The Complete Works of John Keats: Poems, Plays & Personal Letters. John Keats

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Shed a quill-feather from my larboard wing

       Wish’d, trusted, hop’d ’twas no sign of decay

       Thank heaven, I’m hearty yet! ’twas no such thing:

       At five the golden light began to spring,

       With fiery shudder through the bloomed east;

       At six we heard Panthea’s churches ring

       The city wall his unhiv’d swarms had cast,

       To watch our grand approach, and hail us as we pass’d.

      LXXXI.

      “As flowers turn their faces to the sun,

       So on our flight with hungry eyes they gaze,

       And, as we shap’d our course, this, that way run,

       With mad-cap pleasure, or hand-clasp’d amaze;

       Sweet in the air a mild-ton’d music plays,

       And progresses through its own labyrinth;

       Buds gather’d from the green spring’s middle-days,

       They scatter’d, daisy, primrose, hyacinth,

       Or round white columns wreath’d from capital to plinth.

      LXXXII.

      “Onward we floated o’er the panting streets,

       That seem’d throughout with upheld faces paved;

       Look where we will, our bird’s-eye vision meets

       Legions of holiday; bright standards waved,

       And fluttering ensigns emulously craved

       Our minute’s glance; a busy thunderous roar,

       From square to square, among the buildings raved,

       As when the sea, at flow, gluts up once more

       The craggy hollowness of a wild reefed shore.

      LXXXIII.

      “And ‘Bellanaine for ever!’ shouted they,

       While that fair Princess, from her winged chair,

       Bow’d low with high demeanour, and, to pay

       Their new-blown loyalty with guerdon fair,

       Still emptied at meet distance, here and there,

       A plenty horn of jewels. And here I

       (Who wish to give the devil her due) declare

       Against that ugly piece of calumny,

       Which calls them Highland pebble-stones not worth a fly.

      LXXXIV.

      “Still ‘Bellanaine!’ they shouted, while we glide

       ‘Slant to a light Ionic portico,

       The city’s delicacy, and the pride

       Of our Imperial Basilic; a row

       Of lords and ladies, on each hand, make show

       Submissive of knee-bent obeisance,

       All down the steps; and, as we enter’d, lo!

       The strangest sight the most unlook’d for chance

       All things turn’d topsy-turvy in a devil’s dance.

      LXXXV.

      “‘Stead of his anxious Majesty and court

       At the open doors, with wide saluting eyes,

       Congèes and scrape-graces of every sort,

       And all the smooth routine of gallantries,

       Was seen, to our immoderate surprise,

       A motley crowd thick gather’d in the hall,

       Lords, scullions, deputy-scullions, with wild cries

       Stunning the vestibule from wall to wall,

       Where the Chief Justice on his knees and hands doth crawl.

      LXXXVI.

      “Counts of the palace, and the state purveyor

       Of moth’s-down, to make soft the royal beds,

       The Common Council and my fool Lord Mayor

       Marching a-row, each other slipshod treads;

       Powder’d bag-wigs and ruffy-tuffy heads

       Of cinder wenches meet and soil each other;

       Toe crush’d with heel ill-natur’d fighting breeds,

       Frill-rumpling elbows brew up many a bother,

       And fists in the short ribs keep up the yell and pother.

      LXXXVII.

      “A Poet, mounted on the Court-Clown’s back,

       Rode to the Princess swift with spurring heels,

       And close into her face, with rhyming clack,

       Began a Prothalamion; she reels,

       She falls, she faints! while laughter peels

       Over her woman’s weakness. ‘Where!’ cry’d I,

       ‘Where is his Majesty?’ No person feels

       Inclin’d to answer; wherefore instantly

       I plung’d into the crowd to find him or die.

      LXXXVIII.

      “Jostling my way I gain’d the stairs, and ran

       To the first landing, where, incredible!

       I met, far gone in liquor, that old man,

       That vile impostor Hum.”

       So far so well,

       For we have prov’d the Mago never fell

       Down stairs on Crafticanto’s evidence;

       And therefore duly shall proceed to tell,

       Plain in our own original mood and tense,

       The sequel of this day, though labour ’tis immense!

      To

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