The Gadfly by E. L. Voynich (ebook reader android TXT) 📕
"Is that really it? What should I do without you, Arthur? I should always be losing my things. No, I am not going to write any more now. Come out into the garden, and I will help you with your work. What is the bit you couldn't understand?"
They went out into the still, shadowy cloister garden. The seminary occupied the buildings of an old Dominican monastery, and two hundred years ago the square courtyard had been stiff and trim, and the rosemary and lavender had grown in close-cut bushes between the straight box edgings. Now the white-robed monks who had tended them were laid away and forgotten; but the scented herbs flowered still in the gracious mid-summer evening, though no man gathered their blossoms for simples any more. Tufts of wild parsley and columbin
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“The Rhone?”
“No, the Arve; it runs so fast.”
“Then we will go to Chamonix.”
They spent the afternoon drifting about in a
little sailing boat. The beautiful lake produced
far less impression upon Arthur than the gray and
muddy Arve. He had grown up beside the Mediterranean,
and was accustomed to blue ripples;
but he had a positive passion for swiftly moving
water, and the hurried rushing of the glacier
stream delighted him beyond measure. “It is so
much in earnest,” he said.
Early on the following morning they started for
Chamonix. Arthur was in very high spirits while
driving through the fertile valley country; but
when they entered upon the winding road near
Cluses, and the great, jagged hills closed in around
them, he became serious and silent. From St. Martin
they walked slowly up the valley, stopping to
sleep at wayside chalets or tiny mountain villages,
and wandering on again as their fancy directed.
Arthur was peculiarly sensitive to the influence of
scenery, and the first waterfall that they passed
threw him into an ecstacy which was delightful to
see; but as they drew nearer to the snow-peaks
he passed out of this rapturous mood into one of
dreamy exaltation that Montanelli had not seen
before. There seemed to be a kind of mystical relationship
between him and the mountains. He
would lie for hours motionless in the dark, secret,
echoing pine-forests, looking out between the
straight, tall trunks into the sunlit outer world of
flashing peaks and barren cliffs. Montanelli
watched him with a kind of sad envy.
“I wish you could show me what you see,
carino,” he said one day as he looked up from his
book, and saw Arthur stretched beside him on the
moss in the same attitude as an hour before, gazing
out with wide, dilated eyes into the glittering
expanse of blue and white. They had turned aside
from the high-road to sleep at a quiet village near
the falls of the Diosaz, and, the sun being already
low in a cloudless sky, had mounted a point of pine-clad
rock to wait for the Alpine glow over the
dome and needles of the Mont Blanc chain. Arthur
raised his head with eyes full of wonder and
mystery.
“What I see, Padre? I see a great, white being
in a blue void that has no beginning and no end.
I see it waiting, age after age, for the coming of the
Spirit of God. I see it through a glass darkly.”
Montanelli sighed.
“I used to see those things once.”
“Do you never see them now?”
“Never. I shall not see them any more. They
are there, I know; but I have not the eyes to see
them. I see quite other things.”
“What do you see?”
“I, carino? I see a blue sky and a snow-mountain
—that is all when I look up into the heights.
But down there it is different.”
He pointed to the valley below them. Arthur
knelt down and bent over the sheer edge of the
precipice. The great pine trees, dusky in the gathering
shades of evening, stood like sentinels along
the narrow banks confining the river. Presently
the sun, red as a glowing coal, dipped behind a
jagged mountain peak, and all the life and light
deserted the face of nature. Straightway there
came upon the valley something dark and threatening
—sullen, terrible, full of spectral weapons.
The perpendicular cliffs of the barren western
mountains seemed like the teeth of a monster
lurking to snatch a victim and drag him down into
the maw of the deep valley, black with its moaning
forests. The pine trees were rows of knife-blades
whispering: “Fall upon us!” and in the
gathering darkness the torrent roared and howled,
beating against its rocky prison walls with the
frenzy of an everlasting despair.
“Padre!” Arthur rose, shuddering, and drew
back from the precipice. “It is like hell.”
“No, my son,” Montanelli answered softly, “it
is only like a human soul.”
“The souls of them that sit in darkness and in
the shadow of death?”
“The souls of them that pass you day by day
in the street.”
Arthur shivered, looking down into the shadows.
A dim white mist was hovering among the
pine trees, clinging faintly about the desperate
agony of the torrent, like a miserable ghost that
had no consolation to give.
“Look!” Arthur said suddenly. “The people
that walked in darkness have seen a great
light.”
Eastwards the snow-peaks burned in the afterglow.
When the red light had faded from the
summits Montanelli turned and roused Arthur
with a touch on the shoulder.
“Come in, carino; all the light is gone. We
shall lose our way in the dark if we stay any
longer.”
“It is like a corpse,” Arthur said as he turned
away from the spectral face of the great snow-peak
glimmering through the twilight.
They descended cautiously among the black
trees to the chalet where they were to sleep.
As Montanelli entered the room where Arthur
was waiting for him at the supper table, he saw
that the lad seemed to have shaken off the ghostly
fancies of the dark, and to have changed into quite
another creature.
“Oh, Padre, do come and look at this absurd
dog! It can dance on its hind legs.”
He was as much absorbed in the dog and its
accomplishments as he had been in the afterglow.
The woman of the chalet, red-faced and white-aproned,
with sturdy arms akimbo, stood by smiling,
while he put the animal through its tricks.
“One can see there’s not much on his mind if he
can carry on that way,” she said in patois to her
daughter. “And what a handsome lad!”
Arthur coloured like a schoolgirl, and the
woman, seeing that he had understood, went away
laughing at his confusion. At supper he talked of
nothing but plans for excursions, mountain
ascents, and botanizing expeditions. Evidently
his dreamy fancies had not interfered with either
his spirits or his appetite.
When Montanelli awoke the next morning Arthur
had disappeared. He had started before daybreak
for the higher pastures “to help Gaspard
drive up the goats.”
Breakfast had not long been on the table, however,
when he came tearing into the room, hatless,
with a tiny peasant girl of three years old
perched on his shoulder, and a great bunch of wild
flowers in his hand.
Montanelli looked up, smiling. This was a curious
contrast to the grave and silent Arthur of Pisa
or Leghorn.
“Where have you been, you madcap? Scampering
all over the mountains without any breakfast?”
“Oh, Padre, it was so jolly! The mountains
look perfectly glorious at sunrise; and the dew is
so thick! Just look!”
He lifted for inspection a wet and muddy boot.
“We took some bread and cheese with us, and
got some goat’s milk up there on the pasture; oh, it
was nasty! But I’m hungry again, now; and I
want something for this little person, too.
Annette, won’t you have some honey?”
He had sat down with the child on his knee, and
was helping her to put the flowers in order.
“No, no!” Montanelli interposed. “I can’t
have you catching cold. Run and change your wet
things. Come to me, Annette. Where did you
pick her up?”
“At the top of the village. She belongs to the
man we saw yesterday—the man that cobbles the
commune’s boots. Hasn’t she lovely eyes? She’s
got a tortoise in her pocket, and she calls it
‘Caroline.’”
When Arthur had changed his wet socks and
came down to breakfast he found the child seated
on the Padre’s knee, chattering volubly to him
about her tortoise, which she was holding upside
down in a chubby hand, that “monsieur” might
admire the wriggling legs.
“Look, monsieur!” she was saying gravely in
her half-intelligible patois: “Look at Caroline’s
boots!”
Montanelli sat playing with the child, stroking
her hair, admiring her darling tortoise, and telling
her wonderful stories. The woman of the
chalet, coming in to clear the table, stared in
amazement at the sight of Annette turning out
the pockets of the grave gentleman in clerical
dress.
“God teaches the little ones to know a good
man,” she said. “Annette is always afraid of
strangers; and see, she is not shy with his reverence
at all. The wonderful thing! Kneel down,
Annette, and ask the good monsieur’s blessing
before he goes; it will bring thee luck.”
“I didn’t know you could play with children
that way, Padre,” Arthur said an hour later, as
they walked through the sunlit pasture-land.
“That child never took her eyes off you all the
time. Do you know, I think–-”
“Yes?”
“I was only going to say—it seems to me
almost a pity that the Church should forbid priests
to marry. I cannot quite understand why. You
see, the training of children is such a serious thing,
and it means so much to them to be surrounded
from the very beginning with good influences, that
I should have thought the holier a man’s vocation
and the purer his life, the more fit he is to be a
father. I am sure, Padre, if you had not been
under a vow,—if you had married,—your children
would have been the very–-”
“Hush!”
The word was uttered in a hasty whisper that
seemed to deepen the ensuing silence.
“Padre,” Arthur began again, distressed by the
other’s sombre look, “do you think there is anything
wrong in what I said? Of course I may be
mistaken; but I must think as it comes natural to
me to think.”
“Perhaps,” Montanelli answered gently, “you
do not quite realize the meaning of what you just
said. You will see differently in a few years.
Meanwhile we had better talk about something
else.”
It was the first break in the perfect ease and harmony
that reigned between them on this ideal holiday.
From Chamonix they went on by the Tete-Noire
to Martigny, where they stopped to rest,
as the weather was stiflingly hot. After dinner
they sat on the terrace of the hotel, which was
sheltered from the sun and commanded a good
view of the mountains. Arthur brought out his
specimen box and plunged into an earnest botanical
discussion in Italian.
Two English artists were sitting on the terrace;
one sketching, the other lazily chatting. It did
not seem to have occurred to him that the strangers
might understand English.
“Leave off daubing at the landscape, Willie,”
he said; “and draw that glorious Italian boy going
into ecstasies over those bits of ferns. Just look
at the line of his eyebrows! You only need to put
a crucifix for the magnifying-glass and a Roman
toga for the jacket and knickerbockers, and there’s
your Early Christian complete, expression and
all.”
“Early Christian be hanged! I sat beside that
youth at dinner; he was just as ecstatic over the
roast fowl as over those grubby little weeds. He’s
pretty enough; that olive colouring is beautiful;
but he’s not half so picturesque as his father.”
“His—who?”
“His father, sitting there straight in front of
you. Do you mean to say you’ve passed him over?
It’s a perfectly magnificent face.”
“Why, you dunder-headed, go-to-meeting
Methodist! Don’t you know a Catholic priest
when you see one?”
“A priest? By Jove, so he is! Yes, I forgot;
vow of chastity, and all that sort of thing. Well
then, we’ll be charitable and suppose the boy’s his
nephew.”
“What idiotic people!” Arthur whispered,
looking up with dancing eyes. “Still, it is kind of
them to think me
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