Part 28 (2/2)

Malcolm George MacDonald 51390K 2022-07-22

”What is that?”

”Ow, jist the een o' the day.--the day's eyes, ye ken. They're sma' een for sic a great face, but syne there's a lot o' them to mak up for that. They've begun to close a'ready, but the mair they close the bonnier they luik, wi' their bits o' screwed up mooies (little mouths). But saw ye ever sic reid anes, or ony sic a size, my leddy?”

”I don't think I ever did. What is the reason they are so large and red?”

”I dinna ken. There canna be muckle nourishment in sic a thin soil, but there maun be something that agrees wi' them. It's the same a'

roon' aboot here.”

Lady Florimel sat looking at the daisies, and Malcolm stood a few yards off watching for the first of the red sails, which must soon show themselves, creeping out on the ebb tide. Nor had he waited long before a boat appeared, then another and another--six huge oars, ponderous to toil withal, urging each from the shelter of the harbour out into the wide weltering plain. The fis.h.i.+ng boat of that time was not decked as now, and each, with every lift of its bows, revealed to their eyes a gaping hollow, ready, if a towering billow should break above it, to be filled with sudden death.

One by one the whole fleet crept out, and ever as they gained the breeze, up went the red sails, and filled: aside leaned every boat from the wind, and went dancing away over the frolicking billows towards the sunset, its sails, deep dyed in oak bark, s.h.i.+ning redder and redder in the growing redness of the sinking sun.

Nor did Portlossie alone send out her boats, like huge seabirds warring on the live treasures of the deep; from beyond the headlands east and west, out they glided on slow red wing,--from Scaurnose, from Sandend, from Clamrock, from the villages all along the coast, --spreading as they came, each to its work apart through all the laborious night, to rejoin its fellows only as home drew them back in the clear gray morning, laden and slow with the harvest of the stars. But the night lay between, into which they were sailing over waters of heaving green that for ever kept tossing up roses --a night whose curtain was a horizon built up of steady blue, but gorgeous with pa.s.sing purple and crimson, and flas.h.i.+ng with molten gold.

Malcolm was not one of those to whom the sea is but a pond for fish, and the sky a storehouse of wind and rain, suns.h.i.+ne and snow: he stood for a moment gazing, lost in pleasure. Then he turned to Lady Florimel: she had thrown her daisies on the sand, appeared to be deep in her book, and certainly caught nothing of the splendour before her beyond the red light on her page.

”Saw ye ever a bonnier sicht, my leddy?” said Malcolm.

She looked up, and saw, and gazed in silence. Her nature was full of poetic possibilities; and now a formless thought foreshadowed itself in a feeling she did not understand: why should such a sight as this make her feel sad? The vital connection between joy and effort had begun from afar to reveal itself with the question she now uttered.

”What is it all for?” she asked dreamily, her eyes gazing out on the calm ecstasy of colour, which seemed to have broken the bonds of law, and ushered in a new chaos, fit matrix of new heavens and new earth.

”To catch herrin',” answered Malcolm, ignorant of the mood that prompted the question, and hence mistaking its purport.

But a falling doubt had troubled the waters of her soul, and through the ripple she could descry it settling into form. She was silent for a moment.

”I want to know,” she resumed, ”why it looks as if some great thing were going on. Why is all this pomp and show? Something ought to be at hand. All I see is the catching of a few miserable fis.h.!.+ If it were the eve of a glorious battle now, I could understand it --if those were the little English boats rus.h.i.+ng to attack the Spanish Armada, for instance. But they are only gone to catch fish.

Or if they were setting out to discover the Isles of the West, the country beyond the sunset!--but this jars.”

”I canna answer ye a' at ance, my leddy,” said Malcolm; ”I maun tak time to think aboot it. But I ken brawly what ye mean.” Even as he spoke he withdrew, and, descending the mound, walked away beyond the bored craig, regardless now of the far lessening sails and the sinking sun. The motes of the twilight were multiplying fast as he returned along the sh.o.r.e side of the dune, but Lady Florimel had vanished from its crest. He ran to the top: thence, in the dim of the twilight, he saw her slow retreating form, phantom-like, almost at the grated door of the tunnel, which, like that of a tomb, appeared ready to draw her in, and yield her no more.

”My leddy, my leddy,” he cried, ”winna ye bide for 't?”

He went bounding after her like a deer. She heard him call, and stood holding the door half open.

”It's the battle o' Armageddon, my leddy,” he cried, as he came within hearing distance.

”The battle of what?” she exclaimed, bewildered. ”I really can't understand your savage Scotch.”

”Hoot, my leddy! the battle o' Armageddon 's no ane o' the Scots battles; it's the battle atween the richt and the wrang, 'at ye read aboot i' the buik o' the Revelations.”

”What on earth are you talking about?” returned Lady Florimel in dismay, beginning to fear that her squire was losing his senses.

”It's jist what ye was sayin,' my leddy: sic a pomp as yon bude to hing abune a gran' battle some gait or ither.”

”What has the catching of fish to do with a battle in the Revelations?”

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