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The Man against the Sky
Llewellyn and the Tree
Edwin Arlington Robinson
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       Could he have made Priscilla share
         The paradise that he had planned,
       Llewellyn would have loved his wife
         As well as any in the land.
       Could he have made Priscilla cease
         To goad him for what God left out,
       Llewellyn would have been as mild
         As any we have read about.
       Could all have been as all was not,
         Llewellyn would have had no story;
       He would have stayed a quiet man
         And gone his quiet way to glory.
       But howsoever mild he was
         Priscilla was implacable;
       And whatsoever timid hopes
         He built -- she found them, and they fell.
       And this went on, with intervals
         Of labored harmony between
       Resounding discords, till at last
         Llewellyn turned -- as will be seen.
       Priscilla, warmer than her name,
         And shriller than the sound of saws,
       Pursued Llewellyn once too far,
         Not knowing quite the man he was.
       The more she said, the fiercer clung
         The stinging garment of his wrath;
       And this was all before the day
         When Time tossed roses in his path.
       Before the roses ever came
         Llewellyn had already risen.
       The roses may have ruined him,
         They may have kept him out of prison.
       And she who brought them, being Fate,
         Made roses do the work of spears, --
       Though many made no more of her
         Than civet, coral, rouge, and years.
       You ask us what Llewellyn saw,
         But why ask what may not be given?
       To some will come a time when change
         Itself is beauty, if not heaven.
       One afternoon Priscilla spoke,
         And her shrill history was done;
       At any rate, she never spoke
         Like that again to anyone.
       One gold October afternoon
         Great fury smote the silent air;
       And then Llewellyn leapt and fled
         Like one with hornets in his hair.
       Llewellyn left us, and he said
         Forever, leaving few to doubt him;
       And so, through frost and clicking leaves,
         The Tilbury way went on without him.
       And slowly, through the Tilbury mist,
         The stillness of October gold
       Went out like beauty from a face.
         Priscilla watched it, and grew old.
       He fled, still clutching in his flight
         The roses that had been his fall;
       The Scarlet One, as you surmise,
         Fled with him, coral, rouge, and all.
       Priscilla, waiting, saw the change
         Of twenty slow October moons;
       And then she vanished, in her turn
         To be forgotten, like old tunes.
       So they were gone -- all three of them,
         I should have said, and said no more,
       Had not a face once on Broadway
         Been one that I had seen before.
       The face and hands and hair were old,
         But neither time nor penury
       Could quench within Llewellyn's eyes
         The shine of his one victory.
       The roses, faded and gone by,
         Left ruin where they once had reigned;
       But on the wreck, as on old shells,
         The color of the rose remained.
       His fictive merchandise I bought
         For him to keep and show again,
       Then led him slowly from the crush
         Of his cold-shouldered fellow men.
       "And so, Llewellyn," I began --
         "Not so," he said; "not so, at all:
       I've tried the world, and found it good,
         For more than twenty years this fall.
       "And what the world has left of me
         Will go now in a little while."
       And what the world had left of him
         Was partly an unholy guile.
       "That I have paid for being calm
         Is what you see, if you have eyes;
       For let a man be calm too long,
         He pays for much before he dies.
       "Be calm when you are growing old
         And you have nothing else to do;
       Pour not the wine of life too thin
         If water means the death of you.
       "You say I might have learned at home
         The truth in season to be strong?
       Not so; I took the wine of life
         Too thin, and I was calm too long.
       "Like others who are strong too late,
         For me there was no going back;
       For I had found another speed,
         And I was on the other track.
       "God knows how far I might have gone
         Or what there might have been to see;
       But my speed had a sudden end,
         And here you have the end of me."
       The end or not, it may be now
         But little farther from the truth
       To say those worn satiric eyes
         Had something of immortal youth.
       He may among the millions here
         Be one; or he may, quite as well,
       Be gone to find again the Tree
         Of Knowledge, out of which he fell.
       He may be near us, dreaming yet
         Of unrepented rouge and coral;
       Or in a grave without a name
         May be as far off as a moral.