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<h2> CHAPTER XI. THE EVIL WOOD </h2>
<p>I fell fast asleep, and when I woke the sun was rising. I went to the top
again, and looked back: the hollow I had crossed in the moonlight lay
without sign of life. Could it be that the calm expanse before me swarmed
with creatures of devouring greed?</p>
<p>I turned and looked over the land through which my way must lie. It seemed
a wide desert, with a patch of a different colour in the distance that
might be a forest. Sign of presence, human or animal, was none—smoke
or dust or shadow of cultivation. Not a cloud floated in the clear heaven;
no thinnest haze curtained any segment of its circling rim.</p>
<p>I descended, and set out for the imaginable forest: something alive might
be there; on this side of it could not well be anything!</p>
<p>When I reached the plain, I found it, as far as my sight could go, of
rock, here flat and channeled, there humped and pinnacled—evidently
the wide bed of a vanished river, scored by innumerable water-runs,
without a trace of moisture in them. Some of the channels bore a dry moss,
and some of the rocks a few lichens almost as hard as themselves. The air,
once "filled with pleasant noise of waters," was silent as death. It took
me the whole day to reach the patch,—which I found indeed a forest—but
not a rudiment of brook or runnel had I crossed! Yet through the glowing
noon I seemed haunted by an aural mirage, hearing so plainly the voice of
many waters that I could hardly believe the opposing testimony of my eyes.</p>
<p>The sun was approaching the horizon when I left the river-bed, and entered
the forest. Sunk below the tree-tops, and sending his rays between their
pillar-like boles, he revealed a world of blessed shadows waiting to
receive me. I had expected a pine-wood, but here were trees of many sorts,
some with strong resemblances to trees I knew, others with marvellous
differences from any I had ever seen. I threw myself beneath the boughs of
what seemed a eucalyptus in blossom: its flowers had a hard calyx much
resembling a skull, the top of which rose like a lid to let the froth-like
bloom-brain overfoam its cup. From beneath the shadow of its
falchion-leaves my eyes went wandering into deep after deep of the forest.</p>
<p>Soon, however, its doors and windows began to close, shutting up aisle and
corridor and roomier glade. The night was about me, and instant and sharp
the cold. Again what a night I found it! How shall I make my reader share
with me its wild ghostiness?</p>
<p>The tree under which I lay rose high before it branched, but the boughs of
it bent so low that they seemed ready to shut me in as I leaned against
the smooth stem, and let my eyes wander through the brief twilight of the
vanishing forest. Presently, to my listless roving gaze, the varied
outlines of the clumpy foliage began to assume or imitate—say rather
SUGGEST other shapes than their own. A light wind began to blow; it set
the boughs of a neighbour tree rocking, and all their branches aswing,
every twig and every leaf blending its individual motion with the sway of
its branch and the rock of its bough. Among its leafy shapes was a pack of
wolves that struggled to break from a wizard's leash: greyhounds would not
have strained so savagely! I watched them with an interest that grew as
the wind gathered force, and their motions life.</p>
<p>Another mass of foliage, larger and more compact, presented my fancy with
a group of horses' heads and forequarters projecting caparisoned from
their stalls. Their necks kept moving up and down, with an impatience that
augmented as the growing wind broke their vertical rhythm with a wilder
swaying from side to side. What heads they were! how gaunt, how strange!—several
of them bare skulls—one with the skin tight on its bones! One had
lost the under jaw and hung low, looking unutterably weary—but now
and then hove high as if to ease the bit. Above them, at the end of a
branch, floated erect the form of a woman, waving her arms in imperious
gesture. The definiteness of these and other leaf masses first surprised
and then discomposed me: what if they should overpower my brain with
seeming reality? But the twilight became darkness; the wind ceased; every
shape was shut up in the night; I fell asleep.</p>
<p>It was still dark when I began to be aware of a far-off, confused, rushing
noise, mingled with faint cries. It grew and grew until a tumult as of
gathering multitudes filled the wood. On all sides at once the sounds drew
nearer; the spot where I lay seemed the centre of a commotion that
extended throughout the forest. I scarce moved hand or foot lest I should
betray my presence to hostile things.</p>
<p>The moon at length approached the forest, and came slowly into it: with
her first gleam the noises increased to a deafening uproar, and I began to
see dim shapes about me. As she ascended and grew brighter, the noises
became yet louder, and the shapes clearer. A furious battle was raging
around me. Wild cries and roars of rage, shock of onset, struggle
prolonged, all mingled with words articulate, surged in my ears. Curses
and credos, snarls and sneers, laughter and mockery, sacred names and
howls of hate, came huddling in chaotic interpenetration. Skeletons and
phantoms fought in maddest confusion. Swords swept through the phantoms:
they only shivered. Maces crashed on the skeletons, shattering them
hideously: not one fell or ceased to fight, so long as a single joint held
two bones together. Bones of men and horses lay scattered and heaped;
grinding and crunching them under foot fought the skeletons. Everywhere
charged the bone-gaunt white steeds; everywhere on foot or on wind-blown
misty battle-horses, raged and ravened and raved the indestructible
spectres; weapons and hoofs clashed and crushed; while skeleton jaws and
phantom-throats swelled the deafening tumult with the war-cry of every
opinion, bad or good, that had bred strife, injustice, cruelty in any
world. The holiest words went with the most hating blow. Lie-distorted
truths flew hurtling in the wind of javelins and bones. Every moment some
one would turn against his comrades, and fight more wildly than before,
THE TRUTH! THE TRUTH! still his cry. One I noted who wheeled ever in a
circle, and smote on all sides. Wearied out, a pair would sit for a minute
side by side, then rise and renew the fierce combat. None stooped to
comfort the fallen, or stepped wide to spare him.</p>
<p>The moon shone till the sun rose, and all the night long I had glimpses of
a woman moving at her will above the strife-tormented multitude, now on
this front now on that, one outstretched arm urging the fight, the other
pressed against her side. "Ye are men: slay one another!" she shouted. I
saw her dead eyes and her dark spot, and recalled what I had seen the
night before.</p>
<p>Such was the battle of the dead, which I saw and heard as I lay under the
tree.</p>
<p>Just before sunrise, a breeze went through the forest, and a voice cried,
"Let the dead bury their dead!" At the word the contending thousands
dropped noiseless, and when the sun looked in, he saw never a bone, but
here and there a withered branch.</p>
<p>I rose and resumed my journey, through as quiet a wood as ever grew out of
the quiet earth. For the wind of the morning had ceased when the sun
appeared, and the trees were silent. Not a bird sang, not a squirrel,
mouse, or weasel showed itself, not a belated moth flew athwart my path.
But as I went I kept watch over myself, nor dared let my eyes rest on any
forest-shape. All the time I seemed to hear faint sounds of mattock and
spade and hurtling bones: any moment my eyes might open on things I would
not see! Daylight prudence muttered that perhaps, to appear, ten thousand
phantoms awaited only my consenting fancy.</p>
<p>In the middle of the afternoon I came out of the wood—to find before
me a second net of dry water-courses. I thought at first that I had
wandered from my attempted line, and reversed my direction; but I soon saw
it was not so, and concluded presently that I had come to another branch
of the same river-bed. I began at once to cross it, and was in the bottom
of a wide channel when the sun set.</p>
<p>I sat down to await the moon, and growing sleepy, stretched myself on the
moss. The moment my head was down, I heard the sounds of rushing streams—all
sorts of sweet watery noises. The veiled melody of the molten music sang
me into a dreamless sleep, and when I woke the sun was already up, and the
wrinkled country widely visible. Covered with shadows it lay striped and
mottled like the skin of some wild animal. As the sun rose the shadows
diminished, and it seemed as if the rocks were re-absorbing the darkness
that had oozed out of them during the night.</p>
<p>Hitherto I had loved my Arab mare and my books more, I fear, than live man
or woman; now at length my soul was athirst for a human presence, and I
longed even after those inhabitants of this alien world whom the raven had
so vaguely described as nearest my sort. With heavy yet hoping heart, and
mind haunted by a doubt whether I was going in any direction at all, I
kept wearily travelling "north-west and by south."</p>
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