I
For no very intelligible reason, Mr.
Lucas had hurried ahead of his party. He was
perhaps reaching the age at which independence becomes
valuable, because it is so soon to be lost. Tired
of attention and consideration, he liked breaking
away from the younger members, to ride by himself,
and to dismount unassisted. Perhaps he also relished
that more subtle pleasure of being kept waiting for
lunch, and of telling the others on their arrival
that it was of no consequence.
So, with childish impatience, he battered
the animal’s sides with his heels, and made
the muleteer bang it with a thick stick and prick it
with a sharp one, and jolted down the hill sides through
clumps of flowering shrubs and stretches of anémones
and asphodel, till he heard the sound of running water,
and came in sight of the group of plane trees where
they were to have their meal.
Even in England those trees would
have been remarkable, so huge were they, so interlaced,
so magnificently clothed in quivering green. And
here in Greece they were unique, the one cool spot
in that hard brilliant landscape, already scorched
by the heat of an April sun. In their midst was
hidden a tiny Khan or country inn, a frail mud building
with a broad wooden balcony in which sat an old woman
spinning, while a small brown pig, eating orange peel,
stood beside her. On the wet earth below squatted
two children, playing some primaeval game with their
fingers; and their mother, none too clean either, was
messing with some rice inside. As Mrs. Forman
would have said, it was all very Greek, and the fastidious
Mr. Lucas felt thankful that they were bringing their
own food with them, and should eat it in the open
air.
Still, he was glad to be there-the
muleteer had helped him off-and glad that
Mrs. Forman was not there to forestall his opinions-glad
even that he should not see Ethel for quite half an
hour. Ethel was his youngest daughter, still
unmarried. She was unselfish and affectionate,
and it was generally understood that she was to devote
her life to her father, and be the comfort of his
old age. Mrs. Forman always referred to her as
Antigone, and Mr. Lucas tried to settle down to the
rôle of Oedipus, which seemed the only one that public
opinion allowed him.
He had this in common with Oedipus,
that he was growing old. Even to himself it had
become obvious. He had lost interest in other
people’s affairs, and seldom attended when they
spoke to him. He was fond of talking himself
but often forgot what he was going to say, and even
when he succeeded, it seldom seemed worth the effort.
His phrases and gestures had become stiff and set,
his anecdotes, once so successful, fell flat, his
silence was as meaningless as his speech. Yet
he had led a healthy, active life, had worked steadily,
made money, educated his children. There was
nothing and no one to blame: he was simply growing
old.
At the present moment, here he was
in Greece, and one of the dreams of his life was realized.
Forty years ago he had caught the fever of Hellenism,
and all his life he had felt that could he but visit
that land, he would not have lived in vain. But
Athens had been dusty, Delphi wet, Thermopylae flat,
and he had listened with amazement and cynicism to
the rapturous exclamations of his companions.
Greece was like England: it was a man who was
growing old, and it made no difference whether that
man looked at the Thames or the Eurotas. It was
his last hope of contradicting that logic of experience,
and it was failing.
Yet Greece had done something for
him, though he did not know it. It had made him
discontented, and there are stirrings of life in discontent.
He knew that he was not the victim of continual ill-luck.
Something great was wrong, and he was pitted against
no mediocre or accidental enemy. For the last
month a strange desire had possessed him to die fighting.
“Greece is the land for young
people,” he said to himself as he stood under
the plane trees, “but I will enter into it, I
will possess it. Leaves shall be green again,
water shall be sweet, the sky shall be blue.
They were so forty years ago, and I will win them back.
I do mind being old, and I will pretend no longer.”
He took two steps forward, and immediately
cold waters were gurgling over his ankle.
“Where does the water come from?”
he asked himself. “I do not even know that.”
He remembered that all the hill sides were dry; yet
here the road was suddenly covered with flowing streams.
He stopped still in amazement, saying:
“Water out of a tree-out of a hollow
tree? I never saw nor thought of that before.”
For the enormous plane that leant
towards the Khan was hollow-it had been
burnt out for charcoal-and from its living
trunk there gushed an impetuous spring, coating the
bark! with fern and moss, and flowing over the mule
track to create fertile meadows beyond. The simple
country folk had paid to beauty and mystery such tribute
as they could, for in the rind of the tree a shrine
was cut, holding a lamp and a little picture of the
Virgin, inheritor of the Naiad’s and Dryad’s
joint abode.
“I never saw anything so marvellous
before,” said Mr. Lucas. “I could
even step inside the trunk and see where the water
comes from.”
For a moment he hesitated to violate
the shrine. Then he remembered with a smile his
own thought-“the place shall be mine;
I will enter it and possess it”-and
leapt almost aggressively on to a stone within.
The water pressed up steadily and
noiselessly from the hollow roots and hidden crevices
of the plane, forming a wonderful amber pool ere it
spilt over the lip of bark on to the earth outside.
Mr. Lucas tasted it and it was sweet, and when he
looked up the black funnel of the trunk he saw sky
which was blue, and some leaves which were green; and
he remembered, without smiling, another of his thoughts.
Others had been before him-indeed
he had a curious sense of companionship. Little
votive offerings to the presiding Power were fastened
on to the bark-tiny arms and legs and eyes
in tin, grotesque models of the brain or the heart-all
tokens of some recovery of strength or wisdom or love.
There was no such thing as the solitude of nature
for the sorrows and joys of humanity had pressed even
into the bosom of a tree. He spread out his arms
and steadied himself against the soft charred wood,
and then slowly leant back, till his body was resting
on the trunk behind. His eyes closed, and he had
the strange feeling of one who is moving, yet at peace-the
feeling of the swimmer, who, after long struggling
with chopping seas, finds that after all the tide will
sweep him to his goal.
So he lay motionless, conscious only
of the stream below his feet, and that all things
were a stream, in which he was moving.
He was aroused at last by a shock-the
shock of an arrival perhaps, for when he opened his
eyes, something unimagined, indefinable, had passed
over all things, and made them intelligible and good.
There was meaning in the stoop of
the old woman over her work, and in the quick motions
of the little pig, and in her diminishing globe of
wool. A young man came singing over the streams
on a mule, and there was beauty in his pose and sincerity
in his greeting. The sun made no accidental patterns
upon the spreading roots of the trees, and there was
intention in the nodding clumps of asphodel, and in
the music of the water. To Mr. Lucas, who, in
a brief space of time, had discovered not only Greece,
but England and all the world and life, there seemed
nothing ludicrous in the desire to hang within the
tree another votive offering-a little model
of an entire man.
“Why, here’s papa, playing at being Merlin.”
All unnoticed they had arrived-Ethel,
Mrs. Forman, Mr. Graham, and the English-speaking
dragoman. Mr. Lucas peered out at them suspiciously.
They had suddenly become unfamiliar, and all that they
did seemed strained and coarse.
“Allow me to give you a hand,”
said Mr. Graham, a young man who was always polite
to his elders.
Mr. Lucas felt annoyed. “Thank
you, I can manage perfectly well by myself,”
he replied. His foot slipped as he stepped out
of the tree, and went into the spring.
“Oh papa, my papa!” said
Ethel, “what are you doing? Thank goodness
I have got a change for you on the mule.”
She tended him carefully, giving him
clean socks and dry boots, and then sat him down on
the rug beside the lunch basket, while she went with
the others to explore the grove.
They came back in ecstasies, in which
Mr. Lucas tried to join. But he found them intolerable.
Their enthusiasm was superficial, commonplace, and
spasmodic. They had no perception of the coherent
beauty was flowering around them. He tried at
least to explain his feelings, and what he said was:
“I am altogether pleased with
the appearance of this place. It impresses me
very favourably. The trees are fine, remarkably
fine for Greece, and there is something very poetic
in the spring of clear running water. The people
too seem kindly and civil. It is decidedly an
attractive place.”
Mrs. Forman upbraided him for his tepid praise.
“Oh, it is a place in a thousand!”
she cried “I could live and die here! I
really would stop if I had not to be back at Athens!
It reminds me of the Colonus of Sophocles.”
“Well, I must stop,” said Ethel.
“I positively must.”
“Yes, do! You and your
father! Antigone and Oedipus. Of course you
must stop at Colonus!”
Mr. Lucas was almost breathless with
excitement. When he stood within the tree, he
had believed that his happiness would be independent
of locality. But these few minutes’ conversation
had undeceived him. He no longer trusted himself
to journey through the world, for old thoughts, old
wearinesses might be waiting to rejoin him as soon
as he left the shade of the planes, and the music
of the virgin water. To sleep in the Khan with
the gracious, kind-eyed country people, to watch the
bats flit about within the globe of shade, and see
the moon turn the golden patterns into silver-one
such night would place him beyond relapse, and confirm
him for ever in the kingdom he had regained. But
all his lips could say was: “I should be
willing to put in a night here.”
“You mean a week, papa!
It would be sacrilege to put in less.”
“A week then, a week,”
said his lips, irritated at being corrected, while
his heart was leaping with joy. All through lunch
he spoke to them no more, but watched the place he
should know so well, and the people who would so soon
be his companions and friends. The inmates of
the Khan only consisted of an old woman, a middle-aged
woman, a young man and two children, and to none of
them had he spoken, yet he loved them as he loved
everything that moved or breathed or existed beneath
the benedictory shade of the planes.
“En route!” said
the shrill voice of Mrs. Forman. “Ethel!
Mr. Graham! The best of things must end.”
“To-night,” thought Mr.
Lucas, “they will light the little lamp by the
shrine. And when we all sit together on the balcony,
perhaps they will tell me which offerings they put
up.”
“I beg your pardon, Mr. Lucas,”
said Graham, “but they want to fold up the rug
you are sitting on.”
Mr. Lucas got up, saying to himself:
“Ethel shall go to bed first, and then I will
try to tell them about my offering too-for
it is a thing I must do. I think they will understand
if I am left with them alone.”
Ethel touched him on the cheek.
“Papa! I’ve called you three times.
All the mules are here.”
“Mules? What mules?”
“Our mules. We’re all waiting.
Oh, Mr. Graham, do help my father on.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking
about, Ethel.”
“My dearest papa, we must start.
You know we have to get to Olympia to-night.”
Mr. Lucas in pompous, confident tones
replied: “I always did wish, Ethel, that
you had a better head for plans. You know perfectly
well that we are putting in a week here. It is
your own suggestion.”
Ethel was startled into impoliteness.
“What a perfectly ridiculous idea. You
must have known I was joking. Of course I meant
I wished we could.”
“Ah! if we could only do what
we wished!” sighed Mrs. Forman, already seated
on her mule.
“Surely,” Ethel continued
in calmer tones, “you didn’t think I meant
it.”
“Most certainly I did.
I have made all my plans on the supposition that we
are stopping here, and it will be extremely inconvenient,
indeed, impossible for me to start.”
He delivered this remark with an air
of great conviction, and Mrs. Forman and Mr. Graham
had to turn away to hide their smiles.
“I am sorry I spoke so carelessly;
it was wrong of me. But, you know, we can’t
break up our party, and even one night here would make
us miss the boat at Patras.”
Mrs. Forman, in an aside, called Mr.
Graham’s attention to the excellent way in which
Ethel managed her father.
“I don’t mind about the
Patras boat. You said that we should stop here,
and we are stopping.”
It seemed as if the inhabitants of
the Khan had divined in some mysterious way that the
altercation touched them. The old woman stopped
her spinning, while the young man and the two children
stood behind Mr. Lucas, as if supporting him.
Neither arguments nor entreaties moved
him. He said little, but he was absolutely determined,
because for the first time he saw his daily life aright.
What need had he to return to England? Who would
miss him? His friends were dead or cold.
Ethel loved him in a way, but, as was right, she had
other interests. His other children he seldom
saw. He had only one other relative, his sister
Julia, whom he both feared and hated. It was
no effort to struggle. He would be a fool as well
as a coward if he stirred from the place which brought
him happiness and peace.
At last Ethel, to humour him, and
not disinclined to air her modern Greek, went into
the Khan with the astonished dragoman to look at the
rooms. The woman inside received them with loud
welcomes, and the young man, when no one was looking,
began to lead Mr. Lucas’ mule to the stable.
“Drop it, you brigand!”
shouted Graham, who always declared that foreigners
could understand English if they chose. He was
right, for the man obeyed, and they all stood waiting
for Ethel’s return.
She emerged at last, with close-gathered
skirts, followed by the dragoman bearing the little
pig, which he had bought at a bargain.
“My dear papa, I will do all
I can for you, but stop in that Khan-no.”
“Are there-fleas?” asked Mrs.
Forman.
Ethel intimated that “fleas” was not the
word.
“Well, I am afraid that settles
it,” said Mrs. Forman, “I know how particular
Mr. Lucas is.”
“It does not settle it,”
said Mr. Lucas. “Ethel, you go on.
I do not want you. I don’t know why I ever
consulted you. I shall stop here alone.”
“That is absolute nonsense,”
said Ethel, losing her temper. “How can
you be left alone at your age? How would you
get your meals or your bath? All your letters
are waiting for you at Patras. You’ll miss
the boat. That means missing the London operas,
and upsetting all your engagements for the month.
And as if you could travel by yourself!”
“They might knife you,” was Mr. Graham’s
contribution.
The Greeks said nothing; but whenever
Mr. Lucas looked their way, they beckoned him towards
the Khan. The children would even have drawn him
by the coat, and the old woman on the balcony stopped
her almost completed spinning, and fixed him with
mysterious appealing eyes. As he fought, the
issue assumed gigantic proportions, and he believed
that he was not merely stopping because he had regained
youth or seen beauty or found happiness, but because
in, that place and with those people a supreme event
was awaiting him which would transfigure the face of
the world. The moment was so tremendous that
he abandoned words and arguments as useless, and rested
on the strength of his mighty unrevealed allies:
silent men, murmuring water, and whispering trees.
For the whole place called with one voice, articulate
to him, and his garrulous opponents became every minute
more meaningless and absurd. Soon they would be
tired and go chattering away into the sun, leaving
him to the cool grove and the moonlight and the destiny
he foresaw.
Mrs. Forman and the dragoman had indeed
already started, amid the piercing screams of the
little pig, and the struggle might have gone on indefinitely
if Ethel had not called in Mr. Graham.
“Can you help me?” she
whispered. “He is absolutely unmanageable.”
“I’m no good at arguing-but
if I could help you in any other way-”
and he looked down complacently at his well-made figure.
Ethel hesitated. Then she said:
“Help me in any way you can. After all,
it is for his good that we do it.”
“Then have his mule led up behind him.”
So when Mr. Lucas thought he had gained
the day, he suddenly felt himself lifted off the ground,
and sat sideways on the saddle, and at the same time
the mule started off at a trot. He said nothing,
for he had nothing to say, and even his face showed
little emotion as he felt the shade pass and heard
the sound of the water cease. Mr. Graham was
running at his side, hat in hand, apologizing.
“I know I had no business to
do it, and I do beg your pardon awfully. But
I do hope that some day you too will feel that I was-damn!”
A stone had caught him in the middle
of the back. It was thrown by the little boy,
who was pursuing them along the mule track. He
was followed by his sister, also throwing stones.
Ethel screamed to the dragoman, who
was some way ahead with Mrs. Forman, but before he
could rejoin them, another adversary appeared.
It was the young Greek, who had cut them off in front,
and now dashed down at Mr. Lucas’ bridle.
Fortunately Graham was an expert boxer, and it did
not take him a moment to beat down the youth’s
feeble defence, and to send him sprawling with a bleeding
mouth into the asphodel. By this time the dragoman
had arrived, the children, alarmed at the fate of their
brother, had desisted, and the rescue party, if such
it is to be considered, retired in disorder to the
trees.
“Little devils!” said
Graham, laughing; with triumph. “That’s
the modern Greek all over. Your father meant
money if he stopped, and they consider we were taking
it out of their pocket.”
“Oh, they are terrible-simple
savages! I don’t know how I shall ever
thank you. You’ve saved my father.”
“I only hope you didn’t think me brutal.”
“No,” replied Ethel with a little sigh.
“I admire strength.”
Meanwhile the cavalcade reformed,
and Mr. Lucas, who, as Mrs. Forman said, bore his
disappointment wonderfully well, was put comfortably
on to his mule. They hurried up the opposite
hillside, fearful of another attack, and it was not
until they had left the eventful place far behind
that Ethel found an opportunity to speak to her father
and ask his pardon for the way she had treated him.
“You seemed so different, dear
father, and you quite frightened me. Now I feel
that you are your old self again.”
He did not answer, and she concluded
that he was not unnaturally offended at her behaviour.
By one of those curious tricks of
mountain scenery, the place they had left an hour
before suddenly reappeared far below them. The
Khan was hidden under the green dome, but in the open
there still stood three figures, and through the pure
air rose up a faint cry of defiance or farewell.
Mr. Lucas stopped irresolutely, and
let the reins fall from his hand.
“Come, father dear,” said Ethel gently.
He obeyed, and in another moment a
spur of the hill hid the dangerous scene for ever.
II
It was breakfast time, but the gas
was alight, owing to the fog. Mr. Lucas was in
the middle of an account of a bad night he had spent,
Ethel, who was to be married in a few weeks, had her
arms on the table, listening.
“First the door bell rang, then
you came back from the theatre. Then the dog
started, and after the dog the cat. And at three
in the morning a young hooligan passed by singing.
Oh yes: then there was the water gurgling in
the pipe above my head.”
“I think that was only the bath
water running away,” said Ethel, looking rather
worn.
“Well, there’s nothing
I dislike more than running water. It’s
perfectly impossible to sleep in the house. I
shall give it up. I shall give notice next quarter.
I shall tell the landlord plainly, ’The reason
I am giving up the house is this: it is perfectly
impossible to sleep in it.’ If he says-says-well,
what has he got to say?”
“Some more toast, father?”
“Thank you, my dear.” He took it,
and there was an interval of peace.
But he soon recommenced. “I’m
not going to submit to the practising next door as
tamely as they think. I wrote and told them so-didn’t
I?”
“Yes,” said Ethel, who
had taken care that the letter should not reach.
“I have seen the governess, and she has promised
to arrange it differently. And Aunt Julia hates
noise. It will sure to be all right.”
Her aunt, being the only unattached
member of the family, was coming to keep house for
her father when she left him. The reference was
not a happy one, and Mr. Lucas commenced a series
of half articulate sighs, which was only stopped by
the arrival of the post.
“Oh, what a parcel!” cried
Ethel. “For me! What can it be!
Greek stamps. This is most exciting!”
It proved to be some asphodel bulbs,
sent by Mrs. Forman from Athens for planting in the
conservatory.
“Doesn’t it bring it all
back! You remember the asphodels, father.
And all wrapped up in Greek newspapers. I wonder
if I can read them still. I used to be able to,
you know.”
She rattled on, hoping to conceal
the laughter of the children next door-a
favourite source of querulousness at breakfast time.
“Listen to me! ‘A
rural disaster.’ Oh, I’ve hit on something
sad. But never mind. ’Last Tuesday
at Plataniste, in the province of messenia, a shocking
tragedy occurred. A large tree’-aren’t
I getting on well?-’blew down in
the night and’-wait a minute-oh,
dear! ’crushed to death the five occupants of
the little Khan there, who had apparently been sitting
in the balcony. The bodies of Maria Rhomaides,
the aged proprietress, and of her daughter, aged forty-six,
were easily recognizable, whereas that of her grandson’-oh,
the rest is really too horrid; I wish I had never
tried it, and what’s more I feel to have heard
the name Plataniste before. We didn’t stop
there, did we, in the spring?”
“We had lunch,” said Mr.
Lucas, with a faint expression of trouble on his vacant
face. “Perhaps it was where the dragoman
bought the pig.”
“Of course,” said Ethel
in a nervous voice. “Where the dragoman
bought the little pig. How terrible!”
“Very terrible!” said
her father, whose attention was wandering to the noisy
children next door. Ethel suddenly started to
her feet with genuine interest.
“Good gracious!” she exclaimed.
“This is an old paper. It happened not
lately but in April-the night of Tuesday
the eighteenth-and we-we must
have been there in the afternoon.”
“So we were,” said Mr.
Lucas. She put her hand to her heart, scarcely
able to speak.
“Father, dear father, I must
say it: you wanted to stop there. All those
people, those poor half savage people, tried, to keep
you, and they’re dead. The whole place,
it says, is in ruins, and even the stream has changed
its course. Father, dear, if it had not been for
me, and if Arthur had not helped me, you must have
been killed.”
Mr. Lucas waved his hand irritably.
“It is not a bit of good speaking to the governess,
I shall write to the landlord and say, ’The reason
I am giving up the house is this: the dog barks,
the children next door are intolerable, and I cannot
stand the noise of running water.’”
Ethel did not check his babbling.
She was aghast at the narrowness of the escape, and
for a long time kept silence. At last she said:
“Such a marvellous deliverance does make one
believe in Providence.”
Mr. Lucas, who was still composing
his letter to the landlord, did not reply.