Of these 50,000 florIns, free of attal11der, For 1400 cavalry and four hundred foot To come Into the terrene of the commune
or elsewhere m Tuscany .
or elsewhere m Tuscany .
Cantos-of-Ezra-Pound
.
Elpenor, how art thou come to thIS dark coast~
. . Cam'st thou afoot, outstnppmg seamen'> . .
And he 10 heavy speech
. . III fate and abundant wme I slept 10 Clrce's 109Ie
. . Gomg down the long ladder unguarded,
. . I fell agamst the buttress,
. . Shattered the nape-nerve, the soul sought Avel nus
. c But thou, 0 Kmg, I bId remember me, unwept, unbuned, . . Heap up mIne arms, be tomb by sea-bord, and mscnbt. . d cc A man of no fortune, and with a name to come
cc And set my oar up, that I swung mId fellows"
And Anttdea came, whom I beat off, and then Tlreslas Theban, Holdmg Ius golden wand, knew me, and spoke first
. . A second tlIDe'> why'> man of III star,
t< Facmg the sunless dead and thlS Joyless reglon~
t< Stand from the fosse, leave me my bloody bever . . For soothsay "
And I stepped back,
And he strong wlth the blood, saId then . . Odysseus
4
? ? ? Shalt return through splteful Neptune, over dark seas, ? ? Lose all compamons" And then Antlclea came
LIe qUiet DIVUS I mean, that IS Andreas DIVUS,
In officma Wecheh, 1538, out of Homer
And he sailed, by Sltens and thence outward and away And unto Cltce
V enerandam,
In the Cretan's phrase, With the golden crown, AphrodIte,
Cyprl mummenta sortita est, mIrthful, otlchalchl, With golden GIrdles and breast bands, thou wIth dark eyelIds
Beanng the golden bough of ArgIclda So that
? HANG It all, Robert Browmng,
there can be but the one . . Sordello " But Sordello, and my Sordello~
Lo Sordels SI fo dl Mantovana
So-shu churned In the sea
Seal sports m the spray-whIted circles of chff-wash, Sleek head, daughter of 11r,
eyes of Picasso
Under black fur-hood, hthe daughter of Ocean, And the wave runs In the beach-groove
ct Eleanor, ~XEPaliS and ehE7l"TohtS' "
And poor old Homer bhnd, blInd, as a bat,
Ear, ear for the sea-surge, murmur of old men's vOlces
. . Let her go back to the shlPs,
Back among GreClan faces, lest eVlI come on our own, EVil and further evu, and a curse cursed on our children, Moves, yes she moves lIke a goddess
And has the face of a god
and the vOice of Schoeney's daughters, And doom goes wlth her lD walkmg,
Let her go back to the ships,
back among Grecian vOIces"
And by the beach-run, Tyro,
TWisted arms of the sea-god,
Llthe smews of water, gnppmg he~, cross-hold, And the blue-gray glass of the wave tents them, Glare azure of water, cold-welter, close cover QUiet sun-tawny sand-stretch,
The gulls broad out thelr WIngs,
mppmg between the splay feathers,
II
6
? Smpe come for thelI' bath,
bend out theIr wmg-Jomts,
Spread wet wmgs to the sun-film, And by SClOS,
to left of the Naxos passage, Naviform rock overgrown,
alg-e clIng to Its edge,
There IS a wme-red glow m the shallows,
a tm flash m the sun-dazzle
The shIp landed m SClOS,
men wantmg spring-water,
And by the rock-pool a young boy loggy WIth vme-must, . . To N axos') Yes, we'll take you to Naxos,
Cum' along lad" tc Not that way' " co Aye, that way 15 Naxos"
And I saId . . It's a straIght shIp" And an ex-convIct out of Italy
knocked me mto the fore-stays,
(He was wanted for manslaughter 111 Tuscany)
And the whole twenty agamst me, Mad for a lIttle slave money
And they took her out of SCIOS And off her course
And the boy came to, agalll, WIth the racket, And looked out over the bows,
and to eastward, and to the Naxos passage God-sleIght then, god-sleIght
ShIP stock fast m sea-swIrl, Ivy upon the oars, Kmg Pentheus,
grapes wlth no seed but sea-foam, Ivy 111 scupper-hole
Aye, I, Acretes, stood there,
and the god stood by me,
Water cuttmg under the keel,
7
? Sea-break from stern forrards,
wake runnIng off from the bow,
And where was gunwale, there now was vine-trunk, And tenthru where cordage had been,
grape-leaves on the rowlocks, Heavy Vine on the oarshafts,
And. out of nothmg, a breathmg, hot breath on my anh. les,
Beasts hke shadows m glass,
a furred tall upon nothmgness
Lynx-purr, and heathery smell of beasts, where tar smell had been,
Smff and pad-foot of beasts, eye-ghtter out of black aIr
The sky overshot, dry, WIth no tempest, Sruff and pad-foot of beasts,
fur brushmg my knee-skm, Rustle of aIry sheaths.
dry forms m the (l! ther And the shIp lIke a keel In shIp-yard,
slung lIke an ox m smIth's slIng, Ribs stuck fast m the ways,
grape-cluster over pm-rack,
VOId air takmg pelt LIfeless alr become smewed,
felIne leISure of panthers,
Leopards snrffing the grape shoots by scupper-hole, Crouched panthers by fore-hatch,
And the sea blue-deep about us,
green-ruddy 111 shadows.
And Ly~us ? ? From now, Acretes, my altars, Fearing no bondage,
fearIng no cat of the wood, Safe WIth my lynxes,
feed111g grapes to my leopards, 8
? Ohbanum IS my Incense,
the VInes grow m my homage"
The back-swell now smooth In the rudder-chams, Black snout of a porpOIse
where Lycabs had been, FISh-scales on the oarsmen
And I worshIp
I have seen what I have seen
When they brought the boy I saId to He has a god m h1l11,
though I do not know whIch god" And they kIcked me mto the fore-stays
I have seen what I have seen
Medon's face lIke the face of a dory, Arms shrunk Into fins And you, Pentheus, Had as well hsten to Tlreslas, and to Cadmus,
or your luck w1l1 go out of you FIsh-scales over grom muscles,
lynx-purr amId sea And of a later year,
pale In the wIne-red algre, If you wIll lean over the rock,
the coral face under wave-t1Oge, Rose-paleness under water-shIft,
Ileuthyena, faIr Dafne of sea-bords, The SW1l11mer's arms turned to branches, Who wIll say 10 what year,
fleeIng what band of tntons, The smooth brows, seen, and half seen,
now Ivory stIllness
And So-shu churned In the sea, So-shu also, USIng the long moon for a churn-stIck
LIthe turmng of water, smews of PoseIdon,
9
? Black azure and hyalIne,
glass wave over Tyro,
Close cover, unsttllness,
btlght welter of wave-cords,
Then qUlet water,
qUlet m the buff sands,
Sea-fowl stletchmg wmg-Jomts,
splaslung 10 rock-hollows and sand-hollows
In the wave-runs by the half-dune,
Glass-ghnt of wave 1D the tide-rips agalnst sunlIght,
pallor of Hesperus, Grey peak of the wave,
wave, colour of grape's pulp,
Ohve grey m the near,
far, smoke grey of the rock. -shde,
Salmon-pInk WlOgS of the fish-hawk cast grey shadows 1D water,
The tower hke a one-eyed gle'tt goose cranes up out of the ohvc-gro~e,
And we have heard the fauns eluding Proteus
m the smell of hay under the ohve-trees.
And the frogs slngmg against the fauns In. the half-hght
And
10
? III
ISAT on the Dogana's steps
For the gondolas cost too much, that year,
And there were not" those girls ", there was one face, And the Buccentoro twenty Y'lrds off, howhng . . Strettl ",
And the lIt cross-beams, that year, In the MOrOSlnl,
A n d peacocks 10 KOle's house, 0 1 there may have been
Gods float In the 'lzure alt,
Bnght gods and Tuscan, hack before dew was shed Light and the first lIght, before ever dew was fallen Pamsks, and from the oak, dryas,
And from the apple, mrehd,
Through all the wood, and the leaves are full of VOices, A-whisper, and the clouds howe over the lake,
And there are gods upon them,
And 10 the water, the almond-white SWimmers,
The SlIvery water glazes the upturned mpple,
As POgglO has remarked Green vems In the turquoIse,
Or, the gray steps lead up under the cedars
My CId rode up to Burgos,
Up to the studded gate between two towers,
Beat wIth hiS lance butt, and the child came out,
Una mna de nueve anos,
To the httle gallery over the gate, between the towers, Readmg the Writ, voce t10nula
That no man speak to, feed, help Ruy Dlaz,
On pam to have hIS heart out, set on a pike spIke
And both hIS eyes torn out, and all hIS goods sequestered, ? ? And here, Myo Cld, are the seals,
The big seal and the wntIng "
And he caIre down from Blvar, Myo Cld,
II
? WIth no hawks left there on theIr perches, And no clothes there m the presses,
And left hIs trunk wIth Raquel and Vidas, That bIg box of sand, wIth the pawn-brokers, To get pay for hIs menIe,
Breakmg hIs way to ValencIa
Ignez da Castro murdered, and a wall
Here strIpped, here made to stand
Drear waste, the pIgment flakes from the stone, Or plaster flakes, Mantegna pamted the wall Sxlk tatters, "Nee Spe Nee Metu 'J
I2
? IV
PALACE In smoky lIght,
Troy but a heap of smoulderIng boundary stones, ANAXIFORMINGES' Aurunculela'
Hear me Cadmus of Golden Prows'
The slIver mIrrors catch the bnght stones and flare, Dawn, to our waklOg, dnfts I n the green cool hght, Dew-haze blurs, In the grass, pale ankles movmg Beat, beat, whIrr, thud, In the soft turf
under the apple trees,
Choros nympharum, goat-foot, WIth the pale foot alternate, Crescent of blue-shot waters, green-gold In the shallows,
A black cock crows In the sea-foam,
And by the curved, carved foot of the couch, claw-foot and hon head, an old man seated
Speakmg In the low drone Ityn'
Et ter fleblhter, Ityn, Ityn'
And she went toward the WIndow and cast her down,
Itynl
cc All the whue, the whIle, swallows cry10g
cc It 15 Cabestan's heart 10 the dIsh" . . It IS Cabestan's heart In the dlsh)
cc No other taste shall change thIS . .
And she went toward the Window, the shm whIte stone bar
Makmg a double arch,
FIrm even fingers held to the :firm pale stone, Swung for a moment,
and the wmd out of Rhodez Caught In the full of her sleeve
the swallows cryIng 13
? 'TIS 'TIS YtIS' Acta:on
and a valley,
The valley IS thIck wIth leaves, wIth leaves, the trees, The sunlIght glItters, glItters a-top,
Like a :fish-scale roof,
LIke the church roof In POlctlers If It were gold
Beneath It, beneath It
Not a ray, not a shvver, not a spare dISC of sunlIght Flakmg the black, soft water,
Bathing the body of nymphs, of nymphs, and DIana, Nymphs, whIte-gathered about her, and the aIr, aIr, Shakmg, aIr alIght WIth the goddess,
fanmng theIr haIr m the dark, LIftmg, lIftIng and waffing
Ivory dIppmg In stiver, Shadow'd, o'ershadow'd
Ivory dIppIng m stiver,
Not a splotch, not a lost shatter of sunlIght Then Acta:on VIdal,
VIdal It IS old VIdal speaking,
stumblIng along In the wood,
Not a patch, not a lost shImmer of sunlIght,
the pale haIr of the goddess
The dogs leap on Acta:on,
" HIther, hIther, Acta:on,"
Spotted stag of the wood, Gold, gold, a sheaf of hair,
ThIck hke a wheat swath, Blaze, blaze m the sun,
The dogs leap on Acta:on 14
? Stumblmg, stumblmg along m the wood, Muttenng, muttenng OVid
. . Pergusa pool pool Gargaphla, . . Pool pool of Salmacls "
The empty armour shakes as the cygnet moves
Thus the lIght rams, thus pours, e [0 solezlls plovll The hqUld and rushmg crystal
beneath the knees of the gods Ply over ply, thm ghtter of water,
Brook film beanng white petals The pme at Takasago
grows with the pme of Ise'
The water whIrls up the bnght pale sand m the sprIng's mouth . . Behold the Tree of the VIsages' "
Forked branch-tips, flammg as If wIth lotus
Ply over ply The shallow eddymg flUid,
beneath the knees of the gods
Torches melt m the glare
set flame of the corner cook-stall,
Blue agate casmg the sky (as at Gourdon that tme) the sputter of resm,
Saffron sandal so petals the narrow foot Hymenreus 10' Hymen, 10 Hymena:e' AuruncuIeIa'
One scarlet flower IS cast on the blanch-whIte stone
And So-Gyoku, saymg
? ? Tlus WInd, srre, IS the kmg's wmd,
Tlus WInd 18 wmd of the palace, Shakmg ImperIal water-Jets . .
And HSIang, openmg hiS collar . . ThIS WInd roars m the earth's bag,
It lays the water WIth rushes" IS
? No WInd lS the kIng's WInd
Let every cow keep her calf
~cTlus WInd IS held 10 gauze curtains " No w1nd 1S the kIng's
The camel drIvers Sit In the turn of the stairs, Look down on Ecbatan of plotted streets,
. . Danae' Danae'
What WInd IS the kIng's'> . .
Smoke hangs on the stream,
The peach-trees shed bnght leaves In the water, Sound drifts In the eventng haze,
The bark scrapes at the ford, Gut rafters above black water,
Three steps In an open field, Gray stone-posts leadIng
Pere Henri Jacques would speak Wlth the Sennm, on Rokku, Mount Rokku between the rock and the cedars,
Polhonac,
As Gyges on Thraclan platter set the feast,
Cabestan, Tereus,
It IS Cabestan's heart 10 the dish,
Vldal, or Ecbatan, upon the gIlded tower In Ecbatan Lay the god's bride, lay ever, waiting the golden raIn By Garonne . . Saave' . .
The Garonne 15 truck hke palOt,
Process10n, - cc Et sa'ave, sa'ave, sa'ave Regma! " - Moves lIke a worm, 10 the crowd
Adlge, thIn :film of unages,
Across the Adlge, by Stefano, Madonna 10 hortulo, As Cavalcantt had seen her
The Centaur's heel plants 10 the earth loam And we Sit here
there 10 the arena
z6
? v
GEAT bulk, huge mass, thesauru'),
Ecbatan, the clock tIcks and fades out
The bnde awaltmg the god's touch, Ecbatan, CIty of patterned streets, agam the VISIon Down In the VIa: strada:, toga'd the crowd, and arm'd, RushIng on populous bUSIness,
and from parapet looked down
and North was Egypt,
the celestIal Nue, blue deep,
cuttxng low barren land, Old men and camels
workmg the watet-wheels, Measureless seas and stars,
Iambhchus' hght,
the souls ascendmg,
Sparks hke a partndge covey,
LIke the . . CIOCCO " , brand struck I n the game
tt Et omniformIS" AIr, fire, the pale soft lIght Topaz I manage, and three sorts of blue,
but on the barb of tIme
The fire'> always, and the VlSlon always,
Ear dull, perhaps, WIth the VISIon, fhttxng
And fadmg at WIll Weavmg WIth pomts of gold, Gold-yellow, saffron The roman shoe, Aurunculeta's
And come shufflIng feet, and crIes" Da nuces'
c. Nuces' " praISe, and Hymena:us . . bnngs the gul to her man . . Or . . here Sextus had seen her . .
TItter of sound about me, always
and from . . Hesperus "
Hush of the older song . . Fades hght from sea-crest, . . And m LydIa walks With palr'd women
. . Peerless among the paIrs, that once m SardIS
17
? " In satIetIes
Fades the lIght flom the sea, 'lnd man) th Ilgs
. . Are set abroad and brought to nund of thee,"
And the vmestocks he untended, llew leaves come to the shoots, North wmd mps 011 the bough, and seas m heal t
Toss up chIll crests,
And the vme stocks he untended
And many thlOgs are set abroad and blOught to mlOd Of thee, Atthls, unfrUltful
The talks ran long m the mght
And from Mauleon, fresh wIth a new earned grade, In maze of approachmg ram-steps, POlcebot-
The aIr was full of women,
And Savamc Mauleon
Gave hIm hIs land and kmght's fee, and he wed the woman Came lust of travel on hml, of 1omerya,
And out of England a kmght wIth slow-hftmg eyelIds
Let fassa lurar a del, put gl1mour upon her
And left her an eIght months gone
. . Came lust of woman upon hIm," POlcebot, now on North road from Spam
(Sea-change, a grey m the water)
And 10 small house by town's edge
Found a woman, changed and famihar face, Hard nIght, and pattmg at mormng
And Plelte won the 51Ogmg, Pleite de Maensac,
Song or land on the throw, and was drcftz hom
And had De TierCl's WIfe and wIth the war they made
Troy m Auvergnat
Wlule Menelaus ptled up the church at port
He kept Tyndarlda Dauph10 stood wIth de Maensac
John BorgIa IS bathed at last (Clock-tIck pIerces the VISIon) TIber, dark WIth the cloak, wet cat gleammg 10 patches
18
? Chck of the hooves, through garbage,
ClutchIng the greasy stone cc And the cloak floated . . Slander lS up betImes
But Varchl of Florence,
Steeped In a dIfferent year, and pondermg Brutus, Then c. l;t")'a p. aX' aVOLS 8EVTEpa. VI
. . Dog-eye" " (to Alessandro)
. . Whether for love of Florence," Varchl leaves It, Saymg . . I saw the man, came up WIth hIm at Venice,
. . I, one wantmg the facts,
. . And no mean labour Or for a pnvy SpIte';) . .
Our Benedetto leaves It,
But ? ? I saw the man Se PZtz';)
rr 0 empta';l For LorenzacclO had thought of stroke m the open But uncertaIn (for the Duke went never unguarded)
. . And would have thrown him from wall
. . Yet feared thiS mIght not end hIm," or lest Alessandro Know not by whom death came, 0 se credesse
. . I f when the foot shpped, when death came upon hun,
. . Lest COUSIn Du1. . e Alessandro thmk he had fallen alone,
. . No fnend to aId hIm m fallmg"
Cazna attende
The lake of Ice there below me
And all of thIS, runs Varchl, dre~med out beforehand In Perugla, caught In the star-maze by Del Carmme, Cast on a natal paper, set WIth an exegesIS, told,
All told to Alessandro, told thnce over,
Who held hIS death for a doom
In abulela But Don Lorenzmo
Whether for love of Florence but
. . 0 se morose, credesse caduto da se "
l;l-ya. , (fl,,),a
SchIaVOnI, caught on the wood-barge,
GIves out the afterbIrth, GIOVannI BorgIa,
TraIls out no more at nights, where Barabello
19
? Prods the Pope's elephant, and gets no crown, where MozarelJo Takes the Calabnan roadway, and for endmg
Is smothered beneath a mule,
a poet's endmg,
Down a stale well-hole, oh a poet's endmg "Sanazarro
. . Alone out of all the court was faIthful to hIm"
For the gOSSIp of Naples' trouble drIfts to North,
Fracastor (lIghtnmg was mtdw1fe) Cotta, and Ser D'Alv1ano, AI poco glorno ed al gran cerchlo d'ombra,
Talk the talks out With NaVlghero,
Burner of yearly Martlals,
(The slavelet IS mourned m vam)
And the next comer says to Were nme wounds,
. . Four men, whIte horse Held on the saddle before hIm " Hooves clmk and shck on the cobbles
SchIaVOnI cloak . . Smk the damn thmg' . .
Splash wakes that chap on the wood-barge
TIber catchtng the nap, the moonlIt velvet,
A wet cat gleamIng 1n patches
cc Se pIa," VarchI, cc 0 empla, ma rtsoluto
cc E ternbtle dehberazlone "
Both saymgs run m the wmd.
Ma se mortsse'
20
? VI
WHAT you have done, Odysseus,
We know what you have done
And that Gu:tllaume sold out hIs ground rents
(Seventh of POltlers, NInth of AqultaIn) to Tant las fotel com aUZIrets
c. Cen e quatre vIngt et velt vetz "
The stone IS ahve In my hand, the crops wxll be thIck In my death-year
T:tll LOUIS IS wed wIth Eleanor
And had (He, Guxllaume) a son that had to wIfe The Duchess of Normandla whose daughter
Was wIfe to KIng Henry e maire del reI Jove
Went over sea t:tll day's end (he, LOUIS, Wlth Eleanor) ComIng at last to Acre
to Ongla, oncle " salth Arnaut
Her uncle commanded In Acre,
That had known hel In gIrlhood (Theseus, son of Aegeus)
And he, LOUIS, was not at ease In that town, And was not at ease by Jordan
As she rode out to the palm-grove
Her scarf In Saladln's C1mler
DIvorced her 10 that year, he LOUIS, dlvorclng thus Aqultalne
And that year Plantagenet marrxed her (that had dodged past 17 swtors)
Et quand 10 reIS LOIS 10 entendlt mout er fasche
N auphal, VeXls, Harry Joven
In pledge for all hIS hfe and Me of all hIS heIrs Shall have GISOrs, and Vexls, Neufchastel
But If no ISSue GISOrs shall revert
? . . Need not wed Ahx m the name
Tuntty holy mdlvlslble RIchard our brother Need not wed Allx once hIs father's ward and But whomso he choose for Ahx, etc
Eleanor, domna Jauzionda, mother of RIchard,
Turnmg on thtrty years (wd have been yeals before tht:. ) By nver-marsh, by gallened church-porch,
Malemorte, Correze, to whom
? ? My Lady of Ventadour . . Is shut by Ebhs 10
cc And wtll not hawk nor hunt
nor get her free 10 the aIr
cc Nor watch fish nse to baIt
c. Nor the glare-Wlllg'd flIes alIght In the creek's edge ? ? Save 10 my absence, Madame
? Que 1a lauzeta mover' . . Send word I ask you to Ebhs
you have seen that maker
. . And finder of songs so far afield as thIS " That he may free her,
who sheds such lIght In the aIr"
E 10 Sordels Sl fo dt Mantovana,
Son of a poor kmght, Sler Escort,
And he delIghted hImself 10 chan~ons
And mIxed WIth the men of the court
And went to the court of RIchard Samt Bontface And was there taken WIth love for hIS WIfe
Cumzza, da Romano That freed her slaves on a Wednesday
Masnatas et servos, witness PICUS de Farmatls
and Don Ehnus and Don Llpus
sons of Farmato de' Farmatl
? CC free of person, free of wIll
cc free to buy, WItness, sell, testate" A manto subtraxlt lpsam
dictum Sordellum concubulsse
(C Wmter and Summer I smg of her glace, As the rose IS faIr, so faIr 15 hel face,
Both Summer and Wmter I SlOg of her, The S'10W makyth me to remember her"
And Calrels was of Sarlat
Theseus from Troezene And they wd have given hIm pOlson
But for the shape of hIS sword-hIlt
? VII
ELEANOR (she spoued In a Bntish clImate) VEAa. v6pos and 'EAE'II"TOALS, and
poor old Homer blmd,
blmd as a bat, Ear, ear for the sea-surge,
rattle of old men's VOiceS And then the phantom Rome,
marble narrow for seats ct 51 pulVlS nullus" saId OVId,
c. Erlt, nullum tamen excute"
Then :file and candles, e II mestiers ecoutes,
Scene for the battle only, but stUl scene,
Pennons and standards y cavals armatz
Not mere succesSIon of strokes, SIghtless narratIon,
And Dante's . . CIOCCO," brand struck m the game Un peu molSl, plancher plus bas que Ie JardIn
. . Contre Ie lambns, fautewl de paIlle,
. . Un Vleux plano, et sous Ie barometre "
The old men's VOICes, beneath the columns of false marble, The modISh and darkIsh walls,
PlScreeter gdrung, and the panelled wood
Suggested, for the leasehold IS
Touched With an lffipreCISlon about three squares, The house too thtck, the palntIngs
a shade too oued
And the great domed head, eon gIl oeem onestt e tard, Moves before me, phantom With weIghted motIon, Grave meessu, dnnkIng the tone of thIngs,
And the old vOice hfts Itself
weavlng an endless sentence
? We also made ghostly VISIts, and the staIr
That knew us, found us agam on the turn of It, Knockmg at empty rooms, seekmg for buned beauty, And the sun-tanned, gracIOus and well-formed fingers LIft no latch of bent bronze, no EmpIre handle
TWIsts for the knocker's fall, no VOIce to answer
A strange conCIerge, m place of the gouty-footed SceptIc agamst all thIS one seeks the hvmg,
Stubborn agamst the fact The wted flowers
Brushed out a seven year SInce, of no effect
Damn the partItIon' Paper, dark brown and stretched, FlImsy and damned part1t1on
lone, dead the long year My hntel, and LlU Ch'e's lmtel
Tlffie blacked out wIth the rubber The Elysee carnes a name on
And the bus behmd me gIves me a date for peg,
Low ce1hng and the Erard and the suver,
These are m tt tlffie" Four cha1rs, the bow-front dresser, The pamer of the desk, cloth top sunk m
. . Beer-bottle on the statue's pedIment'
. . That, Fntz, 1S the era, to-day agamst the past,
tt Contemporary" And the passIOn endures
Agamst the1r actIon, aromas Rooms, agamst chromcles Smaragdos, chrysohthos, De Gama wore stnped pants In Afnca And tt Mountams of the sea gave bIrth to troops",
Le Vieux commode en acaJou beer-bottles of vanous strata,
But tS she dead as Tyro"> In seven years) EMvavs, ~Xaplipos, E'XE7r70hLS
The sea runs m the beach-groove, shakmg the floated pebbles, Eleanor'
The scarlet curtam throws a less scarlet shadow,
? LamplIght 1t BuovIlla, e quel remlr, And all that day
Nlcea moved before me
And the cold grey aIr troubled hel not
For all her naked beauty, bIt not the tropIc skm, And the long slender feet lIt on the curb's marge And her movmg heIght went before me,
We alone havmg bemg And all that day, another day
Thm husks I had known as men, Dry casques of dep1rted locusts
speakmg a shell of speech Propped between chaIrs and table
Words lIke the locust-shells, moved by no mner hemg, A dryness callIng for death,
Another day, between walls of a sham Myceman,
. . Toc" sphmxes, sham-MemphiS columns,
And beneath the Jazz a corte:ll. , a stIffness or stIllness,
Shell of the older house
Brown-yellow wood, and the no colour plaster, Dry professonal talk
now stllhng the III beat mUSlC, House expulsed by thts house
Square even shoulders and the satm skm, Gone cheeks of the dancmg woman,
Scil the old dead dry talk, gassed o u t - It IS ten years gone, makes stIff about her a glass, A petrefactlon of aIr
The old room of the tawdry class asserts Itself, The young men, never'
Only the husk of talk
o VOl che slete m PICCloletta barca,
DIdo choked up With sobs, for her 5lcheus 2. 6
? LIes heavy m my arms, dead we1ght Drownmg, WIth tears, new Eros,
And the hfe goes on, moomng upon bare h1lls, Flame leaps from the hand, the ram 1S hstless, Yet drmks the thlrst from our hps,
sohd as echo,
PaSSlon to breed a form 10 shImmer of ram-blur,
But Eros drowned, drowned, heavy-half dead WIth tears
For dead Slcheus
LIfe to make mock of motIon For the husks, before me, move,
The words rattle shells gIven out by shells The hve man, out of lands and prISons,
shakes the dry pods,
Probes for old WIlls and frIendshIps, and the bIg ! ocust-casques Bend to the tawdry table,
LIft up theIr spoons to mouths, put fOlks m cutlets,
And make sound lIke the sound of VOIces
Lorenzacclo
Bemg more hve than they, more full of flames and VOIces Ma se mor1sse'
Credesse caduto da se, ma se morISse And the tallmddference moves,
a more hvmg shell,
Dnft m the alr of fate, dry phantom, but mtact o Alessandro, cruef and thrIce warned, watcher,
Eternal watcher of thmgs, Of thmgs, of men, of paSSIOns
Eyes floatmg m dry, dark alr,
E bIondo, Wlth glass-grey ms, Wlth an even SIde-fall of halt The stIff, stIll features
? VIII
THESE fragments you have shelved (shored) "Slut'" "BItch'" Truth and Calhop;: Slang10g each other sous les laurlers
That Alessandro was negroId Slgtsmund
Frater tamquam Et compater carzsstme tergo
And Malatesta
EqUlvalent to
hannt de dzcts entza
Glohanm of the MedICI,
Florence
Letter receIved, and 10 the matter of our Messlte GlanozlO,
One from htm also, sent on In form and WIth all due dIspatch, HaVing added your wlShes and memoranda
As to arrang10g peace between you and the K10g of Ragona,
So far as I am concerned, It wd
GIve me the greatest possible pleasure,
At any rate nothlOg wd gIve me more pleasure
or be more acceptable to me,
And I shd hke to be party to It, as was promIsed me,
etther as participant or adherent As for my serVIce money,
Perhaps you and your father wd draw It And send It on to me as qUIckly as pOSSIble And tell the Maestro dz pe1'ltore
That there can be no question of
HIS paIntIng the walls for the moment,
As the mortar IS not yet dry
And It wd be merely work chucked away
(buttato VIa)
? But I want It to be qUIte clear, that untIl the chapels are ready I wlll arrange for hIm to palnt somethlng else
So that both he and I shall
Get as much enjoyment as possIble from It,
And In order that he may enter my serVIce
And also because you WrIte me that he needs cash,
I want to arrange With hIm to gIve hIm so much per year And to assure hIm that he Will get the sum agreed on You may say that I WIll depOSIt securIty
For hIm wherever he hkes
And let me have a clear answer,
For I mean to give hIm good treatment
So that he may come to hve the rest
Of hts hfe m my lands-
Unless you put hIm off It -
And for thIS I mean to make due prOVISIon,
So that he can work as he lIkes,
Or waste hIS tIme as he lIkes
(affattgandose per suo ptacere 0 no non glt manchera la proVlxtone mat)
neveI lackmg prOVlSlon SIGISMUNDUS P ANDOLPHUS DE MALA TESTIS
In campo Ilim Doment VenetorU1n aze 7 aprzlts 1449 contra Cremonam
and because the aforesaId most IllustrIOUS Duke of Mllan
Is content and Wills that the aforesaId Lord 51gISmundo Go mto the serVIce of the most magnIficent commune of the Florentlnes
For alhance defenSIve of the two states,
Therefore between the aforesaid IllustrIOUS Sigismund And the respectable man Agnolo della Stufa,
ambassador, SlndlC and procurator ApPolnted by the ten of the bally, etc, the half
29
?
Of these 50,000 florIns, free of attal11der, For 1400 cavalry and four hundred foot To come Into the terrene of the commune
or elsewhere m Tuscany . & please the ten of the Bally,
And to be hImself thele With them In the sen-ICC of the commune
WIth hIS horsemen and hIS footmen
(gente dt cavallo c da pte) etc
Aug 5 1452, regtster of the Tw of tbe Barly
From the forked rocks of Penna and BIlh, on Cal pegna With the road leading under the cMf,
m the WInd-shelter Into Tuscany, And the north road, toward the Marecchla
the mud-stretch full of cobbles
L yra
. . Ye Spltlts who of olde were m thIS lard Each under Love, 1. nd shaken,
Go WIth your lutes, awaken
The summer WithIn her mmd,
Who hath not Helen for peer
Yseut nor Batsabe " With the InterruptIon
Magnifico, compater et cartSS11ne
(JohannI dl Coslmo) VenIce has taken me on agaIn
At 7,000 a month, fiorznt dt Camera For 2,000 horse and four hundred footmen, And It rams here by the gallon,
We have had to dig a new dItch
In three or four days
I shall try to set up the bombards
Under the plumes, With the flakes and small wads of colour ShowerIng from the balCOnIes
30
? WIth the sheets spread from Wlndows,
WIth leaves and small branches pmned on them,
Arras hung from the raumgs, out of the dus~, WIth pheasant taus upnght on theIr forelocks, The small whIte horses, the
Twelve gIrls ndmg m order, green satin In panmer'd habIts, Under the baldachmo, sIlver'd WIth heavy stItches,
Blanca VIscontI, WIth Sforza,
The peasant's son and the duchess,
To RImmI, and to the wars southward,
Boats drawn on the sand, red-orange salls m the creek's mouth, For two days' pleasure, mosdy rr 1a pesca," ? Shmg,
D I CUI m the whIch he, Francesco, godeva molto
To the war southward
In whIch he, at that tune, receIved an excellent hldmg And the Greek emperor was In FloLence
(Ferrara haVIng the pest) And WIth hIm Gemlsthus Plethon
Talkmg of the war about the temple at Delphos,
And of POSEIDON, concret Allgemezne,
And tellmg of how Plato went to Dlonyslus of Syracuse Because he had observed that tyrants
Were most efficIent In all that they set theIr hands to,
But he was unable to persuade DlOnyslUs
To any amelIoratIon
And m the gate at Ancona, between the foregate
And the mam-gates
SIgIsmundo, ally, come through an enemy force,
To patch up some sort of treaty, passes one gate
And they shut It before they open the next gate, and he says . . Now you have me,
Caught lIke a hen In a coop"
And the captam of the watch says . . Yes MeSSIre SIglsmundo, But we want thIs town for ourselves"
31
? WIth the church agamst hIm, WIth the MedICI bank for Itself,
WIth wattle Sforza agaInst hIm
Sforza Francesco, wattle-nose,
Who mamed hIm (SIgismundo) hIs (Francesco's)
Daughter In September,
Who stole Pesaro In October (as Brogho says tr bc~tlalmel1te") Who stood wIth the VenetIans In November,
WIth the Mtlanese m December,
Sold Mtlan In November, stole Muan In December
Or sometbUlg of that sort,
Commanded the Muanese In the sprmg,
the VenetIans at mIdsummer,
The Mtlanese In the autumn,
And was Naples' ally In October,
He, SIglsmundo, te11tplum tedtficavtt In Romagna, teemmg WIth cattle thleves,
wlth the game lost Ul mld-channel, And never qUIte lost tul' 50,
and never qUIte lost ttll the end, m Romagna, So that Galeaz sold Pesaro . . to get pay for hIS cattle"
And POlctiers, you know, Guulaume POlctleIs, had brought the song up out of Spam
With the SIngers and vieis But here they wanted a settIng. By Mareccrua, where the water comes down over the cobbles And Mason had come to VerucchlO,
and the sword, Paolo tl Bello's,
caught m the arras And, m Este's house, Parlsma
Paid
For thIS tnbe pald always, and the house Called also Atreldes',
And the wmd IS stu! for a lIttle
31
? And the dusk rolled
to one sIde a httle
And he was twelve at the ome, Sigismundo, And no dues had been paId for three years, And hIS elder brother gone PIOUS,
And that year they fought m the streets, And that year he got out to Cesena
And brought back the leVIes,
And that year he crossed by nxght over Fogha, and
33
? IX
ONE year floods rose.
One year they fought 10 the sno'" 5,
One year hau fell. breakIng the trec~ md walls Down here In the marsh they trapped hIm
In one year,
And he stood m the water up to hIs neck
to keep the hounds off him, And he floundered about In the marsh and came m after three days.
That was Astorre ManfredI of Faenza who worked the ambush
and set the dogs off to find hIm, In the marsh, down here under Mantua, And he fought m Fano, In a street fight,
and that was nearly the end of him,
And the Emperor came down and knxghted us, And they had a wooden castle set up for fiesta,
And one year BastnlO went out Into the courtyard
Where the lIsts were, and the pahsades
had been set for the tourneys, And he talked down the antI-Hellene,
And there was an heIr male to the selgnor,
And Madame Gmevra dIed
And he, Slgu;mundo, was Capitan for the VenetIans And he had sold off small castles
and butit the great Rocca to hIS plan, And he fought lIke ten devus at Monteluro
and got notll1ng but the VlctOry And old Sforza bItched us at Pesaro,
(SIC) March the x6th tC that Mesme Alessandro Sforza
IS become lord of Pesaro
? through the wangle of the Illus 5gr Mr Fedtlcho d'Orblllo Who worked the wangle with Galeaz
through the WigglIng of Messer Francesco, Who waggled It so that Galeaz should sell Pesaro
to Alex and Fossembrone to Feddy, and he hadn't the nght to sell
And thlS he did besttalmente, that IS Sforza dId besttalmente as he had promised hun, SI81smundo, per capttoJz
to see that he, Malatesta, should have Pesaro" And this cut us off from our south half
and fimshed our game, thus, In the begmnmg, And he, 5181smundo, spoke hiS mmd to Francesco
and we drove them out of the Marches
And the Kmg 0' Ragona, Alphonse Ie roy d'Aragon, was the next nau 10 our coffin,
And all you can say IS, anyway,
that he 51glSmundo called a town councIl
And Valturlo said cc as well for a sheep as a lamb"
and thIS change-over (htec tradItIo)
As old bladder saId rr rem eorum saluavtt "
Saved the Florent1Oc state, and that, maybe, was somethIng And co Florence our natural ally" as they said 10 the meeting
for whatever that was worth afterward And he began buudmg the TEMPIO,
and Pohxena, hlS second WIfe, dIed And the Venetians sent down an ambassador And said co speak humanely,
But tell rumIt's no tune for ralSIng rus pay" And the Venetians sent down an ambassador
Wlth three pages of secret InStructIons
To the effect Did he thmk the campaign was a Joy-tlde) And old Wattle-wattle slIpped 1Oto MIlan
But he couldn't stand 51dg being so high With the Venetians And he talked It over with Feddy, and Feddy saId C< Pesaro . .
35
? And old Foscarl wrote It Caro mlO
. . If we splIt wIth Francesco you can have It . . And we'll help you m every wa) possIble"
But Feddy offered It sooner And Slglsmundo got up a few arches,
And stole that marble 10 Classe, . . stoic" that IS,
Casus est talts
Foscart doge, to the prefect of Ravenn1
. . Why, what, whIch, thunder, damn1tlOn'~~' "
Cams est talzs
FUlPPO, commendatary of the abbazI1
Of Sant Apolhnalre, Classe, Cardmal of Bologfl1
That he dId one mght (quadam 11octC) sell to the
Illmo DO, DO Slgismund Malatesta
Lord of Anmm1Oum, marble, porphyry, serpentme,
Whose men, Slglsmundo's, came wIth more than an hundred two wheeled ox carts and deported, for the beautlfymg
of the tempto where was Santa MarIa m TrIVlO
Where the same are now on the walls Four hundred
ducats to be paId back to the abbazt4 by the saId swmdlIng CardInal or hIs heIrS
grnnh' rrnnh, pthg
wheels, plaustra, oxen under nIght-shIeld,
And on the 13th of August AloysIus Purtheo,
The next abbot, to Slglsmundo, receipt for 200 ducats Corn-salve for the damage done 10 that scurry
And there was the row about that German-Burgundian female And It Was hiS meSSlamc year, Pohorcetes,
but he was be10g a bIt too POLUMETIS
And the Venetlans wouldn't gtve hIm SIX months vacatlon
And he went down to the old bnck heap of Pesaro and waIted for Feddy
36
? And Feddy finally saId" I am commg' to help Alessandro"
And he saId cc ThIs tune MIster Feddy has done It . . He saId . . Brogho, I'm the goat ThIS tIme
Mr Feddy has done It (m'l'ha calata) " And he'd lost hIS Job WIth the VenetIans,
And the stone dIdn't come In from Istria
And we sent men to the suk war,
And Wattle never paxd up on the naIl
Though we SIgned on WIth MIlan and Florence, And he set up the bombards In muck down by Vada
where nobody else could have set 'em and he took the wood out of the bombs and made 'em of two scoops of metal
And the Jobs gettIng smaller and smaller, Unci he sIgned on WIth SIena,
And that tIme they grabbed hxs post-bag And what was It, anyhow>
Pitighano, a man WIth a ten acre lot, Two lumps of tufa,
and they"d taken hlS pasture land from hun, And SIdg had got back theIr horses,
and he had two bIg lumps of tufa
WIth Slx hundred pIgs In the basements And the poor deVIls were dymg of cold
And thIS IS what they found m the post-bag
Ex Anmmo d,e xxn Decembrts
rr Magntfice tiC potens domme, mt smgulartsstme
cc I adVIse yr LordshIp how
cc I have been WIth master AlWIdge who
. . has shown me the deSIgn of the nave that goes jn the mIddle, cc of the church and the deSIgn for the roof and "
cc JHesus,
rr Magntfico exso SIgnor MlO
. . Sence to-day I am recommanded that I have to tel you my
37
? . . father's op. mum that he has shode to Mr Gcnare about the . . valts of the cherch etc
c. GlOvane of Master alwIse P S I t~lUk It advlsabl that . . I shud go to rome to talk to mIster Alb(. rt so as I can no . . what he thInks about It nte
. . Sagramoro "
rf Illustre szgnor 11110, MessIre Battista "
. . FIrst Ten slabs best red, se"en by I 5, by onc thIrd, " EIght dItto, good red, 15 by three by one,
. . SIX of same, 15 by one by one
. . EIght columns 15 by three and one third
etc WIth carrIage, danars I 5I . . MONSEIGNEUR
. . Madame ! sotta has had me WrIte today about Sr Galeazzo's . . daughter The man who saId young pullets make thIn . . soup, knew what he was talkIng about We went to see the . . gIrl the other day for all the good that dId, and she dented . . the whole matter and kept her end up wIthout lOSIng her . . temper I thInk Madame Ixotta very nearly eAhausted the . . matter M, pare che aHa decto hogm choma All the . . children are well Where you are everyone IS pleased and "happy because of your takIng the chate'lu here we are the . . reverse as you mIght say drIftIng wIthout a rudder Madame
. . LucreZla has probably, or should have, WrItten to you, I
. . suppose you have the letter by now " remembered to you
. . sagramoro to put up the derncks . . beams at . .
Everyone wants to be 2. I Dec D de M "
There IS a supply of
. . MAGNIFICENT LORD WITH DUB REVERENCE
. . MessIre Malatesta IS well and asks for you every day He
"IS so much pleased With hIS pony, It wd take me a month . . to wrIte you all the fun he gets out of that pony I want to . . agaIn remmd you to wrIte to GeorgIo Rambottom or to hls
38
? . . boss to fix up that wall to the httle garden that madame Isotta . . uses, for It IS all flat on the ground now as I have already told . . hIm a lot of t1Il1es, for all the good that does, so I am Wrttmg . . to your lordshIp m the matter I have done all th'lt I can, for . . all the good that does as noboddy hear can do anythIng . . WIthout you
. . your faithful
LUNARDA DA PALLA 2. 0 Dec 1454"
cc gone over It WIth all the foremen and engmeers And " about the suver for the small medal "
tt Magmfiee ae potens
. . because the walls of "
tt Malatesta de Malatestls ad Magntficum Domtnum Patremque tt suum
. . Exl! O Dno et Dno sm Dno S1g1smundum Pandolfi FIllum . . Malatestls CapItan General
c? Magm1l. cent and Exalted Lord and Fathel In especIal my "lord With due recommend'ltlon your letter has been pre- . . sented to me by Gentlhno da Gradara and With It the bay . . pony (lonZlnO balectmo) the whIch you have sent me, and to whIch appears m my eyes a fine caparlson'd charger, upon " which I mtend to learn all there IS to know about ndmg, In . . consIderatlon of yr paternal affectIon for whIch I than! . . to your excellency thus bnefly and pray you contmue to hold C< me m thlS esteem notIfYIng you by the bearer of thIS that . . we are all m good health, as I hope and deslre }our Exct to LordshIp IS also WIth contInued remembrance I remaIn
<t Your son and servant
MALATESTA DE MALATESTIS
Gwen In Rtmtm, thIS the 2. 2nd day 0/ December anno domInI 1454 "
(m the sIxth year of h,s age)
39
? ? ? ILLUSTRIOUS PRINCE
tc Unfittmg as It IS that I should offer counsels to Hanntbal "
. . Magnzfier! ac potelH d0111111? , dom1l1(, 1111 HlI! ! ,ularmlme, "httmtlz recomendatzone PI emma etc ThIS to advise your
. . Mgt LdshP how the second load of Veronese marble has ? ? finally got here, after bemg held up at Ferrara with no end . . of fuss and botheratlOn, the whole of It havmg been there t. unloaded
. . I learned how It happened, and It h1S co~t a few flonns to . . get back the saId load whIch had been seIzed for the skIpper's . . debt and defalcatlOn, he havmg fled when the lIghter was . . seIzed But that yr Mgt Ldshp may not lose the moneys . . paId out on hIs account I have had the lIghter brought here . . and am holdIng It, agamst hIs arrIval If not we stIll have t'the lIghter
. . As soon as the Xmas fetes are over I WIll have the stone ? ? floor laId m the sacresty, for whIch the stone 15 already cut . . The wall of the buudmg IS fimshed and I shall now get the . . roof on
. . We have not begun puttmg new stone Into the martyr to chapel, first because the heavy frosts wd certamly spOIl . . the Job, secondly because the ahofants aren't yet here and to one can't get the measurements for the cormce to the columns . . that are to rest on the ahofants
. . They are domg the stairs to your room In the c1stle I tt have had Messire Antonto degh Attl'S court paved and the . . stone benches put m It
t. Ottavian 15 illummatIng the bull I mean the bull for ? ? the chapel All the stone-cutters are waItIng for sprmg tt weathertostartworkagaIn
? ? The tomb IS all done except part of the lId, and as soon as . . MesSlre AgostInO gets back from Cesena I wIll see that he . . :finIshes It, ever recommendIng me to yr Mgt Ldshp
. . belIeve me yr faIthful PETRUS GENARIIS"
? That's what they found 10 the post-bag And some more of It to the effect that
he . . hved and ruled . .
.
. . Cam'st thou afoot, outstnppmg seamen'> . .
And he 10 heavy speech
. . III fate and abundant wme I slept 10 Clrce's 109Ie
. . Gomg down the long ladder unguarded,
. . I fell agamst the buttress,
. . Shattered the nape-nerve, the soul sought Avel nus
. c But thou, 0 Kmg, I bId remember me, unwept, unbuned, . . Heap up mIne arms, be tomb by sea-bord, and mscnbt. . d cc A man of no fortune, and with a name to come
cc And set my oar up, that I swung mId fellows"
And Anttdea came, whom I beat off, and then Tlreslas Theban, Holdmg Ius golden wand, knew me, and spoke first
. . A second tlIDe'> why'> man of III star,
t< Facmg the sunless dead and thlS Joyless reglon~
t< Stand from the fosse, leave me my bloody bever . . For soothsay "
And I stepped back,
And he strong wlth the blood, saId then . . Odysseus
4
? ? ? Shalt return through splteful Neptune, over dark seas, ? ? Lose all compamons" And then Antlclea came
LIe qUiet DIVUS I mean, that IS Andreas DIVUS,
In officma Wecheh, 1538, out of Homer
And he sailed, by Sltens and thence outward and away And unto Cltce
V enerandam,
In the Cretan's phrase, With the golden crown, AphrodIte,
Cyprl mummenta sortita est, mIrthful, otlchalchl, With golden GIrdles and breast bands, thou wIth dark eyelIds
Beanng the golden bough of ArgIclda So that
? HANG It all, Robert Browmng,
there can be but the one . . Sordello " But Sordello, and my Sordello~
Lo Sordels SI fo dl Mantovana
So-shu churned In the sea
Seal sports m the spray-whIted circles of chff-wash, Sleek head, daughter of 11r,
eyes of Picasso
Under black fur-hood, hthe daughter of Ocean, And the wave runs In the beach-groove
ct Eleanor, ~XEPaliS and ehE7l"TohtS' "
And poor old Homer bhnd, blInd, as a bat,
Ear, ear for the sea-surge, murmur of old men's vOlces
. . Let her go back to the shlPs,
Back among GreClan faces, lest eVlI come on our own, EVil and further evu, and a curse cursed on our children, Moves, yes she moves lIke a goddess
And has the face of a god
and the vOice of Schoeney's daughters, And doom goes wlth her lD walkmg,
Let her go back to the ships,
back among Grecian vOIces"
And by the beach-run, Tyro,
TWisted arms of the sea-god,
Llthe smews of water, gnppmg he~, cross-hold, And the blue-gray glass of the wave tents them, Glare azure of water, cold-welter, close cover QUiet sun-tawny sand-stretch,
The gulls broad out thelr WIngs,
mppmg between the splay feathers,
II
6
? Smpe come for thelI' bath,
bend out theIr wmg-Jomts,
Spread wet wmgs to the sun-film, And by SClOS,
to left of the Naxos passage, Naviform rock overgrown,
alg-e clIng to Its edge,
There IS a wme-red glow m the shallows,
a tm flash m the sun-dazzle
The shIp landed m SClOS,
men wantmg spring-water,
And by the rock-pool a young boy loggy WIth vme-must, . . To N axos') Yes, we'll take you to Naxos,
Cum' along lad" tc Not that way' " co Aye, that way 15 Naxos"
And I saId . . It's a straIght shIp" And an ex-convIct out of Italy
knocked me mto the fore-stays,
(He was wanted for manslaughter 111 Tuscany)
And the whole twenty agamst me, Mad for a lIttle slave money
And they took her out of SCIOS And off her course
And the boy came to, agalll, WIth the racket, And looked out over the bows,
and to eastward, and to the Naxos passage God-sleIght then, god-sleIght
ShIP stock fast m sea-swIrl, Ivy upon the oars, Kmg Pentheus,
grapes wlth no seed but sea-foam, Ivy 111 scupper-hole
Aye, I, Acretes, stood there,
and the god stood by me,
Water cuttmg under the keel,
7
? Sea-break from stern forrards,
wake runnIng off from the bow,
And where was gunwale, there now was vine-trunk, And tenthru where cordage had been,
grape-leaves on the rowlocks, Heavy Vine on the oarshafts,
And. out of nothmg, a breathmg, hot breath on my anh. les,
Beasts hke shadows m glass,
a furred tall upon nothmgness
Lynx-purr, and heathery smell of beasts, where tar smell had been,
Smff and pad-foot of beasts, eye-ghtter out of black aIr
The sky overshot, dry, WIth no tempest, Sruff and pad-foot of beasts,
fur brushmg my knee-skm, Rustle of aIry sheaths.
dry forms m the (l! ther And the shIp lIke a keel In shIp-yard,
slung lIke an ox m smIth's slIng, Ribs stuck fast m the ways,
grape-cluster over pm-rack,
VOId air takmg pelt LIfeless alr become smewed,
felIne leISure of panthers,
Leopards snrffing the grape shoots by scupper-hole, Crouched panthers by fore-hatch,
And the sea blue-deep about us,
green-ruddy 111 shadows.
And Ly~us ? ? From now, Acretes, my altars, Fearing no bondage,
fearIng no cat of the wood, Safe WIth my lynxes,
feed111g grapes to my leopards, 8
? Ohbanum IS my Incense,
the VInes grow m my homage"
The back-swell now smooth In the rudder-chams, Black snout of a porpOIse
where Lycabs had been, FISh-scales on the oarsmen
And I worshIp
I have seen what I have seen
When they brought the boy I saId to He has a god m h1l11,
though I do not know whIch god" And they kIcked me mto the fore-stays
I have seen what I have seen
Medon's face lIke the face of a dory, Arms shrunk Into fins And you, Pentheus, Had as well hsten to Tlreslas, and to Cadmus,
or your luck w1l1 go out of you FIsh-scales over grom muscles,
lynx-purr amId sea And of a later year,
pale In the wIne-red algre, If you wIll lean over the rock,
the coral face under wave-t1Oge, Rose-paleness under water-shIft,
Ileuthyena, faIr Dafne of sea-bords, The SW1l11mer's arms turned to branches, Who wIll say 10 what year,
fleeIng what band of tntons, The smooth brows, seen, and half seen,
now Ivory stIllness
And So-shu churned In the sea, So-shu also, USIng the long moon for a churn-stIck
LIthe turmng of water, smews of PoseIdon,
9
? Black azure and hyalIne,
glass wave over Tyro,
Close cover, unsttllness,
btlght welter of wave-cords,
Then qUlet water,
qUlet m the buff sands,
Sea-fowl stletchmg wmg-Jomts,
splaslung 10 rock-hollows and sand-hollows
In the wave-runs by the half-dune,
Glass-ghnt of wave 1D the tide-rips agalnst sunlIght,
pallor of Hesperus, Grey peak of the wave,
wave, colour of grape's pulp,
Ohve grey m the near,
far, smoke grey of the rock. -shde,
Salmon-pInk WlOgS of the fish-hawk cast grey shadows 1D water,
The tower hke a one-eyed gle'tt goose cranes up out of the ohvc-gro~e,
And we have heard the fauns eluding Proteus
m the smell of hay under the ohve-trees.
And the frogs slngmg against the fauns In. the half-hght
And
10
? III
ISAT on the Dogana's steps
For the gondolas cost too much, that year,
And there were not" those girls ", there was one face, And the Buccentoro twenty Y'lrds off, howhng . . Strettl ",
And the lIt cross-beams, that year, In the MOrOSlnl,
A n d peacocks 10 KOle's house, 0 1 there may have been
Gods float In the 'lzure alt,
Bnght gods and Tuscan, hack before dew was shed Light and the first lIght, before ever dew was fallen Pamsks, and from the oak, dryas,
And from the apple, mrehd,
Through all the wood, and the leaves are full of VOices, A-whisper, and the clouds howe over the lake,
And there are gods upon them,
And 10 the water, the almond-white SWimmers,
The SlIvery water glazes the upturned mpple,
As POgglO has remarked Green vems In the turquoIse,
Or, the gray steps lead up under the cedars
My CId rode up to Burgos,
Up to the studded gate between two towers,
Beat wIth hiS lance butt, and the child came out,
Una mna de nueve anos,
To the httle gallery over the gate, between the towers, Readmg the Writ, voce t10nula
That no man speak to, feed, help Ruy Dlaz,
On pam to have hIS heart out, set on a pike spIke
And both hIS eyes torn out, and all hIS goods sequestered, ? ? And here, Myo Cld, are the seals,
The big seal and the wntIng "
And he caIre down from Blvar, Myo Cld,
II
? WIth no hawks left there on theIr perches, And no clothes there m the presses,
And left hIs trunk wIth Raquel and Vidas, That bIg box of sand, wIth the pawn-brokers, To get pay for hIs menIe,
Breakmg hIs way to ValencIa
Ignez da Castro murdered, and a wall
Here strIpped, here made to stand
Drear waste, the pIgment flakes from the stone, Or plaster flakes, Mantegna pamted the wall Sxlk tatters, "Nee Spe Nee Metu 'J
I2
? IV
PALACE In smoky lIght,
Troy but a heap of smoulderIng boundary stones, ANAXIFORMINGES' Aurunculela'
Hear me Cadmus of Golden Prows'
The slIver mIrrors catch the bnght stones and flare, Dawn, to our waklOg, dnfts I n the green cool hght, Dew-haze blurs, In the grass, pale ankles movmg Beat, beat, whIrr, thud, In the soft turf
under the apple trees,
Choros nympharum, goat-foot, WIth the pale foot alternate, Crescent of blue-shot waters, green-gold In the shallows,
A black cock crows In the sea-foam,
And by the curved, carved foot of the couch, claw-foot and hon head, an old man seated
Speakmg In the low drone Ityn'
Et ter fleblhter, Ityn, Ityn'
And she went toward the WIndow and cast her down,
Itynl
cc All the whue, the whIle, swallows cry10g
cc It 15 Cabestan's heart 10 the dIsh" . . It IS Cabestan's heart In the dlsh)
cc No other taste shall change thIS . .
And she went toward the Window, the shm whIte stone bar
Makmg a double arch,
FIrm even fingers held to the :firm pale stone, Swung for a moment,
and the wmd out of Rhodez Caught In the full of her sleeve
the swallows cryIng 13
? 'TIS 'TIS YtIS' Acta:on
and a valley,
The valley IS thIck wIth leaves, wIth leaves, the trees, The sunlIght glItters, glItters a-top,
Like a :fish-scale roof,
LIke the church roof In POlctlers If It were gold
Beneath It, beneath It
Not a ray, not a shvver, not a spare dISC of sunlIght Flakmg the black, soft water,
Bathing the body of nymphs, of nymphs, and DIana, Nymphs, whIte-gathered about her, and the aIr, aIr, Shakmg, aIr alIght WIth the goddess,
fanmng theIr haIr m the dark, LIftmg, lIftIng and waffing
Ivory dIppmg In stiver, Shadow'd, o'ershadow'd
Ivory dIppIng m stiver,
Not a splotch, not a lost shatter of sunlIght Then Acta:on VIdal,
VIdal It IS old VIdal speaking,
stumblIng along In the wood,
Not a patch, not a lost shImmer of sunlIght,
the pale haIr of the goddess
The dogs leap on Acta:on,
" HIther, hIther, Acta:on,"
Spotted stag of the wood, Gold, gold, a sheaf of hair,
ThIck hke a wheat swath, Blaze, blaze m the sun,
The dogs leap on Acta:on 14
? Stumblmg, stumblmg along m the wood, Muttenng, muttenng OVid
. . Pergusa pool pool Gargaphla, . . Pool pool of Salmacls "
The empty armour shakes as the cygnet moves
Thus the lIght rams, thus pours, e [0 solezlls plovll The hqUld and rushmg crystal
beneath the knees of the gods Ply over ply, thm ghtter of water,
Brook film beanng white petals The pme at Takasago
grows with the pme of Ise'
The water whIrls up the bnght pale sand m the sprIng's mouth . . Behold the Tree of the VIsages' "
Forked branch-tips, flammg as If wIth lotus
Ply over ply The shallow eddymg flUid,
beneath the knees of the gods
Torches melt m the glare
set flame of the corner cook-stall,
Blue agate casmg the sky (as at Gourdon that tme) the sputter of resm,
Saffron sandal so petals the narrow foot Hymenreus 10' Hymen, 10 Hymena:e' AuruncuIeIa'
One scarlet flower IS cast on the blanch-whIte stone
And So-Gyoku, saymg
? ? Tlus WInd, srre, IS the kmg's wmd,
Tlus WInd 18 wmd of the palace, Shakmg ImperIal water-Jets . .
And HSIang, openmg hiS collar . . ThIS WInd roars m the earth's bag,
It lays the water WIth rushes" IS
? No WInd lS the kIng's WInd
Let every cow keep her calf
~cTlus WInd IS held 10 gauze curtains " No w1nd 1S the kIng's
The camel drIvers Sit In the turn of the stairs, Look down on Ecbatan of plotted streets,
. . Danae' Danae'
What WInd IS the kIng's'> . .
Smoke hangs on the stream,
The peach-trees shed bnght leaves In the water, Sound drifts In the eventng haze,
The bark scrapes at the ford, Gut rafters above black water,
Three steps In an open field, Gray stone-posts leadIng
Pere Henri Jacques would speak Wlth the Sennm, on Rokku, Mount Rokku between the rock and the cedars,
Polhonac,
As Gyges on Thraclan platter set the feast,
Cabestan, Tereus,
It IS Cabestan's heart 10 the dish,
Vldal, or Ecbatan, upon the gIlded tower In Ecbatan Lay the god's bride, lay ever, waiting the golden raIn By Garonne . . Saave' . .
The Garonne 15 truck hke palOt,
Process10n, - cc Et sa'ave, sa'ave, sa'ave Regma! " - Moves lIke a worm, 10 the crowd
Adlge, thIn :film of unages,
Across the Adlge, by Stefano, Madonna 10 hortulo, As Cavalcantt had seen her
The Centaur's heel plants 10 the earth loam And we Sit here
there 10 the arena
z6
? v
GEAT bulk, huge mass, thesauru'),
Ecbatan, the clock tIcks and fades out
The bnde awaltmg the god's touch, Ecbatan, CIty of patterned streets, agam the VISIon Down In the VIa: strada:, toga'd the crowd, and arm'd, RushIng on populous bUSIness,
and from parapet looked down
and North was Egypt,
the celestIal Nue, blue deep,
cuttxng low barren land, Old men and camels
workmg the watet-wheels, Measureless seas and stars,
Iambhchus' hght,
the souls ascendmg,
Sparks hke a partndge covey,
LIke the . . CIOCCO " , brand struck I n the game
tt Et omniformIS" AIr, fire, the pale soft lIght Topaz I manage, and three sorts of blue,
but on the barb of tIme
The fire'> always, and the VlSlon always,
Ear dull, perhaps, WIth the VISIon, fhttxng
And fadmg at WIll Weavmg WIth pomts of gold, Gold-yellow, saffron The roman shoe, Aurunculeta's
And come shufflIng feet, and crIes" Da nuces'
c. Nuces' " praISe, and Hymena:us . . bnngs the gul to her man . . Or . . here Sextus had seen her . .
TItter of sound about me, always
and from . . Hesperus "
Hush of the older song . . Fades hght from sea-crest, . . And m LydIa walks With palr'd women
. . Peerless among the paIrs, that once m SardIS
17
? " In satIetIes
Fades the lIght flom the sea, 'lnd man) th Ilgs
. . Are set abroad and brought to nund of thee,"
And the vmestocks he untended, llew leaves come to the shoots, North wmd mps 011 the bough, and seas m heal t
Toss up chIll crests,
And the vme stocks he untended
And many thlOgs are set abroad and blOught to mlOd Of thee, Atthls, unfrUltful
The talks ran long m the mght
And from Mauleon, fresh wIth a new earned grade, In maze of approachmg ram-steps, POlcebot-
The aIr was full of women,
And Savamc Mauleon
Gave hIm hIs land and kmght's fee, and he wed the woman Came lust of travel on hml, of 1omerya,
And out of England a kmght wIth slow-hftmg eyelIds
Let fassa lurar a del, put gl1mour upon her
And left her an eIght months gone
. . Came lust of woman upon hIm," POlcebot, now on North road from Spam
(Sea-change, a grey m the water)
And 10 small house by town's edge
Found a woman, changed and famihar face, Hard nIght, and pattmg at mormng
And Plelte won the 51Ogmg, Pleite de Maensac,
Song or land on the throw, and was drcftz hom
And had De TierCl's WIfe and wIth the war they made
Troy m Auvergnat
Wlule Menelaus ptled up the church at port
He kept Tyndarlda Dauph10 stood wIth de Maensac
John BorgIa IS bathed at last (Clock-tIck pIerces the VISIon) TIber, dark WIth the cloak, wet cat gleammg 10 patches
18
? Chck of the hooves, through garbage,
ClutchIng the greasy stone cc And the cloak floated . . Slander lS up betImes
But Varchl of Florence,
Steeped In a dIfferent year, and pondermg Brutus, Then c. l;t")'a p. aX' aVOLS 8EVTEpa. VI
. . Dog-eye" " (to Alessandro)
. . Whether for love of Florence," Varchl leaves It, Saymg . . I saw the man, came up WIth hIm at Venice,
. . I, one wantmg the facts,
. . And no mean labour Or for a pnvy SpIte';) . .
Our Benedetto leaves It,
But ? ? I saw the man Se PZtz';)
rr 0 empta';l For LorenzacclO had thought of stroke m the open But uncertaIn (for the Duke went never unguarded)
. . And would have thrown him from wall
. . Yet feared thiS mIght not end hIm," or lest Alessandro Know not by whom death came, 0 se credesse
. . I f when the foot shpped, when death came upon hun,
. . Lest COUSIn Du1. . e Alessandro thmk he had fallen alone,
. . No fnend to aId hIm m fallmg"
Cazna attende
The lake of Ice there below me
And all of thIS, runs Varchl, dre~med out beforehand In Perugla, caught In the star-maze by Del Carmme, Cast on a natal paper, set WIth an exegesIS, told,
All told to Alessandro, told thnce over,
Who held hIS death for a doom
In abulela But Don Lorenzmo
Whether for love of Florence but
. . 0 se morose, credesse caduto da se "
l;l-ya. , (fl,,),a
SchIaVOnI, caught on the wood-barge,
GIves out the afterbIrth, GIOVannI BorgIa,
TraIls out no more at nights, where Barabello
19
? Prods the Pope's elephant, and gets no crown, where MozarelJo Takes the Calabnan roadway, and for endmg
Is smothered beneath a mule,
a poet's endmg,
Down a stale well-hole, oh a poet's endmg "Sanazarro
. . Alone out of all the court was faIthful to hIm"
For the gOSSIp of Naples' trouble drIfts to North,
Fracastor (lIghtnmg was mtdw1fe) Cotta, and Ser D'Alv1ano, AI poco glorno ed al gran cerchlo d'ombra,
Talk the talks out With NaVlghero,
Burner of yearly Martlals,
(The slavelet IS mourned m vam)
And the next comer says to Were nme wounds,
. . Four men, whIte horse Held on the saddle before hIm " Hooves clmk and shck on the cobbles
SchIaVOnI cloak . . Smk the damn thmg' . .
Splash wakes that chap on the wood-barge
TIber catchtng the nap, the moonlIt velvet,
A wet cat gleamIng 1n patches
cc Se pIa," VarchI, cc 0 empla, ma rtsoluto
cc E ternbtle dehberazlone "
Both saymgs run m the wmd.
Ma se mortsse'
20
? VI
WHAT you have done, Odysseus,
We know what you have done
And that Gu:tllaume sold out hIs ground rents
(Seventh of POltlers, NInth of AqultaIn) to Tant las fotel com aUZIrets
c. Cen e quatre vIngt et velt vetz "
The stone IS ahve In my hand, the crops wxll be thIck In my death-year
T:tll LOUIS IS wed wIth Eleanor
And had (He, Guxllaume) a son that had to wIfe The Duchess of Normandla whose daughter
Was wIfe to KIng Henry e maire del reI Jove
Went over sea t:tll day's end (he, LOUIS, Wlth Eleanor) ComIng at last to Acre
to Ongla, oncle " salth Arnaut
Her uncle commanded In Acre,
That had known hel In gIrlhood (Theseus, son of Aegeus)
And he, LOUIS, was not at ease In that town, And was not at ease by Jordan
As she rode out to the palm-grove
Her scarf In Saladln's C1mler
DIvorced her 10 that year, he LOUIS, dlvorclng thus Aqultalne
And that year Plantagenet marrxed her (that had dodged past 17 swtors)
Et quand 10 reIS LOIS 10 entendlt mout er fasche
N auphal, VeXls, Harry Joven
In pledge for all hIS hfe and Me of all hIS heIrs Shall have GISOrs, and Vexls, Neufchastel
But If no ISSue GISOrs shall revert
? . . Need not wed Ahx m the name
Tuntty holy mdlvlslble RIchard our brother Need not wed Allx once hIs father's ward and But whomso he choose for Ahx, etc
Eleanor, domna Jauzionda, mother of RIchard,
Turnmg on thtrty years (wd have been yeals before tht:. ) By nver-marsh, by gallened church-porch,
Malemorte, Correze, to whom
? ? My Lady of Ventadour . . Is shut by Ebhs 10
cc And wtll not hawk nor hunt
nor get her free 10 the aIr
cc Nor watch fish nse to baIt
c. Nor the glare-Wlllg'd flIes alIght In the creek's edge ? ? Save 10 my absence, Madame
? Que 1a lauzeta mover' . . Send word I ask you to Ebhs
you have seen that maker
. . And finder of songs so far afield as thIS " That he may free her,
who sheds such lIght In the aIr"
E 10 Sordels Sl fo dt Mantovana,
Son of a poor kmght, Sler Escort,
And he delIghted hImself 10 chan~ons
And mIxed WIth the men of the court
And went to the court of RIchard Samt Bontface And was there taken WIth love for hIS WIfe
Cumzza, da Romano That freed her slaves on a Wednesday
Masnatas et servos, witness PICUS de Farmatls
and Don Ehnus and Don Llpus
sons of Farmato de' Farmatl
? CC free of person, free of wIll
cc free to buy, WItness, sell, testate" A manto subtraxlt lpsam
dictum Sordellum concubulsse
(C Wmter and Summer I smg of her glace, As the rose IS faIr, so faIr 15 hel face,
Both Summer and Wmter I SlOg of her, The S'10W makyth me to remember her"
And Calrels was of Sarlat
Theseus from Troezene And they wd have given hIm pOlson
But for the shape of hIS sword-hIlt
? VII
ELEANOR (she spoued In a Bntish clImate) VEAa. v6pos and 'EAE'II"TOALS, and
poor old Homer blmd,
blmd as a bat, Ear, ear for the sea-surge,
rattle of old men's VOiceS And then the phantom Rome,
marble narrow for seats ct 51 pulVlS nullus" saId OVId,
c. Erlt, nullum tamen excute"
Then :file and candles, e II mestiers ecoutes,
Scene for the battle only, but stUl scene,
Pennons and standards y cavals armatz
Not mere succesSIon of strokes, SIghtless narratIon,
And Dante's . . CIOCCO," brand struck m the game Un peu molSl, plancher plus bas que Ie JardIn
. . Contre Ie lambns, fautewl de paIlle,
. . Un Vleux plano, et sous Ie barometre "
The old men's VOICes, beneath the columns of false marble, The modISh and darkIsh walls,
PlScreeter gdrung, and the panelled wood
Suggested, for the leasehold IS
Touched With an lffipreCISlon about three squares, The house too thtck, the palntIngs
a shade too oued
And the great domed head, eon gIl oeem onestt e tard, Moves before me, phantom With weIghted motIon, Grave meessu, dnnkIng the tone of thIngs,
And the old vOice hfts Itself
weavlng an endless sentence
? We also made ghostly VISIts, and the staIr
That knew us, found us agam on the turn of It, Knockmg at empty rooms, seekmg for buned beauty, And the sun-tanned, gracIOus and well-formed fingers LIft no latch of bent bronze, no EmpIre handle
TWIsts for the knocker's fall, no VOIce to answer
A strange conCIerge, m place of the gouty-footed SceptIc agamst all thIS one seeks the hvmg,
Stubborn agamst the fact The wted flowers
Brushed out a seven year SInce, of no effect
Damn the partItIon' Paper, dark brown and stretched, FlImsy and damned part1t1on
lone, dead the long year My hntel, and LlU Ch'e's lmtel
Tlffie blacked out wIth the rubber The Elysee carnes a name on
And the bus behmd me gIves me a date for peg,
Low ce1hng and the Erard and the suver,
These are m tt tlffie" Four cha1rs, the bow-front dresser, The pamer of the desk, cloth top sunk m
. . Beer-bottle on the statue's pedIment'
. . That, Fntz, 1S the era, to-day agamst the past,
tt Contemporary" And the passIOn endures
Agamst the1r actIon, aromas Rooms, agamst chromcles Smaragdos, chrysohthos, De Gama wore stnped pants In Afnca And tt Mountams of the sea gave bIrth to troops",
Le Vieux commode en acaJou beer-bottles of vanous strata,
But tS she dead as Tyro"> In seven years) EMvavs, ~Xaplipos, E'XE7r70hLS
The sea runs m the beach-groove, shakmg the floated pebbles, Eleanor'
The scarlet curtam throws a less scarlet shadow,
? LamplIght 1t BuovIlla, e quel remlr, And all that day
Nlcea moved before me
And the cold grey aIr troubled hel not
For all her naked beauty, bIt not the tropIc skm, And the long slender feet lIt on the curb's marge And her movmg heIght went before me,
We alone havmg bemg And all that day, another day
Thm husks I had known as men, Dry casques of dep1rted locusts
speakmg a shell of speech Propped between chaIrs and table
Words lIke the locust-shells, moved by no mner hemg, A dryness callIng for death,
Another day, between walls of a sham Myceman,
. . Toc" sphmxes, sham-MemphiS columns,
And beneath the Jazz a corte:ll. , a stIffness or stIllness,
Shell of the older house
Brown-yellow wood, and the no colour plaster, Dry professonal talk
now stllhng the III beat mUSlC, House expulsed by thts house
Square even shoulders and the satm skm, Gone cheeks of the dancmg woman,
Scil the old dead dry talk, gassed o u t - It IS ten years gone, makes stIff about her a glass, A petrefactlon of aIr
The old room of the tawdry class asserts Itself, The young men, never'
Only the husk of talk
o VOl che slete m PICCloletta barca,
DIdo choked up With sobs, for her 5lcheus 2. 6
? LIes heavy m my arms, dead we1ght Drownmg, WIth tears, new Eros,
And the hfe goes on, moomng upon bare h1lls, Flame leaps from the hand, the ram 1S hstless, Yet drmks the thlrst from our hps,
sohd as echo,
PaSSlon to breed a form 10 shImmer of ram-blur,
But Eros drowned, drowned, heavy-half dead WIth tears
For dead Slcheus
LIfe to make mock of motIon For the husks, before me, move,
The words rattle shells gIven out by shells The hve man, out of lands and prISons,
shakes the dry pods,
Probes for old WIlls and frIendshIps, and the bIg ! ocust-casques Bend to the tawdry table,
LIft up theIr spoons to mouths, put fOlks m cutlets,
And make sound lIke the sound of VOIces
Lorenzacclo
Bemg more hve than they, more full of flames and VOIces Ma se mor1sse'
Credesse caduto da se, ma se morISse And the tallmddference moves,
a more hvmg shell,
Dnft m the alr of fate, dry phantom, but mtact o Alessandro, cruef and thrIce warned, watcher,
Eternal watcher of thmgs, Of thmgs, of men, of paSSIOns
Eyes floatmg m dry, dark alr,
E bIondo, Wlth glass-grey ms, Wlth an even SIde-fall of halt The stIff, stIll features
? VIII
THESE fragments you have shelved (shored) "Slut'" "BItch'" Truth and Calhop;: Slang10g each other sous les laurlers
That Alessandro was negroId Slgtsmund
Frater tamquam Et compater carzsstme tergo
And Malatesta
EqUlvalent to
hannt de dzcts entza
Glohanm of the MedICI,
Florence
Letter receIved, and 10 the matter of our Messlte GlanozlO,
One from htm also, sent on In form and WIth all due dIspatch, HaVing added your wlShes and memoranda
As to arrang10g peace between you and the K10g of Ragona,
So far as I am concerned, It wd
GIve me the greatest possible pleasure,
At any rate nothlOg wd gIve me more pleasure
or be more acceptable to me,
And I shd hke to be party to It, as was promIsed me,
etther as participant or adherent As for my serVIce money,
Perhaps you and your father wd draw It And send It on to me as qUIckly as pOSSIble And tell the Maestro dz pe1'ltore
That there can be no question of
HIS paIntIng the walls for the moment,
As the mortar IS not yet dry
And It wd be merely work chucked away
(buttato VIa)
? But I want It to be qUIte clear, that untIl the chapels are ready I wlll arrange for hIm to palnt somethlng else
So that both he and I shall
Get as much enjoyment as possIble from It,
And In order that he may enter my serVIce
And also because you WrIte me that he needs cash,
I want to arrange With hIm to gIve hIm so much per year And to assure hIm that he Will get the sum agreed on You may say that I WIll depOSIt securIty
For hIm wherever he hkes
And let me have a clear answer,
For I mean to give hIm good treatment
So that he may come to hve the rest
Of hts hfe m my lands-
Unless you put hIm off It -
And for thIS I mean to make due prOVISIon,
So that he can work as he lIkes,
Or waste hIS tIme as he lIkes
(affattgandose per suo ptacere 0 no non glt manchera la proVlxtone mat)
neveI lackmg prOVlSlon SIGISMUNDUS P ANDOLPHUS DE MALA TESTIS
In campo Ilim Doment VenetorU1n aze 7 aprzlts 1449 contra Cremonam
and because the aforesaId most IllustrIOUS Duke of Mllan
Is content and Wills that the aforesaId Lord 51gISmundo Go mto the serVIce of the most magnIficent commune of the Florentlnes
For alhance defenSIve of the two states,
Therefore between the aforesaid IllustrIOUS Sigismund And the respectable man Agnolo della Stufa,
ambassador, SlndlC and procurator ApPolnted by the ten of the bally, etc, the half
29
?
Of these 50,000 florIns, free of attal11der, For 1400 cavalry and four hundred foot To come Into the terrene of the commune
or elsewhere m Tuscany . & please the ten of the Bally,
And to be hImself thele With them In the sen-ICC of the commune
WIth hIS horsemen and hIS footmen
(gente dt cavallo c da pte) etc
Aug 5 1452, regtster of the Tw of tbe Barly
From the forked rocks of Penna and BIlh, on Cal pegna With the road leading under the cMf,
m the WInd-shelter Into Tuscany, And the north road, toward the Marecchla
the mud-stretch full of cobbles
L yra
. . Ye Spltlts who of olde were m thIS lard Each under Love, 1. nd shaken,
Go WIth your lutes, awaken
The summer WithIn her mmd,
Who hath not Helen for peer
Yseut nor Batsabe " With the InterruptIon
Magnifico, compater et cartSS11ne
(JohannI dl Coslmo) VenIce has taken me on agaIn
At 7,000 a month, fiorznt dt Camera For 2,000 horse and four hundred footmen, And It rams here by the gallon,
We have had to dig a new dItch
In three or four days
I shall try to set up the bombards
Under the plumes, With the flakes and small wads of colour ShowerIng from the balCOnIes
30
? WIth the sheets spread from Wlndows,
WIth leaves and small branches pmned on them,
Arras hung from the raumgs, out of the dus~, WIth pheasant taus upnght on theIr forelocks, The small whIte horses, the
Twelve gIrls ndmg m order, green satin In panmer'd habIts, Under the baldachmo, sIlver'd WIth heavy stItches,
Blanca VIscontI, WIth Sforza,
The peasant's son and the duchess,
To RImmI, and to the wars southward,
Boats drawn on the sand, red-orange salls m the creek's mouth, For two days' pleasure, mosdy rr 1a pesca," ? Shmg,
D I CUI m the whIch he, Francesco, godeva molto
To the war southward
In whIch he, at that tune, receIved an excellent hldmg And the Greek emperor was In FloLence
(Ferrara haVIng the pest) And WIth hIm Gemlsthus Plethon
Talkmg of the war about the temple at Delphos,
And of POSEIDON, concret Allgemezne,
And tellmg of how Plato went to Dlonyslus of Syracuse Because he had observed that tyrants
Were most efficIent In all that they set theIr hands to,
But he was unable to persuade DlOnyslUs
To any amelIoratIon
And m the gate at Ancona, between the foregate
And the mam-gates
SIgIsmundo, ally, come through an enemy force,
To patch up some sort of treaty, passes one gate
And they shut It before they open the next gate, and he says . . Now you have me,
Caught lIke a hen In a coop"
And the captam of the watch says . . Yes MeSSIre SIglsmundo, But we want thIs town for ourselves"
31
? WIth the church agamst hIm, WIth the MedICI bank for Itself,
WIth wattle Sforza agaInst hIm
Sforza Francesco, wattle-nose,
Who mamed hIm (SIgismundo) hIs (Francesco's)
Daughter In September,
Who stole Pesaro In October (as Brogho says tr bc~tlalmel1te") Who stood wIth the VenetIans In November,
WIth the Mtlanese m December,
Sold Mtlan In November, stole Muan In December
Or sometbUlg of that sort,
Commanded the Muanese In the sprmg,
the VenetIans at mIdsummer,
The Mtlanese In the autumn,
And was Naples' ally In October,
He, SIglsmundo, te11tplum tedtficavtt In Romagna, teemmg WIth cattle thleves,
wlth the game lost Ul mld-channel, And never qUIte lost tul' 50,
and never qUIte lost ttll the end, m Romagna, So that Galeaz sold Pesaro . . to get pay for hIS cattle"
And POlctiers, you know, Guulaume POlctleIs, had brought the song up out of Spam
With the SIngers and vieis But here they wanted a settIng. By Mareccrua, where the water comes down over the cobbles And Mason had come to VerucchlO,
and the sword, Paolo tl Bello's,
caught m the arras And, m Este's house, Parlsma
Paid
For thIS tnbe pald always, and the house Called also Atreldes',
And the wmd IS stu! for a lIttle
31
? And the dusk rolled
to one sIde a httle
And he was twelve at the ome, Sigismundo, And no dues had been paId for three years, And hIS elder brother gone PIOUS,
And that year they fought m the streets, And that year he got out to Cesena
And brought back the leVIes,
And that year he crossed by nxght over Fogha, and
33
? IX
ONE year floods rose.
One year they fought 10 the sno'" 5,
One year hau fell. breakIng the trec~ md walls Down here In the marsh they trapped hIm
In one year,
And he stood m the water up to hIs neck
to keep the hounds off him, And he floundered about In the marsh and came m after three days.
That was Astorre ManfredI of Faenza who worked the ambush
and set the dogs off to find hIm, In the marsh, down here under Mantua, And he fought m Fano, In a street fight,
and that was nearly the end of him,
And the Emperor came down and knxghted us, And they had a wooden castle set up for fiesta,
And one year BastnlO went out Into the courtyard
Where the lIsts were, and the pahsades
had been set for the tourneys, And he talked down the antI-Hellene,
And there was an heIr male to the selgnor,
And Madame Gmevra dIed
And he, Slgu;mundo, was Capitan for the VenetIans And he had sold off small castles
and butit the great Rocca to hIS plan, And he fought lIke ten devus at Monteluro
and got notll1ng but the VlctOry And old Sforza bItched us at Pesaro,
(SIC) March the x6th tC that Mesme Alessandro Sforza
IS become lord of Pesaro
? through the wangle of the Illus 5gr Mr Fedtlcho d'Orblllo Who worked the wangle with Galeaz
through the WigglIng of Messer Francesco, Who waggled It so that Galeaz should sell Pesaro
to Alex and Fossembrone to Feddy, and he hadn't the nght to sell
And thlS he did besttalmente, that IS Sforza dId besttalmente as he had promised hun, SI81smundo, per capttoJz
to see that he, Malatesta, should have Pesaro" And this cut us off from our south half
and fimshed our game, thus, In the begmnmg, And he, 5181smundo, spoke hiS mmd to Francesco
and we drove them out of the Marches
And the Kmg 0' Ragona, Alphonse Ie roy d'Aragon, was the next nau 10 our coffin,
And all you can say IS, anyway,
that he 51glSmundo called a town councIl
And Valturlo said cc as well for a sheep as a lamb"
and thIS change-over (htec tradItIo)
As old bladder saId rr rem eorum saluavtt "
Saved the Florent1Oc state, and that, maybe, was somethIng And co Florence our natural ally" as they said 10 the meeting
for whatever that was worth afterward And he began buudmg the TEMPIO,
and Pohxena, hlS second WIfe, dIed And the Venetians sent down an ambassador And said co speak humanely,
But tell rumIt's no tune for ralSIng rus pay" And the Venetians sent down an ambassador
Wlth three pages of secret InStructIons
To the effect Did he thmk the campaign was a Joy-tlde) And old Wattle-wattle slIpped 1Oto MIlan
But he couldn't stand 51dg being so high With the Venetians And he talked It over with Feddy, and Feddy saId C< Pesaro . .
35
? And old Foscarl wrote It Caro mlO
. . If we splIt wIth Francesco you can have It . . And we'll help you m every wa) possIble"
But Feddy offered It sooner And Slglsmundo got up a few arches,
And stole that marble 10 Classe, . . stoic" that IS,
Casus est talts
Foscart doge, to the prefect of Ravenn1
. . Why, what, whIch, thunder, damn1tlOn'~~' "
Cams est talzs
FUlPPO, commendatary of the abbazI1
Of Sant Apolhnalre, Classe, Cardmal of Bologfl1
That he dId one mght (quadam 11octC) sell to the
Illmo DO, DO Slgismund Malatesta
Lord of Anmm1Oum, marble, porphyry, serpentme,
Whose men, Slglsmundo's, came wIth more than an hundred two wheeled ox carts and deported, for the beautlfymg
of the tempto where was Santa MarIa m TrIVlO
Where the same are now on the walls Four hundred
ducats to be paId back to the abbazt4 by the saId swmdlIng CardInal or hIs heIrS
grnnh' rrnnh, pthg
wheels, plaustra, oxen under nIght-shIeld,
And on the 13th of August AloysIus Purtheo,
The next abbot, to Slglsmundo, receipt for 200 ducats Corn-salve for the damage done 10 that scurry
And there was the row about that German-Burgundian female And It Was hiS meSSlamc year, Pohorcetes,
but he was be10g a bIt too POLUMETIS
And the Venetlans wouldn't gtve hIm SIX months vacatlon
And he went down to the old bnck heap of Pesaro and waIted for Feddy
36
? And Feddy finally saId" I am commg' to help Alessandro"
And he saId cc ThIs tune MIster Feddy has done It . . He saId . . Brogho, I'm the goat ThIS tIme
Mr Feddy has done It (m'l'ha calata) " And he'd lost hIS Job WIth the VenetIans,
And the stone dIdn't come In from Istria
And we sent men to the suk war,
And Wattle never paxd up on the naIl
Though we SIgned on WIth MIlan and Florence, And he set up the bombards In muck down by Vada
where nobody else could have set 'em and he took the wood out of the bombs and made 'em of two scoops of metal
And the Jobs gettIng smaller and smaller, Unci he sIgned on WIth SIena,
And that tIme they grabbed hxs post-bag And what was It, anyhow>
Pitighano, a man WIth a ten acre lot, Two lumps of tufa,
and they"d taken hlS pasture land from hun, And SIdg had got back theIr horses,
and he had two bIg lumps of tufa
WIth Slx hundred pIgs In the basements And the poor deVIls were dymg of cold
And thIS IS what they found m the post-bag
Ex Anmmo d,e xxn Decembrts
rr Magntfice tiC potens domme, mt smgulartsstme
cc I adVIse yr LordshIp how
cc I have been WIth master AlWIdge who
. . has shown me the deSIgn of the nave that goes jn the mIddle, cc of the church and the deSIgn for the roof and "
cc JHesus,
rr Magntfico exso SIgnor MlO
. . Sence to-day I am recommanded that I have to tel you my
37
? . . father's op. mum that he has shode to Mr Gcnare about the . . valts of the cherch etc
c. GlOvane of Master alwIse P S I t~lUk It advlsabl that . . I shud go to rome to talk to mIster Alb(. rt so as I can no . . what he thInks about It nte
. . Sagramoro "
rf Illustre szgnor 11110, MessIre Battista "
. . FIrst Ten slabs best red, se"en by I 5, by onc thIrd, " EIght dItto, good red, 15 by three by one,
. . SIX of same, 15 by one by one
. . EIght columns 15 by three and one third
etc WIth carrIage, danars I 5I . . MONSEIGNEUR
. . Madame ! sotta has had me WrIte today about Sr Galeazzo's . . daughter The man who saId young pullets make thIn . . soup, knew what he was talkIng about We went to see the . . gIrl the other day for all the good that dId, and she dented . . the whole matter and kept her end up wIthout lOSIng her . . temper I thInk Madame Ixotta very nearly eAhausted the . . matter M, pare che aHa decto hogm choma All the . . children are well Where you are everyone IS pleased and "happy because of your takIng the chate'lu here we are the . . reverse as you mIght say drIftIng wIthout a rudder Madame
. . LucreZla has probably, or should have, WrItten to you, I
. . suppose you have the letter by now " remembered to you
. . sagramoro to put up the derncks . . beams at . .
Everyone wants to be 2. I Dec D de M "
There IS a supply of
. . MAGNIFICENT LORD WITH DUB REVERENCE
. . MessIre Malatesta IS well and asks for you every day He
"IS so much pleased With hIS pony, It wd take me a month . . to wrIte you all the fun he gets out of that pony I want to . . agaIn remmd you to wrIte to GeorgIo Rambottom or to hls
38
? . . boss to fix up that wall to the httle garden that madame Isotta . . uses, for It IS all flat on the ground now as I have already told . . hIm a lot of t1Il1es, for all the good that does, so I am Wrttmg . . to your lordshIp m the matter I have done all th'lt I can, for . . all the good that does as noboddy hear can do anythIng . . WIthout you
. . your faithful
LUNARDA DA PALLA 2. 0 Dec 1454"
cc gone over It WIth all the foremen and engmeers And " about the suver for the small medal "
tt Magmfiee ae potens
. . because the walls of "
tt Malatesta de Malatestls ad Magntficum Domtnum Patremque tt suum
. . Exl! O Dno et Dno sm Dno S1g1smundum Pandolfi FIllum . . Malatestls CapItan General
c? Magm1l. cent and Exalted Lord and Fathel In especIal my "lord With due recommend'ltlon your letter has been pre- . . sented to me by Gentlhno da Gradara and With It the bay . . pony (lonZlnO balectmo) the whIch you have sent me, and to whIch appears m my eyes a fine caparlson'd charger, upon " which I mtend to learn all there IS to know about ndmg, In . . consIderatlon of yr paternal affectIon for whIch I than! . . to your excellency thus bnefly and pray you contmue to hold C< me m thlS esteem notIfYIng you by the bearer of thIS that . . we are all m good health, as I hope and deslre }our Exct to LordshIp IS also WIth contInued remembrance I remaIn
<t Your son and servant
MALATESTA DE MALATESTIS
Gwen In Rtmtm, thIS the 2. 2nd day 0/ December anno domInI 1454 "
(m the sIxth year of h,s age)
39
? ? ? ILLUSTRIOUS PRINCE
tc Unfittmg as It IS that I should offer counsels to Hanntbal "
. . Magnzfier! ac potelH d0111111? , dom1l1(, 1111 HlI! ! ,ularmlme, "httmtlz recomendatzone PI emma etc ThIS to advise your
. . Mgt LdshP how the second load of Veronese marble has ? ? finally got here, after bemg held up at Ferrara with no end . . of fuss and botheratlOn, the whole of It havmg been there t. unloaded
. . I learned how It happened, and It h1S co~t a few flonns to . . get back the saId load whIch had been seIzed for the skIpper's . . debt and defalcatlOn, he havmg fled when the lIghter was . . seIzed But that yr Mgt Ldshp may not lose the moneys . . paId out on hIs account I have had the lIghter brought here . . and am holdIng It, agamst hIs arrIval If not we stIll have t'the lIghter
. . As soon as the Xmas fetes are over I WIll have the stone ? ? floor laId m the sacresty, for whIch the stone 15 already cut . . The wall of the buudmg IS fimshed and I shall now get the . . roof on
. . We have not begun puttmg new stone Into the martyr to chapel, first because the heavy frosts wd certamly spOIl . . the Job, secondly because the ahofants aren't yet here and to one can't get the measurements for the cormce to the columns . . that are to rest on the ahofants
. . They are domg the stairs to your room In the c1stle I tt have had Messire Antonto degh Attl'S court paved and the . . stone benches put m It
t. Ottavian 15 illummatIng the bull I mean the bull for ? ? the chapel All the stone-cutters are waItIng for sprmg tt weathertostartworkagaIn
? ? The tomb IS all done except part of the lId, and as soon as . . MesSlre AgostInO gets back from Cesena I wIll see that he . . :finIshes It, ever recommendIng me to yr Mgt Ldshp
. . belIeve me yr faIthful PETRUS GENARIIS"
? That's what they found 10 the post-bag And some more of It to the effect that
he . . hved and ruled . .
.