South Wind(Fiscle Part-3), Norman Douglas [most important books of all time .TXT] 📗
- Author: Norman Douglas
Book online «South Wind(Fiscle Part-3), Norman Douglas [most important books of all time .TXT] 📗». Author Norman Douglas
Just Yet! While Admitting That Something Ought To Be Done, It Struck
Him As A Hazardous Proceeding To Play Fast And Loose, In This Fashion,
With The Reputation Of A Saint.
His Reverence, Duly Impressed, Waited For Half An Hour. It Was Then
Seen That The Nicaraguan Representative Had Once More Given The
Soundest Of Advice. The Downpour Of Ashes Ceased Abruptly, At The
Moment When The Sun Sank Into The Sea. No Mischief Was Done.
Late At Night Another Phenomenon Became Visible. The Volcano Was
Observed To Be In Violent Eruption. It Blazed Forth Like A Gigantic
Torch Held Into The Heavens. Streams Of Lava Poured Down The Mountain
Flanks, Reddening Sky And Sea.
Nepenthe Was Consoled By The Spectacle. The Demon Had At Last Found An
Outlet--A Method Of Relief. There Would Be No More Showers Of Ashes. The
Fact That Villages Were Being Overwhelmed Under A Deluge Of Flame,
Vineyards Scorched And Hundreds Of Innocent Folks, Their Retreat Cut
Off By Fiery Torrents, Were Even Then Being Roasted To Death, Was No
Concern To The Islanders. It Only Proved What Every One Knew: That The
Jurisdiction Of Their Patron Saint Did Not Extend To The Mainland.
Each Of Those Villages Had Its Own Saint, Whose Business It Was To
Forestall Accidents Of This Kind. If They Failed In Their Duty Through
Incapacity Or Mulishness, Nothing Was Easier Than To Get Rid Of Them;
There Were Others To Choose From--Dozens Of Others, Waiting For The Job!
Thinking Thus, The Islanders Gave Vent To An Immense Sigh If Relief.
They Wished Long Life To Their Patron Saint, With Whose Services They
Had Reason To Be Satisfied. Their Own Crops And Lives Were Safe From
Harm, Thanks To The Martyr Dodekanus. He Loved His People, And They
Loved Him. He Was A Protector Worthy Of The Name--Not Like Those
Low-Bred Bastards Across The Water.
Chapter 32
Mr. Heard Had Just Finished His Early Italian Luncheon. Sitting At His
Coffee And Smoking A Cigarette, In A Mood Of Considerable Contentment,
He Gazed Over The Mirror-Like Surface Of The Sea Towards The Volcano,
Whose Pyrotechnical Display On The Previous Evening Had Kept Him Awake
To A Late Hour. Yet Another Glistering Day! Each One Warmer Than The
Last, And Never A Change In The Wind! Presently He Would Retire For An
Hour Or Two Into His Cool And Darkened Bed-Room.
One Little Thing Troubled His Mind. There Had Been No Reply To The
Note--A Kind Of Note Of Enquiry--Which He Had Left At The Villa Mon Repos
On The Preceding Day. Though He Knew Little Of His Cousin, He Could Not
Help Feeling Anxious. She Was All By Herself In That Lonely Little
Place, Suffering--Perhaps, And Too Proud Or Too Shy To Complain. Mr.
Eames' Description Of Her Had Made Him Uneasy. Why Should She Look As
If She Had Seen A Ghost? What Could That Signify? The Bibliographer Was
A Level-Headed Person, By No Means Given To Flights Of Imagination.
Imperceptibly, He Felt, There Had Been Established An Under-Current Of
Sympathy Between Himself And This Solitary Woman, Whom Everybody Seemed
To Like. She Was Different From The Ordinary Type; The Kind Of Woman
Whom A Man Could Not Help Respecting. She Contrasted Favourably With
Some Of His Recent Female Acquaintances Who, However Charming Or Witty,
Dissatisfied Him In This Or That Particular. His Cousin's Devotion To
Child And Husband Appealed To His Heart. She Seemed To Be Perfect Of
Her Kind.
Africa Had Boiled Most Of The Starch Out Of Mr. Heard. But His
Acquaintance With Some Of The Saddest And Wildest Aspects Of Womanhood
Only Deepened His Conviction Of The Sanctity Of The Sex. Some Called
Him Old-Fashioned Or Quixotic, Because He Was Not Altogether In
Sympathy With Modern Feministic Movements; They Called Him An Idealist,
Because He Had Preserved His Belief In The Sacred Mission Of Women Upon
Earth--His Childlike Faith In The Purity Of Their Souls. They Were A
Humanizing Influence, The Guardian Angels Of Mankind, The Inspirers,
The Mothers, The Protectors Of Innocence. It Pleased Him To Think That
Woman Had Softened Harsh Dealings Between Man And Man; That Every
Mitigation Of Savagery, Every Incitement To Worthy Or Heroic Actions,
Was Due To Her Gentle Words, Her Encouraging Example. From The Very
Dawn Of History Woman Had Opposed Herself To Deeds Of Violence. What
Was It Count Caloveglia Had Said? "Temperance. All The Rest Is
Embroidery." How Well The Old Man Could Put Things! Temperance. . . .
His Cousin, From What He Could Guess Of Her Character, Agreed With That
Description. Mr. Heard Would Have Maintained Against The Whole World
That A Woman, A True Woman Like This, Could Do No Wrong.
And Now He Gathered That She Was In Trouble Of Some Kind. Then Why Not
Allow Him To Help? He Had Asked For An Early Reply To His Note. Well,
Perhaps It Would Arrive By The Evening Post.
Slightly Vexed None The Less, He Laid Down The Stump Of His Cigarette,
Preparatory To Retiring For The Hot Hours Of The Day. One Owes
Something To Oneself, N'est-Ce Pas? At That Moment There Was A Knock At
His Door.
Denis Entered. His Face, Shaded Under A Broad-Brimmed Hat, Was Ruddy
With The Heat. He Wore Light Flannels, And Was Carrying His Jacket On
His Arm. There Was A Large Parcel In His Hand. He Looked The Picture Of
Health.
Mr. Heard, On Rising, Gave Him A Critical Glance. He Remembered His
Trip In The Boat, And The Suicide's Rock--That Black, Ominous Cliff; He
Remembered The Thoughts Which Had Passed Through His Mind At The Time.
Was This The Kind Of Boy To Kill Himself? Surely Not. Keith Must Have
Been Mistaken. And Count Caloveglia--Was He Mistaken Too? Evidently.
There Was Nothing Tragic About Denis. He Was Brimming Over With Life.
His Troubles, Whatever They Were, Must Have Been Forgotten.
"I've Been Lunching With Keith," He Began. "He Made Me Tell Him A
Fairy-Tale."
"Sit Down And Have Some Coffee! You Came Away Very Early."
"He Told Me He Wanted To Go To Sleep After Luncheon. And One Or Two
Other Nice Things."
Ah, Thought Mr. Heard, Keith Was Acting Up To What He Had Said In The
Boat; He Was Being Good To The Boy; That Was Right Of Him.
"I'm Sure," He Said, "That Keith Has Been Speaking Kindly To You."
"Kindly? It's Like Talking To An Earthquake. He Told Me To Dominate My
Reflexes. He Called Me A Perambulating Echo. He Said I Was A Human
Amoeba--"
"Amoeba. What's That?"
"A Sort Of Animal That Floats About Trying To Attach Itself To
Something Which It Can't Find."
"I Think I See What He Means. Anything Else?"
"He Said I Was A Chameleon."
"A Chameleon!"
"A Chameleon That Needed The Influence Of A Good Woman. Then He Gave Me
This Box Of Cuban Chocolates, To Keep Me From Crying, I Suppose. Have
One! They're Not Nearly As Nasty As They Look."
"Thanks. A Chameleon. That Is Really Interesting, As Keith Would Say. I
Have Seen Thousands Of Them. Outlandish Beasts, That Anchor Themselves
By Their Tails And Squint Horribly. Let's Have A Look At You, Denis.
No, I Fail To Detect Any Striking Resemblance."
"I Believe He Meant That I Take On The Colour Of Other People And Have
None Of My Own. Then He Told Me To Go And Murder Somebody."
"I Wouldn't Do That, Denis," Laughed The Bishop. "Murders Are So
Dreadfully Vulgar."
"He Said It Might Make A Man Of Me. He Forgets That I'm Not Quite His
Age."
"You Had Better Not Tell Him That! Any Other Advice?"
"Nothing New. He Said I Made A Mistake In Paying Attention To What
Human Beings Said And Did, And That I Ought To Forsake Mankind For A
While, And Art And Books And So On. You Know The Way He Talks! He Said
It Would Give Me A Stronger Individuality If I Came Into Contact With
Nature And Thought Things Out For Myself Instead Of Listening To Other
People. He Advised Me To Sit Among The Rocks At Midnight And In The Hot
Afternoons, Conversing With The Genii Of Earth And Air. It Would
Correct My Worldly Perspective. I Think He May Be Right, In A Way.
There Is Something In It. So I Asked Him To Climb Into The Hills With
Me, Then And There, In Order To Get Into Touch With Elemental Powers.
He Said He Thought Highly Of My Character, But As To Climbing About In
This Heat--He Said He'd Be Damned If He Would. Those Were His Very
Words. He Wanted To Sleep. He Was Too Old For That Sort Of Thing."
"Very Sensible, I'm Sure."
"You Think So? Because Then--Then He Told Me That You Were The Proper
Person For An Expedition Of That Kind. He Suggested I Should Come And
See You About It At Once--It Would Allow Him Time To Get His Usual
Afternoon Nap. That Is Why I'm Here. So Do! It Isn't So Very Hot, Once
You Get Used To It. We Are Sure To See Something Funny."
"Oh!"
This, Thought The Bishop, Was A Pretty Example Of That Doctrine Of
Benevolent Egotism Which Keith Had Expounded To Him Once Or Twice. A
Very Pretty Example!
"He Said That?"
Denis Nodded.
The Notion Was Distasteful To Mr. Heard. To Go Out Into This Torrid
Sunshine. . . . He, Too, Was Not Exactly Young; Moreover, He Was Still
Rather Delicate--He Needed All The Rest He Could Get. He Was Looking
Forward With Positive Delight To The Coming Hours In His Cool Bedroom.
"You Really Want Me To Climb To The Top Of A Mountain At This Hour Of
The Day And Sit There In The Heat, Waiting For Some Wretched Demon To
Reveal Himself? Aren't You A Little Too Old For That Sort Of Thing?
Come Now! Does It Strike You As A Reasonable Proposition? With The
Thermometer At Seventy-Eight In This Room?"
"Keith Said You Liked Nothing Better. He Said You Might Take Offence If
I Didn't Ask You To Come."
He Seemed To Be Disappointed.
There Were Not Many People For Whom Mr. Heard Would Have Put Himself
Out Just Then In That Particular Way; And Denis, Up To A Few Days Ago,
Was Certainly Not One Of Them. The Bishop Had Never Been Drawn Towards
This Rather Precious Youth. He Was Not Mr. Heard's Type Of Boy. There
Was A Lack Of Grit And Stamina About Him--Something Soft, Both In Manner
And Appearance; Something Dreamy, Ambiguous, Almost Epicene. Mr. Heard
Had Not Quite Lost His Old British Instinct As To The Fundamental
Uselessness Of All Art. A Young Fellow Who, Instead Of Taking Up Some
Rational Profession, Talked About Cimabue And Jacopo Bellini . . .
There Was Something Not Quite Right With Him. Jacopo Bellini! But Even
While Thinking What To Reply, He Was Conscious Of Having Undergone A
Slight Change Of Feeling Lately. He Was Growing More Tolerant And
Benign, Even In Trifles Like This. Jacopo Bellini: Why Not? Meanwhile,
He Bethought Himself Of A Way Of Escape.
"Suppose You Go Alone? Or Why Not Try The Midnight Expedition First? I
Might Manage Midnight."
"I've Tried It."
"Alone?" He Laughed. "No Success?"
"None Whatever," Said Denis. And It Seemed As If A Shadow Flitted
Across His Face At These Words.
That Cloud, That Change Of Tone--What Did They Portend? Something Might
Be Wrong, Then, After All. Perhaps Keith Had Been Correct In His
Diagnosis When He Observed That A Susceptible Mind Like This Could Be
Shaken Out Of Its Equilibrium By The Influence Of Nepenthe--"Capable Of
Anything In This Clear Pagan Light." It Was Not Mr. Heard's Habit To
Probe Into The Feelings Of Others--As To Those Of A Person Like Denis He
Did Not Pretend To Understand Them. Artistic People! Incalculable!
Inconsequential! Irresponsible! Quite Another Point Of View! Yet He
Could Not Help Thinking Of That Doleful Black Rock, With The
Turquoise-Tinted Water At Its Foot. Remembering These Things He Felt A
Sudden Access Of Sympathy Towards This Lonesome Fellow-Creature.
Instead Of Pursuing The Subject Of The Expedition He Asked, Quite
Abruptly:
"Tell Me, Denis, Are You Happy Here?"
"How Odd That You Should Come With That Question! I Had A Letter From
My Mother This Morning. She Wants To Know The
Comments (0)