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The Three Taverns
John Brown
Edwin Arlington Robinson
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       Though for your sake I would not have you now
       So near to me tonight as now you are,
       God knows how much a stranger to my heart
       Was any cold word that I may have written;
       And you, poor woman that I made my wife,
       You have had more of loneliness, I fear,
       Than I -- though I have been the most alone,
       Even when the most attended. So it was
       God set the mark of his inscrutable
       Necessity on one that was to grope,
       And serve, and suffer, and withal be glad
       For what was his, and is, and is to be,
       When his old bones, that are a burden now,
       Are saying what the man who carried them
       Had not the power to say. Bones in a grave,
       Cover them as they will with choking earth,
       May shout the truth to men who put them there,
       More than all orators. And so, my dear,
       Since you have cheated wisdom for the sake
       Of sorrow, let your sorrow be for you,
       This last of nights before the last of days,
       The lying ghost of what there is of me
       That is the most alive. There is no death
       For me in what they do. Their death it is
       They should heed most when the sun comes again
       To make them solemn. There are some I know
       Whose eyes will hardly see their occupation,
       For tears in them -- and all for one old man;
       For some of them will pity this old man,
       Who took upon himself the work of God
       Because he pitied millions. That will be
       For them, I fancy, their compassionate
       Best way of saying what is best in them
       To say; for they can say no more than that,
       And they can do no more than what the dawn
       Of one more day shall give them light enough
       To do. But there are many days to be,
       And there are many men to give their blood,
       As I gave mine for them. May they come soon!
       May they come soon, I say. And when they come,
       May all that I have said unheard be heard,
       Proving at last, or maybe not -- no matter --
       What sort of madness was the part of me
       That made me strike, whether I found the mark
       Or missed it. Meanwhile, I've a strange content,
       A patience, and a vast indifference
       To what men say of me and what men fear
       To say. There was a work to be begun,
       And when the Voice, that I have heard so long,
       Announced as in a thousand silences
       An end of preparation, I began
       The coming work of death which is to be,
       That life may be. There is no other way
       Than the old way of war for a new land
       That will not know itself and is tonight
       A stranger to itself, and to the world
       A more prodigious upstart among states
       Than I was among men, and so shall be
       Till they are told and told, and told again;
       For men are children, waiting to be told,
       And most of them are children all their lives.
       The good God in his wisdom had them so,
       That now and then a madman or a seer
       May shake them out of their complacency
       And shame them into deeds. The major file
       See only what their fathers may have seen,
       Or may have said they saw when they saw nothing.
       I do not say it matters what they saw.
       Now and again to some lone soul or other
       God speaks, and there is hanging to be done, --
       As once there was a burning of our bodies
       Alive, albeit our souls were sorry fuel.
       But now the fires are few, and we are poised
       Accordingly, for the state's benefit,
       A few still minutes between heaven and earth.
       The purpose is, when they have seen enough
       Of what it is that they are not to see,
       To pluck me as an unripe fruit of treason,
       And then to fling me back to the same earth
       Of which they are, as I suppose, the flower --
       Not given to know the riper fruit that waits
       For a more comprehensive harvesting.
       Yes, may they come, and soon. Again I say,
       May they come soon! -- before too many of them
       Shall be the bloody cost of our defection.
       When hell waits on the dawn of a new state,
       Better it were that hell should not wait long, --
       Or so it is I see it who should see
       As far or farther into time tonight
       Than they who talk and tremble for me now,
       Or wish me to those everlasting fires
       That are for me no fear. Too many fires
       Have sought me out and seared me to the bone --
       Thereby, for all I know, to temper me
       For what was mine to do. If I did ill
       What I did well, let men say I was mad;
       Or let my name for ever be a question
       That will not sleep in history. What men say
       I was will cool no cannon, dull no sword,
       Invalidate no truth. Meanwhile, I was;
       And the long train is lighted that shall burn,
       Though floods of wrath may drench it, and hot feet
       May stamp it for a slight time into smoke
       That shall blaze up again with growing speed,
       Until at last a fiery crash will come
       To cleanse and shake a wounded hemisphere,
       And heal it of a long malignity
       That angry time discredits and disowns.
       Tonight there are men saying many things;
       And some who see life in the last of me
       Will answer first the coming call to death;
       For death is what is coming, and then life.
       I do not say again for the dull sake
       Of speech what you have heard me say before,
       But rather for the sake of all I am,
       And all God made of me. A man to die
       As I do must have done some other work
       Than man's alone. I was not after glory,
       But there was glory with me, like a friend,
       Throughout those crippling years when friends were few,
       And fearful to be known by their own names
       When mine was vilified for their approval.
       Yet friends they are, and they did what was given
       Their will to do; they could have done no more.
       I was the one man mad enough, it seems,
       To do my work; and now my work is over.
       And you, my dear, are not to mourn for me,
       Or for your sons, more than a soul should mourn
       In Paradise, done with evil and with earth.
       There is not much of earth in what remains
       For you; and what there may be left of it
       For your endurance you shall have at last
       In peace, without the twinge of any fear
       For my condition; for I shall be done
       With plans and actions that have heretofore
       Made your days long and your nights ominous
       With darkness and the many distances
       That were between us. When the silence comes,
       I shall in faith be nearer to you then
       Than I am now in fact. What you see now
       Is only the outside of an old man,
       Older than years have made him. Let him die,
       And let him be a thing for little grief.
       There was a time for service, and he served;
       And there is no more time for anything
       But a short gratefulness to those who gave
       Their scared allegiance to an enterprise
       That has the name of treason -- which will serve
       As well as any other for the present.
       There are some deeds of men that have no names,
       And mine may like as not be one of them.
       I am not looking far for names tonight.
       The King of Glory was without a name
       Until men gave him one; yet there He was,
       Before we found Him and affronted Him
       With numerous ingenuities of evil,
       Of which one, with His aid, is to be swept
       And washed out of the world with fire and blood.
       Once I believed it might have come to pass
       With a small cost of blood; but I was dreaming --
       Dreaming that I believed. The Voice I heard
       When I left you behind me in the north, --
       To wait there and to wonder and grow old
       Of loneliness, -- told only what was best,
       And with a saving vagueness, I should know
       Till I knew more. And had I known even then --
       After grim years of search and suffering,
       So many of them to end as they began --
       After my sickening doubts and estimations
       Of plans abandoned and of new plans vain --
       After a weary delving everywhere
       For men with every virtue but the Vision --
       Could I have known, I say, before I left you
       That summer morning, all there was to know --
       Even unto the last consuming word
       That would have blasted every mortal answer
       As lightning would annihilate a leaf,
       I might have trembled on that summer morning;
       I might have wavered; and I might have failed.
       And there are many among men today
       To say of me that I had best have wavered.
       So has it been, so shall it always be,
       For those of us who give ourselves to die
       Before we are so parcelled and approved
       As to be slaughtered by authority.
       We do not make so much of what they say
       As they of what our folly says of us;
       They give us hardly time enough for that,
       And thereby we gain much by losing little.
       Few are alive to-day with less to lose
       Than I who tell you this, or more to gain;
       And whether I speak as one to be destroyed
       For no good end outside his own destruction,
       Time shall have more to say than men shall hear
       Between now and the coming of that harvest
       Which is to come. Before it comes, I go --
       By the short road that mystery makes long
       For man's endurance of accomplishment.
       I shall have more to say when I am dead.