Edith Wharton

Here you will find the Long Poem The Last Giustianini of poet Edith Wharton

The Last Giustianini

O WIFE, wife, wife! As if the sacred name 
Could weary one with saying! Once again 
Laying against my brow your lips' soft flame, 
Join with me, Sweetest, in love's new refrain, 
Since the whole music of my late-found life 
Is that we call each other 'husband -- wife.' 

And yet, stand back, and let your cloth of gold 
Straighten its sumptuous lines from waist to knee, 
And, flowing firmly outward, fold on fold, 
Invest your slim young form with majesty 
As when, in those calm bridal robes arrayed, 
You stood beside me, and I was afraid. 

I was afraid -- O sweetness, whiteness, youth, 
Best gift of God, I feared you! I, indeed, 
For whom all womanhood has been, forsooth, 
Summed up in the sole Virgin of the Creed, 
I thought that day our Lady's self stood there 
And bound herself to me with vow and prayer. 

Ah, yes, that day. I sat, remember well, 
Half-crook'd above a missal, and laid in 
The gold-leaf slowly; silence in my cell; 
The picture, Satan tempting Christ to sin 
Upon the mount's blue, pointed pinnacle, 
The world outspread beneath as fair as hell --

When suddenly they summoned me. I stood 
Abashed before the Abbot, who reclined 
Full-bellied in his chair beneath the rood, 
And roseate with having lately dined; 
And then -- I standing there abashed -- he said: 
'The house of Giustiniani all lie dead.' 

It scarcely seemed to touch me (I had led 
A grated life so long) that oversea 
My kinsmen in their knighthood should lie dead, 
Nor that this sudden death should set me free, 
Me, the last Giustiniani -- well, what then? 
A monk! -- The Giustiniani had been men. 

So when the Abbot said: 'The state decrees 
That you, the latest scion of the house 
Which died in vain for Venice overseas, 
Should be exempted from your sacred vows, 
And straightway, when you leave this cloistered place, 
Take wife, and add new honors to the race,' 

I hardly heard him -- would have crept again 
To the warped missal -- but he snatched a sword 
And girded me, and all the heart of men 
Rushed through me, as he laughed and hailed me lord, 
And, with my hand upon the hilt, I cried, 
'Viva San Marco!' like my kin who died. 

But, straightway, when, a new-made knight, I stood 
Beneath the bridal arch, and saw you come, 
A certain monkish warping of the blood 
Ran up and struck the man's heart in me dumb; 
I breathed an Ave to our Lady's grace, 
And did not dare to look upon your face. 

And when we swept the waters side by side, 
With timbrelled gladness clashing on the air, 
I trembled at your image in the tide, 
And warded off the devil with a prayer, 
Still seeming in a golden dream to move 
Through fiendish labyrinths of forbidden love. 

But when they left us, and we stood alone, 
I, the last Giustiniani, face to face 
With your unvisioned beauty, made my own 
In this, the last strange bridal of our race, 
And, looking up at last to meet your eyes, 
Saw in their depths the star of love arise, 

Ah, then the monk's garb shrivelled from my heart, 
And left me man to face your womanhood. 
Without a prayer to keep our lips apart 
I turned about and kissed you where you stood, 
And gathering all the gladness of my life 
Into a new-found word, I called you 'wife!'