<h3>IV</h3>
<p>It was a bright starlight night, a week or ten days
later. There had been several such nights since the
occasion of Lady Constantine’s promise to Swithin St.
Cleeve to come and study astronomical phenomena on the Rings-Hill
column; but she had not gone there. This evening she sat at
a window, the blind of which had not been drawn down. Her
elbow rested on a little table, and her cheek on her hand.
Her eyes were attracted by the brightness of the planet Jupiter,
as he rode in the ecliptic opposite, beaming down upon her as if
desirous of notice.</p>
<p>Beneath the planet could be still discerned the dark edges of
the park landscape against the sky. As one of its features,
though nearly screened by the trees which had been planted to
shut out the fallow tracts of the estate, rose the upper part of
the column. It was hardly visible now, even if visible at
all; yet Lady Constantine knew from daytime experience its exact
bearing from the window at which she leaned. The knowledge
that there it still was, despite its rapid envelopment by the
shades, led her lonely mind to her late meeting on its summit
with the young astronomer, and to her promise to honour him with
a visit for learning some secrets about the scintillating bodies
overhead. The curious juxtaposition of youthful ardour and
old despair that she had found in the lad would have made him
interesting to a woman of perception, apart from his fair hair
and early-Christian face. But such is the heightening touch
of memory that his beauty was probably richer in her imagination
than in the real. It was a moot point to consider whether
the temptations that would be brought to bear upon him in his
course would exceed the staying power of his nature. Had he
been a wealthy youth he would have seemed one to tremble
for. In spite of his attractive ambitions and gentlemanly
bearing, she thought it would possibly be better for him if he
never became known outside his lonely tower,—forgetting
that he had received such intellectual enlargement as would
probably make his continuance in Welland seem, in his own eye, a
slight upon his father’s branch of his family, whose social
standing had been, only a few years earlier, but little removed
from her own.</p>
<p>Suddenly she flung a cloak about her and went out on the
terrace. She passed down the steps to the lower lawn,
through the door to the open park, and there stood still.
The tower was now discernible. As the words in which a
thought is expressed develop a further thought, so did the fact
of her having got so far influence her to go further. A
person who had casually observed her gait would have thought it
irregular; and the lessenings and increasings of speed with which
she proceeded in the direction of the pillar could be accounted
for only by a motive much more disturbing than an intention to
look through a telescope. Thus she went on, till, leaving
the park, she crossed the turnpike-road, and entered the large
field, in the middle of which the fir-clad hill stood like Mont
St. Michel in its bay.</p>
<p>The stars were so bright as distinctly to show her the place,
and now she could see a faint light at the top of the column,
which rose like a shadowy finger pointing to the upper
constellations. There was no wind, in a human sense; but a
steady stertorous breathing from the fir-trees showed that, now
as always, there was movement in apparent stagnation.
Nothing but an absolute vacuum could paralyze their
utterance.</p>
<p>The door of the tower was shut. It was something more
than the freakishness which is engendered by a sickening monotony
that had led Lady Constantine thus far, and hence she made no ado
about admitting herself. Three years ago, when her every
action was a thing of propriety, she had known of no possible
purpose which could have led her abroad in a manner such as
this.</p>
<p>She ascended the tower noiselessly. On raising her head
above the hatchway she beheld Swithin bending over a scroll of
paper which lay on the little table beside him. The small
lantern that illuminated it showed also that he was warmly
wrapped up in a coat and thick cap, behind him standing the
telescope on its frame.</p>
<p>What was he doing? She looked over his shoulder upon the
paper, and saw figures and signs. When he had jotted down
something he went to the telescope again.</p>
<p>‘What are you doing to-night?’ she said in a low
voice.</p>
<p>Swithin started, and turned. The faint lamp-light was
sufficient to reveal her face to him.</p>
<p>‘Tedious work, Lady Constantine,’ he answered,
without betraying much surprise. ‘Doing my best to
watch phenomenal stars, as I may call them.’</p>
<p>‘You said you would show me the heavens if I could come
on a starlight night. I have come.’</p>
<p>Swithin, as a preliminary, swept round the telescope to
Jupiter, and exhibited to her the glory of that orb. Then
he directed the instrument to the less bright shape of
Saturn.</p>
<p>‘Here,’ he said, warming up to the subject,
‘we see a world which is to my mind by far the most
wonderful in the solar system. Think of streams of
satellites or meteors racing round and round the planet like a
fly-wheel, so close together as to seem solid
matter!’ He entered further and further into the
subject, his ideas gathering momentum as he went on, like his pet
heavenly bodies.</p>
<p>When he paused for breath she said, in tones very different
from his own, ‘I ought now to tell you that, though I am
interested in the stars, they were not what I came to see you
about. . . . I first thought of disclosing the matter to
Mr. Torkingham; but I altered my mind, and decided on
you.’</p>
<p>She spoke in so low a voice that he might not have heard
her. At all events, abstracted by his grand theme, he did
not heed her. He continued,—</p>
<p>‘Well, we will get outside the solar system
altogether,—leave the whole group of sun, primary and
secondary planets quite behind us in our flight, as a bird might
leave its bush and sweep into the whole forest. Now what do
you see, Lady Constantine?’ He levelled the
achromatic at Sirius.</p>
<p>She said that she saw a bright star, though it only seemed a
point of light now as before.</p>
<p>‘That’s because it is so distant that no
magnifying will bring its size up to zero. Though called a
fixed star, it is, like all fixed stars, moving with
inconceivable velocity; but no magnifying will show that velocity
as anything but rest.’</p>
<p>And thus they talked on about Sirius, and then about other
stars</p>
<blockquote><p> . . . in the scrowl<br/>
Of all those beasts, and fish, and fowl,<br/>
With which, like Indian plantations,<br/>
The learned stock the constellations,</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="nind">till he asked her how many stars she thought were visible to
them at that moment.</p>
<p>She looked around over the magnificent stretch of sky that
their high position unfolded. ‘Oh, thousands,
hundreds of thousands,’ she said absently.</p>
<p>‘No. There are only about three thousand.
Now, how many do you think are brought within sight by the help
of a powerful telescope?’</p>
<p>‘I won’t guess.’</p>
<p>‘Twenty millions. So that, whatever the stars were
made for, they were not made to please our eyes. It is just
the same in everything; nothing is made for man.’</p>
<p>‘Is it that notion which makes you so sad for your
age?’ she asked, with almost maternal solicitude.
‘I think astronomy is a bad study for you. It makes
you feel human insignificance too plainly.’</p>
<p>‘Perhaps it does. However,’ he added more
cheerfully, ‘though I feel the study to be one almost
tragic in its quality, I hope to be the new Copernicus.
What he was to the solar system I aim to be to the systems
beyond.’</p>
<p>Then, by means of the instrument at hand, they travelled
together from the earth to Uranus and the mysterious outskirts of
the solar system; from the solar system to a star in the Swan,
the nearest fixed star in the northern sky; from the star in the
Swan to remoter stars; thence to the remotest visible; till the
ghastly chasm which they had bridged by a fragile line of sight
was realized by Lady Constantine.</p>
<p>‘We are now traversing distances beside which the
immense line stretching from the earth to the sun is but an
invisible point,’ said the youth. ‘When, just
now, we had reached a planet whose remoteness is a hundred times
the remoteness of the sun from the earth, we were only a two
thousandth part of the journey to the spot at which we have
optically arrived now.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, pray don’t; it overpowers me!’ she
replied, not without seriousness. ‘It makes me feel
that it is not worth while to live; it quite annihilates
me.’</p>
<p>‘If it annihilates your ladyship to roam over these
yawning spaces just once, think how it must annihilate me to be,
as it were, in constant suspension amid them night after
night.’</p>
<p>‘Yes. . . . It was not really this subject that I
came to see you upon, Mr. St. Cleeve,’ she began a second
time. ‘It was a personal matter.’</p>
<p>‘I am listening, Lady Constantine.’</p>
<p>‘I will tell it you. Yet no,—not this
moment. Let us finish this grand subject first; it dwarfs
mine.’</p>
<p>It would have been difficult to judge from her accents whether
she were afraid to broach her own matter, or really interested in
his. Or a certain youthful pride that he evidenced at being
the elucidator of such a large theme, and at having drawn her
there to hear and observe it, may have inclined her to indulge
him for kindness’ sake.</p>
<p>Thereupon he took exception to her use of the word
‘grand’ as descriptive of the actual universe:</p>
<p>‘The imaginary picture of the sky as the concavity of a
dome whose base extends from horizon to horizon of our earth is
grand, simply grand, and I wish I had never got beyond looking at
it in that way. But the actual sky is a horror.’</p>
<p>‘A new view of our old friends, the stars,’ she
said, smiling up at them.</p>
<p>‘But such an obviously true one!’ said the young
man. ‘You would hardly think, at first, that horrid
monsters lie up there waiting to be discovered by any moderately
penetrating mind—monsters to which those of the oceans bear
no sort of comparison.’</p>
<p>‘What monsters may they be?’</p>
<p>‘Impersonal monsters, namely, Immensities. Until a
person has thought out the stars and their inter-spaces, he has
hardly learnt that there are things much more terrible than
monsters of shape, namely, monsters of magnitude without known
shape. Such monsters are the voids and waste places of the
sky. Look, for instance, at those pieces of darkness in the
Milky Way,’ he went on, pointing with his finger to where
the galaxy stretched across over their heads with the
luminousness of a frosted web. ‘You see that dark
opening in it near the Swan? There is a still more
remarkable one south of the equator, called the Coal Sack, as a
sort of nickname that has a farcical force from its very
inadequacy. In these our sight plunges quite beyond any
twinkler we have yet visited. Those are deep wells for the
human mind to let itself down into, leave alone the human body!
and think of the side caverns and secondary abysses to right and
left as you pass on!’</p>
<p>Lady Constantine was heedful and silent.</p>
<p>He tried to give her yet another idea of the size of the
universe; never was there a more ardent endeavour to bring down
the immeasurable to human comprehension! By figures of
speech and apt comparisons he took her mind into leading-strings,
compelling her to follow him into wildernesses of which she had
never in her life even realized the existence.</p>
<p>‘There is a size at which dignity begins,’ he
exclaimed; ‘further on there is a size at which grandeur
begins; further on there is a size at which solemnity begins;
further on, a size at which awfulness begins; further on, a size
at which ghastliness begins. That size faintly approaches
the size of the stellar universe. So am I not right in
saying that those minds who exert their imaginative powers to
bury themselves in the depths of that universe merely strain
their faculties to gain a new horror?’</p>
<p>Standing, as she stood, in the presence of the stellar
universe, under the very eyes of the constellations, Lady
Constantine apprehended something of the earnest youth’s
argument.</p>
<p>‘And to add a new weirdness to what the sky possesses in
its size and formlessness, there is involved the quality of
decay. For all the wonder of these everlasting stars,
eternal spheres, and what not, they are not everlasting, they are
not eternal; they burn out like candles. You see that dying
one in the body of the Greater Bear? Two centuries ago it
was as bright as the others. The senses may become
terrified by plunging among them as they are, but there is a
pitifulness even in their glory. Imagine them all
extinguished, and your mind feeling its way through a heaven of
total darkness, occasionally striking against the black,
invisible cinders of those stars. . . . If you are
cheerful, and wish to remain so, leave the study of astronomy
alone. Of all the sciences, it alone deserves the character
of the terrible.’</p>
<p>‘I am not altogether cheerful.’</p>
<p>‘Then if, on the other hand, you are restless and
anxious about the future, study astronomy at once. Your
troubles will be reduced amazingly. But your study will
reduce them in a singular way, by reducing the importance of
everything. So that the science is still terrible, even as
a panacea. It is quite impossible to think at all
adequately of the sky—of what the sky substantially is,
without feeling it as a juxtaposed nightmare. It is
better—far better—for men to forget the universe than
to bear it clearly in mind! . . . But you say the universe
was not really what you came to see me about. What was it,
may I ask, Lady Constantine?’</p>
<p>She mused, and sighed, and turned to him with something
pathetic in her.</p>
<p>‘The immensity of the subject you have engaged me on has
completely crushed my subject out of me! Yours is
celestial; mine lamentably human! And the less must give
way to the greater.’</p>
<p>‘But is it, in a human sense, and apart from macrocosmic
magnitudes, important?’ he inquired, at last attracted by
her manner; for he began to perceive, in spite of his
prepossession, that she had really something on her mind.</p>
<p>‘It is as important as personal troubles usually
are.’</p>
<p>Notwithstanding her preconceived notion of coming to Swithin
as employer to dependant, as <i>châtelaine</i> to page, she
was falling into confidential intercourse with him. His
vast and romantic endeavours lent him a personal force and charm
which she could not but apprehend. In the presence of the
immensities that his young mind had, as it were, brought down
from above to hers, they became unconsciously equal. There
was, moreover, an inborn liking in Lady Constantine to dwell less
on her permanent position as a county lady than on her passing
emotions as a woman.</p>
<p>‘I will postpone the matter I came to charge you
with,’ she resumed, smiling. ‘I must reconsider
it. Now I will return.’</p>
<p>‘Allow me to show you out through the trees and across
the fields?’</p>
<p>She said neither a distinct yes nor no; and, descending the
tower, they threaded the firs and crossed the ploughed
field. By an odd coincidence he remarked, when they drew
near the Great House—</p>
<p>‘You may possibly be interested in knowing, Lady
Constantine, that that medium-sized star you see over there, low
down in the south, is precisely over Sir Blount
Constantine’s head in the middle of Africa.’</p>
<p>‘How very strange that you should have said so!’
she answered. ‘You have broached for me the very
subject I had come to speak of.’</p>
<p>‘On a domestic matter?’ he said, with
surprise.</p>
<p>‘Yes. What a small matter it seems now, after our
astronomical stupendousness! and yet on my way to you it so far
transcended the ordinary matters of my life as the subject you
have led me up to transcends this. But,’ with a
little laugh, ‘I will endeavour to sink down to such
ephemeral trivialities as human tragedy, and explain, since I
have come. The point is, I want a helper: no woman ever
wanted one more. For days I have wanted a trusty friend who
could go on a secret errand for me. It is necessary that my
messenger should be educated, should be intelligent, should be
silent as the grave. Do you give me your solemn promise as
to the last point, if I confide in you?’</p>
<p>‘Most emphatically, Lady Constantine.’</p>
<p>‘Your right hand upon the compact.’</p>
<p>He gave his hand, and raised hers to his lips. In
addition to his respect for her as the lady of the manor, there
was the admiration of twenty years for twenty-eight or nine in
such relations.</p>
<p>‘I trust you,’ she said. ‘Now, beyond
the above conditions, it was specially necessary that my agent
should have known Sir Blount Constantine well by sight when he
was at home. For the errand is concerning my husband; I am
much disturbed at what I have heard about him.’</p>
<p>‘I am indeed sorry to know it.’</p>
<p>‘There are only two people in the parish who fulfil all
the conditions,—Mr. Torkingham, and yourself. I sent
for Mr. Torkingham, and he came. I could not tell
him. I felt at the last moment that he wouldn’t
do. I have come to you because I think you will do.
This is it: my husband has led me and all the world to believe
that he is in Africa, hunting lions. I have had a
mysterious letter informing me that he has been seen in London,
in very peculiar circumstances. The truth of this I want
ascertained. Will you go on the journey?’</p>
<p>‘Personally, I would go to the end of the world for you,
Lady Constantine; but—’</p>
<p>‘No buts!’</p>
<p>‘How can I leave?’</p>
<p>‘Why not?’</p>
<p>‘I am preparing a work on variable stars. There is
one of these which I have exceptionally observed for several
months, and on this my great theory is mainly based. It has
been hitherto called irregular; but I have detected a periodicity
in its so-called irregularities which, if proved, would add some
very valuable facts to those known on this subject, one of the
most interesting, perplexing, and suggestive in the whole field
of astronomy. Now, to clinch my theory, there should be a
sudden variation this week,—or at latest next
week,—and I have to watch every night not to let it
pass. You see my reason for declining, Lady
Constantine.’</p>
<p>‘Young men are always so selfish!’ she said.</p>
<p>‘It might ruin the whole of my year’s labour if I
leave now!’ returned the youth, greatly hurt.
‘Could you not wait a fortnight longer?’</p>
<p>‘No,—no. Don’t think that I have asked
you, pray. I have no wish to inconvenience you.’</p>
<p>‘Lady Constantine, don’t be angry with me!
Will you do this,—watch the star for me while I am
gone? If you are prepared to do it effectually, I will
go.’</p>
<p>‘Will it be much trouble?’</p>
<p>‘It will be some trouble. You would have to come
here every clear evening about nine. If the sky were not
clear, then you would have to come at four in the morning, should
the clouds have dispersed.’</p>
<p>‘Could not the telescope be brought to my
house?’</p>
<p>Swithin shook his head.</p>
<p>‘Perhaps you did not observe its real size,—that
it was fixed to a frame-work? I could not afford to buy an
equatorial, and I have been obliged to rig up an apparatus of my
own devising, so as to make it in some measure answer the purpose
of an equatorial. It <i>could</i> be moved, but I would
rather not touch it.’</p>
<p>‘Well, I’ll go to the telescope,’ she went
on, with an emphasis that was not wholly playful.
‘You are the most ungallant youth I ever met with; but I
suppose I must set that down to science. Yes, I’ll go
to the tower at nine every night.’</p>
<p>‘And alone? I should prefer to keep my pursuits
there unknown.’</p>
<p>‘And alone,’ she answered, quite overborne by his
inflexibility.</p>
<p>‘You will not miss the morning observation, if it should
be necessary?’</p>
<p>‘I have given my word.’</p>
<p>‘And I give mine. I suppose I ought not to have
been so exacting!’ He spoke with that sudden
emotional sense of his own insignificance which made these
alternations of mood possible. ‘I will go
anywhere—do anything for you—this
moment—to-morrow or at any time. But you must return
with me to the tower, and let me show you the observing
process.’</p>
<p>They retraced their steps, the tender hoar-frost taking the
imprint of their feet, while two stars in the Twins looked down
upon their two persons through the trees, as if those two persons
could bear some sort of comparison with them. On the tower
the instructions were given. When all was over, and he was
again conducting her to the Great House she said—</p>
<p>‘When can you start?’</p>
<p>‘Now,’ said Swithin.</p>
<p>‘So much the better. You shall go up by the night
mail.’</p>
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