Once upon a time the Prince of Felicitas
had occasion to set forth on a journey. It was
a late autumn evening with few pale stars and a moon
no larger than the paring of a finger-nail.
And as he rode through the purlieus of his city, the
white mane of his amber-coloured steed was all that
he could clearly see in the dusk of the high streets.
His way led through a quarter but little known to
him, and he was surprised to find that his horse,
instead of ambling forward with his customary gentle
vigour, stepped carefully from side to side, stopping
now and then to curve his neck and prick his ears as
though at some thing of fear unseen in the darkness;
while on either hand creatures could be heard rustling
and scuttling, and little cold draughts as of wings
fanned the rider’s cheeks.
The Prince at last turned in his saddle,
but so great was the darkness that he could not even
see his escort.
“What is the name of this street?” he
said.
“Sire, it is called the Vita Publica.”
“It is very dark.”
Even as he spoke his horse staggered, but, recovering
its foothold with an effort, stood trembling violently.
Nor could all the incitements of its master induce
the beast again to move forward.
“Is there no one with a lanthorn in this street?”
asked the Prince.
His attendants began forthwith to
call out loudly for any one who had a lanthorn.
Now, it chanced that an old man sleeping in a hovel
on a pallet of straw was, awakened by these cries.
When he heard that it was the Prince of Felicitas
himself, he came hastily, carrying his lanthorn, and
stood trembling beside the Prince’s horse.
It was so dark that the Prince could not see him.
“Light your lanthorn, old man,” he said.
The old man laboriously lit his lanthorn.
Its pale rays fled out on either hand; beautiful
but grim was the vision they disclosed. Tall
houses, fair court-yards, and a palm grown garden;
in front of the Prince’s horse a deep cesspool,
on whose jagged edges the good beast’s hoofs
were planted; and, as far as the glimmer of the lanthorn
stretched, both ways down the rutted street, paving
stones displaced, and smooth tesselated marble; pools
of mud, the hanging fruit of an orange tree, and dark,
scurrying shapes of monstrous rats bolting across from
house to house. The old man held the lanthorn
higher; and instantly bats flying against it would
have beaten out the light but for the thin protection
of its horn sides.
The Prince sat still upon his horse,
looking first at the rutted space that he had traversed
and then at the rutted space before him.
“Without a light,” he
said, “this thoroughfare is dangerous.
What is your name, old man?”
“My name is Cethru,” replied the aged
churl.
“Cethru!” said the Prince.
“Let it be your duty henceforth to walk with
your lanthorn up and down this street all night and
every night,” and he looked at Cethru:
“Do you understand, old man, what it is you have
to do?”
The old man answered in a voice that
trembled like a rusty flute:
“Aye, aye! to walk
up and down and hold my lanthorn so that folk can see
where they be going.”
The Prince gathered up his reins;
but the old man, lurching forward, touched his stirrup.
“How long be I to go on wi’ thiccy job?”
“Until you die!”
Cethru held up his lanthorn, and they
could see his long, thin face, like a sandwich of
dried leather, jerk and quiver, and his thin grey hairs
flutter in the draught of the bats’ wings circling
round the light.
“‘Twill be main hard!”
he groaned; “an’ my lanthorn’s nowt
but a poor thing.”
With a high look, the Prince of Felicitas
bent and touched the old man’s forehead.
“Until you die, old man,”
he repeated; and bidding his followers to light torches
from Cethru’s lanthorn, he rode on down the twisting
street. The clatter of the horses’ hoofs
died out in the night, and the scuttling and the rustling
of the rats and the whispers of the bats’ wings
were heard again.
Cethru, left alone in the dark thoroughfare,
sighed heavily; then, spitting on his hands, he tightened
the old girdle round his loins, and slinging the lanthorn
on his staff, held it up to the level of his waist,
and began to make his way along the street. His
progress was but slow, for he had many times to stop
and rekindle the flame within his lanthorn, which
the bats’ wings, his own stumbles, and the jostlings
of footpads or of revellers returning home, were for
ever extinguishing. In traversing that long
street he spent half the night, and half the night
in traversing it back again. The saffron swan
of dawn, slow swimming up the sky-river between the
high roof-banks, bent her neck down through the dark
air-water to look at him staggering below her, with
his still smoking wick. No sooner did Cethru
see that sunlit bird, than with a great sigh of joy
he sat him down, and at once fell asleep.
Now when the dwellers in the houses
of the Vita Publica first gained knowledge
that this old man passed every night with his lanthorn
up and down their street, and when they marked those
pallid gleams gliding over the motley prospect of
cesspools and garden gates, over the sightless hovels
and the rich-carved frontages of their palaces; or
saw them stay their journey and remain suspended like
a handful of daffodils held up against the black stuffs
of secrecy they said:
“It is good that the old man
should pass like this we shall see better
where we’re going; and if the Watch have any
job on hand, or want to put the pavements in order,
his lanthorn will serve their purpose well enough.”
And they would call out of their doors and windows
to him passing:
“Holà! old man Cethru!
All’s well with our house, and with the street
before it?”
But, for answer, the old man only
held his lanthorn up, so that in the ring of its pale
light they saw some sight or other in the street.
And his silence troubled them, one by one, for each
had expected that he would reply:
“Aye, aye! All’s
well with your house, Sirs, and with the street before
it!”
Thus they grew irritated with this
old man who did not seem able to do anything but just
hold his lanthorn up. And gradually they began
to dislike his passing by their doors with his pale
light, by which they could not fail to see, not only
the rich-carved frontages and scrolled gates of courtyards
and fair gardens, but things that were not pleasing
to the eye. And they murmured amongst themselves:
“What is the good of this old man and his silly
lanthorn? We can see all we want to see without
him; in fact, we got on very well before he came.”
So, as he passed, rich folk who were
supping would pelt him with orange-peel and empty
the dregs of their wine over his head; and poor folk,
sleeping in their hutches, turned over, as the rays
of the lanthorn fell on them, and cursed him for that
disturbance. Nor did revellers or footpads treat
the old man, civilly, but tied him to the wall, where
he was constrained to stay till a kind passerby released
him. And ever the bats darkened his lanthorn
with their wings and tried to beat the flame out.
And the old man thought: “This be a terrible
hard job; I don’t seem to please nobody.”
But because the Prince of Felicitas had so commanded
him, he continued nightly to pass with his lanthorn
up and down the street; and every morning as the saffron
swan came swimming overhead, to fall asleep.
But his sleep did not last long, for he was compelled
to pass many hours each day in gathering rushes and
melting down tallow for his lanthorn; so that his
lean face grew more than ever like a sandwich of dried
leather.
Now it came to pass that the Town
Watch having had certain complaints made to them that
persons had been bitten in the Vita Publica
by rats, doubted of their duty to destroy these ferocious
creatures; and they held investigation, summoning
the persons bitten and inquiring of them how it was
that in so dark a street they could tell that the animals
which had bitten them were indeed rats. Howbeit
for some time no one could be found who could say
more than what he had been told, and since this was
not evidence, the Town Watch had good hopes that they
would not after all be forced to undertake this tedious
enterprise. But presently there came before
them one who said that he had himself seen the rat
which had bitten him, by the light of an old man’s
lanthorn. When the Town Watch heard this they
were vexed, for they knew that if this were true they
would now be forced to prosecute the arduous undertaking,
and they said:
“Bring in this old man!”
Cethru was brought before them trembling.
“What is this we hear, old man,
about your lanthorn and the rat? And in the
first place, what were you doing in the Vita Publica
at that time of night?”
Cethru answered: “I were just passin’
with my lanthorn!”
“Tell us did you see the rat?”
Cethru shook his head: “My lanthorn seed
the rat, maybe!” he muttered.
“Old owl!” said the Captain
of the Watch: “Be careful what you say!
If you saw the rat, why did you then not aid this
unhappy citizen who was bitten by it first,
to avoid that rodent, and subsequently to slay it,
thereby relieving the public of a pestilential danger?”
Cethru looked at him, and for some
seconds did not reply; then he said slowly: “I
were just passin’ with my lanthorn.”
“That you have already told
us,” said the Captain of the Watch; “it
is no answer.”
Cethru’s leathern cheeks became
wine-coloured, so desirous was he to speak, and so
unable. And the Watch sneered and laughed, saying:
“This is a fine witness.”
But of a sudden Cethru spoke:
“What would I be duin’ killin’
rats; tidden my business to kill rats.”
The Captain of the Watch caressed
his beard, and looking at the old man with contempt,
said:
“It seems to me, brothers, that
this is an idle old vagabond, who does no good to
any one. We should be well advised, I think,
to prosecute him for vagrancy. But that is not
at this moment the matter in hand. Owing to
the accident scarcely fortunate of
this old man’s passing with his lanthorn, it
would certainly appear that citizens have been bitten
by rodents. It is then, I fear, our duty to
institute proceedings against those poisonous and
violent animals.”
And amidst the sighing of the Watch, it was so resolved.
Cethru was glad to shuffle away, unnoticed,
from the Court, and sitting down under a camel-date
tree outside the City Wall, he thus reflected:
“They were rough with me!
I done nothin’, so far’s I can see!”
And a long time he sat there with
the bunches of the camel-dates above him, golden as
the sunlight. Then, as the scent of the lyric-flowers,
released by evening, warned him of the night dropping
like a flight of dark birds on the plain, he rose
stiffly, and made his way as usual toward the Vita
Publica.
He had traversed but little of that
black thoroughfare, holding his lanthorn at the level
of his breast, when the sound of a splash and cries
for help smote his long, thin ears. Remembering
how the Captain of the Watch had admonished him, he
stopped and peered about, but owing to his proximity
to the light of his own lanthorn he saw nothing.
Presently he heard another splash and the sound of
blowings and of puffings, but still unable to see
clearly whence they came, he was forced in bewilderment
to resume his march. But he had no sooner entered
the next bend of that obscure and winding avenue than
the most lamentable, lusty cries assailed him.
Again he stood still, blinded by his own light.
Somewhere at hand a citizen was being beaten, for
vague, quick-moving forms emerged into the radiance
of his lanthorn out of the deep violet of the night
air. The cries swelled, and died away, and swelled;
and the mazed Cethru moved forward on his way.
But very near the end of his first traversage, the
sound of a long, deep sighing, as of a fat man in spiritual
pain, once more arrested him.
“Drat me!” he thought,
“this time I will see what ’tis,”
and he spun round and round, holding his lanthorn
now high, now low, and to both sides. “The
devil an’ all’s in it to-night,”
he murmured to himself; “there’s some’at
here fetchin’ of its breath awful loud.”
But for his life he could see nothing, only that
the higher he held his lanthorn the more painful grew
the sound of the fat but spiritual sighing. And
desperately, he at last resumed his progress.
On the morrow, while he still slept
stretched on his straw pallet, there came to him a
member of the Watch.
“Old man, you are wanted at
the Court House; rouse up, and bring your lanthorn.”
Stiffly Cethru rose.
“What be they wantin’ me fur now, mester?”
“Ah!” replied the Watchman,
“they are about to see if they can’t put
an end to your goings-on.”
Cethru shivered, and was silent.
Now when they reached the Court House
it was patent that a great affair was forward; for
the Judges were in their robes, and a crowd of advocates,
burgesses, and common folk thronged the careen, lofty
hall of justice.
When Cethru saw that all eyes were
turned on him, he shivered still more violently, fixing
his fascinated gaze on the three Judges in their emerald
robes.
“This then is the prisoner,”
said the oldest of the Judges; “proceed with
the indictment!”
A little advocate in snuff-coloured
clothes rose on little legs, and commenced to read:
“Forasmuch as on the seventeenth
night of August fifteen hundred years since the Messiah’s
death, one Celestine, a maiden of this city, fell
into a cesspool in the Vita Publica, and
while being quietly drowned, was espied of the burgess
Pardonix by the light of a lanthorn held by the old
man Cethru; and, forasmuch as, plunging in, the said
Pardonix rescued her, not without grave risk of life
and the ruin, of his clothes, and to-day lies ill
of fever; and forasmuch as the old man Cethru was the
cause of these misfortunes to the burgess Pardonix,
by reason of his wandering lanthorn’s showing
the drowning maiden, the Watch do hereby indict, accuse,
and otherwise place charge upon this Cethru of ‘Vagabondage
without serious occupation.’
“And, forasmuch as on this same
night the Watchman Filepo, made aware, by the light
of this said Cethru’s lanthorn, of three sturdy
footpads, went to arrest them, and was set on by the
rogues and well-nigh slain, the Watch do hereby indict,
accuse, and otherwise charge upon Cethru complicity
in this assault, by reasons, namely, first, that he
discovered the footpads to the Watchman and the Watchman
to the footpads by the light of his lanthorn; and,
second, that, having thus discovered them, he stood
idly by and gave no assistance to the law.
“And, forasmuch as on this same
night the wealthy burgess Pranzo, who, having
prepared a banquet, was standing in his doorway awaiting
the arrival of his guests, did see, by the light of
the said Cethru’s lanthorn, a beggar woman and
her children grovelling in the gutter for garbage,
whereby his appetite was lost completely; and, forasmuch
as he, Pranzo, has lodged a complaint against
the Constitution for permitting women and children
to go starved, the Watch do hereby indict, accuse,
and otherwise make charge on Cethru of rebellion and
of anarchy, in that wilfully he doth disturb good
citizens by showing to them without provocation disagreeable
sights, and doth moreover endanger the laws by causing
persons to desire to change them.
“These be the charges, reverend Judges, so please
you!”
And having thus spoken, the little advocate resumed
his seat.
Then said the oldest of the Judges:
“Cethru, you have heard; what answer do you
make?”
But no word, only the chattering of teeth, came from
Cethru.
“Have you no defence?” said the Judge:
“these are grave accusations!”
Then Cethru spoke:
“So please your Highnesses,” he said,
“can I help what my lanthorn sees?”
And having spoken these words, to
all further questions he remained more silent than
a headless man.
The Judges took counsel of each other,
and the oldest of them thus addressed himself to Cethru:
“If you have no defence, old
man, and there is no one will say a word for you,
we can but proceed to judgment.”
Then in the main aisle of the Court there rose a youthful
advocate.
“Most reverend Judges,”
he said in a mellifluous voice, clearer than the fluting
of a bell-bird, “it is useless to look for words
from this old man, for it is manifest that he himself
is nothing, and that his lanthorn is alone concerned
in this affair. But, reverend Judges, bethink
you well: Would you have a lanthorn ply a trade
or be concerned with a profession, or do aught indeed
but pervade the streets at night, shedding its light,
which, if you will, is vagabondage? And, Sirs,
upon the second count of this indictment: Would
you have a lanthorn dive into cesspools to rescue
maidens? Would you have a lanthorn to beat footpads?
Or, indeed, to be any sort of partisan either of the
Law or of them that break the Law? Sure, Sirs,
I think not. And as to this third charge of
fostering anarchy let me but describe the trick of
this lanthorn’s flame. It is distilled,
most reverend Judges, of oil and wick, together with
that sweet secret heat of whose birth no words of mine
can tell. And when, Sirs, this pale flame has
sprung into the air swaying to every wind, it brings
vision to the human eye. And, if it be charged
on this old man Cethru that he and his lanthorn by
reason of their showing not only the good but the
evil bring no pleasure into the world, I ask, Sirs,
what in the world is so dear as this power to see whether
it be the beautiful or the foul that is disclosed?
Need I, indeed, tell you of the way this flame spreads
its feelers, and delicately darts and hovers in the
darkness, conjuring things from nothing? This
mechanical summoning, Sirs, of visions out of blackness
is benign, by no means of malevolent intent; no more
than if a man, passing two donkeys in the road, one
lean and the other fat, could justly be arraigned
for malignancy because they were not both fat.
This, reverend Judges, is the essence of the matter
concerning the rich burgess, Pranzo, who, on account
of the sight he saw by Cethru’s lanthorn, has
lost the equilibrium of his stomach. For, Sirs,
the lanthorn did but show that which was there, both
fair and foul, no more, no less; and though it is
indeed true that Pranzo is upset, it was not
because the lanthorn maliciously produced distorted
images, but merely caused to be seen, in due proportions,
things which Pranzo had not seen before.
And surely, reverend Judges, being just men, you would
not have this lanthorn turn its light away from what
is ragged and ugly because there are also fair things
on which its light may fall; how, indeed, being a
lanthorn, could it, if it would? And I would
have you note this, Sirs, that by this impartial discovery
of the proportions of one thing to another, this lanthorn
must indeed perpetually seem to cloud and sadden those
things which are fair, because of the deep instincts
of harmony and justice planted in the human breast.
However unfair and cruel, then, this lanthorn may
seem to those who, deficient in these instincts, desire
all their lives to see naught but what is pleasant,
lest they, like Pranzo, should lose their appetites it
is not consonant with equity that this lanthorn should,
even if it could, be prevented from thus mechanically
buffeting the holiday cheek of life. I would
think, Sirs, that you should rather blame the queazy
state of Pranzo’s stomach. The old man
has said that he cannot help what his lanthorn sees.
This is a just saying. But if, reverend Judges,
you deem this equipoised, indifferent lanthorn to
be indeed blameworthy for having shown in the same
moment, side by side, the skull and the fair face,
the burdock and the tiger-lily, the butterfly and
toad, then, most reverend Judges, punish it, but do
not punish this old man, for he himself is but a flume
of smoke, thistle down dispersed nothing!”
So saying, the young advocate ceased.
Again the three Judges took counsel
of each other, and after much talk had passed between
them, the oldest spoke:
“What this young advocate has
said seems to us to be the truth. We cannot
punish a lanthorn. Let the old man go!”
And Cethru went out into the sunshine . . . .
Now it came to pass that the Prince
of Felicitas, returning from his journey, rode once
more on his amber-coloured steed down the Vita
Publica.
The night was dark as a rook’s
wing, but far away down the street burned a little
light, like a red star truant from heaven. The
Prince riding by descried it for a lanthorn, with
an old man sleeping beside it.
“How is this, Friend?”
said the Prince. “You are not walking as
I bade you, carrying your lanthorn.”
But Cethru neither moved nor answered:
“Lift him up!” said the Prince.
They lifted up his head and held the
lanthorn to his closed eyes. So lean was that
brown face that the beams from the lanthorn would not
rest on it, but slipped past on either side into the
night. His eyes did not open. He was dead.
And the Prince touched him, saying:
“Farewell, old man! The lanthorn is still
alight. Go, fetch me another one, and let him
carry it!” 1909.