<h2><SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>CHAPTER X</h2>
<p class="poem">
“From Eden’s bowers the full-fed rivers flow,<br/>
To guide the outcasts to the land of woe:<br/>
Our Earth one little toiling streamlet yields.<br/>
To guide the wanderers to the happy fields.”</p>
<p>After leaving this village, where I had rested for nearly a week, I travelled
through a desert region of dry sand and glittering rocks, peopled principally
by goblin-fairies. When I first entered their domains, and, indeed, whenever I
fell in with another tribe of them, they began mocking me with offered handfuls
of gold and jewels, making hideous grimaces at me, and performing the most
antic homage, as if they thought I expected reverence, and meant to humour me
like a maniac. But ever, as soon as one cast his eyes on the shadow behind me,
he made a wry face, partly of pity, partly of contempt, and looked ashamed, as
if he had been caught doing something inhuman; then, throwing down his handful
of gold, and ceasing all his grimaces, he stood aside to let me pass in peace,
and made signs to his companions to do the like. I had no inclination to
observe them much, for the shadow was in my heart as well as at my heels. I
walked listlessly and almost hopelessly along, till I arrived one day at a
small spring; which, bursting cool from the heart of a sun-heated rock, flowed
somewhat southwards from the direction I had been taking. I drank of this
spring, and found myself wonderfully refreshed. A kind of love to the cheerful
little stream arose in my heart. It was born in a desert; but it seemed to say
to itself, “I will flow, and sing, and lave my banks, till I make my
desert a paradise.” I thought I could not do better than follow it, and
see what it made of it. So down with the stream I went, over rocky lands,
burning with sunbeams. But the rivulet flowed not far, before a few blades of
grass appeared on its banks, and then, here and there, a stunted bush.
Sometimes it disappeared altogether under ground; and after I had wandered some
distance, as near as I could guess, in the direction it seemed to take, I would
suddenly hear it again, singing, sometimes far away to my right or left,
amongst new rocks, over which it made new cataracts of watery melodies. The
verdure on its banks increased as it flowed; other streams joined it; and at
last, after many days’ travel, I found myself, one gorgeous summer
evening, resting by the side of a broad river, with a glorious horse-chestnut
tree towering above me, and dropping its blossoms, milk-white and rosy-red, all
about me. As I sat, a gush of joy sprang forth in my heart, and over flowed at
my eyes.</p>
<p>Through my tears, the whole landscape glimmered in such bewildering loveliness,
that I felt as if I were entering Fairy Land for the first time, and some
loving hand were waiting to cool my head, and a loving word to warm my heart.
Roses, wild roses, everywhere! So plentiful were they, they not only perfumed
the air, they seemed to dye it a faint rose-hue. The colour floated abroad with
the scent, and clomb, and spread, until the whole west blushed and glowed with
the gathered incense of roses. And my heart fainted with longing in my bosom.</p>
<p>Could I but see the Spirit of the Earth, as I saw once the indwelling woman of
the beech-tree, and my beauty of the pale marble, I should be content.
Content!—Oh, how gladly would I die of the light of her eyes! Yea, I
would cease to be, if that would bring me one word of love from the one mouth.
The twilight sank around, and infolded me with sleep. I slept as I had not
slept for months. I did not awake till late in the morning; when, refreshed in
body and mind, I rose as from the death that wipes out the sadness of life, and
then dies itself in the new morrow. Again I followed the stream; now climbing a
steep rocky bank that hemmed it in; now wading through long grasses and wild
flowers in its path; now through meadows; and anon through woods that crowded
down to the very lip of the water.</p>
<p>At length, in a nook of the river, gloomy with the weight of overhanging
foliage, and still and deep as a soul in which the torrent eddies of pain have
hollowed a great gulf, and then, subsiding in violence, have left it full of a
motionless, fathomless sorrow—I saw a little boat lying. So still was the
water here, that the boat needed no fastening. It lay as if some one had just
stepped ashore, and would in a moment return. But as there were no signs of
presence, and no track through the thick bushes; and, moreover, as I was in
Fairy Land where one does very much as he pleases, I forced my way to the
brink, stepped into the boat, pushed it, with the help of the tree-branches,
out into the stream, lay down in the bottom, and let my boat and me float
whither the stream would carry us. I seemed to lose myself in the great flow of
sky above me unbroken in its infinitude, except when now and then, coming
nearer the shore at a bend in the river, a tree would sweep its mighty head
silently above mine, and glide away back into the past, never more to fling its
shadow over me. I fell asleep in this cradle, in which mother Nature was
rocking her weary child; and while I slept, the sun slept not, but went round
his arched way. When I awoke, he slept in the waters, and I went on my silent
path beneath a round silvery moon. And a pale moon looked up from the floor of
the great blue cave that lay in the abysmal silence beneath.</p>
<p>Why are all reflections lovelier than what we call the reality?—not so
grand or so strong, it may be, but always lovelier? Fair as is the gliding
sloop on the shining sea, the wavering, trembling, unresting sail below is
fairer still. Yea, the reflecting ocean itself, reflected in the mirror, has a
wondrousness about its waters that somewhat vanishes when I turn towards
itself. All mirrors are magic mirrors. The commonest room is a room in a poem
when I turn to the glass. (And this reminds me, while I write, of a strange
story which I read in the fairy palace, and of which I will try to make a
feeble memorial in its place.) In whatever way it may be accounted for, of one
thing we may be sure, that this feeling is no cheat; for there is no cheating
in nature and the simple unsought feelings of the soul. There must be a truth
involved in it, though we may but in part lay hold of the meaning. Even the
memories of past pain are beautiful; and past delights, though beheld only
through clefts in the grey clouds of sorrow, are lovely as Fairy Land. But how
have I wandered into the deeper fairyland of the soul, while as yet I only
float towards the fairy palace of Fairy Land! The moon, which is the lovelier
memory or reflex of the down-gone sun, the joyous day seen in the faint mirror
of the brooding night, had rapt me away.</p>
<p>I sat up in the boat. Gigantic forest trees were about me; through which, like
a silver snake, twisted and twined the great river. The little waves, when I
moved in the boat, heaved and fell with a plash as of molten silver, breaking
the image of the moon into a thousand morsels, fusing again into one, as the
ripples of laughter die into the still face of joy. The sleeping woods, in
undefined massiveness; the water that flowed in its sleep; and, above all, the
enchantress moon, which had cast them all, with her pale eye, into the charmed
slumber, sank into my soul, and I felt as if I had died in a dream, and should
never more awake.</p>
<p>From this I was partly aroused by a glimmering of white, that, through the
trees on the left, vaguely crossed my vision, as I gazed upwards. But the trees
again hid the object; and at the moment, some strange melodious bird took up
its song, and sang, not an ordinary bird-song, with constant repetitions of the
same melody, but what sounded like a continuous strain, in which one thought
was expressed, deepening in intensity as evolved in progress. It sounded like a
welcome already overshadowed with the coming farewell. As in all sweetest
music, a tinge of sadness was in every note. Nor do we know how much of the
pleasures even of life we owe to the intermingled sorrows. Joy cannot unfold
the deepest truths, although deepest truth must be deepest joy. Cometh
white-robed Sorrow, stooping and wan, and flingeth wide the doors she may not
enter. Almost we linger with Sorrow for very love.</p>
<p>As the song concluded the stream bore my little boat with a gentle sweep round
a bend of the river; and lo! on a broad lawn, which rose from the water’s
edge with a long green slope to a clear elevation from which the trees receded
on all sides, stood a stately palace glimmering ghostly in the moonshine: it
seemed to be built throughout of the whitest marble. There was no reflection of
moonlight from windows—there seemed to be none; so there was no cold
glitter; only, as I said, a ghostly shimmer. Numberless shadows tempered the
shine, from column and balcony and tower. For everywhere galleries ran along
the face of the buildings; wings were extended in many directions; and
numberless openings, through which the moonbeams vanished into the interior,
and which served both for doors and windows, had their separate balconies in
front, communicating with a common gallery that rose on its own pillars. Of
course, I did not discover all this from the river, and in the moonlight. But,
though I was there for many days, I did not succeed in mastering the inner
topography of the building, so extensive and complicated was it.</p>
<p>Here I wished to land, but the boat had no oars on board. However, I found that
a plank, serving for a seat, was unfastened, and with that I brought the boat
to the bank and scrambled on shore. Deep soft turf sank beneath my feet, as I
went up the ascent towards the palace.</p>
<p>When I reached it, I saw that it stood on a great platform of marble, with an
ascent, by broad stairs of the same, all round it. Arrived on the platform, I
found there was an extensive outlook over the forest, which, however, was
rather veiled than revealed by the moonlight.</p>
<p>Entering by a wide gateway, but without gates, into an inner court, surrounded
on all sides by great marble pillars supporting galleries above, I saw a large
fountain of porphyry in the middle, throwing up a lofty column of water, which
fell, with a noise as of the fusion of all sweet sounds, into a basin beneath;
overflowing which, it ran into a single channel towards the interior of the
building. Although the moon was by this time so low in the west, that not a ray
of her light fell into the court, over the height of the surrounding buildings;
yet was the court lighted by a second reflex from the sun of other lands. For
the top of the column of water, just as it spread to fall, caught the
moonbeams, and like a great pale lamp, hung high in the night air, threw a dim
memory of light (as it were) over the court below. This court was paved in
diamonds of white and red marble. According to my custom since I entered Fairy
Land, of taking for a guide whatever I first found moving in any direction, I
followed the stream from the basin of the fountain. It led me to a great open
door, beneath the ascending steps of which it ran through a low arch and
disappeared. Entering here, I found myself in a great hall, surrounded with
white pillars, and paved with black and white. This I could see by the
moonlight, which, from the other side, streamed through open windows into the
hall.</p>
<p>Its height I could not distinctly see. As soon as I entered, I had the feeling
so common to me in the woods, that there were others there besides myself,
though I could see no one, and heard no sound to indicate a presence. Since my
visit to the Church of Darkness, my power of seeing the fairies of the higher
orders had gradually diminished, until it had almost ceased. But I could
frequently believe in their presence while unable to see them. Still, although
I had company, and doubtless of a safe kind, it seemed rather dreary to spend
the night in an empty marble hall, however beautiful, especially as the moon
was near the going down, and it would soon be dark. So I began at the place
where I entered, and walked round the hall, looking for some door or passage
that might lead me to a more hospitable chamber. As I walked, I was deliciously
haunted with the feeling that behind some one of the seemingly innumerable
pillars, one who loved me was waiting for me. Then I thought she was following
me from pillar to pillar as I went along; but no arms came out of the faint
moonlight, and no sigh assured me of her presence.</p>
<p>At length I came to an open corridor, into which I turned; notwithstanding
that, in doing so, I left the light behind. Along this I walked with
outstretched hands, groping my way, till, arriving at another corridor, which
seemed to strike off at right angles to that in which I was, I saw at the end a
faintly glimmering light, too pale even for moonshine, resembling rather a
stray phosphorescence. However, where everything was white, a little light went
a great way. So I walked on to the end, and a long corridor it was. When I came
up to the light, I found that it proceeded from what looked like silver letters
upon a door of ebony; and, to my surprise even in the home of wonder itself,
the letters formed the words, <i>The Chamber of Sir Anodos</i>. Although I had
as yet no right to the honours of a knight, I ventured to conclude that the
chamber was indeed intended for me; and, opening the door without hesitation, I
entered. Any doubt as to whether I was right in so doing, was soon dispelled.
What to my dark eyes seemed a blaze of light, burst upon me. A fire of large
pieces of some sweet-scented wood, supported by dogs of silver, was burning on
the hearth, and a bright lamp stood on a table, in the midst of a plentiful
meal, apparently awaiting my arrival. But what surprised me more than all, was,
that the room was in every respect a copy of my own room, the room whence the
little stream from my basin had led me into Fairy Land. There was the very
carpet of grass and moss and daisies, which I had myself designed; the curtains
of pale blue silk, that fell like a cataract over the windows; the
old-fashioned bed, with the chintz furniture, on which I had slept from
boyhood. “Now I shall sleep,” I said to myself. “My shadow
dares not come here.”</p>
<p>I sat down to the table, and began to help myself to the good things before me
with confidence. And now I found, as in many instances before, how true the
fairy tales are; for I was waited on, all the time of my meal, by invisible
hands. I had scarcely to do more than look towards anything I wanted, when it
was brought me, just as if it had come to me of itself. My glass was kept
filled with the wine I had chosen, until I looked towards another bottle or
decanter; when a fresh glass was substituted, and the other wine supplied. When
I had eaten and drank more heartily and joyfully than ever since I entered
Fairy Land, the whole was removed by several attendants, of whom some were male
and some female, as I thought I could distinguish from the way the dishes were
lifted from the table, and the motion with which they were carried out of the
room. As soon as they were all taken away, I heard a sound as of the shutting
of a door, and knew that I was left alone. I sat long by the fire, meditating,
and wondering how it would all end; and when at length, wearied with thinking,
I betook myself to my own bed, it was half with a hope that, when I awoke in
the morning, I should awake not only in my own room, but in my own castle also;
and that I should walk, out upon my own native soil, and find that Fairy Land
was, after all, only a vision of the night. The sound of the falling waters of
the fountain floated me into oblivion.</p>
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