The Project Gutenberg eBook ofBrowning's HeroinesThis ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.Title: Browning's HeroinesAuthor: Ethel Colburn MayneIllustrator: Maxwell ArmfieldRelease date: April 28, 2007 [eBook #21247]Most recently updated: January 2, 2021Language: EnglishCredits: Produced by Ted Garvin, Michael Zeug, Lisa Reigel, and theOnline Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BROWNING'S HEROINES ***
This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online atwww.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
Title: Browning's HeroinesAuthor: Ethel Colburn MayneIllustrator: Maxwell ArmfieldRelease date: April 28, 2007 [eBook #21247]Most recently updated: January 2, 2021Language: EnglishCredits: Produced by Ted Garvin, Michael Zeug, Lisa Reigel, and theOnline Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Title: Browning's Heroines
Author: Ethel Colburn MayneIllustrator: Maxwell Armfield
Author: Ethel Colburn Mayne
Illustrator: Maxwell Armfield
Release date: April 28, 2007 [eBook #21247]Most recently updated: January 2, 2021
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Ted Garvin, Michael Zeug, Lisa Reigel, and theOnline Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BROWNING'S HEROINES ***
Pippa
When this book was projected, some one asked, "What is there to say about Browning's heroines beyond what he said himself?"—and the question, though it could not stay me, did chill momentarily my primal ardour. Soon, however, the restorative answer presented itself. "If there were nothing to say about Browning's heroines beyond what he said himself, it would be a bad mark against him." For tosuggest—to open magic casements—surely is the office of our artists in every sort: thus, for them to say all that there is to say about anything is to show the casement stuck fast, as it were, and themselves battering somewhat desperately to open it. Saying the things "about" is the other people's function. It is as if we suddenly saw a princess come out upon her castle-walls, and hymned that fair emergence, which to herself is nothing.
Browning, I think, is "coming back," as stars come back. There has been the period of obscuration. Seventeen years ago, when theYellow Bookand theNational Observerwere contending forlesjeunes, Browning was, in the more "precious" côterie, king of modern poets. I can remember the editor of that golden Quarterly reading, declaiming, quoting, almost breathing, Browning! It was from Henry Harland that this reader learnt to readThe Ring and the Book: "Leave out the lawyers and the Tertium Quid, and all after Guido until the Envoi." It was Henry Harland who would answer, if one asked him what he was thinking of:
"And thinking too—oh, thinking, if you like,How utterly dissociated was I. . . ."
"And thinking too—oh, thinking, if you like,How utterly dissociated was I. . . ."
—regardless of all aptitude in the allusion, making it simply because it "burned up in his brain," just as days "struck fierce 'mid many a day struck calm" were alwayshisdays of excitement. . . . A hundred Browning verses sing themselves around my memories of the flat in Cromwell Road.
Misconceptionswas swung forth with gesture that figured swaying branches:
"This is a spray the bird clung to. . . ."
"This is a spray the bird clung to. . . ."
You were to notice how the rhythms bent and tossed like boughs in that first stanza—and to notice, also, how regrettable the second stanza was. Nor shall I easily let slip the memory ofApparent Failure, thus recited. He would begin at the second verse, the "Doric little Morgue" verse. You were not to miss the great "phrase" in
"The three men who did most abhorTheir lives in Paris yesterday. . . ."
"The three men who did most abhorTheir lives in Paris yesterday. . . ."
—but you were to feel, scarce less keenly, the dire descent to bathos in "So killed themselves." It was almost the show-example, he would tell you, of Browning's chief defect—over-statement.
"How did it happen, my poor boy?You wanted to be Bonaparte,And have the Tuileries for toy,And could not, so it broke your heart. . . ."
"How did it happen, my poor boy?You wanted to be Bonaparte,And have the Tuileries for toy,And could not, so it broke your heart. . . ."
How compassionately he would give that forth! "A screen of glass, you're thankful for"; "Be quiet, and unclench your fist"; "Poor men God made, and all for this!"—the phrases (how alert we were for the "phrase" in those days) would fall grave and vibrant from the voice with its subtle foreign colouring: you could always infuriate "H. H." by telling him he had a foreign accent.
Those were Browning days; and now these are, or soon shall be. Two or three years since, to quote him was, in the opinion of aStandardreviewer, to write yourself down a back-number, as they say. I preserve the cutting which damns with faint praise some thus antiquated short stories of 1910. Browning and Wagner were so obsolete! . . . How young that critic must have been—so young that he had never seen a star return. Quite differently they come back—or is it quite the same? Soon we shall be able to judge, for this star is returning, and—oh wonder!—istrailing clouds of glory of the very newest cut. The stars always do that, this watcher fancies, and certainly Browning, like the Jub-jub, was ages ahead of the fashion. His passport for to-day is dated up to the very hour—for though he could be so many other things besides, one of his achievements, for us, will prove to have been that he could be so "ugly."Thatwould not have been reckoned among his glories in the Yellow Book-room; but the wheel shall come full circle—we shall be saying all this, one day, the other way round. For, as Browning consoles, encourages, and warns us by showing inFifine,[x:1]each age believes—and should believe—that to it alone the secret of true art has been whispered.
Ethel Colburn Mayne.
11 Holland Road,Kensington, W.
[x:1]I write far from my books, but the passage will be easily found or recalled.
[x:1]I write far from my books, but the passage will be easily found or recalled.
Two birds, possibly eagles
PART IGIRLHOODPAGEIntroductory3I.The Girl in "Count Gismond"15II.Pippa PassesI.Dawn: Pippa23II.Morning: Ottima36III.Noon: Phene51IV.Evening; Night: The Ending of the Day67III.Mildred Tresham81IV.Balaustion93V.Pompilia122PART IITHE GREAT LADY"My Last Duchess," and "The Flight of the Duchess"165PART IIITHE LOVERI.Lovers Meeting199II.Trouble of Love: The Woman'sI.The Lady in "The Glove"215II.Dîs Aliter Visum; or, Le Byron De Nos Jours224III.The Laboratory233IV.In a Year237PART IVTHE WIFEI.A Woman's Last Word245II.James Lee's Wife250I.She Speaks at the Window254II.By the Fireside256III.In the Doorway257IV.Along the Beach258V.On the Cliff261VI.Reading a Book, under the Cliff262VII.Among the Rocks266VIII.Beside the Drawing-board268IX.On Deck271PART VTROUBLE OF LOVE: THE MAN'SI.The Woman Unwon277II.The Woman Won304
Girlhood
Browning's power of embodying in rhythm the full beauty of girlhood is unequalled by any other English poet. Heine alone is his peer in this; but even Heine's imagination dwelt more fondly on the abstract pathos and purity of a maiden than on her individual gaiety and courage. In older women, also, these latter qualities were the spells for Browning; and, with him, a girl sets forth early on her brave career. That is the just adjective. His girls are as brave as the young knights of other poets; and in this appreciation of a dauntless gesture in women we see one of the reasons why he may be called the first "feminist" poet since Shakespeare. To me, indeed, even Shakespeare's maidens have less of the peculiar iridescence of their state than Browning's have, and I think this is because, already in the modern poet's day, girlhood was beginning to be seen as it had never been seen before—that is, as a "thing-by-itself." People had perceived—dimly enough, but with eyes which have since grown clearer-sighted—that there is a stage in woman's developmentwhich ought to be her very own to enjoy, as a man enjoyshisadolescence. This dawning sense is explicit in the earlier verses of one of Browning's most original utterances,Evelyn Hope, which is the call of a man, many years older, to the mysterious soul of a dead young girl—
"Sixteen years old when she died!Perhaps she had hardly heard my name;It was not her time to love; beside,Her life had many a hope and aim,Duties enough and little cares,And now was quiet, now astir . . ."
"Sixteen years old when she died!Perhaps she had hardly heard my name;It was not her time to love; beside,Her life had many a hope and aim,Duties enough and little cares,And now was quiet, now astir . . ."
Here recognition of the girl's individuality is complete. Not a word in the stanza hints at Evelyn's possible love for another man. "It was not her time"; there were quite different joys in life for her. . . . Such a view is even still something of a novelty, and Browning was the first to express it thus whole-heartedly. There had been, of course, from all time the hymning of maiden purity and innocence, but beneath such celebrations had lurked that predatory instinct which a still more modern poet has epitomised in a haunting and ambiguous phrase—
"For each man kills the thing he loves."
"For each man kills the thing he loves."
Thus, even in Shakespeare, the Girl is not so much that transient, exquisite thing as she is the Woman-in-love; thus, even for Rosalind, there waits the Emersonianprécis—
"Whither went the lovely hoyden?Disappeared in blessèd wife;Servant to a wooden cradle,Living in a baby's life."
"Whither went the lovely hoyden?Disappeared in blessèd wife;Servant to a wooden cradle,Living in a baby's life."
I confess that this tabloid "story of a woman" has, ever since my first discovery of it, been a source of anger to me; and I do not think that such resentment should be reckoned as a manifestation of modern decadence. The hustling out of sight of that "lovely hoyden" is unworthy of a poet; poet's eyes should rest longer upon beauty so irrecoverable—for though the wife and mother be the happiest that ever was, she can never be a girl again.
In the same way, to me the earliest verses ofEvelyn Hopeare the loveliest. As I read on, doubts and questions gather fast—
"But the time will come—at last it will,When, Evelyn Hope, what meant (I shall say)In the lower earth, in the years long still,That body and soul so pure and gay?Why your hair was amber, I shall divine,And your mouth of your own geranium's red—And what you would do with me, in fine,In the new life come in the old one's stead.I have lived (I shall say) so much since then,Given up myself so many times,Gained me the gains of various men,Ransacked the ages, spoiled the climes;Yet one thing, one, in my soul's full scope,Either I missed, or itself missed me:And I want and find you, Evelyn Hope!What is the issue? let us see!I loved you, Evelyn, all the while.My heart seemed full as it could hold?There was place and to spare for the frank young smile,And the red young mouth, and the hair's young gold.So, hush—I will give you this leaf to keep:See, I shut it inside the sweet cold hand!There, that is our secret: go to sleep!You will wake, and remember, and understand."* * * * *
"But the time will come—at last it will,When, Evelyn Hope, what meant (I shall say)In the lower earth, in the years long still,That body and soul so pure and gay?Why your hair was amber, I shall divine,And your mouth of your own geranium's red—And what you would do with me, in fine,In the new life come in the old one's stead.
I have lived (I shall say) so much since then,Given up myself so many times,Gained me the gains of various men,Ransacked the ages, spoiled the climes;Yet one thing, one, in my soul's full scope,Either I missed, or itself missed me:And I want and find you, Evelyn Hope!What is the issue? let us see!
I loved you, Evelyn, all the while.My heart seemed full as it could hold?There was place and to spare for the frank young smile,And the red young mouth, and the hair's young gold.So, hush—I will give you this leaf to keep:See, I shut it inside the sweet cold hand!There, that is our secret: go to sleep!You will wake, and remember, and understand."
* * * * *
Here the average man is revived, the man who can imagine no meaning for the loveliness of a girl's body and soul but that it shall "do something" with him. When they meet in the "new life come in the old one's stead," this is the question he looks forward to asking; and instinctively, I think, we ask ourselves a different one.WillEvelyn, on waking, "remember and understand"? Will she not have passed by very far, in the spirit-world, this unconscious egotist? . . . True, he can to some extent realise that probability—
"Delayed it may be for more lives yet,Through worlds I shall traverse, not a few:Much is to learn, much to forget,Ere the time be come for taking you."
"Delayed it may be for more lives yet,Through worlds I shall traverse, not a few:Much is to learn, much to forget,Ere the time be come for taking you."
But Browning has used the wrong word here. She whom the "good stars that met in her horoscope" had made of "spirit, fire, and dew," must, whether it be her desire to do so or not, eternally keep part of herself from thetakingof any man. . . . This is a curious lapse in Browning, to whom women are,in the highest sense of the word, individuals—not individualists, a less lovable and far more capturable thing. His heroines are indeed instinct with devotion, but it is devotion that chooses, not devotion that submits. A world of "gaiety and courage" lies between the two conceptions—a world, no less, of widened responsibility and heavier burdens for the devotee. If we compare a Browning heroine with a Byron one, we shall almost have traversed that new country, wherein the air grows ever more bracing as we travel onward.
With shrinking and timidity the Browning girl is unacquainted. As experience grows, these sensations may sadly touch her, but she will not have been prepared for them; no reason for feeling either had entered her dream of life. She trusts—
"Trust, that's purer than pearl"—
"Trust, that's purer than pearl"—
and how much purer than shrinking! Free from the athletics and the slang, she is antetype, indeed, of, say, the St. Andrews girl, that admirable creation of our age; but she soars beyond her sister on the wings of her more exquisite sensibility, and her deeper restfulness. Not for her the perpetual pursuit of the india-rubber or the other kinds of ball; she can conceive of the open air as something better than a place to play games in. Like Wordsworth's Lucy—
"Hers shall be the breathing balm,And hers the silence and the calm,Of mute insensate things;"
"Hers shall be the breathing balm,And hers the silence and the calm,Of mute insensate things;"
and from such "being" she draws joys more instant and more glancingly fair than Lucy drew. Among them is the joy of laughter. Of all gifts that the fulness of time has brought to women, may we not reckon that almost the best? A woman laughs nowadays, where, before, as an ideal she smiled, or as a caricature giggled; and I think that the great symphony of sex has been deepened, heightened wellnigh beyond recognition, by that confident and delicate wood-note.
* * * * *"All the breath and the bloom of the year in the bag of one bee:All the wonder and wealth of the mine in the heart of one gem:In the core of one pearl all the shade and the shine of the sea:Breath and bloom, shade and shine—wonder, wealth, and—how far above them!—Truth, that's brighter than gem,Trust, that's purer than pearl—Brightest truth, purest trust, in the universe, all were for meIn the kiss of one girl."
* * * * *
"All the breath and the bloom of the year in the bag of one bee:All the wonder and wealth of the mine in the heart of one gem:In the core of one pearl all the shade and the shine of the sea:Breath and bloom, shade and shine—wonder, wealth, and—how far above them!—Truth, that's brighter than gem,Trust, that's purer than pearl—Brightest truth, purest trust, in the universe, all were for meIn the kiss of one girl."
Nothing there of "Be good, sweet maid, and let who will be clever"! Do the fortunate girls of to-day getSummum Bonumin their albums (if they have albums), as we of the past got Kingsley's ineffable pat on the head? But since even for us to be a girl was bliss, these maidens of a later day mustsurely be in paradise. They keep, in the words of our poet, "much that we resigned"—much, too, that we prized. No girl, in our day, but dreamed of the lordly lover, and I hazard a guess that the fantasy persists. It is slower to be realised than even in our own dream-period, for now it must come through the horn-gate of the maiden's own judgment. Man has fallen from the self-erected pedestal of "superiority." He had placed himself badly on it, such as it was—the pose was ignoble, the balance insecure. One day, he will himself look back, rejoicing that he is down; and when—or if—he goes up again, it will be more worthily to stay, since other hands than his own will have built the pillar, and placed him thereupon. His chief hope of reinstatement lies in this one, certain fact: No girl will ever thrill to a lover who cannot answer for her toA Pearl, A Girl—
"A simple ring with a single stone,To the vulgar eye no stone of price:Whisper the right word, that alone—Forth starts a sprite, like fire from ice,And lo! you are lord (says an Eastern scroll)Of heaven and earth, lord whole and sole,Through the power in a pearl.A woman ('tis I this time that say)With little the world counts worthy praise,Utter the true word—out and awayEscapes her soul: I am wrapt in blaze,Creation's lord, of heaven and earthLord whole and sole—by a minute's birth—Through the love in a girl!"
"A simple ring with a single stone,To the vulgar eye no stone of price:Whisper the right word, that alone—Forth starts a sprite, like fire from ice,And lo! you are lord (says an Eastern scroll)Of heaven and earth, lord whole and sole,Through the power in a pearl.
A woman ('tis I this time that say)With little the world counts worthy praise,Utter the true word—out and awayEscapes her soul: I am wrapt in blaze,Creation's lord, of heaven and earthLord whole and sole—by a minute's birth—Through the love in a girl!"
As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be! But observe that he has to utter thetrueword.
This brave and joyous note is the essential Browning, and to me it supplies an easy explanation for his much-discussed rejection of the very early poemPauline, for which, despite its manifold beauties, he never in later life cared at all—more, he wished to suppress it. InPauline, his deepest sense of woman's spiritual function is falsified. This might be accounted for by the fact that it was written at twenty-one, if it were not that at twenty-one most young men are most "original." Browning, in this as in other things, broke down tradition, forPaulineis by far the least original of his works in outlook—it is, indeed, in outlook, of the purest common-place. "It exhibits," says Mr. Chesterton, "the characteristic mark of a juvenile poem, the general suggestion that the author is a thousand years old"; and it exhibits too the entirely un-characteristic mark of a Browning poem, the general suggestion that the poet has not thought for himself on a subject which he was, in the issue, almost to make his own—that of the inspiring, as opposed (for in Browning the antithesis is as marked as that) to the consoling, power of a beloved woman. From the very first line this emotional flaccidity is evident—
"Pauline, mine own, bend o'er me—thy soft breastShall pant to mine—bend o'er me—thy sweet eyesAnd loosened hair and breathing lips, and armsDrawing me to thee—these build up a screenTo shut me in with thee, and from all fear . . ."
"Pauline, mine own, bend o'er me—thy soft breastShall pant to mine—bend o'er me—thy sweet eyesAnd loosened hair and breathing lips, and armsDrawing me to thee—these build up a screenTo shut me in with thee, and from all fear . . ."
And again in the picture of her, lovely to the sense, but, in some strange fashion, hardly less than nauseating to the mind—
". . . Love looks through—Whispers—E'en at the last I have her still,With her delicious eyes as clear as heavenWhen rain in a quick shower has beat down mist . . .How the blood lies upon her cheek, outspreadAs thinned by kisses! only in her lipsIt wells and pulses like a living thing,And her neck looks like marble misted o'erWith love-breath—a Pauline from heights above,Stooping beneath me, looking up—one lookAs I might kill her and be loved the more.So love me—me, Pauline, and nought but me,Never leave loving! . . ."
". . . Love looks through—Whispers—E'en at the last I have her still,With her delicious eyes as clear as heavenWhen rain in a quick shower has beat down mist . . .How the blood lies upon her cheek, outspreadAs thinned by kisses! only in her lipsIt wells and pulses like a living thing,And her neck looks like marble misted o'erWith love-breath—a Pauline from heights above,Stooping beneath me, looking up—one lookAs I might kill her and be loved the more.So love me—me, Pauline, and nought but me,Never leave loving! . . ."
Something is there to which not again, not once again, did Browning stoop; and that something removes, for me, all difficulty in understanding his rejection, despite its exquisite verbal beauties, of this work. Moreover, it is interesting to observe the queer sub-conscious sense of the lover's inferiority betrayed in the prose note at the end. This is in French, and feigns to be written by Pauline herself. She is there made to speak of "mon pauvre ami." Let any woman ask herself what that phrase implies, when used by her inspeaking of a lover—"my poor dear friend"! We cannot of course be sure that Browning, as a man, was versed in this scrap of feminine psychology; but we do gather with certainty from Pauline's fabled comment that her view of the confession—for the poem is merely, as Mr. Chesterton says, "the typical confession of a boy"—was very much less lachrymose than that ofmon pauvre ami. Unconsciously, then, here—but in another poem soon to be discussed, not unconsciously—there sounds the humorous note in regard to men which dominates so many of women's relations with them. "The big child"—to some women, as we all know, man presents himself in that aspect chiefly. Pauline, remarking of her lover's "idea" that it was perhaps as unintelligible to him as to her, is a tender exponent of this view; the girl inYouth and Artis gayer and more ironic. Here we have a woman, successful though (as I read the poem)[12:1]notfamous, recalling to a successful and famous sculptor the days when they lived opposite one another—she as a young student of singing, he as a budding statuary—
"We studied hard in our styles,Chipped each at a crust like Hindoos,For air looked out on the tiles,For fun watched each other's windows.* * * * *And I—soon managed to findWeak points in the flower-fence facing,Was forced to put up a blindAnd be safe in my corset-lacing.* * * * *No harm! It was not my faultIf you never turned your eyes' tail upAs I shook upon E in alt,Or ran the chromatic scale up.* * * * *Why did you not pinch a flowerIn a pellet of clay and fling it?Why did I not put a powerOf thanks in a look, or sing it?"* * * * *
"We studied hard in our styles,Chipped each at a crust like Hindoos,For air looked out on the tiles,For fun watched each other's windows.
* * * * *
And I—soon managed to findWeak points in the flower-fence facing,Was forced to put up a blindAnd be safe in my corset-lacing.
* * * * *
No harm! It was not my faultIf you never turned your eyes' tail upAs I shook upon E in alt,Or ran the chromatic scale up.
* * * * *
Why did you not pinch a flowerIn a pellet of clay and fling it?Why did I not put a powerOf thanks in a look, or sing it?"
* * * * *
I confess that this lyric, except for its penultimate verse, soon to be quoted, does not seem to me what Mr. Chesterton calls it—"delightful." Nothing, plainly, did bring these two together; she may have looked jealously at his models, and he at her piano-tuner (though even this, so far as "he" is concerned, I question), but they remained uninterested in one another—and why should they not? When at the end she cries—
"This could but have happened once,And we missed it, lost it for ever"—
"This could but have happened once,And we missed it, lost it for ever"—
one's impulse surely is (mine is) to ask with some vexation what "this" was?
"Each life's unfulfilled, you see;It hangs still, patchy and scrappy;We have not sighed deep, laughed free,Starved, feasted, despaired—been happy."
"Each life's unfulfilled, you see;It hangs still, patchy and scrappy;We have not sighed deep, laughed free,Starved, feasted, despaired—been happy."
Away from its irritating context, that stanzaisdelightful; with the context it is to me wholly meaningless. The boy and girl had not fallen in love—there is no more to say; and I heartily wish that Browning had not tried to say it. The whole lyric is based on nothingness, or else on a self-consciousness peculiarly unappealing. Kate Brown was evidently quite "safe in her corset-lacing" before she put up a blind. I fear that this confession of my dislike forYouth and Artis a betrayal of lacking humour; I can but face it out, and say that unhumorous is precisely what, despite its levity of manner, rhythm, and rhyme,Youth and Artseems to my sense. . . . I rejoice that we need not reckon this Kate among Browning's girls; she is introduced to us as married to her rich old lord, and queen ofbals-parés. Thus we may console ourselves with the hope that life has vulgarised her, and that as a girl she was far less objectionable than she now represents herself to have been. We have only to imagine Evelyn Hope putting up a superfluous blind that she might be safe in her corset-lacing, to sweep the gamut of Kate Brown's commonness. . . . Let us remove her from a list which now offers us a figure more definitely and dramatically posed than any of those whom we have yet considered.
[12:1]Mr. Chesterton and Mrs. Orr both speak of Kate Brown as having succeeded in her art. I cannot find any words in the poem which justify this view. She is "queen atbals-parés," and she has married "a rich old lord," but nothing in either condition predicates the successful cantatrice.
[12:1]Mr. Chesterton and Mrs. Orr both speak of Kate Brown as having succeeded in her art. I cannot find any words in the poem which justify this view. She is "queen atbals-parés," and she has married "a rich old lord," but nothing in either condition predicates the successful cantatrice.
It is like a fairy tale, for there are three beautiful princesses, and the youngest is the heroine. The setting is French—a castle in Aix-en-Provence; it is the fourteenth century, for tourneys and hawking-parties are the amusements, and a birthday is celebrated by an award of crowns to the victors in the lists, when there are ladies in brave attire, thrones, canopies, false knight and true knight. . . . Here is the story.
Once upon a time there were three beautiful princesses, and they lived in a splendid castle. The youngest had neither father nor mother, so she had come to dwell with her cousins, and they had all been quite happy together until one day in summer, when there was a great tourney and prize-giving to celebrate the birthday of the youngest princess. She was to award the crowns, and her cousins dressed her like a queen for the ceremony. She was very happy; she laughed and "sang her birthday-song quite through," while she looked at herself, garlanded with roses, in the glass before they all three went arm-in-arm down the castle stairs. The throneand canopy were ready; troops of merry friends had assembled. These kissed the cheek of the youngest princess, laughing and calling her queen, and then they helped her to stoop under the canopy, which was pierced by a long streak of golden sunshine. There, in the gleam and gloom, she took her seat on the throne. But for all her joy and pride, there came to her, as she sat there, a great ache of longing for her dead father and mother; and afterwards she remembered this, and thought that perhaps if her cousins had guessed that such sorrow was in her heart, even at her glad moment, they might not have allowed the thing to happen which did happen.
All eyes were on her, except those of her cousins, which were lowered, when the moment came for her to stand up and present the victor's crown.
Shy and proud and glad, she stood up, and as she did so, there stalked forth Count Gauthier—
". . . And he thundered 'Stay!'And all stayed. 'Bring no crowns, I say!''Bring torches! Wind the penance-sheetAbout her! Let her shun the chaste,Or lay herself before their feet!Shall she whose body I embracedA night long, queen it in the day?For Honour's sake no crowns, I say!'"* * * * *
". . . And he thundered 'Stay!'And all stayed. 'Bring no crowns, I say!'
'Bring torches! Wind the penance-sheetAbout her! Let her shun the chaste,Or lay herself before their feet!Shall she whose body I embracedA night long, queen it in the day?For Honour's sake no crowns, I say!'"
* * * * *
Some years afterwards she told the story of thatbirthday to a dear friend, and when she came to Count Gauthier's accusation, she had to stop speaking for an instant, because her voice was choked with tears.
Her friend asked her what she had answered, and she replied—
"I? What I answered? As I liveI never fancied such a thingAs answer possible to give;"
"I? What I answered? As I liveI never fancied such a thingAs answer possible to give;"
—for just as the body is struck dumb, as it were, when some monstrous engine of torture is directed upon it, so was her soul for one moment.
But only for one moment. For instantly another knight strode out—Count Gismond. She had never seen him face to face before, but now, so beholding him, she knew that she was saved. He walked up to Gauthier and gave him the lie in his throat, then struck him on the mouth with the back of a hand, so that the blood flowed from it—
". . . North, South,East, West, I looked. The lie was deadAnd damned, and truth stood up instead."
". . . North, South,East, West, I looked. The lie was deadAnd damned, and truth stood up instead."
Recalling it now, with her friend Adela, she mused a moment; then said how her gladdest memory of that hour was that never for an instant had she felt any doubt of the event.
"God took that on him—I was bidWatch Gismond for my part: I did.Did I not watch him while he letHis armourer just brace his greaves,Rivet his hauberk, on the fretThe while! His foot . . . my memory leavesNo least stamp out, nor how anonHe pulled his ringing gauntlets on."
"God took that on him—I was bidWatch Gismond for my part: I did.
Did I not watch him while he letHis armourer just brace his greaves,Rivet his hauberk, on the fretThe while! His foot . . . my memory leavesNo least stamp out, nor how anonHe pulled his ringing gauntlets on."
Before the trumpet's peal had died, the false knight lay, "prone as his lie," upon the ground; and Gismond flew at him, and drove his sword into the breast—
"Cleaving till out the truth he clove.Which done, he dragged him to my feetAnd said 'Here die, but end thy breathIn full confession, lest thou fleetFrom my first, to God's second death!Say, hast thou lied?' And, 'I have liedTo God and her,' he said, and died."
"Cleaving till out the truth he clove.
Which done, he dragged him to my feetAnd said 'Here die, but end thy breathIn full confession, lest thou fleetFrom my first, to God's second death!Say, hast thou lied?' And, 'I have liedTo God and her,' he said, and died."
Then Gismond knelt and said to her words which even to this dear friend she could not repeat. She sank on his breast—
"Over my head his arm he flungAgainst the world . . ."
"Over my head his arm he flungAgainst the world . . ."
—and then and there the two walked forth, amid the shouting multitude, never more to return. "And so they were married, and lived happy ever after."
Gaiety, courage, trust: in this nameless Browning heroine we find the characteristic marks. On thatbirthday morning, almost her greatest joy was in the sense of her cousins' love—
"I thought they loved me, did me graceTo please themselves; 'twas all their deed"
"I thought they loved me, did me graceTo please themselves; 'twas all their deed"
—and never a thought of their jealousy had entered her mind. Both were beautiful—
". . . Each a queenBy virtue of her brow and breast;Not needing to be crowned, I mean,As I do. E'en when I was dressed,Had either of them spoke, insteadOf glancing sideways with still head!But no: they let me laugh and singMy birthday-song quite through . . ."
". . . Each a queenBy virtue of her brow and breast;Not needing to be crowned, I mean,As I do. E'en when I was dressed,Had either of them spoke, insteadOf glancing sideways with still head!
But no: they let me laugh and singMy birthday-song quite through . . ."
and so, all trust and gaiety, she had gone down arm-in-arm with them, and taken her state on the "foolish throne," while everybody applauded her. Then had come the moment when Gauthier stalked forth; and from the older mind, now pondering on that infamy, a flash of bitter scorn darts forth—