Thedumb man
There is a story.—I cannot
tell it.—I have no words. The story
is almost forgotten but sometimes I remember.
The story concerns three men in a
house in a street. If I could say the words I
would sing the story. I would whisper it into
the ears of women, of mothers. I would run through
the streets saying it over and over. My tongue
would be torn loose—it would rattle against
my teeth.
The three men are in a room in the
house. One is young and dandified. He continually
laughs.
There is a second man who has a long
white beard. He is consumed with doubt but occasionally
his doubt leaves him and he sleeps.
A third man there is who has wicked
eyes and who moves nervously about the room rubbing
his hands together. The three men are waiting—
waiting.
Upstairs in the house there is a woman
standing with her back to a wall, in half darkness
by a window.
That is the foundation of my story
and everything I will ever know is distilled in it.
I remember that a fourth man came
to the house, a white silent man. Everything
was as silent as the sea at night. His feet on
the stone floor of the room where the three men were
made no sound.
The man with the wicked eyes became
like a boiling liquid—he ran back and forth
like a caged animal. The old grey man was infected
by his nervousness—he kept pulling at his
beard.
The fourth man, the white one, went
upstairs to the woman.
There she was—waiting.
How silent the house was—how
loudly all the clocks in the neighborhood ticked.
The woman upstairs craved love. That must have
been the story. She hungered for love with her
whole being. She wanted to create in love.
When the white silent man came into her presence she
sprang forward. Her lips were parted. There
was a smile on her lips.
The white one said nothing. In
his eyes there was no rebuke, no question. His
eyes were as impersonal as stars.
Down stairs the wicked one whined
and ran back and forth like a little lost hungry dog.
The grey one tried to follow him about but presently
grew tired and lay down on the floor to sleep.
He never awoke again.
The dandified fellow lay on the floor
too. He laughed and played with his tiny black
mustache.
I have no words to tell what happened
in my story. I cannot tell the story.
The white silent one may have been Death.
The waiting eager woman may have been Life.
Both the old grey bearded man and
the wicked one puzzle me. I think and think but
cannot understand them. Most of the time however
I do not think of them at all. I keep thinking
about the dandified man who laughed all through my
story.
If I could understand him I could
understand everything. I could run through the
world telling a wonderful story. I would no longer
be dumb.
Why was I not given words? Why am I dumb?
I have a wonderful story to tell but know no way to
tell it.