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<h2> CHAPTER III. — THE GATES OF THE CITY </h2>
<p>The men I met coming from Jerusalem reported all sorts of contradictory
impressions; and yet my own impression contradicted them all. Their
impressions were doubtless as true as mine; but I describe my own because
it is true, and because I think it points to a neglected truth about the
real Jerusalem. I need not say I did not expect the real Jerusalem to be
the New Jerusalem; a city of charity and peace, any more than a city of
chrysolite and pearl. I might more reasonably have expected an austere and
ascetic place, oppressed with the weight of its destiny, with no inns
except monasteries, and these sealed with the terrible silence of the
Trappists; an awful city where men speak by signs in the street. I did not
need the numberless jokes about Jerusalem to-day, to warn me against
expecting this; anyhow I did not expect it, and certainly I did not find
it. But neither did I find what I was much more inclined to expect;
something at the other extreme. Many reports had led me to look for a
truly cosmopolitan town, that is a truly conquered town. I looked for a
place like Cairo, containing indeed old and interesting things, but open
on every side to new and vulgar things; full of the touts who seem only
created for the tourists and the tourists who seem only created for the
touts. There may be more of this in the place than pleases those who would
idealise it. But I fancy there is much less of it than is commonly
supposed in the reaction from such an ideal. It does not, like Cairo,
offer the exciting experience of twenty guides fighting for one traveller;
of young Turks drinking American cocktails as a protest against Christian
wine. The town is quite inconvenient enough to make it a decent place for
pilgrims. Or a stranger might have imagined a place even less Western than
Cairo, one of those villages of Palestine described in dusty old books of
Biblical research. He might remember drawings like diagrams representing a
well or a wine-press, rather a dry well, so to speak, and a wine-press
very difficult to associate with wine. These hard colourless outlines
never did justice to the colour of the East, but even to give it the
colour of the East would not do justice to Jerusalem. If I had anticipated
the Bagdad of all our dreams, a maze of bazaars glowing with gorgeous
wares, I should have been wrong again. There is quite enough of this vivid
and varied colour in Jerusalem, but it is not the first fact that arrests
the attention, and certainly not the first that arrested mine. I give my
own first impression as a fact, for what it is worth and exactly as it
came. I did not expect it, and it was some time before I even understood
it. As soon as I was walking inside the walls of Jerusalem, I had an
overwhelming impression that I was walking in the town of Rye, where it
looks across the flat sea-meadows towards Winchelsea.</p>
<p>As I tried to explain this eccentric sentiment to myself, I was conscious
of another which at once completed and contradicted it. It was not only
like a memory of Rye, it was mixed with a memory of the Mount St. Michael,
which stands among the sands of Normandy on the other side of the narrow
seas. The first part of the sensation is that the traveller, as he walks
the stony streets between the walls, feels that he is inside a fortress.
But it is the paradox of such a place that, while he feels in a sense that
he is in a prison, he also feels that he is on a precipice. The sense of
being uplifted, and set on a high place, comes to him through the smallest
cranny, or most accidental crack in rock or stone; it comes to him
especially through those long narrow windows in the walls of the old
fortifications; those slits in the stone through which the medieval
archers used their bows and the medieval artists used their eyes, with
even greater success. Those green glimpses of fields far below or of flats
far away, which delight us and yet make us dizzy (by being both near and
far) when seen through the windows of Memling, can often be seen from the
walls of Jerusalem. Then I remembered that in the same strips of medieval
landscape could be seen always, here and there, a steep hill crowned with
a city of towers. And I knew I had the mystical and double pleasure of
seeing such a hill and standing on it. A city that is set upon a hill
cannot be hid; but it is more strange when the hill cannot anywhere be
hid, even from the citizen in the city.</p>
<p>Then indeed I knew that what I saw was Jerusalem of the Crusaders; or at
least Jerusalem of the Crusades. It was a medieval town, with walls and
gates and a citadel, and built upon a hill to be defended by bowmen. The
greater part of the actual walls now standing were built by Moslems late
in the Middle Ages; but they are almost exactly like the walls that were
being built by the Christians at or before that time. The Crusader Edward,
afterwards Edward the First, reared such battlements far away among the
rainy hills of Wales. I do not know what elements were originally Gothic
or what originally Saracenic. The Crusaders and the Saracens constantly
copied each other while they combated each other; indeed it is a fact
always to be found in such combats. It is one of the arguments against war
that are really human, and therefore are never used by humanitarians. The
curse of war is that it does lead to more international imitation; while
in peace and freedom men can afford to have national variety. But some
things in this country were certainly copied from the Christian invaders,
and even if they are not Christian they are in many ways strangely
European. The wall and gates which now stand, whatever stood before them
and whatever comes after them, carry a memory of those men from the West
who came here upon that wild adventure, who climbed this rock and clung to
it so perilously from the victory of Godfrey to the victory of Saladin;
and that is why this momentary Eastern exile reminded me so strangely of
the hill of Rye and of home.</p>
<p>I do not forget, of course, that all these visible walls and towers are
but the battlements and pinnacles of a buried city, or of many buried
cities. I do not forget that such buildings have foundations that are to
us almost like fossils; the gigantic fossils of some other geological
epoch. Something may be said later of those lost empires whose very
masterpieces are to us like petrified monsters. From this height, after
long histories unrecorded, fell the forgotten idol of the Jebusites, on
that day when David's javelin-men scaled the citadel and carried through
it, in darkness behind his coloured curtains, the god whose image had
never been made by man. Here was waged that endless war between the graven
gods of the plain and the invisible god of the mountain; from here the
hosts carrying the sacred fish of the Philistines were driven back to the
sea from which their worship came. Those who worshipped on this hill had
come out of bondage in Egypt and went into bondage in Babylon; small as
was their country, there passed before them almost the whole pageant of
the old pagan world. All its strange shapes and strong almost cruel
colours remain in the records of their prophets; whose lightest phrase
seems heavier than the pyramids of Egypt; and whose very words are like
winged bulls walking. All this historic or pre-historic interest may be
touched on in its turn; but I am not dealing here with the historic
secrets unearthed by the study of the place, but with the historic
associations aroused by the sight of it. The traveller is in the position
of that famous fantastic who tied his horse to a wayside cross in the
snow, and afterward saw it dangling from the church-spire of what had been
a buried city. But here the cross does not stand as it does on the top of
a spire; but as it does on the top of an Egyptian obelisk in Rome,—
where the priests have put a cross on the top of the heathen monument; for
fear it should walk. I entirely sympathise with their sentiment; and I
shall try to suggest later why I think that symbol the logical culmination
of heathen as well as Christian things. The traveller in the traveller's
tale looked up at last and saw, from the streets far below, the spire and
cross dominating a Gothic city. If I looked up in a vision and saw it
dominating a Babylonian city, that blocked the heavens with monstrous
palaces and temples, I should still think it natural that it should
dominate. But the point here is that what I saw above ground was rather
the Gothic town than the Babylonian; and that it reminded me, if not
specially of the cross, at least of the soldiers who took the cross.</p>
<p>Nor do I forget the long centuries that have passed over the place since
these medieval walls were built, any more than the far more interesting
centuries that passed before they were built. But any one taking exception
to the description on that ground may well realise, on consideration, that
it is an exception that proves the rule. There is something very negative
about Turkish rule; and the best and worst of it is in the word neglect.
Everything that lived under the vague empire of Constantinople remained in
a state of suspended animation like something frozen rather than decayed,
like something sleeping rather than dead. It was a sort of Arabian spell,
like that which turned princes and princesses into marble statues in the
<i>Arabian Nights</i>. All that part of the history of the place is a kind
of sleep; and that of a sleeper who hardly knows if he has slept an hour
or a hundred years. When I first found myself in the Jaffa Gate of
Jerusalem, my eye happened to fall on something that might be seen
anywhere, but which seemed somehow to have a curious significance there.
Most people are conscious of some common object which still strikes them
as uncommon; as if it were the first fantastic sketch in the sketch-book
of nature. I myself can never overcome the sense of something almost
unearthly about grass growing upon human buildings. There is in it a wild
and even horrible fancy, as if houses could grow hair. When I saw that
green hair on the huge stone blocks of the citadel, though I had seen the
same thing on any number of ruins, it came to me like an omen or a vision,
a curious vision at once of chaos and of sleep. It is said that the grass
will not grow where the Turk sets his foot; but it is the other side of
the same truth to say that it would grow anywhere but where it ought to
grow. And though in this case it was but an accident and a symbol, it was
a very true symbol. We talk of the green banner of the Turk having been
planted on this or that citadel; and certainly it was so planted with
splendid valour and sensational victory. But this is the green banner that
he plants on all his high cities in the end.</p>
<p>Therefore my immediate impression of the walls and gates was not
contradicted by my consciousness of what came before and what came after
that medieval period. It remained primarily a thing of walls and gates; a
thing which the modern world does not perhaps understand so well as the
medieval world. There is involved in it all that idea of definition which
those who do not like it are fond of describing as dogma. A wall is like
rule; and the gates are like the exceptions that prove the rule. The man
making it has to decide where his rule will run and where his exception
shall stand. He cannot have a city that is all gates any more than a house
that is all windows; nor is it possible to have a law that consists
entirely of liberties. The ancient races and religions that contended for
this city agreed with each other in this, when they differed about
everything else. It was true of practically all of them that when they
built a city they built a citadel. That is, whatever strange thing they
may have made, they regarded it as something to be defined and to be
defended.</p>
<p>And from this standpoint the holy city was a happy city; it had no
suburbs. That is to say, there are all sorts of buildings outside the
wall; but they are outside the wall. Everybody is conscious of being
inside or outside a boundary; but it is the whole character of the true
suburbs which grow round our great industrial towns that they grow, as it
were, unconsciously and blindly, like grass that covers up a boundary line
traced on the earth. This indefinite expansion is controlled neither by
the soul of the city from within, nor by the resistance of the lands round
about. It destroys at once the dignity of a town and the freedom of a
countryside. The citizens are too new and numerous for citizenship; yet
they never learn what there is to be learned of the ancient traditions of
agriculture. The first sight of the sharp outline of Jerusalem is like a
memory of the older types of limitation and liberty. Happy is the city
that has a wall; and happier still if it is a precipice.</p>
<p>Again, Jerusalem might be called a city of staircases. Many streets are
steep and most actually cut into steps. It is, I believe, an element in
the controversy about the cave at Bethlehem traditionally connected with
the Nativity that the sceptics doubt whether any beasts of burden could
have entered a stable that has to be reached by such steps. And indeed to
any one in a modern city like London or Liverpool it may well appear odd,
like a cab-horse climbing a ladder. But as a matter of fact, if the asses
and goats of Jerusalem could not go up and downstairs, they could not go
anywhere. However this may be, I mention the matter here merely as adding
another touch to that angular profile which is the impression involved
here. Strangely enough, there is something that leads up to this
impression even in the labyrinth of mountains through which the road winds
its way to the city. The hills round Jerusalem are themselves often hewn
out in terraces, like a huge stairway. This is mostly for the practical
and indeed profitable purpose of vineyards; and serves for a reminder that
this ancient seat of civilisation has not lost the tradition of the mercy
and the glory of the vine. But in outline such a mountain looks much like
the mountain of Purgatory that Dante saw in his vision, lifted in
terraces, like titanic steps up to God. And indeed this shape also is
symbolic; as symbolic as the pointed profile of the Holy City. For a creed
is like a ladder, while an evolution is only like a slope. A spiritual and
social evolution is generally a pretty slippery slope; a miry slope where
it is very easy to slide down again.</p>
<p>Such is something like the sharp and even abrupt impression produced by
this mountain city; and especially by its wall with gates like a house
with windows. A gate, like a window, is primarily a picture-frame. The
pictures that are found within the frame are indeed very various and
sometimes very alien. Within this frame-work are indeed to be found things
entirely Asiatic, or entirely Moslem, or even entirely nomadic. But
Jerusalem itself is not nomadic. Nothing could be less like a mere camp of
tents pitched by Arabs. Nothing could be less like the mere chaos of
colour in a temporary and tawdry bazaar. The Arabs are there and the
colours are there, and they make a glorious picture; but the picture is in
a Gothic frame, and is seen so to speak through a Gothic window. And the
meaning of all this is the meaning of all windows, and especially of
Gothic windows. It is that even light itself is most divine within limits;
and that even the shining one is most shining, when he takes upon himself
a shape.</p>
<p>Such a system of walls and gates, like many other things thought rude and
primitive, is really very rationalistic. It turns the town, as it were,
into a plan of itself, and even into a guide to itself. This is especially
true, as may be suggested in a moment, regarding the direction of the
roads leading out of it. But anyhow, a man must decide which way he will
leave the city; he cannot merely drift out of the city as he drifts out of
the modern cities through a litter of slums. And there is no better way to
get a preliminary plan of the city than to follow the wall and fix the
gates in the memory. Suppose, for instance, that a man begins in the south
with the Zion Gate, which bears the ancient name of Jerusalem. This, to
begin with, will sharpen the medieval and even the Western impression
first because it is here that he has the strongest sentiment of threading
the narrow passages of a great castle; but also because the very name of
the gate was given to this south-western hill by Godfrey and Tancred
during the period of the Latin kingdom. I believe it is one of the
problems of the scholars why the Latin conquerors called this hill the
Zion Hill, when the other is obviously the sacred hill. Jerusalem is
traditionally divided into four hills, but for practical purposes into
two; the lower eastern hill where stood the Temple, and now stands the
great Mosque, and the western where is the citadel and the Zion Gate to
the south of it. I know nothing of such questions; and I attach no
importance to the notion that has crossed my own mind, and which I only
mention in passing, for I have no doubt there are a hundred objections to
it. But it is known that Zion or Sion was the old name of the place before
it was stormed by David; and even afterwards the Jebusites remained on
this western hill, and some compromise seems to have been made with them.
Is it conceivable, I wonder, that even in the twelfth century there
lingered some local memory of what had once been a way of distinguishing
Sion of the Jebusites from Salem of the Jews? The Zion Gate, however, is
only a starting-point here; if we go south-eastward from it we descend a
steep and rocky path, from which can be caught the first and finest vision
of what stands on the other hill to the east. The great Mosque of Omar
stands up like a peacock, lustrous with mosaics that are like plumes of
blue and green.</p>
<p>Scholars, I may say here, object to calling it the Mosque of Omar; on the
petty and pedantic ground that it is not a mosque and was not built by
Omar. But it is my fixed intention to call it the Mosque of Omar, and with
ever renewed pertinacity to continue calling it the Mosque of Omar. I
possess a special permit from the Grand Mufti to call it the Mosque of
Omar. He is the head of the whole Moslem religion, and if he does not
know, who does? He told me, in the beautiful French which matches his
beautiful manners, that it really is not so ridiculous after all to call
the place the Mosque of Omar, since the great Caliph desired and even
designed such a building, though he did not build it. I suppose it is
rather as if Solomon's Temple had been called David's Temple. Omar was a
great man and the Mosque was a great work, and the two were telescoped
together by the excellent common sense of vulgar tradition. There could
not be a better example of that great truth for all travellers; that
popular tradition is never so right as when it is wrong; and that pedantry
is never so wrong as when it is right. And as for the other objection,
that the Dome of the Rock (to give it its other name) is not actually used
as a Mosque, I answer that Westminster Abbey is not used as an Abbey. But
modern Englishmen would be much surprised if I were to refer to it as
Westminster Church; to say nothing of the many modern Englishmen for whom
it would be more suitable to call it Westminster Museum. And for whatever
purposes the Moslems may actually use their great and glorious sanctuary,
at least they have not allowed it to become the private house of a
particular rich man. And that is what we have suffered to happen, if not
to Westminster Abbey, at least to Welbeck Abbey.</p>
<p>The Mosque of Omar (I repeat firmly) stands on the great eastern plateau
in place of the Temple; and the wall that runs round to it on the south
side of the city contains only the Dung Gate, on which the fancy need not
linger. All along outside this wall the ground falls away into the
southern valley; and upon the dreary and stony steep opposite is the place
called Acaldama. Wall and valley turn together round the corner of the
great temple platform, and confronting the eastern wall, across the
ravine, is the mighty wall of the Mount of Olives. On this side there are
several gates now blocked up, of which the most famous, the Golden Gate,
carries in its very uselessness a testimony to the fallen warriors of the
cross. For there is a strange Moslem legend that through this gate, so
solemnly sealed up, shall ride the Christian King who shall again rule in
Jerusalem. In the middle of the square enclosure rises the great dark Dome
of the Rock; and standing near it, a man may see for the first time in the
distance, another dome. It lies away to the west, but a little to the
north; and it is surmounted, not by a crescent but a cross. Many heroes
and holy kings have desired to see this thing, and have not seen it.</p>
<p>It is very characteristic of the city, with its medieval medley and huddle
of houses, that a man may first see the Church of the Holy Sepulchre which
is in the west, by going as far as possible to the east. All the sights
are glimpses; and things far can be visible and things near invisible. The
traveller comes on the Moslem dome round a corner; and he finds the
Christian dome, as it were, behind his own back. But if he goes on round
the wall to the north-east corner of the Court of the Temple, he will find
the next entrance; the Gate of St. Stephen. On the slope outside, by a
strange and suitable coincidence, the loose stones which lie on every side
of the mountain city seemed to be heaped higher; and across the valley on
the skirts of the Mount of Olives is the great grey olive of Gethsemane.</p>
<p>On the northern side the valley turns to an artificial trench, for the
ground here is higher; and the next or northern gate bears the name of
Herod; though it might well bear the name either of Godfrey or Saladin.
For just outside it stands a pine-tree, and beside it a rude bulk of
stone; where stood these great captains in turn, before they took
Jerusalem. Then the wall runs on till it comes to the great Damascus Gate,
graven I know not why with great roses in a style wholly heraldic and
occidental, and in no way likely to remind us of the rich roses of
Damascus; though their name has passed into our own English tongue and
tradition, along with another word for the delicate decoration of the
sword. But at the first glance, at any rate, it is hard to believe that
the roses on the walls are not the Western roses of York or Lancaster, or
that the swords which guarded them were not the straight swords of England
or of France. Doubtless a deeper and more solemn memory ought to return
immediately to the mind where that gate looks down the great highway; as
if one could see, hung over it in the sky for ever, the cloud concealing
the sunburst that broods upon the road to Damascus. But I am here only
confessing the facts or fancies of my first impression; and again the
fancy that came to me first was not of any such alien or awful things. I
did not think of damask or damascene or the great Arabian city or even the
conversion of St. Paul. I thought of my own little house in
Buckinghamshire, and how the edge of the country town where it stands is
called Aylesbury End, merely because it is the corner nearest to
Aylesbury. That is what I mean by saying that these ancient customs are
more rational and even utilitarian than the fashions of modernity. When a
street in a new suburb is called Pretoria Avenue, the clerk living there
does not set out from his villa with the cheerful hope of finding the road
lead him to Pretoria. But the man leaving Aylesbury End does know it would
lead him to Aylesbury; and the man going out at the Damascus Gate did know
it would lead him to Damascus. And the same is true of the next and last
of the old entrances, the Jaffa Gate in the east; but when I saw that I
saw something else as well.</p>
<p>I have heard that there is a low doorway at the entrance to a famous
shrine which is called the Gate of Humility; but indeed in this sense all
gates are gates of humility, and especially gates of this kind. Any one
who has ever looked at a landscape under an archway will know what I mean,
when I say that it sharpens a pleasure with a strange sentiment of
privilege. It adds to the grace of distance something that makes it not
only a grace but a gift. Such are the visions of remote places that appear
in the low gateways of a Gothic town; as if each gateway led into a
separate world; and almost as if each dome of sky were a different
chamber. But he who walks round the walls of this city in this spirit will
come suddenly upon an exception which will surprise him like an
earthquake. It looks indeed rather like something done by an earthquake;
an earthquake with a half-witted sense of humour. Immediately at the side
of one of these humble and human gateways there is a great gap in the
wall, with a wide road running through it. There is something of unreason
in the sight which affects the eye as well as the reason. It recalls some
crazy tale about the great works of the Wise Men of Gotham. It suggests
the old joke about the man who made a small hole for the kitten as well as
a large hole for the cat. Everybody has read about it by this time; but
the immediate impression of it is not merely an effect of reading or even
of reasoning. It looks lop-sided; like something done by a one-eyed giant.
But it was done by the last prince of the great Prussian imperial system,
in what was probably the proudest moment in all his life of pride.</p>
<p>What is true has a way of sounding trite; and what is trite has a way of
sounding false. We shall now probably weary the world with calling the
Germans barbaric, just as we very recently wearied the world with calling
them cultured and progressive and scientific. But the thing is true though
we say it a thousand times. And any one who wishes to understand the sense
in which it is true has only to contemplate that fantasy and fallacy in
stone; a gate with an open road beside it. The quality I mean, however, is
not merely in that particular contrast; as of a front door standing by
itself in an open field. It is also in the origin, the occasion and the
whole story of the thing. There is above all this supreme stamp of the
barbarian; the sacrifice of the permanent to the temporary. When the walls
of the Holy City were overthrown for the glory of the German Emperor, it
was hardly even for that everlasting glory which has been the vision and
the temptation of great men. It was for the glory of a single day. It was
something rather in the nature of a holiday than anything that could be
even in the most vainglorious sense a heritage. It did not in the ordinary
sense make a monument, or even a trophy. It destroyed a monument to make a
procession. We might almost say that it destroyed a trophy to make a
triumph. There is the true barbaric touch in this oblivion of what
Jerusalem would look like a century after, or a year after, or even the
day after. It is this which distinguishes the savage tribe on the march
after a victory from the civilised army establishing a government, even if
it be a tyranny. Hence the very effect of it, like the effect of the whole
Prussian adventure in history, remains something negative and even
nihilistic. The Christians made the Church of the Holy Sepulchre and the
Moslems made the Mosque of Omar; but this is what the most scientific
culture made at the end of the great century of science. It made an
enormous hole. The only positive contribution of the nineteenth century to
the spot is an unnaturally ugly clock, at the top of an ornamental tower,
or a tower that was meant to be ornamental. It was erected, I believe, to
commemorate the reign of Abdul Hamid; and it seems perfectly adapted to
its purpose, like one of Sir William Watson's sonnets on the same subject.
But this object only adds a touch of triviality to the much more
tremendous negative effect of the gap by the gate. That remains a parable
as well as a puzzle, under all the changing skies of day and night; with
the shadows that gather tinder the narrow Gate of Humility; and beside it,
blank as daybreak and abrupt as an abyss, the broad road that has led
already to destruction.</p>
<p>The gap remains like a gash, a sort of wound in the walls; but it only
strengthens by contrast the general sense of their continuity. Save this
one angle where the nineteenth century has entered, the vague impression
of the thirteenth or fourteenth century rather deepens than dies away. It
is supported more than many would suppose even by the figures that appear
in the gateways or pass in procession under the walls. The brown
Franciscans and the white Dominicans would alone give some colour to a
memory of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem; and there are other examples and
effects which are less easily imagined in the West. Thus as I look down
the street, I see coming out from under an archway a woman wearing a high
white head-dress very like those we have all seen in a hundred pictures of
tournaments or hunting parties, or the Canterbury Pilgrimage or the Court
of Louis XI. She is as white as a woman of the North; and it is not, I
think, entirely fanciful to trace a certain freedom and dignity in her
movement, which is quite different at least from the shuffling walk of the
shrouded Moslem women. She is a woman of Bethlehem, where a tradition, it
is said, still claims as a heroic heritage the blood of the Latin knights
of the cross. This is, of course, but one aspect of the city; but it is
one which may be early noted, yet one which is generally neglected. As I
have said, I had expected many things of Jerusalem, but I had not expected
this. I had expected to be disappointed with it as a place utterly
profaned and fallen below its mission. I had expected to be awed by it;
indeed I had expected to be frightened of it, as a place dedicated and
even doomed by its mission. But I had never fancied that it would be
possible to be fond of it; as one might be fond of a little walled town
among the orchards of Normandy or the hop-fields of Kent.</p>
<p>And just then there happened a coincidence that was also something like a
catastrophe. I was idly watching, as it moved down the narrow street to
one of the dark doorways, the head-dress, like a tower of white drapery,
belonging to the Christian woman from the place where Christ was born.
After she had disappeared into the darkness of the porch I continued to
look vaguely at the porch, and thought how easily it might have been a
small Gothic gate in some old corner of Rouen, or even Canterbury. In
twenty such places in the town one may see the details that appeal to the
same associations, so different and so distant. One may see that angular
dogtooth ornament that makes the round Norman gateways look like the
gaping mouths of sharks. One may see the pointed niches in the walls,
shaped like windows and serving somewhat the purpose of brackets, on which
were to stand sacred images possibly removed by the Moslems. One may come
upon a small court planted with ornamental trees with some monument in the
centre, which makes the precise impression of something in a small French
town. There are no Gothic spires, but there are numberless Gothic doors
and windows; and he who first strikes the place at this angle, as it were,
may well feel the Northern element as native and the Eastern element as
intrusive. While I was thinking all these things, something happened which
in that place was almost a portent.</p>
<p>It was very cold; and there were curious colours in the sky. There had
been chilly rains from time to time; and the whole air seemed to have
taken on something sharper than a chill. It was as if a door had been
opened in the northern corner of the heavens; letting in something that
changed all the face of the earth. Great grey clouds with haloes of lurid
pearl and pale-green were coming up from the plains or the sea and
spreading over the towers of the city. In the middle of the moving mass of
grey vapours was a splash of paler vapour; a wan white cloud whose white
seemed somehow more ominous than gloom. It went over the high citadel like
a white wild goose flying; and a few white feathers fell.</p>
<p>It was the snow; and it snowed day and night until that Eastern city was
sealed up like a village in Norway or Northern Scotland. It rose in the
streets till men might almost have been drowned in it like a sea of solid
foam. And the people of the place told me there had been no such thing
seen in it in all recent records, or perhaps in the records of all its
four thousand years.</p>
<p>All this came later; but for me at the moment, looking at the scene in so
dreamy a fashion, it seemed merely like a dramatic conclusion to my dream.
It was but an accident confirming what was but an aspect. But it confirmed
it with a strange and almost supernatural completeness. The white light
out of the window in the north lay on all the roofs and turrets of the
mountain town; for there is an aspect in which snow looks less like frozen
water than like solidified light. As the snow accumulated there
accumulated also everywhere those fantastic effects of frost which seem to
fit in with the fantastic qualities of medieval architecture; and which
make an icicle seem like the mere extension of a gargoyle. It was the
atmosphere that has led so many romancers to make medieval Paris a mere
black and white study of night and snow. Something had redrawn in silver
all things from the rude ornament on the old gateways to the wrinkles on
the ancient hills of Moab. Fields of white still spotted with green swept
down into the valleys between us and the hills; and high above them the
Holy City lifted her head into the thunder-clouded heavens, wearing a
white head-dress like a daughter of the Crusaders.</p>
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