Here you will find the Long Poem A Letter From Italy of poet Alfred Austin
I Lately, when we wished good-bye Underneath a gloomy sky, ``Bear,'' you said, ``my love in mind, Leaving me not quite behind; And across the mountains send News and greeting to your friend.'' II Swiftly though we did advance Through the rich flat fields of France, Still the eye grew tired to see Patches of equality. Nothing wanton, waste, or wild; Women delving, lonely child Tending cattle lank and lean; Not a hedgerow to be seen, Where the eglantine may ramble, Or the vagrant unkempt bramble Might its flowers upon you press Simple-sweet but profitless: Jealous ditches, straight and square Sordid comfort everywhere. Pollard poplars, stunted vine, Nowhere happy-pasturing kine Wandering in untended groups Through the uncut buttercups. All things pruned to pile the shelf Nothing left to be itself: Neither horn, nor hound, nor stirrup, Not a carol, not a chirrup; Every idle sound repressed, Like a Sabbath without rest. III O the sense of freedom when Kingly mountains rose again! Congregated, but alone, Each upon his separate throne; Like to mighty minds that dwell, Lonely, inaccessible, High above the human race, Single and supreme in space: Soaring higher, higher, higher, Carrying with them our desire, Irrepressible if fond, To push on to worlds beyond! Many a peak august I saw, Crowned with mist and girt with awe, Fertilising, as is fit, Valleys that look up to it, With the melted snows down-driven, Which itself received from Heaven. Then, to see the torrents flashing, Leaping, twisting, foaming, crashing, Like a youth who feels, at length, Freedom ample as his strength, Hurrying from the home that bore him, With the whole of life before him! IV As, when summer sunshine gleams, Glaciers soften into streams, So to liquid, flowing vowels, As we pierced the mountains' bowels, Teuton consonants did melt When Italian warmth was felt. Gloomy fir and pine austere, Unto precipices sheer Clinging, as one holds one's breath, Half-way betwixt life and death, Changed to gently-shelving slope, Where man tills with faith and hope, And the tenderest-tendrilled tree Prospers in security. Softer outlines, balmier air, Belfries unto evening prayer Calling, as the shadows fade, Halting crone, and hurrying maid, With her bare black tresses twined Into massive coils behind, And her snowy-pleated vest Folded o'er mysterious breast, Like the dove's wings chastely crossed At the Feast of Pentecost. Something, in scent, sight, and sound, Elsewhere craved for, never found, Underneath, around, above, Moves to tenderness and love. V But three nights I halted where Stands the temple, vowed to prayer, That surmounts the Lombard plain, Green with strips of grape and grain. There, Spiaggiascura's child, By too hopeful love beguiled, Yet resolved, save faith should flow Through his parched heart, to forego Earthly bliss for heavenly pain, Prayed for Godfrid, prayed in vain. VI How looked Florence? Fair as when Beatrice was nearly ten: Nowise altered, just the same Marble city, mountain frame, Turbid river, cloudless sky, As in days when you and I Roamed its sunny streets, apart, Ignorant of each other's heart, Little knowing that our feet Slow were moving on to meet, And that we should find, at last, Kinship in a common Past. But a shadow falls athwart All her beauty, all her art. For alas! I vainly seek Outstretched hand and kindling cheek, Such as, in the bygone days, Sweetened, sanctified, her ways. When, as evening belfries chime, I to Bellosguardo climb, Vaguely thinking there to find Faces that still haunt my mind, Though the doors stand open wide, No one waits for me inside; Not a voice comes forth to greet, As of old, my nearing feet. So I stand without, and stare, Wishing you were here to share Void too vast alone to bear. To Ricorboli I wend: But where now the dear old friend, Heart as open as his gate, Song, and jest, and simple state? They who loved me all are fled; Some are gone, and some are dead. So, though young and lovely be Florence still, it feels to me, Thinking of the days that were, Like a marble sepulchre. VII Yet, thank Heaven! he liveth still, Now no more upon the hill Where was perched his Tuscan home, But in liberated Rome: Hale as ever; still his stride Keeps me panting at his side. Would that you were here to stray With me up the Appian Way, Climb with me the Coelian mount, With me find Egeria's fount, See the clear sun sink and set From the Pincian parapet, Or from Sant' Onofrio watch Shaggy Monte Cavo catch Gloomy glory on its face, As