Shadows of Ecstasy, Charles Williams [e ink epub reader .txt] 📗
- Author: Charles Williams
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Year of the Second Evolution of Man.”’
Roger stopped. Almost before his voice had ceased, Rosamond said:
“Philip, darling, you haven’t eaten anything. Have a cake?” Philip for
once took no notice. Roger said: “About a thousand words—a little
more. Allowing for recapitulations in its extremely rhetorical
style—the High Executive hasn’t studied the best models—say,
seven-fifty. Either pure waste or the most important seven-fifty words
I’ve ever read.”
“I haven’t got the hang of it,” Philip said in bewilderment. “What
does it mean?”
“It—what did it say?—it calls to you more especially, Philip,” Roger
went on. “It salutes you, because you have the vision of the conquest
of death in the exchanged adoration of love. It expects you to do
something about it all at once.” His eyes lingered on Isabel, and then
became abstracted. He sighed once and got to his feet. “I’ll have some
more tea,” he said. “The cup that cheers but not inebriates after
words that inebriate but do not cheer.”
Isabel, pouring out the tea, said: “Don’t they cheer you, dearest?”
“Not one bit,” Roger answered. He leaned gloomily against the
mantelpiece, and after a pause said suddenly, “Well, Rosamond, and
what do you make of it?”
Rosamond answered coldly. “I wasn’t listening, I don’t think it’s very
nice, and really, Roger, I don’t see why you need have read it.”
“The High Executive of the African peoples asked me to,” Roger said
perversely. “What don’t you like about it—giving up intellect or
having the vision of the conquest of death?”
“I think you’re simply silly, Roger,” Rosamond exclaimed and stood up.
“And if it was written by a lot of…a lot of Africans, that makes
it more disgusting than ever. I don’t think it ought to have been
printed.”
Isabel spoke before Roger, sadistically watching Rosamond, could
reply. “Do you think it’s authentic, Roger?” she asked.
“My dear, how can I guess?” her husband answered, more placably; then
he shifted his position, and added: “It’s authentic enough in one way;
there is something more.”
Isabel smiled at him. “But need we think we didn’t know it already?”
she asked softly. “It isn’t very new, is it?”
He was looking across the room at the high bookcase.
“If they came alive,” he murmured, “if they are alive—all shut up in
their cases, all nicely shelved—shelved—shelved. We put them in
their places in our minds, don’t we? If they got out of their
bookcases—not the pretty little frontispieces but the things beyond
the frontispieces, not the charming lines of type but the things the
type means. Dare you look for them, Isabel?” As he still stared at the
bookcase his voice altered into the deeper sound of a subdued chant.
“He scarce had ceased when the superior fiend was moving towards the
shore:
“‘Hid in its vacant interlunar cave
And thus the Filial Godhead answering spake.’”
Rosamond said sharply: “Do be quiet, Roger. You know I hate your
quoting.”
“Quoting!” Roger said, “quoting!” and stopped in despair. He looked at
Philip as if asking him whether he couldn’t do something.
Philip didn’t see the look; he was meditating. But the silence
affected him at last; he raised his eyes, and was on the point of
speaking when Rosamond interrupted, slipping her hand through his arm.
“Don’t talk about it any more, darling,” she said; “it’s too horrid.
Look, shall I come as far as the Tube with you?”
He stirred—rather heavily, Roger thought—but as their eyes met he
smiled back at her, and only Isabel’s hand prevented her husband from
again quoting the High Executive on the exchanged adoration of love.
It was therefore with a slight but unusual formality that farewells
were spoken, and Philip departed for the station.
Roger remained propped against the mantelpiece, but he said,
viciously, “She ‘wasn’t listening’!”
Isabel looked at him a little anxiously. “Don’t listen too carefully,
darling,” she said. “It’s not just cowardice—to refuse to hear some
sounds.”
He pulled himself upright. “I must go and work,” he said. “I must
exquisitely water the wine so that it may be tolerable for weak
heads.” By the door he paused. “Do you remember your Yeats?” he asked.
“What rough beast, its hour come round at last, Slouches towards
Bethlehem to be born? I wonder. Also I wonder where exactly Bethlehem
is, and what are the prodigies of the birth.”
In the Tube Philip read the proclamation of the High Executive over
again, and, to the best of his ability, considered it. He was uneasily
conscious that Rosamond would have disapproved of this, and he
couldn’t help feeling that it was only by an oversight that she hadn’t
asked him to please her by leaving it alone. However, she hadn’t, so
he was morally free. There stirred vaguely in his mind the subtler
question of whether he were free by a strict or by an easy
interpretation of morals: did exact justice, did a proper honour,
demand that he should follow her choice or insist on his own? But the
question never got as far as definition; he was aware of a difficulty
turning over in its sleep—slouching towards Bethlehem but not
reaching it—and almost deliberately refrained from realizing it.
Because he did want to know, more accurately, what this alleged
declaration had said about love. Unlike Roger and, fortunately for
him, like Rosamond, he had no particular use for the masters of verse.
He was therefore ignorant of the cloud of testimony that had been
borne to the importance and significance of the passion that was
growing in him. He had certainly heard of Dante and Beatrice, of
Tristram and Iseult, of Lancelot and Guinevere, but there he stopped.
He had hardly heard, he had certainly never brooded over, that strange
identification of Beatrice with Theology and of Theology with Beatrice
by which one great poet has justified centuries of else doubtful
minds. But by that secular dispensation of mercy which has moved in
the blood of myriads of lovers, he had felt what he did not know and
experienced what he could not formularize. And the words which he now
read did not so much startle his innocent devotion by their
eccentricity as dimly disturb him with a sense of their justice. He
had had no use at all for the African peoples except in so far as they
gave him an opportunity to follow his European habits in providing
Rosamond with a home and a car and anything else she wanted. The
prospect of the great age of intellect being done, also left him
unmoved; he hadn’t realized that any special great age of intellect
had existed—except for a vague idea that a period of past history
known as the Middle Ages was considerably less intelligent than the
present, and that there had been a brief time when Athens, and a
rather longer time when Rome, was very intellectual. But when all that
seemed to him meaningless had been removed, there still remained the
fact that never before, never anywhere, had any words, printed or
spoken, come nearer to telling him what he really felt about Rosamond
than this paragraph which purported to come from the centre of Africa,
and from dark-skinned chiefs pouring up against the guns and rifles of
England. He knew it was silly, but he knew it said “adoration,”
“vision,” “apprehension of victory,” “conquest of death.” He knew it
was silly, but he knew also that he had felt through Rosamond, brief
and little understood, something which was indeed apprehension of
victory and conquest of death.
When he got home he found his godfather alone, and, rather against his
own intention, found himself approaching the subject. Caithness had
seen the proclamation and was inclined to be a little scornful of it:
which may partly have been due to the unrecognized fact that, while
Roger and Philip had both found their interior passions divined and
applauded, Caithness had had his referred to merely as “a misguided
principle.” He doubted the authenticity, and went on to add: “Rather
bombastic, don’t you think? I don’t pretend to know what it means.”
Philip said, “Roger seemed quite impressed by it.”
“O Roger!” the priest said good-humouredly. “I called it bombast but I
expect he’d call it poetry. I don’t mean that it hasn’t a kind of
thrill in it, but thrills aren’t the only thing—certainly they’re not
safe things to live by.”
Philip thought this over, and decided that he agreed with it. Only his
sensations about Rosamond were not—no, they were not thrills: and he
wasn’t at all clear that they weren’t things to live by. He said,
shamelessly involving Roger: “He made fun of me about it—he seemed to
think that part of it was meant for me. The paragraph about—O well,
some paragraph or other.”
Caithness looked down at the paper. “This about the exaltation of
love, I expect,” he said, with a rather charming smile. “Roger would
be all in favour of that; the poets are. But perhaps they’re more used
to living on the hilltops than the rest of us.”
“You don’t think it’s true then?” Philip asked, with a slight and
irrational feeling of disappointment. Irrational, because he hadn’t
actually expected Caithness to agree with a gospel, if it was a
gospel, out of Africa. Sir Bernard had once remarked that Caithness
limited himself to the Near East in the matter of gospels, “the near
East modified by the much nearer West.”
But over the direct question Caithness hesitated. “I wouldn’t care to
say it wasn’t true,” he said, “but all truth is not expedient. It’s no
use making people expect too much.”
“No,” Philip said, “I suppose it isn’t.” Was he expecting too much?
was he, in fact, expecting anything at all? Or could whatever he
expected or whatever happened alter the terribly important fact of the
shape of Rosamond’s ear? He also looked again at the paper, and words
leapt to his eyes. “Believe, imagine, live. Know exaltation and feed
on it-”
“You don’t then,” he said, unwontedly stirred, “really think one ought
to believe in it too much?”
“Why yes, my dear boy,” the priest answered. “Only these things are so
often deceptive; they change or they become familiar. One can’t trust
one’s own vision too far; that’s where religion comes in.”
Sir Bernard would no doubt have pointed out, what did not occur to
either of the others, that this merely meant that Caithness was
substituting his own hobby for Philip’s. But he wasn’t there, and so,
vaguely depressed, especially as he couldn’t feel that Rosamond’s ear
would ever change, the young man turned the conversation, and shut
away the appeal of the High Executive for the time being in whatever
corresponded in his mind to Roger Ingram’s bookshelves.
The African trouble, however, displayed, during the next few days, no
possibility of being shut away. The steps which the Powers, on the
unanimous testimony of their spokesmen, were harmoniously taking
produced no effect against the rebels (as the enemy was habitually
called). It became clear that the “hordes” consisted, in fact, of
highly disciplined and well-supplied armies. In the north of Africa
the territory held by the European forces grew daily smaller; all
Egypt, except Cairo, was lost; the French were pressed back to the
coast of Tangier; the Spaniards were hustled out of Morocco. The
Dominion of South Africa was sending out expeditions, of which no news
returned—certainly there had not been much time, but there was no
news at all, or none that was published. In England an official
censorship was attempted, but failed owing to the speedy growth of a
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