No trace
of him has ever been found.
The Marriage of Panurge
It was a dim, hot night; all the great city smoked as with a mist,
and a tawny moon rose through films of cloud far in the vista of the
east. Ambrose thought with a sudden recollection that the moon, that
world of splendour, was shining in a farther land, on the coast of
the wild rocks, on the heaving sea, on the faery apple-garths in
Avalon, where, though the apples are always golden, yet the blossoms
of enchantment never fade, but hang for ever against the sky.
They were passing a half-lit street, and these dreams were broken
by the sudden clanging, rattling music of a piano-organ. For a moment
they saw the shadowy figures of the children as they flitted to and
fro, dancing odd measures in the rhythm of the tune. Then they came
into a long, narrow way with a church spire in the distance, and near
the church they passed the "church-shop"—Roman, evidently, from
the subjects and the treatment of the works of art on view. But it
was strange! In the middle of the window was a crude, glaring statue
of some saint. He was in bright red robes, sprinkled with golden
stars; the blood rained down from a wound in his forehead, and with
one hand he drew the scarlet vestment aside and pointed to the
dreadful gash above his heart, and from this, again, the bloody drops
fell thick. The colours stared and shrieked, and yet, through the
bad, cheap art there seemed to shine a rapture that was very near to
beauty; the thing expressed was so great that it had to a certain
extent overcome the villainy of the expression.
They wandered vaguely, after their custom. Ambrose was silent; he
was thinking of Avalon and "Red Martyrdom" and the Frenchman's
parting salutation, of the vision in one of the old books, "the Man
clothed in a robe redder and more shining than burning fire, and his
feet and his hands and his face were of a like flame, and five angels
in fiery vesture stood about him, and at the feet of the Man the
ground was covered with a ruddy dew."
They passed under an old church tower that rose white in the
moonlight above them. The air had cleared, the mist had floated away,
and now the sky glowed violet, and the white stones of the classic
spire shone on high. From it there came suddenly a tumult of glad
sound, exultant bells in ever-changing order, pealing out as if to
honour some great victory, so that the mirth of the street below
became but a trivial restless noise. He thought of some passage that
he had read but could not distinctly remember: a ship was coming back
to its haven after a weary and tempestuous voyage over many dreadful
seas, and those on board saw the tumult in the city as their sails
were sighted; heard afar the shouts of gladness from the rejoicing
people; heard the bells from all the spires and towers break suddenly
into triumphant chorus, sounding high above the washing of the
waves.
Ambrose roused himself from his dreams. They had been walking in a
circle and had returned almost to the street of the Château,
though, their knowledge of the district being of an unscientific
character, they were under the impression that they were a mile or so
away from that particular point. As it happened, they had not entered
this street before, and they were charmed at the sudden appearance of
stained glass lighted up from within. The colour was rich and good;
there were flourished scrolls and grotesques in the Renaissance
manner, many emblazoned shields in ruby and gold and azure; and the
centre-piece showed the Court of the Beer King—a jovial and
venerable figure attended by a host of dwarfs and kobolds, all
holding on high enormous mugs of beer. They went in boldly and were
glad. It was the famous "Three Kings" in its golden and unreformed
days, but this they knew not. The room was of moderate size, very
low, with great dark beams in the white ceiling. White were the
walls; on the plaster, black-letter texts with vermilion initials
praised the drinker's art, and more kobolds, in black and red, loomed
oddly in unsuspected corners. The lighting, presumably, was gas, but
all that was visible were great antique lanterns depending from iron
hooks, and through their dull green glass only a dim radiance fell
upon the heavy oak tables and the drinkers. From the middle beam an
enormous bouquet of fresh hops hung on high; there was a subdued
murmur of talk, and now and then the clatter of the lid of a mug, as
fresh beer was ordered. In one corner there was a kind of bar; behind
it a couple of grim women—the kobolds
apparently—performed their office; and above, on a sort of
rack, hung mugs and tankards of all sizes and of all fantasies. There
were plain mugs of creamy earthenware, mugs gaudily and oddly painted
with garlanded goats, with hunting scenes, with towering castles,
with flaming posies of flowers. Then some friend of the drunken, some
sage who had pried curiously into the secrets of thirst, had made a
series of wonders in glass, so shining and crystalline that to behold
them was as if one looked into a well, for every glitter of the
facets gave promise of satisfaction. There were the mugs, capacious
and very deep, crowned for the most part not with mere plain lids of
common use and make, but with tall spires in pewter, richly
ornamented, evident survivals from the Middle Ages. Ambrose's eyes
glistened; the place was altogether as he would have designed it.
Nelly, too, was glad to sit down, for they had walked longer than
usual. She was refreshed by a glass of some cool drink with a borage
flower and a cherry floating in it, and Ambrose ordered a mug of
beer.
It is not known how many of these krugs he emptied. It was,
as has been noted, a sultry night, and the streets were dusty, and
that glass of Benedictine after dinner rather evokes than dismisses
the demon of thirst. Still, Munich beer is no hot and rebellious
drink, so the causes of what followed must probably be sought for in
other springs. Ambrose took a deep draught, gazed upward to the
ceiling, and ordered another mug of beer for himself and some more of
the cool and delicate and flowery beverage for Nelly. When the drink
was set upon the board, he thus began, without title or preface:
"You must know, Nelly dear," he said, "that the marriage of
Panurge, which fell out in due time (according to the oracle and
advice of the Holy Bottle), was by no means a fortunate one.
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