A DRAMATIC MONOLOGUE. (This poem is founded on the confession of a man who went with one of the expeditions to save Sir John Franklin’s party, and who, being sent ahead, saw signs of them, but, through cowardice, was afraid to tell.) O Father, hear my tale, then pity me, For even God His pity hath withdrawn. O death was dread and awful in those days! You prate of hell and punishment to come, And endless torments made for those who sin; Stern priest, put down your cross and hearken me;— This is my doom, it sitteth by my side, And never leaves me through the desolate years. Go, take your hell to men who never lived, Save as, the slow world wendeth, sluggish, dull. Even they must suffer also, poor bleak ones, Then is your feeble comfort nothing worth. You tell me to have hope, God will forgive, O priest, can God forgive a sin like mine? You say He is all-loving, did He lie With me that night amid the eyeless dark, And writhe with me, and whisper, “Save thyself, That way to north lies cold and age and death, And awful failure on men’s awÈd tongues, To linger years hereafter; Southward lies Home heat and love and sweet, blood-pulsing life— Life, with its morns and eves and glad to-morrow, And joy and hope for many days to be?” Did He, I say, lie with me there that night, And know that awful tragedy beyond, And my poor tragedy enacted there? Then must He feel Him since as I have felt, And live that hideous misery in His heart. Stay, hearken, priest, and haunt me not with hopes, As futile as those icy-fingered winds That stirred the canvas there that arctic night. I bid thee hark and mumble not thy prayers Like August bees heard in a summer room, That drone afar, but keep them for the dead, The dull-eared dead who sleep and heed them not. Then hearken, priest, and learn thee of my woe, For I have lain afar on northern nights, By star-filled wastes, and conned it o’er and o’er, You talk of ladders leading up to light, Of windows bursting on the perfect day, Of dawns grown ruddy on the blackest night, Yea, I have groped about the muffled walls, And beat my spirit’s prison all in vain, Only to find them shrouded fold on fold; And still the cruel, icy stars look down, And my dread memory stayeth with me still. Long day by day a desolation went Where our wan faces fared, o’er all that waste; And I was young and filled with love of life, And fear of ugly death as some weird black, The enemy of love and youth and joy;— A lonely, ruined bridge at edge of night, No, Father, take your cross, mine is a pain That only distant ages can out-burn. Forgiveness! No, you know not what you say; You churchmen mumble words as charmers do, And talk of God and love so glib and pat, And think you reach men’s souls and give them light, When all the time my spirit is to you A land unfound, a region far-removed, Where walk dim ghosts of thoughts and fears and pains You never dreamed of. What know you of souls Like this of mine that hath girt misery’s sum, And found the black with which God veils His face. You say the church absolves, you speak of peace, You talk of what not even God can do Be He but what you make Him. In my light, And mine is light of one who knows the case, The facts, the reasons, and hath weighed them too, There is but one absolver, the absolved. Ofttimes I think you churchmen do not feel; You wear a mask and mumble petty hopes, And show a righteous patronage of scorn Toward all poor creatures who have shown life’s sting; And all the while, you of you who are men, And not mere walking, feeding, lusting swine, Still fared we north across that frozen waste Of icy horror ringed with awful night, To seek the living in a world of death; And as we fared a terror grew and grew About my heart like madness, till I dreamed A vague desire to flee by night and creep, By steel-blue, windless plain and haunted wood, And wizened shore and headland, once more south. There as we went the days grew wan and shrunk, And nights grew vast and weird and beautiful, Walled with flame-glories of auroral light, Ringing the frozen world with myriad spears Of awful splendour there across the night. Then life ebbed lower in the bravest heart, And spake the leader, “If in ten more days We chance on nothing, then will we return, And set our faces once more to the south.” For that dread land began to close us in, With cold and hunger, bit at our poor limbs, Till life grew there a feeble, flickering flame, Amid the snows and ice-floes of that land. Then ten days crept out shrunk and grey and wan, With nothing but the lonely, haunted waste. Then spake the leader, “If in five more days!” Then parcelled out those five grey, haggard days, While life to me grew like an ebbing tide, That surged far out from some dread death-like strand. And horror came upon me like the night, But when the third day waned we came, at last, Unto the shores of some dread, lonely sea, That gloomed to north and night, and far beyond, Where ruined straits and headlands loomed and sank, There seemed the awful endings of the world. Then spake the leader, “Let us go not yet, But stay a little ere we turn us south, Perchance, poor souls, they might be somewhere here.” And then to me, “You go, for you are young And strong, and life throbs quickest in your veins, And you have eyes more strong to see, for ours Are dimmed by the dread frost-mists of this land; And creep out there beyond yon gleaming ledge, And bring me word of what you there may see. Then whispering “Madness, madness,” to the dark, I crept me fearful o’er that gleaming ledge, And saw but night and awful gulfs of dark, And weird ice-mountains looming desolate there, And far beyond the vastness of that sea. And then—O God, why died I not that hour? Amid the gleaming floes far up that shore, So far it seemed that man’s foot scarce could go, The certain, tapering outline of a mast, And one small patch of rag; and then I felt No man could ever live to reach that place, And horror seized me of that haunted world, Then crept I back the weak ghost of a life, A miserable, shaking, coffined fear, And spake, “I saw but ice and winds and dark, And the dread vastness of that desolate sea.” Again he spake, “Creep out once more and look, Perchance your sight was misled by the gleam.” And then once more I crept out on that ledge, And saw again the night and awful dark, And that poor beckoning mast that haunts me yet; And as I lay those moments seemed to grow, As men have felt in looking down long years, And there I chose “’twixt evil and the good,” And took the evil; then began my hell, And back I crept with that black lie on lips, And spake again, “I only saw the night, And those weird mountains and the awful deep.” At that he moaned and spake, “Poor souls! Poor souls! Then they are doomed if ever men were doomed.” Whereat a sudden, great auroral flame Filled all the heaven, lighting wastes and sea, And came a wondrous shock across the world, Like sounds of far-off battle where hosts die, As if God thundered back mine awful lie, And I fell in a heap where all was black. When next I lived we were full three days south, And two had died upon that dreadful march; Then memory came, and I went laughing mad, But kept mine awful secret to this hour. No, priest, you can do nothing, pain like mine Must smoulder out in its own agony, Till there be nought but ashes at the last. But something ’mid the pauses of the dark Doth teach me that I am not all alone, But I have felt in some dim, shapeless way, As memories long remembered after youth, That back of all there is some mighty will, Beyond the little dreams that we are here, Beyond the misery of our days and years, Beyond the outmost system’s outmost rim, Where wrinkled suns in awful blackness swim, A wondrous mercy that is working still. |