<h2> Chapter 19 </h2><br/>
<br/>
<p>Although deprived for the present of all intercourse with
Chastel and Yoletta, now in constant attendance on her
mother, I ought to have been happy, for all things seemed
conspiring to make my life precious to me. Nevertheless, I
was far from happy; and, having heard so much said about
reason in my late conversations with the father and mother of
the house, I began to pay an unusual amount of attention to
this faculty in me, in order to discover by its aid the
secret of the sadness which continued at all times during
this period to oppress my heart. I only discovered, what
others have discovered before me, that the practice of
introspection has a corrosive effect on the mind, which only
serves to aggravate the malady it is intended to cure. During
those restful days in the Mother's Room, when I had sat with
Chastel, this spirit of melancholy had been with me; but the
mother's hallowing presence had given something of a divine
color to it, my passions had slumbered, and, except at rare
intervals, I had thought of sorrow as of something at an
immeasurable distance from me. Then to my spirit</p>
<p><br/>
"<i>The gushing of the wave<br/>
Far, far away, did seem to mourn and
rave<br/>
On alien shores</i>";</p>
<p>and so sweet had seemed that pause, that I had hoped and
prayed for its continuance. No sooner was I separated from
her than the charm dissolved, and all my thoughts, like
evening clouds that appear luminous and rich in color until
the sun has set, began to be darkened with a mysterious
gloom. Strive how I might, I was unable to compose my mind to
that serene, trustful temper she had desired to see in me,
and without which there could be no blissful futurity. After
all the admonitions and the comforting assurances I had
received, and in spite of reason and all it could say to me,
each night I went to my bed with a heavy heart; and each
morning when I woke, there, by my pillow, waited that sad
phantom, to go with me where I went, to remind me at every
pause of an implacable Fate, who held my future in its hands,
who was mightier than Chastel, and would shatter all her
schemes for my happiness like vessels of brittle glass.</p>
<p>Several days—probably about fifteen, for I did not
count them—had passed since I had been admitted into
the mother's sleeping-room, when there came an exceedingly
lovely day, which seemed to bring to me a pleasant sensation
of returning health, and made me long to escape from morbid
dreams and vain cravings. Why should I sit at home and mope,
I thought; it was better to be active: sun and wind were full
of healing. Such a day was in truth one of those captain
jewels "that seldom placed are" among the blusterous days of
late autumn, with winter already present to speed its
parting. For a long time the sky had been overcast with
multitudes and endless hurrying processions of wild-looking
clouds—torn, wind-chased fugitives, of every mournful
shade of color, from palest gray to slatey-black; and storms
of rain had been frequent, impetuous, and suddenly
intermitted, or passing away phantom-like towards the misty
hills, there to lose themselves among other phantoms, ever
wandering sorrowfully in that vast, shadowy borderland where
earth and heaven mingled; and gusts of wind which, as they
roared by over a thousand straining trees and passed off with
hoarse, volleying sounds, seemed to mimic the echoing
thunder. And the leaves—the millions and myriads of
sere, cast-off leaves, heaped ankle-deep under the desolate
giants of the wood, and everywhere, in the hollows of the
earth, lying silent and motionless, as became dead, fallen
things—suddenly catching a mock fantastic life from the
wind, how they would all be up and stirring, every leaf with
a hiss like a viper, racing, many thousands at a time, over
the barren spaces, all hurriedly talking together in their
dead-leaf language! until, smitten with a mightier gust, they
would rise in flight on flight, in storms and stupendous,
eddying columns, whirled up to the clouds, to fall to the
earth again in showers, and freckle the grass for roods
around. Then for a moment, far off in heavens, there would be
a rift, or a thinning of the clouds, and the sunbeams,
striking like lightning through their ranks, would illumine
the pale blue mist, the slanting rain, the gaunt black boles
and branches, glittering with wet, casting a momentary glory
over the ocean-like tumult of nature.</p>
<p>In the condition I was in, with a relaxed body and dejected
mind, this tempestuous period, which would have only afforded
fresh delight to a person in perfect health, had no charm for
my spirit; but, on the contrary, it only served to intensify
my gloom. And yet day after day it drew me forth, although in
my weakness I shivered in the rough gale, and shrank from the
touch of the big cold drops the clouds flung down on me. It
fascinated me, like the sight of armies contending in battle,
or of some tragic action from which the spectator cannot
withdraw his gaze. For I had become infected with strange
fancies, so persistent and somber that they were like
superstitions. It seemed to me that not I but nature had
changed, that the familiar light had passed like a kindly
expression from her countenance, which was now charged with
an awful menacing gloom that frightened my soul. Sometimes,
when straying alone, like an unquiet ghost among the leafless
trees, when a deeper shadow swept over the earth, I would
pause, pale with apprehension, listening to the many
dirge-like sounds of the forest, ever prophesying evil, until
in my trepidation I would start and tremble, and look to this
side and to that, as if considering which way to fly from
some unimaginable calamity coming, I knew not from where, to
wreck my life for ever.</p>
<p>This bright day was better suited to my complaint. The sun
shone as in spring; not a stain appeared on the crystal vault
of heaven; everywhere the unfailing grass gave rest to the
eye with its verdure; and a light wind blew fresh and bracing
in my face, making my pulses beat faster, although feebly
still. Remembering my happy wood-cutting days, before my
trouble had come to me, I got my ax and started to walk to
the wood; then seeing Yoletta watching my departure from the
terrace, I waved my hand to her. Before I had gone far,
however, she came running to me, full of anxiety, to warn me
that I was not yet strong enough for such work. I assured her
that I had no intention of working hard and tiring myself,
then continued my walk, while she returned to attend on her
mother.</p>
<p>The day was so bright with sunshine that it inspired me with
a kind of passing gladness, and I began to hum snatches of
old half-remembered songs. They were songs of departing
summer, tinged with melancholy, and suggested other verses
not meant for singing, which I began repeating.</p>
<p><br/>
"Rich flowers have perished on the silent
earth—<br/>
Blossoms of valley and of wood that
gave<br/>
A fragrance to the winds."</p>
<p>And again:</p>
<p><br/>
"The blithesome birds have sought a sunnier
shore;<br/>
They lingered till the cold cold winds
went in<br/>
And withered their green homes."</p>
<p>And these also were fragments, breathing only of sadness,
which made me resolve to dismiss poetry from my mind and
think of nothing at all. I tried to interest myself in a
flight of buzzard-like hawks, soaring in wide circles at an
immense height above me. Gazing up into that far blue vault,
under which they moved so serenely, and which seemed so
infinite, I remembered how often in former days, when gazing
up into such a sky, I had breathed a prayer to the Unseen
Spirit; but now I recalled the words the father of the house
had spoken to me, and the prayer died unformed in my heart,
and a strange feeling of orphanhood saddened me, and brought
my eyes to earth again.</p>
<p>Half-way to the wood, on an open reach where there were no
trees or bushes, I came on a great company of storks, half a
thousand of them at least, apparently resting on their
travels, for they were all standing motionless, with necks
drawn in, as if dozing. They were very stately, handsome
birds, clear gray in color, with a black collar on the neck,
and red beak and legs. My approach did not disturb them until
I was within twenty yards of the nearest—for they were
scattered over an acre of ground; then they rose with a loud,
rustling noise of wings, only to settle again at a short
distance off.</p>
<p>Incredible numbers of birds, chiefly waterfowl, had appeared
in the neighborhood since the beginning of the wet,
boisterous weather; the river too was filled with these new
visitors, and I was told that most of them were passengers
driven from distant northern regions, which they made their
summer home, and were now flying south in search of a warmer
climate.</p>
<p>All this movement in the feathered world had, during my
troubled days, brought me as little pleasure as the other
changes going on about me: those winged armies ever hurrying
by in broken detachments, wailing and clanging by day and by
night in the clouds, white with their own terror, or
black-plumed like messengers of doom, to my distempered fancy
only added a fresh element of fear to a nature racked with
disorders, and full of tremendous signs and omens.</p>
<p>The interest with which I now remarked these pilgrim storks
seemed to me a pleasant symptom of a return to a saner state
of mind, and before continuing my walk I wished that Yoletta
had been there with me to see them and tell me their history;
for she was curious about such matters, and had a most
wonderful affection for the whole feathered race. She had her
favorites among the birds at different seasons, and the kind
she most esteemed now had been arriving for over a month,
their numbers increasing day by day until the woods and
fields were alive with their flocks.</p>
<p>This kind was named the cloud-bird, on account of its
starling-like habit of wheeling about over its
feeding-ground, the birds throwing themselves into masses,
then scattering and gathering again many times, so that when
viewed at a distance a large flock had the appearance of a
cloud, growing dark and thin alternately, and continually
changing its form. It was somewhat larger than a starling,
with a freer flight, and had a richer plumage, its color
being deep glossy blue, or blue-black, and underneath bright
chestnut. When close at hand and in the bright sunshine, the
aerial gambols of a flock were beautiful to witness, as the
birds wheeled about and displayed in turn, as if moved by one
impulse, first the rich blue, then the bright chestnut
surfaces to the eye. The charming effect was increased by the
bell-like, chirping notes they all uttered together, and as
they swept round or doubled in the air at intervals came
these tempests of melodious sound—a most perfect
expression of wild jubilant bird-life. Yoletta, discoursing
in the most delightful way about her loved cloud-birds, had
told me that they spent the summer season in great solitary
marshes, where they built their nests in the rushes; but with
cold weather they flew abroad, and at such times seemed
always to prefer the neighborhood of man, remaining in great
flocks near the house until the next spring. On this bright
sunny morning I was amazed at the multitudes I saw during my
walk: yet it was not strange that birds were so abundant,
considering that there were no longer any savages on the
earth, with nothing to amuse their vacant minds except
killing the feathered creatures with their bows and arrows,
and no innumerable company of squaws clamorous for
trophies—unchristian women of the woods with painted
faces, insolence in their eyes, and for ornaments the
feathered skins torn from slain birds on their heads.</p>
<p>When I at length arrived at the wood, I went to that spot
where I had felled the large tree on the occasion of my last
and disastrous visit, and where Yoletta, newly released from
confinement, had found me. There lay the rough-barked giant
exactly as I had left it, and once more I began to hack at
the large branches; but my feeble strokes seemed to make
little impression, and becoming tired in a very short time, I
concluded that I was not yet equal to such work, and sat
myself down to rest. I remembered how, when sitting on that
very spot, I had heard a slight rustling of the withered
leaves, and looking up beheld Yoletta coming swiftly towards
me with outstretched arms, and her face shining with joy.
Perhaps she would come again to me to-day: yes, she would
surely come when I wished for her so much; for she had
followed me out to try to dissuade me from going to the
woods, and would be anxiously thinking about me; and she
could spare an hour from the sick-room now. The trees and
bushes would prevent me from seeing her approach, but I
should hear her, as I had heard her before. I sat motionless,
scarcely breathing, straining my sense to catch the first
faint sound of her light, swift step; and every time a small
bird, hopping along the ground, rustled a withered leaf, I
started up to greet and embrace her. But she did not come;
and at last, sick at heart with hope deferred, I covered my
face with my hands, and, weak with misery, cried like a
disappointed child.</p>
<p>Presently something touched me, and, removing my hands from
my face, I saw that great silver-gray dog which had come to
Yoletta's call when I fainted, sitting before me with his
chin resting on my knees. No doubt he remembered that last
wood-cutting day very well, and had come to take care of me
now.</p>
<p>"Welcome, dear old friend!" said I; and in my craving for
sympathy of some kind I put my arms over him, and pressed my
face against his. Then I sat up again, and gazed into the
pair of clear brown eyes watching my face so gravely.</p>
<p>"Look here, old fellow," said I, talking audibly to him for
want of something in human shape to address, "you didn't lick
my face just now when you might have done so with impunity;
and when I speak to you, you don't wag that beautiful bushy
tail which serves you for ornament. This reminds me that you
are not like the dogs I used to know—the dogs that
talked with their tails, caressed with their tongues, and
were never over-clean or well-behaved. Where are they
now—collies, rat-worrying terriers, hounds, spaniels,
pointers, retrievers—dogs rough and dogs smooth; big
brute boarhounds, St. Bernard's, mastiffs, nearly or quite as
big as you are, but not so slender, silky-haired, and
sharp-nosed, and without your refined expression of keenness
without cunning. And after these canine noblemen of the old
<i>regime</i>, whither has vanished the countless rabble of
mongrels, curs, and pariah dogs; and last of all—being
more degenerate—the corpulent, blear-eyed, wheezy pet
dogs of a hundred breeds? They are all dead, no doubt: they
have been dead so long that I daresay nature extracted all
the valuable salts that were contained in their flesh and
bones thousands of years ago, and used it for better
things—raindrops, froth of the sea, flowers and fruit,
and blades of grass. Yet there was not a beast in all that
crew of which its master or mistress was not ready to affirm
that it could do everything but talk! No one says that of
you, my gentle guardian; for dog-worship, with all the ten
thousand fungoid cults that sprang up and flourished
exceedingly in the muddy marsh of man's intellect, has
withered quite away, and left no seed. Yet in intelligence
you are, I fancy, somewhat ahead of your far-off progenitors:
long use has also given you something like a conscience. You
are a good, sensible beast, that's all. You love and serve
your master, according to your lights; night and day, you,
with your fellows, guard his flocks and herds, his house and
fields. Into his sacred house, however, you do not intrude
your comely countenance, knowing your place."</p>
<p>"What, then, happened to earth, and how long did that
undreaming slumber last from which I woke to find things so
altered? I do not know, nor does it matter very much. I only
know that there has been a sort of mighty Savonarola bonfire,
in which most of the things once valued have been consumed to
ashes—politics, religions, systems of philosophy, isms
and ologies of all descriptions; schools, churches, prisons,
poorhouses; stimulants and tobacco; kings and parliaments;
cannon with its hostile roar, and pianos that thundered
peacefully; history, the press, vice, political economy,
money, and a million things more—all consumed like so
much worthless hay and stubble. This being so, why am I not
overwhelmed at the thought of it? In that feverish, full
age—so full, and yet, my God, how empty!—in the
wilderness of every man's soul, was not a voice heard crying
out, prophesying the end? I know that a thought sometimes
came to me, passing through my brain like lightning through
the foliage of a tree; and in the quick, blighting fire of
that intolerable thought, all hopes, beliefs, dreams, and
schemes seemed instantaneously to shrivel up and turn to
ashes, and drop from me, and leave me naked and desolate.
Sometimes it came when I read a book of philosophy; or
listened on a still, hot Sunday to a dull preacher—they
were mostly dull—prosing away to a sleepy, fashionable
congregation about Daniel in the lions' den, or some other
equally remote matter; or when I walked in crowded
thoroughfares; or when I heard some great politician out of
office—out in the cold, like a miserable working-man
with no work to do—hurling anathemas at an iniquitous
government; and sometimes also when I lay awake in the silent
watches of the night. A little while, the thought said, and
all this will be no more; for we have not found out the
secret of happiness, and all our toil and effort is
misdirected; and those who are seeking for a mechanical
equivalent of consciousness, and those who are going about
doing good, are alike wasting their lives; and on all our
hopes, beliefs, dreams, theories, and enthusiasms, 'Passing
away' is written plainly as the <i>Mene, mene, tekel,
upharsin</i> seen by Belshazzar on the wall of his palace in
Babylon."</p>
<p>"That withering thought never comes to me now. 'Passing away'
is not written on the earth, which is still God's green
footstool; the grass was not greener nor the flowers sweeter
when man was first made out of clay, and the breath of life
breathed into his nostrils. And the human family and
race—outcome of all that dead, unimaginable
past—this also appears to have the stamp of
everlastingness on it; and in its tranquil power and majesty
resembles some vast mountain that lifts its head above the
clouds, and has its granite roots deep down in the world's
center. A feeling of awe is in me when I gaze on it; but it
is vain to ask myself now whether the vanished past, with its
manifold troubles and transitory delights, was preferable to
this unchanging peaceful present. I care for nothing but
Yoletta; and if the old world was consumed to ashes that she
might be created, I am pleased that it was so consumed; for
nobler than all perished hopes and ambitions is the hope that
I may one day wear that bright, consummate flower on my
bosom."</p>
<p>"I have only one trouble now—a wolf that follows me
everywhere, always threatening to rend me to pieces with its
black jaws. Not you, old friend—a great, gaunt,
man-eating, metaphorical wolf, far more terrible than that
beast of the ancients which came to the poor man's door. In
the darkness its eyes, glowing like coals, are ever watching
me, and even in the bright daylight its shadowy form is ever
near me, stealing from bush to bush, or from room to room,
always dogging my footsteps. Will it ever vanish, like a mere
phantom—a wolf of the brain—or will it come
nearer and more near, to spring upon and rend me at the last?
If they could only clothe my mind as they have my body, to
make me like themselves with no canker at my heart, ever
contented and calmly glad! But nothing comes from taking
thought. I am sick of thought—I hate it! Away with it!
I shall go and look for Yoletta, since she does not come to
me. Good-by, old friend, you have been well-behaved and
listened with considerable patience to a long discourse. It
will benefit you about as much as I have been benefited by
many a lecture and many a sermon I was compelled to listen to
in the old vanished days."</p>
<p>Bestowing another caress on him I got up and went back to the
house, thinking sadly as I walked that the bright weather had
not yet greatly improved my spirits.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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