The Secret Power by Marie Corelli (the reading strategies book txt) đ
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âA very welcome little boat!â said Lady Kingswood, with feelingââA rescue in the nick of time!â
âNever mind that!â and Morgan waved her pretty hand expressivelyâ âMy point is that marriageâjust marriageâhas not done much for you. It is what women clamour for, and scheme for,âand nine out of ten regret the whole business when they have had their way. There are so many more things in life worth winning!â
Lady Kingswood looked at her interestedly. She made a pretty picture just then in her white morning gown, seated in a low basket chair with pale blue silk cushions behind her on which her golden head rested with the brightness of a daffodil.
âSo many more things!â she repeatedââMy air-ship for instance!â itâs worth all the men and all the marriages Iâve ever heard of! My beloved âWhite Eagle!ââmy own creationâmy babyâSUCH a baby!â She laughed. âBut I must learn to fly with it alone!â
âI hope you will do nothing rash!ââsaid Lady Kingswood, mildly; she was very ignorant of modern discovery and invention, and all attempt to explain anything of the kind to her would have been a hope less businessââI understand that it is always necessary to take a pilot and an observer in these terrible sky-machinesââ
She was interrupted by a gay little peal of laughter from Morgana.
âTerrible?âOh, dear âDuchess,â you are too funny! Thereâs nothing âterribleâ about MY âsky-machine!â Do you ever read poetry? No?â Well then you donât know that lovely and prophetic line of Keatsââ
âBeautiful things made new For the surprise of the sky-children.ââPoets are always prophetic,âthat is, REAL poets, not modern verse mongers; and I fancy Keats must have imagined something in the far distant future like my âWhite Eagle!â For it really IS âa beautiful thing made newââa beautiful natural force put to new usesâand who knows?âI may yet surprise those âsky-children!ââ
Lady Kingswoodâs mind floundered helplessly in this flood of what, to her, was incomprehensibility. Morgana went on in the sweet fluting voice which was one of her special charms.
âIf you havenât read Keats, you must have read at some time or other the âArabian Nightsâ and the story of âSindbad the Sailorâ? Yes? You think you have? Well, you know how poor Sindbad got into the Valley of Diamonds and waited for an eagle to fly down and carry him off! Thatâs just like me! Iâve been dropped into a Valley of Diamonds and often wondered how I should escapeâbut the Eagle has arrived!â
âIâm afraid I donât quite follow youââsaid Lady KingswoodââIâm rather dense, you know! Surely your Valley of Diamondsâif you mean wealthâhas made your âEagleâ possible?â
Morgana nodded.
âExactly! If there had been no Valley of Diamonds there would have been no Eagle! But, all the same, this little female Sindbad is glad to get out of the valley!â
Lady Kingswood laughed.
âMy dear child, if you are making a sort of allegory on your wealth, you are not âout of the valleyâ nor are you likely to be!â
Morgana sighed.
âMy vulgar wealth!â she murmured.
âWhat? Vulgar?â
âYes. A man told me it was.â
âA vulgar man himself, I should imagine!â said Lady Kingswood, warmly.
Morgana shrugged her shoulders carelessly.
âOh, no, he isnât. Heâs eccentric, but not vulgar. Heâs aristocratic to the tips of his toesâand English. That accounts for his rudeness. Sometimes, you knowâonly sometimesâEnglishmen can be VERY rude! But Iâd rather have them soâitâs a sort of well-bred clumsiness, like the manners of a Newfoundland dog. Itâs not the âmake-a-dollarâ air of American men.â
âYou are quite English yourself, arenât you?â queried her companion.
âNoânot English in any sense. Iâm pure Celtic of Celt, from the farthest Highlands of Scotland. But I hate to say Iâm âScotch,â as slangy people use that word for whisky! Iâm just Highland-born. My father and mother were the same, and I came to life a wild moor, among mists and mountains and stormy seasâIâm always glad of that! Iâm glad my eyes did not look their first on a city! Thereâs a tradition in the part of Scotland where I was born which tells of a history far far back in time when sailors from Phoenicia came to our shores,âmen greatly civilised when we all were but savages, and they made love to the Highland women and had children by them,âthen when they went away back to Egypt they left many traces of Eastern customs and habits which remain to this day. My father used always to say that he could count his ancestry back to Egypt!âit pleased him to think so and it did nobody any harm!â
âHave you ever been to the East?â asked Lady Kingswood.
âNoâbut Iâm going! My âWhite Eagleâ will take me there in a very short time! But, as Iâve already told you, I must learn to fly alone.â
âWhat does the Marchese Rivardi say to that?â
âI donât ask him!â replied Morgana, indifferentlyââWhat I may decide to do is not his business.â She broke off abruptlyâthen continuedââHe is coming to luncheon,âand afterwards you shall see my air-ship. I wonât persuade you to go up in it!â
âI COULDNâT!â said Lady Kingswood, emphaticallyââIâve no nerve for such an adventure.â
Morgana rose from her chair, smiling kindly.
âDear âDuchessâ be quite easy in your mind!â she saidââI want you very much on land, but I shall not want you in the air! You will be quite safe and happy here in the Palazzo dâOroââshe turned as she saw the shadow of a manâs tall figure fall on the smooth marble pavement of the loggiaââAh! Here is the Marchese! We were just speaking of you!â
âTroppâ onore!â he murmured, as he kissed the little hand she held out to him in the Sicilian fashion of gallantryââI fear I am perhaps too early?â
âOh no! We were about to go in to luncheonâI know the hour by the bell of the monastery down thereâyou hear it?â
A soft âting-ting tongâârang from the olive and ilex woods below the Palazzo,âand Morgana, listening, smiled.
âPoor Don Aloysius!â she saidââHe will now go to his soup maigreâ and we to our poulet, sauce bechamel,âand he will be quite as contented as we are!â
âMore so, probably!â said Rivardi, as he courteously assisted Lady Kingswood, who was slightly lame, to rise from her chairââHe is one of the few men who in life have found peace,â
Morgana gave him a keen glance.
âYou think he has really found it?â
âI think so,âyes! He has faith in Godâa great support that has given way for most of the peoples of this world.â
Lady Kingswood looked pained.
âI am sorry to hear you say that!â
âI am sorry myself to say it, miladi, but I fear it is true!â he rejoinedââIt is one sign of a general break-up.â
âOh, you are right! You are very right!â exclaimed Morgana suddenly, and with emphasisââWe know that when even one human being is unable to recognise his best friend we sayââPoor man! His brain is gone!â Itâs the same thing with a nation. Or a world! When it is so ailing that it cannot recognise the Friend who brought it into being, who feeds it, keeps it, and gives it all it has, we must say the same thingââIts brain is gone!ââ
Rivardi was surprised at the passionate energy she threw into these words.
âYou feel that deeply?â he saidââAnd yetâpardon me!âyou do not assume to be religious?â
âMarchese, I âassumeâ nothing!â she answeredââI cannot âpretendâ! To âassumeâ or to âpretendâ would hardly serve the Creator adequately. Creative or Natural Force is so far away from sham that one must do more than âassumeââone must BE!â
Her voice thrilled on the air, and Lady Kingswood, who was crossing the loggia, leaning on her stick, paused to look at the eloquent speaker. She was worth looking at just then, for she seemed inspired. Her eyes were extraordinarily brilliant, and her whole personality expressed a singular vitality coupled with an ethereal grace that suggested some thing almost superhuman.
âYesâone must be!â she repeatedââI have not BEEN A STUDENT OF SCIENCE SO LONG WITHOUT LEARNING that there is no âassumingâ anything in the universe. One must SEE straight, and THINK straight too! I could not âassumeâ religion, because I FEEL itâin the very depths of my soul! As Don Aloysius said the other day, it is marvellous how close we are to the Source of all life, and yet we imagine we are far away! If we could only realise the truth of the Divine Nearness, and work WITH it and IN it, we should make discoveries worth knowing! We work too much WITH ourselves and OF ourselves.â She paused,âthen added slowly and seriouslyââI have never done any work that way. I have always considered myself Nothing,âthe Force I have obeyed was and is Everything.â
âAnd soâbeing Nothingâyou still made your air-ship possible!â said Rivardi, smiling indulgently at her fantastic speech.
She answered him with unmoved and patient gravity.
âIt is as you say,âbeing Nothing myself, and owning myself to be Nothing; the Force that is Everything made my air-ship possible!â
CHAPTER XV
Two or three hours later the âWhite Eagleâ was high in air above the Palazzo dâOro. Down below Lady Kingswood stood on the seashore by the aerodrome, watching the wonderful ship of the sky with dazzled, scared eyesâamazed at the lightning speed of its ascent and the steadiness of its level flight. She had seen it spread its great wings as by self-volition and soar out of the aerodrome with Morgana seated inside like an elfin queen in a fairy carâshe had seen the Marchese Giulio Rivardi âtake the helmâ with the assistant Gaspard, now no longer a prey to fear, beside him. Up, up and away they had flown, waving to her till she could see their forms no longerâtill the âWhite Eagleâ itself looked no bigger than a dove soaring in the blue. And while she waited, even this faint dove-image vanished! She looked in every direction, but the skies were empty. To her there was something very terrifying in this complete disappearance of human beings in the vast stretches of the airâthey had gone so silently, too, for the âWhite Eagleâsâ flight made no sound, and though the afternoon was warm and balmy she felt chilled with the cold of nervous apprehension. Yet they had all assured her there was no cause for alarm,âthey were only going on a short trial trip and would be back to dinner.
âNothing more than a run in a motor-car!â Morgana said, gaily.
Nothing more,âbut to Lady Kingswood it seemed much more. She belonged to simple Victorian daysâdays of quiet home-life and home affections, now voted âdeadly dull!â and all the rushing to and fro and gadding about of modern men and women worried and distressed her, for she had the plain common sense to perceive that it did no good either to health or morals, and led nowhere. She looked wistfully out to sea,âthe blue Sicilian sea so exquisite in tone and play of pure reflections,âand thought how happy a life lived after the old sweet ways might be for a brilliant little creature like Morgana, if she could win âa good manâs loveâ as Shakespeare puts it. And yetâwas not this rather harking back to mere sentiment, often proved delusive? Her own âgood manâs loveâ had been very precious to her,âbut it had not fulfilled all
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