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Canto the Fifth

Fortus obeys, but his heart breaks,
For he is all alone;
Until an unexpected friend
Moves him to soldier on.
1.
Sure as green shoots disrupt the soil in Spring
And Autumn’s vegetation flames and dies,
And Summer nights convulse with thundering
And storms and winds assault the Winter skies,
The cycles of the universe arise
And fall, fall and arise, and never cease,
Diminish never, and could not increase,
But swirl around a pivot at the core
Of everything, a silent heart of peace;
We creatures in and of the rush and roar
Participate as well in something less  and something more.

2.
There is a part of us forever still,
A part of us forever satisfied,
A part of us beyond the pull of will,
Beyond laughter, beyond the tears we’ve cried;
With loving indifference it puts aside
All our past actions: both our guilt and fame;
It hasn’t anything to do with pride,
And has no way to understand our shame;
It is a part of us we know, but cannot name.

3.
The swirling tempest of the day-to-day
Obscures awareness of this deathless self,
And all the petty dramas that we play,
Striving, straining with all our strength and stealt
For what we misperceive as power and wealth,
Just serve to plunge us deeper in the storm,
Where we lose heart as we lose youth and health,
While troubles and confusions round us swarm —
And we are watched by our own silent, nameless form.

4.
So we watch Fortus in his storm of tears,
Stopped motionless at life’s stark borderline;
The sun is sinking as the evening nears;
The battle noises gradually decline
From far across the field, giving a sign
There will be no more fighting for today;
Fortus can’t shake the thought that he will pine
For Poverist from now on, come what may,
And passing time won’t help the aching go away.

5.
He hears approaching footfalls in the field
That lies eastward before the city walls;
Despite despair, his grief is forced to yield
To feeble curiosity, which calls
His eyes to see who it may be; She stalls
Her movement when his searching eyes arise,
And stands at middle distance; Late light falls
A sheer curtain of amber from the skies,
So all colors are changed, as if by magic dyes.

6.
It is a woman Fortus turns to view:
Straight, elegant in form, of stature slight;
Resuming her approach, she passes through
The evening light, herself a ray of light,
Dressed in loose linens whose apparent white
Has been transformed to glowing amber shade
By evening’s subtle artist, as the bright
Sky high above her slowly is remade
In salmon tones, and ever bluer glows the glade.

7.
This is a lonely fighter at the edge
Of battle, (gently cries the lady when
She finally reaches Fortus;) What strange pledge
Brought you out of your city, among men
Whose every purpose, every regimen
Is aimed at conquering your Elven folk?

Replies Fortus:  You have but asked again
A question that one moment past I spoke
Myself; I’m forced to answer — it’s a pledge I broke.

8.
A phantom Merlin turned me from my queen,
With mad illusions no one could believe;
But now I credit none of what I’ve seen;
Weighed down with shame, I wander here to grieve;
Aching for one my grief cannot retrieve;
She gave her life for mine, to my disgrace;
So brief the time that moved me to conceive
Affection for her nothing can displace —
My heart is haunted by her brave and cheerful face.

9.
Tell me, how did you meet? the lady asks.

We fell in like the rain falls on the earth,
(He answers,) in the middle of the tasks
I’ve yet to finish; When she brought her mirth
And gusto to my sullen heart, the birth
Of something wonderful took place in me;
I did not understand what it was worth
Until the sudden, sad calamity
Of losing her and everything so violently.

10.
Fortus, do you know me? inquires the maid.

He lifts his eyes to look at her, for he
Has spoken until now as if afraid,
His face downcast; He cannot help but see
In her some vague familiarity.

Perhaps it is the light, (half whispering
He says,) or sorrow fooling memory,
But you look like . . . 

                                   There’s not another thing
To say — he’s stopped short in a rush of reckoning.

11.
She leans to touch him gently on his cheek,
And says: Now you must stand to hear my news,
And look at me the whole time that I speak.

He rises, though his heart would fain refuse,
And leave him down to grieve if it could choose;
It takes all of his courage to arise,
And anything, but anything he views
Rather than look into the lady’s eyes,
Which seems a dreadful task. The patient lady cries:

12.
Now Fortus, please look up, please look at me!

He finds the will to look into her face.

He’s staggered, shocked, exclaims: How can this be?
Moments ago and not far from this place
The lance of Britomart took every trace
Of you away from me — yet you exist?
Can I believe my eyes in such a case?
What do I really see? The world’s a-twist
With mad illusions; How can you be Poverist?

13.
This is as much a mystery to me,
She says; My happiness and disbelief
Are tussling like two children; Am I she
You name? I am and I am not; So brief
The time we had, yet such a careless thief
Was death that lost me to whatever force
Has brought me here — a force greater than grief
We made together; Nothing blocks its course;
The short time I was gone, I think I glimpsed its source.

14.
For I was nowhere, I was everywhere,
Saw everything and nothing in a glance;
My name was gone, and so was all my care,
And nothing had a name, a circumstance
Of no concern; Then waking from the trance,
Or deep dream, that other reality,
I found myself walking toward you; The lance
Did not end me, it seems; How can it be?
I do not know; Perhaps I’m here to set you free.

15.
For death and grief had stopped you in your tracks,
Is that not so?
                        He answers, Yes, that’s true.

And now, how stands your heart?
                                  It lacks
For nothing as long as I believe in you;
But even though you’re here, clearly in view,
A vision, or a comforting delusion,
I cannot tell; I can’t even construe
My own existence from this day’s confusion;
Oh, how I long to know that you are real, and no illusion.

16.
I feel the same, she murmurs; Dream on dream,
I have been tumbling like a wind tossed cloud,
Transformed from rain into a vapor stream,
At once alone, at once pressed in a crowd;
Between the two of us there is allowed
A strange connection through this ebb and flow;
You make me happy and you make me proud
To be myself, and that is all I know;
I feel its truth, but how it’s true I cannot show.

17.
She reaches to him, and he takes her hand.

I know, he says, this is no phantom touch.

And then they find each other’s arms and stand
There in the dusk.
                              He says: This is as much
Of magic as I need; Illusions such
As this I will accept without a qualm.

She smiles at him: Here’s truth that we can clutch
In an embrace, a sweet and simple balm
For our heartaches, and in this storm, a sheltering calm.

18.
So Fortus, (she steps back from him,) now what
Do you propose to do?
                                      He looks away
To think.
                 The time has come, he says, to shut
The door on all my doubts; There is a ray
Of constant light I’ll follow as this day
Sinks into night — the light we bring to view;
I’ll follow that; Though I can’t wish away
Uncertainty, it cannot shake my faith in you;
Yes, now I am quite certain what I ought to do.

19.
But listen, Poverist replies to him,
How will you know I am who I appear
To be, and not some trumpery, some wizard’s whim
Sent by the Archimago, shaped to steer
You from your path? I’ll help you persevere
In this mad war, however it turns out;
I’ll find some way to aid you, never fear,
Though I don’t know how this will come about,
Nor how you’ll know you are with me 
                                                        without a doubt.

20.
As if responding to those words, the rose
Leaps straightaway out of the soldier’s hand
To Poverist, setting alight her clothes
And flesh and hair, so Fortus cannot stand
Near her — she’s changed into a fiery brand;
He’s forced away, recoiling from the flame;
Feeling she has again slipped from his hand,
His heart begins to sink with grief and shame,
Until he hears her cheerful voice call out his name.

21.
Fortus, look here! I’m fine; I’m safe, she calls;
(Engulfed in flames, she’s perfectly unharmed;)
If your pathway by some misfortune falls
Under the influence of one who’s charmed
Your eyes but left your mind somehow alarmed,
Then you must put the creature to this test;
The rose will see the devil is disarmed,
Preserve your life as you pursue your quest;
Leave it to me to make sure that your path is blessed.

22.
Go now!  The words of Merlin keep in mind;
Be guided by the flower’s constant light,
Which I return to you; By day you’ll find
Invisibly I’ll keep you in my sight; 
For now I’ll take a place upon the night
And will persist, though all the heavens move.

Then she ascends, a streaming meteorite,
Til she is but a winking point above;
Clearly he hears her whisper: 
                                    Now press on, my love!

23.
As Fortus’ eyes follow her sparkling path,
His heartbeat hammers hard against his chest,
Sounding the meeting’s only aftermath,
For all around, as if they were impressed
With wonder, sounds of nature are suppressed;
The one sound is the pounding of his heart –
A martial drumming, summoning his best –
Though many mysteries obscure his part,
By this good drum, he knows 
                                   the time has come to start.

24.
So by the light of his blood-kindled rose,
Beneath the eyes of his star-streaming love,
Across the fields Fortus the soldier goes
Not knowing how the hands of time might move,
Or what triumph or what disaster prove
To be his destiny; Northeasterly
He wends his way through darkened field and grove;
Where snakes and Elven soldiers fought that day;
(Now turn we back in time, their story to assay.)


finis canto v
Glorianna
Table of Contents
EpigraphsOde of DedicationProem
The Cantos
Canto ICanto VCanto IX
Canto IICanto VICanto X
Canto IIICanto VIICanto XI
Canto IVCanto VIIICanto XII
Appendices
L’EnvoiApologiaGender/
Aesthetics