though but a rock, drew nigh;
    So, we broke the cedar pales away,
    Let the purple awning flap in the wind,
    And a statute bright was on every deck!
    We shouted, every man of us,
    And steered right into the harbour thus,
    With pomp and pæan glorious.


    A hundred shapes of lucid stone!
    All day we built its shrine for each,
    A shrine of rock for every one,
    Nor paused till in the westering sun
    We sat together on the beach
    To sing because our task was done.
    When lo! what shouts and merry songs!
    What laughter all the distance stirs!
    A loaded raft with happy throngs
    Of gentle islanders!
    "Our isles are just at hand," they cried,
    "Like cloudlets faint in even sleeping
    "Our temple-gates are opened wide,
    "Our olive-groves thick shade are keeping
    "For these majestic forms" they cried.
    Oh, then we awoke with sudden start
    From our deep dream, and knew, too late,
    How bare the rock, how desolate,
    Which had received our precious freight:
    Yet we called out "Depart!
    "Our gifts, once given, must here abide.
    "Our work is done; we have no heart
    "To mar our work," we cried.


    Festus.
    In truth?


    Paracelsus.
    Nay, wait: all this in tracings faint
    On rugged stones strewn here and there, but piled
    In order once: then follows mark what follows!
    "The sad rhyme of the men who proudly clung
    "To their first fault, and withered in their pride."


    Festus.
    Come back then, Aureole; as you fear God, come!
    This is foul sin; come back! Renounce the past,
    Forswear the future; look for joy no more,
    But wait death's summons amid holy sights,
    And trust me for the event peace, if not joy.
    Return with me to Einsiedeln, dear Aureole!


    Paracelsus.
    No way, no way! it would not turn to good.
    A spotless child sleeps on the flowering moss
    'T is well for him; but when a sinful man,
    Envying such slumber, may desire to put
    His guilt away, shall he return at once
    To rest by lying there? Our sires knew well
    (Spite of the grave discoveries of their sons)
    The fitting course for such: dark cells, dim lamps,
    A stone floor one may writhe on like a worm:
    No mossy pillow blue with violets!


    Festus.
    I see no symptom of these absolute
    And tyrannous passions. You are calmer now.
    This verse-making can purge you well enough
    Without the terrible penance you describe.
    You love me still: the lusts you fear will never
    Outrage your friend. To Einsiedeln, once more!
    Say but the word!


    Paracelsus.
    No, no; those lusts forbid:
    They crouch, I know, cowering with half-shut eye
    Beside you; 't is their nature. Thrust yourself
    Between them and their prey; let some fool style me
    Or king or quack, it matters not then try
    Your wisdom, urge them to forego their treat!
    No, no; learn better and look deeper, Festus!
    If you knew how a devil sneers within me
    While you are talking now of this, now that,
    As though we differed scarcely save in trifles!


    Festus.
    Do we so differ? True, change must proceed,
    Whether for good or ill; keep from me, which!
    Do not confide all secrets: I was born
    To hope, and you . . .


    Paracelsus.
    To trust: you know the fruits!


    Festus.
    Listen: I do believe, what you call trust
    Was self-delusion at the best: for, see!
    So long as God would kindly pioneer
    A path for you, and screen you from the world,
    Procure you full exemption from man's lot,
    Man's common hopes and fears, on the mere pretext
    Of your engagement in his service yield you
    A limitless licence, make you God, in fact,
    And turn your slave you were content to say
    Most courtly praises! What is it, at last,
    But selfishness without example? None
    Could trace God's will so plain as you, while yours
    Remained implied in it; but now you fail,
    And we, who prate about that will, are fools!
    In short, God's service is established here
    As he determines fit, and not your way,
    And this you cannot brook. Such discontent
    Is weak. Renounce all creatureship at once!
    Affirm an absolute right to have and use
    Your energies; as though the rivers should say
    "We rush to the ocean; what have we to do
    "With feeding streamlets, lingering in the vales,
    "Sleeping in lazy pools?" Set up that plea,
    That will be bold at least!


    Paracelsus.
    'T is like enough.
    The serviceable spirits are those, no doubt,
    The East produces: lo, the master bids,
    They wake, raise terraces and garden-grounds
    In one night's space; and, this done, straight begin
    Another century's sleep, to the great praise
    Of him that framed them wise and beautiful,
    Till a lamp's rubbing, or some chance akin,
    Wake them again. I am of different mould.
    I would have soothed my lord, and slaved for him
    And done him service past my narrow bond,
    And thus I get rewarded for my pains!
    Beside, 't is vain to talk of forwarding
    God's glory otherwise; this is alone
    The sphere of its increase, as far as men
    Increase it; why, then, look beyond this sphere?
    We are his glory; and if we be glorious,
    Is not the thing achieved?


    Festus.
    Shall one like me
    Judge hearts like yours? Though years have changed you much,
    And you have left your first love, and retain
    Its empty shade to veil your crooked ways,
    Yet I still hold that you have honoured God.
    And who shall call your course without reward?
    For, wherefore this repining at defeat
    Had triumph ne'er inured you to high hopes?
    I urge you to forsake the life you curse,
    And what success attends me? simply talk
    Of passion, weakness and remorse; in short,
    Anything but the naked truth you choose
    This so-despised career, and cheaply hold
    My happiness, or rather other men's.
    Once more, return!


    Paracelsus.
    And quickly. John the thief
    Has pilfered half my secrets by this time:
    And we depart by daybreak. I am weary,
    I know not how; not even the wine-cup soothes
    My brain to-night . . .
    Do you not thoroughly despise me, Festus?
    No flattery! One like you needs not be told
    We live and breathe deceiving and deceived.
    Do you not scorn me from your heart of hearts,
    Me and my cant, each petty subterfuge,
    My rhymes and all this frothy shower of words,
    My glozing self-deceit, my outward crust
    Of lies which wrap, as tetter, morphew, furfair
    Wrapt the sound flesh? so, see you flatter not!
    Even God flatters: but my friend, at least,
    Is true. I would depart, secure henceforth
    Against all further insult, hate and wrong
    From puny foes; my one friend's scorn shall brand me:
    No fear of sinking deeper!


    Festus.
    No, dear Aureole!
    No, no; I came to counsel faithfully.
    There are old rules, made long ere we were born,
    By which I judge you. I, so fallible,
    So infinitely low beside your mighty
    Majestic spirit! even I can see
    You own some higher law than ours which call
    Sin, what is no sin weakness, what is strength.
    But I have only these, such as they are,
    To guide me; and I blame you where they bid,
    Only so long as blaming promises
    To win peace for your soul: the more, that sorrow
    Has fallen on me of late, and they have helped me
    So that I faint not under my distress.
    But wherefore should I scruple to avow
    In spite of all, as brother judging brother,
    Your fate is most inexplicable to me?
    And should you perish without recompense
    And satisfaction yet too hastily
    I have relied on love: you may have sinned,
    But you have loved. As a mere human matter
    As I would have God deal with fragile men
    In the end I say that you will triumph yet!


    Paracelsus.
    Have you felt sorrow, Festus? 't is because
    You love me. Sorrow, and sweet Michal yours!
    Well thought on: never let her know this last
    Dull winding-up of all: these miscreants dared
    Insult me me she loved: so, grieve her not!


    Festus.
    Your ill success can little grieve her now.


    Paracelsus.
    Michal is dead! pray Christ we do not craze!


    Festus.
    Aureole, dear Aureole, look not on me thus!
    Fool, fool! this is the heart grown sorrow-proof
    I cannot bear those eyes.


    Paracelsus.
    Nay, really dead?


    Festus.
    'T is scarce a month.


    Paracelsus.
    Stone dead! then you have laid her
    Among the flowers ere this. Now, do you know,
    I can reveal a secret which shall comfort
    Even you. I have no julep, as men think,
    To cheat the grave; but a far better secret.
    Know, then, you did not ill to trust your love
    To the cold earth: I have thought much of it:
    For I believe we do not wholly die.


    Festus.
    Aureole!


    Paracelsus.
    Nay, do not laugh; there is a reason
    For what I say: I think the soul can never
    Taste death. I am, just now, as you may see,
    Very unfit to put so strange a thought
    In an intelligible dress of words;
    But take it as my trust, she is not dead.


    Festus.
    But not on this account alone? you surely,
    Aureole, you have believed this all along?


    Paracelsus.
    And Michal sleeps among the roots and dews,
    While I am moved at Basil, and full of schemes
    For Nuremberg, and hoping and despairing,
    As though it mattered how the farce plays out,
    So it be quickly played. Away, away!
    Have your will, rabble! while we fight the prize,
    Troop you in safety to the snug back-seats
    And leave a clear arena for the brave
    About to perish for your sport! Behold!



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