The quarry.
Donal threw everything aside, careless
of possible disgrace in the class the next morning,
and, trembling with hope, accompanied Gibbie:
she would be there surely! It was
one of those clear nights in which a gleam of straw-colour
in the west, with light-thinned gray-green deepening
into blue above it, is like the very edge of the axe
of the cold the edge that reaches the soul.
But the youths were warm enough: they had health
and hope. The hospitable crimson room, with
its round table set out for a Scotch tea, and its
fire blazing hugely, received them. And there
sat Ginevra by the fire! with her pretty feet on
a footstool before it: in those days ladies wore
open shoes, and showed dainty stockings. Her
face looked rosy, but it was from the firelight, for
when she turned it towards them, it showed pale as
usual. She received them, as always, with the
same simple sincerity that had been hers on the bank
of the Lorrie burn. But Gibbie read some trouble
in her eyes, for his soul was all touch, and, like
a delicate spiritual seismograph, responded at once
to the least tremble of a neighbouring soul.
The minister was not present, and Mrs. Sclater had
both to be the blazing coal, and keep blowing herself,
else, however hot it might be at the smouldering hearth,
the little company would have sent up no flame of
talk.
When tea was over, Gibbie went to
the window, got within the red curtains, and peeped
out. Returning presently, he spelled with fingers
and signed with hands to Ginevra that it was a glorious
night: would she not come for a walk? Ginevra
looked to Mrs. Sclater.
“Gibbie wants me to go for a walk,” she
said.
“Certainly, my dear if
you are well enough to go with him,” replied
her friend.
“I am always well,” answered Ginevra.
“I can’t go with you,”
said Mrs. Sclater, “for I expect my husband
every moment; but what occasion is there, with two
such knights to protect you?”
She was straining hard on the bit
of propriety; but she knew them all so well? she
said to herself. Then first perceiving Gibbie’s
design, Donal cast him a grateful glance, while Ginevra
rose hastily, and ran to put on her outer garments.
Plainly to Donal, she was pleased to go.
When they stood on the pavement, there
was the moon, the very cream of light, ladying it
in a blue heaven. It was not all her own, but
the clouds about her were white and attendant, and
ever when they came near her took on her livery the
poor paled-rainbow colours, which are all her reflected
light can divide into: that strange brown we
see so often on her cloudy people must, I suppose,
be what the red or the orange fades to. There
was a majesty and peace about her airy domination,
which Donal himself would have found difficult, had
he known her state, to bring into harmony with her
aeonian death. Strange that the light of lovers
should be the coldest of all cold things within human
ken dead with cold, millions of years before
our first father and mother appeared each to the other
on the earth! The air was keen but dry.
Nothing could fall but snow; and of anything like
it there was nothing but those few frozen vapours
that came softly out of the deeps to wait on the moon.
Between them and behind them lay depth absolute,
expressed in the perfection of nocturnal blues, deep
as gentle, the very home of the dwelling stars.
The steps of the youths rang on the pavements, and
Donal’s voice seemed to him so loud and clear
that he muffled it all in gentler meaning. He
spoke low, and Ginevra answered him softly. They
walked close together, and Gibbie flitted to and fro,
now on this side, now on that, now in front of them,
now behind.
“Hoo likit ye the sermon, mem?” asked
Donal.
“Papa thought it a grand sermon,” answered
Ginevra.
“An’ yersel’?” persisted
Donal.
“Papa tells me I am no judge,” she replied.
“That’s as muckle as to
say ye didna like it sae weel as he did!” returned
Donal, in a tone expressing some relief.
“Mr. Duff is very good to my
father, Donal,” she rejoined, “and I don’t
like to say anything against his sermon; but all the
time I could not help thinking whether your mother
would like this and that; for you know, Donal, any
good there is in me I have got from her, and from
Gibbie and from you, Donal.”
The youth’s heart beat with
a pleasure that rose to physical pain. Had he
been a winged creature he would have flown straight
up; but being a sober wingless animal, he stumped
on with his two happy legs. Gladly would he
have shown her the unreality of Fergus that
he was a poor shallow creature, with only substance
enough to carry show and seeming, but he felt, just
because he had reason to fear him, that it would be
unmanly to speak the truth of him behind his back,
except in the absolute necessity of rectitude.
He felt also that, if Ginevra owed her father’s
friend such delicacy, he owed him at least a little
silence; for was he not under more obligation to this
same shallow-pated orator, than to all eternity he
could wipe out, even if eternity carried in it the
possibility of wiping out an obligation? Few
men understand, but Donal did, that he who would cancel
an obligation is a dishonest man. I cannot help
it that many a good man good, that is,
because he is growing better must then
be reckoned in the list of the dishonest: he
is in their number until he leaves it.
Donal remaining silent, Ginevra presently
returned him his own question:
“How did you like the sermon, Donal?”
“Div ye want me to say, mem?” he asked.
“I do, Donal,” she answered.
“Weel, I wad jist say, in a
general w’y, ‘at I canna think muckle o’
ony sermon ‘at micht gar a body think mair o’
the prêcher nor o’ him ’at he comes
to prech aboot. I mean, ’at I dinna see
hoo onybody was to lo’e God or his neebour ae
jot the mair for hearin’ yon sermon last nicht.”
“But might not some be frightened
by it, and brought to repentance, Donal?” suggested
the girl.
“Ou ay; I daur say; I dinna
ken. But I canna help thinkin’ ’at
what disna gie God onything like fair play, canna
dee muckle guid to men, an’ may, I doobt, dee
a heap o’ ill. It’s a pagan kin’
o’ a thing yon.”
“That’s just what I was
feeling I don’t say thinking, you
know for you say we must not say think
when we have taken no trouble about it. I am
sorry for Mr. Duff, if he has taken to teaching where
he does not understand.”
They had left the city behind them,
and were walking a wide open road, with a great sky
above it. On its borders were small fenced fields,
and a house here and there with a garden. It
was a plain-featured, slightly undulating country,
with hardly any trees not at all beautiful,
except as every place under the heaven which man has
not defiled is beautiful to him who can see what is
there. But this night the earth was nothing:
what was in them and over them was all. Donal
felt as so many will feel, before the earth,
like a hen set to hatch the eggs of a soaring bird,
shall have done rearing broods for heaven that,
with this essential love and wonder by his side, to
be doomed to go on walking to all eternity would be
a blissful fate, were the landscape turned to a brick-field,
and the sky to persistent gray.
“Wad ye no tak my airm, mem?”
he said at length, summoning courage. “I
jist fin’ mysel’ like a horse wi’
a reyn brocken, gaein’ by mysel’ throu’
the air this gait.”
Before he had finished the sentence
Ginevra had accepted the offer. It was the first
time. His arm trembled. He thought it was
her hand.
“Ye’re no cauld, are ye, mem?”
he said.
“Not the least,” she answered.
“Eh, mem! gien fowk was but
a’ made oot o’ the same clay, like, ’at
ane micht say till anither ’Ye hae
me as ye hae yersel’’!”
“Yes, Donal,” rejoined
Ginevra; “I wish we were all made of the poet-clay
like you! What it would be to have a well inside,
out of which to draw songs and ballads as I pleased!
That’s what you have, Donal or,
rather, you’re just a draw-well of music yourself.”
Donal laughed merrily. A moment
more and he broke out singing:
My thoughts are like fireflies, pulsing in moonlight;
My heart is a silver cup, full of red wine;
My soul a pale gleaming horizon, whence soon light
Will flood the gold earth with a torrent divine.
“What’s that, Donal?” cried Ginevra.
“Ow, naething,” answered Donal.
“It was only my hert lauchin’.”
“Say the words,” said Ginevra.
“I canna I dinna ken them noo,”
replied Donal.
“Oh, Donal! are those lovely
words gone altogether for ever?
Shall I not hear them again?”
“I’ll try to min’
upo’ them whan I gang hame,” he said.
“I canna the noo. I can think o’
naething but ae thing.”
“And what is that, Donal?”
“Yersel’,” answered Donal.
Ginevra’s hand lifted just a
half of its weight from Donal’s arm, like a
bird that had thought of flying, then settled again.
“It is very pleasant to be together
once more as in the old time, Donal though
there are no daisies and green fields. But
what place is that, Donal?”
Instinctively, almost unconsciously,
she wanted to turn the conversation. The place
she pointed to was an opening immediately on the roadside,
through a high bank narrow and dark, with
one side half lighted by the moon. She had often
passed it, walking with her school-fellows, but had
never thought of asking what it was. In the
shining dusk it looked strange and a little dreadful.
“It’s the muckle quarry,
mem,” answered Donal: “div ye no
ken that? That’s whaur maist the haill
toon cam oot o’. It’s a some eerie
kin’ o’ a place to luik at i’ this
licht. I won’er at ye never saw’t.”
“I have seen the opening there,
but never took much notice of it before,” said
Ginevra.
“Come an’ I’ll lat
ye see’t,” rejoined Donal. “It’s
weel worth luikin’ intill. Ye hae nae
notion sic a place as ’tis. It micht be
amo’ the grenite muntains o’ Aigypt,
though they takna freely sic fine blocks oot o’
this ane as they tuik oot o’ that at Syene.
Ye wadna be fleyt to come an’ see what the
meen maks o’ ’t, wad ye, mem?”
“No, Donal. I would not
be frightened to go anywhere with you. But ”
“Eh, mem! it maks me richt
prood to hear ye say that. Come awa’ than.”
So saying, he turned aside, and led
her into the narrow passage, cut through a friable
sort of granite. Gibbie, thinking they had gone
to have but a peep and return, stood in the road, looking
at the clouds and the moon, and crooning to himself.
By and by, when he found they did not return, he
followed them.
When they reached the end of the cutting,
Ginevra started at sight of the vast gulf, the moon
showing the one wall a ghastly gray, and from the
other throwing a shadow half across the bottom.
But a winding road went down into it, and Donal led
her on. She shrunk at first, drawing back from
the profound, mysterious-looking abyss, so awfully
still; but when Donal looked at her, she was ashamed
to refuse to go farther, and indeed almost afraid
to take her hand from his arm; so he led her down
the terrace road. The side of the quarry was
on one hand, and on the other she could see only into
the gulf.
“Oh, Donal!” she said
at length, almost in a whisper, “this is like
a dream I once had, of going down and down a long roundabout
road, inside the earth, down and down, to the heart
of a place full of the dead the ground
black with death, and between horrible walls.”
Donal looked at her; his face was
in the light reflected from the opposite gray precipice:
she thought it looked white and strange, and grew
more frightened, but dared not speak. Presently
Donal again began to sing, and this is something like
what he sang:
“Death! whaur do ye bide, auld Death?”
“I bide in ilka breath,”
Quo’ Death.
“No i’ the pyramids,
An’ no the worms amids,
’Neth coffin-lids;
I bidena whaur life has been,
An’ whaur’s nae mair to be
dune.”
“Death! whaur do ye bide, auld
Death?”
“Wi’ the leevin’, to
dee ’at’s laith,”
Quo’ Death.
“Wi’ the man an’ the
wife
’At lo’e like life,
But strife; (without)
Wi’ the bairns ’at hing
to their mither,
An’ a’ ’at lo’e
ane anither.”
“Death! whaur do ye bide, auld Death?”
“Abune an’ aboot an’
aneath,”
Quo’ Death.
“But o’ a’ the airts,
An’ o’ a’ the pairts,
In herts,
Whan the tane to the tither says na,
An’ the north win’ begins
to blaw.”
“What a terrible song, Donal!” said Ginevra.
He made no reply, but went on, leading
her down into the pit: he had been afraid she
was going to draw back, and sang the first words her
words suggested, knowing she would not interrupt him.
The aspect of the place grew frightful to her.
“Are you sure there are no holes full
of water, down there?” she faltered.
“Ay, there’s ane or twa,”
replied Donal, “but we’ll haud oot
o’ them.”
Ginevra shuddered, but was determined
to show no fear: Donal should not reproach her
with lack of faith! They stepped at last on the
level below, covered with granite chips and stones
and great blocks. In the middle rose a confused
heap of all sorts. To this, and round to the
other side of it, Donal led her. There shone
the moon on the corner of a pool, the rest of which
crept away in blackness under an overhanging mass.
She caught his arm with both hands. He told
her to look up. Steep granite rock was above
them all round, on one side dark, on the other mottled
with the moon and the thousand shadows of its own
roughness; over the gulf hung vaulted the blue, cloud-blotted
sky, whence the moon seemed to look straight down
upon her, asking what they were about, away from their
kind, in such a place of terror.
Suddenly Donal caught her hand.
She looked in his face. It was not the moon
that could make it so white.
“Ginevra!” he said, with trembling voice.
“Yes, Donal,” she answered.
“Ye’re no angry at me
for ca’in ye by yer name? I never did it
afore.”
“I always call you Donal,” she answered.
“That’s nait’ral.
Ye’re a gran’ leddy, an’ I’m
naething abune a herd-laddie.”
“You’re a great poet,
Donal, and that’s much more than being a lady
or a gentleman.”
“Ay, maybe,” answered
Donal listlessly, as if he were thinking of something
far away; “but it winna mak up for the tither;
they’re no upo’ the same side o’
the watter, like. A puir lad like me daurna
lift an ee till a gran’ leddy like you,
mem. A’ the warl’ wad but scorn
him, an’ lauch at the verrà notion.
My time’s near ower at the college, an’
I see naething for ‘t but gang hame an’
fee (hire myself). I’ll be better workin’
wi’ my han’s nor wi’ my heid whan
I hae nae houp left o’ ever seein’
yer face again. I winna lowse a day aboot it.
Gien I lowse time I may lowse my rizón.
Hae patience wi’ me ae meenute, mem; I’m
jist driven to tell ye the trowth. It’s
mony a lang sin’ I hae kent mysel’
wantin’ you. Ye’re the boady, an’
I’m the shaidow. I dinna mean nae hyperbolics that’s
the w’y the thing luiks to me i’ my ain
thouchts. Eh, mem, but ye’re bonnie!
Ye dinna ken yersel’ hoo bonnie ye are, nor
what a subversion you mak i’ my hert an’
my heid. I cud jist cut my heid aff, an’
lay ‘t aneth yer feet to haud them
aff o’ the cauld flure.”
Still she looked him in the eyes,
like one bewildered, unable to withdraw her eyes from
his. Her face too had grown white.
“Tell me to haud my tongue,
mem, an’ I’ll haud it,” he said.
Her lips moved, but no sound came.
“I ken weel,” he went
on, “ye can never luik upo’ me as onything
mair nor a kin’ o’ a human bird, ‘at
ye wad hing in a cage, an’ gie seeds an’
bits o’ sugar till, an’ hearken till whan
he sang. I’ll never trouble ye nae mair,
an’ whether ye grant me my prayer or no, ye’ll
never see me again. The only differ ’ill
be ’at I’ll aither hing my heid or
haud it up for the rest o’ my days.
I wad fain ken ‘at I wasna despised, an’
’at maybe gien things had been different, but
na, I dinna mean that; I mean naething ’at
wad fricht ye frae what I wad hae. It sudna
mean a hair mair nor lies in itsel’.”
“What is it, Donal?”
said Ginevra, half inaudibly, and with effort:
she could scarcely speak for a fluttering in her throat.
“I cud beseech ye upo’
my k-nees,” he went on, as if she had not spoken,
“to lat me kiss yer bonnie fût; but that
ye micht grant for bare peety, an’ that wad
dee me little guid; sae for ance an’ for
a’, till maybe efter we’re a’ ayont
the muckle sea, I beseech at the fauvour o’
yer sweet sowl, to lay upo’ me, as upo’
the lips o’ the sowl ’at sang ye the sangs
ye likit sae weel to hear whan ye was but a leddy-lassie ae
solitary kiss. It shall be holy to me as the
licht; an’ I sweir by the Trowth I’ll think
o’ ’t but as ye think, an’ man nor
wuman nor bairn, no even Gibbie himsel’, sall
ken ”
The last word broke the spell upon Ginevra.
“But, Donal,” she said,
as quietly as when years ago they talked by the Lorrie
side, “would it be right? a secret
with you I could not tell to any one? not
even if afterwards ”
Donal’s face grew so ghastly
with utter despair that absolute terror seized her;
she turned from him and fled, calling “Gibbie!
Gibbie!”
He was not many yards off, approaching
the mound as she came from behind it. He ran
to meet her. She darted to him like a dove pursued
by a hawk, threw herself into his arms, laid her head
on his shoulder, and wept. Gibbie held her fast,
and with all the ways in his poor power sought to
comfort her. She raised her face at length.
It was all wet with tears which glistened in the moonlight.
Hurriedly Gibbie asked on his fingers:
“Was Donal not good to you?”
“He’s beautiful,”
she sobbed; “but I couldn’t, you know,
Gibbie, I couldn’t. I don’t care
a straw about position and all that who
would with a poet? but I couldn’t,
you know, Gibbie. I couldn’t let him think
I might have married him in any case:
could I now, Gibbie?”
She laid her head again on his shoulder
and sobbed. Gibbie did not well understand her.
Donal, where he had thrown himself on a heap of granite
chips, heard and understood, felt and knew and resolved
all in one. The moon shone, and the clouds went
flitting like ice-floe about the sky, now gray in
distance, now near the moon and white, now in her
very presence and adorned with her favour on their
bosoms, now drifting again into the gray; and still
the two, Ginevra and Gibbie, stood motionless Gibbie
with the tears in his eyes, and Ginevra weeping as
if her heart would break; and behind the granite blocks
lay Donal.
Again Ginevra raised her head.
“Gibbie, you must go and look after poor Donal,”
she said.
Gibbie went, but Donal was nowhere
to be seen. To escape the two he loved so well,
and be alone as he felt, he had crept away softly
into one of the many recesses of the place. Again
and again Gibbie made the noise with which he was
accustomed to call him, but he gave back no answer,
and they understood that wherever he was he wanted
to be left to himself. They climbed again the
winding way out of the gulf, and left him the heart
of its desolation.
“Take me home, Gibbie,”
said Ginevra, when they reached the high road.
As they went, not a word more passed
between them. Ginevra was as dumb as Gibbie,
and Gibbie was sadder than he had ever been in his
life not only for Donal’s sake, but
because, in his inexperienced heart, he feared that
Ginevra would not listen to Donal because she could
not because she had already promised herself
to Fergus Duff; and with all his love to his kind,
he could not think it well that Fergus should be made
happy at such a price. He left her at her own
door, and went home, hoping to find Donal there before
him.
He was not there. Hour after
hour passed, and he did not appear. At eleven
o’clock, Gibbie set out to look for him, but
with little hope of finding him. He went all
the way back to the quarry, thinking it possible he
might be waiting there, expecting him to return without
Ginevra. The moon was now low, and her light
reached but a little way into it, so that the look
of the place was quite altered, and the bottom of
it almost dark. But Gibbie had no fear.
He went down to the spot, almost feeling his way, where
they had stood, got upon the heap, and called and
whistled many times. But no answer came.
Donal was away, he did not himself know where, wandering
wherever the feet in his spirit led him. Gibbie
went home again, and sat up all night, keeping the
kettle boiling, ready to make tea for him the moment
he should come in. But even in the morning Donal
did not appear. Gibbie was anxious for
Donal was unhappy.
He might hear of him at the college,
he thought, and went at the usual hour. Sure
enough, as he entered the quadrangle, there was Donal
going in at the door leading to the moral philosophy
class-room. For hours, neglecting his own class,
he watched about the court, but Donal never showed
himself. Gibbie concluded he had watched to
avoid him, and had gone home by Crown-street, and himself
returned the usual and shorter way, sure almost of
now finding him in his room although probably
with the door locked. The room was empty, and
Mistress Murkison had not seen him.
Donal’s final examination, upon
which alone his degree now depended, came on the next
day: Gibbie watched at a certain corner, and
unseen saw him pass with a face pale but
strong, eyes that seemed not to have slept, and lips
that looked the inexorable warders of many sighs.
After that he did not see him once till the last day
of the session arrived. Then in the public room
he saw him go up to receive his degree. Never
before had he seen him look grand; and Gibbie knew
that there was not any evil in the world, except wrong.
But it had been the dreariest week he had ever passed.
As they came from the public room, he lay in wait
for him once more, but again in vain: he must
have gone through the sacristan’s garden behind.
When he reached his lodging, he found
a note from Donal waiting him, in which he bade him
good-bye, said he was gone to his mother, and asked
him to pack up his things for him: he would write
to Mistress Murkison and tell her what to do with
the chest.