Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Jury Deliberates by Edgar Lee Masters
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The Jury Deliberates

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        The jurymen are seated here and there
        In Merival's great library. They smoke,
        And drink a little beer or Scotch. Arise
        At times to read the evidence taken down,
        And typed for reference. Before them lie
        Elenor Murray's letters, all the letters
        Written to Merival - there's Alma Bell's,
        And Miriam Fay's, letters anonymous.
        The article of Roberts in the Dawn,
        That one of Demos, Hogos; a daily file
        Of Lowell's Times - Lowell has festered now
        Some weeks, a felon-finger in a stall.
        And where is Barrett Bays? In Kankakee
        Where Elenor Murray's ancestor was kept.
        The strain and shame had broken him; a fear
        Fell on him of a consequence when the coroner
        Still kept him with a deputy. He grew wild,
        Attacked the deputy, began to wander
        And show some several selves. A multiple
        Spirit of devils had him. Dr. Burke
        Went over him and found him mad.

        And now
        The jury meet amid a rapid shift
        Of changes, mist and cloud. The man is sick
        Who administers the country. Has come back
        To laud the pact of peace; his auditors
        Turn silently away, whole states assemble
        To hear and turn away, sometimes to heckle.
        And if a mattoid emperor caused the war,
        And Elenor Murrays put the emperor down,
        The emperor, could he laugh at all, can laugh
        To see a country, bent to spend its last
        Dollar, its blood to the last drop, having spent
        Enough of these, go mad as Barrett Bays.
        And like a headless man, seen in a dream,
        Go capering in an ecstasy of doubt,
        Regret and disillusion. He can laugh
        To see the pact, which took the great estate,
        Once his and God's, and wrapt it as with snakes
        That stung and sucked, rejected in the land
        That sent these Elenor Murrays to make free
        The world from despotism. See that very land
        Crop despotisms - so the jury sees
        Convened to end the case of Elenor Murray....

        And Rev. Maiworm, juryman, gives his thought
        To conquest of the world for Christ, and says
        The churches must unite to free the world
        From war and sin. Result? Why less and less
        Homes like the Murray home, where husband, wife,
        Live in dissension. More and more of schools
        For Elenor Murrays. Happy marriages
        Will be the rule, our Elenors will find
        Good husbands, quiet hearths, a competence.
        And Isaac Newfeldt said: "You talk pish-posh.
        You go about at snipping withered leaves,
        And picking blasted petals - take the root,
        Get at the soil - you cannot end these wars
        Until you solve the feeding problem. Quit
        Relying on your magic to make bread
        With five loaves broken, raise a bigger crop
        Of wheat, and get it to the mouths of men.
        And as for sin - what is it? - All of sin
        Lies in the customs, comes from how you view
        The bread and butter matter; all your gods
        And sons of God are guardians of the status
        Of business and of money; sin a thing
        Which contradicts, or threatens banks and wharves.
        And as for that your churches now control
        As much as human nature can digest
        A dominance like that. And what's the state
        Of things in Christendom? Why, wars, and want
        And many Elenor Murrays. Tyrannies
        Are like as pea and pea; you shall not drink,
        Or read, or talk, or trade, are from one pod.
        What would I do? Why, socialize the world,
        Then leave men free to live or die, let nature
        Go decimating as she will, and weed
        The worthless with disease or alcohol -
        You won't see much of that, however, if
        You socialize the world."

            And David Barrow
        Spoke up and said: "No ism is enough.
        The question is, Is life worth living, good
        Or bad? If bad, I think that Elenor Murray had
        As good a life as any. Here we've sat
        These weeks and heard these stories - nothing new;
        And as to waste, our time is wasted here,
        If there were better things to do; and yet
        Perhaps there is no better. I've enjoyed
        This work, association. Well, you're told
        To judge not, and that means to judge not man;
        You are not told to judge not God. And so
        I judge Him. And again your Elenor Murrays,
        Your human being cannot will his way,
        But God's omnipotent, and where He fails
        He should be censured. Why does He allow
        A world like this, and suffer earthquakes, storms,
        The sinking of Titanics, cancers? Why
        Suffer these wars, this war? - Talk of the riffles
        That flowed from Elenor Murray - here's a wave
        Of tidal power, stirred by a greedy coot
        Who called himself an emperor! And look
        Our land, America, is ruined, slopped
        For good, or for our lives with filth and stench;
        So that to live here takes what strength you have,
        None left for living, as a man should live.
        And this America once free and fair
        Is now the hatefulest, commonest group of men,
        Women and children in the Occident.
        What's life here now? Why, boredom, nothing else....
        Why pity Elenor Murray? Gottlieb Gerald
        Told of her home life; it was good enough,
        Average American, or better. Schools
        She had in plenty, what would she have done
        With courses to the end in music, art?
        She was not happy. Elenor had a brain,
        And brains and happiness are at enmity.
        And if the world goes on some thousand years,
        The race as much advanced beyond us now
        In feeling, thought, as we are now beyond
        Pinthecanthropus, say, why, all will see
        What I see now; - 'twere better if the race
        Had never risen. All analogies
        Of nature show that death of man is death.
        He plants his seed and dies, the resurrection
        Is not the man, but is the child that grows
        From sperm he sows. The grain of wheat that sprouts
        Is not the stalk that bore it. Now suppose
        We get the secret in a thousand years,
        Can prove that death's the end, analogies
        Put by with amber, frogs' legs - tell me then
        What opiate will still the shrieks of men?
        But some of us know now, and I am one.
        There is no heaven for me; and as for those
        Who make a heaven to get out of this -
        You gentlemen who call life good, the world
        The work of God's perfection; yet invent
        A heaven to rest in from this world of woe -
        You do not wish to go there; and resort
        To cures and Christian Science to stay here!
        Which shows you are not sure. And thus we have
        Your Christian saying at heart that life is bad,
        And heaven is good, but not so good and sure
        That you will hurry to it. Why, I'll prove
        The Christian pessimist, as well as I.
        He says life is so bad it has no meaning,
        Unless there be a future; and I say
        Life's bad, and if no future, then is worse.
        And as it has no future, is a hell.
        This girl was soaked in opiates to the last.
        Religion, love for Barrett Bays, believed
        That God is love. Love is a word to me
        That has no meaning but in terms of man.
        And if a man cause war, or suffer war,
        When he could stop it, do we say he loves?
        Why call God love who can prevent a war?
        To chasten us, to better, purge our sins?
        Well, if it be then we are bettered, purged
        When William Hohenzollern goes to war
        And makes the whole world crazy."

        "Understand
        I do not mock, I pity man and life.
        No man has sat here who has suffered more,
        Seeing the life of Elenor Murray, through
        Her life beholding life, our country's life.
        I pity man and life. I curse the scheme
        Which wakes the senseless clay to lips that bleed,
        And eyes that weep, and hearts that agonize,
        Then in an instant make them clay again!
        And for it all no reason, that the reason
        Can bring to light to stand the light."

        "And yet
        I'd make life better, food and shelter better
        And wider happiness, and fuller love.
        We're travelers on a ship that has no bourne
        But rocks, for us. On such a ship 'twere wise
        To have the daily comforts, foolish course
        To neither eat, nor sleep, keep warm, nor sing.
        But only walk the rainy deck and wait.
        The little opiates of happiness
        Would make the sailing better, though we know
        The trip is nowhere and the rocks will sink
        The portless steamer."

        "Is it portless?" asked
        Llewellyn George, "you're leaping to a thought,
        And overlook a world of intimations,
        And hints of truth. I grant you take this race
        That lives to-day, and make the world a boat
        There is no port for us as human lives
        In this our life. But look, you see the race
        Has climbed, a mountain trail, and looks below
        From certain heights to-day at man the beast.
        We scan a half a million years of man
        From caves to temples, gestures, beacon fires
        To wireless. Call that mechanical,
        And power developed over tools. But here
        Is mystery beyond these. - What of powers,
        Devotions, aspirations, sacred flame
        Which masters nature, worships life, defies
        Death to obstruct it, hungers for the right,
        The truth, hates wrong, and by that passion wills
        All art, all beauty, goodness, and creates
        Those living waters of increasing life
        By which man lives, and has to-day the means
        Of fuller living. Here's a realm of richness,
        Beyond and separate from material things,
        Your aeroplanes or conquests. Now I put
        This question to you, David Barrow, what
        But God who is and has some end for life,
        And gives it meaning, though we see it not -
        What is it in the heart of man which lifts,
        Sustains him to the truth, the harmony,
        The beauty say of loyalty, or truth
        Or art, or science? lighting lamps for men
        To walk by, men who hate the lamps, the hand
        That lights? What is this spirit, but the spirit
        Of Something which moves through us, to an end,
        And by its constancy in man made constant
        Proclaims an end? There's Bruno, Socrates,
        There's Washington who might have lost his life,
        Why do these men cling to the vision, hope?
        When neither poverty, nor jeers, nor flames,
        Nor cups of poison stay? Who say thereby
        That death is nothing, but this life of ours,
        Which can be shaped to truth and harmony,
        And rising flame of spirit, giving light,
        Is everything worth while, must be lived so
        And if not lived so, then there's death indeed,
        By turning from the voice that says that man
        Must still aspire. And why aspire if death
        Ends us, the scheme? And all this realm of spirit,
        Of love for truth and beauty, is the play
        Of shadows on the tomb?"

        "Now take this girl:
        She knew before she sailed to France, this man,
        This Barrett Bays was mad about her - knew
        She could stay here and have him, live with him,
        And thus achieve a happiness. And she knew
        To leave him was to make a chance to lose him.
        But then you say she knew he'd tire of her,
        And left for France. And still that happiness
        Before he tired would be hers. You see
        This spirit I'd delineate working here:
        To sacrifice and by the sacrifice
        Rise to a bigger spirit, make it truer;
        Then bring that truer spirit to her love
        For Barrett Bays, and not just loll and slop
        In love to-day. Why does she wish to give
        A finer spirit to this Barrett Bays?
        And to that end take life in hand? It's this:
        My Something, God at work. You say it's woman
        In sublimate of passion - call it that.
        Why sublimate a passion? All her life
        This girl aspires - you think to win a man?
        But win a man with what? With finest self
        Make this her contribution to these riches,
        Which Bruno and the others filled so full.
        You see this Something going on, but races
        Come up, express themselves and pass away;
        But yet this Something manifests itself
        Through souls like Elenor Murray's - fills her life
        With fuller meanings, maybe at the last
        This Something will reveal itself so clear
        That men like David Barrow can perceive.
        And Love, this spirit, twin of Death, you see
        Love slays this girl, but Love remains to slay,
        Lift up, drive on and slay. I call Death twin
        Of Love, and why? Because two things alone
        Make what we are and live, first Love the flame,
        And Death the cap that snuffs it. Is it bread
        That keeps us dancing, skating like these bugs
        That play criss-cross on evening waters? - no!
        It's bread to get more life to give more love,
        Bring to some heart a fuller life, receive
        A fuller life for having given life.
        This force of love may look demonical.
        It tears, destroys, and crushes, chokes and kills,
        Is always stretching hands to Death its twin.
        And yet it is creation and creates,
        Feeds roses, jonquils, columbines, gardenias,
        As well as thistles, cockle burrs and thorns.
        This is the force to which the girl's alert,
        And sensitive, is shaken by its power,
        Driven, uplifted, purified; a doll
        Of paper dancing on magnetic plates;
        And by that passion lusts for Death himself,
        For union with another, sacrifice,
        Beauty, and she aspires and toils, and turns
        To God, the symptom always of this nature.
        My fellow-jurymen, you'll never see,
        Or learn so well about another soul
        That had this Love force deeper in her flesh,
        Her spirit, suffered more. Why do we suffer?
        What is this love force? 'Tis the child of blood
        Of madness, as this Elenor is the seed
        Of that old grandma, who was mad, and cousin
        Of Taylor who did murder. What is this
        But human spirit flamed and subtleized
        Until it is a poison and a food;
        A madness but a clearest sanity;
        A vision and a blindness, all as if
        When nature goes so far, refines so much
        Her balance has been broken, if the Something
        Makes not a genius or a giant soul.
        And so we suffer. But why do we suffer?
        Well, not as Barrow said, that life is bad;
        A failure and a fraud. Not suffering
        That points to dust, defeat, is painfulest;
        But suffering that points to skies and realms
        Above us, whence we came, or where we go,
        That suffering is most poignant, as it is
        Significant as well, and rapturous too.
        The pain that thrills us for the singing Flame
        Of Love, the force creative, that's the pain!
        And those must suffer most to whom the sounds
        Of music or of words, or scents, or scenes
        Recall lost realms. No soul can understand
        Music or words in whom there is not stirred
        A recollection - that is genius too:
        A memory, and reliving hours we lived
        Before we looked upon this world of man."...

        Then Winthrop Marion said: "I like your talk,
        Llewellyn George, but still what killed the girl?
        What was the cause of death of Elenor Murray?
        She died from syncope, that's clear enough.
        The doctors tell us that in syncope
        The victim should be laid down, not held up.
        And Barrett Bays, the bungler, held her up
        When she was stricken - like the man, I think!
        Well, Coroner, suppose we make a verdict,
        And say we find that had this Barrett Bays
        Sustained this Elenor Murray in the war,
        And in her life, with friendship, and with faith
        She had not died. Suppose we further find
        That when he took her, held her in his arms
        When she had syncope, he was dull or crazed,
        And missed a chance to save her. We could find
        That had he laid her down when she was stricken
        She might have lived - I knew that much myself.
        And we could find that had he never driven
        This woman from his arms, but kept her there,
        Before said day of August 7th, no doubt
        She had not died on August 7th. In short,
        He held her up, and should have laid her down,
        And drove her from him when she needed arms
        To hold her up. And so we find her death
        Was due to Barrett Bays - we censure him,
        Would hold him to the courts - that cannot be -
        And so we hold him up for memory
        Contemptuous, and say his bitter words
        Brought on the syncope, so long prepared
        By what he did. We write his course unfeeling,
        Weak, selfish, petty, flowing from the craze
        Of sexual jealousy, made worse by war,
        And universal madness, erethism
        Of hellish war. And, gentlemen, one thing:
        Paul Robert's article in the Dawn suggests
        Some things I credit, knowing them. We get
        Our notions of uncleanness from the Jews,
        The Pentateuch. There are no women here,
        And I can talk; - you know the ancient Jews
        Deemed sex unclean, and only to be touched
        At sufferance of Jehovah; birth unclean,
        A mother needing purification after
        Her hour of giving birth. You know their laws
        Concerning adultery. Well, they've tainted us
        In spite of Greece. Now look at Elenor Murray:
        What if she went with Gregory Wenner. Hell!
        Did that contaminate her, change her flesh,
        Or change her spirit? All this evidence
        Shows that it did not. But it changed this man,
        Because his mind was slime where snakes could breed.
        But now what do we see? That woman is
        Essential genius, man just mechanism
        Of conscious thought and strength. This Elenor
        Is wiser, being nature, than this man,
        And lives a life that puts this Barrett Bays
        To shame and laughter. Look at her: She's brave,
        Devoted, loyal, true and dutiful,
        She's will to life, and through it senses God,
        And seeks to serve the cosmic soul. I think
        This jury should start now to raise a fund
        To erect a statue of her in the park
        To keep her name and labors fresh in mind
        To those who shall come after."

        "And I'll sign
        A verdict in these words, but understand
        Such things are Coram non judice; still
        We can chip in our money, start the fund
        To build this monument."

        Ritter interrupted.
        The banker said: "I'll start it with a hundred,"
        And so the fund was started.

        Marion
        Resumed to speak of riffles: "In Chicago
        There's less than half the people speaking English,
        The rest is Babel: Germans, Russians, Poles
        And all the tongues, much rippling going on,
        And if we couldn't trace the riffles out
        From Elenor Murray, We must give this up.
        One thing is sure: Look out for England, if
        America shall grow a separate soul.
        You may have congresses, and presidents,
        These states, but if America is a realm.
        Of tribute as to thought, America
        Is just a province. And it's past the time
        When we should be ourselves, we've wasted time,
        And grafted alien things upon our bole.
        A Domesday of the minds that think and know
        In our America would give us hope,
        We have them in abundance. What I hate
        Is that crude Demos which shouts down the minds,
        Outvotes them, takes these silly lies that move
        The populace and makes them into laws,
        And makes a village of a great republic."

        And Merival listened as the jurymen
        Philosophied the case of Elenor Murray,
        And life at large. And having listened spoke:
        "I like the words Llewellyn George has said.
        Love is a sea which wrecks and sinks our craft,
        But re-creates the hands that build again;
        And like a tidal wave which sponges out
        An island or a city, lifts and leaves
        Fresh seeds and forms of beauty on the peaks.
        The whinchat in the mud upon its claws,
        Storm driven from its course to sea, brings life
        Of animal and plant to virgin shores,
        And islands strange and new. These happenings
        Of Elenor Murray carry beauty forth,
        Unhurt amid the storm-cloud, darkness, fire,
        To lives and eras. And our country too,
        So ruined and so weltering, like a ball
        Of mud made in a missile by a god
        May bear, no less, a pearl at core, a truth,
        A liberty, a genius, beauty, - thrown
        In mischief by the god, and staining walls
        Of this our temple; in a day to be
        Dried up, cracks open, and the pearl appears
        To be set in a precious time beyond
        Our time and vision. This is what I mean:
        Call Elenor egoist, and make her work,
        And life the means of rich return to her
        In exaltation, pride; - a missile of mud,
        It carries still the pearl of her, the seed
        Of finer spirits. We must open eyes
        To see inside the mud-ball. If it be
        We conquered slavery of the negro through,
        Because of economic forces, yet
        We conquered it. Trade, cotton, were the mud
        Upon the whinchat's claws containing seeds
        Of liberties to be, and carried forth
        In mid seas of the future to sunny isles,
        More blest than ours. And as for this, you know
        The English blotted slavery from their books
        And left their books unbalanced in point of cash,
        But balanced richly in a manhood gain.
        I warn you, David Barrow, pessimist,
        Against a general slur on life and man.
        Deride the Christian ethic, if you choose,
        You must retain its word of benevolence;
        Or better, you must honor man, whose heart
        Leaps up to its benevolence, from whose heart
        The Christian doctrine of benevolence
        Did issue to this world. If Christian doctrine
        Be man-made, not a miracle, as it is
        All man-made, still it's out of generous fire
        Of human spirit; that's the thing divine....
        Now how is Elenor Murray wonderful
        To me viewed through this mass of evidence?
        Why, as the soul maternal, out of which
        All goodness, beauty, and benevolence,
        All aspiration, sacrifice, all death
        For truth and liberty blesses life of us.
        This soul maternal, passion to create
        New life and guide it into happiness,
        Is Mother Mary of all tenderness,
        All charity, all vision, rises up
        From its obscurity and primal force
        Of romance, passion and the child, to realms,
        Democracies, republics; never flags
        To make them brighter, freer, so to spread
        Its ecstasy to all, and take in turn
        Redoubled ecstasy! The tragedy
        Is that this Elenor for her mother gift
        Is cursed and tortured, sent a wanderer;
        And in her death must find much clinging mud
        Around the pearl of her. If that be mud,
        Which we have heard, around her, is it mud
        That weights the soul of America, the pure
        Dream of our founders? Larger Athens, where
        All things should be heard gladly and considered,
        And men should grow, be forced to grow, because
        Not driven or restrained by usages,
        Or laws of mad majorities, but left
        At their own peril to work out their lives....
        Well, gentlemen, I'll tell you what I've learned.
        What is a man or woman but a sperm
        Accreted into largeness? Still a sperm
        In likeness, being brain and spinal cord,
        Fed by the glands, the thyroid and the rest,
        Whose secrets we are ignorant of. We know
        That when they fail our minds fail. But the glands
        Are visible and clear: but in us whirl
        Emotions; fear, disgust, murder or wrath,
        Traced back to animals as moods of flight
        Repulsion, curiosity, all the rest.
        Now what are these but levers of our machine?
        Elenor Murray teaches this to me:
        Build up a science of these levers, learn
        To handle fear, disgust, anger, wonder.
        They teach us physiology; who teaches
        The use of instincts and emotions, powers?
        All learning may be that, but what is that?
        Why just a spread of food, where after nibbling
        You learn what you can eat, and what is good
        For you to eat. You'll see a different world
        When this philosophy of levers rules."...

        Then Merival tacked round and said: "I'll show
        The riffles in my life from Elenor Murray:
        The politicians give me notice now
        I cannot be the coroner again.
        I didn't want to be, but I had planned
        To go to Congress, and they say to that
        We do not want you. So my circle turns,
        And riffles back to breeding better hogs,
        And finer cattle. Here's the verdict, sign
        Your names, and I'll return it to the clerk.




Extra Info:
From the "Doomsday Book".


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