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The Three Taverns
The Three Taverns
Edwin Arlington Robinson
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       When the brethren heard of us, they came to meet us
       as far as Appii Forum, and The Three Taverns.
       (Acts 28:15)
       

       Herodion, Apelles, Amplias,
       And Andronicus? Is it you I see --
       At last? And is it you now that are gazing
       As if in doubt of me? Was I not saying
       That I should come to Rome? I did say that;
       And I said furthermore that I should go
       On westward, where the gateway of the world
       Lets in the central sea. I did say that,
       But I say only, now, that I am Paul --
       A prisoner of the Law, and of the Lord
       A voice made free. If there be time enough
       To live, I may have more to tell you then
       Of western matters. I go now to Rome,
       Where Caesar waits for me, and I shall wait,
       And Caesar knows how long. In Caesarea
       There was a legend of Agrippa saying
       In a light way to Festus, having heard
       My deposition, that I might be free,
       Had I stayed free of Caesar; but the word
       Of God would have it as you see it is --
       And here I am. The cup that I shall drink
       Is mine to drink -- the moment or the place
       Not mine to say. If it be now in Rome,
       Be it now in Rome; and if your faith exceed
       The shadow cast of hope, say not of me
       Too surely or too soon that years and shipwreck,
       And all the many deserts I have crossed
       That are not named or regioned, have undone
       Beyond the brevities of our mortal healing
       The part of me that is the least of me.
       You see an older man than he who fell
       Prone to the earth when he was nigh Damascus,
       Where the great light came down; yet I am he
       That fell, and he that saw, and he that heard.
       And I am here, at last; and if at last
       I give myself to make another crumb
       For this pernicious feast of time and men --
       Well, I have seen too much of time and men
       To fear the ravening or the wrath of either.
       Yes, it is Paul you see -- the Saul of Tarsus
       That was a fiery Jew, and had men slain
       For saying Something was beyond the Law,
       And in ourselves. I fed my suffering soul
       Upon the Law till I went famishing,
       Not knowing that I starved. How should I know,
       More then than any, that the food I had --
       What else it may have been -- was not for me?
       My fathers and their fathers and their fathers
       Had found it good, and said there was no other,
       And I was of the line. When Stephen fell,
       Among the stones that crushed his life away,
       There was no place alive that I could see
       For such a man. Why should a man be given
       To live beyond the Law? So I said then,
       As men say now to me. How then do I
       Persist in living? Is that what you ask?
       If so, let my appearance be for you
       No living answer; for Time writes of death
       On men before they die, and what you see
       Is not the man. The man that you see not --
       The man within the man -- is most alive;
       Though hatred would have ended, long ago,
       The bane of his activities. I have lived,
       Because the faith within me that is life
       Endures to live, and shall, till soon or late,
       Death, like a friend unseen, shall say to me
       My toil is over and my work begun.
       How often, and how many a time again,
       Have I said I should be with you in Rome!
       He who is always coming never comes,
       Or comes too late, you may have told yourselves;
       And I may tell you now that after me,
       Whether I stay for little or for long,
       The wolves are coming. Have an eye for them,
       And a more careful ear for their confusion
       Than you need have much longer for the sound
       Of what I tell you -- should I live to say
       More than I say to Caesar. What I know
       Is down for you to read in what is written;
       And if I cloud a little with my own
       Mortality the gleam that is immortal,
       I do it only because I am I --
       Being on earth and of it, in so far
       As time flays yet the remnant. This you know;
       And if I sting men, as I do sometimes,
       With a sharp word that hurts, it is because
       Man's habit is to feel before he sees;
       And I am of a race that feels. Moreover,
       The world is here for what is not yet here
       For more than are a few; and even in Rome,
       Where men are so enamored of the Cross
       That fame has echoed, and increasingly,
       The music of your love and of your faith
       To foreign ears that are as far away
       As Antioch and Haran, yet I wonder
       How much of love you know, and if your faith
       Be the shut fruit of words. If so, remember
       Words are but shells unfilled. Jews have at least
       A Law to make them sorry they were born
       If they go long without it; and these Gentiles,
       For the first time in shrieking history,
       Have love and law together, if so they will,
       For their defense and their immunity
       In these last days. Rome, if I know the name,
       Will have anon a crown of thorns and fire
       Made ready for the wreathing of new masters,
       Of whom we are appointed, you and I, --
       And you are still to be when I am gone,
       Should I go presently. Let the word fall,
       Meanwhile, upon the dragon-ridden field
       Of circumstance, either to live or die;
       Concerning which there is a parable,
       Made easy for the comfort and attention
       Of those who preach, fearing they preach in vain.
       You are to plant, and then to plant again
       Where you have gathered, gathering as you go;
       For you are in the fields that are eternal,
       And you have not the burden of the Lord
       Upon your mortal shoulders. What you have
       Is a light yoke, made lighter by the wearing,
       Till it shall have the wonder and the weight
       Of a clear jewel, shining with a light
       Wherein the sun and all the fiery stars
       May soon be fading. When Gamaliel said
       That if they be of men these things are nothing,
       But if they be of God they are for none
       To overthrow, he spoke as a good Jew,
       And one who stayed a Jew; and he said all.
       And you know, by the temper of your faith,
       How far the fire is in you that I felt
       Before I knew Damascus. A word here,
       Or there, or not there, or not anywhere,
       Is not the Word that lives and is the life;
       And you, therefore, need weary not yourselves
       With jealous aches of others. If the world
       Were not a world of aches and innovations,
       Attainment would have no more joy of it.
       There will be creeds and schisms, creeds in creeds,
       And schisms in schisms; myriads will be done
       To death because a farthing has two sides,
       And is at last a farthing. Telling you this,
       I, who bid men to live, appeal to Caesar.
       Once I had said the ways of God were dark,
       Meaning by that the dark ways of the Law.
       Such is the glory of our tribulations;
       For the Law kills the flesh that kills the Law,
       And we are then alive. We have eyes then;
       And we have then the Cross between two worlds --
       To guide us, or to blind us for a time,
       Till we have eyes indeed. The fire that smites
       A few on highways, changing all at once,
       Is not for all. The power that holds the world
       Away from God that holds himself away --
       Farther away than all your works and words
       Are like to fly without the wings of faith --
       Was not, nor ever shall be, a small hazard
       Enlivening the ways of easy leisure
       Or the cold road of knowledge. When our eyes
       Have wisdom, we see more than we remember;
       And the old world of our captivities
       May then become a smitten glimpse of ruin,
       Like one where vanished hewers have had their day
       Of wrath on Lebanon. Before we see,
       Meanwhile, we suffer; and I come to you,
       At last, through many storms and through much night.
       Yet whatsoever I have undergone,
       My keepers in this instance are not hard.
       But for the chance of an ingratitude,
       I might indeed be curious of their mercy,
       And fearful of their leisure while I wait,
       A few leagues out of Rome. Men go to Rome,
       Not always to return -- but not that now.
       Meanwhile, I seem to think you look at me
       With eyes that are at last more credulous
       Of my identity. You remark in me
       No sort of leaping giant, though some words
       Of mine to you from Corinth may have leapt
       A little through your eyes into your soul.
       I trust they were alive, and are alive
       Today; for there be none that shall indite
       So much of nothing as the man of words
       Who writes in the Lord's name for his name's sake
       And has not in his blood the fire of time
       To warm eternity. Let such a man --
       If once the light is in him and endures --
       Content himself to be the general man,
       Set free to sift the decencies and thereby
       To learn, except he be one set aside
       For sorrow, more of pleasure than of pain;
       Though if his light be not the light indeed,
       But a brief shine that never really was,
       And fails, leaving him worse than where he was,
       Then shall he be of all men destitute.
       And here were not an issue for much ink,
       Or much offending faction among scribes.
       The Kingdom is within us, we are told;
       And when I say to you that we possess it
       In such a measure as faith makes it ours,
       I say it with a sinner's privilege
       Of having seen and heard, and seen again,
       After a darkness; and if I affirm
       To the last hour that faith affords alone
       The Kingdom entrance and an entertainment,
       I do not see myself as one who says
       To man that he shall sit with folded hands
       Against the Coming. If I be anything,
       I move a driven agent among my kind,
       Establishing by the faith of Abraham,
       And by the grace of their necessities,
       The clamoring word that is the word of life
       Nearer than heretofore to the solution
       Of their tomb-serving doubts. If I have loosed
       A shaft of language that has flown sometimes
       A little higher than the hearts and heads
       Of nature's minions, it will yet be heard,
       Like a new song that waits for distant ears.
       I cannot be the man that I am not;
       And while I own that earth is my affliction,
       I am a man of earth, who says not all
       To all alike. That were impossible,
       Even as it were so that He should plant
       A larger garden first. But you today
       Are for the larger sowing; and your seed,
       A little mixed, will have, as He foresaw,
       The foreign harvest of a wider growth,
       And one without an end. Many there are,
       And are to be, that shall partake of it,
       Though none may share it with an understanding
       That is not his alone. We are all alone;
       And yet we are all parcelled of one order --
       Jew, Gentile, or barbarian in the dark
       Of wildernesses that are not so much
       As names yet in a book. And there are many,
       Finding at last that words are not the Word,
       And finding only that, will flourish aloft,
       Like heads of captured Pharisees on pikes,
       Our contradictions and discrepancies;
       And there are many more will hang themselves
       Upon the letter, seeing not in the Word
       The friend of all who fail, and in their faith
       A sword of excellence to cut them down.
       As long as there are glasses that are dark --
       And there are many -- we see darkly through them;
       All which have I conceded and set down
       In words that have no shadow. What is dark
       Is dark, and we may not say otherwise;
       Yet what may be as dark as a lost fire
       For one of us, may still be for another
       A coming gleam across the gulf of ages,
       And a way home from shipwreck to the shore;
       And so, through pangs and ills and desperations,
       There may be light for all. There shall be light.
       As much as that, you know. You cannot say
       This woman or that man will be the next
       On whom it falls; you are not here for that.
       Your ministration is to be for others
       The firing of a rush that may for them
       Be soon the fire itself. The few at first
       Are fighting for the multitude at last;
       Therefore remember what Gamaliel said
       Before you, when the sick were lying down
       In streets all night for Peter's passing shadow.
       Fight, and say what you feel; say more than words.
       Give men to know that even their days of earth
       To come are more than ages that are gone.
       Say what you feel, while you have time to say it.
       Eternity will answer for itself,
       Without your intercession; yet the way
       For many is a long one, and as dark,
       Meanwhile, as dreams of hell. See not your toil
       Too much, and if I be away from you,
       Think of me as a brother to yourselves,
       Of many blemishes. Beware of stoics,
       And give your left hand to grammarians;
       And when you seem, as many a time you may,
       To have no other friend than hope, remember
       That you are not the first, or yet the last.
       The best of life, until we see beyond
       The shadows of ourselves (and they are less
       Than even the blindest of indignant eyes
       Would have them) is in what we do not know.
       Make, then, for all your fears a place to sleep
       With all your faded sins; nor think yourselves
       Egregious and alone for your defects
       Of youth and yesterday. I was young once;
       And there's a question if you played the fool
       With a more fervid and inherent zeal
       Than I have in my story to remember,
       Or gave your necks to folly's conquering foot,
       Or flung yourselves with an unstudied aim,
       Less frequently than I. Never mind that.
       Man's little house of days will hold enough,
       Sometimes, to make him wish it were not his,
       But it will not hold all. Things that are dead
       Are best without it, and they own their death
       By virtue of their dying. Let them go, --
       But think you not the world is ashes yet,
       And you have all the fire. The world is here
       Today, and it may not be gone tomorrow;
       For there are millions, and there may be more,
       To make in turn a various estimation
       Of its old ills and ashes, and the traps
       Of its apparent wrath. Many with ears
       That hear not yet, shall have ears given to them,
       And then they shall hear strangely. Many with eyes
       That are incredulous of the Mystery
       Shall yet be driven to feel, and then to read
       Where language has an end and is a veil,
       Not woven of our words. Many that hate
       Their kind are soon to know that without love
       Their faith is but the perjured name of nothing.
       I that have done some hating in my time
       See now no time for hate; I that have left,
       Fading behind me like familiar lights
       That are to shine no more for my returning,
       Home, friends, and honors, -- I that have lost all else
       For wisdom, and the wealth of it, say now
       To you that out of wisdom has come love,
       That measures and is of itself the measure
       Of works and hope and faith. Your longest hours
       Are not so long that you may torture them
       And harass not yourselves; and the last days
       Are on the way that you prepare for them,
       And was prepared for you, here in a world
       Where you have sinned and suffered, striven and seen.
       If you be not so hot for counting them
       Before they come that you consume yourselves,
       Peace may attend you all in these last days --
       And me, as well as you. Yes, even in Rome.
       Well, I have talked and rested, though I fear
       My rest has not been yours; in which event,
       Forgive one who is only seven leagues
       From Caesar. When I told you I should come,
       I did not see myself the criminal
       You contemplate, for seeing beyond the Law
       That which the Law saw not. But this, indeed,
       Was good of you, and I shall not forget;
       No, I shall not forget you came so far
       To meet a man so dangerous. Well, farewell.
       They come to tell me I am going now --
       With them. I hope that we shall meet again,
       But none may say what he shall find in Rome.