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 Part I, Canto IV - Canto VI1860 Chapman & Hall / Ticknor & Fields
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 II
 Eugene de Luvois was a man who, in part
 From strong physical health, and that vigour of heart
 Which physical health gives, and partly, perchance,
 From a generous vanity native to France,
 Threw himself, heart and soul, into all that allured
 Or engaged his sensations; nor ever endured
 To relinquish to failure whate'er he began,
 Or accept any rank, save the foremost.  A man
 Of action by nature, he might have, no doubt,
 Been in some sense a great man, had life but laid out
 Any great field of action for him, or conceded
 To action a really great aim, such as needed
 Faith, patience, self-sacrifice.
 -------------------But, on the whole,
 From circumstance partly beyond his control,
 His life was of trifles made up, and he lived
 In a world of frivolities. Still he contrived
 The trifles, to which he was wedded, to dower
 With so much of his own individual power
 (And mere pastime to him was so keen a pursuit).
 That these trifles seem'd such as you scarce could impute
 To a trifler.
 -----------Both he and Lord Alfred had been
 Men of pleasure: but men's pleasant vices, which, seen
 In Alfred, appear'd, from the light languid mood
 Of soft unconcern with which these were pursued,
 As amiable foibles, by strange involution,
 In Eugene, from their earnest, intense prosecution.
 Appear'd almost criminal.
 ----------------------Nevertheless,
 What in him gave to vice, from its pathos and stress,
 A sort of malignity, might have perchance
 Had the object been changed by transposed circumstance,
 Given vigour to virtue. And therefore, indeed,
 Had his lite been allied to some fix'd moral creed,
 In the practice and forms of a rigid, severe,
 And ascetic religion, he might have come near
 To each saint in that calendar which he no spurn'd.
 In its orbit, however, his intellect turn'd
 On a circle so narrow'd as quite to exclude
 A spacious humanity. Therefore, both crude
 And harsh his religion would ever have been,
 As shallow, presumptuous, narrow, and keen,
 Was the trite irreligion which now he display'd.
 It depended alone upon chance to have made
 Persecutor of this man, or martyr. For, closed
 In the man, lurk'd two natures the world deems opposed,
 A Savonarola's, a Calvin's, alike
 Unperceived by himself. It was in him to strike
 At whatever the object he sought to attain,
 Bold as Brutus, relentless as Philip of Spain,
 And undaunted to march, in behalf of his brothers,
 To the stake, or to light it, remorseless, for others.
 The want of his lite was the great want, in fact,
 Of a principle, less than of power to act
 Upon principle. Life without one living truth!
 To the sacred political creed of his youth
 The century which he was born to denied
 All realisation. Its generous pride
 To degenerate protest on all things was sunk;
 Its principles, each to a prejudice shrunk.
 And thus from his youth he had lived, in constrain'd
 Vain resistance, opposed to the race that then reign'd
 In the land of his birth, and from this cause alone
 Exiled from his due sphere of action, and thrown
 Into reckless inertness , whence, early possess'd
 Of inherited wealth, he had learn'd to invest
 Both his wealth and those passions wealth frees from the cage
 Which penury locks, in each vice of an age
 All the virtues of which, by the creed he revered,
 Were to him illegitimate.
 -------------------Thus, he appear'd
 Neither Brutus nor Philip in action and deed,
 Neither Calvin nor Savonarola in creed,
 But that which the world chose to have him appear,-
 The frivolous tyrant of Fashion, a mere
 Reformer in coats, cards, and carriages! Still
 'Twas this vigour of nature, and tension of will
 Whence his love for Lucile to such passion grown.
 The moment in which with his nature her own
 Into contact had come, the intense life in her,
 The tenacious embrace of her strong character,
 Had seized and possess'd what in him was akin
 To the powers within her; and still, as within
 Her loftier, larger, more luminous nature,
 These powers assumed greater glory and stature,
 Her influence over the mind of Eugene
 Was not only strong, but so strong as to strain
 All his own to a loftier limit.
 -------------------------And so
 His whole being seem'd to cling to her, as though
 He divined that, in some unaccountable way,
 His happier destinies secretly lay
 In the light of her dark eyes. And still, in be mind,
 To the anguish of losing the woman was join'd
 The terror of missing his life's destination,
 Of which, as in mystical representation,
 The love of the woman, whose aspect benign
 Guided, starlike, his soul seem'd the symbol and sign.
 For he felt, if the light of that star it should miss,
 That there lurk'd in his nature, conceal'd, an abyss
 Into which all the current of being might roll,
 Devastating a life, and submerging a soul.
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 IX
 --------------------Before he relinquish'd
 His unconscious employment, that light was extinguish'd.
 Wheels, at last, from the inn door aroused him. He ran
 Down the stairs; reach'd the entrance. An old stableman
 Was lighting his pipe in the doorway alone.
 Down the mountam, that moment, a carriage was gone.
 He could hear it, already too distant to see.
 He turn'd to the groom there -
 ----------------------'Madame est parti'.
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 X
 He sprang from the doorstep; he rush'd on; bat whither
 He knew not - on, into the dark cloudy weather-
 The midnight-the mountains-on, over the shelf
 Of the precipice-on, still-away from himself!
 ...
 A change had pass'd o'er him; an angry remorse
 Of his own frantic failure and error had marr'd
 Such a refuge for ever. The future seem'd barr'd
 By the corpse of a dead hope o'er which he must tread
 To attain it. He realised then all the dread
 Conditions which go to a life without faith.
 The sole unseen fact he believed in was death.
 His soul, roused to life by a great human need,
 Now hunger'd and thirsted. What had he to feed
 Her hunger and thirst on? That wise mother, France,
 Had left to her spoil'd child of outgrown romance
 Not a toy yet unbroken.
 -----------------From college to college
 She had gorged him crop full on her dead Tree of Knowledge;
 But the lost Tree of Life - still the cherubim's sword
 Fenced it from her false Edens. Belief was a word
 To him, not a fact. He yet clung by a name
 To a dynasty fallen for ever. He came
 Of an old princely house, true through change to the race
 And the sword of Saint Louis -a faith 'twere disgrace
 To relinquish, and folly to live for! Nor less
 Was his ancient religion (once potent to bless
 Or to ban; and the crozier his ancestors kneel'd
 To adore, when they fought for the Cross, in hard field
 With the Crescent) become, ere it reach'd him, tradition;
 A mere faded badge of a social position;
 A thing to retain and say nothing about,
 Lest, if used, it should draw degradation from doubt.
 Thus, the first time he sought them, the creeds of his youth
 Wholly fail'd the strong needs of his manhood, in truth!
 And beyond them, what region of refuge? What field
 For employment, this civilized age, did it yield,
 In that civilized land? or to thought? or to action?
 Blind deliriums, bewilder'd and endless distraction!
 Not even a desert, not even the cell
 Of a hermit to flee to, wherein he might quell
 The wild devil-instincts which now, unreprest,
 Ran riot thro' that ruin'd world in his breast.
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 XXI [only final line here]
 Who can answer where any road leads?
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 XXII [Long verse based closely on a poem of Musset's]
 | Part I, Canto III, Verse I 1867 Chapman & Hall
 Part I, Canto IV: Verse VII - final two lines deleted.
 Part I, Canto IV: Verse XV - in line two, "of the Countess" ischanged to "of Lucile"
 Part I, Canto V: no changes noted
 Part I, Canto VI: in dialogue Verses IV-V, "The Countess" is changed to "Lucile" and
 "The Duke" to "Luvois" 
 
 Part I Canto IV Verse IIEugene de Luvois was a man who, in part
 From strong physical health, and that vigour of heart
 Which physical health gives, and partly, perchance,
 From a generous vanity native to France,
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 With the heart of a hunter, whatever the quarry,
 Pursued it, too hotly impatient to tarry
 Or turn, till he took it. His trophies were trifles:
 But trifler he was not. When rose leaves it rifles,
 No less than when oak-trees it ruins, the wind
 Its pleasure pursues with impetuous mind.
 Both Eugene de Luvois and Lord Alfred had been
 Men of pleasure: but men's pleasant vices, which, seen
 Floating faint, in the sunshine of Alfred's soft mood,
 Seem'd amiable foibles, by Luvois pursued
 With impetuous passion, seemed semi-Satanic.
 Half-pleased you see brooks play with pebbles ; in panic
 You watch them whirl'd down by the torrent.
 -------------------In truth,
 To the sacred political creed of his youth
 The century which he was born to denied
 All realisation. Its generous pride
 To degenerate protest on all things was sunk;
 Its principles, each to a prejudice shrunk.
 Down the path of a life that led nowhere he trod,
 Where his whims were his guides, and his will was his god,
 And his pastime his purpose.
 ----------------From boyhood possess'd
 Of inherited wealth, he had learn'd to invest
 Both his wealth and those passions wealth frees from the cage
 Which penury locks, in each vice of an age
 All the virtues of which, by the creed he revered,
 Were to him illegitimate.
 --------------------Thus, he appear'd
 To the world what the world chose to have him appear,-
 The frivolous tyrant of Fashion, a mere
 Reformer in coats, cards, and carriages! Still
 'Twas this vigour of nature, and tension of will,
 That found for the first time-perchance for the last-
 In Lucile what they lacked yet to free from the Past
 Force, and faith, in the Future.
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 --------------------And so, in his mind,
 To the anguish of losing the woman was join'd
 The terror of missing his life's destination,
 Which in her had its mystical representation.
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 IX
 ------------------Before he relinquish'd
 His unconscious employment, that light was extinguish'd.
 Wheels, at last, from the inn door aroused him. He ran
 Down the stairs; reach'd the door-just to see her depart.
 Down the mountain the carriage was speeding.
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 X
 ------------------------His heart
 Pealed the knell of its last hope. He rush'd on; but whither
 He knew not-on, into the dark cloudy weather-
 The midnight-the mountains-on, over the shelf
 Of the precipice-on, still-away from himself!
 ...
 A change had pass'd o'er him; an angry remorse
 Of his own frantic failure and error had marr'd
 Such a refuge for ever. The future seem'd barr'd
 By the corpse of a dead hope o'er which he must tread
 To attain it. Life's wilderness round him was spread.
 What clue there to cling by?
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 ----------------He clung by a name
 To a dynasty fallen for ever. He cam
 e 
Of an old princely house, true through change to the race
 And the sword of Saint Louis-a faith 'twere disgrace
 To relinquish, and folly to live for! Nor less
 Was his ancient religion (once potent to bless
 Or to ban; and the crozier his ancestors kneel'd
 To adore, when they fought for the Cross, in hard field
 With the Crescent) become, ere it reach'd him, tradition;
 A. mere faded badge of a social position;
 A thing to retain and say nothing about,
 Lest, if used, it should draw degradation from doubt.
 Thus, the first time he sought them, the creeds of his youth
 Wholly fail'd the strong needs of his manhood, in truth!
 And beyond them, what region of refuge? what field
 For employment, this civilized age, did it yield,
 In that civilized land? or to thought? or to action?
 Blind deliriums, bewilder'd and endless distraction!
 Not even a desert, not even the cell
 Of a hermit to flee to, wherein he might quell
 The wild devil-instincts which now, unreprest,
 Ran riot through that ruin'd world in his breast.
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 XXI: [final line deleted]
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 1860 XXII deleted entirely.
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