Parables of a Province Part 3
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"Is not that the light of thy home--yonder against the bunch of firs?"
"Yes, yes, good father, they have put a light in the window. See, see, there are two lights. Ah, merci, merci, they both live! She hath had her hour! That was the sign our mother promised me."
"Michel's wife--ah, yes, Michel's wife! Blessed be G.o.d. A moment, Gustave; let us kneel here..."
... "Monsieur, did you not see a white arrow shoot down the sky as the prayer ended?"
"My son, it was a falling star."
"It seemed to have a tuft of fire."
"Hast thou also the mind of a woman, Gustave?"
"I cannot tell. If it was not a human soul it was a world, and death is death."
"Thou shalt think of life, Gustave. In thy nest there are two birds where was but one. Keep in thy heart the joy of life and the truth of love, and the White Omen shall be naught to thee."
"May I say 'thou' as I speak?"
"Thou shalt speak as I speak to thee."
"Thy face is pale-art thou ill, mon pere?"
"I have no beard, and the moon s.h.i.+nes in my face."
"Thy look is as that of one without sight."
"Nay, nay, I can see the two lights in thy window, my son."
"Joy--joy, a little while, and I shall clasp my Fanchon in my arms!"
"Thy Fanchon, and the child--and the child."
The fire sent a trembling glow through the room of a hut on a Voshti hill, and the smell of burning fir and camphire wood filtered through the air with a sleepy sweetness. So delicate and faint between the quilts lay the young mother, the little Fanchon, a s.h.i.+ning wonder still in her face, and the exquisite touch of birth on her--for when a child is born the mother also is born again. So still she lay until one who gave her into the world stooped, and drawing open the linen at her breast, nestled a little life there, which presently gave a tiny cry, the first since it came forth. Then Fanchon's arms drew up, and, with eyes all tenderly burning, she clasped the babe to her breast, and as silk breast touched silk cheek, there sprang up in her the delight and knowledge that the doom of the White Omen was not for herself. Then she called the child by its father's name, and said into the distance: "Gustave, Gustave, come back!"
And the mother of Fanchon, remembering one night so many years before, said, under her breath: "Michel, Michel, thou art gone so long!"
With their speaking, Gustave and the priest entered on them; and Fanchon crying out for joy, said:
"Kiss thy child--thy little Gustave, my husband." Then, to the priest:
"Last night I saw the White Omen, mon pere; and one could not die, nor let the child die, without a blessing. But we shall both live now."
The priest blessed all, and long time he talked with the wife of the lost Michel. When he rose to go to bed she said to him: "The journey has been too long, mon pere. Your face is pale and you tremble. Youth has no patience. Gustave hurried you."
"Gustave yearned for thy Fanchon and the child. The White Omen made him afraid."
"But the journey was too much. It is a hard, a bitter trail."
"I have come gladly as I went once with thy Michel. But, as thou sayest, I am tired--at my heart. I will get to my rest."
Near dawn Gustave started from the bed where he sat watching, for he saw the White Omen over against the shrine, and then a voice said, as it were out of a great distance:
"Even me also, O my father!"
With awed footsteps, going to see, he found that a man had pa.s.sed out upon that trail by which no hunter from life can set a mark to guide a comrade; leaving behind the bones and flesh which G.o.d set up, too heavy to carry on so long a journey.
THE SOJOURNERS
"My father, shall we soon be there?"
The man stopped, and shading his eyes with his hand, looked long before him into the silver haze. They were on the southern bank of a wide valley, flanked by deep hills looking wise as grey-headed youth, a legion of close comrades, showing no gap in their ranks. They seemed to breathe; to sit, looking down into the valley, with heads dropped on their b.r.e.a.s.t.s, and deep overshadowed eyes, that never changed, in mist or snow, or sun, or any kind of weather: dark brooding lights that knew the secrets of the world, watchful yet kind. Races, ardent with longing, had come and gone through the valley, had pa.s.sed the s.h.i.+ning porches in the North on the way to the quiet country; and they had never come again, though shadows flitted back and forth when the mists came down: visiting spirits, hungering on the old trail for some that had dropped by the way. As the ages pa.s.sed, fewer and fewer travelled through the valley-no longer a people or a race, but twos and threes, and sometimes a small company, like soldiers of a battered guard, and oftener still solitary pilgrims, broken with much travel and bowed with loneliness.
But they always cried out with joy when they beheld far off in the North, at the end of the long trail, this range of grey and violet hills break into golden gaps with scarlet walls, and rivers of water ride through them pleasantly. Then they hurried on to the opal haze that hung at the end of the valley--and who heard ever of any that wished to leave the Scarlet Hills and the quiet country beyond!
The boy repeated his question: "My father, shall we soon be there?"
The man withdrew his hand from over his eyes, and a strange smile came to his lips.
"My son," he answered, "canst thou not see? Yonder, through the gentle mist, are the Scarlet Hills. Our journey is near done."
The boy lifted his head and looked. "I can see nothing but the mist, my father--not the Scarlet Hills. I am tired, I would sleep."
"Thou shalt sleep soon. The wise men told us of the Delightful Chateau at the gateway of the hills. Courage, my son! If I gave thee the golden b.a.l.l.s to toss, would it cheer thee?"
"My father, I care not for the golden b.a.l.l.s; but if I had horse and sword and a thousand men, I would take a city."
The man laid his hand upon the boy's shoulder.
"If I, my son," he said, "had a horse and sword and a thousand men, I would build a city."
"Why dost thou not fly thy falcon, or write thy thoughts upon the sand, as thou didst yesterday, my father?"
The man loosed the falcon from his wrist, and watched it fly away.
"My son, I care not for the falcon, nor any more for writing on the sands."
"My father, if thou didst build a city, I would not tear it down, but I would keep it with my thousand men.
"Thou hast well said, my son." And the man stooped and kissed the lad on the forehead.
And so they travelled on in silence for a long time, and slowly they came to the opal haze, which smelled sweet as floating flowers, and gave their hearts a halcyon restfulness. And glancing down at him many times, the father saw the lad's face look serenely wise, without becoming old, and his brown hair cl.u.s.tered on his forehead with all the life of youth in it. Yet in his eyes the lad seemed as old as himself.
"My father," said the lad again, "wouldst thou then build a city?"
And the father answered: "Nay, my son, I would sow seed, and gather it into harvest--enough for my needs, no more; and sit quiet in my doorway when my work was done, and be grateful to the G.o.ds."
Parables of a Province Part 3
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Parables of a Province Part 3 summary
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