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For look at Elenor!
Why did she never marry? Any man Had made his life rich had he married her.
But in this present scheme of things such women Move in a life where men are mostly less In mind and heart than they are--and the men Who are their equals never come to them, Or come to them too seldom, or if they come Are blind and do not know these Elenors.
And she had character enough to live In single life, refuse the lesser chance, Since she found not the great one, as I think.
But let it pa.s.s--I'm sure she was beloved, And more than once, I'm sure. But I am sure She was too wise for errors crude and common.
And if she had a love that stopped her heart, She knew beforehand all, and met her fate Bravely, and wrote that "To be brave and not To flinch," to keep before her soul her faith Deep down within it, lest she might forget it Among her crowded thoughts.
She went to the war.
She came to see me before she went, and said She owed her courage and her restless spirit To me, her will to live, her love of life, Her power to sacrifice and serve, to me.
She put her arms about my neck and kissed me, Said I had been a mother to her, being A mother if no more; wished she had brought More happiness to me, material things, Delight in life.
Of course her work took strength.
Her life was sapped by service in the war, She died for country, for America, As much as any soldier. So I say If her life came to any waste, what waste May her heroic life and death prevent?
The world has spent two hundred billion dollars To put an egotist and strutting despot Out of the power he used to tyrannize Over his people with a tyranny Political in chief, to take away The glittering dominion of a crown.
I want some good to us out of this war, And some emanc.i.p.ation. Let me tell you: I know a worse thing than a German king: It is the social scourge of poverty, Which cripples, slays the husband and the wife, And sends the children forth in life half formed.
I know a tyranny more insidious Than any William had, it is the tyranny Of superst.i.tion, customs, laws and rules; The tyranny of the church, the tyranny Of marriage, and the tyranny of beliefs Concerning right and wrong, of good and evil; The tyranny of taboos, the despotism That rules our spirits with commands and threats: Ghosts of dead faiths and creeds, ghosts of the past.
The tyranny, in short, that starves and chains Imprisons, scourges, crucifies the soul, Which only asks the chance to live and love, Freely as it wishes, which will live so If you take Poverty and chuck him out.
Then make the main thing inner growth, take rules, Conventions and religion (save it be The wors.h.i.+p of G.o.d in spirit without hands And without temples sacraments) the babble Of moralists, the rant and flummery Of preachers and of priests, and chuck them out.
These things produce your waste and suffering.
You tell a soul it sins and make it suffer, Spend years in impotence and twilight thought.
You punish where no punishment should be, Weaken and break the soul. You weight the soul With idols and with symbols meaningless, When G.o.d gave but three things: the earth and air And mind to know them, live in freedom by them.
Well, I would have America become As free as any soul has ever dreamed her, And if America does not get strength To free herself, now that the war is over.
Then Elenor Murray's spirit has not won The thing she died for.
So I go my way, Back to get supper, I who live, shall die In America as it is--Rise up and change it For mothers of the future Elenors.
By now the press was full of Elenor Murray.
And far and near, wherever she was known, Had lived, or taught, or studied, tongues were loosed In episodes or stories of the girl.
The coroner on the street was b.u.t.ton-holed, Received marked articles and letters, some Anonymous, some crazy. David Borrow Who helped this Alma Bell as lawyer, friend, Found in his mail a note from Alma Bell, Enclosed with one much longer, written for The coroner to read.
When Merival Had read it, then he said to Borrow: "Read This letter to the other jurors." So He read it to them, as they sat one night, Invited to the home of Merival To drink a little wine and have a smoke, And talk about the case.
ALMA BELL TO THE CORONER
What my name is, or where I live, or if I am that Alma Bell whose name is broached With Elenor Murray's who shall know from this?
My hand-writing I hide in type, I send This letter through a friend who will not tell.
But first, since no chance ever yet was mine To speak my heart out, since if I had tried These fifteen years ago to tell my heart, I must have failed for lack of words and mind, I speak my heart out now. I knew the soul Of Elenor Murray, knew it at the time, Have verified my knowledge in these years, Who have not lost her, have kept touch with her In letters, know the splendid sacrifice She made in the war. She was a human soul Earth is not blest with often.
First I say I knew her when she first came to my cla.s.s Turned seventeen just then--such blue-bell eyes, And such a cataract of dark brown hair, And such a brow, sweet lips, and such a way Of talking with a cunning gasp, as if To catch breath for the words. And such a sense Of fitness, beauty, delicacy. But more Such vital power that shook her silver nerves, And made her dim to others; but to me She was all sanity of soul, her body, The instruments of life, were overborne By that great flame of hers. And if her music Fell sometimes into discord, which I doubt, It was her heart-strings which could not vibrate For human weakness, what the soul of her Struck for response; and when the strings so failed She was more grieved than I, or anyone, Who listened and expected more.
Well, then What was my love? I am not loath to tell.
I could not touch her hand without a thrill, Nor kiss her lips but I felt purified, Exalted in some way. And if fatigue, The hopeless, daily ills of teaching brought My spirit to distress, and if I went, As oftentimes I did, to call upon her After the school hours, as I heard her step Responding to my knock, my heart went up, Her face framed by the opened door--what peace Was mine to see it, peace ineffable And rest were mine to sit with her and hear That voice of hers where breath was caught for words, That cunning gasp and pause!
I loved her then, Have loved her always, love her now no less.
I feel her spirit somehow, can take out Her letters, photograph, and find a joy That such a soul lived, was in truth my soul, Must always be my soul.
What was this love?
Why only this, shame nature if you will: But since man's body is not man's alone, Nor woman's body wholly feminine, A biologic truth, our body's souls Are neither masculine nor feminine, But part and part; from whence our souls play forth Part masculine, part feminine--this woman Had that of body first which made her soul, Or made her soul play in its way, and I Had that of body which made soul of me Play in its way. Our music met, that's all, And harmonized. The flesh's explanation Is not important, nor to tell whence comes A love in the heart--the thing is love at last: Love which unites and comforts, glorifies, Enlarges spirit, woos to generous life, Invites to sacrifice, to service, clothes This poor dull earth with glory, makes the dawn An hour of high resolve, the night a hope For dawn for fuller life, the day a time For working out the soul in terms of love.
This was my love for Elenor Murray--this Her love for me, I think. Her sacrifice In the war I traced to our love--all the good Her life set into being, into motion Has in it something of this love of ours.
How good is G.o.d who gives us love, the lens Through which we see the beauty, hid from eyes That have no love, no lens.
Then what are spirits?
Effluvia material of our bodies?
Or is the spirit all--the body nothing, Since every atom, particle of matter With its interstices of soul, divides Until there is no matter, only soul?
But what is love but of the soul--what flesh Knows love but through the soul? May it not be As soul learns love through flesh, it may at last, Helped on its way by flesh, discard the flesh:-- As cured men leave their crutches--and go on Loving with spirits. For it seems to me I must find Elenor Murray as a spirit, Myself a spirit, love her as I loved her These years on earth, but with a clearer fire, Flame that is separate from fuel, burning Eternal through itself.
And here a word: My love for Elenor Murray never had Other expression than the look of eyes, The spiritual thrill of listening to her voice, A hand clasp, kiss upon the lips at best, Better to find her soul, as Plato says.
Too true I left LeRoy under a cloud, Because of love for Elenor Murray--yet Not lawless love, I write now to make clear What love was mine--and you must understand.
But let me tell how life has dealt with me, Then judge my purpose, dream, the quality Of Elenor Murray judge, who in some way, Somehow has drawn me onward, upward too, I hope, as I have striven.
I did fear Her safety, and her future, did reprove Her conduct, its appearance, rather more In dread of gossip, dread of ways to follow From such free ways begun at seventeen, In innocence, out of a vital heart.
But when a bud is opening what stray bees Come to drag pollen over it, and set Life going to the end in the fruit of life!
O, my wish was to keep her for some love To ripen in a rich maturity.
My care proved useless--or shall I say so?
Or anyone say so? since no mind knows What failure here may somewhere prove a gain.
There was that man who came into her life With heart unsatisfied, bound to a woman He wedded early. Elenor Murray's love Destroyed this man by human measurements.
And he destroyed her, so they say. But yet She poured her love upon him, lit her soul With brighter flames for love of him. At last She knew no thing but love and sacrifice.
She wrote me last her life was just one pain, Had always been so from the first, and now She wished to fling her spirit in the war, Give, serve, nor count the cost, win death and G.o.d In service in the war--O, loveliest soul I pray and pray to meet you once again!
So was her life a ruin, was it waste?
She was a prodigal flower that never shut Its petals, even in darkness, let her soul Escape when, where it would.
But to myself: I dragged myself to England from LeRoy And plunged in life, philosophies of life, Spinoza and what not, read poetry, Heard music too, Tschaikowsky, Wagner, all Who tried to make sound tell the secret thing That drove me wild in searching love. And lovers I had one after the other, having fallen To that belief the way is by the body.
But I was fooled and grew by slow degrees.
And then there came a wild man in my life, A vagabond, a madman, genius--well, We both went mad, and I smashed everything, And ran away, threw all the world for him, Only to find myself worn out, half dead At last, as it were out of delirium.
And for four years sat by the sea, or made Visits to Paris, where I met the man I married. Then how strange! I gave myself Wholly to bearing children, just to find Some explanation of myself, some work Wholly absorbing, lives to take my love.
And here I was instructed, found a step For my poor feet to mount by. Though submerged, Alone too much, my husband not the mate I dreamed of, hearing echoes in my dreams Of London and of Paris, sometimes voices Of lovers lost and vanished; still I've found A peace sometimes, a stay, too, in the innocence And helplessness of children.
But you see, In spite of all we do, however high And fiercely mounts desire, life imposes Repression, sacrifice, renunciation.
And our poor souls fall muddied in the ditch, Or take the discipline and live life out.
So Elenor Murray lived and did not fail.
And so it was the knowledge of her life Kept me in spite of failures at the task Of holding to my self.
These two months pa.s.sed I found I had not killed desire--found Among a group a chance to try again For happiness, but knew it was not there.
Then to my children I came back and said: "Free once again through suffering." So I prayed: "Come to me flame of spirit, fire of wors.h.i.+p, Bright fire of song; if I but be myself, Work through my fate, you shall be mine at last."...
Then was it that I heard from Elenor Murray-- Such letters, such outpourings of herself!
Poor woman leaving love that could not be More than it was; how wise she was to fly, And use that love for service, as she did; Extract its purest essence for the war, And ease death with it, merging love and death Into that mystic union, seen at last By Elenor Murray.
When I heard she came All broken from the war, and died somehow There by the river, then she seemed to me More near--I seemed to feel her; little zephyrs Blowing about my face, when I sat looking Over the sea in my rose bower, seemed The exhalation of her soul that caught Its breath for words. I see her in my dreams-- O, my pure soul, what have you been to me, What must you be hereafter!
But my friend, And I must call you friend, whose strength in life Drives you to find economies of spirit, And save the waste of spirit, you must find Whatever waste there was of Elenor Murray Of love or faith, or time, or strength, great gain In spite of early chances, father, mother, Too loveless, negligent, or ignorant; Her mother instinct never blessed with children.
I sometimes think no life is without use-- For even weeds that sow themselves, frost reaped And matted on the ground, enrich the soil, Or feed some life. Our eyes must see the end Of what these growths are for, before we say Where waste is and where gain.