Poetry Explorer- Classic Contemporary Poetry, IVAN IVANOVITCH, by ROBERT BROWNING



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Classic and Contemporary Poetry

IVAN IVANOVITCH, by                 Poet Analysis     Poet's Biography
First Line: They tell me, your carpenters,' quoth I to my friend the russ
Last Line: "as air to walk abroad. ""how otherwise?"" asked he."
Subject(s): Carpenters; Russia; Soviet Union; Russians


"They tell me, your carpenters," quoth I to my friend the Russ,
Make a simple hatchet serve as a tool-box serves with us.
Arm but each man with his axe, 'tis a hammer and saw and plane
And chisel, and - what know I else? We should imitate in vain
The mastery wherewithal, by a flourish of just the adze,
He cleaves, clamps, dovetails in, - no need of our nails and brads,
The manageable pine: 'tis said he could shave himself
With the axe, - so all adroit, now a giant and now an elf,
Does he work and play at once!
Quoth my friend the Russ to me,
You never heard tell a tale told children, time out of mind,
By father and mother and nurse, for a moral that's behind,
Which children quickly seize. If the incident happened at all,
We place it in Peter's time when hearts were great not small,
Germanized, Frenchified. I wager 'tis old to you
As the story of Adam and Eve, and possibly quite as true.
In the deep of our land, 'tis said, a village from out of the woods
Emerged on the great main-road 'twixt two great solitudes.
Through forestry right and left, black verst and verst of pine,
From village to village runs the road's long wide bare line.
Clearance and clearance break the else-unconquered growth
Of pine and all that breeds and broods there, leaving loth
Man's inch of masterdom, - spot of life, spirit of fire, -
To star the dark and dread, lest right and rule expire
Throughout the monstrous wild, a-hungered to resume
Its ancient sway, suck back the world into its womb;
Defrauded by man's craft which clove from North to South
This highway broad and straight e'en from the Neva's mouth
To Moscow's gates of gold. So, spot of life and spirit
Of fire aforesaid, burn, each village death-begirth
By wall and wall of pine - unprobed undreamed abyss.
Early one winter morn, in such a village as this,
Snow-whitened everywhere except the middle road
Ice-roughed by track of sledge, there worked by his abode
Ivan Ivanovitch, the carpenter, employed
On a huge shipmast trunk; his axe now trimmed and toyed
With branch and twig, and now some chop athwart the bole
Changed bole to billets, bared at once the sap and soul.
About him, watched the work his neighbors sheep-skin-clad;
Each bearded mouth puffed steam, each gray eye twinkled glad
To see the sturdy arm which, never stopping play,
Proved strong man's blood still boils, freeze winter as he may.
Sudden, a burst of bells. Out of the road, on edge
Of the hamlet--horse's hoofs galloping. "How, a sledge?
What's here?" cried all as--in, up to the open space,
Workyard and market-ground, folk's common meeting-place,--
Stumbled on, till he fell, in one last bound for life,
A horse; and, at his heels, a sledge held--" Dmitri's wife!
Back without Dmitri too! and children--where are they?
Only a frozen corpse!"
They drew it forth: then--" Nay,
Not dead, though like to die! Gone hence a month ago:
Home again, this rough jaunt--alone through night and snow--
What can the cause be? Hark--Droug, old horse, how he groans:
His day's done! Chafe away, keep chafing, for she moans:
She's coming to! Give here: see, motherkin, your friends!
Cheer up, all safe at home! Warm inside makes amends
For outside cold,--sup quick! Don't look as we were bears!
What is it startles you? What strange adventure stares
Up at us in your face? You know friends--which is which?
I'm Vassili, he's Sergei, Ivan Ivanovitch"--
At the word, the woman's eyes, slow-wandering till they neared
The blue eyes o'er the bush of honey-colored beard,
Took in full light and sense and--torn to rags, some dream
Which hid the naked truth--O loud and long the scream
She gave, as if all power of voice within her throat
Poured itself wild away to waste in one dread note!
Then followed gasps and sobs, and then the steady flow
Of kindly tears: the brain was saved, a man might know.
Down fell her face upon the good friend's propping knee;
His broad hands smoothed her head, as fain to brush it free
From fancies, swarms that stung like bees unhived. He soothed--
"Loukeria, Louscha!"-- still he, fondling, smoothed and smoothed.
At last her lips foraged speech.
Ivan, dear--you indeed?
You, just the same dear you! While I . . . Oh, intercede,
Sweet Mother, with thy Son Almighty--let his might
Bring yesterday once more, undo all done last night!
But this time yesterday, Ivan, I sat like you,
A child on either knee, and, clearer than the two,
A babe inside my arms, close to my heart--that's lost
In morsels o'er the snow, Father, Son, Holy Ghost,
Cannot you bring again my blessed yesterday?"
When no more tears would flow, she told her tale: this way.
"Maybe, a month ago,--was it not?--news came here,
They wanted, deeper down, good workmen fit to rear
A church and roof it in. 'We'll go,' my husband said:
'None understands like me to melt and mould their lead.'
So, friends here helped us off--Ivan, dear, you the first!
How gay we jingled forth, all five--(my heart will burst)---
While Dmitri shook the reins, urged Droug upon his track!
"Well, soon the month ran out, we just ere coming back,
When yesterday--behold, the village was on fire!
Fire ran from house to house. What help, as, nigh and nigher,
The flames came furious? 'Haste,' cried Dmitri, 'men must do
The little good man may: to sledge and in with you,
You and our three! We check the fire by laying flat
Each building in its path,--I needs must stay for that,--
But you . . . no time for talk! Wrap round you every rug,
Cover the couple close,--you'll have the babe to hug.
No care to guide old Droug, he knows his way, by guess,
Once start him on the road: but chirrup, none the less!
The snow lies glib as glass and hard as steel, and soon
You'll have rise, fine and full, a marvel of a moon.
Hold straight up, all the same, this lighted twist of pitch!
Once home and with our friend Ivan Ivanovitch,
All's safe: I have my pay in pouch, all's right with me,
So I but find as safe you and our precious three!
Off, Droug!--because the flames had reached us, and the men
Shouted, 'But lend a hand, Dimitri--as good as ten!'
"So, in we bundled--I and those God gave me once;
Old Droug, that's stiff at first, seemed youthful for the nonce:
He understood the case, galloping straight ahead.
Out came the moon: my twist soon dwindled, feebly red
In that unnatural day--yes, daylight bred between
Moonlight and snow-light, lamped those grotto-depths which screen
Such devils from God's eye. Ah, pines, how straight you grow,
Nor bend one pitying branch, true breed of brutal snow!
Some undergrowth had served to keep the devils blind
While we escaped outside their border!
"Was that--wind?
Anyhow, Droug starts, stops, back go his ears, he snuffs,
Snorts,--never such a snort! then plunges, knows the sough's
Only the wind: yet, no--our breath goes up too straight!
Still the low sound,--less low, loud, louder, at a rate
There's no mistaking more! Shall I lean out-- look--learn
The truth whatever it be? Pad, Pad! At last, I turn-
"'T is the regular pad of the wolves in pursuit of the life in the
sledge!
An army they are: close-packed they press like the thrust of a wedge:
They increase as they hunt: for I see, through the pine-trucks ranged
each side,
Slip forth new fiend and fiend, make wider and still more wide
The four-footed steady advance. The foremost-none may pass:
They are elders and lead the line, eye and eye-green glowing brass!
But a long way distant still. Droug, save us! He does his best:
Yet they gain on us, till they reach,-one reaches...How utter the
rest?
O that Satan-faced first of the band! How he lolls out the length
of his tongue,
How he laughs and lets gleam his white teeth! He is on me, his paws
pry among
The wraps and the rugs! O my pair, my twin-pigeons, lie still and
seem dead!
Stepan, he shall never have you for a meal,-here's your mother
instead!
No, he will not be counselled-must cry, poor Stiopka, so foolish!
though first
Of my boy-brood, he was not the best: nay, neighbors called him the
worst:
He was puny, an undersized slip,-darling to me, all the same!
But little there was to be praised in the boy, and a plenty to blame.
I loved him with heart and soul, yes-but deal him a blow for a fault,
He would sulk for whole days. 'Foolish boy! lie still of the villain
will vault,
Will snatch you from over my head!' No use! he cries, he screams,-
who can hold
Fast a boy in frenzy of fear! It follows-as I foretold!
The Satan-face snatched and snapped: I tugged, I tore and then
His brother too needs must shriek! If one must go, 't is men
The Tsar needs, so we hear, not ailing boys! Perhaps
My hands relaxed their grasp, got tangled in the wraps:
God, he was gone! I looked: there tumbled the cursed crew,
Each fighting for a share: too busy to pursue!
That's so far gain at least: Droug, gallop another verst
Or two, or three-God sends we beat them, arrive the first!
A mother who boasts two boys was ever accounted rich:
Some have not a boy: some have, but lose him,-Gods knows which
Is worse: how pitiful to see your weakling pine
And pale and pass away! Strong brats, this pair of mine!
"O misery! for while I settle to what near seems
Content, I am 'ware again of the tramp, and again there gleams-
Point and point-the line, eyes, levelled green brassy fire!
So soon is resumed your chase? Will nothing appease, naught tire
The furies? And yet I think-I am certain the race is slack,
And the numbers are nothing like. Not a quarter of the pack!
Feasters and those full-fed are staying behind...Ah why?
We'll sorrow for that too soon! Now,-gallop, reach home and die,
Nor ever again leave house, to trust our life in the trap
For life-we call a sledge! Terioscha, in my lap!
Yes, I'll lie down upon you, tight-tie you with the strings
Here-of my heart! No fear, this time, your mother flings...
Flings? I flung? Never! But think!-a woman after all,
Contending with a wolf! Save you I must and shall,
Terentii!
"How now? What, you head the race,
Your eyes and tongue and teeth crave fresh food,
Satan-face?
Flash again?
There and there! Plain I struck green fire out!
All a poor fist can do to damage eyes proves vain!
My fist-why not crunch that? He is wanton for...O God,
Why give this wolf his taste? Common wolves scrape and prod
The earth till out they scratch some corpse-mere putrid flesh!
Why must this glutton leave the faded, choose the fresh?
Terentii-God, feel!-his neck keeps fast thy bag
Of holy things, saints' bones, this Satan-face will drag
Forth, and devour along with him, our Pope declared
The relics were to save from danger!
"Spurned, not spared! 'T was through my arms, crossed arms, he-
nuzzling now with snout,
Now ripping, tooth and claw-plucked, pulled Terentii out,
A prize indeed! I saw-how could I else but see?-
My precious one-I bit to hold back-pulled from me!
Up came the others, fell to dancing-did the imps!-
Skipped as they scampered round. There 's one is gray, and limps:
Who knows but old bad Marpha-she always owed me spite
And envied me my births-skulks out of doors at night
And turns into a wolf, and joins the sisterhood,
And laps the youthful life, then slinks from out the wood,
Squats down at the door by dawn, spins there demure as erst
-No strength, old crone-not she!-to crawl forth half a verst!
Well, I escaped with one: 'twixt one and none there lies
The space 'twixt heaven and hell. And see, a roselight dyes
The endmost snow: "t is dawn, 't is day, 't is safe at home!
We have outwitted you! Ay, monsters, snarl and foam,
Fight each the other fiend, disputing for a share,-
Forgetful in your greed, our finest off we bear,
Tough Droug and I,-my babe, my boy that shall be man,
My man that shall be more, do all a hunter can
To trace and follow and find and catch and crucify
Wolves, wolfkins, all your crew! A thousand deaths shall die
The whimperingest cub that ever squeezed the teat!
'Take that!' we'll stab you with,-'the tenderness we met
When, wretches, you danced round,-not this, thank God-not this!
Hellhounds, we balk you!'
"But-Ah, God above!-Bliss, bliss,-
Not the band, no! And yet-yes, for Droug knows him! One-
This only of them all has said 'She saves a son!'
His fellows disbelieve such luck: But he believes,
He lets them pick the bones, laugh at him in their sleeves:
He's off and after us,-one speck, one spot, one ball
Grows bigger, bound on bound,-one wolf as good as all!
Oh, but I know the trick! Have at the snaky tongue!
That's the right way with the wolves! Go, tell your mates I wrung
The panting morsel out, left you to howl your worst!
Now for t now! Ah me, I know him-thrice-accurst
Satan-face,-him to the end of my foe!
"All fight's in vain:
This time the green brass points pierce to my very brain.
I fall-fall as I ought-quite on the babe I guard:
I overspread with flesh the whole of him. Too hard
To die this way, torn piecemeal? Move hence? Not I-one inch!
Gnaw through me, through and through: flat thus I lie nor flinch!
O God, the feel of the fang furrowing my shoulders!-see!
It grinds-it grates the bone. O Kirill under me,
Could I do more? Besides he knew the wolf's way to win:
I clung, closed round like wax: yet in he wedged and in,
Past my neck, past my breasts, my heart, until...how feels
The onion-bulb your knife parts, pushing through its peels,
Till out you scoop its clove wherein lie stalk and leaf
And bloom and seed unborn?
"That slew me: yes, in brief,
I died then, dead I lay doubtlessly till Droug stopped
Here, I suppose. I come to life, I find me propped
Thus,-how or when or why-I know not. Tell me, friends,
All was a dream: laugh quick and say the nightmare ends!
Soon I shall find my house: 't is over there: in proof,
Save for that chimney heaped with snow, you'd see the roof
Which holds my three-my two-my one-not one?
"Life's mixed
With misery, yet we live-must live. The Satan fixed
His face on mine so fast, I took its print as pitch
Takes what it cools beneath. Ivan Ivanovitch,
'T is you unharden me, you thaw, disperse the thing!
Only keep looking kind, the horror will not cling,
Your face smooths fast away each print of Satan. Tears
-What good they do! Life's sweet, and all its after-years,
Ivan Ivanovitch, I owe you! Yours am I!
May God reward you, dear!"
"Down she sank. Solemnly
Ivan rose, raised his axe,-for fitly as she knelt,
Her head lay: well apart, each side, her arms hung,-dealt
Lightning-swift thunder-strong one blow-no need of more!
Headless she knelt on still: that pine was sound of core
(Neighbors used to say)-cast-iron-kernelled-which
Taxed for a second stroke Ivan Ivanovitch.
The man was scant of words as strokes. "It had to be:
I could no other: God it was, bade 'Act for me!'"
Then stooping, peering round-what is it now he lacks?
A proper strip of bark wherewith to wipe his axe,
Which done, he turns, goes in, closes the door behind.
The others mute remain, watching the blood-snake wind
Into a hiding-place among the splinter-heaps.
At length, still mute, all move: one lifts-from where it steeps
Redder each ruddy rag of pine-the head: two more
Take up the dripping body: then, mute still as before,
Move in a sort of march, march on till marching ends
Opposite to the church; where halting,-who suspends,
By its long hair, the thing, deposits in its place
The piteous head: once more the body shows no trace
Of harm done: there lies whole the Louscha, maid and wife
And mother, loved until this latest of her life.
Then all sit on the bank of snow which bounds a space
Kept free before the porch of judgement: just the place!
Presently all the souls, man, woman, child which make
The village up, are found assembling for the sake
Of what is to be done. The very Jews are there:
A Gypsy-troop, though bound with horses of the Fair,
Squats with the rest. Each heart with its conception seethes
And simmers, but no tongue speaks: one may say, -none breathes.
Anon from out the church totters the Pope-the priest-
Hardly alive, so old, a hundred years at least.
With him, the Commune's head, a hoary senior too,
Starosta, that's his style,-like Equity Judge with you,-
Natural Jurisconsult: then, fenced about with furs,
Pomeschik-Lord of the Land, who wields-and none demurs-
A power of life and death. They stoop, survey the corpse.
Then, straightened on his staffm the Starosta-the thorpe's
Sagaciousest old man-hears what you just have heard,
From Droug's first in rush, all, up to Ivan's last word-
"God Bade me act for him: I dared not disobey!"
Silence-the Pomeschik broke with "A wild wrong way
Of righting wrong-if wrong there were, such wrath to rouse!
Why was not law observed?
Ivan Ivanovitch has done a deed that's named
Murder by law and me: who doubts, may speak unblamed!"
All turned to the old Pope. "Ay, children, I am old-
How old, myself have got to know no longer. Rolled
Quite round, my orb of life, from infancy to age,
Seems passing back again to youth. A certain stage
At least I reach, or dream I reach, where I discern
Truer truths, laws behold more lawlike than we learn
When first we set out foot to tread the course I trod
With man to guide my steps: who leads me now is God.
'Your young men shall see visions:' and in my youth I saw
And paid obedience to man's visionary law:
'Your old men shall dream dreams.' And, in my age, a hand
Conducts me through the cloud round law to where I stand
Firm on its base,-know cause, who, before, knew effect.
I hold he saw
The unexampled sin, ordained the novel law,
Whereof first instrument was first intelligence
Found loyal here. I hold that, failing human sense,
The very earth had oped, sky fallen, to efface
Humanity's new wrong, motherhood's first disgrace.
Earth opted not, neither fell the sky, for prompt was found
A man and man enough, head-sober and heart-sound
Ready to hear God's voice, resolute to obey.
Ivan Ivanovitch, I hold, has done, this day,
No otherwise than did, in ages long ago,
Moses when he made known the purport of that flow
Of fire athwart the law's twain-tables! I proclaim
Ivan Ivanovitch God's servant!"
When the Amen grew dull
And died away and left acquittal plain adjudged,
"Amen!" last sighed the lord. "There'e none shall say I grudged
Escape from punishment in such a novel case.
Deferring to old age and holy life,-be grace
Granted! say I. No less, scruples might shake a sence
Firmer than I boast mine. Law's law, and evidence
Of breach therein lies plain,-blood-red-bright-all may see!
Yet all absolve the deed must be!"
So, while the youngers raised the corpse, the elders trooped
Silently to the house: where halting , some one stooped,
Listened beside the door; all there was silent too.
Then they held counsel; then pushed door and, passing through,
Stood in the murderer's presence.
Ivan Ivanovitch
Knelt, building on the floor that Kremlin rare and rich
He deftly cut and carved on lazy winter nights.
Some five young faces watched, breathlessly, as, to rights,
Piece upon piece, he reared the fabric nigh complete.
Stescha, Ivan's old mother, sat spinning by the heat
Of the oven where his wife Katia stood baking bread.
Ivan's self, as he turned his honey-colored head,
Was just in the act to drop, 'twixt fir cones,-each a dome,
The scooped-out yellow gourd presumably the home
Of Kolokol the Big: the bell, therein to hitch,
-An acorn-cup-was ready: Ivan Ivanovitch
Turned with it in his mouth.
They told him he was free
As air to walk abroad. "How otherwise?" asked he.




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