Mike Fletcher, George Moore [reading books for 4 year olds .TXT] 📗
- Author: George Moore
Book online «Mike Fletcher, George Moore [reading books for 4 year olds .TXT] 📗». Author George Moore
"How Clever You Are, Darling! Go There. Do You Hear? Uncle Is
Answering Her. To-Morrow We Shall Find An Opportunity To Get Away;
But Now I Would Not Be Found Out.... I Told Mother You Weren't Here.
Go!"
The Morrow Brought No Opportunity For Flight. Lily Could Not Leave
Her Room, And It Was Whispered That The Doctors Despaired Of Her
Life. Then Mike Opened His Heart To The Major, And The Old Soldier
Promised Him His Cordial Support When Lily Was Well. Three Days
Passed, And Then, Unable To Bear The Strain Any Longer, Mike Fled To
Monte Carlo. There He Lost And Won A Fortune. Hence Italy Enticed
Him, And He Went, Knowing That He Should Never Go There With Lily.
But Not In Art Nor In Dissipation Did He Find Escape From Her
Deciduous Beauty, Now Divided From The Grave Only By A Breath,
Beautiful And Divinely Sorrowful In Its Transit.
Some Days Passed, And Then A Letter From The Major Brought Him Back
Over-Worn With Anxiety, Wild With Grief. He Found Her Better. She Had
Been Carried Down From Her Room, And Was Lying On A Sofa By The Open
Window. There Were A Few Flowers In Her Hands, And When She Offered
Them To Mike She Said With A Kind Of Heine-Like Humour--
"Take Them, They Will Live Almost As Long As I Shall."
"Lily, You Will Get Well, And We Shall See Italy Together. I Had To
Leave You--I Should Have Gone Mad Had I Remained. The Moment I Heard
I Could See You I Returned. You Will Get Well."
"No, No; I'm Here Only For A Few Days--A Few Weeks At Most. I Shall
Never Go To Italy. I Shall Never Be Your Sweetheart. I'm One Of God's
Virgins. I Belong To My Saint, My First And Real Sweetheart. You
Remember When I Came To See You In The Temple Gardens, I Told You
About Him Then, Didn't I! Ah! Happy, Happy Aspirations, Better Even
Than You, My Darling. And He Is Waiting For Me; I See Him Now. He
Smiles, And Opens His Arms."
"You'll Get Well. The Sun Of Italy Shall Be Our Heaven, Thy Lips
Shall Give Me Immortality, Thy Love Shall Give Me God."
"Fine Words, My Sweetheart, Fine Words, But Death Waits Not For
Love.... Well, It's A Pity To Die Without Having Loved."
"It Is Worse To Live Without Having Loved, Dearest--Dearest, You
Will Live."
He Never Saw Her Again. Next Day She Was Too Ill To Come Down, And
Henceforth She Grew Daily Weaker. Every Day Brought Death Visibly
Nearer, And One Day The Major Came To Mike In The Garden And Said--
"It Is All Over, My Poor Friend!"
Then Came Days Of White Flowers And Wreaths, And Bouquets And Baskets
Of Bloom, Stephanotis, Roses, Lilies, And Every White Blossom That
Blows; And So Friends Sought To Cover And Hide The Darkness Of The
Grave. Mike Remembered The Disordered Faces Of The Girls In Church;
Weeping, They Threw Themselves On Each Other's Shoulders; And The
Mournful Chant Was Sung; And The Procession Toiled Up The Long Hill
To The Cemetery Above The Town, And Lily Was Laid There, To Rest
There For Ever. There She Lies, Facing Italy, Which She Never Knew
But In Dream. The Wide Country Leading To Italy Lies Below Her, The
Peaks Of The Rocky Coast, The Blue Sea, The Gray-Green Olives
Billowing Like Tides From Hill To Hill; The White Loggias Gleaming In
The Sunlight. His Thoughts Followed The Flight Of The Blue Mountain
Passes That Lead So Enticingly To Italy, And As He Looked Into The
Distance, Dim And Faint As The Dream That Had Gone, There Rose In His
Mind An Even Fairer Land Than Italy, The Land Of Dream, Where For
Every One, Even For Mike Fletcher, There Grows Some Rose Or Lily
Unattainable.
Chapter 9 Pg 122
In The Dreary Drawing-Room, Amid The Tattered Copies Of The _Graphic_
And _Illustrated London News_, He Encountered The Inevitable Idle
Woman. They Engaged In Conversation; And He Repeated The Phrases That
Belong Inevitably To Such Occasions.
"How Horrible All This Is," He Said To Himself; "This Is Worse Than
Peeping And Botanizing On A Mother's Grave."
He Desired Supreme Grief, And Grief Fled From His Lure; And Rhymes
And Images Thronged His Brain; And The Poem That Oftenest Rose In His
Mind, Seemingly Complete In Cadence And Idea, Was So Cruel, That
Lily, Looking Out Of Heaven, Seemed To Beg Him To Refrain. But Though
He Erased The Lines On The Paper, He Could Not Erase Them On His
Brain, And Baffled, He Pondered Over The Phenomena Of The Antagonism
Of Desired Aspirations And Intellectual Instincts. He Desired A Poem
Full Of The Divine Grace Of Grief; A Poem Beautiful, Tender And Pure,
Fresh And Wild As A Dove Crossing In The Dawn From Wood To Wood. He
Desired The Picturesqueness Of A Young Man's Grief For A Dead Girl,
An Adonais Going Forth Into The Glittering Morning, And Weeping For
His Love That Has Passed Out Of The Sun Into The Shadow. This Is What
He Wrote:
A Une Poetrenaire.
We Are Alone! Listen, A Little While,
And Hear The Reason Why Your Weary Smile
And Lute-Toned Speaking Is So Very Sweet
To Me, And How My Love Is More Complete
Than Any Love Of Any Lover. They
Have Only Been Attracted By The Gray
Delicious Softness Of Your Eyes, Your Slim
And Delicate Form, Or Some Such Whimpering Whim,
The Simple Pretexts Of All Lovers;--I
For Other Reasons. Listen Whilst I Try
And Say. I Joy To See The Sunset Slope
Beyond The Weak Hours' Hopeless Horoscope,
Leaving The Heavens A Melancholy Calm,
Of Quiet Colour Chaunted Like A Psalm,
In Mildly Modulated Phrases; Thus
Your Life Shall Fade Like A Voluptuous
Vision Beyond The Sight, And You Shall Die
Like Some Soft Evening's Sad Serenity ...
I Would Possess Your Dying Hours; Indeed
My Love Is Worthy Of The Gift, I Plead
For Them.
Although I Never Loved As Yet,
Methinks That I Might Love You; I Would Get
From Out The Knowledge That The Time Was Brief,
That Tenderness Whose Pity Grows To Grief,
My Dream Of Love, And Yea, It Would Have Charms
Beyond All Other Passions, For The Arms
Of Death Are Stretchéd You-Ward, And He Claims
You As His Bride. Maybe My Soul Misnames
Its Passion; Love Perhaps It Is Not, Yet
To See You Fading Like A Violet,
Or Some Sweet Thought Away, Would Be A Strange
And Costly Pleasure, Far Beyond The Range
Chapter 9 Pg 123Of Common Man's Emotion. Listen, I
Will Choose A Country Spot Where Fields Of Rye
And Wheat Extend In Waving Yellow Plains,
Broken With Wooded Hills And Leafy Lanes,
To Pass Our Honeymoon; A Cottage Where
The Porch And Windows Are Festooned With Fair
Green Wreaths Of Eglantine, And Look Upon
A Shady Garden Where We'll Walk Alone
In The Autumn Sunny Evenings; Each Will See
Our Walks Grow Shorter, Till At Length To Thee
The Garden's Length Is Far, And Thou Wilt Rest
From Time To Time, Leaning Upon My Breast
Thy Languid Lily Face. Then Later Still,
Unto The Sofa By The Window-Sill
Thy Wasted Body I Shall Carry, So
That Thou Mays't Drink The Last Left Lingering Glow
Of Even, When The Air Is Filled With Scent
Of Blossoms; And My Spirits Shall Be Rent
The While With Many Griefs. Like Some Blue Day
That Grows More Lovely As It Fades Away,
Gaining That Calm Serenity And Height
Of Colour Wanted, As The Solemn Night
Steals Forward Thou Shalt Sweetly Fall Asleep
For Ever And For Ever; I Shall Weep
A Day And Night Large Tears Upon Thy Face,
Laying Thee Then Beneath A Rose-Red Place
Where I May Muse And Dedicate And Dream
Volumes Of Poesy Of Thee; And Deem
It Happiness To Know That Thou Art Far
From Any Base Desires As That Fair Star
Set In The Evening Magnitude Of Heaven.
Death Takes But Little, Yea, Thy Death Has Given
Me That Deep Peace And Immaculate Possession
Which Man May Never Find In Earthly Passion.
The Composition Of The Poem Induced A Period Of Literary Passion,
During Which He Composed Much Various Matter, Even Part Of His Great
Poem, Which He Would Have Completed Had He Not Been Struck By An Idea
For A Novel, And So Imperiously, That He Wrote The Book Straight From
End To End. It Was Sent To A London Publisher, And It Raised Some
Tumult Of Criticism, None Of Which Reached The Author. When It
Appeared He Was Far Away, Living In Arab Tents, Seeking Pleasure At
Other Sources. For Suddenly, When The Strain Of The Composition Of
His Book Was Relaxed, Civilization Had Grown Hateful To Him; A
Picture By Fromantin, And That Painter's Book, _Un Été Dans Le
Sahara_, Quickened The Desire Of Primitive Life; He Sped Away, And
For Nearly Two Years Lived On The Last Verge Of Civilization,
Sometimes Passing Beyond It With The Bedouins Into The Interior, On
Slave-Trading Or Rapacious Expeditions. The Frequentation Of These
Simple People Calmed The Fever Of Ennui, Which Had Been Consuming
Him. Nature Leads Us To The Remedy That The Development Of Reason
Inflicts On The Animal--Man. And For More Than A Year Mike Thought He
Had Solved The Problem Of Life; Now He Lived In Peace--Passion Had
Ebbed Almost Out Of Hearing, And In The Plain Satisfaction Of His
Instincts He Found Happiness.
With The Wild Chieftains, Their Lances At Rest, Watching From Behind
A Sandhill, He Sometimes Thought That The Joy He Experienced Was Akin
To That Which He Had Known In Sussex, When His Days Were Spent In
Hunting And Shooting; Now, As Then, He Found Relief By Surrendering
Himself To The Hygienics Of The Air And Earth. But His Second Return
To Animal Nature Had Been More Violent And Radical; And It Pleased
Him To Think That He Could Desire Nothing But The Arabs With Whom He
Lived, And Whose Friendship He Had Won. But _Qui A Bu Boira_, And
Below Consciousness Dead Appetites Were Awakening, And Would Soon Be
Astir.
The Tribe Had Wandered To An Encampment In The Vicinity Of Morocco;
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