And he prostrated himself long in prayer: then raised
his head, and said:—
"Despair not in calamities of a gladdening that shall wipe away thy sorrows;
For how many a simoom blows, then turns to a gentle breeze, and is changed!
How many a hateful cloud arises, then passes away, and pours not forth!
And the smoke of the wood, fear is conceived of it, yet no blaze appears from it;
And oft sorrow rises, and straightway sets again.
So be patient when fear assails, for Time is the Father of Wonders;
And hope from the peace of God blessings not to be reckoned!"
How should such a chant as this enter a young
man's heart who felt himself despicable in the sight
of his mistress?
"Should you like a little more?" asked Amaryllis,
in a very gentle tone, now he had obeyed her.
"I would rather not," said Amadis, still hanging
his head.
His days were mixed of honey and wormwood;
sweet because of Amaryllis, absinthe because of his
weakness.
A voice came from the summer-house; Flamma
was shouting an old song, with heavy emphasis
here and there, with big capital letters:—
The jolly old Sun, where goes he at night?
And what does he Do, when he's out of Sight?
All Insinuation Scorning;
I don't mean to Say that he Tipples apace,
I only Know he's a very Red Face
When he gets up in the Morning!
"Haw! Haw! Haw!" laughed Bill Nye, with
his mouth full. "Th' zun do look main red in the
marning, surely."
They heard the front door open and shut; Iden
had come in for his lunch, and, by the sound of the
footsteps, had brought one of his gossips with
him.
At this Mrs. Iden began to ruffle up her feathers
for battle.
Iden came through into the dairy.
"Now, you ain't wanted here," she said. "Poking
your nose into everything. Wonder you don't
help Luce make the beds and sweep the floor!"
"Can I help'ee?" said Iden, soothingly. "Want
any wood for the fire—or anything?"
"As if Luce couldn't fetch the wood—and chop
it, as well as you. Why can't you mind your business?
Here's Bill Nye been waiting these two
hours to see you"—following Iden towards the
sitting-room. "Who have you brought in with
you now? Of course, everybody comes in of a
butter-making morning, just the busiest time!
Oh! it's you! Sit still, Mr. Duck; I don't mind
you. What will you take?"
More ale and cheese here, too; Iden and Jack
Duck sat in the bow-window and went at their
lunch. So soon as they were settled, out flounced
Mrs. Iden into the dairy: "The lazy lot of people
in this house—I never saw anything like it!"
It was true.
There was Alere Flamma singing in the summer-house;
Amadis Iden resting on the form; Amaryllis
standing by him; Bill Nye munching;
Jearje indolently rotating the churn with one hand,
and feeding himself with the other; Luce sitting
down to her lunch in the kitchen; Iden lifting his
mug in the bow-window; Jack Duck with his great
mouth full; eight people—and four little children
trotting down the road with baskets of food.
"The lazy lot of people in this house; I never
saw anything like it."
And that was the beauty of the place, the "Let
us not trouble ourselves;" "a handful in Peace and
Quiet" is better than set banquets; crumbs for
everybody, and for the robin too; "God listens to
those who pray to him. Let us eat, and drink, and
think of nothing;" believe me, the plain plenty,
and the rest, and peace, and sunshine of an old
farmhouse, there is nothing like it in this world!
"I never saw anything like it. Nothing done;
nothing done; the morning gone and nothing done;
and the butter's not come yet!"
Homer is thought much of; now, his heroes are
always eating. They eat all through the Iliad, they
eat at Patroclus' tomb; Ulysses eats a good deal
in the Odyssey: Jupiter eats. They only did at
Coombe-Oaks as was done on Olympus.
CHAPTER XXXIV.
A
MARYLLIS went outside the court,
and waited; Amadis rose and followed
her. "Come a little way into the
Brook-Field," she said.
They left the apple-bloom behind
them, and going down the gravel-path passed the
plum trees—the daffodils there were over now—by
the strawberry patch which Iden had planted under
the parlour window; by the great box-hedge where
a thrush sat on her nest undisturbed, though Amaryllis's
dress brushed the branches; by the espalier
apple, to the little orchard-gate.
The parlour-window—there are no parlours now,
except in old country houses; there were parlours
in the days of Queen Anne; in the modern villas
they have drawing-rooms.
The parlour-window hung over with pear-tree
branches, planted beneath with strawberry; white
blossom above, white flower beneath; birds' nests
in the branches of the pear—that was Iden.
They opened the little orchard-gate which pushed
heavily against the tall meadow-grass growing between
the bars. The path was almost gone—grown
out with grass, and as they moved they left a broad
trail behind them.
Bill Nye the mower, had he seen, would have
muttered to himself; they were trespassing on his
mowing-grass, trampling it, and making it more
difficult to cut.
Her dress swept over the bennets and shook the
thick-stemmed butter-cups—branched like the
golden candlestick, and with flowers of golden flame.
For the burnished petals reflect the sun, and throw
light back into the air.
Amadis began to drag behind—he could not
walk much farther; they sat down together on the
trunk of an oak that had been felled by a gateway
close to the horse-chestnut trees Iden had planted.
Even with his back leaning against a limb of the
oak, Amadis had to partly support himself with his
hands.
What was the use of such a man?—He had
nothing but his absurdly romantic name from Don
Quixote to recommend him.
That was the very thought that gnawed at poor
Amadis's heart as he sat by her side. What use to
care for him?
Iden's flag-basket of tools lay by the gate, it was
a new gate, and he had been fitting it before he
went in to lunch. His basket was of flag because
the substance of the flag is soft, and the tools,
chisels, and so on, laid pleasant in it; he must have
everything right. The new gate was of solid oak,
no "sappy" stuff, real heart of oak, well-seasoned,
without a split, fine, close-grained timber, cut on the
farm, and kept till it was thoroughly fit, genuine
English oak. If you would only consider Iden's
gate you might see there the man.
This gateway was only between two meadows,
and the ordinary farmer, when the old gate wore
out, would have stopped it with a couple of rails, or
a hurdle or two, something very, very cheap and
rough; at most a gate knocked up by the village
carpenter of ash and willow, at the lowest possible
charge.
Iden could not find a carpenter good enough to
make his gate in the hamlet; he sent for one ten
miles, and paid him full carpenter's wages. He
was not satisfied then, he watched the man at his
work to see that the least little detail was done
correctly, till the fellow would have left the job,
had he not been made pliable by the Goliath ale.
So he just stretched the job out as long as he
could, and talked and talked with Iden, and stroked
him the right way, and drank the ale, and "played
it upon me and on William, That day in a way I
despise." Till what with the planing, and shaving,
and smoothing, and morticing, and ale, and time,
it footed up a pretty bill, enough for three commonplace
gates, not of the Iden style.
Why, Iden had put away those pieces of timber
years before for this very purpose, and had watched
the sawyers saw them out at the pit. They would
have made good oak furniture. There was nothing
special or particular about this gateway; he had
done the same in turn for every gateway on the
farm; it was the Iden way.
A splendid gate it was, when it was finished, fit
for a nobleman's Home Park. I doubt, if you
would find such a gate, so well proportioned, and
made of such material on any great estate in the
kingdom. For not even dukes can get an Iden to
look after their property. An Iden is not to be
"picked up," I can tell you.
The neighbourhood round about had always
sneered in the broad country way at Iden's
gates. "Vit for m' Lard's park. What do he
want wi' such geates? A' ain't a got no cattle
to speak on; any ould rail ud do as good as thuck
geat."
The neighbourhood round about could never
understand Iden, never could see why he had gone
to such great trouble to render the homestead
beautiful with trees, why he had re-planted the
orchard with pleasant eating apples in the place of
the old cider apples, hard and sour. "Why
wouldn't thaay a' done for he as well as for we?"
All the acts of Iden seemed to the neighbourhood
to be the acts of a "vool."
When he cut a hedge, for instance, Iden used to
have the great bushes that bore unusually fine May
bloom saved from the billhook, that they might
flower in the spring. So, too, with the crab-apples—for
the sake of the white blossom; so, too, with
the hazel—for the nuts.
But what caused the most "wonderment" was
the planting of the horse-chestnuts in the corner of
the meadow? Whatever did he want with horse-chestnuts?
No other horse-chestnuts grew about
there. You couldn't eat the horse-chestnuts when
they dropped in autumn.
In truth Iden built for all time, and not for the
little circumstance of the hour. His gate was
meant to last for years, rain and shine, to endure
any amount of usage, to be a work of Art in
itself.
His gate as the tangible symbol of his mind—was
at once his strength and his folly. His
strength, for it was such qualities as these that
made Old England famous, and set her on the firm
base whereon she now stands—built for all Time.
His folly, because he made too much of little things,
instead of lifting his mind higher.
If only he could have lived three hundred years
the greater world would have begun to find out
Iden and to idolize him, and make pilgrimages
from over sea to Coombe Oaks, to hear him talk,
for Iden could talk of the trees and grass, and all
that the Earth bears, as if one had conversed face
to face with the great god Pan himself.
But while Iden slumbered with his head against
the panel—think, think, think—this shallow world
of ours, this petty threescore years and ten, was
slipping away. Already Amaryllis had marked
with bitterness at heart the increasing stoop of the
strong back.
Iden was like the great engineer who could
never build a bridge, because he knew so well how
a bridge ought to be built.
"Such a fuss over a mess of a gate," said Mrs.
Iden, "making yourself ridiculous: I believe that
carpenter is just taking advantage of you. Why
can't you go into town and see your father?—it
would be a hundred pounds in your pocket"—as it
would have been, no doubt. If only Mrs. Iden had
gone about her lecture in a pleasanter manner perhaps
he would have taken her advice.
Resting upon the brown timber in the grass
Amaryllis and Amadis could just see a corner of
the old house through the spars of the new gate.
Coombe Oaks was a grown house, if you understand;
a house that had grown in the course of
many generations, not built to set order; it had
grown like a tree that adapts itself to circumstances,
and, therefore, like the tree it was beautiful
to look at. There were windows in deep notches,
between gables where there was no look-out except
at the pears on the wall, awkward windows, quite
bewildering. A workman came to mend one one
day, and could not get at it. "Darned if I ever
seed such a crooked picter of a house!" said
he.
A kingfisher shot across above the golden surface
of the buttercups, straight for the brook,
moving, as it seemed, without wings, so swiftly did
he vibrate them, that only his azure hue was visible,
drawn like a line of peacock blue over the gold.
In the fitness of things Amaryllis ought not to
have been sitting there like this, with Amadis lost
in the sweet summer dream of love.
She ought to have loved and married a Launcelot
du Lake, a hero of the mighty arm, only with
the income of Sir Gorgius Midas: that is the
proper thing.
But the fitness of things never comes to pass—everything
happens in the Turkish manner.
Here was Amaryllis, very strong and full of life,
very, very young and inexperienced, very poor and
without the least expectation whatever (for who
could reconcile the old and the older Iden?), the
daughter of poor and embarrassed parents, whom
she wished and prayed to help in their coming old
age. Here was Amaryllis, full of poetic feeling
and half a painter at heart, full of generous sentiments—what
a nature to be ground down in the
sordidness of married poverty!
Here was Amadis, extremely poor, quite feeble,
and unable to earn a shilling, just talking of seeing
the doctor again about this fearful debility, full too,
as he thought at least, of ideas—what a being to
think of her!
Nothing ever happens in the fitness of things.
If only now he could have regained the health and
strength of six short months ago—if only that,
but you see, he had not even that. He might get
better; true—he might, I have tried 80 drugs and
I am no better, I hope he will.
Could any blundering Sultan in the fatalistic
East have put things together for them with more
utter contempt of fitness? It is all in the
Turkish manner, you see.
There they sat, happier and happier, and
deeper and deeper in love every moment, on the
brown timber in the long grass, their hearts as full
of love as the meadow was of sunshine.
You have heard of the Sun's Golden Cup, in
which after sunset he was carried over Ocean's
stream, while we slumber in the night, to land
again in the East and give us the joy of his rising.
The great Golden Cup in which Hercules, too, was
taken over; it was as if that Cup had been filled to
the brim with the nectar of love and placed at the
lips to drink, inexhaustible.
In the play of Faust—Alere's Faust—Goethe
has put an interlude, an Intermezzo; I shall leave
Amaryllis and Amadis in their Interlude in Heaven.
Let the Play of Human Life, with its sorrows and its
Dread, pause awhile; let Care go aside behind the
wings, let Debt and Poverty unrobe, let Age
stand upright, let Time stop still (oh, Miracle! as
the Sun did in the Vale of Ajalon). Let us leave
our lovers in the Interlude in Heaven.
And as I must leave them (I trust but for a
little while) I will leave them on the brown oak
timber, sap-stain brown, in the sunshine and
dancing shadow of summer, among the long grass
and the wild flowers.
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