Part 27 (2/2)
”You spoke so feelingly a little while ago,” he ventured along, with hesitation, ”about how sadly the notion of a priest's sacrificing himself--never knowing what love meant--appealed to a woman. I should think that the idea of sacrificing herself would seem to her even sadder still.”
”I don't remember that we mentioned THAT,” she replied. ”How do you mean--sacrificing herself?”
Theron gathered some of the outlying folds of her dress in his hand, and boldly patted and caressed them. ”You, so beautiful and so free, with such fine talents and abilities,” he murmured; ”you, who could have the whole world at your feet--are you, too, never going to know what love means? Do you call that no sacrifice? To me it is the most terrible that my imagination can conceive.”
Celia laughed--a gentle, amused little laugh, in which Theron's ears traced elements of tenderness. ”You must regulate that imagination of yours,” she said playfully. ”It conceives the thing that is not. Pray, when”--and here, turning her head, she bent down upon his face a gaze of arch mock-seriousness--”pray, when did I describe myself in these terms?
When did I say that I should never know what love meant?”
For answer Theron laid his head down upon his arm, and closed his eyes, and held his face against the draperies encircling her. ”I cannot think!” he groaned.
The thing that came uppermost in his mind, as it swayed and rocked in the tempest of emotion, was the strange reminiscence of early childhood in it all. It was like being a little boy again, nestling in an innocent, unthinking transport of affection against his mother's skirts.
The tears he felt scalding his eyes were the spontaneous, unashamed tears of a child; the tremulous and exquisite joy which spread, wave-like, over him, at once reposeful and yearning, was full of infantile purity and sweetness. He had not comprehended at all before what wellsprings of spiritual beauty, what limpid depths of idealism, his nature contained.
”We were speaking of our respective religions,” he heard Celia say, as imperturbably as if there had been no digression worth mentioning.
”Yes,” he a.s.sented, and moved his head so that he looked up at her back hair, and the leaves high above, mottled against the sky. The wish to lie there, where now he could just catch the rose-leaf line of her under-chin as well, was very strong upon him. ”Yes?” he repeated.
”I cannot talk to you like that,” she said; and he sat up again shamefacedly.
”Yes--I think we were speaking of religions--some time ago,” he faltered, to relieve the situation. The dreadful thought that she might be annoyed began to oppress him.
”Well, you said whatever my religion was, it was yours too. That ent.i.tles you at least to be told what the religion is. Now, I am a Catholic.”
Theron, much mystified, nodded his head. Could it be possible--was there coming a deliberate suggestion that he should become a convert? ”Yes--I know,” he murmured.
”But I should explain that I am only a Catholic in the sense that its symbolism is pleasant to me. You remember what Schopenhauer said--you cannot have the water by itself: you must also have the jug that it is in. Very well; the Catholic religion is my jug. I put into it the things I like. They were all there long ago, thousands of years ago. The Jews threw them out; we will put them back again. We will restore art and poetry and the love of beauty, and the gentle, spiritual, soulful life.
The Greeks had it; and Christianity would have had it too, if it hadn't been for those brutes they call the Fathers. They loved ugliness and dirt and the thought of h.e.l.l-fire. They hated women. In all the earlier stages of the Church, women were very prominent in it. Jesus himself appreciated women, and delighted to have them about him, and talk with them and listen to them. That was the very essence of the Greek spirit; and it breathed into Christianity at its birth a sweetness and a grace which twenty generations of cranks and savages like Paul and Jerome and Tertullian weren't able to extinguish. But the very man, Cyril, who killed Hypatia, and thus began the dark ages, unwittingly did another thing which makes one almost forgive him. To please the Egyptians, he secured the Church's acceptance of the adoration of the Virgin. It is that idea which has kept the Greek spirit alive, and grown and grown, till at last it will rule the world. It was only epileptic Jews who could imagine a religion without s.e.x in it.”
”I remember the pictures of the Virgin in your room,” said Theron, feeling more himself again. ”I wondered if they quite went with the statues.”
The remark won a smile from Celia's lips.
”They get along together better than you suppose,” she answered.
”Besides, they are not all pictures of Mary. One of them, standing on the moon, is of Isis with the infant Horus in her arms. Another might as well be Mahamie, bearing the miraculously born Buddha, or Olympias with her child Alexander, or even Perictione holding her babe Plato--all these were similar cases, you know. Almost every religion had its Immaculate Conception. What does it all come to, except to show us that man turns naturally toward the wors.h.i.+p of the maternal idea? That is the deepest of all our instincts--love of woman, who is at once daughter and wife and mother. It is that that makes the world go round.”
Brave thoughts shaped themselves in Theron's mind, and shone forth in a confident yet wistful smile on his face.
”It is a pity you cannot change estates with me for one minute,” he said, in steady, low tone. ”Then you would realize the tremendous truth of what you have been saying. It is only your intellect that has reached out and grasped the idea. If you were in my place, you would discover that your heart was bursting with it as well.”
Celia turned and looked at him.
”I myself,” he went on, ”would not have known, half an hour ago, what you meant by the wors.h.i.+p of the maternal idea. I am much older than you. I am a strong, mature man. But when I lay down there, and shut my eyes--because the charm and marvel of this whole experience had for the moment overcome me--the strangest sensation seized upon me. It was absolutely as if I were a boy again, a good, pure-minded, fond little child, and you were the mother that I idolized.”
Celia had not taken her eyes from his face. ”I find myself liking you better at this moment,” she said, with gravity, ”than I have ever liked you before.”
Then, as by a sudden impulse, she sprang to her feet. ”Come!” she cried, her voice and manner all vivacity once more, ”we have been here long enough.”
Upon the instant, as Theron was more laboriously getting up, it became apparent to them both that perhaps they had been there too long.
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