<h2><SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.<br/> WHAT BEATRICE DREAMED</h2>
<p>Geoffrey lay upon his back, watching the still patch of sunshine and listening
to the ticking of the clock, as he passed all these and many other events in
solemn review, till the series culminated in his vivid recollection of the
scene of that very morning.</p>
<p>“I am sick of it,” he said at last aloud, “sick and tired.
She makes my life wretched. If it wasn’t for Effie upon my word I’d
. . . By Jove, it is three o’clock; I will go and see Miss Granger.
She’s a woman, not a female ghost at any rate, though she is a
freethinker—which,” he added as he slowly struggled off the couch,
“is a very foolish thing to be.”</p>
<p>Very shakily, for he was sadly knocked about, Geoffrey hobbled down the long
narrow room and through the door, which was ajar. The opposite door was also
set half open. He knocked softly, and getting no answer pushed it wide and
looked in, thinking that he had, perhaps, made some mistake as to the room. On
a sofa placed about two-thirds down its length, lay Beatrice asleep. She was
wrapped in a kind of dressing-gown of some simple blue stuff, and all about her
breast and shoulders streamed her lovely curling hair. Her sweet face was
towards him, its pallor relieved only by the long shadow of the dark lashes and
the bent bow of the lips. One white wrist and hand hung down almost to the
floor, and beneath the spread curtain of the sunlit hair her bosom heaved
softly in her sleep. She looked so wondrously beautiful in her rest that he
stopped almost awed, and gazed, and gazed again, feeling as though a present
sense and power were stilling his heart to silence. It is dangerous to look
upon such quiet loveliness, and very dangerous to feel that pressure at the
heart. A truly wise man feeling it would have fled, knowing that seeds sown in
such silences may live to bloom upon a bitter day, and shed their fruit into
the waters of desolation. But Geoffrey was not wise—who would have been?
He still stood and gazed till the sight stamped itself so deeply on the tablets
of his heart that through all the years to come no heats of passion, no frosts
of doubt, and no sense of loss could ever dull its memory.</p>
<p>The silent sun shone on, the silent woman slept, and in silence the watcher
gazed. And as he looked a great fear, a prescience of evil that should come,
entered into Geoffrey and took possession of him. A cloud without crossed the
ray of sunlight and turned it. It wavered, for a second it rested on his
breast, flashed back to hers, then went out; and as it flashed and died, he
seemed to know that henceforth, for life till death, ay! and beyond, his fate
and that sleeping woman’s were one fate. It was but a momentary
knowledge; the fear shook him, and was gone almost before he understood its
foolishness. But it had been with him, and in after days he remembered it.</p>
<p>Just then Beatrice woke, opening her grey eyes. Their dreamy glance fell upon
him, looking through him and beyond him, rather than at him. Then she raised
herself a little and stretching out both her arms towards him, spoke aloud.</p>
<p>“So have you have come back to me at last,” she said. “I knew
that you would come and I have waited.”</p>
<p>He made no answer, he did not know what to say; indeed he began to think that
he also must be dreaming. For a little while Beatrice still looked at him in
the same absent manner, then suddenly started up, the red blood streaming to
her brow.</p>
<p>“Why, Mr. Bingham,” she said, “is it really you? What was it
that I said? Oh, pray forgive me, whatever it was. I have been asleep dreaming
such a curious dream, and talking in my sleep.”</p>
<p>“Do not alarm yourself, Miss Granger,” he answered, recovering
himself with a jerk; “you did not say anything dreadful, only that you
were glad to see me. What were you dreaming about?”</p>
<p>Beatrice looked at him doubtfully; perhaps his words did not ring quite true.</p>
<p>“I think that I had better tell you as I have said so much,” she
answered. “Besides, it was a very curious dream, and if I believed in
dreams it would rather frighten me, only fortunately I do not. Sit down and I
will tell it to you before I forget it. It is not very long.”</p>
<p>He took the chair to which she pointed, and she began, speaking in the voice of
one yet laden with the memories of sleep.</p>
<p>“I dreamed that I stood in space. Far to my right was a great globe of
light, and to my left was another globe, and I knew that the globes were named
Life and Death. From the globe on the right to the globe on the left, and back
again, a golden shuttle, in which two flaming eyes were set, was shot
continually, and I knew also that this was the shuttle of Destiny, weaving the
web of Fate. Presently the shuttle flew, leaving behind it a long silver
thread, and the eyes in the shuttle were such as your eyes. Again the shuttle
sped through space, and this time its eyes were like my eyes, and the thread it
left behind it was twisted from a woman’s hair. Half way between the
globes of Life and Death my thread was broken, but the shuttle flew on and
vanished. For a moment the thread hung in air, then a wind rose and blew it, so
that it floated away like a spider’s web, till it struck upon your silver
thread of life and began to twist round and round it. As it twisted it grew
larger and heavier, till at last it was thick as a great tress of hair, and the
silver line bent beneath the weight so that I saw it soon must break. Then
while I wondered what would happen, a white hand holding a knife slid slowly
down the silver line, and with the knife severed the wrappings of woman’s
hair, which fell and floated slowly away, like a little cloud touched with
sunlight, till they were lost in darkness. But the thread of silver that was
your line of life, sprang up quivering and making a sound like sighs, till at
last it sighed itself to silence.</p>
<p>“Then I seemed to sleep, and when I woke I was floating upon such a misty
sea as we saw last night. I had lost all sight of land, and I could not
remember what the stars were like, nor how I had been taught to steer, nor
understand where I must go. I called to the sea, and asked it of the stars, and
the sea answered me thus:</p>
<p>“‘Hope has rent her raiment, and the stars are set.’</p>
<p>“I called again, and asked of the land where I should go, and the land
did not answer, but the sea answered me a second time:</p>
<p>“‘Child of the mist, wander in the mist, and in darkness seek for
light.’</p>
<p>“Then I wept because Hope had rent her starry garment and in darkness I
must seek for light. And while I still wept, <i>you</i> rose out of the sea and
sat before me in the boat. I had never seen you before, and still I felt that I
had known you always. You did not speak, and I did not speak, but you looked
into my heart and saw its trouble. Then I looked into your heart, and read what
was written. And this was written:</p>
<p>“‘Woman whom I knew before the Past began, and whom I shall know
when the Future is ended, why do you weep?’</p>
<p>“And my heart answered, ‘I weep because I am lost upon the waters
of the earth, because Hope has rent her starry robes, and in everlasting
darkness I must seek for light that is not.’ Then your heart said,
‘<i>I</i> will show you light,’ and bending forward you touched me
on the breast.</p>
<p>“And suddenly an agony shook me like the agonies of birth and death, and
the sky was full of great-winged angels who rolled up the mist as a cloth, and
drew the veils from the eyes of Night, and there, her feet upon the globe, and
her star-set head piercing the firmament of heaven, stood Hope breathing peace
and beauty. She looked north and south and east and west, then she looked
upwards through the arching vaults of heaven, and wherever she set her eyes,
bright with holy tears, the darkness shrivelled and sorrow ceased, and from
corruption arose the Incorruptible. I gazed and worshipped, and as I did so,
again the sea spoke unquestioned:</p>
<p>“‘In darkness thou hast found light, in Death seek for
wisdom.’</p>
<p>“Then once more Hope rent her starry robes, and the angels drew down a
veil over the eyes of Night, and the sea swallowed me, and I sank till I
reached the deep foundations of mortal death. And there in the Halls of Death I
sat for ages upon ages, till at last I saw you come, and on your lips was the
word of wisdom that makes all things clear, but what it was I cannot remember.
Then I stretched out my hand to greet you, and woke, and that is all my
dream.”</p>
<p class="p2">
She ceased, her grey eyes set wide, as though they still strove to trace their
spiritual vision upon the air of earth, her breast heaving, and her lips apart.</p>
<p>“Great heaven!” he said, “what an imagination you must have
to dream such a dream as that.”</p>
<p>“Imagination,” she answered, returning to her natural manner.
“I have none, Mr. Bingham. I used to have, but I lost it when I
lost—everything else. Can you interpret my dream? Of course you cannot;
it is nothing but nonsense—such stuff as dreams are made of, that is
all.”</p>
<p>“It may be nonsense, I daresay it is, but it is beautiful
nonsense,” he answered. “I wish ladies had more of such stuff to
give the world.”</p>
<p>“Ah, well, dreams may be wiser than wakings, and nonsense than learned
talk, for all we know. But there’s an end of it. I do not know why I
repeated it to you. I am sorry that I did repeat it, but it seemed so real it
shook me out of myself. This is what comes of breaking in upon the routine of
life by being three parts drowned. One finds queer things at the bottom of the
sea, you know. By the way I hope that you are recovering. I do not think that
you will care to go canoeing again with me, Mr. Bingham.”</p>
<p>There was an opening for a compliment here, but Geoffrey felt that it would be
too much in earnest if spoken, so he resisted the temptation.</p>
<p>“What, Miss Granger,” he said, “should a man say to a lady
who but last night saved his life, at the risk, indeed almost at the cost, of
her own?”</p>
<p>“It was nothing,” she answered, colouring; “I clung to you,
that was all, more by instinct than from any motive. I think I had a vague idea
that you might float and support me.”</p>
<p>“Miss Granger, the occasion is too serious for polite fibs. I know how
you saved my life. I do not know how to thank you for it.”</p>
<p>“Then don’t thank me at all, Mr. Bingham. Why should you thank me?
I only did what I was bound to do. I would far rather die than desert a
companion in distress, of any sort; we all must die, but it would be dreadful
to die ashamed. You know what they say, that if you save a person from drowning
you will do them an injury afterwards. That is how they put it here; in some
parts the saying is the other way about, but I am not likely ever to do you an
injury, so it does not make me unhappy. It was an awful experience: you were
senseless, so you cannot know how strange it felt lying upon the slippery rock,
and seeing those great white waves rush upon us through the gloom, with nothing
but the night above, and the sea around, and death between the two. I have been
lonely for many years, but I do not think that I ever quite understood what
loneliness really meant before. You see,” she added by way of an
afterthought, “I thought that you were dead, and there is not much
company in a corpse.”</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, “one thing is, it would have been lonelier
if we had gone.”</p>
<p>“Do you think so?” she answered, looking at him inquiringly.
“I don’t quite see how you make that out. If you believe in what we
have been taught, as I think you do, wherever it was you found yourself there
would be plenty of company, and if, like me, you do not believe in anything,
why, then, you would have slept, and sleep asks for nothing.”</p>
<p>“Did you believe in nothing when you lay upon the rock waiting to be
drowned, Miss Granger?”</p>
<p>“Nothing!” she answered; “only weak people find revelation in
the extremities of fear. If revelation comes at all, surely it must be born in
the heart and not in the senses. I believed in nothing, and I dreaded nothing,
except the agony of death. Why should I be afraid? Supposing that I am
mistaken, and there is something beyond, is it my fault that I cannot believe?
What have I done that I should be afraid? I have never harmed anybody that I
know of, and if I could believe I would. I wish I had died,” she went on,
passionately; “it would be all over now. I am tired of the world, tired
of work and helplessness, and all the little worries which wear one out. I am
not wanted here, I have nothing to live for, and I wish that I had died!”</p>
<p>“Some day you will think differently, Miss Granger. There are many things
that a woman like yourself can live for—at the least, there is your
work.”</p>
<p>She laughed drearily. “My work! If you only knew what it is like you
would not talk to me about it. Every day I roll my stone up the hill, and every
night it seems to roll down again. But you have never taught in a village
school. How can you know? I work all day, and in the evening perhaps I have to
mend the tablecloths, or—what do you think?—write my father’s
sermons. It sounds curious, does it not, that I should write sermons? But I do.
I wrote the one he is going to preach next Sunday. It makes very little
difference to him what it is so long as he can read it, and, of course, I never
say anything which can offend anybody, and I do not think that they listen
much. Very few people go to church in Bryngelly.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you ever get any time to yourself, then?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, sometimes I do, and then I go out in my canoe, or read, and am
almost happy. After all, Mr. Bingham, it is very wrong and ungrateful of me to
speak like this. I have more advantages than nine-tenths of the world, and I
ought to make the best of them. I don’t know why I have been speaking as
I have, and to you, whom I never saw till yesterday. I never did it before to
any living soul, I assure you. It is just like the story of the man who came
here last year with the divining rod. There is a cottage down on the
cliff—it belongs to Mr. Davies, who lives in the Castle. Well, they have
no drinking water near, and the new tenant made a great fuss about it. So Mr.
Davies hired men, and they dug and dug and spent no end of money, but could not
come to water. At last the tenant fetched an old man from some parish a long
way off, who said that he could find springs with a divining rod. He was a
curious old man with a crutch, and he came with his rod, and hobbled about till
at last the rod twitched just at the tenant’s back door—at least
the diviner said it did. At any rate, they dug there, and in ten minutes struck
a spring of water, which bubbled up so strongly that it rushed into the house
and flooded it. And what do you think? After all, the water was brackish. You
are the man with the divining rod, Mr. Bingham, and you have made me talk a
great deal too much, and, after all, you see it is not nice talk. You must
think me a very disagreeable and wicked young woman, and I daresay I am. But
somehow it is a relief to open one’s mind. I do hope, Mr. Bingham, that
you will see—in short, that you will not misunderstand me.”</p>
<p>“Miss Granger,” he answered, “there is between us that which
will always entitle us to mutual respect and confidence—the link of life
and death. Had it not been for you, I should not sit here to listen to your
confidence to-day. You may tell me that a mere natural impulse prompted you to
do what you did. I know better. It was your will that triumphed over your
natural impulse towards self-preservation. Well, I will say no more about it,
except this: If ever a man was bound to a woman by ties of gratitude and
respect, I am bound to you. You need not fear that I shall take advantage of or
misinterpret your confidence.” Here he rose and stood before her, his
dark handsome face bowed in proud humility. “Miss Granger, I look upon it
as an honour done to me by one whom henceforth I must reverence among all
women. The life you gave back to me, and the intelligence which directs it, are
in duty bound to you, and I shall not forget the debt.”</p>
<p>Beatrice listened to his words, spoken in that deep and earnest voice, which in
after years became so familiar to Her Majesty’s judges and to
Parliament—listened with a new sense of pleasure rising in her heart. She
was this man’s equal; what he could dare, she could dare; where he could
climb, she could follow—ay, and if need be, show the path, and she felt
that he acknowledged it. In his sight she was something more than a handsome
girl to be admired and deferred to for her beauty’s sake. He had placed
her on another level—one, perhaps, that few women would have wished to
occupy. But Beatrice was thankful to him. It was the first taste of supremacy
that she had ever known.</p>
<p>It is something to stir the proud heart of such a woman as Beatrice, in that
moment when for the first time she feels herself a conqueror, victorious, not
through the vulgar advantage of her sex, not by the submission of man’s
coarser sense, but rather by the overbalancing weight of mind.</p>
<p>“Do you know,” she said, suddenly looking up, “you make me
very proud,” and she stretched out her hand to him.</p>
<p>He took it, and, bending, touched it with his lips. There was no possibility of
misinterpreting the action, and though she coloured a little—for, till
then, no man had even kissed the tip of her finger—she did not
misinterpret it. It was an act of homage, and that was all.</p>
<p>And so they sealed the compact of their perfect friendship for ever and a day.</p>
<p>Then came a moment’s silence. It was Geoffrey who broke it.</p>
<p>“Miss Granger,” he said, “will you allow me to preach you a
lecture, a very short one?”</p>
<p>“Go on,” she said.</p>
<p>“Very well. Do not blame me if you don’t like it, and do not set me
down as a prig, though I am going to tell you your faults as I read them in
your own words. You are proud and ambitious, and the cramped lines in which you
are forced to live seem to strangle you. You have suffered, and have not
learned the lesson of suffering—humility. You have set yourself up
against Fate, and Fate sweeps you along like spray upon the gale, yet you go
unwilling. In your impatience you have flown to learning for refuge, and it has
completed your overthrow, for it has induced you to reject as non-existent all
that you cannot understand. Because your finite mind cannot search infinity,
because no answer has come to all your prayers, because you see misery and
cannot read its purpose, because you suffer and have not found rest, you have
said there is naught but chance, and become an atheist, as many have done
before you. Is it not true?”</p>
<p>“Go on,” she answered, bowing her head to her breast so that the
long rippling hair almost hid her face.</p>
<p>“It seems a little odd,” Geoffrey said with a short laugh,
“that I, with all my imperfections heaped upon me, should presume to
preach to you—but you will know best how near or how far I am from the
truth. So I want to say something. I have lived for thirty-five years, and seen
a good deal and tried to learn from it, and I know this. In the long run,
unless we of our own act put away the opportunity, the world gives us our due,
which generally is not much. So much for things temporal. If you are fit to
rule, in time you will rule; if you do not, then be content and acknowledge
your own incapacity. And as for things spiritual, I am sure of
this—though of course one does not like to talk much of these
matters—if you only seek for them long enough in some shape you will find
them, though the shape may not be that which is generally recognised by any
particular religion. But to build a wall deliberately between oneself and the
unseen, and then complain that the way is barred, is simply childish.”</p>
<p>“And what if one’s wall is built, Mr. Bingham?”</p>
<p>“Most of us have done something in that line at different times,”
he answered, “and found a way round it.”</p>
<p>“And if it stretches from horizon to horizon, and is higher than the
clouds, what then?”</p>
<p>“Then you must find wings and fly over it.”</p>
<p>“And where can any earthly woman find those spiritual wings?” she
asked, and then sank her head still deeper on her breast to cover her
confusion. For she remembered that she had heard of wanderers in the dusky
groves of human passion, yes, even Mænad wanderers, who had suddenly come face
to face with their own soul; and that the cruel paths of earthly love may yet
lead the feet which tread them to the ivory gates of heaven.</p>
<p>And remembering these beautiful myths, though she had no experience of love,
and knew little of its ways, Beatrice grew suddenly silent. Nor did Geoffrey
give her an answer, though he need scarcely have feared to do so.</p>
<p>For were they not discussing a purely abstract question?</p>
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