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The Three Taverns
Rahel to Varnhagen
Edwin Arlington Robinson
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       Note. -- Rahel Robert and Varnhagen von Ense were married, after many protestations on her part, in 1814. The marriage -- so far as he was concerned, at any rate -- appears to have been satisfactory.
       

       Now you have read them all; or if not all,
       As many as in all conscience I should fancy
       To be enough. There are no more of them --
       Or none to burn your sleep, or to bring dreams
       Of devils. If these are not sufficient, surely
       You are a strange young man. I might live on
       Alone, and for another forty years,
       Or not quite forty, -- are you happier now? --
       Always to ask if there prevailed elsewhere
       Another like yourself that would have held
       These aged hands as long as you have held them,
       Not once observing, for all I can see,
       How they are like your mother's. Well, you have read
       His letters now, and you have heard me say
       That in them are the cinders of a passion
       That was my life; and you have not yet broken
       Your way out of my house, out of my sight, --
       Into the street. You are a strange young man.
       I know as much as that of you, for certain;
       And I'm already praying, for your sake,
       That you be not too strange. Too much of that
       May lead you bye and bye through gloomy lanes
       To a sad wilderness, where one may grope
       Alone, and always, or until he feels
       Ferocious and invisible animals
       That wait for men and eat them in the dark.
       Why do you sit there on the floor so long,
       Smiling at me while I try to be solemn?
       Do you not hear it said for your salvation,
       When I say truth? Are you, at four and twenty,
       So little deceived in us that you interpret
       The humor of a woman to be noticed
       As her choice between you and Acheron?
       Are you so unscathed yet as to infer
       That if a woman worries when a man,
       Or a man-child, has wet shoes on his feet
       She may as well commemorate with ashes
       The last eclipse of her tranquillity?
       If you look up at me and blink again,
       I shall not have to make you tell me lies
       To know the letters you have not been reading.
       I see now that I may have had for nothing
       A most unpleasant shivering in my conscience
       When I laid open for your contemplation
       The wealth of my worn casket. If I did,
       The fault was not yours wholly. Search again
       This wreckage we may call for sport a face,
       And you may chance upon the price of havoc
       That I have paid for a few sorry stones
       That shine and have no light -- yet once were stars,
       And sparkled on a crown. Little and weak
       They seem; and they are cold, I fear, for you.
       But they that once were fire for me may not
       Be cold again for me until I die;
       And only God knows if they may be then.
       There is a love that ceases to be love
       In being ourselves. How, then, are we to lose it?
       You that are sure that you know everything
       There is to know of love, answer me that.
       Well? . . . You are not even interested.
       Once on a far off time when I was young,
       I felt with your assurance, and all through me,
       That I had undergone the last and worst
       Of love's inventions. There was a boy who brought
       The sun with him and woke me up with it,
       And that was every morning; every night
       I tried to dream of him, but never could,
       More than I might have seen in Adam's eyes
       Their fond uncertainty when Eve began
       The play that all her tireless progeny
       Are not yet weary of. One scene of it
       Was brief, but was eternal while it lasted;
       And that was while I was the happiest
       Of an imaginary six or seven,
       Somewhere in history but not on earth,
       For whom the sky had shaken and let stars
       Rain down like diamonds. Then there were clouds,
       And a sad end of diamonds; whereupon
       Despair came, like a blast that would have brought
       Tears to the eyes of all the bears in Finland,
       And love was done. That was how much I knew.
       Poor little wretch! I wonder where he is
       This afternoon. Out of this rain, I hope.
       At last, when I had seen so many days
       Dressed all alike, and in their marching order,
       Go by me that I would not always count them,
       One stopped -- shattering the whole file of Time,
       Or so it seemed; and when I looked again,
       There was a man. He struck once with his eyes,
       And then there was a woman. I, who had come
       To wisdom, or to vision, or what you like,
       By the old hidden road that has no name, --
       I, who was used to seeing without flying
       So much that others fly from without seeing,
       Still looked, and was afraid, and looked again.
       And after that, when I had read the story
       Told in his eyes, and felt within my heart
       The bleeding wound of their necessity,
       I knew the fear was his. If I had failed him
       And flown away from him, I should have lost
       Ingloriously my wings in scrambling back,
       And found them arms again. If he had struck me
       Not only with his eyes but with his hands,
       I might have pitied him and hated love,
       And then gone mad. I, who have been so strong --
       Why don't you laugh? -- might even have done all that.
       I, who have learned so much, and said so much,
       And had the commendations of the great
       For one who rules herself -- why don't you cry? --
       And own a certain small authority
       Among the blind, who see no more than ever,
       But like my voice, -- I would have tossed it all
       To Tophet for one man; and he was jealous.
       I would have wound a snake around my neck
       And then have let it bite me till I died,
       If my so doing would have made me sure
       That one man might have lived; and he was jealous.
       I would have driven these hands into a cage
       That held a thousand scorpions, and crushed them,
       If only by so poisonous a trial
       I could have crushed his doubt. I would have wrung
       My living blood with mediaeval engines
       Out of my screaming flesh, if only that
       Would have made one man sure. I would have paid
       For him the tiresome price of body and soul,
       And let the lash of a tongue-weary town
       Fall as it might upon my blistered name;
       And while it fell I could have laughed at it,
       Knowing that he had found out finally
       Where the wrong was. But there was evil in him
       That would have made no more of his possession
       Than confirmation of another fault;
       And there was honor -- if you call it honor
       That hoods itself with doubt and wears a crown
       Of lead that might as well be gold and fire.
       Give it as heavy or as light a name
       As any there is that fits. I see myself
       Without the power to swear to this or that
       That I might be if he had been without it.
       Whatever I might have been that I was not,
       It only happened that it wasn't so.
       Meanwhile, you might seem to be listening:
       If you forget yourself and go to sleep,
       My treasure, I shall not say this again.
       Look up once more into my poor old face,
       Where you see beauty, or the Lord knows what,
       And say to me aloud what else there is
       Than ruins in it that you most admire.
       No, there was never anything like that;
       Nature has never fastened such a mask
       Of radiant and impenetrable merit
       On any woman as you say there is
       On this one. Not a mask? I thank you, sir,
       But you see more with your determination,
       I fear, than with your prudence or your conscience;
       And you have never met me with my eyes
       In all the mirrors I've made faces at.
       No, I shall never call you strange again:
       You are the young and inconvincible
       Epitome of all blind men since Adam.
       May the blind lead the blind, if that be so?
       And we shall need no mirrors? You are saying
       What most I feared you might. But if the blind,
       Or one of them, be not so fortunate
       As to put out the eyes of recollection,
       She might at last, without her meaning it,
       Lead on the other, without his knowing it,
       Until the two of them should lose themselves
       Among dead craters in a lava-field
       As empty as a desert on the moon.
       I am not speaking in a theatre,
       But in a room so real and so familiar
       That sometimes I would wreck it. Then I pause,
       Remembering there is a King in Weimar --
       A monarch, and a poet, and a shepherd
       Of all who are astray and are outside
       The realm where they should rule. I think of him,
       And save the furniture; I think of you,
       And am forlorn, finding in you the one
       To lavish aspirations and illusions
       Upon a faded and forsaken house
       Where love, being locked alone, was nigh to burning
       House and himself together. Yes, you are strange,
       To see in such an injured architecture
       Room for new love to live in. Are you laughing?
       No? Well, you are not crying, as you should be.
       Tears, even if they told only gratitude
       For your escape, and had no other story,
       Were surely more becoming than a smile
       For my unwomanly straightforwardness
       In seeing for you, through my close gate of years
       Your forty ways to freedom. Why do you smile?
       And while I'm trembling at my faith in you
       In giving you to read this book of danger
       That only one man living might have written --
       These letters, which have been a part of me
       So long that you may read them all again
       As often as you look into my face,
       And hear them when I speak to you, and feel them
       Whenever you have to touch me with your hand, --
       Why are you so unwilling to be spared?
       Why do you still believe in me? But no,
       I'll find another way to ask you that.
       I wonder if there is another way
       That says it better, and means anything.
       There is no other way that could be worse?
       I was not asking you; it was myself
       Alone that I was asking. Why do I dip
       For lies, when there is nothing in my well
       But shining truth, you say? How do you know?
       Truth has a lonely life down where she lives;
       And many a time, when she comes up to breathe,
       She sinks before we seize her, and makes ripples.
       Possibly you may know no more of me
       Than a few ripples; and they may soon be gone,
       Leaving you then with all my shining truth
       Drowned in a shining water; and when you look
       You may not see me there, but something else
       That never was a woman -- being yourself.
       You say to me my truth is past all drowning,
       And safe with you for ever? You know all that?
       How do you know all that, and who has told you?
       You know so much that I'm an atom frightened
       Because you know so little. And what is this?
       You know the luxury there is in haunting
       The blasted thoroughfares of disillusion --
       If that's your name for them -- with only ghosts
       For company? You know that when a woman
       Is blessed, or cursed, with a divine impatience
       (Another name of yours for a bad temper)
       She must have one at hand on whom to wreak it
       (That's what you mean, whatever the turn you give it),
       Sure of a kindred sympathy, and thereby
       Effect a mutual calm? You know that wisdom,
       Given in vain to make a food for those
       Who are without it, will be seen at last,
       And even at last only by those who gave it,
       As one or more of the forgotten crumbs
       That others leave? You know that men's applause
       And women's envy savor so much of dust
       That I go hungry, having at home no fare
       But the same changeless bread that I may swallow
       Only with tears and prayers? Who told you that?
       You know that if I read, and read alone,
       Too many books that no men yet have written,
       I may go blind, or worse? You know yourself,
       Of all insistent and insidious creatures,
       To be the one to save me, and to guard
       For me their flaming language? And you know
       That if I give much headway to the whim
       That's in me never to be quite sure that even
       Through all those years of storm and fire I waited
       For this one rainy day, I may go on,
       And on, and on alone, through smoke and ashes,
       To a cold end? You know so dismal much
       As that about me? . . . Well, I believe you do.