Marrying the Hangman

written by


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She has been condemned to death by hanging. A man

may escape this death by becoming the hangman, a

woman by marrying the hangman. But at the present

time there is no hangman; thus there is no escape.

There is only a death, indefinitely postponed. This is

not fantasy, it is history.

*

To live in prison is to live without mirrors. To live

without mirrors is to live without the self. She is

living selflessly, she finds a hole in the stone wall and

on the other side of the wall, a voice. The voice

comes through darkness and has no face. This voice

becomes her mirror.

*

In order to avoid her death, her particular death, with

wrung neck and swollen tongue, she must marry the

hangman. But there is no hangman, first she must

create him, she must persuade this man at the end of

the voice, this voice she has never seen and which has

never seen her, this darkness, she must persuade him

to renounce his face, exchange it for the impersonal

mask of death, of official death which has eyes but

no mouth, this mask of a dark leper. She must

transform his hands so they will be willing to twist

the rope around throats that have been singled out

as hers was, throats other than hers. She must marry

the hangman or no one, but that is not so bad. Who

else is there to marry?

*

You wonder about her crime. She was condemned

to death for stealing clothes from her employer, from

the wife of her employer. She wished to make herself

more beautiful. This desire in servants was not legal.

*

She uses her voice like a hand, her voice reaches

through the wall, stroking and touching. What could

she possibly have said that would have convinced him?

He was not condemned to death, freedom awaited

him. What was the temptation, the one that worked?

Perhaps he wanted to live with a woman whose life

he had saved, who had seen down into the earth but

had nevertheless followed him back up to life. It was

his only chance to be a hero, to one person at least,

for if he became the hangman the others would

despise him. He was in prison for wounding another

man, on one finger of the right hand, with a sword.

This too is history.

*

My friends, who are both women, tell me their stories,

which cannot be believed and which are true. They

are horror stories and they have not happened to me,

they have not yet happened to me, they have

happened to me but we are detached, we watch our

unbelief with horror. Such things cannot happen to

us, it is afternoon and these things do not happen in

the afternoon. The trouble was, she said, I didn’t

have time to put my glasses on and without them I’m

blind as a bat, I couldn’t even see who it was. These

things happen and we sit at a table and tell stories

about them so we can finally believe. This is not

fantasy, it is history, there is more than one hangman

and because of this some of them are unemployed.

*

He said: the end of walls, the end of ropes, the opening

of doors, a field, the wind, a house, the sun, a table,

an apple.

She said: nipple, arms, lips, wine, belly, hair, bread,

thighs, eyes, eyes.

They both kept their promises.

*

The hangman is not such a bad fellow. Afterwards he

goes to the refrigerator and cleans up the leftovers,

though he does not wipe up what he accidentally

spills. He wants only the simple things: a chair,

someone to pull off his shoes, someone to watch him

while he talks, with admiration and fear, gratitude if

possible, someone in whom to plunge himself for rest

and renewal. These things can best be had by marrying

a woman who has been condemned to death by other

men for wishing to be beautiful. There is a wide

choice.

*

Everyone said he was a fool.

Everyone said she was a clever woman.

They used the word ensnare.

*

What did they say the first time they were alone

together in the same room? What did he say when

she had removed her veil and he could see that she

was not a voice but a body and therefore finite?

What did she say when she discovered that she had

left one locked room for another? They talked of

love, naturally, though that did not keep them

busy forever.

*

The fact is there are no stories I can tell my friends

that will make them feel better. History cannot be

erased, although we can soothe ourselves by

speculating about it. At that time there were no

female hangmen. Perhaps there have never been any,

and thus no man could save his life by marriage.

Though a woman could, according to the law.

*

He said: foot, boot, order, city, fist, roads, time,

knife.

She said: water, night, willow, rope hair, earth belly,

cave, meat, shroud, open, blood.

They both kept their promises.

© Margaret Atwood