Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Convent by Edgar Lee Masters
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The Convent

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        Elenor Murray stole away from Nice
        Before her furlough ended, tense to see
        Something of Italy, and planned to go
        To Genoa, explore the ancient town
        Of Christopher Columbus, if she might
        Elude the regulation, as she did,
        In leaving Nice for Italy. But for her
        Always the dream, and always the defeat
        Of what she dreamed.

        She found herself in Florence
        And saw the city. But the weariness
        Of labor and her illness came again
        At intervals, and on such days she lay
        And heard the hours toll, wished for death and wept,
        Being alone and sorrowful.

        On a morning
        She rose and looked for galleries, came at last
        Into the Via Gino Capponi
        And saw a little church and entered in,
        And saw amid the darkness of the church
        A woman kneeling, knelt beside the woman,
        And put her hand upon the woman's forehead
        To find that it was wrinkled, strange to say
        A scar upon the forehead, like a cross....
        Elenor Murray rose and walked away,
        Sobs gathering in her throat, her body weak,
        And reeled against the wall, for so it seemed,
        Against which hung thick curtains, velvet, red,
        A little grimed and worn. And as she leaned
        Against the curtains, clung to them, she felt
        A giving, parted them, and found a door,
        Pushed on the door which yielded, opened it
        And saw a yard before her.

        It was walled.
        A garden of old urns and ancient growths,
        Some flowering plants around the wall.

        Before her
        And in the garden's center stood a statue,
        With outstretched arms, the Virgin without the child.
        And suddenly on Elenor Murray came
        Great sorrow like a madness, seeing there
        The pitying Virgin, stretching arms to her.
        And so she ran along the pebbly walk,
        Fell fainting at the Virgin's feet and lay
        Unconscious in the garden.

        When she woke
        Two nuns were standing by, and one was dressed
        In purest white, and held within her hands
        A tray of gold, and on the tray of gold
        There was a glass of wine, and in a cup
        Some broth of beef, and on a plate of gold
        A wafer.

        And the other nun was dressed
        In purest white, but over her shoulders lay
        A cape of blue, blue as the sky of Florence
        Above the garden wall.

        Then as she saw
        The nuns before her, in the interval
        Of gathering thought, re-limning life again
        From wonder if she had not died, and these
        Were guides or ministrants of another world,
        The nun with cape of blue to Elenor
        Said: "Drink this wine, this broth;" and Elenor
        Drank and arose, being lifted up by them,
        And taken through the convent door and given
        A little room as white and clean as light,
        And a bed of snowy linen.

            Then they said:
        "This is the Convent where we send up prayers,
        Prayers for the souls who do not pray for self -
        Rest, child, and be at peace; and if there be
        Friends you would tell that you are here, then we
        Will send the word for you, sleep now and rest."
        And listening to their voices Elenor slept.
        And when she woke a nurse was at her side,
        And food was served her, broths and fruit. Each day
        A doctor came to tell her all was well,
        And health would soon return.

        So for a month
        Elenor Murray lay and heard the bells,
        And breathed the fragrance of the flowering city
        That floated through her window, in the stillness
        Of the convent dreamed, and said to self: This place
        Is good to die in, who is there to tell
        That I am here? There was no one. To them
        She gave her name, but said: "Till I am well
        Let me remain, and if I die, some place
        Must be for me for burial, put me there.
        And if I live to go again to France
        And join my unit, let me have a writing
        That I did not desert, was stricken here
        And could not leave. For while I stole away
        From Nice to get a glimpse of Italy,
        I might have done so in my furlough time,
        And not stayed over it." And to Elenor
        The nuns said: "We will help you, but for now
        Rest and put by anxieties."

        On a day
        Elenor Murray made confessional.
        And to the nuns told bit by bit her life,
        Her childhood, schooling, travels, work in the war,
        What fate had followed her, what sufferings.
        And Sister Mary, she who saw her first,
        And held the tray of gold with wine and broth,
        Sat often with her, read to her, and said:
        "Letters will go ahead of you to clear
        Your absence over time - be not afraid,
        All will be well."

            And so when Elenor Murray
        Arose to leave she found all things prepared:
        A cab to take her to the train, compartments
        Reserved for her from place to place, her fare
        And tickets paid for, till at last she came
        To Brest and joined her unit, in three days
        Looked at the rolling waters as the ship
        Drove to America - such a coming home!
        To what and whom?

        *        *        *        *        *

        Loveridge Chase returned and brought the letters
        To Coroner Merival from New York. That day
        The chemical analysis was finished, showed
        No ricin and no poison. Elenor Murray
        Died how? What were the circumstances? Then
        When Coroner Merival broke the seals of wax,
        And cut the twine that bound the package, found
        The man was Barrett Bays who wrote the letters -
        There were a hundred - then he cast about
        To lay his hands on Barrett Bays, and found
        That Barrett Bays lived in Chicago, taught,
        Was a professor, aged some forty years.
        Why did this Barrett Bays emerge not, speak,
        Come forward? Was it simply to conceal
        A passion written in these letters here
        For his sake or his wife's? Or was it guilt
        For some complicity in Elenor's death?
        And on this day the coroner had a letter
        From Margery Camp which said: "Where's Barrett Bays?
        Why have you not arrested him? He knows
        Something, perhaps about the death of Elenor."
        So Coroner Merival sent process forth
        To bring in Barrett Bays, non est inventus.
        He had not visited his place of teaching,
        Been seen in haunts accustomed for some days -
        Not since the death of Elenor Murray, none
        Knew where to find him, and none seemed to know
        What lay between this man and Elenor Murray.
        This was the more suspicious. Then the Times
        Made headlines of the letters, published some
        Wherein this Barrett Bays had written Elenor:
        "You are my hope in life, my morning star,
        My love at last, my all." From coast to coast
        The word was flashed about this Barrett Bays;
        And Mrs. Bays at Martha's Vineyard read,
        Turned up her nose, continued on the round
        Of gaieties, but to a chum relieved
        Her loathing with these words: "Another woman,
        He's soiled himself at last."

        And Barrett Bays,
        Who roughed it in the Adirondacks, hoped
        The inquest's end would leave him undisclosed
        In Elenor Murray's life, though wracked with fear
        About the letters in the vault, some day
        To be unearthed, or taken, it might be,
        By Margery Camp for uses sinister -
        He reading that the letters had been given
        To Coroner Merival, and seeing his name
        Printed in every sheet, saw no escape
        In any nook of earth, returned and walked
        In Merival's office: trembling, white as snow.

        So Barrett Bays was sworn, before the jury
        Sat and replied to questions, said he knew
        Elenor Murray in the fall before
        She went to France, saw much of her for weeks;
        Had written her these letters before she left.
        Had followed her in the war, and gone to France,
        Had seen her for some days in Paris when
        She had a furlough. Had come back and parted
        With Elenor Murray, broken with her, found
        A cause for crushing out his love for her.
        Came back to win forgetfulness, had written
        No word to her since leaving Paris - let
        Her letters lie unanswered; brought her letters,
        And gave them to the coroner. Then he told
        Of the day before her death, and how she came
        By motor to Chicago with her aunt,
        Named Irma Leese, and telephoned him, begged
        An hour for talk. "Come meet me by the river,"
        She had said. And so went to meet her. Then he told
        Why he relented, after he had left her
        In Paris with no word beside this one:
        "This is the end." Now he was curious
        To know what she would say, what could be said
        Beyond what she had written - so he went
        Out of a curious but hardened heart.




Extra Info:
From the "Doomsday Book".


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