Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 8. DOMINUS HYACINTHUS ..., by ROBERT BROWNING Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: Ah, my giacinto, he's no ruddy rogue Last Line: "sing ""tra-la-la, for, lambkins, we must live!" Subject(s): Murder, Infidelity; Rome | ||||||||
(DOMINUS HYACINTHUS DE ARCHANGELIS) PAUPERUM PROCURATOR Ah, my Giacinto, he's no ruddy rogue, Is not Cinone? What, to-day we're eight? Seven and one's eight, I hope, old curly-pate! -- Branches me out his verb-tree on the slate, Amo -as -avi -atum -are -ans, Up to -aturus, person, tense, and mood, Quies me cum subjunctivo (I could cry) And chews Corderius with his morning crust! Look eight years onward, and he's perched, he's perched Dapper and deft on stool beside this chair, Cinozzo, Cinoncello, who but he? -- Trying his milk-teeth on some crusty case Like this, papa shall triturate full soon To smooth Papinianian pulp! It trots Already through my head, though noon be now, Does supper-time and what belongs to eve. Dispose, O Don, o' the day, first work then play! -- The proverb bids. And "then" means, won't we hold Our little yearly lovesome frolic feast, Cinuolo's birth-night, Cinicello's own, That makes gruff January grin perforce! For too contagious grows the mirth, the warmth Escaping from so many hearts at once -- When the good wife, buxom and bonny yet, Jokes the hale grandsire, -- such are just the sort To go off suddenly, -- he who hides the key O' the box beneath his pillow every night, -- Which box may hold a parchment (some one thinks) Will show a scribbled something like a name "Cinino, Ciniccino," near the end, "To whom I give and I bequeath my lands, Estates, tenements, hereditaments, When I decease as honest grandsire ought." Wherefore -- yet this one time again perhaps -- Sha'n't my Orvieto fuddle his old nose! Then, uncles, one or the other, well i' the world, May -- drop in, merely? -- trudge through rain and wind, Rather! The smell-feasts rouse them at the hint There's cookery in a certain dwelling-place! Gossips, too, each with keepsake in his poke, Will pick the way, thrid lane by lantern-light, And so find door, put galligaskin off At entry of a decent domicile Cornered in snug Condotti, -- all for love, All to crush cup with Cinucciatolo! Well, Let others climb the heights o' the court, the camp! How vain are chambering and wantonness, Revel and rout and pleasures that make mad! Commend me to home-joy, the family board, Altar and hearth! These, with a brisk career A source of honest profit and good fame, Just so much work as keeps the brain from rust, Just so much play as lets the heart expand, Honoring God and serving man, -- I say, These are reality, and all else, -- fluff, Nutshell and naught, -- thank Flaccus for the phrase! Suppose I had been Fisc, yet bachelor! Why, work with a will, then! Wherefore lazy now? Turn up the hour-glass, whence no sand-grain slips But should have done its duty to the saint O' the day, the son and heir that's eight years old! Let law come dimple Cinoncino's cheek, And Latin dumple Cinarello's chin, And while we spread him fine and toss him flat This pulp that makes the pancake, trim our mass Of matter into Argument the First, Prime Pleading in defence of our accused, Which, once a-waft on paper wing, shall soar, Shall signalize before applausive Rome What study, and mayhap some mother-wit, Can do toward making Master fop and Fisc Old bachelor Bottinius bite his thumb. Now, how good God is! How falls plumb to point This murder, gives me Guido to defend Now, of all days i' the year, just when the boy Verges on Virgil, reaches the right age For some such illustration from his sire, Stimulus to himself! One might wait years And never find the chance which now finds me! The fact is, there's a blessing on the hearth, A special providence for fatherhood! Here's a man, and what's more, a noble, kills -- Not sneakingly but almost with parade -- Wife's father and wife's mother and wife's self That's mother's self of son and heir (like mine!) -- And here stand I, the favored advocate, Who pluck this flower o' the field, no Solomon Was ever clothed in glorious gold to match, And set the same in Cinoncino's cap! I defend Guido and his comrades -- I! Pray God, I keep me humble: not to me -- Non nobis, Domine, sed tibi laus! How the fop chuckled when they made him Fisc! We'll beat you, my Bottinius, all for love, All for our tribute to Cinotto's day! Why, 'sbuddikins, old Innocent himself May rub his eyes at the bustle, -- ask "What's this Rolling from out the rostrum, as a gust O' the Pro Milone had been prisoned there, And rattled Rome awake?" Awaken Rome, How can the Pope doze on in decency? He needs must wake up also, speak his word, Have his opinion like the rest of Rome, About this huge, this hurly-burly case: He wants who can excogitate the truth, Give the result in speech, plain black and white, To mumble in the mouth and make his own -- A little changed, good man, a little changed! No matter, so his gratitude be moved, By when my Giacintino gets of age, Mindful of who thus helped him at a pinch, Archangelus Procurator Pauperum -- And proved Hortensius Redivivus! Whew! To earn the Est-est, merit the minced herb That mollifies the liver's leathery slice, With here a goose-foot, there a cock's-comb stuck, Cemented in an element of cheese! I doubt if dainties do the grandsire good: Last June he had a sort of strangling ... bah! He's his own master, and his will is made. So, liver fizz, law flit and Latin fly As we rub hands o'er dish by way of grace! May I lose cause if I vent one word more Except -- with fresh-cut quill we ink the white -- P-r-o-pro Guidone et Sociis. There! Count Guido married -- or, in Latin due, What? Duxit in uxorem? -- commonplace! Toedas jugales iniit, subiit, -- ha! He underwent the matrimonial torch? Connubio stabili sibi junxit, -- hum! In stable bond of marriage bound his own? That's clear of any modern taint: and yet .. Virgil is little help to who writes prose. He shall attack me Terence with the dawn, Shall Cinuccino! Mum, mind business, Sir! Thus circumstantially evolve we facts, Ita se habet ideo series facti: He wedded, -- ah, with owls for augury! Nupserat, heu sinistris avibus, One of the blood Arezzo boasts her best, Dominus Guido, nobili genere ortus, Pompilioe ... But the version afterward! Curb we this ardor! Notes alone, to-day, The speech to-morrow, and the Latin last: Such was the rule in Farinacci's time. Indeed I hitched it into verse and good. Unluckily, law quite absorbs a man, Or else I think I too had poetized. "Law is the pork substratum of the fry, Goose-foot and cock's-comb are Latinity," And in this case, if circumstance assist, We'll garnish law with idiom, never fear! Out-of-the-way events extend our scope: For instance, when Bottini brings his charge, "That letter which you say Pompilia wrote, To criminate her parents and herself And disengage her husband from the coil, -- That, Guido Franceschini wrote, say we: Because Pompilia could not read nor write, Therefore he pencilled her such letter first, Then made her trace in ink the same again." -- Ha, my Bottini, have I thee on hip? How will he turn this and break Tully's pate? "Existimandum" (don't I hear the dog!) "Quod Guido designaverit elementa Dictoe epistoloe, quoe fuerint (Superinducto ab ea calamo) Notata atramento" -- there's a style! -- "Quia ipsa scribere nesciebat." Boh! Now, my turn! Either, Insulse! (I outburst) Stupidly put! Inane is the response, Inanis est responsio, or the like -- To wit, that each of all those characters, Quod singula elementa epistoloe, Had first of all been traced for her by him, Fuerant per eum prius designata, And then, the ink applied a-top of that, Et deinde, superinducto calamo, The piece, she says, became her handiwork, Per eam, efformata, ut ipsa asserit. Inane were such response! (a second time:) Her husband outlined her the whole, forsooth? Vir ejus lineabat epistolam? What, she confesses that she wrote the thing, Fatetur eam scripsisse, (scorn that scathes!) That she might pay obedience to her lord? Ut viro obtemperaret, apices (Here repeat charge with proper varied phrase) Eo designante, ipsaque calamum Super inducente? By such argument, Ita pariter, she seeks to show the same, (Ay, by Saint Joseph and what saints you please) Epistolam ostendit, medius fidius, No voluntary deed but fruit of force! Non voluntarie sed coacte scriptam! That's the way to write Latin, friend my Fisc! Bottini is a beast, one barbarous: Look out for him when he attempts to say "Armed with a pistol, Guido followed her!" Will not I be beforehand with my Fisc, Cut away phrase by phrase from underfoot! Guido Pompiliam -- Guido thus his wife Following with igneous engine, shall I have? Armis munitus igneis persequens -- Arma sulphurea gestans, sulphury arms, Or, might one style a pistol -- popping-piece? Armatus breviori sclopulo? We'll let him have been armed so, though it make Somewhat against us: I had thought to own -- Provided with a simple travelling-sword, Ense solummodo viatorio Instructus: but we'll grant the pistol here: Better we lost the cause than lacked the gird At the Fisc's Latin, lost the Judge's laugh! It's Venturini that decides for style. Tommati rather goes upon the law. So, as to law, -- Ah, but with law ne'er hope To level the fellow, -- don't I know his trick! How he draws up, ducks under, twists aside! He's a lean-gutted hectic rascal, fine As pale-haired red-eyed ferret which pretends 'T is ermine, pure soft snow from tail to snout. He eludes law by piteous looks aloft. Lets Latin glance off as he makes appeal To saint that's somewhere in the ceiling-top: Do you suppose I don't conceive the beast? Plague of the ermine-vermin! For it takes, It takes, and here's the fellow Fisc, you see, And Judge, you'll not be long in seeing next! Confound the fop -- he's now at work like me: Enter his study, as I seem to do, Hear him read out his writing to himself! I know he writes as if he spoke: I hear The hoarse shrill throat, see shut eyes, neck shot-forth, -- I see him strain on tiptoe, soar and pour Eloquence out, nor stay nor stint at all -- Perorate in the air, then quick to press With the product! What abuse of type and sheet! He'll keep clear of my cast, my logic-throw, Let argument slide, and then deliver swift Some bowl from quite an unguessed point of stand -- Having the luck o' the last word, the reply! A plaguy cast, a mortifying stroke: You face a fellow -- cries, "So, there you stand? But I discourteous jump clean o'er your head! You take ship-carpentry for pilotage, Stop rat-holes, while a sea sweeps through the breach, -- Hammer and fortify at puny points? Do, clamp and tenon, make all tight and safe! 'T is here and here and here you ship a sea, No good of your stopped leaks and littleness!" Yet what do I name "little and a leak"? The main defence o' the murder's used to death, By this time, dry bare bones, no scrap we pick: Safer I worked the new, the unforeseen, The nice by-stroke, the fine and improvised Point that can titillate the brain o' the Bench Torpid with over-teaching, long ago! As if Tommati (that has heard, reheard And heard again, first this side and then that -- Guido and Pietro, Pietro and Guido, din And deafen, full three years, at each long ear) Don't want amusement for instruction now, Won't rather feel a flea run o'er his ribs, Than a daw settle heavily on his head! Oh, I was young and had the trick of fence, Knew subtle pass and push with careless right -- My left arm ever quiet behind back, With dagger ready. not both hands to blade! Puff and blow, put the strength out, Blunder-bore! There's my subordinate, young Spreti, now, Pedant and prig, -- he'll pant away at proof, That's his way! Now for mine -- to rub some life Into one's choppy fingers this cold day! I trust Cinuzzo ties on tippet, guards The precious throat on which so much depends, Guido must be all goose-flesh in his hole, Despite the prison-straw: bad Carnival For captives! no sliced fry for him, poor Count! Carnival-time, -- another providence! The town a-swarm with strangers to amuse, To edify, to give one's name and fame In charge of, till they find, some future day, Cintino come and claim it, his name too, Pledge of the pleasantness they owe papa -- Who else was it cured Rome of her great qualms, When she must needs have her own judgment? -- ay, When all her topping wits had set to work, Pronounced already on the case: mere boys, Twice Cineruggiolo's age with half his sense, As good as tell me, when I cross the court, "Master Arcangeli!" (plucking at my gown) "We can predict, we comprehend your play, We'll help you save your client." Tra-la-la! I've travelled ground, from childhood to this hour, To have the town anticipate my track? The old fox takes the plain and velvet path, The young hound's predilection, -- prints the dew, Don't he, to suit their pulpy pads of paw? No! Burying nose deep down i' the briery bush, Thus I defend Count Guido. Where are we weak? First, which is foremost in advantage too, Our murder, -- we call, killing, -- is a fact Confessed, defended, made a boast of: good! To think the Fisc claimed use of torture here, And got thereby avowal plump and plain That gives me just the chance I wanted, -- scope Not for brute-force but ingenuity, Explaining matters, not denying them! One may dispute, -- as I am bound to do, And shall, -- validity of process here: Inasmuch as a noble is exempt From torture which plebeians undergo In such a case: for law is lenient, lax, Remits the torture to a nobleman Unless suspicion be of twice the strength Attaches to a man born vulgarly: We don't card silk with comb that dresses wool. Moreover, 't was severity undue In this case, even had the lord been lout. What utters, on this head, our oracle, Our Farinacci, my Gamaliel erst, In those immortal "Questions"? This I quote: "Of all the tools at Law's disposal, sure That named Vigiliarum is the best -- That is, the worst -- to whoso needs must bear: Lasting, as it may do, from some seven hours To ten; (beyond ten, we've no precedent; Certain have touched their ten but, bah, they died!) It does so efficaciously convince, That -- speaking by much observation here -- Out of each hundred cases, by my count, Never I knew of patients beyond four Withstand its taste, or less than ninety-six End by succumbing: only martyrs four, Of obstinate silence, guilty or no, -- against Ninety-six full confessors, innocent Or otherwise, -- so shrewd a tool have we!" No marvel either: in unwary hands, Death on the spot is no rare consequence: As indeed all but happened in this case To one of ourselves, our young tough peasant friend The accomplice called Baldeschi: they were rough, Dosed him with torture as you drench a horse, Not modify your treatment to a man: So, two successive days he fainted dead, And only on the third essay, gave up, Confessed like flesh and blood. We could reclaim, -- Blockhead Bottini giving cause enough! But no, -- we'll take it as spontaneously Confessed: we'll have the murder beyond doubt. Ah, fortunate (the poet's word reversed) Inasmuch as we know our happiness! Had the antagonist left dubiety, Here were we proving murder a mere myth, And Guido innocent, ignorant, absent, -- ay, Absent! He was -- why, where should Christian be? -- Engaged in visiting his proper church, The duty of us all at Christmas-time, When Caponsacchi, the seducer, stung To madness by his relegation, cast About him and contrived a remedy In murder: since opprobrium broke afresh, By birth o' the babe, on him the imputed sire. He it was quietly sought to smother up His shame and theirs together, -- killed the three, And fled -- (go seek him where you please to search) -- Just at the time when Guido, touched by grace, Devotions ended, hastened to the spot, Meaning to pardon his convicted wife, "Neither do I condemn thee, go in peace!" -- And thus arrived i' the nick of time to catch The charge o' the killing, though great-heartedly He came but to forgive and bring to life. Doubt ye the force of Christmas on the soul? "Is thine eye evil because mine is good?" So, doubtless, had I needed argue here But for the full confession round and sound! Thus might you wrong some kingly alchemist, -- Whose concern should not be with showing brass Transmuted into gold, but triumphing, Rather, about his gold changed out of brass, Not vulgarly to the mere sight and touch, But in the idea, the spiritual display, The apparition buoyed by winged words Hovering above its birthplace in the brain, -- Thus would you wrong this excellent personage Forced, by the gross need, to gird apron round, Plant forge, light fire, ply bellows, -- in a word, Demonstrate: when a faulty pipkin's crack May disconcert you his presumptive truth! Here were I hanging to the testimony Of one of these poor rustics -- four, ye gods! Whom the first taste of friend the Fiscal's cord May drive into undoing my whole speech, Undoing, on his birthday, -- what is worse, -- My son and heir! I wonder, all the same, Not so much at those peasants' lack of heart; But -- Guido Franceschini, nobleman, Bear pain no better! Everybody knows It used once, when my father was a boy, To form a proper, nay, important point I' the education of our well-born youth, That they took torture handsomely at need, Without confessing in this clownish guise. Each noble had his rack for private use, And would, for the diversion of a guest, Bid it be set up in the yard of arms, And take thereon his hour of exercise, -- Command the varletry stretch, strain their best, While friends looked on, admired my lord could smile 'Mid tugging which had caused an ox to roar. Men are no longer men! -- And advocates No longer Farinacci, let us add, If I one more time fly from point proposed! So, Vindicatio, -- here begins the speech! Honoris causa; thus we make our stand: Honor in us had injury, we prove. Or if we fail to prove such injury More than misprision of the fact, -- what then? It is enough, authorities declare, If the result, the deed in question now, Be caused by confidence that injury Is veritable and no figment: since, What, though proved fancy afterward, seemed fact At the time, they argue shall excuse result. That which we do, persuaded of good cause For what we do, hold justifiable! -- So casuists bid: man, bound to do his best, They would not have him leave that best undone And mean to do his worst, -- though fuller light Show best was worst and worst would have been best. Act by the present light! -- they ask of man. Ultra quod hic non agitur, besides It is not anyway our business here, De probatione adulterii, To prove what we thought crime was crime indeed, Ad irrogandam poenam, and require Its punishment: such nowise do we seek: Sed ad effectum, but 't is our concern, Excusandi, here to simply find excuse, Occisorem, for who did the killing-work, Et ad illius defensionem, (mark The difference) and defend the man, just that! Quo casu levior probatio Exuberaret, to which end far lighter proof Suffices than the prior case would claim: It should be always harder to convict, In short, than to establish innocence. Therefore we shall demonstrate first of all That Honor is a gift of God to man Precious beyond compare: which natural sense Of human rectitude and purity, -- Which white, man's soul is born with, -- brooks no touch: Therefore, the sensitivest spot of all, Wounded by any wafture breathed from black, Is -- honor within honor, like the eye Centred i' the ball -- the honor of our wife. Touch us o' the pupil of our honor, then, Not actually, -- since so you slay outright, -- But by a gesture simulating touch, Presumable mere menace of such taint, -- This were our warrant for eruptive ire "To whose dominion I impose no end." (Virgil, now, should not be too difficult To Cinoncino, -- say, the early books. Pen, truce to further gambols! Poscimum!) Nor can revenge of injury done here To the honor proved the life and soul of us, Be too excessive, too extravagant: Such wrong seeks and must have complete revenge. Show we this, first, on the mere natural ground Begin at the beginning, and proceed Incontrovertibly. Theodoric, In an apt sentence Cassiodorus cites, Propounds for basis of all household law -- I hardly recollect it, but it ends, "Bird mates with bird, beast genders with his like, And brooks no interference." Bird and beast? The very insects ... if they wive or no, How dare I say when Aristotle doubts? But the presumption is they likewise wive, At least the nobler sorts; for take the bee As instance, -- copying King Solomon, -- Why that displeasure of the bee to aught Which savors of incontinency, makes The unchaste a very horror to the hive? Whence comes it bees obtain their epithet Of castoe apes, notably "the chaste"? Because, ingeniously saith Scaliger, (The young sage, -- see his book of table-talk) "Such is their hatred of immodest act, They fall upon the offender, sting to death." I mind a passage much confirmative I' the Idyllist (though I read him Latinized) -- "Why," asks a shepherd, "is this bank unfit For celebration of our vernal loves?" "Oh swain," returns the instructed shepherdess "Bees swarm here, and would quick resent our warmth!" Only cold-blooded fish lack instinct here, Nor gain nor guard connubiality: But beasts, quadrupedal, mammiferous, Do credit to their beasthood: witness him That AElian cites, the noble elephant, (Or if not AElian, somebody as sage) Who seeing, much offence beneath his nose, His master's friend exceed in courtesy The due allowance to his master's wife, Taught them good manners and killed both at once, Making his master and the world admire. Indubitably, then, that master's self, Favored by circumstance, had done the same Or else stood clear rebuked by his own beast. Adeo, ut qui honorem spernit, thus, Who values his own honor not a straw, -- Et non recuperare curat, nor Labors by might and main to salve its wound, Se ulciscendo, by revenging him, Nil differat a belluis, is a brute, Quinimo irrationabilior Ipsismet belluis, nay, contrariwise, Much more irrational than brutes themselves, Should be considered, reputetur! How? If a poor animal feel honor smart, Taught by blind instinct nature plants in him, Shall man, -- confessed creation's masterstroke, Nay, intellectual glory, nay, a god, Nay, of the nature of my Judges here, -- Shall man prove the insensible, the block, The blot o' the earth he crawls on to disgrace? (Come, that's both solid and poetic!) Man Derogate, live for the low tastes alone, Mean creeping cares about the animal life? Absit such homage to vile flesh and blood! (May Gigia have remembered, nothing stings Fried liver out of its monotony Of richness, like a root of fennel, chopped Fine with the parsley: parsley-sprigs, I said -- Was there need I should say "and fennel too"? But no, she cannot have been so obtuse! To our argument! The fennel will be chopped.) From beast to man next mount we -- ay, but, mind, Still mere man, not yet Christian, -- that, in time! Not too fast, mark you! 'T is on Heathen grounds We next defend our act: then, fairly urge -- If this were done of old, in a green tree, Allowed in the Spring rawness of our kind, What may be licensed in the Autumn dry And ripe, the latter harvest-tide of man? If, with his poor and primitive half-lights, The Pagan, whom our devils served for gods, Could stigmatize the breach of marriage-vow As that which blood, blood only might efface, -- Absolve the husband, outraged, whose revenge Anticipated law, plied sword himself, -- How with the Christian in full blaze of noon? Shall not he rather double penalty, Multiply vengeance, than, degenerate, Let privilege be minished, droop, decay? Therefore set forth at large the ancient law! Superabundant the examples be To pick and choose from. The Athenian Code, Solon's, the name is serviceable, -- then, The Laws of the Twelve Tables, that fifteenth, -- "Romulus" likewise rolls out round and large. The Julian; the Cornelian: Gracchus' Law: So old a chime, the bells ring of themselves! Spreti can set that going if he please, I point you, for my part, the belfry plain, Intent to rise from dusk, diluculum, Into the Christian day shall broaden next. First, the fit compliment to His Holiness Happily reigning: then sustain the point -- All that was long ago declared as law By the natural revelation, stands confirmed By Apostle and Evangelist and Saint, -- To wit -- that Honor is man's supreme good. Why should I balk Saint Jerome of his phrase? Ubi honor non est, where no honor is, Ibi contemptus est; and where contempt, Ibi injuria frequens; and where that, The frequent injury, ibi et indignatio; And where the indignation, ibi quies Nulla: and where there is no quietude, Why, ibi, there, the mind is often cast Down from the heights where it proposed to dwell, Mens a proposito soepe dejicitur. And naturally the mind is so cast down, Since harder 't is, quum difficilius sit, Iram cohibere, to coerce one's wrath, Quam miracula facere, than work miracles, -- So Gregory smiles in his First Dialogue. Whence we infer, the ingenuous soul, the man Who makes esteem of honor and repute, Whenever honor and repute are touched, Arrives at term of fury and despair, Loses all guidance from the reason-check; As in delirium or a frenzy-fit, Nor fury nor despair he satiates, -- no, Not even if he attain the impossible, O'erturn the hinges of the universe To annihilate -- not whoso caused the smart Solely, the author simply of his pain, But the place, the memory, vituperii, O' the shame and scorn: quia, -- says Solomon, (The Holy Spirit speaking by his mouth In Proverbs, the sixth chapter near the end) -- Because, the zeal and fury of a man, Zelus et furor viri, will not spare, Non parcet, in the day of his revenge, In die vindictoe, nor will acquiesce, Nec acquiescet, through a person's prayers, Cujusdam precibus, -- nec suscipiet, Nor yet take, pro redemptione, for Redemption, dona plurium, gifts of friends, Mere money-payment to compound for ache. Who recognizes not my client's case? Whereto, as strangely consentaneous here, Adduce Saint Bernard in the Epistle writ To Robertulus, his nephew: "Too much grief, Dolor quippe nimius non deliberat, Does not excogitate propriety, Non verecundatur, nor knows shame at all, Non consulit rationem, nor consults Reason, non dignitatis metuit Damnum, nor dreads the loss of dignity; Modum et ordinem, order and the mode, Ignorat, it ignores:" why, trait for trait, Was ever portrait limned so like the life? (By Cavalier Maratta, shall I say? I hear he's first in reputation now.) Yes, that of Samson in the Sacred Text: That's not so much the portrait as the man! Samson in Gaza was the antetype Of Guido at Rome: observe the Nazarite! Blinded he was, -- an easy thing to bear: Intrepidly he took imprisonment, Gyves, stripes, and daily labor at the mill: But when he found himself, i' the public place, Destined to make the common people sport, Disdain burned up with such an impetus I' the breast of him, that, all the man one fire, Moriatur, roared he, let my soul's self die, Anima mea, with the Philistines! So, pulled down pillar, roof, and death and all, Multosque plures interfecit, ay, And many more he killed thus, moriens, Dying, quam vivus, than in his whole life, Occiderat, he ever killed before. Are these things writ for no example, Sirs? One instance more, and let me see who doubts! Our Lord himself, made all of mansuetude, Sealing the sum of sufferance up, received Opprobrium, contumely and buffeting Without complaint: but when he found himself Touched in his honor never so little for once, Then outbroke indignation pent before -- "Honorem meum nemini dabo!" "No, My honor I to nobody will give!" And certainly the example so hath wrought, That whosoever, at the proper worth, Apprises worldly honor and repute, Esteems it nobler to die honored man Beneath Mannaia, than live centuries Disgraced in the eye o' the world. We find Saint Paul No recreant to this faith delivered once: "Far worthier were it that I died," cries he, Expedit mihi magis mori, "than That any one should make my glory void," Quam ut gloriam meam quis evacuet! See, ad Corinthienses: whereupon Saint Ambrose makes a comment with much fruit, Doubtless my Judges long since laid to heart, So I desist from bringing forward here. (I can't quite recollect it.) Have I proved Satis superque, both enough and to spare, That Revelation old and new admits The natural man may effervesce in ire, O'erflood earth, o'erfroth heaven with foamy rage, At the first puncture to his self-respect? Then, Sirs, this Christian dogma, this law-bud Full-blown now, soon to bask the absolute flower Of Papal doctrine in our blaze of day, -- Bethink you, shall we miss one promise-streak, One doubtful birth of dawn crepuscular, One dew-drop comfort to humanity, Now that the chalice teems with noonday wine? Yea, argue Molinists who bar revenge -- Referring just to what makes out our case! Under old dispensation, argue they, The doom of the adulterous wife was death, Stoning by Moses' law. "Nay, stone her not, Put her away!" next legislates our Lord; And last of all, "Nor yet divorce a wife!" Ordains the Church, "she typifies ourself, The Bride no fault shall cause to fall from Christ." Then, as no jot nor tittle of the Law Has passed away -- which who presumes to doubt? As not one word of Christ is rendered vain -- Which, could it be though heaven and earth should pass? -- Where do I find my proper punishment For my adulterous wife, I humbly ask Of my infallible Pope, -- who now remits Even the divorce allowed by Christ in lieu Of lapidation Moses licensed me? The Gospel checks the Law which throws the stone, The Church tears the divorce-bill Gospel grants Shall wives sin and enjoy impunity? What profits me the fulness of the days, The final dispensation, I demand, Unless Law, Gospel, and the Church subjoin, "But who hath barred thee primitive revenge, Which, like fire damped and dammed up, burns more fierce? Use thou thy natural privilege of man, Else wert thou found like those old ingrate Jews, Despite the manna-banquet on the board, A-longing after melons, cucumbers, And such like trash of Egypt left behind!" (There was one melon had improved our soup: But did not Cinoncino need the rind To make a boat with? So I seem to think.) Law, Gospel, and the Church -- from these we leap To the very last revealment, easy rule Befitting the well-born and thorough-bred O' the happy day we live in, not the dark O' the early rude and acorn-eating race. "Behold," quoth James, "we bridle in a horse And turn his body as we would thereby!" Yea, but we change the bit to suit the growth, And rasp our colt's jaw with a rugged spike We hasten to remit our managed steed Who wheels round at persuasion of a touch. Civilization bows to decency, The acknowledged use and wont: 't is manners -- mild But yet imperative law -- which make the man. Thus do we pay the proper compliment To rank, and that society of Rome Hath so obliged us by its interest, Taken our client's part instinctively, As unaware defending its own cause. What dictum doth Society lay down I' the case of one who hath a faithless wife? Wherewithal should the husband cleanse his way? Be patient and forgive? Oh, language fails, -- Shrinks from depicturing his turpitude! For if wronged husband raise not hue and cry, Quod si maritus de adulterio non Conquereretur, he's presumed a -- foh! Presumitur leno: so, complain he must. But how complain? At your tribunal, lords? Far weighter challenge suits your sense, I wot! You sit not to have gentlemen propose Questions gentility can itself discuss. Did not you prove that to our brother Paul? The Abate, quum judicialiter Prosequeretur, when he tried the law, Guidonis causam, in Count Guido's case Accidit ipsi, this befell himself, Quod risum moverit et cachinnos, that He moved to mirth and cachinnation, all Or nearly all, fere in omnibus Etiam sensatis et cordatis, men Strong-sensed, sound-hearted, nay, the very Court, Ipsismet in judicibus, I might add, Non tamen dicam. In a cause like this, So multiplied were reasons pro and con, Delicate, intertwisted and obscure, That Law refused loan of a finger-tip To unravel, readjust the hopeless twine, Since, half-a-dozen steps outside Law's seat, There stood a foolish trifler with a tool A-dangle to no purpose by his side, Had clearly cut the embroilment in a trice. Asserunt enim unanimiter Doctores, for the Doctors all assert, That husbands, quod mariti, must be held Viles, cornuti reputantur, vile, Fronts branching forth a florid infamy, Si propriis manibus, if with their own hands, Non sumunt, they fail straight to take revenge, Vindictam, but expect the deed be done By the Court -- expectant illam fieri Per judices, qui summopere rident, which Gives an enormous guffaw for reply, Et cachinnantur. For he ran away, Deliquit enim, just that he might 'scape The censure of both counsellors and crowd, Ut vulgi et Doctorum evitaret Censuram, and lest so he superadd To loss of honor ignominy too, Et sic ne istam quoque ignominiam Amisso honori superadderet. My lords, my lords, the inconsiderate step Was -- we referred ourselves to Law at all! Twit me not with, "Law else had punished you!" Each punishment of the extra-legal step, To which the high-born preferably revert, Is ever for some oversight, some slip I' the taking vengeance, not for vengeance' self. A good thing, done unhandsomely, turns ill; And never yet lacked ill the law's rebuke. For pregnant instance, let us contemplate The luck of Leonardus, -- see at large Of Sicily's Decisions sixty-first. This Leonard finds his wife is false: what then? He makes her own son snare her, and entice Out of the town walls to a private walk, Wherein he slays her with commodity. They find her body half-devoured by dogs: Leonard is tried, convicted, punished, sent To labor in the galleys seven years long: Why? For the murder? Nay, but for the mode! Malus modus occidendi, ruled the Court, An ugly mode of killing, nothing more! Another fructuous sample, -- see "De Re Criminali," in Matthaeus' divine piece. Another husband, in no better plight, Simulates absence, thereby tempts his wife; On whom he falls, out of sly ambuscade, Backed by a brother of his, and both of them Armed to the teeth with arms that law had blamed. Nimis dolose, overwilily, Fuisse operatum, did they work, Pronounced the law: had all been fairly done Law had not found him worthy, as she did, Of four years' exile. Why cite more? Enough Is good as a feast -- (unless a birthday-feast For one's Cinuccio) so, we finish here. My lords, we rather need defend ourselves Inasmuch as, for a twinkling of an eye, We hesitatingly appealed to law, -- Than need deny that, on mature advice, We blushingly bethought us, bade revenge Back to its simple proper private way Of decent self-dealt gentlemanly death. Judges, here is the law, and here beside, The testimony! Look to it! Pause and breathe So far is only too plain; we must watch: Bottini will scarce hazard an attack Here: best anticipate the fellow's play, And guard the weaker places -- warily ask, What if considerations of a sort, Reasons of a kind, arise from out the strange Peculiar unforeseen new circumstance Of this our (candor owns) abnormal act, To bar the right of us revenging so? "Impunity were otherwise your meed: Go slay your wife and welcome," -- may be urged, -- "But why the innocent old couple slay, Pietro, Violante? You may do enough, Not too much, not exceed the golden mean: Neither brute-beast nor Pagan, Gentile, Jew, Nor Christian, no nor votarist of the mode, Is justified to push revenge so far!" No, indeed? Why, thou very sciolist! The actual wrong, Pompilia seemed to do, Was virtual wrong done by the parents here -- Imposing her upon us as their child -- Themselves allow: then, her fault was their fault, Her punishment be theirs accordingly! But wait a little, sneak not off so soon! Was this cheat solely harm to Guido, pray? The precious couple you call innocent, -- Why, they were felons that Law failed to clutch, Qui ut fraudarent, who that they might rob, Legitime vocatos, folk law called, Ad fidei commissum, true heirs to the Trust, Partum supposuerunt, feigned this birth, Immemores reos factos esse, blind To the fact that, guilty, they incurred thereby Ultimi supplicii, hanging or what's worse. Do you blame us that we turn Law's instruments, Not mere self-seekers, -- mind the public weal Nor make the private good our sole concern? That having -- shall I say -- secured a thief, Not simply we recover from his pouch The stolen article our property, But also pounce upon our neighbor's purse We opportunely find reposing there, And do him justice while we right ourselves? He owes us, for our part, a drubbing say, But owes our neighbor just a dance i' the air Under the gallows: so, we throttle him. That neighbor's Law, that couple are the Thief, We are the over-ready to help Law -- Zeal of her house hath eaten us up: for which, Can it be, Law intends to eat up us, Crudum Priamum, devour poor Priam raw, ('T was Jupiter's own joke,) with babes to boot, Priamique pisinnos, in Homeric phrase? Shame! -- and so ends my period prettily. But even, -- prove the pair not culpable, Free as unborn babe from connivance at, Participation in, their daughter's fault: Ours the mistake. Is that a rare event? Non semel, it is anything but rare, In contingentia facti, that by chance, Impunes evaserunt, go scot-free, Qui, such well-meaning people as ourselves, Justo dolore moti, who aggrieved With cause, apposuerunt manus, lay Rough hands, in innocentes, on wrong heads. Cite we an illustrative case in point: Mulier Smirnea quoedam, good my lords, A gentlewoman lived in Smyrna once, Virum et filium ex eo conceptum, who, Both husband and her son begot by him, Killed, interfecerat, ex quo, because, Vir filium suum perdiderat, her spouse Had been beforehand with her, killed her son, Matrimonii primi, of a previous bed. Deinde accusata, then accused, Apud Dolabellam, before him that sat Proconsul, nec duabus coedibus Contaminatam liberare, nor To liberate a woman doubly-dyed With murder, voluit, made he up his mind, Nec condemnare, nor to doom to death, Justo dolore impulsam, one impelled By just grief; sed remisit, but sent her up Ad Areopagum, to the Hill of Mars, Sapientissimorum judicum Coetum, to that assembly of the sage Paralleled only by my judges here; Ubi, cognito de causa, where, the cause Well weighed, responsum est, they gave reply, Ut ipsa et accusator, that both sides O' the suit, redirent, should come back again, Post centum annos, after a hundred years, For judgment; et sic, by which sage decree, Duplici parricidio rea, one Convicted of a double parricide, Quamvis etiam innocentem, though in truth Out of the pair, one innocent at least She, occidisset, plainly had put to death, Undequaque, yet she altogether 'scaped, Evasit impunis. See the case at length In Valerius, fittingly styled Maximus, That eighth book of his Memorable Facts. Nor Cyriacus cites beside the mark: Similiter uxor quoe mandaverat, Just so, a lady who had taken care, Homicidium viri, that her lord be killed, Ex denegatione debiti, For denegation of a certain debt, Matrimonialis, he was loth to pay, Fuit pecuniaria mulcta, was Amerced in a pecuniary mulct, Punita, et ad poenam, and to pains, Temporalem, for a certain space of time, In monasterio, in a convent. (Ay, In monasterio! He mismanages In with the ablative, the accusative! I had hoped to have hitched the villain into verse For a gift, this very day, a complete list O' the prepositions each with proper case, Telling a story, long was in my head. What prepositions take the accusative? Ad, to or at -- who saw the cat? -- down to Ob, for, because of, keep her claws off! Tush! Law in a man takes the whole liberty: The muse is fettered: just as Ovid found!) And now, sea widens and the coast is clear. What of the dubious act you bade excuse? Surely things broaden, brighten, till at length Remains -- so far from act that needs defence -- Apology to make for act delayed One minute, let alone eight mortal months Of hesitation! "Why procrastinate?" (Out with it, my Bottinius, ease thyself!) "Right, promptly done, is twice right: right delayed Turns wrong. We grant you should have killed your wife, But killed o' the moment, at the meeting her In company with the priest: then did the tongue O' the Brazen Head give license, 'Time is now!' Wait to make mind up? 'Time is past' it peals. Friend, you are competent to mastery O' the passions that confessedly explain An outbreak: you allow an interval, And then break out as if time's clock still clanged. You have forfeited your chance, and flat you fall Into the commonplace category Of men bound to go softly all their days, Obeying law." Now, which way make response? What was the answer Guido gave, himself? -- That so to argue came of ignorance How honor bears a wound: "For, wound," said he, "My body, and the smart soon mends and ends: While, wound my soul where honor sits and rules, Longer the sufferance, stronger grows the pain, Being ex incontinenti, fresh as first." But try another tack, urge common sense By way of contrast: say -- Too true, my lords! We did demur, awhile did hesitate: Since husband sure should let a scruple speak Ere he slay wife, -- for his own safety, lords! Carpers abound in this misjudging world: Moreover, there's a nicety in law That seems to justify them should they carp, Suppose the source of injury a son, -- Father may slay such son yet run no risk: Why graced with such a privilege? Because A father so incensed with his own child, Or must have reason, or believe he has: Quia semper, seeing that in such event, Presumitur, the law is bound suppose, Quod capiat pater, that the sire must take, Bonum consilium pro filio, The best course as to what befits his boy, Through instinct, ex instinctu, of mere love, Amoris, and paterni, fatherhood; Quam confidentiam, which confidence, Non habet, law declines to entertain, De viro, of the husband: where finds he An instinct that compels him love his wife? Rather is he presumably her foe. So, let him ponder long in this bad world Ere do the simplest act of justice. But Again -- and here we brush Bottini's breast -- Object you, "See the danger of delay, Suppose a man murdered my friend last month: Had I come up and killed him for his pains In rage, I had done right, allows the law: I meet him now and kill him in cold blood, I do wrong, equally allows the law: Wherein do actions differ, yours and mine?" In plenitudine intellectus es? Hast thy wits, Fisc? To take such slayer's life, Returns it life to thy slain friend at all? Had he stolen ring instead of stabbing friend, -- To-day, to-morrow, or next century, Meeting the thief, thy ring upon his thumb, Thou justifiably hadst wrung it thence: So, couldst thou wrench thy friend's life back again, Though prisoned in the bosom of his foe, Why, law would look complacent on thy wrath. Our case is, that the thing we lost, we found: The honor, we were robbed of eight months since, Being recoverable at any day By death of the delinquent. Go thy ways! Ere thou hast learned law, will be much to do, As said the gaby while he shod the goose. Nay, if you urge me, interval was none! From the inn to the villa -- blank or else a bar Of adverse and contrarious incident Solid between us and our just revenge! What with the priest who flourishes his blade, The wife who like a fury flings at us, The crowd -- and then the capture, the appeal To Rome, the journey there, the jaunting thence To shelter at the House of Convertites, The visits to the Villa, and so forth, Where was one minute left us all this while To put in execution that revenge We planned o' the instant? -- as it were, plumped down O' the spot, some eight months since, which round sound egg, Rome, more propitious than our nest, should hatch! Object not, "You reached Rome on Christmaseve, And, despite liberty to act at once, Waited a whole and indecorous week!" Hath so the Molinism, the canker, lords, Eaten to our bone? Is no religion left? No care for aught held holy by the Church? What, would you have us skip and miss those Feasts O' the Natal Time, must we go prosecute Secular business on a sacred day? Should not the merest charity expect, Setting our poor concerns aside for once, We hurried to the song matutinal I' the Sistine, and pressed forward for the Mass The Cardinal that's Camerlengo chants, Then rushed on to the blessing of the Hat And Rapier, which the Pope sends to what prince Has done most detriment to the Infidel -- And thereby whetted courage if 't were blunt? Meantime, allow we kept the house a week, Suppose not we were idle in our mew! Picture us raging here and raving there -- "'Money?' I need none. 'Friends?' The word is null. Restore the white was on that shield of mine Borne at" ... wherever might be shield to bear. "I see my grandsire, he who fought so well At" ... here find out and put in time and place, Or else invent the fight his grandsire fought: "I see this! I see that!" (See nothing else, Or I shall scarce see lamb's fry in an hour! What to the uncle, as I bid advance The smoking dish? "Fry suits a tender tooth! Behooves we care a little for our kin -- You, Sir, -- who care so much for cousinship As come to your poor loving nephew's feast!" He has the reversion of a long lease yet -- Land to bequeath! He loves lamb's fry, I know!) Here fall to be considered those same six Qualities; what Bottini needs must call So many aggravations of our crime, Parasite-growth upon mere murder's back. We summarily might dispose of such By some off-hand and jaunty fling, some skit -- "So, since there's proved no crime to aggravate, A fico for your aggravations, Fisc!" No, -- handle mischief rather, -- play with spells Were meant to raise a spirit, and laugh the while We show that did he rise we stand his match! Therefore, first aggravation: we made up -- Over and above our simple murderous selves -- A regular assemblage of armed men, Coadunatio armatorum, -- ay, Unluckily it was the very judge That sits in judgment on our cause to-day Who passed the law as Governor of Rome: "Four men armed" -- though for lawful purpose, mark! Much more for an acknowledge crime -- "shall die." We five were armed to the teeth, meant murder too? Why, that's the very point that saves me. First Let me instruct you. Crime nor done nor meant, -- You punish still who arm and congregate: For wherefore use bad means to a good end? Crime being meant not done, -- you punish still The means to crime, whereon you haply pounce, Though accident have balked them of effect. But crime not only compassed but complete, Meant and done too? Why, since you have the end, Be that your sole concern, nor mind those means No longer to the purpose! Murdered we? (-- Which, that our luck was in the present case, Quod contigisse in proesenti casu, Is palpable, manibus palpatum est --) Make murder out against us, nothing else! Of many crimes committed with a view To one main crime, Law overlooks the less, Intent upon the large. Suppose a man Having in view commission of a theft, Climbs the town-wall: 't is for the theft he hangs, In case he stands convicted of such theft: Law remits whipping, due to who clomb wall Through bravery or wantonness alone, Just to dislodge a daw's nest, plant a flag. So I interpret you the manly mind Of him about to judge both you and me, -- Our Governor, who, being no Fisc, my Fisc, Cannot have blundered on ineptitude! Next aggravation, -- that the arms themselves Were specially of such forbidden sort Through shape or length or breadth, as, prompt, Law plucks From single hand of solitary man, Making him pay the carriage with his life: Delatio armorum, arms against the rule, Contra formam constitutionis, of Pope Alexander's blessed memory. Such are the poniards with the double prong, Horn-like, when tines make bold the antlered buck, Each prong of brittle glass -- wherewith to stab And break off short and so let fragment stick Fast in the flesh to baffle surgery: Such being the Genoese blade with hooked edge That did us service at the villa here. Sed parcat mihi tam eximius vir, But, -- let so rare a personage forgive, -- Fisc, thy objection is a foppery! Thy charge runs that we killed three innocents: Killed, dost see? Then, if killed, what matter how? -- By stick or stone, by sword or dagger, tool Long or tool short, round or triangular -- Poor slain folk find small comfort in the choice! Means to an end, means to an end, my Fisc! Nature cries out, "Take the first arms you find!" Furor ministrat arma: where's a stone? Under Mi lapidem, where darts for me? Unde sagittas? But subdue the bard And rationalize a little. Eight months since, Had we, or had we not, incurred your blame For letting 'scape unpunished this bad pair? I think I proved that in last paragraph! Why did we so? Because our courage failed. Wherefore? Through lack of arms to fight the foe: We had no arms or merely lawful ones, An unimportant sword and blunderbuss, Against a foe, pollent in potency, The amasius, and our vixen of a wife. Well then, how culpably do we gird loin And once more undertake the high emprise, Unless we load ourselves this second time With handsome superfluity of arms, Since better is "too much" than "not enough," And "plus non vitiat," too much does no harm, Except in mathematics, sages say. Gather instruction from the parable! At first we are advised -- "A lad hath here Seven barley loaves and two small fishes: what Is that among so many?" Aptly asked: But put that question twice and, quite as apt, The answer is, "Fragments, twelve baskets full!" And, while we speak of superabundance, fling We word by the way to fools who cast their flout On Guido -- "Punishment were pardoned him, But here the punishment exceeds offence: He might be just, but he was cruel too!" Why, grant there seems a kind of cruelty In downright stabbing people he could maim, (If so you stigmatize the stern and strict) Still, Guido meant no cruelty -- may plead Transgression of his mandate, over-zeal O' the part of his companions: all he craved Was, they should fray the faces of the folk, Merely disfigure, nowise make them die. Solummodo fassus est, he owns no more, Dedisse mandatum, than that he desired, Ad sfrisiandum, dicam, that they hack And hew, i' the customary phrase, his wife, Uxorem tantum, and no harm beside. If his instructions then be misconceived, Nay, disobeyed, impute you blame to him? Cite me no Panicollus to the point, As adverse! Oh, I quite expect his case -- How certain noble youths of Sicily Having good reason to mistrust their wives, Killed them and were absolved in consequence: While others who had gone beyond the need By mutilation of each paramour -- As Galba in the Horatian satire grieved -- These were condemned to the galleys, cast for guilt Exceeding simple murder of a wife. But why? Because of ugliness, and not Cruelty, in the said revenge, I trow! Ex causa abscissionis partium; Qui nempe id facientes reputantur Naturoe inimici, man revolts Against them as the natural enemy. Pray, grant to one who meant to slit the nose And slash the cheek and slur the mouth, at most, A somewhat more humane award than these Obtained, these natural enemies of man! Objectum funditus corruit, flat you fall, My Fisc! I waste no kick on you, but - Third aggravation: that our act was done -- Not in the public street, where safety lies, Not in the by-place, caution may avoid, Wood, cavern, desert, spots contrived for crime, -- But in the very house, home, nook and nest, O' the victims, murdered in their dwelling-place, In domo ac habitatione propria, Where all presumably is peace and joy. The spider, crime, pronounce we twice a pest When, creeping from congenial cottage, she Taketh hold with her hands, to horrify His household more, i' the palace of the king. All three were housed and safe and confident. Moreover, the permission that our wife Should have at length domum pro carcere, Her own abode in place of prison -- why, We ourselves granted, by our other self And proxy Paolo: did we make such grant, Meaning a lure? -- elude the vigilance O' the jailer, lead her to commodious death, While we ostensibly relented? Ay, Just so did we, nor otherwise, my Fisc! Is vengeance lawful? We demand our right, But find it will be questioned or refused By jailer, turnkey, hangdog, -- what know we? Pray, how is it we should conduct ourselves? To gain our private right -- break public peace, Do you bid us? -- trouble order with our broils? Endanger ... shall I shrink to own ... ourselves? -- Who want no broken head nor bloody nose (While busied slitting noses, breaking heads) From the first tipstaff that may interfere! Nam quicquid sit, for howsoever it be, An de consensu nostro, if with leave Or not, a monasterio, from the nuns, Educta esset, she had been led forth, Potuimus id dissimulare, we May well have granted leave in pure pretence, Ut aditum habere, that thereby An entry we might compass, a free move Potuissemus, to her easy death, Ad eam occidendam. Privacy O' the hearth, and sanctitude of home, say you? Shall we give man's abode more privilege Than God's? -- for in the churches where he dwells, In quibus assistit Regum Rex, by means Of his essence, per essentiam, all the same, Et nihilominus, therein, in eis, Ex justa via delinquens, whoso dares To take a liberty on ground enough, Is pardoned, excusatur: that's our case -- Delinquent through befitting cause. You hold, To punish a false wife in her own house Is graver than, what happens every day, To hale a debtor from his hiding-place In church protected by the Sacrament? To this conclusion have I brought my Fisc? Foxes have holes, and fowls o' the air their nests; Praise you the impiety that follows, Fisc? Shall false wife yet have where to lay her head? "Contra Fiscum definitum est!" He's done! "Surge et scribe," make a note of it! -- If may dally with Aquinas' word. Or in the death-throe does he mutter still, Fourth aggravation, that we changed our garb And rusticized ourselves with uncouth hat, Rough vest and goatskin wrappage; murdered thus Mutatione vestium, in disguise, Whereby mere murder got complexed with wile, Turned homicidium ex insidiis? Fisc, How often must I round thee in the ears -- All means are lawful to a lawful end? Concede he had the right to kill his wife: The Count indulged in a travesty; why? De illa ut vindictam sumeret, That on her he might lawful vengeance take, Commodius, with more ease, et tutius, And safelier: wants he warrant for the step? Read to thy profit how the Apostle once For ease and safety, when Damascus raged, Was let down in a basket by the wall, To 'scape the malice of the governor (Another sort of Governor boasts Rome!) -- Many are of opinion, -- covered close, Concealed with -- what except that very cloak He left behind at Troas afterward? I shall not add a syllable: Molinists may! Well, have we more to manage? Ay, indeed! Fifth aggravation, that our wife reposed Sub potestate judicis, beneath Protection of the judge, -- her house was styled A prison, and his power became its guard In lieu of wall and gate and bolt and bar. This is a tough point, shrewd, redoubtable: Because we have to supplicate that judge Shall overlook wrong done the judgment-seat. Now, I might suffer my own nose be pulled, As man: but then as father ... if the Fisc Touched one hair of my boy who held my hand In confidence he could not come to harm Crossing the Corso, at my own desire, Going to see those bodies in the church -- What would you say to that, Don Hyacinth? This is the sole and single knotty point: For, bid Tommati blink his interest, You laud his magnanimity the while: But balk Tommati's office, -- he talks big! "My predecessors in the place, -- those sons O' the prophets that may hope succeed me here, -- Shall I diminish their prerogative? Count Guido Franceschini's honor! -- well. Has the Governor of Rome none?" You perceive The cards are all against us. Make a push, Kick over table, as shrewd gamesters do! We, do you say, encroach upon the rights, Deny the omnipotence o' the Judge forsooth? We, who have only been from first to last Intending that his purpose should prevail, Nay more, at times, anticipating it At risk of his rebuke? But wait awhile! Cannot we lump this with the sixth and last Of the aggravations -- that the Majesty O' the Sovereign here received a wound? to wit, Loesa Majestas, since our violence Was out of envy to the course of law, In odium litis? We cut short thereby Three pending suits, promoted by ourselves I' the main, -- which worsens crime, accedit ad Exasperationem criminis! Yes, here the eruptive wrath with full effect! How, did not indignation chain my tongue, Could I repel this last, worst charge of all! (There is a porcupine to barbecue; Gigia can jug a rabbit well enough, With sour-sweet sauce and pine-pips; but, good Lord, Suppose the devil instigate the wench To stew, not roast him? Stew my porcupine? If she does, I know where his quills shall stick! Come, I must go myself and see to things: I cannot stay much longer stewing here.) Our stomach ... I mean, our soul is stirred within, And we want words. We wounded Majesty? Fall under such a censure, we? -- who yearned So much that Majesty dispel the cloud And shine on us with healing on her wings, That we prayed Pope Majestas' very self To anticipate a little the tardy pack, Bell us forth deep the authoritative bay Should start the beagles into sudden yelp Unisonous, -- and, Gospel leading Law, Grant there assemble in our own behoof A Congregation, a particular Court, A few picked friends of quality and place, To hear the several matters in dispute, Causes big, little, and indifferent, Bred of our marriage like a mushroom-growth, All at once (can one brush off such too soon?) And so with laudable dispatch decide Whether we, in the main (to sink detail) Were one the Pope should hold fast or let go. "What, take the credit from the Law?" you ask? Indeed, we did! Law ducks to Gospel here: Why should Law gain the glory and pronounce A judgment shall immortalize the Pope? Yes: our self-abnegating policy Was Joab's -- we would rouse our David's sloth, Bid him encamp against a city, sack A place whereto ourselves had long laid seige, Lest, taking it at last, it take our name Nor be styled Innocentinopolis. But no! The modesty was in alarm, The temperance refused to interfere, Returned us our petition with the word "Ad judices suos," "Leave him to his Judge!" As who should say, "Why trouble my repose? Why consult Peter in a simple case, Peter's wife's sister in her fever-fit Might solve as readily as the Apostle's self? Are my Tribunals posed by aught so plain? Hath not my Court a conscience? It is of age, Ask it!" We do ask, -- but, inspire reply To the Court thou bidst me ask, as I have asked -- Oh thou, who vigilantly dost attend To even the few, the ineffectual words Which rise from this our low and mundane sphere Up to thy region out of smoke and noise, Seeking corroboration from thy nod Who art all justice -- which means mercy too, In a low noisy smoky world like ours Where Adam's sin made peccable his seed! We venerate the father of the flock, Whose last faint sands of life, the frittered gold, Fall noiselessly, yet all too fast, o' the cone And tapering heap of those collected years: Never have these been hurried in their flow, Though justice fain would jog reluctant arm, In eagerness to take the forfeiture Of guilty life: much less shall mercy sue In vain that thou let innocence survive, Precipitate no minim of the mass O' the all-so precious moments of thy life, By pushing Guido into death and doom! (Our Cardinal engages to go read The Pope my speech, and point its beauties out. They say, the Pope has one half-hour, in twelve, Of something like a moderate return Of the intellectuals, -- never much to lose! -- If I adroitly plant this passage there, The Fisc will find himself forestalled, I think, Though he stand, beat till the old ear-drum break! -- Ah, boy of my own bowels, Hyacinth, Wilt ever catch the knack, requite the pains Of poor papa, become proficient too I' the how and why and when, the time to laugh, The time to weep, the time, again, to pray, And all the times prescribed by Holy Writ? Well, well, we fathers can but care, but cast Our bread upon the waters!) In a word, These secondary charges go to ground, Since secondary, and superfluous, -- motes Quite from the main point: we did all and some, Little and much, adjunct and principal, Causa honoris. Is there such a cause As the sake of honor? By that sole test try Our action, nor demand if more or less, Because of the action's mode, we merit blame Or maybe deserve praise! The Court decides Is the end lawful? It allows the means: What we may do, we may with safety do, And what means "safety" we ourselves must judge. Put case a person wrongs me past dispute: If my legitimate vengeance be a blow, Mistrusting my bare arm can deal that blow, I claim co-operation of a stick; Doubtful if stick be tough, I crave a sword; Diffident of ability in fence, I fee a friend, a swordsman to assist: Take one -- he may be coward, fool or knave Why not take fifty? -- and if these exceed I' the due degree of drubbing, whom accuse But the first author of the aforesaid wrong Who put poor me to such a world of pains? Surgery would have just excised a wart; The patient made such pother, struggled so That the sharp instrument sliced nose and all. Taunt us not that our friends performed for pay! Ourselves had toiled for simple honor's sake: But country clowns want dirt they comprehend, The piece of gold! Our reasons, which suffice Ourselves, be ours alone; our piece of gold Be, to the rustic, reason he approves! We must translate our motives like our speech, Into the lower phrase that suits the sense O' the limitedly apprehensive. Let Each level have its language! Heaven speaks first To the angel, then the angel tames the word Down to the ear of Tobit: he, in turn, Diminishes the message to his dog, And finally that dog finds how the flea (Which else, importunate, might check his speed) Shall learn its hunger must have holiday, By application of his tongue or paw: So many varied sorts of language here, Each following each with pace to match the step, Haud passibus oequis! Talking of which flea, Reminds me I must put in special word For the poor humble following, -- the four friends, Sicarii, our assassins caught and caged. Ourselves are safe in your approval now: Yet must we care for our companions, plead The cause o' the poor the friends (of old-world faith) Who lie in tribulation for our sake. Pauperum Procurator is my style: I stand forth as the poor man's advocate: And when we treat of what concerns the poor, Et cum agatur de pauperibus, In bondage, carceratis, for their sake, In eorum causis, natural piety, Pietas, ever ought to win the day, Triumphare debet, quia ipsi sunt, Because those very paupers constitute, Thesaurus Christi, all the wealth of Christ. Nevertheless I shall not hold you long With multiplicity of proofs, nor burn Candle at noontide, clarify the clear. There beams a case refulgent from our books -- Castrensis, Butringarius, everywhere I find it burn to dissipate the dark. 'T is this: a husband had a friend, which friend Seemed to him over-friendly with his wife In thought and purpose, -- I pretend no more. To justify suspicion or dispel, He bids his wife make show of giving heed, Semblance of sympathy -- propose, in fine, A secret meeting in a private place. The friend, enticed thus, finds an ambuscade, To wit, the husband posted with a pack Of other friends, who fall upon the first And beat his love and life out both at once. These friends were brought to question for their help; Law ruled, "The husband being in the right, Who helped him in the right can scarce be wrong" -- Opinio, an opinion every way, Multum tenenda cordi, heart should hold! When the inferiors follow as befits The lead o' the principal, they change their name, And, non dicuntur, are no longer called His mandatories, mandatorii, But helpmates, sed auxiliatores; since To that degree does honor's sake lend aid, Adeo honoris causa est efficax, That not alone, non solum, does it pour Itself out, se diffundat, on mere friends We bring to do our bidding of this sort, In mandatorios simplices, but sucks Along with it in wide and generous whirl, Sed etiam assassinii qualitate Qualificatos, people qualified By the quality of assassination's self, Dare I make use of such neologism, Ut utar verbo. Haste we to conclude: Of the other points that favor, leave some few For Spreti; such as the delinquents' youth. One of them falls short, by some months, of age Fit to be managed by the gallows; two May plead exemption from our law's award, Being foreigners, subjects of the Granduke -- I spare that bone to Spreti, and reserve Myself the juicier breast of argument -- Flinging the breast-blade i' the face o' the Fisc, Who furnished me the tidbit: he must needs Play off his privilege and rack the clowns, -- And they, at instance of the rack, confess All four unanimously made resolve, -- The night o' the murder, in brief minute snatched Behind the back of Guido as he fled, -- That, since he had not kept his promise, paid The money for the murder on the spot, So, reaching home again, might please ignore The pact or pay them in improper coin, -- They one and all resolved, these hopeful friends, 'T were best inaugurate the morrow's light, Nature recruited with her due repose, By killing Guido as he lay asleep Pillowed on wallet which contained their fee. I thank the Fisc for knowledge of this fact: What fact could hope to make more manifest Their rectitude, Guido's integrity? For who fails recognize the touching truth That these poor rustics bore no envy, hate, Malice nor yet uncharitableness Against the people they had put to death? In them, did such an act reward itself? All done was to deserve the simple pay, Obtain the bread clowns earn by sweat of brow, And missing which, they missed of every thing -- Hence claimed pay, even at expense of life To their own lord, so little warped (admire!) By prepossession, such the absolute Instinct of equity in rustic souls! Whereas our Count, the cultivated mind, He, wholly rapt in his serene regard Of honor, he contemplating the sun, Who hardly marks if taper blink below, He, dreaming of no argument for death Except a vengeance worthy noble hearts, -- Dared not so desecrate the deed, forsooth, Vulgarize vengeance, as defray its cost By money dug from out the dirty earth, Irritant mere, in Ovid's phrase, to ill. What though he lured base hinds by lucre's hope, -- The only motive they could masticate, Milk for babes, not strong meat which men require? The deed done, those coarse hands were soiled enough, He spared them the pollution of the pay. So much for the allegement, thine, my Fisc, Quo nil absurdius, than which naught more mad, Excogitari potest, may be squeezed From out the cogitative brain of thee! And now, thou excellent the Governor! (Push to the peroration) coeterum Enixe supplico, I strive in prayer, Ut dominis meis, that unto the Court, Benigna fronte, with a gracious brow, Et oculis serenis, and mild eyes, Perpendere placeat, it may please them weigh, Quod dominus Guido, that our noble Count, Occidit, did the killing in dispute, Ut ejus honor tumulatus, that The honor of him buried fathom-deep In infamy, in infamia, might arise, Resurgeret, as ghost breaks sepulchre! Occidit, for he killed, uxorem, wife, Quia illi fuit, since she was to him, Opprobrio, a disgrace and nothing more! Et genitores, killed her parents too, Qui, who, postposita verecundia, Having thrown off all sort of decency, Filiam repudiarunt, had renounced Their daughter, atque declarare non Erubuerunt, nor felt blush tinge cheek, Declaring, meretricis genitam Esse, she was the offspring of a drab, Ut ipse dehonestaretur, just That so himself might lose his social rank! Cujus mentem, and which daughter's heart and soul, They, perverterunt, turned from the right course, Et ad illicitos amores non Dumtaxat pellexerunt, and to love Not simply did alluringly incite, Sed vi obedientioe, but by force O' the duty, filialis, daughters owe, Coegerunt, forced and drove her to the deed: Occidit, I repeat he killed the clan, Ne scilicet amplius in dedecore, Lest peradventure longer life might trail, Viveret, link by link his turpitude, Invisus consanguineis, hateful so To kith and kindred, a nobilibus Notatus, shunned by men of quality, Relictus ab amicis, left i' the lurch By friends, ab omnibus derisus, turned A common hack-block to try edge of jokes. Occidit, and he killed them here in Rome, In Urbe, the Eternal City, Sirs, Nempe quoe alias spectata est, The appropriate theatre which witnessed once Matronam nobilem, Lucretia's self, Ablue e pudicitioe maculas, Wash off the spots of her pudicity, Sanguine proprio, with her own pure blood; Quoe vidit, and which city also saw, Patrem, Virginius, undequaque, quite, Impunem, with no sort of punishment, Nor, et non illaudatum, lacking praise, Sed polluentem parricidio, Imbrue his hands with butchery, filioe, Of chaste Virginia, to avoid a rape, Ne raperetur ad stupra; so to heart, Tanti illi cordi fuit, did he take, Suspicio, the mere fancy men might have, Honoris amittendi, of fame's loss, Ut potius voluerit filia Orbari, he preferred to lose his child, Quam illa incederet, rather than she walk The ways an, inhonesta, child disgraced, Licet non sponte, though against her will. Occidit -- killed them, I reiterate -- In propria domo, in their own abode, Ut adultera et parentes, that each wretch, Conscii agnoscerent, might both see and say, Nullum locum, there's no place, nullumque ess Asylum, nor yet refuge of escape, Impenetrabilem, shall serve as bar, Honori loeso, to the wounded one In honor; neve ibi opprobria Continuarentur, killed them on the spot Moreover, dreading lest within those walls The opprobrium peradventure be prolonged, Et domus quoe testis fuit turpium, And that the domicile which witnessed crime Esset et poenoe, might watch punishment: Occidit, killed, I round you in the ears, Quia alio modo, since by other mode, Non poterat ejus existimatio, There was no possibility his fame, Loesa, gashed griesly, tam enormiter, Ducere cicatrices, might be healed: Occidit ut exemplum proeberet Uxoribus, killed her, so to lesson wives Jura conjugii, that the marriage-oath, Esse servanda, must be kept henceforth: Occidit denique, killed her, in a word, Ut pro posse honestus viveret, That he, please God, might creditably live Sin minus, but if fate willed otherwise, Proprii honoris, of his outraged fame, Offensi, by Mannaia, if you please, Commiseranda victima caderet, The pitiable victim he should fall! Done! I' the rough, i' the rough! But done And, lo, Landed and stranded lies my very speech, My miracle, my monster of defence -- Leviathan into the nose whereof I have put fish-hook, pierced his jaw with thorn, And given him to my maidens for a play! I' the rough: to-morrow I review my piece Tame here and there undue floridity. It's hard: you have to plead before these priests And poke at them with Scripture, or you pass For heathen and, what's worse, for ignorant O' the quality o' the Court and what it likes By way of illustration of the law. To-morrow stick in this, and throw out that, And, having first ecclesiasticized, Regularize the whole, next emphasize, Then latinize, and lastly Cicero-ize, Giving my Fisc his finish. There's my speech! And where's my fry, and family and friends? Where's that huge Hyacinth I mean to hug Till he cries out, "Jam satis! Let me breathe!" Now, what an evening have I earned to-day! Hail, ye true pleasures, all the rest are false! Oh, the old mother, oh, the fattish wife! Rogue Hyacinth shall put on paper toque, And wrap himself around with mamma's veil Done up to imitate papa's black robe, (I'm in the secret of the comedy, -- Part of the program leaked out long ago!) And call himself the Advocate o' the Poor, Mimic Don father that defends the Count: And for reward shall have a small full glass Of manly red rosolio to himself, -- Always provided that he conjugate Ribo, I drink, correctly -- nor be found Make the perfectum, bipsi, as last year! How the ambitious do so harden heart As lightly hold by these home-sanctitudes, To me is matter of bewilderment -- Bewilderment! Because ambition's range Is nowise tethered by domestic tie: Am I refused an outlet from my home To the world's stage? -- whereon a man should play The man in public, vigilant for law, Zealous for truth, a credit to his kind, Nay, -- since, employing talent so, I yield The Lord his own again with usury, -- A satisfaction, yea, to God himself! Well, I have modelled me by Agur's wish, "Remove far from me vanity and lies, Feed me with food convenient for me!" What I' the world should a wise man require beyond? Can I but coax the good fat little wife To tell her fool of a father the mad prank His scapegrace nephew played this time last year At Carnival! He could not choose, I think, But modify that inconsiderate gift O' the cup and cover (somewhere in the will Under the pillow, some one seems to guess) -- Correct that clause in favor of a boy The trifle ought to grace, with name engraved, Would look so well, produced in future years To pledge a memory, when poor papa Latin and law are long since laid at rest -- Hyacintho dono dedit avus! Why, The wife should get a necklace for her pains, The very pearls that made Violante proud, And Pietro pawned for half their value once, Redeemable by somebody, ne sit Marita quoe rotundioribus Onusta mammis ... baccis ambulet: Her bosom shall display the big round balls, No braver proudly borne by wedded wife! With which Horatian promise I conclude. Into the pigeon-hole with thee, my speech! Off and away, first work, then play, play, play Bottini, burn thy books, thou blazing ass! Sing "Tra-la-la, for, lambkins, we must live!" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 10. THE POPE by ROBERT BROWNING THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 11. GUIDO by ROBERT BROWNING THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 12. THE BOOK AND THE RING by ROBERT BROWNING THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 2. HALF-ROME by ROBERT BROWNING THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 3. THE OTHER HALF-ROME by ROBERT BROWNING THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 4. TERTIUM QUID by ROBERT BROWNING THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 5. COUNT GUIDO FRANCESCHINI by ROBERT BROWNING THE RING AND THE BOOK: BOOK 6. GIUSEPPE CAPONSACCHI by ROBERT BROWNING CHILDE ROLAND TO THE DARK TOWER CAME' by ROBERT BROWNING |
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