And the Damsel said to the Sage:
“Now, what is life? And why does the fruit
taste bitter in the mouth?”
And the Sage answered, as he stepped from his cave:
“My child, there was once a
man who had two ears like other people. They
were naturally necessary for his enjoyment of the day.
But one of these ears offended his head. It behaved
with stupidity, thinking thereby to enhance its value
to him it heard too much. Oh, it conducted
itself with a gross stupidity. ‘Out upon
you,’ cried the man; ’since you have overstepped
the limit of the functions of an ear, I shall cut you
from my head!’ And so, without hesitation, he
took a sword and accomplished the deed. The poor
ear then lay upon the ground bleeding, and the man
went about with a mutilated head.”
“And what was the good of all that?” said
the Damsel.
“There was no good in it,”
replied the Sage. “But he was a man, and
he had punished the too-fond-and-foolish ear also
he hoped a new and more suitable one would grow in
its place. ‘Change,’ he said, ’was
a thing to be welcomed.’”
“And tell me, Sage, what became of the ear?”
asked the Damsel.
“The ear fared better.
Another man of greater shrewdness came along, and,
although he had two ears of his own, he said, ’A
third will not come amiss,’ and he picked up
the ear and heard with three ears instead of two.
So he became knowing and clever because of the information
he acquired in this way. The grafted ear grew
and flourished, and, in spite of its remaining abnormal,
it obtained a certain enjoyment out of existence.”
“But who really benefited by all this?”
inquired the Damsel.
“No one,” said the Sage;
“the first man went about with only one ear;
the second man made himself remarkable with three and
the cut-off ear, although alive and successful, felt
itself an excrescence.”
“Then what could be the pleasure of it
all?” demanded the Damsel.
“Out upon you!”
exclaimed the Sage, in a passion. “You asked
me what was life and why the fruit tasted
bitter in the mouth? I have answered you.”
And he went back into his cave and barred the door.
The Damsel sat down upon a stone outside.
“It seems to me that men are
fools,” she said, and she clapped her hands
to her two ears. “When I am angry and offended
with one of you, I will cut the ear from off the head
of some one else.”
And she picked up an apple and ate it. And it
tasted sweet.
A man will often fling away a woman
who has wronged him although in doing so he is deeply
hurting himself. A woman will forgive a man who
has wronged her because her own personal pleasure in
him is greater than her outraged pride. Hence
women are more unconscious philosophers than men.
The Damsel returned again to the cave
of the Sage. There were other questions she wished
to ask about life. The door was hard to push ajar,
but at last she obtained entrance.
“What do you want now?”
he demanded, with a voice of grumbling. “Were
you not content with my last utterances?”
“Yes and no,”
said the Damsel. “I came to quite other
conclusions myself. I would have kept the ear
on my head, since cutting one off, however it had
angered me, would have upset my own comfort.”
“We have finished with that
matter now,” said the Sage, showing signs of
impatience he was still a man. “What
next?”
“I want to know,” said
the Damsel, “why a woman who has Diamonds and
Pearls and Emeralds and Rubies in her possession should
set such store upon a Topaz a yellow Topaz the
color she dislikes and a Topaz of uneven
temper and peculiar properties. She never wears
this stone that it does not bruise her, now her neck,
now her arm. It is restless and slips from its
chain. It will not remain in the case with the
other jewels. And at last she has lost it she
fears for good and all. And so now all the other
stones, which seemed very well in their way, have
grown of even less value in her eyes, and she can only
lament the loss of her Topaz. ‘I am brilliant,’
cries the Diamond. ’I set off your eyes,
and I love you.’ ‘I am soft and caressing,’
whispers the Pearl. ’I lie close to your
white skin and keep it cool, and I love you.’
’I am witty,’ laughs the Emerald.
’I make your thoughts flash, and I love you.’
‘I am the color of blood, and I would die for
you,’ chants the Ruby, ‘and I love you.’
And all these things the stones say all the day to
her, and yet the woman only listens with half an ear,
and their words have no effect upon her because of
the charm of this tiresome Topaz. What does it
all mean, Sage?”
“It means, first of all,”
said the Sage, “that the woman is a fool, as
what is the value of a Topaz in comparison with a Diamond
or a Ruby? It means, secondly, that the Topaz
is a greater fool, because it would be more agreeable
surely to lie close to the woman’s soft neck
than to be picked up by any stranger or lie neglected
in the dust. But, above and beyond everything,
it means that cherries are ripest when out of reach,
and that the whole world is full of fools of either
opinion, who do not know when they are well off.”
Upon which the Sage, with his usual
lack of manners, retired into his cave and slammed
his door.
The Damsel sat down upon the rock
and came again to her own conclusions. The stone
that apparently was a Topaz was in reality a yellow
Diamond of great rarity and worth, and that was why
the woman valued it so highly. Her instincts
were stronger than her reason. But if she had
not made herself so cheap by adoring the stone, it
would not have become restless and she would not have
lost it. Even stones cannot stand too much honey.
If ever the woman should find this yellow Diamond again
she must be told to keep it in a cool box and not
caress it or place it above the others.
The Damsel thought aloud and the Sage
heard her he strode forth in a rage.
“Why do you come here demanding
my advice if you moralize yourself? Out upon
you again!” he thundered. “The woman
will not find her Topaz, which is now revelling in
the sun of freedom and will soon go down into nothingness
and be forgotten. And after lamenting until her
eyes look gaunt, the woman will begin to see some
beauty in a Sapphire and become consoled, and so all
will be well.”
“I do not care what you say,”
said the Damsel. “It is better to have what
one wants one’s self than to try and learn to
like anything else that other people think better.”
And she refastened a bracelet with
great care which contained two cat’s-eyes
of no value as she went on her way.
Seize the occasion lest it pass thee
by and fall into the lap of another.
No man likes shooting tame rabbits.
Most men like the hunt more than the
quarry therefore the wise woman is elusive.
It is a good hostess who never inclines
her guests unconsciously to look at the clock.
Some things cause pride, some pleasure.
There is only one thing which causes infinite bliss
and oblivion of time, and this one thing, unless bound
with chains, is called immoral.
It is a wise man who knows when he
is happy and can appreciate the divine bliss of the
tangible now. Most of us retrospect or
anticipate and so lose the present.
Seize Love at whatever age he comes
to you if you can avoid being ridiculous.
“More questions?” exclaimed
the Sage, as the Damsel tapped gently upon the door
of his cave.
“Women are never satisfied;
they are as restless as the sea, and when they have
received all the best advice they invariably follow
their own inclinations.”
“It was not to discuss women,”
replied the Damsel, timidly; “this time it is
of a man I wish to ask.”
“Begin, then, and have done
quickly,” growled the Sage, averting his head.
The Damsel had an outline against the sky which caused
ideas not tranquillizing for Hermits.
“I wish to know why a man who
possessed the most beautiful and noble Bird of Paradise a
bird of rare plumage and wonderful qualities should
suddenly see more beauty in an ordinary Cockatoo, whose
only attraction was its yellow feathers a
Cockatoo that screamed monotonously as it swung backward
and forward on its perch, and would eat sugar out of
the hand of any stranger while it cried ‘Pretty
Poll.’ The man could not afford to buy
this creature also, so he deliberately sold his exquisite
Bird of Paradise to a person called Circumstance and
with the money became the possessor of the Cockatoo,
who pierced the drums of his ears with its eternal
‘Pretty Poll’ and wearied his sight with
its yellow feathers. Why did the man do this?”
The Sage laughed at so simple a question.
“Because he was a man, and even
a screaming Cockatoo belonging to some one else has
more charm at times than the most divine Bird of Paradise
belonging to himself.”
“But was it worth while to sell
this rare thing for a very ordinary one?” demanded
the Damsel.
“Certainly not,” said
the Sage, impatiently. “What childish questions
you ask! The thing was a folly on the face of
it; but, as I said before, he was a man and
the Cockatoo belonged to some one else!”
“Then what will happen now?”
asked the Damsel, placing herself in the direction
in which the Sage had turned his head.
“The Bird of Paradise will still
be the most beautiful and glorious and desirable bird
in the world; and when the man realizes he has lost
it forever he will begin to value its every feather,
and will spend his days in comparing all its remembered
perfections and advantages with the screams and the
yellow feathers of the Cockatoo.”
“And what will the Cockatoo do?” inquired
the Damsel.
“It will probably continue to
shriek ‘Pretty Poll,’ and eat sugar out
of the hand of any stranger,” replied the Sage,
plucking his heard.
“And the man?”
“The man will go on telling
every one he has bought the most divine bird in the
world, in the hope that some one will offer him a large
sum of money for it. The only person who gains
in the affair is the Bird of Paradise, who, instead
of being caged as when in the possession of the man,
is absolutely free to fly with its new master, Circumstance,
who only seeks to please and soothe this glorious
bird and make life fair for it.”
“But what will be the very end?” persisted
the Damsel.
The Sage turned and looked full at
her. He was angry with her importunity and would
have answered sternly.
Then he saw that the ripples of her
hair were golden and his voice softened.
“That will depend upon
Circumstance,” he replied, and he closed his
door softly in her face.
A man wishes and a woman wishes,
but Circumstance frequently wins the game.
Life is short avoid causing yawns.
It is possible for a woman to retain
the amorous affection of a man for many years if
he only sees her for the two best hours out of each
twenty-four.
“Please open the door, Sage,”
entreated the Damsel, “and I will tell you a
story.”
The Sage pushed it ajar with his foot,
but he did not come out.
“There was once upon a time
a man,” she said, “who unexpectedly and
for no apparent reason became the possessor of a Tiger.
It had been coveted by numbers of people and was of
a certain value and beauty. It had an infinite
variety of tricks. It was learned in caresses.
It was fierce, and gentle, and it could love passionately.
Altogether a large price would have been offered the
man for it by many others if he had wished to sell
it. In the beginning he had greatly valued the
possession of this strange beast, and had fed it with
his own hand. The little anxiety as to whether
it would eat him or not, or rush away, had kept him
interested. But gradually, as he became certain
the Tiger adored him, and would show none but velvet
claws and make only purring sounds, his keenness waned.
He still loved it, but certainty is monotonous, and
his eyes wandered to other objects. ’The
Tiger is nothing but a domestic cat,’ he said;
’I will pet and caress it when the mood takes
me, and for the rest of the time it can purr to itself
by the fire.’ At last one day, after the
Tiger was especially gracious and had purred with all
essence of love, the man yawned. ‘It is
really a charming beast,’ he said, ’but
it is always the same; and then he went away and forgot
even to feed it. The Tiger felt hungry and restless.
Its quietness and gentleness became less apparent.
The man on his travels chanced to think of it and
sent it a biscuit. So the Tiger waited, and when
the man returned and expected the usual docile caresses,
it bit his hand. ’Vile beast!’ said
the man. ’Have I not fed and kept you for
weeks, and now you bite my hand!’ Now tell me,
Sage, which was right the man or the Tiger?”
“Both, and neither,” said
the Sage, decidedly. “The man was only obeying
the eternal law in finding what he was sure of monotonous;
but he mistook the nature of the beast he had to deal
with. Tigers are not of the species that can
ever be really monotonous, if he had known. The
Tiger was foolish to allow its true nature to be so
disguised by its love for the man that he was deceived
into looking upon it as a domestic cat. It thought
to please him thereby and so lost its hold.”
“And what will be the end?” asked the
Damsel.
“The man’s hand will smart
to the end of his life, and he will never secure another
Tiger. And the Tiger will go elsewhere and console
itself by letting its natural instincts have full
play. It will not be foolish a second time.”
But the Damsel’s conclusion was different.
“No,” she said. “The
man’s hand will heal up, and the Tiger will caress
him and make him forget the bite, and they will love
each other to eternity because they have both realized
their own stupidity.”
And without speaking further she allowed
the Sage to close the door.
It is wiser to know the species
one is playing with: do not offer Tigers hay or
Antelopes joints of meat.
Next day, in a pouring shower of rain,
the Damsel knocked at the Sage’s door.
It was for shelter, she said, this time, until the
storm should pass.
The Sage was fairly gracious, and
to while away the time the Damsel began a story.
“A man once owned a brown Sparrow.
It had no attractions, and it made a continuous and
wearying noise as it chattered under the eaves.
It did the same thing every day, and had monotonous
domestic habits that often greatly irritated the man,
but he was accustomed to it, and did not
complain. After several years a travelling Showman
came along; he had a large aviary of birds of all
sorts, some for sale, some not. Among them was
a glorious Humming Bird of wonderful brilliancy and
plumage, a creature full of beauty and grace and charm
and elegance. The man became passionately attached
to it; he was ready to perpetrate any folly for the
sake of obtaining possession of it, and indeed he did
commit numbers of regrettable actions, and at last
stole the bird from the Showman and carried it away.
Then, in a foreign palace, for a short while he revelled
in its beauty and the joy of owning it. The Humming
Bird did its best to be continually charming, but
it felt its false position. And the worry and
annoyance of concealing the theft from the Showman,
and the different food the Humming Bird required,
and the care that had to be taken of it, at last began
to weary the man. He chafed and was often disagreeable
to it, although he realized its glory and beauty and
the feather it was in his cap. Finally, one day,
in a fit of desperation, the man let the Humming Bird
fly, and crept back home to the homely brown Sparrow,
with its irritating noises and utter want of beauty.
Why was this, Sage?”
The Sage had not to think long.
“Custom, my child,” he
said. “Custom forges stronger chains than
the finest plumage of a Humming Bird. The man
had to put himself out and exert himself to retain
the Humming Bird in a way that was not agreeable to
his self-love, whereas the brown Sparrow lived on always
the same, causing him no trouble, and custom had deadened
the sense of its want of charm.”
“Then it seems to me it was
rather hard upon the poor Humming Bird!” said
the Damsel.
“It is always hard upon the
Humming Birds,” replied the Sage, and his voice
was quite sad.
The rain did not cease for a long
time. It was more than an hour before the Damsel
left the cave.
If you are a Humming Bird it is
wiser for you to remain in the possession of the Travelling
Showman.
A long period elapsed after this before
the Damsel again tapped at the Sage’s door.
He looked out morning and evening, and attributed his
lack of enthusiasm for his devotions to an attack
of rheumatism from the damp of his cave. At last,
one morning he spied her sauntering slowly up the
hill, and he retired into the back of his cell, and
the Damsel had to knock twice before he opened the
window shutter. She was in a gay mood, and demanded
a story, so the Sage began:
“There was once upon a time
a Fish with glittering scales who swam about in a
deep river. It had been tempted by the flies of
many Fishermen, but had laughed at them all and swam
away, just under the surface of the water, so that
the sun might shine on its glittering scales to please
the eyes of the Fishermen and to excite their desire
to secure it. It was a Fish who laughed a good
deal at life. But one fine day a new Angler came
along; he was young and beautiful, and seemed lazy
and happy, and not particularly anxious to throw the
line. The Fish peeped at him from the sheltering
shadow of a rock. ’This is the most perfect
specimen of a Fisherman I have ever seen,’ it
said to itself. ’I could almost believe
it would be agreeable to swallow the fly and let him
land me and put me in his basket.’ The
young Fisherman threw the line, and the sun caught
the glittering scales of the Fish at that moment.
The laziness vanished from the Fisherman, and he began
to have a strong desire to secure the Fish.
“He fished for some time, and
the Fish swam backward and forward, making up its
mind. It saw the hook under the fly, but the attraction
of the Angler growing stronger and stronger, at last
it deliberately decided to come up and bite.
’I know all the emotions of swimming on the surface
and letting my scales shine in the sun,’ it mused,
’but I know nothing about the bank and the basket,
and perhaps the tales that are drilled into the heads
of us Fish from infancy about suffocation and exhaustion
are not true.’ And it mused again:
’He is a perfectly beautiful Fisherman and looks
kind, and I want to be closer to him and let him touch
my glittering scales. After all, one ought to
know everything before one dies.’
“So, its heart beating and its
eyes melting, the Fish deliberately rose to the surface
and swallowed the fly. The hook caught in a gristly
place and did not hurt much, and the novel experience
of being pulled onto the green meadow delighted the
Fish. It saw the Fisherman close, and felt his
hands as he tenderly disengaged the hook. He was
full of joy and pride at securing the difficult Fish
and admired its scales. He talked aloud and told
it how bright he found it, and he was altogether charming
and delightful, and the Fish adored him and was glad
it had been caught.
“Then after some time of this
admiration and dalliance, the Fisherman put it in
the basket among the cool rushes. The Fish lay
quiet, still content. It had not yet begun to
pant. For an hour almost the Fisherman gloried
in his catch. He opened the lid frequently and
smiled at the Fish.
“Then he lay down on the bank
beside the basket and let his rod float idly in the
stream. The sun was warm and pleasant.
“‘I wish,’ he said
to himself, ’after all, I had not secured the
Fish yet; the throwing of the fly and the excitement
of trying to catch the creature are better fun than
having it safely landed and lying in the basket,’
and he yawned, and his eyes gradually closed and he
slept.
“Now the Fish heard very plainly
what he had said. Tell me, Damsel you
who ask questions and answer them finally yourself tell
me, What did the Fish do?”
The Damsel mused a moment. She
stirred with her white fingers the water in the basin
of the fountain that sprang from the rock close by.
Then she looked at the Sage from under the shadow
of her brows and answered, thoughtfully:
“The Fish was stunned at first
by this truth being uttered so near it. It suddenly
realized what it had done and what it had lost.
’I, who swam about freely and showed my glittering
scales in the sun, am now caught and in a basket,
with no prospect but suffocation and death in front
of me,’ it said to itself. ’I could
have even supported that, and the knowledge that my
scales will become dull and unattractive in the near
future, if the Fisherman had only continued to lift
the lid and admire me a little longer.’
And it sighed and began to feel the sense of suffocation.
But it was a Fish of great determination and resources.
’I have learned my lesson,’ it gasped;
’the Fisherman has taught it to me himself.
Now I will make a great jump and try to get out of
the basket.’
“So it jumped and opened the
lid. The Fisherman stirred in his sleep and put
out his hand vaguely to close it again, but he was
too sleepy to fasten the catch, and with less noise
the Fish bounced up again and succeeded in floundering
upon the grass. It lay panting and in great distress,
but it looked at the beautiful Angler with regret.
He was so beautiful and so desirable. ‘I
could almost stay now,’ the Fish sighed.
Then it braced itself up and gave one more bound, and
this time reached the rock at the edge of the stream.
“Again the Fisherman awoke,
and now casually, with his eyes still closed, fastened
up the basket before he slept again; but the Fish with
its third bound reached the river, and darted out into
the middle of the stream.
“‘Good-bye, Beautiful
Angler!’ it said, sadly. ’You were
sweet, but you have taught me a lesson, and freedom
is sweeter.’
“The splash of its reaching
the water fully awakened the Fisherman, but he saw
the basket with the lid shut, and had no anxieties
until his eye caught the pink of the water where the
Fish sheltered under the rock. Its gill was still
bleeding from the hook wound, and colored a circle
round it. Then he opened the lid and found the
basket empty.
“‘Good-bye,’ said
the Fish. ’Your wish has been granted, and
your pleasure can begin all over again!’
“But the Fisherman suddenly
realized that his rod, while he slept, had fallen
into the river, and was floating away down the stream.
“‘Good-bye again,’
said the Fish; ’I have suffered, but I have now
experience, and I am grateful to you, and my gill will
heal up, and I will smile at you sometimes from just
under the surface of the water, and so all is well!’
And it flashed its glittering scales in the sun before
it darted away out of sight in the strong current.”
And the Damsel folded her hands and
looked into distance.
“Thank you, Damsel,” said
the Sage, gently for him; “but the Fisherman
could procure another rod rods are not rarities.
What then?”
“That would be for another day,”
said the Damsel; “and for another
Fish!” And she tripped away down the hill, and
was deaf to the Sage, who gruffly called after her.
When you have caught your Fish,
it may be wiser to cook it and eat it.
The sun was setting when the Damsel
next came to the Cave. She had a pet falcon with
her, and kept caressing it as she propounded her question.
“There lived a woman in a Castle
who had three Knights devoted to her. She loved
one, and her vanity was pleased with the other two.
While she continued to play with them all, they all
loved her to distraction; but presently her preference
for the one Knight became evident, and the two others,
after doing their utmost to supplant the third without
success, at last left the Castle and rode away.
They were no sooner gone, and things had become quiet,
and no combats occurred to interrupt the lovers’
intercourse, when the chosen Knight began to weary,
and he, too, at last rode away, although before he
had been the most ardent of all. Why was this,
Sage? And what should the woman do?”
“It was because the Knight had
won the prize and the woman gave him no trouble to
keep it,” replied the Sage. “He was
bound to weary. When a man’s profession
is fighting and he has fought hard and succeeded, after
sufficient rest he wishes to fight again. So if
the woman wants her lover back, she had better first
summon the other two.”
For once the Damsel had nothing to
say, and had no excuse to remain longer in the cave.
The Sage, however, was not in the
mind to let her go so soon, so he began a question:
“Why do you caress that bird
so much? It appears completely indifferent to
you. Surely that is waste of time?”
“It is agreeable to waste time,” replied
the Damsel.
“Upon an insensible object?”
“Yes.”
“More so than if it returned your caresses?”
“Probably there is
the speculation. It might one day respond, while
certainly if it repaid warmly my love now, one day
it would not. Nothing lasts in this world.
You have told me so yourself.”
The Sage was nettled.
“Yes, there is one thing that lasts, that is
friendship,” he said.
“Friendship!” exclaimed
the Damsel; “but that is not made up of caresses.
It does not make the heart beat.”
“We were not talking of beating hearts,”
said the Sage, sententiously.
“Very well. Good-bye, then,
Sage,” laughed the Damsel. “You must
think of more stories for me before I come again.”
And, continuing to caress the falcon,
she walked away, stately and fair, into the setting
sun.
When she had gone the Sage wondered
why there was no twilight that evening, and why it
had suddenly become night.
Most men prefer to possess something
that the other men want.
It would be a peaceful world if we
could only realize that the fever of love is like
other fevers. It comes to a crisis, and the patient
either dies or is cured. It cannot last at the
same point forever.
The Damsel came back again next day.
She had remarked, the day she spent with him in the
rain, that the Sage was not so old or so uncomely as
she had at first supposed. “If he were
to shave off his beard and wear a velvet doublet,
he would look as well as many a cavalier of the Court,”
she mused. And she called out before she reached
the door:
“Sage, I have come back because
I want to ask you just another question. Will
you not come out and sit in the sun while you answer?”
So the Sage advanced in a recalcitrant
manner, but he would not sit down beside her.
Then the Damsel began:
“A woman once possessed a ball
of silk. It was of so fine and rare a kind that,
although of many thousand yards, it took up no space,
and she unwound it daily for her pleasure without
any appreciable difference in the size of the ball.
At last she suddenly fancied she perceived some alteration.
It came upon her as a shock, but still she continued
to use the silk with the casual idea that a thing
she had employed so long must go on forever.
Then again, in about a week, there came another shock.
The ball was certainly smaller, and felt cold and hard
and firm. The thought came to her, ’What
if it should not be silk all through and I have come
to the end of matters? What shall I do?’
Now tell me, Sage, should the woman go on to the end
and find perhaps a stone? Or should she try to
rewind the silk? Which is the best course?”
The Damsel took up the Sage’s
staff, which he had dropped for the moment, and with
its point she drew geometrical figures in the sand.
But the sun made shadows with her eyelashes, and the
Sage felt his voice tremble, so he answered, tartly:
“That would depend upon the
nature of the woman. If she continues to unwind
the silk she will certainly find a piece of adamant,
which has been cunningly covered with this rare, soft
substance. If she tries to rewind, she will discover
the thread has become tangled, and the ball can never
again look smooth and even as before. She must
choose which she would prefer, a clean piece of adamant
or an uneven ball of silk.”
“But that is no answer to my
question,” said the Damsel, pouting. “I
asked which must she do for the best.”
“Neither is better nor worse!”
replied the Sage with asperity. “And there
is no best.”
“You are quite wrong, Sage,”
returned the Damsel. “There is a third
course. She can cut the thread and leave the ball
as it is, a coating of smooth silk still and
an undiscovered possibility inside.”
“You are too much for me!”
exclaimed the Sage in a fury. “Answer your
own questions, to begin with, in future! I will
have no more of you!” and he went into his cave
and ostentatiously fastened the door.
The Damsel smiled to herself and continued
to draw geometrical figures with the point of the
Sage’s staff in the sand.
There are always three courses
in life: the good, the bad, and the indifferent.
The good gives you calm, and makes you sleep; the bad
gives you emotions, and makes you weep; and the indifferent
gives you no satisfaction, and makes you yawn, so choose
wisely.
One can swear to be faithful eternally,
but how can one swear to love eternally? The
one is a question of will, the other a sentiment beyond
all human control. One might as sensibly swear
to keep the wind in the south, or the sun from setting!
And yet we swear both vows and break both
vows.
A woman is always hardest upon her
own sins, committed by others.
A man is sometimes lenient to them.
A fool can win the love of a man,
but it requires a woman of resources to keep it.
The Damsel did not go away from the
cave, as was her custom. She continued to draw
geometrical figures in the sand. Presently she
called to the Sage once more.
“Come out again, dear Sage!
Listen, I have something more to say.”
He unfastened the window and stood leaning on the
sill.
“Well?” he said, sternly. “Well?”
“A Ring Dove once was owned
by a man. It was the sweetest and most gentle
of birds, besides being extremely beautiful. It
adored the man and lived contentedly in its cage.
The perches, which the man had had prepared especially
for it, were endeared to it from association with
the happy hours when it had been caressed by the man.
Altogether to it the cage appeared a palace, and it
lived content.
“The man was a brutal creature,
more or less, and at last he cruelly ill-treated the
Ring Dove, and exalted a Cuckoo in its place.
This conduct greatly saddened the sweet Dove, but
it over and over again forgave its tormentor, so great
was its love, and even saw the Cuckoo advanced to
the highest honors without anger, only a bleeding heart.
How long things would have continued in this way no
one knows; but the man suddenly gave the Cuckoo the
Ring Dove’s cage, and let the Cuckoo sleep on
the perches which the Dove was accustomed to consider
its very own. This overcame the gentle Dove.
Its broken heart mended, and it flew away. Tell
me, Sage, why did this action cure the Dove of its
great love for the man, when it had borne all the
blows and cruelty without resentment?”
“That is an easy question to
answer,” replied the Sage. “The Dove
was really growing tired and seized this as a good
opportunity to be off.”
“Oh, how little you know of
the female sex, even of Doves!” laughed the
Damsel. “I can give you the true reason
myself. It was the bad taste of the man in giving
the Cuckoo the cage and perches of the Ring Dove,
which he had consecrated to her. That cured her,
and enabled her to fly away.”
And the Damsel curtsied to the Sage
and sauntered off, laughing and looking back over
her shoulder.
An action committed in bad taste
is more curing and disillusionizing to Love than the
cruelest blows of rage and hate.
A man would often be the lover of
his wife if he were married to some one
else.
There come moments in life when we regret the old
gods.
Time and place temperature
and temperament and after the sunset the
night and then to-morrow.
All the winter passed and the Damsel
remained at the Court and the Sage in his cave.
Both found the days long and their occupation insufficient.
At last, when spring came, the Damsel
again mounted the hill one morning before dawn and
tapped at the Sage’s door.
His heart gave a bound, and he flew
to open it without more ado.
“So you have come back?”
he said; and his voice was eager, though it was a
gray light and he could not see her plainly.
“Yes,” said she; “I
want you to tell me one more story of life before I
go on a long voyage.”
So the Sage began:
“There was once upon a time
a man of half-measures, whose brain was filled with
dreams for his own glory, and he possessed a woman
of flesh and blood, who loved him, and would have
turned the dreams into realities. But because
he was happy with her, and because her hair was black
and her eyes were green, and her flesh like alabaster,
he said to himself, ’This is a fiend and a vampire.
Nothing human can be so delectable.’ So
he ran a stake through her body, and buried her at
the cross-roads. Then he found life an emptiness,
and went down into nothingness and was forgotten ”
“Oh, hush, Sage!” said
the Damsel, trembling; “I wish to hear no more.
Come, shave off your beard, and put on a velvet doublet,
and return with me to the Court. See, life is
short, and I am fair.”
And the Sage suddenly felt he had
found the philosopher’s stone, and knew the
secret he had come into the wilds to find.
So he went back to his cave, and shaved
his beard, and donned a velvet doublet, long since
lain by in lavender. And he took the Damsel by
the hand, and they gladly ran down the hill.
And the zéphyrs whispered, and
the day dawned, and all the world smiled young and
gay.