The Peace Maker
The Peace Maker - meaning Summary
Revenge Against a Slanderer
The poem accuses a duplicitous figure — presenting as both woman and man — whose deceit and slander wreck lives. The speaker catalogues ruined people: a once-honest man turned drunkard, his estranged wife, a loved woman driven to suicide, and the breakdown of his family and reputation. He blames communal indifference, expresses furious desire for retribution, and concludes by declaring his own life and affections destroyed by this single malicious person.
Read Complete AnalysesIt has a point of neither sex But comes in guise of both, And, doubly dangerous complex, It is a thing to loathe A lady with her sweet, sad smile, A gentleman on oath. Strip off the mother-veil, and fur! And signs of quiet taste. The dead child’s locket take from her (The dead man’s gift in haste) And wash from every evil line The layers of filling paste! From saddened eyes the hell’s own glare! From sweet mouth blasphemy! Wrench out the gold-filled false teeth there That twice mock honesty, And leave the evil face awry For married folk to see. For foolish girl wives in despair, For men’s and children’s sakes, Let loose the glossed and padded hair To writhe like scorching snakes! And strip the barren body bare To show what Satan makes. Aye! I could take her by the throat More sure than hangman’s noose, And set my teeth and set my nails, And hate would set my thews. And fling her to the drought-starved swine, Were all my brethren Jews. There was the kindest man I knew, Brave, handsome, straight and tall Between his loved ones and the world He stood, a fortress wall. He whines, a ruined drunkard now, And this thing did it all. There was the girl who married me And bore my children twain, We’ll never meet each other’s eyes Like boy and girl again. The very children’s love and trust By this foul thing was slain. There was a girl my manhood loved, She’d Love’s own red gold hair, And grey eyes that were Pity’s own And courage that was rare. She sleeps amongst the suicides, And this thing sent her there. And all because the town was dull And goodness was too tame, And people took no interest In one they could not blame. And all because my life was clean And I had won a name. And now, for years of senseless hate And paltry, bitter strife, For reparation come too late, For sweetheart, mate and wife, I tread her vile heart in the dust And ashes of my life.
Feel free to be first to leave comment.