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

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        I'm home at last. How long were you asleep?
        I startled you. The time? It's midnight past.
        Put on your slippers and your robe, my dear,
        And make some coffee for me - what a night!
        Yes, tell you? I shall tell you everything.
        I must tell someone, and a wife should know
        The workings of a governor's mind - no one
        Could guess what turned the scale to save this man
        Who would have died to-morrow, but for me.
        That's fine. This coffee helps me. As I said
        This night has been a trial. Well, you know
        I told these lawyers they could come at eight,
        And so they came. A seasoned lawyer one,
        The other young and radical, both full
        Of sentiment of some sort. And there you sit,
        And do not say a word of disapproval.
        You smile, which means you sun yourself within
        The power I have, and yet do you approve?
        This man committed brutal murder, did
        A nameless horror; now he's saved from death.
        The father and the mother of the girl,
        The neighborhood, perhaps, in which she lived
        Will roar against me, think that I was bought,
        Or used by someone I'm indebted to
        In politics. Oh no! It's really funny,
        Since it is simpler than such things as these.
        And no one, saving you, shall know the secret.
        For there I sat and didn't say a word
        To indicate, betray my thought; not when
        The thing came out that moved me. Let them read
        The doctor's affidavits, that this man
        Was crazy when he killed the girl, and read
        The transcript of the evidence on the trial.
        They read and talked. At last the younger lawyer,
        For sometime still, kept silent by the other,
        Pops out with something, reads an affidavit,
        As foreign to the matter as a story
        Of melodrama color on the screen,
        Which still contained a sentence that went home;
        I felt my mind turn like a turn-table,
        And click as when the switchman kicks the tongue
        Of steel into the slot that holds the table.
        And from my mind the engine, that's the problem,
        Puffed, puffed and moved away, out on the track,
        And disappeared upon its business. How
        Is that for metaphor? Your coffee, dear,
        Stirs up my fancy. But to tell the rest,
        If my face changed expression, or my eye
        Betrayed my thought, then I have no control
        Of outward seeming. For they argued on
        An hour or so thereafter. And I asked
        Re-reading of the transcript where this man
        Told of his maniac passion, of the night
        He killed the girl, the doctors' testimony
        I had re-read, and let these lawyers think
        My interest centered there, and my decision
        Was based upon such matters, and at last
        The penalty commuted. When in truth
        I tell you I had let the fellow hang
        For all of this, except that I took fire
        Because of something in this affidavit
        Irrelevant to the issue, reaching me
        In something only relevant to me.
        O, well, all life is such. Our great decisions
        Flame out of sparks, where roaring fires before,
        Not touching our combustibles wholly failed
        To flame or light us.

        Now the secret hear.
        Do you remember all the books I read
        Two years ago upon heredity,
        Foot-notes to evolution, the dynamics
        Of living matter? Well, it wasn't that
        That made me save this fellow. There you smile
        For knowing how and when I got these books,
        Who woke my interest in them. Never mind,
        You don't know yet my reasons.

        But I'll tell you:
        And let you see a governor's mind at work.
        When this young lawyer in this affidavit
        Read to a certain place my mind strayed off
        And lived a time past, you were present too.
        It was that morning when I passed my crisis,
        Had just dodged death, could scarcely speak, too weak
        To lift a hand to feed myself, but needed
        Vital replenishment of strength, and then
        I got it in a bowl of oyster soup,
        Rich cream at that. And as I live, my dear,
        As this young lawyer read, I felt myself
        In bed as I lay then, re-lived the weakness,
        Could see the spoon that carried to my mouth
        The appetizing soup, imagined there
        The feelings I had then of getting fingers
        Upon the rail of life again, how faint,
        But with such clear degrees. Could see the hand
        That held the spoon, the eyes that looked at me
        In triumph for the victory of my strength,
        Which battled, almost lost the prize of life.
        It all came over me when this lawyer read:
        Elenor Murray lately come from France
        Found dead beside the river, was the cousin
        Of this Fred Taylor, and had planned to come
        To see the governor, death prevented her -
        Suppose it had?

        That affidavit, doubtless
        Was read to me to move me for the fact
        This man was kindred to a woman who
        Served in the war, this lawyer was that cheap!
        And isn't it as cheap to think that I
        Could be persuaded by the circumstance
        That Elenor Murray, she who nursed me once,
        Was cousin to this fellow, if this lawyer
        Knew this, and did he know it? I don't know.
        Had Elenor Murray lived she would have come
        To ask her cousin's life - I know her heart.
        And at the last, I think this was the thing:
        I thought I'd do exactly what I'd do
        If she had lived and asked me, disregard
        Her death, and act as if she lived, repay
        Her dead hands, which in life had saved my life.

        Now, dear, your eyes have tears - I know - believe me,
        I had no romance with this Elenor Murray.
        Good Lord, it's one o'clock, I must to bed....

        You get my story Merival? Do you think,
        A softness in the heart went to the brain
        And softened that? Well now I stress two things:
        I can't endure defeat, nor bear to see
        An ardent spirit thwarted. What I've achieved
        Has been through will that would not bend, and so
        To see that in another wins my love,
        And my support. Now take this Elenor Murray
        She had a will like mine, she worked her way
        As I have done. And just to hear that she
        Had planned to see me, ask for clemency
        For this condemned degenerate, made me say
        Shall I let death defeat her? Take the breach
        And make her death no matter in my course?
        For as I live if she had come to me
        I had done that I did. And why was that?
        No romance! Never that! Yet human love
        As friend can keep for friend in this our life
        I felt for Elenor Murray - and for this:
        It was her will that would not take defeat,
        Devotion to her work, and in my case
        This depth of friendship welling in her heart
        For human beings, that I shared in - there
        Gave tireless healing to her nursing hands
        And saved my life. And for a life a life.
        This criminal will live some years, we'll say,
        Were better dead. All right. He'll cost the state
        Say twenty thousand dollars. What is that
        Contrasted with the cost to me, if I
        Had let him hang? There is a bank account,
        Economies in the realm of thought to watch.
        And don't you think the souls - let's call them souls -
        Of these avenging, law abiding folk,
        These souls of the community all in all
        Will be improved for hearing that I did
        A human thing, and profit more therefrom
        Than though that sense of balance in their souls
        Struck for the thought of crime avenged, the law
        Fulfilled and vindicated? Yes, it's true.
        And Merival spoke up and said: "It's true,
        I understand your story, and I'm glad.
        It's like you and I'll tell my jury first,
        And they will scatter it, what moved in you
        And how this Elenor Murray saved a life."

        *        *        *        *        *

        The talk of waste in human life was constant
        As Coroner Merival took evidence
        At Elenor Murray's inquest. Everyone
        Could think of waste in some one's life as well
        As in his own.
        John Scofield knew the girl,
        Had worked for Arthur Fouche, her grandfather,
        And knew what course his life took, how his fortune
        Was wasted, dwindled down.

        Remembering
        A talk he heard between this Elenor Murray
        And Arthur Fouche, her grandfather, he spoke
        To Coroner Merival on the street one day:



Extra Info:
From the "Doomsday Book".


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