Page:The Bliss of a Moment.djvu/93

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

ROBERT BROWNING

Approach not Robert Browning ye who want
Success, tranquillity, or peace of life;
Solution of conflicts, and harmony
Do not furnish themes of his plays, songs, and tales.

A deep plunge he took into vital sap
To perceive, explain, convey life's own being;
Life is but movement, unrest, revolution,—
A story of fight and grand defeat.
Man is not he who is content with success.
He is man indeed who ever failure seeks;
Daily to seize fresh future is his one care.
To grasp the moon, up into the skies to fly.

Hair-splitting critic is Browning; he paints
Eternal soul and finite body's strife;
Heroes, hermits, lovers, priests, scholars,—all
Bear on flesh and blood endless yearning's marks.
Wildly in the breast of men and women
Surges the same Paracelsian word:
"Immense am I, immortal is myself.
Grow I would, break I would, though bound in mud."
Life is not in any moment exhausted,
In any nucleus, person, or race;
To fail is the nature progressive man's.
New hopes live on through despair, doubt, death.

Teacher of efforts, of fruition careless,
O thou world's greatest, best critic of life!
Thine is the modern Geeta's gospel of hope
And work for its own sake, O seer, energist bold!

89