Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Jim And Arabel's Sister by Edgar Lee Masters
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Jim And Arabel's Sister

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        Last night a friend of mine and I sat talking,
        When all at once I found 'twas one o'clock.
        So we came out and he went home to wife
        And children, and I started for the club
        Which I call home; and then just like a flash
        You came into my mind. I bought a slug
        And stood, in the booth, with doubtful heart and heard
        The buzzer buzz. Well, it was sweet to me
        To hear your voice at last - it was so drowsy,
        Like a child's voice. And I could see your eyes
        Heavy with sleep, and I could see you standing
        In nightgown with head leaned against the wall....

        Julia! the welcome of your drowsy voice
        Went through me like the warmth of priceless wine,
        It showed your understanding, that you know
        How it is with a man, and how it is with me
        Who work by day and sometimes drift by night
        About this hellish city. Though you know
        That I am fifty-one, can you imagine
        My feeling with no children growing up?
        My feeling as of one who sees a play
        And afterwards sits somewhere at a table
        And talks with friends about the different parts
        Over a sandwich and a glass of beer?
        My feeling with this money which I've made
        And cannot use? Sometimes the stress of working
        The money dulls the fancy which could use it
        In splendid dreams or in the art of life.
        Well, here was I ringing your bell at last
        At half-past one, and there you stood before me
        With a sleepy voice and a sleepy smile, with hands
        So warm, and cheeks so red from sleep, not vexed,
        But like a child, awakened, who smiles at you
        With half-shut eyes and kisses you, so you
        Gave me a kiss. The world seems better, Julia,
        For that kiss which you gave me at the door....

        Breakfast? Why, toast and coffee, not too strong,
        My heart acts queer of late....

            I want to say
        Lest I forget it, if you ever hear
        From Arabel or Francis what I said
        To Francis when he told me he intended
        To marry Arabel, why just remember
        Our talk this morning and forget I said it,
        I'm sorry that I said it. But, you see,
        That night we met, I being fifty-one
        And old at what men call the game, looked on
        With steady eye and quiet nerve, I saw you
        Just as I'd see a woman anywhere;
        And I found you as I'd found others before you,
        But with this difference so it seemed to me:
        What had been false with them was real with you,
        What had been shame with them with you was life,
        What had been craft with them with you was nature,
        What had been sin with them to you was good,
        What had been vice with them to you the honest
        And uncorrupted innocence of a human
        Heart so human looking on our souls.
        What had been coarse to them to you was clean
        As rain is, or fresh flowers, all things that grow
        And move and sing along creation's way.
        You came to me like friendship, what you gave
        Was friendship's gift, when friends think least of self
        And least of motive. And it is through you
        That I have risen out of the pit where sneers
        And laughter, looks and words obscene,
        Blaspheme our nature. It is through you, Julia,
        As one amid great beach trees where soft mosses
        Pillow our heads and where we see the clouds
        Upon their infinite sailings and the lake
        Washes beneath us, and we lie and think
        How this has been forever and will be
        When we are dust a thousand, thousand years,
        Yet how life is eternal - just as one
        Who there falls into prayer for ecstasy
        Of wonder, prophecy could not blaspheme
        The Eternal Power (as he might well blaspheme
        The gospel hymns and ritual) that I
        Cannot blaspheme you, Julia.
        For what is our communion, yours and mine,
        If it be not a way of laying hold
        On that mysterious essence which makes one
        Of heaven and earth, makes kindred human hands....
        Tears are not like you, Julia; laugh, that's right!
        Pour me a little coffee, if you please.

        I'll take from my herbarium certain species
        To make my points: Now here there is the woman
        Of life promiscuous, or nearly so.
        She fixes her design upon a man,
        Who's married and the riotous game begins.
        They go along a year or two perhaps.
        Then psychic chemistry performs its part:
        They are in love, or he's in love with her.
        What shall be done with love? Now watch the woman:
        That which she gave without love at the first
        She now withdraws in spite of love unless
        He breaks his life up, cuts all former ties
        And weds her. Do you wonder sometimes men
        Kill women with a knife or strangle them?
        Well, here's another: She has been to Ogontz,
        You meet her at a dinner-dance, we'll say.
        She has green eyes and hair as light as jonquils;
        She wears black velvet and a salmon sash.
        And when you dance with her she has a way
        Of giving you her flesh beneath thin silk,
        Which almost lisps as she caresses you
        With legs that scarcely touch you; and she says
        Things with a double meaning, and she smiles
        To carry out her meaning. Well, you think
        The girl is yours, and after weeks of chasing
        She lands you up at the appointed place
        With mamma, who looks at you with big eyes,
        That have a nervous way of opening
        And closing slowly like a big wax doll's,
        From which great clouds of wrath and wonder come;
        Which meeting is a way of saying to you:
        The girl is yours if you will marry her,
        And let her have your money.

        Julia, be still;
        I can't go on while you are laughing so.
        I know that men are easy, but to see
        Women as women see them is a gift
        That comes to men who reach my age in life....

        Well, here's another, here's the type of woman
        Whose power of motherhood conceals the art
        By which she thrives, through which she reaches also
        An apotheosis in society.
        Her dream is children conscious or unconscious.
        And her strength is the race's, and she draws
        The urgings of posterity and leans
        Upon the hopes and ideals of the day.
        To her a man must sacrifice his life.
        But women, Julia, of whatever type,
        Are still but waiting ovules seeking man,
        And man's life to develop, even to live.
        And like the praying mantis who's devoured
        In the embrace, man is devoured by women
        In some way, by some sort. Love is a flame
        In man's life where he warms him but to suck
        The invisible heat and perish. Life is cramped,
        Bound down with many ropes, shut in by gates,
        Love is not free which should be wholly free
        For Life's sake.

        On Michigan Avenue
        At lunch time, or at five o'clock, you'll see
        In rain or shine a certain tailor walk
        In modish coat and trousers, with a cane.
        That fellow is the pitifulest man I know.
        He has no woman, cannot find a woman,
        Because all women, seeing him, divine
        What surges through him, and within their hearts
        Laugh slyly and deny him for the fun
        Of seeing how denial keeps him walking
        All up and down the boulevard. He's found
        No hand of human friendship like yours, Julia.
        I use him for my point. If we could make
        Some fine erotometer one could sit
        And watch its trembling springs and nervous hands
        Record the waves of longing in the city,
        And the urge of life that writhes beneath the blows
        Of custom and of fear. Love is not free,
        Which should be wholly free for Life's sake.

        Julia.
        So much for all these things, and now for you
        To whom they lead.

            You'll find among the marshes
        The sundew and the pitcher plant; in shallows,
        Where the green scum floats languidly you'll find
        The water lily with white petals and
        A sickly perfume. But the sundew catches
        The midges flitting by with rainbow wings,
        Impales them on its tiny spines, in time
        Devours them. And the pitcher plant holds out
        Its cup of green for larger bugs, which fall
        Into the water, treasured there like tears
        Of women, and so drowned are soon absorbed
        Into the verdant vesture of its leaves.
        The pitcher plant and sundew, water lily
        Well typify the nature of most women
        Who must have blood or soul of man to live,
        Except you, Julia. For my friend at Hinsdale
        Who raises flowers laid out a primrose bed.
        He read somewhere that primroses will change
        Under your eyes sometimes to something else,
        Become another flower and not a primrose,
        Another species even. So he watched
        And saw it, saw this miracle! The seed
        Has somewhere in its vital self the power
        Of this mutation. What is the origin
        Of spiritual species? For you're a primrose, Julia,
        Who has mutated: You are not a mother;
        Nor are you yet the woman seeking marriage;
        Nor yet the woman thriving by her sex;
        Nor yet the woman spoken of by Solomon
        Who waits and watches and whose steps lead down
        To death and hell. Nor yet Delilah who
        Rejoices in the secret of man's strength
        And in subduing it.

        You are a flower
        Designed to comfort such poor men as I,
        And show the world how love can be a thing
        That asks no more than what it freely gives,
        And gives all, all some women call the prize
        For life or honor, riches, power or place.
        You are a blossom in the primrose bed
        So raised to subtler color, sweeter scent.
        You have mutated, Julia, that is it,
        This flower of you is what I call The Lover!



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