<h2><SPAN name="chap11"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p class="poem">
“A wilderness of building, sinking far<br/>
And self-withdrawn into a wondrous depth,<br/>
Far sinking into splendour—without end:<br/>
Fabric it seemed of diamond and of gold,<br/>
With alabaster domes, and silver spires,<br/>
And blazing terrace upon terrace, high<br/>
Uplifted.”<br/>
W<small>ORDSWORTH</small>.</p>
<p>But when, after a sleep, which, although dreamless, yet left behind it a sense
of past blessedness, I awoke in the full morning, I found, indeed, that the
room was still my own; but that it looked abroad upon an unknown landscape of
forest and hill and dale on the one side—and on the other, upon the
marble court, with the great fountain, the crest of which now flashed glorious
in the sun, and cast on the pavement beneath a shower of faint shadows from the
waters that fell from it into the marble basin below.</p>
<p>Agreeably to all authentic accounts of the treatment of travellers in Fairy
Land, I found by my bedside a complete suit of fresh clothing, just such as I
was in the habit of wearing; for, though varied sufficiently from the one
removed, it was yet in complete accordance with my tastes. I dressed myself in
this, and went out. The whole palace shone like silver in the sun. The marble
was partly dull and partly polished; and every pinnacle, dome, and turret ended
in a ball, or cone, or cusp of silver. It was like frost-work, and too
dazzling, in the sun, for earthly eyes like mine.</p>
<p>I will not attempt to describe the environs, save by saying, that all the
pleasures to be found in the most varied and artistic arrangement of wood and
river, lawn and wild forest, garden and shrubbery, rocky hill and luxurious
vale; in living creatures wild and tame, in gorgeous birds, scattered
fountains, little streams, and reedy lakes—all were here. Some parts of
the palace itself I shall have occasion to describe more minutely.</p>
<p>For this whole morning I never thought of my demon shadow; and not till the
weariness which supervened on delight brought it again to my memory, did I look
round to see if it was behind me: it was scarcely discernible. But its
presence, however faintly revealed, sent a pang to my heart, for the pain of
which, not all the beauties around me could compensate. It was followed,
however, by the comforting reflection that, peradventure, I might here find the
magic word of power to banish the demon and set me free, so that I should no
longer be a man beside myself. The Queen of Fairy Land, thought I, must dwell
here: surely she will put forth her power to deliver me, and send me singing
through the further gates of her country back to my own land. “Shadow of
me!” I said; “which art not me, but which representest thyself to
me as me; here I may find a shadow of light which will devour thee, the shadow
of darkness! Here I may find a blessing which will fall on thee as a curse, and
damn thee to the blackness whence thou hast emerged unbidden.” I said
this, stretched at length on the slope of the lawn above the river; and as the
hope arose within me, the sun came forth from a light fleecy cloud that swept
across his face; and hill and dale, and the great river winding on through the
still mysterious forest, flashed back his rays as with a silent shout of joy;
all nature lived and glowed; the very earth grew warm beneath me; a magnificent
dragon-fly went past me like an arrow from a bow, and a whole concert of birds
burst into choral song.</p>
<p>The heat of the sun soon became too intense even for passive support. I
therefore rose, and sought the shelter of one of the arcades. Wandering along
from one to another of these, wherever my heedless steps led me, and wondering
everywhere at the simple magnificence of the building, I arrived at another
hall, the roof of which was of a pale blue, spangled with constellations of
silver stars, and supported by porphyry pillars of a paler red than
ordinary.—In this house (I may remark in passing), silver seemed
everywhere preferred to gold; and such was the purity of the air, that it
showed nowhere signs of tarnishing.—The whole of the floor of this hall,
except a narrow path behind the pillars, paved with black, was hollowed into a
huge basin, many feet deep, and filled with the purest, most liquid and radiant
water. The sides of the basin were white marble, and the bottom was paved with
all kinds of refulgent stones, of every shape and hue.</p>
<p>In their arrangement, you would have supposed, at first sight, that there was
no design, for they seemed to lie as if cast there from careless and playful
hands; but it was a most harmonious confusion; and as I looked at the play of
their colours, especially when the waters were in motion, I came at last to
feel as if not one little pebble could be displaced, without injuring the
effect of the whole. Beneath this floor of the water, lay the reflection of the
blue inverted roof, fretted with its silver stars, like a second deeper sea,
clasping and upholding the first. The fairy bath was probably fed from the
fountain in the court. Led by an irresistible desire, I undressed, and plunged
into the water. It clothed me as with a new sense and its object both in one.
The waters lay so close to me, they seemed to enter and revive my heart. I rose
to the surface, shook the water from my hair, and swam as in a rainbow, amid
the coruscations of the gems below seen through the agitation caused by my
motion. Then, with open eyes, I dived, and swam beneath the surface. And here
was a new wonder. For the basin, thus beheld, appeared to extend on all sides
like a sea, with here and there groups as of ocean rocks, hollowed by ceaseless
billows into wondrous caves and grotesque pinnacles. Around the caves grew
sea-weeds of all hues, and the corals glowed between; while far off, I saw the
glimmer of what seemed to be creatures of human form at home in the waters. I
thought I had been enchanted; and that when I rose to the surface, I should
find myself miles from land, swimming alone upon a heaving sea; but when my
eyes emerged from the waters, I saw above me the blue spangled vault, and the
red pillars around. I dived again, and found myself once more in the heart of a
great sea. I then arose, and swam to the edge, where I got out easily, for the
water reached the very brim, and, as I drew near washed in tiny waves over the
black marble border. I dressed, and went out, deeply refreshed.</p>
<p>And now I began to discern faint, gracious forms, here and there throughout the
building. Some walked together in earnest conversation. Others strayed alone.
Some stood in groups, as if looking at and talking about a picture or a statue.
None of them heeded me. Nor were they plainly visible to my eyes. Sometimes a
group, or single individual, would fade entirely out of the realm of my vision
as I gazed. When evening came, and the moon arose, clear as a round of a
horizon-sea when the sun hangs over it in the west, I began to see them all
more plainly; especially when they came between me and the moon; and yet more
especially, when I myself was in the shade. But, even then, I sometimes saw
only the passing wave of a white robe; or a lovely arm or neck gleamed by in
the moonshine; or white feet went walking alone over the moony sward. Nor, I
grieve to say, did I ever come much nearer to these glorious beings, or ever
look upon the Queen of the Fairies herself. My destiny ordered otherwise.</p>
<p>In this palace of marble and silver, and fountains and moonshine, I spent many
days; waited upon constantly in my room with everything desirable, and bathing
daily in the fairy bath. All this time I was little troubled with my demon
shadow I had a vague feeling that he was somewhere about the palace; but it
seemed as if the hope that I should in this place be finally freed from his
hated presence, had sufficed to banish him for a time. How and where I found
him, I shall soon have to relate.</p>
<p>The third day after my arrival, I found the library of the palace; and here,
all the time I remained, I spent most of the middle of the day. For it was, not
to mention far greater attractions, a luxurious retreat from the noontide sun.
During the mornings and afternoons, I wandered about the lovely neighbourhood,
or lay, lost in delicious day-dreams, beneath some mighty tree on the open
lawn. My evenings were by-and-by spent in a part of the palace, the account of
which, and of my adventures in connection with it, I must yet postpone for a
little.</p>
<p>The library was a mighty hall, lighted from the roof, which was formed of
something like glass, vaulted over in a single piece, and stained throughout
with a great mysterious picture in gorgeous colouring.</p>
<p>The walls were lined from floor to roof with books and books: most of them in
ancient bindings, but some in strange new fashions which I had never seen, and
which, were I to make the attempt, I could ill describe. All around the walls,
in front of the books, ran galleries in rows, communicating by stairs. These
galleries were built of all kinds of coloured stones; all sorts of marble and
granite, with porphyry, jasper, lapis lazuli, agate, and various others, were
ranged in wonderful melody of successive colours. Although the material, then,
of which these galleries and stairs were built, rendered necessary a certain
degree of massiveness in the construction, yet such was the size of the place,
that they seemed to run along the walls like cords.</p>
<p>Over some parts of the library, descended curtains of silk of various dyes,
none of which I ever saw lifted while I was there; and I felt somehow that it
would be presumptuous in me to venture to look within them. But the use of the
other books seemed free; and day after day I came to the library, threw myself
on one of the many sumptuous eastern carpets, which lay here and there on the
floor, and read, and read, until weary; if that can be designated as weariness,
which was rather the faintness of rapturous delight; or until, sometimes, the
failing of the light invited me to go abroad, in the hope that a cool gentle
breeze might have arisen to bathe, with an airy invigorating bath, the limbs
which the glow of the burning spirit within had withered no less than the glow
of the blazing sun without.</p>
<p>One peculiarity of these books, or at least most of those I looked into, I must
make a somewhat vain attempt to describe.</p>
<p>If, for instance, it was a book of metaphysics I opened, I had scarcely read
two pages before I seemed to myself to be pondering over discovered truth, and
constructing the intellectual machine whereby to communicate the discovery to
my fellow men. With some books, however, of this nature, it seemed rather as if
the process was removed yet a great way further back; and I was trying to find
the root of a manifestation, the spiritual truth whence a material vision
sprang; or to combine two propositions, both apparently true, either at once or
in different remembered moods, and to find the point in which their invisibly
converging lines would unite in one, revealing a truth higher than either and
differing from both; though so far from being opposed to either, that it was
that whence each derived its life and power. Or if the book was one of travels,
I found myself the traveller. New lands, fresh experiences, novel customs, rose
around me. I walked, I discovered, I fought, I suffered, I rejoiced in my
success. Was it a history? I was the chief actor therein. I suffered my own
blame; I was glad in my own praise. With a fiction it was the same. Mine was
the whole story. For I took the place of the character who was most like
myself, and his story was mine; until, grown weary with the life of years
condensed in an hour, or arrived at my deathbed, or the end of the volume, I
would awake, with a sudden bewilderment, to the consciousness of my present
life, recognising the walls and roof around me, and finding I joyed or sorrowed
only in a book. If the book was a poem, the words disappeared, or took the
subordinate position of an accompaniment to the succession of forms and images
that rose and vanished with a soundless rhythm, and a hidden rime.</p>
<p>In one, with a mystical title, which I cannot recall, I read of a world that is
not like ours. The wondrous account, in such a feeble, fragmentary way as is
possible to me, I would willingly impart. Whether or not it was all a poem, I
cannot tell; but, from the impulse I felt, when I first contemplated writing
it, to break into rime, to which impulse I shall give way if it comes upon me
again, I think it must have been, partly at least, in verse.</p>
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