<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The Hill of Dreams</h1>
<h2>by Arthur Machen</h2>
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<h3>Contents</h3>
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<tr>
<td> <SPAN href="#chap01">I.</SPAN></td>
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<td> <SPAN href="#chap02">II.</SPAN></td>
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<td> <SPAN href="#chap03">III.</SPAN></td>
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<td> <SPAN href="#chap04">IV.</SPAN></td>
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<td> <SPAN href="#chap05">V.</SPAN></td>
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<td> <SPAN href="#chap06">VI.</SPAN></td>
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<td> <SPAN href="#chap07">VII.</SPAN></td>
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</table>
<h3><SPAN name="chap01"></SPAN>I.</h3>
<p>There was a glow in the sky as if great furnace doors were opened.</p>
<p>But all the afternoon his eyes had looked on glamour; he had strayed in
fairyland. The holidays were nearly done, and Lucian Taylor had gone out
resolved to lose himself, to discover strange hills and prospects that he had
never seen before. The air was still, breathless, exhausted after heavy rain,
and the clouds looked as if they had been moulded of lead. No breeze blew upon
the hill, and down in the well of the valley not a dry leaf stirred, not a
bough shook in all the dark January woods.</p>
<p>About a mile from the rectory he had diverged from the main road by an opening
that promised mystery and adventure. It was an old neglected lane, little more
than a ditch, worn ten feet deep by its winter waters, and shadowed by great
untrimmed hedges, densely woven together. On each side were turbid streams, and
here and there a torrent of water gushed down the banks, flooding the lane. It
was so deep and dark that he could not get a glimpse of the country through
which he was passing, but the way went down and down to some unconjectured
hollow.</p>
<p>Perhaps he walked two miles between the high walls of the lane before its
descent ceased, but he thrilled with the sense of having journeyed very far,
all the long way from the known to the unknown. He had come as it were into the
bottom of a bowl amongst the hills, and black woods shut out the world. From
the road behind him, from the road before him, from the unseen wells beneath
the trees, rivulets of waters swelled and streamed down towards the center to
the brook that crossed the lane. Amid the dead and wearied silence of the air,
beneath leaden and motionless clouds, it was strange to hear such a tumult of
gurgling and rushing water, and he stood for a while on the quivering
footbridge and watched the rush of dead wood and torn branches and wisps of
straw, all hurrying madly past him, to plunge into the heaped spume, the barmy
froth that had gathered against a fallen tree.</p>
<p>Then he climbed again, and went up between limestone rocks, higher and higher,
till the noise of waters became indistinct, a faint humming of swarming hives
in summer. He walked some distance on level ground, till there was a break in
the banks and a stile on which he could lean and look out. He found himself, as
he had hoped, afar and forlorn; he had strayed into outland and occult
territory. From the eminence of the lane, skirting the brow of a hill, he
looked down into deep valleys and dingles, and beyond, across the trees, to
remoter country, wild bare hills and dark wooded lands meeting the grey still
sky. Immediately beneath his feet the ground sloped steep down to the valley, a
hillside of close grass patched with dead bracken, and dotted here and there
with stunted thorns, and below there were deep oak woods, all still and silent,
and lonely as if no one ever passed that way. The grass and bracken and thorns
and woods, all were brown and grey beneath the leaden sky, and as Lucian looked
he was amazed, as though he were reading a wonderful story, the meaning of
which was a little greater than his understanding. Then, like the hero of a
fairy-book, he went on and on, catching now and again glimpses of the amazing
country into which he had penetrated, and perceiving rather than seeing that as
the day waned everything grew more grey and somber. As he advanced he heard the
evening sounds of the farms, the low of the cattle, and the barking of the
sheepdogs; a faint thin noise from far away. It was growing late, and as the
shadows blackened he walked faster, till once more the lane began to descend,
there was a sharp turn, and he found himself, with a good deal of relief, and a
little disappointment, on familiar ground. He had nearly described a circle,
and knew this end of the lane very well; it was not much more than a mile from
home. He walked smartly down the hill; the air was all glimmering and
indistinct, transmuting trees and hedges into ghostly shapes, and the walls of
the White House Farm flickered on the hillside, as if they were moving towards
him. Then a change came. First, a little breath of wind brushed with a dry
whispering sound through the hedges, the few leaves left on the boughs began to
stir, and one or two danced madly, and as the wind freshened and came up from a
new quarter, the sapless branches above rattled against one another like bones.
The growing breeze seemed to clear the air and lighten it. He was passing the
stile where a path led to old Mrs. Gibbon’s desolate little cottage, in
the middle of the fields, at some distance even from the lane, and he saw the
light blue smoke of her chimney rise distinct above the gaunt greengage trees,
against a pale band that was broadening along the horizon. As he passed the
stile with his head bent, and his eyes on the ground, something white started
out from the black shadow of the hedge, and in the strange twilight, now tinged
with a flush from the west, a figure seemed to swim past him and disappear. For
a moment he wondered who it could be, the light was so flickering and unsteady,
so unlike the real atmosphere of the day, when he recollected it was only Annie
Morgan, old Morgan’s daughter at the White House. She was three years
older than he, and it annoyed him to find that though she was only fifteen,
there had been a dreadful increase in her height since the summer holidays. He
had got to the bottom of the hill, and, lifting up his eyes, saw the strange
changes of the sky. The pale band had broadened into a clear vast space of
light, and above, the heavy leaden clouds were breaking apart and driving
across the heaven before the wind. He stopped to watch, and looked up at the
great mound that jutted out from the hills into mid-valley. It was a natural
formation, and always it must have had something of the form of a fort, but its
steepness had been increased by Roman art, and there were high banks on the
summit which Lucian’s father had told him were the <i>vallum</i> of the
camp, and a deep ditch had been dug to the north to sever it from the hillside.
On this summit oaks had grown, queer stunted-looking trees with twisted and
contorted trunks, and writhing branches; and these now stood out black against
the lighted sky. And then the air changed once more; the flush increased, and a
spot like blood appeared in the pond by the gate, and all the clouds were
touched with fiery spots and dapples of flame; here and there it looked as if
awful furnace doors were being opened.</p>
<p>The wind blew wildly, and it came up through the woods with a noise like a
scream, and a great oak by the roadside ground its boughs together with a
dismal grating jar. As the red gained in the sky, the earth and all upon it
glowed, even the grey winter fields and the bare hillsides crimsoned, the
waterpools were cisterns of molten brass, and the very road glittered. He was
wonder-struck, almost aghast, before the scarlet magic of the afterglow. The
old Roman fort was invested with fire; flames from heaven were smitten about
its walls, and above there was a dark floating cloud, like a fume of smoke, and
every haggard writhing tree showed as black as midnight against the black of
the furnace.</p>
<p>When he got home he heard his mother’s voice calling: “Here’s
Lucian at last. Mary, Master Lucian has come, you can get the tea ready.”
He told a long tale of his adventures, and felt somewhat mortified when his
father seemed perfectly acquainted with the whole course of the lane, and knew
the names of the wild woods through which he had passed in awe.</p>
<p>“You must have gone by the Darren, I suppose”—that was all he
said. “Yes, I noticed the sunset; we shall have some stormy weather. I
don’t expect to see many in church tomorrow.”</p>
<p>There was buttered toast for tea “because it was holidays.” The red
curtains were drawn, and a bright fire was burning, and there was the old
familiar furniture, a little shabby, but charming from association. It was much
pleasanter than the cold and squalid schoolroom; and much better to be reading
<i>Chambers’s Journal</i> than learning Euclid; and better to talk to his
father and mother than to be answering such remarks as: “I say, Taylor,
I’ve torn my trousers; how much do you charge for mending?”
“Lucy, dear, come quick and sew this button on my shirt.”</p>
<p>That night the storm woke him, and he groped with his hands amongst the
bedclothes, and sat up, shuddering, not knowing where he was. He had seen
himself, in a dream, within the Roman fort, working some dark horror, and the
furnace doors were opened and a blast of flame from heaven was smitten upon
him.</p>
<p class="p2">
Lucian went slowly, but not discreditably, up the school, gaining prizes now
and again, and falling in love more and more with useless reading and unlikely
knowledge. He did his elegiacs and iambics well enough, but he preferred
exercising himself in the rhymed Latin of the middle ages. He liked history,
but he loved to meditate on a land laid waste, Britain deserted by the legions,
the rare pavements riven by frost, Celtic magic still brooding on the wild
hills and in the black depths of the forest, the rosy marbles stained with
rain, and the walls growing grey. The masters did not encourage these
researches; a pure enthusiasm, they felt, should be for cricket and football,
the <i>dilettanti</i> might even play fives and read Shakespeare without blame,
but healthy English boys should have nothing to do with decadent periods. He
was once found guilty of recommending Villon to a school-fellow named Barnes.
Barnes tried to extract unpleasantness from the text during preparation, and
rioted in his place, owing to his incapacity for the language. The matter was a
serious one; the headmaster had never heard of Villon, and the culprit gave up
the name of his literary admirer without remorse. Hence, sorrow for Lucian, and
complete immunity for the miserable illiterate Barnes, who resolved to confine
his researches to the Old Testament, a book which the headmaster knew well. As
for Lucian, he plodded on, learning his work decently, and sometimes doing very
creditable Latin and Greek prose. His school-fellows thought him quite mad, and
tolerated him, and indeed were very kind to him in their barbarous manner. He
often remembered in after life acts of generosity and good nature done by
wretches like Barnes, who had no care for old French nor for curious meters,
and such recollections always moved him to emotion. Travelers tell such tales;
cast upon cruel shores amongst savage races, they have found no little kindness
and warmth of hospitality.</p>
<p>He looked forward to the holidays as joyfully as the rest of them. Barnes and
his friend Duscot used to tell him their plans and anticipation; they were
going home to brothers and sisters, and to cricket, more cricket, or to
football, more football, and in the winter there were parties and jollities of
all sorts. In return he would announce his intention of studying the Hebrew
language, or perhaps Provençal, with a walk up a bare and desolate mountain by
way of open-air amusement, and on a rainy day for choice. Whereupon Barnes
would impart to Duscot his confident belief that old Taylor was quite cracked.
It was a queer, funny life that of school, and so very unlike anything in
<i>Tom Brown</i>. He once saw the headmaster patting the head of the
bishop’s little boy, while he called him “my little man,” and
smiled hideously. He told the tale grotesquely in the lower fifth room the same
day, and earned much applause, but forfeited all liking directly by proposing a
voluntary course of scholastic logic. One barbarian threw him to the ground and
another jumped on him, but it was done very pleasantly. There were, indeed,
some few of a worse class in the school, solemn sycophants, prigs perfected
from tender years, who thought life already “serious,” and yet, as
the headmaster said, were “joyous, manly young fellows.” Some of
these dressed for dinner at home, and talked of dances when they came back in
January. But this virulent sort was comparatively infrequent, and achieved
great success in after life. Taking his school days as a whole, he always spoke
up for the system, and years afterward he described with enthusiasm the strong
beer at a roadside tavern, some way out of the town. But he always maintained
that the taste for tobacco, acquired in early life, was the great life, was the
great note of the English Public School.</p>
<p>Three years after Lucian’s discovery of the narrow lane and the vision of
the flaming fort, the August holidays brought him home at a time of great heat.
It was one of those memorable years of English weather, when some Provençal
spell seems wreathed round the island in the northern sea, and the grasshoppers
chirp loudly as the cicadas, the hills smell of rosemary, and white walls of
the old farmhouses blaze in the sunlight as if they stood in Arles or Avignon
or famed Tarascon by Rhone.</p>
<p>Lucian’s father was late at the station, and consequently Lucian bought
the <i>Confessions of an English Opium Eater</i> which he saw on the bookstall.
When his father did drive up, Lucian noticed that the old trap had had a new
coat of dark paint, and that the pony looked advanced in years.</p>
<p>“I was afraid that I should be late, Lucian,” said his father,
“though I made old Polly go like anything. I was just going to tell
George to put her into the trap when young Philip Harris came to me in a
terrible state. He said his father fell down ‘all of a sudden like’
in the middle of the field, and they couldn’t make him speak, and would I
please to come and see him. So I had to go, though I couldn’t do anything
for the poor fellow. They had sent for Dr. Burrows, and I am afraid he will
find it a bad case of sunstroke. The old people say they never remember such a
heat before.”</p>
<p>The pony jogged steadily along the burning turnpike road, taking revenge for
the hurrying on the way to the station. The hedges were white with the
limestone dust, and the vapor of heat palpitated over the fields. Lucian showed
his <i>Confessions</i> to his father, and began to talk of the beautiful bits
he had already found. Mr. Taylor knew the book well—had read it many
years before. Indeed he was almost as difficult to surprise as that character
in Daudet, who had one formula for all the chances of life, and when he saw the
drowned Academician dragged out of the river, merely observed
“<i>J’ai vu tout ça.</i>” Mr. Taylor the parson, as his
parishioners called him, had read the fine books and loved the hills and woods,
and now knew no more of pleasant or sensational surprises. Indeed the living
was much depreciated in value, and his own private means were reduced almost to
vanishing point, and under such circumstances the great style loses many of its
finer savours. He was very fond of Lucian, and cheered by his return, but in the
evening he would be a sad man again, with his head resting on one hand, and
eyes reproaching sorry fortune.</p>
<p>Nobody called out “Here’s your master with Master Lucian; you can
get tea ready,” when the pony jogged up to the front door. His mother had
been dead a year, and a cousin kept house. She was a respectable person called
Deacon, of middle age, and ordinary standards; and, consequently, there was
cold mutton on the table. There was a cake, but nothing of flour, baked in
ovens, would rise at Miss Deacon’s evocation. Still, the meal was laid in
the beloved “parlor,” with the view of hills and valleys and
climbing woods from the open window, and the old furniture was still pleasant
to see, and the old books in the shelves had many memories. One of the most
respected of the armchairs had become weak in the castors and had to be
artfully propped up, but Lucian found it very comfortable after the hard forms.
When tea was over he went out and strolled in the garden and orchards, and
looked over the stile down into the brake, where foxgloves and bracken and
broom mingled with the hazel undergrowth, where he knew of secret glades and
untracked recesses, deep in the woven green, the cabinets for many years of his
lonely meditations. Every path about his home, every field and hedgerow had
dear and friendly memories for him; and the odour of the meadowsweet was better
than the incense steaming in the sunshine. He loitered, and hung over the stile
till the far-off woods began to turn purple, till the white mists were
wreathing in the valley.</p>
<p>Day after day, through all that August, morning and evening were wrapped in
haze; day after day the earth shimmered in the heat, and the air was strange,
unfamiliar. As he wandered in the lanes and sauntered by the cool sweet verge
of the woods, he saw and felt that nothing was common or accustomed, for the
sunlight transfigured the meadows and changed all the form of the earth. Under
the violent Provençal sun, the elms and beeches looked exotic trees, and in the
early morning, when the mists were thick, the hills had put on an unearthly
shape.</p>
<p>The one adventure of the holidays was the visit to the Roman fort, to that
fantastic hill about whose steep bastions and haggard oaks he had seen the
flames of sunset writhing nearly three years before. Ever since that Saturday
evening in January, the lonely valley had been a desirable place to him; he had
watched the green battlements in summer and winter weather, had seen the heaped
mounds rising dimly amidst the drifting rain, had marked the violent height
swim up from the ice-white mists of summer evenings, had watched the fairy
bulwarks glimmer and vanish in hovering April twilight. In the hedge of the
lane there was a gate on which he used to lean and look down south to where the
hill surged up so suddenly, its summit defined on summer evenings not only by
the rounded ramparts but by the ring of dense green foliage that marked the
circle of oak trees. Higher up the lane, on the way he had come that Saturday
afternoon, one could see the white walls of Morgan’s farm on the hillside
to the north, and on the south there was the stile with the view of old Mrs.
Gibbon’s cottage smoke; but down in the hollow, looking over the gate,
there was no hint of human work, except those green and antique battlements, on
which the oaks stood in circle, guarding the inner wood.</p>
<p>The ring of the fort drew him with stronger fascination during that hot August
weather. Standing, or as his headmaster would have said, “mooning”
by the gate, and looking into that enclosed and secret valley, it seemed to his
fancy as if there were a halo about the hill, an aureole that played like flame
around it. One afternoon as he gazed from his station by the gate the sheer
sides and the swelling bulwarks were more than ever things of enchantment; the
green oak ring stood out against the sky as still and bright as in a picture,
and Lucian, in spite of his respect for the law of trespass, slid over the
gate. The farmers and their men were busy on the uplands with the harvest, and
the adventure was irresistible. At first he stole along by the brook in the
shadow of the alders, where the grass and the flowers of wet meadows grew
richly; but as he drew nearer to the fort, and its height now rose sheer above
him, he left all shelter, and began desperately to mount. There was not a
breath of wind; the sunlight shone down on the bare hillside; the loud chirp of
the grasshoppers was the only sound. It was a steep ascent and grew steeper as
the valley sank away. He turned for a moment, and looked down towards the
stream which now seemed to wind remote between the alders; above the valley
there were small dark figures moving in the cornfield, and now and again there
came the faint echo of a high-pitched voice singing through the air as on a
wire. He was wet with heat; the sweat streamed off his face, and he could feel
it trickling all over his body. But above him the green bastions rose defiant,
and the dark ring of oaks promised coolness. He pressed on, and higher, and at
last began to crawl up the <i>vallum</i>, on hands and knees, grasping the turf
and here and there the roots that had burst through the red earth. And then he
lay, panting with deep breaths, on the summit.</p>
<p>Within the fort it was all dusky and cool and hollow; it was as if one stood at
the bottom of a great cup. Within, the wall seemed higher than without, and the
ring of oaks curved up like a dark green vault. There were nettles growing
thick and rank in the foss; they looked different from the common nettles in
the lanes, and Lucian, letting his hand touch a leaf by accident, felt the
sting burn like fire. Beyond the ditch there was an undergrowth, a dense
thicket of trees, stunted and old, crooked and withered by the winds into
awkward and ugly forms; beech and oak and hazel and ash and yew twisted and so
shortened and deformed that each seemed, like the nettle, of no common kind. He
began to fight his way through the ugly growth, stumbling and getting hard
knocks from the rebound of twisted boughs. His foot struck once or twice
against something harder than wood, and looking down he saw stones white with
the leprosy of age, but still showing the work of the axe. And farther, the
roots of the stunted trees gripped the foot-high relics of a wall; and a round
heap of fallen stones nourished rank, unknown herbs, that smelt poisonous. The
earth was black and unctuous, and bubbling under the feet, left no track
behind. From it, in the darkest places where the shadow was thickest, swelled
the growth of an abominable fungus, making the still air sick with its corrupt
odour, and he shuddered as he felt the horrible thing pulped beneath his feet.
Then there was a gleam of sunlight, and as he thrust the last boughs apart, he
stumbled into the open space in the heart of the camp. It was a lawn of sweet
close turf in the center of the matted brake, of clean firm earth from which no
shameful growth sprouted, and near the middle of the glade was a stump of a
felled yew-tree, left untrimmed by the woodman. Lucian thought it must have
been made for a seat; a crooked bough through which a little sap still ran was
a support for the back, and he sat down and rested after his toil. It was not
really so comfortable a seat as one of the school forms, but the satisfaction
was to find anything at all that would serve for a chair. He sat there, still
panting after the climb and his struggle through the dank and jungle-like
thicket, and he felt as if he were growing hotter and hotter; the sting of the
nettle was burning his hand, and the tingling fire seemed to spread all over
his body.</p>
<p>Suddenly, he knew that he was alone. Not merely solitary; that he had often
been amongst the woods and deep in the lanes; but now it was a wholly different
and a very strange sensation. He thought of the valley winding far below him,
all its fields by the brook green and peaceful and still, without path or
track. Then he had climbed the abrupt surge of the hill, and passing the green
and swelling battlements, the ring of oaks, and the matted thicket, had come to
the central space. And behind there were, he knew, many desolate fields, wild
as common, untrodden, unvisited. He was utterly alone. He still grew hotter as
he sat on the stump, and at last lay down at full length on the soft grass, and
more at his ease felt the waves of heat pass over his body.</p>
<p>And then he began to dream, to let his fancies stray over half-imagined,
delicious things, indulging a virgin mind in its wanderings. The hot air seemed
to beat upon him in palpable waves, and the nettle sting tingled and itched
intolerably; and he was alone upon the fairy hill, within the great mounds,
within the ring of oaks, deep in the heart of the matted thicket. Slowly and
timidly he began to untie his boots, fumbling with the laces, and glancing all
the while on every side at the ugly misshapen trees that hedged the lawn. Not a
branch was straight, not one was free, but all were interlaced and grew one
about another; and just above ground, where the cankered stems joined the
protuberant roots, there were forms that imitated the human shape, and faces
and twining limbs that amazed him. Green mosses were hair, and tresses were
stark in grey lichen; a twisted root swelled into a limb; in the hollows of the
rotted bark he saw the masks of men. His eyes were fixed and fascinated by the
simulacra of the wood, and could not see his hands, and so at last, and
suddenly, it seemed, he lay in the sunlight, beautiful with his olive skin,
dark haired, dark eyed, the gleaming bodily vision of a strayed faun.</p>
<p>Quick flames now quivered in the substance of his nerves, hints of mysteries,
secrets of life passed trembling through his brain, unknown desires stung him.
As he gazed across the turf and into the thicket, the sunshine seemed really to
become green, and the contrast between the bright glow poured on the lawn and
the black shadow of the brake made an odd flickering light, in which all the
grotesque postures of stem and root began to stir; the wood was alive. The turf
beneath him heaved and sank as with the deep swell of the sea. He fell asleep,
and lay still on the grass, in the midst of the thicket.</p>
<p>He found out afterwards that he must have slept for nearly an hour. The shadows
had changed when he awoke; his senses came to him with a sudden shock, and he
sat up and stared at his bare limbs in stupid amazement. He huddled on his
clothes and laced his boots, wondering what folly had beset him. Then, while he
stood indecisive, hesitating, his brain a whirl of puzzled thought, his body
trembling, his hands shaking; as with electric heat, sudden remembrance
possessed him. A flaming blush shone red on his cheeks, and glowed and thrilled
through his limbs. As he awoke, a brief and slight breeze had stirred in a nook
of the matted boughs, and there was a glinting that might have been the flash
of sudden sunlight across shadow, and the branches rustled and murmured for a
moment, perhaps at the wind’s passage.</p>
<p>He stretched out his hands, and cried to his visitant to return; he entreated
the dark eyes that had shone over him, and the scarlet lips that had kissed
him. And then panic fear rushed into his heart, and he ran blindly, dashing
through the wood. He climbed the <i>vallum</i>, and looked out, crouching, lest
anybody should see him. Only the shadows were changed, and a breath of cooler
air mounted from the brook; the fields were still and peaceful, the black
figures moved, far away, amidst the corn, and the faint echo of the
high-pitched voices sang thin and distant on the evening wind. Across the
stream, in the cleft on the hill, opposite to the fort, the blue wood smoke
stole up a spiral pillar from the chimney of old Mrs. Gibbon’s cottage.
He began to run full tilt down the steep surge of the hill, and never stopped
till he was over the gate and in the lane again. As he looked back, down the
valley to the south, and saw the violent ascent, the green swelling bulwarks,
and the dark ring of oaks; the sunlight seemed to play about the fort with an
aureole of flame.</p>
<p>“Where on earth have you been all this time, Lucian?” said his
cousin when he got home. “Why, you look quite ill. It is really madness
of you to go walking in such weather as this. I wonder you haven’t got a
sunstroke. And the tea must be nearly cold. I couldn’t keep your father
waiting, you know.”</p>
<p>He muttered something about being rather tired, and sat down to his tea. It was
not cold, for the “cozy” had been put over the pot, but it was
black and bitter strong, as his cousin expressed it. The draught was
unpalatable, but it did him good, and the thought came with great consolation
that he had only been asleep and dreaming queer, nightmarish dreams. He shook
off all his fancies with resolution, and thought the loneliness of the camp,
and the burning sunlight, and possibly the nettle sting, which still tingled
most abominably, must have been the only factors in his farrago of impossible
recollections. He remembered that when he had felt the sting, he had seized a
nettle with thick folds of his handkerchief, and having twisted off a good
length, and put it in his pocket to show his father. Mr. Taylor was almost
interested when he came in from his evening stroll about the garden and saw the
specimen.</p>
<p>“Where did you manage to come across that, Lucian?” he said.
“You haven’t been to Caermaen, have you?”</p>
<p>“No. I got it in the Roman fort by the common.”</p>
<p>“Oh, the twyn. You must have been trespassing then. Do you know what it
is?”</p>
<p>“No. I thought it looked different from the common nettles.”</p>
<p>“Yes; it’s a Roman nettle—<i>urtica pilulifera</i>.
It’s a rare plant. Burrows says it’s to be found at Caermaen, but I
was never able to come across it. I must add it to the <i>flora</i> of the
parish.”</p>
<p>Mr. Taylor had begun to compile a <i>flora</i> accompanied by a <i>hortus
siccus</i>, but both stayed on high shelves dusty and fragmentary. He put the
specimen on his desk, intending to fasten it in the book, but the maid swept it
away, dry and withered, in a day or two.</p>
<p>Lucian tossed and cried out in his sleep that night, and the awakening in the
morning was, in a measure, a renewal of the awakening in the fort. But the
impression was not so strong, and in a plain room it seemed all delirium, a
phantasmagoria. He had to go down to Caermaen in the afternoon, for Mrs. Dixon,
the vicar’s wife, had “commanded” his presence at tea. Mr.
Dixon, though fat and short and clean shaven, ruddy of face, was a safe man,
with no extreme views on anything. He “deplored” all extreme party
convictions, and thought the great needs of our beloved Church were
conciliation, moderation, and above all “amolgamation”—so he
pronounced the word. Mrs. Dixon was tall, imposing, splendid, well fitted for
the Episcopal order, with gifts that would have shone at the palace. There were
daughters, who studied German Literature, and thought Miss Frances Ridley
Havergal wrote poetry, but Lucian had no fear of them; he dreaded the boys.
Everybody said they were such fine, manly fellows, such gentlemanly boys, with
such a good manner, sure to get on in the world. Lucian had said
“Bother!” in a very violent manner when the gracious invitation was
conveyed to him, but there was no getting out of it. Miss Deacon did her best
to make him look smart; his ties were all so disgraceful that she had to supply
the want with a narrow ribbon of a sky-blue tint; and she brushed him so long
and so violently that he quite understood why a horse sometimes bites and
sometimes kicks the groom. He set out between two and three in a gloomy frame
of mind; he knew too well what spending the afternoon with honest manly boys
meant. He found the reality more lurid than his anticipation. The boys were in
the field, and the first remark he heard when he got in sight of the group was:</p>
<p>“Hullo, Lucian, how much for the tie?” “Fine tie,”
another, a stranger, observed. “You bagged it from the kitten,
didn’t you?”</p>
<p>Then they made up a game of cricket, and he was put in first. He was l.b.w. in
his second over, so they all said, and had to field for the rest of the
afternoon. Arthur Dixon, who was about his own age, forgetting all the laws of
hospitality, told him he was a beastly muff when he missed a catch, rather a
difficult catch. He missed several catches, and it seemed as if he were always
panting after balls, which, as Edward Dixon said, any fool, even a baby, could
have stopped. At last the game broke up, solely from Lucian’s lack of
skill, as everybody declared. Edward Dixon, who was thirteen, and had a swollen
red face and a projecting eye, wanted to fight him for spoiling the game, and
the others agreed that he funked the fight in a rather dirty manner. The
strange boy, who was called De Carti, and was understood to be faintly related
to Lord De Carti of M’Carthytown, said openly that the fellows at his
place wouldn’t stand such a sneak for five minutes. So the afternoon
passed off very pleasantly indeed, till it was time to go into the vicarage for
weak tea, homemade cake, and unripe plums. He got away at last. As he went out
at the gate, he heard De Carti’s final observation:</p>
<p>“We like to dress well at our place. His governor must be beastly poor to
let him go about like that. D’ye see his trousers are all ragged at heel?
Is old Taylor a gentleman?”</p>
<p>It had been a very gentlemanly afternoon, but there was a certain relief when
the vicarage was far behind, and the evening smoke of the little town, once the
glorious capital of Siluria, hung haze-like over the ragged roofs and mingled
with the river mist. He looked down from the height of the road on the huddled
houses, saw the points of light start out suddenly from the cottages on the
hillside beyond, and gazed at the long lovely valley fading in the twilight,
till the darkness came and all that remained was the somber ridge of the
forest. The way was pleasant through the solemn scented lane, with glimpses of
dim country, the vague mystery of night overshadowing the woods and meadows. A
warm wind blew gusts of odour from the meadowsweet by the brook, now and then
bee and beetle span homeward through the air, booming a deep note as from a
great organ far away, and from the verge of the wood came the “who-oo,
who-oo, who-oo” of the owls, a wild strange sound that mingled with the
whirr and rattle of the night-jar, deep in the bracken. The moon swam up
through the films of misty cloud, and hung, a golden glorious lantern, in
mid-air; and, set in the dusky hedge, the little green fires of the glowworms
appeared. He sauntered slowly up the lane, drinking in the religion of the
scene, and thinking the country by night as mystic and wonderful as a dimly-lit
cathedral. He had quite forgotten the “manly young fellows” and
their sports, and only wished as the land began to shimmer and gleam in the
moonlight that he knew by some medium of words or colour how to represent the
loveliness about his way.</p>
<p>“Had a pleasant evening, Lucian?” said his father when he came in.</p>
<p>“Yes, I had a nice walk home. Oh, in the afternoon we played cricket. I
didn’t care for it much. There was a boy named De Carti there; he is
staying with the Dixons. Mrs. Dixon whispered to me when we were going in to
tea, ‘He’s a second cousin of Lord De Carti’s,’ and she
looked quite grave as if she were in church.”</p>
<p>The parson grinned grimly and lit his old pipe.</p>
<p>“Baron De Carti’s great-grandfather was a Dublin attorney,”
he remarked. “Which his name was Jeremiah M’Carthy. His prejudiced
fellow-citizens called him the Unjust Steward, also the Bloody Attorney, and I
believe that ‘to hell with M’Carthy’ was quite a popular cry
about the time of the Union.”</p>
<p>Mr. Taylor was a man of very wide and irregular reading and a tenacious memory;
he often used to wonder why he had not risen in the Church. He had once told
Mr. Dixon a singular and <i>drolatique</i> anecdote concerning the
bishop’s college days, and he never discovered why the prelate did not
bow according to his custom when the name of Taylor was called at the next
visitation. Some people said the reason was lighted candles, but that was
impossible, as the Reverend and Honorable Smallwood Stafford, Lord
Beamys’s son, who had a cure of souls in the cathedral city, was well
known to burn no end of candles, and with him the bishop was on the best of
terms. Indeed the bishop often stayed at Coplesey (pronounced
“Copsey”) Hall, Lord Beamys’s place in the west.</p>
<p>Lucian had mentioned the name of De Carti with intention, and had perhaps
exaggerated a little Mrs. Dixon’s respectful manner. He knew such
incidents cheered his father, who could never look at these subjects from a
proper point of view, and, as people said, sometimes made the strangest remarks
for a clergyman. This irreverent way of treating serious things was one of the
great bonds between father and son, but it tended to increase their isolation.
People said they would often have liked to asked Mr. Taylor to garden-parties,
and tea-parties, and other cheap entertainments, if only he had not been such
an <i>extreme</i> man and so <i>queer</i>. Indeed, a year before, Mr. Taylor
had gone to a garden-party at the Castle, Caermaen, and had made such fun of
the bishop’s recent address on missions to the Portuguese, that the
Gervases and Dixons and all who heard him were quite shocked and annoyed. And,
as Mrs. Meyrick of Lanyravon observed, his black coat was perfectly
<i>green</i> with age; so on the whole the Gervases did not like to invite Mr.
Taylor again. As for the son, nobody cared to have him; Mrs. Dixon, as she said
to her husband, really asked him out of charity.</p>
<p>“I am afraid he seldom gets a real meal at home,” she remarked,
“so I thought he would enjoy a good wholesome tea for once in a way. But
he is such an <i>unsatisfactory</i> boy, he would only have one slice of that
nice plain cake, and I couldn’t get him to take more than two plums. They
were really quite ripe too, and boys are usually so fond of fruit.”</p>
<p>Thus Lucian was forced to spend his holidays chiefly in his own company, and
make the best he could of the ripe peaches on the south wall of the rectory
garden. There was a certain corner where the heat of that hot August seemed
concentrated, reverberated from one wall to the other, and here he liked to
linger of mornings, when the mists were still thick in the valleys,
“mooning,” meditating, extending his walk from the quince to the
medlar and back again, beside the mouldering walls of mellowed brick. He was
full of a certain wonder and awe, not unmixed with a swell of strange
exultation, and wished more and more to be alone, to think over that wonderful
afternoon within the fort. In spite of himself the impression was fading; he
could not understand that feeling of mad panic terror that drove him through
the thicket and down the steep hillside; yet, he had experienced so clearly the
physical shame and reluctance of the flesh; he recollected that for a few
seconds after his awakening the sight of his own body had made him shudder and
writhe as if it had suffered some profoundest degradation. He saw before him a
vision of two forms; a faun with tingling and prickling flesh lay expectant in
the sunlight, and there was also the likeness of a miserable shamed boy,
standing with trembling body and shaking, unsteady hands. It was all confused,
a procession of blurred images, now of rapture and ecstasy, and now of terror
and shame, floating in a light that was altogether phantasmal and unreal. He
dared not approach the fort again; he lingered in the road to Caermaen that
passed behind it, but a mile away, and separated by the wild land and a strip
of wood from the towering battlements. Here he was looking over a gate one day,
doubtful and wondering, when he heard a heavy step behind him, and glancing
round quickly saw it was old Morgan of the White House.</p>
<p>“Good afternoon, Master Lucian,” he began. “Mr. Taylor pretty
well, I suppose? I be goin’ to the house a minute; the men in the fields
are wantin’ some more cider. Would you come and taste a drop of cider,
Master Lucian? It’s very good, sir, indeed.”</p>
<p>Lucian did not want any cider, but he thought it would please old Morgan if he
took some, so he said he should like to taste the cider very much indeed.
Morgan was a sturdy, thick-set old man of the ancient stock; a stiff churchman,
who breakfasted regularly on fat broth and Caerphilly cheese in the fashion of
his ancestors; hot, spiced elder wine was for winter nights, and gin for festal
seasons. The farm had always been the freehold of the family, and when Lucian,
in the wake of the yeoman, passed through the deep porch by the oaken door,
down into the long dark kitchen, he felt as though the seventeenth century
still lingered on. One mullioned window, set deep in the sloping wall, gave all
the light there was through quarries of thick glass in which there were whorls
and circles, so that the lapping rose-branch and the garden and the fields
beyond were distorted to the sight. Two heavy beams, oaken but whitewashed, ran
across the ceiling; a little glow of fire sparkled in the great fireplace, and
a curl of blue smoke fled up the cavern of the chimney. Here was the genuine
chimney-corner of our fathers; there were seats on each side of the fireplace
where one could sit snug and sheltered on December nights, warm and merry in
the blazing light, and listen to the battle of the storm, and hear the flame
spit and hiss at the falling snowflakes. At the back of the fire were great
blackened tiles with raised initials and a date—I.M., 1684.</p>
<p>“Sit down, Master Lucian, sit down, sir,” said Morgan.</p>
<p>“Annie,” he called through one of the numerous doors,
“here’s Master Lucian, the parson, would like a drop of cider.
Fetch a jug, will you, directly?”</p>
<p>“Very well, father,” came the voice from the dairy and presently
the girl entered, wiping the jug she held. In his boyish way Lucian had been a
good deal disturbed by Annie Morgan; he could see her on Sundays from his seat
in church, and her skin, curiously pale, her lips that seemed as though they
were stained with some brilliant pigment, her black hair, and the quivering
black eyes, gave him odd fancies which he had hardly shaped to himself. Annie
had grown into a woman in three years, and he was still a boy. She came into
the kitchen, curtsying and smiling.</p>
<p>“Good-day, Master Lucian, and how is Mr. Taylor, sir?”</p>
<p>“Pretty well, thank you. I hope you are well.”</p>
<p>“Nicely, sir, thank you. How nice your voice do sound in church,
Master<br/>
Lucian, to be sure. I was telling father about it last Sunday.”<br/></p>
<p>Lucian grinned and felt uncomfortable, and the girl set down the jug on the
round table and brought a glass from the dresser. She bent close over him as
she poured out the green oily cider, fragrant of the orchard; her hand touched
his shoulder for a moment, and she said, “I beg your pardon, sir,”
very prettily. He looked up eagerly at her face; the black eyes, a little oval
in shape, were shining, and the lips smiled. Annie wore a plain dress of some
black stuff, open at the throat; her skin was beautiful. For a moment the ghost
of a fancy hovered unsubstantial in his mind; and then Annie curtsied as she
handed him the cider, and replied to his thanks with, “And welcome
kindly, sir.”</p>
<p>The drink was really good; not thin, nor sweet, but round and full and
generous, with a fine yellow flame twinkling through the green when one held it
up to the light. It was like a stray sunbeam hovering on the grass in a deep
orchard, and he swallowed the glassful with relish, and had some more, warmly
commending it. Mr. Morgan was touched.</p>
<p>“I see you do know a good thing, sir,” he said. “Is, indeed,
now, it’s good stuff, though it’s my own makin’. My old
grandfather he planted the trees in the time of the wars, and he was a very
good judge of an apple in his day and generation. And a famous grafter he was,
to be sure. You will never see no swelling in the trees he grafted at all
whatever. Now there’s James Morris, Penyrhaul, he’s a famous
grafter, too, and yet them Redstreaks he grafted for me five year ago, they be
all swollen-like below the graft already. Would you like to taste a Blemmin
pippin, now, Master Lucian? there be a few left in the loft, I believe.”</p>
<p>Lucian said he should like an apple very much, and the farmer went out by
another door, and Annie stayed in the kitchen talking. She said Mrs. Trevor,
her married sister, was coming to them soon to spend a few days.</p>
<p>“She’s got such a beautiful baby,” said Annie, “and
he’s quite sensible-like already, though he’s only nine months old.
Mary would like to see you, sir, if you would be so kind as to step in; that
is, if it’s not troubling you at all, Master Lucian. I suppose you must
be getting a fine scholar now, sir?”</p>
<p>“I am doing pretty well, thank you,” said the boy. “I was
first in my form last term.”</p>
<p>“Fancy! To think of that! D’you hear, father, what a scholar
Master<br/>
Lucian be getting?”<br/></p>
<p>“He be a rare grammarian, I’m sure,” said the farmer.
“You do take after your father, sir; I always do say that nobody have got
such a good deliverance in the pulpit.”</p>
<p>Lucian did not find the Blenheim Orange as good as the cider, but he ate it
with all the appearance of relish, and put another, with thanks, in his pocket.
He thanked the farmer again when he got up to go; and Annie curtsied and
smiled, and wished him good-day, and welcome, kindly.</p>
<p>Lucian heard her saying to her father as he went out what a nice-mannered young
gentleman he was getting, to be sure; and he went on his way, thinking that
Annie was really very pretty, and speculating as to whether he would have the
courage to kiss her, if they met in a dark lane. He was quite sure she would
only laugh, and say, “Oh, Master Lucian!”</p>
<p>For many months he had occasional fits of recollection, both cold and hot; but
the bridge of time, gradually lengthening, made those dreadful and delicious
images grow more and more indistinct, till at last they all passed into that
wonderland which a youth looks back upon in amazement, not knowing why this
used to be a symbol of terror or that of joy. At the end of each term he would
come home and find his father a little more despondent, and harder to cheer
even for a moment; and the wall paper and the furniture grew more and more
dingy and shabby. The two cats, loved and ancient beasts, that he remembered
when he was quite a little boy, before he went to school, died miserably, one
after the other. Old Polly, the pony, at last fell down in the stable from the
weakness of old age, and had to be killed there; the battered old trap ran no
longer along the well-remembered lanes. There was long meadow grass on the
lawn, and the trained fruit trees on the wall had got quite out of hand. At
last, when Lucian was seventeen, his father was obliged to take him from
school; he could no longer afford the fees. This was the sorry ending of many
hopes, and dreams of a double-first, a fellowship, distinction and glory that
the poor parson had long entertained for his son, and the two moped together,
in the shabby room, one on each side of the sulky fire, thinking of dead days
and finished plans, and seeing a grey future in the years that advanced towards
them. At one time there seemed some chance of a distant relative coming forward
to Lucian’s assistance; and indeed it was quite settled that he should go
up to London with certain definite aims. Mr. Taylor told the good news to his
acquaintances—his coat was too green now for any pretence of friendship;
and Lucian himself spoke of his plans to Burrows the doctor and Mr. Dixon, and
one or two others. Then the whole scheme fell through, and the parson and his
son suffered much sympathy. People, of course, had to say they were sorry, but
in reality the news was received with high spirits, with the joy with which one
sees a stone, as it rolls down a steep place, give yet another bounding leap
towards the pool beneath. Mrs. Dixon heard the pleasant tidings from Mrs.
Colley, who came in to talk about the Mothers’ Meeting and the Band of
Hope. Mrs. Dixon was nursing little Æthelwig, or some such name, at the time,
and made many affecting observations on the general righteousness with which
the world was governed. Indeed, poor Lucian’s disappointment seemed
distinctly to increase her faith in the Divine Order, as if it had been some
example in Butler’s <i>Analogy</i>.</p>
<p>“Aren’t Mr. Taylor’s views very <i>extreme?</i>” she
said to her husband the same evening.</p>
<p>“I am afraid they are,” he replied. “I was quite
<i>grieved</i> at the last Diocesan Conference at the way in which he spoke.
The dear old bishop had given an address on Auricular Confession; he was
<i>forced</i> to do so, you know, after what had happened, and I must say that
I never felt prouder of our beloved Church.”</p>
<p>Mr. Dixon told all the Homeric story of the conference, reciting the
achievements of the champions, “deploring” this and applauding
that. It seemed that Mr. Taylor had had the audacity to quote authorities which
the bishop could not very well repudiate, though they were directly opposed to
the “safe” Episcopal pronouncement.</p>
<p>Mrs. Dixon of course was grieved; it was “sad” to think of a
clergyman behaving so shamefully.</p>
<p>“But you know, dear,” she proceeded, “I have been thinking
about that unfortunate Taylor boy and his disappointments, and after what
you’ve just told me, I am sure it’s some kind of judgment on them
both. Has Mr. Taylor forgotten the vows he took at his ordination? But
don’t you think, dear, I am right, and that he has been punished:
‘The sins of the fathers’?”</p>
<p>Somehow or other Lucian divined the atmosphere of threatenings and judgments,
and shrank more and more from the small society of the countryside. For his
part, when he was not “mooning” in the beloved fields and woods of
happy memory, he shut himself up with books, reading whatever could be found on
the shelves, and amassing a store of incongruous and obsolete knowledge. Long
did he linger with the men of the seventeenth century; delaying in the gay
sunlit streets with Pepys, and listening to the charmed sound of the
Restoration Revel; roaming by peaceful streams with Izaak Walton, and the great
Catholic divines; enchanted with the portrait of Herbert the loving ascetic;
awed by the mystic breath of Crashaw. Then the cavalier poets sang their
gallant songs; and Herrick made Dean Prior magic ground by the holy incantation
of a verse. And in the old proverbs and homely sayings of the time he found the
good and beautiful English life, a time full of grace and dignity and rich
merriment. He dived deeper and deeper into his books; he had taken all
obsolescence to be his province; in his disgust at the stupid usual questions,
“Will it pay?” “What good is it?” and so forth, he
would only read what was uncouth and useless. The strange pomp and symbolism of
the Cabala, with its hint of more terrible things; the Rosicrucian mysteries of
Fludd, the enigmas of Vaughan, dreams of alchemists—all these were his
delight. Such were his companions, with the hills and hanging woods, the brooks
and lonely waterpools; books, the thoughts of books, the stirrings of
imagination, all fused into one phantasy by the magic of the outland country.
He held himself aloof from the walls of the fort; he was content to see the
heaped mounds, the violent height with faerie bulwarks, from the gate in the
lane, and to leave all within the ring of oaks in the mystery of his
boyhood’s vision. He professed to laugh at himself and at his fancies of
that hot August afternoon, when sleep came to him within the thicket, but in
his heart of hearts there was something that never faded—something that
glowed like the red glint of a gypsy’s fire seen from afar across the
hills and mists of the night, and known to be burning in a wild land.
Sometimes, when he was sunken in his books, the flame of delight shot up, and
showed him a whole province and continent of his nature, all shining and aglow;
and in the midst of the exultation and triumph he would draw back, a little
afraid. He had become ascetic in his studious and melancholy isolation, and the
vision of such ecstasies frightened him. He began to write a little; at first
very tentatively and feebly, and then with more confidence. He showed some of
his verses to his father, who told him with a sigh that he had once hoped to
write—in the old days at Oxford, he added.</p>
<p>“They are very nicely done,” said the parson; “but I’m
afraid you won’t find anybody to print them, my boy.”</p>
<p>So he pottered on; reading everything, imitating what struck his fancy,
attempting the effect of the classic meters in English verse, trying his hand
at a masque, a Restoration comedy, forming impossible plans for books which
rarely got beyond half a dozen lines on a sheet of paper; beset with splendid
fancies which refused to abide before the pen. But the vain joy of conception
was not altogether vain, for it gave him some armor about his heart.</p>
<p>The months went by, monotonous, and sometimes blotted with despair. He wrote
and planned and filled the waste-paper basket with hopeless efforts. Now and
then he sent verses or prose articles to magazines, in pathetic ignorance of
the trade. He felt the immense difficulty of the career of literature without
clearly understanding it; the battle was happily in a mist, so that the host of
the enemy, terribly arrayed, was to some extent hidden. Yet there was enough of
difficulty to appall; from following the intricate course of little nameless
brooks, from hushed twilight woods, from the vision of the mountains, and the
breath of the great wind, passing from deep to deep, he would come home filled
with thoughts and emotions, mystic fancies which he yearned to translate into
the written word. And the result of the effort seemed always to be bathos!
Wooden sentences, a portentous stilted style, obscurity, and awkwardness
clogged the pen; it seemed impossible to win the great secret of language; the
stars glittered only in the darkness, and vanished away in clearer light. The
periods of despair were often long and heavy, the victories very few and
trifling; night after night he sat writing after his father had knocked out his
last pipe, filling a page with difficulty in an hour, and usually forced to
thrust the stuff away in despair, and go unhappily to bed, conscious that after
all his labour he had done nothing. And these were moments when the accustomed
vision of the land alarmed him, and the wild domed hills and darkling woods
seemed symbols of some terrible secret in the inner life of that
stranger—himself. Sometimes when he was deep in his books and papers,
sometimes on a lonely walk, sometimes amidst the tiresome chatter of Caermaen
“society,” he would thrill with a sudden sense of awful hidden
things, and there ran that quivering flame through his nerves that brought back
the recollection of the matted thicket, and that earlier appearance of the bare
black boughs enwrapped with flames. Indeed, though he avoided the solitary
lane, and the sight of the sheer height, with its ring of oaks and moulded
mounds, the image of it grew more intense as the symbol of certain hints and
suggestions. The exultant and insurgent flesh seemed to have its temple and
castle within those olden walls, and he longed with all his heart to escape, to
set himself free in the wilderness of London, and to be secure amidst the
murmur of modern streets.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>II.</h3>
<p>Lucian was growing really anxious about his manuscript. He had gained enough
experience at twenty-three to know that editors and publishers must not be
hurried; but his book had been lying at Messrs. Beit’s office for more
than three months. For six weeks he had not dared to expect an answer, but
afterwards life had become agonizing. Every morning, at post-time, the poor
wretch nearly choked with anxiety to know whether his sentence had arrived, and
the rest of the day was racked with alternate pangs of hope and despair. Now
and then he was almost assured of success; conning over these painful and eager
pages in memory, he found parts that were admirable, while again, his
inexperience reproached him, and he feared he had written a raw and awkward
book, wholly unfit for print. Then he would compare what he remembered of it
with notable magazine articles and books praised by reviewers, and fancy that
after all there might be good points in the thing; he could not help liking the
first chapter for instance. Perhaps the letter might come tomorrow. So it went
on; week after week of sick torture made more exquisite by such gleams of hope;
it was as if he were stretched in anguish on the rack, and the pain relaxed and
kind words spoken now and again by the tormentors, and then once more the
grinding pang and burning agony. At last he could bear suspense no longer, and
he wrote to Messrs. Beit, inquiring in a humble manner whether the manuscript
had arrived in safety. The firm replied in a very polite letter, expressing
regret that their reader had been suffering from a cold in the head, and had
therefore been unable to send in his report. A final decision was promised in a
week’s time, and the letter ended with apologies for the delay and a hope
that he had suffered no inconvenience. Of course the “final
decision” did not come at the end of the week, but the book was returned
at the end of three weeks, with a circular thanking the author for his kindness
in submitting the manuscript, and regretting that the firm did not see their
way to producing it. He felt relieved; the operation that he had dreaded and
deprecated for so long was at last over, and he would no longer grow sick of
mornings when the letters were brought in. He took his parcel to the sunny
corner of the garden, where the old wooden seat stood sheltered from the biting
March winds. Messrs. Beit had put in with the circular one of their short lists,
a neat booklet, headed: <i>Messrs. Beit & Co.’s Recent
Publications</i>.</p>
<p>He settled himself comfortably on the seat, lit his pipe, and began to read:
“<i>A Bad Un to Beat:</i> a Novel of Sporting Life, by the Honorable Mrs.
Scudamore Runnymede, author of <i>Yoicks, With the Mudshire Pack, The
Sportleigh Stables</i>, etc., etc., 3 vols. At all Libraries.” The
<i>Press</i>, it seemed, pronounced this to be “a charming book. Mrs.
Runnymede has wit and humor enough to furnish forth half-a-dozen ordinary
sporting novels.” “Told with the sparkle and vivacity of a
past-mistress in the art of novel writing,” said the <i>Review</i>; while
Miranda, of <i>Smart Society</i>, positively bubbled with enthusiasm.
“You must forgive me, Aminta,” wrote this young person, “if I
have not sent the description I promised of Madame Lulu’s new creations
and others of that ilk. I must a tale unfold; Tom came in yesterday and began
to rave about the Honorable Mrs. Scudamore Runnymede’s last novel, <i>A
Bad Un to Beat</i>. He says all the Smart Set are talking of it, and it seems
the police have to regulate the crowd at Mudie’s. You know I read
everything Mrs. Runnymede writes, so I set out Miggs directly to beg, borrow or
steal a copy, and I confess I burnt the midnight oil before I laid it down.
Now, mind you get it, you will find it so awfully <i>chic</i>.” Nearly
all the novelists on Messrs. Beit’s list were ladies, their works all ran
to three volumes, and all of them pleased the <i>Press</i>, the <i>Review</i>,
and Miranda of <i>Smart Society</i>. One of these books, <i>Millicent’s
Marriage</i>, by Sarah Pocklington Sanders, was pronounced fit to lie on the
school-room table, on the drawing-room bookshelf, or beneath the pillow of the
most gently nurtured of our daughters. “This,” the reviewer went
on, “is high praise, especially in these days when we are deafened by the
loud-voiced clamor of self-styled ‘artists.’ We would warn the
young men who prate so persistently of style and literature, construction and
prose harmonies, that we believe the English reading public will have none of
them. Harmless amusement, a gentle flow of domestic interest, a faithful
reproduction of the open and manly life of the hunting field, pictures of
innocent and healthy English girlhood such as Miss Sanders here affords us;
these are the topics that will always find a welcome in our homes, which remain
bolted and barred against the abandoned artist and the scrofulous
stylist.”</p>
<p>He turned over the pages of the little book and chuckled in high relish; he
discovered an honest enthusiasm, a determination to strike a blow for the good
and true that refreshed and exhilarated. A beaming face, spectacled and
whiskered probably, an expansive waistcoat, and a tender heart, seemed to shine
through the words which Messrs. Beit had quoted; and the alliteration of the
final sentence; that was good too; there was style for you if you wanted it.
The champion of the blushing cheek and the gushing eye showed that he too could
handle the weapons of the enemy if he cared to trouble himself with such
things. Lucian leant back and roared with indecent laughter till the tabby
tom-cat who had succeeded to the poor dead beasts looked up reproachfully from
his sunny corner, with a face like the reviewer’s, innocent and round and
whiskered. At last he turned to his parcel and drew out some half-dozen sheets
of manuscript, and began to read in a rather desponding spirit; it was pretty
obvious, he thought, that the stuff was poor and beneath the standard of
publication. The book had taken a year and a half in the making; it was a pious
attempt to translate into English prose the form and mystery of the domed
hills, the magic of occult valleys, the sound of the red swollen brook swirling
through leafless woods. Day-dreams and toil at nights had gone into the eager
pages, he had laboured hard to do his very best, writing and rewriting, weighing
his cadences, beginning over and over again, grudging no patience, no trouble
if only it might be pretty good; good enough to print and sell to a reading
public which had become critical. He glanced through the manuscript in his
hand, and to his astonishment, he could not help thinking that in its measure
it was decent work. After three months his prose seemed fresh and strange as if
it had been wrought by another man, and in spite of himself he found charming
things, and impressions that were not commonplace. He knew how weak it all was
compared with his own conceptions; he had seen an enchanted city, awful,
glorious, with flame smitten about its battlements, like the cities of the
Sangraal, and he had moulded his copy in such poor clay as came to his hand;
yet, in spite of the gulf that yawned between the idea and the work, he knew as
he read that the thing accomplished was very far from a failure. He put back
the leaves carefully, and glanced again at Messrs. Beit’s list. It had
escaped his notice that <i>A Bad Un to Beat</i> was in its third three-volume
edition. It was a great thing, at all events, to know in what direction to aim,
if he wished to succeed. If he worked hard, he thought, he might some day win
the approval of the coy and retiring Miranda of <i>Smart Society</i>; that
modest maiden might in his praise interrupt her task of disinterested
advertisement, her philanthropic counsels to “go to Jumper’s, and
mind you ask for Mr. C. Jumper, who will show you the lovely blue paper with
the yellow spots at ten shillings the piece.” He put down the pamphlet,
and laughed again at the books and the reviewers: so that he might not weep.
This then was English fiction, this was English criticism, and farce, after
all, was but an ill-played tragedy.</p>
<p>The rejected manuscript was hidden away, and his father quoted Horace’s
maxim as to the benefit of keeping literary works for some time “in the
wood.” There was nothing to grumble at, though Lucian was inclined to
think the duration of the reader’s catarrh a little exaggerated. But this
was a trifle; he did not arrogate to himself the position of a small commercial
traveler, who expects prompt civility as a matter of course, and not at all as
a favor. He simply forgot his old book, and resolved that he would make a
better one if he could. With the hot fit of resolution, the determination not
to be snuffed out by one refusal upon him, he began to beat about in his mind
for some new scheme. At first it seemed that he had hit upon a promising
subject; he began to plot out chapters and scribble hints for the curious story
that had entered his mind, arranging his circumstances and noting the effects
to be produced with all the enthusiasm of the artist. But after the first
breath the aspect of the work changed; page after page was tossed aside as
hopeless, the beautiful sentences he had dreamed of refused to be written, and
his puppets remained stiff and wooden, devoid of life or motion. Then all the
old despairs came back, the agonies of the artificer who strives and perseveres
in vain; the scheme that seemed of amorous fire turned to cold hard ice in his
hands. He let the pen drop from his fingers, and wondered how he could have
ever dreamed of writing books. Again, the thought occurred that he might do
something if he could only get away, and join the sad procession in the
murmuring London streets, far from the shadow of those awful hills. But it was
quite impossible; the relative who had once promised assistance was appealed
to, and wrote expressing his regret that Lucian had turned out a
“loafer,” wasting his time in scribbling, instead of trying to earn
his living. Lucian felt rather hurt at this letter, but the parson only grinned
grimly as usual. He was thinking of how he signed a check many years before, in
the days of his prosperity, and the check was payable to this didactic
relative, then in but a poor way, and of a thankful turn of mind.</p>
<p>The old rejected manuscript had almost passed out of his recollection. It was
recalled oddly enough. He was looking over the <i>Reader</i>, and enjoying the
admirable literary criticisms, some three months after the return of his book,
when his eye was attracted by a quoted passage in one of the notices. The
thought and style both wakened memory, the cadences were familiar and beloved.
He read through the review from the beginning; it was a very favorable one, and
pronounced the volume an immense advance on Mr. Ritson’s previous work.
“Here, undoubtedly, the author has discovered a vein of pure
metal,” the reviewer added, “and we predict that he will go
far.” Lucian had not yet reached his father’s stage, he was unable
to grin in the manner of that irreverent parson. The passage selected for high
praise was taken almost word for word from the manuscript now resting in his
room, the work that had not reached the high standard of Messrs. Beit & Co.,
who, curiously enough, were the publishers of the book reviewed in the
<i>Reader</i>. He had a few shillings in his possession, and wrote at once to a
bookseller in London for a copy of <i>The Chorus in Green</i>, as the author
had oddly named the book. He wrote on June 21st and thought he might fairly
expect to receive the interesting volume by the 24th; but the postman, true to
his tradition, brought nothing for him, and in the afternoon he resolved to
walk down to Caermaen, in case it might have come by a second post; or it might
have been mislaid at the office; they forgot parcels sometimes, especially when
the bag was heavy and the weather hot. This 24th was a sultry and oppressive
day; a grey veil of cloud obscured the sky, and a vaporous mist hung heavily
over the land, and fumed up from the valleys. But at five o’clock, when
he started, the clouds began to break, and the sunlight suddenly streamed down
through the misty air, making ways and channels of rich glory, and bright
islands in the gloom. It was a pleasant and shining evening when, passing by
devious back streets to avoid the barbarians (as he very rudely called the
respectable inhabitants of the town), he reached the post-office; which was
also the general shop.</p>
<p>“Yes, Mr. Taylor, there is something for you, sir,” said the man.
“William the postman forgot to take it up this morning,” and he
handed over the packet. Lucian took it under his arm and went slowly through
the ragged winding lanes till he came into the country. He got over the first
stile on the road, and sitting down in the shelter of a hedge, cut the strings
and opened the parcel. <i>The Chorus in Green</i> was got up in what reviewers
call a dainty manner: a bronze-green cloth, well-cut gold lettering, wide
margins and black “old-face” type, all witnessed to the good taste
of Messrs. Beit & Co. He cut the pages hastily and began to read. He soon
found that he had wronged Mr. Ritson—that old literary hand had by no
means stolen his book wholesale, as he had expected. There were about two
hundred pages in the pretty little volume, and of these about ninety were
Lucian’s, dovetailed into a rather different scheme with skill that was
nothing short of exquisite. And Mr. Ritson’s own work was often very
good; spoilt here and there for some tastes by the “cataloguing”
method, a somewhat materialistic way of taking an inventory of the holy country
things; but, for that very reason, contrasting to a great advantage with
Lucian’s hints and dreams and note of haunting. And here and there Mr.
Ritson had made little alterations in the style of the passages he had
conveyed, and most of these alterations were amendments, as Lucian was obliged
to confess, though he would have liked to argue one or two points with his
collabourator and corrector. He lit his pipe and leant back comfortably in the
hedge, thinking things over, weighing very coolly his experience of humanity,
his contact with the “society” of the countryside, the affair of
the <i>The Chorus in Green</i>, and even some little incidents that had struck
him as he was walking through the streets of Caermaen that evening. At the
post-office, when he was inquiring for his parcel, he had heard two old women
grumbling in the street; it seemed, so far as he could make out, that both had
been disappointed in much the same way. One was a Roman Catholic, hardened, and
beyond the reach of conversion; she had been advised to ask alms of the
priests, “who are always creeping and crawling about.” The other
old sinner was a Dissenter, and, “Mr. Dixon has quite enough to do to
relieve good Church people.” Mrs. Dixon, assisted by Henrietta, was, it
seemed, the lady high almoner, who dispensed these charities. As she said to
Mrs. Colley, they would end by keeping all the beggars in the county, and they
really couldn’t afford it. A large family was an expensive thing, and the
girls <i>must</i> have new frocks. “Mr. Dixon is always telling me and
the girls that we must not <i>demoralize</i> the people by indiscriminate
charity.” Lucian had heard of these sage counsels, and through it them as
he listened to the bitter complaints of the gaunt, hungry old women. In the
back street by which he passed out of the town he saw a large
“healthy” boy kicking a sick cat; the poor creature had just
strength enough to crawl under an outhouse door; probably to die in torments.
He did not find much satisfaction in thrashing the boy, but he did it with
hearty good will. Further on, at the corner where the turnpike used to be, was
a big notice, announcing a meeting at the school-room in aid of the missions to
the Portuguese. “Under the Patronage of the Lord Bishop of the
Diocese,” was the imposing headline; the Reverend Merivale Dixon, vicar
of Caermaen, was to be in the chair, supported by Stanley Gervase, Esq., J.P.,
and by many of the clergy and gentry of the neighborhood. Senhor Diabo,
“formerly a Romanist priest, now an evangelist in Lisbon,” would
address the meeting. “Funds are urgently needed to carry on this good
work,” concluded the notice. So he lay well back in the shade of the
hedge, and thought whether some sort of an article could not be made by
vindicating the terrible Yahoos; one might point out that they were in many
respects a simple and unsophisticated race, whose faults were the result of
their enslaved position, while such virtues as they had were all their own.
They might be compared, he thought, much to their advantage, with more complex
civilizations. There was no hint of anything like the Beit system of publishing
in existence amongst them; the great Yahoo nation would surely never feed and
encourage a scabby Houyhnhnm, expelled for his foulness from the
horse-community, and the witty dean, in all his minuteness, had said nothing of
“safe” Yahoos. On reflection, however, he did not feel quite secure
of this part of his defense; he remembered that the leading brutes had
favorites, who were employed in certain simple domestic offices about their
masters, and it seemed doubtful whether the contemplated vindication would not
break down on this point. He smiled queerly to himself as he thought of these
comparisons, but his heart burned with a dull fury. Throwing back his unhappy
memory, he recalled all the contempt and scorn he had suffered; as a boy he had
heard the masters murmuring their disdain of him and of his desire to learn
other than ordinary school work. As a young man he had suffered the insolence
of these wretched people about him; their cackling laughter at his poverty
jarred and grated in his ears; he saw the acrid grin of some miserable idiot
woman, some creature beneath the swine in intelligence and manners, merciless,
as he went by with his eyes on the dust, in his ragged clothes. He and his
father seemed to pass down an avenue of jeers and contempt, and contempt from
such animals as these! This putrid filth, moulded into human shape, made only
to fawn on the rich and beslaver them, thinking no foulness too foul if it were
done in honor of those in power and authority; and no refined cruelty of
contempt too cruel if it were contempt of the poor and humble and oppressed; it
was to this obscene and ghastly throng that he was something to be pointed at.
And these men and women spoke of sacred things, and knelt before the awful
altar of God, before the altar of tremendous fire, surrounded as they professed
by Angels and Archangels and all the Company of Heaven; and in their very
church they had one aisle for the rich and another for the poor. And the
species was not peculiar to Caermaen; the rich business men in London and the
successful brother author were probably amusing themselves at the expense of
the poor struggling creature they had injured and wounded; just as the
“healthy” boy had burst into a great laugh when the miserable sick
cat cried out in bitter agony, and trailed its limbs slowly, as it crept away
to die. Lucian looked into his own life and his own will; he saw that in spite
of his follies, and his want of success, he had not been consciously malignant,
he had never deliberately aided in oppression, or looked on it with enjoyment
and approval, and he felt that when he lay dead beneath the earth, eaten by
swarming worms, he would be in a purer company than now, when he lived amongst
human creatures. And he was to call this loathsome beast, all sting and filth,
brother! “I had rather call the devils my brothers,” he said in his
heart, “I would fare better in hell.” Blood was in his eyes, and as
he looked up the sky seemed of blood, and the earth burned with fire.</p>
<p>The sun was sinking low on the mountain when he set out on the way again.
Burrows, the doctor, coming home in his trap, met him a little lower on the
road, and gave him a friendly good-night.</p>
<p>“A long way round on this road, isn’t it?” said the doctor.
“As you have come so far, why don’t you try the short cut across
the fields? You will find it easily enough; second stile on the left hand, and
then go straight ahead.”</p>
<p>He thanked Dr. Burrows and said he would try the short cut, and Burrows span on
homeward. He was a gruff and honest bachelor, and often felt very sorry for the
lad, and wished he could help him. As he drove on, it suddenly occurred to him
that Lucian had an awful look on his face, and he was sorry he had not asked
him to jump in, and to come to supper. A hearty slice of beef, with strong ale,
whisky and soda afterwards, a good pipe, and certain Rabelaisian tales which
the doctor had treasured for many years, would have done the poor fellow a lot
of good, he was certain. He half turned round on his seat, and looked to see if
Lucian were still in sight, but he had passed the corner, and the doctor drove
on, shivering a little; the mists were beginning to rise from the wet banks of
the river.</p>
<p>Lucian trailed slowly along the road, keeping a look out for the stile the
doctor had mentioned. It would be a little of an adventure, he thought, to find
his way by an unknown track; he knew the direction in which his home lay, and
he imagined he would not have much difficulty in crossing from one stile to
another. The path led him up a steep bare field, and when he was at the top,
the town and the valley winding up to the north stretched before him. The river
was stilled at the flood, and the yellow water, reflecting the sunset, glowed
in its deep pools like dull brass. These burning pools, the level meadows
fringed with shuddering reeds, the long dark sweep of the forest on the hill,
were all clear and distinct, yet the light seemed to have clothed them with a
new garment, even as voices from the streets of Caermaen sounded strangely,
mounting up thin with the smoke. There beneath him lay the huddled cluster of
Caermaen, the ragged and uneven roofs that marked the winding and sordid
streets, here and there a pointed gable rising above its meaner fellows; beyond
he recognized the piled mounds that marked the circle of the amphitheatre, and
the dark edge of trees that grew where the Roman wall whitened and waxed old
beneath the frosts and rains of eighteen hundred years. Thin and strange,
mingled together, the voices came up to him on the hill; it was as if an
outland race inhabited the ruined city and talked in a strange language of
strange and terrible things. The sun had slid down the sky, and hung quivering
over the huge dark dome of the mountain like a burnt sacrifice, and then
suddenly vanished. In the afterglow the clouds began to writhe and turn
scarlet, and shone so strangely reflected in the pools of the snake-like river,
that one would have said the still waters stirred, the fleeting and changing of
the clouds seeming to quicken the stream, as if it bubbled and sent up gouts of
blood. But already about the town the darkness was forming; fast, fast the
shadows crept upon it from the forest, and from all sides banks and wreaths of
curling mist were gathering, as if a ghostly leaguer were being built up
against the city, and the strange race who lived in its streets. Suddenly there
burst out from the stillness the clear and piercing music of the
<i>réveillé</i>, calling, recalling, iterated, reiterated, and ending with one
long high fierce shrill note with which the steep hills rang. Perhaps a boy in
the school band was practicing on his bugle, but for Lucian it was magic. For
him it was the note of the Roman trumpet, <i>tuba mirum spargens sonum</i>,
filling all the hollow valley with its command, reverberated in dark places in
the far forest, and resonant in the old graveyards without the walls. In his
imagination he saw the earthen gates of the tombs broken open, and the serried
legion swarming to the eagles. Century by century they passed by; they rose,
dripping, from the river bed, they rose from the level, their armor shone in
the quiet orchard, they gathered in ranks and companies from the cemetery, and
as the trumpet sounded, the hill fort above the town gave up its dead. By
hundreds and thousands the ghostly battle surged about the standard, behind the
quaking mist, ready to march against the mouldering walls they had built so many
years before.</p>
<p>He turned sharply; it was growing very dark, and he was afraid of missing his
way. At first the path led him by the verge of a wood; there was a noise of
rustling and murmuring from the trees as if they were taking evil counsel
together. A high hedge shut out the sight of the darkening valley, and he
stumbled on mechanically, without taking much note of the turnings of the
track, and when he came out from the wood shadow to the open country, he stood
for a moment quite bewildered and uncertain. A dark wild twilight country lay
before him, confused dim shapes of trees near at hand, and a hollow below his
feet, and the further hills and woods were dimmer, and all the air was very
still. Suddenly the darkness about him glowed; a furnace fire had shot up on
the mountain, and for a moment the little world of the woodside and the steep
hill shone in a pale light, and he thought he saw his path beaten out in the
turf before him. The great flame sank down to a red glint of fire, and it led
him on down the ragged slope, his feet striking against ridges of ground, and
falling from beneath him at a sudden dip. The bramble bushes shot out long
prickly vines, amongst which he was entangled, and lower he was held back by
wet bubbling earth. He had descended into a dark and shady valley, beset and
tapestried with gloomy thickets; the weird wood noises were the only sounds,
strange, unutterable mutterings, dismal, inarticulate. He pushed on in what he
hoped was the right direction, stumbling from stile to gate, peering through
mist and shadow, and still vainly seeking for any known landmark. Presently
another sound broke upon the grim air, the murmur of water poured over stones,
gurgling against the old misshapen roots of trees, and running clear in a deep
channel. He passed into the chill breath of the brook, and almost fancied he
heard two voices speaking in its murmur; there seemed a ceaseless utterance of
words, an endless argument. With a mood of horror pressing on him, he listened
to the noise of waters, and the wild fancy seized him that he was not deceived,
that two unknown beings stood together there in the darkness and tried the
balances of his life, and spoke his doom. The hour in the matted thicket rushed
over the great bridge of years to his thought; he had sinned against the earth,
and the earth trembled and shook for vengeance. He stayed still for a moment,
quivering with fear, and at last went on blindly, no longer caring for the
path, if only he might escape from the toils of that dismal shuddering hollow.
As he plunged through the hedges the bristling thorns tore his face and hands;
he fell amongst stinging-nettles and was pricked as he beat out his way amidst
the gorse. He raced headlong, his head over his shoulder, through a windy wood,
bare of undergrowth; there lay about the ground mouldering stumps, the relics of
trees that had thundered to their fall, crashing and tearing to earth, long
ago; and from these remains there flowed out a pale thin radiance, filling the
spaces of the sounding wood with a dream of light. He had lost all count of the
track; he felt he had fled for hours, climbing and descending, and yet not
advancing; it was as if he stood still and the shadows of the land went by, in
a vision. But at last a hedge, high and straggling, rose before him, and as he
broke through it, his feet slipped, and he fell headlong down a steep bank into
a lane. He lay still, half-stunned, for a moment, and then rising unsteadily,
he looked desperately into the darkness before him, uncertain and bewildered.
In front it was black as a midnight cellar, and he turned about, and saw a
glint in the distance, as if a candle were flickering in a farm-house window.
He began to walk with trembling feet towards the light, when suddenly something
pale started out from the shadows before him, and seemed to swim and float down
the air. He was going down hill, and he hastened onwards, and he could see the
bars of a stile framed dimly against the sky, and the figure still advanced
with that gliding motion. Then, as the road declined to the valley, the
landmark he had been seeking appeared. To his right there surged up in the
darkness the darker summit of the Roman fort, and the streaming fire of the
great full moon glowed through the bars of the wizard oaks, and made a halo
shine about the hill. He was now quite close to the white appearance, and saw
that it was only a woman walking swiftly down the lane; the floating movement
was an effect due to the somber air and the moon’s glamour. At the gate,
where he had spent so many hours gazing at the fort, they walked foot to foot,
and he saw it was Annie Morgan.</p>
<p>“Good evening, Master Lucian,” said the girl, “it’s
very dark, sir, indeed.”</p>
<p>“Good evening, Annie,” he answered, calling her by her name for the
first time, and he saw that she smiled with pleasure. “You are out late,
aren’t you?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir; but I’ve been taking a bit of supper to old Mrs. Gibbon.
She’s been very poorly the last few days, and there’s nobody to do
anything for her.”</p>
<p>Then there were really people who helped one another; kindness and pity were
not mere myths, fictions of “society,” as useful as Doe and Roe,
and as non-existent. The thought struck Lucian with a shock; the
evening’s passion and delirium, the wild walk and physical fatigue had
almost shattered him in body and mind. He was “degenerate,”
<i>decadent</i>, and the rough rains and blustering winds of life, which a
stronger man would have laughed at and enjoyed, were to him “hail-storms
and fire-showers.” After all, Messrs. Beit, the publishers, were only
sharp men of business, and these terrible Dixons and Gervases and Colleys
merely the ordinary limited clergy and gentry of a quiet country town; sturdier
sense would have dismissed Dixon as an old humbug, Stanley Gervase, Esquire,
J.P., as a “bit of a bounder,” and the ladies as “rather a
shoddy lot.” But he was walking slowly now in painful silence, his heavy,
lagging feet striking against the loose stones. He was not thinking of the girl
beside him; only something seemed to swell and grow and swell within his heart;
it was all the torture of his days, weary hopes and weary disappointment, scorn
rankling and throbbing, and the thought “I had rather call the devils my
brothers and live with them in hell.” He choked and gasped for breath,
and felt involuntary muscles working in his face, and the impulses of a madman
stirring him; he himself was in truth the realization of the vision of Caermaen
that night, a city with mouldering walls beset by the ghostly legion. Life and
the world and the laws of the sunlight had passed away, and the resurrection
and kingdom of the dead began. The Celt assailed him, becoming from the weird
wood he called the world, and his far-off ancestors, the “little
people,” crept out of their caves, muttering charms and incantations in
hissing inhuman speech; he was beleaguered by desires that had slept in his
race for ages.</p>
<p>“I am afraid you are very tired, Master Lucian. Would you like me to give
you my hand over this rough bit?”</p>
<p>He had stumbled against a great round stone and had nearly fallen. The
woman’s hand sought his in the darkness; as he felt the touch of the soft
warm flesh he moaned, and a pang shot through his arm to his heart. He looked
up and found he had only walked a few paces since Annie had spoken; he had
thought they had wandered for hours together. The moon was just mounting above
the oaks, and the halo round the dark hill brightened. He stopped short, and
keeping his hold of Annie’s hand, looked into her face. A hazy glory of
moonlight shone around them and lit up their eyes. He had not greatly altered
since his boyhood; his face was pale olive in colour, thin and oval; marks of
pain had gathered about the eyes, and his black hair was already stricken with
grey. But the eager, curious gaze still remained, and what he saw before him
lit up his sadness with a new fire. She stopped too, and did not offer to draw
away, but looked back with all her heart. They were alike in many ways; her
skin was also of that olive colour, but her face was sweet as a beautiful summer
night, and her black eyes showed no dimness, and the smile on the scarlet lips
was like a flame when it brightens a dark and lonely land.</p>
<p>“You are sorely tired, Master Lucian, let us sit down here by the
gate.”</p>
<p>It was Lucian who spoke next: “My dear, my dear.” And their lips
were together again, and their arms locked together, each holding the other
fast. And then the poor lad let his head sink down on his sweetheart’s
breast, and burst into a passion of weeping. The tears streamed down his face,
and he shook with sobbing, in the happiest moment that he had ever lived. The
woman bent over him and tried to comfort him, but his tears were his
consolation and his triumph. Annie was whispering to him, her hand laid on his
heart; she was whispering beautiful, wonderful words, that soothed him as a
song. He did not know what they meant.</p>
<p>“Annie, dear, dear Annie, what are you saying to me? I have never heard
such beautiful words. Tell me, Annie, what do they mean?”</p>
<p>She laughed, and said it was only nonsense that the nurses sang to the
children.</p>
<p>“No, no, you are not to call me Master Lucian any more,” he said,
when they parted, “you must call me Lucian; and I, I worship you, my dear
Annie.”</p>
<p>He fell down before her, embracing her knees, and adored, and she allowed him,
and confirmed his worship. He followed slowly after her, passing the path which
led to her home with a longing glance. Nobody saw any difference in Lucian when
he reached the rectory. He came in with his usual dreamy indifference, and told
how he had lost his way by trying the short cut. He said he had met Dr. Burrows
on the road, and that he had recommended the path by the fields. Then, as dully
as if he had been reading some story out of a newspaper, he gave his father the
outlines of the Beit case, producing the pretty little book called <i>The
Chorus in Green</i>. The parson listened in amazement.</p>
<p>“You mean to tell me that <i>you</i> wrote this book?” he said. He
was quite roused.</p>
<p>“No; not all of it. Look; that bit is mine, and that; and the beginning
of this chapter. Nearly the whole of the third chapter is by me.”</p>
<p>He closed the book without interest, and indeed he felt astonished at his
father’s excitement. The incident seemed to him unimportant.</p>
<p>“And you say that eighty or ninety pages of this book are yours, and
these scoundrels have stolen your work?”</p>
<p>“Well, I suppose they have. I’ll fetch the manuscript, if you would
like to look at it.”</p>
<p>The manuscript was duly produced, wrapped in brown paper, with Messrs.<br/>
Beit’s address label on it, and the post-office dated stamps.<br/></p>
<p>“And the other book has been out a month.” The parson, forgetting
the sacerdotal office, and his good habit of grinning, swore at Messrs. Beit and
Mr. Ritson, calling them damned thieves, and then began to read the manuscript,
and to compare it with the printed book.</p>
<p>“Why, it’s splendid work. My poor fellow,” he said after a
while, “I had no notion you could write so well. I used to think of such
things in the old days at Oxford; ‘old Bill,’ the tutor, used to
praise my essays, but I never wrote anything like this. And this infernal
ruffian of a Ritson has taken all your best things and mixed them up with his
own rot to make it go down. Of course you’ll expose the gang?”</p>
<p>Lucian was mildly amused; he couldn’t enter into his father’s
feelings at all. He sat smoking in one of the old easy chairs, taking the rare
relish of a hot grog with his pipe, and gazing out of his dreamy eyes at the
violent old parson. He was pleased that his father liked his book, because he
knew him to be a deep and sober scholar and a cool judge of good letters; but
he laughed to himself when he saw the magic of print. The parson had expressed
no wish to read the manuscript when it came back in disgrace; he had merely
grinned, said something about boomerangs, and quoted Horace with relish.
Whereas now, before the book in its neat case, lettered with another
man’s name, his approbation of the writing and his disapproval of the
“scoundrels,” as he called them, were loudly expressed, and, though
a good smoker, he blew and puffed vehemently at his pipe.</p>
<p>“You’ll expose the rascals, of course, won’t you?” he
said again.</p>
<p>“Oh no, I think not. It really doesn’t matter much, does it? After
all, there are some very weak things in the book; doesn’t it strike you
as ‘young?’ I have been thinking of another plan, but I
haven’t done much with it lately. But I believe I’ve got hold of a
really good idea this time, and if I can manage to see the heart of it I hope
to turn out a manuscript worth stealing. But it’s so hard to get at the
core of an idea—the heart, as I call it,” he went on after a pause.
“It’s like having a box you can’t open, though you know
there’s something wonderful inside. But I do believe I’ve a fine
thing in my hands, and I mean to try my best to work it.”</p>
<p>Lucian talked with enthusiasm now, but his father, on his side, could not share
these ardors. It was his part to be astonished at excitement over a book that
was not even begun, the mere ghost of a book flitting elusive in the world of
unborn masterpieces and failures. He had loved good letters, but he shared
unconsciously in the general belief that literary attempt is always pitiful,
though he did not subscribe to the other half of the popular faith—that
literary success is a matter of very little importance. He thought well of
books, but only of printed books; in manuscripts he put no faith, and the
<i>paulo-post-futurum</i> tense he could not in any manner conjugate. He
returned once more to the topic of palpable interest.</p>
<p>“But about this dirty trick these fellows have played on you. You
won’t sit quietly and bear it, surely? It’s only a question of
writing to the papers.”</p>
<p>“They wouldn’t put the letter in. And if they did, I should only
get laughed at. Some time ago a man wrote to the <i>Reader</i>, complaining of
his play being stolen. He said that he had sent a little one-act comedy to
Burleigh, the great dramatist, asking for his advice. Burleigh gave his advice
and took the idea for his own very successful play. So the man said, and I
daresay it was true enough. But the victim got nothing by his complaint.
‘A pretty state of things,’ everybody said. ‘Here’s a
Mr. Tomson, that no one has ever heard of, bothers Burleigh with his rubbish,
and then accuses him of petty larceny. Is it likely that a man of
Burleigh’s position, a playwright who can make his five thousand a year
easily, would borrow from an unknown Tomson?’ I should think it very
likely, indeed,” Lucian went on, chuckling, “but that was their
verdict. No; I don’t think I’ll write to the papers.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, my boy, I suppose you know your own business best. I think
you are mistaken, but you must do as you like.”</p>
<p>“It’s all so unimportant,” said Lucian, and he really thought
so. He had sweeter things to dream of, and desired no communion of feeling with
that madman who had left Caermaen some few hours before. He felt he had made a
fool of himself, he was ashamed to think of the fatuity of which he had been
guilty, such boiling hatred was not only wicked, but absurd. A man could do no
good who put himself into a position of such violent antagonism against his
fellow-creatures; so Lucian rebuked his heart, saying that he was old enough to
know better. But he remembered that he had sweeter things to dream of; there
was a secret ecstasy that he treasured and locked tight away, as a joy too
exquisite even for thought till he was quite alone; and then there was that
scheme for a new book that he had laid down hopelessly some time ago; it seemed
to have arisen into life again within the last hour; he understood that he had
started on a false tack, he had taken the wrong aspect of his idea. Of course
the thing couldn’t be written in that way; it was like trying to read a
page turned upside down; and he saw those characters he had vainly sought
suddenly disambushed, and a splendid inevitable sequence of events unrolled
before him.</p>
<p>It was a true resurrection; the dry plot he had constructed revealed itself as
a living thing, stirring and mysterious, and warm as life itself. The parson
was smoking stolidly to all appearance, but in reality he was full of amazement
at his own son, and now and again he slipped sly furtive glances towards the
tranquil young man in the arm-chair by the empty hearth. In the first place,
Mr. Taylor was genuinely impressed by what he had read of Lucian’s work;
he had so long been accustomed to look upon all effort as futile that success
amazed him. In the abstract, of course, he was prepared to admit that some
people did write well and got published and made money, just as other persons
successfully backed an outsider at heavy odds; but it had seemed as improbable
that Lucian should show even the beginnings of achievement in one direction as
in the other. Then the boy evidently cared so little about it; he did not
appear to be proud of being worth robbing, nor was he angry with the robbers.</p>
<p>He sat back luxuriously in the disreputable old chair, drawing long slow
wreaths of smoke, tasting his whisky from time to time, evidently well at ease
with himself. The father saw him smile, and it suddenly dawned upon him that
his son was very handsome; he had such kind gentle eyes and a kind mouth, and
his pale cheeks were flushed like a girl’s. Mr. Taylor felt moved. What a
harmless young fellow Lucian had been; no doubt a little queer and different
from others, but wholly inoffensive and patient under disappointment. And Miss
Deacon, her contribution to the evening’s discussion had been
characteristic; she had remarked, firstly, that writing was a very unsettling
occupation, and secondly, that it was extremely foolish to entrust one’s
property to people of whom one knew nothing. Father and son had smiled together
at these observations, which were probably true enough. Mr. Taylor at last left
Lucian along; he shook hands with a good deal of respect, and said, almost
deferentially:</p>
<p>“You mustn’t work too hard, old fellow. I wouldn’t stay up
too late, if I were you, after that long walk. You must have gone miles out of
your way.”</p>
<p>“I’m not tired now, though. I feel as if I could write my new book
on the spot”; and the young man laughed a gay sweet laugh that struck the
father as a new note in his son’s life.</p>
<p>He sat still a moment after his father had left the room. He cherished his
chief treasure of thought in its secret place; he would not enjoy it yet. He
drew up a chair to the table at which he wrote or tried to write, and began
taking pens and paper from the drawer. There was a great pile of ruled paper
there; all of it used, on one side, and signifying many hours of desperate
scribbling, of heart-searching and rack of his brain; an array of poor, eager
lines written by a waning fire with waning hope; all useless and abandoned. He
took up the sheets cheerfully, and began in delicious idleness to look over
these fruitless efforts. A page caught his attention; he remembered how he
wrote it while a November storm was dashing against the panes; and there was
another, with a queer blot in one corner; he had got up from his chair and
looked out, and all the earth was white fairyland, and the snowflakes whirled
round and round in the wind. Then he saw the chapter begun of a night in March:
a great gale blew that night and rooted up one of the ancient yews in the
churchyard. He had heard the trees shrieking in the woods, and the long wail of
the wind, and across the heaven a white moon fled awfully before the streaming
clouds. And all these poor abandoned pages now seemed sweet, and past
unhappiness was transmuted into happiness, and the nights of toil were holy. He
turned over half a dozen leaves and began to sketch out the outlines of the new
book on the unused pages; running out a skeleton plan on one page, and dotting
fancies, suggestions, hints on others. He wrote rapidly, overjoyed to find that
loving phrases grew under his pen; a particular scene he had imagined filled
him with desire; he gave his hand free course, and saw the written work
glowing; and action and all the heat of existence quickened and beat on the wet
page. Happy fancies took shape in happier words, and when at last he leant back
in his chair he felt the stir and rush of the story as if it had been some
portion of his own life. He read over what he had done with a renewed pleasure
in the nimble and flowing workmanship, and as he put the little pile of
manuscript tenderly in the drawer he paused to enjoy the anticipation of
tomorrow’s labour.</p>
<p>And then—but the rest of the night was given to tender and delicious
things, and when he went up to bed a scarlet dawn was streaming from the east.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>III.</h3>
<p>For days Lucian lay in a swoon of pleasure, smiling when he was addressed,
sauntering happily in the sunlight, hugging recollection warm to his heart.
Annie had told him that she was going on a visit to her married sister, and
said, with a caress, that he must be patient. He protested against her absence,
but she fondled him, whispering her charms in his ear till he gave in and then
they said good-bye, Lucian adoring on his knees. The parting was as strange as
the meeting, and that night when he laid his work aside, and let himself sink
deep into the joys of memory, all the encounter seemed as wonderful and
impossible as magic.</p>
<p>“And you really don’t mean to do anything about those
rascals?” said his father.</p>
<p>“Rascals? Which rascals? Oh, you mean Beit. I had forgotten all about
it.<br/>
No; I don’t think I shall trouble. They’re not worth powder and
shot.”<br/></p>
<p>And he returned to his dream, pacing slowly from the medlar to the quince and
back again. It seemed trivial to be interrupted by such questions; he had not
even time to think of the book he had recommenced so eagerly, much less of this
labour of long ago. He recollected without interest that it cost him many pains,
that it was pretty good here and there, and that it had been stolen, and it
seemed that there was nothing more to be said on the matter. He wished to think
of the darkness in the lane, of the kind voice that spoke to him, of the kind
hand that sought his own, as he stumbled on the rough way. So far, it was
wonderful. Since he had left school and lost the company of the worthy
barbarians who had befriended him there, he had almost lost the sense of
kinship with humanity; he had come to dread the human form as men dread the
hood of the cobra. To Lucian a man or a woman meant something that stung, that
spoke words that rankled, and poisoned his life with scorn. At first such
malignity shocked him: he would ponder over words and glances and wonder if he
were not mistaken, and he still sought now and then for sympathy. The poor boy
had romantic ideas about women; he believed they were merciful and pitiful,
very kind to the unlucky and helpless. Men perhaps had to be different; after
all, the duty of a man was to get on in the world, or, in plain language, to
make money, to be successful; to cheat rather than to be cheated, but always to
be successful; and he could understand that one who fell below this high
standard must expect to be severely judged by his fellows. For example, there
was young Bennett, Miss Spurry’s nephew. Lucian had met him once or twice
when he was spending his holidays with Miss Spurry, and the two young fellows
compared literary notes together. Bennett showed some beautiful things he had
written, over which Lucian had grown both sad and enthusiastic. It was such
exquisite magic verse, and so much better than anything he ever hoped to write,
that there was a touch of anguish in his congratulations. But when Bennett,
after many vain prayers to his aunt, threw up a safe position in the bank, and
betook himself to a London garret, Lucian was not surprised at the general
verdict.</p>
<p>Mr. Dixon, as a clergyman, viewed the question from a high standpoint and found
it all deplorable, but the general opinion was that Bennett was a hopeless
young lunatic. Old Mr. Gervase went purple when his name was mentioned, and the
young Dixons sneered very merrily over the adventure.</p>
<p>“I always thought he was a beastly young ass,” said Edward Dixon,
“but I didn’t think he’d chuck away his chances like that.
Said he couldn’t stand a bank! I hope he’ll be able to stand bread
and water. That’s all those littery fellows get, I believe, except
Tennyson and Mark Twain and those sort of people.”</p>
<p>Lucian of course sympathized with the unfortunate Bennett, but such judgments
were after all only natural. The young man might have stayed in the bank and
succeeded to his aunt’s thousand a year, and everybody would have called
him a very nice young fellow—“clever, too.” But he had
deliberately chosen, as Edward Dixon had said, to chuck his chances away for
the sake of literature; piety and a sense of the main chance had alike pointed
the way to a delicate course of wheedling, to a little harmless practicing on
Miss Spurry’s infirmities, to frequent compliances of a soothing nature,
and the “young ass” had been blind to the direction of one and the
other. It seemed almost right that the vicar should moralize, that Edward Dixon
should sneer, and that Mr. Gervase should grow purple with contempt. Men,
Lucian thought, were like judges, who may pity the criminal in their hearts,
but are forced to vindicate the outraged majesty of the law by a severe
sentence. He felt the same considerations applied to his own case; he knew that
his father should have had more money, that his clothes should be newer and of
a better cut, that he should have gone to the university and made good friends.
If such had been his fortune he could have looked his fellow-men proudly in the
face, upright and unashamed. Having put on the whole armor of a first-rate West
End tailor, with money in his purse, having taken anxious thought for the
morrow, and having some useful friends and good prospects; in such a case he
might have held his head high in a gentlemanly and Christian community. As it
was he had usually avoided the reproachful glance of his fellows, feeling that
he deserved their condemnation. But he had cherished for a long time his
romantic sentimentalities about women; literary conventions borrowed from the
minor poets and pseudo-medievalists, or so he thought afterwards. But, fresh
from school, wearied a little with the perpetual society of barbarian though
worthy boys, he had in his soul a charming image of womanhood, before which he
worshipped with mingled passion and devotion. It was a nude figure, perhaps,
but the shining arms were to be wound about the neck of a vanquished knight;
there was rest for the head of a wounded lover; the hands were stretched forth
to do works of pity, and the smiling lips were to murmur not love alone, but
consolation in defeat. Here was the refuge for a broken heart; here the scorn
of men would but make tenderness increase; here was all pity and all charity
with loving-kindness. It was a delightful picture, conceived in the “come
rest on this bosom,” and “a ministering angel thou” manner,
with touches of allurement that made devotion all the sweeter. He soon found
that he had idealized a little; in the affair of young Bennett, while the men
were contemptuous the women were virulent. He had been rather fond of Agatha
Gervase, and she, so other ladies said, had “set her cap” at him.
Now, when he rebelled, and lost the goodwill of his aunt, dear Miss Spurry,
Agatha insulted him with all conceivable rapidity. “After all, Mr.
Bennett,” she said, “you will be nothing better than a beggar; now,
will you? You mustn’t think me cruel, but I can’t help speaking the
truth. <i>Write books!</i>” Her expression filled up the incomplete
sentence; she waggled with indignant emotion. These passages came to
Lucian’s ears, and indeed the Gervases boasted of “how well poor
Agatha had behaved.”</p>
<p>“Never mind, Gathy,” old Gervase had observed. “If the
impudent young puppy comes here again, we’ll see what Thomas can do with
the horse-whip.”</p>
<p>“Poor dear child,” Mrs. Gervase added in telling the tale,
“and she was so fond of him too. But of course it couldn’t go on
after his shameful behavior.”</p>
<p>But Lucian was troubled; he sought vainly for the ideal womanly, the tender
note of “come rest on this bosom.” Ministering angels, he felt
convinced, do not rub red pepper and sulfuric acid into the wounds of suffering
mortals.</p>
<p>Then there was the case of Mr. Vaughan, a squire in the neighborhood, at whose
board all the aristocracy of Caermaen had feasted for years. Mr. Vaughan had a
first-rate cook, and his cellar was rare, and he was never so happy as when he
shared his good things with his friends. His mother kept his house, and they
delighted all the girls with frequent dances, while the men sighed over the
amazing champagne. Investments proved disastrous, and Mr. Vaughan had to sell
the grey manor-house by the river. He and his mother took a little modern
stucco villa in Caermaen, wishing to be near their dear friends. But the men
were “very sorry; rough on you, Vaughan. Always thought those Patagonians
were risky, but you wouldn’t hear of it. Hope we shall see you before
very long; you and Mrs. Vaughan must come to tea some day after
Christmas.”</p>
<p>“Of course we are all very sorry for them,” said Henrietta Dixon.
“No, we haven’t called on Mrs. Vaughan yet. They have no regular
servant, you know; only a woman in the morning. I hear old mother Vaughan, as
Edward will call her, does nearly everything. And their house is absurdly
small; it’s little more than a cottage. One really can’t call it a
gentleman’s house.”</p>
<p>Then Mr. Vaughan, his heart in the dust, went to the Gervases and tried to
borrow five pounds of Mr. Gervase. He had to be ordered out of the house, and,
as Edith Gervase said, it was all very painful; “he went out in such a
funny way,” she added, “just like the dog when he’s had a
whipping. Of course it’s sad, even if it is all his own fault, as
everybody says, but he looked so ridiculous as he was going down the steps that
I couldn’t help laughing.” Mr. Vaughan heard the ringing, youthful
laughter as he crossed the lawn.</p>
<p>Young girls like Henrietta Dixon and Edith Gervase naturally viewed the
Vaughans’ comical position with all the high spirits of their age, but
the elder ladies could not look at matters in this frivolous light.</p>
<p>“Hush, dear, hush,” said Mrs. Gervase, “it’s all too
shocking to be a laughing matter. Don’t you agree with me, Mrs. Dixon?
The sinful extravagance that went on at Pentre always <i>frightened</i> me. You
remember that ball they gave last year? Mr. Gervase assured me that the
champagne must have cost <i>at least</i> a hundred and fifty shillings the
dozen.”</p>
<p>“It’s dreadful, isn’t it,” said Mrs. Dixon, “when
one thinks of how many poor people there are who would be thankful for a crust
of bread?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Mrs. Dixon,” Agatha joined in, “and you know how
absurdly the Vaughans spoilt the cottagers. Oh, it was really wicked; one would
think Mr. Vaughan wished to make them above their station. Edith and I went for
a walk one day nearly as far as Pentre, and we begged a glass of water of old
Mrs. Jones who lives in that pretty cottage near the brook. She began praising
the Vaughans in the most fulsome manner, and showed us some flannel things they
had given her at Christmas. I assure you, my dear Mrs. Dixon, the flannel was
the very best quality; no lady could wish for better. It couldn’t have
cost less than half-a-crown a yard.”</p>
<p>“I know, my dear, I know. Mr. Dixon always said it couldn’t last.
How often I have heard him say that the Vaughans were pauperizing all the
common people about Pentre, and putting every one else in a most unpleasant
position. Even from a worldly point of view it was very poor taste on their
part. So different from the <i>true</i> charity that Paul speaks of.”</p>
<p>“I only wish they had given away nothing worse than flannel,” said
Miss Colley, a young lady of very strict views. “But I assure you there
was a perfect orgy, I can call it nothing else, every Christmas. Great joints
of prime beef, and barrels of strong beer, and snuff and tobacco distributed
wholesale; as if the poor wanted to be encouraged in their disgusting habits.
It was really impossible to go through the village for weeks after; the whole
place was poisoned with the fumes of horrid tobacco pipes.”</p>
<p>“Well, we see how that sort of thing ends,” said Mrs. Dixon,
summing up judicially. “We had intended to call, but I really think it
would be impossible after what Mrs. Gervase has told us. The idea of Mr.
Vaughan trying to sponge on poor Mr. Gervase in that shabby way! I think
meanness of that kind is so hateful.”</p>
<p>It was the practical side of all this that astonished Lucian. He saw that in
reality there was no high-flown quixotism in a woman’s nature; the smooth
arms, made he had thought for caressing, seemed muscular; the hands meant for
the doing of works of pity in his system, appeared dexterous in the giving of
“stingers,” as Barnes might say, and the smiling lips could sneer
with great ease. Nor was he more fortunate in his personal experiences. As has
been told, Mrs. Dixon spoke of him in connection with “judgments,”
and the younger ladies did not exactly cultivate his acquaintance.
Theoretically they “adored” books and thought poetry “too
sweet,” but in practice they preferred talking about mares and
fox-terriers and their neighbors.</p>
<p>They were nice girls enough, very like other young ladies in other country
towns, content with the teaching of their parents, reading the Bible every
morning in their bedrooms, and sitting every Sunday in church amongst the
well-dressed “sheep” on the right hand. It was not their fault if
they failed to satisfy the ideal of an enthusiastic dreamy boy, and indeed,
they would have thought his feigned woman immodest, absurdly sentimental, a
fright (“never wears stays, my dear”) and <i>horrid</i>.</p>
<p>At first he was a good deal grieved at the loss of that charming tender woman,
the work of his brain. When the Miss Dixons went haughtily by with a scornful
waggle, when the Miss Gervases passed in the wagonette laughing as the mud
splashed him, the poor fellow would look up with a face of grief that must have
been very comic; “like a dying duck,” as Edith Gervase said. Edith
was really very pretty, and he would have liked to talk to her, even about
fox-terriers, if she would have listened. One afternoon at the Dixons’ he
really forced himself upon her, and with all the obtuseness of an enthusiastic
boy tried to discuss the <i>Lotus Eaters</i> of Tennyson. It was too absurd.
Captain Kempton was making signals to Edith all the time, and Lieutenant
Gatwick had gone off in disgust, and he had promised to bring her a puppy
“by Vick out of Wasp.” At last the poor girl could bear it no
longer:</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s very sweet,” she said at last. “When did you
say you were going to London, Mr. Taylor?”</p>
<p>It was about the time that his disappointment became known to everybody, and
the shot told. He gave her a piteous look and slunk off, “just like the
dog when he’s had a whipping,” to use Edith’s own expression.
Two or three lessons of this description produced their due effect; and when he
saw a male Dixon or Gervase approaching him he bit his lip and summoned up his
courage. But when he descried a “ministering angel” he made haste
and hid behind a hedge or took to the woods. In course of time the desire to
escape became an instinct, to be followed as a matter of course; in the same
way he avoided the adders on the mountain. His old ideals were almost if not
quite forgotten; he knew that the female of the <i>bête humaine</i>, like the
adder, would in all probability sting, and he therefore shrank from its trail,
but without any feeling of special resentment. The one had a poisoned tongue as
the other had a poisoned fang, and it was well to leave them both alone. Then
had come that sudden fury of rage against all humanity, as he went out of
Caermaen carrying the book that had been stolen from him by the enterprising
Beit. He shuddered as he though of how nearly he had approached the verge of
madness, when his eyes filled with blood and the earth seemed to burn with
fire. He remembered how he had looked up to the horizon and the sky was
blotched with scarlet; and the earth was deep red, with red woods and red
fields. There was something of horror in the memory, and in the vision of that
wild night walk through dim country, when every shadow seemed a symbol of some
terrible impending doom. The murmur of the brook, the wind shrilling through
the wood, the pale light flowing from the mouldered trunks, and the picture of
his own figure fleeing and fleeting through the shades; all these seemed
unhappy things that told a story in fatal hieroglyphics. And then the life and
laws of the sunlight had passed away, and the resurrection and kingdom of the
dead began. Though his limbs were weary, he had felt his muscles grow strong as
steel; a woman, one of the hated race, was beside him in the darkness, and the
wild beast woke within him, ravening for blood and brutal lust; all the raging
desires of the dim race from which he came assailed his heart. The ghosts
issued out from the weird wood and from the caves in the hills, besieging him,
as he had imagined the spiritual legion besieging Caermaen, beckoning him to a
hideous battle and a victory that he had never imagined in his wildest dreams.
And then out of the darkness the kind voice spoke again, and the kind hand was
stretched out to draw him up from the pit. It was sweet to think of that which
he had found at last; the boy’s picture incarnate, all the passion and
compassion of his longing, all the pity and love and consolation. She, that
beautiful passionate woman offering up her beauty in sacrifice to him, she was
worthy indeed of his worship. He remembered how his tears had fallen upon her
breast, and how tenderly she had soothed him, whispering those wonderful
unknown words that sang to his heart. And she had made herself defenseless
before him, caressing and fondling the body that had been so despised. He
exulted in the happy thought that he had knelt down on the ground before her,
and had embraced her knees and worshipped. The woman’s body had become
his religion; he lay awake at night looking into the darkness with hungry eyes;
wishing for a miracle, that the appearance of the so-desired form might be
shaped before him. And when he was alone in quiet places in the wood, he fell
down again on his knees, and even on his face, stretching out vain hands in the
air, as if they would feel her flesh. His father noticed in those days that the
inner pocket of his coat was stuffed with papers; he would see Lucian walking
up and down in a secret shady place at the bottom of the orchard, reading from
his sheaf of manuscript, replacing the leaves, and again drawing them out. He
would walk a few quick steps, and pause as if enraptured, gazing in the air as
if he looked through the shadows of the world into some sphere of glory,
feigned by his thought. Mr. Taylor was almost alarmed at the sight; he
concluded of course that Lucian was writing a book. In the first place, there
seemed something immodest in seeing the operation performed under one’s
eyes; it was as if the “make-up” of a beautiful actress were done
on the stage, in full audience; as if one saw the rounded calves fixed in
position, the fleshings drawn on, the voluptuous outlines of the figure
produced by means purely mechanical, blushes mantling from the paint-pot, and
the golden tresses well secured by the wigmaker. Books, Mr. Taylor thought,
should swim into one’s ken mysteriously; they should appear all printed
and bound, without apparent genesis; just as children are suddenly told that
they have a little sister, found by mamma in the garden. But Lucian was not
only engaged in composition; he was plainly rapturous, enthusiastic; Mr. Taylor
saw him throw up his hands, and bow his head with strange gesture. The parson
began to fear that his son was like some of those mad Frenchmen of whom he had
read, young fellows who had a sort of fury of literature, and gave their whole
lives to it, spending days over a page, and years over a book, pursuing art as
Englishmen pursue money, building up a romance as if it were a business. Now
Mr. Taylor held firmly by the “walking-stick” theory; he believed
that a man of letters should have a real profession, some solid employment in
life. “Get something to do,” he would have liked to say, “and
then you can write as much as you please. Look at Scott, look at Dickens and
Trollope.” And then there was the social point of view; it might be
right, or it might be wrong, but there could be no doubt that the literary man,
as such, was not thought much of in English society. Mr. Taylor knew his
Thackeray, and he remembered that old Major Pendennis, society personified, did
not exactly boast of his nephew’s occupation. Even Warrington was rather
ashamed to own his connection with journalism, and Pendennis himself laughed
openly at his novel-writing as an agreeable way of making money, a useful
appendage to the cultivation of dukes, his true business in life. This was the
plain English view, and Mr. Taylor was no doubt right enough in thinking it
good, practical common sense. Therefore when he saw Lucian loitering and
sauntering, musing amorously over his manuscript, exhibiting manifest signs of
that fine fury which Britons have ever found absurd, he felt grieved at heart,
and more than ever sorry that he had not been able to send the boy to Oxford.</p>
<p>“B.N.C. would have knocked all this nonsense out of him,” he
thought. “He would have taken a double First like my poor father and made
something of a figure in the world. However, it can’t be helped.”
The poor man sighed, and lit his pipe, and walked in another part of the
garden.</p>
<p>But he was mistaken in his diagnosis of the symptoms. The book that Lucian had
begun lay unheeded in the drawer; it was a secret work that he was engaged on,
and the manuscripts that he took out of that inner pocket never left him day or
night. He slept with them next to his heart, and he would kiss them when he was
quite alone, and pay them such devotion as he would have paid to her whom they
symbolized. He wrote on these leaves a wonderful ritual of praise and devotion;
it was the liturgy of his religion. Again and again he copied and recopied this
madness of a lover; dallying all days over the choice of a word, searching for
more exquisite phrases. No common words, no such phrases as he might use in a
tale would suffice; the sentences of worship must stir and be quickened, they
must glow and burn, and be decked out as with rare work of jewelry. Every part
of that holy and beautiful body must be adored; he sought for terms of
extravagant praise, he bent his soul and mind low before her, licking the dust
under her feet, abased and yet rejoicing as a Templar before the image of
Baphomet. He exulted more especially in the knowledge that there was nothing of
the conventional or common in his ecstasy; he was not the fervent, adoring
lover of Tennyson’s poems, who loves with passion and yet with a proud
respect, with the love always of a gentleman for a lady. Annie was not a lady;
the Morgans had farmed their land for hundreds of years; they were what Miss
Gervase and Miss Colley and the rest of them called common people.
Tennyson’s noble gentleman thought of their ladies with something of
reticence; they imagined them dressed in flowing and courtly robes, walking
with slow dignity; they dreamed of them as always stately, the future
mistresses of their houses, mothers of their heirs. Such lovers bowed, but not
too low, remembering their own honor, before those who were to be equal
companions and friends as well as wives. It was not such conceptions as these
that he embodied in the amazing emblems of his ritual; he was not, he told
himself, a young officer, “something in the city,” or a rising
barrister engaged to a Miss Dixon or a Miss Gervase. He had not thought of
looking out for a nice little house in a good residential suburb where they
would have pleasant society; there were to be no consultations about
wall-papers, or jocose whispers from friends as to the necessity of having a
room that would do for a nursery. No glad young thing had leant on his arm
while they chose the suite in white enamel, and china for “our
bedroom,” the modest salesman doing his best to spare their blushes. When
Edith Gervase married she would get mamma to look out for two really good
servants, “as we must begin quietly,” and mamma would make sure
that the drains and everything were right. Then her “girl friends”
would come on a certain solemn day to see all her “lovely things.”
“Two dozen of everything!” “Look, Ethel, did you ever see
such ducky frills?” “And that insertion, isn’t it quite too
sweet?” “My dear Edith, you <i>are</i> a lucky girl.”
“All the underlinen specially made by Madame Lulu!” “What
delicious things!” “I hope he knows what a prize he is
winning.” “Oh! do look at those lovely ribbon-bows!”
“You darling, how happy you must be.” “Real
Valenciennes!” Then a whisper in the lady’s ear, and her reply,
“Oh, <i>don’t</i>, Nelly!” So they would chirp over their
treasures, as in Rabelais they chirped over their cups; and every thing would
be done in due order till the wedding-day, when mamma, who had strained her
sinews and the commandments to bring the match about, would weep and look
indignantly at the unhappy bridegroom. “I <i>hope</i> you’ll be
kind to her, Robert.” Then in a rapid whisper to the bride: “Mind,
you <i>insist</i> on Wyman’s flushing the drains when you come back;
servants are so careless and dirty too. Don’t let him go about by himself
in Paris. Men are so <i>queer</i>, one never knows. You <i>have</i> got the
pills?” And aloud, after these <i>secreta</i>, “God bless you, my
dear; good-bye! <i>cluck</i>, <i>cluck</i>, good-bye!”</p>
<p>There were stranger things written in the manuscript pages that Lucian
cherished, sentences that burnt and glowed like “coals of fire which hath
a most vehement flame.” There were phrases that stung and tingled as he
wrote them, and sonorous words poured out in ecstasy and rapture, as in some of
the old litanies. He hugged the thought that a great part of what he had
invented was in the true sense of the word occult: page after page might have
been read aloud to the uninitiated without betraying the inner meaning. He
dreamed night and day over these symbols, he copied and recopied the manuscript
nine times before he wrote it out fairly in a little book which he made himself
of a skin of creamy vellum. In his mania for acquirements that should be
entirely useless he had gained some skill in illumination, or limning as he
preferred to call it, always choosing the obscurer word as the obscurer arts.
First he set himself to the severe practice of the text; he spent many hours
and days of toil in struggling to fashion the serried columns of black letter,
writing and rewriting till he could shape the massive character with firm true
hand. He cut his quills with the patience of a monk in the scriptorium, shaving
and altering the nib, lightening and increasing the pressure and flexibility of
the points, till the pen satisfied him, and gave a stroke both broad and even.
Then he made experiments in inks, searching for some medium that would rival
the glossy black letter of the old manuscripts; and not till he could produce a
fair page of text did he turn to the more entrancing labour of the capitals and
borders and ornaments. He mused long over the Lombardic letters, as glorious in
their way as a cathedral, and trained his hand to execute the bold and flowing
lines; and then there was the art of the border, blossoming in fretted splendor
all about the page. His cousin, Miss Deacon, called it all a great waste of
time, and his father thought he would have done much better in trying to
improve his ordinary handwriting, which was both ugly and illegible. Indeed,
there seemed but a poor demand for the limner’s art. He sent some
specimens of his skill to an “artistic firm” in London; a verse of
the “Maud,” curiously emblazoned, and a Latin hymn with the notes
pricked on a red stave. The firm wrote civilly, telling him that his work,
though good, was not what they wanted, and enclosing an illuminated text.
“We have great demand for this sort of thing,” they concluded,
“and if you care to attempt something in this style we should be pleased
to look at it.” The said text was “Thou, God, seest me.” The
letter was of a degraded form, bearing much the same relation to the true
character as a “churchwarden gothic” building does to Canterbury
Cathedral; the colours were varied. The initial was pale gold, the <i>h</i>
pink, the <i>o</i> black, the <i>u</i> blue, and the first letter was somehow
connected with a bird’s nest containing the young of the pigeon, who were
waited on by the female bird.</p>
<p>“What a pretty text,” said Miss Deacon. “I should like to
nail it up in my room. Why don’t you try to do something like that,
Lucian? You might make something by it.”</p>
<p>“I sent them these,” said Lucian, “but they don’t like
them much.”</p>
<p>“My dear boy! I should think not! Like them! What were you thinking of to
draw those queer stiff flowers all round the border? Roses? They don’t
look like roses at all events. Where do you get such ideas from?”</p>
<p>“But the design is appropriate; look at the words.”</p>
<p>“My dear Lucian, I can’t read the words; it’s such a queer
old-fashioned writing. Look how plain that text is; one can see what it’s
about. And this other one; I can’t make it out at all.”</p>
<p>“It’s a Latin hymn.”</p>
<p>“A Latin hymn? Is it a Protestant hymn? I may be old-fashioned, but
<i>Hymns Ancient and Modern</i> is quite good enough for me. This is the music,
I suppose? But, my dear boy, there are only four lines, and who ever heard of
notes shaped like that: you have made some square and some diamond-shape? Why
didn’t you look in your poor mother’s old music? It’s in the
ottoman in the drawing-room. I could have shown you how to make the notes;
there are crotchets, you know, and quavers.”</p>
<p>Miss Deacon laid down the illuminated <i>Urbs Beata</i> in despair; she felt
convinced that her cousin was “next door to an idiot.”</p>
<p>And he went out into the garden and raged behind a hedge. He broke two
flower-pots and hit an apple-tree very hard with his stick, and then, feeling
more calm, wondered what was the use in trying to do anything. He would not
have put the thought into words, but in his heart he was aggrieved that his
cousin liked the pigeons and the text, and did not like his emblematical roses
and the Latin hymn. He knew he had taken great pains over the work, and that it
was well done, and being still a young man he expected praise. He found that in
this hard world there was a lack of appreciation; a critical spirit seemed
abroad. If he could have been scientifically observed as he writhed and smarted
under the strictures of “the old fool,” as he rudely called his
cousin, the spectacle would have been extremely diverting. Little boys
sometimes enjoy a very similar entertainment; either with their tiny fingers or
with mamma’s nail scissors they gradually deprive a fly of its wings and
legs. The odd gyrations and queer thin buzzings of the creature as it spins
comically round and round never fail to provide a fund of harmless amusement.
Lucian, indeed, fancied himself a very ill-used individual; but he should have
tried to imitate the nervous organization of the flies, which, as mamma says,
“can’t really feel.”</p>
<p>But now, as he prepared the vellum leaves, he remembered his art with joy; he
had not laboured to do beautiful work in vain. He read over his manuscript once
more, and thought of the designing of the pages. He made sketches on furtive
sheets of paper, and hunted up books in his father’s library for
suggestions. There were books about architecture, and medieval iron work, and
brasses which contributed hints for adornment; and not content with mere
pictures he sought in the woods and hedges, scanning the strange forms of
trees, and the poisonous growth of great water-plants, and the parasite twining
of honeysuckle and briony. In one of these rambles he discovered a red earth
which he made into a pigment, and he found in the unctuous juice of a certain
fern an ingredient which he thought made his black ink still more glossy. His
book was written all in symbols, and in the same spirit of symbolism he
decorated it, causing wonderful foliage to creep about the text, and showing
the blossom of certain mystical flowers, with emblems of strange creatures,
caught and bound in rose thickets. All was dedicated to love and a
lover’s madness, and there were songs in it which haunted him with their
lilt and refrain. When the book was finished it replaced the loose leaves as
his constant companion by day and night. Three times a day he repeated his
ritual to himself, seeking out the loneliest places in the woods, or going up
to his room; and from the fixed intentness and rapture of his gaze, the father
thought him still severely employed in the questionable process of composition.
At night he contrived to wake for his strange courtship; and he had a peculiar
ceremony when he got up in the dark and lit his candle. From a steep and wild
hillside, not far from the house, he had cut from time to time five large
boughs of spiked and prickly gorse. He had brought them into the house, one by
one, and had hidden them in the big box that stood beside his bed. Often he
woke up weeping and murmuring to himself the words of one of his songs, and
then when he had lit the candle, he would draw out the gorse-boughs, and place
them on the floor, and taking off his nightgown, gently lay himself down on the
bed of thorns and spines. Lying on his face, with the candle and the book
before him, he would softly and tenderly repeat the praises of his dear, dear
Annie, and as he turned over page after page, and saw the raised gold of the
majuscules glow and flame in the candle-light, he pressed the thorns into his
flesh. At such moments he tasted in all its acute savour the joy of physical
pain; and after two or three experiences of such delights he altered his book,
making a curious sign in vermilion on the margin of the passages where he was
to inflict on himself this sweet torture. Never did he fail to wake at the
appointed hour, a strong effort of will broke through all the heaviness of
sleep, and he would rise up, joyful though weeping, and reverently set his
thorny bed upon the floor, offering his pain with his praise. When he had
whispered the last word, and had risen from the ground, his body would be all
freckled with drops of blood; he used to view the marks with pride. Here and
there a spine would be left deep in the flesh, and he would pull these out
roughly, tearing through the skin. On some nights when he had pressed with more
fervor on the thorns his thighs would stream with blood, red beads standing out
on the flesh, and trickling down to his feet. He had some difficulty in washing
away the bloodstains so as not to leave any traces to attract the attention of
the servant; and after a time he returned no more to his bed when his duty had
been accomplished. For a coverlet he had a dark rug, a good deal worn, and in
this he would wrap his naked bleeding body, and lie down on the hard floor,
well content to add an aching rest to the account of his pleasures. He was
covered with scars, and those that healed during the day were torn open afresh
at night; the pale olive skin was red with the angry marks of blood, and the
graceful form of the young man appeared like the body of a tortured martyr. He
grew thinner and thinner every day, for he ate but little; the skin was
stretched on the bones of his face, and the black eyes burnt in dark purple
hollows. His relations noticed that he was not looking well.</p>
<p>“Now, Lucian, it’s perfect madness of you to go on like
this,” said Miss Deacon, one morning at breakfast. “Look how your
hand shakes; some people would say that you have been taking brandy. And all
that you want is a little medicine, and yet you won’t be advised. You
know it’s not my fault; I have asked you to try Dr. Jelly’s Cooling
Powders again and again.”</p>
<p>He remembered the forcible exhibition of the powders when he was a boy, and
felt thankful that those days were over. He only grinned at his cousin and
swallowed a great cup of strong tea to steady his nerves, which were shaky
enough. Mrs. Dixon saw him one day in Caermaen; it was very hot, and he had
been walking rather fast. The scars on his body burnt and tingled, and he
tottered as he raised his hat to the vicar’s wife. She decided without
further investigation that he must have been drinking in public-houses.</p>
<p>“It seems a mercy that poor Mrs. Taylor was taken,” she said to her
husband. “She has certainly been spared a great deal. That wretched young
man passed me this afternoon; he was quite intoxicated.”</p>
<p>“How very said,” said Mr. Dixon. “A little port, my
dear?”</p>
<p>“Thank you, Merivale, I will have another glass of sherry. Dr. Burrows is
always scolding me and saying I <i>must</i> take something to keep up my
energy, and this sherry is so weak.”</p>
<p>The Dixons were not teetotalers. They regretted it deeply, and blamed the
doctor, who “insisted on some stimulant.” However, there was some
consolation in trying to convert the parish to total abstinence, or, as they
curiously called it, temperance. Old women were warned of the sin of taking a
glass of beer for supper; aged labourers were urged to try Cork-ho, the new
temperance drink; an uncouth beverage, styled coffee, was dispensed at the
reading-room. Mr. Dixon preached an eloquent “temperance” sermon,
soon after the above conversation, taking as his text: <i>Beware of the leaven
of the Pharisees</i>. In his discourse he showed that fermented liquor and
leaven had much in common, that beer was at the present day “put
away” during Passover by the strict Jews; and in a moving peroration he
urged his dear brethren, “and more especially those amongst us who are
poor in this world’s goods,” to beware indeed of that evil leaven
which was sapping the manhood of our nation. Mrs. Dixon cried after church:</p>
<p>“Oh, Merivale, what a beautiful sermon! How earnest you were. I hope it
will do good.”</p>
<p>Mr. Dixon swallowed his port with great decorum, but his wife fuddled herself
every evening with cheap sherry. She was quite unaware of the fact, and
sometimes wondered in a dim way why she always had to scold the children after
dinner. And so strange things sometimes happened in the nursery, and now and
then the children looked queerly at one another after a red-faced woman had
gone out, panting.</p>
<p>Lucian knew nothing of his accuser’s trials, but he was not long in
hearing of his own intoxication. The next time he went down to Caermaen he was
hailed by the doctor.</p>
<p>“Been drinking again today?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Lucian in a puzzled voice. “What do you
mean?”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, if you haven’t, that’s all right, as you’ll
be able to take a drop with me. Come along in?”</p>
<p>Over the whisky and pipes Lucian heard of the evil rumors affecting his
character.</p>
<p>“Mrs. Dixon assured me you were staggering from one side of the street to
the other. You quite frightened her, she said. Then she asked me if I
recommended her to take one or two ounces of spirit at bedtime for the
palpitation; and of course I told her two would be better. I have my living to
make here, you know. And upon my word, I think she wants it; she’s always
gurgling inside like a waterworks. I wonder how old Dixon can stand it.”</p>
<p>“I like ‘ounces of spirit,’” said Lucian.
“That’s taking it medicinally, I suppose. I’ve often heard of
ladies who have to ‘take it medicinally’; and that’s how
it’s done?”</p>
<p>“That’s it. ‘Dr Burrows won’t <i>listen</i> to
me’: ‘I tell him how I dislike the taste of spirits, but he says
they are absolutely <i>necessary</i> for my constitution’: ‘my
medical man <i>insists</i> on something at bedtime’; that’s the
style.”</p>
<p>Lucian laughed gently; all these people had become indifferent to him; he could
no longer feel savage indignation at their little hypocrisies and malignancies.
Their voices uttering calumny, and morality, and futility had become like the
thin shrill angry note of a gnat on a summer evening; he had his own thoughts
and his own life, and he passed on without heeding.</p>
<p>“You come down to Caermaen pretty often, don’t you?” said the
doctor.<br/>
“I’ve seen you two or three times in the last
fortnight.”<br/></p>
<p>“Yes, I enjoy the walk.”</p>
<p>“Well, look me up whenever you like, you know. I am often in just at this
time, and a chat with a human being isn’t bad, now and then. It’s a
change for me; I’m often afraid I shall lose my patients.”</p>
<p>The doctor had the weakness of these terrible puns, dragged headlong into the
conversation. He sometimes exhibited them before Mrs. Gervase, who would smile
in a faint and dignified manner, and say:</p>
<p>“Ah, I see. Very amusing indeed. We had an old coachmen once who was very
clever, I believe, at that sort of thing, but Mr. Gervase was obliged to send
him away, the laughter of the other domestics was so very boisterous.”</p>
<p>Lucian laughed, not boisterously, but good-humouredly, at the doctor’s
joke. He liked Burrows, feeling that he was a man and not an automatic gabbling
machine.</p>
<p>“You look a little pulled down,” said the doctor, when Lucian rose
to go. “No, you don’t want my medicine. Plenty of beef and beer
will do you more good than drugs. I daresay it’s the hot weather that has
thinned you a bit. Oh, you’ll be all right again in a month.”</p>
<p>As Lucian strolled out of the town on his way home, he passed a small crowd of
urchins assembled at the corner of an orchard. They were enjoying themselves
immensely. The “healthy” boy, the same whom he had seen some weeks
ago operating on a cat, seemed to have recognized his selfishness in keeping
his amusements to himself. He had found a poor lost puppy, a little creature
with bright pitiful eyes, almost human in their fond, friendly gaze. It was not
a well-bred little dog; it was certainly not that famous puppy “by Vick
out of Wasp”; it had rough hair and a foolish long tail which it wagged
beseechingly, at once deprecating severity and asking kindness. The poor animal
had evidently been used to gentle treatment; it would look up in a boy’s
face, and give a leap, fawning on him, and then bark in a small doubtful voice,
and cower a moment on the ground, astonished perhaps at the strangeness, the
bustle and animation. The boys were beside themselves with eagerness; there was
quite a babble of voices, arguing, discussing, suggesting. Each one had a plan
of his own which he brought before the leader, a stout and sturdy youth.</p>
<p>“Drown him! What be you thinkin’ of, mun?” he was saying.
“’Tain’t no sport at all. You shut your mouth, gwaes. Be you
goin’ to ask your mother for the boiling-water? Is, Bob Williams, I do
know all that: but where be you a-going to get the fire from? Be quiet, mun,
can’t you? Thomas Trevor, be this dog yourn or mine? Now, look you, if
you don’t all of you shut your bloody mouths, I’ll take the dog
’ome and keep him. There now!”</p>
<p>He was a born leader of men. A singular depression and lowness of spirit showed
itself on the boys’ faces. They recognized that the threat might very
possibly be executed, and their countenances were at once composed to humble
attention. The puppy was still cowering on the ground in the midst of them: one
or two tried to relieve the tension of their feelings by kicking him in the
belly with their hobnail boots. It cried out with the pain and writhed a
little, but the poor little beast did not attempt to bite or even snarl. It
looked up with those beseeching friendly eyes at its persecutors, and fawned on
them again, and tried to wag its tail and be merry, pretending to play with a
straw on the road, hoping perhaps to win a little favor in that way.</p>
<p>The leader saw the moment for his master-stroke. He slowly drew a piece of rope
from his pocket.</p>
<p>“What do you say to that, mun? Now, Thomas Trevor! We’ll hang him
over that there bough. Will that suit you, Bobby Williams?”</p>
<p>There was a great shriek of approval and delight. All was again bustle and
animation. “I’ll tie it round his neck?” “Get out, mun,
you don’t know how it be done.” “Is, I do, Charley.”
“Now, let me, gwaes, now do let me.” “You be sure he
won’t bite?” “He bain’t mad, be he?”
“Suppose we were to tie up his mouth first?”</p>
<p>The puppy still fawned and curried favor, and wagged that sorry tail, and lay
down crouching on one side on the ground, sad and sorry in his heart, but still
with a little gleam of hope; for now and again he tried to play, and put up his
face, praying with those fond, friendly eyes. And then at last his gambols and
poor efforts for mercy ceased, and he lifted up his wretched voice in one long
dismal whine of despair. But he licked the hand of the boy that tied the noose.</p>
<p>He was slowly and gently swung into the air as Lucian went by unheeded; he
struggled, and his legs twisted and writhed. The “healthy” boy
pulled the rope, and his friends danced and shouted with glee. As Lucian turned
the corner, the poor dangling body was swinging to and fro, the puppy was
dying, but he still kicked a little.</p>
<p>Lucian went on his way hastily, and shuddering with disgust. The young of the
human creature were really too horrible; they defiled the earth, and made
existence unpleasant, as the pulpy growth of a noxious and obscene fungus
spoils an agreeable walk. The sight of those malignant little animals with
mouths that uttered cruelty and filthy, with hands dexterous in torture, and
feet swift to run all evil errands, had given him a shock and broken up the
world of strange thoughts in which he had been dwelling. Yet it was no good
being angry with them: it was their nature to be very loathsome. Only he wished
they would go about their hideous amusements in their own back gardens where
nobody could see them at work; it was too bad that he should be interrupted and
offended in a quiet country road. He tried to put the incident out of his mind,
as if the whole thing had been a disagreeable story, and the visions amongst
which he wished to move were beginning to return, when he was again rudely
disturbed. A little girl, a pretty child of eight or nine, was coming along the
lane to meet him. She was crying bitterly and looking to left and right, and
calling out some word all the time.</p>
<p>“Jack, Jack, Jack! Little Jackie! Jack!”</p>
<p>Then she burst into tears afresh, and peered into the hedge, and tried to peep
through a gate into a field.</p>
<p>“Jackie, Jackie, Jackie!”</p>
<p>She came up to Lucian, sobbing as if her heart would break, and dropped him an
old-fashioned curtsy.</p>
<p>“Oh, please sir, have you seen my little Jackie?”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?” said Lucian. “What is it you’ve
lost?”</p>
<p>“A little dog, please sir. A little terrier dog with white hair. Father
gave me him a month ago, and said I might keep him. Someone did leave the
garden gate open this afternoon, and he must ’a got away, sir, and I was
so fond of him sir, he was so playful and loving, and I be afraid he be
lost.”</p>
<p>She began to call again, without waiting for an answer.</p>
<p>“Jack, Jack, Jack!”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid some boys have got your little dog,” said Lucian.
“They’ve killed him. You’d better go back home.”</p>
<p>He went on, walking as fast as he could in his endeavor to get beyond the noise
of the child’s crying. It distressed him, and he wished to think of other
things. He stamped his foot angrily on the ground as he recalled the annoyances
of the afternoon, and longed for some hermitage on the mountains, far above the
stench and the sound of humanity.</p>
<p>A little farther, and he came to Croeswen, where the road branched off to right
and left. There was a triangular plot of grass between the two roads; there the
cross had once stood, “the goodly and famous roode” of the old
local chronicle. The words echoed in Lucian’s ears as he went by on the
right hand. “There were five steps that did go up to the first pace, and
seven steps to the second pace, all of clene hewn ashler. And all above it was
most curiously and gloriously wrought with thorowgh carved work; in the highest
place was the Holy Roode with Christ upon the Cross having Marie on the one
syde and John on the other. And below were six splendent and glisteringe
archaungels that bore up the roode, and beneath them in their stories were the
most fair and noble images of the xii Apostles and of divers other Saints and
Martirs. And in the lowest storie there was a marvelous imagerie of divers
Beasts, such as oxen and horses and swine, and little dogs and peacocks, all
done in the finest and most curious wise, so that they all seemed as they were
caught in a Wood of Thorns, the which is their torment of this life. And here
once in the year was a marvelous solemn service, when the parson of Caermaen
came out with the singers and all the people, singing the psalm <i>Benedicite
omnia opera</i> as they passed along the road in their procession. And when
they stood at the roode the priest did there his service, making certain
prayers for the beasts, and then he went up to the first pace and preached a
sermon to the people, shewing them that as our lord Jhu dyed upon the Tree of
his deare mercy for us, so we too owe mercy to the beasts his Creatures, for
that they are all his poor lieges and silly servants. And that like as the Holy
Aungells do their suit to him on high, and the Blessed xii Apostles and the
Martirs, and all the Blissful Saints served him aforetime on earth and now
praise him in heaven, so also do the beasts serve him, though they be in
torment of life and below men. For their spirit goeth downward, as Holy Writ
teacheth us.”</p>
<p>It was a quaint old record, a curious relic of what the modern inhabitants of
Caermaen called the Dark Ages. A few of the stones that had formed the base of
the cross still remained in position, grey with age, blotched with black lichen
and green moss. The remainder of the famous rood had been used to mend the
roads, to build pigsties and domestic offices; it had turned Protestant, in
fact. Indeed, if it had remained, the parson of Caermaen would have had no time
for the service; the coffee-stall, the Portuguese Missions, the Society for the
Conversion of the Jews, and important social duties took up all his leisure.
Besides, he thought the whole ceremony unscriptural.</p>
<p>Lucian passed on his way, wondering at the strange contrasts of the Middle
Ages. How was it that people who could devise so beautiful a service believed
in witchcraft, demoniacal possession and obsession, in the incubus and
succubus, and in the Sabbath and in many other horrible absurdities? It seemed
astonishing that anybody could even pretend to credit such monstrous tales, but
there could be no doubt that the dread of old women who rode on broomsticks and
liked black cats was once a very genuine terror.</p>
<p>A cold wind blew up from the river at sunset, and the scars on his body began
to burn and tingle. The pain recalled his ritual to him, and he began to recite
it as he walked along. He had cut a branch of thorn from the hedge and placed
it next to his skin, pressing the spikes into the flesh with his hand till the
warm blood ran down. He felt it was an exquisite and sweet observance for her
sake; and then he thought of the secret golden palace he was building for her,
the rare and wonderful city rising in his imagination. As the solemn night
began to close about the earth, and the last glimmer of the sun faded from the
hills, he gave himself anew to the woman, his body and his mind, all that he
was, and all that he had.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN>IV.</h3>
<p>In the course of the week Lucian again visited Caermaen. He wished to view the
amphitheatre more precisely, to note the exact position of the ancient walls,
to gaze up the valley from certain points within the town, to imprint minutely
and clearly on his mind the surge of the hills about the city, and the dark
tapestry of the hanging woods. And he lingered in the museum where the relics
of the Roman occupation had been stored; he was interested in the fragments of
tessellated floors, in the glowing gold of drinking cups, the curious beads of
fused and coloured glass, the carved amber-work, the scent-flagons that still
retained the memory of unctuous odours, the necklaces, brooches, hair-pins of
gold and silver, and other intimate objects which had once belonged to Roman
ladies. One of the glass flagons, buried in damp earth for many hundred years,
had gathered in its dark grave all the splendors of the light, and now shone
like an opal with a moonlight glamour and gleams of gold and pale sunset green,
and imperial purple. Then there were the wine jars of red earthenware, the
memorial stones from graves, and the heads of broken gods, with fragments of
occult things used in the secret rites of Mithras. Lucian read on the labels
where all these objects were found: in the churchyard, beneath the turf of the
meadow, and in the old cemetery near the forest; and whenever it was possible
he would make his way to the spot of discovery, and imagine the long darkness
that had hidden gold and stone and amber. All these investigations were
necessary for the scheme he had in view, so he became for some time quite a
familiar figure in the dusty deserted streets and in the meadows by the river.
His continual visits to Caermaen were a tortuous puzzle to the inhabitants, who
flew to their windows at the sound of a step on the uneven pavements. They were
at a loss in their conjectures; his motive for coming down three times a week
must of course be bad, but it seemed undiscoverable. And Lucian on his side was
at first a good deal put out by occasional encounters with members of the
Gervase or Dixon or Colley tribes; he had often to stop and exchange a few
conventional expressions, and such meetings, casual as they were, annoyed and
distracted him. He was no longer infuriated or wounded by sneers of contempt or
by the cackling laughter of the young people when they passed him on the road
(his hat was a shocking one and his untidiness terrible), but such incidents
were unpleasant just as the smell of a drain was unpleasant, and threw the
strange mechanism of his thoughts out of fear for the time. Then he had been
disgusted by the affair of the boys and the little dog; the loathsomeness of it
had quite broken up his fancies. He had read books of modern occultism, and
remembered some of the experiments described. The adept, it was alleged, could
transfer the sense of consciousness from his brain to the foot or hand, he
could annihilate the world around him and pass into another sphere. Lucian
wondered whether he could not perform some such operation for his own benefit.
Human beings were constantly annoying him and getting in his way, was it not
possible to annihilate the race, or at all events to reduce them to wholly
insignificant forms? A certain process suggested itself to his mind, a work
partly mental and partly physical, and after two or three experiments he found
to his astonishment and delight that it was successful. Here, he thought, he
had discovered one of the secrets of true magic; this was the key to the
symbolic transmutations of the Eastern tales. The adept could, in truth, change
those who were obnoxious to him into harmless and unimportant shapes, not as in
the letter of the old stories, by transforming the enemy, but by transforming
himself. The magician puts men below him by going up higher, as one looks down
on a mountain city from a loftier crag. The stones on the road and such petty
obstacles do not trouble the wise man on the great journey, and so Lucian, when
obliged to stop and converse with his fellow-creatures, to listen to their poor
pretences and inanities, was no more inconvenienced than when he had to climb
an awkward stile in the course of a walk. As for the more unpleasant
manifestations of humanity; after all they no longer concerned him. Men intent
on the great purpose did not suffer the current of their thoughts to be broken
by the buzzing of a fly caught in a spider’s web, so why should he be
perturbed by the misery of a puppy in the hands of village boys? The fly, no
doubt, endured its tortures; lying helpless and bound in those slimy bands, it
cried out in its thin voice when the claws of the horrible monster fastened on
it; but its dying agonies had never vexed the reverie of a lover. Lucian saw no
reason why the boys should offend him more than the spider, or why he should
pity the dog more than he pitied the fly. The talk of the men and women might
be wearisome and inept and often malignant; but he could not imagine an
alchemist at the moment of success, a general in the hour of victory, or a
financier with a gigantic scheme of swindling well on the market being annoyed
by the buzz of insects. The spider is, no doubt, a very terrible brute with a
hideous mouth and hairy tiger-like claws when seen through the microscope; but
Lucian had taken away the microscope from his eyes. He could now walk the
streets of Caermaen confident and secure, without any dread of interruption,
for at a moment’s notice the transformation could be effected. Once Dr.
Burrows caught him and made him promise to attend a bazaar that was to be held
in aid of the Hungarian Protestants; Lucian assented the more willingly as he
wished to pay a visit to certain curious mounds on a hill a little way out of
the town, and he calculated on slinking off from the bazaar early in the
afternoon. Lord Beamys was visiting Sir Vivian Ponsonby, a local magnate, and
had kindly promised to drive over and declare the bazaar open. It was a solemn
moment when the carriage drew up and the great man alighted. He was rather an
evil-looking old nobleman, but the clergy and gentry, their wives and sons and
daughters welcomed him with great and unctuous joy. Conversations were broken
off in mid-sentence, slow people gaped, not realizing why their friends had so
suddenly left them, the Meyricks came up hot and perspiring in fear lest they
should be too late, Miss Colley, a yellow virgin of austere regard, smiled
largely, Mrs. Dixon beckoned wildly with her parasol to the “girls”
who were idly strolling in a distant part of the field, and the archdeacon ran
at full speed. The air grew dark with bows, and resonant with the genial laugh
of the archdeacon, the cackle of the younger ladies, and the shrill parrot-like
voices of the matrons; those smiled who had never smiled before, and on some
maiden faces there hovered that look of adoring ecstasy with which the old
maidens graced their angels. Then, when all the due rites had been performed,
the company turned and began to walk towards the booths of their small Vanity
Fair. Lord Beamys led the way with Mrs. Gervase, Mrs. Dixon followed with Sir
Vivian Ponsonby, and the multitudes that followed cried, saying, “What a
dear old man!”—“Isn’t it <i>kind</i> of him to come all
this way?”—“What a sweet expression, isn’t
it?”—“I think he’s an old love”—“One
of the good old sort”—“Real English
nobleman”—“Oh most correct, I assure you; if a girl gets into
trouble, notice to quit at once”—“Always stands by the
Church”—“Twenty livings in his gift”—“Voted
for the Public Worship Regulation Act”—“Ten thousand acres
strictly preserved.” The old lord was leering pleasantly and muttering to
himself: “Some fine gals here. Like the looks of that filly with the pink
hat. Ought to see more of her. She’d give Lotty points.”</p>
<p>The pomp swept slowly across the grass: the archdeacon had got hold of Mr.
Dixon, and they were discussing the misdeeds of some clergyman in the rural
deanery.</p>
<p>“I can scarce credit it,” said Mr. Dixon.</p>
<p>“Oh, I assure you, there can be no doubt. We have witnesses. There can be
no question that there was a procession at Llanfihangel on the Sunday before
Easter; the choir and minister went round the church, carrying palm branches in
their hands.”</p>
<p>“Very shocking.”</p>
<p>“It has distressed the bishop. Martin is a hard-working man enough, and
all that, but those sort of things can’t be tolerated. The bishop told me
that he had set his face against processions.”</p>
<p>“Quite right: the bishop is perfectly right. Processions are
unscriptural.”</p>
<p>“It’s the thin end of the wedge, you know, Dixon.”</p>
<p>“Exactly. I have always resisted anything of the kind here.”</p>
<p>“Right. <i>Principiis obsta</i>, you know. Martin is so
<i>imprudent</i>.<br/>
There’s a <i>way</i> of doing things.”<br/></p>
<p>The “scriptural” procession led by Lord Beamys broke up when the
stalls were reached, and gathered round the nobleman as he declared the bazaar
open.</p>
<p>Lucian was sitting on a garden-seat, a little distance off, looking dreamily
before him. And all that he saw was a swarm of flies clustering and buzzing
about a lump of tainted meat that lay on the grass. The spectacle in no way
interrupted the harmony of his thoughts, and soon after the opening of the
bazaar he went quietly away, walking across the fields in the direction of the
ancient mounds he desired to inspect.</p>
<p>All these journeys of his to Caermaen and its neighborhood had a peculiar
object; he was gradually leveling to the dust the squalid kraals of modern
times, and rebuilding the splendid and golden city of Siluria. All this mystic
town was for the delight of his sweetheart and himself; for her the wonderful
villas, the shady courts, the magic of tessellated pavements, and the hangings
of rich stuffs with their intricate and glowing patterns. Lucian wandered all
day through the shining streets, taking shelter sometimes in the gardens
beneath the dense and gloomy ilex trees, and listening to the plash and trickle
of the fountains. Sometimes he would look out of a window and watch the crowd
and colour of the market-place, and now and again a ship came up the river
bringing exquisite silks and the merchandise of unknown lands in the Far East.
He had made a curious and accurate map of the town he proposed to inhabit, in
which every villa was set down and named. He drew his lines to scale with the
gravity of a surveyor, and studied the plan till he was able to find his way
from house to house on the darkest summer night. On the southern slopes about
the town there were vineyards, always under a glowing sun, and sometimes he
ventured to the furthest ridge of the forest, where the wild people still
lingered, that he might catch the golden gleam of the city far away, as the
light quivered and scintillated on the glittering tiles. And there were gardens
outside the city gates where strange and brilliant flowers grew, filling the
hot air with their odour, and scenting the breeze that blew along the streets.
The dull modern life was far away, and people who saw him at this period
wondered what was amiss; the abstraction of his glance was obvious, even to
eyes not over-sharp. But men and women had lost all their power of annoyance
and vexation; they could no longer even interrupt his thought for a moment. He
could listen to Mr. Dixon with apparent attention, while he was in reality
enraptured by the entreating music of the double flute, played by a girl in the
garden of Avallaunius, for that was the name he had taken. Mr. Dixon was
innocently discoursing archeology, giving a brief <i>résumé</i> of the view
expressed by Mr. Wyndham at the last meeting of the antiquarian society.</p>
<p>“There can be no doubt that the temple of Diana stood there in pagan
times,” he concluded, and Lucian assented to the opinion, and asked a few
questions which seemed pertinent enough. But all the time the flute notes were
sounding in his ears, and the ilex threw a purple shadow on the white pavement
before his villa. A boy came forward from the garden; he had been walking
amongst the vines and plucking the ripe grapes, and the juice had trickled down
over his breast. Standing beside the girl, unashamed in the sunlight, he began
to sing one of Sappho’s love songs. His voice was as full and rich as a
woman’s, but purged of all emotion; he was an instrument of music in the
flesh. Lucian looked at him steadily; the white perfect body shone against the
roses and the blue of the sky, clear and gleaming as marble in the glare of the
sun. The words he sang burned and flamed with passion, and he was as
unconscious of their meaning as the twin pipes of the flute. And the girl was
smiling. The vicar shook hands and went on, well pleased with his remarks on
the temple of Diana, and also with Lucian’s polite interest.</p>
<p>“He is by no means wanting in intelligence,” he said to his family.
“A little curious in manner, perhaps, but not stupid.”</p>
<p>“Oh, papa,” said Henrietta, “don’t you think he is
rather silly? He can’t talk about anything—anything interesting, I
mean. And he pretends to know a lot about books, but I heard him say the other
day he had never read <i>The Prince of the House of David</i> or
<i>Ben-Hur</i>. Fancy!”</p>
<p>The vicar had not interrupted Lucian. The sun still beat upon the roses, and a
little breeze bore the scent of them to his nostrils together with the smell of
grapes and vine-leaves. He had become curious in sensation, and as he leant
back upon the cushions covered with glistening yellow silk, he was trying to
analyze a strange ingredient in the perfume of the air. He had penetrated far
beyond the crude distinctions of modern times, beyond the rough:
“there’s a smell of roses,” “there must be sweetbriar
somewhere.” Modern perceptions of odour were, he knew, far below those of
the savage in delicacy. The degraded black fellow of Australia could
distinguish odours in a way that made the consumer of “damper” stare
in amazement, but the savage’s sensations were all strictly utilitarian.
To Lucian as he sat in the cool porch, his feet on the marble, the air came
laden with scents as subtly and wonderfully interwoven and contrasted as the
harmonica of a great master. The stained marble of the pavement gave a cool
reminiscence of the Italian mountain, the blood-red roses palpitating in the
sunlight sent out an odour mystical as passion itself, and there was the hint of
inebriation in the perfume of the trellised vines. Besides these, the
girl’s desire and the unripe innocence of the boy were as distinct as
benzoin and myrrh, both delicious and exquisite, and exhaled as freely as the
scent of the roses. But there was another element that puzzled him, an aromatic
suggestion of the forest. He understood it at last; it was the vapor of the
great red pines that grew beyond the garden; their spicy needles were burning
in the sun, and the smell was as fragrant as the fume of incense blown from
far. The soft entreaty of the flute and the swelling rapture of the boy’s
voice beat on the air together, and Lucian wondered whether there were in the
nature of things any true distinction between the impressions of sound and
scent and colour. The violent blue of the sky, the song, and the odours seemed
rather varied symbols of one mystery than distinct entities. He could almost
imagine that the boy’s innocence was indeed a perfume, and that the
palpitating roses had become a sonorous chant.</p>
<p>In the curious silence which followed the last notes, when the boy and girl had
passed under the purple ilex shadow, he fell into a reverie. The fancy that
sensations are symbols and not realities hovered in his mind, and led him to
speculate as to whether they could not actually be transmuted one into another.
It was possible, he thought, that a whole continent of knowledge had been
undiscovered; the energies of men having been expended in unimportant and
foolish directions. Modern ingenuity had been employed on such trifles as
locomotive engines, electric cables, and cantilever bridges; on elabourate
devices for bringing uninteresting people nearer together; the ancients had
been almost as foolish, because they had mistaken the symbol for the thing
signified. It was not the material banquet which really mattered, but the
thought of it; it was almost as futile to eat and take emetics and eat again as
to invent telephones and high-pressure boilers. As for some other ancient
methods of enjoying life, one might as well set oneself to improve calico
printing at once.</p>
<p>“Only in the garden of Avallaunius,” said Lucian to himself,
“is the true and exquisite science to be found.”</p>
<p>He could imagine a man who was able to live in one sense while he pleased; to
whom, for example, every impression of touch, taste, hearing, or seeing should
be translated into odour; who at the desired kiss should be ravished with the
scent of dark violets, to whom music should be the perfume of a rose-garden at
dawn.</p>
<p>When, now and again, he voluntarily resumed the experience of common life, it
was that he might return with greater delight to the garden in the city of
refuge. In the actual world the talk was of Nonconformists, the lodger
franchise, and the Stock Exchange; people were constantly reading newspapers,
drinking Australian Burgundy, and doing other things equally absurd. They
either looked shocked when the fine art of pleasure was mentioned, or confused
it with going to musical comedies, drinking bad whisky, and keeping late hours
in disreputable and vulgar company. He found to his amusement that the
profligate were by many degrees duller than the pious, but that the most
tedious of all were the persons who preached promiscuity, and called their
system of “pigging” the “New Morality.”</p>
<p>He went back to the city lovingly, because it was built and adorned for his
love. As the metaphysicians insist on the consciousness of the ego as the
implied basis of all thought, so he knew that it was she in whom he had found
himself, and through whom and for whom all the true life existed. He felt that
Annie had taught him the rare magic which had created the garden of
Avallaunius. It was for her that he sought strange secrets and tried to
penetrate the mysteries of sensation, for he could only give her wonderful
thoughts and a wonderful life, and a poor body stained with the scars of his
worship.</p>
<p>It was with this object, that of making the offering of himself a worthy one,
that he continually searched for new and exquisite experiences. He made lovers
come before him and confess their secrets; he pried into the inmost mysteries
of innocence and shame, noting how passion and reluctance strive together for
the mastery. In the amphitheatre he sometimes witnessed strange entertainments
in which such tales as <i>Daphnis and Chloe</i> and <i>The Golden Ass</i> were
performed before him. These shows were always given at nighttime; a circle of
torch-bearers surrounded the stage in the center, and above, all the tiers of
seats were dark. He would look up at the soft blue of the summer sky, and at
the vast dim mountain hovering like a cloud in the west, and then at the scene
illumined by a flaring light, and contrasted with violent shadows. The subdued
mutter of conversation in a strange language rising from bench after bench,
swift hissing whispers of explanation, now and then a shout or a cry as the
interest deepened, the restless tossing of the people as the end drew near, an
arm lifted, a cloak thrown back, the sudden blaze of a torch lighting up purple
or white or the gleam of gold in the black serried ranks; these were
impressions that seemed always amazing. And above, the dusky light of the
stars, around, the sweet-scented meadows, and the twinkle of lamps from the
still city, the cry of the sentries about the walls, the wash of the tide
filling the river, and the salt savour of the sea. With such a scenic ornament
he saw the tale of Apuleius represented, heard the names of Fotis and Byrrhaena
and Lucius proclaimed, and the deep intonation of such sentences as <i>Ecce
Veneris hortator et armiger Liber advenit ultro</i>. The tale went on through
all its marvelous adventures, and Lucian left the amphitheatre and walked
beside the river where he could hear indistinctly the noise of voices and the
singing Latin, and note how the rumor of the stage mingled with the murmur of
the shuddering reeds and the cool lapping of the tide. Then came the farewell
of the cantor, the thunder of applause, the crash of cymbals, the calling of
the flutes, and the surge of the wind in the great dark wood.</p>
<p>At other times it was his chief pleasure to spend a whole day in a vineyard
planted on the steep slope beyond the bridge. A grey stone seat had been placed
beneath a shady laurel, and here he often sat without motion or gesture for
many hours. Below him the tawny river swept round the town in a half circle; he
could see the swirl of the yellow water, its eddies and miniature whirlpools,
as the tide poured up from the south. And beyond the river the strong circuit
of the walls, and within, the city glittered like a charming piece of mosaic.
He freed himself from the obtuse modern view of towns as places where human
beings live and make money and rejoice or suffer, for from the standpoint of
the moment such facts were wholly impertinent. He knew perfectly well that for
his present purpose the tawny sheen and shimmer of the tide was the only fact
of importance about the river, and so he regarded the city as a curious work in
jewelry. Its radiant marble porticoes, the white walls of the villas, a dome of
burning copper, the flash and scintillation of tiled roofs, the quiet red of
brickwork, dark groves of ilex, and cypress, and laurel, glowing rose-gardens,
and here and there the silver of a fountain, seemed arranged and contrasted
with a wonderful art, and the town appeared a delicious ornament, every cube of
colour owing its place to the thought and inspiration of the artificer. Lucian,
as he gazed from his arbour amongst the trellised vines, lost none of the
subtle pleasures of the sight; noting every <i>nuance</i> of colour, he let his
eyes dwell for a moment on the scarlet flash of poppies, and then on a glazed
roof which in the glance of the sun seemed to spout white fire. A square of
vines was like some rare green stone; the grapes were massed so richly amongst
the vivid leaves, that even from far off there was a sense of irregular flecks
and stains of purple running through the green. The laurel garths were like
cool jade; the gardens, where red, yellow, blue and white gleamed together in a
mist of heat, had the radiance of opal; the river was a band of dull gold. On
every side, as if to enhance the preciousness of the city, the woods hung dark
on the hills; above, the sky was violet, specked with minute feathery clouds,
white as snowflakes. It reminded him of a beautiful bowl in his villa; the
ground was of that same brilliant blue, and the artist had fused into the work,
when it was hot, particles of pure white glass.</p>
<p>For Lucian this was a spectacle that enchanted many hours; leaning on one hand,
he would gaze at the city glowing in the sunlight till the purple shadows grew
down the slopes and the long melodious trumpet sounded for the evening watch.
Then, as he strolled beneath the trellises, he would see all the radiant facets
glimmering out, and the city faded into haze, a white wall shining here and
there, and the gardens veiled in a dim glow of colour. On such an evening he
would go home with the sense that he had truly lived a day, having received for
many hours the most acute impressions of beautiful colour.</p>
<p>Often he spent the night in the cool court of his villa, lying amidst soft
cushions heaped upon the marble bench. A lamp stood on the table at his elbow,
its light making the water in the cistern twinkle. There was no sound in the
court except the soft continual plashing of the fountain. Throughout these
still hours he would meditate, and he became more than ever convinced that man
could, if he pleased, become lord of his own sensations. This, surely, was the
true meaning concealed under the beautiful symbolism of alchemy. Some years
before he had read many of the wonderful alchemical books of the later Middle
Ages, and had suspected that something other than the turning of lead into gold
was intended. This impression was deepened when he looked into <i>Lumen de
Lumine</i> by Vaughan, the brother of the Silurist, and he had long puzzled
himself in the endeavor to find a reasonable interpretation of the hermetic
mystery, and of the red powder, “glistening and glorious in the
sun.” And the solution shone out at last, bright and amazing, as he lay
quiet in the court of Avallaunius. He knew that he himself had solved the
riddle, that he held in his hand the powder of projection, the
philosopher’s stone transmuting all it touched to fine gold; the gold of
exquisite impressions. He understood now something of the alchemical symbolism;
the crucible and the furnace, the “Green Dragon,” and the
“Son Blessed of the Fire” had, he saw, a peculiar meaning. He
understood, too, why the uninitiated were warned of the terror and danger
through which they must pass; and the vehemence with which the adepts
disclaimed all desire for material riches no longer struck him as singular. The
wise man does not endure the torture of the furnace in order that he may be
able to compete with operators in pork and company promoters; neither a steam
yacht, nor a grouse-moor, nor three liveried footmen would add at all to his
gratifications. Again Lucian said to himself:</p>
<p>“Only in the court of Avallaunius is the true science of the exquisite to
be found.”</p>
<p>He saw the true gold into which the beggarly matter of existence may be
transmuted by spagyric art; a succession of delicious moments, all the rare
flavors of life concentrated, purged of their lees, and preserved in a
beautiful vessel. The moonlight fell green on the fountain and on the curious
pavements, and in the long sweet silence of the night he lay still and felt
that thought itself was an acute pleasure, to be expressed perhaps in terms of
odour or colour by the true artist.</p>
<p>And he gave himself other and even stranger gratifications. Outside the city
walls, between the baths and the amphitheatre, was a tavern, a place where
wonderful people met to drink wonderful wine. There he saw priests of Mithras
and Isis and of more occult rites from the East, men who wore robes of bright
colours, and grotesque ornaments, symbolizing secret things. They spoke amongst
themselves in a rich jargon of coloured words, full of hidden meanings and the
sense of matters unintelligible to the uninitiated, alluding to what was
concealed beneath roses, and calling each other by strange names. And there
were actors who gave the shows in the amphitheatre, officers of the legion who
had served in wild places, singers, and dancing girls, and heroes of strange
adventure.</p>
<p>The walls of the tavern were covered with pictures painted in violent hues;
blues and reds and greens jarring against one another and lighting up the gloom
of the place. The stone benches were always crowded, the sunlight came in
through the door in a long bright beam, casting a dancing shadow of vine leaves
on the further wall. There a painter had made a joyous figure of the young
Bacchus driving the leopards before him with his ivy-staff, and the quivering
shadow seemed a part of the picture. The room was cool and dark and cavernous,
but the scent and heat of the summer gushed in through the open door. There was
ever a full sound, with noise and vehemence, there, and the rolling music of
the Latin tongue never ceased.</p>
<p>“The wine of the siege, the wine that we saved,” cried one.</p>
<p>“Look for the jar marked <i>Faunus</i>; you will be glad.”</p>
<p>“Bring me the wine of the Owl’s Face.”</p>
<p>“Let us have the wine of Saturn’s Bridge.”</p>
<p>The boys who served brought the wine in dull red jars that struck a charming
note against their white robes. They poured out the violet and purple and
golden wine with calm sweet faces as if they were assisting in the mysteries,
without any sign that they heard the strange words that flashed from side to
side. The cups were all of glass; some were of deep green, of the colour of the
sea near the land, flawed and specked with the bubbles of the furnace. Others
were of brilliant scarlet, streaked with irregular bands of white, and having
the appearance of white globules in the moulded stem. There were cups of dark
glowing blue, deeper and more shining than the blue of the sky, and running
through the substance of the glass were veins of rich gamboge yellow, twining
from the brim to the foot. Some cups were of a troubled and clotted red, with
alternating blotches of dark and light, some were variegated with white and
yellow stains, some wore a film of rainbow colours, some glittered, shot with
gold threads through the clear crystal, some were as if sapphires hung
suspended in running water, some sparkled with the glint of stars, some were
black and golden like tortoiseshell.</p>
<p>A strange feature was the constant and fluttering motion of hands and arms.
Gesture made a constant commentary on speech; white fingers, whiter arms, and
sleeves of all colours, hovered restlessly, appeared and disappeared with an
effect of threads crossing and re-crossing on the loom. And the odour of the
place was both curious and memorable; something of the damp cold breath of the
cave meeting the hot blast of summer, the strangely mingled aromas of rare
wines as they fell plashing and ringing into the cups, the drugged vapor of the
East that the priests of Mithras and Isis bore from their steaming temples;
these were always strong and dominant. And the women were scented, sometimes
with unctuous and overpowering perfumes, and to the artist the experiences of
those present were hinted in subtle and delicate <i>nuances</i> of odour.</p>
<p>They drank their wine and caressed all day in the tavern. The women threw their
round white arms about their lover’s necks, they intoxicated them with
the scent of their hair, the priests muttered their fantastic jargon of
Theurgy. And through the sonorous clash of voices there always seemed the ring
of the cry:</p>
<p>“Look for the jar marked <i>Faunus</i>; you will be glad.”</p>
<p>Outside, the vine tendrils shook on the white walls glaring in the sunshine;
the breeze swept up from the yellow river, pungent with the salt sea savour.</p>
<p>These tavern scenes were often the subject of Lucian’s meditation as he
sat amongst the cushions on the marble seat. The rich sound of the voices
impressed him above all things, and he saw that words have a far higher reason
than the utilitarian office of imparting a man’s thought. The common
notion that language and linked words are important only as a means of
expression he found a little ridiculous; as if electricity were to be studied
solely with the view of “wiring” to people, and all its other
properties left unexplored, neglected. Language, he understood, was chiefly
important for the beauty of its sounds, by its possession of words resonant,
glorious to the ear, by its capacity, when exquisitely arranged, of suggesting
wonderful and indefinable impressions, perhaps more ravishing and farther
removed from the domain of strict thought than the impressions excited by music
itself. Here lay hidden the secret of the sensuous art of literature; it was
the secret of suggestion, the art of causing delicious sensation by the use of
words. In a way, therefore, literature was independent of thought; the mere
English listener, if he had an ear attuned, could recognize the beauty of a
splendid Latin phrase.</p>
<p>Here was the explanation of the magic of <i>Lycidas</i>. From the standpoint of
the formal understanding it was an affected lament over some wholly
uninteresting and unimportant Mr. King; it was full of nonsense about
“shepherds” and “flocks” and “muses” and
such stale stock of poetry; the introduction of St Peter on a stage thronged
with nymphs and river gods was blasphemous, absurd, and, in the worst taste;
there were touches of greasy Puritanism, the twang of the conventicle was only
too apparent. And <i>Lycidas</i> was probably the most perfect piece of pure
literature in existence; because every word and phrase and line were sonorous,
ringing and echoing with music.</p>
<p>“Literature,” he re-enunciated in his mind, “is the sensuous
art of causing exquisite impressions by means of words.”</p>
<p>And yet there was something more; besides the logical thought, which was often
a hindrance, a troublesome though inseparable accident, besides the sensation,
always a pleasure and a delight, besides these there were the indefinable
inexpressible images which all fine literature summons to the mind. As the
chemist in his experiments is sometimes astonished to find unknown, unexpected
elements in the crucible or the receiver, as the world of material things is
considered by some a thin veil of the immaterial universe, so he who reads
wonderful prose or verse is conscious of suggestions that cannot be put into
words, which do not rise from the logical sense, which are rather parallel to
than connected with the sensuous delight. The world so disclosed is rather the
world of dreams, rather the world in which children sometimes live, instantly
appearing, and instantly vanishing away, a world beyond all expression or
analysis, neither of the intellect nor of the senses. He called these fancies
of his “Meditations of a Tavern,” and was amused to think that a
theory of letters should have risen from the eloquent noise that rang all day
about the violet and golden wine.</p>
<p>“Let us seek for more exquisite things,” said Lucian to himself. He
could almost imagine the magic transmutation of the senses accomplished, the
strong sunlight was an odour in his nostrils; it poured down on the white marble
and the palpitating roses like a flood. The sky was a glorious blue, making the
heart joyous, and the eyes could rest in the dark green leaves and purple
shadow of the ilex. The earth seemed to burn and leap beneath the sun, he
fancied he could see the vine tendrils stir and quiver in the heat, and the
faint fume of the scorching pine needles was blown across the gleaming garden
to the seat beneath the porch. Wine was before him in a cup of carved amber; a
wine of the colour of a dark rose, with a glint as of a star or of a jet of
flame deep beneath the brim; and the cup was twined about with a delicate
wreath of ivy. He was often loath to turn away from the still contemplation of
such things, from the mere joy of the violent sun, and the responsive earth. He
loved his garden and the view of the tessellated city from the vineyard on the
hill, the strange clamor of the tavern, and white Fotis appearing on the
torch-lit stage. And there were shops in the town in which he delighted, the
shops of the perfume makers, and jewelers, and dealers in curious ware. He
loved to see all things made for ladies’ use, to touch the gossamer silks
that were to touch their bodies, to finger the beads of amber and the gold
chains which would stir above their hearts, to handle the carved hairpins and
brooches, to smell odours which were already dedicated to love.</p>
<p>But though these were sweet and delicious gratifications, he knew that there
were more exquisite things of which he might be a spectator. He had seen the
folly of regarding fine literature from the standpoint of the logical
intellect, and he now began to question the wisdom of looking at life as if it
were a moral representation. Literature, he knew, could not exist without some
meaning, and considerations of right and wrong were to a certain extent
inseparable from the conception of life, but to insist on ethics as the chief
interest of the human pageant was surely absurd. One might as well read
<i>Lycidas</i> for the sake of its denunciation of “our corrupted
Clergy,” or Homer for “manners and customs.” An artist
entranced by a beautiful landscape did not greatly concern himself with the
geological formation of the hills, nor did the lover of a wild sea inquire as
to the chemical analysis of the water. Lucian saw a coloured and complex life
displayed before him, and he sat enraptured at the spectacle, not concerned to
know whether actions were good or bad, but content if they were curious.</p>
<p>In this spirit he made a singular study of corruption. Beneath his feet, as he
sat in the garden porch, was a block of marble through which there ran a
scarlet stain. It began with a faint line, thin as a hair, and grew as it
advanced, sending out offshoots to right and left, and broadening to a pool of
brilliant red. There were strange lives into which he looked that were like the
block of marble; women with grave sweet faces told him the astounding tale of
their adventures, and how, they said, they had met the faun when they were
little children. They told him how they had played and watched by the vines and
the fountains, and dallied with the nymphs, and gazed at images reflected in
the water pools, till the authentic face appeared from the wood. He heard
others tell how they had loved the satyrs for many years before they knew their
race; and there were strange stories of those who had longed to speak but knew
not the word of the enigma, and searched in all strange paths and ways before
they found it.</p>
<p>He heard the history of the woman who fell in love with her slave-boy, and
tempted him for three years in vain. He heard the tale from the woman’s
full red lips, and watched her face, full of the ineffable sadness of lust, as
she described her curious stratagems in mellow phrases. She was drinking a
sweet yellow wine from a gold cup as she spoke, and the odour in her hair and
the aroma of the precious wine seemed to mingle with the soft strange words
that flowed like an unguent from a carven jar. She told how she bought the boy
in the market of an Asian city, and had him carried to her house in the grove
of fig-trees. “Then,” she went on, “he was led into my
presence as I sat between the columns of my court. A blue veil was spread above
to shut out the heat of the sun, and rather twilight than light shone on the
painted walls, and the wonderful colours of the pavement, and the images of
Love and the Mother of Love. The men who brought the boy gave him over to my
girls, who undressed him before me, one drawing gently away his robe, another
stroking his brown and flowing hair, another praising the whiteness of his
limbs, and another caressing him, and speaking loving words in his ear. But
the boy looked sullenly at them all, striking away their hands, and pouting
with his lovely and splendid lips, and I saw a blush, like the rosy veil of
dawn, reddening his body and his cheeks. Then I made them bathe him, and anoint
him with scented oils from head to foot, till his limbs shone and glistened
with the gentle and mellow glow of an ivory statue. Then I said: ‘You are
bashful, because you shine alone amongst us all; see, we too will be your
fellows.’ The girls began first of all, fondling and kissing one another,
and doing for each other the offices of waiting-maids. They drew out the pins
and loosened the bands of their hair, and I never knew before that they were so
lovely. The soft and shining tresses flowed down, rippling like sea-waves; some
had hair golden and radiant as this wine in my cup, the faces of others
appeared amidst the blackness of ebony; there were locks that seemed of
burnished and scintillating copper, some glowed with hair of tawny splendor,
and others were crowned with the brightness of the sardonyx. Then, laughing,
and without the appearance of shame, they unfastened the brooches and bands
which sustained their robes, and so allowed silk and linen to flow swiftly to
the stained floor, so that one would have said there was a sudden apparition of
the fairest nymphs. With many festive and jocose words they began to incite
each other to mirth, praising the beauties that shone on every side, and
calling the boy by a girl’s name, they invited him to be their playmate.
But he refused, shaking his head, and still standing dumb-founded and abashed,
as if he saw a forbidden and terrible spectacle. Then I ordered the women to
undo my hair and my clothes, making them caress me with the tenderness of the
fondest lover, but without avail, for the foolish boy still scowled and pouted
out his lips, stained with an imperial and glorious scarlet.”</p>
<p>She poured out more of the topaz-coloured wine in her cup, and Lucian saw it
glitter as it rose to the brim and mirrored the gleam of the lamps. The tale
went on, recounting a hundred strange devices. The woman told how she had
tempted the boy by idleness and ease, giving him long hours of sleep, and
allowing him to recline all day on soft cushions, that swelled about him,
enclosing his body. She tried the experiment of curious odours: causing him to
smell always about him the oil of roses, and burning in his presence rare gums
from the East. He was allured by soft dresses, being clothed in silks that
caressed the skin with the sense of a fondling touch. Three times a day they
spread before him a delicious banquet, full of savour and odour and colour; three
times a day they endeavored to intoxicate him with delicate wine.</p>
<p>“And so,” the lady continued, “I spared nothing to catch him
in the glistening nets of love; taking only sour and contemptuous glances in
return. And at last in an incredible shape I won the victory, and then, having
gained a green crown, fighting in agony against his green and crude immaturity,
I devoted him to the theatre, where he amused the people by the splendor of his
death.”</p>
<p>On another evening he heard the history of the man who dwelt alone, refusing
all allurements, and was at last discovered to be the lover of a black statue.
And there were tales of strange cruelties, of men taken by mountain robbers,
and curiously maimed and disfigured, so that when they escaped and returned to
the town, they were thought to be monsters and killed at their own doors.
Lucian left no dark or secret nook of life unvisited; he sat down, as he said,
at the banquet, resolved to taste all the savours, and to leave no flagon
unvisited.</p>
<p>His relations grew seriously alarmed about him at this period. While he heard
with some inner ear the suave and eloquent phrases of singular tales, and
watched the lamp-light in amber and purple wine, his father saw a lean pale
boy, with black eyes that burnt in hollows, and sad and sunken cheeks.</p>
<p>“You ought to try and eat more, Lucian,” said the parson;
“and why don’t you have some beer?”</p>
<p>He was looking feebly at the roast mutton and sipping a little water; but he
would not have eaten or drunk with more relish if the choicest meat and drink
had been before him.</p>
<p>His bones seemed, as Miss Deacon said, to be growing through his skin; he had
all the appearance of an ascetic whose body has been reduced to misery by long
and grievous penance. People who chanced to see him could not help saying to
one another: “How ill and wretched that Lucian Taylor looks!” They
were of course quite unaware of the joy and luxury in which his real life was
spent, and some of them began to pity him, and to speak to him kindly.</p>
<p>It was too late for that. The friendly words had as much lost their meaning as
the words of contempt. Edward Dixon hailed him cheerfully in the street one
day:</p>
<p>“Come in to my den, won’t you, old fellow?” he said.
“You won’t see the pater. I’ve managed to bag a bottle of his
old port. I know you smoke like a furnace, and I’ve got some ripping
cigars. You will come, won’t you! I can tell you the pater’s booze
is first rate.”</p>
<p>He gently declined and went on. Kindness and unkindness, pity and contempt had
become for him mere phrases; he could not have distinguished one from the
other. Hebrew and Chinese, Hungarian and Pushtu would be pretty much alike to
an agricultural labourer; if he cared to listen he might detect some general
differences in sound, but all four tongues would be equally devoid of
significance.</p>
<p>To Lucian, entranced in the garden of Avallaunius, it seemed very strange that
he had once been so ignorant of all the exquisite meanings of life. Now,
beneath the violet sky, looking through the brilliant trellis of the vines, he
saw the picture; before, he had gazed in sad astonishment at the squalid rag
which was wrapped about it.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>V.</h3>
<p>And he was at last in the city of the unending murmuring streets, a part of the
stirring shadow, of the amber-lighted gloom.</p>
<p>It seemed a long time since he had knelt before his sweetheart in the lane, the
moon-fire streaming upon them from the dark circle of the fort, the air and the
light and his soul full of haunting, the touch of the unimaginable thrilling
his heart; and now he sat in a terrible “bed-sitting-room” in a
western suburb, confronted by a heap and litter of papers on the desk of a
battered old bureau.</p>
<p>He had put his breakfast-tray out on the landing, and was thinking of the
morning’s work, and of some very dubious pages that he had blackened the
night before. But when he had lit his disreputable briar, he remembered there
was an unopened letter waiting for him on the table; he had recognized the
vague, staggering script of Miss Deacon, his cousin. There was not much news;
his father was “just the same as usual,” there had been a good deal
of rain, the farmers expected to make a lot of cider, and so forth. But at the
close of the letter Miss Deacon became useful for reproof and admonition.</p>
<p>“I was at Caermaen on Tuesday,” she said, “and called on the
Gervases and the Dixons. Mr. Gervase smiled when I told him you were a literary
man, living in London, and said he was afraid you wouldn’t find it a very
practical career. Mrs. Gervase was very proud of Henry’s success; he
passed fifth for some examination, and will begin with nearly four hundred a
year. I don’t wonder the Gervases are delighted. Then I went to the
Dixons, and had tea. Mrs. Dixon wanted to know if you had published anything
yet, and I said I thought not. She showed me a book everybody is talking about,
called the <i>Dog and the Doctor</i>. She says it’s selling by thousands,
and that one can’t take up a paper without seeing the author’s
name. She told me to tell you that you ought to try to write something like it.
Then Mr. Dixon came in from the study, and your name was mentioned again. He
said he was afraid you had made rather a mistake in trying to take up
literature as if it were a profession, and seemed to think that a place in a
house of business would be more <i>suitable</i> and more practical. He pointed
out that you had not had the advantages of a university training, and said that
you would find men who had made good friends, and had the <i>tone</i> of the
university, would be before you at every step. He said Edward was doing very
well at Oxford. He writes to them that he knows several noblemen, and that
young Philip Bullingham (son of Sir John Bullingham) is his most intimate
friend; of course this is <i>very</i> satisfactory for the Dixons. I am afraid,
my dear Lucian, you have rather overrated your powers. Wouldn’t it be
better, even now, to look out for some <i>real work</i> to do, instead of
wasting your time over those silly old books? I know quite well how the
Gervases and the Dixons feel; they think idleness so injurious for a young man,
and likely to lead to <i>bad habits</i>. You know, my dear Lucian, I am only
writing like this because of my affection for you, so I am sure, my dear boy,
you won’t be offended.”</p>
<p>Lucian pigeon-holed the letter solemnly in the receptacle lettered
“Barbarians.” He felt that he ought to ask himself some serious
questions: “Why haven’t I passed fifth? why isn’t Philip (son
of Sir John) my most intimate friend? why am I an idler, liable to fall into
bad habits?” but he was eager to get to his work, a curious and intricate
piece of analysis. So the battered bureau, the litter of papers, and the thick
fume of his pipe, engulfed him and absorbed him for the rest of the morning.
Outside were the dim October mists, the dreary and languid life of a side
street, and beyond, on the main road, the hum and jangle of the gliding trains.
But he heard none of the uneasy noises of the quarter, not even the shriek of
the garden gates nor the yelp of the butcher on his round, for delight in his
great task made him unconscious of the world outside.</p>
<p>He had come by curious paths to this calm hermitage between Shepherd’s
Bush and Acton Vale. The golden weeks of the summer passed on in their
enchanted procession, and Annie had not returned, neither had she written.
Lucian, on his side, sat apart, wondering why his longing for her were not
sharper. As he though of his raptures he would smile faintly to himself, and
wonder whether he had not lost the world and Annie with it. In the garden of
Avallaunius his sense of external things had grown dim and indistinct; the
actual, material life seemed every day to become a show, a fleeting of shadows
across a great white light. At last the news came that Annie Morgan had been
married from her sister’s house to a young farmer, to whom, it appeared,
she had been long engaged, and Lucian was ashamed to find himself only
conscious of amusement, mingled with gratitude. She had been the key that
opened the shut palace, and he was now secure on the throne of ivory and gold.
A few days after he had heard the news he repeated the adventure of his
boyhood; for the second time he scaled the steep hillside, and penetrated the
matted brake. He expected violent disillusion, but his feeling was rather
astonishment at the activity of boyish imagination. There was no terror nor
amazement now in the green bulwarks, and the stunted undergrowth did not seem
in any way extraordinary. Yet he did not laugh at the memory of his sensations,
he was not angry at the cheat. Certainly it had been all illusion, all the
heats and chills of boyhood, its thoughts of terror were without significance.
But he recognized that the illusions of the child only differed from those of
the man in that they were more picturesque; belief in fairies and belief in the
Stock Exchange as bestowers of happiness were equally vain, but the latter form
of faith was ugly as well as inept. It was better, he knew, and wiser, to wish
for a fairy coach than to cherish longings for a well-appointed brougham and
liveried servants.</p>
<p>He turned his back on the green walls and the dark oaks without any feeling of
regret or resentment. After a little while he began to think of his adventures
with pleasure; the ladder by which he had mounted had disappeared, but he was
safe on the height. By the chance fancy of a beautiful girl he had been
redeemed from a world of misery and torture, the world of external things into
which he had come a stranger, by which he had been tormented. He looked back at
a kind of vision of himself seen as he was a year before, a pitiable creature
burning and twisting on the hot coals of the pit, crying lamentably to the
laughing bystanders for but one drop of cold water wherewith to cool his
tongue. He confessed to himself, with some contempt, that he had been a social
being, depending for his happiness on the goodwill of others; he had tried hard
to write, chiefly, it was true, from love of the art, but a little from a
social motive. He had imagined that a written book and the praise of
responsible journals would ensure him the respect of the county people. It was
a quaint idea, and he saw the lamentable fallacies naked; in the first place, a
painstaking artist in words was not respected by the respectable; secondly,
books should not be written with the object of gaining the goodwill of the
landed and commercial interests; thirdly and chiefly, no man should in any way
depend on another.</p>
<p>From this utter darkness, from danger of madness, the ever dear and sweet Annie
had rescued him. Very beautifully and fitly, as Lucian thought, she had done
her work without any desire to benefit him, she had simply willed to gratify
her own passion, and in doing this had handed to him the priceless secret. And
he, on his side, had reversed the process; merely to make himself a splendid
offering for the acceptance of his sweetheart, he had cast aside the vain
world, and had found the truth, which now remained with him, precious and
enduring.</p>
<p>And since the news of the marriage he found that his worship of her had by no
means vanished; rather in his heart was the eternal treasure of a happy love,
untarnished and spotless; it would be like a mirror of gold without alloy,
bright and lustrous for ever. For Lucian, it was no defect in the woman that
she was desirous and faithless; he had not conceived an affection for certain
moral or intellectual accidents, but for the very woman. Guided by the
self-evident axiom that humanity is to be judged by literature, and not
literature by humanity, he detected the analogy between <i>Lycidas</i> and
Annie. Only the dullard would object to the nauseous cant of the one, or to the
indiscretions of the other. A sober critic might say that the man who could
generalize Herbert and Laud, Donne and Herrick, Sanderson and Juxon, Hammond
and Lancelot Andrewes into “our corrupted Clergy” must be either an
imbecile or a scoundrel, or probably both. The judgment would be perfectly
true, but as a criticism of <i>Lycidas</i> it would be a piece of folly. In the
case of the woman one could imagine the attitude of the conventional lover; of
the chevalier who, with his tongue in his cheek, “reverences and
respects” all women, and coming home early in the morning writes a
leading article on St English Girl. Lucian, on the other hand, felt profoundly
grateful to the delicious Annie, because she had at precisely the right moment
voluntarily removed her image from his way. He confessed to himself that,
latterly, he had a little dreaded her return as an interruption; he had
shivered at the thought that their relations would become what was so terribly
called an “intrigue” or “affair.” There would be all
the threadbare and common stratagems, the vulgarity of secret assignations, and
an atmosphere suggesting the period of Mr. Thomas Moore and Lord Byron and
“segars.” Lucian had been afraid of all this; he had feared lest
love itself should destroy love.</p>
<p>He considered that now, freed from the torment of the body, leaving untasted
the green water that makes thirst more burning, he was perfectly initiated in
the true knowledge of the splendid and glorious love. There seemed to him a
monstrous paradox in the assertion that there could be no true love without a
corporal presence of the beloved; even the popular sayings of “Absence
makes the heart grow fonder,” and “familiarity breeds
contempt,” witnessed to the contrary. He thought, sighing, and with
compassion, of the manner in which men are continually led astray by the cheat
of the senses. In order that the unborn might still be added to the born,
nature had inspired men with the wild delusion that the bodily companionship of
the lover and the beloved was desirable above all things, and so, by the false
show of pleasure, the human race was chained to vanity, and doomed to an
eternal thirst for the non-existent.</p>
<p>Again and again he gave thanks for his own escape; he had been set free from a
life of vice and sin and folly, from all the dangers and illusions that are
most dreaded by the wise. He laughed as he remembered what would be the common
view of the situation. An ordinary lover would suffer all the sting of sorrow
and contempt; there would be grief for a lost mistress, and rage at her
faithlessness, and hate in the heart; one foolish passion driving on another,
and driving the man to ruin. For what would be commonly called the real woman
he now cared nothing; if he had heard that she had died in her farm in Utter
Gwent, he would have experienced only a passing sorrow, such as he might feel
at the death of any one he had once known. But he did not think of the young
farmer’s wife as the real Annie; he did not think of the frost-bitten
leaves in winter as the real rose. Indeed, the life of many reminded him of the
flowers; perhaps more especially of those flowers which to all appearance are
for many years but dull and dusty clumps of green, and suddenly, in one night,
burst into the flame of blossom, and fill all the misty lawns with odour; till
the morning. It was in that night that the flower lived, not through the long
unprofitable years; and, in like manner, many human lives, he thought, were
born in the evening and dead before the coming of day. But he had preserved the
precious flower in all its glory, not suffering it to wither in the hard light,
but keeping it in a secret place, where it could never be destroyed. Truly now,
and for the first time, he possessed Annie, as a man possesses the gold which
he has dug from the rock and purged of its baseness.</p>
<p>He was musing over these things when a piece of news, very strange and
unexpected, arrived at the rectory. A distant, almost a mythical relative,
known from childhood as “Cousin Edward in the Isle of Wight,” had
died, and by some strange freak had left Lucian two thousand pounds. It was a
pleasure to give his father five hundred pounds, and the rector on his side
forgot for a couple of days to lean his head on his hand. From the rest of the
capital, which was well invested, Lucian found he would derive something
between sixty and seventy pounds a year, and his old desires for literature and
a refuge in the murmuring streets returned to him. He longed to be free from
the incantations that surrounded him in the country, to work and live in a new
atmosphere; and so, with many good wishes from his father, he came to the
retreat in the waste places of London.</p>
<p>He was in high spirits when he found the square, clean room, horribly
furnished, in the by-street that branched from the main road, and advanced in
an unlovely sweep to the mud pits and the desolation that was neither town nor
country. On every side monotonous grey streets, each house the replica of its
neighbor, to the east an unexplored wilderness, north and west and south the
brickfields and market-gardens, everywhere the ruins of the country, the tracks
where sweet lanes had been, gangrened stumps of trees, the relics of hedges,
here and there an oak stripped of its bark, white and haggard and leprous, like
a corpse. And the air seemed always grey, and the smoke from the brickfields
was grey.</p>
<p>At first he scarcely realized the quarter into which chance had led him. His
only thought was of the great adventure of letters in which he proposed to
engage, and his first glance round his “bed-sitting-room” showed
him that there was no piece of furniture suitable for his purpose. The table,
like the rest of the suite, was of bird’s-eye maple; but the maker seemed
to have penetrated the druidic secret of the rocking-stone, the thing was in a
state of unstable equilibrium perpetually. For some days he wandered through
the streets, inspecting the second-hand furniture shops, and at last, in a
forlorn byway, found an old Japanese bureau, dishonored and forlorn, standing
amongst rusty bedsteads, sorry china, and all the refuse of homes dead and
desolate. The bureau pleased him in spite of its grime and grease and dirt.
Inlaid mother-of-pearl, the gleam of lacquer dragons in red gold, and hints of
curious design shone through the film of neglect and ill-usage, and when the
woman of the shop showed him the drawers and well and pigeon-holes, he saw that
it would be an apt instrument for his studies.</p>
<p>The bureau was carried to his room and replaced the
“bird’s-eye” table under the gas-jet. As Lucian arranged what
papers he had accumulated: the sketches of hopeless experiments, shreds and
tatters of stories begun but never completed, outlines of plots, two or three
notebooks scribbled through and through with impressions of the abandoned
hills, he felt a thrill of exaltation at the prospect of work to be
accomplished, of a new world all open before him.</p>
<p>He set out on the adventure with a fury of enthusiasm; his last thought at
night when all the maze of streets was empty and silent was of the problem, and
his dreams ran on phrases, and when he awoke in the morning he was eager to get
back to his desk. He immersed himself in a minute, almost a microscopic
analysis of fine literature. It was no longer enough, as in the old days, to
feel the charm and incantation of a line or a word; he wished to penetrate the
secret, to understand something of the wonderful suggestion, all apart from the
sense, that seemed to him the <i>differentia</i> of literature, as
distinguished from the long follies of “character-drawing,”
“psychological analysis,” and all the stuff that went to make the
three-volume novel of commerce.</p>
<p>He found himself curiously strengthened by the change from the hills to the
streets. There could be no doubt, he thought, that living a lonely life,
interested only in himself and his own thoughts, he had become in a measure
inhuman. The form of external things, black depths in woods, pools in lonely
places, those still valleys curtained by hills on every side, sounding always
with the ripple of their brooks, had become to him an influence like that of a
drug, giving a certain peculiar colour and outline to his thoughts. And from
early boyhood there had been another strange flavor in his life, the dream of
the old Roman world, those curious impressions that he had gathered from the
white walls of Caermaen, and from the looming bastions of the fort. It was in
reality the subconscious fancies of many years that had rebuilt the golden
city, and had shown him the vine-trellis and the marbles and the sunlight in
the garden of Avallaunius. And the rapture of love had made it all so vivid and
warm with life, that even now, when he let his pen drop, the rich noise of the
tavern and the chant of the theatre sounded above the murmur of the streets.
Looking back, it was as much a part of his life as his schooldays, and the
tessellated pavements were as real as the square of faded carpet beneath his
feet.</p>
<p>But he felt that he had escaped. He could now survey those splendid and lovely
visions from without, as if he read of opium dreams, and he no longer dreaded a
weird suggestion that had once beset him, that his very soul was being moulded
into the hills, and passing into the black mirror of still waterpools. He had
taken refuge in the streets, in the harbor of a modern suburb, from the vague,
dreaded magic that had charmed his life. Whenever he felt inclined to listen to
the old wood-whisper or to the singing of the fauns he bent more earnestly to
his work, turning a deaf ear to the incantations.</p>
<p>In the curious labour of the bureau he found refreshment that was continually
renewed. He experienced again, and with a far more violent impulse, the
enthusiasm that had attended the writing of his book a year or two before, and
so, perhaps, passed from one drug to another. It was, indeed, with something of
rapture that he imagined the great procession of years all to be devoted to the
intimate analysis of words, to the construction of the sentence, as if it were
a piece of jewelry or mosaic.</p>
<p>Sometimes, in the pauses of the work, he would pace up and down his cell,
looking out of the window now and again and gazing for an instant into the
melancholy street. As the year advanced the days grew more and more misty, and
he found himself the inhabitant of a little island wreathed about with the
waves of a white and solemn sea. In the afternoon the fog would grow denser,
shutting out not only sight but sound; the shriek of the garden gates, the
jangling of the tram-bell echoed as if from a far way. Then there were days of
heavy incessant rain; he could see a grey drifting sky and the drops plashing
in the street, and the houses all dripping and saddened with wet.</p>
<p>He cured himself of one great aversion. He was no longer nauseated at the sight
of a story begun and left unfinished. Formerly, even when an idea rose in his
mind bright and wonderful, he had always approached the paper with a feeling of
sickness and dislike, remembering all the hopeless beginnings he had made. But
now he understood that to begin a romance was almost a separate and special
art, a thing apart from the story, to be practiced with sedulous care. Whenever
an opening scene occurred to him he noted it roughly in a book, and he devoted
many long winter evenings to the elabouration of these beginnings. Sometimes the
first impression would yield only a paragraph or a sentence, and once or twice
but a splendid and sonorous word, which seemed to Lucian all dim and rich with
unsurmised adventure. But often he was able to write three or four vivid pages,
studying above all things the hint and significance of the words and actions,
striving to work into the lines the atmosphere of expectation and promise, and
the murmur of wonderful events to come.</p>
<p>In this one department of his task the labour seemed almost endless. He would
finish a few pages and then rewrite them, using the same incident and nearly
the same words, but altering that indefinite something which is scarcely so
much style as manner, or atmosphere. He was astonished at the enormous change
that was thus effected, and often, though he himself had done the work, he
could scarcely describe in words how it was done. But it was clear that in this
art of manner, or suggestion, lay all the chief secrets of literature, that by
it all the great miracles were performed. Clearly it was not style, for style
in itself was untranslatable, but it was that high theurgic magic that made the
English <i>Don Quixote</i>, roughly traduced by some Jervas, perhaps the best
of all English books. And it was the same element that made the journey of
Roderick Random to London, so ostensibly a narrative of coarse jokes and common
experiences and burlesque manners, told in no very choice diction, essentially
a wonderful vision of the eighteenth century, carrying to one’s very
nostrils the aroma of the Great North Road, iron-bound under black frost,
darkened beneath shuddering woods, haunted by highwaymen, with an adventure
waiting beyond every turn, and great old echoing inns in the midst of lonely
winter lands.</p>
<p>It was this magic that Lucian sought for his opening chapters; he tried to find
that quality that gives to words something beyond their sound and beyond their
meaning, that in the first lines of a book should whisper things unintelligible
but all significant. Often he worked for many hours without success, and the
grim wet dawn once found him still searching for hieroglyphic sentences, for
words mystical, symbolic. On the shelves, in the upper part of his bureau, he
had placed the books which, however various as to matter, seemed to have a part
in this curious quality of suggestion, and in that sphere which might almost be
called supernatural. To these books he often had recourse, when further effort
appeared altogether hopeless, and certain pages in Coleridge and Edgar Allan
Poe had the power of holding him in a trance of delight, subject to emotions
and impressions which he knew to transcend altogether the realm of the formal
understanding. Such lines as:</p>
<p class="poem">
Bottomless vales and boundless floods,<br/>
And chasms, and caves, and Titan woods,<br/>
With forms that no man can discover<br/>
For the dews that drip all over;<br/></p>
<p>had for Lucian more than the potency of a drug, lulling him into a splendid
waking-sleep, every word being a supreme incantation. And it was not only his
mind that was charmed by such passages, for he felt at the same time a strange
and delicious bodily languor that held him motionless, without the desire or
power to stir from his seat. And there were certain phrases in <i>Kubla
Khan</i> that had such a magic that he would sometimes wake up, as it were, to
the consciousness that he had been lying on the bed or sitting in the chair by
the bureau, repeating a single line over and over again for two or three hours.
Yet he knew perfectly well that he had not been really asleep; a little effort
recalled a constant impression of the wall-paper, with its pink flowers on a
buff ground, and of the muslin-curtained window, letting in the grey winter
light. He had been some seven months in London when this odd experience first
occurred to him. The day opened dreary and cold and clear, with a gusty and
restless wind whirling round the corner of the street, and lifting the dead
leaves and scraps of paper that littered the roadway into eddying mounting
circles, as if a storm of black rain were to come. Lucian had sat late the
night before, and rose in the morning feeling weary and listless and
heavy-headed. While he dressed, his legs dragged him as with weights, and he
staggered and nearly fell in bending down to the mat outside for his tea-tray.
He lit the spirit lamp on the hearth with shaking, unsteady hands, and could
scarcely pour out the tea when it was ready. A delicate cup of tea was one of
his few luxuries; he was fond of the strange flavor of the green leaf, and this
morning he drank the straw-coloured liquid eagerly, hoping it would disperse the
cloud of languor. He tried his best to coerce himself into the sense of vigor
and enjoyment with which he usually began the day, walking briskly up and down
and arranging his papers in order. But he could not free himself from
depression; even as he opened the dear bureau a wave of melancholy came upon
him, and he began to ask himself whether he were not pursuing a vain dream,
searching for treasures that had no existence. He drew out his cousin’s
letter and read it again, sadly enough. After all there was a good deal of
truth in what she said; he had “overrated” his powers, he had no
friends, no real education. He began to count up the months since he had come
to London; he had received his two thousand pounds in March, and in May he had
said good-bye to the woods and to the dear and friendly paths. May, June, July,
August, September, October, November, and half of December had gone by; and
what had he to show? Nothing but the experiment, the attempt, futile
scribblings which had no end nor shining purpose. There was nothing in his desk
that he could produce as evidence of his capacity, no fragment even of
accomplishment. It was a thought of intense bitterness, but it seemed as if the
barbarians were in the right—a place in a house of business would have
been more suitable. He leaned his head on his desk overwhelmed with the
severity of his own judgment. He tried to comfort himself again by the thought
of all the hours of happy enthusiasm he had spent amongst his papers, working
for a great idea with infinite patience. He recalled to mind something that he
had always tried to keep in the background of his hopes, the foundation-stone
of his life, which he had hidden out of sight. Deep in his heart was the hope
that he might one day write a valiant book; he scarcely dared to entertain the
aspiration, he felt his incapacity too deeply, but yet this longing was the
foundation of all his painful and patient effort. This he had proposed in
secret to himself, that if he laboured without ceasing, without tiring, he might
produce something which would at all events be art, which would stand wholly
apart from the objects shaped like books, printed with printers’ ink, and
called by the name of books that he had read. Giotto, he knew, was a painter,
and the man who imitated walnut-wood on the deal doors opposite was a painter,
and he had wished to be a very humble pupil in the class of the former. It was
better, he thought, to fail in attempting exquisite things than to succeed in
the department of the utterly contemptible; he had vowed he would be the dunce
of Cervantes’s school rather than top-boy in the academy of <i>A Bad Un
to Beat</i> and <i>Millicent’s Marriage</i>. And with this purpose he had
devoted himself to labourious and joyous years, so that however mean his
capacity, the pains should not be wanting. He tried now to rouse himself from a
growing misery by the recollection of this high aim, but it all seemed hopeless
vanity. He looked out into the grey street, and it stood a symbol of his life,
chill and dreary and grey and vexed with a horrible wind. There were the dull
inhabitants of the quarter going about their common business; a man was crying
“mackerel” in a doleful voice, slowly passing up the street, and
staring into the white-curtained “parlors,” searching for the face
of a purchaser behind the India-rubber plants, stuffed birds, and piles of
gaudy gilt books that adorned the windows. One of the blistered doors over the
way banged, and a woman came scurrying out on some errand, and the garden gate
shrieked two melancholy notes as she opened it and let it swing back after her.
The little patches called gardens were mostly untilled, uncared for, squares of
slimy moss, dotted with clumps of coarse ugly grass, but here and there were
the blackened and rotting remains of sunflowers and marigolds. And beyond, he
knew, stretched the labyrinth of streets more or less squalid, but all grey and
dull, and behind were the mud pits and the steaming heaps of yellowish bricks,
and to the north was a great wide cold waste, treeless, desolate, swept by
bitter wind. It was all like his own life, he said again to himself, a maze of
unprofitable dreariness and desolation, and his mind grew as black and hopeless
as the winter sky. The morning went thus dismally till twelve o’clock,
and he put on his hat and great-coat. He always went out for an hour every day
between twelve and one; the exercise was a necessity, and the landlady made his
bed in the interval. The wind blew the smoke from the chimneys into his face as
he shut the door, and with the acrid smoke came the prevailing odour of the
street, a blend of cabbage-water and burnt bones and the faint sickly vapor
from the brickfields. Lucian walked mechanically for the hour, going eastward,
along the main road. The wind pierced him, and the dust was blinding, and the
dreariness of the street increased his misery. The row of common shops, full of
common things, the blatant public-houses, the Independent chapel, a horrible
stucco parody of a Greek temple with a façade of hideous columns that was a
nightmare, villas like smug Pharisees, shops again, a church in cheap Gothic,
an old garden blasted and riven by the builder, these were the pictures of the
way. When he got home again he flung himself on the bed, and lay there stupidly
till sheer hunger roused him. He ate a hunch of bread and drank some water, and
began to pace up and down the room, wondering whether there were no escape from
despair. Writing seemed quite impossible, and hardly knowing what he did he
opened his bureau and took out a book from the shelves. As his eyes fell on the
page the air grew dark and heavy as night, and the wind wailed suddenly,
loudly, terribly.</p>
<p>“By woman wailing for her Demon lover.” The words were on his lips
when he raised his eyes again. A broad band of pale clear light was shining
into the room, and when he looked out of the window he saw the road all
brightened by glittering pools of water, and as the last drops of the
rain-storm starred these mirrors the sun sank into the wrack. Lucian gazed
about him, perplexed, till his eyes fell on the clock above his empty hearth.
He had been sitting, motionless, for nearly two hours without any sense of the
passage of time, and without ceasing he had murmured those words as he dreamed
an endless wonderful story. He experienced somewhat the sensations of Coleridge
himself; strange, amazing, ineffable things seemed to have been presented to
him, not in the form of the idea, but actually and materially, but he was less
fortunate than Coleridge in that he could not, even vaguely, image to himself
what he had seen. Yet when he searched his mind he knew that the consciousness
of the room in which he sat had never left him; he had seen the thick darkness
gather, and had heard the whirl of rain hissing through the air. Windows had
been shut down with a crash, he had noted the pattering footsteps of people
running to shelter, the landlady’s voice crying to some one to look at
the rain coming in under the door. It was like peering into some old bituminous
picture, one could see at last that the mere blackness resolved itself into the
likeness of trees and rocks and travelers. And against this background of his
room, and the storm, and the noises of the street, his vision stood out
illuminated, he felt he had descended to the very depths, into the caverns that
are hollowed beneath the soul. He tried vainly to record the history of his
impressions; the symbols remained in his memory, but the meaning was all
conjecture.</p>
<p>The next morning, when he awoke, he could scarcely understand or realize the
bitter depression of the preceding day. He found it had all vanished away and
had been succeeded by an intense exaltation. Afterwards, when at rare intervals
he experienced the same strange possession of the consciousness, he found this
to be the invariable result, the hour of vision was always succeeded by a
feeling of delight, by sensations of brightened and intensified powers. On that
bright December day after the storm he rose joyously, and set about the labour
of the bureau with the assurance of success, almost with the hope of formidable
difficulties to be overcome. He had long busied himself with those curious
researches which Poe had indicated in the <i>Philosophy of Composition</i>, and
many hours had been spent in analyzing the singular effects which may be
produced by the sound and resonance of words. But he had been struck by the
thought that in the finest literature there were more subtle tones than the
loud and insistent music of “never more,” and he endeavored to find
the secret of those pages and sentences which spoke, less directly, and less
obviously, to the soul rather than to the ear, being filled with a certain
grave melody and the sensation of singing voices. It was admirable, no doubt,
to write phrases that showed at a glance their designed rhythm, and rang with
sonorous words, but he dreamed of a prose in which the music should be less
explicit, of names rather than notes. He was astonished that morning at his own
fortune and facility; he succeeded in covering a page of ruled paper wholly to
his satisfaction, and the sentences, when he read them out, appeared to suggest
a weird elusive chanting, exquisite but almost imperceptible, like the echo of
the plainsong reverberated from the vault of a monastic church.</p>
<p>He thought that such happy mornings well repaid him for the anguish of
depression which he sometimes had to suffer, and for the strange experience of
“possession” recurring at rare intervals, and usually after many
weeks of severe diet. His income, he found, amounted to sixty-five pounds a
year, and he lived for weeks at a time on fifteen shillings a week. During
these austere periods his only food was bread, at the rate of a loaf a day; but
he drank huge draughts of green tea, and smoked a black tobacco, which seemed
to him a more potent mother of thought than any drug from the scented East.
“I hope you go to some nice place for dinner,” wrote his cousin;
“there used to be some excellent eating-houses in London where one could
get a good cut from the joint, <i>with plenty of gravy</i>, and a boiled
potato, for a shilling. Aunt Mary writes that you should try Mr. Jones’s
in Water Street, Islington, whose father came from near Caermaen, and was
always most comfortable in her day. I daresay the walk there would do you good.
It is such a pity you smoke that horrid tobacco. I had a letter from Mrs. Dolly
(Jane Diggs, who married your cousin John Dolly) the other day, and she said
they would have been delighted to take you for only twenty-five shillings a
week for the sake of the family if you had not been a smoker. She told me to
ask you if you had ever seen a horse or a dog smoking tobacco. They are such
nice, comfortable people, and the children would have been company for you.
Johnnie, who used to be such a dear little fellow, has just gone into an office
in the City, and seems to have excellent prospects. How I wish, my dear Lucian,
that you could do something in the same way. Don’t forget Mr.
Jones’s in Water Street, and you might mention your name to him.”</p>
<p>Lucian never troubled Mr. Jones; but these letters of his cousin’s always
refreshed him by the force of contrast. He tried to imagine himself a part of
the Dolly family, going dutifully every morning to the City on the bus, and
returning in the evening for high tea. He could conceive the fine odour of hot
roast beef hanging about the decorous house on Sunday afternoons, papa asleep
in the dining-room, mamma lying down, and the children quite good and happy
with their “Sundays books.” In the evening, after supper, one read
the <i>Quiver</i> till bedtime. Such pictures as these were to Lucian a comfort
and a help, a remedy against despair. Often when he felt overwhelmed by the
difficulty of the work he had undertaken, he thought of the alternative career,
and was strengthened.</p>
<p>He returned again and again to that desire of a prose which should sound
faintly, not so much with an audible music, but with the memory and echo of it.
In the night, when the last tram had gone jangling by, and he had looked out
and seen the street all wrapped about in heavy folds of the mist, he conducted
some of his most delicate experiments. In that white and solitary midnight of
the suburban street he experienced the curious sense of being on a tower,
remote and apart and high above all the troubles of the earth. The gas lamp,
which was nearly opposite, shone in a pale halo of light, and the houses
themselves were merely indistinct marks and shadows amidst that palpable
whiteness, shutting out the world and its noises. The knowledge of the swarming
life that was so still, though it surrounded him, made the silence seem deeper
than that of the mountains before the dawn; it was as if he alone stirred and
looked out amidst a host sleeping at his feet. The fog came in by the open
window in freezing puffs, and as Lucian watched he noticed that it shook and
wavered like the sea, tossing up wreaths and drifts across the pale halo of the
lamp, and, these vanishing, others succeeded. It was as if the mist passed by
from the river to the north, as if it still passed by in the silence.</p>
<p>He would shut his window gently, and sit down in his lighted room with all the
consciousness of the white advancing shroud upon him. It was then that he found
himself in the mood for curious labours, and able to handle with some touch of
confidence the more exquisite instruments of the craft. He sought for that
magic by which all the glory and glamour of mystic chivalry were made to shine
through the burlesque and gross adventures of Don Quixote, by which Hawthorne
had lit his infernal Sabbath fires, and fashioned a burning aureole about the
village tragedy of the <i>Scarlet Letter</i>. In Hawthorne the story and the
suggestion, though quite distinct and of different worlds, were rather parallel
than opposed to one another; but Cervantes had done a stranger thing. One read
of Don Quixote, beaten, dirty, and ridiculous, mistaking windmills for giants,
sheep for an army; but the impression was of the enchanted forest, of Avalon,
of the San Graal, “far in the spiritual city.” And Rabelais showed
him, beneath the letter, the Tourainian sun shining on the hot rock above
Chinon, on the maze of narrow, climbing streets, on the high-pitched, gabled
roofs, on the grey-blue <i>tourelles</i>, pricking upward from the fantastic
labyrinth of walls. He heard the sound of sonorous plain-song from the monastic
choir, of gross exuberant gaiety from the rich vineyards; he listened to the
eternal mystic mirth of those that halted in the purple shadow of the
<i>sorbier</i> by the white, steep road. The gracious and ornate
<i>châteaux</i> on the Loire and the Vienne rose fair and shining to confront
the incredible secrets of vast, dim, far-lifted Gothic naves, that seemed ready
to take the great deep, and float away from the mist and dust of earthly
streets to anchor in the haven of the clear city that hath foundations. The
rank tale of the <i>garderobe</i>, of the farm-kitchen, mingled with the
reasoned, endless legend of the schools, with luminous Platonic argument; the
old pomp of the Middle Ages put on the robe of a fresh life. There was a smell
of wine and of incense, of June meadows and of ancient books, and through it
all he hearkened, intent, to the exultation of chiming bells ringing for a new
feast in a new land. He would cover pages with the analysis of these marvels,
tracking the suggestion concealed beneath the words, and yet glowing like the
golden threads in a robe of samite, or like that device of the old binders by
which a vivid picture appeared on the shut edges of a book. He tried to imitate
this art, to summon even the faint shadow of the great effect, rewriting a page
of Hawthorne, experimenting and changing an epithet here and there, noting how
sometimes the alteration of a trifling word would plunge a whole scene into
darkness, as if one of those blood-red fires had instantly been extinguished.
Sometimes, for severe practice, he attempted to construct short tales in the
manner of this or that master. He sighed over these desperate attempts, over
the clattering pieces of mechanism which would not even simulate life; but he
urged himself to an infinite perseverance. Through the white hours he worked on
amidst the heap and litter of papers; books and manuscripts overflowed from the
bureau to the floor; and if he looked out he saw the mist still pass by, still
passing from the river to the north.</p>
<p>It was not till the winter was well advanced that he began at all to explore
the region in which he lived. Soon after his arrival in the grey street he had
taken one or two vague walks, hardly noticing where he went or what he saw; but
for all the summer he had shut himself in his room, beholding nothing but the
form and colour of words. For his morning walk he almost invariably chose the
one direction, going along the Uxbridge Road towards Notting Hill, and
returning by the same monotonous thoroughfare. Now, however, when the new year
was beginning its dull days, he began to diverge occasionally to right and
left, sometimes eating his luncheon in odd corners, in the bulging parlors of
eighteenth-century taverns, that still fronted the surging sea of modern
streets, or perhaps in brand new “publics” on the broken borders of
the brickfields, smelling of the clay from which they had swollen. He found
waste by-places behind railway embankments where he could smoke his pipe
sheltered from the wind; sometimes there was a wooden fence by an old
pear-orchard where he sat and gazed at the wet desolation of the
market-gardens, munching a few currant biscuits by way of dinner. As he went
farther afield a sense of immensity slowly grew upon him; it was as if, from
the little island of his room, that one friendly place, he pushed out into the
grey unknown, into a city that for him was uninhabited as the desert.</p>
<p>He came back to his cell after these purposeless wanderings always with a sense
of relief, with the thought of taking refuge from grey. As he lit the gas and
opened the desk of his bureau and saw the pile of papers awaiting him, it was
as if he had passed from the black skies and the stinging wind and the dull
maze of the suburb into all the warmth and sunlight and violent colour of the
south.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="chap06"></SPAN>VI.</h3>
<p>It was in this winter after his coming to the grey street that Lucian first
experienced the pains of desolation. He had all his life known the delights of
solitude, and had acquired that habit of mind which makes a man find rich
company on the bare hillside and leads him into the heart of the wood to
meditate by the dark waterpools. But now in the blank interval when he was
forced to shut up his desk, the sense of loneliness overwhelmed him and filled
him with unutterable melancholy. On such days he carried about with him an
unceasing gnawing torment in his breast; the anguish of the empty page awaiting
him in his bureau, and the knowledge that it was worse than useless to attempt
the work. He had fallen into the habit of always using this phrase “the
work” to denote the adventure of literature; it had grown in his mind to
all the austere and grave significance of “the great work” on the
lips of the alchemists; it included every trifling and labourious page and the
vague magnificent fancies that sometimes hovered below him. All else had become
mere by-play, unimportant, trivial; the work was the end, and the means and the
food of his life—it raised him up in the morning to renew the struggle,
it was the symbol which charmed him as he lay down at night. All through the
hours of toil at the bureau he was enchanted, and when he went out and explored
the unknown coasts, the one thought allured him, and was the coloured glass
between his eyes and the world. Then as he drew nearer home his steps would
quicken, and the more weary and grey the walk, the more he rejoiced as he
thought of his hermitage and of the curious difficulties that awaited him
there. But when, suddenly and without warning, the faculty disappeared, when
his mind seemed a hopeless waste from which nothing could arise, then he became
subject to a misery so piteous that the barbarians themselves would have been
sorry for him. He had known some foretaste of these bitter and inexpressible
griefs in the old country days, but then he had immediately taken refuge in the
hills, he had rushed to the dark woods as to an anodyne, letting his heart
drink in all the wonder and magic of the wild land. Now in these days of
January, in the suburban street, there was no such refuge.</p>
<p>He had been working steadily for some weeks, well enough satisfied on the whole
with the daily progress, glad to awake in the morning, and to read over what he
had written on the night before. The new year opened with faint and heavy
weather and a breathless silence in the air, but in a few days the great frost
set in. Soon the streets began to suggest the appearance of a beleaguered city,
the silence that had preceded the frost deepened, and the mist hung over the
earth like a dense white smoke. Night after night the cold increased, and
people seemed unwilling to go abroad, till even the main thoroughfares were
empty and deserted, as if the inhabitants were lying close in hiding. It was at
this dismal time that Lucian found himself reduced to impotence. There was a
sudden break in his thought, and when he wrote on valiantly, hoping against
hope, he only grew more aghast on the discovery of the imbecilities he had
committed to paper. He ground his teeth together and persevered, sick at heart,
feeling as if all the world were fallen from under his feet, driving his pen on
mechanically, till he was overwhelmed. He saw the stuff he had done without
veil or possible concealment, a lamentable and wretched sheaf of verbiage,
worse, it seemed, than the efforts of his boyhood. He was not longer
tautological, he avoided tautology with the infernal art of a leader-writer,
filling his wind bags and mincing words as if he had been a trained journalist
on the staff of the <i>Daily Post</i>. There seemed all the matter of an
insufferable tragedy in these thoughts; that his patient and enduring toil was
in vain, that practice went for nothing, and that he had wasted the labour of
Milton to accomplish the tenth-rate. Unhappily he could not “give
in”; the longing, the fury for the work burnt within him like a burning
fire; he lifted up his eyes in despair.</p>
<p>It was then, while he knew that no one could help him, that he languished for
help, and then, though he was aware that no comfort was possible, he fervently
wished to be comforted. The only friend he had was his father, and he knew that
his father would not even understand his distress. For him, always, the printed
book was the beginning and end of literature; the agony of the maker, his
despair and sickness, were as accursed as the pains of labour. He was ready to
read and admire the work of the great Smith, but he did not wish to hear of the
period when the great Smith had writhed and twisted like a scotched worm, only
hoping to be put out of his misery, to go mad or die, to escape somehow from
the bitter pains. And Lucian knew no one else. Now and then he read in the
paper the fame of the great <i>littérateurs</i>; the Gypsies were entertaining
the Prince of Wales, the Jolly Beggars were dining with the Lord Mayor, the Old
Mumpers were mingling amicably and gorgeously with the leading members of the
Stock Exchange. He was so unfortunate as to know none of these gentlemen, but
it hardly seemed likely that they could have done much for him in any case.
Indeed, in his heart, he was certain that help and comfort from without were in
the nature of things utterly impossible, his ruin and grief were within, and
only his own assistance could avail. He tried to reassure himself, to believe
that his torments were a proof of his vocation, that the facility of the
novelist who stood six years deep in contracts to produce romances was a thing
wholly undesirable, but all the while he longed for but a drop of that
inexhaustible fluency which he professed to despise.</p>
<p>He drove himself out from that dreary contemplation of the white paper and the
idle pen. He went into the frozen and deserted streets, hoping that he might
pluck the burning coal from his heart, but the fire was not quenched. As he
walked furiously along the grim iron roads he fancied that those persons who
passed him cheerfully on their way to friends and friendly hearths shrank from
him into the mists as they went by. Lucian imagined that the fire of his
torment and anguish must in some way glow visibly about him; he moved, perhaps,
in a nimbus that proclaimed the blackness and the flames within. He knew, of
course, that in misery he had grown delirious, that the well-coated,
smooth-hatted personages who loomed out of the fog upon him were in reality
shuddering only with cold, but in spite of common sense he still conceived that
he saw on their faces an evident horror and disgust, and something of the
repugnance that one feels at the sight of a venomous snake, half-killed,
trailing its bleeding vileness out of sight. By design Lucian tried to make for
remote and desolate places, and yet when he had succeeded in touching on the
open country, and knew that the icy shadow hovering through the mist was a
field, he longed for some sound and murmur of life, and turned again to roads
where pale lamps were glimmering, and the dancing flame of firelight shone
across the frozen shrubs. And the sight of these homely fires, the thought of
affection and consolation waiting by them, stung him the more sharply perhaps
because of the contrast with his own chills and weariness and helpless
sickness, and chiefly because he knew that he had long closed an everlasting
door between his heart and such felicities. If those within had come out and
had called him by his name to enter and be comforted, it would have been quite
unavailing, since between them and him there was a great gulf fixed. Perhaps
for the first time he realized that he had lost the art of humanity for ever.
He had thought when he closed his ears to the wood whisper and changed the
fauns’ singing for the murmur of the streets, the black pools for the
shadows and amber light of London, that he had put off the old life, and had
turned his soul to healthy activities, but the truth was that he had merely
exchanged one drug for another. He could not be human, and he wondered whether
there were some drop of the fairy blood in his body that made him foreign and a
stranger in the world.</p>
<p>He did not surrender to desolation without repeated struggles. He strove to
allure himself to his desk by the promise of some easy task; he would not
attempt invention, but he had memoranda and rough jottings of ideas in his
note-books, and he would merely amplify the suggestions ready to his hand. But
it was hopeless, again and again it was hopeless. As he read over his notes,
trusting that he would find some hint that might light up the dead fires, and
kindle again that pure flame of enthusiasm, he found how desperately his
fortune had fallen. He could see no light, no colour in the lines he had
scribbled with eager trembling fingers; he remembered how splendid all these
things had been when he wrote them down, but now they were meaningless, faded
into grey. The few words he had dashed on to the paper, enraptured at the
thought of the happy hours they promised, had become mere jargon, and when he
understood the idea it seemed foolish, dull, unoriginal. He discovered
something at last that appeared to have a grain of promise, and determined to
do his best to put it into shape, but the first paragraph appalled him; it
might have been written by an unintelligent schoolboy. He tore the paper in
pieces, and shut and locked his desk, heavy despair sinking like lead into his
heart. For the rest of that day he lay motionless on the bed, smoking pipe
after pipe in the hope of stupefying himself with tobacco fumes. The air in the
room became blue and thick with smoke; it was bitterly cold, and he wrapped
himself up in his great-coat and drew the counterpane over him. The night came
on and the window darkened, and at last he fell asleep.</p>
<p>He renewed the effort at intervals, only to plunge deeper into misery. He felt
the approaches of madness, and knew that his only hope was to walk till he was
physically exhausted, so that he might come home almost fainting with fatigue,
but ready to fall asleep the moment he got into bed. He passed the mornings in
a kind of torpor, endeavoring to avoid thought, to occupy his mind with the
pattern of the paper, with the advertisements at the end of a book, with the
curious greyness of the light that glimmered through the mist into his room,
with the muffled voices that rumbled now and then from the street. He tried to
make out the design that had once coloured the faded carpet on the floor, and
wondered about the dead artist in Japan, the adorner of his bureau. He
speculated as to what his thoughts had been as he inserted the rainbow
mother-of-pearl and made that great flight of shining birds, dipping their
wings as they rose from the reeds, or how he had conceived the lacquer dragons
in red gold, and the fantastic houses in the garden of peach-trees. But sooner
or later the oppression of his grief returned, the loud shriek and clang of the
garden-gate, the warning bell of some passing bicyclist steering through the
fog, the noise of his pipe falling to the floor, would suddenly awaken him to
the sense of misery. He knew that it was time to go out; he could not bear to
sit still and suffer. Sometimes he cut a slice of bread and put it in his
pocket, sometimes he trusted to the chance of finding a public-house, where he
could have a sandwich and a glass of beer. He turned always from the main
streets and lost himself in the intricate suburban byways, willing to be
engulfed in the infinite whiteness of the mist.</p>
<p>The roads had stiffened into iron ridges, the fences and trees were glittering
with frost crystals, everything was of strange and altered aspect. Lucian
walked on and on through the maze, now in a circle of shadowy villas, awful as
the buried streets of Herculaneum, now in lanes dipping onto open country, that
led him past great elm-trees whose white boughs were all still, and past the
bitter lonely fields where the mist seemed to fade away into grey darkness. As
he wandered along these unfamiliar and ghastly paths he became the more
convinced of his utter remoteness from all humanity, he allowed that grotesque
suggestion of there being something visibly amiss in his outward appearance to
grow upon him, and often he looked with a horrible expectation into the faces
of those who passed by, afraid lest his own senses gave him false intelligence,
and that he had really assumed some frightful and revolting shape. It was
curious that, partly by his own fault, and largely, no doubt, through the
operation of mere coincidence, he was once or twice strongly confirmed in this
fantastic delusion. He came one day into a lonely and unfrequented byway, a
country lane falling into ruin, but still fringed with elms that had formed an
avenue leading to the old manor-house. It was now the road of communication
between two far outlying suburbs, and on these winter nights lay as black,
dreary, and desolate as a mountain track. Soon after the frost began, a
gentleman had been set upon in this lane as he picked his way between the
corner where the bus had set him down, and his home where the fire was blazing,
and his wife watched the clock. He was stumbling uncertainly through the gloom,
growing a little nervous because the walk seemed so long, and peering anxiously
for the lamp at the end of his street, when the two footpads rushed at him out
of the fog. One caught him from behind, the other struck him with a heavy
bludgeon, and as he lay senseless they robbed him of his watch and money, and
vanished across the fields. The next morning all the suburb rang with the
story; the unfortunate merchant had been grievously hurt, and wives watched
their husbands go out in the morning with sickening apprehension, not knowing
what might happen at night. Lucian of course was ignorant of all these rumors,
and struck into the gloomy by-road without caring where he was or whither the
way would lead him.</p>
<p>He had been driven out that day as with whips, another hopeless attempt to
return to the work had agonised him, and existence seemed an intolerable pain.
As he entered the deeper gloom, where the fog hung heavily, he began, half
consciously, to gesticulate; he felt convulsed with torment and shame, and it
was a sorry relief to clench his nails into his palm and strike the air as he
stumbled heavily along, bruising his feet against the frozen ruts and ridges.
His impotence was hideous, he said to himself, and he cursed himself and his
life, breaking out into a loud oath, and stamping on the ground. Suddenly he
was shocked at a scream of terror, it seemed in his very ear, and looking up he
saw for a moment a woman gazing at him out of the mist, her features distorted
and stiff with fear. A momentary convulsion twitched her arms into the ugly
mimicry of a beckoning gesture, and she turned and ran for dear life, howling
like a beast.</p>
<p>Lucian stood still in the road while the woman’s cries grew faint and
died away. His heart was chilled within him as the significance of this strange
incident became clear. He remembered nothing of his violent gestures; he had
not known at the time that he had sworn out loud, or that he was grinding his
teeth with impotent rage. He only thought of that ringing scream, of the
horrible fear on the white face that had looked upon him, of the woman’s
headlong flight from his presence. He stood trembling and shuddering, and in a
little while he was feeling his face, searching for some loathsome mark, for
the stigmata of evil branding his forehead. He staggered homewards like a
drunken man, and when he came into the Uxbridge Road some children saw him and
called after him as he swayed and caught at the lamp-post. When he got to his
room he sat down at first in the dark. He did not dare to light the gas.
Everything in the room was indistinct, but he shut his eyes as he passed the
dressing-table, and sat in a corner, his face turned to the wall. And when at
last he gathered courage and the flame leapt hissing from the jet, he crept
piteously towards the glass, and ducked his head, crouching miserably, and
struggling with his terrors before he could look at his own image.</p>
<p>To the best of his power he tried to deliver himself from these more grotesque
fantasies; he assured himself that there was nothing terrific in his
countenance but sadness, that his face was like the face of other men. Yet he
could not forget that reflection he had seen in the woman’s eyes, how the
surest mirrors had shown him a horrible dread, her soul itself quailing and
shuddering at an awful sight. Her scream rang and rang in his ears; she had
fled away from him as if he offered some fate darker than death.</p>
<p>He looked again and again into the glass, tortured by a hideous uncertainty.
His senses told him there was nothing amiss, yet he had had a proof, and yet,
as he peered most earnestly, there was, it seemed, something strange and not
altogether usual in the expression of the eyes. Perhaps it might be the
unsteady flare of the gas, or perhaps a flaw in the cheap looking-glass, that
gave some slight distortion to the image. He walked briskly up and down the
room and tried to gaze steadily, indifferently, into his own face. He would not
allow himself to be misguided by a word. When he had pronounced himself
incapable of humanity, he had only meant that he could not enjoy the simple
things of common life. A man was not necessarily monstrous, merely because he
did not appreciate high tea, a quiet chat about the neighbors, and a happy
noisy evening with the children. But with what message, then, did he appear
charged that the woman’s mouth grew so stark? Her hands had jerked up as
if they had been pulled with frantic wires; she seemed for the instant like a
horrible puppet. Her scream was a thing from the nocturnal Sabbath.</p>
<p>He lit a candle and held it close up to the glass so that his own face glared
white at him, and the reflection of the room became an indistinct darkness. He
saw nothing but the candle flame and his own shining eyes, and surely they were
not as the eyes of common men. As he put down the light, a sudden suggestion
entered his mind, and he drew a quick breath, amazed at the thought. He hardly
knew whether to rejoice or to shudder. For the thought he conceived was this:
that he had mistaken all the circumstances of the adventure, and had perhaps
repulsed a sister who would have welcomed him to the Sabbath.</p>
<p>He lay awake all night, turning from one dreary and frightful thought to the
other, scarcely dozing for a few hours when the dawn came. He tried for a
moment to argue with himself when he got up; knowing that his true life was
locked up in the bureau, he made a desperate attempt to drive the phantoms and
hideous shapes from his mind. He was assured that his salvation was in the
work, and he drew the key from his pocket, and made as if he would have opened
the desk. But the nausea, the remembrances of repeated and utter failure, were
too powerful. For many days he hung about the Manor Lane, half dreading, half
desiring another meeting, and he swore he would not again mistake the cry of
rapture, nor repulse the arms extended in a frenzy of delight. In those days he
dreamed of some dark place where they might celebrate and make the marriage of
the Sabbath, with such rites as he had dared to imagine.</p>
<p>It was perhaps only the shock of a letter from his father that rescued him from
these evident approaches to madness. Mr. Taylor wrote how they had missed him
at Christmas, how the farmers had inquired after him, of the homely familiar
things that recalled his boyhood, his mother’s voice, the friendly
fireside, and the good old fashions that had nurtured him. He remembered that
he had once been a boy, loving the cake and puddings and the radiant holly, and
all the seventeenth-century mirth that lingered on in the ancient farmhouses.
And there came to him the more holy memory of Mass on Christmas morning. How
sweet the dark and frosty earth had smelt as he walked beside his mother down
the winding lane, and from the stile near the church they had seen the world
glimmering to the dawn, and the wandering lanthorns advancing across the
fields. Then he had come into the church and seen it shining with candles and
holly, and his father in pure vestments of white linen sang the longing music
of the liturgy at the altar, and the people answered him, till the sun rose
with the grave notes of the Paternoster, and a red beam stole through the
chancel window.</p>
<p>The worst horror left him as he recalled the memory of these dear and holy
things. He cast away the frightful fancy that the scream he had heard was a
shriek of joy, that the arms, rigidly jerked out, invited him to an embrace.
Indeed, the thought that he had longed for such an obscene illusion, that he
had gloated over the recollection of that stark mouth, filled him with disgust.
He resolved that his senses were deceived, that he had neither seen nor heard,
but had for a moment externalized his own slumbering and morbid dreams. It was
perhaps necessary that he should be wretched, that his efforts should be
discouraged, but he would not yield utterly to madness.</p>
<p>Yet when he went abroad with such good resolutions, it was hard to resist an
influence that seemed to come from without and within. He did not know it, but
people were everywhere talking of the great frost, of the fog that lay heavy on
London, making the streets dark and terrible, of strange birds that came
fluttering about the windows in the silent squares. The Thames rolled out
duskily, bearing down the jarring ice-blocks, and as one looked on the black
water from the bridges it was like a river in a northern tale. To Lucian it all
seemed mythical, of the same substance as his own fantastic thoughts. He rarely
saw a newspaper, and did not follow from day to day the systematic readings of
the thermometer, the reports of ice-fairs, of coaches driven across the river
at Hampton, of the skating on the fens; and hence the iron roads, the
beleaguered silence and the heavy folds of mist appeared as amazing as a
picture, significant, appalling. He could not look out and see a common
suburban street foggy and dull, nor think of the inhabitants as at work or
sitting cheerfully eating nuts about their fires; he saw a vision of a grey
road vanishing, of dim houses all empty and deserted, and the silence seemed
eternal. And when he went out and passed through street after street, all void,
by the vague shapes of houses that appeared for a moment and were then
instantly swallowed up, it seemed to him as if he had strayed into a city that
had suffered some inconceivable doom, that he alone wandered where myriads had
once dwelt. It was a town as great as Babylon, terrible as Rome, marvelous as
Lost Atlantis, set in the midst of a white wilderness surrounded by waste
places. It was impossible to escape from it; if he skulked between hedges, and
crept away beyond the frozen pools, presently the serried stony lines
confronted him like an army, and far and far they swept away into the night, as
some fabled wall that guards an empire in the vast dim east. Or in that
distorting medium of the mist, changing all things, he imagined that he trod an
infinite desolate plain, abandoned from ages, but circled and encircled with
dolmen and menhir that loomed out at him, gigantic, terrible. All London was
one grey temple of an awful rite, ring within ring of wizard stones circled
about some central place, every circle was an initiation, every initiation
eternal loss. Or perhaps he was astray for ever in a land of grey rocks. He had
seen the light of home, the flicker of the fire on the walls; close at hand, it
seemed, was the open door, and he had heard dear voices calling to him across
the gloom, but he had just missed the path. The lamps vanished, the voices
sounded thin and died away, and yet he knew that those within were waiting,
that they could not bear to close the door, but waited, calling his name, while
he had missed the way, and wandered in the pathless desert of the grey rocks.
Fantastic, hideous, they beset him wherever he turned, piled up into strange
shapes, pricked with sharp peaks, assuming the appearance of goblin towers,
swelling into a vague dome like a fairy rath, huge and terrible. And as one
dream faded into another, so these last fancies were perhaps the most
tormenting and persistent; the rocky avenues became the camp and fortalice of
some half-human, malignant race who swarmed in hiding, ready to bear him away
into the heart of their horrible hills. It was awful to think that all his
goings were surrounded, that in the darkness he was watched and surveyed, that
every step but led him deeper and deeper into the labyrinth.</p>
<p>When, of an evening, he was secure in his room, the blind drawn down and the
gas flaring, he made vigorous efforts toward sanity. It was not of his free
will that he allowed terror to overmaster him, and he desired nothing better
than a placid and harmless life, full of work and clear thinking. He knew that
he deluded himself with imagination, that he had been walking through London
suburbs and not through Pandemonium, and that if he could but unlock his bureau
all those ugly forms would be resolved into the mist. But it was hard to say if
he consoled himself effectually with such reflections, for the return to common
sense meant also the return to the sharp pangs of defeat. It recalled him to
the bitter theme of his own inefficiency, to the thought that he only desired
one thing of life, and that this was denied him. He was willing to endure the
austerities of a monk in a severe cloister, to suffer cold, to be hungry, to be
lonely and friendless, to forbear all the consolation of friendly speech, and
to be glad of all these things, if only he might be allowed to illuminate the
manuscript in quietness. It seemed a hideous insufferable cruelty, that he
should so fervently desire that which he could never gain.</p>
<p>He was led back to the old conclusion; he had lost the sense of humanity, he
was wretched because he was an alien and a stranger amongst citizens. It seemed
probable that the enthusiasm of literature, as he understood it, the fervent
desire for the fine art, had in it something of the inhuman, and dissevered the
enthusiast from his fellow-creatures. It was possible that the barbarian
suspected as much, that by some slow process of rumination he had arrived at
his fixed and inveterate impression, by no means a clear reasoned conviction;
the average Philistine, if pressed for the reasons of his dislike, would either
become inarticulate, ejaculating “faugh” and “pah” like
an old-fashioned Scots Magazine, or else he would give some imaginary and
absurd reason, alleging that all “littery men” were poor, that
composers never cut their hair, that painters were rarely public-school men,
that sculptors couldn’t ride straight to hounds to save their lives, but
clearly these imbecilities were mere afterthoughts; the average man hated the
artist from a deep instinctive dread of all that was strange, uncanny, alien to
his nature; he gibbered, uttered his harsh, semi-bestial “faugh,”
and dismissed Keats to his gallipots from much the same motives as usually
impelled the black savages to dismiss the white man on an even longer journey.</p>
<p>Lucian was not especially interested in this hatred of the barbarian for the
maker, except from this point, that it confirmed him in his belief that the
love of art dissociated the man from the race. One touch of art made the whole
world alien, but surely miseries of the civilized man cast amongst savages were
not so much caused by dread of their ferocity as by the terror of his own
thoughts; he would perhaps in his last despair leave his retreat and go forth
to perish at their hands, so that he might at least die in company, and hear
the sound of speech before death. And Lucian felt most keenly that in his case
there was a double curse; he was as isolated as Keats, and as inarticulate as
his reviewers. The consolation of the work had failed him, and he was suspended
in the void between two worlds.</p>
<p>It was no doubt the composite effect of his failures, his loneliness of soul,
and solitude of life, that had made him invest those common streets with such
grim and persistent terrors. He had perhaps yielded to a temptation without
knowing that he had been tempted, and, in the manner of De Quincey, had chosen
the subtle in exchange for the more tangible pains. Unconsciously, but still of
free will, he had preferred the splendor and the gloom of a malignant vision
before his corporal pains, before the hard reality of his own impotence. It was
better to dwell in vague melancholy, to stray in the forsaken streets of a city
doomed from ages, to wander amidst forlorn and desperate rocks than to awake to
a gnawing and ignoble torment, to confess that a house of business would have
been more suitable and more practical, that he had promised what he could never
perform. Even as he struggled to beat back the phantasmagoria of the mist, and
resolved that he would no longer make all the streets a stage of apparitions,
he hardly realized what he had done, or that the ghosts he had called might
depart and return again.</p>
<p>He continued his long walks, always with the object of producing a physical
weariness and exhaustion that would enable him to sleep of nights. But even
when he saw the foggy and deserted avenues in their proper shape, and allowed
his eyes to catch the pale glimmer of the lamps, and the dancing flame of the
firelight, he could not rid himself of the impression that he stood afar off,
that between those hearths and himself there was a great gulf fixed. As he
paced down the footpath he could often see plainly across the frozen shrubs
into the homely and cheerful rooms. Sometimes, late in the evening, he caught a
passing glimpse of the family at tea, father, mother, and children laughing and
talking together, well pleased with each other’s company. Sometimes a
wife or a child was standing by the garden gate peering anxiously through the
fog, and the sight of it all, all the little details, the hideous but
comfortable armchairs turned ready to the fire, maroon-red curtains being drawn
close to shut out the ugly night, the sudden blaze and illumination as the fire
was poked up so that it might be cheerful for father; these trivial and common
things were acutely significant. They brought back to him the image of a dead
boy—himself. They recalled the shabby old “parlor” in the
country, with its shabby old furniture and fading carpet, and renewed a whole
atmosphere of affection and homely comfort. His mother would walk to the end of
the drive and look out for him when he was late (wandering then about the dark
woodlands); on winter evenings she would make the fire blaze, and have his
slippers warming by the hearth, and there was probably buttered toast “as
a treat.” He dwelt on all these insignificant petty circumstances, on the
genial glow and light after the muddy winter lanes, on the relish of the
buttered toast and the smell of the hot tea, on the two old cats curled fast
asleep before the fender, and made them instruments of exquisite pain and
regret. Each of these strange houses that he passed was identified in his mind
with his own vanished home; all was prepared and ready as in the old days, but
he was shut out, judged and condemned to wander in the frozen mist, with weary
feet, anguished and forlorn, and they that would pass from within to help him
could not, neither could he pass to them. Again, for the hundredth time, he
came back to the sentence: he could not gain the art of letters and he had lost
the art of humanity. He saw the vanity of all his thoughts; he was an ascetic
caring nothing for warmth and cheerfulness and the small comforts of life, and
yet he allowed his mind to dwell on such things. If one of those passers-by,
who walked briskly, eager for home, should have pitied him by some miracle and
asked him to come in, it would have been worse than useless, yet he longed for
pleasures that he could not have enjoyed. It was as if he were come to a place
of torment, where they who could not drink longed for water, where they who
could feel no warmth shuddered in the eternal cold. He was oppressed by the
grim conceit that he himself still slept within the matted thicket, imprisoned
by the green bastions of the Roman fort. He had never come out, but a
changeling had gone down the hill, and now stirred about the earth.</p>
<p>Beset by such ingenious terrors, it was not wonderful that outward events and
common incidents should abet his fancies. He had succeeded one day in escaping
from the mesh of the streets, and fell on a rough and narrow lane that stole
into a little valley. For the moment he was in a somewhat happier mood; the
afternoon sun glowed through the rolling mist, and the air grew clearer. He saw
quiet and peaceful fields, and a wood descending in a gentle slope from an old
farmstead of warm red brick. The farmer was driving the slow cattle home from
the hill, and his loud halloo to his dog came across the land a cheerful mellow
note. From another side a cart was approaching the clustered barns, hesitating,
pausing while the great horses rested, and then starting again into lazy
motion. In the well of the valley a wandering line of bushes showed where a
brook crept in and out amongst the meadows, and, as Lucian stood, lingering, on
the bridge, a soft and idle breath ruffled through the boughs of a great elm.
He felt soothed, as by calm music, and wondered whether it would not be better
for him to live in some such quiet place, within reach of the streets and yet
remote from them. It seemed a refuge for still thoughts; he could imagine
himself sitting at rest beneath the black yew tree in the farm garden, at the
close of a summer day. He had almost determined that he would knock at the door
and ask if they would take him as a lodger, when he saw a child running towards
him down the lane. It was a little girl, with bright curls tossing about her
head, and, as she came on, the sunlight glowed upon her, illuminating her
brick-red frock and the yellow king-cups in her hat. She had run with her eyes
on the ground, chirping and laughing to herself, and did not see Lucian till
she was quite near him. She started and glanced into his eyes for a moment, and
began to cry; he stretched out his hand, and she ran from him screaming,
frightened no doubt by what was to her a sudden and strange apparition. He
turned back towards London, and the mist folded him in its thick darkness, for
on that evening it was tinged with black.</p>
<p>It was only by the intensest strain of resolution that he did not yield utterly
to the poisonous anodyne which was always at hand. It had been a difficult
struggle to escape from the mesh of the hills, from the music of the fauns, and
even now he was drawn by the memory of these old allurements. But he felt that
here, in his loneliness, he was in greater danger, and beset by a blacker
magic. Horrible fancies rushed wantonly into his mind; he was not only ready to
believe that something in his soul sent a shudder through all that was simple
and innocent, but he came trembling home one Saturday night, believing, or
half-believing, that he was in communion with evil. He had passed through the
clamorous and blatant crowd of the “high street,” where, as one
climbed the hill, the shops seemed all aflame, and the black night air glowed
with the flaring gas-jets and the naphtha-lamps, hissing and wavering before
the February wind. Voices, raucous, clamant, abominable, were belched out of
the blazing public-houses as the doors swung to and fro, and above these doors
were hideous brassy lamps, very slowly swinging in a violent blast of air, so
that they might have been infernal thuribles, censing the people. Some man was
calling his wares in one long continuous shriek that never stopped or paused,
and, as a respond, a deeper, louder voice roared to him from across the road.
An Italian whirled the handle of his piano-organ in a fury, and a ring of imps
danced mad figures around him, danced and flung up their legs till the rags
dropped from some of them, and they still danced on. A flare of naphtha,
burning with a rushing noise, threw a light on one point of the circle, and
Lucian watched a lank girl of fifteen as she came round and round to the flash.
She was quite drunk, and had kicked her petticoats away, and the crowd howled
laughter and applause at her. Her black hair poured down and leapt on her
scarlet bodice; she sprang and leapt round the ring, laughing in Bacchic
frenzy, and led the orgy to triumph. People were crossing to and fro, jostling
against each other, swarming about certain shops and stalls in a dense dark
mass that quivered and sent out feelers as if it were one writhing organism. A
little farther a group of young men, arm in arm, were marching down the roadway
chanting some music-hall verse in full chorus, so that it sounded like
plainsong. An impossible hubbub, a hum of voices angry as swarming bees, the
squeals of five or six girls who ran in and out, and dived up dark passages and
darted back into the crowd; all these mingled together till his ears quivered.
A young fellow was playing the concertina, and he touched the keys with such
slow fingers that the tune wailed solemn into a dirge; but there was nothing so
strange as the burst of sound that swelled out when the public-house doors were
opened.</p>
<p>He walked amongst these people, looked at their faces, and looked at the
children amongst them. He had come out thinking that he would see the English
working class, “the best-behaved and the best-tempered crowd in the
world,” enjoying the simple pleasure of the Saturday night’s
shopping. Mother bought the joint for Sunday’s dinner, and perhaps a pair
of boots for father; father had an honest glass of beer, and the children were
given bags of sweets, and then all these worthy people went decently home to
their well-earned rest. De Quincey had enjoyed the sight in his day, and had
studied the rise and fall of onions and potatoes. Lucian, indeed, had desired
to take these simple emotions as an opiate, to forget the fine fret and
fantastic trouble of his own existence in plain things and the palpable joy of
rest after labour. He was only afraid lest he should be too sharply reproached
by the sight of these men who fought bravely year after year against
starvation, who knew nothing of intricate and imagined grief, but only the
weariness of relentless labour, of the long battle for their wives and children.
It would be pathetic, he thought, to see them content with so little,
brightened by the expectation of a day’s rest and a good dinner, forced,
even then, to reckon every penny, and to make their children laugh with
halfpence. Either he would be ashamed before so much content, or else he would
be again touched by the sense of his inhumanity which could take no interest in
the common things of life. But still he went to be at least taken out of
himself, to be forced to look at another side of the world, so that he might
perhaps forget a little while his own sorrows.</p>
<p>He was fascinated by what he saw and heard. He wondered whether De Quincey also
had seen the same spectacle, and had concealed his impressions out of reverence
for the average reader. Here there were no simple joys of honest toilers, but
wonderful orgies, that drew out his heart to horrible music. At first the
violence of sound and sight had overwhelmed him; the lights flaring in the
night wind, the array of naphtha lamps, the black shadows, the roar of voices.
The dance about the piano-organ had been the first sign of an inner meaning,
and the face of the dark girl as she came round and round to the flame had been
amazing in its utter furious abandon. And what songs they were singing all
around him, and what terrible words rang out, only to excite peals of laughter.
In the public-houses the workmen’s wives, the wives of small tradesmen,
decently dressed in black, were drinking their faces to a flaming red, and
urging their husbands to drink more. Beautiful young women, flushed and
laughing, put their arms round the men’s necks and kissed them, and then
held up the glass to their lips. In the dark corners, at the openings of side
streets, the children were talking together, instructing each other, whispering
what they had seen; a boy of fifteen was plying a girl of twelve with whisky,
and presently they crept away. Lucian passed them as they turned to go, and
both looked at him. The boy laughed, and the girl smiled quietly. It was above
all in the faces around him that he saw the most astounding things, the Bacchic
fury unveiled and unashamed. To his eyes it seemed as if these revelers
recognized him as a fellow, and smiled up in his face, aware that he was in the
secret. Every instinct of religion, of civilization even, was swept away; they
gazed at one another and at him, absolved of all scruples, children of the
earth and nothing more. Now and then a couple detached themselves from the
swarm, and went away into the darkness, answering the jeers and laughter of
their friends as they vanished.</p>
<p>On the edge of the pavement, not far from where he was standing, Lucian noticed
a tall and lovely young woman who seemed to be alone. She was in the full light
of a naphtha flame, and her bronze hair and flushed cheeks shone illuminate as
she viewed the orgy. She had dark brown eyes, and a strange look as of an old
picture in her face; and her eyes brightened with an urgent gleam. He saw the
revelers nudging each other and glancing at her, and two or three young men
went up and asked her to come for a walk. She shook her head and said “No
thank you” again and again, and seemed as if she were looking for
somebody in the crowd.</p>
<p>“I’m expecting a friend,” she said at last to a man who
proposed a drink and a walk afterwards; and Lucian wondered what kind of friend
would ultimately appear. Suddenly she turned to him as he was about to pass on,
and said in a low voice:</p>
<p>“I’ll go for a walk with you if you like; you just go on, and
I’ll follow in a minute.”</p>
<p>For a moment he looked steadily at her. He saw that the first glance has misled
him; her face was not flushed with drink as he had supposed, but it was radiant
with the most exquisite colour, a red flame glowed and died on her cheek, and
seemed to palpitate as she spoke. The head was set on the neck nobly, as in a
statue, and about the ears the bronze hair strayed into little curls. She was
smiling and waiting for his answer.</p>
<p>He muttered something about being very sorry, and fled down the hill out of the
orgy, from the noise of roaring voices and the glitter of the great lamps very
slowly swinging in the blast of wind. He knew that he had touched the brink of
utter desolation; there was death in the woman’s face, and she had indeed
summoned him to the Sabbath. Somehow he had been able to refuse on the instant,
but if he had delayed he knew he would have abandoned himself to her, body and
soul. He locked himself in his room and lay trembling on the bed, wondering if
some subtle sympathy had shown the woman her perfect companion. He looked in
the glass, not expecting now to see certain visible and outward signs, but
searching for the meaning of that strange glance that lit up his eyes. He had
grown even thinner than before in the last few months, and his cheeks were
wasted with hunger and sorrow, but there were still about his features the
suggestion of a curious classic grace, and the look as of a faun who has
strayed from the vineyards and olive gardens. He had broken away, but now he
felt the mesh of her net about him, a desire for her that was a madness, as if
she held every nerve in his body and drew him to her, to her mystic world, to
the rosebush where every flower was a flame.</p>
<p>He dreamed all night of the perilous things he had refused, and it was loss to
awake in the morning, pain to return to the world. The frost had broken and the
fog had rolled away, and the grey street was filled with a clear grey light.
Again he looked out on the long dull sweep of the monotonous houses, hidden for
the past weeks by a curtain of mist. Heavy rain had fallen in the night, and
the garden rails were still dripping, the roofs still dark with wet, all down
the line the dingy white blinds were drawn in the upper windows. Not a soul
walked the street; every one was asleep after the exertions of the night
before; even on the main road it was only at intervals that some straggler
paddled by. Presently a woman in a brown ulster shuffled off on some errand,
then a man in shirt-sleeves poked out his head, holding the door half-open, and
stared up at a window opposite. After a few minutes he slunk in again, and
three loafers came slouching down the street, eager for mischief or beastliness
of some sort. They chose a house that seemed rather smarter than the rest, and,
irritated by the neat curtains, the little grass plot with its dwarf shrub, one
of the ruffians drew out a piece of chalk and wrote some words on the front
door. His friends kept watch for him, and the adventure achieved, all three
bolted, bellowing yahoo laughter. Then a bell began, tang, tang, tang, and here
and there children appeared on their way to Sunday-school, and the chapel
“teachers” went by with verjuice eyes and lips, scowling at the
little boy who cried “Piper, piper!” On the main road many
respectable people, the men shining and ill-fitted, the women hideously
bedizened, passed in the direction of the Independent nightmare, the stuccoed
thing with Doric columns, but on the whole life was stagnant. Presently Lucian
smelt the horrid fumes of roast beef and cabbage; the early risers were
preparing the one-o’clock meal, but many lay in bed and put off dinner
till three, with the effect of prolonging the cabbage atmosphere into the late
afternoon. A drizzly rain began as the people were coming out of church, and
the mothers of little boys in velvet and little girls in foolishness of every
kind were impelled to slap their offspring, and to threaten them with father.
Then the torpor of beef and beer and cabbage settled down on the street; in
some houses they snorted and read the Parish Magazine, in some they snored and
read the murders and collected filth of the week; but the only movement of the
afternoon was a second procession of children, now bloated and distended with
food, again answering the summons of tang, tang, tang. On the main road the
trams, laden with impossible people, went humming to and fro, and young men who
wore bright blue ties cheerfully haw-hawed and smoked penny cigars. They
annoyed the shiny and respectable and verjuice-lipped, not by the frightful
stench of the cigars, but because they were cheerful on Sunday. By and by the
children, having heard about Moses in the Bulrushes and Daniel in the
Lion’s Den, came straggling home in an evil humor. And all the day it was
as if on a grey sheet grey shadows flickered, passing by.</p>
<p>And in the rose-garden every flower was a flame! He thought in symbols, using
the Persian imagery of a dusky court, surrounded by white cloisters, gilded by
gates of bronze. The stars came out, the sky glowed a darker violet, but the
cloistered wall, the fantastic trellises in stone, shone whiter. It was like a
hedge of may-blossom, like a lily within a cup of lapis-lazuli, like sea-foam
tossed on the heaving sea at dawn. Always those white cloisters trembled with
the lute music, always the garden sang with the clear fountain, rising and
falling in the mysterious dusk. And there was a singing voice stealing through
the white lattices and the bronze gates, a soft voice chanting of the Lover and
the Beloved, of the Vineyard, of the Gate and the Way. Oh! the language was
unknown; but the music of the refrain returned again and again, swelling and
trembling through the white nets of the latticed cloisters. And every rose in
the dusky air was a flame.</p>
<p>He had seen the life which he expressed by these symbols offered to him, and he
had refused it; and he was alone in the grey street, with its lamps just
twinkling through the dreary twilight, the blast of a ribald chorus sounding
from the main road, a doggerel hymn whining from some parlor, to the
accompaniment of the harmonium. He wondered why he had turned away from that
woman who knew all secrets, in whose eyes were all the mysteries. He opened the
desk of his bureau, and was confronted by the heap and litter of papers, lying
in confusion as he had left them. He knew that there was the motive of his
refusal; he had been unwilling to abandon all hope of the work. The glory and
the torment of his ambition glowed upon him as he looked at the manuscript; it
seemed so pitiful that such a single desire should be thwarted. He was aware
that if he chose to sit down now before the desk he could, in a manner, write
easily enough—he could produce a tale which would be formally well
constructed and certain of favorable reception. And it would not be the utterly
commonplace, entirely hopeless favorite of the circulating library; it would
stand in those ranks where the real thing is skillfully counterfeited, amongst
the books which give the reader his orgy of emotions, and yet contrive to be
superior, and “art,” in his opinion. Lucian had often observed this
species of triumph, and had noted the acclamation that never failed the clever
sham. <i>Romola</i>, for example, had made the great host of the serious, the
portentous, shout for joy, while the real book, <i>The Cloister and the
Hearth</i>, was a comparative failure.</p>
<p>He knew that he could write a <i>Romola</i>; but he thought the art of
counterfeiting half-crowns less detestable than this shabby trick of imitating
literature. He had refused definitely to enter the atelier of the gentleman who
pleased his clients by ingeniously simulating the grain of walnut; and though
he had seen the old oaken ambry kicked out contemptuously into the farmyard,
serving perhaps the necessities of hens or pigs, he would not apprentice
himself to the masters of veneer. He paced up and down the room, glancing now
and again at his papers, and wondering if there were not hope for him. A great
thing he could never do, but he had longed to do a true thing, to imagine
sincere and genuine pages.</p>
<p>He was stirred again to this fury for the work by the event of the evening
before, by all that had passed through his mind since the melancholy dawn. The
lurid picture of that fiery street, the flaming shops and flaming glances, all
its wonders and horrors, lit by the naphtha flares and by the burning souls,
had possessed him; and the noises, the shriek and the whisper, the jangling
rattle of the piano-organ, the long-continued scream of the butcher as he
dabbled in the blood, the lewd litany of the singers, these seemed to be
resolved into an infernal overture, loud with the expectation of lust and
death. And how the spectacle was set in the cloud of dark night, a phantom play
acted on that fiery stage, beneath those hideous brassy lamps, very slowly
swinging in a violent blast. As all the medley of outrageous sights and sounds
now fused themselves within his brain into one clear impression, it seemed that
he had indeed witnessed and acted in a drama, that all the scene had been
prepared and vested for him, and that the choric songs he had heard were but
preludes to a greater act. For in that woman was the consummation and
catastrophe of it all, and the whole stage waited for their meeting. He fancied
that after this the voices and the lights died away, that the crowd sank
swiftly into the darkness, and that the street was at once denuded of the great
lamps and of all its awful scenic apparatus.</p>
<p>Again, he thought, the same mystery would be represented before him; suddenly
on some dark and gloomy night, as he wandered lonely on a deserted road, the
wind hurrying before him, suddenly a turn would bring him again upon the fiery
stage, and the antique drama would be re-enacted. He would be drawn to the same
place, to find that woman still standing there; again he would watch the rose
radiant and palpitating upon her cheek, the argent gleam in her brown eyes, the
bronze curls gilding the white splendor of her neck. And for the second time
she would freely offer herself. He could hear the wail of the singers swelling
to a shriek, and see the dusky dancers whirling round in a faster frenzy, and
the naphtha flares tinged with red, as the woman and he went away into the
dark, into the cloistered court where every flower was a flame, whence he would
never come out.</p>
<p>His only escape was in the desk; he might find salvation if he could again hide
his heart in the heap and litter of papers, and again be rapt by the cadence of
a phrase. He threw open his window and looked out on the dim world and the
glimmering amber lights. He resolved that he would rise early in the morning,
and seek once more for his true life in the work.</p>
<p>But there was a strange thing. There was a little bottle on the mantelpiece, a
bottle of dark blue glass, and he trembled and shuddered before it, as if it
were a fetish.</p>
<h3><SPAN name="chap07"></SPAN>VII.</h3>
<p>It was very dark in the room. He seemed by slow degrees to awake from a long
and heavy torpor, from an utter forgetfulness, and as he raised his eyes he
could scarcely discern the pale whiteness of the paper on the desk before him.
He remembered something of a gloomy winter afternoon, of driving rain, of gusty
wind: he had fallen asleep over his work, no doubt, and the night had come
down.</p>
<p>He lay back in his chair, wondering whether it were late; his eyes were half
closed, and he did not make the effort and rouse himself. He could hear the
stormy noise of the wind, and the sound reminded him of the half-forgotten
days. He thought of his boyhood, and the old rectory, and the great elms that
surrounded it. There was something pleasant in the consciousness that he was
still half dreaming; he knew he could wake up whenever he pleased, but for the
moment he amused himself by the pretence that he was a little boy again, tired
with his rambles and the keen air of the hills. He remembered how he would
sometimes wake up in the dark at midnight, and listen sleepily for a moment to
the rush of the wind straining and crying amongst the trees, and hear it beat
upon the walls, and then he would fall to dreams again, happy in his warm, snug
bed.</p>
<p>The wind grew louder, and the windows rattled. He half opened his eyes and shut
them again, determined to cherish that sensation of long ago. He felt tired and
heavy with sleep; he imagined that he was exhausted by some effort; he had,
perhaps, been writing furiously without rest. He could not recollect at the
instant what the work had been; it would be delightful to read the pages when
he had made up his mind to bestir himself.</p>
<p>Surely that was the noise of boughs, swaying and grinding in the wind. He
remembered one night at home when such a sound had roused him suddenly from a
deep sweet sleep. There was a rushing and beating as of wings upon the air, and
a heavy dreary noise, like thunder far away upon the mountain. He had got out
of bed and looked from behind the blind to see what was abroad. He remembered
the strange sight he had seen, and he pretended it would be just the same if he
cared to look out now. There were clouds flying awfully from before the moon,
and a pale light that made the familiar land look strange and terrible. The
blast of wind came with a great shriek, and the trees tossed and bowed and
quivered; the wood was scourged and horrible, and the night air was ghastly
with a confused tumult, and voices as of a host. A huge black cloud rolled
across the heaven from the west and covered up the moon, and there came a
torrent of bitter hissing rain.</p>
<p>It was all a vivid picture to him as he sat in his chair, unwilling to wake.
Even as he let his mind stray back to that night of the past years, the rain
beat sharply on the window-panes, and though there were no trees in the grey
suburban street, he heard distinctly the crash of boughs. He wandered vaguely
from thought to thought, groping indistinctly amongst memories, like a man
trying to cross from door to door in a darkened unfamiliar room. But, no doubt,
if he were to look out, by some magic the whole scene would be displayed before
him. He would not see the curve of monotonous two-storied houses, with here and
there a white blind, a patch of light, and shadows appearing and vanishing, not
the rain plashing in the muddy road, not the amber of the gas-lamp opposite,
but the wild moonlight poured on the dearly loved country; far away the dim
circle of the hills and woods, and beneath him the tossing trees about the
lawn, and the wood heaving under the fury of the wind.</p>
<p>He smiled to himself, amidst his lazy meditations, to think how real it seemed,
and yet it was all far away, the scenery of an old play long ended and
forgotten. It was strange that after all these years of trouble and work and
change he should be in any sense the same person as that little boy peeping
out, half frightened, from the rectory window. It was as if looking in the
glass one should see a stranger, and yet know that the image was a true
reflection.</p>
<p>The memory of the old home recalled his father and mother to him, and he
wondered whether his mother would come if he were to cry out suddenly. One
night, on just such a night as this, when a great storm blew from the mountain,
a tree had fallen with a crash and a bough had struck the roof, and he awoke in
a fright, calling for his mother. She had come and had comforted him, soothing
him to sleep, and now he shut his eyes, seeing her face shining in the
uncertain flickering candle light, as she bent over his bed. He could not think
she had died; the memory was but a part of the evil dreams that had come
afterwards.</p>
<p>He said to himself that he had fallen asleep and dreamed sorrow and agony, and
he wished to forget all the things of trouble. He would return to happy days,
to the beloved land, to the dear and friendly paths across the fields. There
was the paper, white before him, and when he chose to stir, he would have the
pleasure of reading his work. He could not quite recollect what he had been
about, but he was somehow conscious that the had been successful and had
brought some long labour to a worthy ending. Presently he would light the gas,
and enjoy the satisfaction that only the work could give him, but for the time
he preferred to linger in the darkness, and to think of himself as straying
from stile to stile through the scented meadows, and listening to the bright
brook that sang to the alders.</p>
<p>It was winter now, for he heard the rain and the wind, and the swaying of the
trees, but in those old days how sweet the summer had been. The great hawthorn
bush in blossom, like a white cloud upon the earth, had appeared to him in
twilight, he had lingered in the enclosed valley to hear the nightingale, a
voice swelling out from the rich gloom, from the trees that grew around the
well. The scent of the meadowsweet was blown to him across the bridge of years,
and with it came the dream and the hope and the longing, and the afterglow red
in the sky, and the marvel of the earth. There was a quiet walk that he knew so
well; one went up from a little green byroad, following an unnamed brooklet
scarce a foot wide, but yet wandering like a river, gurgling over its pebbles,
with its dwarf bushes shading the pouring water. One went through the meadow
grass, and came to the larch wood that grew from hill to hill across the
stream, and shone a brilliant tender green, and sent vague sweet spires to the
flushing sky. Through the wood the path wound, turning and dipping, and
beneath, the brown fallen needles of last year were soft and thick, and the
resinous cones gave out their odour as the warm night advanced, and the shadows
darkened. It was quite still; but he stayed, and the faint song of the brooklet
sounded like the echo of a river beyond the mountains. How strange it was to
look into the wood, to see the tall straight stems rising, pillar-like, and
then the dusk, uncertain, and then the blackness. So he came out from the larch
wood, from the green cloud and the vague shadow, into the dearest of all
hollows, shut in on one side by the larches and before him by high violent
walls of turf, like the slopes of a fort, with a clear line dark against the
twilight sky, and a weird thorn bush that grew large, mysterious, on the
summit, beneath the gleam of the evening star.</p>
<p>And he retraced his wanderings in those deep old lanes that began from the
common road and went away towards the unknown, climbing steep hills, and
piercing the woods of shadows, and dipping down into valleys that seemed
virgin, unexplored, secret for the foot of man. He entered such a lane not
knowing where it might bring him, hoping he had found the way to fairyland, to
the woods beyond the world, to that vague territory that haunts all the dreams
of a boy. He could not tell where he might be, for the high banks rose steep,
and the great hedges made a green vault above. Marvelous ferns grew rich and
thick in the dark red earth, fastening their roots about the roots of hazel and
beech and maple, clustering like the carven capitals of a cathedral pillar.
Down, like a dark shaft, the lane dipped to the well of the hills, and came
amongst the limestone rocks. He climbed the bank at last, and looked out into a
country that seemed for a moment the land he sought, a mysterious realm with
unfamiliar hills and valleys and fair plains all golden, and white houses
radiant in the sunset light.</p>
<p>And he thought of the steep hillsides where the bracken was like a wood, and of
bare places where the west wind sang over the golden gorse, of still circles in
mid-lake, of the poisonous yew-tree in the middle of the wood, shedding its
crimson cups on the dank earth. How he lingered by certain black waterpools
hedged on every side by drooping wych-elms and black-stemmed alders, watching
the faint waves widening to the banks as a leaf or a twig dropped from the
trees.</p>
<p>And the whole air and wonder of the ancient forest came back to him. He had
found his way to the river valley, to the long lovely hollow between the hills,
and went up and up beneath the leaves in the warm hush of midsummer, glancing
back now and again through the green alleys, to the river winding in mystic
esses beneath, passing hidden glens receiving the streams that rushed down the
hillside, ice-cold from the rock, passing the immemorial tumulus, the graves
where the legionaries waited for the trumpet, the grey farmhouses sending the
blue wreaths of wood smoke into the still air. He went higher and higher, till
at last he entered the long passage of the Roman road, and from this, the ridge
and summit of the wood, he saw the waves of green swell and dip and sink
towards the marshy level and the gleaming yellow sea. He looked on the surging
forest, and thought of the strange deserted city mouldering into a petty village
on its verge, of its encircling walls melting into the turf, of vestiges of an
older temple which the earth had buried utterly.</p>
<p>It was winter now, for he heard the wail of the wind, and a sudden gust drove
the rain against the panes, but he thought of the bee’s song in the
clover, of the foxgloves in full blossom, of the wild roses, delicate,
enchanting, swaying on a long stem above the hedge. He had been in strange
places, he had known sorrow and desolation, and had grown grey and weary in the
work of letters, but he lived again in the sweetness, in the clear bright air
of early morning, when the sky was blue in June, and the mist rolled like a
white sea in the valley. He laughed when he recollected that he had sometimes
fancied himself unhappy in those days; in those days when he could be glad
because the sun shone, because the wind blew fresh on the mountain. On those
bright days he had been glad, looking at the fleeting and passing of the clouds
upon the hills, and had gone up higher to the broad dome of the mountain,
feeling that joy went up before him.</p>
<p>He remembered how, a boy, he had dreamed of love, of an adorable and ineffable
mystery which transcended all longing and desire. The time had come when all
the wonder of the earth seemed to prefigure this alone, when he found the
symbol of the Beloved in hill and wood and stream, and every flower and every
dark pool discoursed a pure ecstasy. It was the longing for longing, the love
of love, that had come to him when he awoke one morning just before the dawn,
and for the first time felt the sharp thrill of passion.</p>
<p>He tried in vain to express to himself the exquisite joys of innocent desire.
Even now, after troubled years, in spite of some dark cloud that overshadowed
the background of his thought, the sweetness of the boy’s imagined
pleasure came like a perfume into his reverie. It was no love of a woman but
the desire of womanhood, the Eros of the unknown, that made the heart tremble.
He hardly dreamed that such a love could ever be satisfied, that the thirst of
beauty could be slaked. He shrank from all contact of actuality, not venturing
so much as to imagine the inner place and sanctuary of the mysteries. It was
enough for him to adore in the outer court, to know that within, in the sweet
gloom, were the vision and the rapture, the altar and the sacrifice.</p>
<p>He remembered, dimly, the passage of many heavy years since that time of hope
and passion, but, perhaps, the vague shadow would pass away, and he could renew
the boy’s thoughts, the unformed fancies that were part of the bright
day, of the wild roses in the hedgerow. All other things should be laid aside,
he would let them trouble him no more after this winter night. He saw now that
from the first he had allowed his imagination to bewilder him, to create a
fantastic world in which he suffered, moulding innocent forms into terror and
dismay. Vividly, he saw again the black circle of oaks, growing in a haggard
ring upon the bastions of the Roman fort. The noise of the storm without grew
louder, and he thought how the wind had come up the valley with the sound of a
scream, how a great tree had ground its boughs together, shuddering before the
violent blast. Clear and distinct, as if he were standing now in the lane, he
saw the steep slopes surging from the valley, and the black crown of the oaks
set against the flaming sky, against a blaze and glow of light as if great
furnace doors were opened. He saw the fire, as it were, smitten about the
bastions, about the heaped mounds that guarded the fort, and the crooked evil
boughs seemed to writhe in the blast of flame that beat from heaven. Strangely
with the sight of the burning fort mingled the impression of a dim white shape
floating up the dusk of the lane towards him, and he saw across the valley of
years a girl’s face, a momentary apparition that shone and vanished away.</p>
<p>Then there was a memory of another day, of violent summer, of white farmhouse
walls blazing in the sun, and a far call from the reapers in the cornfields. He
had climbed the steep slope and penetrated the matted thicket and lay in the
heat, alone on the soft short grass that grew within the fort. There was a
cloud of madness, and confusion of broken dreams that had no meaning or clue
but only an indefinable horror and defilement. He had fallen asleep as he gazed
at the knotted fantastic boughs of the stunted brake about him, and when he
woke he was ashamed, and fled away fearing that “they” would pursue
him. He did not know who “they” were, but it seemed as if a
woman’s face watched him from between the matted boughs, and that she
summoned to her side awful companions who had never grown old through all the
ages.</p>
<p>He looked up, it seemed, at a smiling face that bent over him, as he sat in the
cool dark kitchen of the old farmhouse, and wondered why the sweetness of those
red lips and the kindness of the eyes mingled with the nightmare in the fort,
with the horrible Sabbath he had imagined as he lay sleeping on the hot soft
turf. He had allowed these disturbed fancies, all this mad wreck of terror and
shame that he had gathered in his mind, to trouble him for too long a time;
presently he would light up the room, and leave all the old darkness of his
life behind him, and from henceforth he would walk in the day.</p>
<p>He could still distinguish, though very vaguely, the pile of papers beside him,
and he remembered, now, that he had finished a long task that afternoon, before
he fell asleep. He could not trouble himself to recollect the exact nature of
the work, but he was sure that he had done well; in a few minutes, perhaps, he
would strike a match, and read the title, and amuse himself with his own
forgetfulness. But the sight of the papers lying there in order made him think
of his beginnings, of those first unhappy efforts which were so impossible and
so hopeless. He saw himself bending over the table in the old familiar room,
desperately scribbling, and then laying down his pen dismayed at the sad
results on the page. It was late at night, his father had been long in bed, and
the house was still. The fire was almost out, with only a dim glow here and
there amongst the cinders, and the room was growing chilly. He rose at last
from his work and looked out on a dim earth and a dark and cloudy sky.</p>
<p>Night after night he had laboured on, persevering in his effort, even through
the cold sickness of despair, when every line was doomed as it was made. Now,
with the consciousness that he knew at least the conditions of literature, and
that many years of thought and practice had given him some sense of language,
he found these early struggles both pathetic and astonishing. He could not
understand how he had persevered so stubbornly, how he had had the heart to
begin a fresh page when so many folios of blotted, painful effort lay torn,
derided, impossible in their utter failure. It seemed to him that it must have
been a miracle or an infernal possession, a species of madness, that had driven
him on, every day disappointed, and every day hopeful.</p>
<p>And yet there was a joyous side to the illusion. In these dry days that he
lived in, when he had bought, by a long experience and by countless hours of
misery, a knowledge of his limitations, of the vast gulf that yawned between
the conception and the work, it was pleasant to think of a time when all things
were possible, when the most splendid design seemed an affair of a few weeks.
Now he had come to a frank acknowledgment; so far as he was concerned, he
judged every book wholly impossible till the last line of it was written, and
he had learnt patience, the art of sighing and putting the fine scheme away in
the pigeon-hole of what could never be. But to think of those days! Then one
could plot out a book that should be more curious than Rabelais, and jot down
the outlines of a romance to surpass Cervantes, and design renaissance
tragedies and volumes of <i>contes</i>, and comedies of the Restoration;
everything was to be done, and the masterpiece was always the rainbow cup, a
little way before him.</p>
<p>He touched the manuscript on the desk, and the feeling of the pages seemed to
restore all the papers that had been torn so long ago. It was the atmosphere of
the silent room that returned, the light of the shaded candle falling on the
abandoned leaves. This had been painfully excogitated while the snowstorm
whirled about the lawn and filled the lanes, this was of the summer night, this
of the harvest moon rising like a fire from the tithebarn on the hill. How well
he remembered those half-dozen pages of which he had once been so proud; he had
thought out the sentences one evening, while he leaned on the foot-bridge and
watched the brook swim across the road. Every word smelt of the meadowsweet
that grew thick upon the banks; now, as he recalled the cadence and the phrase
that had seemed so charming, he saw again the ferns beneath the vaulted roots
of the beech, and the green light of the glowworm in the hedge.</p>
<p>And in the west the mountains swelled to a great dome, and on the dome was a
mound, the memorial of some forgotten race, that grew dark and large against
the red sky, when the sun set. He had lingered below it in the solitude,
amongst the winds, at evening, far away from home; and oh, the labour and the
vain efforts to make the form of it and the awe of it in prose, to write the
hush of the vast hill, and the sadness of the world below sinking into the
night, and the mystery, the suggestion of the rounded hillock, huge against the
magic sky.</p>
<p>He had tried to sing in words the music that the brook sang, and the sound of
the October wind rustling through the brown bracken on the hill. How many pages
he had covered in the effort to show a white winter world, a sun without warmth
in a grey-blue sky, all the fields, all the land white and shining, and one
high summit where the dark pines towered, still in the still afternoon, in the
pale violet air.</p>
<p>To win the secret of words, to make a phrase that would murmur of summer and
the bee, to summon the wind into a sentence, to conjure the odour of the night
into the surge and fall and harmony of a line; this was the tale of the long
evenings, of the candle flame white upon the paper and the eager pen.</p>
<p>He remembered that in some fantastic book he had seen a bar or two of music,
and, beneath, the inscription that here was the musical expression of
Westminster Abbey. His boyish effort seemed hardly less ambitious, and he no
longer believed that language could present the melody and the awe and the
loveliness of the earth. He had long known that he, at all events, would have
to be content with a far approach, with a few broken notes that might suggest,
perhaps, the magistral everlasting song of the hill and the streams.</p>
<p>But in those far days the impossible was but a part of wonderland that lay
before him, of the world beyond the wood and the mountain. All was to be
conquered, all was to be achieved; he had but to make the journey and he would
find the golden world and the golden word, and hear those songs that the sirens
sang. He touched the manuscript; whatever it was, it was the result of painful
labour and disappointment, not of the old flush of hope, but it came of weary
days, of correction and re-correction. It might be good in its measure; but
afterwards he would write no more for a time. He would go back again to the
happy world of masterpieces, to the dreams of great and perfect books, written
in an ecstasy.</p>
<p>Like a dark cloud from the sea came the memory of the attempt he had made, of
the poor piteous history that had once embittered his life. He sighed and said
alas, thinking of his folly, of the hours when he was shaken with futile,
miserable rage. Some silly person in London had made his manuscript more
saleable and had sold it without rendering an account of the profits, and for
that he had been ready to curse humanity. Black, horrible, as the memory of a
stormy day, the rage of his heart returned to his mind, and he covered his
eyes, endeavoring to darken the picture of terror and hate that shone before
him. He tried to drive it all out of his thought, it vexed him to remember
these foolish trifles; the trick of a publisher, the small pomposities and
malignancies of the country folk, the cruelty of a village boy, had inflamed
him almost to the pitch of madness. His heart had burnt with fury, and when he
looked up the sky was blotched, and scarlet as if it rained blood.</p>
<p>Indeed he had almost believed that blood had rained upon him, and cold blood
from a sacrifice in heaven; his face was wet and chill and dripping, and he had
passed his hand across his forehead and looked at it. A red cloud had seemed to
swell over the hill, and grow great, and come near to him; he was but an ace
removed from raging madness.</p>
<p>It had almost come to that; the drift and the breath of the scarlet cloud had
well-nigh touched him. It was strange that he had been so deeply troubled by
such little things, and strange how after all the years he could still recall
the anguish and rage and hate that shook his soul as with a spiritual tempest.</p>
<p>The memory of all that evening was wild and troubled; he resolved that it
should vex him no more, that now, for the last time, he would let himself be
tormented by the past. In a few minutes he would rise to a new life, and forget
all the storms that had gone over him.</p>
<p>Curiously, every detail was distinct and clear in his brain. The figure of the
doctor driving home, and the sound of the few words he had spoken came to him
in the darkness, through the noise of the storm and the pattering of the rain.
Then he stood upon the ridge of the hill and saw the smoke drifting up from the
ragged roofs of Caermaen, in the evening calm; he listened to the voices
mounting thin and clear, in a weird tone, as if some outland folk were speaking
in an unknown tongue of awful things.</p>
<p>He saw the gathering darkness, the mystery of twilight changing the huddled
squalid village into an unearthly city, into some dreadful Atlantis, inhabited
by a ruined race. The mist falling fast, the gloom that seemed to issue from
the black depths of the forest, to advance palpably towards the walls, were
shaped before him; and beneath, the river wound, snake-like, about the town,
swimming to the flood and glowing in its still pools like molten brass. And as
the water mirrored the afterglow and sent ripples and gouts of blood against
the shuddering reeds, there came suddenly the piercing trumpet-call, the loud
reiterated summons that rose and fell, that called and recalled, echoing
through all the valley, crying to the dead as the last note rang. It summoned
the legion from the river and the graves and the battlefield, the host floated
up from the sea, the centuries swarmed about the eagles, the array was set for
the last great battle, behind the leaguer of the mist.</p>
<p>He could imagine himself still wandering through the dim unknown, terrible
country, gazing affrighted at the hills and woods that seemed to have put on an
unearthly shape, stumbling amongst the briars that caught his feet. He lost his
way in a wild country, and the red light that blazed up from the furnace on the
mountains only showed him a mysterious land, in which he strayed aghast, with
the sense of doom weighing upon him. The dry mutter of the trees, the sound of
an unseen brook, made him afraid as if the earth spoke of his sin, and
presently he was fleeing through a desolate shadowy wood, where a pale light
flowed from the mouldering stumps, a dream of light that shed a ghostly
radiance.</p>
<p>And then again the dark summit of the Roman fort, the black sheer height rising
above the valley, and the moonfire streaming around the ring of oaks, glowing
about the green bastions that guarded the thicket and the inner place.</p>
<p>The room in which he sat appeared the vision, the trouble of the wind and rain
without was but illusion, the noise of the waves in the seashell. Passion and
tears and adoration and the glories of the summer night returned, and the calm
sweet face of the woman appeared, and he thrilled at the soft touch of her hand
on his flesh.</p>
<p>She shone as if she had floated down into the lane from the moon that swam
between films of cloud above the black circle of the oaks. She led him away
from all terror and despair and hate, and gave herself to him with rapture,
showing him love, kissing his tears away, pillowing his cheek upon her breast.</p>
<p>His lips dwelt on her lips, his mouth upon the breath of her mouth, her arms
were strained about him, and oh! she charmed him with her voice, with sweet
kind words, as she offered her sacrifice. How her scented hair fell down, and
floated over his eyes, and there was a marvelous fire called the moon, and her
lips were aflame, and her eyes shone like a light on the hills.</p>
<p>All beautiful womanhood had come to him in the lane. Love had touched him in
the dusk and had flown away, but he had seen the splendor and the glory, and
his eyes had seen the enchanted light.</p>
<p class="center">
AVE ATQUE VALE</p>
<p>The old words sounded in his ears like the ending of a chant, and he heard the
music’s close. Once only in his weary hapless life, once the world had
passed away, and he had known her, the dear, dear Annie, the symbol of all
mystic womanhood.</p>
<p>The heaviness of languor still oppressed him, holding him back amongst these
old memories, so that he could not stir from his place. Oddly, there seemed
something unaccustomed about the darkness of the room, as if the shadows he had
summoned had changed the aspect of the walls. He was conscious that on this
night he was not altogether himself; fatigue, and the weariness of sleep, and
the waking vision had perplexed him. He remembered how once or twice when he
was a little boy startled by an uneasy dream, and had stared with a frightened
gaze into nothingness, not knowing where he was, all trembling, and breathing
quick, till he touched the rail of his bed, and the familiar outlines of the
looking-glass and the chiffonier began to glimmer out of the gloom. So now he
touched the pile of manuscript and the desk at which he had worked so many
hours, and felt reassured, though he smiled at himself, and he felt the old
childish dread, the longing to cry out for some one to bring a candle, and show
him that he really was in his own room. He glanced up for an instant, expecting
to see perhaps the glitter of the brass gas jet that was fixed on the wall,
just beside his bureau, but it was too dark, and he could not rouse himself and
make the effort that would drive the cloud and the muttering thoughts away.</p>
<p>He leant back again, picturing the wet street without, the rain driving like
fountain spray about the gas lamp, the shrilling of the wind on those waste
places to the north. It was strange how in the brick and stucco desert where no
trees were, he all the time imagined the noise of tossing boughs, the grinding
of the boughs together. There was a great storm and tumult in this wilderness
of London, and for the sound of the rain and the wind he could not hear the hum
and jangle of the trams, and the jar and shriek of the garden gates as they
opened and shut. But he could imagine his street, the rain-swept desolate curve
of it, as it turned northward, and beyond the empty suburban roads, the
twinkling villa windows, the ruined field, the broken lane, and then yet
another suburb rising, a solitary gas-lamp glimmering at a corner, and the
plane tree lashing its boughs, and driving great showers against the glass.</p>
<p>It was wonderful to think of. For when these remote roads were ended one dipped
down the hill into the open country, into the dim world beyond the glint of
friendly fires. Tonight, how waste they were, these wet roads, edged with the
red-brick houses, with shrubs whipped by the wind against one another, against
the paling and the wall. There the wind swayed the great elms scattered on the
sidewalk, the remnants of the old stately fields, and beneath each tree was a
pool of wet, and a torment of raindrops fell with every gust. And one passed
through the red avenues, perhaps by a little settlement of flickering shops,
and passed the last sentinel wavering lamp, and the road became a ragged lane,
and the storm screamed from hedge to hedge across the open fields. And then,
beyond, one touched again upon a still remoter avant-garde of London, an island
amidst the darkness, surrounded by its pale of twinkling, starry lights.</p>
<p>He remembered his wanderings amongst these outposts of the town, and thought
how desolate all their ways must be tonight. They were solitary in wet and
wind, and only at long intervals some one pattered and hurried along them,
bending his eyes down to escape the drift of rain. Within the villas, behind
the close-drawn curtains, they drew about the fire, and wondered at the
violence of the storm, listening for each great gust as it gathered far away,
and rocked the trees, and at last rushed with a huge shock against their walls
as if it were the coming of the sea. He thought of himself walking, as he had
often walked, from lamp to lamp on such a night, treasuring his lonely
thoughts, and weighing the hard task awaiting him in his room. Often in the
evening, after a long day’s labour, he had thrown down his pen in utter
listlessness, feeling that he could struggle no more with ideas and words, and
he had gone out into driving rain and darkness, seeking the word of the enigma
as he tramped on and on beneath these outer battlements of London.</p>
<p>Or on some grey afternoon in March or November he had sickened of the dull
monotony and the stagnant life that he saw from his window, and had taken his
design with him to the lonely places, halting now and again by a gate, and
pausing in the shelter of a hedge through which the austere wind shivered,
while, perhaps, he dreamed of Sicily, or of sunlight on the Provençal olives.
Often as he strayed solitary from street to field, and passed the Syrian fig
tree imprisoned in Britain, nailed to an ungenial wall, the solution of the
puzzle became evident, and he laughed and hurried home eager to make the page
speak, to note the song he had heard on his way.</p>
<p>Sometimes he had spent many hours treading this edge and brim of London, now
lost amidst the dun fields, watching the bushes shaken by the wind, and now
looking down from a height whence he could see the dim waves of the town, and a
barbaric water tower rising from a hill, and the snuff-coloured cloud of smoke
that seemed blown up from the streets into the sky.</p>
<p>There were certain ways and places that he had cherished; he loved a great old
common that stood on high ground, curtained about with ancient spacious houses
of red brick, and their cedarn gardens. And there was on the road that led to
this common a space of ragged uneven ground with a pool and a twisted oak, and
here he had often stayed in autumn and looked across the mist and the valley at
the great theatre of the sunset, where a red cloud like a charging knight shone
and conquered a purple dragon shape, and golden lances glittered in a field of
faerie green.</p>
<p>Or sometimes, when the unending prospect of trim, monotonous, modern streets
had wearied him, he had found an immense refreshment in the discovery of a
forgotten hamlet, left in a hollow, while all new London pressed and surged on
every side, threatening the rest of the red roofs with its vulgar growth. These
little peaceful houses, huddled together beneath the shelter of trees, with
their bulging leaded windows and uneven roofs, somehow brought back to him the
sense of the country, and soothed him with the thought of the old farm-houses,
white or grey, the homes of quiet lives, harbors where, perhaps, no tormenting
thoughts ever broke in.</p>
<p>For he had instinctively determined that there was neither rest nor health in
all the arid waste of streets about him. It seemed as if in those dull rows of
dwellings, in the prim new villas, red and white and staring, there must be a
leaven working which transformed all to base vulgarity. Beneath the dull sad
slates, behind the blistered doors, love turned to squalid intrigue, mirth to
drunken clamor, and the mystery of life became a common thing; religion was
sought for in the greasy piety and flatulent oratory of the Independent chapel,
the stuccoed nightmare of the Doric columns. Nothing fine, nothing rare,
nothing exquisite, it seemed, could exist in the weltering suburban sea, in the
habitations which had risen from the stench and slime of the brickfields. It
was as if the sickening fumes that steamed from the burning bricks had been
sublimed into the shape of houses, and those who lived in these grey places
could also claim kinship with the putrid mud.</p>
<p>Hence he had delighted in the few remains of the past that he could find still
surviving on the suburb’s edge, in the grave old houses that stood apart
from the road, in the mouldering taverns of the eighteenth century, in the
huddled hamlets that had preserved only the glow and the sunlight of all the
years that had passed over them. It appeared to him that vulgarity and
greasiness and squalor had come with a flood, that not only the good but also
the evil in man’s heart had been made common and ugly, that a sordid scum
was mingled with all the springs, of death as of life. It would be alike futile
to search amongst these mean two-storied houses for a splendid sinner as for a
splendid saint; the very vices of these people smelt of cabbage water and a
pothouse vomit.</p>
<p>And so he had often fled away from the serried maze that encircled him, seeking
for the old and worn and significant as an antiquary looks for the fragments of
the Roman temple amidst the modern shops. In some way the gusts of wind and the
beating rain of the night reminded him of an old house that had often attracted
him with a strange indefinable curiosity. He had found it on a grim grey day in
March, when he had gone out under a leaden-moulded sky, cowering from a dry
freezing wind that brought with it the gloom and the doom of far unhappy
Siberian plains. More than ever that day the suburb had oppressed him;
insignificant, detestable, repulsive to body and mind, it was the only hell
that a vulgar age could conceive or make, an inferno created not by Dante but
by the jerry-builder. He had gone out to the north, and when he lifted up his
eyes again he found that he had chanced to turn up by one of the little lanes
that still strayed across the broken fields. He had never chosen this path
before because the lane at its outlet was so wholly degraded and offensive,
littered with rusty tins and broken crockery, and hedged in with a paling
fashioned out of scraps of wire, rotting timber, and bending worn-out rails.
But on this day, by happy chance, he had fled from the high road by the first
opening that offered, and he no longer groped his way amongst obscene refuse,
sickened by the bloated bodies of dead dogs, and fetid odours from unclean
decay, but the malpassage had become a peaceful winding lane, with warm shelter
beneath its banks from the dismal wind. For a mile he had walked quietly, and
then a turn in the road showed him a little glen or hollow, watered by such a
tiny rushing brooklet as his own woods knew, and beyond, alas, the glaring
foreguard of a “new neighborhood”; raw red villas, semi-detached,
and then a row of lamentable shops.</p>
<p>But as he was about to turn back, in the hope of finding some other outlet, his
attention was charmed by a small house that stood back a little from the road
on his right hand. There had been a white gate, but the paint had long faded to
grey and black, and the wood crumbled under the touch, and only moss marked out
the lines of the drive. The iron railing round the lawn had fallen, and the
poor flower-beds were choked with grass and a faded growth of weeds. But here
and there a rosebush lingered amidst suckers that had sprung grossly from the
root, and on each side of the hall door were box trees, untrimmed, ragged, but
still green. The slate roof was all stained and livid, blotched with the
drippings of a great elm that stood at one corner of the neglected lawn, and
marks of damp and decay were thick on the uneven walls, which had been washed
yellow many years before. There was a porch of trellis work before the door,
and Lucian had seen it rock in the wind, swaying as if every gust must drive it
down. There were two windows on the ground floor, one on each side of the door,
and two above, with a blind space where a central window had been blocked up.</p>
<p>This poor and desolate house had fascinated him. Ancient and poor and fallen,
disfigured by the slate roof and the yellow wash that had replaced the old
mellow dipping tiles and the warm red walls, and disfigured again by spots and
patches of decay; it seemed as if its happy days were for ever ended. To Lucian
it appealed with a sense of doom and horror; the black streaks that crept upon
the walls, and the green drift upon the roof, appeared not so much the work of
foul weather and dripping boughs, as the outward signs of evil working and
creeping in the lives of those within.</p>
<p>The stage seemed to him decked for doom, painted with the symbols of tragedy;
and he wondered as he looked whether any one were so unhappy as to live there
still. There were torn blinds in the windows, but he had asked himself who
could be so brave as to sit in that room, darkened by the dreary box, and
listen of winter nights to the rain upon the window, and the moaning of wind
amongst the tossing boughs that beat against the roof.</p>
<p>He could not imagine that any chamber in such a house was habitable. Here the
dead had lain, through the white blind the thin light had filtered on the rigid
mouth, and still the floor must be wet with tears and still that great rocking
elm echoed the groaning and the sobs of those who watched. No doubt, the damp
was rising, and the odour of the earth filled the house, and made such as
entered draw back, foreseeing the hour of death.</p>
<p>Often the thought of this strange old house had haunted him; he had imagined
the empty rooms where a heavy paper peeled from the walls and hung in dark
strips; and he could not believe that a light ever shone from those windows
that stared black and glittering on the neglected lawn. But tonight the wet and
the storm seemed curiously to bring the image of the place before him, and as
the wind sounded he thought how unhappy those must be, if any there were, who
sat in the musty chambers by a flickering light, and listened to the elm-tree
moaning and beating and weeping on the walls.</p>
<p>And tonight was Saturday night; and there was about that phrase something that
muttered of the condemned cell, of the agony of a doomed man. Ghastly to his
eyes was the conception of any one sitting in that room to the right of the
door behind the larger box tree, where the wall was cracked above the window
and smeared with a black stain in an ugly shape.</p>
<p>He knew how foolish it had been in the first place to trouble his mind with
such conceits of a dreary cottage on the outskirts of London. And it was more
foolish now to meditate these things, fantasies, feigned forms, the issue of a
sad mood and a bleak day of spring. For soon, in a few moments, he was to rise
to a new life. He was but reckoning up the account of his past, and when the
light came he was to think no more of sorrow and heaviness, of real or imagined
terrors. He had stayed too long in London, and he would once more taste the
breath of the hills, and see the river winding in the long lovely valley; ah!
he would go home.</p>
<p>Something like a thrill, the thrill of fear, passed over him as he remembered
that there was no home. It was in the winter, a year and a half after his
arrival in town, that he had suffered the loss of his father. He lay for many
days prostrate, overwhelmed with sorrow and with the thought that now indeed he
was utterly alone in the world. Miss Deacon was to live with another cousin in
Yorkshire; the old home was at last ended and done. He felt sorry that he had
not written more frequently to his father: there were things in his
cousin’s letters that had made his heart sore. “Your poor father
was always looking for your letters,” she wrote, “they used to
cheer him so much. He nearly broke down when you sent him that money last
Christmas; he got it into his head that you were starving yourself to send it
him. He was hoping so much that you would have come down this Christmas, and
kept asking me about the plum-puddings months ago.”</p>
<p>It was not only his father that had died, but with him the last strong link was
broken, and the past life, the days of his boyhood, grew faint as a dream. With
his father his mother died again, and the long years died, the time of his
innocence, the memory of affection. He was sorry that his letters had gone home
so rarely; it hurt him to imagine his father looking out when the post came in
the morning, and forced to be sad because there was nothing. But he had never
thought that his father valued the few lines that he wrote, and indeed it was
often difficult to know what to say. It would have been useless to write of
those agonizing nights when the pen seemed an awkward and outlandish
instrument, when every effort ended in shameful defeat, or of the happier hours
when at last wonder appeared and the line glowed, crowned and exalted. To poor
Mr. Taylor such tales would have seemed but trivial histories of some Oriental
game, like an odd story from a land where men have time for the infinitely
little, and can seriously make a science of arranging blossoms in a jar, and
discuss perfumes instead of politics. It would have been useless to write to
the rectory of his only interest, and so he wrote seldom.</p>
<p>And then he had been sorry because he could never write again and never see his
home. He had wondered whether he would have gone down to the old place at
Christmas, if his father had lived. It was curious how common things evoked the
bitterest griefs, but his father’s anxiety that the plum-pudding should
be good, and ready for him, had brought the tears into his eyes. He could hear
him saying in a nervous voice that attempted to be cheerful: “I suppose
you will be thinking of the Christmas puddings soon, Jane; you remember how
fond Lucian used to be of plum-pudding. I hope we shall see him this
December.” No doubt poor Miss Deacon paled with rage at the suggestion
that she should make Christmas pudding in July; and returned a sharp answer;
but it was pathetic. The wind wailed, and the rain dashed and beat again and
again upon the window. He imagined that all his thoughts of home, of the old
rectory amongst the elms, had conjured into his mind the sound of the storm
upon the trees, for, tonight, very clearly he heard the creaking of the boughs,
the noise of boughs moaning and beating and weeping on the walls, and even a
pattering of wet, on wet earth, as if there were a shrub near the window that
shook off the raindrops, before the gust.</p>
<p>That thrill, as it were a shudder of fear, passed over him again, and he knew
not what had made him afraid. There were some dark shadow on his mind that
saddened him; it seemed as if a vague memory of terrible days hung like a cloud
over his thought, but it was all indefinite, perhaps the last grim and ragged
edge of the melancholy wrack that had swelled over his life and the bygone
years. He shivered and tried to rouse himself and drive away the sense of dread
and shame that seemed so real and so awful, and yet he could not grasp it. But
the torpor of sleep, the burden of the work that he had ended a few hours
before, still weighed down his limb and bound his thoughts. He could scarcely
believe that he had been busy at his desk a little while ago, and that just
before the winter day closed it and the rain began to fall he had laid down the
pen with a sigh of relief, and had slept in his chair. It was rather as if he
had slumbered deeply through a long and weary night, as if an awful vision of
flame and darkness and the worm that dieth not had come to him sleeping. But he
would dwell no more on the darkness; he went back to the early days in London
when he had said farewell to the hills and to the waterpools, and had set to
work in this little room in the dingy street.</p>
<p>How he had toiled and laboured at the desk before him! He had put away the old
wild hopes of the masterpiece conceived and executed in a fury of inspiration,
wrought out in one white heat of creative joy; it was enough if by dint of long
perseverance and singleness of desire he could at last, in pain and agony and
despair, after failure and disappointment and effort constantly renewed,
fashion something of which he need not be ashamed. He had put himself to school
again, and had, with what patience he could command, ground his teeth into the
rudiments, resolved that at last he would test out the heart of the mystery.
They were good nights to remember, these; he was glad to think of the little
ugly room, with its silly wall-paper and its “bird’s-eye”
furniture, lighted up, while he sat at the bureau and wrote on into the cold
stillness of the London morning, when the flickering lamplight and the daystar
shone together. It was an interminable labour, and he had always known it to be
as hopeless as alchemy. The gold, the great and glowing masterpiece, would
never shine amongst the dead ashes and smoking efforts of the crucible, but in
the course of the life, in the interval between the failures, he might possibly
discover curious things.</p>
<p>These were the good nights that he could look back on without any fear or
shame, when he had been happy and content on a diet of bread and tea and
tobacco, and could hear of some imbecility passing into its hundredth thousand,
and laugh cheerfully—if only that last page had been imagined aright, if
the phrases noted in the still hours rang out their music when he read them in
the morning. He remembered the drolleries and fantasies that the worthy Miss
Deacon used to write to him, and how he had grinned at her words of reproof,
admonition, and advice. She had once instigated Dolly <i>fils</i> to pay him a
visit, and that young prop of respectability had talked about the extraordinary
running of Bolter at the Scurragh meeting in Ireland; and then, glancing at
Lucian’s books, had inquired whether any of them had “warm
bits.” He had been kind though patronizing, and seemed to have moved
freely in the most brilliant society of Stoke Newington. He had not been able
to give any information as to the present condition of Edgar Allan Poe’s
old school. It appeared eventually that his report at home had not been a very
favorable one, for no invitation to high tea had followed, as Miss Deacon had
hoped. The Dollys knew many nice people, who were well off, and Lucian’s
cousin, as she afterwards said, had done <i>her</i> best to introduce him to
the <i>beau monde</i> of those northern suburbs.</p>
<p>But after the visit of the young Dolly, with what joy he had returned to the
treasures which he had concealed from profane eyes. He had looked out and seen
his visitor on board the tram at the street corner, and he laughed out loud,
and locked his door. There had been moments when he was lonely, and wished to
hear again the sound of friendly speech, but, after such an irruption of
suburban futility, it was a keen delight, to feel that he was secure on his
tower, that he could absorb himself in his wonderful task as safe and silent as
if he were in mid-desert.</p>
<p>But there was one period that he dared not revive; he could not bear to think
of those weeks of desolation and terror in the winter after his coming to
London. His mind was sluggish, and he could not quite remember how many years
had passed since that dismal experience; it sounded all an old story, but yet
it was still vivid, a flaming scroll of terror from which he turned his eyes
away. One awful scene glowed into his memory, and he could not shut out the
sight of an orgy, of dusky figures whirling in a ring, of lurid naphtha flares
blazing in the darkness, of great glittering lamps, like infernal thuribles,
very slowly swaying in a violent blast of air. And there was something else,
something which he could not remember, but it filled him with terror, but it
slunk in the dark places of his soul, as a wild beast crouches in the depths of
a cave.</p>
<p>Again, and without reason, he began to image to himself that old mouldering
house in the field. With what a loud incessant noise the wind must be clamoring
about on this fearful night, how the great elm swayed and cried in the storm,
and the rain dashed and pattered on the windows, and dripped on the sodden
earth from the shaking shrubs beside the door. He moved uneasily on his chair,
and struggled to put the picture out of his thoughts; but in spite of himself
he saw the stained uneven walls, that ugly blot of mildew above the window, and
perhaps a feeble gleam of light filtered through the blind, and some one,
unhappy above all and for ever lost, sat within the dismal room. Or rather,
every window was black, without a glimmer of hope, and he who was shut in thick
darkness heard the wind and the rain, and the noise of the elm-tree moaning and
beating and weeping on the walls.</p>
<p>For all his effort the impression would not leave him, and as he sat before his
desk looking into the vague darkness he could almost see that chamber which he
had so often imagined; the low whitewashed ceiling held up by a heavy beam, the
smears of smoke and long usage, the cracks and fissures of the plaster. Old
furniture, shabby, deplorable, battered, stood about the room; there was a
horsehair sofa worn and tottering, and a dismal paper, patterned in a livid
red, blackened and mouldered near the floor, and peeled off and hung in strips
from the dank walls. And there was that odour of decay, of the rank soil
steaming, of rotting wood, a vapor that choked the breath and made the heart
full of fear and heaviness.</p>
<p>Lucian again shivered with a thrill of dread; he was afraid that he had
overworked himself and that he was suffering from the first symptoms of grave
illness. His mind dwelt on confused and terrible recollections, and with a mad
ingenuity gave form and substance to phantoms; and even now he drew a long
breath, almost imagining that the air in his room was heavy and noisome, that
it entered his nostrils with some taint of the crypt. And his body was still
languid, and though he made a half motion to rise he could not find enough
energy for the effort, and he sank again into the chair. At all events, he
would think no more of that sad house in the field; he would return to those
long struggles with letters, to the happy nights when he had gained victories.</p>
<p>He remembered something of his escape from the desolation and the worse than
desolation that had obsessed him during that first winter in London. He had
gone free one bleak morning in February, and after those dreary terrible weeks
the desk and the heap and litter of papers had once more engulfed and absorbed
him. And in the succeeding summer, of a night when he lay awake and listened to
the birds, shining images came wantonly to him. For an hour, while the dawn
brightened, he had felt the presence of an age, the resurrection of the life
that the green fields had hidden, and his heart stirred for joy when he knew
that he held and possessed all the loveliness that had so long mouldered. He
could scarcely fall asleep for eager and leaping thoughts, and as soon as his
breakfast was over he went out and bought paper and pens of a certain celestial
stationer in Notting Hill. The street was not changed as he passed to and fro
on his errand. The rattling wagons jostled by at intervals, a rare hansom came
spinning down from London, there sounded the same hum and jangle of the gliding
trams. The languid life of the pavement was unaltered; a few people,
un-classed, without salience or possible description, lounged and walked from
east to west, and from west to east, or slowly dropped into the byways to
wander in the black waste to the north, or perhaps go astray in the systems
that stretched towards the river. He glanced down these by-roads as he passed,
and was astonished, as always, at their mysterious and desert aspect. Some were
utterly empty; lines of neat, appalling residences, trim and garnished as if
for occupation, edging the white glaring road; and not a soul was abroad, and
not a sound broke their stillness. It was a picture of the desolation of
midnight lighted up, but empty and waste as the most profound and solemn hours
before the day. Other of these by-roads, of older settlement, were furnished
with more important houses, standing far back from the pavement, each in a
little wood of greenery, and thus one might look down as through a forest
vista, and see a way smooth and guarded with low walls and yet untrodden, and
all a leafy silence. Here and there in some of these echoing roads a figure
seemed lazily advancing in the distance, hesitating and delaying, as if lost in
the labyrinth. It was difficult to say which were the more dismal, these
deserted streets that wandered away to right and left, or the great main
thoroughfare with its narcotic and shadowy life. For the latter appeared vast,
interminable, grey, and those who traveled by it were scarcely real, the bodies
of the living, but rather the uncertain and misty shapes that come and go
across the desert in an Eastern tale, when men look up from the sand and see a
caravan pass them, all in silence, without a cry or a greeting. So they passed
and repassed each other on those pavements, appearing and vanishing, each
intent on his own secret, and wrapped in obscurity. One might have sworn that
not a man saw his neighbor who met him or jostled him, that here every one was
a phantom for the other, though the lines of their paths crossed and recrossed,
and their eyes stared like the eyes of live men. When two went by together,
they mumbled and cast distrustful glances behind them as though afraid all the
world was an enemy, and the pattering of feet was like the noise of a shower of
rain. Curious appearances and simulations of life gathered at points in the
road, for at intervals the villas ended and shops began in a dismal row, and
looked so hopeless that one wondered who could buy. There were women fluttering
uneasily about the greengrocers, and shabby things in rusty black touched and
retouched the red lumps that an unshaven butcher offered, and already in the
corner public there was a confused noise, with a tossing of voices that rose
and fell like a Jewish chant, with the senseless stir of marionettes jerked
into an imitation of gaiety. Then, in crossing a side street that seemed like
grey mid-winter in stone, he trespassed from one world to another, for an old
decayed house amidst its garden held the opposite corner. The laurels had grown
into black skeletons, patched with green drift, the ilex gloomed over the
porch, the deodar had blighted the flower-beds. Dark ivies swarmed over an
elm-tree, and a brown clustering fungus sprang in gross masses on the lawn,
showing where the roots of dead trees mouldered. The blue verandah, the blue
balcony over the door, had faded to grey, and the stucco was blotched with ugly
marks of weather, and a dank smell of decay, that vapor of black rotten earth
in old town gardens, hung heavy about the gates. And then a row of musty villas
had pushed out in shops to the pavement, and the things in faded black buzzed
and stirred about the limp cabbages, and the red lumps of meat.</p>
<p>It was the same terrible street, whose pavements he had trodden so often, where
sunshine seemed but a gaudy light, where the fume of burning bricks always
drifted. On black winter nights he had seen the sparse lights glimmering
through the rain and drawing close together, as the dreary road vanished in
long perspective. Perhaps this was its most appropriate moment, when nothing of
its smug villas and skeleton shops remained but the bright patches of their
windows, when the old house amongst its mouldering shrubs was but a dark cloud,
and the streets to the north and south seemed like starry wastes, beyond them
the blackness of infinity. Always in the daylight it had been to him abhorred
and abominable, and its grey houses and purlieus had been fungus-like
sproutings, an efflorescence of horrible decay.</p>
<p>But on that bright morning neither the dreadful street nor those who moved
about it appalled him. He returned joyously to his den, and reverently laid out
the paper on his desk. The world about him was but a grey shadow hovering on a
shining wall; its noises were faint as the rustling of trees in a distant wood.
The lovely and exquisite forms of those who served the Amber Venus were his
distinct, clear, and manifest visions, and for one amongst them who came to him
in a fire of bronze hair his heart stirred with the adoration of love. She it
was who stood forth from all the rest and fell down prostrate before the
radiant form in amber, drawing out her pins in curious gold, her glowing
brooches of enamel, and pouring from a silver box all her treasures of jewels
and precious stones, chrysoberyl and sardonyx, opal and diamond, topaz and
pearl. And then she stripped from her body her precious robes and stood before
the goddess in the glowing mist of her hair, praying that to her who had given
all and came naked to the shrine, love might be given, and the grace of Venus.
And when at last, after strange adventures, her prayer was granted, then when
the sweet light came from the sea, and her lover turned at dawn to that bronze
glory, he saw beside him a little statuette of amber. And in the shrine, far in
Britain where the black rains stained the marble, they found the splendid and
sumptuous statue of the Golden Venus, the last fine robe of silk that the lady
had dedicated falling from her fingers, and the jewels lying at her feet. And
her face was like the lady’s face when the sun had brightened it on that
day of her devotion.</p>
<p>The bronze mist glimmered before Lucian’s eyes; he felt as though the
soft floating hair touched his forehead and his lips and his hands. The fume of
burning bricks, the reek of cabbage water, never reached his nostrils that were
filled with the perfume of rare unguents, with the breath of the violet sea in
Italy. His pleasure was an inebriation, an ecstasy of joy that destroyed all
the vile Hottentot kraals and mud avenues as with one white lightning flash,
and through the hours of that day he sat enthralled, not contriving a story
with patient art, but rapt into another time, and entranced by the urgent gleam
in the lady’s eyes.</p>
<p>The little tale of <i>The Amber Statuette</i> had at last issued from a humble
office in the spring after his father’s death. The author was utterly
unknown; the author’s Murray was a wholesale stationer and printer in
process of development, so that Lucian was astonished when the book became a
moderate success. The reviewers had been sadly irritated, and even now he
recollected with cheerfulness an article in an influential daily paper, an
article pleasantly headed: “Where are the disinfectants?”</p>
<p>And then—but all the months afterwards seemed doubtful, there were only
broken revelations of the labourious hours renewed, and the white nights when he
had seen the moonlight fade and the gaslight grow wan at the approach of dawn.</p>
<p>He listened. Surely that was the sound of rain falling on sodden ground, the
heavy sound of great swollen drops driven down from wet leaves by the gust of
wind, and then again the strain of boughs sang above the tumult of the air;
there was a doleful noise as if the storm shook the masts of a ship. He had
only to get up and look out of the window and he would see the treeless empty
street, and the rain starring the puddles under the gas-lamp, but he would wait
a little while.</p>
<p>He tried to think why, in spite of all his resolutions, a dark horror seemed to
brood more and more over all his mind. How often he had sat and worked on just
such nights as this, contented if the words were in accord though the wind
might wail, though the air were black with rain. Even about the little book
that he had made there seemed some taint, some shuddering memory that came to
him across the gulf of forgetfulness. Somehow the remembrance of the offering
to Venus, of the phrases that he had so lovingly invented, brought back again
the dusky figures that danced in the orgy, beneath the brassy glittering lamps;
and again the naphtha flares showed the way to the sad house in the fields, and
the red glare lit up the mildewed walls and the black hopeless windows. He
gasped for breath, he seemed to inhale a heavy air that reeked of decay and
rottenness, and the odour of the clay was in his nostrils.</p>
<p>That unknown cloud that had darkened his thoughts grew blacker and engulfed
him, despair was heavy upon him, his heart fainted with a horrible dread. In a
moment, it seemed, a veil would be drawn away and certain awful things would
appear.</p>
<p>He strove to rise from his chair, to cry out, but he could not. Deep, deep the
darkness closed upon him, and the storm sounded far away. The Roman fort surged
up, terrific, and he saw the writhing boughs in a ring, and behind them a glow
and heat of fire. There were hideous shapes that swarmed in the thicket of the
oaks; they called and beckoned to him, and rose into the air, into the flame
that was smitten from heaven about the walls. And amongst them was the form of
the beloved, but jets of flame issued from her breasts, and beside her was a
horrible old woman, naked; and they, too, summoned him to mount the hill.</p>
<p>He heard Dr. Burrows whispering of the strange things that had been found in
old Mrs. Gibbon’s cottage, obscene figures, and unknown contrivances. She
was a witch, he said, and the mistress of witches.</p>
<p>He fought against the nightmare, against the illusion that bewildered him. All
his life, he thought, had been an evil dream, and for the common world he had
fashioned an unreal red garment, that burned in his eyes. Truth and the dream
were so mingled that now he could not divide one from the other. He had let
Annie drink his soul beneath the hill, on the night when the moonfire shone,
but he had not surely seen her exalted in the flame, the Queen of the Sabbath.
Dimly he remembered Dr. Burrows coming to see him in London, but had he not
imagined all the rest?</p>
<p>Again he found himself in the dusky lane, and Annie floated down to him from
the moon above the hill. His head sank upon her breast again, but, alas, it was
aflame. And he looked down, and he saw that his own flesh was aflame, and he
knew that the fire could never be quenched.</p>
<p>There was a heavy weight upon his head, his feet were nailed to the floor, and
his arms bound tight beside him. He seemed to himself to rage and struggle with
the strength of a madman; but his hand only stirred and quivered a little as it
lay upon the desk.</p>
<p>Again he was astray in the mist; wandering through the waste avenues of a city
that had been ruined from ages. It had been splendid as Rome, terrible as
Babylon, and for ever the darkness had covered it, and it lay desolate for ever
in the accursed plain. And far and far the grey passages stretched into the
night, into the icy fields, into the place of eternal gloom.</p>
<p>Ring within ring the awful temple closed around him; unending circles of vast
stones, circle within circle, and every circle less throughout all ages. In the
center was the sanctuary of the infernal rite, and he was borne thither as in
the eddies of a whirlpool, to consummate his ruin, to celebrate the wedding of
the Sabbath. He flung up his arms and beat the air, resisting with all his
strength, with muscles that could throw down mountains; and this time his
little finger stirred for an instant, and his foot twitched upon the floor.</p>
<p>Then suddenly a flaring street shone before him. There was darkness round about
him, but it flamed with hissing jets of light and naphtha fires, and great
glittering lamps swayed very slowly in a violent blast of air. A horrible
music, and the exultation of discordant voices, swelled in his ears, and he saw
an uncertain tossing crowd of dusky figures that circled and leapt before him.
There was a noise like the chant of the lost, and then there appeared in the
midst of the orgy, beneath a red flame, the figure of a woman. Her bronze hair
and flushed cheeks were illuminate, and an argent light shone from her eyes,
and with a smile that froze his heart her lips opened to speak to him. The
tossing crowd faded away, falling into a gulf of darkness, and then she drew
out from her hair pins of curious gold, and glowing brooches in enamel, and
poured out jewels before him from a silver box, and then she stripped from her
body her precious robes, and stood in the glowing mist of her hair, and held
out her arms to him. But he raised his eyes and saw the mould and decay gaining
on the walls of a dismal room, and a gloomy paper was dropping to the rotting
floor. A vapor of the grave entered his nostrils, and he cried out with a loud
scream; but there was only an indistinct guttural murmur in his throat.</p>
<p>And presently the woman fled away from him, and he pursued her. She fled away
before him through midnight country, and he followed after her, chasing her
from thicket to thicket, from valley to valley. And at last he captured her and
won her with horrible caresses, and they went up to celebrate and make the
marriage of the Sabbath. They were within the matted thicket, and they writhed
in the flames, insatiable, for ever. They were tortured, and tortured one
another, in the sight of thousands who gathered thick about them; and their
desire rose up like a black smoke.</p>
<p>Without, the storm swelled to the roaring of an awful sea, the wind grew to a
shrill long scream, the elm-tree was riven and split with the crash of a
thunderclap. To Lucian the tumult and the shock came as a gentle murmur, as if
a brake stirred before a sudden breeze in summer. And then a vast silence
overwhelmed him.</p>
<p class="p2">
A few minutes later there was a shuffling of feet in the passage, and the door
was softly opened. A woman came in, holding a light, and she peered curiously
at the figure sitting quite still in the chair before the desk. The woman was
half dressed, and she had let her splendid bronze hair flow down, her cheeks
were flushed, and as she advanced into the shabby room, the lamp she carried
cast quaking shadows on the mouldering paper, patched with marks of rising damp,
and hanging in strips from the wet, dripping wall. The blind had not been
drawn, but no light or glimmer of light filtered through the window, for a
great straggling box tree that beat the rain upon the panes shut out even the
night. The woman came softly, and as she bent down over Lucian an argent gleam
shone from her brown eyes, and the little curls upon her neck were like golden
work upon marble. She put her hand to his heart, and looked up, and beckoned to
some one who was waiting by the door.</p>
<p>“Come in, Joe,” she said. “It’s just as I thought it
would be: ‘Death by misadventure’;” and she held up a little
empty bottle of dark blue glass that was standing on the desk. “He would
take it, and I always knew he would take a drop too much one of these
days.”</p>
<p>“What’s all those papers that he’s got there?”</p>
<p>“Didn’t I tell you? It was crool to see him. He got it into
’is ’ead he could write a book; he’s been at it for the last
six months. Look ’ere.”</p>
<p>She spread the neat pile of manuscript broadcast over the desk, and took a
sheet at haphazard. It was all covered with illegible hopeless scribblings;
only here and there it was possible to recognize a word.</p>
<p>“Why, nobody could read it, if they wanted to.”</p>
<p>“It’s all like that. He thought it was beautiful. I used to
’ear him jabbering to himself about it, dreadful nonsense it was he used
to talk. I did my best to tongue him out of it, but it wasn’t any
good.”</p>
<p>“He must have been a bit dotty. He’s left you everything.”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“You’ll have to see about the funeral.”</p>
<p>“There’ll be the inquest and all that first.”</p>
<p>“You’ve got evidence to show he took the stuff.”</p>
<p>“Yes, to be sure I have. The doctor told him he would be certain to do
for himself, and he was found two or three times quite silly in the streets.
They had to drag him away from a house in Halden Road. He was carrying on
dreadful, shaking at the gaite, and calling out it was ’is ’ome and
they wouldn’t let him in. I heard Dr. Manning myself tell ’im in
this very room that he’d kill ’imself one of these days. Joe!
Aren’t you ashamed of yourself. I declare you’re quite rude, and
it’s almost Sunday too. Bring the light over here, can’t
you?”</p>
<p>The man took up the blazing paraffin lamp, and set it on the desk, beside the
scattered heap of that terrible manuscript. The flaring light shone through the
dead eyes into the dying brain, and there was a glow within, as if great
furnace doors were opened.</p>
<h5>THE END</h5>
<p class="letter">
Other books by Arthur Machen<br/><br/>
Novels<br/><br/>
The Hill of Dreams<br/>
The Great Return<br/>
The Terror<br/>
The Secret Glory<br/>
The Green Round<br/>
The Great God Pan<br/>
Kings of Horror<br/>
The Chronicle of Clemendy<br/>
The Great God Pan and The Inmost Light<br/>
The Three Imposters<br/>
The House of Souls<br/>
The Angels of Mons, The Bowmen, and Other Legends of the War<br/>
Fantastic Tales or the Way to Attain<br/>
The Shining Pyramid<br/>
The Glorious Mystery<br/>
Ornaments in Jade<br/>
The Children of the Pool and Other Stories<br/>
The Cosy Room and Other Stories<br/>
Holy Terrors<br/>
Tales of Horror and the Supernatural<br/>
Tales of Horror and the Supernatural Volume Two<br/>
The Strange World of Arthur Machen Black Crusade<br/>
The Novel of the Black Seal and Other Stories<br/>
The Novel of the White Powder and Other Stories<br/></p>
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