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Captain Craig

Chapter 11: I
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About This Book

A collection of poems beginning with a long narrative portrait of an aging, proud man who drifts into poverty and prompts reflections on dignity, failure, and small mercies. The remaining pieces move among other solitary or strained figures in a small-town milieu, exploring memory, social judgment, domestic life, and the passage of time. Plain diction, subtle irony, and careful dramatic detail shape meditations on compassion, human frailty, and the moral weight of ordinary moments.

 

THE GROWTH OF “LORRAINE”

I

While I stood listening, discreetly dumb,
Lorraine was having the last word with me:
“I know,” she said, “I know it, but you see
Some creatures are born fortunate, and some
Are born to be found out and overcome,—
Born to be slaves, to let the rest go free;
And if I’m one of them (and I must be)
You may as well forget me and go home.
“You tell me not to say these things, I know,
But I should never try to be content:
I’ve gone too far; the life would be too slow.
Some could have done it—some girls have the stuff;
But I can’t do it: I don’t know enough.
I’m going to the devil.”—And she went.

II

I did not half believe her when she said
That I should never hear from her again;
Nor when I found a letter from Lorraine,
Was I surprised or grieved at what I read:
“Dear friend, when you find this, I shall be dead.
You are too far away to make me stop.
They say that one drop—think of it, one drop!—
Will be enough,—but I’ll take five instead.
“You do not frown because I call you friend,
For I would have you glad that I still keep
Your memory, and even at the end—
Impenitent, sick, shattered—cannot curse
The love that flings, for better or for worse,
This worn-out, cast-out flesh of mine to sleep.”