Beyond the first flutter of surprise,
the Martians had shown no interest in the abrupt termination
of the year’s divinations. They melted
away, a trifle more silently perhaps than usual, when
I shattered the magic globe, but with their invariable
indifference, and having handed the reviving Heru
over to some women who led her away, apparently already
half forgetful of the things that had just happened,
I was left alone on the palace steps, not even An beside
me, and only the shadow of a passerby now and then
to break the solitude. Whereon a great loneliness
took hold upon me, and, pacing to and fro along the
ancient terrace with bent head and folded arms, I bewailed
my fate. To and fro I walked, heedless and melancholy,
thinking of the old world, that was so far and this
near world so distant from me in everything making
life worth living, thinking, as I strode gloomily here
and there, how gladly I would exchange these poor
puppets and the mockery of a town they dwelt in, for
a sight of my comrades and a corner in the poorest
wine-shop salon in New York or ’Frisco; idly
speculating why, and how, I came here, as I sauntered
down amongst the glistening, shell-like fragments
of the shattered globe, and finding no answer.
How could I? It was too fair, I thought, standing
there in the open; there was a fatal sweetness in
the air, a deadly sufficiency in the beauty of everything
around falling on the lax senses like some sleepy
draught of pleasure. Not a leaf stirred, the wide
purple roof of the sky was unbroken by the healthy
promise of a cloud from rim to rim, the splendid country,
teeming with its spring-time richness, lay in rank
perfection everywhere; and just as rank and sleek and
passionless were those who owned it.
Why, even I, who yesterday was strong,
began to come under the spell of it. But yesterday
the spirit of the old world was still strong within
me, yet how much things were now changing. The
well-strung muscles loosening, the heart beating a
slower measure, the busy mind drowsing off to listlessness.
Was I, too, destined to become like these? Was
the red stuff in my veins to be watered down to pallid
Martian sap? Was ambition and hope to desert
me, and idleness itself become laborious, while life
ran to seed in gilded uselessness? Little did
I guess how unnecessary my fears were, or of the incredible
fairy tale of adventure into which fate was going
to plunge me.
Still engrossed the next morning by
these thoughts, I decided I would go to Hath.
Hath was a man at least they said so he
might sympathise even though he could not help, and
so, dressing finished, I went down towards the innermost
palace whence for an hour or two had come sounds of
unwonted bustle. Asking for the way occasionally
from sleepy folk lolling about the corridors, waiting
as it seemed for their breakfasts to come to them,
and embarrassed by the new daylight, I wandered to
and fro in the labyrinths of that stony ant-heap until
I chanced upon a curtained doorway which admitted
to a long chamber, high-roofed, ample in proportions,
with colonnades on either side separated from the main
aisle by rows of flowery figures and emblematic scroll-work,
meaning I knew not what. Above those pillars
ran a gallery with many windows looking out over the
ruined city. While at the further end of the
chamber stood three broad steps leading to a dais.
As I entered, the whole place was full of bustling
girls, their yellow garments like a bed of flowers
in the sunlight trickling through the casements, and
all intent on the spreading of a feast on long tables
ranged up and down the hall. The morning light
streamed in on the white cloths. It glittered
on the glass and the gold they were putting on the
trestles, and gave resplendent depths of colour to
the ribbon bands round the pillars. All were
so busy no one noticed me standing in the twilight
by the door, but presently, laying a hand on a worker’s
shoulder, I asked who they banqueted for, and why
such unwonted preparation?
“It is the marriage-feast tonight,
stranger, and a marvel you did not know it.
You, too, are to be wed.”
“I had not heard of it, damsel;
a paternal forethought of your Government, I suppose?
Have you any idea who the lady is?”
“How should I know?” she
answered laughingly. “That is the secret
of the urn. Meanwhile, we have set you a place
at the table-head near Princess Heru, and tonight
you dip and have your chance like all of them; may
luck send you a rosy bride, and save her from Ar-hap.”
“Ay, now I remember; An told
me of this before; Ar-hap is the sovereign with whom
your people have a little difference, and shares unbidden
in the free distribution of brides to-night.
This promises to be interesting; depend on it I will
come; if you will keep me a place where I can hear
the speeches, and not forget me when the turtle soup
goes round, I shall be more than grateful. Now
to another matter. I want to get a few minutes
with your President, Prince Hath. He concentrates
the fluid intelligence of this sphere, I am told.
Where can I find him?”
“He is drunk, in the library, sir!”
“My word! It is early
in the day for that, and a singular conjunction of
place and circumstance.”
“Where,” said the girl,
“could he safer be? We can always fetch
him if we want him, and sunk in blue oblivion he will
not come to harm.”
“A cheerful view, Miss, which
is worthy of the attention of our reformers.
Nevertheless, I will go to him. I have known
men tell more truth in that state than in any other.”
The servitor directed me to the library,
and after desolate wanderings up crumbling steps and
down mouldering corridors, sunny and lovely in decay,
I came to the immense lumber-shed of knowledge they
had told me of, a city of dead books, a place of dusty
cathedral aisles stored with forgotten learning.
At a table sat Hath the purposeless, enthroned in
leather and vellum, snoring in divine content amongst
all that wasted labour, and nothing I could do was
sufficient to shake him into semblance of intelligence.
So perforce I turned away till he should have come
to himself, and wandering round the splendid litter
of a noble library, presently amongst the ruck of
volumes on the floor, amongst those lordly tomes in
tattered green and gold, and ivory, my eye lit upon
a volume propped up curiously on end, and going to
it through the confusion I saw by the dried fruit
rind upon the sticks supporting it, that the grave
and reverend tome was set to catch a mouse!
It was a splendid book when I looked more closely,
bound as a king might bind his choicest treasure,
the sweet-scented leather on it was no doubt frayed;
the golden arabesques upon the covers had
long since shed their eyes of inset gems, the jewelled
clasp locking its learning up from vulgar gaze was
bent and open. Yet it was a lordly tome with
an odour of sanctity about it, and lifting it with
difficulty, I noticed on its cover a red stain of mouse’s
blood. Those who put it to this quaint use of
mouse-trap had already had some sport, but surely
never was a mouse crushed before under so much learning.
And while I stood guessing at what the book might
hold within, Heru, the princess, came tripping in
to me, and with the abrupt familiarity of her kind,
laid a velvet hand upon my wrist, conned the title
over to herself.
“What does it say, sweet girl?”
I asked. “The matter is learned, by its
feel,” and that maid, pursing up her pretty lips,
read the title to me “The Secret
of the Gods.”
“The Secret of the Gods,”
I murmured. “Was it possible other worlds
had struggled hopelessly to come within the barest
ken of that great knowledge, while here the same was
set to catch a mouse with?”
I said, “Silver-footed, sit
down and read me a passage or two,” and propping
the mighty volume upon a table drew a bench before
it and pulled her down beside me.
“Oh! a horrid, dry old book
for certain,” cried that lady, her pink fingertips
falling as lightly on the musty leaves as almond petals
on March dust. “Where shall I begin?
It is all equally dull.”
“Dip in,” was my answer.
“’Tis no great matter where, but near
the beginning. What says the writer of his intention?
What sets he out to prove?”
“He says that is the Secret
of the First Great Truth, descended straight to him
“Many have said so much, yet have lied.”
“He says that which is written
in his book is through him but not of him, past criticism
and beyond cavil. ’Tis all in ancient and
crabbed characters going back to the threshold of
my learning, but here upon this passage-top where
they are writ large I make them out to say, ‘only
the man who has died many
times begins to live.’”
“A pregnant passage! Turn
another page, and try again; I have an inkling of
the book already.”
“’Tis poor, silly stuff,”
said the girl, slipping a hand covertly into my own.
“Why will you make me read it? I have
a book on pomatums worth twice as much as this.”
“Nevertheless, dip in again,
dear lady. What says the next heading?”
And with a little sigh at the heaviness of her task,
Heru read out: “Sometimes the
gods themselves forget the answers
to their own Riddles.”
“Lady, I knew it!
“All this is still preliminary
to the great matter of the book, but the mutterings
of the priest who draws back the curtains of the shrine and
here, after the scribe has left these two yellow pages
blank as though to set a space of reverence between
himself and what comes next here speaks
the truth, the voice, the fact of all life.”
But “Oh! Jones,” she said, turning
from the dusty pages and clasping her young, milk-warm
hands over mine and leaning towards me until her blushing
cheek was near to my shoulder and the incense of her
breath upon me. “Oh! Gulliver Jones,”
she said. “Make me read no more; my soul
revolts from the task, the crazy brown letters swim
before my eyes. Is there no learning near at
hand that would be pleasanter reading than this silly
book of yours? What, after all,” she said,
growing bolder at the sound of her own voice, “what,
after all, is the musty reticence of gods to the whispered
secret of a maid? Jones, splendid stranger for
whom all men stand aside and women look over shoulders,
oh, let me be your book!” she whispered, slipping
on to my knee and winding her arms round my neck till,
through the white glimmer of her single vest, I could
feel her heart beating against mine. “Newest
and dearest of friends, put by this dreary learning
and look in my eyes; is there nothing to be spelt
out there?”
And I was constrained to do as she
bid me, for she was as fresh as an almond blossom
touched by the sun, and looking down into two swimming
blue lakes where shyness and passion were contending books
easy enough, in truth, to be read, I saw that she
loved me, with the unconventional ardour of her nature.
It was a pleasant discovery, if its
abruptness was embarrassing, for she was a maid in
a thousand; and half ashamed and half laughing I let
her escalade me, throwing now and then a rueful look
at the Secret of the Gods, and all that priceless
knowledge treated so unworthily.
What else could I do? Besides,
I loved her myself! And if there was a momentary
chagrin at having yonder golden knowledge put off by
this lovely interruption, yet I was flesh and blood,
the gods could wait they had to wait long
and often before, and when this sweet interpreter
was comforted we would have another try. So it
happened I took her into my heart and gave her the
answer she asked for.
For a long time we sat in the dusky
grandeur of the royal library, my mind revolving between
wonder and admiration of the neglected knowledge all
about, and the stirrings of a new love, while Heru
herself, lapsed again into Martian calm, lay half
sleeping on my shoulder, but presently, unwinding
her arms, I put her down.
“There, sweetheart,” I
whispered, “enough of this for the moment; tonight,
perhaps, some more, but while we are here amongst all
this lordly litter, I can think of nothing else.”
Again I bid her turn the pages, noting as she did
so how each chapter was headed by the coloured configuration
of a world. Page by page we turned of crackling
parchment, until by chance, at the top of one, my eye
caught a coloured round I could not fail to recognise ’twas
the spinning button on the blue breast of the immeasurable
that yesterday I inhabited. “Read here,”
I cried, clapping my finger upon the page midway down,
where there were some signs looking like Egyptian
writing. “Says this quaint dabbler in
all knowledge anything of Isis, anything of Phra, of
Ammon, of Ammon Top?”
“And who was Isis? who Ammon Top?” asked
the lady.
“Nay, read,” I answered,
and down the page her slender fingers went awandering
till at a spot of knotted signs they stopped.
“Why, here is something about thy Isis,”
exclaimed Heru, as though amused at my perspicuity.
“Here, halfway down this chapter of earth-history,
it says,” and putting one pink knee across the
other to better prop the book she read:
“And the priests of Thebes were
gone; the sand stood untrampled on the temple steps
a thousand years; the wild bees sang the song of desolation
in the ears of Isis; the wild cats littered in the
stony lap of Ammon; ay, another thousand years went
by, and earth was tilled of unseen hands and sown
with yellow grain from Paradise, and the thin veil
that separates the known from the unknown was rent,
and men walked to and fro.”
“Go on,” I said.
“Nay,” laughed the other,
“the little mice in their eagerness have been
before you see, all this corner is gnawed
away.”
“Read on again,” I said,
“where the page is whole; those sips of knowledge
you have given make me thirsty for more. There,
begin where this blazonry of initialed red and gold
looks so like the carpet spread by the scribe for
the feet of a sovereign truth what says
he here?” And she, half pouting to be set back
once more to that task, half wondering as she gazed
on those magic letters, let her eyes run down the
page, then began:
“And it was the Beginning, and
in the centre void presently there came a nucleus
of light: and the light brightened in the grey
primeval morning and became definite and articulate.
And from the midst of that natal splendour, behind
which was the Unknowable, the life came hitherward;
from the midst of that nucleus undescribed, undescribable,
there issued presently the primeval sigh that breathed
the breath of life into all things. And that
sigh thrilled through the empty spaces of the illimitable:
it breathed the breath of promise over the frozen
hills of the outside planets where the night-frost
had lasted without beginning: and the waters
of ten thousand nameless oceans, girding nameless
planets, were stirred, trembling into their depth.
It crossed the illimitable spaces where the herding
aérolites swirl forever through space in the
wake of careering world, and all their whistling wings
answered to it. It reverberated through the grey
wastes of vacuity, and crossed the dark oceans of
the Outside, even to the black shores of the eternal
night beyond.
“And hardly had echo of that
breath died away in the hollow of the heavens and
the empty wombs of a million barren worlds, when the
light brightened again, and drawing in upon itself
became definite and took form, and therefrom, at the
moment of primitive conception, there came
And just then, as she had read so
far as that, when all my faculties were aching to
know what came next whether this were but
the idle scribbling of a vacuous fool, or something
else there rose the sound of soft flutes and tinkling bells in the corridors, as
seneschals wandered piping round the palace to call folk to meals, a smell of
roast meat and grilling fish as that procession lifted the curtains between the
halls, and
“Dinner!” shouted my sweet
Martian, slapping the covers of The Secret of the
Gods together and pushing the stately tome headlong
from the table. “Dinner! ’Tis
worth a hundred thousand planets to the hungry!”
Nothing I could say would keep her,
and, scarcely knowing whether to laugh or to be angry
at so unseemly an interruption, but both being purposeless
I dug my hands into my pockets, and somewhat sulkily
refusing Heru’s invitation to luncheon in the
corridor (Navy rations had not fitted my stomach for
these constant debauches of gossamer food), strolled
into the town again in no very pleasant frame of mind.