Part 6 (1/2)
And I said: I will go from here by ways of dream and I will come to that valley and enter in and mourn there for the good years that are dead. And I said: I will take a wreath, a wreath of mourning, and lay it at their feet in token of my sorrow for their dooms.
And when I sought about among the flowers, among the flowers for my wreath of mourning, the lily looked too large and the laurel looked too solemn and I found nothing frail enough nor slender to serve as an offering to the years that were dead. And at last I made a slender wreath of daisies in the manner that I had seen them made in one of the years that is dead.
”This,” said I, ”is scarce less fragile or less frail than one of those delicate forgotten years.” Then I took my wreath in my hand and went from here. And when I had come by paths of mystery to that romantic land, where the valley that rumour told of lies close to the mountainous moon, I searched among the gra.s.s for those poor slight years for whom I bought my sorrow and my wreath. And when I found there nothing in the gra.s.s I said: ”Time has shattered them and swept them away and left not even any faint remains.”
But looking upwards in the blaze of the moon I suddenly saw colossi sitting near, and towering up and blotting out the stars and filling the night with blackness; and at those idols' feet I saw praying and making obeisance kings and the days that are and all times and all cities and all nations and all their G.o.ds. Neither the smoke of incense nor of the sacrifice burning reached those colossal heads, they sat there not to be measured, not to be over-thrown, not to be worn away.
I said: ”Who are those?”
One answered: ”Alone the Immortals.”
And I said sadly: ”I came not to see dread G.o.ds, but I came to shed my tears and to offer flowers at the feet of certain little years that are dead and may not come again.”
He answered me: ”These _are_ the years that are dead, alone the immortals; all years to be are Their children--They fas.h.i.+oned their smiles and their laughter; all earthly kings They have crowned, all G.o.ds They have created; all the events to be flow down from their feet like a river, the worlds are flying pebbles that They have already thrown, and Time and all his centuries behind him kneel there with bended crests in token of va.s.salage at Their potent feet.”
And when I heard this I turned away with my wreath, and went back to my own land comforted.
A MORAL LITTLE TALE
There was once an earnest Puritan who held it wrong to dance. And for his principles he labored hard, his was a zealous life. And there loved him all of those who hated the dance; and those that loved the dance respected him too; they said ”He is a pure, good man and acts according to his lights.”
He did much to discourage dancing and helped to close several Sunday entertainments. Some kinds of poetry, he said, he liked, but not the fanciful kind as that might corrupt the thoughts of the very young.
He always dressed in black.
He was quite interested in morality and was quite sincere and there grew to be much respect on Earth for his honest face and his flowing pure-white beard.
One night the Devil appeared unto him in a dream and said ”Well done.”
”Avaunt,” said that earnest man.
”No, no, friend,” said the Devil.
”Dare not to call me 'friend,'” he answered bravely.
”Come, come, friend,” said the Devil. ”Have you not done my work? Have you not put apart the couples that would dance? Have you not checked their laughter and their accursed mirth? Have you not worn my livery of black? O friend, friend, you do not know what a detestable thing it is to sit in h.e.l.l and hear people being happy, and singing in theatres and singing in the fields, and whispering after dances under the moon,” and he fell to cursing fearfully.
”It is you,” said the Puritan, ”that put into their hearts the evil desire to dance; and black is G.o.d's own livery, not yours.”
And the Devil laughed contemptuously and spoke.
”He only made the silly colors,” he said, ”and useless dawns on hill-slopes facing South, and b.u.t.terflies flapping along them as soon as the sun rose high, and foolish maidens coming out to dance, and the warm mad West wind, and worst of all that pernicious influence Love.”
And when the Devil said that G.o.d made Love that earnest man sat up in bed and shouted ”Blasphemy! Blasphemy!”
”It's true,” said the Devil. ”It isn't I that send the village fools muttering and whispering two by two in the woods when the harvest moon is high, it's as much as I can bear even to see them dancing.”