<h3> <SPAN name="rahel"></SPAN> Rahel to Varnhagen<br/> </h3>
<p>Note. — Rahel Robert and Varnhagen von Ense were married,
after many protestations on her part, in 1814. The marriage — so far
as he was concerned, at any rate — appears to have been satisfactory.</p>
<p>Now you have read them all; or if not all,<br/>
As many as in all conscience I should fancy<br/>
To be enough. There are no more of them —<br/>
Or none to burn your sleep, or to bring dreams<br/>
Of devils. If these are not sufficient, surely<br/>
You are a strange young man. I might live on<br/>
Alone, and for another forty years,<br/>
Or not quite forty, — are you happier now? —<br/>
Always to ask if there prevailed elsewhere<br/>
Another like yourself that would have held<br/>
These aged hands as long as you have held them,<br/>
Not once observing, for all I can see,<br/>
How they are like your mother's. Well, you have read<br/>
His letters now, and you have heard me say<br/>
That in them are the cinders of a passion<br/>
That was my life; and you have not yet broken<br/>
Your way out of my house, out of my sight, —<br/>
Into the street. You are a strange young man.<br/>
I know as much as that of you, for certain;<br/>
And I'm already praying, for your sake,<br/>
That you be not too strange. Too much of that<br/>
May lead you bye and bye through gloomy lanes<br/>
To a sad wilderness, where one may grope<br/>
Alone, and always, or until he feels<br/>
Ferocious and invisible animals<br/>
That wait for men and eat them in the dark.<br/>
Why do you sit there on the floor so long,<br/>
Smiling at me while I try to be solemn?<br/>
Do you not hear it said for your salvation,<br/>
When I say truth? Are you, at four and twenty,<br/>
So little deceived in us that you interpret<br/>
The humor of a woman to be noticed<br/>
As her choice between you and Acheron?<br/>
Are you so unscathed yet as to infer<br/>
That if a woman worries when a man,<br/>
Or a man-child, has wet shoes on his feet<br/>
She may as well commemorate with ashes<br/>
The last eclipse of her tranquillity?<br/>
If you look up at me and blink again,<br/>
I shall not have to make you tell me lies<br/>
To know the letters you have not been reading.<br/>
I see now that I may have had for nothing<br/>
A most unpleasant shivering in my conscience<br/>
When I laid open for your contemplation<br/>
The wealth of my worn casket. If I did,<br/>
The fault was not yours wholly. Search again<br/>
This wreckage we may call for sport a face,<br/>
And you may chance upon the price of havoc<br/>
That I have paid for a few sorry stones<br/>
That shine and have no light — yet once were stars,<br/>
And sparkled on a crown. Little and weak<br/>
They seem; and they are cold, I fear, for you.<br/>
But they that once were fire for me may not<br/>
Be cold again for me until I die;<br/>
And only God knows if they may be then.<br/>
There is a love that ceases to be love<br/>
In being ourselves. How, then, are we to lose it?<br/>
You that are sure that you know everything<br/>
There is to know of love, answer me that.<br/>
Well? . . . You are not even interested.<br/></p>
<p>Once on a far off time when I was young,<br/>
I felt with your assurance, and all through me,<br/>
That I had undergone the last and worst<br/>
Of love's inventions. There was a boy who brought<br/>
The sun with him and woke me up with it,<br/>
And that was every morning; every night<br/>
I tried to dream of him, but never could,<br/>
More than I might have seen in Adam's eyes<br/>
Their fond uncertainty when Eve began<br/>
The play that all her tireless progeny<br/>
Are not yet weary of. One scene of it<br/>
Was brief, but was eternal while it lasted;<br/>
And that was while I was the happiest<br/>
Of an imaginary six or seven,<br/>
Somewhere in history but not on earth,<br/>
For whom the sky had shaken and let stars<br/>
Rain down like diamonds. Then there were clouds,<br/>
And a sad end of diamonds; whereupon<br/>
Despair came, like a blast that would have brought<br/>
Tears to the eyes of all the bears in Finland,<br/>
And love was done. That was how much I knew.<br/>
Poor little wretch! I wonder where he is<br/>
This afternoon. Out of this rain, I hope.<br/></p>
<p>At last, when I had seen so many days<br/>
Dressed all alike, and in their marching order,<br/>
Go by me that I would not always count them,<br/>
One stopped — shattering the whole file of Time,<br/>
Or so it seemed; and when I looked again,<br/>
There was a man. He struck once with his eyes,<br/>
And then there was a woman. I, who had come<br/>
To wisdom, or to vision, or what you like,<br/>
By the old hidden road that has no name, —<br/>
I, who was used to seeing without flying<br/>
So much that others fly from without seeing,<br/>
Still looked, and was afraid, and looked again.<br/>
And after that, when I had read the story<br/>
Told in his eyes, and felt within my heart<br/>
The bleeding wound of their necessity,<br/>
I knew the fear was his. If I had failed him<br/>
And flown away from him, I should have lost<br/>
Ingloriously my wings in scrambling back,<br/>
And found them arms again. If he had struck me<br/>
Not only with his eyes but with his hands,<br/>
I might have pitied him and hated love,<br/>
And then gone mad. I, who have been so strong —<br/>
Why don't you laugh? — might even have done all that.<br/>
I, who have learned so much, and said so much,<br/>
And had the commendations of the great<br/>
For one who rules herself — why don't you cry? —<br/>
And own a certain small authority<br/>
Among the blind, who see no more than ever,<br/>
But like my voice, — I would have tossed it all<br/>
To Tophet for one man; and he was jealous.<br/>
I would have wound a snake around my neck<br/>
And then have let it bite me till I died,<br/>
If my so doing would have made me sure<br/>
That one man might have lived; and he was jealous.<br/>
I would have driven these hands into a cage<br/>
That held a thousand scorpions, and crushed them,<br/>
If only by so poisonous a trial<br/>
I could have crushed his doubt. I would have wrung<br/>
My living blood with mediaeval engines<br/>
Out of my screaming flesh, if only that<br/>
Would have made one man sure. I would have paid<br/>
For him the tiresome price of body and soul,<br/>
And let the lash of a tongue-weary town<br/>
Fall as it might upon my blistered name;<br/>
And while it fell I could have laughed at it,<br/>
Knowing that he had found out finally<br/>
Where the wrong was. But there was evil in him<br/>
That would have made no more of his possession<br/>
Than confirmation of another fault;<br/>
And there was honor — if you call it honor<br/>
That hoods itself with doubt and wears a crown<br/>
Of lead that might as well be gold and fire.<br/>
Give it as heavy or as light a name<br/>
As any there is that fits. I see myself<br/>
Without the power to swear to this or that<br/>
That I might be if he had been without it.<br/>
Whatever I might have been that I was not,<br/>
It only happened that it wasn't so.<br/>
Meanwhile, you might seem to be listening:<br/>
If you forget yourself and go to sleep,<br/>
My treasure, I shall not say this again.<br/>
Look up once more into my poor old face,<br/>
Where you see beauty, or the Lord knows what,<br/>
And say to me aloud what else there is<br/>
Than ruins in it that you most admire.<br/></p>
<p>No, there was never anything like that;<br/>
Nature has never fastened such a mask<br/>
Of radiant and impenetrable merit<br/>
On any woman as you say there is<br/>
On this one. Not a mask? I thank you, sir,<br/>
But you see more with your determination,<br/>
I fear, than with your prudence or your conscience;<br/>
And you have never met me with my eyes<br/>
In all the mirrors I've made faces at.<br/>
No, I shall never call you strange again:<br/>
You are the young and inconvincible<br/>
Epitome of all blind men since Adam.<br/>
May the blind lead the blind, if that be so?<br/>
And we shall need no mirrors? You are saying<br/>
What most I feared you might. But if the blind,<br/>
Or one of them, be not so fortunate<br/>
As to put out the eyes of recollection,<br/>
She might at last, without her meaning it,<br/>
Lead on the other, without his knowing it,<br/>
Until the two of them should lose themselves<br/>
Among dead craters in a lava-field<br/>
As empty as a desert on the moon.<br/>
I am not speaking in a theatre,<br/>
But in a room so real and so familiar<br/>
That sometimes I would wreck it. Then I pause,<br/>
Remembering there is a King in Weimar —<br/>
A monarch, and a poet, and a shepherd<br/>
Of all who are astray and are outside<br/>
The realm where they should rule. I think of him,<br/>
And save the furniture; I think of you,<br/>
And am forlorn, finding in you the one<br/>
To lavish aspirations and illusions<br/>
Upon a faded and forsaken house<br/>
Where love, being locked alone, was nigh to burning<br/>
House and himself together. Yes, you are strange,<br/>
To see in such an injured architecture<br/>
Room for new love to live in. Are you laughing?<br/>
No? Well, you are not crying, as you should be.<br/>
Tears, even if they told only gratitude<br/>
For your escape, and had no other story,<br/>
Were surely more becoming than a smile<br/>
For my unwomanly straightforwardness<br/>
In seeing for you, through my close gate of years<br/>
Your forty ways to freedom. Why do you smile?<br/>
And while I'm trembling at my faith in you<br/>
In giving you to read this book of danger<br/>
That only one man living might have written —<br/>
These letters, which have been a part of me<br/>
So long that you may read them all again<br/>
As often as you look into my face,<br/>
And hear them when I speak to you, and feel them<br/>
Whenever you have to touch me with your hand, —<br/>
Why are you so unwilling to be spared?<br/>
Why do you still believe in me? But no,<br/>
I'll find another way to ask you that.<br/>
I wonder if there is another way<br/>
That says it better, and means anything.<br/>
There is no other way that could be worse?<br/>
I was not asking you; it was myself<br/>
Alone that I was asking. Why do I dip<br/>
For lies, when there is nothing in my well<br/>
But shining truth, you say? How do you know?<br/>
Truth has a lonely life down where she lives;<br/>
And many a time, when she comes up to breathe,<br/>
She sinks before we seize her, and makes ripples.<br/>
Possibly you may know no more of me<br/>
Than a few ripples; and they may soon be gone,<br/>
Leaving you then with all my shining truth<br/>
Drowned in a shining water; and when you look<br/>
You may not see me there, but something else<br/>
That never was a woman — being yourself.<br/>
You say to me my truth is past all drowning,<br/>
And safe with you for ever? You know all that?<br/>
How do you know all that, and who has told you?<br/>
You know so much that I'm an atom frightened<br/>
Because you know so little. And what is this?<br/>
You know the luxury there is in haunting<br/>
The blasted thoroughfares of disillusion —<br/>
If that's your name for them — with only ghosts<br/>
For company? You know that when a woman<br/>
Is blessed, or cursed, with a divine impatience<br/>
(Another name of yours for a bad temper)<br/>
She must have one at hand on whom to wreak it<br/>
(That's what you mean, whatever the turn you give it),<br/>
Sure of a kindred sympathy, and thereby<br/>
Effect a mutual calm? You know that wisdom,<br/>
Given in vain to make a food for those<br/>
Who are without it, will be seen at last,<br/>
And even at last only by those who gave it,<br/>
As one or more of the forgotten crumbs<br/>
That others leave? You know that men's applause<br/>
And women's envy savor so much of dust<br/>
That I go hungry, having at home no fare<br/>
But the same changeless bread that I may swallow<br/>
Only with tears and prayers? Who told you that?<br/>
You know that if I read, and read alone,<br/>
Too many books that no men yet have written,<br/>
I may go blind, or worse? You know yourself,<br/>
Of all insistent and insidious creatures,<br/>
To be the one to save me, and to guard<br/>
For me their flaming language? And you know<br/>
That if I give much headway to the whim<br/>
That's in me never to be quite sure that even<br/>
Through all those years of storm and fire I waited<br/>
For this one rainy day, I may go on,<br/>
And on, and on alone, through smoke and ashes,<br/>
To a cold end? You know so dismal much<br/>
As that about me? . . . Well, I believe you do.<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
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