- The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Collected Works in Verse and Prose of
- William Butler Yeats, Vol. 7 (of 8), by William Butler Yeats
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
- other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
- whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
- the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
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- to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
- Title: The Collected Works in Verse and Prose of William Butler Yeats, Vol. 7 (of 8)
- The Secret Rose. Rosa Alchemica. The Tables of the Law.
- The Adoration of the Magi. John Sherman and Dhoya
- Author: William Butler Yeats
- Release Date: August 5, 2015 [EBook #49614]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WORKS OF W B YEATS, VOL 7 ***
- Produced by Emmy, mollypit and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
- THE COLLECTED WORKS OF WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS
- [Illustration: _Emery Walker, Ph. sc._
- _From a drawing by J. B. Yeats_]
- THE SECRET ROSE. ROSA ALCHEMICA.
- THE TABLES OF THE LAW. THE
- ADORATION OF THE MAGI. JOHN
- SHERMAN AND DHOYA :: BEING THE
- SEVENTH VOLUME OF THE COLLECTED
- WORKS IN VERSE & PROSE
- OF WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS :: IMPRINTED
- AT THE SHAKESPEARE
- HEAD PRESS STRATFORD-ON-AVON
- MCMVIII
- CONTENTS
- PAGE
- THE SECRET ROSE:
- DEDICATION 3
- TO THE SECRET ROSE 5
- THE CRUCIFIXION OF THE OUTCAST 7
- OUT OF THE ROSE 20
- THE WISDOM OF THE KING 31
- THE HEART OF THE SPRING 42
- THE CURSE OF THE FIRES AND OF THE SHADOWS 51
- THE OLD MEN OF THE TWILIGHT 61
- WHERE THERE IS NOTHING, THERE IS GOD 69
- OF COSTELLO THE PROUD, OF OONA THE DAUGHTER OF
- DERMOTT AND OF THE BITTER TONGUE 78
- ROSA ALCHEMICA 103
- THE TABLES OF THE LAW 141
- THE ADORATION OF THE MAGI 165
- EARLY STORIES.
- JOHN SHERMAN 183
- DHOYA 283
- THE SECRET ROSE
- As for living, our servants will do that for
- us.—_Villiers de L’Isle Adam._
- Helen, when she looked in her mirror, seeing the
- withered wrinkles made in her face by old age,
- wept, and wondered why she had twice been carried
- away.—_Leonardo da Vinci._
- _My Dear A.E.--I dedicate this book to you because, whether you think
- it well or ill written, you will sympathize with the sorrows and the
- ecstasies of its personages, perhaps even more than I do myself.
- Although I wrote these stories at different times and in different
- manners, and without any definite plan, they have but one subject,
- the war of spiritual with natural order; and how can I dedicate such
- a book to anyone but to you, the one poet of modern Ireland who has
- moulded a spiritual ecstasy into verse? My friends in Ireland sometimes
- ask me when I am going to write a really national poem or romance,
- and by a national poem or romance I understand them to mean a poem or
- romance founded upon some famous moment of Irish history, and built
- up out of the thoughts and feelings which move the greater number of
- patriotic Irishmen. I on the other hand believe that poetry and romance
- cannot be made by the most conscientious study of famous moments and
- of the thoughts and feelings of others, but only by looking into that
- little, infinite, faltering, eternal flame that we call ourselves. If
- a writer wishes to interest a certain people among whom he has grown
- up, or fancies he has a duty towards them, he may choose for the
- symbols of his art their legends, their history, their beliefs, their
- opinions, because he has a right to choose among things less than
- himself, but he cannot choose among the substances of art. So far,
- however, as this book is visionary it is Irish; for Ireland, which is
- still predominantly Celtic, has preserved with some less excellent
- things a gift of vision, which has died out among more hurried and
- more successful nations: no shining candelabra have prevented us from
- looking into the darkness, and when one looks into the darkness there
- is always something there._
- _W. B. YEATS._
- _TO THE SECRET ROSE_
- _Far off, most secret, and inviolate Rose,
- Enfold me in my hour of hours; where those
- Who sought thee at the Holy Sepulchre,
- Or in the wine-vat, dwell beyond the stir
- And tumult of defeated dreams; and deep
- Among pale eyelids heavy with the sleep
- Men have named beauty. Your great leaves enfold
- The ancient beards, the helms of ruby and gold
- Of the crowned Magi; and the king whose eyes
- Saw the Pierced Hands and Rood of Elder rise
- In druid vapour and make the torches dim;
- Till vain frenzy awoke and he died; and him
- Who met Fand walking among flaming dew,
- By a grey shore where the wind never blew,
- And lost the world and Emir for a kiss;
- And him who drove the gods out of their liss
- And till a hundred morns had flowered red
- Feasted, and wept the barrows of his dead;
- And the proud dreaming king who flung the crown
- And sorrow away, and calling bard and clown
- Dwelt among wine-stained wanderers in deep woods;
- And him who sold tillage and house and goods,
- And sought through lands and islands numberless years
- Until he found with laughter and with tears
- A woman of so shining loveliness
- That men threshed corn at midnight by a tress,
- A little stolen tress. I too await
- The hour of thy great wind of love and hate.
- When shall the stars be blown about the sky,
- Like the sparks blown out of a smithy, and die?
- Surely thine hour has come, thy great wind blows,
- Far off, most secret, and inviolate Rose?_
- THE CRUCIFIXION OF THE OUTCAST
- A MAN, with thin brown hair and a pale face, half ran, half walked,
- along the road that wound from the south to the town of Sligo. Many
- called him Cumhal, the son of Cormac, and many called him the Swift,
- Wild Horse; and he was a gleeman, and he wore a short parti-coloured
- doublet, and had pointed shoes, and a bulging wallet. Also he was of
- the blood of the Ernaans, and his birth-place was the Field of Gold;
- but his eating and sleeping places were the four provinces of Eri, and
- his abiding place was not upon the ridge of the earth. His eyes strayed
- from the Abbey tower of the White Friars and the town battlements to
- a row of crosses which stood out against the sky upon a hill a little
- to the eastward of the town, and he clenched his fist, and shook it at
- the crosses. He knew they were not empty, for the birds were fluttering
- about them; and he thought how, as like as not, just such another
- vagabond as himself was hanged on one of them; and he muttered: ‘If it
- were hanging or bowstringing, or stoning or beheading, it would be bad
- enough. But to have the birds pecking your eyes and the wolves eating
- your feet! I would that the red wind of the Druids had withered in
- his cradle the soldier of Dathi, who brought the tree of death out of
- barbarous lands, or that the lightning, when it smote Dathi at the foot
- of the mountain, had smitten him also, or that his grave had been dug
- by the green-haired and green-toothed merrows deep at the roots of the
- deep sea.’
- While he spoke, he shivered from head to foot, and the sweat came
- out upon his face, and he knew not why, for he had looked upon many
- crosses. He passed over two hills and under the battlemented gate, and
- then round by a left-hand way to the door of the Abbey. It was studded
- with great nails, and when he knocked at it, he roused the lay brother
- who was the porter, and of him he asked a place in the guest-house.
- Then the lay brother took a glowing turf on a shovel, and led the way
- to a big and naked outhouse strewn with very dirty rushes; and lighted
- a rush-candle fixed between two of the stones of the wall, and set
- the glowing turf upon the hearth and gave him two unlighted sods and
- a wisp of straw, and showed him a blanket hanging from a nail, and a
- shelf with a loaf of bread and a jug of water, and a tub in a far
- corner. Then the lay brother left him and went back to his place by
- the door. And Cumhal the son of Cormac began to blow upon the glowing
- turf that he might light the two sods and the wisp of straw; but the
- sods and the straw would not light, for they were damp. So he took off
- his pointed shoes, and drew the tub out of the corner with the thought
- of washing the dust of the highway from his feet; but the water was so
- dirty that he could not see the bottom. He was very hungry, for he had
- not eaten all that day; so he did not waste much anger upon the tub,
- but took up the black loaf, and bit into it, and then spat out the
- bite, for the bread was hard and mouldy. Still he did not give way to
- his anger, for he had not drunken these many hours; having a hope of
- heath beer or wine at his day’s end, he had left the brooks untasted,
- to make his supper the more delightful. Now he put the jug to his lips,
- but he flung it from him straightway, for the water was bitter and
- ill-smelling. Then he gave the jug a kick, so that it broke against
- the opposite wall, and he took down the blanket to wrap it about him
- for the night. But no sooner did he touch it than it was alive with
- skipping fleas. At this, beside himself with anger, he rushed to the
- door of the guest-house, but the lay brother, being well accustomed to
- such outcries, had locked it on the outside; so he emptied the tub and
- began to beat the door with it, till the lay brother came to the door
- and asked what ailed him, and why he woke him out of sleep. ‘What ails
- me!’ shouted Cumhal, ‘are not the sods as wet as the sands of the Three
- Rosses? and are not the fleas in the blanket as many as the waves of
- the sea and as lively? and is not the bread as hard as the heart of a
- lay brother who has forgotten God? and is not the water in the jug as
- bitter and as ill-smelling as his soul? and is not the foot-water the
- colour that shall be upon him when he has been charred in the Undying
- Fires?’ The lay brother saw that the lock was fast, and went back to
- his niche, for he was too sleepy to talk with comfort. And Cumhal went
- on beating at the door, and presently he heard the lay brother’s foot
- once more, and cried out at him, ‘O cowardly and tyrannous race of
- friars, persecutors of the bard and the gleeman, haters of life and
- joy! O race that does not draw the sword and tell the truth! O race
- that melts the bones of the people with cowardice and with deceit!’
- ‘Gleeman,’ said the lay brother, ‘I also make rhymes; I make many
- while I sit in my niche by the door, and I sorrow to hear the bards
- railing upon the friars. Brother, I would sleep, and therefore I make
- known to you that it is the head of the monastery, our gracious abbot,
- who orders all things concerning the lodging of travellers.’
- ‘You may sleep,’ said Cumhal, ‘I will sing a bard’s curse on the
- abbot.’ And he set the tub upside down under the window, and stood
- upon it, and began to sing in a very loud voice. The singing awoke the
- abbot, so that he sat up in bed and blew a silver whistle until the lay
- brother came to him. ‘I cannot get a wink of sleep with that noise,’
- said the abbot. ‘What is happening?’
- ‘It is a gleeman,’ said the lay brother, ‘who complains of the sods,
- of the bread, of the water in the jug, of the foot-water, and of the
- blanket. And now he is singing a bard’s curse upon you, O brother
- abbot, and upon your father and your mother, and your grandfather and
- your grandmother, and upon all your relations.’
- ‘Is he cursing in rhyme?’
- ‘He is cursing in rhyme, and with two assonances in every line of his
- curse.’
- The abbot pulled his night-cap off and crumpled it in his hands, and
- the circular brown patch of hair in the middle of his bald head looked
- like an island in the midst of a pond, for in Connaught they had not
- yet abandoned the ancient tonsure for the style then coming into use.
- ‘If we do not somewhat,’ he said, ‘he will teach his curses to the
- children in the street, and the girls spinning at the doors, and to the
- robbers upon Ben Bulben.’
- ‘Shall I go, then,’ said the other, ‘and give him dry sods, a fresh
- loaf, clean water in a jug, clean foot-water, and a new blanket, and
- make him swear by the blessed Saint Benignus, and by the sun and moon,
- that no bond be lacking, not to tell his rhymes to the children in the
- street, and the girls spinning at the doors, and the robbers upon Ben
- Bulben?’
- ‘Neither our blessed Patron nor the sun and moon would avail at all,’
- said the abbot; ‘for to-morrow or the next day the mood to curse
- would come upon him, or a pride in those rhymes would move him, and
- he would teach his lines to the children, and the girls, and the
- robbers. Or else he would tell another of his craft how he fared in the
- guest-house, and he in his turn would begin to curse, and my name would
- wither. For learn there is no steadfastness of purpose upon the roads,
- but only under roofs, and between four walls. Therefore I bid you go
- and awaken Brother Kevin, Brother Dove, Brother Little Wolf, Brother
- Bald Patrick, Brother Bald Brandon, Brother James and Brother Peter.
- And they shall take the man, and bind him with ropes, and dip him in
- the river that he may cease to sing. And in the morning, lest this but
- make him curse the louder, we will crucify him.’
- ‘The crosses are all full,’ said the lay brother.
- ‘Then we must make another cross. If we do not make an end of him
- another will, for who can eat and sleep in peace while men like him
- are going about the world? Ill should we stand before blessed Saint
- Benignus, and sour would be his face when he comes to judge us at
- the Last Day, were we to spare an enemy of his when we had him under
- our thumb! Brother, the bards and the gleemen are an evil race, ever
- cursing and ever stirring up the people, and immoral and immoderate in
- all things, and heathen in their hearts, always longing after the Son
- of Lir, and Aengus, and Bridget, and the Dagda, and Dana the Mother,
- and all the false gods of the old days; always making poems in praise
- of those kings and queens of the demons, Finvaragh, whose home is
- under Cruachmaa, and Red Aodh of Cnocna-Sidhe, and Cleena of the Wave,
- and Aoibhell of the Grey Rock, and him they call Donn of the Vats of
- the Sea; and railing against God and Christ and the blessed Saints.’
- While he was speaking he crossed himself, and when he had finished he
- drew the nightcap over his ears, to shut out the noise, and closed his
- eyes, and composed himself to sleep.
- The lay brother found Brother Kevin, Brother Dove, Brother Little Wolf,
- Brother Bald Patrick, Brother Bald Brandon, Brother James and Brother
- Peter sitting up in bed, and he made them get up. Then they bound
- Cumhal, and they dragged him to the river, and they dipped him in it at
- the place which was afterwards called Buckley’s Ford.
- ‘Gleeman,’ said the lay brother, as they led him back to the
- guest-house, ‘why do you ever use the wit which God has given you to
- make blasphemous and immoral tales and verses? For such is the way of
- your craft. I have, indeed, many such tales and verses well nigh by
- rote, and so I know that I speak true! And why do you praise with rhyme
- those demons, Finvaragh, Red Aodh, Cleena, Aoibhell and Donn? I, too,
- am a man of great wit and learning, but I ever glorify our gracious
- abbot, and Benignus our Patron, and the princes of the province.
- My soul is decent and orderly, but yours is like the wind among the
- salley gardens. I said what I could for you, being also a man of many
- thoughts, but who could help such a one as you?’
- ‘Friend,’ answered the gleeman, ‘my soul is indeed like the wind, and
- it blows me to and fro, and up and down, and puts many things into my
- mind and out of my mind, and therefore am I called the Swift, Wild
- Horse.’ And he spoke no more that night, for his teeth were chattering
- with the cold.
- The abbot and the friars came to him in the morning, and bade him get
- ready to be crucified, and led him out of the guest-house. And while he
- still stood upon the step a flock of great grass-barnacles passed high
- above him with clanking cries. He lifted his arms to them and said, ‘O
- great grass-barnacles, tarry a little, and mayhap my soul will travel
- with you to the waste places of the shore and to the ungovernable sea!’
- At the gate a crowd of beggars gathered about them, being come there
- to beg from any traveller or pilgrim who might have spent the night in
- the guest-house. The abbot and the friars led the gleeman to a place
- in the woods at some distance, where many straight young trees were
- growing, and they made him cut one down and fashion it to the right
- length, while the beggars stood round them in a ring, talking and
- gesticulating. The abbot then bade him cut off another and shorter
- piece of wood, and nail it upon the first. So there was his cross for
- him; and they put it upon his shoulder, for his crucifixion was to be
- on the top of the hill where the others were. A half-mile on the way he
- asked them to stop and see him juggle for them; for he knew, he said,
- all the tricks of Aengus the Subtle-hearted. The old friars were for
- pressing on, but the young friars would see him: so he did many wonders
- for them, even to the drawing of live frogs out of his ears. But after
- a while they turned on him, and said his tricks were dull and a shade
- unholy, and set the cross on his shoulders again. Another half-mile
- on the way, and he asked them to stop and hear him jest for them, for
- he knew, he said, all the jests of Conan the Bald, upon whose back a
- sheep’s wool grew. And the young friars, when they had heard his merry
- tales, again bade him take up his cross, for it ill became them to
- listen to such follies. Another half-mile on the way, he asked them to
- stop and hear him sing the story of White-breasted Deirdre, and how
- she endured many sorrows, and how the sons of Usna died to serve her.
- And the young friars were mad to hear him, but when he had ended they
- grew angry, and beat him for waking forgotten longings in their hearts.
- So they set the cross upon his back, and hurried him to the hill.
- When he was come to the top, they took the cross from him, and began to
- dig a hole to stand it in, while the beggars gathered round, and talked
- among themselves. ‘I ask a favour before I die,’ says Cumhal.
- ‘We will grant you no more delays,’ says the abbot.
- ‘I ask no more delays, for I have drawn the sword, and told the truth,
- and lived my vision, and am content.’
- ‘Would you, then, confess?’
- ‘By sun and moon, not I; I ask but to be let eat the food I carry in my
- wallet. I carry food in my wallet whenever I go upon a journey, but I
- do not taste of it unless I am well-nigh starved. I have not eaten now
- these two days.’
- ‘You may eat, then,’ says the abbot, and he turned to help the friars
- dig the hole.
- The gleeman took a loaf and some strips of cold fried bacon out of his
- wallet and laid them upon the ground. ‘I will give a tithe to the
- poor,’ says he, and he cut a tenth part from the loaf and the bacon.
- ‘Who among you is the poorest?’ And thereupon was a great clamour, for
- the beggars began the history of their sorrows and their poverty, and
- their yellow faces swayed like Gara Lough when the floods have filled
- it with water from the bogs.
- He listened for a little, and, says he, ‘I am myself the poorest,
- for I have travelled the bare road, and by the edges of the sea; and
- the tattered doublet of particoloured cloth upon my back and the
- torn pointed shoes upon my feet have ever irked me, because of the
- towered city full of noble raiment which was in my heart. And I have
- been the more alone upon the roads and by the sea because I heard in
- my heart the rustling of the rose-bordered dress of her who is more
- subtle than Aengus, the Subtle-hearted, and more full of the beauty of
- laughter than Conan the Bald, and more full of the wisdom of tears than
- White-breasted Deirdre, and more lovely than a bursting dawn to them
- that are lost in the darkness. Therefore, I award the tithe to myself;
- but yet, because I am done with all things, I give it unto you.’
- So he flung the bread and the strips of bacon among the beggars,
- and they fought with many cries until the last scrap was eaten. But
- meanwhile the friars nailed the gleeman to his cross, and set it
- upright in the hole, and shovelled the earth in at the foot, and
- trampled it level and hard. So then they went away, but the beggars
- stared on, sitting round the cross. But when the sun was sinking, they
- also got up to go, for the air was getting chilly. And as soon as they
- had gone a little way, the wolves, who had been showing themselves on
- the edge of a neighbouring coppice, came nearer, and the birds wheeled
- closer and closer. ‘Stay, outcasts, yet a little while,’ the crucified
- one called in a weak voice to the beggars, ‘and keep the beasts and the
- birds from me.’ But the beggars were angry because he had called them
- outcasts, so they threw stones and mud at him, and went their way. Then
- the wolves gathered at the foot of the cross, and the birds flew lower
- and lower. And presently the birds lighted all at once upon his head
- and arms and shoulders, and began to peck at him, and the wolves began
- to eat his feet. ‘Outcasts,’ he moaned, ‘have you also turned against
- the outcast?’
- OUT OF THE ROSE
- ONE winter evening an old knight in rusted chain-armour rode slowly
- along the woody southern slope of Ben Bulben, watching the sun go down
- in crimson clouds over the sea. His horse was tired, as after a long
- journey, and he had upon his helmet the crest of no neighbouring lord
- or king, but a small rose made of rubies that glimmered every moment to
- a deeper crimson. His white hair fell in thin curls upon his shoulders,
- and its disorder added to the melancholy of his face, which was the
- face of one of those who have come but seldom into the world, and
- always for its trouble, the dreamers who must do what they dream, the
- doers who must dream what they do.
- After gazing a while towards the sun, he let the reins fall upon the
- neck of his horse, and, stretching out both arms towards the west, he
- said, ‘O Divine Rose of Intellectual Flame, let the gates of thy peace
- be opened to me at last!’ And suddenly a loud squealing began in the
- woods some hundreds of yards further up the mountain side. He stopped
- his horse to listen, and heard behind him a sound of feet and of
- voices. ‘They are beating them to make them go into the narrow path by
- the gorge,’ said someone, and in another moment a dozen peasants armed
- with short spears had come up with the knight, and stood a little apart
- from him, their blue caps in their hands.
- ‘Where do you go with the spears?’ he asked; and one who seemed the
- leader answered: ‘A troop of wood-thieves came down from the hills a
- while ago and carried off the pigs belonging to an old man who lives by
- Glen Car Lough, and we turned out to go after them. Now that we know
- they are four times more than we are, we follow to find the way they
- have taken; and will presently tell our story to De Courcey, and if he
- will not help us, to Fitzgerald; for De Courcey and Fitzgerald have
- lately made a peace, and we do not know to whom we belong.’
- ‘But by that time,’ said the knight, ‘the pigs will have been eaten.’
- ‘A dozen men cannot do more, and it was not reasonable that the whole
- valley should turn out and risk their lives for two, or for two dozen
- pigs.’
- ‘Can you tell me,’ said the knight, ‘if the old man to whom the pigs
- belong is pious and true of heart?’
- ‘He is as true as another and more pious than any, for he says a prayer
- to a saint every morning before his breakfast.’
- ‘Then it were well to fight in his cause,’ said the knight, ‘and if you
- will fight against the wood-thieves I will take the main brunt of the
- battle, and you know well that a man in armour is worth many like these
- wood-thieves, clad in wool and leather.’
- And the leader turned to his fellows and asked if they would take the
- chance; but they seemed anxious to get back to their cabins.
- ‘Are the wood-thieves treacherous and impious?’
- ‘They are treacherous in all their dealings,’ said a peasant, ‘and no
- man has known them to pray.’
- ‘Then,’ said the knight, ‘I will give five crowns for the head of every
- wood-thief killed by us in the fighting’; and he bid the leader show
- the way, and they all went on together. After a time they came to where
- a beaten track wound into the woods, and, taking this, they doubled
- back upon their previous course, and began to ascend the wooded slope
- of the mountains. In a little while the path grew very straight and
- steep, and the knight was forced to dismount and leave his horse tied
- to a tree-stem. They knew they were on the right track: for they could
- see the marks of pointed shoes in the soft clay and mingled with them
- the cloven footprints of the pigs. Presently the path became still
- more abrupt, and they knew by the ending of the cloven footprints that
- the thieves were carrying the pigs. Now and then a long mark in the
- clay showed that a pig had slipped down, and been dragged along for a
- little way. They had journeyed thus for about twenty minutes, when a
- confused sound of voices told them that they were coming up with the
- thieves. And then the voices ceased, and they understood that they had
- been overheard in their turn. They pressed on rapidly and cautiously,
- and in about five minutes one of them caught sight of a leather jerkin
- half hidden by a hazel-bush. An arrow struck the knight’s chain-armour,
- but glanced off harmlessly, and then a flight of arrows swept by them
- with the buzzing sound of great bees. They ran and climbed, and climbed
- and ran towards the thieves, who were now all visible standing up
- among the bushes with their still quivering bows in their hands: for
- they had only their spears, and they must at once come hand to hand.
- The knight was in the front, and smote down first one and then another
- of the wood-thieves. The peasants shouted, and, pressing on, drove
- the wood-thieves before them until they came out on the flat top of
- the mountain, and there they saw the two pigs quietly grubbing in the
- short grass, so they ran about them in a circle, and began to move back
- again towards the narrow path: the old knight coming now the last of
- all, and striking down thief after thief. The peasants had got no very
- serious hurts among them, for he had drawn the brunt of the battle upon
- himself, as could well be seen from the bloody rents in his armour; and
- when they came to the entrance of the narrow path he bade them drive
- the pigs down into the valley, while he stood there to guard the way
- behind them. So in a moment he was alone, and, being weak with loss of
- blood, might have been ended there and then by the wood-thieves he had
- beaten off, had fear not made them begone out of sight in a great hurry.
- An hour passed, and they did not return; and now the knight could stand
- on guard no longer, but had to lie down upon the grass. A half-hour
- more went by, and then a young lad, with what appeared to be a number
- of cock’s feathers stuck round his hat, came out of the path behind
- him, and began to move about among the dead thieves, cutting their
- heads off. Then he laid the heads in a heap before the knight, and
- said: ‘O great knight, I have been bid come and ask you for the crowns
- you promised for the heads: five crowns a head. They bid me tell you
- that they have prayed to God and His Mother to give you a long life,
- but that they are poor peasants, and that they would have the money
- before you die. They told me this over and over for fear I might forget
- it, and promised to beat me if I did.’
- The knight raised himself upon his elbow, and opening a bag that hung
- to his belt, counted out the five crowns for each head. There were
- thirty heads in all.
- ‘O great knight,’ said the lad, ‘they have also bid me take all care of
- you, and light a fire, and put this ointment upon your wounds.’ And he
- gathered sticks and leaves together, and, flashing his flint and steel
- under a mass of dry leaves, had made a very good blaze. Then, drawing
- off the coat of mail, he began to anoint the wounds: but he did it
- clumsily, like one who does by rote what he had been told. The knight
- motioned him to stop, and said: ‘You seem a good lad.’
- ‘I would ask something of you for myself.’
- ‘There are still a few crowns,’ said the knight; ‘shall I give them to
- you?’
- ‘O no,’ said the lad. ‘They would be no good to me. There is only one
- thing that I care about doing, and I have no need of money to do it. I
- go from village to village and from hill to hill, and whenever I come
- across a good cock I steal him and take him into the woods, and I keep
- him there under a basket, until I get another good cock, and then I set
- them to fight. The people say I am an innocent, and do not do me any
- harm, and never ask me to do any work but go a message now and then. It
- is because I am an innocent that they send me to get the crowns: anyone
- else would steal them; and they dare not come back themselves, for now
- that you are not with them they are afraid of the wood-thieves. Did you
- ever hear how, when the wood-thieves are christened, the wolves are
- made their godfathers, and their right arms are not christened at all?’
- ‘If you will not take these crowns, my good lad, I have nothing for
- you, I fear, unless you would have that old coat of mail which I shall
- soon need no more.’
- ‘There was something I wanted: yes, I remember now,’ said the lad. ‘I
- want you to tell me why you fought like the champions and giants in the
- stories and for so little a thing. Are you indeed a man like us? Are
- you not rather an old wizard who lives among these hills, and will not
- a wind arise presently and crumble you into dust?’
- ‘I will tell you of myself,’ replied the knight, ‘for now that I am
- the last of the fellowship, I may tell all and witness for God. Look
- at the Rose of Rubies on my helmet, and see the symbol of my life and
- of my hope.’ And then he told the lad this story, but with always
- more frequent pauses; and, while he told it, the Rose shone a deep
- blood-colour in the firelight, and the lad stuck the cock’s feathers in
- the earth in front of him, and moved them about as though he made them
- actors in the play.
- ‘I live in a land far from this, and was one of the Knights of Saint
- John,’ said the old man; ‘but I was one of those in the Order who
- always longed for more arduous labours in the service of the Most High.
- At last there came to us a knight of Palestine, to whom the truth of
- truths had been revealed by God Himself. He had seen a great Rose of
- Fire, and a Voice out of the Rose had told him how men would turn from
- the light of their own hearts, and bow down before outer order and
- outer fixity, and that then the light would cease, and none escape the
- curse except the foolish good man who could not, and the passionate
- wicked man who would not, think. Already, the Voice told him, the
- wayward light of the heart was shining out upon the world to keep it
- alive, with a less clear lustre, and that, as it paled, a strange
- infection was touching the stars and the hills and the grass and the
- trees with corruption, and that none of those who had seen clearly
- the truth and the ancient way could enter into the Kingdom of God,
- which is in the Heart of the Rose, if they stayed on willingly in the
- corrupted world; and so they must prove their anger against the Powers
- of Corruption by dying in the service of the Rose of God. While the
- knight of Palestine was telling us these things we seemed to see in a
- vision a crimson Rose spreading itself about him, so that he seemed to
- speak out of its heart, and the air was filled with fragrance. By this
- we knew that it was the very Voice of God which spoke to us by the
- knight, and we gathered about him and bade him direct us in all things,
- and teach us how to obey the Voice. So he bound us with an oath, and
- gave us signs and words whereby we might know each other even after
- many years, and he appointed places of meeting, and he sent us out in
- troops into the world to seek good causes, and die in doing battle for
- them. At first we thought to die more readily by fasting to death in
- honour of some saint; but this he told us was evil, for we did it for
- the sake of death, and thus took out of the hands of God the choice
- of the time and manner of our death, and by so doing made His power
- the less. We must choose our service for its excellence, and for this
- alone, and leave it to God to reward us at His own time and in His own
- manner. And after this he compelled us to eat always two at a table to
- watch each other lest we fasted unduly, for some among us said that
- if one fasted for a love of the holiness of saints and then died, the
- death would be acceptable. And the years passed, and one by one my
- fellows died in the Holy Land, or in warring upon the evil princes of
- the earth, or in clearing the roads of robbers; and among them died the
- knight of Palestine, and at last I was alone. I fought in every cause
- where the few contended against the many, and my hair grew white, and a
- terrible fear lest I had fallen under the displeasure of God came upon
- me. But, hearing at last how this western isle was fuller of wars and
- rapine than any other land, I came hither, and I have found the thing I
- sought, and, behold! I am filled with a great joy.’
- Thereat he began to sing in Latin, and, while he sang, his voice grew
- fainter and fainter. Then his eyes closed, and his lips fell apart, and
- the lad knew he was dead. ‘He has told me a good tale,’ he said, ‘for
- there was fighting in it, but I did not understand much of it, and it
- is hard to remember so long a story.’
- And, taking the knight’s sword, he began to dig a grave in the soft
- clay. He dug hard, and a faint light of dawn had touched his hair and
- he had almost done his work when a cock crowed in the valley below.
- ‘Ah,’ he said, ‘I must have that bird’; and he ran down the narrow path
- to the valley.
- THE WISDOM OF THE KING
- THE High-Queen of the Island of Woods had died in childbirth, and her
- child was put to nurse with a woman who lived in a hut of mud and
- wicker, within the border of the wood. One night the woman sat rocking
- the cradle, and pondering over the beauty of the child, and praying
- that the gods might grant him wisdom equal to his beauty. There came
- a knock at the door, and she got up, not a little wondering, for the
- nearest neighbours were in the dun of the High-King a mile away; and
- the night was now late. ‘Who is knocking?’ she cried, and a thin voice
- answered, ‘Open! for I am a crone of the grey hawk, and I come from the
- darkness of the great wood.’ In terror she drew back the bolt, and a
- grey-clad woman, of a great age, and of a height more than human, came
- in and stood by the head of the cradle. The nurse shrank back against
- the wall, unable to take her eyes from the woman, for she saw by the
- gleaming of the firelight that the feathers of the grey hawk were upon
- her head instead of hair. But the child slept, and the fire danced, for
- the one was too ignorant and the other too full of gaiety to know what
- a dreadful being stood there. ‘Open!’ cried another voice, ‘for I am a
- crone of the grey hawk, and I watch over his nest in the darkness of
- the great wood.’ The nurse opened the door again, though her fingers
- could scarce hold the bolts for trembling, and another grey woman, not
- less old than the other, and with like feathers instead of hair, came
- in and stood by the first. In a little, came a third grey woman, and
- after her a fourth, and then another and another and another, until
- the hut was full of their immense bodies. They stood a long time in
- perfect silence and stillness, for they were of those whom the dropping
- of the sand has never troubled, but at last one muttered in a low thin
- voice: ‘Sisters, I knew him far away by the redness of his heart under
- his silver skin’; and then another spoke: ‘Sisters, I knew him because
- his heart fluttered like a bird under a net of silver cords’; and then
- another took up the word: ‘Sisters, I knew him because his heart sang
- like a bird that is happy in a silver cage.’ And after that they sang
- together, those who were nearest rocking the cradle with long wrinkled
- fingers; and their voices were now tender and caressing, now like the
- wind blowing in the great wood, and this was their song:
- Out of sight is out of mind:
- Long have man and woman-kind,
- Heavy of will and light of mood,
- Taken away our wheaten food,
- Taken away our Altar stone;
- Hail and rain and thunder alone,
- And red hearts we turn to grey,
- Are true till Time gutter away.
- When the song had died out, the crone who had first spoken, said: ‘We
- have nothing more to do but to mix a drop of our blood into his blood.’
- And she scratched her arm with the sharp point of a spindle, which
- she had made the nurse bring to her, and let a drop of blood, grey as
- the mist, fall upon the lips of the child; and passed out into the
- darkness. Then the others passed out in silence one by one; and all the
- while the child had not opened his pink eyelids or the fire ceased to
- dance, for the one was too ignorant and the other too full of gaiety to
- know what great beings had bent over the cradle.
- When the crones were gone, the nurse came to her courage again, and
- hurried to the dun of the High-King, and cried out in the midst of the
- assembly hall that the Sidhe, whether for good or evil she knew not,
- had bent over the child that night; and the king and his poets and men
- of law, and his huntsmen, and his cooks, and his chief warriors went
- with her to the hut and gathered about the cradle, and were as noisy as
- magpies, and the child sat up and looked at them.
- Two years passed over, and the king died fighting against the Fer Bolg;
- and the poets and the men of law ruled in the name of the child, but
- looked to see him become the master himself before long, for no one
- had seen so wise a child, and tales of his endless questions about
- the household of the gods and the making of the world went hither and
- thither among the wicker houses of the poor. Everything had been well
- but for a miracle that began to trouble all men; and all women, who,
- indeed, talked of it without ceasing. The feathers of the grey hawk
- had begun to grow in the child’s hair, and though his nurse cut them
- continually, in but a little while they would be more numerous than
- ever. This had not been a matter of great moment, for miracles were a
- little thing in those days, but for an ancient law of Eri that none
- who had any blemish of body could sit upon the throne; and as a grey
- hawk was a wild thing of the air which had never sat at the board, or
- listened to the songs of the poets in the light of the fire, it was not
- possible to think of one in whose hair its feathers grew as other than
- marred and blasted; nor could the people separate from their admiration
- of the wisdom that grew in him a horror as at one of unhuman blood. Yet
- all were resolved that he should reign, for they had suffered much from
- foolish kings and their own disorders, and moreover they desired to
- watch out the spectacle of his days; and no one had any other fear but
- that his great wisdom might bid him obey the law, and call some other,
- who had but a common mind, to reign in his stead.
- When the child was seven years old the poets and the men of law were
- called together by the chief poet, and all these matters weighed and
- considered. The child had already seen that those about him had hair
- only, and, though they had told him that they too had had feathers
- but had lost them because of a sin committed by their forefathers,
- they knew that he would learn the truth when he began to wander into
- the country round about. After much consideration they decreed a new
- law commanding every one upon pain of death to mingle artificially
- the feathers of the grey hawk into his hair; and they sent men with
- nets and slings and bows into the countries round about to gather a
- sufficiency of feathers. They decreed also that any who told the truth
- to the child should be flung from a cliff into the sea.
- The years passed, and the child grew from childhood into boyhood and
- from boyhood into manhood, and from being curious about all things
- he became busy with strange and subtle thoughts which came to him in
- dreams, and with distinctions between things long held the same and
- with the resemblance of things long held different. Multitudes came
- from other lands to see him and to ask his counsel, but there were
- guards set at the frontiers, who compelled all that came to wear the
- feathers of the grey hawk in their hair. While they listened to him
- his words seemed to make all darkness light and filled their hearts
- like music; but, alas, when they returned to their own lands his words
- seemed far off, and what they could remember too strange and subtle
- to help them to live out their hasty days. A number indeed did live
- differently afterwards, but their new life was less excellent than the
- old: some among them had long served a good cause, but when they heard
- him praise it and their labour, they returned to their own lands to
- find what they had loved less lovable and their arm lighter in the
- battle, for he had taught them how little a hair divides the false and
- true; others, again, who had served no cause, but wrought in peace the
- welfare of their own households, when he had expounded the meaning of
- their purpose, found their bones softer and their will less ready for
- toil, for he had shown them greater purposes; and numbers of the young,
- when they had heard him upon all these things, remembered certain words
- that became like a fire in their hearts, and made all kindly joys and
- traffic between man and man as nothing, and went different ways, but
- all into vague regret.
- When any asked him concerning the common things of life; disputes about
- the mear of a territory, or about the straying of cattle, or about the
- penalty of blood; he would turn to those nearest him for advice; but
- this was held to be from courtesy, for none knew that these matters
- were hidden from him by thoughts and dreams that filled his mind like
- the marching and counter-marching of armies. Far less could any know
- that his heart wandered lost amid throngs of overcoming thoughts and
- dreams, shuddering at its own consuming solitude.
- Among those who came to look at him and to listen to him was the
- daughter of a little king who lived a great way off; and when he
- saw her he loved, for she was beautiful, with a strange and pale
- beauty unlike the women of his land; but Dana, the great mother, had
- decreed her a heart that was but as the heart of others, and when she
- considered the mystery of the hawk feathers she was troubled with a
- great horror. He called her to him when the assembly was over and
- told her of her beauty, and praised her simply and frankly as though
- she were a fable of the bards; and he asked her humbly to give him
- her love, for he was only subtle in his dreams. Overwhelmed with his
- greatness, she half consented, and yet half refused, for she longed to
- marry some warrior who could carry her over a mountain in his arms. Day
- by day the king gave her gifts; cups with ears of gold and findrinny
- wrought by the craftsmen of distant lands; cloth from over sea, which,
- though woven with curious figures, seemed to her less beautiful than
- the bright cloth of her own country; and still she was ever between a
- smile and a frown; between yielding and withholding. He laid down his
- wisdom at her feet, and told how the heroes when they die return to
- the world and begin their labour anew; how the kind and mirthful Men
- of Dea drove out the huge and gloomy and misshapen People from Under
- the Sea; and a multitude of things that even the Sidhe have forgotten,
- either because they happened so long ago or because they have not time
- to think of them; and still she half refused, and still he hoped,
- because he could not believe that a beauty so much like wisdom could
- hide a common heart.
- There was a tall young man in the dun who had yellow hair, and was
- skilled in wrestling and in the training of horses; and one day when
- the king walked in the orchard, which was between the foss and the
- forest, he heard his voice among the salley bushes which hid the waters
- of the foss. ‘My blossom,’ it said, ‘I hate them for making you weave
- these dingy feathers into your beautiful hair, and all that the bird
- of prey upon the throne may sleep easy o’ nights’; and then the low,
- musical voice he loved answered: ‘My hair is not beautiful like yours;
- and now that I have plucked the feathers out of your hair I will put
- my hands through it, thus, and thus, and thus; for it casts no shadow
- of terror and darkness upon my heart.’ Then the king remembered many
- things that he had forgotten without understanding them, doubtful
- words of his poets and his men of law, doubts that he had reasoned
- away, his own continual solitude; and he called to the lovers in a
- trembling voice. They came from among the salley bushes and threw
- themselves at his feet and prayed for pardon, and he stooped down and
- plucked the feathers out of the hair of the woman and then turned away
- towards the dun without a word. He strode into the hall of assembly,
- and having gathered his poets and his men of law about him, stood upon
- the daïs and spoke in a loud, clear voice: ‘Men of law, why did you
- make me sin against the laws of Eri? Men of verse, why did you make
- me sin against the secrecy of wisdom, for law was made by man for the
- welfare of man, but wisdom the gods have made, and no man shall live by
- its light, for it and the hail and the rain and the thunder follow a
- way that is deadly to mortal things? Men of law and men of verse, live
- according to your kind, and call Eocha of the Hasty Mind to reign over
- you, for I set out to find my kindred.’ He then came down among them,
- and drew out of the hair of first one and then another the feathers
- of the grey hawk, and, having scattered them over the rushes upon the
- floor, passed out, and none dared to follow him, for his eyes gleamed
- like the eyes of the birds of prey; and no man saw him again or heard
- his voice. Some believed that he found his eternal abode among the
- demons, and some that he dwelt henceforth with the dark and dreadful
- goddesses, who sit all night about the pools in the forest watching the
- constellations rising and setting in those desolate mirrors.
- THE HEART OF THE SPRING
- A VERY old man, whose face was almost as fleshless as the foot of a
- bird, sat meditating upon the rocky shore of the flat and hazel-covered
- isle which fills the widest part of the Lough Gill. A russet-faced boy
- of seventeen years sat by his side, watching the swallows dipping for
- flies in the still water. The old man was dressed in threadbare blue
- velvet, and the boy wore a frieze coat and a blue cap, and had about
- his neck a rosary of blue beads. Behind the two, and half hidden by
- trees, was a little monastery. It had been burned down a long while
- before by sacrilegious men of the Queen’s party, but had been roofed
- anew with rushes by the boy, that the old man might find shelter in his
- last days. He had not set his spade, however, into the garden about it,
- and the lilies and the roses of the monks had spread out until their
- confused luxuriancy met and mingled with the narrowing circle of the
- fern. Beyond the lilies and the roses the ferns were so deep that a
- child walking among them would be hidden from sight, even though he
- stood upon his toes; and beyond the fern rose many hazels and small oak
- trees.
- ‘Master,’ said the boy, ‘this long fasting, and the labour of beckoning
- after nightfall with your rod of quicken wood to the beings who dwell
- in the waters and among the hazels and oak-trees, is too much for
- your strength. Rest from all this labour for a little, for your hand
- seemed more heavy upon my shoulder and your feet less steady under
- you to-day than I have known them. Men say that you are older than
- the eagles, and yet you will not seek the rest that belongs to age.’
- He spoke in an eager, impulsive way, as though his heart were in the
- words and thoughts of the moment; and the old man answered slowly and
- deliberately, as though his heart were in distant days and distant
- deeds.
- ‘I will tell you why I have not been able to rest,’ he said. ‘It is
- right that you should know, for you have served me faithfully these
- five years and more, and even with affection, taking away thereby a
- little of the doom of loneliness which always falls upon the wise. Now,
- too, that the end of my labour and the triumph of my hopes is at hand,
- it is the more needful for you to have this knowledge.’
- ‘Master, do not think that I would question you. It is for me to keep
- the fire alight, and the thatch close against the rain, and strong,
- lest the wind blow it among the trees; and it is for me to take the
- heavy books from the shelves, and to lift from its corner the great
- painted roll with the names of the Sidhe, and to possess the while an
- incurious and reverent heart, for right well I know that God has made
- out of His abundance a separate wisdom for everything which lives, and
- to do these things is my wisdom.’
- ‘You are afraid,’ said the old man, and his eyes shone with a momentary
- anger.
- ‘Sometimes at night,’ said the boy, ‘when you are reading, with the
- rod of quicken wood in your hand, I look out of the door and see, now
- a great grey man driving swine among the hazels, and now many little
- people in red caps who come out of the lake driving little white cows
- before them. I do not fear these little people so much as the grey man;
- for, when they come near the house, they milk the cows, and they drink
- the frothing milk, and begin to dance; and I know there is good in the
- heart that loves dancing; but I fear them for all that. And I fear the
- tall white-armed ladies who come out of the air, and move slowly hither
- and thither, crowning themselves with the roses or with the lilies,
- and shaking about their living hair, which moves, for so I have heard
- them tell each other, with the motion of their thoughts, now spreading
- out and now gathering close to their heads. They have mild, beautiful
- faces, but, Aengus, son of Forbis, I fear all these beings, I fear the
- people of the Sidhe, and I fear the art which draws them about us.’
- ‘Why,’ said the old man, ‘do you fear the ancient gods who made the
- spears of your father’s fathers to be stout in battle, and the little
- people who came at night from the depth of the lakes and sang among
- the crickets upon their hearths? And in our evil day they still watch
- over the loveliness of the earth. But I must tell you why I have fasted
- and laboured when others would sink into the sleep of age, for without
- your help once more I shall have fasted and laboured to no good end.
- When you have done for me this last thing, you may go and build your
- cottage and till your fields, and take some girl to wife, and forget
- the ancient gods. I have saved all the gold and silver pieces that were
- given to me by earls and knights and squires for keeping them from
- the evil eye and from the love-weaving enchantments of witches, and
- by earls’ and knights’ and squires’ ladies for keeping the people of
- the Sidhe from making the udders of their cattle fall dry, and taking
- the butter from their churns. I have saved it all for the day when my
- work should be at an end, and now that the end is at hand you shall not
- lack for gold and silver pieces enough to make strong the roof-tree of
- your cottage and to keep cellar and larder full. I have sought through
- all my life to find the secret of life. I was not happy in my youth,
- for I knew that it would pass; and I was not happy in my manhood, for
- I knew that age was coming; and so I gave myself, in youth and manhood
- and age, to the search for the Great Secret. I longed for a life
- whose abundance would fill centuries, I scorned the life of fourscore
- winters. I would be--nay, I _will_ be!--like the Ancient Gods of the
- land. I read in my youth, in a Hebrew manuscript I found in a Spanish
- monastery, that there is a moment after the Sun has entered the Ram
- and before he has passed the Lion, which trembles with the Song of the
- Immortal Powers, and that whosoever finds this moment and listens to
- the Song shall become like the Immortal Powers themselves; I came back
- to Ireland and asked the fairy men, and the cow-doctors, if they knew
- when this moment was; but though all had heard of it, there was none
- could find the moment upon the hour-glass. So I gave myself to magic,
- and spent my life in fasting and in labour that I might bring the Gods
- and the Fairies to my side; and now at last one of the Fairies has told
- me that the moment is at hand. One, who wore a red cap and whose lips
- were white with the froth of the new milk, whispered it into my ear.
- To-morrow, a little before the close of the first hour after dawn, I
- shall find the moment, and then I will go away to a southern land and
- build myself a palace of white marble amid orange trees, and gather the
- brave and the beautiful about me, and enter into the eternal kingdom
- of my youth. But, that I may hear the whole Song, I was told by the
- little fellow with the froth of the new milk on his lips, that you must
- bring great masses of green boughs and pile them about the door and the
- window of my room; and you must put fresh green rushes upon the floor,
- and cover the table and the rushes with the roses and the lilies of the
- monks. You must do this to-night, and in the morning at the end of the
- first hour after dawn, you must come and find me.’
- ‘Will you be quite young then?’ said the boy.
- ‘I will be as young then as you are, but now I am still old and tired,
- and you must help me to my chair and to my books.’
- When the boy had left Aengus son of Forbis in his room, and had lighted
- the lamp which, by some contrivance of the wizard’s, gave forth a sweet
- odour as of strange flowers, he went into the wood and began cutting
- green boughs from the hazels, and great bundles of rushes from the
- western border of the isle, where the small rocks gave place to gently
- sloping sand and clay. It was nightfall before he had cut enough for
- his purpose, and well-nigh midnight before he had carried the last
- bundle to its place, and gone back for the roses and the lilies. It was
- one of those warm, beautiful nights when everything seems carved of
- precious stones. Sleuth Wood away to the south looked as though cut out
- of green beryl, and the waters that mirrored them shone like pale opal.
- The roses he was gathering were like glowing rubies, and the lilies had
- the dull lustre of pearl. Everything had taken upon itself the look of
- something imperishable, except a glow-worm, whose faint flame burnt
- on steadily among the shadows, moving slowly hither and thither, the
- only thing that seemed alive, the only thing that seemed perishable as
- mortal hope. The boy gathered a great armful of roses and lilies, and
- thrusting the glow-worm among their pearl and ruby, carried them into
- the room, where the old man sat in a half-slumber. He laid armful after
- armful upon the floor and above the table, and then, gently closing
- the door, threw himself upon his bed of rushes, to dream of a peaceful
- manhood with his chosen wife at his side, and the laughter of children
- in his ears. At dawn he rose, and went down to the edge of the lake,
- taking the hour-glass with him. He put some bread and a flask of wine
- in the boat, that his master might not lack food at the outset of his
- journey, and then sat down to wait until the hour from dawn had gone
- by. Gradually the birds began to sing, and when the last grains of
- sand were falling, everything suddenly seemed to overflow with their
- music. It was the most beautiful and living moment of the year; one
- could listen to the spring’s heart beating in it. He got up and went to
- find his master. The green boughs filled the door, and he had to make
- a way through them. When he entered the room the sunlight was falling
- in flickering circles on floor and walls and table, and everything
- was full of soft green shadows. But the old man sat clasping a mass of
- roses and lilies in his arms, and with his head sunk upon his breast.
- On the table, at his left hand, was a leathern wallet full of gold
- and silver pieces, as for a journey, and at his right hand was a long
- staff. The boy touched him and he did not move. He lifted the hands but
- they were quite cold, and they fell heavily.
- ‘It were better for him,’ said the lad, ‘to have told his beads and
- said his prayers like another, and not to have spent his days in
- seeking amongst the Immortal Powers what he could have found in his own
- deeds and days had he willed. Ah, yes, it were better to have said his
- prayers and kissed his beads!’ He looked at the threadbare blue velvet,
- and he saw it was covered with the pollen of the flowers, and while he
- was looking at it a thrush, who had alighted among the boughs that were
- piled against the window, began to sing.
- THE CURSE OF THE FIRES AND OF THE SHADOWS
- ONE summer night, when there was peace, a score of Puritan troopers
- under the pious Sir Frederick Hamilton, broke through the door of the
- Abbey of the White Friars which stood over the Gara Lough at Sligo. As
- the door fell with a crash they saw a little knot of friars gathered
- about the altar, their white habits glimmering in the steady light of
- the holy candles. All the monks were kneeling except the abbot, who
- stood upon the altar steps with a great brazen crucifix in his hand.
- ‘Shoot them!’ cried Sir Frederick Hamilton, but none stirred, for
- all were new converts, and feared the crucifix and the holy candles.
- The white lights from the altar threw the shadows of the troopers up
- on to roof and wall. As the troopers moved about, the shadows began
- a fantastic dance among the corbels and the memorial tablets. For a
- little while all was silent, and then five troopers who were the
- body-guard of Sir Frederick Hamilton lifted their muskets, and shot
- down five of the friars. The noise and the smoke drove away the mystery
- of the pale altar lights, and the other troopers took courage and
- began to strike. In a moment the friars lay about the altar steps,
- their white habits stained with blood. ‘Set fire to the house!’ cried
- Sir Frederick Hamilton, and at his word one went out, and came in
- again carrying a heap of dry straw, and piled it against the western
- wall, and, having done this, fell back, for the fear of the crucifix
- and of the holy candles was still in his heart. Seeing this, the five
- troopers who were Sir Frederick Hamilton’s body-guard darted forward,
- and taking each a holy candle set the straw in a blaze. The red tongues
- of fire rushed up and flickered from corbel to corbel and from tablet
- to tablet, and crept along the floor, setting in a blaze the seats and
- benches. The dance of the shadows passed away, and the dance of the
- fires began. The troopers fell back towards the door in the southern
- wall, and watched those yellow dancers springing hither and thither.
- For a time the altar stood safe and apart in the midst of its white
- light; the eyes of the troopers turned upon it. The abbot whom they
- had thought dead had risen to his feet and now stood before it with
- the crucifix lifted in both hands high above his head. Suddenly he
- cried with a loud voice, ‘Woe unto all who smite those who dwell within
- the Light of the Lord, for they shall wander among the ungovernable
- shadows, and follow the ungovernable fires!’ And having so cried he
- fell on his face dead, and the brazen crucifix rolled down the steps
- of the altar. The smoke had now grown very thick, so that it drove the
- troopers out into the open air. Before them were burning houses. Behind
- them shone the painted windows of the Abbey filled with saints and
- martyrs, awakened, as from a sacred trance, into an angry and animated
- life. The eyes of the troopers were dazzled, and for a while could
- see nothing but the flaming faces of saints and martyrs. Presently,
- however, they saw a man covered with dust who came running towards
- them. ‘Two messengers,’ he cried, ‘have been sent by the defeated Irish
- to raise against you the whole country about Manor Hamilton, and if you
- do not stop them you will be overpowered in the woods before you reach
- home again! They ride north-east between Ben Bulben and Cashel-na-Gael.’
- Sir Frederick Hamilton called to him the five troopers who had first
- fired upon the monks and said, ‘Mount quickly, and ride through the
- woods towards the mountain, and get before these men, and kill them.’
- In a moment the troopers were gone, and before many moments they had
- splashed across the river at what is now called Buckley’s Ford, and
- plunged into the woods. They followed a beaten track that wound along
- the northern bank of the river. The boughs of the birch and quicken
- trees mingled above, and hid the cloudy moonlight, leaving the pathway
- in almost complete darkness. They rode at a rapid trot, now chatting
- together, now watching some stray weasel or rabbit scuttling away
- in the darkness. Gradually, as the gloom and silence of the woods
- oppressed them, they drew closer together, and began to talk rapidly;
- they were old comrades and knew each other’s lives. One was married,
- and told how glad his wife would be to see him return safe from this
- harebrained expedition against the White Friars, and to hear how
- fortune had made amends for rashness. The oldest of the five, whose
- wife was dead, spoke of a flagon of wine which awaited him upon an
- upper shelf; while a third, who was the youngest, had a sweetheart
- watching for his return, and he rode a little way before the others,
- not talking at all. Suddenly the young man stopped, and they saw that
- his horse was trembling. ‘I saw something,’ he said, ‘and yet I do not
- know but it may have been one of the shadows. It looked like a great
- worm with a silver crown upon his head.’ One of the five put his hand
- up to his forehead as if about to cross himself, but remembering that
- he had changed his religion he put it down, and said: ‘I am certain
- it was but a shadow, for there are a great many about us, and of very
- strange kinds.’ Then they rode on in silence. It had been raining in
- the earlier part of the day, and the drops fell from the branches,
- wetting their hair and their shoulders. In a little they began to talk
- again. They had been in many battles against many a rebel together,
- and now told each other over again the story of their wounds, and
- so awakened in their hearts the strongest of all fellowships, the
- fellowship of the sword, and half forgot the terrible solitude of the
- woods.
- Suddenly the first two horses neighed, and then stood still, and would
- go no further. Before them was a glint of water, and they knew by the
- rushing sound that it was a river. They dismounted, and after much
- tugging and coaxing brought the horses to the river-side. In the midst
- of the water stood a tall old woman with grey hair flowing over a grey
- dress. She stood up to her knees in the water, and stooped from time to
- time as though washing. Presently they could see that she was washing
- something that half floated. The moon cast a flickering light upon it,
- and they saw that it was the dead body of a man, and, while they were
- looking at it, an eddy of the river turned the face towards them, and
- each of the five troopers recognized at the same moment his own face.
- While they stood dumb and motionless with horror, the woman began to
- speak, saying slowly and loudly: ‘Did you see my son? He has a crown of
- silver on his head, and there are rubies in the crown.’ Then the oldest
- of the troopers, he who had been most often wounded, drew his sword and
- cried: ‘I have fought for the truth of my God, and need not fear the
- shadows of Satan,’ and with that rushed into the water. In a moment he
- returned. The woman had vanished, and though he had thrust his sword
- into air and water he had found nothing.
- The five troopers remounted, and set their horses at the ford, but all
- to no purpose. They tried again and again, and went plunging hither
- and thither, the horses foaming and rearing. ‘Let us,’ said the old
- trooper, ‘ride back a little into the wood, and strike the river
- higher up.’ They rode in under the boughs, the ground-ivy crackling
- under the hoofs, and the branches striking against their steel caps.
- After about twenty minutes’ riding they came out again upon the river,
- and after another ten minutes found a place where it was possible to
- cross without sinking below the stirrups. The wood upon the other
- side was very thin, and broke the moonlight into long streams. The
- wind had arisen, and had begun to drive the clouds rapidly across the
- face of the moon, so that thin streams of light seemed to be dancing
- a grotesque dance among the scattered bushes and small fir-trees. The
- tops of the trees began also to moan, and the sound of it was like the
- voice of the dead in the wind; and the troopers remembered the belief
- that tells how the dead in purgatory are spitted upon the points of the
- trees and upon the points of the rocks. They turned a little to the
- south, in the hope that they might strike the beaten path again, but
- they could find no trace of it.
- Meanwhile, the moaning grew louder and louder, and the dance of the
- white moon-fires more and more rapid. Gradually they began to be
- aware of a sound of distant music. It was the sound of a bagpipe,
- and they rode towards it with great joy. It came from the bottom of
- a deep, cup-like hollow. In the midst of the hollow was an old man
- with a red cap and withered face. He sat beside a fire of sticks, and
- had a burning torch thrust into the earth at his feet, and played an
- old bagpipe furiously. His red hair dripped over his face like the
- iron rust upon a rock. ‘Did you see my wife?’ he cried, looking up a
- moment; ‘she was washing! she was washing!’ ‘I am afraid of him,’ said
- the young trooper, ‘I fear he is one of the Sidhe.’ ‘No,’ said the old
- trooper, ‘he is a man, for I can see the sun-freckles upon his face.
- We will compel him to be our guide’; and at that he drew his sword,
- and the others did the same. They stood in a ring round the piper, and
- pointed their swords at him, and the old trooper then told him that
- they must kill two rebels, who had taken the road between Ben Bulben
- and the great mountain spur that is called Cashel-na-Gael, and that he
- must get up before one of them and be their guide, for they had lost
- their way. The piper turned, and pointed to a neighbouring tree, and
- they saw an old white horse ready bitted, bridled, and saddled. He
- slung the pipe across his back, and, taking the torch in his hand, got
- upon the horse, and started off before them, as hard as he could go.
- The wood grew thinner and thinner, and the ground began to slope up
- toward the mountain. The moon had already set, and the little white
- flames of the stars had come out everywhere. The ground sloped more
- and more until at last they rode far above the woods upon the wide
- top of the mountain. The woods lay spread out mile after mile below,
- and away to the south shot up the red glare of the burning town. But
- before and above them were the little white flames. The guide drew rein
- suddenly, and pointing upwards with the hand that did not hold the
- torch, shrieked out, ‘Look; look at the holy candles!’ and then plunged
- forward at a gallop, waving the torch hither and thither. ‘Do you hear
- the hoofs of the messengers?’ cried the guide. ‘Quick, quick! or they
- will be gone out of your hands!’ and he laughed as with delight of the
- chase. The troopers thought they could hear far off, and as if below
- them, rattle of hoofs; but now the ground began to slope more and more,
- and the speed grew more headlong moment by moment. They tried to pull
- up, but in vain, for the horses seemed to have gone mad. The guide
- had thrown the reins on to the neck of the old white horse, and was
- waving his arms and singing a wild Gaelic song. Suddenly they saw the
- thin gleam of a river, at an immense distance below, and knew that they
- were upon the brink of the abyss that is now called Lug-na-Gael, or in
- English the Stranger’s Leap. The six horses sprang forward, and five
- screams went up into the air, a moment later five men and horses fell
- with a dull crash upon the green slopes at the foot of the rocks.
- THE OLD MEN OF THE TWILIGHT
- AT the place, close to the Dead Man’s Point, at the Rosses, where
- the disused pilot-house looks out to sea through two round windows
- like eyes, a mud cottage stood in the last century. It also was a
- watchhouse, for a certain old Michael Bruen, who had been a smuggler
- in his day, and was still the father and grandfather of smugglers,
- lived there, and when, after nightfall, a tall schooner crept over the
- bay from Roughley, it was his business to hang a horn lanthorn in the
- southern window, that the news might travel to Dorren’s Island, and
- from thence, by another horn lanthorn, to the village of the Rosses.
- But for this glimmering of messages, he had little communion with
- mankind, for he was very old, and had no thought for anything but for
- the making of his soul, at the foot of the Spanish crucifix of carved
- oak that hung by his chimney, or bent double over the rosary of stone
- beads brought to him in a cargo of silks and laces out of France. One
- night he had watched hour after hour, because a gentle and favourable
- wind was blowing, and _La Mère de Miséricorde_ was much overdue; and
- he was about to lie down upon his heap of straw, seeing that the dawn
- was whitening the east, and that the schooner would not dare to round
- Roughley and come to an anchor after daybreak; when he saw a long line
- of herons flying slowly from Dorren’s Island and towards the pools
- which lie, half choked with reeds, behind what is called the Second
- Rosses. He had never before seen herons flying over the sea, for they
- are shore-keeping birds, and partly because this had startled him out
- of his drowsiness, and more because the long delay of the schooner
- kept his cupboard empty, he took down his rusty shot-gun, of which the
- barrel was tied on with a piece of string, and followed them towards
- the pools.
- When he came close enough to hear the sighing of the rushes in the
- outermost pool, the morning was grey over the world, so that the tall
- rushes, the still waters, the vague clouds, the thin mist lying among
- the sand-heaps, seemed carved out of an enormous pearl. In a little he
- came upon the herons, of whom there were a great number, standing with
- lifted legs in the shallow water; and crouching down behind a bank of
- rushes, looked to the priming of his gun, and bent for a moment over
- his rosary to murmur: ‘Patron Patrick, let me shoot a heron; made into
- a pie it will support me for nearly four days, for I no longer eat as
- in my youth. If you keep me from missing I will say a rosary to you
- every night until the pie is eaten.’ Then he lay down, and, resting his
- gun upon a large stone, turned towards a heron which stood upon a bank
- of smooth grass over a little stream that flowed into the pool; for he
- feared to take the rheumatism by wading, as he would have to do if he
- shot one of those which stood in the water. But when he looked along
- the barrel the heron was gone, and, to his wonder and terror, a man of
- infinitely great age and infirmity stood in its place. He lowered the
- gun, and the heron stood there with bent head and motionless feathers,
- as though it had slept from the beginning of the world. He raised the
- gun, and no sooner did he look along the iron than that enemy of all
- enchantment brought the old man again before him, only to vanish when
- he lowered the gun for the second time. He laid the gun down, and
- crossed himself three times, and said a _Paternoster_ and an _Ave
- Maria_, and muttered half aloud: ‘Some enemy of God and of my patron
- is standing upon the smooth place and fishing in the blessed water,’
- and then aimed very carefully and slowly. He fired, and when the smoke
- had gone saw an old man, huddled upon the grass and a long line of
- herons flying with clamour towards the sea. He went round a bend of the
- pool, and coming to the little stream looked down on a figure wrapped
- in faded clothes of black and green of an ancient pattern and spotted
- with blood. He shook his head at the sight of so great a wickedness.
- Suddenly the clothes moved and an arm was stretched upwards towards
- the rosary which hung about his neck, and long wasted fingers almost
- touched the cross. He started back, crying: ‘Wizard, I will let no
- wicked thing touch my blessed beads’; and the sense of a great danger
- just escaped made him tremble.
- ‘If you listen to me,’ replied a voice so faint that it was like a
- sigh, ‘you will know that I am not a wizard, and you will let me kiss
- the cross before I die.’
- ‘I will listen to you,’ he answered, ‘but I will not let you touch my
- blessed beads,’ and sitting on the grass a little way from the dying
- man, he reloaded his gun and laid it across his knees and composed
- himself to listen.
- ‘I know not how many generations ago we, who are now herons, were the
- men of learning of the King Leaghaire; we neither hunted, nor went to
- battle, nor listened to the Druids preaching, and even love, if it
- came to us at all, was but a passing fire. The Druids and the poets
- told us, many and many a time, of a new Druid Patrick; and most among
- them were fierce against him, while a few thought his doctrine merely
- the doctrine of the gods set out in new symbols, and were for giving
- him welcome; but we yawned in the midst of their tale. At last they
- came crying that he was coming to the king’s house, and fell to their
- dispute, but we would listen to neither party, for we were busy with
- a dispute about the merits of the Great and of the Little Metre; nor
- were we disturbed when they passed our door with sticks of enchantment
- under their arms, travelling towards the forest to contend against his
- coming, nor when they returned after nightfall with torn robes and
- despairing cries; for the click of our knives writing our thoughts in
- Ogham filled us with peace and our dispute filled us with joy; nor
- even when in the morning crowds passed us to hear the strange Druid
- preaching the commandments of his god. The crowds passed, and one, who
- had laid down his knife to yawn and stretch himself, heard a voice
- speaking far off, and knew that the Druid Patrick was preaching within
- the king’s house; but our hearts were deaf, and we carved and disputed
- and read, and laughed a thin laughter together. In a little we heard
- many feet coming towards the house, and presently two tall figures
- stood in the door, the one in white, the other in a crimson robe; like
- a great lily and a heavy poppy; and we knew the Druid Patrick and our
- King Leaghaire. We laid down the slender knives and bowed before the
- king, but when the black and green robes had ceased to rustle, it was
- not the loud rough voice of King Leaghaire that spoke to us, but a
- strange voice in which there was a rapture as of one speaking from
- behind a battlement of Druid flame: “I preached the commandments of the
- Maker of the world,” it said; “within the king’s house and from the
- centre of the earth to the windows of Heaven there was a great silence,
- so that the eagle floated with unmoving wings in the white air, and
- the fish with unmoving fins in the dim water, while the linnets and
- the wrens and the sparrows stilled their ever-trembling tongues in
- the heavy boughs, and the clouds were like white marble, and the
- rivers became their motionless mirrors, and the shrimps in the far-off
- sea-pools were still, enduring eternity in patience, although it was
- hard.” And as he named these things, it was like a king numbering his
- people. “But your slender knives went click, click! upon the oaken
- staves, and, all else being silent, the sound shook the angels with
- anger. O, little roots, nipped by the winter, who do not awake although
- the summer pass above you with innumerable feet. O, men who have no
- part in love, who have no part in song, who have no part in wisdom,
- but dwell with the shadows of memory where the feet of angels cannot
- touch you as they pass over your heads, where the hair of demons cannot
- sweep about you as they pass under your feet, I lay upon you a curse,
- and change you to an example for ever and ever; you shall become grey
- herons and stand pondering in grey pools and flit over the world in
- that hour when it is most full of sighs, having forgotten the flame of
- the stars and not yet found the flame of the sun; and you shall preach
- to the other herons until they also are like you, and are an example
- for ever and ever; and your deaths shall come to you by chance and
- unforeseen, that no fire of certainty may visit your hearts.”’
- The voice of the old man of learning became still, but the voteen
- bent over his gun with his eyes upon the ground, trying in vain to
- understand something of this tale; and he had so bent, it may be for a
- long time, had not a tug at his rosary made him start out of his dream.
- The old man of learning had crawled along the grass, and was now trying
- to draw the cross down low enough for his lips to reach it.
- ‘You must not touch my blessed beads,’ cried the voteen, and struck
- the long withered fingers with the barrel of his gun. He need not have
- trembled, for the old man fell back upon the grass with a sigh and was
- still. He bent down and began to consider the black and green clothes,
- for his fear had begun to pass away when he came to understand that
- he had something the man of learning wanted and pleaded for, and now
- that the blessed beads were safe, his fear had nearly all gone; and
- surely, he thought, if that big cloak, and that little tight-fitting
- cloak under it, were warm and without holes, Saint Patrick would take
- the enchantment out of them and leave them fit for human use. But the
- black and green clothes fell away wherever his fingers touched them,
- and while this was a new wonder, a slight wind blew over the pool and
- crumbled the old man of learning and all his ancient gear into a little
- heap of dust, and then made the little heap less and less until there
- was nothing but the smooth green grass.
- WHERE THERE IS NOTHING, THERE IS GOD.
- THE little wicker houses at Tullagh, where the Brothers were accustomed
- to pray, or bend over many handicrafts, when twilight had driven them
- from the fields, were empty, for the hardness of the winter had brought
- the brotherhood together in the little wooden house under the shadow
- of the wooden chapel; and Abbot Malathgeneus, Brother Dove, Brother
- Bald Fox, Brother Peter, Brother Patrick, Brother Bittern, Brother
- Fair-brows, and many too young to have won names in the great battle,
- sat about the fire with ruddy faces, one mending lines to lay in the
- river for eels, one fashioning a snare for birds, one mending the
- broken handle of a spade, one writing in a large book, and one shaping
- a jewelled box to hold the book; and among the rushes at their feet lay
- the scholars, who would one day be Brothers, and whose school-house
- it was, and for the succour of whose tender years the great fire was
- supposed to leap and flicker. One of these, a child of eight or nine
- years, called Olioll, lay upon his back looking up through the hole
- in the roof, through which the smoke went, and watching the stars
- appearing and disappearing in the smoke with mild eyes, like the eyes
- of a beast of the field. He turned presently to the Brother who wrote
- in the big book, and whose duty was to teach the children, and said,
- ‘Brother Dove, to what are the stars fastened?’ The Brother, rejoicing
- to see so much curiosity in the stupidest of his scholars, laid down
- the pen and said, ‘There are nine crystalline spheres, and on the first
- the Moon is fastened, on the second the planet Mercury, on the third
- the planet Venus, on the fourth the Sun, on the fifth the planet Mars,
- on the sixth the planet Jupiter, on the seventh the planet Saturn;
- these are the wandering stars; and on the eighth are fastened the fixed
- stars; but the ninth sphere is a sphere of the substance on which the
- breath of God moved in the beginning.’
- ‘What is beyond that?’ said the child.
- ‘There is nothing beyond that; there is God.’
- And then the child’s eyes strayed to the jewelled box, where one great
- ruby was gleaming in the light of the fire, and he said, ‘Why has
- Brother Peter put a great ruby on the side of the box?’
- ‘The ruby is a symbol of the love of God.’
- ‘Why is the ruby a symbol of the love of God?’
- ‘Because it is red, like fire, and fire burns up everything, and where
- there is nothing, there is God.’
- The child sank into silence, but presently sat up and said, ‘There is
- somebody outside.’
- ‘No,’ replied the Brother. ‘It is only the wolves; I have heard them
- moving about in the snow for some time. They are growing very wild, now
- that the winter drives them from the mountains. They broke into a fold
- last night and carried off many sheep, and if we are not careful they
- will devour everything.’
- ‘No, it is the footstep of a man, for it is heavy; but I can hear the
- footsteps of the wolves also.’
- He had no sooner done speaking than somebody rapped three times, but
- with no great loudness.
- ‘I will go and open, for he must be very cold.’
- ‘Do not open, for it may be a man-wolf, and he may devour us all.’
- But the boy had already drawn back the heavy wooden bolt, and all the
- faces, most of them a little pale, turned towards the slowly-opening
- door.
- ‘He has beads and a cross, he cannot be a man-wolf,’ said the child,
- as a man with the snow heavy on his long, ragged beard, and on the
- matted hair, that fell over his shoulders and nearly to his waist, and
- dropping from the tattered cloak that but half-covered his withered
- brown body, came in and looked from face to face with mild, ecstatic
- eyes. Standing some way from the fire, and with eyes that had rested at
- last upon the Abbot Malathgeneus, he cried out, ‘O blessed abbot, let
- me come to the fire and warm myself and dry the snow from my beard and
- my hair and my cloak; that I may not die of the cold of the mountains
- and anger the Lord with a wilful martyrdom.’
- ‘Come to the fire,’ said the abbot, ‘and warm yourself, and eat the
- food the boy Olioll will bring you. It is sad indeed that any for whom
- Christ has died should be as poor as you.’
- The man sat over the fire, and Olioll took away his now dripping cloak
- and laid meat and bread and wine before him; but he would eat only of
- the bread, and he put away the wine, asking for water. When his beard
- and hair had begun to dry a little and his limbs had ceased to shiver
- with the cold, he spoke again.
- ‘O blessed abbot, have pity on the poor, have pity on a beggar who has
- trodden the bare world this many a year, and give me some labour to do,
- the hardest there is, for I am the poorest of God’s poor.’
- Then the Brothers discussed together what work they could put him to,
- and at first to little purpose, for there was no labour that had not
- found its labourer in that busy community; but at last one remembered
- that Brother Bald Fox, whose business it was to turn the great quern in
- the quern-house, for he was too stupid for anything else, was getting
- old for so heavy a labour; and so the beggar was put to the quern from
- the morrow.
- The cold passed away, and the spring grew to summer, and the quern
- was never idle, nor was it turned with grudging labour, for when any
- passed the beggar was heard singing as he drove the handle round. The
- last gloom, too, had passed from that happy community, for Olioll, who
- had always been stupid and unteachable, grew clever, and this was the
- more miraculous because it had come of a sudden. One day he had been
- even duller than usual, and was beaten and told to know his lesson
- better on the morrow or be sent into a lower class among little boys
- who would make a joke of him. He had gone out in tears, and when he
- came the next day, although his stupidity, born of a mind that would
- listen to every wandering sound and brood upon every wandering light,
- had so long been the byword of the school, he knew his lesson so well
- that he passed to the head of the class, and from that day was the best
- of scholars. At first Brother Dove thought this was an answer to his
- own prayers to the Virgin, and took it for a great proof of the love
- she bore him; but when many far more fervid prayers had failed to add a
- single wheatsheaf to the harvest, he began to think that the child was
- trafficking with bards, or druids, or witches, and resolved to follow
- and watch. He had told his thought to the abbot, who bid him come to
- him the moment he hit the truth; and the next day, which was a Sunday,
- he stood in the path when the abbot and the Brothers were coming from
- vespers, with their white habits upon them, and took the abbot by the
- habit and said, ‘The beggar is of the greatest of saints and of the
- workers of miracle. I followed Olioll but now, and by his slow steps
- and his bent head I saw that the weariness of his stupidity was over
- him, and when he came to the little wood by the quern-house I knew by
- the path broken in the under-wood and by the foot-marks in the muddy
- places that he had gone that way many times. I hid behind a bush where
- the path doubled upon itself at a sloping place, and understood by the
- tears in his eyes that his stupidity was too old and his wisdom too new
- to save him from terror of the rod. When he was in the quern-house I
- went to the window and looked in, and the birds came down and perched
- upon my head and my shoulders, for they are not timid in that holy
- place; and a wolf passed by, his right side shaking my habit, his left
- the leaves of a bush. Olioll opened his book and turned to the page
- I had told him to learn, and began to cry, and the beggar sat beside
- him and comforted him until he fell asleep. When his sleep was of the
- deepest the beggar knelt down and prayed aloud, and said, “O Thou Who
- dwellest beyond the stars, show forth Thy power as at the beginning,
- and let knowledge sent from Thee awaken in his mind, wherein is nothing
- from the world, that the nine orders of angels may glorify Thy name”;
- and then a light broke out of the air and wrapped Aodh, and I smelt the
- breath of roses. I stirred a little in my wonder, and the beggar turned
- and saw me, and, bending low, said, “O Brother Dove, if I have done
- wrong, forgive me, and I will do penance. It was my pity moved me”;
- but I was afraid and I ran away, and did not stop running until I came
- here.’
- Then all the Brothers began talking together, one saying it was such
- and such a saint, and one that it was not he but another; and one that
- it was none of these, for they were still in their brotherhoods, but
- that it was such and such a one; and the talk was as near to quarreling
- as might be in that gentle community, for each would claim so great
- a saint for his native province. At last the abbot said, ‘He is none
- that you have named, for at Easter I had greeting from all, and each
- was in his brotherhood; but he is Aengus the Lover of God, and the
- first of those who have gone to live in the wild places and among
- the wild beasts. Ten years ago he felt the burden of many labours
- in a brotherhood under the Hill of Patrick and went into the forest
- that he might labour only with song to the Lord; but the fame of his
- holiness brought many thousands to his cell, so that a little pride
- clung to a soul from which all else had been driven. Nine years ago he
- dressed himself in rags, and from that day none has seen him, unless,
- indeed, it be true that he has been seen living among the wolves on the
- mountains and eating the grass of the fields. Let us go to him and
- bow down before him; for at last, after long seeking, he has found the
- nothing that is God; and bid him lead us in the pathway he has trodden.
- They passed in their white habits along the beaten path in the wood,
- the acolytes swinging their censers before them, and the abbot, with
- his crozier studded with precious stones, in the midst of the incense;
- and came before the quern-house and knelt down and began to pray,
- awaiting the moment when the child would wake, and the Saint cease
- from his watch and come to look at the sun going down into the unknown
- darkness, as his way was.
- OF COSTELLO THE PROUD, OF OONA THE DAUGHTER OF DERMOTT
- AND OF THE BITTER TONGUE.
- COSTELLO had come up from the fields and lay upon the ground before
- the door of his square tower, resting his head upon his hands and
- looking at the sunset, and considering the chances of the weather.
- Though the customs of Elizabeth and James, now going out of fashion
- in England, had begun to prevail among the gentry, he still wore the
- great cloak of the native Irish; and the sensitive outlines of his face
- and the greatness of his indolent body had a commingling of pride and
- strength which belonged to a simpler age. His eyes wandered from the
- sunset to where the long white road lost itself over the south-western
- horizon and to a horseman who toiled slowly up the hill. A few more
- minutes and the horseman was near enough for his little and shapeless
- body, his long Irish cloak, and the dilapidated bagpipes hanging from
- his shoulders, and the rough-haired garron under him, to be seen
- distinctly in the grey dusk. So soon as he had come within earshot, he
- began crying: ‘Is it sleeping you are, Tumaus Costello, when better men
- break their hearts on the great white roads? Get up out of that, proud
- Tumaus, for I have news! Get up out of that, you great omadhaun! Shake
- yourself out of the earth, you great weed of a man!’
- Costello had risen to his feet, and as the piper came up to him seized
- him by the neck of his jacket, and lifting him out of his saddle threw
- him on to the ground.
- ‘Let me alone, let me alone,’ said the other, but Costello still shook
- him.
- ‘I have news from Dermott’s daughter, Winny.’ The great fingers were
- loosened, and the piper rose gasping.
- ‘Why did you not tell me,’ said Costello, ‘that you came from her? You
- might have railed your fill.’
- ‘I have come from her, but I will not speak unless I am paid for my
- shaking.’
- Costello fumbled at the bag in which he carried his money, and it was
- some time before it would open, for the hand that had overcome many men
- shook with fear and hope. ‘Here is all the money in my bag,’ he said,
- dropping a stream of French and Spanish money into the hand of the
- piper, who bit the coins before he would answer.
- ‘That is right, that is a fair price, but I will not speak till I have
- good protection, for if the Dermotts lay their hands upon me in any
- boreen after sundown, or in Cool-a-vin by day, I will be left to rot
- among the nettles of a ditch, or hung on the great sycamore, where they
- hung the horse-thieves last Beltaine four years.’ And while he spoke he
- tied the reins of his garron to a bar of rusty iron that was mortared
- into the wall.
- ‘I will make you my piper and my body-servant,’ said Costello, ‘and no
- man dare lay hands upon the man, or the goat, or the horse, or the dog
- that is Tumaus Costello’s.’
- ‘And I will only tell my message,’ said the other, flinging the saddle
- on the ground, ‘in the corner of the chimney with a noggin in my hand,
- and a jug of the Brew of the Little Pot beside me, for though I am
- ragged and empty, my forebears were well clothed and full until their
- house was burnt and their cattle harried seven centuries ago by the
- Dillons, whom I shall yet see on the hob of hell, and they screeching’;
- and while he spoke the little eyes gleamed and the thin hands clenched.
- Costello led him into the great rush-strewn hall, where were none of
- the comforts which had begun to grow common among the gentry, but a
- feudal gauntness and bareness, and pointed to the bench in the great
- chimney; and when he had sat down, filled up a horn noggin and set it
- on the bench beside him, and set a great black jack of leather beside
- the noggin, and lit a torch that slanted out from a ring in the wall,
- his hands trembling the while; and then turned towards him and said:
- ‘Will Dermott’s daughter come to me, Duallach, son of Daly?’
- ‘Dermott’s daughter will not come to you, for her father has set women
- to watch her, but she bid me tell you that this day sennight will be
- the eve of St. John and the night of her betrothal to Namara of the
- Lake, and she would have you there that, when they bid her drink to him
- she loves best, as the way is, she may drink to you, Tumaus Costello,
- and let all know where her heart is, and how little of gladness is in
- her marriage; and I myself bid you go with good men about you, for I
- saw the horse-thieves with my own eyes, and they dancing the “Blue
- Pigeon” in the air.’ And then he held the now empty noggin towards
- Costello, his hand closing round it like the claw of a bird, and cried:
- ‘Fill my noggin again, for I would the day had come when all the water
- in the world is to shrink into a periwinkle-shell, that I might drink
- nothing but Poteen.’
- Finding that Costello made no reply, but sat in a dream, he burst out:
- ‘Fill my noggin, I tell you, for no Costello is so great in the world
- that he should not wait upon a Daly, even though the Daly travel the
- road with his pipes and the Costello have a bare hill, an empty house,
- a horse, a herd of goats, and a handful of cows.’
- ‘Praise the Dalys if you will,’ said Costello as he filled the noggin,
- ‘for you have brought me a kind word from my love.’
- For the next few days Duallach went hither and thither trying to raise
- a bodyguard, and every man he met had some story of Costello, how he
- killed the wrestler when but a boy by so straining at the belt that
- went about them both that he broke the big wrestler’s back; how when
- somewhat older he dragged fierce horses through a ford in the Unchion
- for a wager; how when he came to manhood he broke the steel horseshoe
- in Mayo; how he drove many men before him through Rushy Meadow at
- Drum-an-air because of a malevolent song they had about his poverty;
- and of many another deed of his strength and pride; but he could find
- none who would trust themselves with any so passionate and poor in a
- quarrel with careful and wealthy persons like Dermott of the Sheep and
- Namara of the Lake.
- Then Costello went out himself, and after listening to many excuses
- and in many places, brought in a big half-witted fellow, who followed
- him like a dog, a farm-labourer who worshipped him for his strength,
- a fat farmer whose forefathers had served his family, and a couple of
- lads who looked after his goats and cows; and marshalled them before
- the fire in the empty hall. They had brought with them their stout
- cudgels, and Costello gave them an old pistol apiece, and kept them
- all night drinking Spanish ale and shooting at a white turnip which
- he pinned against the wall with a skewer. Duallach of the Pipes sat
- on the bench in the chimney playing ‘The Green Bunch of Rushes,’ ‘The
- Unchion Stream,’ and ‘The Princes of Breffeny’ on his old pipes, and
- railing now at the appearance of the shooters, now at their clumsy
- shooting, and now at Costello because he had no better servants. The
- labourer, the half-witted fellow, the farmer and the lads were all well
- accustomed to Duallach’s railing, for it was as inseparable from wake
- or wedding as the squealing of his pipes, but they wondered at the
- forbearance of Costello, who seldom came either to wake or wedding, and
- if he had would scarce have been patient with a scolding piper.
- On the next evening they set out for Cool-a-vin, Costello riding a
- tolerable horse and carrying a sword, the others upon rough-haired
- garrons, and with their stout cudgels under their arms. As they rode
- over the bogs and in the boreens among the hills they could see
- fire answering fire from hill to hill, from horizon to horizon, and
- everywhere groups who danced in the red light on the turf, celebrating
- the bridal of life and fire. When they came to Dermott’s house they
- saw before the door an unusually large group of the very poor, dancing
- about a fire, in the midst of which was a blazing cartwheel, that
- circular dance which is so ancient that the gods, long dwindled to
- be but fairies, dance no other in their secret places. From the door
- and through the long loop-holes on either side came the pale light of
- candles and the sound of many feet dancing a dance of Elizabeth and
- James.
- They tied their horses to bushes, for the number so tied already showed
- that the stables were full, and shoved their way through a crowd of
- peasants who stood about the door, and went into the great hall where
- the dance was. The labourer, the half-witted fellow, the farmer and the
- two lads mixed with a group of servants who were looking on from an
- alcove, and Duallach sat with the pipers on their bench, but Costello
- made his way through the dancers to where Dermott of the Sheep stood
- with Namara of the Lake pouring Poteen out of a porcelain jug into horn
- noggins with silver rims.
- ‘Tumaus Costello,’ said the old man, ‘you have done a good deed
- to forget what has been, and to fling away enmity and come to the
- betrothal of my daughter to Namara of the Lake.’
- ‘I come,’ answered Costello, ‘because when in the time of Costello De
- Angalo my forebears overcame your forebears and afterwards made peace,
- a compact was made that a Costello might go with his body-servants and
- his piper to every feast given by a Dermott for ever, and a Dermott
- with his body-servants and his piper to every feast given by a Costello
- for ever.’
- ‘If you come with evil thoughts and armed men,’ said the son of Dermott
- flushing, ‘no matter how strong your hands to wrestle and to swing the
- sword, it shall go badly with you, for some of my wife’s clan have
- come out of Mayo, and my three brothers and their servants have come
- down from the Ox Mountains’; and while he spoke he kept his hand inside
- his coat as though upon the handle of a weapon.
- ‘No,’ answered Costello, ‘I but come to dance a farewell dance with
- your daughter.’
- Dermott drew his hand out of his coat and went over to a tall pale girl
- who was now standing but a little way off with her mild eyes fixed upon
- the ground.
- ‘Costello has come to dance a farewell dance, for he knows that you
- will never see one another again.’
- The girl lifted her eyes and gazed at Costello, and in her gaze was
- that trust of the humble in the proud, the gentle in the violent,
- which has been the tragedy of woman from the beginning. Costello led
- her among the dancers, and they were soon drawn into the rhythm of the
- Pavane, that stately dance which, with the Saraband, the Gallead, and
- the Morrice dances, had driven out, among all but the most Irish of
- the gentry, the quicker rhythms of the verse-interwoven, pantomimic
- dances of earlier days; and while they danced there came over them the
- unutterable melancholy, the weariness with the world, the poignant and
- bitter pity for one another, the vague anger against common hopes and
- fears, which is the exultation of love. And when a dance ended and the
- pipers laid down their pipes and lifted their horn noggins, they stood
- a little from the others waiting pensively and silently for the dance
- to begin again and the fire in their hearts to leap up and to wrap them
- anew; and so they danced and danced Pavane and Saraband and Gallead and
- Morrice through the night long, and many stood still to watch them,
- and the peasants came about the door and peered in, as though they
- understood that they would gather their children’s children about them
- long hence, and tell how they had seen Costello dance with Dermott’s
- daughter Oona, and become by the telling themselves a portion of
- ancient romance; but through all the dancing and piping Namara of the
- Lake went hither and thither talking loudly and making foolish jokes
- that all might seem well with him, and old Dermott of the Sheep grew
- redder and redder, and looked oftener and oftener at the doorway to see
- if the candles there grew yellow in the dawn.
- At last he saw that the moment to end had come, and, in a pause after a
- dance, cried out from where the horn noggins stood that his daughter
- would now drink the cup of betrothal; then Oona came over to where he
- was, and the guests stood round in a half-circle, Costello close to
- the wall to the right, and the piper, the labourer, the farmer, the
- half-witted man and the two farm lads close behind him. The old man
- took out of a niche in the wall the silver cup from which her mother
- and her mother’s mother had drunk the toasts of their betrothals, and
- poured Poteen out of a porcelain jug and handed the cup to his daughter
- with the customary words, ‘Drink to him whom you love the best.’
- She held the cup to her lips for a moment, and then said in a clear
- soft voice: ‘I drink to my true love, Tumaus Costello.’
- And then the cup rolled over and over on the ground, ringing like
- a bell, for the old man had struck her in the face and the cup had
- fallen, and there was a deep silence.
- There were many of Namara’s people among the servants now come out of
- the alcove, and one of them, a story-teller and poet, a last remnant of
- the bardic order, who had a chair and a platter in Namara’s kitchen,
- drew a French knife out of his girdle and made as though he would
- strike at Costello, but in a moment a blow had hurled him to the
- ground, his shoulder sending the cup rolling and ringing again. The
- click of steel had followed quickly, had not there come a muttering and
- shouting from the peasants about the door and from those crowding up
- behind them; and all knew that these were no children of Queen’s Irish
- or friendly Namaras and Dermotts, but of the wild Irish about Lough
- Gara and Lough Cara, who rowed their skin coracles, and had masses
- of hair over their eyes, and left the right arms of their children
- unchristened that they might give the stouter blows, and swore only by
- St. Atty and sun and moon, and worshipped beauty and strength more than
- St. Atty or sun and moon.
- Costello’s hand had rested upon the handle of his sword and his
- knuckles had grown white, but now he drew it away, and, followed by
- those who were with him, strode towards the door, the dancers giving
- way before him, the most angrily and slowly, and with glances at the
- muttering and shouting peasants, but some gladly and quickly, because
- the glory of his fame was over him. He passed through the fierce
- and friendly peasant faces, and came where his good horse and the
- rough-haired garrons were tied to bushes; and mounted and bade his
- ungainly bodyguard mount also and ride into the narrow boreen. When
- they had gone a little way, Duallach, who rode last, turned towards
- the house where a little group of Dermotts and Namaras stood next to a
- more numerous group of countrymen, and cried: ‘Dermott, you deserve to
- be as you are this hour, a lantern without a candle, a purse without a
- penny, a sheep without wool, for your hand was ever niggardly to piper
- and fiddler and story-teller and to poor travelling people.’ He had
- not done before the three old Dermotts from the Ox Mountains had run
- towards their horses, and old Dermott himself had caught the bridle of
- a garron of the Namaras and was calling to the others to follow him;
- and many blows and many deaths had been had not the countrymen caught
- up still glowing sticks from the ashes of the fires and hurled them
- among the horses with loud cries, making all plunge and rear, and some
- break from those who held them, the whites of their eyes gleaming in
- the dawn.
- For the next few weeks Costello had no lack of news of Oona, for now
- a woman selling eggs or fowls, and now a man or a woman on pilgrimage
- to the Well of the Rocks, would tell him how his love had fallen ill
- the day after St. John’s Eve, and how she was a little better or a
- little worse, as it might be; and though he looked to his horses and
- his cows and goats as usual, the common and uncomely, the dust upon the
- roads, the songs of men returning from fairs and wakes, men playing
- cards in the corners of fields on Sundays and Saints’ Days, the rumours
- of battles and changes in the great world, the deliberate purposes of
- those about him, troubled him with an inexplicable trouble; and the
- country people still remember how when night had fallen he would bid
- Duallach of the Pipes tell, to the chirping of the crickets, ‘The Son
- of Apple,’ ‘The Beauty of the World,’ ‘The King of Ireland’s Son,’ or
- some other of those traditional tales which were as much a piper’s
- business as ‘The Green Bunch of Rushes,’ ‘The Unchion Stream,’ or ‘The
- Chiefs of Breffeny’; and while the boundless and phantasmal world of
- the legends was a-building, would abandon himself to the dreams of his
- sorrow.
- Duallach would often pause to tell how some clan of the wild Irish had
- descended from an incomparable King of the Blue Belt, or Warrior of the
- Ozier Wattle, or to tell with many curses how all the strangers and
- most of the Queen’s Irish were the seed of the misshapen and horned
- People from Under the Sea or of the servile and creeping Ferbolg;
- but Costello cared only for the love sorrows, and no matter whither
- the stories wandered, whether to the Isle of the Red Lough, where the
- blessed are, or to the malign country of the Hag of the East, Oona
- alone endured their shadowy hardships; for it was she and no king’s
- daughter of old who was hidden in the steel tower under the water
- with the folds of the Worm of Nine Eyes round and about her prison;
- and it was she who won by seven years of service the right to deliver
- from hell all she could carry, and carried away multitudes clinging
- with worn fingers to the hem of her dress; and it was she who endured
- dumbness for a year because of the little thorn of enchantment the
- fairies had thrust into her tongue; and it was a lock of her hair,
- coiled in a little carved box, which gave so great a light that men
- threshed by it from sundown to sunrise, and awoke so great a wonder
- that kings spent years in wandering or fell before unknown armies in
- seeking to discover her hiding-place; for there was no beauty in the
- world but hers, no tragedy in the world but hers: and when at last
- the voice of the piper, grown gentle with the wisdom of old romance,
- was silent, and his rheumatic steps had toiled upstairs and to bed,
- and Costello had dipped his fingers into the little delf font of
- holy water and begun to pray to Mary of the Seven Sorrows, the blue
- eyes and star-covered dress of the painting in the chapel faded from
- his imagination, and the brown eyes and homespun dress of Dermott’s
- daughter Winny came in their stead; for there was no tenderness in
- the world but hers. He was of those ascetics of passion who keep
- their hearts pure for love or for hatred as other men for God, for
- Mary and for the Saints, and who, when the hour of their visitation
- arrives, come to the Divine Essence by the bitter tumult, the Garden
- of Gethsemane, and the desolate Rood ordained for immortal passions in
- mortal hearts.
- One day a serving-man rode up to Costello, who was helping his two lads
- to reap a meadow, and gave him a letter, and rode away without a word;
- and the letter contained these words in English: ‘Tumaus Costello,
- my daughter is very ill. The wise woman from Knock-na-Sidhe has seen
- her, and says she will die unless you come to her. I therefore bid you
- come to her, whose peace you stole by treachery.—DERMOTT, THE SON OF
- DERMOTT.’
- Costello threw down his scythe, and sent one of the lads for Duallach,
- who had become woven into his mind with Oona, and himself saddled his
- great horse and Duallach’s garron.
- When they came to Dermott’s house it was late afternoon, and Lough
- Gara lay down below them, blue, mirror-like, and deserted; and though
- they had seen, when at a distance, dark figures moving about the door,
- the house appeared not less deserted than the Lough. The door stood
- half open, and Costello knocked upon it again and again, so that a
- number of lake gulls flew up out of the grass and circled screaming
- over his head, but there was no answer.
- ‘There is no one here,’ said Duallach, ‘for Dermott of the Sheep is
- too proud to welcome Costello the Proud,’ and he threw the door open,
- and they saw a ragged, dirty, very old woman, who sat upon the floor
- leaning against the wall. Costello knew that it was Bridget Delaney,
- a deaf and dumb beggar; and she, when she saw him, stood up and made
- a sign to him to follow, and led him and his companion up a stair and
- down a long corridor to a closed door. She pushed the door open and
- went a little way off and sat down as before; Duallach sat upon the
- ground also, but close to the door, and Costello went and gazed upon
- Winny sleeping upon a bed. He sat upon a chair beside her and waited,
- and a long time passed and still she slept on, and then Duallach
- motioned to him through the door to wake her, but he hushed his
- very breath, that she might sleep on, for his heart was full of that
- ungovernable pity which makes the fading heart of the lover a shadow
- of the divine heart. Presently he turned to Duallach and said: ‘It is
- not right that I stay here where there are none of her kindred, for
- the common people are always ready to blame the beautiful.’ And then
- they went down and stood at the door of the house and waited, but the
- evening wore on and no one came.
- ‘It was a foolish man that called you Proud Costello,’ Duallach cried
- at last; ‘had he seen you waiting and waiting where they left none but
- a beggar to welcome you, it is Humble Costello he would have called
- you.’
- Then Costello mounted and Duallach mounted, but when they had ridden a
- little way Costello tightened the reins and made his horse stand still.
- Many minutes passed, and then Duallach cried: ‘It is no wonder that
- you fear to offend Dermott of the Sheep, for he has many brothers and
- friends, and though he is old, he is a strong man and ready with his
- hands, and he is of the Queen’s Irish, and the enemies of the Gael are
- upon his side.’
- And Costello answered flushing and looking towards the house: ‘I swear
- by the Mother of God that I will never return there again if they do
- not send after me before I pass the ford in the Brown River,’ and he
- rode on, but so very slowly that the sun went down and the bats began
- to fly over the bogs. When he came to the river he lingered awhile upon
- the bank among the flowers of the flag, but presently rode out into the
- middle and stopped his horse in a foaming shallow. Duallach, however,
- crossed over and waited on a further bank above a deeper place. After a
- good while Duallach cried out again, and this time very bitterly: ‘It
- was a fool who begot you and a fool who bore you, and they are fools of
- all fools who say you come of an old and noble stock, for you come of
- whey-faced beggars who travelled from door to door, bowing to gentles
- and to serving-men.’
- With bent head, Costello rode through the river and stood beside him,
- and would have spoken had not hoofs clattered on the further bank and a
- horseman splashed towards them. It was a serving-man of Dermott’s, and
- he said, speaking breathlessly like one who had ridden hard: ‘Tumaus
- Costello, I come to bid you again to Dermott’s house. When you had
- gone, his daughter Winny awoke and called your name, for you had been
- in her dreams. Bridget Delaney the Dummy saw her lips move and the
- trouble upon her, and came where we were hiding in the wood above the
- house and took Dermott of the Sheep by the coat and brought him to his
- daughter. He saw the trouble upon her, and bid me ride his own horse to
- bring you the quicker.’
- Then Costello turned towards the piper Duallach Daly, and taking him
- about the waist lifted him out of the saddle and hurled him against a
- grey rock that rose up out of the river, so that he fell lifeless into
- the deep place, and the waters swept over the tongue which God had made
- bitter, that there might be a story in men’s ears in after time. Then
- plunging his spurs into the horse, he rode away furiously toward the
- north-west, along the edge of the river, and did not pause until he
- came to another and smoother ford, and saw the rising moon mirrored in
- the water. He paused for a moment irresolute, and then rode into the
- ford and on over the Ox Mountains, and down towards the sea; his eyes
- almost continually resting upon the moon which glimmered in the dimness
- like a great white rose hung on the lattice of some boundless and
- phantasmal world. But now his horse, long dark with sweat and breathing
- hard, for he kept spurring it to an extreme speed, fell heavily,
- hurling him into the grass at the road-side. He tried to make it stand
- up, and failing in this, went on alone towards the moonlight; and came
- to the sea and saw a schooner lying there at anchor. Now that he could
- go no further because of the sea, he found that he was very tired and
- the night very cold, and went into a shebeen close to the shore and
- threw himself down upon a bench. The room was full of Spanish and Irish
- sailors who had just smuggled a cargo of wine and ale, and were waiting
- a favourable wind to set out again. A Spaniard offered him a drink in
- bad Gaelic. He drank it greedily and began talking wildly and rapidly.
- For some three weeks the wind blew inshore or with too great violence,
- and the sailors stayed drinking and talking and playing cards, and
- Costello stayed with them, sleeping upon a bench in the shebeen, and
- drinking and talking and playing more than any. He soon lost what
- little money he had, and then his horse, which some one had brought
- from the mountain boreen, to a Spaniard, who sold it to a farmer from
- the mountains, and then his long cloak and his spurs and his boots of
- soft leather. At last a gentle wind blew towards Spain, and the crew
- rowed out to their schooner, singing Gaelic and Spanish songs, and
- lifted the anchor, and in a little while the white sails had dropped
- under the horizon. Then Costello turned homeward, his life gaping
- before him, and walked all day, coming in the early evening to the road
- that went from near Lough Gara to the southern edge of Lough Cay. Here
- he overtook a great crowd of peasants and farmers, who were walking
- very slowly after two priests and a group of well-dressed persons,
- certain of whom were carrying a coffin. He stopped an old man and
- asked whose burying it was and whose people they were, and the old man
- answered: ‘It is the burying of Oona, Dermott’s daughter, and we are
- the Namaras and the Dermotts and their following, and you are Tumaus
- Costello who murdered her.’
- Costello went on towards the head of the procession, passing men who
- looked at him with fierce eyes, and only vaguely understanding what
- he had heard, for now that he had lost the understanding that belongs
- to good health, it seemed impossible that a gentleness and a beauty
- which had been so long the world’s heart could pass away. Presently he
- stopped and asked again whose burying it was, and a man answered: ‘We
- are carrying Dermott’s daughter Winny whom you murdered, to be buried
- in the island of the Holy Trinity,’ and the man stooped and picked up
- a stone and cast it at Costello, striking him on the cheek and making
- the blood flow out over his face. Costello went on scarcely feeling the
- blow, and coming to those about the coffin, shouldered his way into the
- midst of them, and laying his hand upon the coffin, asked in a loud
- voice: ‘Who is in this coffin?’
- The three old Dermotts from the Ox Mountains caught up stones and bid
- those about them do the same; and he was driven from the road, covered
- with wounds, and but for the priests would surely have been killed.
- When the procession had passed on, Costello began to follow again, and
- saw from a distance the coffin laid upon a large boat, and those about
- it get into other boats, and the boats move slowly over the water to
- Insula Trinitatis; and after a time he saw the boats return and their
- passengers mingle with the crowd upon the bank, and all disperse by
- many roads and boreens. It seemed to him that Winny was somewhere on
- the island smiling gently as of old, and when all had gone he swam
- in the way the boats had been rowed and found the new-made grave
- beside the ruined Abbey of the Holy Trinity, and threw himself upon
- it, calling to Oona to come to him. Above him the square ivy leaves
- trembled, and all about him white moths moved over white flowers, and
- sweet odours drifted through the dim air.
- He lay there all that night and through the day after, from time to
- time calling her to come to him, but when the third night came he had
- forgotten, worn out with hunger and sorrow, that her body lay in the
- earth beneath; but only knew she was somewhere near and would not come
- to him.
- Just before dawn, the hour when the peasants hear his ghostly voice
- crying out, his pride awoke and he called loudly: ‘Winny, daughter of
- Dermott of the Sheep, if you do not come to me I will go and never
- return to the island of the Holy Trinity,’ and before his voice had
- died away a cold and whirling wind had swept over the island and he saw
- many figures rushing past, women of the Sidhe with crowns of silver and
- dim floating drapery; and then Oona, but no longer smiling gently, for
- she passed him swiftly and angrily, and as she passed struck him upon
- the face crying: ‘Then go and never return.’
- He would have followed, and was calling out her name, when the whole
- glimmering company rose up into the air, and, rushing together in the
- shape of a great silvery rose, faded into the ashen dawn.
- Costello got up from the grave, understanding nothing but that he had
- made his beloved angry and that she wished him to go, and wading out
- into the lake, began to swim. He swam on and on, but his limbs were too
- weary to keep him afloat, and her anger was heavy about him, and when
- he had gone a little way he sank without a struggle, like a man passing
- into sleep and dreams.
- The next day a poor fisherman found him among the reeds upon the lake
- shore, lying upon the white lake sand with his arms flung out as
- though he lay upon a rood, and carried him to his own house. And the
- very poor lamented over him and sang the keen, and when the time had
- come, laid him in the Abbey on Insula Trinitatis with only the ruined
- altar between him and Dermott’s daughter, and planted above them two
- ash-trees that in after days wove their branches together and mingled
- their trembling leaves.
- ROSA ALCHEMICA
- O blessed and happy he, who knowing the mysteries
- of the gods, sanctifies his life, and purifies his
- soul, celebrating orgies in the mountains with holy
- purifications.—_Euripides._
- ROSA ALCHEMICA
- I
- IT is now more than ten years since I met, for the last time, Michael
- Robartes, and for the first time and the last time his friends
- and fellow students; and witnessed his and their tragic end, and
- endured those strange experiences, which have changed me so that my
- writings have grown less popular and less intelligible, and driven
- me almost to the verge of taking the habit of St. Dominic. I had
- just published _Rosa Alchemica_, a little work on the Alchemists,
- somewhat in the manner of Sir Thomas Browne, and had received many
- letters from believers in the arcane sciences, upbraiding what they
- called my timidity, for they could not believe so evident sympathy
- but the sympathy of the artist, which is half pity, for everything
- which has moved men’s hearts in any age. I had discovered, early in
- my researches, that their doctrine was no merely chemical phantasy,
- but a philosophy they applied to the world, to the elements and to
- man himself; and that they sought to fashion gold out of common metals
- merely as part of an universal transmutation of all things into some
- divine and imperishable substance; and this enabled me to make my
- little book a fanciful reverie over the transmutation of life into art,
- and a cry of measureless desire for a world made wholly of essences.
- I was sitting dreaming of what I had written, in my house in one of
- the old parts of Dublin; a house my ancestors had made almost famous
- through their part in the politics of the city and their friendships
- with the famous men of their generations; and was feeling an unwonted
- happiness at having at last accomplished a long-cherished design, and
- made my rooms an expression of this favourite doctrine. The portraits,
- of more historical than artistic interest, had gone; and tapestry, full
- of the blue and bronze of peacocks, fell over the doors, and shut out
- all history and activity untouched with beauty and peace; and now when
- I looked at my Crevelli and pondered on the rose in the hand of the
- Virgin, wherein the form was so delicate and precise that it seemed
- more like a thought than a flower, or at the grey dawn and rapturous
- faces of my Francesca, I knew all a Christian’s ecstasy without his
- slavery to rule and custom; when I pondered over the antique bronze
- gods and goddesses, which I had mortgaged my house to buy, I had all a
- pagan’s delight in various beauty and without his terror at sleepless
- destiny and his labour with many sacrifices; and I had only to go to
- my bookshelf, where every book was bound in leather, stamped with
- intricate ornament, and of a carefully chosen colour: Shakespeare
- in the orange of the glory of the world, Dante in the dull red of
- his anger, Milton in the blue grey of his formal calm; and I could
- experience what I would of human passions without their bitterness and
- without satiety. I had gathered about me all gods because I believed
- in none, and experienced every pleasure because I gave myself to none,
- but held myself apart, individual, indissoluble, a mirror of polished
- steel: I looked in the triumph of this imagination at the birds of
- Hera, glowing in the firelight as though they were wrought of jewels;
- and to my mind, for which symbolism was a necessity, they seemed the
- doorkeepers of my world, shutting out all that was not of as affluent
- a beauty as their own; and for a moment I thought as I had thought
- in so many other moments, that it was possible to rob life of every
- bitterness except the bitterness of death; and then a thought which had
- followed this thought, time after time, filled me with a passionate
- sorrow. All those forms: that Madonna with her brooding purity, those
- rapturous faces singing in the morning light, those bronze divinities
- with their passionless dignity, those wild shapes rushing from despair
- to despair, belonged to a divine world wherein I had no part; and every
- experience, however profound, every perception, however exquisite,
- would bring me the bitter dream of a limitless energy I could never
- know, and even in my most perfect moment I would be two selves, the
- one watching with heavy eyes the other’s moment of content. I had
- heaped about me the gold born in the crucibles of others; but the
- supreme dream of the alchemist, the transmutation of the weary heart
- into a weariless spirit, was as far from me as, I doubted not, it had
- been from him also. I turned to my last purchase, a set of alchemical
- apparatus which, the dealer in the Rue le Peletier had assured me,
- once belonged to Raymond Lully, and as I joined the _alembic_ to the
- _athanor_ and laid the _lavacrum maris_ at their side, I understood the
- alchemical doctrine, that all beings, divided from the great deep where
- spirits wander, one and yet a multitude, are weary; and sympathized,
- in the pride of my connoisseurship, with the consuming thirst for
- destruction which made the alchemist veil under his symbols of lions
- and dragons, of eagles and ravens, of dew and of nitre, a search for an
- essence which would dissolve all mortal things. I repeated to myself
- the ninth key of Basilius Valentinus, in which he compares the fire
- of the last day to the fire of the alchemist, and the world to the
- alchemist’s furnace, and would have us know that all must be dissolved
- before the divine substance, material gold or immaterial ecstasy,
- awake. I had dissolved indeed the mortal world and lived amid immortal
- essences, but had obtained no miraculous ecstasy. As I thought of these
- things, I drew aside the curtains and looked out into the darkness, and
- it seemed to my troubled fancy that all those little points of light
- filling the sky were the furnaces of innumerable divine alchemists, who
- labour continually, turning lead into gold, weariness into ecstasy,
- bodies into souls, the darkness into God; and at their perfect labour
- my mortality grew heavy, and I cried out, as so many dreamers and men
- of letters in our age have cried, for the birth of that elaborate
- spiritual beauty which could alone uplift souls weighted with so many
- dreams.
- II
- My reverie was broken by a loud knocking at the door, and I wondered
- the more at this because I had no visitors, and had bid my servants
- do all things silently, lest they broke the dream of my inner life.
- Feeling a little curious, I resolved to go to the door myself, and,
- taking one of the silver candlesticks from the mantlepiece, began to
- descend the stairs. The servants appeared to be out, for though the
- sound poured through every corner and crevice of the house there was
- no stir in the lower rooms. I remembered that because my needs were so
- few, my part in life so little, they had begun to come and go as they
- would, often leaving me alone for hours. The emptiness and silence
- of a world from which I had driven everything but dreams suddenly
- overwhelmed me, and I shuddered as I drew the bolt. I found before me
- Michael Robartes, whom I had not seen for years, and whose wild red
- hair, fierce eyes, sensitive, tremulous lips and rough clothes made
- him look now, just as they used to do fifteen years before, something
- between a debauchee, a saint, and a peasant. He had recently come to
- Ireland, he said, and wished to see me on a matter of importance;
- indeed, the only matter of importance for him and for me. His voice
- brought up before me our student years in Paris, and remembering the
- magnetic power he had once possessed over me, a little fear mingled
- with much annoyance at this irrelevant intrusion, as I led the way up
- the wide staircase, where Swift had passed joking and railing, and
- Curran telling stories and quoting Greek, in simpler days, before
- men’s minds, subtilized and complicated by the romantic movement in
- art and literature, began to tremble on the verge of some unimagined
- revelation. I felt that my hand shook, and saw that the light of the
- candle wavered and quivered more than it need have upon the Mænads on
- the old French panels, making them look like the first beings slowly
- shaping in the formless and void darkness. When the door had closed,
- and the peacock curtain, glimmering like many-coloured flame, fell
- between us and the world, I felt, in a way I could not understand,
- that some singular and unexpected thing was about to happen. I went
- over to the mantlepiece, and finding that a little chainless bronze
- censer, set, upon the outside, with pieces of painted china by Orazio
- Fontana, which I had filled with antique amulets, had fallen upon its
- side and poured out its contents, I began to gather the amulets into
- the bowl, partly to collect my thoughts and partly with that habitual
- reverence which seemed to me the due of things so long connected with
- secret hopes and fears. ‘I see,’ said Michael Robartes, ‘that you are
- still fond of incense, and I can show you an incense more precious than
- any you have ever seen,’ and as he spoke he took the censer out of my
- hand and put the amulets in a little heap between the _athanor_ and the
- _alembic_. I sat down, and he sat down at the side of the fire, and sat
- there for awhile looking into the fire, and holding the censer in his
- hand. ‘I have come to ask you something,’ he said, ‘and the incense
- will fill the room, and our thoughts, with its sweet odour while we
- are talking. I got it from an old man in Syria, who said it was made
- from flowers, of one kind with the flowers that laid their heavy purple
- petals upon the hands and upon the hair and upon the feet of Christ in
- the Garden of Gethsemane, and folded Him in their heavy breath, until
- He cried against the cross and his destiny.’ He shook some dust into
- the censer out of a small silk bag, and set the censer upon the floor
- and lit the dust which sent up a blue stream of smoke, that spread
- out over the ceiling, and flowed downwards again until it was like
- Milton’s banyan tree. It filled me, as incense often does, with a faint
- sleepiness, so that I started when he said, ‘I have come to ask you
- that question which I asked you in Paris, and which you left Paris
- rather than answer.’
- He had turned his eyes towards me, and I saw them glitter in the
- firelight, and through the incense, as I replied: ‘You mean, will I
- become an initiate of your Order of the Alchemical Rose? I would not
- consent in Paris, when I was full of unsatisfied desire, and now that I
- have at last fashioned my life according to my desire, am I likely to
- consent?’
- ‘You have changed greatly since then,’ he answered. ‘I have read your
- books, and now I see you among all these images, and I understand
- you better than you do yourself, for I have been with many and many
- dreamers at the same cross-ways. You have shut away the world and
- gathered the gods about you, and if you do not throw yourself at their
- feet, you will be always full of lassitude, and of wavering purpose,
- for a man must forget he is miserable in the bustle and noise of the
- multitude in this world and in time; or seek a mystical union with
- the multitude who govern this world and time.’ And then he murmured
- something I could not hear, and as though to someone I could not see.
- For a moment the room appeared to darken, as it used to do when he was
- about to perform some singular experiment, and in the darkness the
- peacocks upon the doors seemed to glow with a more intense colour. I
- cast off the illusion, which was, I believe, merely caused by memory,
- and by the twilight of incense, for I would not acknowledge that he
- could overcome my now mature intellect; and I said: ‘Even if I grant
- that I need a spiritual belief and some form of worship, why should I
- go to Eleusis and not to Calvary?’ He leaned forward and began speaking
- with a slightly rhythmical intonation, and as he spoke I had to
- struggle again with the shadow, as of some older night than the night
- of the sun, which began to dim the light of the candles and to blot out
- the little gleams upon the corner of picture-frames and on the bronze
- divinities, and to turn the blue of the incense to a heavy purple;
- while it left the peacocks to glimmer and glow as though each separate
- colour were a living spirit. I had fallen into a profound dream-like
- reverie in which I heard him speaking as at a distance. ‘And yet there
- is no one who communes with only one god,’ he was saying, ‘and the
- more a man lives in imagination and in a refined understanding, the
- more gods does he meet with and talk with, and the more does he come
- under the power of Roland, who sounded in the Valley of Roncesvalles
- the last trumpet of the body’s will and pleasure; and of Hamlet, who
- saw them perishing away, and sighed; and of Faust, who looked for
- them up and down the world and could not find them; and under the
- power of all those countless divinities who have taken upon themselves
- spiritual bodies in the minds of the modern poets and romance writers,
- and under the power of the old divinities, who since the Renaissance
- have won everything of their ancient worship except the sacrifice of
- birds and fishes, the fragrance of garlands and the smoke of incense.
- The many think humanity made these divinities, and that it can unmake
- them again; but we who have seen them pass in rattling harness, and
- in soft robes, and heard them speak with articulate voices while we
- lay in deathlike trance, know that they are always making and unmaking
- humanity, which is indeed but the trembling of their lips.’
- He had stood up and begun to walk to and fro, and had become in my
- waking dream a shuttle weaving an immense purple web whose folds had
- begun to fill the room. The room seemed to have become inexplicably
- silent, as though all but the web and the weaving were at an end in
- the world. ‘They have come to us; they have come to us,’ the voice
- began again; ‘all that have ever been in your reverie, all that you
- have met with in books. There is Lear, his head still wet with the
- thunder-storm, and he laughs because you thought yourself an existence
- who are but a shadow, and him a shadow who is an eternal god; and
- there is Beatrice, with her lips half parted in a smile, as though all
- the stars were about to pass away in a sigh of love; and there is the
- mother of the God of humility who cast so great a spell over men that
- they have tried to unpeople their hearts that he might reign alone, but
- she holds in her hand the rose whose every petal is a god; and there,
- O swiftly she comes! is Aphrodite under a twilight falling from the
- wings of numberless sparrows, and about her feet are the grey and white
- doves.’ In the midst of my dream I saw him hold out his left arm and
- pass his right hand over it as though he stroked the wings of doves. I
- made a violent effort which seemed almost to tear me in two, and said
- with forced determination: ‘You would sweep me away into an indefinite
- world which fills me with terror; and yet a man is a great man just in
- so far as he can make his mind reflect everything with indifferent
- precision like a mirror.’ I seemed to be perfectly master of myself,
- and went on, but more rapidly: ‘I command you to leave me at once,
- for your ideas and phantasies are but the illusions that creep like
- maggots into civilizations when they begin to decline, and into minds
- when they begin to decay.’ I had grown suddenly angry, and seizing the
- _alembic_ from the table, was about to rise and strike him with it,
- when the peacocks on the door behind him appeared to grow immense; and
- then the _alembic_ fell from my fingers and I was drowned in a tide
- of green and blue and bronze feathers, and as I struggled hopelessly
- I heard a distant voice saying: ‘Our master Avicenna has written that
- all life proceeds out of corruption.’ The glittering feathers had now
- covered me completely, and I knew that I had struggled for hundreds of
- years, and was conquered at last. I was sinking into the depth when
- the green and blue and bronze that seemed to fill the world became a
- sea of flame and swept me away, and as I was swirled along I heard
- a voice over my head cry, ‘The mirror is broken in two pieces,’ and
- another voice answer, ‘The mirror is broken in four pieces,’ and a more
- distant voice cry with an exultant cry, ‘The mirror is broken into
- numberless pieces’; and then a multitude of pale hands were reaching
- towards me, and strange gentle faces bending above me, and half wailing
- and half caressing voices uttering words that were forgotten the moment
- they were spoken. I was being lifted out of the tide of flame, and
- felt my memories, my hopes, my thoughts, my will, everything I held
- to be myself, melting away; then I seemed to rise through numberless
- companies of beings who were, I understood, in some way more certain
- than thought, each wrapped in his eternal moment, in the perfect
- lifting of an arm, in a little circlet of rhythmical words, in dreaming
- with dim eyes and half-closed eyelids. And then I passed beyond these
- forms, which were so beautiful they had almost ceased to be, and,
- having endured strange moods, melancholy, as it seemed, with the weight
- of many worlds, I passed into that Death which is Beauty herself, and
- into that Loneliness which all the multitudes desire without ceasing.
- All things that had ever lived seemed to come and dwell in my heart,
- and I in theirs; and I had never again known mortality or tears, had I
- not suddenly fallen from the certainty of vision into the uncertainty
- of dream, and become a drop of molten gold falling with immense
- rapidity, through a night elaborate with stars, and all about me a
- melancholy exultant wailing. I fell and fell and fell, and then the
- wailing was but the wailing of the wind in the chimney, and I awoke
- to find myself leaning upon the table and supporting my head with my
- hands. I saw the _alembic_ swaying from side to side in the distant
- corner it had rolled to, and Michael Robartes watching me and waiting.
- ‘I will go wherever you will,’ I said, ‘and do whatever you bid me, for
- I have been with eternal things.’ ‘I knew,’ he replied, ‘you must need
- answer as you have answered, when I heard the storm begin. You must
- come to a great distance, for we were commanded to build our temple
- between the pure multitude by the waves and the impure multitude of
- men.’
- III
- I did not speak as we drove through the deserted streets, for my mind
- was curiously empty of familiar thoughts and experiences; it seemed
- to have been plucked out of the definite world and cast naked upon
- a shoreless sea. There were moments when the vision appeared on the
- point of returning, and I would half-remember, with an ecstasy of joy
- or sorrow, crimes and heroisms, fortunes and misfortunes; or begin to
- contemplate, with a sudden leaping of the heart, hopes and terrors,
- desires and ambitions, alien to my orderly and careful life; and then
- I would awake shuddering at the thought that some great imponderable
- being had swept through my mind. It was indeed days before this feeling
- passed perfectly away, and even now, when I have sought refuge in the
- only definite faith, I feel a great tolerance for those people with
- incoherent personalities, who gather in the chapels and meeting-places
- of certain obscure sects, because I also have felt fixed habits and
- principles dissolving before a power, which was _hysterica passio_
- or sheer madness, if you will, but was so powerful in its melancholy
- exultation that I tremble lest it wake again and drive me from my
- new-found peace.
- When we came in the grey light to the great half-empty terminus, it
- seemed to me I was so changed that I was no more, as man is, a moment
- shuddering at eternity, but eternity weeping and laughing over a
- moment; and when we had started and Michael Robartes had fallen asleep,
- as he soon did, his sleeping face, in which there was no sign of all
- that had so shaken me and that now kept me wakeful, was to my excited
- mind more like a mask than a face. The fancy possessed me that the man
- behind it had dissolved away like salt in water, and that it laughed
- and sighed, appealed and denounced at the bidding of beings greater or
- less than man. ‘This is not Michael Robartes at all: Michael Robartes
- is dead; dead for ten, for twenty years perhaps,’ I kept repeating to
- myself. I fell at last into a feverish sleep, waking up from time to
- time when we rushed past some little town, its slated roofs shining
- with wet, or still lake gleaming in the cold morning light. I had been
- too preoccupied to ask where we were going, or to notice what tickets
- Michael Robartes had taken, but I knew now from the direction of the
- sun that we were going westward; and presently I knew also, by the way
- in which the trees had grown into the semblance of tattered beggars
- flying with bent heads towards the east, that we were approaching the
- western coast. Then immediately I saw the sea between the low hills
- upon the left, its dull grey broken into white patches and lines.
- When we left the train we had still, I found, some way to go, and
- set out, buttoning our coats about us, for the wind was bitter and
- violent. Michael Robartes was silent, seeming anxious to leave me to
- my thoughts; and as we walked between the sea and the rocky side of a
- great promontory, I realized with a new perfection what a shock had
- been given to all my habits of thought and of feelings, if indeed some
- mysterious change had not taken place in the substance of my mind, for
- the grey waves, plumed with scudding foam, had grown part of a teeming,
- fantastic inner life; and when Michael Robartes pointed to a square
- ancient-looking house, with a much smaller and newer building under its
- lee, set out on the very end of a dilapidated and almost deserted pier,
- and said it was the Temple of the Alchemical Rose, I was possessed with
- the phantasy that the sea, which kept covering it with showers of white
- foam, was claiming it as part of some indefinite and passionate life,
- which had begun to war upon our orderly and careful days, and was about
- to plunge the world into a night as obscure as that which followed
- the downfall of the classical world. One part of my mind mocked this
- phantastic terror, but the other, the part that still lay half plunged
- in vision, listened to the clash of unknown armies, and shuddered at
- unimaginable fanaticisms, that hung in those grey leaping waves.
- We had gone but a few paces along the pier when we came upon an old
- man, who was evidently a watchman, for he sat in an overset barrel,
- close to a place where masons had been lately working upon a break in
- the pier, and had in front of him a fire such as one sees slung under
- tinkers’ carts. I saw that he was also a voteen, as the peasants say,
- for there was a rosary hanging from a nail on the rim of the barrel,
- and as I saw I shuddered, and I did not know why I shuddered. We had
- passed him a few yards when I heard him cry in Gaelic, ‘Idolaters,
- idolaters, go down to Hell with your witches and your devils; go down
- to Hell that the herrings may come again into the bay’; and for some
- moments I could hear him half screaming and half muttering behind us.
- ‘Are you not afraid,’ I said, ‘that these wild fishing people may do
- some desperate thing against you?’
- ‘I and mine,’ he answered, ‘are long past human hurt or help, being
- incorporate with immortal spirits, and when we die it shall be the
- consummation of the supreme work. A time will come for these people
- also, and they will sacrifice a mullet to Artemis, or some other
- fish to some new divinity, unless indeed their own divinities, the
- Dagda, with his overflowing cauldron, Lug, with his spear dipped in
- poppy-juice lest it rush forth hot for battle, Aengus, with the three
- birds on his shoulder, Bodb and his red swineherd, and all the heroic
- children of Dana, set up once more their temples of grey stone. Their
- reign has never ceased, but only waned in power a little, for the Sidhe
- still pass in every wind, and dance and play at hurley, and fight their
- sudden battles in every hollow and on every hill; but they cannot build
- their temples again till there have been martyrdoms and victories, and
- perhaps even that long-foretold battle in the Valley of the Black Pig.’
- Keeping close to the wall that went about the pier on the seaward side,
- to escape the driving foam and the wind, which threatened every moment
- to lift us off our feet, we made our way in silence to the door of the
- square building. Michael Robartes opened it with a key, on which I
- saw the rust of many salt winds, and led me along a bare passage and
- up an uncarpeted stair to a little room surrounded with bookshelves.
- A meal would be brought, but only of fruit, for I must submit to a
- tempered fast before the ceremony, he explained, and with it a book on
- the doctrine and method of the Order, over which I was to spend what
- remained of the winter daylight. He then left me, promising to return
- an hour before the ceremony. I began searching among the bookshelves,
- and found one of the most exhaustive alchemical libraries I have ever
- seen. There were the works of Morienus, who hid his immortal body
- under a shirt of hair-cloth; of Avicenna, who was a drunkard and yet
- controlled numberless legions of spirits; of Alfarabi, who put so many
- spirits into his lute that he could make men laugh, or weep, or fall in
- deadly trance as he would; of Lully, who transformed himself into the
- likeness of a red cock; of Flamel, who with his wife Parnella achieved
- the elixir many hundreds of years ago, and is fabled to live still in
- Arabia among the Dervishes; and of many of less fame. There were very
- few mystics but alchemical mystics, and because, I had little doubt, of
- the devotion to one god of the greater number and of the limited sense
- of beauty, which Robartes would hold an inevitable consequence; but I
- did notice a complete set of facsimiles of the prophetical writings of
- William Blake, and probably because of the multitudes that thronged his
- illumination and were ‘like the gay fishes on the wave when the moon
- sucks up the dew.’ I noted also many poets and prose writers of every
- age, but only those who were a little weary of life, as indeed the
- greatest have been everywhere, and who cast their imagination to us, as
- a something they needed no longer now that they were going up in their
- fiery chariots.
- Presently I heard a tap at the door, and a woman came in and laid a
- little fruit upon the table. I judged that she had once been handsome,
- but her cheeks were hollowed by what I would have held, had I seen her
- anywhere else, an excitement of the flesh and a thirst for pleasure,
- instead of which it doubtless was an excitement of the imagination and
- a thirst for beauty. I asked her some question concerning the ceremony,
- but getting no answer except a shake of the head, saw that I must await
- initiation in silence. When I had eaten, she came again, and having
- laid a curiously wrought bronze box on the table, lighted the candles,
- and took away the plates and the remnants. So soon as I was alone,
- I turned to the box, and found that the peacocks of Hera spread out
- their tails over the sides and lid, against a background, on which were
- wrought great stars, as though to affirm that the heavens were a part
- of their glory. In the box was a book bound in vellum, and having upon
- the vellum and in very delicate colours, and in gold, the alchemical
- rose with many spears thrusting against it, but in vain, as was shown
- by the shattered points of those nearest to the petals. The book was
- written upon vellum, and in beautiful clear letters, interspersed
- with symbolical pictures and illuminations, after the manner of the
- _Splendor Solis_.
- The first chapter described how six students, of Celtic descent,
- gave themselves separately to the study of alchemy, and solved, one
- the mystery of the Pelican, another the mystery of the green Dragon,
- another the mystery of the Eagle, another that of Salt and Mercury.
- What seemed a succession of accidents, but was, the book declared,
- the contrivance of preternatural powers, brought them together in the
- garden of an inn in the South of France, and while they talked together
- the thought came to them that alchemy was the gradual distillation of
- the contents of the soul, until they were ready to put off the mortal
- and put on the immortal. An owl passed, rustling among the vine-leaves
- overhead, and then an old woman came, leaning upon a stick, and,
- sitting close to them, took up the thought where they had dropped it.
- Having expounded the whole principle of spiritual alchemy, and bid
- them found the Order of the Alchemical Rose, she passed from among
- them, and when they would have followed was nowhere to be seen. They
- formed themselves into an Order, holding their goods and making their
- researches in common, and, as they became perfect in the alchemical
- doctrine, apparitions came and went among them, and taught them more
- and more marvellous mysteries. The book then went on to expound so
- much of these as the neophyte was permitted to know, dealing at the
- outset and at considerable length with the independent reality of our
- thoughts, which was, it declared, the doctrine from which all true
- doctrines rose. If you imagine, it said, the semblance of a living
- being, it is at once possessed by a wandering soul, and goes hither
- and hither working good or evil, until the moment of its death has
- come; and gave many examples, received, it said, from many gods. Eros
- had taught them how to fashion forms in which a divine soul could
- dwell, and whisper what they would into sleeping minds; and Ate, forms
- from which demonic beings could pour madness, or unquiet dreams, into
- sleeping blood; and Hermes, that if you powerfully imagined a hound at
- your bedside it would keep watch there until you woke, and drive away
- all but the mightiest demons, but that if your imagination was weakly,
- the hound would be weakly also, and the demons prevail, and the hound
- soon die; and Aphrodite, that if you made, by a strong imagining, a
- dove crowned with silver and bad it flutter over your head, its soft
- cooing would make sweet dreams of immortal love gather and brood
- over mortal sleep; and all divinities alike had revealed with many
- warnings and lamentations that all minds are continually giving birth
- to such beings, and sending them forth to work health or disease, joy
- or madness. If you would give forms to the evil powers, it went on,
- you were to make them ugly, thrusting out a lip, with the thirsts of
- life, or breaking the proportions of a body with the burdens of life;
- but the divine powers would only appear in beautiful shapes, which
- are but, as it were, shapes trembling out of existence, folding up
- into a timeless ecstasy, drifting with half-shut eyes, into a sleepy
- stillness. The bodiless souls who descended into these forms were what
- men call the moods; and worked all great changes in the world; for just
- as the magician or the artist could call them when he would, so they
- could call out of the mind of the magician or the artist, or if they
- were demons, out of the mind of the mad or the ignoble, what shape
- they would, and through its voice and its gestures pour themselves
- out upon the world. In this way all great events were accomplished; a
- mood, a divinity, or a demon, first descending like a faint sigh into
- men’s minds and then changing their thoughts and their actions until
- hair that was yellow had grown black, or hair that was black had grown
- yellow, and empires moved their border, as though they were but drifts
- of leaves. The rest of the book contained symbols of form, and sound,
- and colour, and their attribution to divinities and demons, so that the
- initiate might fashion a shape for any divinity or any demon, and be as
- powerful as Avicenna among those who live under the roots of tears and
- of laughter.
- IV
- A couple of hours after sunset Michael Robartes returned and told me
- that I would have to learn the steps of an exceedingly antique dance,
- because before my initiation could be perfected I had to join three
- times in a magical dance, for rhythm was the wheel of Eternity, on
- which alone the transient and accidental could be broken, and the
- spirit set free. I found that the steps, which were simple enough,
- resembled certain antique Greek dances, and having been a good dancer
- in my youth and the master of many curious Gaelic steps, I soon had
- them in my memory. He then robed me and himself in a costume which
- suggested by its shape both Greece and Egypt, but by its crimson colour
- a more passionate life than theirs; and having put into my hands a
- little chainless censer of bronze, wrought into the likeness of a rose,
- by some modern craftsman, he told me to open a small door opposite
- to the door by which I had entered. I put my hand to the handle,
- but the moment I did so the fumes of the incense, helped perhaps by
- his mysterious glamour, made me fall again into a dream, in which I
- seemed to be a mask, lying on the counter of a little Eastern shop.
- Many persons, with eyes so bright and still that I knew them for more
- than human, came in and tried me on their faces, but at last flung
- me into a corner with a little laughter; but all this passed in a
- moment, for when I awoke my hand was still upon the handle. I opened
- the door, and found myself in a marvellous passage, along whose sides
- were many divinities wrought in a mosaic, not less beautiful than the
- mosaic in the Baptistery at Ravenna, but of a less severe beauty;
- the predominant colour of each divinity, which was surely a symbolic
- colour, being repeated in the lamps that hung from the ceiling, a
- curiously-scented lamp before every divinity. I passed on, marvelling
- exceedingly how these enthusiasts could have created all this beauty in
- so remote a place, and half persuaded to believe in a material alchemy,
- by the sight of so much hidden wealth; the censer filling the air, as I
- passed, with smoke of ever-changing colour.
- I stopped before a door, on whose bronze panels were wrought great
- waves in whose shadow were faint suggestions of terrible faces. Those
- beyond it seemed to have heard our steps, for a voice cried: ‘Is the
- work of the Incorruptible Fire at an end?’ and immediately Michael
- Robartes answered: ‘The perfect gold has come from the _athanor_.’ The
- door swung open, and we were in a great circular room, and among men
- and women who were dancing slowly in crimson robes. Upon the ceiling
- was an immense rose wrought in mosaic; and about the walls, also in
- mosaic, was a battle of gods and angels, the gods glimmering like
- rubies and sapphires, and the angels of the one greyness, because, as
- Michael Robartes whispered, they had renounced their divinity, and
- turned from the unfolding of their separate hearts, out of love for a
- God of humility and sorrow. Pillars supported the roof and made a kind
- of circular cloister, each pillar being a column of confused shapes,
- divinities, it seemed, of the wind, who rose as in a whirling dance
- of more than human vehemence, and playing upon pipes and cymbals; and
- from among these shapes were thrust out hands, and in these hands were
- censers. I was bid place my censer also in a hand and take my place
- and dance, and as I turned from the pillars towards the dancers, I
- saw that the floor was of a green stone, and that a pale Christ on a
- pale cross was wrought in the midst. I asked Robartes the meaning of
- this, and was told that they desired ‘To trouble His unity with their
- multitudinous feet.’ The dance wound in and out, tracing upon the floor
- the shapes of petals that copied the petals in the rose overhead, and
- to the sound of hidden instruments which were perhaps of an antique
- pattern, for I have never heard the like; and every moment the dance
- was more passionate, until all the winds of the world seemed to have
- awakened under our feet. After a little I had grown weary, and stood
- under a pillar watching the coming and going of those flame-like
- figures; until gradually I sank into a half-dream, from which I was
- awakened by seeing the petals of the great rose, which had no longer
- the look of mosaic, falling slowly through the incense-heavy air,
- and, as they fell, shaping into the likeness of living beings of an
- extraordinary beauty. Still faint and cloud-like, they began to dance,
- and as they danced took a more and more definite shape, so that I was
- able to distinguish beautiful Grecian faces and august Egyptian faces,
- and now and again to name a divinity by the staff in his hand or by a
- bird fluttering over his head; and soon every mortal foot danced by the
- white foot of an immortal; and in the troubled eyes that looked into
- untroubled shadowy eyes, I saw the brightness of uttermost desire as
- though they had found at length, after unreckonable wandering, the lost
- love of their youth. Sometimes, but only for a moment, I saw a faint
- solitary figure with a veiled face, and carrying a faint torch, flit
- among the dancers, but like a dream within a dream, like a shadow of
- a shadow, and I knew by an understanding born from a deeper fountain
- than thought, that it was Eros himself, and that his face was veiled
- because no man or woman from the beginning of the world has ever known
- what love is, or looked into his eyes, for Eros alone of divinities
- is altogether a spirit, and hides in passions not of his essence if he
- would commune with a mortal heart. So that if a man love nobly he knows
- love through infinite pity, unspeakable trust, unending sympathy; and
- if ignobly through vehement jealousy, sudden hatred, and unappeasable
- desire; but unveiled love he never knows. While I thought these things,
- a voice cried to me from the crimson figures: ‘Into the dance! there
- is none that can be spared out of the dance; into the dance! into the
- dance! that the gods may make them bodies out of the substance of our
- hearts’; and before I could answer, a mysterious wave of passion, that
- seemed like the soul of the dance moving within our souls, took hold of
- me, and I was swept, neither consenting nor refusing, into the midst. I
- was dancing with an immortal august woman, who had black lilies in her
- hair, and her dreamy gesture seemed laden with a wisdom more profound
- than the darkness that is between star and star, and with a love like
- the love that breathed upon the waters; and as we danced on and on,
- the incense drifted over us and round us, covering us away as in the
- heart of the world, and ages seemed to pass, and tempests to awake and
- perish in the folds of our robes and in her heavy hair.
- Suddenly I remembered that her eyelids had never quivered, and that her
- lilies had not dropped a black petal, or shaken from their places, and
- understood with a great horror that I danced with one who was more or
- less than human, and who was drinking up my soul as an ox drinks up a
- wayside pool; and I fell, and darkness passed over me.
- V
- I awoke suddenly as though something had awakened me, and saw that I
- was lying on a roughly painted floor, and that on the ceiling, which
- was at no great distance, was a roughly painted rose, and about me on
- the walls half-finished paintings. The pillars and the censers had
- gone; and near me a score of sleepers lay wrapped in disordered robes,
- their upturned faces looking to my imagination like hollow masks; and
- a chill dawn was shining down upon them from a long window I had not
- noticed before; and outside the sea roared. I saw Michael Robartes
- lying at a little distance and beside him an overset bowl of wrought
- bronze which looked as though it had once held incense. As I sat thus,
- I heard a sudden tumult of angry men and women’s voices mix with the
- roaring of the sea; and leaping to my feet, I went quickly to Michael
- Robartes, and tried to shake him out of his sleep. I then seized him
- by the shoulder and tried to lift him, but he fell backwards, and
- sighed faintly; and the voices became louder and angrier; and there
- was a sound of heavy blows upon the door, which opened on to the pier.
- Suddenly I heard a sound of rending wood, and I knew it had begun to
- give, and I ran to the door of the room. I pushed it open and came out
- upon a passage whose bare boards clattered under my feet, and found
- in the passage another door which led into an empty kitchen; and as I
- passed through the door I heard two crashes in quick succession, and
- knew by the sudden noise of feet and the shouts that the door which
- opened on to the pier had fallen inwards. I ran from the kitchen and
- out into a small yard, and from this down some steps which descended
- the seaward and sloping side of the pier, and from the steps clambered
- along the water’s edge, with the angry voices ringing in my ears. This
- part of the pier had been but lately refaced with blocks of granite,
- so that it was almost clear of seaweed; but when I came to the old
- part, I found it so slippery with green weed that I had to climb up
- on to the roadway. I looked towards the Temple of the Alchemical Rose,
- where the fishermen and the women were still shouting, but somewhat
- more faintly, and saw that there was no one about the door or upon the
- pier; but as I looked, a little crowd hurried out of the door and began
- gathering large stones from where they were heaped up in readiness for
- the next time a storm shattered the pier, when they would be laid under
- blocks of granite. While I stood watching the crowd, an old man, who
- was, I think, the voteen, pointed to me, and screamed out something,
- and the crowd whitened, for all the faces had turned towards me. I ran,
- and it was well for me that pullers of the oar are poorer men with
- their feet than with their arms and their bodies; and yet while I ran I
- scarcely heard the following feet or the angry voices, for many voices
- of exultation and lamentation, which were forgotten as a dream is
- forgotten the moment they were heard, seemed to be ringing in the air
- over my head.
- There are moments even now when I seem to hear those voices of
- exultation and lamentation, and when the indefinite world, which has
- but half lost its mastery over my heart and my intellect, seems about
- to claim a perfect mastery; but I carry the rosary about my neck, and
- when I hear, or seem to hear them, I press it to my heart and say: ‘He
- whose name is Legion is at our doors deceiving our intellects with
- subtlety and flattering our hearts with beauty, and we have no trust
- but in Thee’; and then the war that rages within me at other times is
- still, and I am at peace.
- THE TABLES OF THE LAW
- I
- ‘WILL you permit me, Aherne,’ I said, ‘to ask you a question, which I
- have wanted to ask you for years, and have not asked because we have
- grown nearly strangers? Why did you refuse the berretta, and almost
- at the last moment? When you and I lived together, you cared neither
- for wine, women, nor money, and had thoughts for nothing but theology
- and mysticism.’ I had watched through dinner for a moment to put my
- question, and ventured now, because he had thrown off a little of
- the reserve and indifference which, ever since his last return from
- Italy, had taken the place of our once close friendship. He had just
- questioned me, too, about certain private and almost sacred things, and
- my frankness had earned, I thought, a like frankness from him.
- When I began to speak he was lifting to his lips a glass of that old
- wine which he could choose so well and valued so little; and while
- I spoke, he set it slowly and meditatively upon the table and held
- it there, its deep red light dyeing his long delicate fingers. The
- impression of his face and form, as they were then, is still vivid
- with me, and is inseparable from another and fanciful impression:
- the impression of a man holding a flame in his naked hand. He was to
- me, at that moment, the supreme type of our race, which, when it has
- risen above, or is sunken below, the formalisms of half-education and
- the rationalisms of conventional affirmation and denial, turns away,
- unless my hopes for the world and for the Church have made me blind,
- from practicable desires and intuitions towards desires so unbounded
- that no human vessel can contain them, intuitions so immaterial that
- their sudden and far-off fire leaves heavy darkness about hand and
- foot. He had the nature, which is half monk, half soldier of fortune,
- and must needs turn action into dreaming, and dreaming into action;
- and for such there is no order, no finality, no contentment in this
- world. When he and I had been students in Paris, we had belonged to a
- little group which devoted itself to speculations about alchemy and
- mysticism. More orthodox in most of his beliefs than Michael Robartes,
- he had surpassed him in a fanciful hatred of all life, and this hatred
- had found expression in the curious paradox--half borrowed from some
- fanatical monk, half invented by himself--that the beautiful arts were
- sent into the world to overthrow nations, and finally life herself, by
- sowing everywhere unlimited desires, like torches thrown into a burning
- city. This idea was not at the time, I believe, more than a paradox,
- a plume of the pride of youth; and it was only after his return to
- Ireland that he endured the fermentation of belief which is coming upon
- our people with the reawakening of their imaginative life.
- Presently he stood up, saying: ‘Come, and I will show you, for you at
- any rate will understand,’ and taking candles from the table, he lit
- the way into the long paved passage that led to his private chapel. We
- passed between the portraits of the Jesuits and priests--some of no
- little fame--his family had given to the Church; and engravings and
- photographs of pictures that had especially moved him; and the few
- paintings his small fortune, eked out by an almost penurious abstinence
- from the things most men desire, had enabled him to buy in his travels.
- The pictures that I knew best, for they had hung there longest,
- whether reproductions or originals, were of the Sienese School, which
- he had studied for a long time, claiming that it alone of the schools
- of the world pictured not the world but what is revealed to saints in
- their dreams and visions. The Sienese alone among Italians, he would
- say, could not or would not represent the pride of life, the pleasure
- in swift movement or sustaining strength, or voluptuous flesh. They
- were so little interested in these things that there often seemed to
- be no human body at all under the robe of the saint, but they could
- represent by a bowed head, or uplifted face, man’s reverence before
- Eternity as no others could, and they were at their happiest when
- mankind had dwindled to a little group silhouetted upon a golden abyss,
- as if they saw the world habitually from far off. When I had praised
- some school that had dipped deeper into life, he would profess to
- discover a more intense emotion than life knew in those dark outlines.
- ‘Put, even Francesca, who felt the supernatural as deeply,’ he would
- say, ‘beside the work of Siena, and one finds a faint impurity in his
- awe, a touch of ghostly terror, where love and humbleness had best
- been all.’ He had often told me of his hope that by filling his mind
- with those holy pictures he would help himself to attain at last to
- vision and ecstasy, and of his disappointment at never getting more
- than dreams of a curious and broken beauty. But of late he had added
- pictures of a different kind, French symbolistic pictures which he had
- bought for a few pounds from little-known painters, English and French
- pictures of the School of the English Pre-Raphaelites; and now he stood
- for a moment and said, ‘I have changed my taste. I am fascinated a
- little against my will by these faces, where I find the pallor of souls
- trembling between the excitement of the flesh and the excitement of the
- spirit, and by landscapes that are created by heightening the obscurity
- and disorder of nature. These landscapes do not stir the imagination
- to the energies of sanctity but as to orgaic dancing and prophetic
- frenzy.’ I saw with some resentment new images where the old ones had
- often made that long gray, dim, empty, echoing passage become to my
- eyes a vestibule of Eternity.
- Almost every detail of the chapel, which we entered by a narrow Gothic
- door, whose threshold had been worn smooth by the secret worshippers of
- the penal times, was vivid in my memory; for it was in this chapel that
- I had first, and when but a boy, been moved by the mediævalism which
- is now, I think, the governing influence in my life. The only thing
- that seemed new was a square bronze box which stood upon the altar
- before the six unlighted candles and the ebony crucifix, and was like
- those made in ancient times of more precious substances to hold the
- sacred books. Aherne made me sit down on an oak bench, and having bowed
- very low before the crucifix, took the bronze box from the altar, and
- sat down beside me with the box upon his knees.
- ‘You will perhaps have forgotten,’ he said, ‘most of what you have
- read about Joachim of Flora, for he is little more than a name to even
- the well read. He was an abbot in Cortale in the twelfth century,
- and is best known for his prophecy, in a book called _Expositio in
- Apocalypsin_, that the Kingdom of the Father was passed, the Kingdom
- of the Son passing, the Kingdom of the Spirit yet to come. The
- Kingdom of the Spirit was to be a complete triumph of the Spirit, the
- _spiritualis intelligentia_ he called it, over the dead letter. He
- had many followers among the more extreme Franciscans, and these were
- accused of possessing a secret book of his called the _Liber Inducens
- in Evangelium Æternum_. Again and again groups of visionaries were
- accused of possessing this terrible book, in which the freedom of the
- Renaissance lay hidden, until at last Pope Alexander IV. had it found
- and cast into the flames. I have here the greatest treasure the world
- contains. I have a copy of that book; and see what great artists have
- made the robes in which it is wrapped. The greater portion of the book
- itself is illuminated in the Byzantine style, which so few care for
- to-day, but which moves me because these tall, emaciated angels and
- saints seem to have less relation to the world about us than to an
- abstract pattern of flowing lines, that suggest an imagination absorbed
- in the contemplation of Eternity. Even if you do not care for so formal
- an art, you cannot help seeing that work where there is so much gold,
- and of that purple colour which has gold dissolved in it, was valued at
- a great price in its day. But it was only at the Renaissance the labour
- was spent upon it which has made it the priceless thing it is. The
- wooden boards of the cover show by the astrological allegories painted
- upon them, as by the style of painting itself, some craftsman of the
- school of Francesco Cossi of Ferrara, but the gold clasps and hinges
- are known to be the work of Benvenuto Cellini, who made likewise the
- bronze box and covered it with gods and demons, whose eyes are closed,
- to signify an absorption in the inner light.
- I took the book in my hands and began turning over the gilded,
- many-coloured pages, holding it close to the candle to discover the
- texture of the paper.
- ‘Where did you get this amazing book?’ I said. ‘If genuine, and I
- cannot judge by this light, you have discovered one of the most
- precious things in the world.’
- ‘It is certainly genuine,’ he replied. ‘When the original was
- destroyed, one copy alone remained, and was in the hands of a
- lute-player of Florence, and from him it passed to his son, and so
- from generation to generation until it came to the lute-player who
- was father to Benvenuto Cellini, and from Benvenuto Cellini to that
- Cardinal of Ferrara who released him from prison, and from him to
- a natural son, so from generation to generation, the story of its
- wandering passing on with it, until it came into the possession of
- the family of Aretino, and to Giulio Aretino, an artist and worker in
- metals, and student of the kabalistic heresies of Pico della Mirandola.
- He spent many nights with me at Rome, discussing philosophy; and at
- last I won his confidence so perfectly that he showed me this, his
- greatest treasure; and, finding how much I valued it, and feeling that
- he himself was growing old and beyond the help of its teaching, he sold
- it to me for no great sum, considering its great preciousness.’
- ‘What is the doctrine?’ I said. ‘Some mediæval straw-splitting about
- the nature of the Trinity, which is only useful to-day to show how many
- things are unimportant to us, which once shook the world?’
- ‘I could never make you understand,’ he said, with a sigh, ‘that
- nothing is unimportant in belief, but even you will admit that this
- book goes to the heart. Do you see the tables on which the commandments
- were written in Latin?’ I looked to the end of the room, opposite to
- the altar, and saw that the two marble tablets were gone, and that
- two large empty tablets of ivory, like large copies of the little
- tablets we set over our desks, had taken their place. ‘It has swept
- the commandments of the Father away,’ he went on, ‘and displaced the
- commandments of the Son by the commandments of the Holy Spirit. The
- first book is called _Fractura Tabularum_. In the first chapter it
- mentions the names of the great artists who made them graven things
- and the likeness of many things, and adored them and served them; and
- the second the names of the great wits who took the name of the Lord
- their God in vain; and that long third chapter, set with the emblems
- of sanctified faces, and having wings upon its borders, is the praise
- of breakers of the seventh day and wasters of the six days, who yet
- lived comely and pleasant days. Those two chapters tell of men and
- women who railed upon their parents, remembering that their god was
- older than the god of their parents; and that which has the sword of
- Michael for an emblem commends the kings that wrought secret murder and
- so won for their people a peace that was _amore somnoque gravata et
- vestibus versicoloribus_, heavy with love and sleep and many-coloured
- raiment; and that with the pale star at the closing has the lives of
- the noble youths who loved the wives of others and were transformed
- into memories, which have transformed many poorer hearts into sweet
- flames; and that with the winged head is the history of the robbers who
- lived upon the sea or in the desert, lives which it compares to the
- twittering of the string of a bow, _nervi stridentis instar_; and those
- two last, that are fire and gold, are devoted to the satirists who bore
- false witness against their neighbours and yet illustrated eternal
- wrath, and to those that have coveted more than other men the house of
- God, and all things that are His, which no man has seen and handled,
- except in madness and in dreams.
- ‘The second book is called _Lex Secreta_, and describes the true
- inspiration of action, the only Eternal Evangel; and ends with a
- vision, which he saw among the mountains of La Sila, of his disciples
- sitting throned in the blue deep of the air, and laughing aloud, with
- a laughter that was like the rustling of the wings of Time: _Cœlis in
- cœruleis ridentes sedebant discipuli mei super thronos: talis erat
- risus, qualis temporis pennati susurrus._’
- ‘I know little of Joachim of Flora,’ I said, ‘except that Dante set him
- in Paradise among the great doctors. If he held a heresy so singular, I
- cannot understand how no rumours of it came to the ears of Dante; and
- Dante made no peace with the enemies of the Church.’
- ‘Joachim of Flora acknowledged openly the authority of the Church, and
- even asked that all his published writings, and those to be published
- by his desire after his death, should be submitted to the censorship of
- the Pope. He considered that those whose work was to live and not to
- reveal were children and that the Pope was their Father; but he taught
- in secret that certain others, and in always increasing numbers, were
- elected, not to live, but to reveal that hidden substance of God which
- is colour and music and softness and a sweet odour; and that these
- have no father but the Holy Spirit. Just as poets and painters and
- musicians labour at their works, building them with lawless and lawful
- things alike, so long as they embody the beauty that is beyond the
- grave, these children of the Holy Spirit labour at their moments with
- eyes upon the shining substance on which Time has heaped the refuse of
- creation; for the world only exists to be a tale in the ears of coming
- generations; and terror and content, birth and death, love and hatred,
- and the fruit of the Tree, are but instruments for that supreme art
- which is to win us from life and gather us into eternity like doves
- into their dove-cots.
- ‘I shall go away in a little while and travel into many lands, that I
- may know all accidents and destinies, and when I return, will write
- my secret law upon those ivory tablets, just as poets and romance
- writers have written the principles of their art in prefaces; and when
- I know what principle of life, discoverable at first by imagination
- and instinct, I am to express, I will gather my pupils that they may
- discover their law in the study of my law, as poets and painters
- discover their own art of expression by the study of some Master. I
- know nothing certain as yet but this--I am to become completely alive,
- that is, completely passionate, for beauty is only another name for
- perfect passion. I shall create a world where the whole lives of men
- shall be articulated and simplified as if seventy years were but one
- moment, or as they were the leaping of a fish or the opening of a
- flower.’
- He was pacing up and down, and I listened to the fervour of his words
- and watched the excitement of his gestures with not a little concern.
- I had been accustomed to welcome the most singular speculations, and
- had always found them as harmless as the Persian cat who half closes
- her meditative eyes and stretches out her long claws before my fire.
- But now I would battle in the interests of orthodoxy, even of the
- commonplace: and yet could find nothing better to say than: ‘It is
- not necessary to judge everyone by the law, for we have also Christ’s
- commandment of love.’
- He turned and said, looking at me with shining eyes: ‘Jonathan Swift
- made a soul for the gentlemen of this city by hating his neighbour as
- himself.’
- ‘At any rate, you cannot deny that to teach so dangerous a doctrine is
- to accept a terrible responsibility.’
- ‘Leonardo da Vinci,’ he replied, ‘has this noble sentence: “The hope
- and desire of returning home to one’s former state is like the moth’s
- desire for the light; and the man who with constant longing awaits
- each new month and new year, deeming that the things he longs for are
- ever too late in coming, does not perceive that he is longing for his
- own destruction.” How, then, can the pathway which will lead us into
- the heart of God be other than dangerous? Why should you, who are no
- materialist, cherish the continuity and order of the world as those do
- who have only the world? You do not value the writers who will express
- nothing unless their reason understands how it will make what is called
- the right more easy; why, then, will you deny a like freedom to the
- supreme art, the art which is the foundation of all arts? Yes, I shall
- send out of this chapel saints, lovers, rebels and prophets: souls who
- will surround themselves with peace, as with a nest made with grass;
- and others over whom I shall weep. The dust shall fall for many years
- over this little box; and then I shall open it; and the tumults, which
- are, perhaps, the flames of the last day, shall come from under the
- lid.’
- I did not reason with him that night, because his excitement was great
- and I feared to make him angry; and when I called at his house a few
- days later, he was gone and his house was locked up and empty. I have
- deeply regretted my failure both to combat his heresy and to test the
- genuineness of his strange book. Since my conversion I have indeed done
- penance for an error which I was only able to measure after some years.
- II
- I was walking along one of the Dublin quays, on the side nearest the
- river, about ten years after our conversation, stopping from time
- to time to turn over the books upon an old bookstall, and thinking,
- curiously enough, of the terrible destiny of Michael Robartes, and his
- brotherhood; when I saw a tall and bent man walking slowly along the
- other side of the quay. I recognized, with a start, in a lifeless mask
- with dim eyes, the once resolute and delicate face of Owen Aherne. I
- crossed the quay quickly, but had not gone many yards before he turned
- away, as though he had seen me, and hurried down a side street; I
- followed, but only to lose him among the intricate streets on the north
- side of the river. During the next few weeks I inquired of everybody
- who had once known him, but he had made himself known to nobody; and I
- knocked, without result, at the door of his old house; and had nearly
- persuaded myself that I was mistaken, when I saw him again in a narrow
- street behind the Four Courts, and followed him to the door of his
- house.
- I laid my hand on his arm; he turned quite without surprise; and indeed
- it is possible that to him, whose inner life had soaked up the outer
- life, a parting of years was a parting from forenoon to afternoon.
- He stood holding the door half open, as though he would keep me from
- entering; and would perhaps have parted from me without further words
- had I not said: ‘Owen Aherne, you trusted me once, will you not trust
- me again, and tell me what has come of the ideas we discussed in this
- house ten years ago?--but perhaps you have already forgotten them.’
- ‘You have a right to hear,’ he said, ‘for since I have told you the
- ideas, I should tell you the extreme danger they contain, or rather the
- boundless wickedness they contain; but when you have heard this we must
- part, and part for ever, because I am lost, and must be hidden!’
- I followed him through the paved passage, and saw that its corners were
- choked, and the pictures gray, with dust and cobwebs; and that the
- dust and cobwebs which covered the ruby and sapphire of the saints on
- the window had made it very dim. He pointed to where the ivory tablets
- glimmered faintly in the dimness, and I saw that they were covered with
- small writing, and went up to them and began to read the writing. It
- was in Latin, and was an elaborate casuistry, illustrated with many
- examples, but whether from his own life or from the lives of others
- I do not know. I had read but a few sentences when I imagined that a
- faint perfume had begun to fill the room, and turning round asked Owen
- Aherne if he were lighting the incense.
- ‘No,’ he replied, and pointed where the thurible lay rusty and empty on
- one of the benches; as he spoke the faint perfume seemed to vanish, and
- I was persuaded I had imagined it.
- ‘Has the philosophy of the _Liber Inducens in Evangelium Æternum_ made
- you very unhappy?’ I said.
- ‘At first I was full of happiness,’ he replied, ‘for I felt a divine
- ecstasy, an immortal fire in every passion, in every hope, in every
- desire, in every dream; and I saw, in the shadows under leaves, in the
- hollow waters, in the eyes of men and women, its image, as in a mirror;
- and it was as though I was about to touch the Heart of God. Then all
- changed and I was full of misery, and I said to myself that I was
- caught in the glittering folds of an enormous serpent, and was falling
- with him through a fathomless abyss, and that henceforth the glittering
- folds were my world; and in my misery it was revealed to me that man
- can only come to that Heart through the sense of separation from it
- which we call sin, and I understood that I could not sin, because I
- had discovered the law of my being, and could only express or fail to
- express my being, and I understood that God has made a simple and an
- arbitrary law that we may sin and repent!’
- He had sat down on one of the wooden benches and now became silent, his
- bowed head and hanging arms and listless body having more of dejection
- than any image I have met with in life or in any art. I went and stood
- leaning against the altar, and watched him, not knowing what I should
- say; and I noticed his black closely-buttoned coat, his short hair,
- and shaven head, which preserved a memory of his priestly ambition,
- and understood how Catholicism had seized him in the midst of the
- vertigo he called philosophy; and I noticed his lightless eyes and his
- earth-coloured complexion, and understood how she had failed to do more
- than hold him on the margin: and I was full of an anguish of pity.
- ‘It may be,’ he went on, ‘that the angels whose hearts are shadows of
- the Divine Heart, and whose bodies are made of the Divine Intellect,
- may come to where their longing is always by a thirst for the divine
- ecstasy, the immortal fire, that is in passion, in hope, in desire, in
- dreams; but we whose hearts perish every moment, and whose bodies melt
- away like a sigh, must bow and obey!’
- I went nearer to him and said: ‘Prayer and repentance will make you
- like other men.’
- ‘No, no,’ he said, ‘I am not among those for whom Christ died, and this
- is why I must be hidden. I have a leprosy that even eternity cannot
- cure. I have seen the whole, and how can I come again to believe that a
- part is the whole? I have lost my soul because I have looked out of the
- eyes of the angels.’
- Suddenly I saw, or imagined that I saw, the room darken, and faint
- figures robed in purple, and lifting faint torches with arms that
- gleamed like silver, bending, above Owen Aherne; and I saw, or
- imagined that I saw, drops, as of burning gum, fall from the torches,
- and a heavy purple smoke, as of incense, come pouring from the flames
- and sweeping about us. Owen Aherne, more happy than I who have been
- half initiated into the Order of the Alchemical Rose, and protected
- perhaps by his great piety, had sunk again into dejection and
- listlessness, and saw none of these things; but my knees shook under
- me, for the purple-robed figures were less faint every moment, and now
- I could hear the hissing of the gum in the torches. They did not appear
- to see me, for their eyes were upon Owen Aherne; now and again I could
- hear them sigh as though with sorrow for his sorrow, and presently I
- heard words which I could not understand except that they were words of
- sorrow, and sweet as though immortal was talking to immortal. Then one
- of them waved her torch, and all the torches waved, and for a moment it
- was as though some great bird made of flames had fluttered its plumage,
- and a voice cried as from far up in the air: ‘He has charged even his
- angels with folly, and they also bow and obey; but let your heart
- mingle with our hearts, which are wrought of divine ecstasy, and your
- body with our bodies, which are wrought of divine intellect.’ And at
- that cry I understood that the Order of the Alchemical Rose was not of
- this earth, and that it was still seeking over this earth for whatever
- souls it could gather within its glittering net; and when all the faces
- turned towards me, and I saw the mild eyes and the unshaken eyelids, I
- was full of terror, and thought they were about to fling their torches
- upon me, so that all I held dear, all that bound me to spiritual and
- social order, would be burnt up, and my soul left naked and shivering
- among the winds that blow from beyond this world and from beyond the
- stars; and then a faint voice cried, ‘Why do you fly from our torches
- that were made out of the trees under which Christ wept in the Garden
- of Gethsemane? Why do you fly from our torches that were made out of
- sweet wood, after it had perished from the world and come to us who
- made it of old times with our breath?’
- It was not until the door of the house had closed behind my flight, and
- the noise of the street was breaking on my ears, that I came back to
- myself and to a little of my courage; and I have never dared to pass
- the house of Owen Aherne from that day, even though I believe him to
- have been driven into some distant country by the spirits whose name is
- legion, and whose throne is in the indefinite abyss, and whom he obeys
- and cannot see.
- THE ADORATION OF THE MAGI
- I WAS sitting reading late into the night a little after my last
- meeting with Aherne, when I heard a light knocking on my front door. I
- found upon the doorstep three very old men with stout sticks in their
- hands, who said they had been told I should be up and about, and that
- they were to tell me important things. I brought them into my study,
- and when the peacock curtains had closed behind us, I set their chairs
- for them close to the fire, for I saw that the frost was on their
- great-coats of frieze and upon the long beards that flowed almost to
- their waists. They took off their great-coats, and leaned over the
- fire warming their hands, and I saw that their clothes had much of the
- country of our time, but a little also, as it seemed to me, of the town
- life of a more courtly time. When they had warmed themselves--and they
- warmed themselves, I thought, less because of the cold of the night
- than because of a pleasure in warmth for the sake of warmth--they
- turned towards me, so that the light of the lamp fell full upon their
- weather-beaten faces, and told the story I am about to tell. Now one
- talked and now another, and they often interrupted one another, with
- a desire, like that of countrymen, when they tell a story, to leave
- no detail untold. When they had finished they made me take notes of
- whatever conversation they had quoted, so that I might have the exact
- words, and got up to go. When I asked them where they were going, and
- what they were doing, and by what names I should call them, they would
- tell me nothing, except that they had been commanded to travel over
- Ireland continually, and upon foot and at night, that they might live
- close to the stones and the trees and at the hours when the immortals
- are awake.
- I have let some years go by before writing out this story, for I am
- always in dread of the illusions which come of that inquietude of the
- veil of the Temple, which M. Mallarmé considers a characteristic of our
- times; and only write it now because I have grown to believe that there
- is no dangerous idea which does not become less dangerous when written
- out in sincere and careful English.
- The three old men were three brothers, who had lived in one of the
- western islands from their early manhood, and had cared all their lives
- for nothing except for those classical writers and old Gaelic writers
- who expounded an heroic and simple life; night after night in winter,
- Gaelic story-tellers would chant old poems to them over the poteen; and
- night after night in summer, when the Gaelic story-tellers were at work
- in the fields or away at the fishing, they would read to one another
- Virgil and Homer, for they would not enjoy in solitude, but as the
- ancients enjoyed. At last a man, who told them he was Michael Robartes,
- came to them in a fishing-boat, like St. Brandan drawn by some vision
- and called by some voice; and spoke of the coming again of the gods
- and the ancient things; and their hearts, which had never endured the
- body and pressure of our time, but only of distant times, found nothing
- unlikely in anything he told them, but accepted all simply and were
- happy. Years passed, and one day, when the oldest of the old men, who
- travelled in his youth and thought sometimes of other lands, looked
- out on the grey waters, on which the people see the dim outline of the
- Islands of the Young--the Happy Islands where the Gaelic heroes live
- the lives of Homer’s Phæacians--a voice came out of the air over the
- waters and told him of the death of Michael Robartes. They were still
- mourning when the next oldest of the old men fell asleep while reading
- out the Fifth Eclogue of Virgil, and a strange voice spoke through him,
- and bid them set out for Paris, where a woman lay dying, who would
- reveal to them the secret names of the gods, which can be perfectly
- spoken only when the mind is steeped in certain colours and certain
- sounds and certain odours; but at whose perfect speaking the immortals
- cease to be cries and shadows, and walk and talk with one like men and
- women.
- They left their island, at first much troubled at all they saw in the
- world, and came to Paris, and there the youngest met a person in a
- dream, who told him they were to wander about at hazard until those who
- had been guiding their footsteps had brought them to a street and a
- house, whose likeness was shown him in the dream. They wandered hither
- and thither for many days, but one morning they came into some narrow
- and shabby streets, on the south of the Seine, where women with pale
- faces and untidy hair looked at them out of the windows; and just as
- they were about to turn back because Wisdom could not have alighted in
- so foolish a neighbourhood, they came to the street and the house of
- the dream. The oldest of the old men, who still remembered some of the
- modern languages he had known in his youth, went up to the door and
- knocked, but when he had knocked, the next in age to him said it was
- not a good house, and could not be the house they were looking for, and
- urged him to ask for some one that they knew was not there and go away.
- The door was opened by an old over-dressed woman, who said, ‘O, you are
- her three kinsmen from Ireland. She has been expecting you all day.’
- The old men looked at one another and followed her upstairs, passing
- doors from which pale and untidy women thrust out their heads, and into
- a room where a beautiful woman lay asleep in a bed, with another woman
- sitting by her.
- The old woman said: ‘Yes, they have come at last; now she will be able
- to die in peace,’ and went out.
- ‘We have been deceived by devils,’ said one of the old men, ‘for the
- immortals would not speak through a woman like this.’
- ‘Yes,’ said another, ‘we have been deceived by devils, and we must go
- away quickly.’
- ‘Yes,’ said the third, ‘we have been deceived by devils, but let us
- kneel down for a little, for we are by the deathbed of one that has
- been beautiful.’ They knelt down, and the woman who sat by the bed, and
- seemed to be overcome with fear and awe, lowered her head. They watched
- for a little the face upon the pillow and wondered at its look, as of
- unquenchable desire, and at the porcelain-like refinement of the vessel
- in which so malevolent a flame had burned.
- Suddenly the second oldest of them crowed like a cock, and until the
- room seemed to shake with the crowing. The woman in the bed still
- slept on in her death-like sleep, but the woman who sat by her head
- crossed herself and grew pale, and the youngest of the old men cried
- out: ‘A devil has gone into him, and we must begone or it will go into
- us also.’ Before they could rise from their knees, a resonant chanting
- voice came from the lips that had crowed and said: ‘I am not a devil,
- but I am Hermes the Shepherd of the Dead, and I run upon the errands of
- the gods, and you have heard my sign, that has been my sign from the
- old days. Bow down before her from whose lips the secret names of the
- immortals, and of the things near their hearts, are about to come, that
- the immortals may come again into the world. Bow down, and understand
- that when they are about to overthrow the things that are to-day and
- bring the things that were yesterday, they have no one to help them,
- but one whom the things that are to-day have cast out. Bow down and
- very low, for they have chosen for their priestess this woman in whose
- heart all follies have gathered, and in whose body all desires have
- awaked; this woman who has been driven out of Time and has lain upon
- the bosom of Eternity. After you have bowed down the old things shall
- be again, and another Argo shall carry heroes over sea, and another
- Achilles beleaguer another Troy.’
- The voice ended with a sigh, and immediately the old man awoke out of
- sleep, and said: ‘Has a voice spoken through me, as it did when I fell
- asleep over my Virgil, or have I only been asleep?’
- The oldest of them said: ‘A voice has spoken through you. Where has
- your soul been while the voice was speaking through you?’
- ‘I do not know where my soul has been, but I dreamed I was under the
- roof of a manger, and I looked down and I saw an ox and an ass; and I
- saw a red cock perching on the hay-rack; and a woman hugging a child;
- and three old men, in armour studded with rubies, kneeling with their
- heads bowed very low in front of the woman and the child. While I was
- looking the cock crowed and a man with wings on his heels swept up
- through the air, and as he passed me, cried out: “Foolish old men, you
- had once all the wisdom of the stars.” I do not understand my dream or
- what it would have us do, but you who have heard the voice out of the
- wisdom of my sleep know what we have to do.’
- Then the oldest of the old men told him they were to take the
- parchments they had brought with them out of their pockets and spread
- them on the ground. When they had spread them on the ground, they took
- out of their pockets their pens, made of three feathers, which had
- fallen from the wing of the old eagle that is believed to have talked
- of wisdom with St. Patrick.
- ‘He meant, I think,’ said the youngest, as he put their ink-bottles
- by the side of the rolls of parchment, ‘that when people are good the
- world likes them and takes possession of them, and so eternity comes
- through people who are not good or who have been forgotten. Perhaps
- Christianity was good and the world liked it, so now it is going away
- and the immortals are beginning to awake.’
- ‘What you say has no wisdom,’ said the oldest, ‘because if there are
- many immortals, there cannot be only one immortal.’
- Then the woman in the bed sat up and looked about her with wild eyes;
- and the oldest of the old men said: ‘Lady, we have come to write down
- the secret names,’ and at his words a look of great joy came into her
- face. Presently she began to speak slowly, and yet eagerly, as though
- she knew she had but a little while to live, and in the Gaelic of their
- own country; and she spoke to them many secret powerful names, and of
- the colours, and odours, and weapons, and instruments of music and
- instruments of handicraft belonging to the owners of those names; but
- most about the Sidhe of Ireland and of their love for the Cauldron, and
- the Whetstone, and the Sword, and the Spear. Then she tossed feebly
- for a while and moaned, and when she spoke again it was in so faint a
- murmur that the woman who sat by the bed leaned down to listen, and
- while she was listening the spirit went out of the body.
- Then the oldest of the old men said in French to the woman who was
- still bending over the bed: ‘There must have been yet one name which
- she had not given us, for she murmured a name while the spirit was
- going out of the body,’ and the woman said, ‘She was but murmuring
- over the name of a symbolist painter she was fond of. He used to go to
- something he called the Black Mass, and it was he who taught her to see
- visions and to hear voices. She met him for the first time a few months
- ago, and we have had no peace from that day because of her talk about
- visions and about voices. Why! It was only last night that I dreamed I
- saw a man with a red beard and red hair, and dressed in red, standing
- by my bedside. He held a rose in one hand, and tore it in pieces with
- the other hand, and the petals drifted about the room, and became
- beautiful people who began to dance slowly. When I woke up I was all in
- a heat with terror.’
- This is all the old men told me, and when I think of their speech and
- of their silence, of their coming and of their going, I am almost
- persuaded that had I gone out of the house after they had gone out of
- it, I should have found no footsteps on the snow. They may, for all I
- or any man can say, have been themselves immortals: immortal demons,
- come to put an untrue story into my mind for some purpose I do not
- understand. Whatever they were, I have turned into a pathway which
- will lead me from them and from the Order of the Alchemical Rose. I
- no longer live an elaborate and haughty life, but seek to lose myself
- among the prayers and the sorrows of the multitude. I pray best in poor
- chapels, where the frieze coats brush by me as I kneel, and when I pray
- against the demons I repeat a prayer which was made I know not how many
- centuries ago to help some poor Gaelic man or woman who had suffered
- with a suffering like mine.
- _Seacht b-pàidreacha fó seacht
- Chuir Muire faoi n-a Mac,
- Chuir Brighid faoi n-a brat,
- Chuir Dia faoi n-a neart,
- Eidir sinn ‘san Sluagh Sidhe,
- Eidir sinn ‘san Sluagh Gaoith._
- Seven paters seven times,
- Send Mary by her Son,
- Send Bridget by her mantle,
- Send God by His strength,
- Between us and the faery host,
- Between us and the demons of the air.
- JOHN SHERMAN
- AND
- DHOYA:
- TWO EARLY STORIES
- _Republished by kind permission of Mr. T. Fisher Unwin._
- Having been persuaded somewhat against my judgment to include these
- early stories, I have read them for the first time these many years.
- They have come to interest me very deeply; for I am something of an
- astrologer, and can see in them a young man--was I twenty-three? and
- we Irish ripen slowly--born when the Water-Carrier was on the horizon,
- at pains to overcome Saturn in Saturn’s hour, just as I can see in
- much that follows his struggle with the still all-too-unconquered
- Moon, and at last, as I think, the summons of the prouder Sun. Sligo,
- where I had lived as a child and spent some months or weeks of every
- year till long after, is Ballah, and Pool Dhoya is at the river mouth
- there, and he who gave me all of Sherman that was not born at the
- rising of the Water-Carrier has still the bronze upon his face, and is
- at this moment, it may be, in his walled garden, wondering, as he did
- twenty years ago, whether he will ever mend the broken glass of the
- conservatory, where I am not too young to recollect the vine-trees and
- grapes that did not ripen.
- W. B. YEATS.
- _November 14th, 1907._
- JOHN SHERMAN
- FIRST PART
- JOHN SHERMAN LEAVES BALLAH
- I
- IN the west of Ireland, on the 9th of December, in the town of Ballah,
- in the Imperial Hotel there was a single guest, clerical and youthful.
- With the exception of a stray commercial traveller, who stopped once
- for a night, there had been nobody for a whole month but this guest,
- and now he was thinking of going away. The town, full enough in summer
- of trout and salmon fishers, slept all winter like the bears.
- On the evening of the 9th of December, in the coffee-room of the
- Imperial Hotel, there was nobody but this guest. The guest was
- irritated. It had rained all day, and now that it was clearing up night
- had almost fallen. He had packed his portmanteau; his stockings, his
- clothes-brush, his razor, his dress shoes were each in their corner,
- and now he had nothing to do. He had tried the paper that was lying on
- the table. He did not agree with its politics.
- The waiter was playing an accordion in a little room over the stairs.
- The guest’s irritation increased, for the more he thought about it
- the more he perceived that the accordion was badly played. There was
- a piano in the coffee-room; he sat down at it and played the tune
- correctly, as loudly as possible. The waiter took no notice. He did not
- know that he was being played for. He was wholly absorbed in his own
- playing, and besides he was old, obstinate, and deaf. The guest could
- stand it no longer. He rang for the waiter, and then, remembering that
- he did not need anything, went out before he came.
- He went through Martin’s Street and Peter’s Lane, and turned down by
- the burnt house at the corner of the fish-market, picking his way
- towards the bridge. The town was dripping, but the rain was almost
- over. The large drops fell seldomer and seldomer into the puddles. It
- was the hour of ducks. Three or four had squeezed themselves under a
- gate, and were now splashing about in the gutter of the main street.
- There was scarcely anyone abroad. Once or twice a countryman went by
- in yellow gaiters covered with mud and looked at the guest. Once an
- old woman with a basket of clothes, recognizing the Protestant curate’s
- _locum tenens_, made a low curtsey.
- The clouds gradually drifted away, the twilight deepened and the stars
- came out. The guest, having bought some cigarettes, had spread his
- waterproof on the parapet of the bridge and was now leaning his elbows
- upon it, looking at the river and feeling at last quite tranquil.
- His meditations, he repeated, to himself, were plated with silver by
- the stars. The water slid noiselessly, and one or two of the larger
- stars made little roadways of fire into the darkness. The light from a
- distant casement made also its roadway. Once or twice a fish leaped.
- Along the banks were the vague shadows of houses, seeming like phantoms
- gathering to drink.
- Yes; he felt now quite contented with the world. Amidst his enjoyment
- of the shadows and the river--a veritable festival of silence--was
- mixed pleasantly the knowledge that, as he leant there with the light
- of a neighbouring gas-jet flickering faintly on his refined form and
- nervous face and glancing from the little medal of some Anglican order
- that hung upon his watch-guard, he must have seemed--if there had been
- any to witness--a being of a different kind to the inhabitants--at once
- rough and conventional--of this half-deserted town. Between these two
- feelings the unworldly and the worldly tossed a leaping wave of perfect
- enjoyment. How pleasantly conscious of his own identity it made him
- when he thought how he and not those whose birthright it was, felt most
- the beauty of these shadows and this river! For him who had read much,
- seen operas and plays, known religious experiences, and written verse
- to a waterfall in Switzerland, and not for those who dwelt upon its
- borders for their whole lives, did this river raise a tumult of images
- and wonders. What meaning it had for them he could not imagine. Some
- meaning surely it must have!
- As he gazed out into the darkness, spinning a web of thoughts from
- himself to the river, from the river to himself, he saw, with a corner
- of his eye, a spot of red light moving in the air at the other end of
- the bridge. He turned towards it. It came closer and closer, there
- appearing behind it the while a man and a cigar. The man carried in one
- hand a mass of fishing-line covered with hooks, and in the other a tin
- porringer full of bait.
- ‘Good evening, Howard.’
- ‘Good evening,’ answered the guest, taking his elbows off the parapet
- and looking in a preoccupied way at the man with the hooks. It was only
- gradually he remembered that he was in Ballah among the barbarians, for
- his mind had strayed from the last evening flies, making circles on
- the water beneath, to the devil’s song against ‘the little spirits’ in
- _Mefistofele_. Looking down at the stone parapet he considered a moment
- and then burst out--
- ‘Sherman, how do you stand this place--you who have thoughts above mere
- eating and sleeping and are not always grinding at the stubble mill?
- Here everybody lives in the eighteenth century--the squalid century.
- Well, I am going to-morrow, you know. Thank Heaven, I am done with your
- grey streets and grey minds! The curate must come home, sick or well.
- I have a religious essay to write, and besides I should die. Think of
- that old fellow at the corner there, our most important parishioner.
- There are no more hairs on his head than thoughts in his skull. To
- merely look at him is to rob life of its dignity. Then there is nothing
- in the shops but school-books and Sunday-school prizes. Excellent, no
- doubt, for anyone who has not had to read as many as I have. Such a
- choir! such rain!’
- ‘You need some occupation peculiar to the place,’ said the other,
- baiting his hooks with worms out of the little porringer. ‘I catch
- eels. You should set some night-lines too. You bait them with worms in
- this way, and put them among the weeds at the edge of the river. In the
- morning you find an eel or two, if you have good fortune, turning round
- and round and making the weeds sway. I shall catch a great many after
- this rain.’
- ‘What a suggestion! Do you mean to stay here,’ said Howard, ‘till your
- mind rots like our most important parishioner’s?’
- ‘No, no! To be quite frank with you,’ replied the other, ‘I have some
- good looks and shall try to turn them to account by going away from
- here pretty soon and trying to persuade some girl with money to fall in
- love with me. I shall not be altogether a bad match, you see, because
- after she has made me a little prosperous my uncle will die and make
- me much more so. I wish to be able always to remain a lounger. Yes, I
- shall marry money. My mother has set her heart on it, and I am not,
- you see, the kind of person who falls in love inconveniently. For the
- present--’
- ‘You are vegetating,’ interrupted the other.
- ‘No, I am seeing the world. In your big towns a man finds his minority
- and knows nothing outside its border. He knows only the people like
- himself. But here one chats with the whole world in a day’s walk, for
- every man one meets is a class. The knowledge I am picking up may be
- useful to me when I enter the great cities and their ignorance. But I
- have lines to set. Come with me. I would ask you home, but you and my
- mother, you know, do not get on well.’
- ‘I could not live with anyone I did not believe in,’ said Howard; ‘you
- are so different from me. You can live with mere facts, and that is
- why, I suppose, your schemes are so mercenary. Before this beautiful
- river, these stars, these great purple shadows, do you not feel like
- an insect in a flower? As for me, I also have planned my future. Not
- too near or too far from a great city, I see myself in a cottage
- with diamond panes, sitting by the fire. There are books everywhere
- and etchings on the wall; on the table is a manuscript essay on some
- religious matter. Perhaps I shall marry some day. Probably not, for I
- shall ask so much. Certainly I shall not marry for money, for I hold
- that when we have lost the directness and sincerity of our nature we
- have no compass. If we once break it the world grows trackless.’
- ‘Good-bye,’ said Sherman, briskly; ‘I have baited the last hook. Your
- schemes suit you, but a sluggish fellow like me, poor devil, who wishes
- to lounge through the world, would find them expensive.’
- They parted; Sherman to set his lines and Howard to his hotel in high
- spirits, for it seemed to him he had been eloquent. The billiard-room,
- which opened on the street, was lighted up. A few young men came round
- to play sometimes. He went in, for among these provincial youths he
- felt distinguished; besides, he was a really good player. As he came
- in one of the players missed and swore. Howard reproved him with a
- look. He joined the play for a time, and then catching sight through a
- distant door of the hotel-keeper’s wife putting a kettle on the hob he
- hurried off, and, drawing a chair to the fire, began one of those long
- gossips about everybody’s affairs peculiar to the cloth.
- As Sherman, having set his lines, returned home, he passed a
- tobacconist’s--a sweet-shop and tobacconist’s in one--the only shop
- in town, except public-houses, that remained open. The tobacconist
- was standing in his door, and, recognizing one who dealt consistently
- with a rival at the other end of the town, muttered: ‘There goes that
- Jack o’ Dreams; been fishing most likely. Ugh!’ Sherman paused for a
- moment as he repassed the bridge and looked at the water, on which now
- a new-risen and crescent moon was shining dimly. How full of memories
- it was to him! what playmates and boyish adventures did it not bring to
- mind! To him it seemed to say, ‘Stay near to me,’ as to Howard it had
- said, ‘Go yonder, to those other joys and other sceneries I have told
- you of.’ It bade him who loved stay still and dream, and gave flying
- feet to him who imagined.
- II
- The house where Sherman and his mother lived was one of those bare
- houses so common in country towns. Their dashed fronts mounting above
- empty pavements have a kind of dignity in their utilitarianism. They
- seem to say, ‘Fashion has not made us, nor ever do its caprices pass
- our sand-cleaned doorsteps.’ On every basement window is the same dingy
- wire blind; on every door the same brass knocker. Custom everywhere!
- ‘So much the longer,’ the blinds seem to say, ‘have eyes glanced
- through us’; and the knockers to murmur, ‘And fingers lifted us.’
- No. 15, Stephens’ Row, was in no manner peculiar among its twenty
- fellows. The chairs in the drawing-room facing the street were of heavy
- mahogany with horsehair cushions worn at the corners. On the round
- table was somebody’s commentary on the New Testament laid like the
- spokes of a wheel on a table-cover of American oilcloth with stamped
- Japanese figures half worn away. The room was seldom used, for Mrs.
- Sherman was solitary because silent. In this room the dressmaker sat
- twice a year, and here the rector’s wife used every month or so to
- drink a cup of tea. It was quite clean. There was not a fly-mark on the
- mirror, and all summer the fern in the grate was constantly changed.
- Behind this room and overlooking the garden was the parlour, where
- cane-bottomed chairs took the place of mahogany. Sherman had lived here
- with his mother all his life, and their old servant hardly remembered
- having lived anywhere else; and soon she would absolutely cease to
- remember the world she knew before she saw the four walls of this
- house, for every day she forgot something fresh. The son was almost
- thirty, the mother fifty, and the servant near seventy. Every year they
- had two hundred pounds among them, and once a year the son got a new
- suit of clothes and went into the drawing-room to look at himself in
- the mirror.
- On the morning of the 10th of December Mrs. Sherman was down before her
- son. A spare, delicate-featured woman, with somewhat thin lips tightly
- closed as with silent people, and eyes at once gentle and distrustful,
- tempering the hardness of the lips. She helped the servant to set the
- table, and then, for her old-fashioned ideas would not allow her to
- rest, began to knit, often interrupting her knitting to go into the
- kitchen or to listen at the foot of the stairs. At last, hearing a
- sound upstairs, she put the eggs down to boil, muttering the while,
- and began again to knit. When her son appeared she received him with a
- smile.
- ‘Late again, mother,’ he said.
- ‘The young should sleep,’ she answered, for to her he seemed still a
- boy.
- She had finished her breakfast some time before the young man, and
- because it would have appeared very wrong to her to leave the table,
- she sat on knitting behind the tea-urn: an industry the benefit of
- which was felt by many poor children--almost the only neighbours she
- had a good word for.
- ‘Mother,’ said the young man, presently, ‘your friend the _locum
- tenens_ is off to-day.’
- ‘A good riddance.’
- ‘Why are you so hard on him? He talked intelligently when here, I
- thought,’ answered her son.
- ‘I do not like his theology,’ she replied, ‘nor his way of running
- about and flirting with this body and that body, nor his way of
- chattering while he buttons and unbuttons his gloves.’
- ‘You forget he is a man of the great world, and has about him a manner
- that must seem strange to us.’
- ‘Oh, he might do very well,’ she answered, ‘for one of those Carton
- girls at the rectory.’
- ‘That eldest girl is a good girl,’ replied her son.
- ‘She looks down on us all, and thinks herself intellectual,’ she
- went on. ‘I remember when girls were content with their catechism
- and their Bibles and a little practice at the piano, maybe, for an
- accomplishment. What does any one want more? It is all pride.’
- ‘You used to like her as a child,’ said the young man.
- ‘I like all children.’
- Sherman having finished his breakfast, took a book of travels in one
- hand and a trowel in the other and went out into the garden. Having
- looked under the parlour window for the first tulip shoots, he went
- down to the further end and began covering some sea-kale for forcing.
- He had not been long at work when the servant brought him a letter.
- There was a stone roller at one side of the grass plot. He sat down
- upon it, and taking the letter between his finger and thumb began
- looking at it with an air that said: ‘Well! I know what you mean.’ He
- remained long thus without opening it, the book lying beside him on the
- roller.
- The garden--the letter--the book! You have there the three symbols of
- his life. Every morning he worked in that garden among the sights and
- sounds of nature. Month by month he planted and hoed and dug there. In
- the middle he had set a hedge that divided the garden in two. Above
- the hedge were flowers; below it, vegetables. At the furthest end from
- the house, lapping broken masonry full of wallflowers, the river said,
- month after month to all upon its banks, ‘Hush!’ He dined at two with
- perfect regularity, and in the afternoon went out to shoot or walk.
- At twilight he set night-lines. Later on he read. He had not many
- books--a Shakespeare, Mungo Park’s travels, a few two-shilling novels,
- _Percy’s Reliques_, and a volume on etiquette. He seldom varied his
- occupations. He had no profession. The town talked of it. They said:
- ‘He lives upon his mother,’ and were very angry. They never let him
- see this, however, for it was generally understood he would be a
- dangerous fellow to rouse; but there was an uncle from whom Sherman had
- expectations who sometimes wrote remonstrating. Mrs. Sherman resented
- these letters, for she was afraid of her son going away to seek his
- fortune--perhaps even in America. Now this matter preyed somewhat on
- Sherman. For three years or so he had been trying to make his mind up
- and come to some decision. Sometimes when reading he would start and
- press his lips together and knit his brows for a moment.
- It will now be seen why the garden, the book, and the letter were
- the three symbols of his life, summing up as they did his love of
- out-of-door doings, his meditations, his anxieties. His life in the
- garden had granted serenity to his forehead, the reading of his few
- books had filled his eyes with reverie, and the feeling that he was not
- quite a good citizen had given a slight and occasional trembling to his
- lips.
- He opened the letter. Its contents were what he had long expected.
- His uncle offered to take him into his office. He laid it spread
- out before him--a foot on each margin, right and left--and looked at
- it, turning the matter over and over in his mind. Would he go? would
- he stay? He did not like the idea much. The lounger in him did not
- enjoy the thought of London. Gradually his mind wandered away into
- scheming--infinite scheming--what would he do if he went, what would he
- do if he did not go?
- A beetle, attracted by the faint sunlight, had crawled out of its hole.
- It saw the paper and crept on to it, the better to catch the sunlight.
- Sherman saw the beetle but his mind was not occupied with it. ‘Shall I
- tell Mary Carton?’ he was thinking. Mary had long been his adviser and
- friend. She was, indeed, everybody’s adviser. Yes, he would ask her
- what to do. Then again he thought--no, he would decide for himself. The
- beetle began to move. ‘If it goes off the paper by the top I will ask
- her--if by the bottom I will not.’
- The beetle went off by the top. He got up with an air of decision and
- went into the tool-house and began sorting seeds and picking out the
- light ones, sometimes stopping to watch a spider; for he knew he must
- wait till the afternoon to see Mary Carton. The tool-house was a
- favourite place with him. He often read there and watched the spiders
- in the corners.
- At dinner he was preoccupied.
- ‘Mother,’ he said, ‘would you much mind if we went away from this?’
- ‘I have often told you,’ she answered, ‘I do not like one place better
- than another. I like them all equally little.’
- After dinner he went again into the tool-house. This time he did not
- sort seeds--only watched the spiders.
- III
- Towards evening he went out. The pale sunshine of winter flickered
- on his path. The wind blew the straws about. He grew more and more
- melancholy. A dog of his acquaintance was chasing rabbits in a field.
- He had never been known to catch one, and since his youth had never
- seen one, for he was almost wholly blind. They were his form of the
- eternal chimera. The dog left the field and followed with a friendly
- sniff.
- They came together to the rectory. Mary Carton was not in. There was a
- children’s practice in the school-house. They went thither.
- A child of four or five with a swelling on its face was sitting
- under a wall opposite the school door, waiting to make faces at the
- Protestant children as they came out. Catching sight of the dog she
- seemed to debate in her mind whether to throw a stone at it or call
- it to her. She threw the stone and made it run. In after times he
- remembered all these things as though they were of importance.
- He opened the latched green door and went in. About twenty children
- were singing in shrill voices, standing in a row at the further end. At
- the harmonium he recognised Mary Carton, who nodded to him and went on
- with her playing. The whitewashed walls were covered with glazed prints
- of animals; at the further end was a large map of Europe; by a fire at
- the near end was a table with the remains of tea. This tea was an idea
- of Mary’s. They had tea and cake first, afterwards the singing. The
- floor was covered with crumbs. The fire was burning brightly. Sherman
- sat down beside it. A child with a great deal of oil in her hair was
- sitting on the end of a form at the other side.
- ‘Look,’ she whispered, ‘I have been sent away. At any rate they are
- further from the fire. They have to be near the harmonium. I would not
- sing. Do you like hymns? I don’t. Will you have a cup of tea? I can
- make it quite well. See, I did not spill a drop. Have you enough milk?’
- It was a cup full of milk--children’s tea. ‘Look, there is a mouse
- carrying away a crumb. Hush!’
- They sat there, the child watching the mouse, Sherman pondering on his
- letter, until the music ceased and the children came tramping down the
- room. The mouse having fled, Sherman’s self-appointed hostess got up
- with a sigh and went out with the others.
- Mary Carton closed the harmonium and came towards Sherman. Her face and
- all her movements showed a gentle decision of character. Her glance was
- serene, her features regular, her figure at the same time ample and
- beautifully moulded; her dress plain yet not without a certain air of
- distinction. In a different society she would have had many suitors.
- But she was of a type that in country towns does not get married
- at all. Its beauty is too lacking in pink and white, its nature in
- that small assertiveness admired for character by the uninstructed.
- Elsewhere she would have known her own beauty--as it is right that all
- the beautiful should--and have learnt how to display it, to add gesture
- to her calm and more of mirth and smiles to her grave cheerfulness. As
- it was, her manner was much older than herself.
- She sat down by Sherman with the air of an old friend. They had long
- been accustomed to consult together on every matter. They were such
- good friends they had never fallen in love with each other. Perfect
- love and perfect friendship are indeed incompatible; for the one is a
- battlefield where shadows war beside the combatants, and the other a
- placid country where Consultation has her dwelling.
- These two were such good friends that the most gossiping townspeople
- had given them up with a sigh. The doctor’s wife, a faded beauty and
- devoted romance reader, said one day, as they passed, ‘They are such
- cold creatures’; the old maid who kept the Berlin-wool shop remarked,
- ‘They are not of the marrying sort’; and now their comings and goings
- were no longed noticed. Nothing had ever come to break in on their
- quiet companionship and give obscurity as a dwelling-place for the
- needed illusions. Had one been weak and the other strong, one plain and
- the other handsome, one guide and the other guided, one wise and the
- other foolish, love might have found them out in a moment, for love is
- based on inequality as friendship is on equality.
- ‘John,’ said Mary Carton, warming her hands at the fire, ‘I have had a
- troublesome day. Did you come to help me teach the children to sing? It
- was good of you: you were just too late.’
- ‘No,’ he answered, ‘I have come to be your pupil. I am always your
- pupil.’
- ‘Yes, and a most disobedient one.’
- ‘Well, advise me this time at any rate. My uncle has written, offering
- me a hundred pounds a year to begin with in his London office. Am I to
- go?’
- ‘You know quite well my answer,’ she said.
- ‘Indeed I do not. Why should I go? I am contented here. I am now making
- my garden ready for spring. Later on there will be trout fishing and
- saunters by the edge of the river in the evening when the bats are
- flickering about. In July there will be races. I enjoy the bustle. I
- enjoy life here. When anything annoys me I keep away from it, that is
- all. You know I am always busy. I have occupation and friends and am
- quite contented.’
- ‘It is a great loss to many of us, but you must go, John,’ she said.
- ‘For you know you will be old some day, and perhaps when the vitality
- of youth is gone you will feel that your life is empty and find that
- you are too old to change it; and you will give up, perhaps, trying
- to be happy and likeable and become as the rest are. I think I can
- see you,’ she said, with a laugh, ‘a hypochondriac, like Gorman, the
- retired excise officer, or with a red nose like Dr. Stephens, or
- growing like Peters, the elderly cattle merchant, who starves his
- horse.’
- ‘They were bad material to begin with,’ he answered, ‘and, besides, I
- cannot take my mother away with me at her age, and I cannot leave her
- alone.’
- ‘What annoyance it may be,’ she answered, ‘will soon be forgotten. You
- will be able to give her many more comforts. We women--we all like to
- be dressed well and have pleasant rooms to sit in, and a young man at
- your age should not be idle. You must go away from this little backward
- place. We shall miss you, but you are clever and must go and work with
- other men and have your talents admitted.’
- ‘How emulous you would have me! Perhaps I shall be well-to-do some day;
- meanwhile I only wish to stay here with my friends.’
- She went over to the window and looked out with her face turned from
- him. The evening light cast a long shadow behind her on the floor.
- After some moments, she said, ‘I see people ploughing on the slope of
- the hill. There are people working on a house to the right. Everywhere
- there are people busy,’ and with a slight tremble in her voice she
- added, ‘and, John, nowhere are there any doing what they wish. One has
- to think of so many things--of duty and God.’
- ‘Mary, I didn’t know you were so religious.’
- Coming towards him with a smile, she said, ‘No more did I, perhaps.
- But sometimes the self in one is very strong. One has to think a great
- deal and reason with it. Yet I try hard to lose myself in things about
- me. These children now--I often lie awake thinking about them. That
- child who was talking to you is often on my mind. I do not know what
- will happen to her. She makes me unhappy. I am afraid she is not a good
- child at all. I am afraid she is not taught well at home. I try hard to
- be gentle and patient with her. I am a little displeased with myself
- to-day, so I have lectured you. There! I have made my confession. But,’
- she added, taking one of his hands in both hers and reddening, ‘you
- must go away. You must not be idle. You will gain everything.’
- As she stood there with bright eyes, the light of evening about her,
- Sherman for perhaps the first time saw how beautiful she was, and was
- flattered by her interest. For the first time also her presence did not
- make him at peace with the world.
- ‘Will you be an obedient pupil?’
- ‘You know so much more than I do,’ he answered, ‘and are so much wiser.
- I will write to my uncle and agree to his offer.’
- ‘Now you must go home,’ she said. ‘You must not keep your mother
- waiting for her tea. There! I have raked the fire out. We must not
- forget to lock the door behind us.’
- As they stood on the doorstep the wind blew a whirl of dead leaves
- about them.
- ‘They are my old thoughts,’ he said; ‘see, they are all withered.’
- They walked together silently. At the vicarage he left her and went
- homeward.
- The deserted flour-store at the corner of two roads, the house that
- had been burnt hollow ten years before and still lifted its blackened
- beams, the straggling and leafless fruit-trees rising above garden
- walls, the church where he was christened--these foster-mothers of his
- infancy seemed to nod and shake their heads over him.
- ‘Mother,’ he said, hurriedly entering the room, ‘we are going to
- London.’
- ‘As you wish. I always knew you would be a rolling stone,’ she
- answered, and went out to tell the servant that as soon as she had
- finished the week’s washing they must pack up everything, for they were
- going to London.
- ‘Yes, we must pack up,’ said the old peasant; she did not stop peeling
- the onion in her hand--she had not comprehended. In the middle of the
- night she suddenly started up in bed with a pale face and a prayer to
- the Virgin whose image hung over her head--she had now comprehended.
- IV
- On January the 5th, about two in the afternoon, Sherman sat on the
- deck of the steamer _Lavinia_ enjoying a period of sunshine between
- two showers. The steamer _Lavinia_ was a cattle-boat. It had been his
- wish to travel by some more expensive route, but his mother, with
- her old-fashioned ideas of duty, would not hear of it, and now, as
- he foresaw, was extremely uncomfortable below, while he, who was a
- good sailor, was pretty happy on deck, and would have been quite so
- if the pigs would only tire of their continual squealing. With the
- exception of a very dirty old woman sitting by a crate of geese, all
- the passengers but himself were below. This old woman made the journey
- monthly with geese for the Liverpool market.
- Sherman was dreaming. He began to feel very desolate, and commenced
- a letter to Mary Carton in his notebook to state this fact. He was
- a laborious and unpractised writer, and found it helped him to make
- a pencil copy. Sometimes he stopped and watched the puffin sleeping
- on the waves. Each one of them had its head tucked in in a somewhat
- different way. ‘That is because their characters are different,’ he
- thought.
- Gradually he began to notice a great many corks floating by, one after
- the other. The old woman saw them too, and said, waking out of a half
- sleep: ‘Misther John Sherman, we will be in the Mersey before evening.
- Why are ye goin’ among them savages in London, Misther John? Why don’t
- ye stay among your own people--for what have we in this life but a
- mouthful of air?’
- SECOND PART
- MARGARET LELAND
- I
- Sherman and his mother rented a small house on the north side of St.
- Peter’s Square, Hammersmith. The front windows looked out on to the
- old rank and green square, the windows behind on to a little patch
- of garden round which the houses gathered and pressed as though they
- already longed to trample it out. In this garden was a single tall pear
- tree that never bore fruit.
- Three years passed by without any notable event. Sherman went every day
- to his office in Tower Hill Street, abused his work a great deal, and
- was not unhappy perhaps. He was probably a bad clerk, but then nobody
- was very exacting with the nephew of the head of the firm.
- The firm of Sherman and Saunders, ship-brokers, was a long-established,
- old-fashioned house. Saunders had been dead some years and old Michael
- Sherman ruled alone--an old bachelor full of family pride and pride
- in his wealth. He lived, for all that, in a very simple fashion. His
- mahogany furniture was a little solider than other people’s perhaps.
- He did not understand display. Display finds its excuse in some taste
- good or bad, and in a long industrious life Michael Sherman had never
- found leisure to form one. He seemed to live only from habit. Year by
- year he grew more silent, gradually ceasing to regard anything but his
- family and his ships. His family were represented by his nephew and his
- nephew’s mother. He did not feel much affection for them. He believed
- in his family--that was all. To remind him of the other goal of his
- thoughts hung round his private office pictures with such inscriptions
- as ‘S.S. _Indus_ at the Cape of Good Hope,’ ‘The barque _Mary_ in the
- Mozambique Channel,’ ‘The barque _Livingstone_ at Port Said,’ and
- many more. Every rope was drawn accurately with a ruler, and here and
- there were added distant vessels sailing proudly by with all that
- indifference to perspective peculiar to the drawings of sailors. On
- every ship was the flag of the firm spread out to show the letters.
- No man cared for old Michael Sherman. Every one liked John. Both were
- silent, but the young man had sometimes a talkative fit. The old man
- lived for his ledger, the young man for his dreams.
- In spite of all these differences, the uncle was on the whole pleased
- with the nephew. He noticed a certain stolidity that was of the family.
- It sometimes irritated others. It pleased him. He saw a hundred
- indications besides that made him say, ‘He is a true Sherman. We
- Shermans begin that way and give up frivolity as we grow old. We are
- all the same in the end.’
- * * * * *
- Mrs. Sherman and her son had but a small round of acquaintances--a few
- rich people, clients of the house of Sherman and Saunders for the most
- part. Among these was a Miss Margaret Leland who lived with her mother,
- the widow of the late Henry Leland, ship-broker, on the eastern side
- of St. Peter’s Square. Their house was larger than the Shermans’, and
- noticeable among its fellows by the newly-painted hall-door. Within
- on every side were bronzes and china vases and heavy curtains. In all
- were displayed the curious and vagrant taste of Margaret Leland: the
- rich Italian and mediæval draperies of pre-Raphaelite taste jostling
- the brightest and vulgarest products of more native and Saxon
- schools; vases of the most artistic shape and colour side by side
- with artificial flowers and stuffed birds. This house belonged to the
- Lelands. They had bought it in less prosperous days, and having altered
- it according to their taste and the need of their growing welfare could
- not decide to leave it.
- Sherman was an occasional caller at the Lelands, and had certainly a
- liking, though not a very deep one, for Margaret. As yet he knew little
- more about her than that she wore the most fascinating hats, that the
- late Lord Lytton was her favourite author, and that she hated frogs. It
- is clear that she did not know that a French writer on magic says the
- luxurious and extravagant hate frogs because they are cold, solitary,
- and dreary. Had she done so, she would have been more cautious about
- revealing her tastes.
- For the rest, John Sherman was forgetting the town of Ballah. He
- corresponded indeed with Mary Carton, but his laborious letter-writing
- made his letters fewer and fewer. Sometimes, too, he heard from Howard,
- who had a curacy at Glasgow and was on indifferent terms with his
- parishioners. They objected to his way of conducting the services.
- His letters were full of it. He would not give in, he said, whatever
- happened. His conscience was involved.
- II
- One afternoon Mrs. Leland called on Mrs. Sherman. She very often
- called--this fat, sentimental woman, moving in the midst of a cloud
- of scent. The day was warm, and she carried her too elaborate and
- heavy dress as a large caddis-fly drags its case with much labour and
- patience. She sat down on the sofa with obvious relief, leaning so
- heavily among the cushions that a clothes-moth fluttered out of an
- antimacassar, to be knocked down and crushed by Mrs. Sherman, who was
- very quick in her movements.
- As soon as she found her breath, Mrs. Leland began a long history of
- her sorrows. Her daughter Margaret had been jilted and was in despair,
- had taken to her bed with every resolution to die, and was growing
- paler and paler. The hard-hearted man, though she knew he had heard,
- did not relent. She knew he had heard because her daughter had told his
- sister all about it, and his sister had no heart, because she said it
- was temper that ailed Margaret, and she was a little vixen, and that
- if she had not flirted with everybody the engagement would never have
- been broken off. But Mr. Sims had no heart clearly, as Miss Marriot and
- Mrs. Eliza Taylor, her daughter’s friends, said, when they heard, and
- Lock, the butler, said the same too, and Mary Young, the housemaid,
- said so too--and she knew all about it, for Margaret used to read his
- letters to her often when having her hair brushed.
- ‘She must have been very fond of him,’ said Mrs. Sherman.
- ‘She is so romantic, my dear,’ answered Mrs. Leland, with a sigh. ‘I am
- afraid she takes after an uncle on her father’s side, who wrote poetry
- and wore a velvet jacket and ran away with an Italian countess who used
- to get drunk. When I married Mr. Leland people said he was not worthy
- of me, and that I was throwing myself away--and he in business, too!
- But Margaret is so romantic. There was Mr. Walters, a gentleman-farmer,
- and Simpson who had a jeweller’s shop--I never approved of him!--and
- Mr. Samuelson, and the Hon. William Scott. She tired of them all except
- the Hon. William Scott, who tired of her because someone told him she
- put belladonna in her eyes--and it is not true; and now there is Mr.
- Sims!’ She then cried a little, and allowed herself to be consoled by
- Mrs. Sherman.
- ‘You talk so intelligently and are so well informed,’ she said at
- parting. ‘I have made a very pleasant call,’ and the caddis-worm toiled
- upon its way, arriving in time at other cups of tea.
- III
- The day after Mrs. Leland’s call upon his mother, John Sherman,
- returning home after his not very lengthy day in the office, saw
- Margaret coming towards him. She had a lawn-tennis racket under her
- arm, and was walking slowly on the shady side of the road. She was a
- pretty girl with quite irregular features, who though not really more
- than pretty, had so much manner, so much of an air, that every one
- called her a beauty: a trefoil with the fragrance of a rose.
- ‘Mr. Sherman,’ she cried, coming smiling to meet him, ‘I have been ill,
- but could not stand the house any longer. I am going to the Square to
- play tennis. Will you come with me?’
- ‘I am a bad player,’ he said.
- ‘Of course you are,’ she answered; ‘but you are the only person under a
- hundred to be found this afternoon. How dull life is!’ she continued,
- with a sigh. ‘You heard how ill I have been? What do you do all day?’
- ‘I sit at a desk, sometimes writing, and sometimes, when I get lazy,
- looking up at the flies. There are fourteen on the plaster of the
- ceiling over my head. They died two winters ago. I sometimes think to
- have them brushed off, but they have been there so long now I hardly
- like to.’
- ‘Ah! you like them,’ she said, ‘because you are accustomed to them. In
- most cases there is not much more to be said for our family affections,
- I think.’
- ‘In a room close at hand,’ he went on, ‘there is, you know, Uncle
- Michael, who never speaks.’
- ‘Precisely. You have an uncle who never speaks; I have a mother who
- never is silent. She went to see Mrs. Sherman the other day. What did
- she say to her?’
- ‘Nothing.’
- ‘Really! What a dull thing existence is!’--this with a great sigh.
- ‘When the Fates are weaving our web of life some mischievous goblin
- always runs off with the dye-pot. Everything is dull and grey. Am I
- looking a little pale? I have been so very ill.’
- ‘A little bit pale, perhaps,’ he said, doubtfully.
- The Square gate brought them to a stop. It was locked, but she had the
- key. The lock was stiff, but turned easily for John Sherman.
- ‘How strong you are,’ she said.
- It was an iridescent evening of spring. The leaves of the bushes had
- still their faint green. As Margaret darted about at the tennis, a red
- feather in her cap seemed to rejoice with its wearer. Everything was at
- once gay and tranquil. The whole world had that unreal air it assumes
- at beautiful moments, as though it might vanish at a touch like an
- iridescent soap-bubble.
- After a little Margaret said she was tired, and, sitting on a
- garden-seat among the bushes, began telling him the plots of novels
- lately read by her. Suddenly she cried: ‘The novel-writers were all
- serious people like you. They are so hard on people like me. They
- always make us come to a bad end. They _say_ we are always acting,
- acting, acting; and what else do you serious people do? You act before
- the world. I think, do you know, _we_ act before ourselves. All the
- old foolish kings and queens in history were like us. They laughed and
- beckoned and went to the block for no very good purpose. I daresay the
- headsmen were like you.’
- ‘We would never cut off so pretty a head.’
- ‘Oh, yes, you would--you would cut off mine to-morrow.’ All this she
- said vehemently, piercing him with her bright eyes. ‘You would cut off
- my head to-morrow,’ she repeated, almost fiercely; ‘I tell you you
- would.’
- Her departure was always unexpected, her moods changed with so much
- rapidity. ‘Look!’ she said, pointing where the clock on St. Peter’s
- church showed above the bushes. ‘Five minutes to five. In five minutes
- my mother’s tea-hour. It is like growing old. I go to gossip. Good-bye.’
- The red feather shone for a moment among the bushes and was gone.
- IV
- The next day and the day after, Sherman was followed by those bright
- eyes. When he opened a letter at his desk they seemed to gaze at him
- from the open paper, and to watch him from the flies upon the ceiling.
- He was even a worse clerk than usual.
- One evening he said to his mother, ‘Miss Leland has beautiful eyes.’
- ‘My dear, she puts belladonna in them.’
- ‘What a thing to say!’
- ‘I know she does, though her mother denies it.’
- ‘Well, she is certainly beautiful,’ he answered.
- ‘My dear, if she has an attraction for you, I don’t want to discourage
- it. She is rich as girls go nowadays; and one woman has one fault,
- another another: one’s untidy, one fights with her servants, one fights
- with her friends, another has a crabbed tongue when she talks of them.’
- Sherman became again silent, finding no fragment of romance in such a
- discourse.
- In the next week or two he saw much of Miss Leland. He met her almost
- every evening on his return from the office, walking slowly, her racket
- under her arm. They played tennis much and talked more. Sherman began
- to play tennis in his dreams. Miss Leland told him all about herself,
- her friends, her inmost feelings; and yet every day he knew less about
- her. It was not merely that saying everything she said nothing, but
- that continually there came through her wild words the sound of the
- mysterious flutes and viols of that unconscious nature which dwells
- so much nearer to woman than to man. How often do we not endow the
- beautiful and candid with depth and mystery not their own? We do not
- know that we but hear in their voices those flutes and viols playing to
- us of the alluring secret of the world.
- Sherman had never known in early life what is called first love, and
- now, when he had passed thirty, it came to him--that love more of the
- imagination than of either the senses or affections: it was mainly the
- eyes that followed him.
- It is not to be denied that as this love grew serious it grew
- mercenary. Now active, now latent, the notion had long been in
- Sherman’s mind, as we know, that he should marry money. A born
- lounger, riches tempted him greatly. When those eyes haunted him from
- the fourteen flies on the ceiling, he would say, ‘I should be rich;
- I should have a house in the country; I should hunt and shoot, and
- have a garden and three gardeners; I should leave this abominable
- office.’ Then the eyes became even more beautiful. It was a new kind of
- belladonna.
- He shrank a little, however, from choosing even this pleasant pathway.
- He had planned many futures for himself and learnt to love them all. It
- was this that had made him linger on at Ballah for so long, and it was
- this that now kept him undecided. He would have to give up the universe
- for a garden and three gardeners. How sad it was to make substantial
- even the best of his dreams. How hard it was to submit to that
- decree which compels every step we take in life to be a death in the
- imagination. How difficult it was to be so enwrapped in this one new
- hope as not to hear the lamentations that were going on in dim corners
- of his mind.
- One day he resolved to propose. He examined himself in the glass in
- the morning; and for the first time in his life smiled to see how
- good-looking he was. In the evening before leaving the office he
- peered at himself in the mirror over the mantlepiece in the room where
- customers were received. The sun was blazing through the window full on
- his face. He did not look so well. Immediately all courage left him.
- That evening he went out after his mother had gone to bed and walked
- far along the towing-path of the Thames. A faint mist half covered
- away the houses and factory chimneys on the further side; beside him
- a band of osiers swayed softly, the deserted and full river lapping
- their stems. He looked on all these things with foreign eyes. He had no
- sense of possession. Indeed it seemed to him that everything in London
- was owned by too many to be owned by anyone. Another river that he
- did seem to possess flowed through his memory with all its familiar
- sights--boys riding in the stream to the saddle-girths, fish leaping,
- water-flies raising their small ripples, a swan asleep, the wallflowers
- growing on the red brick of the margin. He grew very sad. Suddenly
- a shooting star, fiery and vagabond, leaped from the darkness. It
- brought his mind again in a moment to Margaret Leland. To marry her, he
- thought, was to separate himself from the old life he loved so well.
- Crossing the river at Putney, he hurried homewards among the
- market-gardens. Nearing home, the streets were deserted, the shops
- closed. Where King Street joins the Broadway, entirely alone with
- itself, in the very centre of the road a little black cat was leaping
- after its shadow.
- ‘Ah!’ he thought, ‘it would be a good thing to be a little black cat.
- To leap about in the moonlight and sleep in the sunlight, and catch
- flies, to have no hard tasks to do or hard decisions to come to, to be
- simple and full of animal spirits.’
- At the corner of Bridge Road was a coffee-stall, the only sign of human
- life. He bought some cold meat and flung it to the little black cat.
- V
- Some more days went by. At last, one day, arriving at the Square
- somewhat earlier than usual, and sitting down to wait for Margaret on
- the seat among the bushes, he noticed the pieces of a torn-up letter
- lying about. Beside him on the seat was a pencil, as though someone had
- been writing there and left it behind them. The pencil-lead was worn
- very short. The letter had been torn up, perhaps in a fit of impatience.
- In a half-mechanical way he glanced over the scraps. On one of them
- he read: ‘MY DEAR ELIZA,--What an incurable gossip my mother is. You
- heard of my misfortune. I nearly died-—-’ Here he had to search among
- the scraps; at last he found one that seemed to follow. ‘Perhaps you
- will hear news from me soon. There is a handsome young man who pays me
- attention, and-—-’ Here another piece had to be found. ‘I would take
- him though he had a face like the man in the moon, and limped like the
- devil at the theatre. Perhaps I am a little in love. Oh! friend of
- my heart--’ Here it broke off again. He was interested, and searched
- the grass and the bushes for fragments. Some had been blown to quite
- a distance. He got together several sentences now. ‘I will not spend
- another winter with my mother for anything. All this is, of course, a
- secret. I had to tell somebody; secrets are bad for my health. Perhaps
- it will all come to nothing.’ Then the letter went off into dress, the
- last novel the writer had read, and so forth. A Miss Sims, too, was
- mentioned, who had said some unkind thing of the writer.
- Sherman was greatly amused. It did not seem to him wrong to read--we do
- not mind spying on one of the crowd, any more than on the personages of
- literature. It never occurred to him that he, or any friend of his, was
- concerned in these pencil scribblings.
- Suddenly he saw this sentence: ‘Heigho! your poor Margaret is falling
- in love again; condole with her, my dear.’
- He started. The name ‘Margaret,’ the mention of Miss Sims, the style
- of the whole letter, all made plain the authorship. Very desperately
- ashamed of himself, he got up and tore each scrap of paper into still
- smaller fragments and scattered them far apart.
- That evening he proposed and was accepted.
- VI
- For several days there was a new heaven and a new earth. Miss Leland
- seemed suddenly impressed with the seriousness of life. She was
- gentleness itself; and as Sherman sat on Sunday mornings in his
- pocket-handkerchief of a garden under the one tree, with its smoky
- stem, watching the little circles of sunlight falling from the leaves
- like a shower of new sovereigns, he gazed at them with a longer and
- keener joy than heretofore--a new heaven and a new earth, surely!
- Sherman planted and dug and raked this pocket-handkerchief of a garden
- most diligently, rooting out the docks and dandelions and mouse-ear and
- the patches of untimely grass. It was the point of contact between his
- new life and the old. It was far too small and unfertile and shaded-in
- to satisfy his love of gardener’s experiments and early vegetables.
- Perforce this husbandry was too little complex for his affections to
- gather much round plant and bed. His garden in Ballah used to touch him
- like the growth of a young family. Now he was content to satisfy his
- barbaric sense of colour; right round were planted alternate hollyhock
- and sunflower, and behind them scarlet-runners showed their inch-high
- cloven shoots.
- One Sunday it occurred to him to write to his friends on the matter
- of his engagement. He numbered them over. Howard, one or two less
- intimate, and Mary Carton. At that name he paused; he would not write
- just yet.
- VII
- One Saturday there was a tennis party. Miss Leland devoted herself all
- day to a young Foreign Office clerk. She played tennis with him, talked
- with him, drank lemonade with him, had neither thoughts nor words for
- anyone else. John Sherman was quite happy. Tennis was always a bore,
- and now he was not called upon to play. It had not struck him there was
- occasion for jealousy.
- As the guests were dispersing, his betrothed came to him. Her manner
- seemed strange.
- ‘Does anything ail you, Margaret?’ he asked, as they left the Square.
- ‘Everything,’ she answered, looking about her with ostentatious
- secrecy. ‘You are a most annoying person. You have no feeling; you
- have no temperament; you are quite the most stupid creature I was ever
- engaged to.’
- ‘What is wrong with you?’ he asked, in bewilderment.
- ‘Don’t you see,’ she replied, with a broken voice, ‘I flirted all day
- with that young clerk? You should have nearly killed me with jealousy.
- You do not love me a bit! There is no knowing what I might do!’
- ‘Well, you know,’ he said, ‘it was not right of you. People might say,
- “Look at John Sherman; how furious he must be!” To be sure, I wouldn’t
- be furious a bit; but then they’d go about saying I was. It would not
- matter, of course; but you know it is not right of you.’
- ‘It is no use pretending you have feeling. It is all that miserable
- little town you come from, with its sleepy old shops and its sleepy
- old society. I would give up loving you this minute,’ she added, with
- a caressing look, ‘if you had not that beautiful bronzed face. I will
- improve you. To-morrow evening you must come to the opera.’ Suddenly
- she changed the subject. ‘Do you see that little fat man coming out of
- the Square and staring at me? I was engaged to him once. Look at the
- four old ladies behind him, shaking their bonnets at me. Each has some
- story about me, and it will be all the same in a hundred years.’
- After this he had hardly a moment’s peace. She kept him continually
- going to theatres, operas, parties. These last were an especial
- trouble; for it was her wont to gather about her an admiring circle to
- listen to her extravagancies, and he was no longer at the age when we
- enjoy audacity for its own sake.
- VIII
- Gradually those bright eyes of his imagination, watching him from
- letters and from among the fourteen flies on the ceiling, had ceased to
- be centres of peace. They seemed like two whirlpools, wherein the order
- and quiet of his life were absorbed hourly and daily.
- He still thought sometimes of the country house of his dreams and of
- the garden and the three gardeners, but somehow they had lost half
- their charm.
- He had written to Howard and some others, and commenced, at last, a
- letter to Mary Carton. It lay unfinished on his desk; a thin coating of
- dust was gathering upon it.
- Mrs. Leland called continually on Mrs. Sherman. She sentimentalized
- over the lovers, and even wept over them; each visit supplied the
- household with conversation for a week.
- Every Sunday morning--his letter-writing time--Sherman looked at his
- uncompleted letter. Gradually it became plain to him he could not
- finish it. It had never seemed to him he had more than friendship
- for Mary Carton, yet somehow it was not possible to tell her of this
- love-affair.
- The more his betrothed troubled him the more he thought about the
- unfinished letter. He was a man standing at the cross roads.
- Whenever the wind blew from the south he remembered his friend, for
- that is the wind that fills the heart with memory.
- One Sunday he removed the dust from the face of the letter almost
- reverently, as though it were the dust from the wheels of destiny. But
- the letter remained unfinished.
- IX
- One Wednesday in June Sherman arrived home an hour earlier than
- usual from his office, as his wont was the first Wednesday in every
- month, on which day his mother was at home to her friends. They had
- not many callers. To-day there was no one as yet but a badly-dressed
- old lady his mother had picked up he knew not where. She had been
- looking at his photograph album, and recalling names and dates
- from her own prosperous times. As she went out Miss Leland came in.
- She gave the old lady in passing a critical look that made the poor
- creature very conscious of a threadbare mantle, and went over to Mrs.
- Sherman, holding out both hands. Sherman, who knew all his mother’s
- peculiarities, noticed on her side a slight coldness; perhaps she did
- not altogether like this beautiful dragon-fly.
- ‘I have come,’ said Miss Leland, ‘to tell John that he must learn to
- paint. Music and society are not enough. There is nothing like art to
- give refinement.’ Then turning to John Sherman--‘My dear, I will make
- you quite different. You are a dreadful barbarian, you know.’
- ‘What ails me, Margaret?’
- ‘Just look at that necktie! Nothing shows a man’s cultivation like
- his necktie! Then your reading! You never read anything but old books
- nobody wants to talk about. I will lend you three everyone has read
- this month. You really must acquire small talk and change your necktie.’
- Presently she noticed the photograph-book lying open on a chair.
- ‘Oh!’ she cried, ‘I must have another look at John’s beauties.’
- It was a habit of his to gather all manner of pretty faces. It came
- from incipient old bachelorhood, perhaps.
- Margaret criticised each photograph in turn with, ‘Ah! she looks as if
- she had some life in her!’ or ‘I do not like your sleepy eyelids,’ or
- some such phrase. The mere relations were passed by without a word. One
- face occurred several times--a quiet face. As Margaret came on this one
- for the third time, Mrs. Sherman, who seemed a little resentful about
- something, said: ‘That is his friend, Mary Carton.’
- ‘He told me about her. He has a book she gave him. So that is she? How
- interesting! I pity these poor country people. It must be hard to keep
- from getting stupid.’
- ‘My friend is not at all stupid,’ said Sherman.
- ‘Does she speak with a brogue? I remember you told me she was very
- good. It must be difficult to keep from talking platitudes when one is
- very good.’
- ‘You are quite wrong about her. You would like her very much,’ he
- replied.
- ‘She is one of those people, I suppose, who can only talk about their
- relatives, or their families, or about their friends’ children: how
- this one has got the whooping-cough, and this one is getting well of
- the measles!’ She kept swaying one of the leaves between her finger
- and thumb impatiently. ‘What a strange way she does her hair; and what
- an ugly dress!’
- ‘You must not talk that way about her--she is my great friend.’
- ‘Friend! friend!’ she burst out. ‘He thinks I will believe in
- friendship between a man and a woman!’
- She got up, and said, turning round with an air of changing the
- subject, ‘Have you written to your friends about our engagement? You
- had not done so when I asked you lately.’
- ‘I have.’
- ‘All?’
- ‘Well, not all.’
- ‘Your great friend, Miss —— what do you call her?’
- ‘Miss Carton. I have not written to her.’
- She tapped impatiently with her foot.
- ‘They were really old companions--that is all,’ said Mrs. Sherman,
- wishing to mend matters. ‘They were both readers; that brought them
- together. I never much fancied her. Yet she was well enough as a
- friend, and helped, maybe, with reading, and the gardening, and
- his good bringing-up, to keep him from the idle young men of the
- neighbourhood.’
- ‘You must make him write and tell her at once--you must, you must!’
- almost sobbed out Miss Leland.
- ‘I promise,’ he answered.
- Immediately returning to herself, she cried, ‘If I were in her place
- I know what I would like to do when I got the letter. I know who I
- would like to kill!’--this with a laugh as she went over and looked at
- herself in the mirror on the mantlepiece.
- THIRD PART
- JOHN SHERMAN REVISITS BALLAH
- I
- The others had gone, and Sherman was alone in the drawing-room by
- himself, looking through the window. Never had London seemed to him so
- like a reef whereon he was cast away. In the Square the bushes were
- covered with dust; some sparrows were ruffling their feathers on the
- side-walk; people passed, continually disturbing them. The sky was full
- of smoke. A terrible feeling of solitude in the midst of a multitude
- oppressed him. A portion of his life was ending. He thought that soon
- he would be no longer a young man, and now, at the period when the
- desire of novelty grows less, was coming the great change of his life.
- He felt he was of those whose granaries are in the past. And now this
- past would never renew itself. He was going out into the distance as
- though with strange sailors in a strange ship.
- He longed to see again the town where he had spent his childhood: to
- see the narrow roads and mean little shops. And perhaps it would be
- easier to tell her who had been the friend of so many years of this
- engagement in his own person than by letter. He wondered why it was so
- hard to write so simple a thing.
- It was his custom to act suddenly on his decisions. He had not made
- many in his life. The next day he announced at the office that he would
- be absent for three or four days. He told his mother he had business in
- the country.
- His betrothed met him on the way to the terminus, as he was walking,
- bag in hand, and asked where he was going. ‘I am going on business to
- the country,’ he said, and blushed. He was creeping away like a thief.
- II
- He arrived in the town of Ballah by rail, for he had avoided the slow
- cattle-steamer and gone by Dublin.
- It was the forenoon, and he made for the Imperial Hotel to wait till
- four in the evening, when he would find Mary Carton in the schoolhouse,
- for he had timed his journey so as to arrive on Thursday, the day of
- the children’s practice.
- As he went through the streets his heart went out to every familiar
- place and sight: the rows of tumble-down thatched cottages; the slated
- roofs of the shops; the women selling gooseberries; the river bridge;
- the high walls of the garden where it was said the gardener used to see
- the ghost of a former owner in the shape of a rabbit; the street corner
- no child would pass at nightfall for fear of the headless soldier;
- the deserted flour-store; the wharves covered with grass. All these
- he watched with Celtic devotion, that devotion carried to the ends of
- the world by the Celtic exiles, and since old time surrounding their
- journeyings with rumour of plaintive songs.
- He sat in the window of the Imperial Hotel, now full of guests. He
- did not notice any of them. He sat there meditating, meditating. Grey
- clouds covering the town with flying shadows rushed by like the old
- and dishevelled eagles that Maeldune saw hurrying towards the waters
- of life. Below in the street passed by country people, townspeople,
- travellers, women with baskets, boys driving donkeys, old men with
- sticks; sometimes he recognized a face or was recognized himself, and
- welcomed by some familiar voice.
- ‘You have come home a handsomer gentleman than your father, Misther
- John, and he was a neat figure of a man, God bless him!’ said the
- waiter, bringing him his lunch; and in truth Sherman had grown
- handsomer for these years away. His face and gesture had more of
- dignity, for on the centre of his nature life had dropped a pinch of
- experience.
- At four he left the hotel and waited near the schoolhouse till the
- children came running out. One or two of the elder ones he recognized
- but turned away.
- III
- Mary Carton was locking the harmonium as he went in. She came to meet
- him with a surprised and joyful air.
- ‘How often I have wished to see you! When did you come? How well you
- remembered my habits to know where to find me. My dear John, how glad I
- am to see you!’
- ‘You are the same as when I left, and this room is the same, too.’
- ‘Yes,’ she answered, ‘the same, only I have had some new prints hung
- up--prints of fruits and leaves and bird-nests. It was only done last
- week. When people choose pictures and poems for children they choose
- out such domestic ones. I would not have any of the kind; children are
- such undomestic animals. But, John, I am so glad to see you in this
- old schoolhouse again. So little has changed with us here. Some have
- died and some have been married, and we are all a little older and the
- trees a little taller.’
- ‘I have come to tell you I am going to be married.’
- She became in a moment perfectly white, and sat down as though attacked
- with faintness. Her hand on the edge of the chair trembled.
- Sherman looked at her, and went on in a bewildered, mechanical way: ‘My
- betrothed is a Miss Leland. She has a good deal of money. You know my
- mother always wished me to marry some one with money. Her father, when
- alive, was an old client of Sherman and Saunders. She is much admired
- in society.’ Gradually his voice became a mere murmur. He did not seem
- to know that he was speaking. He stopped entirely. He was looking at
- Mary Carton.
- Everything around him was as it had been some three years before. The
- table was covered with cups and the floor with crumbs. Perhaps the
- mouse pulling at a crumb under the table was the same mouse as on that
- other evening. The only difference was the brooding daylight of summer
- and the ceaseless chirruping of the sparrows in the ivy outside. He
- had a confused sense of having lost his way. It was just the same
- feeling he had known as a child, when one dark night he had taken a
- wrong turning, and instead of arriving at his own house, found himself
- at a landmark he knew was miles from home.
- A moment earlier, however difficult his life, the issues were always
- definite; now suddenly had entered the obscurity of another’s interest.
- Before this it had not occurred to him that Mary Carton had any
- stronger feeling for him than warm friendship.
- He began again, speaking in the same mechanical way: ‘Miss Leland
- lives with her mother near us. She is very well educated and very well
- connected, though she has lived always among business people.’
- Miss Carton, with a great effort, had recovered her composure.
- ‘I congratulate you,’ she said. ‘I hope you will be always happy. You
- came here on some business for your firm, I suppose? I believe they
- have some connection with the town still.’
- ‘I only came here to tell you I was going to be married.’
- ‘Do you not think it would have been better to have written?’ she said,
- beginning to put away the children’s tea-things in a cupboard by the
- fireplace.
- ‘It would have been better,’ he answered, drooping his head.
- Without a word, locking the door behind them, they went out. Without
- a word they walked the grey streets. Now and then a woman or a child
- curtseyed as they passed. Some wondered, perhaps, to see these old
- friends so silent. At the rectory they bade each other good-bye.
- ‘I hope you will be always happy,’ she said. ‘I will pray for you and
- your wife. I am very busy with the children and old people, but I shall
- always find a moment to wish you well in. Good-bye now.’
- They parted; the gate in the wall closed behind her. He stayed for a
- few moments looking up at the tops of the trees and bushes showing over
- the wall, and at the house a little way beyond. He stood considering
- his problem--her life, his life. His, at any rate, would have incident
- and change; hers would be the narrow existence of a woman who, failing
- to fulfil the only abiding wish she has ever formed, seeks to lose
- herself in routine--mournfulest of things on this old planet.
- This had been revealed: he loved Mary Carton, she loved him. He
- remembered Margaret Leland, and murmured she did well to be jealous.
- Then all her contemptuous words about the town and its inhabitants came
- into his mind. Once they made no impression on him, but now the sense
- of personal identity having been disturbed by this sudden revelation,
- alien as they were to his way of thinking, they began to press in on
- him. Mary, too, would have agreed with them, he thought; and might it
- be that at some distant time weary monotony in abandonment would have
- so weighed down the spirit of Mary Carton that she would be merely one
- of the old and sleepy whose dulness filled the place like a cloud?
- He went sadly towards the hotel; everything about him, the road, the
- sky, the feet wherewith he walked seeming phantasmal and without
- meaning.
- He told the waiter he would leave by the first train in the morning.
- ‘What! and you only just come home?’ the man answered. He ordered
- coffee and could not drink it. He went out and came in again
- immediately. He went down into the kitchen and talked to the servants.
- They told him of everything that had happened since he had gone. He was
- not interested, and went up to his room. ‘I must go home and do what
- people expect of me; one must be careful to do that.’
- Through all the journey home his problem troubled him. He saw the
- figure of Mary Carton perpetually passing through a round of monotonous
- duties. He saw his own life among aliens going on endlessly, wearily.
- From Holyhead to London his fellow-travellers were a lady and her three
- young daughters, the eldest about twelve. The smooth faces shining with
- well-being became to him ominous symbols. He hated them. They were
- symbolic of the indifferent world about to absorb him, and of the vague
- something that was dragging him inch by inch from the nook he had made
- for himself in the chimney-corner. He was at one of those dangerous
- moments when the sense of personal identity is shaken, when one’s past
- and present seem about to dissolve partnership. He sought refuge in
- memory, and counted over every word of Mary’s he could remember. He
- forgot the present and the future. ‘Without love,’ he said to himself,
- ‘we would be either gods or vegetables.’
- The rain beat on the window of the carriage. He began to listen;
- thought and memory became a blank; his mind was full of the sound of
- rain-drops.
- FOURTH PART
- THE REV. WILLIAM HOWARD
- I
- After his return to London Sherman for a time kept to himself, going
- straight home from his office, moody and self-absorbed, trying not to
- consider his problem--her life, his life. He often repeated to himself,
- ‘I must do what people expect of me. It does not rest with me now--my
- choosing time is over.’ He felt that whatever way he turned he would do
- a great evil to himself and others. To his nature all sudden decisions
- were difficult, and so he kept to the groove he had entered upon. It
- did not even occur to him to do otherwise. He never thought of breaking
- this engagement off and letting people say what they would. He was
- bound in hopelessly by a chain of congratulations.
- A week passed slowly as a month. The wheels of the cabs and carriages
- seemed to be rolling through his mind. He often remembered the quiet
- river at the end of his garden in the town of Ballah. How the weeds
- swayed there, and the salmon leaped! At the week’s end came a note
- from Miss Leland, complaining of his neglecting her so many days. He
- sent a rather formal answer, promising to call soon. To add to his
- other troubles, a cold east wind arose and made him shiver continually.
- One evening he and his mother were sitting silent, the one knitting,
- the other half-asleep. He had been writing letters and was now in a
- reverie. Round the walls were one or two drawings, done by him at
- school. His mother had got them framed. His eyes were fixed on a
- drawing of a stream and some astonishing cows.
- A few days ago he had found an old sketchbook for children among some
- forgotten papers, which taught how to draw a horse by making three
- ovals for the basis of his body, one lying down in the middle, two
- standing up at each end for flank and chest, and how to draw a cow by
- basing its body on a square. He kept trying to fit squares into the
- cows. He was half inclined to take them out of their frames and retouch
- on this new principle. Then he began somehow to remember the child with
- the swollen face who threw a stone at the dog the day he resolved to
- leave home first. Then some other image came. His problem moved before
- him in a disjointed way. He was dropping asleep. Through his reverie
- came the click, click of his mother’s needles. She had found some
- London children to knit for. He was at that marchland between waking
- and dreaming where our thoughts begin to have a life of their own--the
- region where art is nurtured and inspiration born.
- He started, hearing something sliding and rustling, and looked up to
- see a piece of cardboard fall from one end of the mantelpiece, and,
- driven by a slight gust of air, circle into the ashes under the grate.
- ‘Oh,’ said his mother, ‘that is the portrait of the _locum tenens_.’
- She still spoke of the Rev. William Howard by the name she had first
- known him by. ‘He is always being photographed. They are all over the
- house, and I, an old woman, have not had one taken all my life. Take it
- out with the tongs.’ Her son, after some poking in the ashes, for it
- had fallen far back, brought out a somewhat dusty photograph. ‘That,’
- she continued, ‘is one he sent us two or three months ago. It has been
- lying in the letter-rack since.’
- ‘He is not so spick-and-span-looking as usual,’ said Sherman, rubbing
- the ashes off the photograph with his sleeve.
- ‘By the by,’ his mother replied, ‘he has lost his parish, I hear. He
- is very mediæval, you know, and he lately preached a sermon to prove
- that children who die unbaptized are lost. He had been reading up the
- subject and was full of it. The mothers turned against him, not being
- so familiar with St. Augustine as he was. There were other reasons in
- plenty too. I wonder that anyone can stand that monkeyish fantastic
- family.’
- As the way is with so many country-bred people, the world for her was
- divided up into families rather than individuals.
- While she was talking, Sherman, who had returned to his chair, leant
- over the table and began to write hurriedly. She was continuing her
- denunciation when he interrupted with: ‘Mother, I have just written
- this letter to him:—
- ‘“MY DEAR HOWARD:
- ‘“Will you come and spend the autumn with us? I hear
- you are unoccupied just now. I am engaged to be
- married, as you know; it will be a long engagement.
- You will like my betrothed. I hope you will be great
- friends.
- ‘“Yours expectantly,
- ’“JOHN SHERMAN.”’
- ‘You rather take me aback,’ she said.
- ‘I really like him,’ he answered. ‘You were always prejudiced against
- the Howards. Forgive me, but I really want very much to have him here.’
- ‘Well, if you like him, I suppose I have no objection.’
- ‘I do like him. He is very clever,’ said her son, ‘and knows a great
- deal. I wonder he does not marry. Do you not think he would make a good
- husband?--for you must admit he is sympathetic.’
- ‘It is not difficult to sympathize with everyone if you have no true
- principles and convictions.’
- Principles and convictions were her names for that strenuous
- consistency attained without trouble by men and women of few ideas.
- ‘I am sure you will like him better,’ said the other, ‘when you see
- more of him.’
- ‘Is that photograph quite spoilt?’ she answered.
- ‘No; there was nothing on it but ashes.’
- ‘That is a pity, for one less would be something.’
- After this they both became silent, she knitting, he gazing at the cows
- browsing at the edge of their stream, and trying to fit squares into
- their bodies; but now a smile played about his lips.
- Mrs. Sherman looked a little troubled. She would not object to any
- visitor of her son’s, but quite made up her mind in no manner to put
- herself out to entertain the Rev. William Howard. She was puzzled as
- well. She did not understand the suddenness of this invitation. They
- usually talked over things for weeks.
- II
- Next day his fellow-clerks noticed a decided improvement in Sherman’s
- spirits. He had a lark-like cheerfulness and alacrity breaking out at
- odd moments. When evening came he called, for the first time since his
- return, on Miss Leland. She scolded him for having answered her note
- in such a formal way, but was sincerely glad to see him return to his
- allegiance. We have said he had sometimes, though rarely, a talkative
- fit. He had one this evening. The last play they had been to, the
- last party, the picture of the year, all in turn he glanced at. She
- was delighted. Her training had not been in vain. Her barbarian was
- learning to chatter. This flattered her a deal.
- ‘I was never engaged,’ she thought, ‘to a more interesting creature.’
- When he had risen to go, Sherman said: ‘I have a friend coming to visit
- me in a few days; you will suit each other delightfully. He is very
- mediæval.’
- ‘Do tell me about him; I like everything mediæval.’
- ‘Oh,’ he cried, with a laugh, ‘his mediævalism is not in your line. He
- is neither a gay troubadour nor a wicked knight. He is a High Church
- curate.’
- ‘Do not tell me anything more about him,’ she answered; ‘I will try to
- be civil to him, but you know I never liked curates. I have been an
- agnostic for many years. You, I believe, are orthodox.’
- As Sherman was on his way home he met a fellow-clerk, and stopped him
- with: ‘Are you an agnostic?’
- ‘No. Why, what is that?’
- ‘Oh, nothing! Good-bye,’ he made answer, and hurried on his way.
- III
- The letter reached the Rev. William Howard at the right moment,
- arriving as it did in the midst of a crisis in his fortunes. In the
- course of a short life he had lost many parishes. He considered
- himself a martyr, but was considered by his enemies a clerical coxcomb.
- He had a habit of getting his mind possessed with some strange opinion,
- or what seemed so to his parishioners, and of preaching it while the
- notion lasted in the most startling way. The sermon on unbaptized
- children was an instance. It was not so much that he thought it true as
- that it possessed him for a day. It was not so much the thought as his
- own relation to it that allured him. Then, too, he loved what appeared
- to his parishioners to be the most unusual and dangerous practices. He
- put candles on the altar and crosses in unexpected places. He delighted
- in the intricacies of High Church costume, and was known to recommend
- confession and prayers for the dead.
- Gradually the anger of his parishioners would increase. The rector,
- the washerwoman, the labourers, the squire, the doctor, the
- school-teachers, the shoemakers, the butchers, the seamstresses,
- the local journalist, the master of the hounds, the innkeeper, the
- veterinary surgeon, the magistrate, the children making mud pies,
- all would be filled with one dread--popery. Then he would fly for
- consolation to his little circle of the faithful, the younger
- ladies, who still repeated his fine sentiments and saw him in their
- imaginations standing perpetually before a wall covered with tapestry
- and holding a crucifix in some constrained and ancient attitude. At
- last he would have to go, feeling for his parishioners a gay and lofty
- disdain, and for himself that reverent approbation one gives to the
- captains who lead the crusade of ideas against those who merely sleep
- and eat. An efficient crusader he certainly was--too efficient, indeed,
- for his efficiency gave to all his thoughts a certain over-completeness
- and isolation, and a kind of hardness to his mind. His intellect was
- like a musician’s instrument with no sounding-board. He could think
- carefully and cleverly, and even with originality, but never in such
- a way as to make his thoughts an illusion to something deeper than
- themselves. In this he was the reverse of poetical, for poetry is
- essentially a touch from behind a curtain.
- This conformation of his mind helped to lead him into all manner of
- needless contests and to the loss of this last parish among much
- else. Did not the world exist for the sake of these hard, crystalline
- thoughts, with which he played as with so many bone spilikins,
- delighting in his own skill? and were not all who disliked them
- merely--the many?
- In this way it came about that Sherman’s letter reached Howard at the
- right moment. Now, next to a new parish, he loved a new friend. A visit
- to London meant many. He had found he was, on the whole, a success at
- the beginning of friendships.
- He at once wrote an acceptance in his small and beautiful handwriting,
- and arrived shortly after his letter. Sherman, on receiving him,
- glanced at his neat and shining boots, the little medal at the
- watch-chain and the well-brushed hat, and nodded as though in answer to
- an inner query. He smiled approval at the slight elegant figure in its
- black clothes, at the satiny hair, and at the face, mobile as moving
- waters.
- For several days the Shermans saw little of their guest. He had friends
- everywhere to turn into enemies and acquaintances to turn into friends.
- His days passed in visiting, visiting, visiting. Then there were
- theatres and churches to see, and new clothes to be bought, over which
- he was as anxious as a woman. Finally he settled down.
- He passed his mornings in the smoking-room. He asked Sherman’s leave
- to hang on the walls one or two religious pictures, without which he
- was not happy, and to place over the mantelpiece, under the pipe-rack,
- an ebony crucifix. In one corner of the room he laid a rug neatly
- folded for covering his knees on chilly days, and on the table a
- small collection of favourite books--a curious and carefully-chosen
- collection, in which Cardinal Newman and Bourget, St. Chrysostom and
- Flaubert lived together in perfect friendship.
- Early in his visit Sherman brought him to the Lelands. He was a
- success. The three--Margaret, Sherman, and Howard--played tennis in the
- Square. Howard was a good player, and seemed to admire Margaret. On
- the way home Sherman once or twice laughed to himself. It was like the
- clucking of a hen with a brood of chickens. He told Howard, too, how
- wealthy Margaret was said to be.
- After this Howard always joined Sherman and Margaret at the tennis.
- Sometimes, too, after a little, on days when the study seemed dull and
- lonely, and the unfinished essay on St. Chrysostom more than usually
- laborious, he would saunter towards the Square before his friend’s
- arrival, to find Margaret now alone, now with an acquaintance or two.
- About this time also press of work, an unusual thing with him, began
- to delay Sherman in town half-an-hour after his usual time. In the
- evenings they often talked of Margaret--Sherman frankly and carefully,
- as though in all anxiety to describe her as she was; and Howard with
- some enthusiasm: ‘She has a religious vocation,’ he said once, with a
- slight sigh.
- Sometimes they played chess--a game that Sherman had recently become
- devoted to, for he found it drew him out of himself more than anything
- else.
- Howard now began to notice a curious thing. Sherman grew shabbier and
- shabbier, and at the same time more and more cheerful. This puzzled
- him, for he had noticed that he himself was not cheerful when shabby,
- and did not even feel upright and clever when his hat was getting old.
- He also noticed that when Sherman was talking to him he seemed to be
- keeping some thought to himself. When he first came to know him long
- ago in Ballah he had noticed occasionally the same thing, and set it
- down to a kind of suspiciousness and over-caution, natural to one who
- lived in such an out-of-the-way place. It seemed more persistent now,
- however. ‘He is not well-trained,’ he thought; ‘he is half a peasant.
- He has not the brilliant candour of the man of the world.’
- All this while the mind of Sherman was clucking continually over its
- brood of thoughts. Ballah was being constantly suggested to him. The
- grey corner of a cloud slanting its rain upon Cheapside called to mind
- by some remote suggestion the clouds rushing and falling in cloven
- surf on the seaward steep of a mountain north of Ballah. A certain
- street-corner made him remember an angle of the Ballah fish-market. At
- night a lantern, marking where the road was fenced off for mending,
- made him think of a tinker’s cart, with its swing-can of burning coals,
- that used to stop on market days at the corner of Peter’s Lane at
- Ballah. Delayed by a crush in the Strand, he heard a faint trickling
- of water near by; it came from a shop window where a little water-jet
- balanced a wooden ball upon its point. The sound suggested a cataract
- with a long Gaelic name, that leaped crying into the Gate of the Winds
- at Ballah. Wandering among these memories a footstep went to and fro
- continually, and the figure of Mary Carton moved among them like a
- phantom. He was set dreaming a whole day by walking down one Sunday
- morning to the border of the Thames--a few hundred yards from his
- house--and looking at the osier-covered Chiswick eyot. It made him
- remember an old day-dream of his. The source of the river that passed
- his garden at home was a certain wood-bordered and islanded lake,
- whither in childhood he had often gone blackberry-gathering. At the
- further end was a little islet called Innisfree. Its rocky centre,
- covered with many bushes, rose some forty feet above the lake. Often
- when life and its difficulties had seemed to him like the lessons of
- some elder boy given to a younger by mistake, it had seemed good to
- dream of going away to that islet and building a wooden hut there and
- burning a few years out, rowing to and fro, fishing, or lying on the
- island slopes by day, and listening at night to the ripple of the water
- and the quivering of the bushes--full always of unknown creatures--and
- going out at morning to see the island’s edge marked by the feet of
- birds.
- These pictures became so vivid to him that the world about him--that
- Howard, Margaret, his mother even--began to seem far off. He hardly
- seemed aware of anything they were thinking and feeling. The light
- that dazzled him flowed from the vague and refracting regions of hope
- and memory; the light that made Howard’s feet unsteady was ever the
- too-glaring lustre of life itself.
- IV
- On the evening of the 20th of June, after the blinds had been
- pulled down and the gas lighted, Sherman was playing chess in the
- smoking-room, right hand against left. Howard had gone out with a
- message to the Lelands. He would often say, ‘Is there any message I
- can deliver for you? I know how lazy you are, and will save you the
- trouble.’ A message was always found for him. A pile of books lent for
- Sherman’s improvement went home one by one.
- ‘Look here,’ said Howard’s voice in the doorway, ‘I have been watching
- you for some time. You are cheating the red men most villainously. You
- are forcing them to make mistakes that the white men may win. Why, a
- few such games would ruin any man’s moral nature.’
- He was leaning against the doorway, looking, to Sherman’s not too
- critical eyes, an embodiment of all that was self-possessed and
- brilliant. The great care with which he was dressed and his whole
- manner seemed to say: ‘Look at me; do I not combine perfectly the
- zealot with the man of the world?’ He seemed excited to-night. He had
- been talking at the Lelands, and talking well, and felt that elation
- which brings us many thoughts.
- ‘My dear Sherman,’ he went on, ‘do cease that game. It is very bad
- for you. There is nobody alive who is honest enough to play a game
- of chess fairly out--right hand against left. We are so radically
- dishonest that we even cheat ourselves. We can no more play chess than
- we can think altogether by ourselves with security. You had much better
- play with me.’
- ‘Very well, but you will beat me; I have not much practice,’ replied
- the other.
- They reset the men and began to play. Sherman relied most upon his
- bishops and queen. Howard was fondest of the knights. At first Sherman
- was the attacking party, but in his characteristic desire to scheme
- out his game many moves ahead, kept making slips, and at last had to
- give up, with his men nearly all gone and his king hopelessly cornered.
- Howard seemed to let nothing escape him. When the game was finished
- he leant back in his chair and said, as he rolled a cigarette: ‘You
- do not play well.’ It gave him satisfaction to feel his proficiency
- in many small arts. ‘You do not do any of these things at all well,’
- he went on, with an insolence peculiar to him when excited. ‘You
- have been really very badly brought up and stupidly educated in that
- intolerable Ballah. They do not understand there any, even the least,
- of the arts of life; they only believe in information. Men who are
- compelled to move in the great world, and who are also cultivated,
- only value the personal acquirements--self-possession, adaptability,
- how to dress well, how even to play tennis decently--you would be not
- so bad at that, by the by, if you practised--or how to paint or write
- effectively. They know that it is better to smoke one’s cigarette with
- a certain charm of gesture than to have by heart all the encyclopedias.
- I say this not merely as a man of the world, but as a teacher of
- religion. A man when he rises from the grave will take with him only
- the things that he is in himself. He will leave behind the things that
- he merely possesses, learning and information not less than money and
- high estate. They will stay behind with his house and his clothes and
- his body. A collection of facts will no more help him than a collection
- of stamps. The learned will not get into heaven as readily as the
- flute-player, or even as the man who smokes a cigarette gracefully.
- Now, you are not learned, but you have been brought up almost as badly
- as if you were. In that wretched town they told you that education was
- to know that Russia is bounded on the north by the Arctic Sea, and
- on the west by the Baltic Ocean, and that Vienna is situated on the
- Danube, and that William the Third came to the throne in the year
- 1688. They have never taught you any personal art. Even chess-playing
- might have helped you at the day of judgment.’
- ‘I am really not a worse chess-player than you. I am only more
- careless.’
- There was a slight resentment in Sherman’s voice. The other noticed it,
- and said, changing his manner from the insolent air of a young beauty
- to a self-depreciatory one, which was wont to give him at times a very
- genuine charm: ‘It is really a great pity, for you Shermans are a deep
- people, much deeper than we Howards. We are like moths or butterflies,
- or rather rapid rivulets, while you and yours are deep pools in the
- forest where the beasts go to drink. No! I have a better metaphor.
- Your mind and mine are two arrows. Yours has got no feathers, and mine
- has no metal on the point. I don’t know which is most needed for right
- conduct. I wonder where we are going to strike earth. I suppose it
- will be all right some day when the world has gone by and they have
- collected all the arrows into one quiver.’
- He went over to the mantelpiece to hunt for a match, as his cigarette
- had gone out. Sherman had lifted a corner of the blind and was gazing
- over the roofs shining from a recent shower, and thinking how on such
- a night as this he had sat with Mary Carton by the rectory fire
- listening to the rain without and talking of the future and of the
- training of village children.
- ‘Have you seen Miss Leland in her last new dress from Paris?’ said
- Howard, making one of his rapid transitions. ‘It is very rich in
- colour, and makes her look a little pale, like Saint Cecilia. She is
- wonderful as she stands by the piano, a silver cross round her neck.
- We have been talking about you. She complains to me. She says you are
- a little barbarous. You seem to look down on style, and sometimes--you
- must forgive me--even on manners, and you are quite without small talk.
- You must really try and be worthy of that beautiful girl, with her
- great soul and religious genius. She told me quite sadly, too, that you
- are not improving.’
- ‘No,’ said Sherman, ‘I am not going forward; I am at present trying to
- go sideways like the crabs.’
- ‘Be serious,’ answered the other. ‘She told me these things with the
- most sad and touching voice. She makes me her confidant, you know, in
- many matters, because of my wide religious experience. You must really
- improve yourself. You must paint or something.’
- ‘Well, I will paint or something.’
- ‘I am quite serious, Sherman. Try and be worthy of her, a soul as
- gentle as Saint Cecilia’s.’
- ‘She is very wealthy,’ said Sherman. ‘If she were engaged to you and
- not to me you might hope to die a bishop.’
- Howard looked at him in a mystified way and the conversation dropped.
- Presently Howard got up and went to his room, and Sherman, resetting
- the chess-board, began to play again, and, letting longer and longer
- pauses of reverie come between his moves, played far into the morning,
- cheating now in favour of the red men, now in favour of the white.
- V
- The next afternoon Howard found Miss Leland sitting, reading in an
- alcove in her drawing-room, between a stuffed parroquet and a blue De
- Morgan jar. As he was shown in he noticed, with a momentary shock, that
- her features were quite commonplace. Then she saw him, and at once
- seemed to vanish wrapped in an exulting flame of life. She stood up,
- flinging the book on to the seat with some violence.
- ‘I have been reading the “Imitation of Christ,” and was just feeling
- that I should have to become a theosophist or a socialist, or go and
- join the Catholic Church, or do something. How delightful it is to see
- you again! How is my savage getting on? It is so good of you to try
- and help me to reform him.’
- They talked on about Sherman, and Howard did his best to console her
- for his shortcomings. Time would certainly improve her savage. Several
- times she gazed at him with those large dark eyes of hers, of which the
- pupils to-day seemed larger than usual. They made him feel dizzy and
- clutch tightly the arm of his chair. Then she began to talk about her
- life since childhood--how they got to the subject he never knew--and
- made a number of those confidences which are so dangerous because so
- flattering. To love--there is nothing else worth living for; but then
- men are so shallow. She had never found a nature deep as her own.
- She would not pretend that she had not often been in love, but never
- had any heart rung back to her the true note. As she spoke her face
- quivered with excitement. The exulting flame of life seemed spreading
- from her to the other things in the room. To Howard’s eyes it seemed as
- though the bright pots and stuffed birds and plush curtains began to
- glow with a light not of this world--to glimmer like the strange and
- chaotic colours the mystic Blake imagined upon the scaled serpent of
- Eden. The light seemed gradually to dim his past and future, and to
- make pale his good resolves. Was it not in itself that which all men
- are seeking, and for which all else exists?
- He leant forward and took her hand, timidly and doubtingly. She did
- not draw it away. He leant nearer and kissed her on the forehead. She
- gave a joyful cry, and, casting her arms round his neck, burst out,
- ‘Ah! you--and I. We were made for each other. I hate Sherman. He is
- an egotist. He is a beast. He is selfish and foolish.’ Releasing one
- of her arms she struck the seat with her hand, excitedly, and went
- on, ‘How angry he will be! But it serves him right! How badly he is
- dressing. He does not know anything about anything. But you--you--I
- knew you were meant for me the moment I saw you.’
- That evening Howard flung himself into a chair in the empty
- smoking-room. He lighted a cigarette; it went out. Again he lighted
- it; again it went out. ‘I am a traitor--and that good, stupid fellow,
- Sherman, never to be jealous!’ he thought. ‘But then, how could I
- help it? And, besides, it cannot be a bad action to save her from a
- man she is so much above in refinement and feeling.’ He was getting
- into good-humour with himself. He got up and went over and looked
- at the photograph of Raphael’s Madonna, which he had hung over the
- mantelpiece. ‘How like Margaret’s are her big eyes!’
- VI
- The next day when Sherman came home from his office he saw an envelope
- lying on the smoking-room table. It contained a letter from Howard,
- saying that he had gone away, and that he hoped Sherman would forgive
- his treachery, but that he was hopelessly in love with Miss Leland, and
- that she returned his love.
- Sherman went downstairs. His mother was helping the servant to set the
- table.
- ‘You will never guess what has happened,’ he said. ‘My affair with
- Margaret is over.’
- ‘I cannot pretend to be sorry, John,’ she replied. She had long
- considered Miss Leland among accepted things, like the chimney-pots on
- the roof, and submitted, as we do, to any unalterable fact, but had
- never praised her or expressed liking in any way. ‘She puts belladonna
- in her eyes, and is a vixen and a flirt, and I dare say her wealth is
- all talk. But how did it happen?’
- Her son was, however, too excited to listen.
- He went upstairs and wrote the following note:
- ‘MY DEAR MARGARET:
- ‘I congratulate you on a new conquest. There is no end
- to your victories. As for me, I bow myself out with
- many sincere wishes for your happiness, and remain,
- Your friend,
- JOHN SHERMAN.’
- Having posted this letter he sat down with Howard’s note spread
- out before him, and wondered whether there was anything mean and
- small-minded in neatness--he himself was somewhat untidy. He had
- often thought so before, for their strong friendship was founded in a
- great measure on mutual contempt, but now immediately added, being in
- good-humour with the world, ‘He is much cleverer than I am. He must
- have been very industrious at school.’
- A week went by. He made up his mind to put an end to his London life.
- He broke to his mother his resolve to return to Ballah. She was
- delighted, and at once began to pack. Her old home had long seemed to
- her a kind of lost Eden, wherewith she was accustomed to contrast the
- present. When, in time, this present had grown into the past it became
- an Eden in turn. She was always ready for a change, if the change came
- to her in the form of a return to something old. Others place their
- ideals in the future; she laid hers in the past.
- The only one this momentous resolution seemed to surprise was the old
- and deaf servant. She waited with ever-growing impatience. She would
- sit by the hour wool-gathering on the corner of a chair with a look
- of bewildered delight. As the hour of departure came near she sang
- continually in a cracked voice.
- Sherman, a few days before leaving, was returning for the last time
- from his office when he saw, to his surprise, Howard and Miss Leland
- carrying each a brown-paper bundle. He nodded good-humouredly, meaning
- to pass on.
- ‘John,’ she said, ‘look at this brooch William gave me--a ladder
- leaning against the moon and a butterfly climbing up it. Is it not
- sweet? We are going to visit the poor.’
- ‘And I,’ he said, ‘am going to catch eels. I am leaving town.’
- He made his excuses, saying he had no time to wait, and hurried off.
- She looked after him with a mournful glance, strange in anybody who had
- exchanged one lover for another more favoured.
- ‘Poor fellow,’ murmured Howard, ‘he is broken-hearted.’
- ‘Nonsense,’ answered Miss Leland, somewhat snappishly.
- FIFTH PART
- JOHN SHERMAN RETURNS TO BALLAH
- I
- This being the homeward trip, SS. _Lavinia_ carried no cattle, but many
- passengers. As the sea was smooth and the voyage near its end, they
- lounged about the deck in groups. Two cattle-merchants were leaning
- over the taffrail smoking. In appearance they were something between
- betting-men and commercial travellers. For years they had done all
- their sleeping in steamers and trains. A short distance from them a
- clerk from Liverpool, with a consumptive cough, walked to and fro, a
- little child holding his hand. Shortly he would be landed in a boat
- putting off from the shore for the purpose. He had come hoping that
- his native air of Teeling Head would restore him. The little child
- was a strange contrast--her cheeks ruddy with perfect health. Further
- forward, talking to one of the crew, was a man with a red face and
- slightly unsteady step. In the companion-house was a governess, past
- her first youth, very much afraid of sea-sickness. She had brought her
- luggage up and heaped it round her to be ready for landing. Sherman
- sat on a pile of cable looking out over the sea. It was just noon;
- SS. _Lavinia_, having passed by Tory and Rathlin, was approaching the
- Donegal cliffs. They were covered by a faint mist, which made them loom
- even vaster than they were. To westward the sun shone on a perfectly
- blue sea. Seagulls came out of the mist and plunged into the sunlight,
- and out of the sunlight and plunged into the mist. To the westward
- gannets were striking continually, and a porpoise showed now and then,
- his fin and back gleaming in the sun. Sherman was more perfectly happy
- than he had been for many a day, and more ardently thinking. All
- nature seemed full of a Divine fulfilment. Everything fulfilled its
- law--fulfilment that is peace, whether it be for good or for evil, for
- evil also has its peace, the peace of the birds of prey. Sherman looked
- from the sea to the ship and grew sad. Upon this thing, crawling slowly
- along the sea, moved to and fro many mournful and slouching figures.
- He looked from the ship to himself and his eyes filled with tears. On
- himself, on these moving figures, hope and memory fed like flames.
- Again his eyes gladdened, for he knew he had found his present. He
- would live in his love and the day as it passed. He would live that
- his law might be fulfilled. Now, was he sure of this truth--the saints
- on the one hand, the animals on the other, live in the moment as it
- passes. Thitherward had his days brought him. This was the one grain
- they had ground. To grind one grain is sufficient for a lifetime.
- II
- A few days later Sherman was hurrying through the town of Ballah. It
- was Saturday, and he passed down through the marketing country people,
- and the old women with baskets of cakes and gooseberries and long
- pieces of sugarstick shaped like walking-sticks, and called by children
- ‘Peggie’s leg.’
- Now, as two months earlier, he was occasionally recognized and greeted,
- and, as before, went on without knowing, his eyes full of unintelligent
- sadness because the mind was making merry afar. They had the look we
- see in the eyes of animals and dreamers. Everything had grown simple,
- his problem had taken itself away. He was thinking what he would say
- to Mary Carton. Now they would be married, they would live in a small
- house with a green door and new thatch, and a row of beehives under
- a hedge. He knew where just such a house stood empty. The day before
- he and his mother had discussed, with their host of the Imperial
- Hotel, this question of houses. They knew the peculiarities of every
- house in the neighbourhood, except two or three built while they were
- away. All day Sherman and his mother had gone over the merits of the
- few they were told were empty. She wondered why her son had grown so
- unpractical. Once he was so easily pleased--the row of beehives and the
- new thatch did not for her settle the question. She set it all down to
- Miss Leland and the plays, and the singing, and the belladonna, and
- remembered with pleasure how many miles of uneasy water lay between the
- town of Ballah and these things.
- She did not know what else beside the row of beehives and the new
- thatch her son’s mind ran on as he walked among the marketing country
- people, and the gooseberry sellers, and the merchants of ‘Peggie’s
- leg,’ and the boys playing marbles in odd corners, and the men in
- waistcoats with flannel sleeves driving carts, and the women driving
- donkeys with creels of turf or churns of milk. Just now she was trying
- to remember whether she used to buy her wool for knitting at Miss
- Peter’s or from Mrs. Macallough’s at the bridge. One or other sold
- it a halfpenny a skein cheaper. She never knew what went on inside
- her son’s mind, she had always her own fish to fry. Blessed are the
- unsympathetic. They preserve their characters in an iron bottle while
- the most of us poor mortals are going about the planet vainly searching
- for any kind of a shell to contain us, and evaporating the while.
- Sherman began to mount the hill to the vicarage. He was happy. Because
- he was happy he began to run. Soon the steepness of the hill made him
- walk. He thought about his love for Mary Carton. Seen by the light of
- this love everything that had happened to him was plain now. He had
- found his centre of unity. His childhood had prepared him for this
- love. He had been solitary, fond of favourite corners of fields, fond
- of going about alone, unhuman like the birds and the leaves, his heart
- empty. How clearly he remembered his first meeting with Mary. They were
- both children. At a school treat they watched the fire-balloon ascend,
- and followed it a little way over the fields together. What friends
- they became, growing up together, reading the same books, thinking the
- same thoughts!
- As he came to the door and pulled at the great hanging iron
- bell-handle, the fire-balloon reascended in his heart, surrounded with
- cheers and laughter.
- III
- He kept the servant talking for a moment or two before she went for
- Miss Carton. The old rector, she told him, was getting less and less
- able to do much work. Old age had come almost suddenly upon him.
- He seldom moved from the fireside. He was getting more and more
- absent-minded. Once lately he had brought his umbrella into the
- reading-desk. More and more did he leave all things to his children--to
- Mary Carton and her younger sisters.
- When the servant had gone, Sherman looked round the somewhat gloomy
- room. In the window hung a canary in a painted cage. Outside was a
- narrow piece of shaded ground between the window and the rectory wall.
- The laurel and holly bushes darkened the window a good deal. On a
- table in the centre of the room were evangelistic books with gilded
- covers. Round the mirror over the mantelpiece were stuck various parish
- announcements, thrust between the glass and the gilding. On a small
- side-table was a copper ear-trumpet.
- How familiar everything seemed to Sherman! Only the room seemed smaller
- than it did three years before, and close to the table with the
- ear-trumpet, at one side of the fireplace before the arm-chair, was a
- new threadbare patch in the carpet.
- Sherman recalled how in this room he and Mary Carton had sat in winter
- by the fire, building castles in the air for each other. So deeply
- meditating was he that she came in and stood unnoticed beside him.
- ‘John,’ she said at last, ‘it is a great pleasure to see you so soon
- again. Are you doing well in London?’
- ‘I have left London.’
- ‘Are you married, then? You must introduce me to your wife.’
- ‘I shall never be married to Miss Leland.’
- ‘What?’
- ‘She has preferred another--my friend William Howard. I have come here
- to tell you something, Mary.’ He went and stood close to her and took
- her hand tenderly. ‘I have always been very fond of you. Often in
- London, when I was trying to think of another kind of life, I used to
- see this fireside and you sitting beside it, where we used to sit and
- talk about the future. Mary--Mary,’ he held her hand in both his--‘you
- will be my wife?’
- ‘You do not love me, John,’ she answered, drawing herself away. ‘You
- have come to me because you think it your duty. I have had nothing but
- duty all my life.’
- ‘Listen,’ he said. ‘I was very miserable; I invited Howard to stay with
- us. One morning I found a note on the smoking-room table to say that
- Margaret had accepted him, and I have come here to ask you to marry me.
- I never cared for anyone else.’
- He found himself speaking hurriedly, as though anxious to get the
- words said and done with. It now seemed to him that he had done ill
- in this matter of Miss Leland. He had not before thought of it--his
- mind had always been busy with other things. Mary Carton looked at him
- wonderingly.
- ‘John,’ she said at last, ‘did you ask Mr. Howard to stay with you on
- purpose to get him to fall in love with Miss Leland, or to give you an
- excuse for breaking off your engagement, as you knew he flirted with
- everyone?’
- ‘Margaret seems very fond of him. I think they are made for each
- other,’ he answered.
- ‘Did you ask him to London on purpose?’
- ‘Well, I will tell you,’ he faltered. ‘I was very miserable. I had
- drifted into this engagement I don’t know how. Margaret glitters and
- glitters and glitters, but she is not of my kind. I suppose I thought,
- like a fool, I should marry someone who was rich. I found out soon that
- I loved nobody but you. I got to be always thinking of you and of this
- town. Then I heard that Howard had lost his curacy, and asked him up.
- I just left them alone and did not go near Margaret much. I knew they
- were made for each other. Do not let us talk of them,’ he continued,
- eagerly. ‘Let us talk about the future. I will take a farm and turn
- farmer. I dare say my uncle will not give me anything when he dies
- because I have left his office. He will call me a ne’er-do-weel, and
- say I would squander it. But you and I--we will get married, will we
- not? We will be very happy,’ he went on, pleadingly. ‘You will still
- have your charities, and I shall be busy with my farm. We will surround
- ourselves with a wall. The world will be on the outside, and on the
- inside we and our peaceful lives.’
- ‘Wait,’ she said; ‘I will give you your answer,’ and going into the
- next room returned with several bundles of letters. She laid them on
- the table; some were white and new, some slightly yellow with time.
- ‘John,’ she said, growing very pale, ‘here are all the letters you ever
- wrote me from your earliest boyhood.’ She took one of the large candles
- from the mantelpiece, and, lighting it, placed it on the hearth.
- Sherman wondered what she was going to do with it. ‘I will tell you,’
- she went on, ‘what I had thought to carry to the grave unspoken. I have
- loved you for a long time. When you came and told me you were going to
- be married to another I forgave you, for man’s love is like the wind,
- and I prayed that God might bless you both.’ She leant down over the
- candle, her face pale and contorted with emotion. ‘All these letters
- after that grew very sacred. Since we were never to be married they
- grew a portion of my life, separated from everything and everyone--a
- something apart and holy. I re-read them all, and arranged them in
- little bundles according to their dates, and tied them with thread. Now
- I and you--we have nothing to do with each other any more.’
- She held the bundle of letters in the flame. He got up from his
- seat. She motioned him away imperiously. He looked at the flame in a
- bewildered way. The letters fell in little burning fragments about
- the hearth. It was all like a terrible dream. He watched those steady
- fingers hold letter after letter in the candle flame, and watched the
- candle burning on like a passion in the grey daylight of universal
- existence. A draught from under the door began blowing the ash about
- the room. The voice said--
- ‘You tried to marry a rich girl. You did not love her, but knew she was
- rich. You tired of her as you tire of so many things, and behaved to
- her most wrongly, most wickedly and treacherously. When you were jilted
- you came again to me and to the idleness of this little town. We had
- all hoped great things of you. You seemed good and honest.’
- ‘I loved you all along,’ he cried. ‘If you would marry me we would
- be very happy. I loved you all along,’ he repeated--this helplessly,
- several times over. The bird shook a shower of seed on his shoulder. He
- picked one of them from the collar of his coat and turned it over in
- his fingers mechanically. ‘I loved you all along.’
- ‘You have done no duty that came to you. You have tired of everything
- you should cling to; and now you have come to this little town because
- here is idleness and irresponsibility.’
- The last letter lay in ashes on the hearth. She blew out the candle,
- and replaced it among the photographs on the mantelpiece, and stood
- there as calm as a portion of the marble.
- ‘John, our friendship is over--it has been burnt in the candle.’
- He started forward, his mind full of appeals half-stifled with despair,
- on his lips gathered incoherent words: ‘She will be happy with Howard.
- They were made for each other. I slipped into it. I always thought I
- should marry someone who was rich. I never loved anyone but you. I did
- not know I loved you at first. I thought about you always. You are the
- root of my life.’
- Steps were heard outside the door at the end of a passage. Mary Carton
- went to the door and called. The steps turned and came nearer. With a
- great effort Sherman controlled himself. The door opened, and a tall,
- slight girl of twelve came into the room. A strong smell of garden
- mould rose from a basket in her hands, Sherman recognized the child who
- had given him tea that evening in the schoolhouse three years before.
- ‘Have you finished weeding the carrots?’ said Mary Carton.
- ‘Yes, Miss.’
- ‘Then you are to weed the small bed under the pear-tree by the
- tool-house. Do not go yet, child. This is Mr. Sherman. Sit down a
- little.’
- The child sat down on the corner of a chair with a scared look in her
- eyes. Suddenly she said--
- ‘Oh, what a lot of burnt paper!’
- ‘Yes; I have been burning some old letters.’
- ‘I think,’ said John, ‘I will go now.’ Without a word of farewell he
- went out, almost groping his way.
- He had lost the best of all the things he held dear. Twice he had gone
- through the fire. The first time worldly ambition left him; the second,
- love. An hour before the air had been full of singing and peace that
- was resonant like joy. Now he saw standing before his Eden the angel
- with the flaming sword. All the hope he had ever gathered about him had
- taken itself off, and the naked soul shivered.
- IV
- The road under his feet felt gritty and barren. He hurried away from
- the town. It was late afternoon. Trees cast bands of shadow across the
- road. He walked rapidly as if pursued. About a mile to the west of
- the town he came on a large wood bordering the road and surrounding
- a deserted house. Some local rich man once lived there, now it was
- given over to a caretaker who lived in two rooms in the back part. Men
- were at work cutting down trees in two or three parts of the wood.
- Many places were quite bare. A mass of ruins--a covered well, and the
- wreckage of castle wall--that had been roofed with green for centuries,
- lifted themselves up, bare as anatomies. The sight intensified, by
- some strange sympathy, his sorrow, and he hurried away as from a thing
- accursed of God.
- The road led to the foot of a mountain, topped by a cairn supposed
- in popular belief to be the grave of Maeve, Mab of the fairies, and
- considered by antiquarians to mark the place where certain prisoners
- were executed in legendary times as sacrifices to the moon.
- He began to climb the mountain. The sun was on the rim of the sea. It
- stayed there without moving, for as he ascended he saw an ever-widening
- circle of water.
- He threw himself down upon the cairn. The sun sank under the sea. The
- Donegal headlands mixed with the surrounding blue. The stars grew out
- of heaven.
- Sometimes he got up and walked to and fro. Hours passed. The stars,
- the streams down in the valley, the wind moving among the boulders,
- the various unknown creatures rustling in the silence--all these were
- contained within themselves, fulfilling their law, content to be alone,
- content to be with others, having the peace of God or the peace of the
- birds of prey. He only did not fulfil his law; something that was not
- he, that was not nature, that was not God, had made him and her he
- loved its tools. Hope, memory, tradition, conformity, had been laying
- waste their lives. As he thought this the night seemed to crush him
- with its purple foot. Hour followed hour. At midnight he started up,
- hearing a faint murmur of clocks striking the hour in the distant town.
- His face and hands were wet with tears, his clothes saturated with dew.
- He turned homeward, hurriedly flying from the terrible firmament.
- What had this glimmering and silence to do with him--this luxurious
- present? He belonged to the past and the future. With pace somewhat
- slackened, because of the furze, he came down into the valley. Along
- the northern horizon moved a perpetual dawn, travelling eastward as the
- night advanced. Once, as he passed a marsh near a lime-kiln, a number
- of small birds rose chirruping from where they had been clinging among
- the reeds. Once, standing still for a moment where two roads crossed on
- a hill-side, he looked out over the dark fields. A white stone rose in
- the middle of a field, a score of yards in front of him. He knew the
- place well; it was an ancient burying-ground. He looked at the stone,
- and suddenly filled by the terror of the darkness children feel, began
- again his hurried walk.
- He re-entered Ballah by the southern side. In passing he looked at the
- rectory. To his surprise a light burned in the drawing-room. He stood
- still. The dawn was brightening towards the east, but all round him
- was darkness, seeming the more intense to his eyes for their being
- fresh from the unshaded fields. In the midst of this darkness shone
- the lighted window. He went over to the gate and looked in. The room
- was empty. He was about to turn away when he noticed a white figure
- standing close to the gate. The latch creaked and the gate moved slowly
- on its hinges.
- ‘John,’ said a trembling voice, ‘I have been praying, and a light has
- come to me. I wished you to be ambitious--to go away and do something
- in the world. You did badly, and my poor pride was wounded. You do not
- know how much I had hoped from you; but it was all pride--all pride and
- foolishness. You love me. I ask no more. We need each other; the rest
- is with God.’
- She took his hand in hers, and began caressing it. ‘We have been
- shipwrecked. Our goods have been cast into the sea.’ Something in her
- voice told of the emotion that divides the love of woman from the love
- of man. She looked upon him whom she loved as full of a helplessness
- that needed protection, a reverberation of the feeling of the mother
- for the child at the breast.
- DHOYA
- I
- LONG ago, before the earliest stone of the Pyramids was laid, before
- the Bo tree of Buddha unrolled its first leaf, before a Japanese had
- painted on a temple wall the horse that every evening descended and
- trampled the rice-fields, before the ravens of Thor had eaten their
- first worm together, there lived a man of giant stature and of giant
- strength named Dhoya. One evening Fomorian galleys had entered the Bay
- of the Red Cataract, now the Bay of Ballah, and there deserted him.
- Though he rushed into the water and hurled great stones after them,
- they were out of reach. From earliest childhood the Fomorians had held
- him captive and compelled him to toil at the oar, but when his strength
- had come his fits of passion made him a terror to all on board.
- Sometimes he would tear the seats of the galley from under the rowers,
- and drive the rowers up into the shrouds, where they would cling until
- the passion left him. ‘The demons,’ they said, ‘have made him their
- own.’ So they enticed him on shore, he having on his head a mighty
- stone pitcher to fill with water, and deserted him.
- When the last sail had dropped over the rim of the world, he rose from
- where he had flung himself down on the sands and hurried through the
- forest eastward. After a time he reached that lake among the mountains
- where in later times Diarmuid drove down four stakes and made thereon
- a platform with four flags in the centre for a hearth, and placed over
- all a roof of wicker and skins, and hid his Grania, islanded thereon.
- Still eastward he went, what is now Bulben on one side, Cope’s mountain
- on the other, until at last he threw himself at full length in a deep
- cavern and slept. Henceforward he made this cavern his lair, issuing
- forth to hunt the deer or the bears or the mountain oxen. Slowly the
- years went by, his fits of fury growing more and more frequent, though
- there was no one but his own shadow to rave against. When his fury was
- on him even the bats and owls, and the brown frogs that crept out of
- the grass at twilight, would hide themselves--even the bats and owls
- and the brown frogs. These he had made his friends, and let them crawl
- and perch about him, for at times he would be very gentle, and they
- too were sullen and silent--the outcasts from they knew not what. But
- most of all, things placid and beautiful feared him. He would watch for
- hours, hidden in the leaves, to reach his hand out slowly and carefully
- at last, and seize and crush some glittering halcyon.
- Slowly the years went by and human face he never saw, but sometimes,
- when the gentle mood was on him and it was twilight, a presence seemed
- to float invisibly by him and sigh softly, and once or twice he awoke
- from sleep with the sensation of a finger having rested for a moment
- on his forehead, and would mutter a prayer to the moon that glimmered
- through the door of his cave before turning to sleep again. ‘O moon,’
- he would say, ‘that wanderest in the blue cave of the sky, more white
- than the beard of Partholan, whose years were five hundred, sullen and
- solitary, sleeping only on the floor of the sea: keep me from the evil
- spirits of the islands of the lake southward beyond the mountains, and
- the evil spirits of the caves northward beyond the mountains, and the
- evil spirits who wave their torches by the mouth of the river eastward
- beyond the valley, and the evil spirits of the pools westward beyond
- the mountains, and I will offer you a bear and a deer in full horn, O
- solitary of the cave divine, and if any have done you wrong I will
- avenge you.’
- Gradually, however, he began to long for this mysterious touch.
- At times he would make journeys into distant parts, and once the
- mountain bulls gathered together, proud of their overwhelming numbers
- and their white horns, and followed him with great bellowing westward,
- he being laden with their tallest, well-nigh to his cave, and would
- have gored him, but, pacing into a pool of the sea to his shoulders, he
- saw them thunder away, losing him in the darkness. The place where he
- stood is called Pooldhoya to this day.
- So the years went slowly by, and ever deeper and deeper came his
- moodiness, and more often his fits of wrath. Once in his gloom he paced
- the forests for miles, now this way, now that, until, returning in the
- twilight, he found himself standing on a cliff southward of the lake
- that was southward of the mountains. The moon was rising. The sound
- of the swaying of reeds floated from beneath, and the twittering of
- the flocks of reed-wrens who love to cling on the moving stems. It was
- the hour of votaries. He turned to the moon, then hurriedly gathered
- a pile of leaves and branches, and making a fire cast thereon wild
- strawberries and the fruit of the quicken-tree. As the smoke floated
- upwards a bar of faint purple clouds drifted over the moon’s face--a
- refusal of the sacrifice. Hurrying through the surrounding woods he
- found an owl sleeping in the hollow of a tree, and returning cast him
- on the fire. Still the clouds gathered. Again he searched the woods.
- This time it was a badger that he cast among the flames. Time after
- time he came and went, sometimes returning immediately with some live
- thing, at others not till the fire had almost burnt itself out. Deer,
- wild swine, birds, all to no purpose. Higher and higher he piled the
- burning branches, the flames and the smoke waved and circled like
- the lash of a giant’s whip. Gradually the nearer islands passed the
- rosy colour on to their more distant brethren. The reed-wrens of the
- furthest reed beds disturbed amid their sleep must have wondered at the
- red gleam reflected in each other’s eyes. Useless his night-long toil;
- the clouds covered the moon’s face more and more, until, when the long
- fire-lash was at its brightest, they drowned her completely in a surge
- of unbroken mist. Raging against the fire he scattered with his staff
- the burning branches, and trampled in his fury the sacrificial embers
- beneath his feet. Suddenly a voice in the surrounding darkness called
- him softly by name. He turned. For years no articulate voice had
- sounded in his ears. It seemed to rise from the air just beneath the
- verge of the precipice. Holding by a hazel bush he leaned out, and for
- a moment it seemed to him the form of a beautiful woman floated faintly
- before him, but changed as he watched to a little cloud of vapour;
- and from the nearest of the haunted islands there came assuredly a
- whiff of music. Then behind him in the forest said the voice, ‘Dhoya,
- my beloved.’ He rushed in pursuit; something white was moving before
- him. He stretched out his hand; it was only a mass of white campion
- trembling in the morning breeze, for an ashen morning was just touching
- the mists on the eastern mountains. Beginning suddenly to tremble with
- supernatural fear Dhoya turned homewards. Everything was changed; dark
- shadows seemed to come and go, and elfin chatter to pass upon the
- breeze. But when he reached the shelter of the pine woods all was still
- as of old. He slackened his speed. Those solemn pine-trees soothed
- him with their vast unsociability--many and yet each one alone. Once
- or twice, when in some glade further than usual from its kind arose a
- pine-tree larger than the rest, he paused with bowed head to mutter an
- uncouth prayer to that dark outlaw. As he neared his cave and came from
- the deep shade into the region of mountain-ash and hazel, the voices
- seemed again to come and go, and the shadows to circle round him, and
- once a voice said, he imagined, in accents faint and soft as falling
- dew, ‘Dhoya, my beloved.’ But a few yards from the cave all grew
- suddenly silent.
- II
- Slower and slower he went, with his eyes on the ground, bewildered
- by all that was happening. A few feet from the cave he stood still,
- counting aimlessly the round spots of light made by the beams slanting
- through trees that hid with their greenness, as in the centre of the
- sea, that hollow rock. As over and over he counted them, he heard,
- first with the ear only, then with the mind also, a footstep going to
- and fro within the cave. Lifting his eyes he saw the same figure seen
- on the cliff--the figure of a woman, beautiful and young. Her dress was
- white, save for a border of feathers dyed the fatal red of the spirits.
- She had arranged in one corner the spears, and in the other the
- brushwood and branches used for the fire, and spread upon the ground
- the skins, and now began pulling vainly at the great stone pitcher of
- the Fomorians.
- Suddenly she saw him and with a burst of laughter flung her arms round
- his neck, crying, ‘Dhoya, I have left my world far off. My people--on
- the floor of the lake they are dancing and singing, and on the islands
- of the lake; always happy, always young, always without change. I have
- left them for thee, Dhoya, for they cannot love. Only the changing,
- and moody, and angry, and weary can love. I am beautiful; love me,
- Dhoya. Do you hear me? I left the places where they dance, Dhoya, for
- thee!’ For long she poured out a tide of words, he answering at first
- little, then more and more as she melted away the silence of so many
- inarticulate years; and all the while she gazed on him with eyes, no
- ardour could rob of the mild and mysterious melancholy that watches us
- from the eyes of animals--sign of unhuman reveries.
- Many days passed over these strangely-wedded ones. Sometimes when he
- asked her, ‘Do you love me?’ she would answer, ‘I do not know, but
- I long for your love endlessly.’ Often at twilight, returning from
- hunting, he would find her bending over a stream that flowed near to
- the cave, decking her hair with feathers and reddening her lips with
- the juice of a wild berry.
- He was very happy secluded in that deep forest. Hearing the faint
- murmurs of the western sea, they seemed to have outlived change. But
- Change is everywhere, with the tides and the stars fastened to her
- wheel. Every blood-drop in their lips, every cloud in the sky, every
- leaf in the world changed a little, while they brushed back their hair
- and kissed. All things change save only the fear of change. And yet
- for his hour Dhoya was happy and as full of dreams as an old man or an
- infant--for dreams wander nearest to the grave and the cradle.
- Once, as he was returning home from hunting, by the northern edge of
- the lake, at the hour when the owls cry to each other, ‘It is time to
- be abroad,’ and the last flutter of the wind has died away, leaving
- under every haunted island an image legible to the least hazel branch,
- there suddenly stood before him a slight figure, at the edge of the
- narrow sand-line, dark against the glowing water. Dhoya drew nearer. It
- was a man leaning on his spear-staff, on his head a small red cap. His
- spear was slender and tipped with shining metal; the spear of Dhoya of
- wood, one end pointed and hardened in the fire. The red-capped stranger
- silently raised that slender spear and thrust at Dhoya, who parried
- with his pointed staff.
- For a long while they fought. The last vestige of sunset passed away
- and the stars came out. Underneath them the feet of Dhoya beat up the
- ground, but the feet of the other as he rushed hither and thither,
- matching his agility with the mortal’s mighty strength, made neither
- shadow nor footstep on the sands. Dhoya was wounded, and growing weary
- a little, when the other leaped away, and, crouching down by the water,
- began: ‘You have carried away by some spell unknown the most beautiful
- of our bands--you who have neither laughter nor singing. Restore her,
- Dhoya, and go free.’ Dhoya answered him no word, and the other rose and
- again thrust at him with the spear. They fought to and fro upon the
- sands until the dawn touched with olive the distant sky, and then his
- anger-fit, long absent, fell on Dhoya, and he closed with his enemy and
- threw him, and put his knee on his chest and his hands on his throat,
- and would have crushed all life out of him, when lo! he held beneath
- his knee no more than a bundle of reeds.
- Nearing home in the early morning he heard the voice he loved, singing:
- Full moody is my love and sad,
- His moods bow low his sombre crest,
- I hold him dearer than the glad,
- And he shall slumber on my breast.
- My love hath many an evil mood,
- Ill words for all things soft and fair,
- I hold him dearer than the good,
- My fingers feel his amber hair.
- No tender wisdom floods the eyes
- That watch me with their suppliant light--
- I hold him dearer than the wise,
- And for him make me wise and bright.
- And when she saw him she cried, ‘An old mortal song heard floating from
- a tent of skin, as we rode, I and mine, through a camping-place at
- night.’ From that day she was always either singing wild and melancholy
- songs or else watching him with that gaze of animal reverie.
- Once he asked, ‘How old are you?’
- ‘A thousand years, for I am young.’
- ‘I am so little to you,’ he went on, ‘and you are so much to me--dawn,
- and sunset, tranquillity, and speech, and solitude.’
- ‘Am I so much?’ she said; ‘say it many times!’ and her eyes seemed to
- brighten and her breast heaved with joy.
- Often he would bring her the beautiful skins of animals, and she would
- walk to and fro on them, laughing to feel their softness under her
- feet. Sometimes she would pause and ask suddenly, ‘Will you weep for me
- when we have parted?’ and he would answer, ‘I will die then’; and she
- would go on rubbing her feet to and fro in the soft skin.
- And so Dhoya grew tranquil and gentle, and Change seemed still to
- have forgotten them, having so much on her hands. The stars rose and
- set watching them smiling together, and the tides ebbed and flowed,
- bringing mutability to all save them. But always everything changes,
- save only the fear of Change.
- III
- One evening as they sat in the inner portion of the cave, watching
- through the opening the paling of the sky and the darkening of the
- leaves, and counting the budding stars, Dhoya suddenly saw stand before
- him the dark outline of him he fought on the lake sand, and heard at
- the same instant his companion sigh.
- The stranger approached a little, and said, ‘Dhoya, we have fought
- heretofore, and now I have come to play chess against thee, for well
- thou knowest, dear to the perfect warrior after war is chess.’
- ‘I know it,’ answered Dhoya.
- ‘And when we have played, Dhoya, we will name the stake.’
- ‘Do not play,’ whispered his companion at his side.
- But Dhoya, being filled with his anger-fit at the sight of his enemy,
- answered, ‘I will play, and I know well the stake you mean, and I name
- this for mine, that I may again have my knee on your chest and my hands
- on your throat, and that you will not again change into a bundle
- of wet reeds.’ His companion lay down on a skin and began to cry a
- little. Dhoya felt sure of winning. He had often played in his boyhood,
- before the time of his anger-fits, with his masters of the galley; and
- besides, he could always return to his hands and his weapons once more.
- Now the floor of the cave was of smooth, white sand, brought from
- the seashore in his great Fomorian pitcher, to make it soft for his
- beloved to walk upon; before it had been, as it now is, of rough clay.
- On this sand the red-capped stranger marked out with his spear-point
- a chess-board, and marked with rushes, crossed and recrossed each
- alternate square, fixing each end of the rush in the sand, until a
- complete board was finished of white and green squares, and then drew
- from a bag large chessmen of mingled wood and silver. Two or three
- would have made an armful for a child. Standing each at his end they
- began to play. The game did not last long. No matter how carefully
- Dhoya played, each move went against him. At last, leaping back from
- the board, he cried, ‘I have lost!’ The two spirits were standing
- together at the entrance. Dhoya seized his spear, but slowly the
- figures began to fade, first a star and then the leaves showed through
- their forms. Soon all had vanished away.
- Then, understanding his loss, he threw himself on the ground, and
- rolling hither and thither, roared like a wild beast. All night long he
- lay on the ground, and all the next day till nightfall. He had crumbled
- his staff unconsciously between his fingers into small pieces, and now,
- full of dull rage, the pointed end of the staff still in his hand,
- arose and went forth westward. In a ravine of the northern mountain
- he came on the tracks of wild horses. Soon one passed him fearlessly,
- knowing nothing of man. He drove the pointed end of the staff deep in
- the flank, making a great wound, sending the horse rushing with short
- screams down the mountain. Other horses passed him one by one, driven
- southward by a cold wind laden with mist, arisen in the night-time.
- Towards the end of the ravine stood one black and huge, the leader of
- the herd. Dhoya leaped on his back with a loud cry that sent a raven
- circling from the neighbouring cliff, and the horse, after vainly
- seeking to throw him, rushed off towards the north-west, over the
- heights of the mountains where the mists floated. The moon, clear
- sometimes of the flying clouds, from low down in the south-east, cast
- a pale and mutable light, making their shadow rise before them on
- the mists, as though they pursued some colossal demon, sombre on his
- black charger. Then leaving the heights they rushed down that valley
- where, in far later times, Diarmuid hid in a deep cavern his Grania,
- and passed the stream where Muadhan, their savage servant, caught fish
- for them on a hook baited with a quicken-berry. On over the plains,
- on northward, mile after mile, the wild gigantic horse leaping cliff
- and chasm in his terrible race; on until the mountains of what is now
- Donegal rose before them--over these among the clouds, driving rain
- blowing in their faces from the sea, Dhoya knowing not whither he went,
- or why he rode. On--the stones loosened by the hoofs rumbling down into
- the valleys--till far in the distance he saw the sea, a thousand feet
- below him; then, fixing his eyes thereon, and using the spear-point as
- a goad, he roused his black horse into redoubled speed, until horse and
- rider plunged headlong into the Western Sea.
- Sometimes the cotters on the mountains of Donegal hear on windy nights
- a sudden sound of horses’ hoofs, and say to each other, ‘There goes
- Dhoya.’ And at the same hour men say if any be abroad in the valleys
- they see a huge shadow rushing along the mountain.
- _Printed by_ A. H. BULLEN, _at The Shakespeare Head Press,
- Stratford-on-Avon_.
- * * * * *
- Transcriber’s Notes:
- Repeated story titles were removed to avoid redundancy. Obvious
- punctuation errors repaired. Varied hyphenation was retained.
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Collected Works in Verse and Prose
- of William Butler Yeats, Vol. 7 (of 8), by William Butler Yeats
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