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.
"They
are very nicely done," said the parson; "but I'm afraid you won't
find anybody to print them, my boy."
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.
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 labor 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 molded 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.
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.
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