I PARTLY to think, more to be left alone, | |
| George Annandale said something to his friends | |
| A word or two, brusque, but yet smoothed enough | |
| To suit their funeral gazeand went upstairs; | |
| And there, in the one room that he could call | 5 |
| His own, he found a sort of meaningless | |
| Annoyance in the mute familiar things | |
| That filled it; for the grates monotonous gleam | |
| Was not the gleam that he had known before, | |
| The books were not the books that used to be, | 10 |
| The place was not the place. There was a lack | |
| Of something; and the certitude of death | |
| Itself, as with a furtive questioning, | |
| Hovered, and he could not yet understand. | |
| He knew that she was gonethere was no need | 15 |
| Of any argued proof to tell him that, | |
| For they had buried her that afternoon, | |
| Under the leaves and snow; and still there was | |
| A doubt, a pitiless doubt, a plunging doubt, | |
| That struck him, and upstartled when it struck, | 20 |
| The vision, the old thought in him. There was | |
| A lack, and one that wrenched him; but it was | |
| Not thatnot that. There was a present sense | |
| Of something indeterminably near | |
| The soul-clutch of a prescient emptiness | 25 |
| That would not be foreboding. And if not, | |
| What then?or was it anything at all? | |
| Yes, it was somethingit was everything | |
| But what was everything? or anything? | |
| Tired of time, bewildered, he sat down; | 30 |
| But in his chair he kept on wondering | |
| That he should feel so desolately strange | |
| And yetfor all he knew that he had lost | |
| More of the world than most men ever win | |
| So curiously calm. And he was left | 35 |
| Unanswered and unsatisfied: there came | |
| No clearer meaning to him than had come | |
| Before; the old abstraction was the best | |
| That he could find, the farthest he could go; | |
| To that was no beginning and no end | 40 |
| No end that he could reach. So he must learn | |
| To live the surest and the largest life | |
| Attainable in him, would he divine | |
| The meaning of the dream and of the words | |
| That he had written, without knowing why, | 45 |
| On sheets that he had bound up like a book | |
| And covered with red leather. There it was | |
| There in his desk, the record he had made, | |
| The spiritual plaything of his life: | |
| There were the words no eyes had ever seen | 50 |
| Save his; there were the words that were not made | |
| For glory or for gold. The pretty wife | |
| Whom he had loved and lost had not so much | |
| As heard of them. They were not made for her. | |
| His love had been so much the life of her, | 55 |
| And hers had been so much the life of him, | |
| That any wayward phrasing on his part | |
| Would have had no moment. Neither had lived enough | |
| To know the book, albeit one of them | |
| Had grown enough to write it. There it was, | 60 |
| However, though he knew not why it was: | |
| There was the book, but it was not for her, | |
| For she was dead. And yet, there was the book. | |
| |
| Thus would his fancy circle out and out, | |
| And out and in again, till he would make | 65 |
| As if with a large freedom to crush down | |
| Those under-thoughts. He covered with his hands | |
| His tired eyes, and waited: he could hear | |
| Or partly feel and hear, mechanically | |
| The sound of talk, with now and then the steps | 70 |
| And skirts of some one scudding on the stairs, | |
| Forgetful of the nerveless funeral feet | |
| That she had brought with her; and more than once | |
| There came to him a call as of a voice | |
| A voice of love returningbut not hers. | 75 |
| Whose he knew not, nor dreamed; nor did he know, | |
| Nor did he dream, in his blurred loneliness | |
| Of thought, what all the rest might think of him. | |
| |
| For it had come at last, and she was gone | |
| With all the vanished women of old time, | 80 |
| And she was never coming back again. | |
| Yes, they had buried her that afternoon, | |
| Under the frozen leaves and the cold earth, | |
| Under the leaves and snow. The flickering week, | |
| The sharp and certain day, and the long drowse | 85 |
| Were over, and the man was left alone. | |
| He knew the losstherefore it puzzled him | |
| That he should sit so long there as he did, | |
| And bring the whole thing backthe love, the trust, | |
| The pallor, the poor face, and the faint way | 90 |
| She last had looked at himand yet not weep, | |
| Or even choose to look about the room | |
| To see how sad it was; and once or twice | |
| He winked and pinched his eyes against the flame | |
| And hoped there might be tears. But hope was all, | 95 |
| And all to him was nothing: he was lost. | |
| And yet he was not lost: he was astray | |
| Out of his life and in another life; | |
| And in the stillness of this other life | |
| He wondered and he drowsed. He wondered when | 100 |
| It was, and wondered if it ever was | |
| On earth that he had known the other face | |
| The searching face, the eloquent, strange face | |
| That with a sightless beauty looked at him | |
| And with a speechless promise uttered words | 105 |
| That were not the worlds words, or any kind | |
| That he had known before. What was it, then? | |
| What was it held himfascinated him? | |
| Why should he not be human? He could sigh, | |
| And he could even groan,but what of that? | 110 |
| There was no grief left in him. Was he glad? | |
| |
| Yet how could he be glad, or reconciled, | |
| Or anything but wretched and undone? | |
| How could he be so frigid and inert | |
| So like a man with water in his veins | 115 |
| Where blood had been a little while before? | |
| How could he sit shut in there like a snail? | |
| What ailed him? What was on him? Was he glad? | |
| Over and over again the question came, | |
| Unanswered and unchanged,and there he was. | 120 |
| But what in heavens name did it all mean? | |
| If he had lived as other men had lived, | |
| If home had ever shown itself to be | |
| The counterfeit that others had called home, | |
| Then to this undivined resource of his | 125 |
| There were some key; but now
Philosophy? | |
| Yes, he could reason in a kind of way | |
| That he was glad for Miriams release | |
| Much as he might be glad to see his friends | |
| Laid out around him with their grave-clothes on, | 130 |
| And this life done for them; but something else | |
| There was that foundered reason, overwhelmed it, | |
| And with a chilled, intuitive rebuff | |
| Beat back the self-cajoling sophistries | |
| That his half-tutored thought would half-project. | 135 |
| |
| What was it, then? Had he become transformed | |
| And hardened through long watches and long grief | |
| Into a loveless, feelingless dead thing | |
| That brooded like a man, breathed like a man, | |
| Did everything but ache? And was a day | 140 |
| To come some time when feeling should return | |
| Forever to drive off that other face | |
| The lineless, indistinguishable face | |
| That once had thrilled itself between his own | |
| And hers there on the pillow,and again | 145 |
| Between him and the coffin-lid had flashed | |
| Like fate before it closed,and at the last | |
| Had come, as it should seem, to stay with him, | |
| Bidden or not? He were a stranger then, | |
| Foredrowsed awhile by some deceiving draught | 150 |
| Of poppied anguish, to the covert grief | |
| And the stark loneliness that waited him, | |
| And for the time were cursedly endowed | |
| With a dull trust that shammed indifference | |
| To knowing there would be no touch again | 155 |
| Of her small hand on his, no silencing | |
| Of her quick lips on his, no feminine | |
| Completeness and love-fragrance in the house, | |
| No sound of some one singing any more, | |
| No smoothing of slow fingers on his hair, | 160 |
| No shimmer of pink slippers on brown tiles. | |
| |
| But there was nothing, nothing, in all that: | |
| He had not fooled himself so much as that; | |
| He might be dreaming or he might be sick, | |
| But not like that. There was no place for fear, | 165 |
| No reason for remorse. There was the book | |
| That he had made, though.
It might be the book; | |
| Perhaps he might find something in the book; | |
| But no, there could be nothing there at all | |
| He knew it word for word; but what it meant | 170 |
| He was not sure that he had written it | |
| For what it meant; and he was not quite sure | |
| That he had written it;more likely it | |
| Was all a paper ghost.
But the dead wife | |
| Was real: he knew all that, for he had been | 175 |
| To see them bury her; and he had seen | |
| The flowers and the snow and the stripped limbs | |
| Of trees; and he had heard the preacher pray; | |
| And he was back again, and he was glad. | |
| Was he a brute? No, he was not a brute: | 180 |
| He was a manlike any other man: | |
| He had loved and married his wife Miriam, | |
| They had lived a little while in paradise | |
| And she was gone; and that was all of it. | |
| |
| But no, not all of itnot all of it: | 185 |
| There was the book again; something in that | |
| Pursued him, overpowered him, put out | |
| The futile strength of all his whys and wheres, | |
| And left him unintelligibly numb | |
| Too numb to care for anything but rest. | 190 |
| It must have been a curious kind of book | |
| That he had made it: it was a drowsy book | |
| At any rate. The very thought of it | |
| Was like the taste of some impossible drink | |
| A taste that had no taste, but for all that | 195 |
| Had mixed with it a strange thought-cordial, | |
| So potent that it somehow killed in him | |
| The ultimate need of doubting any more | |
| Of asking any more. Did he but live | |
| The life that he must live, there were no more | 200 |
| To seek.The rest of it was on the way. | |
| |
| Still there was nothing, nothing, in all this | |
| Nothing that he cared now to reconcile | |
| With reason or with sorrow. All he knew | |
| For certain was that he was tired out: | 205 |
| His flesh was heavy and his blood beat small; | |
| Something supreme had been wrenched out of him | |
| As if to make vague room for something else. | |
| He had been through too much. Yes, he would stay | |
| There where he was and rest.And there he stayed; | 210 |
| The daylight became twilight, and he stayed; | |
| The flame and the face faded, and he slept. | |
| And they had buried her that afternoon, | |
| Under the tight-screwed lid of a long box, | |
| Under the earth, under the leaves and snow. | 215 |
| |
II Look where she would, feed conscience how she might, | |
| There was but one way now for Damaris | |
| One straight way that was hers, hers to defend, | |
| At hand, imperious. But the nearness of it, | |
| The flesh-bewildering simplicity, | 220 |
| And the plain strangeness of it, thrilled again | |
| That wretched little quivering single string | |
| Which yielded not, but held her to the place | |
| Where now for five triumphant years had slept | |
| The flameless dust of Argan.He was gone, | 225 |
| The good man she had married long ago; | |
| And she had lived, and living she had learned, | |
| And surely there was nothing to regret: | |
| Much happiness had been for each of them, | |
| And they had been like lovers to the last: | 230 |
| And after that, and long, long after that, | |
| Her tears had washed out more of widowed grief | |
| Than smiles had ever told of other joy. | |
| But could she, looking back, find anything | |
| That should return to her in the new time, | 235 |
| And with relentless magic uncreate | |
| This temple of new love where she had thrown | |
| Dead sorrow on the altar of new life? | |
| Only one thing, only one thread was left; | |
| When she broke that, when reason snapped it off, | 240 |
| And once for all, baffled, the grave let go | |
| The trivial hideous hold it had on her, | |
| Then she were free, free to be what she would, | |
| Free to be what she was.And yet she stayed, | |
| Leashed, as it were, and with a cobweb strand, | 245 |
| Close to a tombstonemaybe to starve there. | |
| |
| But why to starve? And why stay there at all? | |
| Why not make one good leap and then be done | |
| Forever and at once with Argans ghost | |
| And all such outworn churchyard servitude? | 250 |
| For it was Argans ghost that held the string, | |
| And her sick fancy that held Argans ghost | |
| Held it and pitied it. She laughed, almost, | |
| There for the moment; but her strained eyes filled | |
| With tears, and she was angry for those tears | 255 |
| Angry at first, then proud, then sorry for them. | |
| So she grew calm; and after a vain chase | |
| For thoughts more vain, she questioned of herself | |
| What measure of primeval doubts and fears | |
| Were still to be gone through that she might win | 260 |
| Persuasion of her strength and of herself | |
| To be what she could see that she must be, | |
| No matter where the ghost was.And the more | |
| She lived, the more she came to recognize | |
| That something out of her thrilled ignorance | 265 |
| Was luminously, proudly being born, | |
| And thereby proving, thought by forward thought, | |
| The prowess of its image; and she learned | |
| At length to look right on to the long days | |
| Before her without fearing. She could watch | 270 |
| The coming course of them as if they were | |
| No more than birds, that slowly, silently, | |
| And irretrievably should wing themselves | |
| Uncounted out of sight. And when he came | |
| Again, she might be freeshe would be free. | 275 |
| Else, when he looked at her she must look down, | |
| Defeated, and malignly dispossessed | |
| Of what was hers to prove and in the proving | |
| Wisely to consecrate. And if the plague | |
| Of that perverse defeat should come to be | 280 |
| If at that sickening end she were to find | |
| Herself to be the same poor prisoner | |
| That he had found at firstthen she must lose | |
| All sight and sound of him, she must abjure | |
| All possible thought of him; for he would go | 285 |
| So far and for so long from her that love | |
| Yes, even a love like his, exiled enough, | |
| Might for anothers touch be born again | |
| Born to be lost and starved for and not found; | |
| Or, at the next, the second wretchedest, | 290 |
| It might go mutely flickering down and out, | |
| And on some incomplete and piteous day, | |
| Some perilous day to come, she might at last | |
| Learn, with a noxious freedom, what it is | |
| To be at peace with ghosts. Then were the blow | 295 |
| Thrice deadlier than any kind of death | |
| Could ever be: to know that she had won | |
| The truth too latethere were the dregs indeed | |
| Of wisdom, and of love the final thrust | |
| Unmerciful; and there where now did lie | 300 |
| So plain before her the straight radiance | |
| Of what was her appointed way to take, | |
| Were only the bleak ruts of an old road | |
| That stretched ahead and faded and lay far | |
| Through deserts of unconscionable years. | 305 |
| |
| But vampire thoughts like these confessed the doubt | |
| That love denied; and once, if never again, | |
| They should be turned away. They might come back | |
| More craftily, perchance, they might come back | |
| And with a spirit-thirst insatiable | 310 |
| Finish the strength of her; but now, today | |
| She would have none of them. She knew that love | |
| Was true, that he was true, that she was true; | |
| And should a death-bed snare that she had made | |
| So long ago be stretched inexorably | 315 |
| Through all her life, only to be unspun | |
| With her last breathing? And were bats and threads, | |
| Accursedly devised with watered gules, | |
| To be Loves heraldry? What were it worth | |
| To live and to find out that life were life | 320 |
| But for an unrequited incubus | |
| Of outlawed shame that would not be thrown down | |
| Till she had thrown down fear and overcome | |
| The woman that was yet so much of her | |
| That she might yet go mad? What were it worth | 325 |
| To live, to linger, and to be condemned | |
| In her submission to a common thought | |
| That clogged itself and made of its first faith | |
| Its last impediment? What augured it, | |
| Now in this quick beginning of new life, | 330 |
| To clutch the sunlight and be feeling back, | |
| Back with a scared fantastic fearfulness, | |
| To touch, not knowing why, the vexed-up ghost | |
| Of what was gone? | |
| |
| Yes, there was Argans face, | 335 |
| Pallid and pinched and ruinously marked | |
| With big pathetic bones; there were his eyes, | |
| Quiet and large, fixed wistfully on hers; | |
| And there, close-pressed again within her own, | |
| Quivered his cold thin fingers. And, ah! yes, | 340 |
| There were the words, those dying words again, | |
| And hers that answered when she promised him. | |
| Promised him?
yes. And had she known the truth | |
| Of what she felt that he should ask her that, | |
| And had she known the love that was to be, | 345 |
| God knew that she could not have told him then. | |
| But then she knew it not, nor thought of it; | |
| There was no need of it; nor was there need | |
| Of any problematical support | |
| Whereto to cling while she convinced herself | 350 |
| That loves intuitive utility, | |
| Inexorably merciful, had proved | |
| That what was human was unpermanent | |
| And what was flesh was ashes. She had told | |
| Him then that she would love no other man, | 355 |
| That there was not another man on earth | |
| Whom she could ever love, or who could make | |
| So much as a love thought go through her brain; | |
| And he had smiled. And just before he died | |
| His lips had made as if to say something | 360 |
| Something that passed unwhispered with his breath, | |
| Out of her reach, out of all quest of it. | |
| And then, could she have known enough to know | |
| The meaning of her grief, the folly of it, | |
| The faithlessness and the proud anguish of it, | 365 |
| There might be now no threads to punish her, | |
| No vampire thoughts to suck the coward blood, | |
| The life, the very soul of her. | |
| |
| Yes, Yes, | |
| They might come back.
But why should they come back? | 370 |
| Why was it she had suffered? Why had she | |
| Struggled and grown these years to demonstrate | |
| That close without those hovering clouds of gloom | |
| And through them here and there forever gleamed | |
| The Light itself, the life, the love, the glory, | 375 |
| Which was of its own radiance good proof | |
| That all the rest was darkness and blind sight? | |
| And who was she? The woman she had known | |
| The woman she had petted and called I | |
| The woman she had pitied, and at last | 380 |
| Commiserated for the most abject | |
| And persecuted of all womankind, | |
| Could it be she that had sought out the way | |
| To measure and thereby to quench in her | |
| The womans fearthe fear of her not fearing? | 385 |
| A nervous little laugh that lost itself, | |
| Like logic in a dream, fluttered her thoughts | |
| An instant there that ever she should ask | |
| What she might then have told so easily | |
| So easily that Annandale had frowned, | 390 |
| Had he been given wholly to be told | |
| The truth of what had never been before | |
| So passionately, so inevitably | |
| Confessed. | |
| |
| For she could see from where she sat | 395 |
| The sheets that he had bound up like a book | |
| And covered with red leather; and her eyes | |
| Could see between the pages of the book, | |
| Though her eyes, like them, were closed. And she could read | |
| As well as if she had them in her hand, | 400 |
| What he had written on them long ago, | |
| Six years ago, when he was waiting for her. | |
| She might as well have said that she could see | |
| The man himself, as once he would have looked | |
| Had she been there to watch him while he wrote | 405 |
| Those words, and all for her.
For her whose face | |
| Had flashed itself, prophetic and unseen, | |
| But not unspirited, between the life | |
| That would have been without her and the life | |
| That he had gathered up like frozen roots | 410 |
| Out of a grave-clod lying at his feet, | |
| Unconsciously, and as unconsciously | |
| Transplanted and revived. He did not know | |
| The kind of life that he had found, nor did | |
| He doubt, not knowing it; but well he knew | 415 |
| That it was lifenew life, and that the old | |
| Might then with unimprisoned wings go free, | |
| Onward and all along to its own light, | |
| Through the appointed shadow. | |
| |
| While she gazed | 420 |
| Upon it there she felt within herself | |
| The growing of a newer consciousness | |
| The pride of something fairer than her first | |
| Outclamoring of interdicted thought | |
| Had ever quite foretold; and all at once | 425 |
| There quivered and requivered through her flesh, | |
| Like music, like the sound of an old song, | |
| Triumphant, love-remembered murmurings | |
| Of what for passions innocence had been | |
| Too mightily, too perilously hers, | 430 |
| Ever to be reclaimed and realized | |
| Until today. Today she could throw off | |
| The burden that had held her down so long, | |
| And she could stand upright, and she could see | |
| The way to take, with eyes that had in them | 435 |
| No gleam but of the spirit. Day or night, | |
| No matter; she could see what was to see | |
| All that had been till now shut out from her, | |
| The service, the fulfillment, and the truth, | |
| And thus the cruel wiseness of it all. | 440 |
| |
| So Damaris, more like than anything | |
| To one long prisoned in a twilight cave | |
| With hovering bats for all companionship, | |
| And after time set free to fight the sun, | |
| Laughed out, so glad she was to recognize | 445 |
| The test of what had been, through all her folly, | |
| The courage of her conscience; for she knew, | |
| Now on a late-flushed autumn afternoon | |
| That else had been too bodeful of dead things | |
| To be endured with aught but the same old | 450 |
| Inert, self-contradicted martyrdom | |
| Which she had known so long, that she could look | |
| Right forward through the years, nor any more | |
| Shrink with a cringing prescience to behold | |
| The glitter of dead summer on the grass, | 455 |
| Or the brown-glimmered crimson of still trees | |
| Across the intervale where flashed along, | |
| Black-silvered, the cold river. She had found, | |
| As if by some transcendent freakishness | |
| Of reason, the glad life that she had sought | 460 |
| Where naught but obvious clouds could ever be | |
| Clouds to put out the sunlight from her eyes, | |
| And to put out the love-light from her soul. | |
| But they were gonenow they were all gone; | |
| And with a whimsied pathos, like the mist | 465 |
| Of grief that clings to new-found happiness | |
| Hard wrought, she might have pity for the small | |
| Defeated quest of them that brushed her sight | |
| Like flying lintlint that had once been thread.
| |
| Yes, like an anodyne, the voice of him, | 470 |
| There were the words that he had made for her, | |
| For her alone. The more she thought of them | |
| The more she lived them, and the more she knew | |
| The life-grip and the pulse of warm strength in them. | |
| They were the first and last of words to her, | 475 |
| And there was in them a far questioning | |
| That had for long been variously at work, | |
| Divinely and elusively at work, | |
| With her, and with the grace that had been hers; | |
| They were eternal words, and they diffused | 480 |
| A flame of meaning that mens lexicons | |
| Had never kindled; they were choral words | |
| That harmonized with loves enduring chords | |
| Like wisdom with release; triumphant words | |
| That rang like elemental orisons | 485 |
| Through ages out of ages; words that fed | |
| Loves hunger in the spirit; words that smote; | |
| Thrilled words that echoed, and barbed words that clung; | |
| And every one of them was like a friend | |
| Whose obstinate fidelity, well tried, | 490 |
| Had found at last and irresistibly | |
| The way to her close conscience, and thereby | |
| Revealed the unsubstantial Nemesis | |
| That she had clutched and shuddered at so long; | |
| And every one of them was like a real | 495 |
| And ringing voice, clear toned and absolute, | |
| But of a love-subdued authority | |
| That uttered thrice the plain significance | |
| Of what had else been generously vague | |
| And indolently true. It may have been | 500 |
| The triumph and the magic of the soul, | |
| Unspeakably revealed, that finally | |
| Had reconciled the grim probationing | |
| Of wisdom with unalterable faith, | |
| But she could feelnot knowing what it was, | 505 |
| For the sheer freedom of ita new joy | |
| That humanized the latent wizardry | |
| Of his prophetic voice and put for it | |
| The man within the music. | |
| |
| So it came | 510 |
| To pass, like many a long-compelled emprise | |
| That with its first accomplishment almost | |
| Annihilates its own severity, | |
| That she could find, whenever she might look, | |
| The certified achievement of a love | 515 |
| That had endured, self-guarded and supreme, | |
| To the glad end of all that wavering; | |
| And she could see that now the flickering world | |
| Of autumn was awake with sudden bloom, | |
| New-born, perforce, of a slow bourgeoning. | 520 |
| And she had found what more than half had been | |
| The grave-deluded, flesh-bewildered fear | |
| Which men and women struggle to call faith, | |
| To be the paid progression to an end | |
| Whereat she knew the foresight and the strength | 525 |
| To glorify the gift of what was hers, | |
| To vindicate the truth of what she was. | |
| And had it come to her so suddenly? | |
| There was a pity and a weariness | |
| In asking that, and a great needlessness; | 530 |
| For now there were no wretched quivering strings | |
| That held her to the churchyard any more: | |
| There were no thoughts that flapped themselves like bats | |
| Around her any more. The shield of love | |
| Was clean, and she had paid enough to learn | 535 |
| How it had always been so. And the truth, | |
| Like silence after some far victory, | |
| Had come to her, and she had found it out | |
| As if it were a vision, a thing born | |
| So suddenly!just as a flower is born, | 540 |
| Or as a world is bornso suddenly. | |