Angel Island - Inez Haynes Gillmore (novels to improve english .TXT) 📗
- Author: Inez Haynes Gillmore
- Performer: -
Book online «Angel Island - Inez Haynes Gillmore (novels to improve english .TXT) 📗». Author Inez Haynes Gillmore
they just fitted. I used to brood over them every night before I went to
bed. Oh, they were wonderful in the dark - as if the chest were full of
white fire. Many times I’ve waked up in the middle of the night and gone
to look at them. I don’t know why, but I had to do it. After a while, it
hurt me so much that I made up my mind to lock the chest forever; for I
always wept. I could not help it.”
Julia wept now. The tears poured down her cheeks. But she went on.
“After yesterday’s talk, I thought this situation over for a long time.
Then I went to the chest, took out my wings, brought them downstairs and
- and - and - .”
“What?” somebody whispered.
“Burned them!” Julia’s deep voice swelled on the word “burned” as though
she still felt the scorching agony of that moment.
For a long moment, nobody spoke.
Julia asked their question for them. “Do you want to know why I did it?”
And without waiting, she answered, “Because I wanted to mark in some way
the end of my desire to fly. We must stop wanting to fly, we women. We
must stop wasting our energy brooding over what’s past. We must stop it
at once. Not only that but - for Angela’s sake and for the sake of all
girl-children who will be born on this island - we must learn to walk.”
“Learn to walk!” Peachy repeated. “Julia, have you gone mad? We have
always held out against this degradation. We must continue to do so.”
Again came that proud lift of her shoulders, the vibrant stir of
wing-stumps. That would lower us to a level with men.”
“But are we lowering ourselves?” Julia asked. Are they really on a lower
level? Isn’t the earth as good as the air?”
“It’s better, Julia,” Lulu said unexpectedly. “The earth’s a fine place.
It’s warm and homelike. Things grow there. There’s nothing in the air.”
“There are the stars,” murmured Peachy.
“Yes,” said Julia with a soft tenderness, “but we never reached them.”
“The air-life may not have been better or finer,” Peachy continued,
“but, somehow, it seemed clearer and purer. The earth’s such a cluttered
place. It’s so full of things. You can hardly see it for the stuff
that’s on it. From above it seems beautiful, but near - .”
“Yet, it is on the earth that we must live - and that Angela must live,”
Julia interpolated gently.
“But what is the use of our learning to walk?” Peachy demanded.
“To teach Angela how to walk and all the other girl-children that are
coming to us.”
“But I am afraid,” Peachy said anxiously, that if Angela learned to
walk, she would forget how to fly.”
“On the contrary,” Julia declared, “she would fly better for knowing how
to walk, and walk better for knowing how to fly.”
“I don’t see it,” interposed Clara emphatically. “I don’t see what we
get out of walking or what Angela will get out of it. Suppose we learned
to walk? The men would stop helping us along. We’d lose the appeal of
helplessness.”
“But what is there about what you call ‘the appeal of helplessness’ that
makes it worth keeping?” Julia asked, smiling affectionately into
Clara’s eyes. “Why shouldn’t we lose it?”
“Why, because,” Clara exclaimed indignantly, “because - because - why,
because,” she ended lamely. Then, with one of her unexpected bursts of
mental candor, “I’m sure I don’t know why,” she admitted, “except that
we have always appealed to them for that reason. Then again,” she took
up her argument from another angle, “if we learn to walk, they won’t
wait on us any more. They may even stop giving us things. As it is now,
they’re really very generous to us.”
The others smiled with varying degrees of furtiveness. Pete, as they all
knew, could always placate an incensed Clara by offering her some loot
of the homeward way: a bunch of flowers, a handful of nuts, beautifully
colored pebbles, shells with the iridescence still wet on them. She soon
tired of these toys, but she liked the excitement of the surprise.
“Generous to us!” Chiquita burst out - and this was as unexpected as
Lulu’s face-about. “Well, when you come to that, they’re never generous
to us. They make us pay for all they give us. They seem generous - but
they aren’t really - any more than we are.”
“They are far from generous,” said Peachy. “They are ungenerous. They’re
tyrants. They’re despots. See how they took advantage of our innocence
and ignorance of earth-conditions.”
“I protest.” A note that they had never heard from Julia made steel of
the thrilling melody of her voice. “You must know that is not true!” she
said in an accusing voice. “Be fair to them! Tell the truth to
yourselves! If they took advantage of our innocence and ignorance, it
was we who tempted them to it in the first place. As for our innocence
and ignorance - you speak as, if they were beautiful or desirable. We
were innocent and ignorant of earth-conditions because we were too proud
to learn about them, because we always assumed that we lowered ourselves
by knowing anything about them. Our mistake was that we learned to fly
before we learned to walk.”
“But, Julia, what are we going to do about Angela?” Peachy asked
impatiently.
“I’m coming to that presently,” Julia answered. “But before - I want to
ask you a question. Do you remember the big cave in the northern reef -
the one we used to hide in?”
“Oh, I remember,” Lulu said, “perfectly.”
“Did you ever tell Honey about it?” Julia turned to her directly.
“No. Why, we promised never to tell, didn’t we? In case we ever needed a
place of refuge - .”
“Have any of you ever told about it?” Julia turned to the others. “Think
carefully! This is important.”
“I never have told,” Peachy said wearily. “But about Angela - .”
“Have you, Chiquita?” Julia interrupted with a strange insistence.
“I have never thought of it from that day to this,” Chiquita answered.
“Nor I,” replied Clara. “I’m not sure that I could go to it now. Could
you, Julia?”
“Oh, yes,” Julia answered eagerly, “I’ve - .” She stopped abruptly. “But
now I want to talk to you, and I want you to listen carefully. I am
going to tell you why I think we should learn to walk. It is, in brief,
for Angela’s sake and for the sake of every girl-child that is born on
this island. For a long time, you will think that I am talking about
other things. But you must be patient. I have seen this situation coming
ever since Angela’s wings began to grow. I could not hurry it - but I
knew it must come. Many nights I have lain awake, planning what I should
say to you when the time came. The time has come - and I am going to say
it. It is a long, long speech that I shall deliver; and I am going to
speak very plainly. But you must not get angry - for you know how much I
love you and how much I love your children.
“I’m going back to our young girlhood, to the time when our people were
debating the Great Flight. We thought that we were different from them
all, we five, that we were more original and able and courageous. And we
were different. For when our people decided to go south to the
Snowlands, the courage of rebellion grew in us and we deserted in the
night. Do you remember the wonderful sense of freedom that came to us,
and how the further north we flew, the stronger it became? When we found
these islands, it seemed to us that they must have been created
especially for us. Here, we said, we would live always, free from
earth-ties - five incorruptible air-women.
“Then the men came. I won’t go into all that. We’ve gone over it
hundreds and hundreds of times, just as we did this afternoon, playing
the most pathetic game we know - the do-you-remember game. But after
they came, we found that we were not free from earth-ties. For the Great
Doom overtook us and we fell in love. Then came the capture. And we lost
our wings.”
She paused a moment.
“Do you remember that awful day at the Clubhouse, how Chiquita,
comforted us? I - I failed you then; I fainted; I felt myself to blame
for your betrayal. But Chiquita kept saying, ‘Don’t be afraid. They
won’t hurt us. We are precious to them. They would rather die than lose
us. They need us more than we need them. They are bound to us by a chain
that they cannot break.’ And for a long time that seemed true. What we
had to learn was that we needed them just as much as they needed us,
that we were bound to them by a chain that we could not break.
“I often think” - Julia’s voice had become dreamy - ” now when it is so
different, of those first few months after the capture. How kind they
were to us, how gentle, how considerate, how delicate, how chivalrous!
Do you remember that they treated us as if we were children, how, for a
long time, they pretended to believe in fairies? Do you remember the
long fairy-hunts in the moonlit jungle, the long mermaid-hunts in the
moonlit ocean? Do you remember the fairy-tales by the fire? It seemed to
me then that life was one long fairy-tale. And how quickly we learned
their language! Has it ever occurred to you that no one of them has ever
bothered to learn ours - none except Frank, and he only because he was
mentally curious? Then came the long wooing. How we argued the marriage
question - discussed and debated - each knowing that the Great Doom was
on her and could not be gain-said.
“Then came the betrothal, the marriages, and suddenly all that wonderful
starlight and firelight life ended. For a while, the men seemed to drift
away from each other. For a while, we - the ‘devoted five,’ as our
people called us - seemed to drift away from each other. It was as
though they took back something they had freely given each other to give
to us. It was as though we took back something we had freely given each
other to give to them.
“Then, just as suddenly, they began to drift away from us and back to
each other. Some of the high, worshiping quality in their attitude
toward us disappeared. It was as though we had become less beautiful,
less interesting, less desirable - as if possession had killed some
precious, perishable quality.”
“What that quality is I do not know. We are not dumb like stones or
plants, we women. We are not dull like birds or beasts. We do not fade
in a day like flowers. We do not stop like music. We do not go out like
light. What it was that went, or when or how, I do not know. But it was
something that thrilled and enchanted them. It went - and it went
forever.”
“It was as though we were toys - new toys - with a secret spring. And if
one found and pressed that spring, something unexpected and something
Comments (0)