A presence yet not A presence.
The twilight had fallen while he wrote,
and the wind had risen. It was now blowing a
gale. When he could no longer see, he rose to
light his lamp, and looked out of the window.
All was dusk around him. Above and below was
nothing to be distinguished from the mass; nothing
and something seemed in it to share an equal uncertainty.
He heard the wind, but could not see the clouds that
swept before it, for all was cloud overhead, and no
change of light or feature showed the shifting of
the measureless bulk. Gray stormy space was the
whole idea of the creation. He was gazing into
a void was it not rather a condition of
things inappreciable by his senses? A strange
feeling came over him as of looking from a window
in the wall of the visible into the region unknown,
to man shapeless quite, therefore terrible, wherein
wander the things all that have not yet found or form
or sensible embodiment, so as to manifest themselves
to eyes or ears or hands of mortals. As he gazed,
the huge shapeless hulks of the ships of chaos, dimly
awful suggestions of animals uncreate, yet vaguer
motions of what was not, came heaving up, to vanish,
even from the fancy, as they approached his window.
Earth lay far below, invisible; only through the night
came the moaning of the sea, as the wind drove it,
in still enlarging waves, upon the flat shore, a level
of doubtful grass and sand, three miles away.
It seemed to his heart as if the moaning were the voice
of the darkness, lamenting, like a repentant Satan
or Judas, that it was not the light, could not hold
the light, might not become as the light, but must
that moment cease when the light began to enter it.
Darkness and moaning was all that the earth contained!
Would the souls of the mariners shipwrecked this night
go forth into the ceaseless turmoil? or would they,
leaving behind them the sense for storms, as for all
things soft and sweet as well, enter only a vast silence,
where was nothing to be aware of but each solitary
self? Thoughts and theories many passed through
Donal’s mind as he sought to land the conceivable
from the wandering bosom of the limitless; and he
was just arriving at the conclusion, that, as all
things seen must be after the fashion of the unseen
whence they come, as the very genius of embodiment
is likeness, therefore the soul of man must of course
have natural relations with matter; but, on the other
hand, as the spirit must be the home and origin of
all this moulding, assimilating, modelling energy,
and the spirit only that is in harmonious oneness
with its origin can fully exercise the deputed creative
power, it can be only in proportion to the eternal
life in them, that spirits are able to draw to themselves
matter and clothe themselves in it, so entering into
full relation with the world of storms and sunsets; he
was, I say, just arriving at this hazarded conclusion,
when he started out of his reverie, and was suddenly
all ear to listen. Again! Yes!
it was the same sound that had sent him that first
night wandering through the house in fruitless quest!
It came in two or three fitful chords that melted into
each other like the colours in the lining of a shell,
then ceased. He went to the door, opened it,
and listened. A cold wind came rushing up the
stair. He heard nothing. He stepped out on
the stair, shut his door, and listened. It came
again a strange unearthly musical cry!
If ever disembodied sound went wandering in the wind,
just such a sound must it be! Knowing little
of music save in the forms of tone and vowel-change
and rhythm and rime, he felt as if he could have listened
for ever to the wild wandering sweetness of its lamentation.
Almost immediately it ceased then once
more came again, apparently from far off, dying away
on the distant tops of the billowy air, out of whose
wandering bosom it had first issued. It was as
the wailing of a summer-wind caught and swept along
in a tempest from the frozen north.
The moment he ceased to expect it
any more, he began to think whether it must not have
come from the house. He stole down the stair to
do what, he did not know. He could not go following
an airy nothing all over the castle: of a great
part of it he as yet knew nothing! His constructive
mind had yearned after a complete idea of the building,
for it was almost a passion with him to fit the outsides
and insides of things together; but there were suites
of rooms into which, except the earl and lady Arctura
were to leave home, he could not hope to enter.
It was little more than mechanically therefore that
he went vaguely after the sound; and ere he was half-way
down the stair, he recognized the hopelessness of
the pursuit. He went on, however, to the schoolroom,
where tea was waiting him.
He had returned to his room, and was
sitting again at work, now reading and meditating,
when, in one of the lulls of the storm, he became aware
of another sound one most unusual to his
ears, for he never required any attendance in his
room that of steps coming up the stair heavy
steps, not as of one on some ordinary errand.
He waited listening. The steps came nearer and
nearer, and stopped at his door. A hand fumbled
about upon it, found the latch, lifted it, and entered.
To Donal’s wonder and dismay as well,
it was the earl. His dismay arose from his appearance:
he was deadly pale, and his eyes more like those of
a corpse than a man among his living fellows.
Donal started to his feet.
The apparition turned its head towards
him; but in its look was no atom of recognition, no
acknowledgment or even perception of his presence;
the sound of his rising had had merely a half-mechanical
influence upon its brain. It turned away immediately,
and went on to the window. There it stood, much
as Donal had stood a little while before looking
out, but with the attitude of one listening rather
than one trying to see. There was indeed nothing
but the blackness to be seen and nothing
to be heard but the roaring of the wind, with the
roaring of the great billows rolled along in it.
As it stood, the time to Donal seemed long: it
was but about five minutes. Was the man out of
his mind, or only a sleep-walker? How could he
be asleep so early in the night?
As Donal stood doubting and wondering,
once more came the musical cry out of the darkness and
immediately from the earl a response a soft,
low murmur, by degrees becoming audible, in the tone
of one meditating aloud, but in a restrained ecstacy.
From his words he seemed still to be hearkening the
sounds aerial, though to Donal at least they came no
more.
“Yet once again,” he murmured,
“once again ere I forsake the flesh, are my
ears blest with that voice! It is the song of
the eternal woman! For me she sings! Sing
on, siren; my soul is a listening universe, and therein
nought but thy voice!”
He paused, and began afresh:
“It is the wind in the tree
of life! Its leaves rustle in words of love.
Under its shadow I shall lie, with her I loved and
killed! Ere that day come, she will have forgiven
and forgotten, and all will be well!
“Hark the notes! Clear
as a flute! Full and stringent as a violin!
They are colours! They are flowers! They
are alive! I can see them as they grow, as they
blow! Those are primroses! Those are pimpernels!
Those high, intense, burning tones so soft,
yet so certain what are they? Jasmine? No,
that flower is not a note! It is a chord! and
what a chord! I mean, what a flower! I never
saw that flower before never on this earth!
It must be a flower of the paradise whence comes the
music! It is! It is! Do I not remember
the night when I sailed in the great ship over the
ocean of the stars, and scented the airs of heaven,
and saw the pearly gates gleaming across myriads of
wavering miles! saw, plain as I see them
now, the flowers on the fields within! Ah, me!
the dragon that guards the golden apples! See
his crest his crest and his emerald eyes!
He comes floating up through the murky lake! It
is Geryon! come to bear me to the gyre
below!”
He turned, and with a somewhat quickened
step left the room, hastily shutting the door behind
him, as if to keep back the creature of his vision.
Strong-hearted and strong-brained,
Donal had yet stood absorbed as if he too were out
of the body, and knew nothing more of this earth.
There is something more terrible in a presence that
is not a presence than in a vision of the bodiless;
that is, a present ghost is not so terrible as an
absent one, a present but deserted body. He stood
a moment helpless, then pulled himself together and
tried to think. What should he do? What
could he do? What was required of him? Was
anything required of him? Had he any right to
do anything? Could anything be done that would
not both be and cause a wrong? His first impulse
was to follow: a man in such a condition was
surely not to be left to go whither he would among
the heights and depths of the castle, where he might
break his neck any moment! Interference no doubt
was dangerous, but he would follow him at least a
little way! He heard the steps going down the
stair, and made haste after them. But ere they
could have reached the bottom, the sound of them ceased;
and Donal knew the earl must have left the stair at
a point from which he could not follow him.