Tired

By Augusta Davies Webster

No not to-night, dear child; I cannot go;

I'm busy, tired; they knew I should not come;

you do not need me there. Dear, be content,

and take your pleasure; you shall tell me of it.

There, go to don your miracles of gauze,

and come and show yourself a great pink cloud.

So, she has gone with half a discontent;

but it will die before her curls are shaped,

and she'll go forth intent on being pleased,

and take her ponderous pastime like the rest—

patient delightedly, prepared to talk

in the right voice for the right length of time

on any thing that anybody names,

prepared to listen with the proper calm

to any song that anybody sings;

wedged in their chairs, all soberness and smiles,

one steady sunshine like an August day:

a band of very placid revellers,

glad to be there but gladder still to go.

She like the rest: it seems so strange to me,

my simple peasant girl, my nature's grace,

one with the others; my wood violet

stuck in a formal rose box at a show.

Well, since it makes her happier. True I thought

the artless girl, come from her cottage home

knowing no world beyond her village streets,

come stranger into our elaborate life

with such a blithe and wondering ignorance

as a young child's who sees new things all day,

would learn it my way and would turn to me

out of the solemn follies "What are these?

why must we live by drill and laugh by drill;

may we not be ourselves then, you and I?"

I thought she would have nestled here by me

"I cannot feign, and let me stay with you."

I thought she would have shed about my life

the unalloyed sweet freshness of the fields

pure from your cloying fashionable musks:

but she "will do what other ladies do"—

my sunburnt Madge I saw, with skirts pinned up,

carrying her father's dinner where he sat

to take his noon-day rest beneath the hedge,

and followed slowly for her clear loud song.

And she did then, she says, as others did

who were her like. 'Tis logical enough:

as every woman lives, (tush! as we all,

following such granted patterns for our souls

as for our hats and coats), she lived by rules

how to be as her neighbours, though I, trained

to my own different code, discerned it not

(mistaking other laws for lawlessness,

like raw and hasty travellers): and now

why should she, in a new world, all unapt

to judge its judgments, take so much on her

she did not in her old world, pick and choose

her pleasures and her tastes, her aims, her faiths,

breaking her smooth path with the thorny points

of upstart questions? She is just a bird

born in a wicker cage and brought away

into a gilded one: she does not pine

to make her nest in uncontrolled far woods,

but, unconceiving freedom, chirrups on,

content to see her prison bars so bright.

Yes, best for her; and, if not best for me,

I've my fault in it too: she's logical,

but what am I, who, having chosen her

for being all unlike the tutored type,

next try and mould her to it—chose indeed

my violet for being not a rose,

then bade it hold itself as roses do,

that passers by may note no difference?

The peasant ways must go, the homely burr,

the quaint strong English—ancient classic turns

mixed up with rustic blunders and misuse,

old grammar shot with daring grammarlessness;

the village belle's quick pertness, toss of head,

and shriek of saucy laughter—graces there,

and which a certain reckless gracefulness,

half hoydenish, half fawnlike, made in her

graces in even my eyes… there; the ease

of quick companionship; the unsoftened "no's;"

the ready quarrels, ready makings up;

all these must go, I would not have her mocked

among the other women who have learned

sweet level speech and quiet courtesies—

and then they jarred upon me like the noise

of music out of rule, which, heard at first,

took the fresh ear with novel melody,

but makes you restless, listened to too long,

with missing looked for rhythms. So I teach,

or let her learn, the way to speak, to look,

to walk, to sit, to dance, to sing, to laugh,

and then…… the prized dissimilarity

was outer husk and not essential core:

my wife is just the wife my any friend

selects among my any friend's good girls,

(a duplicate except that here and there

the rendering's faulty or touched in too strong);

my little rugged bit of gold I mined,

cleared from its quartz and dross and pieced for use

with recognized alloy, is minted down

one of a million stamped and current coins.

My poor dear Madge, it half seems treasonous

to let regret touch any thought of you,

loyal and loving to me as you are;

and you are very very dear to me,

I could not spare you, would not change your love

to have the rich ideal of my hope

in any other woman; as you are

I love you, being you. And for the rest,

if I, my theory's too eager fool,

mistook the freedom of blunt ignorance

for one with freedom of the instructed will,

and took yours for a nature made to keep

its hardiness in culture, gaining strength

to be itself more fully; if I looked

for some rare perfectness of natural gifts,

developing not changed, pruned and not dwarfed;

if I believed you would be that to me

so many men have sung by women's names

and known no woman for, where is your fault,

who did but give yourself as you were then,

and with so true a giving? Violet,

whose is the blame if, rooted from your place,

where you grew truly to your natural law,

set by my hand in artificial soil,

bound to unwonted props, whose blame if you

are not quite violet and not quite rose?

She's happy though, I think: she does not bear

the pain of my mistake, and shall not bear;

and she'll not ever guess of a mistake.

Mistake—'tis a hard word. Well let it pass:

it shall not wrong her: for was it in her

or in myself I was mistaken most?

What, I, who have been bold to hurl revolt

at great Queen Bugaboo Society,

did I not teach her suit and service first,

wincing when she infringed some useless law?

do I not wince to-day beside the fire

at every word or gesture she shall use

not scheduled in the warrant what to do?

do I not bid her have the table thus,

assort such viands, use such furniture,

wear such a stuff at morning, such at night,

all to the warrant of Queen Bugaboo,

and feel a something missing when she fails,

a discord setting all my teeth on edge?

Why, what a score of small observances;

mere fashionable tricks, are to my life

the butter on the bread, without which salve

the bit's too coarse to swallow; what a score

of other small observances and tricks,

worn out of fashion or not yet come in,

reek worse than garlic to my pampered taste,

making the wholesomest food too difficult!

And that which in an ancient yesterday

was but some great man's humour is to me

duty by rote to-day. I had not felt

my own life that punctilious copy-book,

writ to stock patterns set to all a school,

I have called usual lives, but my poor Madge

has unawares informed me of myself.

We can no other; 'tis as natural

to men to take this artificial kind

as to the flowers, which, grown in neighbour ranks,

taste the same winds and feed on the same soil,

to take inoculation by the bees

of one another's dyes and be alike

in new unlikeness to their primal types.

Our gift is imitation and to share

the subtle current of all sympathies;

we breathe each other's thoughts, as in a crowd

we breathe each other's breaths, unconsciously;

and if there could be a mere human man

to singly be creator, make the thing

which none has hoped for near him, say the things

which none has thought beside him, were there one

to be the god we claim in our rash word

original, needs were he such a one

as we call savage, one apart in woods

and friendless deserts, planning by himself

some first instinctive art, or questioning

blank ignorance and wonder into thoughts.

And as for us, the men who live in days

when what the West has whispered finds the East

across an ocean in a breath of time;

when the old era's painful manuscripts,

too choice and rare for less than sage's needs,

reach the new era changed to daily showers

of schoolboys' text-books raining from the press;

when we shake hands with our antipodes

for being neighbour to us; when, like streets

of the city where we are burghers, half the world

is our admitted home, the other half

our summer pleasure-grounds outside our walls;

we, who are scholars of all times and lands,

must be content, each several man, to feel

we are no sovereign units each to rule

the small world of himself, but knitted links,

one drawing on the other in a chain—

A bondage say, but have we not its worth,

help, movement, and the chain grows lengthening on

to span the universe? A braggart whim,

were it a possible, if any link,

breaking away from hundreds side by side,

would be a separate spangle.

                   Yet, alack,

sometimes we links get drawn we know not where,

but think there's mud about us. Still the chain

lies in God's hands, though the sly devil comes

and gives a crooked tug or so at times.

Links in a chain—my metaphor goes well,

convinces me where first I was convinced—

links in a chain, drawing each other on:

but never yet material metaphor

would fit a mind's whole thought, and the hitch comes

where I bid mine good-bye. Links in a chain,

but what of hearts and wills that are in us,

hopes, aims, beliefs? must we go measuring them

Ay "the world says," "so other people think,"

dock our near tastes and natures to the shapes

in common wear, make lay figures of our lives,

as women of their bodies, to be decked

and draped or trimmed and swathed or let go bare

by strict indefinite despots out of sight?

Why, let us have that freedom we accord

inanimate things, to grow each to his kind

and to his best, cattle and servile beasts,

to grow each to his kind and to his best;

but we—oh, monstrous folly—we, designed

each man so much unlike to all men else

as one whole kind of beasts to other kinds,

must train and pattern our reluctant souls

into one liveried sameness!

                   Oh, I am tired!

tired, tired, of this bland smiling slavery,

monotonous waste of life. And, while we fools

are making curtsies and brave compliments

to our rare century, and, courtierly,

swaddling our strength in trammels of soft silk,

the rotten depths grow rottener. Every day

more crime, more pain, more horror. We are good

no doubt, we "better classes"—oh, we boast

our modern virtues in the dead men's teeth

that were our fathers—we are earnest now,

and charitable, and we wash ourselves,

and have a very fair morality;

most well brought up, in fine, of any men

that any age has nurtured, and besides

so equal in our manners and our coats:

and then the classes which, though bettering,

are not quite better yet, are the most shrewd,

most apt, most honest, most intelligent,

that ever the world saw yet. True all of it

for aught I know, some of it as I think,

but underneath—great God, how many souls

are born an hour as provender for hell!

Oh horrible days! our goodness growing ripe,

a spreading scent of sweets, but with no power

to disinfect the spreading foulnesses;

and by mere birth-rate vice made multiplex!

From the murk lanes, and from the fetid courts,

and from the shameful dens where poverty

hobnobs with wolfish crime, out of the reek

of lust and filth, out of the festering homes

of pestilence and famine, the hoarse cry

grows multitudinous, the cavernous cry

of shame and ignorance hunger and greed

become despair and devilishness….. And we

gravely thank God for culture and new lights!

Most horrible days: and we who know the worst,

(or dream it, sitting in our easy chairs,

sorry that all men have not easy chairs,)

and would do somewhat, do it all amiss.

We pelt our broad-cast gold into the mire,

then comes a scramble, foul grows fouler yet;

with a Samaritan hand we feed and feed

the daughters of the horseleech, drunkenness

and dissolute idleness, that cry "give, give,"

sucking the lifeblood from our people's heart;

we pension beggars, buy the burglar tools

and the sot gin, and pay the harlot's rent:

societies, committees, vestry rooms,

with fingers in our purses, lavish wealth,

past common counting, to keep up the tale

of pauper legions and bribe new recruits,

sow coin that, like the pestilent dragon's teeth,

bear us a poisonous crop of human harm:

all all endeavours go, like witches' prayers,

backwards against the meaning, and bring down

the counter-curse of blessings that were asked.

What should we do? I know not; but I think

there's moral in a hackneyed classic tale:

when the great gulf still yawned, after the gold

and treasures had been thrown, there came a man

and gave himself, and then the great gulf closed.

But how? how? And I know not; but I think

if the strong pith and freshness of our lives

were not so sucked and dried away, our span

not maimed and dwarfed, our sight not warped untrue,

by eating custom, petty disciplines,

footlight perspectives cramped to suit our stage,

if we were men, not types and portraitures

and imitative shadows, some of us

might learn—

                   Learn, learn, and if we learned,

saw by what boldness, or what sacrifice,

or what endurance, or what vehemence,

the goal of our beginning might be reached,

the padded skeleton we call the world,

that mumming glib Duessa who usurps

the true world's rule and rights, would trip us up

with half a league of silken barriers

too soft for us to break and breaking us.

Oh, but I know it, I, who time by time,

fierce with the turbulent goodness of my youth,

rushed to the clamourous call of new crusades,

and time by time dropped baffled and worn weak

before a rampart as of dancing pumps,

a wind as if it blew from ladies' fans,

till now I sit a weary man growing old

among the ruins of his purposes,

hopeless of any good to be by him.

Oh, with how full a hope, when morning glowed,

I donned my armour, who at night ride back

foolish and broken! I have set myself

to fight with shadows stronger than a man,

being impalpable and everywhere,

and striking done no hurt but to myself;

and I have ridden at ranks in adamant

and fallen, strained and useless, under foot;

and I have sieged impenetrable walls

and waited day by day till I grew faint;

and never have I triumphed in my cause,

whether it were a great one, or a dream,

a pettish whim, or too divinely large:

for if I strove against contagious ills

cankering the core of us or but at spots

that fleck the smooth gloss of our drawingrooms,

and if I rose to claim some wide desire

of general good or but my own escape

from some small prickings of our social gyves,

always I was against the multitude,

against strong Custom's army plodding on,

unconquerable, calm, like a great stream

whose power is that its waters drift one way.

Tired, tired—grown sick of battle and defeat,

lying in harbour, like a man worn out

by storms, and yet not patient of my rest:

how if I went to some kind southern clime

where, as they say, lost in long summer dreams,

the mind grows careless with sun-drunkenness

and sleeps and wakens softly like a child?

Would Madge be over sorry to come out

into free loneliness with me a while?

clear tints and sunshine, glowing seas and skies,

beauty of mountains and of girdled plains,

the strangeness of new peoples, change and rest,

would these atone to her for so much lost

which she counts precious? For she loves that round

of treadmill ceremonies, mimic tasks,

we make our women's lives—Good heavens what work

to set the creatures to, whom we declare

God purposed for companions to us men…

companions to each other only now,

their business but to waste each other's time.

So much to do among us, and we spend

so many human souls on only this!

in petty actress parts in the long game

(grave foolery like children playing school,

setting themselves hard tasks and punishments,)

that lasts till death and is Society:

the sunlight working hours all chopped and chipped

in stray ten minutes by some score of friends

who, grieved their friend's not out, come rustling in

by ones and twos to say the weather's fine;

or paid away, poor soul, on pilgrimage

reciprocally due to tell them so:

each woman owing tax of half her life

as plaything for the others' careless hours,

each woman setting down her foot to hold

her sister tightly to the tethered round,

will she or nill she: all with rights on each

greater than hers… and I might say than God's,

since He made work the natural food of minds,

cheated of which they dwindle and go dead

like palsied limbs, and gives to each that sense

of beasts, who know their food, to know its work,

choosing the great or little.

                   But myself,

have I befooled the instinct by warped use?

for is not the fruit rotten I have found

by all my labours; nothing to the world

and to me bitterness? And I forget

the strong joy of endeavour, and the fire

of hope is burned out in me; all grows dull,

rest is not rest and I am sick of toil:

I count the cost, and—

                   Ready, love, at last?

Why, what a rosy June! A flush of bloom

sparkling with crystal dews—Ah silly one,

you love these muslin roses better far

than those that wear the natural dew of heaven.

I thought you prettier when, the other day,

the children crowned you with the meadow-sweets:

I like to hear you teach them wild flowers' names

and make them love them; but yourself—

                   What's that?

"The wild flowers in a room's hot stifling glare

would die in half a minute." True enough:

your muslin roses are the wiser wear.

Well, I must see you start. Draw your hood close:

and are you shawled against this east wind's chills?