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EMPEDOCLES 

ON 

ETNA 

A 

DRAMATIC  POEM. 

BY 

MATTHEW 

ARNOLD. 


>$>  PERSONS 
EMPEDOCLES. 
PAUSANIAS,  a  Physician. 
CALLICLES,  a  young  Harp-player. 


n 


HE  Scene  of  the  Poem  is  on 
Mount  Etna;  at  first  in  the  forest 
region,  afterwards  on  the  summit 
of  the  mountain. 


111 


ACTI. 


IY 


SCENE  I. 

MORNING.  A  pass  in  the  fo- 
rest region  of  Etna  J& 

>£»CALLICLES. 

J0-  (Alone,  resting  on  a 
rock  by  the  path.) 

MULES, 

I 

think; 

WILL 
NOT  BE 
HERE 
THIS 
iHOUR; 
THEY  FEEL  THE  COOL 
WET  TURF  UNDER 
THEIR  FEET 
BY  THE  STREAM-SIDE, 
AFTER  the  DUSTY  LANES 
IN  WHICH  THEY  HAVE 
TOIL'D  ALL  NIGHT 
FROM  CATANA, 


And  scarcely  will  they  budge  a  yard.  O  Pan, 
How  gracious  is  the  mountain  at  this  hour! 
A  thousand  times  have  I  been  here  alone, 
Or  with  the  revellers  from  the  mountain-towns, 
But  never  on  so  fair  a  morn ; — the  sun 
Is  shining  on  the  brilliant  mountain-crests, 
And  on  the  highest  pines ;  but  farther  down, 
Here  in  the  valley,  is  in  shade;  the  sward 
Is  dark,  and  on  the  stream  the  mist  still  hangs; 
One  sees  one's  footprints  crush'd  in  the  wet  grass, 
One's  breath  curls  in  the  air;  and  on  these  pines 
That  climb  from  the  stream's  edge,  the  long  grey 

tufts, 
Whichthegoats  love,are  jewell'd  thick  with  dew. 
Here  will  I  stay  till  the  slow  litter  comes, 
I  have  my  harp  too — that  is  well, — Apollo ! 
What  mortal  could  be  sick  or  sorry  here  t 
I  know  not  in  what  mind  Empedocles, 
Whose  mules  I  follow'd,  may  be  coming  up, 
But  if,  as  most  men  say,  he  is  half  mad 
With  exile,  and  with  brooding  on  his  wrongs, 
Pausanias,  his  sage  friend,  who  mounts  with  him, 
Could  scarce  have  lighted  on  a  lovelier  cure. 
The  mules  must  be  oelow,  far  down,  I  hear 
Their  tinkling  bells,  mix'd  with  the  song  of  birds, 
Rise  faintly  to  me— now  it  stops! — Who's  here,'' 
vi 


Pausanias !  and  on  foot  6  alone  t 
PAUSANIAS, 


And  thou,  thenr' 
I  left  thee  supping  with  Peisianax, 
With  thy  head  full  of  wine,  and  thy  hair  crown'd, 
Touching  thy  harp  as  the  whim  came  on  thee, 
And  praised  and  spoil'd  by  master  and  by  guests 
Almost  as  much  as  the  new  dancing-girL 
Why  hast  thou  followed  us  t 


CALLICLES,      ._ 

The  night  was  hot, 
And  the  feast  past  its  prime;  so  we  slipp'd  out, 
Some  of  us,  to  the  portico  to  breathe; — 
Peisianax,  thou  know'st,  drinks  late; — and  then, 
As  I  was  lifting  my  soil'd  garland  off, 
I  saw  the  mules  and  litter  in  the  court, 
And  in  the  litter  sate  Empedocles; 
Thou,  too,  wast  with  him.  Straightway  I  sped 

home; 
I  saddled  my  white  mule,  and  all  night  long 
Through  the  cool  lovely  country  followed  you, 
Pass'd  you  a  little  since  as  morning  dawn'd, 
And  have  this  hour  sate  by  the  torrent  here, 
Till  the  slow  mules  should  climb  in  sight  again, 
vii 


And  now  t' 


PAUSANIAS* 

And  now,  back  to  the  town  with  speed! 
Crouch  in  the  wood  first,  till  the  mules  have  pass'd; 
They  do  but  halt,  they  will  be  here  anon, 
Thou  must  be  viewless  to  Empedocles; 
Save  mine,  he  must  not  meet  a  human  eye* 
One  of  his  moods  is  on  him  that  thou  know'st; 
I  think,  thou  wouldst  not  vex  him* 

^►CALLICLES* 

No — and  yet 
I  would  fain  stay,  and  help  thee  tend  him*  Once 
He  knew  me  well,  and  would  oft  notice  me ; 
And  still,  I  know  not  how,  he  draws  me  to  him, 
And  I  could  watch  him  with  his  proud  sad  face, 
His  flowing  locks  and  gold^-encircled  brow 
And  kingly  gait,  for  ever;  such  a  spell 
In  his  severe  looks,  such  a  majesty 
As  drew  of  old  the  people  after  him, 
In  Agrigentum  and  Olympia, 
When  his  star  reign'd,  before  his  banishment, 
Is  potent  still  on  me  in  his  decline* 
But  oh!  Pausanias,  he  is  changed  of  late ; 
There  is  a  settled  trouble  in  his  air 
viii 


Admits  no  momentary  brightening  now, 
And  when  he  comes  among  his  friends  at  feasts, 
'Tis  as  an  orphan  among  prosperous  boys* 
Thou  know' st  of  old  he  loved  this  harp  of  mine, 
When  first  he  sojourn'd  with  Peisianax ; 
He  is  now  always  moody,  and  I  fear  him ; 
But  I  would  serve  him,  soothe  him,  if  I  could, 
Dared  one  but  try. 

^PAUSANIAS. 

Thou  wast  a  kind  child  ever ! 
He  loves  thee,  but  he  must  not  see  thee  now. 
Thou  hast  indeed  a  rare  touch  on  thy  harp, 
He  loves  that  in  thee,  too! — there  was  a  time 
(But  that  is  pass'd),  he  would  have  paid  thy  strain 
With  music  to  have  drawn  the  stars  from  heaven. 
He  hath  his  harp  and  laurel  with  him  still, 
But  he  has  laid  the  use  of  music  by, 
And  all  which  might  relax  his  settled  gloom. 
Yet  thou  may'st  try  thy  playing,  if  thou  wilt — 
But  thou  must  keep  unseen;  follow  us  on, 
But  at  a  distance!  in  these  solitudes, 
In  this  clear  mountains-air,  a  voice  will  rise, 
Though  from  afar,  distinctly;  it  may  soothe  him. 
Play  when  we  halt,  and  when  the  evening  comes 
And  I  must  leave  him  (for  his  pleasure  is 
ix  b 


To  be  left  musing  these  soft  nights  alone 
In  the  high  unfrequented  mountain-spots), 
Then  watch  him,  for  he  ranges  swift  and  far, 
Sometimes  to  Etna's  top,  and  to  the  cone; 
But  hide  thee  in  the  rocks  a  great  way  down, 
And  try  thy  noblest  strains,  my  Callicles, 
With  the  sweet  night  to  help  thy  harmony! 
Thou  wilt  earn  my  thanks  sure,  and  perhaps  his. 

?4»  CALLICLES. 
More  than  a  day  and  night,  Pausanias, 
Of  this  fair  summer- weather,  on  these  hills, 
Would  I  bestow  to  help  Empedocles. 
That  needs  no  thanks ;  one  is  far  better  here 
Than  in  the  broiling  city  in  these  heats. 
But  tell  me,  how  hast  thou  persuaded  him 
In  this  his  present  fierce,  man-hating  mood, 
To  bring  thee  out  with  him  alone  on  Etna.' 

*&  PAUSANIAS. 

Thou  hast  heard  all  men  speaking  of  Pantheia 
The  woman  who  at  Agrigentum  lay 
Thirty  long  days  in  a  cold  trance  of  death, 
And  whom  Empedocles  call'd  back  to  life. 
Thou  art  too  young  to  note  it,  but  his  power 
S wells  with  the  swelling  evil  of  this  time, 


And  holds  men  mute  to  see  where  it  will  rise. 
He  could  stay  swift  diseases  in  old  days, 
Chain  madmen  by  the  music  of  his  lyre. 
Cleanse  to  sweet  airs  the  breath  of  poisonous 

streams, 
And  in  the  mountain-chinks  inter  the  winds, 
This  he  could  do  of  old;  but  now,  since  all 
Clouds  and  grows  daily  worse  in  Sicily, 
Since  broils  tear  us  in  twain,  since  this  new  swarm 
Of  sophists  has  got  empire  in  our  schools 
Where  he  was  paramount,  since  he  is  banish'd 
And  lives  a  lonely  man  in  triple  gloom — 
He  grasps  the  very  reins  of  life  and  death* 
I  ask'd  him  of  Pantheia  yesterday, 
When  we  were  gather  a  with  Peisianax, 
And  he  made  answer,  I  should  come  at  night 
On  Etna  here,  and  be  alone  with  him, 
And  he  would  tell  me,  as  his  old  tried  friend, 
Who  still  was  faithful,  what  might  profit  me; 
That  is,  the  secret  of  this  miracle. 


CALLICLES. 
Bah!  Thou  a  doctor!  Thou  art  superstitious. 
Simple  Pausanias,  'twas  no  miracle! 
Pantheia,  for  I  know  her  kinsmen  well, 
Was  subject  to  these  trances  from  a  girl, 
xi 


Empedocles  would  say  so,  did  he  deign; 

But  he  still  lets  the  people,  whom  he  scorns, 

Gape  and  cry  wizard  at  him,  if  they  list* 

But  thou,  thou  art  no  company  for  him ! 

Thou  art  as  cross,  as  sour  d  as  himself! 

Thou  hast  some  wrong  from  thine  own  citizens, 

And  then  thy  friend  is  banish'd,  and  on  that, 

Straightway  thou  fallest  to  arraign  the  times, 

As  if  the  sky  was  impious  not  to  falL 

The  sophists  are  no  enemies  of  his; 

I  hear,  Qorgias,  their  chief,  speaks  nobly  of  him, 

As  of  his  gifted  master,  and  once  friend. 

He  is  too  scornful,  too  high*- wrought,  too  bitter. 

'Tis  not  the  times,  'tis  not  the  sophists  vex  him ; 

There  is  some  root  of  suffering  in  himself, 

Some  secret  and  unfollpw'd  vein  of  woe, 

Which  makes  the  time  look  black  and  sad  to  him. 

Pester  him  not  in  this  his  sombre  mood 

With  questionings  about  an  idle  tale, 

But  lead  him  through  the  lovely  mountains-paths, 

And  keep  his  mind  from  preying  on  itself, 

And  talk  to  him  of  things  at  hand  and  common, 

Not  miracles !  thou  art  a  learned  man, 

But  credulous  of  fables  as  a  girl. 


Xll 


>^*PAUSANIAS. 

And  thou,  a  boy  whose  tongue  outruns  his 

knowledge, 
And  on  whose  lightness  blame  is  thrown  away* 
Enough  of  this!  Fsee  the  litter  wind 
Up  by  the  torrent- side,  under  the  pines. 
I  must  rejoin  Empedocles.  Do  thou 
Crouch  in  the  brushwood  till  the  mules  have 

pass'd; 
Then  play  thy  kind  part  well.  Farewell  till  night ! 

SCENE  IL 

J0  NOON.  A  Glen  on  the  highest  skirts  of  the 
woody  region  of  Etna. 

EMPEDOCLES--PAUSANIAS. 


^►PAUSANIAS. 

HE  noon  is  hot.  When  we  have 

cross'd  the  stream, 
We  shall  have  left  the  woody 

tract,  and  come 
Upontheopenshoulderofthehill. 
See  how  the  giant  spires  of  yellow  bloom 
Of  the  sun-loving  gentian,  in  the  heat, 
xiii 


Are  shining  on  those  naked  slopes  like  flame ! 
Let  us  rest  here;  and  now,  Empedocles, 
Pantheia's  history ! 

J0  (A  harp-note  below  is  heard). 

>$»  EMPEDOCLES. 

Hark !  what  sound  was  that 
Rose  from  below  (  If  it  were  possible, 
And  we  were  not  so  far  from  human  haunt, 
I  should  have  said  that  some  one  touch'd  a  harp. 
Hark !  there  again ! 

>^PAUSANIAS. 

'Tis  the  boy  Callicles, 
The  sweetest  harp-player  in  Catana. 
He  is  for  ever  coming  on  these  hills, 
In  summer,  to  all  country-festivals, 
With  a  gay  revelling  band;  he  breaks  from  them 
Sometimes,  and  wanders  far  among  the  glens. 
But  heed  him  not,  he  will  not  mount  to  us; 
I  spoke  with  him  this  morning.  Once  more, 

therefore, 
Instruct  me  of  Pantheia's  story,  Master, 
As  I  have  pray'd  thee. 

>§>  EMPEDOCLES. 

That.''  and  to  what  end.'' 
xiv 


>^*PAUSANIAS* 

It  is  enough  that  all  men  speak  of  it* 

But  I  will  also  say,  that  when  the  Gods 

Visit  us  as  they  do  with  sign  and  plague, 

To  know  those  spells  of  thine  which  stay  their 

hand 
Were  to  live  free  from  terror. 

EMPEDOCLES, 

Spells  f  Mistrust  them! 
Mind  is  the  spell  which  governs  earth  and  heaven. 
Man  has  a  mind  with  which  to  plan  his  safety; 
Know  that,  and  help  thyself! 

PAUSANIAS* 

But  thine  own  words  t 
"  The  wit  and  counsel  of  man  was  never  clear, 
Troubles  confound  the  little  wit  he  has/' 
Mind  is  a  light  which  the  Gods  mock  us  with, 
To  lead  those  false  who  trust  it* 

^0(The  harp  sounds  again)* 

Xf*  EMPEDOCLES* 

Hist!  once  more! 
Listen,  Pausanias ! — Ay,  'tis  Callicles ; 
I  know  these  notes  among  a  thousand*  Hark ! 
xv 


>^CALLICLES. 

J3.  (Sings  unseen,  from  below)* 
The  track  winds  down  to  the  clear  stream , 
To  cross  the  sparkling  shallows;  there 
Xhe  cattle  love  to  gather,  on  their  way 
To  the  high  mountain-pastures,  and  to  stay, 
Till  the  rough  cow-herds  drive  them  past, 
Knee-deep  in  the  cool  ford;  for  'tis  the  last 
Of  all  the  woody,  high,  well-water'd  dells 
On  Etna;  and  the  beam 
Of  noon  is  broken  there  by  chestnut-boughs 
Down  its  steep  verdant  sides ;  the  air 
Is  freshened  by  the  leaping  stream,  which  throws 
Eternal  showers  of  spray  on  the  moss'd  roots 
Of  trees,  and  veins  of  turf,  and  long  dark  shoots 
Of  ivy-plants,  and  fragrant  hanging  bells 
Of  hyacinths,  and  on  late  anemonies, 
That  muffle  its  wet  banks ;  but  glade, 
And  stream,  and  sward,  and  chestnut-trees, 
End  here;  Etna  beyond,  in  the  broad  glare 
Of  the  hot  noon,  "without  a  shade, 
Slope  behind  slope,  up  to  the  peak,  lies  bare; 
The  peak,  round  which  the  white  clouds  play- 
In  such  a  glen,  on  such  a  day, 
On  Pelion,  on  the  grassy  ground, 
xvi 


Chiron,  the  aged  Centaur  lay, 
The  young  Achilles  standing  by* 
The  Centaur  taught  him  to  explore 
The  mountains;  where  the  glens  are  dry 
And  the  tired  Centaurs  come  to  rest, 
And  where  the  soaking  springs  abound 
And  the  straight  ashes  grow  for  spears, 
And  where  the  hill-goats  come  to  feed, 
And  the  sea-eagles  build  their  nest* 
He  show'd  him  Phthia  far  away, 
And  said:  O  boy,  I  taught  this  lore 
To  Peleus,  in  long  distant  years ! 
He  told  him  of  the  Gods,  the  stars, 
The  tides; — and  then  of  mortal  wars, 
And  of  the  life  which  heroes  lead 
Before  they  reach  the  Elysian  place 
And  rest  in  the  immortal  mead; 
And  all  the  wisdom  of  his  race* 

J3.  The  music  below  ceases,  and 
EMPEDOCLES  speaks,  accom- 
panying himself  in  a  solemn  manner 
on  his  harp* 

The  out-spread  world  to  span 

A  cord  the  Gods  first  slung, 

And  then  the  soul  of  man 


xvn 


There,  like  a  mir ror ,  hung, 
And  bade  the  winds  through  space  impel  the 
gusty  toy. 

Hither  and  thither  spins 
The  wind-borne,  mirroring  soul, 
A  thousand  glimpses  wins, 
And  never  sees  a  whole; 
Looks  once,  and  drives  elsewhere,  and  leaves  its 
last  employ. 

The  Gods  laugh  in  their  sleeve 
To  watch  man  doubt  and  fear. 
Who  knows  not  what  to  believe 
Since  he  sees  nothing  clear, 
And  dares  stamp  nothing  false  where  he  finds 
nothing  sure. 

Is  this,  Pausanias,  so.'' 
And  can  our  souls  not  strive, 
But  with  the  winds  must  go, 
And  hurry  where  they  drive  f' 
Is  fate  indeed  so  strong,  man's  strength  indeed  so 
poor.'' 

I  will  not  judge.   That  man, 
xviii 


Howbeit,  I  judge  as  lost, 
Whose  mind  allows  a  plan, 
Which  would  degrade  it  most ; 
And  he  treats  doubt  the  best  who  tries  to  see 
least  ilL 

Be  not,  then,  fear's  blind  slave! 
Thou  art  my  friend;  to  thee, 
All  knowledge  that  I  have, 
All  skill  I  wield,  are  free. 
Ask  not  the  latest  news  of  the  last  miracle. 

Ask  not  what  days  and  nights 
In  trance  Pantheia  lay, 
But  ask  how  thou  such  sights 
May' st  see  without  dismay; 
Ask  what  most  helps  -when  known,  thou  son  of 
Anchitus ! 

What  r1  hate,  and  awe,  and  shame 

Fill  thee  to  see  our  time; 

Thou  feelest  thy  soul's  frame 

Shaken  and  out  of  chime  r' 
What  S  life  and  chance  go  hard  with  thee  too,  as 

with  us ; 
xix 


Thy  citizens,  'tis  said, 
Envy  thee  and  oppress, 
Thy  goodness  no  men  aid, 
All  strive  to  make  it  less ; 
Tyranny,  pride,  and  lust,  fill  Sicily's  abodes; 

Heaven  is  with  earth  at  strife, 
Signs  make  thy  soul  afraid, 
The  dead  return  to  life, 
Rivers  are  dried,  winds  stay'd; 
Scarce  one  can  think  in  calm,  so  threatening  are 
the  Gods; 

And  we  feel,  day  and  night, 
The  burden  of  ourselves— 
Well,  then,  the  wiser  wight  \^ 
In  his  own  bosom  delves, 
And  asks  what  ails  him  so,  and  gets  what  cure  he 
can* 

The  sophist  sneers :  Fool,  take 
Thy  pleasure,  right  or  wrong. 
The  pious  wail :  Forsake 
A  world  these  sophists  throng. 

Be  neither  saint  nor  sophist-led,  but  be  a  man! 

xx 


These  hundred  doctors  try- 
To  preach  thee  to  their  school. 
We  have  the  truth!  they  cry; 
And  yet  their  oracle, 
Trumpet  it  as  they  will,  is  but  the  same  as  thine 

Once  read  thy  own  breast  right, 
And  thou  hast  done  with  fears; 
Man  gets  no  other  light, 
Search  he  a  thousand  years. 
Sink  in  thyself!  there  ask  what  ails  thee,  at  that 
shrine! 

What  makes  thee  struggle  and  rave.'' 
Why  are  men  ill  at  ease.'' — 
'Tis  that  the  lot  they  have 
Fails  their  own  will  to  please; 
For  man  would  make  no  murmuring,  were  his 
will  obeyed. 

And  -why  is  it,  that  still 

Man  with  his  lot  thus  fights  / 

'Tis  that  he  makes  this  will 

The  measure  of  his  rights, 
And  believes  Nature  outraged  if  his  will's  gain- 
said, 
xxi 


Couldst  thou,  Pausanias,  learn 
How  deep  a  fault  is  this; 
Couldst  thou  but  once  discern 
Thou  hast  no  right  to  bliss, 
No  title  from  the  Gods  to  welfare  and  repose; 

Then  thou  wouldst  look  less  mazed 
Whene'er  of  bliss  debarr'd, 
Nor  think  the  Gods  were  crazed 
When  thy  own  lot  went  hard. 
But  we  are  all  the  same — the  fools  of  our  own 
woes! 

For,  from  the  first  faint  morn 
Of  life,  the  thirst  for  bliss 
Deep  in  man's  heart  is  born ; 
And,  sceptic  as  he  is, 
He  fails  not  to  judge  clear  if  this  be  quench'd  or 
no* 

Nor  is  the  thirst  to  blame. 

Man  errs  not  that  he  deems 

His  welfare  his  true  aim, 

He  errs  because  he  dreams 
The  world  does  but  exist  that  welfare  to  bestow. 
xxii 


We  mortals  are  no  kings 
For  each  of  whom  to  sway 
A  new-made  world  up-springs, 
Meant  merely  for  his  play; 
No,  we  are  strangers  here;  the  world  is  from  of 
old. 

In  vain  our  pent  wills  fret, 
And  would  the  world  subdue* 
Limits  we  did  not  set 
Condition  all  we  do ; 
Born  into  life  we  are,  and  life  must  be  our  mould. 

Born  into  life! — man  grows 
Forth  from  his  parents'  stem, 
And  blends  their  bloods,  as  those 
Of  theirs  are  blent  in  them; 
So  each  new  man  strikes  root  into  a  far  foretime. 

Born  into  life! — we  bring 
A  bias  with  us  here, 
And,  when  here,  each  new  thing 
Affects  us  we  come  near; 
To  tunes  we  did  not  call  our  being  must  keep  time. 

Born  into  life! — in  vain, 
xxiii 


Opinions,  those  or  these, 
Unaltered  to  retain 
The  obstinate  mind  decrees; 
Experience,  like  a  sea,  soaks  all~ef facing  in. 

Born  into  life! — who  lists 
May  what  is  false  hold  dear, 
And  for  himself  make  mists 
Through  which  to  see  less  clear; 
The  world  is  what  it  is,  for  all  our  dust  and  din. 

Born  into  life! — 'tis  we, 
And  not  the  world,  are  new; 
Our  cry  for  bliss,  our  plea, 
Others  have  urged  it  too — 
Our  wants  have  all  been  felt,  our  errors  made 
before. 

No  eye  could  be  too  sound 
To  observe  a  world  so  vast, 
No  patience  too  profound 
To  sort  what's  here  amass'd; 
How  man  may  here  best  live  no  care  too  great  to 
explore. 

But  we — as  some  rude  guest 
xxiv 


Would  change,  where'er  he  roam, 
The  manners  there  profess'd 
To  those  he  brings  from  home — 
We  mark  not  the  world's  course,  but  would  have 
it  take  ours. 

The  world's  course  proves  the  terms 
On  which  man  wins  content; 
Reason  the  proof  confirms — 
We  spurn  it,  and  invent 
A  false  course  for  the  world,  and  for  ourselves, 
false  powers* 

Riches  we  wish  to  get, 
Yet  remain  spendthrifts  still; 
We  would  have  health,  and  yet 
Still  use  our  bodies  ill; 
Bafflers  of  our  own  prayers,  from  youth  to  life's 
last  scenes. 

We  would  have  inward  peace, 

Yet  will  not  look  within; 

We  -would  have  misery  cease, 

Yet  will  not  cease  from  sin; 
We  want  all  pleasant  ends,  but  will  use  no  harsh 

means; 
xxv  d 


We  do  not  what  we  ought, 
What  we  ought  not,  we  do, 
And  lean  upon  the  thought 
That  chance  will  bring  us  through; 
But  our  own  acts,  for  good  or  ill,  are  mightier 
powers* 

Yet,  even  when  man  forsakes 
All  sin, — is  just,  is  pure, 
Abandons  all  which  makes 
His  welfare  insecure, 
Other  existences  there  are,  that  clash  with  ours. 

Like  us,  the  lightnings-fires 
Love  to  have  scope  and  play; 
The  stream,  like  us,  desires 
An  unimpeded  way; 
Like  us,  the  Libyan  wind  delights  to  roam  at 
large. 

Streams  will  not  curb  their  pride 

The  just  man  not  to  entomb, 

Nor  lightnings  go  aside 

To  give  his  virtues  room ; 
Nor  is  that  wind  less  rough  which  blows  a  good 

man's  barge, 
xxvi 


Nature,  with  equal  mind, 
Sees  all  her  sons  at  play; 
Sees  man  control  the  wind, 
The  wind  sweep  man  away ; 
Allows  the  proudly-riding  and  the  foundering 
bark. 

And,  lastly,  though  of  ours 
No  weakness  spoil  our  lot, 
Though  the  non-human  powers 
Of  Nature  harm  us  not, 
The  ill  deeds  of  other  men  make  often  our  life  dark. 

What  were  the  wise  man's  plan  & — 
Through  this  sharp,  toil-set  life, 
To  work  as  best  he  can, 
And  win  what's  won  by  strife. — 
But  we  an  easier  way  to  cheat  our  pains  have 
found. 

Scratched  by  a  fall,  with  moans 

As  children  of  weak  age 

Lend  life  to  the  dumb  stones 

Whereon  to  vent  their  rage, 
And  bend  their  little  fists,  and  rate  the  senseless 

ground; 
xxvii 


So,  loath  to  suffer  mute, 
We,  peopling  the  void  air, 
Make  Gods  to  whom  to  impute 
The  ills  we  ought  to  bear; 
With  God  and  Fate  to  rail  at,  suffering  easily. 

Yet  grant — as  sense  long  miss'd 
Things  that  are  now  perceived, 
And  much  may  still  exist 
Which  is  not  yet  believed — 
Grant  that  the  world  were  full  of  Gods  we  cannot 
see; 

All  things  the  world  which  fill 
Of  but  one  stuff  are  spun, 
That  we  who  rail  are  still, 
With  -what  we  rail  at,  one; 
One  with  the  o'erlabour' d  Power  that  through 
the  breadth  and  length 

Of  earth,  and  air,  and  sea, 

In  men,  and  plants,  and  stones, 

Hath  toil  perpetually, 

And  travails,  pants,  and  moans; 

Fain  would  do  all  things  well,  but  sometimes  fails 
in  strength. 

xxviii 


And  patiently  exact 
This  universal  God 
Alike  to  any  act 
Proceeds  at  any  nod, 
And  quietly  declaims  the  cursings  of  himself 

This  is  not  what  man  hates, 
Yet  he  can  curse  but  this* 
Harsh  Gods  and  hostile  Fates 
Are  dreams !  this  only  is — 
Is  everywhere;  sustains  the  wise,  the  foolish  elf. 

Nor  only,  in  the  intent 
To  attach  blame  elsewhere, 
Do  we  at  will  invent 
Stern  Powers  who  make  their  care 
To  embitter  human  life,  malignant  Deities; 

* 
But,  next,  we  would  reverse 
The  scheme  ourselves  have  spun, 
And  what  we  made  to  curse 
We  now  would  lean  upon, 
And  feign  kind  Gods  who  perfect  what  man 
vainly  tries* 

Look,  the  world  tempts  our  eye, 
xxix 


And  we  would  know  it  all ! 
We  map  the  starry  sky, 
We  mine  this  earthen  ball, 
We  measure  the  seasides,  we  number  the  sea- 
sands; 

We  scrutinise  the  dates 
Of  long*-past  human  things, 
The  bounds  of  effaced  states, 
The  lines  of  deceased  kings ; 
We  search  out  dead  men's  words,  and  works  of 
dead  men's  hands ; 

We  shut  our  eyes,  and  muse 
How  our  own  minds  are  made, 
What  springs  of  thought  they  use, 
How  righten'd,howbetray'd — 
And  spend  opur  writ  to  name  what  most  employ 
unnamed* 

But  still,  as  we  proceed 

The  mass  swells  more  and  more 

Of  volumes  yet  to  read, 

Of  secrets  yet  to  explore* 
Our  hair  grows  grey,  our  eyes  are  dimm'd,  our 

heat  is  tamed; 
xxx 


We  rest  our  faculties, 
And  thus  address  the  Gods: 
"True  science  if  there  is, 
It  stays  in  your  abodes ! 
Man's  measures  cannot  mete  the  immeasurable 
AIL 

"You  only  can  take  in 
The  world's  immense  design* 
Our  desperate  search  was  sin, 
Which  henceforth  we  resign, 
Sure  only  that  your  mind  sees  all  things  which 
befaL" 

Fools !  That  in  man's  brief  term 
He  cannot  all  things  view, 
Affords  no  ground  to  affirm 
That  there  are  Gods  who  do ; 
Nor  does  being  weary  prove  that  he  has  where  to 
rest* 

Again* — Our  youthful  blood 

Claims  rapture  as  its  right; 

The  world,  a  rolling  flood 

Of  newness  and  delight, 
Draws  in  the  enamour ' d  gazer  to  its  shining  breast; 
xxxi 


Pleasure,  to  our  hot  grasp, 
Gives  flowers,  after  flowers; 
With  passionate  warmth  we  clasp 
Hand  after  hand  in  ours; 
Now  do  we  soon  perceive  how  fast  our  youth  is 
spent. 

At  once  our  eyes  grow  clear! 
We  see,  in  blank  dismay, 
Year  posting  after  year, 
Sense  after  sense  decay; 
Our  shivering  heart  is  mined  by  secret  discontent; 

Yet  still,  in  spite  of  truth, 
In  spite  of  hopes  entomb'd, 
That  longing  of  our  youth 
Burns  ever  unconsumed, 
Still  hungrier  for  delight  as  delights  grow  more 
rare. 

We  pause;  we  hush  our  heart, 

And  thus  address  the  Gods : 

"The  world  hath  fail'd  to  impart 

The  joy  our  youth  forbodes, 
Fail'd  to  fill  up  the  void  which  in  our  breasts  we 

bear* 
xxzii 


"Changeful  till  now,  we  still 
Look'd  on  to  something  new; 
Let  us  with  changeless  will, 
Henceforth  look  on  to  you, 
To  find  with  you  the  joy  we  in  vain  here  require! " 

Fools !  That  so  often  here 
Happiness  mock'd  our  prayer, 
I  think,  might  make  us  fear 
A  like  event  elsewhere; 
Make  us,  not  fly  to  dreams,  but  moderate  desire. 

And  yet,  for  those  who  know 
Themselves,  who  wisely  take 
Their  way  through  life,  and  bow 
To  what  they  cannot  break, 
Why  should  I  say  that  life  need  yield  but  mod- 
erate  bliss  £ 

Shall  we,  with  temper  spoil'd, 
Health  sapp'd  by  living  ill, 
And  judgment,  all  embroiled 
By  sadness  and  self-will, 
Shall  we  judge  what  for  man  is  not  true  bliss  or  is  { 

Is  it  so  small  a  thing 
xxxiii  e 


To  have  en  joy 'd  the  sun, 
To  have  lived  light  in  the  spring, 
To  have  loved,  to  have  thought,  to  have 
done; 
To  have  advanced  true  friends,  and  beat  down 
baffling  foes — 

That  we  must  feign  a  bliss 
Of  doubtful  future  date, 
And,  while  we  dream  on  this, 
Lose  all  our  present  state, 
And  relegate  to  worlds  yet  distant  our  repose  { 

Not  much,  I  know,  you  prize 
What  pleasures  may  be  had, 
Who  look  on  life  with  eyes 
Estranged,  like  mine,  and  sad; 
And  yet  the  villager-churl  feels  the  truth  more  than 
you, 

Who's  loath  to  leave  this  life 

Which  to  him  little  yields, — 

His  hard-'task'd  sunburnt  wife, 

His  often-labour'd  fields, 
Theboorswithwhomhetalk'd,thecountry*-spots 

he  knew* 
xxxiv 


But  thou,  because  thou  hear 'st 
Men  scoff  at  Heaven  and  Fate, 
Because  the  Gods  thou  fear'st 
Fail  to  make  blest  thy  state, 
Tr emblest,  and  wilt  not  dare  to  trust  the  joys  there 
are! 

I  say:  Fear  not!  Life  still 
Leaves  human  effort  scope. 
But,  since  life  teems  with  ill, 
Nurse  no  extravagant  hope : 
Because  thou  must  not  dream,  thou  need'st  not 
then  despair! 

JZ  (A  long  pause.  At  the  end  of  it  the  notes 
of  a  harp  below  are  again  heard,  and 
CALLICLES  sings:) 
Far,  far  from  here, 
The  Adriatic  breaks  in  a  warm  bay 
Among  the  green  Illyrian  hills ;  and  there 
The  sunshine  in  the  happy  glens  is  fair, 
And  by  the  sea,  and  in  the  brakes. 
The  grass  is  cool,  the  seaside  air 
Buoyant  and  fresh,  the  mountain  flowers 
More  virginal  and  sweet  than  ours. 
And  there,  they  say,  two  bright  and  aged  snakes, 
xxxv 


Who  once  were  Cadmus  and  Harmonia, 

Bask  in  the  glens  or  on  the  warm  sea^-shore, 

In  breathless  quiet,  after  all  their  ills ; 

Nor  do  they  see  their  country,  nor  the  place 

Where  the  Sphinx  lived  among  the  frowning  hills  j 

Nor  the  unhappy  palace  of  their  race, 

Nor  Thebes,  nor  the  Ismenus,  any  more. 

There  those  two  live,  far  in  the  Illyrian  brakes ! 
They  had  stay'd  long  enough  to  see, 
In  Thebes,  the  billow  of  calamity 
Over  their  own  dear  children  roll'd, 
Curse  upon  curse,  pang  upon  pang, 
For  years,  they  sitting  helpless  in  their  home, 
A  grey  old  man  and  woman ;  yet  of  old 
The  Gods  had  to  their  marriage  come, 
And  at  the  banquet  all  the  Muses  sang. 

Therefore  they  did  not  end  their  days 

In  sight  of  blood;  but  were  rapt,  far  away 

To  where  the  west*- wind  plays, 

And  murmurs  of  the  Adriatic  come 

To  those  untrodden  mountains-lawns ;  and  there 

Placed  safely  in  changed  forms,  the  pair 

Wholly  forget  their  first  sad  life,  and  home, 

And  all  that  Theban  woe,  and  stray 

xxxvi 


For  ever  through  the  glens,  placid  and  dumb, 

^EMPEDOCLES. 

That  was  my  harp-player  again! — where  is  he^ 

Down  by  the  stream^ 

PAUSANIAS. 

Yes,  Master,  in  the  wood. 

^EMPEDOCLES. 
He  ever  loved  the  Theban  story  well ! 
But  the  day  wears.  Go  now,  Pausanias, 
For  I  must  be  alone.  Leave  me  one  mule ; 
Take  down  with  thee  the  rest  to  Catana. 
And  for  young  Callicles,  thank  him  from  me; 
Tell  him,  I  never  fail'd  to  love  his  lyre — 
But  he  must  follow  me  no  more  to-night. 

>^  PAUSANIAS. 

Thou  wilt  return  to-morrow  to  the  city  t 


EMPEDOCLES. 
Either  to-morrow  or  some  other  day, 
In  the  sure  revolutions  of  the  world, 
Good  friend,  I  shall  revisit  Catana. 
I  have  seen  many  cities  in  my  time, 
xxxvii 


Till  mine  eyes  ache  with  the  long  spectacle, 
And  I  shall  doubtless  see  them  all  again ; 
Thou  know' st  me  for  a  wanderer  from  of  old. 
Meanwhile,  stay  me  not  now*  Farewell,  Pau~ 
sanias! 

JBl  (He  departs  on  his  way  up  the  mountain). 

>^S>  PAUSANIAS  J0  (alone). 

I  dare  not  urge  him  further — he  must  go; 

But  he  is  strangely  wrought ! — I  will  speed  back 

And  bring  Peisianax  to  him  from  the  city; 

His  counsel  could  once  soothe  him.  But,  Apollo ! 

How  his  brow  lightened  as  the  music  rose ! 

Callicles  must  wait  here,  and  play  to  him; 

I  saw"  him  through  the  chestnuts  far  below, 

Just  since,  down  at  the  stream — Ho !  Callicles! 

J0  (He  descends  calling). 


xxxvin 


ACT  II. 


XXXIX 


ACT  II. 
EVENING.  The  summit  of  Etna. 

>f*EMPEDOCLES. 

"13LONE!— 

On  this  charr'd, 

blackened,  melancholy 

waste, 
Crown'd  by  the  awful 

peak,  Etna's  great 

mouth. 
Round  which  the  sullen 

vapour  rolls — alone! 
Pausanias  is  far  hence,  and  that  is  well, 
For  I  must  henceforth  speak  no  more  with  man ; 
He  hath  his  lesson  too,  and  that  debt's  paid; 
And  the  good,  learned,  friendly,  quiet  man, 
May  bravelier  front  his  life,  and  in  himself 
Find  henceforth  energy  and  heart.  But  I — 
The  weary  man,  the  banish'd  citizen, 
Whose  banishment  is  not  his  greatest  ill, 
Whose  weariness  no  energy  can  reach, 
And  for  whose  hurt  courage  is  not  the  cure — 
What  should  I  do  with  life  and  living  more  { 


xl 


No,  thou  art  come  too  late,  Empedocles! 


And  the  world  hath  the  day,  and  must  break  thee, 
Not  thou  the  world*  With  men  thou  canst  not  live, 
Their  thoughts,  their  ways,  their  wishes,  are  not 

thine; 
And  being  lonely  thou  art  miserable, 
For  something  has  impaired  thy  spirit's  strength, 
And  dried  its  self-sufficing  fount  of  joy. 
Thou  canst  not  live  with  men  nor  with  thyself — 
O  sage!  O  sage! — Take  then  the  one  way  left; 
And  turn  thee  to  the  elements,  thy  friends, 
Thy  well'-tried  friends,  thy  willing  ministers, 
And  say:  Ye  helpers,  hear  Empedocles, 
Who  asks  this  final  service  at  your  hands ! 
Before  the  sophist'-brood  hath  overlaid 
Thelastsparkofman'sconsciousnesswith  words, 
Ere  quite  the  being  of  man,  ere  quite  the  world 
Be  disarray' d  of  their  divinity — 
Before  the  soul  lose  all  her  solemn  joys, 
And  awe  be  dead,  and  hope  impossible, 
And  the  soul's  deep  eternal  night  come  on — 
Receive  me,  hide  me,  quench  me,  take  me  home ! 

^(Hc  advances  to  the  edge  of  the  crater. 
Smoke  and  fire  break  forth  with  a  loud 
noise,  and  C  ALLICLE  S  is  heard  below 
singing:) 


The  lyre's  voice  is  lovely  everywhere ; 
In  the  court  of  Gods,  in  the  city  of  men, 
And  in  the  lonely  rock-strewn  mountain-glen, 
In  the  still  mountain  air* 

Only  to  Typho  it  sounds  hatefully; 
To  Typho  only,  the  rebel  overthrown, 
ThroughwhoseheartEtnadrivesherrootsofstone 
To  imbed  them  in  the  sea* 

Wherefore  dost  thou  groan  so  loud/ 

Wherefore  do  thy  nostrils  flash, 

Through  the  dark  night,  suddenly, 

Typho,  such  red  jets  of  flame  / — 

Is  thy  tortured  heart  still  proud  t 

Is  thy  fire-scathed  arm  still  rash/ 

Still  alert  thy  stone-crush' d  frame  / 

Doth  thy  fierce  soul  still  deplore 

Thine  ancient  rout  by  the  Cilician  hills, 

And  that  curst  treachery  on  the  Mount  of  Gore  / 

Do  thy  bloodshot  eyes  still  weep 

The  fight  which  crownfd  thine  ills, 

Thy  last  mischance  on  this  Sicilian  deep  { 

Hast  thou  sworn,  in  thy  sad  lair, 

Where  erst  the  strong  sea-currents  suck'd  thee 

down, 
xlii 


Never  to  cease  to  writhe,  and  try  to  rest, 
Letting  the  sea-stream  wander  through  thy  hair 't 
That  thy  groans,  like  thunder  prest, 
Begin  to  roll,  and  almost  drown 
The  sweet  notes  whose  lulling  spell 
Gods  and  the  race  of  mortals  love  so  well, 
When  through  thy  caves  thou  hearest  music 
swell/ 

But  an  awful  pleasure  bland 

Spreading  o'er  the  Thunderer's  face* 

When  the  sound  climbs  near  his  seat, 

The  Olympian  council  sees ; 

As  he  lets  his  lax  right  hand, 

Which  the  lightnings  doth  embrace, 

Sink  upon  his  mighty  knees* 

And  the  eagle,  at  the  beck 

Of  the  appeasing,  gracious  harmony, 

Droops  all  his  sheeny,  brown,  deep-feather'd 

neck, 
Nestling  nearer  to  Jove's  feet; 
While  o'er  his  sovran  eye 
The  curtains  of  the  blue  films  slowly  meet 
And  the  white  Olympus-peaks 
Rosily  brighten,  and  the  soothed  Gods  smile 
At  one  another  from  their  golden  chairs, 
xliii 


And  no  one  round  the  charmed  circle  speaks* 

Only  the  loved  Hebe  bears 

The  cup  about,  whose  draughts  beguile 

Pain  and  care,  with  a  dark  store 

Of  fresh-'puird  violets  wreathed  €>  nodding  o'er; 

And  her  flushed  feet  glow  on  the  marble  floor* 

>#*EMPEDOCLES* 

He  fables,  yet  speaks  truth ! 

The  brave,  impetuous  heart  yields  everywhere 

To  the  subtle,  contriving  head; 

Great  qualities  are  trodden  down, 

And  littleness  united 

Is  become  invincible* 

TheserumblingsarenotTypho'sgroans,  I  know! 

These  angry  smoked-bursts 

Are  not  the  passionate  breath 

Of  the  mountain'-crush'd,  tortured,  intractable 

Titan  king, — 
But  over  all  the  world 
What  suffering  is  there  not  seen 
Of  plainness  oppress'd  by  cunning, 
As  the  well'-counsell'd  Zeus  oppress'd 
That  self '-helping  son  of  earth ! 
What  anguish  of  greatness, 
xliv 


Rail'd  and  hunted  from  the  world, 
Because  its  simplicity  rebukes 
This  envious,  miserable  age! 

I  am  weary  of  it. 

— Lie  there,  ye  ensigns 

Of  my  unloved  preeminence 

In  an  age  like  this! 

Among  a  people  of  children, 

Who  throng'd  me  in  their  cities, 

Who  worshipped  me  in  their  houses, 

And  ask'd,  not  wisdom, 

But  drugs  to  charm  with, 

But  spells  to  mutter — 

All  the  fool's'-armory  of  magic! — Lie  there, 

My  golden  circlet, 

My  purple  robe! 


CALLICLES  (from  below). 
As  the  sky '-brightening  south- wind  clears  theday , 
And  makes  the  mass'd  clouds  roll, 
The  music  of  the  lyre  blows  away 
The  clouds  which  wrap  the  souL 

Oh!  that  Fate  had  let  me  see 

That  triumph  of  the  sweet  persuasive  lyre, 

xlv 


That  famous,  final  victory, 

When  jealous  Pan  with  Marsyas  did  conspire; 

When,  from  far  Parnassus'  side, 
Young  Apollo,  all  the  pride 
Of  the  Phrygian  flutes  to  tame, 
To  the  Phrygian  highlands  came; 
Where  the  long  green  reed-'beds  sway 
In  the  rippled  waters  grey 
Of  that  solitary  lake 
Where  Maeander's  springs  are  born; 
Whence  the  ridged  pine-wooded  roots 
Of  Messogis  westward  break, 
Mounting  westward,  high  and  higher* 
There  was  held  the  famous  strife; 
There  the  Phrygian  brought  his  flutes, 
And  Apollo  brought  his  lyre; 
And,  when  now  the  westering  sun 
Touch'd  the  hills,  the  strife  was  done, 
And  the  attentive  Muses  said: 
"Marsyas,  thou  art  vanquished!" 
Then  Apollo's  minister 
Hang'd  upon  a  branching  fir 
Marsyas,  that  unhappy  Faun, 
And  began  to  whet  his  knife* 
But  the  Maenads,  who  were  there, 
xlvi 


Left  their  friend,  and  with  robes  flowing 
In  the  "wind,  and  loose  dark  hair 
O'er  their  polish'd  bosoms  blowing, 
Each  her  ribbon'd  tambourine 
Flinging  on  the  mountain-sod, 
With  a  lovely  frightened  mien 
Came  about  the  youthful  God* 
But  he  turn'd  his  beauteous  face 
Haughtily  another  way, 
From  the  grassy  sun-warm'd  place 
Where  in  proud  repose  he  lay, 
With  one  arm  over  his  head, 
Watching  how  the  whetting  sped* 

But  aloof,  on  the  lake-strand, 
Did  the  young  Olympus  stand, 
Weeping  at  his  master's  end; 
For  the  Faun  had  been  his  friend* 
For  he  taught  him  how  to  sing, 
And  he  taught  him  flute-playing* 
Many  a  morning  had  they  gone 
To  theglimmering  mountain-lakes, 
And  had  torn  up  by  the  roots 
The  tall  crested  water-reeds 
With  long  plumes  and  soft  brown  seeds, 
And  had  carved  them  into  flutes, 
xlvii 


Sitting  on  a  tabled  stone 

Where  the  shoreward  ripple  breaks* 

And  he  taught  him  how  to  please 

The  red'-snooded  Phrygian  girls, 

Whom  the  summer  evening  sees 

Flashing  in  the  dance's  whirls 

Underneath  the  starlit  trees 

In  the  mountains-villages. 

Therefore  now  Olympus  stands, 

At  his  master's  piteous  cries 

Pressing  fast  with  both  his  hands 

His  white  garment  to  his  eyes, 

Not  to  see  Apollo's  scorn; — 

Ah,  poor  Faun,  poor  Faun!  ah,  poor  Faun! 

^*  EMPEDOCLES, 

And  lie  thou  there, 

My  laurel  bough! 

Scornful  Apollo's  ensign,  lie  thou  there ! 

Though  thou  hast  been  my  shade  in  the  world's 

heat, 
Though  I  have  loved  thee,  livedinhonouringthee. 
Yet  lie  thou  there, 
My  laurel  bough ! 

I  am  weary  of  thee, 
xlviii 


I  am  weary  of  the  solitude 

Where  he  who  bears  thee  must  abide — 

Of  the  rocks  of  Parnassus, 

Of  the  rocks  of  Delphi, 

Of  the  moonlit  peaks,  and  the  caves. 

Thou  guardest  them,  Apollo ! 

Over  the  grave  of  the  slain  Pytho, 

Though  young,  intolerably  severe ! 

Thou  keepest  aloof  the  profane, 

But  the  solitude  oppresses  thy  votary! 

The  jars  of  men  reach  him  not  in  thy  valley — 

But  can  life  reach  him  i 

Thou  fencest  him  from  the  multitude — 

Who  will  fence  him  from  himself  r' 

He  hears  nothing  but  the  cry  of  the  torrents, 

And  the  beating  of  his  own  heart. 

The  air  is  thin,  the  veins  swell, 

The  temples  tighten  and  throb  there — 

Air!  air! 

Take  thy  bough,  set  me  free  from  my  solitude; 
I  have  been  enough  alone ! 

Where  shall  thy  votary  fly  then:'  back  to  men  t 
But  they  will  gladly  welcome  him  once  more, 
And  help  him  to  unbend  his  too  tense  thought, 
xlix  g 


And  rid  him  of  the  presence  of  himself, 

And  keep  their  friendly  chatter  at  his  ear, 

And  haunt  him,  till  the  absence  from  himself, 

That  other  torment,  grow  unbearable; 

And  he  will  fly  to  solitude  again, 

And  he  will  find  its  air  too  keen  for  him, 

And  so  change  back;  and  many  thousand  times 

Be  miserably  bandied  to  and  fro 

Like  a  sea- wave,  betwixt  the  world  and  thee, 

Thou  young,  implacable  God !  and  only  death 

Can  cut  his  oscillations  short,  and  so 

Bring  him  to  poise*  There  is  no  other  way* 

And  yet  what  days  were  those,  Parmenides ! 

When  we  were  young,  when  we  could  number 

friends 
In  all  the  Italian  cities  like  ourselves, 
When  with  elated  hearts  we  joined  your  train, 
Ye  Sun-born  Virgins !  on  the  road  of  truth* 
Then  we  could  still  enjoy,  then  neither  thought 
Nor  outward  things  were  closed  and  dead  to  us ; 
But  we  received  the  shock  of  mighty  thoughts 
On  simple  minds  with  a  pure  natural  joy; 
And  if  the  sacred  load  oppressed  our  brain, 
We  had  the  power  to  feel  the  pressure  eased, 
The  brow  unbound,  the  thoughts  flow  free 

again, 


In  the  delightful  commerce  of  the  world* 

We  had  not  lost  our  balance  then,  nor  grown 

Thought's  slaves,  and  dead  to  every  natural  joy. 

The  smallest  thing  could  give  us  pleasure  then — 

The  sports  of  the  country  people, 

A  flute-note  from  the  woods, 

Sunset  over  the  sea; 

Seed-time  and  harvest, 

The  reapers  in  the  corn, 

The  vinedresser  in  his  vineyard, 

The  village-girl  at  her  wheel, . 

Fulness  of  life  and  power  of  feeling,  ye 
Are  for  the  happy,  for  the  souls  at  ease, 
Who  dwell  on  a  firm  basis  of  content ! 
But  he,  who  has  outlived  his  prosperous  days — 
But  he,  whose  youth  fell  on  a  different  world 
From  that  on  which  his  exiled  age  is  thrown — 
Whose  mind  was  fed  on  other  food,  was  train'd 
By  other  rules  than  are  in  vogue  to-day — 
Whose  habit  of  thought  is  fixed,  who  will  not 

change, 
But,  in  a  world  he  loves  not,  must  subsist 
In  ceaseless  opposition,  be  the  guard 
Of  his  own  breast,  fetter'd  to  what  he  guards, 
That  the  world  win  no  mastery  over  him — 
li 


Who  has  no  friend,  no  fellow  left,  not  one; 
Who  has  no  minute's  breathing  space  allow'd 

To  nurse  his  dwindling  faculty  of  joy 

Joy  and  the  outward  world  must  die  to  him, 
As  they  are  dead  to  me. 

JSH  (Alongpause,duringwhichEMPEDO- 
CLES  remains  motionless,  plunged  in 
thought*  The  night  deepens.  He 
moves  forward  and  gazes  round  him, 
and  proceeds:) 

And  you,  ye  stars, 

Who  slowly  begin  to  marshal, 

As  of  old,  in  the  fields  of  heaven, 

Your  distant,  melancholy  lines ! 

Have  you,  too,  survived  yourselves  S 

Are  you,  too,  what  I  fear  to  become  / 

You,  too,  once  lived; 

You  too  moved  joyfully 

Among  august  companions, 

In  an  older  world,  peopled  by  Gods, 

In  a  mightier  order, 

The  radiant,  rejoicing,  intelligent  Sons  of 
Heaven. 

But  now,  ye  kindle 

Your  lonely,  cold-shining  lights, 

lii 


Unwilling  lingerers 
In  the  heavenly  wilderness, 
For  a  younger,  ignoble  world ; 
And  renew,  by  necessity, 
Night  after  night  your  courses, 
In  echoing,  unnear'd  silence, 
Above  a  race  you  know  not — 
Uncaring  and  undelighted, 
Without  friend  and  without  home ; 
Weary  like  us,  though  not 
Weary  with  our  weariness. 

No,  no,  ye  stars !  there  is  no  death  with  you, 
No  languor,  no  decay !  languor  and  death, 
They  are  with  me,  not  you!  ye  are  alive — 
Ye,  and  the  pure  dark  ether  where  ye  ride 
Brilliant  above  me !  And  thou,  fiery  world, 
That  sapp'st  the  vitals  of  this  terrible  mount 
Upon  whose  charr'd  and  quaking  crust  I  stand — 
Thou,  too,  brimmest  with  life ! — the  sea  of  cloud, 
That  heaves  its  white  and  billowy  vapours  up 
To  moat  this  isle  of  ashes  from  the  world, 
Lives ;  and  that  other  fainter  sea,  far  down, 
O'er  whose  lit  floor  a  road  of  moonbeams  leads 
To  Etna's  Liparean  sister '-fires 
And  the  long  dusky  line  of  Italy — 
liii 


That  mild  and  luminous  floor  of  waters  lives, 
With  held-in  joy  swelling  its  heart;  I  only, 
Whose  spring  of  hope  is  dried,  whose  spirit  has 

fail'd, 
I,  who  have  not,  like  these,  in  solitude 
Maintained  courage  and  force,  and  in  myself 
Nursed  an  immortal  vigour — I  alone 
Am  dead  to  life  and  joy,  therefore  I  read 
In  all  things  my  own  deadness. 

J0.  (A  long  silence*  He  continues :) 
Oh,  that  I  could  glow  like  this  mountain ! 
Oh,  that  my  heart  bounded  with  the  swell  of  the 

sea! 
Oh,  that  my  soul  were  full  of  light  as  the  stars ! 
Oh,  that  it  brooded  over  the  world  like  the  air ! 

But  no,  this  heart  will  glow  no  more;  thou  art 
A  living  man  no  more,  Empedocles ! 
Nothing  but  a  devouring  flame  of  thought — 
But  a  naked,  eternally  restless  mind ! 

J0.  (After  a  pause : ) 
To  the  elements  it  came  from 
Everything  will  return — 
Our  bodies  to  earth, 
liv 


Our  blood  to  water, 
Heat  to  fire, 
Breath  to  air. 

They  were  well  born,  they  will  be  well  en- 
tombed— 
But  mind  r  / Vv,. 

And  we  might  gladly  share  the  fruitful  stir 
Down  in  our  mother  earth's  miraculous  womb  ^ 
Well  would  it  be 

With  what  roll'd  of  us  in  the  stormy  main ; 
We  mighthavejoy,  blent  with  theall-bathingair, 
Or  with  the  nimble,  radiant  life  of  fire*    , 

But  mind,  but  thought — 
If  these  have  been  the  master  part  of  us — 
Where  will  they  find  their  parent  element^ 
What  will  receive  them,  who  will  call  them 

home  r 
But  we  shall  still  be  in  them,  and  they  in  us, 
And  we  shall  be  the  strangers  of  the  world, 
And  they  will  be  our  lords,  as  they  are  now; 
And  keep  us  prisoners  of  our  consciousness, 
And  never  let  us  clasp  and  feel  the  All 
But  through  their  forms,  and  modes,  and  stifling 

veils, 
lv 


And  we  shall  be  unsatisfied  as  now ; 

And  we  shall  feel  the  agony  of  thirst, 

The  ineffable  longing  for  the  life  of  life 

Baffled  for  ever;  and  still  thought  and  mind 

Will  hurry  us  with  them  on  their  homeless  march 

Over  the  unallied  unopening  earth, 

Over  the  unrecognising  sea;  while  air 

Will  blow  us  fiercely  back  to  sea  and  earth, 

And  fire  repel  us  from  its  living  waves* 

And  then  we  shall  unwillingly  return 

Back  to  this  meadow  of  calamity, 

This  uncongenial  place,  this  human  life; 

And  in  our  individual  human  state 

Go  through  the  sad  probation  all  again, 

To  see  if  we  will  poise  our  life  at  last, 

To  see  if  we  will  now  at  last  be  true 

To  our  own  only  true,  deep-buried  selves, 

Being  one  with  which  we  are  one  with  thewhok 

world; 
Or  whether  we  will  once  more  fall  away 
Into  some  bondage  of  the  flesh  or  mind, 
Some  slough  of  sense,  or  some  fantastic  maze 
Forged  by  the  imperious  lonely  thinkings-power 
And  each  succeeding  age  in  which  we  are  born 
Will  have  more  peril  for  us  than  the  last; 
Will  goad  our  senses  with  a  sharper  spur, 
lvi 


Will  fret  our  minds  to  an  intenser  play, 
Will  make  ourselves  harder  to  be  discerned* 
And  we  shall  struggle  awhile,  gasp  and  rebel — 
And  we  shall  fly  for  refuge  to  past  times, 
Their  soul  of  unworn  youth,  their  breath  of 

greatness, 
And  the  reality  will  pluck  us  back, 
Knead  us  in  its  hot  hand,  and  change  our  nature 
And  we  shall  feel  our  powers  of  effort  flag, 
And  rally  them  for  one  last  fight — and  fail ; 
And  we  shall  sink  in  the  impossible  strife,. 
And  be  astray  for  ever* 

Slave  of  sense 
I  have  in  no  wise  been;  but  slave  of  thought t'  ♦  • . 
And  who  can  say:  I  have  been  always  free, 
Lived  ever  in  the  light  of  my  own  soul  / — 
I  cannot;  I  have  lived  in  wrath  and  gloom, 
Fierce,  disputatious,  ever  at  war  with  man, 
Far  from  my  own  soul,  far  from  warmth  and  light 
But  I  have  not  grown  easy  in  these  bonds — 
But  I  have  not  denied  what  bonds  these  were* 
Yea,  I  take  myself  to  witness, 
That  I  have  loved  no  darkness, 
Sophisticated  no  truth, 
Nursed  no  delusion, 
lvii  h 


Allow'd  no  fear ! 

And  therefore,  O  ye  elements!  I  know — 
Ye  know  it  too — it  hath  been  granted  me 
Not  to  die  wholly,  not  to  be  all  enslaved- 
I  feel  it  in  this  hour.  The  numbing  cloud 
Mounts  off  my  soul;  I  feel  it,  I  breathe  free* 

Is  it  but  for  a  moment  f 
— Ah,  boil  up,  ye  vapours! 
Leap  and  roar,  thou  sea  of  fire! 
My  soul  glows  to  meet  you* 
Ere  it  flag,  ere  the  mists 
Of  despondency  and  gloom 
Rush  over  it  again, 
Receive  me,  save  me! 

*|2(He  plunges  into  the  crater*) 


lviii 


?4ffr  CALLICLES  (from  below)- 

HROUGH    the   black, 

rushing  smoke-bursts, 
I  Thick  breaks  the  red 

flame ; 
All  Etna  heaves  fiercely 
|  Her  forest  ^-clothed  frame. 

Not  here,  O  Apollo ! 
f  Are  haunts  meet  for  thee, 
But,  where  Helicon  breaks  down 
In  cliff  to  the  sea, 

Where  the  moon-silver'd  inlets 
Send  far  their  light  voice 
Up  the  still  vale  of  Thisbe, 
O  speed,  and  rejoice! 

On  the  sward  at  the  cliff-top 
Lie  strewn  the  white  flocks, 
On  the  cliff-side  the  pigeons 
Roost  deep  in  the  rocks. 

In  the  moonlight  the  shepherds, 
Soft  lull'd  by  the  rills, 
Lie  wrapt  in  their  blankets 
Asleep  on  the  hills. 
Ixix 


lx 


— What  forms  are  these  coming 
So  white  through  the  gloom  if 
What  garments  out*- glistening 
The  goldUflower'd  broom  ^ 

What  sweet  ^breathing  presence 
Out'-perfumes  the  thyme  / 
What  voices  enrapture 
The  night's  balmy  primed — 

'Tis  Apollo  comes  leading 
His  choir,  the  Nine. 
— The  leader  is  fairest, 
But  all  are  divine* 

They  are  lost  in  the  hollows ! 
They  stream  up  again ! 
What  seeks  on  this  mountain 
The  glorified  train  / — 

They  bathe  on  this  mountain, 
In  the  spring  by  their  road; 
Then  on  to  Olympus, 
Their  endless  abode, 

— Whose  praise  do  they  mention  e 


Of  what  is  it  told/ — 
What  will  be  for  ever; 
What  was  from  of  old* 

First  hymn  they  the  Father 
Of  all  things ;  and  then, 
The  rest  of  immortals, 
The  action  of  men. 

The  day  in  his  hotness, 
The  strife  with  the  palm; 
The  night  in  her  silence, 
The  stars  in  their  calm. 


lxi 


HERE  ENDS  EMPEDOCLES  ON 
ETNA^  BY  MATTHEW  ARNOLD. 
THE  ENGRAVED  DECORATIONS 
ARE  BY  CHARLES  RICKETTS  UN- 
DER WHOSE  SUPERVISION  THE 
BOOK  HAS  BEEN  PRINTED  AT 

THE  BALLANTYNE  PRESS. 


SOLD  by  Messrs.  Hacon  €>  Rickctts  at  the 
Sign  of  the  Dial,  LI  I  Warwick  Street,  near 
Regent  Street,  W. 


LONDON 
MDCCCXCVL 


r. 


f.-ISro*