Descent into Hell by Charles Williams (ereader iphone .TXT) đź“•
However, Stanhope was, in the politest language, declining to have anything of the sort. "Call it the Chorus," he said, "or if you like I'll try and find a name for the leader, and the rest can just dance and sing. But I'm afraid 'Leaf-Spirits' would be misleading."
"What about'Chorus of Nature-Powers'?" asked Miss Fox, but Stanhope only said, smiling, "You will try and make the trees friendly," which no one quite understood, and shook his head again.
Prescott asked: "Incidentally, I suppose they will be women?"
Mrs. Parry had said, "O, of course, Mr. Prescott," before the question reached her brain. When it did, she added, "At least...I naturally took it for granted.... They are feminine, aren't they?"
Still hankering after mass, Adela said, "It sounds
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demented fanatic; a faint distaste that she should come of his
blood had touched her. It now occurred to her that Struther might
have been talking flat realism. She put the book down, and looked
out of the window. It was-all of a sudden-remarkably easy to look
out of the window. She might even walk down to the gate and look
at the street. The parcel was completely in some one else’s care,
and all she had to do was to leave it. She hoped it was not
troublesome to Peter Stanhope, but it wouldn’t be. He and
whatever he meant by the Omnipotence would manage it quite well
between them. Perhaps, later on,
she could give the omnipotence a hand with some other burden;
everyone carrying everyone else’s, like the Scilly Islanders
taking in each other’s washing. Well, and at that, if it were
tiresome and horrible to wash your own clothes and easy and happy
to wash
someone else Is, the Scilly Islanders might be intelligent enough.
“Change here for Scilly,” she said aloud as she came to the gate.
“My dear!” said a voice beside her.
Pauline jumped. it was a fairly high wall, and she had been
preoccupied; still, she ought to have seen the woman who was
standing outside, alone against the wall on her left. For a
moment something jarred, but she recovered. She said, “Oh, good
evening, Mrs. Sammile. I didn’t see you.”
The other peered at her. “How’s your grandmother?” she asked.
“Rather weaker, I’m afraid,” Pauline said. “It’s kind of you to
ask.”
“And how are you?” Lily Sammile went on. “I’ve been—” but
Pauline unintentionally cut through the sentence.
“Very well indeed,” she murmured, with a deep breath of pleasure.
“Isn’t it a lovely night?”
The other woman strained a little forward, as if, even in the June
evening, she could not see her clearly. She said, “I haven’t seen
you about lately: you haven’t wanted to see me. I thought perhaps
you might.”
Pauline looked back smiling. How, in this quietness of spirit,
could she have thought she wanted anything changed? But the old
lady had wanted to help, and though now she did not need the help,
the goodwill remained. She said, leaning over the gate: “Oh, I’m
much better now.”
“That’s good,” the other woman said. “But take care of yourself.
Think of yourself; be careful of yourself. I could make you
perfectly safe and perfectly happy at the same time. You really
haven’t any idea of how happy you could be.”
Her voice was infinitely softer than Pauline could remember it. In
the full light of day, the other woman had seemed to her slightly
hard, her voice a light third hammer to her feet. She pattered
everywhere, upstairs, downstairs, in my lady’s chamber, in any
chamber; but now her figure was dim and her feet still, and her
voice soft. As soft as the dust the evening wind was blowing down
the street. Dust of the dead,
dust of the Struther who had died in flame. Had he been happy?
happy? happy? Pauline was not sure whether she or her companion
had spoken the word again, but it hung in the air, floating
through it above, and the dust was stirred below, and a little
dizziness took her and passed. Lazily she swung the gate.
She said, as if to draw down the floating mist: “Happy? I… I
happy?”
The other murmured: “Happy, rich. Insatiate, yet satisfied. How
delicious everything would be! I could tell you tales that would
shut everything but yourself out. Wouldn’t you like to be happy?
If there’s
anything that worries you, I can shut it away from you. Think
what you might be missing.”
Pauline said: “I don’t understand.”
The other went on: “My dear, it’s so simple. If you will come
with me, I can fill you, fill your body with any sense you choose.
I can make you feel whatever you’d choose to be. I can give you
certainty of joy
for every moment of life. Secretly, secretly; no other soul-no
other living soul.”
Pauline tingled as she listened. Shut up within herself—shut up
till that very day with fear and duty for only companions—with
silence and forbearance as only possibilities—she felt a vague
thrill of promised delight. Against it her release that day began
already to seem provisional and weak. She had found calm,
certainly; only ten minutes earlier that calm had seemed to her
more than she could ever have hoped. She loved it still; she owed
to it this interval of indulgent communion with something other
than calm. The communion threatened the calm with a more
entrancing sensation of bliss; she felt almost that she had too
rashly abandoned her tribulation for a substitute that was but a
cold gift, when warm splendour had been waiting to enrapture her.
In the very strength of her new-found security she leaned from it,
as from the house itself; as within a tower of peace, with
deliberate purpose she swung
the gate more wide. Inconceivably she all but regretted the fear
that would have been an excuse, even a just reason, for accepting
a promise of more excitement of satisfaction than peace and
freedom could
give or could excuse. Peace had given her new judgment, and
judgment began to lament her peace. If she opened the gate, if
the far vision of her returning vision gave her speed and strength
to leap from it to this more thrilling refuge! And while her heart
beat more quickly and her mind laboured at once to know and not to
know its desires, a voice slid into her ear, teasing her, speeding
her blood, provoking her
purpose. It spoke of sights and sounds, touches and thrills, and
of entire oblivion of harm; nothing was to be that she did not
will, and everything that she willed, to the utmost fullness of
her heart, should be. She would be enough for herself. She could
dream for ever, and her dream should for ever be made real. “Come
soon,” it said, “come now. I’ll wait for you here. In a few
minutes you’ll be free, and then you’ll
come; you shall be back soon. Give me your hand and I’ll give you
a foretaste now.” A hand came into hers, a pulse against her wrist
beat with significance of breathless abandonment to delirious joy.
She
delayed in a tremulous and pleasurable longing.
“But how?” she murmured, “how can all this happen? how do I know
what I want? I’ve never thought… I don’t know anyone… and
to be alone….”
“Give me your hand,” the other said, “then come and dream, till
you discover, so soon, the ripeness of your dream.” She paused,
and added, “You’ll never have to do anything for others any more.”
It was the last touch, and false, false because of the habit
of her past and because of Stanhope’s promise. The fountain of
beauty had sprung upward in a last thrust; it broke against the
arched roof of his world, and the shock stung her into coldness.
Never have to do anything—and she had been promising herself that
she would carry someone’s parcel as hers had been carried, that
she would be what he
said she could. Like it or not, it had been an oath; rash or wise
it stood.
“An oath, an oath, I have an oath in heaven.” She had been reading
more verse of late, since she had had to speak Stanhope’s, and the
holy words engulfed her in the sound which was so much more than
she. “An oath, an oath…. Shall I lay perjury upon my soul?”
The wind, rising as if to a storm, screamed “perjury” through the
sky that held the Hill and all; false, false! she perjured in that
last false gleam. She was come; “false, fleeting, perjured Clarence!
Seize on him, Furies…. The word, Antaean, sprang hundred-voiced
around her, and held her by every gripping voice. Perjury,
on her soul and in her blood, if now she slipped to buy sweets
with money that was not hers; never, till it was hers in all love
and princely good, by gift and gift and gift beyond excelling gift,
in no secrecy of greed but all glory of public exchange, law of the
universe and herself a child of the universe. Never till he—not
Pascal nor the Jesuits nor the old chattering pattering woman but he;
not moonlight or mist or clouding dust but he; not any power in
earth or heaven but he or the peace she had been made bold to bid
him-till they bade her take with all her heart what nothing could
then forbid. An oath, an oath, an oath in heaven, and heaven
known in the bright oath itself, where two loves struck together,
and the serene light of substitution shone, beyond her understanding
but not beyond her deed. She flung the gate shut, and snatched
her hands away, and as it clanged she was standing upright, her
body a guard flung out on the frontier of her soul. The other
woman was at the gate—of garden or world or soul—leaning to but
not over it, speaking hurriedly, wildly, and the voice rising on
the wind and torn and flung on the wind: “Everything, anything;
anything, everything; kindness to me… help to me… nothing
to do for others, nothing to do with others… everything,
everything…”
The door behind her was opened; the maid’s voice said doubtfully:
“Miss Pauline?”
Pauline, rigid at her post, said, turning her head a little: “You
wanted me?”
Phoebe murmured: “Your grandmother’s asking for you, Miss Pauline,
if you could come.”
Pauline said, “I’m coming.” She looked over the gate; she added in
a voice hard with an unreasoning hostility: “Good night.” She ran in.
JUNCTION OF TRAVELLERS
The dead man walked in his dead town. It was still, quiet and
deserted; he too was quiet in it. He had now, for long, no need
to worry. Nagging voice and niggling hunger were gone. It was
heaven enough; he sought nothing else. Dead or alive, or neither
dead nor alive, he was free from the sick fear which the Republic
had imposed on him. The stigmata of his oppression burned and
ached no more. His tired feet had lightness; his worn form
energy. He did not know or care if he were in the body or out of
the body. For the first time he needed nothing, and nothing
distressed him. He walked, sat, stretched himself out. He-did
not sleep, for he did not need sleep. Sometimes he wondered a
little that he was never hungry or thirsty. It was an odd place
he was in, but he did not grow tired of it any more than of
walking through it. So much the better if he were not hungry or
thirsty or tired. As for luxuries, he could not have missed them,
for he had never had them, nor, then and there, was it permitted
him to feel any want.
The faint light persisted. Time had no measurement except by the
slow growth of his interior quiet, and to him none. All the
capacities of satisfaction in one ordinary life, which have their
fulfillment in many ways, in him there were concentrated on that
quiet. Monotony could not exist where all duration was a slow
encouragement of rest. Presently he even found himself looking up
into the sky for the moon. The moon in his mind was, since his
death, connected with the world he had known, with his single room
and his wife, his enemies and tyrants. He felt, now safe, from
it; he seriously expected its appearance, knowing that he was
free. If the big pale ball had
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