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<h2> CHAPTER XV. INTRODUCES THE HON. PERCY DACIER </h2>
<p>The Gods of this world's contests, against whom our poor stripped
individual is commonly in revolt, are, as we know, not miners, they are
reapers; and if we appear no longer on the surface, they cease to bruise
us: they will allow an arena character to be cleansed and made presentable
while enthusiastic friends preserve discretion. It is of course less than
magnanimity; they are not proposed to you for your worship; they are
little Gods, temporary as that great wave, their parent human mass of the
hour. But they have one worshipful element in them, which is, the divine
insistency upon there being two sides to a case—to every case. And
the People so far directed by them may boast of healthfulness. Let the
individual shriek, the innocent, triumphant, have in honesty to admit the
fact. One side is vanquished, according to decree of Law, but the superior
Council does not allow it to be extinguished.</p>
<p>Diana's battle was fought shadowily behind her for the space of a week or
so, with some advocates on behalf of the beaten man; then it became a
recollection of a beautiful woman, possibly erring, misvalued by a
husband, who was neither a man of the world nor a gracious yokefellow, nor
anything to match her. She, however, once out of the public flames, had to
recall her scorchings to be gentle with herself. Under a defeat, she would
have been angrily self-vindicated. The victory of the ashen laurels drove
her mind inward to gird at the hateful yoke, in compassion for its pair of
victims. Quite earnestly by such means, yet always bearing a comical eye
on her subterfuges, she escaped the extremes of personal blame. Those
advocates of her opponent in and out of court compelled her honest heart
to search within and own to faults. But were they not natural faults? It
was her marriage; it was marriage in the abstract: her own mistake and the
world's clumsy machinery of civilization: these were the capital
offenders: not the wife who would laugh ringingly, and would have friends
of the other sex, and shot her epigrams at the helpless despot, and was at
times—yes, vixenish; a nature driven to it, but that was the word.
She was too generous to recount her charges against the vanquished. If his
wretched jealousy had ruined her, the secret high tribunal within her
bosom, which judged her guiltless for putting the sword between their
marriage tie when they stood as one, because a quarrelling couple could
not in honour play the embracing, pronounced him just pardonable. She
distinguished that he could only suppose, manlikely, one bad cause for the
division.</p>
<p>To this extent she used her unerring brains, more openly than on her night
of debate at The Crossways. The next moment she was off in vapour,
meditating grandly on her independence of her sex and the passions. Love!
she did not know it, she was not acquainted with either the criminal or
the domestic God, and persuaded herself that she never could be. She was a
Diana of coldness, preferring friendship; she could be the friend of men.
There was another who could be the friend of women. Her heart leapt to
Redworth. Conjuring up his clear trusty face, at their grasp of hands when
parting, she thought of her visions of her future about the period of the
Dublin Ball, and acknowledged, despite the erratic step to wedlock, a gain
in having met and proved so true a friend. His face, figure, character,
lightest look, lightest word, all were loyal signs of a man of honour,
cold as she; he was the man to whom she could have opened her heart for
inspection. Rejoicing in her independence of an emotional sex, the
impulsive woman burned with a regret that at their parting she had not
broken down conventional barriers and given her cheek to his lips in the
anti-insular fashion with a brotherly friend. And why not when both were
cold? Spirit to spirit, she did, delightfully refreshed by her capacity to
do so without a throb. He had held her hands and looked into her eyes half
a minute, like a dear comrade; as little arousing her instincts of
defensiveness as the clearing heavens; and sisterly love for it was his
due, a sister's kiss. He needed a sister, and should have one in her.
Emma's recollected talk of 'Tom Redworth' painted him from head to foot,
brought the living man over the waters to the deck of the yacht. A stout
champion in the person of Tom Redworth was left on British land; but for
some reason past analysis, intermixed, that is, among a swarm of
sensations, Diana named her champion to herself with the formal prefix:
perhaps because she knew a man's Christian name to be dangerous handling.
They differed besides frequently in opinion, when the habit of thinking of
him as Mr. Redworth would be best. Women are bound to such small
observances, and especially the beautiful of the sisterhood, whom the
world soon warns that they carry explosives and must particularly guard
against the ignition of petty sparks. She was less indiscreet in her
thoughts than in her acts, as is the way with the reflective daughter of
impulse; though she had fine mental distinctions: what she could offer to
do 'spirit to spirit,' for instance, held nothing to her mind of the
intimacy of calling the gentleman plain Tom in mere contemplation of him.
Her friend and champion was a volunteer, far from a mercenary, and he
deserved the reward, if she could bestow it unalarmed. They were to meet
in Egypt. Meanwhile England loomed the home of hostile forces ready to
shock, had she been a visible planet, and ready to secrete a virus of her
past history, had she been making new.</p>
<p>She was happily away, borne by a whiter than swan's wing on the sapphire
Mediterranean. Her letters to Emma were peeps of splendour for the
invalid: her way of life on board the yacht, and sketches of her host and
hostess as lovers in wedlock on the other side of our perilous forties;
sketches of the bays, the towns, the people-priests, dames, cavaliers,
urchins, infants, shifting groups of supple southerners-flashed across the
page like a web of silk, and were dashed off, redolent of herself, as
lightly as the silvery spray of the blue waves she furrowed; telling,
without allusions to the land behind her, that she had dipped in the wells
of blissful oblivion. Emma Dunstane, as is usual with those who receive
exhilarating correspondence from makers of books, condemned the authoress
in comparison, and now first saw that she had the gift of writing. Only
one cry: 'Italy, Eden of exiles!' betrayed the seeming of a moan. She
wrote of her poet and others immediately. Thither had they fled; with
adieu to England!</p>
<p>How many have waved the adieu! And it is England nourishing, England
protecting them, England clothing them in the honours they wear. Only the
posturing lower natures, on the level of their buskins, can pluck out the
pocket-knife of sentimental spite to cut themselves loose from her at
heart in earnest. The higher, bleed as they may, too pressingly feel their
debt. Diana had the Celtic vivid sense of country. In England she was
Irish, by hereditary, and by wilful opposition. Abroad, gazing along the
waters, observing, comparing, reflecting, above all, reading of the
struggles at home, the things done and attempted, her soul of generosity
made her, though not less Irish, a daughter of Britain. It is at a
distance that striving countries should be seen if we would have them in
the pure idea; and this young woman of fervid mind, a reader of public
speeches and speculator on the tides of politics (desirous, further, to
feel herself rather more in the pure idea), began to yearn for England
long before her term of holiday exile had ended. She had been flattered by
her friend, her 'wedded martyr at the stake,' as she named him, to believe
that she could exercise a judgement in politics—could think, even
speak acutely, on public affairs. The reports of speeches delivered by the
men she knew or knew of, set her thrilling; and she fancied the
sensibility to be as independent of her sympathy with the orators as her
political notions were sovereignty above a sex devoted to trifles, and the
feelings of a woman who had gone through fire. She fancied it confidently,
notwithstanding a peculiar intuition that the plunge into the nobler
business of the world would be a haven of safety for a woman with blood
and imagination, when writing to Emma: 'Mr. Redworth's great success in
Parliament is good in itself, whatever his views of present questions; and
I do not heed them when I look to what may be done by a man of such power
in striking at unjust laws, which keep the really numerically better-half
of the population in a state of slavery. If he had been a lawyer! It must
be a lawyer's initiative—a lawyer's Bill. Mr. Percy Dacier also
spoke well, as might have been expected, and his uncle's compliment to him
was merited. Should you meet him sound him. He has read for the Bar, and
is younger than Mr. Redworth. The very young men and the old are our hope.
The middleaged are hard and fast for existing facts. We pick our leaders
on the slopes, the incline and decline of the mountain—not on the
upper table-land midway, where all appears to men so solid, so tolerably
smooth, save for a few excrescences, roughnesses, gradually to be levelled
at their leisure; which induces one to protest that the middle-age of men
is their time of delusion. It is no paradox. They may be publicly useful
in a small way. I do not deny it at all. They must be near the gates of
life—the opening or the closing—for their minds to be
accessible to the urgency of the greater questions. Otherwise the world
presents itself to them under too settled an aspect—unless, of
course, Vesuvian Revolution shakes the land. And that touches only their
nerves. I dream of some old Judge! There is one—if having caught we
could keep him. But I dread so tricksy a pilot. You have guessed him—the
ancient Puck! We have laughed all day over the paper telling us of his
worrying the Lords. Lady Esquart congratulates her husband on being out of
it. Puck 'biens ride' and bewigged might perhaps—except that at the
critical moment he would be sure to plead allegiance to Oberon. However,
the work will be performed by some one: I am prophetic:—when maidens
are grandmothers!—when your Tony is wearing a perpetual laugh in the
unhusbanded regions where there is no institution of the wedding-tie.'</p>
<p>For the reason that she was not to participate in the result of the old
Judge's or young hero's happy championship of the cause of her sex, she
conceived her separateness high aloof, and actually supposed she was a
contemplative, simply speculative political spirit, impersonal albeit a
woman. This, as Emma, smiling at the lines, had not to learn, was always
her secret pride of fancy—the belief in her possession of a
disengaged intellect.</p>
<p>The strange illusion, so clearly exposed to her correspondent, was
maintained through a series of letters very slightly descriptive, dated
from the Piraeus, the Bosphorus, the coasts of the Crimea, all more or
less relating to the latest news of the journals received on board the
yacht, and of English visitors fresh from the country she now seemed fond
of calling 'home.' Politics, and gentle allusions to the curious
exhibition of 'love in marriage' shown by her amiable host and hostess:
'these dear Esquarts, who are never tired of one another, but courtly
courting, tempting me to think it possible that a fortunate selection and
a mutual deference may subscribe to human happiness:—filled the
paragraphs. Reviews of her first literary venture were mentioned once: 'I
was well advised by Mr. Redworth in putting ANTONIA for authoress. She is
a buff jerkin to the stripes, and I suspect that the signature of D. E.
M., written in full, would have cawed woefully to hear that her style is
affected, her characters nullities, her cleverness forced, etc., etc. As
it is, I have much the same contempt for poor Antonia's performance. Cease
penning, little fool! She writes, “with some comprehension of the passion
of love.” I know her to be a stranger to the earliest cry. So you see,
dear, that utter ignorance is the mother of the Art. Dialogues
“occasionally pointed.” She has a sister who may do better.—But why
was I not apprenticed to a serviceable profession or a trade? I perceive
now that a hanger-on of the market had no right to expect a happier fate
than mine has been.'</p>
<p>On the Nile, in the winter of the year, Diana met the Hon. Percy Dacier.
He was introduced to her at Cairo by Redworth. The two gentlemen had
struck up a House of Commons acquaintanceship, and finding themselves
bound for the same destination, had grown friendly. Redworth's arrival had
been pleasantly expected. She remarked on Dacier's presence to Emma,
without sketch or note of him as other than much esteemed by Lord and Lady
Esquart. These, with Diana, Redworth, Dacier, the German Eastern traveller
Schweizerbarth, and the French Consul and Egyptologist Duriette, composed
a voyaging party up the river, of which expedition Redworth was Lady
Dunstane's chief writer of the records. His novel perceptiveness and
shrewdness of touch made them amusing; and his tenderness to the Beauty's
coquettry between the two foreign rivals, moved a deeper feeling. The
German had a guitar, the Frenchman a voice; Diana joined them in harmony.
They complained apart severally of the accompaniment and the singer. Our
English criticized them apart; and that is at any rate to occupy a post,
though it contributes nothing to entertainment. At home the Esquarts had
sung duets; Diana had assisted Redworth's manly chest-notes at the piano.
Each of them declined to be vocal. Diana sang alone for the credit of the
country, Italian and French songs, Irish also. She was in her mood of
Planxty Kelly and Garryowen all the way. 'Madame est Irlandaise?' Redworth
heard the Frenchman say, and he owned to what was implied in the answering
tone of the question. 'We should be dull dogs without the Irish leaven!'
So Tony in exile still managed to do something for her darling Erin. The
solitary woman on her heights at Copsley raised an exclamation of, 'Oh!
that those two had been or could be united!' She was conscious of a mystic
symbolism in the prayer.</p>
<p>She was not apprehensive of any ominous intervention of another. Writing
from Venice, Diana mentioned Mr. Percy Dacier as being engaged to an
heiress; 'A Miss Asper, niece of a mighty shipowner, Mr. Quintin Manx,
Lady Esquart tells me: money fabulous, and necessary to a younger son
devoured with ambition. The elder brother, Lord Creedmore, is a common
Nimrod, always absent in Hungary, Russia, America, hunting somewhere. Mr.
Dacier will be in the Cabinet with the next Ministry.' No more of him. A
new work by ANTONIA was progressing.</p>
<p>The Summer in South Tyrol passed like a royal procession before young eyes
for Diana, and at the close of it, descending the Stelvio, idling through
the Valtelline, Como Lake was reached, Diana full of her work, living the
double life of the author. At Bellagio one afternoon Mr. Percy Dacier
appeared. She remembered subsequently a disappointment she felt in not
beholding Mr. Redworth either with him or displacing him. If engaged to a
lady, he was not an ardent suitor; nor was he a pointedly complimentary
acquaintance. His enthusiasm was reserved for Italian scenery. She had
already formed a sort of estimate of his character, as an indifferent
observer may do, and any woman previous to the inflaming of her
imagination, if that is in store for her; and she now fell to work
resetting the puzzle it became as soon her positive conclusions had to be
shaped again. 'But women never can know young men,' she wrote to Emma,
after praising his good repute as one of the brotherhood. 'He drops pretty
sentences now and then: no compliments; milky nuts. Of course he has a
head, or he would not be where he is—and that seems always to me the
most enviable place a young man can occupy.' She observed in him a
singular conflicting of a buoyant animal nature with a curb of
studiousness, as if the fardels of age were piling on his shoulders before
youth had quitted its pastures.</p>
<p>His build of limbs and his features were those of the finely-bred English;
he had the English taste for sports, games, manly diversions; and in the
bloom of life, under thirty, his head was given to bend. The head bending
on a tall upright figure, where there was breadth of chest, told of
weights working. She recollected his open look, larger than inquiring, at
the introduction to her; and it recurred when she uttered anything
specially taking. What it meant was past a guess, though comparing it with
the frank directness of Redworth's eyes, she saw the difference between a
look that accepted her and one that dilated on two opinions.</p>
<p>Her thought of the gentleman was of a brilliant young charioteer in the
ruck of the race, watchful for his chance to push to the front; and she
could have said that a dubious consort might spoil a promising career. It
flattered her to think that she sometimes prompted him, sometimes
illumined. He repeated sentences she had spoken. 'I shall be better able
to describe Mr. Dacier when you and I sit together, my Emmy, and a stroke
here and there completes the painting. Set descriptions are good for
puppets. Living men and women are too various in the mixture fashioning
them—even the “external presentment”—to be livingly rendered
in a formal sketch. I may tell you his eyes are pale blue, his features
regular, his hair silky, brownish, his legs long, his head rather stooping
(only the head), his mouth commonly closed; these are the facts, and you
have seen much the same in a nursery doll. Such literary craft is of the
nursery. So with landscapes. The art of the pen (we write on darkness) is
to rouse the inward vision, instead of labouring with a Drop-scene brush,
as if it were to the eye; because our flying minds cannot contain a
protracted description. That is why the poets, who spring imagination with
a word or a phrase, paint lasting pictures. The Shakespearian, the
Dantesque, are in a line, two at most. He lends an attentive ear when I
speak, agrees or has a quaint pucker of the eyebrows dissenting inwardly.
He lacks mental liveliness—cheerfulness, I should say, and is
thankful to have it imparted. One suspects he would be a dull domestic
companion. He has a veritable thirst for hopeful views of the world, and
no spiritual distillery of his own. He leans to depression. Why! The
broken reed you call your Tony carries a cargo, all of her manufacture—she
reeks of secret stills; and here is a young man—a sapling oak—inclined
to droop. His nature has an air of imploring me que je d'arrose! I begin
to perform Mrs. Dr. Pangloss on purpose to brighten him—the mind,
the views. He is not altogether deficient in conversational gaiety, and he
shines in exercise. But the world is a poor old ball bounding down a hill—to
an Irish melody in the evening generally, by request. So far of Mr. Percy
Dacier, of whom I have some hopes—distant, perhaps delusive—that
he may be of use to our cause. He listens. It is an auspicious
commencement.'</p>
<p>Lugano is the Italian lake most lovingly encircled by mountain arms, and
every height about it may be scaled with esce. The heights have their nest
of waters below for a home scene, the southern Swiss peaks, with celestial
Monta Rosa, in prospect. It was there that Diana reawakened, after the
trance of a deadly draught, to the glory of the earth and her share in it.
She wakened like the Princess of the Kiss; happily not to kisses; to no
sign, touch or call that she could trace backward. The change befell her
without a warning. After writing deliberately to her friend Emma, she laid
down her pen and thought of nothing; and into this dreamfulness a wine
passed, filling her veins, suffusing her mind, quickening her soul: and
coming whence? out of air, out of the yonder of air. She could have
imagined a seraphic presence in the room, that bade her arise and live;
take the cup of the wells of youth arrested at her lips by her marriage;
quit her wintry bondage for warmth, light, space, the quick of simple
being. And the strange pure ecstasy was not a transient electrification;
it came in waves on a continuous tide; looking was living; walking flying.
She hardly knew that she slept. The heights she had seen rosy at eve were
marked for her ascent in the dawn. Sleep was one wink, and fresh as the
dewy field and rockflowers on her way upward, she sprang to more and more
of heaven, insatiable, happily chirruping over her possessions. The
threading of the town among the dear common people before others were
abroad, was a pleasure and pleasant her solitariness threading the gardens
at the base of the rock, only she astir; and the first rough steps of the
winding footpath, the first closed buds, the sharper air, the uprising of
the mountain with her ascent; and pleasant too was her hunger and the
nibble at a little loaf of bread. A linnet sang in her breast, an eagle
lifted her feet. The feet were verily winged, as they are in a season of
youth when the blood leaps to light from the pressure of the under forces,
like a source at the wellheads, and the whole creature blooms, vital in
every energy as a spirit. To be a girl again was magical. She could fancy
her having risen from the dead. And to be a girl, with a woman's broader
vision and receptiveness of soul, with knowledge of evil, and winging to
ethereal happiness, this was a revelation of our human powers.</p>
<p>She attributed the change to the influences of nature's beauty and
grandeur. Nor had her woman's consciousness to play the chrysalis in any
shy recesses of her heart; she was nowhere veiled or torpid; she was
illumined, like the Salvatore she saw in the evening beams and mounted in
the morning's; and she had not a spot of seeresy; all her nature flew and
bloomed; she was bird, flower, flowing river, a quivering sensibility
unweighted, enshrouded. Desires and hopes would surely have weighted and
shrouded her. She had none, save for the upper air, the eyes of the
mountain.</p>
<p>Which was the dream—her past life or this ethereal existence? But
this ran spontaneously, and the other had often been stimulated—her
vivaciousness on the Nile-boat, for a recent example. She had not a doubt
that her past life was the dream, or deception: and for the reason that
now she was compassionate, large of heart toward all beneath her. Let them
but leave her free, they were forgiven, even to prayers for their
well-being! The plural number in the case was an involuntary multiplying
of the single, coming of her incapacity during this elevation and rapture
of the senses to think distinctly of that One who had discoloured her
opening life. Freedom to breathe, gaze, climb, grow with the grasses, fly
with the clouds, to muse, to sing, to be an unclaimed self, dispersed upon
earth, air, sky, to find a keener transfigured self in that radiation—she
craved no more.</p>
<p>Bear in mind her beauty, her charm of tongue, her present state of white
simplicity in fervour: was there ever so perilous a woman for the most
guarded and clearest-eyed of young men to meet at early morn upon a
mountain side?</p>
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