<h2>CHAPTER XXXV</h2>
<br/>
<div class="first">WHO shall depict the soul of woman? As well
essay to number the silk hairs on the moth's wing, or paint truly
the hues in the blown bubble! The soul of woman dwells apart,
subject to no laws, trammelled by no precedent; mysterious in its
essence, strong in its very frailty, it passes through many phases
to its ultimate end, working as all great agents work, silently and
in the dark.</div>
<p>With the passing of Blake, the spiritual Maxine entered upon a
new phase—was arbitrarily forced into a new phase of
existence. The passing of Blake was sudden, tremendous, devastating
in its effect, leaving as consequences a moral blackness, a moral
chaos.</p>
<p>It was a new Maxine who wakened to the realization of facts;
rather, it was a new Max, for it was the masculine, not the
feminine ego that turned a set face to circumstance in the moment
of desertion—that sedulously wrapped itself in the garment of
pride spun and fashioned in happier hours.</p>
<p>'Now is the test! Now is the time!' Max insisted, drowning by
insistence the poignant cry of the heart; and to this watchword he
marched against fate.</p>
<p>With set purpose he faced life and its vexed questions in that
bitter, precipitate moment. Again it was the beginning of things;
but it was the rue Müller and not the Gare du Nord that was
the scene of action; the May sun fell burning on the Parisian
pavements, while the blood of the adventurer ran slow and cold. The
illusions bred of the winter dawn had been dispersed by the light
of day; life was no glad enterprise—no climbing of golden
heights, but the barren crossing of a trackless region where no
hand proffered guidance and false signs misled the weary eyes. One
weapon alone was necessary in the pursuance of the gray
journey—a sure command—a sure possession of one's
self!</p>
<p>This thought alone made harmony with the music of the past, and
toward its thin sound his ears were strained. Comradeship had come
and gone—love had come and gone—the fundamental idea
that had lured him to Paris alone remained, stark, colorless, but
recognizable!</p>
<p>One must possess one's self! And to achieve this supreme good,
one must close the senses and seal up the heart, and be as a
creature already dead!</p>
<p>To this profound end, Max locked himself in his studio and sat
alone while the May morning waxed; to this profound end, moving as
in a dream, he at last rose at midday and left the
<i>appartement</i> in quest of his customary meal. What that meal
was to consist of—whether stones or bread—did not touch
his brain, for his mind was solely exercised with wonder at the
fact that his will could command the search for food—could
compel his dry lips to the savorless duty of eating.</p>
<p>As he left the little <i>café</i>, paying his score, he
half expected to see his wonder reflected on the good face of
madame the proprietress, and was curiously shocked to receive the
usual cheerful smile, the usual cheerful 'good-day!' that took no
heed of his heavy plight.</p>
<p>It was that cheerful superficiality of Paris that can so
delightfully mirror one's mood when the heart is light—that
can ring so sadly hollow when the soul is sick. It cut Max with a
bitter sharpness; and, like a man fleeing from his own shadow, he
fled the shop.</p>
<p>Outside in the dazzling glitter of the streets, the sun blinded
him, accentuating the scorching pain of unshed tears; the very
pavements seemed to rise up and sear him with their memories. Here
in this very street Blake and he had strolled and smoked on many a
night, wending homeward from the play or the opera, laughing,
jesting, arguing as they paced arm-in-arm up and down before the
sleeping shops. The thought stung him with an amazing sharpness,
and he fled from it, as he had fled from the <i>café</i> and
its smiling proprietress.</p>
<p>His descent upon Paris was a descent upon a region of beauty.
The sense of summer lay like a bloom upon the flowers for sale at
the street corners, and shimmered—a ribbon of silver
sunlight—across the pale-blue sky. The trees in the grand
boulevards shone in their green trappings; rainbow colors glinted
in the shop windows; everywhere, save in the heart of Max, was
fairness and youth and joy.</p>
<p>Supremely conscious of himself, adrift and wretched, he passed
through the crowds of people—passed from sun to shade, from
shade to sun—with a hopeless eager haste that possessed no
object save to outstrip his thoughts.</p>
<p>It is a curious fact that, to the desponding, water has a
magnetic call; without knowledge, almost without volition, his
footsteps turned toward the river—that river which has so
closely girdled Paris through all her varied life. Smooth and pale,
it slipped secretly past its quays as Max approached, indifferent
to the tragedies it concealed, as it was indifferent to the ardent
life that ebbed and flowed across its many bridges. On its breast,
the small, dark craft of the city nestled lazily; to right and left
along its banks, the sun struck glints of gold and bronze from
spire and monument; while, close against its sides, on the very
parapet of its quays, there was in progress that quaint book
traffic that strikes so intimate a note in the life of the
quarter.</p>
<p>It is a charming thought that in the heart of Paris—Paris,
the pleasure city—there is time and space for the vender of
old books to set out his wares, to lay them open to the kindly sky,
to tempt the studious and idle alike to pause and dally and lose
themselves in that most fascinating of all pursuits—- the
search for the treasure that is never found. Max paused beside this
row of tattered bookstalls, and quivered to the stab of a new pain.
Scores of happy mornings he had wandered with Blake in this
vicarious garden of delight, flitting from the books to the curio
shops across the roadway, from the curios back again to the books,
while Blake talked with his easy friendliness to the odd beings who
bartered in this open market.</p>
<p>It was pain inexpressible—it was loneliness made
palpable—to stand by the tressel stalls and allow his eyes to
rest upon the familiar merchandise; and for the third time in that
black morning he fled from his own shadow—fled onward into
the darker, older Paris—the Paris of tradition, where the
church of Notre Dame frowns, silently scornful of those who disturb
its peace.</p>
<p>As he approached the great building, its sombre impressiveness
fell upon his troubled spirit mercifully as its shadow fell across
the blinding sunlight. He paused in the wide space that fronts the
heavy doors, and caught his breath as the fugitive of old might
have caught breath at sight of sanctuary.</p>
<p>Here was a place of shade and magnitude—- a place
untouched by memory!</p>
<p>Blindly he moved toward the door, entered the church, walked up
the aisle. Few sight-seers disturbed the sense of peace, for
outside it was high noon and Paris was engrossed in the serious
business of <i>déjeuner</i>; no service was in progress; all
was still, all dim save where a taper of a lamp glowed before a
shrine or the sun struck sharp through the splendor of stained
glass.</p>
<p>There are few churches—to some minds there is no other
church—where the idea of the profound broods as it does in
Notre Dame. The sense of dignity, the curious ancient scent
compounded by time, the mystic colors of the great windows breathe
of the infinite.</p>
<p>Max, walking up the aisle, looked at the dark walls;
Max—modern, critical—looked up at the wondrous rose
window, and felt the overshadowing power of superhuman things. The
modern world crumbled before the impassive silence, criticism found
no challenge in its brooding spirit, for the mind cannot analyze
what it cannot measure.</p>
<p>Max subscribed to no creed; but, by a strange impulsion, born of
dead ages, his eyes fell from the glowing window and turned to the
high altar. He did not want to pray; he rebelled against the idea
of supplication; but the circling thoughts within him concentrated
suddenly, he clasped his hands with a clasp so fierce that it was
pain.</p>
<p>"Oh, God!" he said, under his breath. "God! God, let me possess
myself!" And as if some chord had snapped, relieving the tension in
his brain, he dropped upon his knees, as he had once done at the
foot of his own staircase and, crouching against a pillar, wept
like a lost child.</p>
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<h2>PART IV</h2>
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