I had let it all grow. I had supposed

It was all OK. Your life

Was a liner I voyaged in.

Costly education had fitted you out.

Financiers and committees and consultants

Effaced themselves in the gleam of your finish.

You trembled with the new life of those engines.

That first morning,

Before your first class at College, you sat there

Sipping coffee. Now I know, as I did not,

What eyes waited at the back of the class

To check your first professional performance

Against their expectations. What assessors

Waited to see you justify the cost

And redeem their gamble. What a furnace

Of eyes waited to prove your metal. I watched

The strange dummy stiffness, the misery,

Of your blue flannel suit, its straitjacket, ugly

Half-approximation to your idea

Of the proprieties you hoped to ease into,

And your horror in it. And the tanned

Almost green undertinge of your face

Shrunk to its wick, your scar lumpish, your plaited

Head pathetically tiny.

                                          You waited,

Knowing yourself helpless in the tweezers

Of the life that judged you, and I saw

The flayed nerve, the unhealable face-wound

Which was all you had for courage.

I saw that what gripped you, as you sipped,

Were terrors that had killed you once already.

Now, I see, I saw, sitting, the lonely

Girl who was going to die.

                                               That blue suit,

A mad, execution uniform,

Survived your sentence. But then I sat, stilled,

Unable to fathom what stilled you

As I looked at you, as I am stilled

Permanently now, permanently

Bending so briefly at your open coffin.