Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Miriam Fay's Letter by Edgar Lee Masters
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Miriam Fay's Letter

    By Edgar Lee Masters



        Elenor Murray asked to go in training
        And came to see me, but the school was full,
        We could not take her. Then she asked to stand
        Upon a list and wait, I put her off.
        She came back, and she came back, till at last
        I took her application; then she came
        And pushed herself and asked when she could come,
        And start to train. At last I laughed and said:
        "Well, come to-morrow." I had never seen
        Such eagerness, persistence. So she came.
        She tried to make a friend of me, perhaps
        Since it was best, I being in command.
        But anyway she wooed me, tried to please me.
        And spite of everything I grew to love her,
        Though I distrusted her. But yet again
        I had belief in her best self, though doubting
        The girl somehow. But when I learned the girl
        Had never had religious discipline,
        Her father without faith, her mother too,
        Her want of moral sense, I understood.
        She lacked stability of spirit, to-day
        She would be one thing, something else the next.
        Shot up in fire, which failed and died away
        And I began to see her fraternize
        With girls who had her traits, too full of life
        To be what they should be, unstable too,
        Much like herself.

            Not long before she came
        Into the training school, six months, perhaps,
        She had some tragedy, I don't know what,
        Had been quite ill in body and in mind.
        When she went into training I could see
        Her purpose to wear down herself, forget
        In weariness of body, something lived.
        She was alert and dutiful and sunny,
        Kept all the rules, was studious, led the class,
        Excelled, I think, in studies of the nerves,
        The mind grown sick.

        As we grew better friends,
        More intimate, she talked about religion,
        And sacred subjects, asked about the church.
        I gave her books to read, encouraged her,
        Asked her to make her peace with God, and set
        Her feet in pious paths. At last she said
        She wished to be baptized, confirmed. I made
        The plans for her, she was baptized, confirmed,
        Went to confessional, and seemed renewed
        In spirit by conversion. For at once
        Her zeal was like a flame at Pentecost,
        She almost took the veil, but missing that,
        She followed out the discipline to the letter,
        Kept all the feast days, went to mass, communion,
        Did works of charity; indeed, I think
        She spent her spare hours all in all at sewing
        There with the sisters for the poor. She had,
        When she came to me, jewelry of value,
        A diamond solitaire, some other things.
        I missed them, and she said she sold them, gave
        The money to a home for friendless children.
        And I remember when she said her father
        Had wronged, misvalued her; but now her love,
        Made more abundant by the love of Christ,
        Had brought her to forgiveness. All her mood
        Was of humility and sacrifice.

        One time I saw her at the convent, sitting
        Upon a foot-stool at the gracious feet
        Of the Mother Superior, sewing for the poor;
        Hair parted in the middle, curls combed out.
        Then was it that I missed her jewelry.
        She looked just like a poor maid, humble, patient,
        Head bent above her sewing, eyes averted.
        The room was silent with religious thought.
        I loved her then and pitied her. But now
        I think she had that in her which at times
        Made her a flagellant, at other times
        A rioter. She used the church to drag
        Her life from something, took it for a bladder
        To float her soul when it was perilled. First,
        She did not sell her jewelry; this ring,
        Too brilliant for forgetting, or to pass
        Unnoticed when she wore it, showed again
        Upon her finger after she had come
        Out of her training, was a graduate.
        She had a faculty for getting in
        Where elegance and riches were. She went
        Among the great ones, when she found a way,
        And traveled with them where she learned the life
        Of notables, aristocrats. It was there,
        Or when from duty free and feasting, gadding
        The ring showed on her finger.

            In two years
        She dropped the church. New friends made in the school,
        New interests, work that took her energies
        And this religious flare had cured her up
        Of what was killing her when first I knew her.
        There was another thing that drew her back
        To flesh, away from spirit: She saw bodies,
        And handled bodies as a nurse, forgot
        The body is the spirit's temple, fell
        To some materialism of thought. And now
        Avoided me, was much away, of course,
        On duty here and there. I tried to hold her,
        Protect and guide her, wrote to her at times
        To make confession, take communion. She
        Ignored these letters. But I heard her say
        The body was as natural as the soul,
        And just as natural its desires. She kept
        Out of the wreck of faith one thing alone,
        If she kept that: She could endure to hear
        God's name profaned, but would not stand to hear
        The Savior's spoken in irreverence.
        She was afraid, no doubt. Or to be just,
        The tender love of Christ, his sacrifice,
        Perhaps had won her wholly - let it go,
        I'll say that much for her.

        Why am I harsh?
        Because I saw the good in her all streaked
        With so much evil, evil known and lived
        In knowledge of it, clung to none the less,
        Unstable as water, how could she succeed?
        Untruthful, how could confidence be hers?
        I sometimes think she joined the church to mask
        A secret life, renewed forgiven sins.
        After she cloaked herself with piety.
        Perhaps, at least, when she saw what to do,
        And how to do it, using these detours
        Of piety to throw us off, who else
        Had seen what doors she entered, whence she came.
        She wronged the church, I think, made it a screen
        To stand behind for kisses, to look from
        Inviting kisses. Then, as I have said,
        She took materialism from her work,
        And so renewed her sins. She drank, I think,
        And smoked and feasted; but as for the rest,
        The smoke obscured the flame, but there is flame
        Or fire at least where there is smoke.

            You ask
        What took her to the war? Why only this:
        Adventure, chance of marriage, amorous conquests -
        The girl was mad for men, although I saw
        Her smoke obscured the flame, I never saw her
        Except with robins far too tame or lame
        To interest her, and robins prove to me
        The hawk is somewhere, waits for night to join
        His playmate when the robins are at rest.
        You see the girl has madness in her, flies
        From exaltation up to ecstasy.
        Feeds on emotion, never has enough.
        Tries all things, states of spirit, even beliefs.
        Passes from lust (I think) to celibacy,
        Feasts, fasts, eats, starves, has raptures then inflicts
        The whip upon her back, is penitent,
        Then proud, is humble, then is arrogant,
        Looks down demurely, stares you out of face,
        But runs the world around. For in point of fact,
        She traveled much, knew cities and their ways;
        And when I used to see her at the convent
        So meek, clothed like a sewing maid, at once
        The pictures that she showed me of herself
        At seaside places or on boulevards,
        Her beauty clothed in linen or in silk,
        Came back to mind, and I would resurrect
        The fragments of our talks in which I saw
        How she knew foods and drinks and restaurants,
        And fashionable shops. This girl could fool the elect -
        She fooled me for a time. I found her out.
        Did she aspire? Perhaps, if you believe
        It's aspiration to seek out the rich,
        And ape them. Not for me. Of course she went
        To get adventure in the war, perhaps
        She got too much. But as to waste of life,
        She might have been a quiet, noble woman
        Keeping her place in life, not trying to rise
        Out of her class - too useless - in her class
        Making herself all worthy, serviceable.
        You'll find 'twas pride that slew her. Very like
        She found a rich man, tried to hold him, lost
        Her honor and her life in consequence.

        *        *        *        *        *

        When Merival showed this letter to the jury,
        Marion the juryman spoke up:
        "You know that type of woman - saintly hag!
        I wouldn't take her word about a thing
        By way of inference, or analysis.
        They had some trouble, she and Elenor
        You may be sure." And Merival replied:
        "Take it for what it's worth. I leave you now
        To see the man who owns the Daily Times.
        He's turned upon our inquest, did you see
        The jab he gives me? I can jab as well."
        So Merival went out and took with him
        A riffle in the waters of circumstance
        Set up by Elenor Murray's death to one
        Remote, secure in greatness - to the man
        Who ran the Times.




Extra Info:
From the "Doomsday Book".


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