Shadows of Ecstasy - Charles Williams (electric book reader .txt) 📗
- Author: Charles Williams
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Mr. Caithness, that the king, being a Christian, is not yet able to be
negligent of material hurt. You and Sir Bernard insisted on his being
liable to pain; you’ll no doubt teach him to endure pain.” He turned
to the others. “Goodnight, Mr. Rosenberg,” he said, “tomorrow we’ll
talk of your journey. Goodnight, Ingram; sleep.” His eyes looked into
Roger’s and sent through him a doctrine of obedience. He and the ocean
swept the young man up and away into themselves; Roger saluted and
followed the gentleman who waited for him.
They came into a hall which opened round them as if into distances.
The walls were hung or covered with some kind of deep grey from which
light shone, almost as over a landscape. Its furniture was not merely
furniture but natural to it; a chest showed like an antique boulder on
a hillside; a table was a table certainly, but it had grown in its
place, and had not been set there, a chair or two glowed darkly as if
shrubs of glistening leaves reflected the sun. Roger walked after his
guide with a sense of perfect proportion such as no room he had ever
entered, however admirably decorated, had given him; the best had been
but arranged art, pleasant to his judgement, while this was an art
which answered his human nature and contented his blood. It
communicated peace. He followed up a staircase, down a corridor, and
was shown into a perfectly ordinary guest-room, where all necessities
awaited him. His companion uttered a few courteous sentences, smiled,
bowed, and left him. Roger went across to the window, but he could not
see outside; the darkness was too deep. He thought of going back and
switching off the light, took a step that way, and felt all through
his body Considine’s voice saying: “Sleep.” To oppose that government
was too much for him; he turned to the dressing-table.
As he made ready for sleep he thought once more of Isabel. The
knowledge of her moved him, yet differently. He had been apt to wonder
what he could do for her; now indeed he wondered what he could do.
There was all his knowledge, all his concern, but it opened up like a
mountain lake from which as yet no irrigating streams ran to the
plains below. The weight and darkness of this power pressed on him; he
himself was the bank which closed those waters in, yet far away he was
also the plain which needed those waters. They lay silent; they held
such mysteries as verse held, and sometimes the surface of them was
troubled by a wind which rippled it into words. “The passion and the
life whose fountains are within…” “felt in the blood and felt
along the heart…” (what passion along what blood?), “in embalmed
darkness guess each sweet” (what hint of what discovery?), “Where the
great vision of the guarded Mount…(“the guarded Mount”…what
vision?), “fear no more the heat…fear no more…”(did that song
come from within the vision of the guarded Mount wherein also the
passion and the fountains of life lay?), “fear no more…merrily,
merrily, shall I live now.” They did not answer each other; they
flowed towards each other and intermingled, and dissolved each into
others, meaning in sound, sound in meaning, and always fresh ripples
rose and ran on that dark surface, away towards the bounded infinity,
and in and between them all was the vast power of which they were but
gleaming movement momently seen. Between them, as into that vast,
received and to be strengthened, he sank to sleep. In the last second
of mingling knowledge and dream he had a vision of a wide desolate
plain, across which, coming swiftly towards him, ran a tall, young,
uncouth, and violent figure, holding in a hand stretched high above
his head what, even at that distance which was yet no distance, was
known for a curiously tinted and involuted shell. It was running at
great speed, and crying out as it came, crying in a great voice, “A
god, yea, many gods,” and the dreamer suddenly recognized that runner
and knew it for the passionate youth of Wordsworth, coming in his own
dream of saving poetry from a world’s destruction, and crying out in
his own divine voice across lands and waters how the shell was poetry
and uttered voices, “voices more than all the winds, with power”; and
the winds awoke in all the quarters of the vast heavens under which
the intense young visionary ran, and roared down towards him and into
the shell he was stretching out towards Roger, and they reverberated
“power, power,” and the shell sang “power,” and the visitant with
longer and wilder steps was leaping forward, and then darkness swept
over all, and the vision lost itself in sleep.
He woke the next morning, and lay for some moments wondering whether
Muriel would be bringing the tea in soon, whether perhaps if he opened
his eyes he would find that she had already brought it, and even that
Isabel had already poured it out. As no-one said anything however, he
opened his eyes, and almost immediately realized that his chance of
tea was very small. At least, he rather doubted whether Considine’s
household provided early cups of tea, and the doubt was justified.
None appeared. Roger, telling himself that he didn’t mind, wondered
for a second whether cups of tea at reasonable times weren’t actually
more important than lines of poetry, or at least whether the two were
entirely incompatible. Nobody objected to wine, and if he had to
choose for the rest of his life between wine and tea he had no kind of
doubt where the choice would rest. Poetry and such things could give
him all the wine he wanted, whereas tea was unique, “a thing of beauty
and a joy for ever.” “That’s right, misquote,” he said to himself
crossly, and repeated the line correctly—“a thing of beauty is a joy
for ever.” Under the sudden spell the immediate urgency of tea faded.
It was silly to want tea so much when he had that power attending him.
He said it again, slowly, and, much consoled, got up.
Baths apparently Considine provided; he dressed and, hoping he was
doing the right thing—it was close on nine—went downstairs. In the
hall he found Mottreux, Caithness, and two or three more of
Considine’s friends, the young Vereker among them. The hall struck him
as being very cold, perhaps because the front door was wide open, and
a rather helpless November sun was doing the best it could with a
morning mist that lay about the house. He said almost as much to
Vereker—Mottreux and Caithness were conducting a stilted
conversation upon, so far as he could hear, their various visits to
America—and Vereker answered that the door should be shut if he
liked. “We don’t notice the cold,” he said.
“Don’t you, indeed?” Roger said, feeling that it was like Vereker’s
cheek. He was a younger man—he was apparently a younger man. Looks
were nothing to go by; Considine himself was enough to go by, and at
that his momentary irritation passed and he said sincerely: “Don’t
you?”
“The body, after all, ought to be able to manage that,” Vereker said,
“to adjust itself, I mean, to whatever temperature it’s in and enjoy
it; that’s why it’s the delicate thing it is.”
Roger said: “And if you shut the door and turned on a furnace
suddenly—then?”
“Yes, then,” Vereker said laughing. “All this wrapping up and
unwrapping—it’s so unnecessary. To do without food, that does take
longer. But it’s the same principle. Here’s Nigel.”
It was by the single Christian name (or the name which he had
recovered from the misguided habits of the Christian church), Roger
found, that his followers generally referred to him, partly in love,
partly in submission, partly in mere recognition of his own unique
quality, though they carried themselves to him with all the behaviour
of respect possible.
He came in now from the drive with a general word of greeting for his
own people, and particular salutations for Roger and Caithness, to the
former already intimate, to the latter courteous but distant, as if to
some hostile ambassador. After the greetings he said generally: “We
shall have news to-day. I’ve felt it already.”
“A premonition?” Caithness asked politely.
“Why do you despise premonitions?” Considine answered. “Let’s go to
breakfast, shall we? Of course,” he went on, as they sat down, “if you
mean the stupid blur of untrained sensation, that is, as it sounds,
negligible. But if you can feel a country in its air can’t you feel
its people too? All last night I heard and felt them, the voices of
the great towns and the small villages, the talk and the doubt and the
terror. Early this morning I felt it all gathering into one, the
solitary thoughts of the peasants and the determination of the
financiers; it swayed one way and another as it came to me, it veered
and shifted as winds do, but it blew against my spirit at last as the
wind on my face, and I smelt the news that went on it. Suydler will
give way.”
“Can you feel a whole nation?” Roger cried.
“Why not?” Considine asked, almost gaily. “Didn’t you feel the crowd
round your gate when you saved the king? can’t you, even in darkness,
feel the passion of a crowd? And do you think it isn’t possible for me
to feel the purpose of a wider, less certain crowd? I can feel England
as you can feel English verse. And they’ll yield; they’ll talk of
peace.”
“It’s less possible than for you to hear them,” the priest said. “They
won’t yield so easily.” Roger heard the hostility of his voice, and
remembered that to Caithness much more than to him, the figure which
sat at the head of the table, breaking a thin piece of toast, was
indeed the High Executive of Africa, by whose will the Christian
missions had been massacred—priests and converts alike, going down
before the rifles of their enemies. The thought shook him; lost in his
own concern with what Sir Bernard mocked and he adored as the exalted
imagination, he had forgotten of what the executive imagination was
capable. It was not only debonair but ruthless. It had spared London,
but rather from convenience and scorn, from the grace of its superior
power, than from any more tender sentiment. He remembered, without any
immediate connexion, that it was Wordsworth—the Wordsworth of his
dream—who had exulted over the defeat of the English armies—certainly
he had called it a truth most painful to record, but Roger,
looking at Considine, excused Wordsworth. It was, certainly it was, a
painful truth, but undeniably a truth, if any of the whole mad dream
were true, that this was no matter of chat and comfort but of anguish
and ecstasy. The quiet house had lulled him, as the sound of the sea
in which men are at that moment drowning, and drowned men are
furnishing food for shellfish, lulls the sleepy holiday-maker after
food. Some other cold than November’s touched Roger; he tried to
think, and Wordsworth ran through him again, crying “Yea, Carnage is
Thy daughter.” Carnage…carnage…the High Executive was
presiding over a changing world, and he who was following that summons
was accepting the blood shed for that change. He was accepting blood,
as all men do by living. But he knew it. He leaned back from the
half-eaten breakfast. Considine was speaking.
“I don’t say the English are frightened,” he said, “they desire what
they think rightness for Africa; also they do not willingly oppose
ideas; also they—or some of them—desire wealth. They are divided,
and Suydler will play
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