Another line that he had quoted came
to her:
The kingdom of I and We forsake, and your home in
annihilation make.
It had seemed at first almost nonsense, if it had been possible
for him to talk nonsense; but now she was thrilled and filled with
the meaning of it. Herself was annihilated; at his bidding she had
destroyed all her old feelings, and emotions, her likes and dislikes,
all the inherited loves and hates that her father and mother had
given her; the old life had been thrown utterly away.
It grew light, and when the dawn burned she fell asleep,
murmuring:
"How say ye that I was lost?"
The Ceremony
From her childhood, from those early and misty days which began to
seem unreal, she recollected the grey stone in the wood.
It was something between the pillar and the pyramid in shape, and
its grey solemnity amidst the leaves and the grass shone and shone
from those early years, always with some hint of wonder. She
remembered how, when she was quite a little girl, she had strayed one
day, on a hot afternoon, from her nurse's side, and only a little way
in the wood the grey stone rose from the grass, and she cried out and
ran back in panic terror.
"What a silly little girl!" the nurse had said. "It's only the
—— stone." She had quite forgotten the name that the
servant had given, and she was always ashamed to ask as she grew
older.
But always that hot day, that burning afternoon of her childhood
when she had first looked consciously on the grey image in the wood,
remained not a memory, but a sensation. The wide wood swelling like
the sea, the tossing of the bright boughs in the sunshine, the sweet
smell of the grass and flowers, the beating of the summer wind upon
her cheek, the gloom of the underglade rich, indistinct, gorgeous,
significant as old tapestry; she could feel it and see it all, and
the scent of it was in her nostrils. And in the midst of the picture,
where strange plants grew gross in shadow, was the old grey shape of
the stone.
But there were in her mind broken remnants of another and far
earlier impression. It was all uncertain, the shadow of a shadow, so
vague that it might well have been a dream that had mingled with the
confused waking thoughts of a little child. She did not know that she
remembered, she rather remembered the memory. But again it was a
summer day, and a woman, perhaps the same nurse, held her in her
arms, and went through the wood. The woman carried bright flowers in
one hand; the dream had in it a glow of bright red, and the perfume
of cottage roses. Then she saw herself put down for a moment on the
grass, and the red colour stained the grim stone, and there was
nothing else—except that one night she woke up and heard the
nurse sobbing.
She often used to think of the strangeness of very early life; one
came, it seemed, from a dark cloud, there was a glow of light, but
for a moment, and afterwards the night. It was as if one gazed at a
velvet curtain, heavy, mysterious, impenetrable blackness, and then,
for the twinkling of an eye, one spied through a pinhole a storied
town that flamed, with fire about its walls and pinnacles. And then
again the folding darkness, so that sight became illusion, almost in
the seeing. So to her was that earliest, doubtful vision of the grey
stone, of the red colour spilled upon it, with the incongruous
episode of the nursemaid, who wept at night.
But the later memory was clear; she could feel, even now, the
inconsequent terror that sent her away shrieking, running to the
nurse's skirts. Afterwards, through the days of girlhood, the stone
had taken its place amongst the vast array of unintelligible things
which haunt every child's imagination. It was part of life, to be
accepted and not questioned; her elders spoke of many things which
she could not understand, she opened books and was dimly amazed, and
in the Bible there were many phrases which seemed strange. Indeed,
she was often puzzled by her parents' conduct, by their looks at one
another, by their half-words, and amongst all these problems which
she hardly recognized as problems, was the grey ancient figure rising
from dark grass.
Some semi-conscious impulse made her haunt the wood where shadow
enshrined the stone. One thing was noticeable: that all through the
summer months the passers-by dropped flowers there. Withered blossoms
were always on the ground, amongst the grass, and on the stone fresh
blooms constantly appeared. From the daffodil to the Michaelmas daisy
there was marked the calendar of the cottage gardens, and in the
winter she had seen sprays of juniper and box, mistletoe and holly.
Once she had been drawn through the bushes by a red glow, as if there
had been a fire in the wood, and when she came to the place, all the
stone shone and all the ground about it was bright with roses.
In her eighteenth year she went one day into the wood, carrying
with her a book that she was reading. She hid herself in a nook of
hazel, and her soul was full of poetry, when there was a rustling,
the rapping of parted boughs returning to their place. Her
concealment was but a little way from the stone, and she peered
through the net of boughs, and saw a girl timidly approaching. She
knew her quite well: it was Annie Dolben, the daughter of a labourer,
lately a promising pupil at Sunday school. Annie was a nice-mannered
girl, never failing in her curtsey, wonderful for her knowledge of
the Jewish Kings. Her face had taken an expression that whispered,
that hinted strange things; there was a light and a glow behind the
veil of flesh. And in her hand she bore lilies.
The lady hidden in hazels watched Annie come close to the grey
image; for a moment her whole body palpitated with expectation,
almost the sense of what was to happen dawned upon her. She watched
Annie crown the stone with flowers she watched the amazing ceremony
that followed.
And yet, in spite of all her blushing shame, she herself bore
blossoms to the wood a few months later. She laid white hot-house
lilies upon the stone, and orchids of dying purple, and crimson
exotic flowers. Having kissed the grey image with devout passion, she
performed there all the antique immemorial rite.
The Soldiers' Rest
The soldier with the ugly wound in the head opened his eyes at
last, and looked about him with an air of pleasant satisfaction.
He still felt drowsy and dazed with some fierce experience through
which he had passed, but so far he could not recollect much about it.
But an agreeable glow began to steal about his heart—such a
glow as comes to people who have been in a tight place and have come
through it better than they had expected. In its mildest form this
set of emotions may be observed in passengers who have crossed the
Channel on a windy day without being sick.
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