Read Complete Poems and Plays Online
Authors: T. S. Eliot
Tags: #Literature, #20th Century, #American Literature, #Poetry, #Drama, #v.5, #Amazon.com, #Retail
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