Beauvale is, or was, the largest
parish in England. It is thinly populated, only just netting the stragglers
from shoals of houses in three large mining villages. For the rest, it holds a
great tract of woodland, fragment of old Sherwood, a few hills of pasture and
arable land, three collieries, and, finally, the ruins of a Cistercian abbey.
These ruins lie in a still rich meadow at the foot of the last fall of
woodland, through whose oaks shines a blue of hyacinths, like water, in
May-time. Of the abbey, there remains only the east wall of the chancel
standing, a wild thick mass of ivy weighting one shoulder, while pigeons perch
in the tracery of the lofty window. This is the window in question.
The vicar of Beauvale is a
bachelor of forty-two years. Quite early in life some illness caused a slight
paralysis of his right side, so that he drags a little, and so that the right
corner of his mouth is twisted up into his cheek with a constant grimace,
unhidden by a heavy moustache. There is something pathetic about this twist on
the vicar's countenance: his eyes are so shrewd and sad. It would be hard to
get near to Mr Colbran. Indeed, now, his soul had some of the twist of his
face, so that, when he is not ironical, he is satiric. Yet a man of more
complete tolerance and generosity scarcely exists. Let the boors mock him, he
merely smiles on the other side, and there is no malice in his eyes, only a
quiet expression of waiting till they have finished. His people do not like him,
yet none could bring forth an accusation against him, save, that "You
never can tell when he's having you."
I dined the other evening with
the vicar in his study. The room scandalizes the neighbourhood because of the
statuary which adorns it: a Laocoon and other classic copies, with bronze and
silver Italian Renaissance work. For the rest, it is all dark and tawny.
Mr Colbran is an archaeologist.
He does not take himself seriously, however, in his hobby, so that nobody knows
the worth of his opinions on the subject.
"Here you are," he said
to me after dinner, "I've found another paragraph for my great work."
"What's that?" I asked.
"Haven't I told you I was
compiling a Bible of the English people--the Bible of their hearts--their
exclamations in presence of the unknown? I've found a fragment at home, a jump
at God from Beauvale."
"Where?" I asked,
startled.
The vicar closed his eyes whilst
looking at me.
"Only on parchment," he
said.
Then, slowly, he reached for a
yellow book, and read, translating as he went:
"Then, while we chanted,
came a crackling at the window, at the great east window, where hung our Lord
on the Cross. It was a malicious covetous Devil wrathed by us, rended the
lovely image of the glass. We saw the iron clutches of the fiend pick the
window, and a face flaming red like fire in a basket did glower down on us. Our
hearts melted away, our legs broke, we thought to die. The breath of the wretch
filled the chapel.
"But our dear Saint, etc.,
etc., came hastening down heaven to defend us. The fiend began to groan and
bray--he was daunted and beat off.
"When the sun uprose, and it
was morning, some went out in dread upon the thin snow. There the figure of our
Saint was broken and thrown down, whilst in the window was a wicked hole as
from the Holy Wounds the Blessed Blood was run out at the touch of the Fiend,
and on the snow was the Blood, sparkling like gold. Some gathered it up for the
joy of this House. . . ."
"Interesting," I said.
"Where's it from?"
"Beauvale records--fifteenth
century."
"Beauvale Abbey," I
said; "they were only very few, the monks. What frightened them, I
wonder."
"I wonder," he
repeated.
"Somebody climbed up,"
I supposed, "and attempted to get in."
"What?" he exclaimed,
smiling.
"Well, what do you think?"
"Pretty much the same,"
he replied. "I glossed it out for my book."
"Your great work? Tell
me."
He put a shade over the lamp so
that the room was almost in darkness.
"Am I more than a
voice?" he asked.
"I can see your hand,"
I replied. He moved entirely from the circle of light. Then his voice began,
sing-song, sardonic:
"I was a serf in
Rollestoun's Newthorpe Manor, master of the stables I was. One day a horse bit
me as I was grooming him. He was an old enemy of mine. I fetched him a blow
across the nose. Then, when he got a chance, he lashed out at me and caught me
a gash over the mouth. I snatched at a hatchet and cut his head. He yelled,
fiend as he was, and strained for me with all his teeth bare. I brought him
down.
"For killing him they
flogged me till they thought I was dead. I was sturdy, because we horse-serfs
got plenty to eat. I was sturdy, but they flogged me till I did not move. The
next night I set fire to the stables, and the stables set fire to the house. I
watched and saw the red flame rise and look out of the window, I saw the folk
running, each for himself, master no more than one of a frightened party. It
was freezing, but the heat made me sweat. I saw them all turn again to watch,
all rimmed with red. They cried, all of them when the roof went in, when the
sparks splashed up at rebound. They cried then like dogs at the bagpipes
howling. Master cursed me, till I laughed as I lay under a bush quite near.
"As the fire went down I got
frightened. I ran for the woods, with fire blazing in my eyes and crackling in
my ears. For hours I was all fire. Then I went to sleep under the bracken. When
I woke it was evening. I had no mantle, was frozen stiff. I was afraid to move,
lest all the sores of my back should be broken like thin ice. I lay still until
I could bear my hunger no longer. I moved then to get used to the pain of
movement, when I began to hunt for food. There was nothing to be found but
hips.
"After wandering about till
I was faint I dropped again in the bracken. The boughs above me creaked with
frost. I started and looked round. The branches were like hair among the
starlight. My heart stood still. Again there was a creak, creak, and suddenly a
whoop, that whistled in fading. I fell down in the bracken like dead wood. Yet,
by the peculiar whistling sound at the end, I knew it was only the ice bending
or tightening in the frost. I was in the woods above the lake, only two miles
from the Manor. And yet, when the lake whooped hollowly again, I clutched the
frozen soil, every one of my muscles as stiff as the stiff earth. So all the
night long I dare not move my face, but pressed it flat down, and taut I lay as
if pegged down and braced.
"When morning came still I
did not move, I lay still in a dream. By afternoon my ache was such it
enlivened me. I cried, rocking my breath in the ache of moving. Then again I
became fierce. I beat my hands on the rough bark to hurt them, so that I should
not ache so much. In such a rage I was I swung my limbs to torture till I fell
sick with pain. Yet I fought the hurt, fought it and fought by twisting and
flinging myself, until it was overcome. Then the evening began to draw on. All
day the sun had not loosened the frost. I felt the sky chill again towards afternoon.
Then I knew the night was coming, and, remembering the great space I had just
come through, horrible so that it seemed to have made me another man, I fled
across the wood.
"But in my running I came
upon the oak where hanged five bodies. There they must hang, bar-stiff, night
after night. It was a terror worse than any. Turning, blundering through the
forest, I came out where the trees thinned, where only hawthorns, ragged and
shaggy, went down to the lake's edge.
"The sky across was red, the
ice on the water glistened as if it were warm. A few wild geese sat out like
stones on the sheet of ice. I thought of Martha. She was the daughter of the
miller at the upper end of the lake. Her hair was red like beech leaves in a
wind. When I had gone often to the mill with the horses she had brought me
food.
"'I thought,' said I to her,
''twas a squirrel sat on your shoulder. 'Tis your hair fallen loose.'
"'They call me the fox,' she
said.
"'Would I were your dog,'
said I. She would bring me bacon and good bread, when I called at the mill with
the horses. The thought of cakes of bread and of bacon made me reel as if
drunk. I had torn at the rabbit holes, I had chewed wood all day. In such a
dimness was my head that I felt neither the soreness of my wounds nor the cuts
of thorns on my knees, but stumbled towards the mill, almost past fear of man
and death, panting with fear of the darkness that crept behind me from trunk to
trunk.
"Coming to the gap in the
wood, below which lay the pond, I heard no sound. Always I knew the place
filled with the buzz of water, but now it was silent. In fear of this stillness
I ran forward, forgetting myself, forgetting the frost. The wood seemed to
pursue me. I fell, just in time, down by a shed wherein were housed the few
wintry pigs. The miller came riding in on his horse, and the barking of dogs
was for him. I heard him curse the day, curse his servant, curse me, whom he
had been out to hunt, in his rage of wasted labour, curse all. As I lay I heard
inside the shed a sucking. Then I knew that the sow was there, and that the
most of her sucking pigs would be already killed for tomorrow's Christmas. The
miller, from forethought to have young at that time, made profit by his sucking
pigs that were sold for the mid-winter feast.
"When in a moment all was
silent in the dusk, I broke the bar and came into the shed. The sow grunted,
but did not come forth to discover me. By and by I crept in towards her warmth.
She had but three young left, which now angered her, she being too full of milk.
Every now and again she slashed at them and they squealed. Busy as she was with
them, I in the darkness advanced towards her. I trembled so that scarce dared I
trust myself near her, for long dared not put my naked face towards her.
Shuddering with hunger and fear, I at last fed of her, guarding my face with my
arm. Her own full young tumbled squealing against me, but she, feeling her
ease, lay grunting. At last I, too, lay drunk, swooning.
"I was roused by the
shouting of the miller. He, angered by his daughter who wept, abused her,
driving her from the house to feed the swine. She came, bowing under a yoke, to
the door of the shed. Finding the pin broken she stood afraid, then, as the sow
grunted, she came cautiously in. I took her with my arm, my hand over her
mouth. As she struggled against my breast my heart began to beat loudly. At
last she knew it was I. I clasped her. She hung in my arms, turning away her
face, so that I kissed her throat. The tears blinded my eyes, I know not why,
unless it were the hurt of my mouth, wounded by the horse, was keen.
"'They will kill you,' she
whispered.
"'No,' I answered.
"And she wept softly. She
took my head in her arms and kissed me, wetting me with her tears, brushing me
with her keen hair, warming me through.
"'I will not go away from
here,' I said. 'Bring me a knife, and I will defend myself.'
"'No,' she wept. 'Ah, no!'
"When she went I lay down,
pressing my chest where she had rested on the earth, lest being alone were
worse emptiness than hunger.
"Later she came again. I saw
her bend in the doorway, a lanthorn hanging in front. As she peered under the
redness of her falling hair, I was afraid of her. But she came with food. We
sat together in the dull light. Sometimes still I shivered and my throat would
not swallow.
"'If,' said I, 'I eat all
this you have brought me, I shall sleep till somebody finds me.'
"Then she took away the rest
of the meat.
"'Why,' said I, 'should I
not eat?' She looked at me in tears of fear.
"'What?' I said, but still
she had no answer. I kissed her, and the hurt of my wounded mouth angered me.
"'Now there is my blood,'
said I, 'on your mouth.' Wiping her smooth hand over her lips, she looked
thereat, then at me.
"'Leave me,' I said, 'I am
tired.' She rose to leave me.
"'But bring a knife,' I
said. Then she held the lanthorn near my face, looking as at a picture.
"'You look to me,' she said,
'like a stirk that is roped for the axe. Your eyes are dark, but they are wide
open.'
"'Then I will sleep,' said
I, 'but will not wake too late.'
"'Do not stay here,' she
said.
"'I will not sleep in the
wood,' I answered, and it was my heart that spoke, 'for I am afraid. I had
better be afraid of the voice of man and dogs, than the sounds in the woods.
Bring me a knife, and in the morning I will go. Alone will I not go now.'
"'The searchers will take
you,' she said.
"'Bring me a knife,' I
answered.
"'Ah, go,' she wept.
"'Not now--I will not--'
"With that she lifted the
lanthorn, lit up her own face and mine. Her blue eyes dried of tears. Then I
took her to myself, knowing she was mine.
"'I will come again,' she
said.
"She went, and I folded my
arms, lay down and slept.
"When I woke, she was
rocking me wildly to rouse me.
"'I dreamed,' said I, 'that
a great heap, as if it were a hill, lay on me and above me.'
"She put a cloak over me,
gave me a hunting-knife and a wallet of food, and other things I did not note.
Then under her own cloak she hid the lanthorn.
"'Let us go,' she said, and
blindly I followed her.
"When I came out into the
cold someone touched my face and my hair.
"'Ha!' I cried, 'who now--?'
Then she swiftly clung to me, hushed me.
"'Someone has touched me,' I
said aloud, still dazed with sleep.
"'Oh hush!' she wept. ''Tis
snowing.' The dogs within the house began to bark. She fled forward, I after
her. Coming to the ford of the stream she ran swiftly over, but I broke through
the ice. Then I knew where I was. Snowflakes, fine and rapid, were biting at my
face. In the wood there was no wind nor snow.
"'Listen,' said I to her,
'listen, for I am locked up with sleep.'
"'I hear roaring overhead,'
she answered. 'I hear in the trees like great bats squeaking.'
"'Give me your hand,' said
I.
"We heard many noises as we
passed. Once as there uprose a whiteness before us, she cried aloud.
"'Nay,' said I, 'do not
untie thy hand from mine,' and soon we were crossing fallen snow. But ever and
again she started back from fear.
"'When you draw back my arm,'
I said, angry, 'you loosed a weal on my shoulder.'
"Thereafter she ran by my
side, like a fawn beside its mother.
"'We will cross the valley
and gain the stream,' I said. 'That will lead us on its ice as on a path deep
into the forest. There we can join the outlaws. The wolves are driven from this
part. They have followed the driven deer.'
"We came directly on a large
gleam that shaped itself up among flying grains of snow.
"'Ah!' she cried, and she
stood amazed.
"Then I thought we had gone
through the bounds into faery realm, and I was no more a man. How did I know
what eyes were gleaming at me between the snow, what cunning spirits in the
draughts of air? So I waited for what would happen, and I forgot her, that she
was there. Only I could feel the spirits whirling and blowing about me.
"Whereupon she clung upon
me, kissing me lavishly, and, were dogs or men or demons come upon us at that
moment, she had let us be stricken down, nor heeded not. So we moved forward to
the shadow that shone in colours upon the passing snow. We found ourselves
under a door of light which shed its colours mixed with snow. This Martha had
never seen, nor I, this door open for a red and brave issuing like fires. We
wondered.
"'It is faery,' she said,
and after a while, 'Could one catch such--Ah, no!'
"Through the snow shone
bunches of red and blue.
"'Could one have such a
little light like a red flower--only a little, like a rose-berry scarlet on
one's breast!--then one were singled out as Our Lady.'
"I flung off my cloak and my
burden to climb up the face of the shadow. Standing on rims of stone, then in
pockets of snow, I reached upward. My hand was red and blue, but I could not
take the stuff. Like colour of a moth's wing it was on my hand, it flew on the
increasing snow. I stood higher on the head of a frozen man, reached higher my
hand. Then I felt the bright stuff cold. I could not pluck it off. Down below
she cried to me to come again to her. I felt a rib that yielded, I struck at it
with my knife. There came a gap in the redness. Looking through I saw below as
it were white stunted angels, with sad faces lifted in fear. Two faces they had
each, and round rings of hair. I was afraid. I grasped the shining red, I pulled.
Then the cold man under me sank, so I fell as if broken on to the snow.
"Soon I was risen again, and
we were running downwards towards the stream. We felt ourselves eased when the
smooth road of ice was beneath us. For a while it was resting, to travel thus
evenly. But the wind blew round us, the snow hung upon us, we leaned us this
way and that, towards the storm. I drew her along, for she came as a bird that
stems lifting and swaying against the wind. By and by the snow came smaller,
there was not wind in the wood. Then I felt nor labour, nor cold. Only I knew
the darkness drifted by on either side, that overhead was a lane of paleness
where a moon fled us before. Still, I can feel the moon fleeing from me, can
feel the trees passing round me in slow dizzy reel, can feel the hurt of my
shoulder and my straight arm torn with holding her. I was following the moon
and the stream, for I knew where the water peeped from its burrow in the ground
there were shelters of the outlaw. But she fell, without sound or sign.
"I gathered her up and
climbed the bank. There all round me hissed the larchwood, dry beneath, and
laced with its dry-fretted cords. For a little way I carried her into the
trees. Then I laid her down till I cut flat hairy boughs. I put her in my bosom
on this dry bed, so we swooned together through the night. I laced her round
and covered her with myself, so she lay like a nut within its shell.
"Again, when morning came,
it was pain of cold that woke me. I groaned, but my heart was warm as I saw the
heap of red hair in my arms. As I looked at her, her eyes opened into mine. She
smiled--from out of her smile came fear. As if in a trap she pressed back her
head.
"'We have no flint,' said I.
"'Yes--in the wallet, flint
and steel and tinder box,' she answered.
"'God yield you blessing,' I
said.
"In a place a little open I
kindled a fire of larch boughs. She was afraid of me, hovering near, yet never
crossing a space.
"'Come,' said I, 'let us eat
this food.'
"'Your face,' she said, 'is
smeared with blood.'
"I opened out my cloak.
"'But come,' said I, 'you
are frosted with cold.'
"I took a handful of snow in
my hand, wiping my face with it, which then I dried on my cloak.
"'My face is no longer
painted with blood, you are no longer afraid of me. Come here then, sit by me
while we eat.'
"But as I cut the cold bread
for her, she clasped me suddenly, kissing me. She fell before me, clasped my
knees to her breast, weeping. She laid her face down to my feet, so that her
hair spread like a fire before me. I wondered at the woman. 'Nay,' I cried. At
that she lifted her face to me from below. 'Nay,' I cried, feeling my tears
fall. With her head on my breast, my own tears rose from their source, wetting
my cheek and her hair, which was wet with the rain of my eyes.
"Then I remembered and took
from my bosom the coloured light of that night before. I saw it was black and
rough.
"'Ah,' said I, 'this is
magic.'
"'The black stone!' she
wondered.
"'It is the red light of the
night before,' I said.
"'It is magic,' she
answered.
"'Shall I throw it?' said I,
lifting the stone, 'shall I throw it away, for fear?'
"'It shines!' she cried,
looking up. 'It shines like the eye of a creature at night, the eye of a wolf
in the doorway.'
"''Tis magic,' I said, 'let
me throw it from us.' But nay, she held my arm.
"'It is red and shining,'
she cried.
"'It is a bloodstone,' I
answered. 'It will hurt us, we shall die in blood.'
"'But give it to me,' she
answered.
"'It is red of blood,' I
said.
"'Ah, give it to me,' she
called.
"'It is my blood,' I said.
"'Give it,' she commanded,
low.
"'It is my life-stone,' I
said.
"'Give it me,' she pleaded.
"'I gave it her. She held it
up, she smiled, she smiled in my face, lifting her arms to me. I took her with
my mouth, her mouth, her white throat. Nor she ever shrank, but trembled with
happiness.
"What woke us, when the
woods were filling again with shadow, when the fire was out, when we opened our
eyes and looked up as if drowned, into the light which stood bright and thick
on the tree-tops, what woke us was the sound of wolves. . . ."
"Nay," said the vicar,
suddenly rising, "they lived happily ever after."
"No," I said.
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