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<h2> XII </h2>
<p>Not less averse than from dogging the Duke was I from remaining another
instant in the presence of Miss Dobson. There seemed to be no possible
excuse for her. This time she had gone too far. She was outrageous. As
soon as the Duke had had time to get clear away, I floated out into the
night.</p>
<p>I may have consciously reasoned that the best way to forget the present
was in the revival of memories. Or I may have been driven by a mere homing
instinct. Anyhow, it was in the direction of my old College that I went.
Midnight was tolling as I floated in through the shut grim gate at which I
had so often stood knocking for admission.</p>
<p>The man who now occupied my room had sported his oak—my oak. I read
the name on the visiting-card attached thereto—E. J. Craddock—and
went in.</p>
<p>E. J. Craddock, interloper, was sitting at my table, with elbows squared
and head on one side, in the act of literary composition. The oars and
caps on my walls betokened him a rowing-man. Indeed, I recognised his
somewhat heavy face as that of the man whom, from the Judas barge this
afternoon, I had seen rowing "stroke" in my College Eight.</p>
<p>He ought, therefore, to have been in bed and asleep two hours ago. And the
offence of his vigil was aggravated by a large tumbler that stood in front
of him, containing whisky and soda. From this he took a deep draught. Then
he read over what he had written. I did not care to peer over his shoulder
at MS. which, though written in my room, was not intended for my eyes. But
the writer's brain was open to me; and he had written "I, the undersigned
Edward Joseph Craddock, do hereby leave and bequeath all my personal and
other property to Zuleika Dobson, spinster. This is my last will and
testament."</p>
<p>He gnawed his pen, and presently altered the "hereby leave" to "hereby and
herewith leave." Fool!</p>
<p>I thereby and therewith left him. As I emerged through the floor of the
room above—through the very carpet that had so often been steeped in
wine, and encrusted with smithereens of glass, in the brave old days of a
well-remembered occupant—I found two men, both of them evidently
reading-men. One of them was pacing round the room. "Do you know," he was
saying, "what she reminded me of, all the time? Those words—aren't
they in the Song of Solomon?—'fair as the moon, clear as the sun,
and... and...'"</p>
<p>"'Terrible as an army with banners,'" supplied his host—rather
testily, for he was writing a letter. It began "My dear Father. By the
time you receive this I shall have taken a step which..."</p>
<p>Clearly it was vain to seek distraction in my old College. I floated out
into the untenanted meadows. Over them was the usual coverlet of white
vapour, trailed from the Isis right up to Merton Wall. The scent of these
meadows' moisture is the scent of Oxford. Even in hottest noon, one feels
that the sun has not dried THEM. Always there is moisture drifting across
them, drifting into the Colleges. It, one suspects, must have had much to
do with the evocation of what is called the Oxford spirit—that
gentlest spirit, so lingering and searching, so dear to them who as youths
were brought into ken of it, so exasperating to them who were not. Yes,
certainly, it is this mild, miasmal air, not less than the grey beauty and
gravity of the buildings, that has helped Oxford to produce, and foster
eternally, her peculiar race of artist-scholars, scholar-artists. The
undergraduate, in his brief periods of residence, is too buoyant to be
mastered by the spirit of the place. He does but salute it, and catch the
manner. It is on him who stays to spend his maturity here that the spirit
will in its fulness gradually descend. The buildings and their traditions
keep astir in his mind whatsoever is gracious; the climate, enfolding and
enfeebling him, lulling him, keeps him careless of the sharp, harsh,
exigent realities of the outer world. Careless? Not utterly. These
realities may be seen by him. He may study them, be amused or touched by
them. But they cannot fire him. Oxford is too damp for that. The
"movements" made there have been no more than protests against the
mobility of others. They have been without the dynamic quality implied in
their name. They have been no more than the sighs of men gazing at what
other men had left behind them; faint, impossible appeals to the god of
retrogression, uttered for their own sake and ritual, rather than with any
intent that they should be heard. Oxford, that lotus-land, saps the
will-power, the power of action. But, in doing so, it clarifies the mind,
makes larger the vision, gives, above all, that playful and caressing
suavity of manner which comes of a conviction that nothing matters, except
ideas, and that not even ideas are worth dying for, inasmuch as the ghosts
of them slain seem worthy of yet more piously elaborate homage than can be
given to them in their heyday. If the Colleges could be transferred to the
dry and bracing top of some hill, doubtless they would be more evidently
useful to the nation. But let us be glad there is no engineer or enchanter
to compass that task. Egomet, I would liefer have the rest of England
subside into the sea than have Oxford set on a salubrious level. For there
is nothing in England to be matched with what lurks in the vapours of
these meadows, and in the shadows of these spires—that mysterious,
inenubilable spirit, spirit of Oxford. Oxford! The very sight of the word
printed, or sound of it spoken, is fraught for me with most actual magic.</p>
<p>And on that moonlit night when I floated among the vapours of these
meadows, myself less than a vapour, I knew and loved Oxford as never
before, as never since. Yonder, in the Colleges, was the fume and fret of
tragedy—Love as Death's decoy, and Youth following her. What then?
Not Oxford was menaced. Come what might, not a stone of Oxford's walls
would be loosened, nor a wreath of her vapours be undone, nor lost a
breath of her sacred spirit.</p>
<p>I floated up into the higher, drier air, that I might, for once, see the
total body of that spirit.</p>
<p>There lay Oxford far beneath me, like a map in grey and black and silver.
All that I had known only as great single things I saw now outspread in
apposition, and tiny; tiny symbols, as it were, of themselves, greatly
symbolising their oneness. There they lay, these multitudinous and
disparate quadrangles, all their rivalries merged in the making of a great
catholic pattern. And the roofs of the buildings around them seemed level
with their lawns. No higher the roofs of the very towers. Up from their
tiny segment of the earth's spinning surface they stood negligible beneath
infinity. And new, too, quite new, in eternity; transient upstarts. I saw
Oxford as a place that had no more past and no more future than a
mining-camp. I smiled down. O hoary and unassailable mushroom!... But if a
man carry his sense of proportion far enough, lo! he is back at the point
from which he started. He knows that eternity, as conceived by him, is but
an instant in eternity, and infinity but a speck in infinity. How should
they belittle the things near to him?... Oxford was venerable and magical,
after all, and enduring. Aye, and not because she would endure was it the
less lamentable that the young lives within her walls were like to be
taken. My equanimity was gone; and a tear fell on Oxford.</p>
<p>And then, as though Oxford herself were speaking up to me, the air
vibrated with a sweet noise of music. It was the hour of one; the end of
the Duke's hour of grace. Through the silvery tangle of sounds from other
clocks I floated quickly down to the Broad.</p>
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