Complete Poems and Plays (77 page)

Read Complete Poems and Plays Online

Authors: T. S. Eliot

Tags: #Literature, #20th Century, #American Literature, #Poetry, #Drama, #v.5, #Amazon.com, #Retail

BOOK: Complete Poems and Plays
2.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

C
OLBY
.
                                         And lock the gate behind me?

Are you sure that you haven’t your own secret garden

Somewhere, if you could find it?

L
UCASTA
.
                                          If I could find it!

No, my only garden is … a dirty public square

In a shabby part of London — like the one where I lived

For a time, with my mother. I’ve no garden.

I hardly feel that I’m even a person:

Nothing but a bit of living matter

Floating on the surface of the Regent’s Canal.

Floating, that’s it.

C
OLBY
.
                       You’re very much a person.

I’m sure that there is a garden somewhere for you —

For anyone who wants one as much as you do.

L
UCASTA
.
And
your
garden is a garden

Where you hear a music that no one else could hear,

And the flowers have a scent that no one else could smell.

C
OLBY
.
You may be right, up to a point.

And yet, you know, it’s not quite real to me —

Although it’s as real to me as … this world.

But that’s just the trouble. They seem so unrelated.

I turn the key, and walk through the gate,

And there I am … alone, in my ‘garden’.

Alone, that’s the thing. That’s why it’s not real.

You know, I think that Eggerson’s garden

Is more real than mine.

L
UCASTA
.
                           Eggerson’s garden?

What makes you think of Eggerson — of all people?

C
OLBY
.
Well, he retires to his garden — literally,

And also in the same sense that I retire to mine.

But he doesn’t feel alone there. And when he comes out

He has marrows, or beetroot, or peas … for Mrs. Eggerson.

L
UCASTA
.
Are you laughing at me?

C
OLBY
.
                                               I’m being very serious.

What I mean is, my garden’s no less unreal to me

Than the world outside it. If you have two lives

Which have nothing whatever to do with each other —

Well, they’re both unreal. But for Eggerson

His garden is a part of one single world.

L
UCASTA
.
But what do you want?

C
OLBY
.
                                            Not to be alone there.

If I were religious, God would walk in my garden

And that would make the world outside it real

And acceptable, I think.

L
UCASTA
.
                           You sound awfully religious.

Is there no other way of making it real to you?

C
OLBY
.
It’s simply the fact of being alone there

That makes it unreal.

L
UCASTA
.
                       Can no one else enter?

C
OLBY
.
It can’t be done by issuing invitations:

They would just have to come. And I should not see them coming.

I should not hear the opening of the gate.

They would simply … be there suddenly,

Unexpectedly. Walking down an alley

I should become aware of someone walking with me.

That’s the only way I can think of putting it.

L
UCASTA.
How afraid one is of … being hurt!

C
OLBY
.
It’s not the hurting that one would mind

But the sense of desolation afterwards.

L
UCASTA
.
I know what you mean. Then the flowers would fade

And the music would stop. And the walls would be broken.

And you would find yourself in a devastated area —

A bomb-site … willow-herb … a dirty public square.

But I can’t imagine that happening to you.

You seem so secure, to me. Not only in your music —

That’s just its expression. You don’t seem to me

To need anybody.

C
OLBY
.
                      That’s quite untrue.

L
UCASTA
.
But you’ve something else, that I haven’t got:

Something of which the music is a … symbol.

I really would like to understand music,

Not in order to be able to talk about it,

But … partly, to enjoy it … and because of what it stands for.

You know, I’m a little jealous of your music!

When I see it as a means of contact with a world

More real than any
I’ve
ever lived in.

And I’d like to understand
you.

C
OLBY.
                                           I believe you do already,

Better than … other people. And I want to understand
you.

Does one ever come to understand anyone?

L
UCASTA
.
I think you’re being very discouraging:

Are you doing it deliberately?

C
OLBY
.
                                         That’s not what I meant.

I meant, there’s no end to understanding a person.

All one can do is to understand them better,

To keep up with them; so that as the other changes

You can understand the change as soon as it happens,

Though you couldn’t have predicted it.

L
UCASTA
.
                                                    I think I’m changing.

I’ve changed quite a lot in the last two hours.

C
OLBY
.
And I think I’m changing too. But perhaps what we call change …

L
UCASTA
.
Is understanding better what one really is.

And the reason why that comes about, perhaps …

C
OLBY
.
Is, beginning to understand another person.

L
UCASTA
.
Oh Colby, now that we begin to understand,

I’d like you to know a little more about me.

You must have wondered.

C
OLBY
.
                                   Must have wondered?

No, I haven’t wondered. It’s all a strange world

To me, you know, in which I find myself.

But if you mean, wondered about your … background:

No. I’ve been curious to know what you
are,

But not who you are, in the ordinary sense.

Is that what you mean? I’ve just accepted you.

L
UCASTA
.
Oh, that’s so wonderful, to be accepted!

No one has ever ‘just accepted’ me before.

Of course the facts don’t matter, in a sense.

But now we’ve got to this point — you might as well know them.

C
OLBY
.
I’d gladly tell you everything about myself;

But you know most of what there is to say

Already, either from what I’ve told you

Or from what I’ve told B.; or from Sir Claude.

L
UCASTA
.
Claude hasn’t told me anything about you;

He doesn’t tell me much. And as for B. —

I’d much rather hear it from yourself.

C
OLBY.
There’s only one thing I can’t tell you.

At least, not yet. I’m not allowed to tell.

And that’s about my parents.

L
UCASTA
.
                                    Oh, I see.

Well, I can’t believe that matters.

But I can tell you all about
my
parents:

At least, I’m going to.

C
OLBY
.
                            Does that matter, either?

L
UCASTA
.
In one way, it matters. A little while ago

You said, very cleverly, that when we first met

You saw I was trying to give a false impression.

I want to tell you now, why I tried to do that.

And it’s always succeeded with people before:

I got into the habit of giving that impression.

That’s where B. has been such a help to me —

He fosters the impression. He half believes in it.

But he knows all about me, and he knows

That what some men have thought about me wasn’t true.

C
OLBY
.
What wasn’t true?

L
UCASTA
.
                             That I was Claude’s mistress —

Or had been his mistress, palmed off on B.

C
OLBY
.
I never thought of such a thing!

L
UCASTA
.
                                                   You never thought of such a thing!

There are not many men who wouldn’t have thought it.

I don’t know about B. He’s very generous.

I don’t think he’d have minded. But he’s very clever too;

And he guessed the truth from the very first moment.

C
OLBY
.
But what is there to know?

L
UCASTA
.
                                           You’ll laugh when I tell you:

I’m only Claude’s daughter.

C
OLBY
.
                                      His daughter!

L
UCASTA
.
His daughter. Oh, it’s a sordid story.

I hated my mother. I never could see

How Claude had ever liked her. Oh, that childhood —

Always living in seedy lodgings

And being turned out when the neighbours complained.

Oh of course Claude gave her money, a regular allowance;

But it wouldn’t have mattered how much he’d given her:

It was always spent before the end of the quarter

On gin and betting, I should guess.

And I knew how she supplemented her income

Other books

Georgette Heyer by Royal Escape
Border Lord by Arnette Lamb
The Captain and the Enemy by Graham Greene
Cure by Belinda Frisch
Night Lurks by Amber Lynn