Part 7 (1/2)

”All that man could do, O king, have I done to keep this jewel of the Truth. Against open foes and secret robbers I have defended it, with faithful watching and hard fighting. Through storm and peril, through darkness and sorrow, through the temptation of pleasure and the bewilderment of riches, I have never parted from it. Gold could not buy it; pa.s.sion could not force it; nor man nor woman could wile or win it away. Glad or sorry, well or wounded, at home or in exile, I have given my life to keep the jewel. This is the meaning of the _yes_.”

”It is right,” said the king. ”And now the _no_.”

The man answered quickly and with heat.

[Ill.u.s.tration: The King's Jewel]

”The _no_ also is right, O king! But not by my fault. The jewel is not untarnished, not perfect. It never was. There is a flaw in the stone. I saw it first when I entered the light of your palace-gate.

Look, it is marred and imperfect, a thing of little value. It is not the crystal of Truth. I have been deceived. You have claimed my life for a fool's errand, a thing of naught; no jewel, but a bauble. Take it. It is yours.”

The king looked not at the gold chain and the blue stone, but at the face of the man. He looked quietly and kindly and steadily into the eyes full of pain and wounded loyalty, until they fell before his look. Then he spoke gently.

”Will you give me my jewel?”

The man lifted his eyes in wonder.

”It is there,” he cried, ”at your feet!”

”I spoke not of that,” said the king, ”but of your life, yourself.”

”My life,” said the man faltering, ”what is that? Is it not ended?”

”It is begun,” said the king. ”Your life--yourself, what of that?”

”I had not thought of that,” said the man, ”only of the jewel, not of myself, my life.”

”Think of it now,” said the king, ”and think clearly. Have you not learned courage and hardiness? Have not your labours brought you strength; your perils, wisdom; your wounds, patience? Has not your task broken chains for you, and lifted you out of sloth and above fear? Do you say that the stone that has done this for you is false, a thing of naught?”

”Is this true?” said the man, trembling and sinking on his knee.

”It is true,” answered the king, ”as G.o.d lives, it is true. Come, stand at my right hand. My jewels that I seek are not dead, but alive.

But the stone which led you here--look! has it a flaw?”

He stooped and lifted the jewel. The light of his face fell upon it.

And in the blue depths of the sapphire the man saw a star.

[Ill.u.s.tration]

THE MUSIC-LOVER

The Music-Lover had come to his favourite seat. It was in the front row of the balcony, just where the curve reaches its outermost point, and, like a rounded headland, meets the unbroken flow of the long-rolling, invisible waves of rhythmical sound.

The value of that chosen place did not seem to be known to the world, else there would have been a higher price demanded for the privilege of occupying it. People were willing to pay far more to get into the boxes, or even to have a chair reserved on the crowded level of the parquet.

But the Music-Lover cared little for fas.h.i.+on, and had long ago ceased to reckon the worth of things by the prices asked for them in the market.