Domesday Book - Part 24
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Part 24

Now I will tell you what I promised to tell About my illness and the battle--well, I wrote you of my illness, only hinted About the care I had, that is the point; 'Twas care alone that saved me, I was ill Beyond all words to tell. And all the while I suffered, fearing I would die; but then I could not bear to think I should not rise To join my fellows, battle once again, And charge across the trenches, take no part In crus.h.i.+ng down the Prussian. For I knew He would be crushed at last. I could not bear To think I should not take a hand in that, Be there when he lay fallen, victory From voice to voice should pa.s.s along the lines.

Well, for some weeks I lay there, and at last Words dropped around me that the time was near For blows to count--would I be there to strike?

Could I get well in time? And every day A sweet voice said: "You're better, oh it's great How you are growing stronger; yesterday Your fever was but one degree, to-day It is a little higher. You must rest, Not think so much! It may be normal perhaps To-morrow or the next day. In a week You will be up and gaining, and the battle Will not be fought before then, I am sure, And not until you're well and strong again."

And thus it went from day to day. Such hands Washed my hot face and bathed me, tucked me in, And fed me too. And once I said to her: "I love a girl, I must get well to fight, I must get well to go to her." And she, It was the nurse I spoke to, took my hand, And turned away with tears. You see it's there We see the big things, nothing else, the things That stand out like the mountains, lesser things Are lost like little hillocks under the shadows Of great emotions, hopes, realities.

Well, so it went. And on a day she leaned Above my face to smooth the pillow out.

And from her heart a golden locket fell, And dangled by the silver chain. The locket Flew open and I saw a face within it, That is I saw there was a face, but saw No eyes or hair, saw nothing to limn out The face so I would know it.

Then I said: "You have a lover, nurse." She straightened up And questioned me: "Have you been ill before?

Do you know of the care a nurse can give, And what she can withhold?" I answered "Yes."

And then she asked: "Have you felt in my hands Great tenderness, solicitude, even prayer?"-- Here, sweetheart, do not let your eyes get moist, I'll tell you everything, for you must see How spirits work together, love to love Pa.s.ses and does its work.

Well, it was true, I felt her tenderness, which was like prayer, And so I answered her: "If I get well, You will have cured me with your human love."

And then she said: "Our unit reached this place When there was neither stoves nor lights. At night We went to bed by candles. Stumbled around Amid the trunks and beds by candle light.

Well, one of us would light a candle, then Each, one by one, the others lighted theirs From this one down the room. And so we pa.s.sed The light along. And as a candle died, The others burned, to which the light was pa.s.sed.

Well, now," she said, "that is a figure of love: We get the flame from someone, light another, Make brighter light by holding flame to flame-- Sometimes we searched for something, held two candles Together for a greater light. And so, My soldier, I have given you the care That comes from love--of country and the cause, But brightened, warmed by one from whom the flame Was pa.s.sed to me, a love that took my hand And warmed it, made it tender for that love, Which said pour out and serve, take love for him And use it in the cause, by using hands To bathe, to soothe, to smooth a pillow down, To heal, sustain."

The truth is, dearest heart, I had not lived, I think, except for her.

And there we were: I filled with love for you, And therefore praying to get well and fight, Be worthy of your love, and there she was With love for someone, striving with that love To nurse me through and give me well and strong To battle in the cause.

Then I got well And joined my company. She took my hand As I departed, closed her eyes and said: "May G.o.d be with you."

Well, it was Belleau, That jungle of machine guns, like a thicket Of rattle snakes. And there was just one thing To clean that thicket out--we had to charge, And so we yelled and charged. No soldier knows How one survives in such a charge as that.

You simply yell and charge; the bullets fall Like drops of rain around you pitter-pat; And on you go and think: where will it get me, The stomach or the heart or through the head?

What will it be like, sudden blackness, pain, No pain at all? And so you charge the nests.

The fellows fell around us like tenpins, Dropped guns, or flung them up, fell on their faces, Or toppled backward, pitched ahead and flung Their helmets off in pitching. And at last I found myself half-dazed, as in a dream, Right in a nest, two Boches facing me, And then I saw this locket, as I saw it Fall from her breast, it might have been a glint Of metal, flash of firing, I don't know.

I only know I ran my bayonet Through one of them; he fell, I stuck the other, Then something stung my side. When I awoke I lay upon a cot, and heard the nurses Discuss the peace, the armistice was signed, The war was over. Well, and in a way We won the war, I won the war, as one Who did his part, at least.

Then I got up, But I was weak and dazed. They said to me I should not cross the ocean in the winter, My lungs might get infected; anyway, The flu was raging. So they sent me down To Nice upon a furlough, as I wrote.

I could not write you all I saw and heard, It was all lovely and all memorable.

But first before I picture Nice to you, My days at Nice, lest you have doubts and fears When I reveal to you I saw this nurse First on the Promenade des Anglais there, Saw much of her in Nice, I saw at once She was that Elenor Murray whom they found Along the river dead; and for the rest To make all clear, I'll tell you everything.

You see I didn't write you of this girl And what we did there, lest you might suspect Some vagrant mood in me concealed or glossed, Which ended in betrayal of our love.

Eyes should look into eyes to supplement The words of truth with light of truth, where nothing Of thoughts that hide have chance to slip and crawl Through eyes averted, twinklings, change of light, Or if they do, reveal themselves, as snakes Are seen when winding into coverts of gra.s.s.

Well, then we met upon the promenade.

She ran toward me, kissed me--oh so glad.

I told her of the battle, of my wound.

And for herself it seemed she had been ill, Off duty for a month before she came To Nice for health; she said as much to me.

I think she had been ill, yet I could sense, Or seemed to sense a mystery, I don't know, Behind her illness. Yet you understand How it was natural we should be happy To meet again, in Nice, too. For you see The army life develops comrades.h.i.+p.

And when we meet the old life rises up And wakes its thrills and memories. It seemed She had been there some days when I arrived And knew the place, and said, "I'll show you Nice."

There was a major she was waiting for, As it turned out. He came there in a week, We had some walks together, all the three, And then I lost them.

But before he came We did the bright cafes and Monte Carlo, And here my little nurse showed something else Besides the tender hands, the prayerful soul.

She had been taking egg-nogs, so she said, But now she took to wine, and drink she could Beyond all men I know. I had to stop Or fall beneath the table, leaving her To order more. And she would sit and weave From right to left hip in a rhythmic way, And cast her eyes obliquely right and left.

It was this way: The music set her thrilling, And keeping time this way. She loved to go Where we could see cocotes, adventurers; Where red vitality was feasting, drinking, And dropping gold upon the gaming table.

We sunned ourselves within the Jardin Public, And walked the beach between the bathing places Where they dry orange peel to make perfumes.

And in that golden suns.h.i.+ne by the sea Caught whiffs of lemon blossoms, and each day I bought her at the stands acacia, Or red anemones--I tell you all-- There was no moment that my thought betrayed Your heart, dear one. She had been good to me.

I saw that she was hungry for these things, For rapture, so I gave them--you don't mind, It came to nothing, dearest.

But at last A different Elenor Murray than I knew There in the hospital took shape before me.

That serving soul, that maid of humble tasks, And sacrifice for others, and that face Of waitress or of ingenue, day by day a.s.sumed sophistication, looks and lines Of knowledge in the world, experience in places of patrician ways. She knew New York as well as I, cafes and shops; Dropped pregnant hints at times that made me think What more she knew, what she was holding back.

Until at last all she had done for me Seemed just what mortals do to earn their bread In any calling, made more generous, maybe, By something in a moment's mood. In truth The ideal showed the clogged pores in the skin Under the light she stood in. For you know When we see people happy we can say Those tears were not all tears--we pitied more Than we were wise to pity--that's the feeling: Most men are Puritans in this, I think.

A woman dancing, drinking, makes you laugh, And half despise yourself for great emotion When seeing her in prayer or reverent thought.

But now I come to something more concrete: The day before the major came we lunched Where we could see the Mediterranean, The clubs, hotels and villas. There she sat All dressed in white, a knitted jacket of silk Matching the leaves upon the trees, and looked As fas.h.i.+onable as the rest. The waiter came.

She did not take the card nor order from it, Was nonchalant, familiar, said at last: "We want some Epernay. You have it doubtless."

The waiter bowed. I looked at Elenor, That was the character of revealing things I saw from day to day. For truth to tell This Epernay might well have been charged water For all I knew. I asked her, and she said: "Delicious wine, not strong." And so we lunched, And the music stormed, and lunchers gabbled, smoked, And dandies ogled. And this Epernay Worked in our blood and Elenor rattled on.

And she was flinging eyes from right to left And moving rhythmically from hip to hip, And with a finger beating out the time.

Somehow our hands touched, then she closed her eyes, Her body shook a little and grew limp.

"What is the matter?" Then she raised her eyes And looked me through an instant. What, my dear, You won't hear any more? Oh, very well, That's all, there is no more.

But after while When things got quieter, the lunchers thinned, The music ended, and the wine grown tame Within our veins, she told me on a time Some years before she was confirmed, and thought She'd take the veil, and for two years or more Was all absorbed in pious thoughts and works.

"But how we learn and change," she added then, "In training we see bodies, learn to know How thirst and hunger, needs of body cry For daily care, become materialists, Unmoralists a little in the sense That any book, or theories of the soul Should tie the body from its natural needs.

Though I accept the faith, no less than ever, That G.o.d is and the Savior is and spirit Is no less real than body, has its needs, Separate or through the body."

Oh, that girl!

She made me guess and wonder. But next day I had a fresh surprise, the major came And she was changed completely. I forgot, I must tell you what happened after lunch.

We rose and she grew impish, stood and laughed As if the secret of the laugh was hers Beyond the concrete matter of the laugh.

She said, "I'll show you something beautiful."

We started out to see it, walked the road Around the foot of Castle Hill. You know The wind blows gustily at Nice; and so All of a sudden went my hat, way up, Far off, and instantly such laughter rose, And boisterous shouts that made me think at once I had been tricked, somehow. It is this way: The gamins loiter there to watch the victims Who lose their hats. And Elenor sat down, And laughed until she cried. I do not know, Perhaps I was not amorous enough At luncheon and she pranked me for revenge.

Well, then the major came, he took my place.

I was the third one in the party now, But saw them every day. What did we do?

No Monte Carlo now, nor ordering Without the card, she was completely changed, Demure again, all words of lovely things: The war had changed the world, had lifted up The spirit of man to visions, and the major Adored her, drank it in. And we explored Limpia and the Old Town, looked aloft At Mont Cau d'Aspremont, picked h.e.l.lebore, And orchids in the gorges, saw St. Pons, The Valley of Hepaticas, sunned ourselves Within the Jardin Public, where the children Play riotously; and Elenor would draw A straying child to her and say: "You darling."

I saw her do this once and dry her eyes And to the major say: "They are so lovely, I had to give up teaching school, the children Stirred my emotions till I could not bear To be among them." And to make an end, I spent the parts of three days with these two.

And on the last day we went to the summit Of the Corinche Road, and saw the sea and Europe Spread out before us--oh, you cannot know The beauty of it, dear, until you see it.

And Elenor sat down as in a trance, And looked and did not speak for minutes. Then She said: "How pure a place this is--it's nature, And I can wors.h.i.+p here, this makes you hate The cafes and the pleasures of the town."

What was this woman, dear, what was her soul?

Or was she half and half? Oh, after all, I am a hostile mixture, so are you.

And so I drifted out, and only stayed A day or two beyond that afternoon.

I took a last walk on the Promenade; At last saw just ahead of me these two, His arm was fast in hers, they sauntered on As if in serious talk. As I came up, I greeted them and said good-bye again.

Where is the major? Did the major steal The heart of Elenor Murray, speed her death?

They could have married. Why did she return?

Or did the major follow her? Well, dear, Here is the story, truthful to a fault.

My soul is yours, I kept it true to you.

Hear how the waters roar upon the sand!

I close my eyes and almost can believe We are together on the Corniche Road.

Well, it may never be that Merival Heard from Bernard of Elenor at Nice, Although he knew it sometime, knew as well Her service in the war had nerved the men And by that much had put the Germans down.

America at the fateful moment lent Her strength to bring the war's end. Elenor Was one of many to cross seas and bring Life strength against the emperor, once secure, And throned in power against such phagocytes As Elenor Murray, Bernard, even kings.

And sawing wood at Amerongen all He thought of was of brains and monstrous hearts Which sent the phagocytes from America, England and France to eat him up at last.

One day an American soldier, so 'tis said Someone told Merival, was walking near The house at Amerongen, saw a man With drooped mustache and whitened beard approach, Two mastiffs walked beside him. As he pa.s.sed Unrecognized, the soldier to a mate Spoke up and said: "What h.e.l.lish dogs are those?-- Like Bismarck used to have; I saw a picture Of Bismarck with his dogs." The drooped mustache Turned nervously and took the soldiers in, Then strode ahead. The emperor was stunned To hear an American soldier use a knife As sharp as that.

But Elenor at Nice Walked with the major as Bernard has told.

And this is wrinkled water, dark and far From Merival, unknown to him. He hears, And this alone, she went from Nice to Florence, Was ill there in a convent, we shall see.

This is the tale that Irma Leese related To Coroner Merival in a leisure hour: