Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
The Chronicle of the Boot
By Giuseppe Giusti (18091850)I
Nor ever meant for country loon;
If with an axe I seem cut out,
The workman was no cobbling clown;
A good jack-boot with double sole he made,
To roam the woods, or through the rivers wade.
I ’m ever wet, and stand it well;
Good for the chase, or spurring hard,
As many jackasses can tell.
Sewn strong with solid stitching, you must know,
At top a hem, all down a seam I show.
Unfit for wear of hucksters small,
I tire and gall a feeble foot,
And most men’s legs don’t fit at all.
To wear me long has been the lot of none;
A little while has satisfied each one.
Of all who wished to try their foot;
But here and there, merely for fun,
The most illustrious I ’ll quote.
How torn and maimed I ’ve been I ’ll tell in brief,
And then how passed along from thief to thief.
I set off at a gallop round,
And traversed all the world full speed;
But, running over too much ground,
I lost my balance, and I fell down smack
By my own weight, full-length upon my back.
Men of all nations, greatest, least,
Poured down some thousand thousand miles,
Led by the Devil and a priest:
Some caught the leg, some held the tasselled tie;
And “Touch and take!” was on all sides the cry.
Helped or unhelped would put me on,
Then found I did not fit his foot,
So let me out to any one;
And thus at last in the first comer’s hands
He leaves me, and for boot-hook only stands.
Played pikes to put his heel in me;
But homewards on St. Francis’ nag
Full many a time I ’ve seen him flee.
Again he hither came, but sore of foot;
Nor has he ever yet quite donned the Boot.
Then pulled on by a merchant plain,
He greased me fresh, and made me trot
To the Levant and back again.
Unpolished, true; but not one jot I failed,
With rare good hobs and sparables well nailed.
To polish up and smarten me;
I wore the spur, the fleece of gold,
But lost my old consistency.
Change followed change, that now I plainly see
That my first nails were far the best for me.
When from the west a pilfering oaf
Jumped from his galley on my heel,
Tried even to insert his hoof.
But comfortably there he could not stay;
And at Palermo him I lamed one day.
A certain King of Spades essayed,
With feet and hands to put me on;
But like Berlicche there he stayed,
When jealous of the roost a Capon crowing,
Just threatened him to set the bells a-going.
Or maybe later, an M. D.,
Leaving his drugs and shop, rushed forth;
Upon my upper-leathers he
To help my case devised intrigues and lies,
Whose web was woven for three centuries.
And with emollients, glosses rare,
He rubbed me till I lost my skin;
And he who had me next in care
Still doctored me according to the rule
Of that iniquitious and cursed school.
I every harpy’s mark became.
Both Frank and Spaniard I endured,
Who played the “Devil and Baker’s” game.
Don Quixote proved at length the lucky wight;
But rent and ridiculed he held me tight.
Say that I sat “malissimo,”
Though greased and varnish-daubed, and styled,
“Chiarissimo,” “Illustrissimo.”
But on the sly he used the file so sore,
That I was left more ragged than before.
Using the pincers and the awl
From frying-pan to fire I fell.
Rogues, bullies, barons, great and small,
To torture me had each a new idea,
“Et diviserunt vestimenta mea.”
Of each untutored clownish brute,
I ’ve come to lose the olden print
Of that upright, well-planted foot,
On which, without one single crooked tread,
The circuit of the Universe I made.
One foolish plan has me undone;
Of walking with another’s legs
When it was time to use my own;
And more than this, the madness most unmeet,
Of hoping change of luck from change of feet.
Myself all shattered and awry;
Earth seems to shake beneath my tread
If but one single step I try.
By dint of letting bad guides lead me so,
I ’ve lost the habit and the power to go.
Unconscionable grasping race!
I ’d have at certain poets too
Who count their bead-roll nowadays,
Christ goes for nothing; the Decretal puts
A veto ’gainst the priesthood wearing “boots.”
And pawed by every dirty hand,
Long have I waited for some leg
To fill my wrinkles, make me stand;
No German leg or Frenchman’s be it known,
But one within my native country grown.
Who, had he not gone strolling forth,
Might well have boasted he possessed
In me the strongest boot on earth.
But snow-storms, on his crooked course one day,
Froze both his legs just as he got half-way.
And subject to the knife again,
Though once of mighty worth and weight,
My under-leathers scarce remain;
And as for patching holes both new and old,
It is not thread nor pegs will make them hold.
You must patch over piece by piece;
Brush off the dirt in ancient mode,
Drive nails and brads; then by degrees
The calf and upper-leathers all remake:
But to the cobbler go, for Heaven’s sake!
If only not a coward: when
I find myself upon his foot,
Should some kind sir, like former men,
Presume with me in the old way to treat,
We ’ll give him a sound kick on honor’s seat.