<h3>VIII</h3>
<p>Lady Constantine then had the pleasure of beholding a waggon,
laden with packing-cases, moving across the field towards the
pillar; and not many days later Swithin, who had never come to
the Great House since the luncheon, met her in a path which he
knew to be one of her promenades.</p>
<p>‘The equatorial is fixed, and the man gone,’ he
said, half in doubt as to his speech, for her commands to him not
to recognize her agency or patronage still puzzled him.
‘I respectfully wish—you could come and see it, Lady
Constantine.’</p>
<p>‘I would rather not; I cannot.’</p>
<p>‘Saturn is lovely; Jupiter is simply sublime; I can see
double stars in the Lion and in the Virgin, where I had seen only
a single one before. It is all I required to set me
going!’</p>
<p>‘I’ll come. But—you need say nothing
about my visit. I cannot come to-night, but I will some
time this week. Yet only this once, to try the
instrument. Afterwards you must be content to pursue your
studies alone.’</p>
<p>Swithin seemed but little affected at this announcement.
‘Hilton and Pimm’s man handed me the bill,’ he
continued.</p>
<p>‘How much is it?’</p>
<p>He told her. ‘And the man who has built the hut
and dome, and done the other fixing, has sent in
his.’ He named this amount also.</p>
<p>‘Very well. They shall be settled with. My
debts must be paid with my money, which you shall have at
once,—in cash, since a cheque would hardly do. Come
to the house for it this evening. But no, no—you must
not come openly; such is the world. Come to the
window—the window that is exactly in a line with the long
snowdrop bed, in the south front—at eight to-night, and I
will give you what is necessary.’</p>
<p>‘Certainly, Lady Constantine,’ said the young
man.</p>
<p>At eight that evening accordingly, Swithin entered like a
spectre upon the terrace to seek out the spot she had
designated. The equatorial had so entirely absorbed his
thoughts that he did not trouble himself seriously to conjecture
the why and wherefore of her secrecy. If he casually
thought of it, he set it down in a general way to an intensely
generous wish on her part not to lessen his influence among the
poorer inhabitants by making him appear the object of
patronage.</p>
<p>While he stood by the long snowdrop bed, which looked up at
him like a nether Milky Way, the French casement of the window
opposite softly opened, and a hand bordered by a glimmer of lace
was stretched forth, from which he received a crisp little
parcel,—bank-notes, apparently. He knew the hand, and
held it long enough to press it to his lips, the only form which
had ever occurred to him of expressing his gratitude to her
without the incumbrance of clumsy words, a vehicle at the best of
times but rudely suited to such delicate merchandise. The
hand was hastily withdrawn, as if the treatment had been
unexpected. Then seemingly moved by second thoughts she
bent forward and said, ‘Is the night good for
observations?’</p>
<p>‘Perfect.’</p>
<p>She paused. ‘Then I’ll come to-night,’
she at last said. ‘It makes no difference to me,
after all. Wait just one moment.’</p>
<p>He waited, and she presently emerged, muffled up like a nun;
whereupon they left the terrace and struck across the park
together.</p>
<p>Very little was said by either till they were crossing the
fallow, when he asked if his arm would help her. She did
not take the offered support just then; but when they were
ascending the prehistoric earthwork, under the heavy gloom of the
fir-trees, she seized it, as if rather influenced by the
oppressive solitude than by fatigue.</p>
<p>Thus they reached the foot of the column, ten thousand spirits
in prison seeming to gasp their griefs from the funereal boughs
overhead, and a few twigs scratching the pillar with the drag of
impish claws as tenacious as those figuring in St.
Anthony’s temptation.</p>
<p>‘How intensely dark it is just here!’ she
whispered. ‘I wonder you can keep in the path.
Many ancient Britons lie buried there doubtless.’</p>
<p>He led her round to the other side, where, feeling his way
with his hands, he suddenly left her, appearing a moment after
with a light.</p>
<p>‘What place is this?’ she exclaimed.</p>
<p>‘This is the new wood cabin,’ said he.</p>
<p>She could just discern the outline of a little house, not
unlike a bathing-machine without wheels.</p>
<p>‘I have kept lights ready here,’ he went on,
‘as I thought you might come any evening, and possibly
bring company.’</p>
<p>‘Don’t criticize me for coming alone,’ she
exclaimed with sensitive promptness. ‘There are
social reasons for what I do of which you know
nothing.’</p>
<p>‘Perhaps it is much to my discredit that I don’t
know.’</p>
<p>‘Not at all. You are all the better for it.
Heaven forbid that I should enlighten you. Well, I see this
is the hut. But I am more curious to go to the top of the
tower, and make discoveries.’</p>
<p>He brought a little lantern from the cabin, and lighted her up
the winding staircase to the temple of that sublime mystery on
whose threshold he stood as priest.</p>
<p>The top of the column was quite changed. The tub-shaped
space within the parapet, formerly open to the air and sun, was
now arched over by a light dome of lath-work covered with
felt. But this dome was not fixed. At the line where
its base descended to the parapet there were half a dozen iron
balls, precisely like cannon-shot, standing loosely in a groove,
and on these the dome rested its whole weight. In the side
of the dome was a slit, through which the wind blew and the North
Star beamed, and towards it the end of the great telescope was
directed. This latter magnificent object, with its circles,
axes, and handles complete, was securely fixed in the middle of
the floor.</p>
<p>‘But you can only see one part of the sky through that
slit,’ said she.</p>
<p>The astronomer stretched out his arm, and the whole dome
turned horizontally round, running on the balls with a rumble
like thunder. Instead of the star Polaris, which had first
been peeping in through the slit, there now appeared the
countenances of Castor and Pollux. Swithin then manipulated
the equatorial, and put it through its capabilities in like
manner.</p>
<p>She was enchanted; being rather excitable she even clapped her
hands just once. She turned to him: ‘Now are you
happy?’</p>
<p>‘But it is all <i>yours</i>, Lady
Constantine.’</p>
<p>‘At this moment. But that’s a defect which
can soon be remedied. When is your birthday?’</p>
<p>‘Next month,—the seventh.’</p>
<p>‘Then it shall all be yours,—a birthday
present.’</p>
<p>The young man protested; it was too much.</p>
<p>‘No, you must accept it all,—equatorial, dome
stand, hut, and everything that has been put here for this
astronomical purpose. The possession of these apparatus
would only compromise me. Already they are reputed to be
yours, and they must be made yours. There is no help for
it. If ever’ (here her voice lost some
firmness),—‘if ever you go away from me,—from
this place, I mean,—and marry, and settle in a new home
elsewhere for good, and forget me, you must take these things,
equatorial and all, and never tell your wife or anybody how they
came to be yours.’</p>
<p>‘I wish I could do something more for you!’
exclaimed the much-moved astronomer. ‘If you could
but share my fame,—supposing I get any, which I may die
before doing,—it would be a little compensation. As
to my going away and marrying, I certainly shall not. I may
go away, but I shall never marry.’</p>
<p>‘Why not?’</p>
<p>‘A beloved science is enough wife for
me,—combined, perhaps, with a little warm friendship with
one of kindred pursuits.’</p>
<p>‘Who is the friend of kindred pursuits?’</p>
<p>‘Yourself I should like it to be.’</p>
<p>‘You would have to become a woman before I could be
that, publicly; or I a man,’ she replied, with dry
melancholy.</p>
<p>‘Why I a woman, or you a man, dear Lady
Constantine?’</p>
<p>‘I cannot explain. No; you must keep your fame and
your science all to yourself, and I must keep
my—troubles.’</p>
<p>Swithin, to divert her from melancholy—not knowing that
in the expression of her melancholy thus and now she found much
pleasure,—changed the subject by asking if they should take
some observations.</p>
<p>‘Yes; the scenery is well hung to-night,’ she said
looking out upon the heavens.</p>
<p>Then they proceeded to scan the sky, roving from planet to
star, from single stars to double stars, from double to coloured
stars, in the cursory manner of the merely curious. They
plunged down to that at other times invisible multitude in the
back rows of the celestial theatre: remote layers of
constellations whose shapes were new and singular; pretty
twinklers which for infinite ages had spent their beams without
calling forth from a single earthly poet a single line, or being
able to bestow a ray of comfort on a single benighted
traveller.</p>
<p>‘And to think,’ said Lady Constantine, ‘that
the whole race of shepherds, since the beginning of the
world,—even those immortal shepherds who watched near
Bethlehem,—should have gone into their graves without
knowing that for one star that lighted them in their labours,
there were a hundred as good behind trying to do so! . . .
I have a feeling for this instrument not unlike the awe I should
feel in the presence of a great magician in whom I really
believed. Its powers are so enormous, and weird, and
fantastical, that I should have a personal fear in being with it
alone. Music drew an angel down, said the poet: but what is
that to drawing down worlds!’</p>
<p>‘I often experience a kind of fear of the sky after
sitting in the observing-chair a long time,’ he
answered. ‘And when I walk home afterwards I also
fear it, for what I know is there, but cannot see, as one
naturally fears the presence of a vast formless something that
only reveals a very little of itself. That’s partly
what I meant by saying that magnitude, which up to a certain
point has grandeur, has beyond it ghastliness.’</p>
<p>Thus the interest of their sidereal observations led them on,
till the knowledge that scarce any other human vision was
travelling within a hundred million miles of their own gave them
such a sense of the isolation of that faculty as almost to be a
sense of isolation in respect of their whole personality, causing
a shudder at its absoluteness. At night, when human
discords and harmonies are hushed, in a general sense, for the
greater part of twelve hours, there is nothing to moderate the
blow with which the infinitely great, the stellar universe,
strikes down upon the infinitely little, the mind of the
beholder; and this was the case now. Having got closer to
immensity than their fellow-creatures, they saw at once its
beauty and its frightfulness. They more and more felt the
contrast between their own tiny magnitudes and those among which
they had recklessly plunged, till they were oppressed with the
presence of a vastness they could not cope with even as an idea,
and which hung about them like a nightmare.</p>
<p>He stood by her while she observed; she by him when they
changed places. Once that Swithin’s emancipation from
a trammelling body had been effected by the telescope, and he was
well away in space, she felt her influence over him diminishing
to nothing. He was quite unconscious of his terrestrial
neighbourings, and of herself as one of them. It still
further reduced her towards unvarnished simplicity in her manner
to him.</p>
<p>The silence was broken only by the ticking of the clock-work
which gave diurnal motion to the instrument. The stars
moved on, the end of the telescope followed, but their tongues
stood still. To expect that he was ever voluntarily going
to end the pause by speech was apparently futile. She laid
her hand upon his arm.</p>
<p>He started, withdrew his eye from the telescope, and brought
himself back to the earth by a visible—almost
painful—effort.</p>
<p>‘Do come out of it,’ she coaxed, with a softness
in her voice which any man but unpractised Swithin would have
felt to be exquisite. ‘I feel that I have been so
foolish as to put in your hands an instrument to effect my own
annihilation. Not a word have you spoken for the last ten
minutes.’</p>
<p>‘I have been mentally getting on with my great
theory. I hope soon to be able to publish it to the
world. What, are you going? I will walk with you,
Lady Constantine. When will you come again?’</p>
<p>‘When your great theory is published to the
world.’</p>
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