Looking back to those days of old,
ere the gate shut behind me, I can see now that to
children with a proper equipment of parents these things
would have worn a different aspect. But to those
whose nearest were aunts and uncles, a special attitude
of mind may be allowed. They treated us, indeed,
with kindness enough as to the needs of the flesh,
but after that with indifference (an indifference,
as I recognise, the result of a certain stupidity),
and therewith the commonplace conviction that your
child is merely animal. At a very early age I
remember realising in a quite impersonal and kindly
way the existence of that stupidity, and its tremendous
influence in the world; while there grew up in me,
as in the parallel case of Caliban upon Setebos, a
vague sense of a ruling power, wilful and freakish,
and prone to the practice of vagaries “just
choosing so:” as, for instance, the giving
of authority over us to these hopeless and incapable
creatures, when it might far more reasonably have
been given to ourselves over them. These elders,
our betters by a trick of chance, commanded no respect,
but only a certain blend of envy of their
good luck and pity for their
inability to make use of it. Indeed, it was one
of the most hopeless features in their character (when
we troubled ourselves to waste a thought on them:
which wasn’t often) that, having absolute licence
to indulge in the pleasures of life, they could get
no good of it. They might dabble in the pond
all day, hunt the chickens, climb trees in the most
uncompromising Sunday clothes; they were free to issue
forth and buy gunpowder in the full eye of the sun free
to fire cannons and explode mines on the lawn:
yet they never did any one of these things. No
irresistible Energy haled them to church o’ Sundays;
yet they went there regularly of their own accord,
though they betrayed no greater delight in the experience
than ourselves.
On the whole, the existence of these
Olympians seemed to be entirely void of interests,
even as their movements were confined and slow, and
their habits stereotyped and senseless. To anything
but appearances they were blind. For them the
orchard (a place elf-haunted, wonderful!) simply produced
so many apples and cherries: or it didn’t,
when the failures of Nature were not infrequently
ascribed to us. They never set foot within fir-wood
or hazel-copse, nor dreamt of the marvels hid therein.
The mysterious sources sources as of old
Nile that fed the duck-pond had no magic
for them. They were unaware of Indians, nor recked
they anything of bisons or of pirates (with pistols!),
though the whole place swarmed with such portents.
They cared not about exploring for robbers’
caves, nor digging for hidden treasure. Perhaps,
indeed, it was one of their best qualities that they
spent the greater part of their time stuffily indoors.
To be sure, there was an exception
in the curate, who would receive unblenching the information
that the meadow beyond the orchard was a prairie studded
with herds of buffalo, which it was our delight, moccasined
and tomahawked, to ride down with those whoops that
announce the scenting of blood. He neither laughed
nor sneered, as the Olympians would have done; but
possessed of a serious idiosyncrasy, he would contribute
such lots of valuable suggestion as to the pursuit
of this particular sort of big game that, as it seemed
to us, his mature age and eminent position could scarce
have been attained without a practical knowledge of
the creature in its native lair. Then, too, he
was always ready to constitute himself a hostile army
or a band of marauding Indians on the shortest possible
notice: in brief, a distinctly able man, with
talents, so far as we could judge, immensely above
the majority. I trust he is a bishop by this
time, he had all the necessary qualifications,
as we knew.
These strange folk had visitors sometimes, stiff
and colourless Olympians like themselves, equally
without vital interests and intelligent pursuits:
emerging out of the clouds, and passing away again
to drag on an aimless existence somewhere out of our
ken. Then brute force was pitilessly applied.
We were captured, washed, and forced into clean collars:
silently submitting, as was our wont, with more contempt
than anger. Anon, with unctuous hair and faces
stiffened in a conventional grin, we sat and listened
to the usual platitudes. How could reasonable
people spend their precious time so? That was
ever our wonder as we bounded forth at last to
the old clay-pit to make pots, or to hunt bears among
the hazels.
It was incessant matter for amazement
how these Olympians would talk over our heads during
meals, for instance of this or the other
social or political inanity, under the delusion that
these pale phantasms of reality were among the importances
of life. We illuminati, eating silently, our
heads full of plans and conspiracies, could have told
them what real life was. We had just left it
outside, and were all on fire to get back to it.
Of course we didn’t waste the revelation on them;
the futility of imparting our ideas had long been demonstrated.
One in thought and purpose, linked by the necessity
of combating one hostile fate, a power antagonistic
ever, a power we lived to evade, we
had no confidants save ourselves. This strange
anæmic order of beings was further removed from us,
in fact, than the kindly beasts who shared our natural
existence in the sun. The estrangement was fortified
by an abiding sense of injustice, arising from the
refusal of the Olympians ever to defend, retract,
or admit themselves in the wrong, or to accept similar
concessions on our part. For instance, when I
flung the cat out of an upper window (though I did
it from no ill-feeling, and it didn’t hurt the
cat), I was ready, after a moment’s reflection,
to own I was wrong, as a gentleman should. But
was the matter allowed to end there? I trow not.
Again, when Harold was locked up in his room all day,
for assault and battery upon a neighbour’s pig, an
action he would have scorned, being indeed on the
friendliest terms with the porker in question, there
was no handsome expression of regret on the discovery
of the real culprit. What Harold had felt was
not so much the imprisonment, indeed he
had very soon escaped by the window, with assistance
from his allies, and had only gone back in time for
his release, as the Olympian habit.
A word would have set all right; but of course that
word was never spoken.
Well! The Olympians are all past
and gone. Somehow the sun does not seem to shine
so brightly as it used; the trackless meadows of old
time have shrunk and dwindled away to a few poor acres.
A saddening doubt, a dull suspicion, creeps over me.
Et in Arcadia ego, I certainly did once
inhabit Arcady. Can it be I too have become an
Olympian?