By Robert Hichens
On a windy night of Spring I sat by
a great fire that had been built by Moors on a plain
of Morocco under the shadow of a white city, and talked
with a fellow-countryman, stranger to me till that
day. We had met in the morning in a filthy alley
of the town, and had forgathered. He was a wanderer
for pleasure like myself, and, learning that he was
staying in a dreary hostelry haunted by fever, I invited
him to dine in my camp, and to pass the night in one
of the small peaked tents that served me and my Moorish
attendants as home. He consented gladly.
Dinner was over no bad one, for Moors can
cook, can even make delicious caramel pudding in desert
places and Mohammed, my stalwart valet
de chambre, had given us most excellent coffee.
Now we smoked by the great fire, looked up at the
marvellously bright stars, and told, as is the way
of travellers, tales of our wanderings. My companion,
whom I took at first to be a rather ironic, sceptical,
and by nature “unimaginative globe-trotter he
was a hard-looking, iron-grey man of middle-age related
the usual tiger story, the time-honoured elephant
anecdote, and a couple of snake yarns of no special
value, and I was beginning to fear that I should get
little entertainment from so prosaic a sportsman,
when I chanced to mention the desert.
“Ah!” said my guest, taking
his pipe from his mouth, “the desert is the
strangest thing in nature, as woman is the strangest
thing in human nature. And when you get them
together desert and woman by
Jove!”
He paused, then he shot a keen glance at me.
“Ever been in the Sahara?” he said.
I replied in the affirmative, but
added that I had as yet only seen the fringe of it.
“Biskra, I suppose,” he
rejoined, “and the nearest oasis, Sidi-Okba,
and so on?”
I nodded. I saw I was in for
another tale, and anticipated some history of shooting
exploits under the salt mountain of El Outaya.
“Well,” he continued,
“I know the Sahara pretty fairly, and about the
oddest thing I ever could believe in I heard of and
believed in there.”
“Something about gazelle?” I queried.
“Gazelle? No a woman!”
he replied..
As he spoke a Moor glided out of the
windy darkness, and threw an armful of dry reeds on
the fire. The flames flared up vehemently, and
I saw that the face of my companion had changed.
The hardness of it was smoothed away. Some memory,
that held its romance, sat with him.
“A woman,” he repeated,
knocking the ashes out of his pipe almost sentimentally “more
than that, a French woman of Paris, with the nameless
charm, the chic, the But
I’ll tell you. Some years ago three Parisians a
man, his wife, and her unmarried sister, a girl of
eighteen, with an angel and a devil in her dark beauty came
to a great resolve. They decided that they were
tired of the Francais, sick of the Bois, bored to
death with the boulevards, that they wanted to see
for themselves the famous French colonies which were
for ever being talked about in the Chamber. They
determined to travel. No sooner was the determination
come to than they were off. Hotel des
Colonies, Marseilles; steamboat, Le General
Chanzy; five o’clock on a splendid, sunny
afternoon Algiers, with its terraces, its
white villas, its palms, trees, and its Spahis!”
“But ” I began.
He foresaw my objection.
“There were Spahis, and
that’s a point of my story. Some fête was
on in the town while our Parisians were there.
All the African troops were out Zouaves,
chasseurs, tirailleurs. The Governor went
in procession to perform some ceremony, and in front
of his carriage rode sixteen Spahis probably
got in from that desert camp of theirs near El Outaya.
All this was long before the Tsar visited Paris, and
our Parisians had never before seen the dashing Spahis,
had only heard of them, of their magnificent horses,
their turbans and flowing Arab robes, their gorgeous
figures, lustrous eyes, and diabolic horsemanship.
You know how they ride? No cavalry to touch them not
even the Cossacks! Well, our French friends were
struck. The unmarried sister, more especially,
was bouleversee by these glorious demons.
As they caracoled beneath the balcony on which she
was leaning she clapped her little hands, in their
white kid gloves, and threw down a shower of roses.
The falling flowers frightened the horses. They
pranced, bucked, reared. One Spahi a
great fellow, eyes like a desert eagle, grand aquiline
profile on whom three roses had dropped,
looked up, saw mademoiselle call her Valerie gazing
down with her great, bright eyes they were
deuced fine eyes, by Jove! ”
“You’ve seen her?” I asked.
“ and flashed a smile
at her with his white teeth. It was his last day
in the service. He was in grand spirits.
‘Mem Dieu! Mais quelles dents!’ she
sang out. Her people laughed at her. The
Spahi looked at her again not smiling.
She shrank back on the balcony. Then his place
was taken by the Governor small imperial,
chapeau de forme, evening dress, landau and
pair. Mademoiselle was desolee. Why
couldn’t civilised men look like Spahis?
Why were all Parisians commonplace? Why why?
Her sister and brother-in-law called her the savage
worshipper, and took her down to the cafe on the terrace
to dine. And all through dinner mademoiselle
talked of the beaux Spahis in
the plural, with a secret reservation in her heart.
After Algiers our Parisians went by way of Constantine
to Biskra. Now they saw desert for the first
time the curious iron-grey, velvety-brown,
and rose-pink mountains; the nomadic Arabs camping
in their earth-coloured tents patched with rags; the
camels against the skyline; the everlasting sands,
broken here and there by the deep green shadows of
distant oases, where the close-growing palms, seen
from far off, give to the desert almost the effect
that clouds give to Cornish waters. At Biskra
mademoiselle oh! what she must have looked
like under the mimosa-trees before the Hotel de l’Oasis!------”
“Then you’ve seen her,” I began.
“ mademoiselle became
enthusiastic again, and, almost before they knew it,
her sister and brother-in-law were committed to a desert
expedition, were fitted out with a dragoman, tents,
mules the whole show, in fact and
one blazing hot day found themselves out in that sunshine you
know it with Biskra a green shadow on that
sea, the mountains behind the sulphur springs turning
from bronze to black-brown in the distance, and the
table flatness of the desert stretching ahead of them
to the limits of the world and the judgment day.”
My companion paused, took a flaming
reed from the fire, put it to his pipe bowl, pulled
hard at his pipe all the time staring straight
before him, as if, among the glowing logs, he saw
the caravan of the Parisians winding onward across
the desert sands. Then he turned to me, sighed,
and said:
“You’ve seen mirage?”
“Yes,” I answered.
“Have you noticed that in mirage
the things one fancies one sees generally appear in
large numbers buildings crowded as in towns,
trees growing together as in woods, men shoulder to
shoulder in large companies?”
My experience of mirage in the desert was so, and
I acknowledged it.
“Have you ever seen in a mirage a solitary figure?”
he continued.
I thought for a moment. Then I replied in the
negative.
“No more have I,” he said.
“And I believe it’s a very rare occurrence.
Now mark the mirage that showed itself to mademoiselle
on the first day of the desert journey of the Parisians.
She saw it on the northern verge of the oasis of Sidi-Okba,
late in the afternoon. As they journeyed Tahar,
their dragoman he had applied for the post,
and got it by the desire of mademoiselle, who admired
his lithe bearing and gorgeous aplomb Tahar
suddenly pulled up his mule, pointed with his brown
hand to the horizon, and said in French:
“‘There is mirage! Look! There
is the mirage of the great desert!’
“Our Parisians, filled with
excitement, gazed above the pointed ears of their
beasts, over the shimmering waste. There, beyond
the palms of the oasis, wrapped in a mysterious haze,
lay the mirage. They looked at it in silence.
Then Mademoiselle cried, in her little bird’s
clear voice:
“‘Mirage! But surely he’s real?’
“‘What does mademoiselle see?’ asked
Tahar quickly.
“’Why, a sort of faint
landscape, through which a man an Arab,
I suppose is riding, towards Sidi what
is it? Sidi-Okba! He’s got something
in front of him, hanging across his saddle.’
“Her relations looked at her in amazement.
“‘I only see houses standing on the edge
of water,’ said her sister.
“‘And I!’ cried the husband.
“‘Houses and water,’
assented Tahar. ’It is always so in the
mirage of Sidi-Okba.’
“‘I see no houses, no
water,’ cried mademoiselle, straining her eyes.
’The Arab rides fast, like the wind. He
is in a hurry. One would think he was being pursued.
Why, now he’s gone!’
“She turned to her companions.
They saw still the fairy houses of the mirage standing
in the haze on the edge of the fairy water.
“‘But,’ mademoiselle
said impatiently, ’there’s nothing at all
now only sand.’
“‘Mademoiselle dreams,’
said Tahar. ‘The mirage is always there.’
“They rode forward. That
night they camped near Sidi-Okba. At dinner,
while the stars came out, they talked of the mirage,
and mademoiselle still insisted that it was a mirage
of a horseman bearing something before him on his
saddle-bow, and riding as if for life. And Tahar
said again:
“‘Mademoiselle dreams!’
“As he spoke he looked at her
with a mysterious intentness, which she noticed.
That night, in her little camp-bed, round which the
desert winds blew mildly, she did indeed dream.
And her dream was of the magic forms that ride on
magic horses through mirage.
“The next day, at dawn, the
caravan of the Parisians went on its way, winding
farther into the desert. In leaving Sidi-Okba
they left behind them the last traces of civilisation the
French man and woman who keep the auberge in
the orange garden there. To-day, as they journeyed,
a sense of deep mystery flowed upon the heart of mademoiselle.
She felt that she was a little cockle-shell of a boat
which, accustomed hitherto only to the Seine, now
set sail upon a mighty ocean. The fear of the
Sahara came upon her.”
My companion paused. His face was grave, almost
stern.
“And her relations?” I asked. “Did
they feel ”
“Haven’t an idea what they felt,”
he answered curtly.
“But how do you know that mademoiselle
“You’ll understand at
the end of the story. As they journeyed in the
sun across the endless flats for the mountains
had vanished now, and nothing broke the level of the
sand mademoiselle’s gaiety went from
her. Silent was the lively, chattering tongue
that knew the jargon of cities, the gossip of the
Plage. She was oppressed. Tahar rode close
at her side. He seemed to have taken her under
his special protection. Far before them rode
the attendants, chanting deep love songs in the sun.
The sound of those songs seemed like the sound of the
great desert singing of its wild and savage love to
the heart of mademoiselle. At first her brother-in-law
and sister bantered her on her silence, but Tahar
stopped them, with a curious authority.
“‘The desert speaks to
mademoiselle,’ he said in her hearing. ’Let
her listen.’
“He watched her continually
with his huge eyes, and she did not mind his glance,
though she began to feel irritated and restless under
the observation of her relations.
“Towards noon Tahar again described
mirage. As he pointed it out he stared fixedly
at mademoiselle.
“The two other Parisians exclaimed
that they saw forest trees, a running stream, a veritable
oasis, where they longed to rest and eat their dejeuner.
“‘And mademoiselle?’ said Tahar.
‘What does she see?’
“She was gazing into the distance.
Her face was very pale, and for a moment she did not
answer. Then she said:
“’I see again the Arab
bearing the burden before him on the saddle. He
is much clearer than yesterday. I can almost see
his face ’
“She paused. She was trembling.
“’But I cannot see what
he carries. It seems to float on the wind, like
a robe, or a woman’s dress. Ah! mon Dieu!
how fast he rides!’
“She stared before her as if
fascinated, and following with her eyes some rapidly-moving
object. Suddenly she shut her eyes.
“‘He’s gone!’ she said.
“‘And now mademoiselle sees?’
said Tahar.
“She opened her eyes.
“‘Nothing.’
“‘Yet the mirage is still there,’
he said.
“‘Valerie,’ cried
her sister, ’are you mad that you see what no
one else can see, and cannot see what all else see?”
“‘Am I mad, Tahar?’ she said gravely,
almost timidly, to the dragoman.
“And the fear of the Sahara came again upon
her.
“‘Mademoiselle sees what
she must,’ he answered. ’The desert
speaks to the heart of mademoiselle.’
“That night there was moon.
Mademoiselle could not sleep. She lay in her
narrow bed and thought of the figure in the mirage,
while the moonbeams stole in between the tent pegs
to keep her company. She thought of second sight,
of phantoms, and of wraiths. Was this riding Arab,
whom she alone could see, a phantom of the Sahara,
mysteriously accompanying the caravan, and revealing
himself to her through the medium of the mirage as
if in a magic mirror? She turned restlessly upon
her pillow, saw the naughty moonbeams, got up, and
went softly to the tent door. All the desert
was bathed in light. She gazed out as a mariner
gazes out over the sea. She heard jackals yelping
in the distance, peevish in their insomnia, and fancied
their voices were the voices of desert demons.
As she stood there she thought of the figure in the
mirage, and wondered if mirage ever rises at night if,
by chance, she might see it now. And, while she
stood wondering, far away across the sand there floated
up a silvery haze, like a veil of spangled tissue exquisite
for a ball robe, she said long after! and
in this haze she saw again the phantom Arab galloping
upon his horse. But now he was clear in the moon.
Furiously he rode, like a thing demented in a dream,
and as he rode he looked back over his shoulder, as
if he feared pursuit. Mademoiselle could see
his fierce eyes, like the eyes of a desert eagle that
stares unwinking at the glaring African sun.
He urged on his fleet horse. She could hear now
the ceaseless thud of its hoofs upon the hard sand
as it drew nearer and nearer. She could see the
white foam upon its steaming flanks, and now at last
she knew that the burden which the Arab bore across
his saddle and supported with his arms was a woman.
Her robe flew out upon the wind; her dark, loose hair
streamed over the breast of the horseman; her face
was hidden against his heart; but mademoiselle saw
his face, uttered a cry, and shrank back against the
canvas of the tent.
“For it was the face of the
Spahi who had ridden in the procession of the Governor of
the Spahi to whom she had thrown the roses from the
balcony of Algiers.
“As she cried out the mirage
faded, the Arab vanished, the thud of the horse’s
hoofs died in her ears, and Tahar, the dragoman, glided
round the tent, and stood before her. His eyes
gleamed in the moonlight like ebon jewels.
“‘Hush!’ he whispered, ‘mademoiselle
sees the mirage?’
“Mademoiselle could not speak.
She stared into the eyes of Tahar, and hers were dilated
with wonder.
“He drew nearer to her.
“‘Mademoiselle has seen again the horseman
and his burden.’
“She bowed her head. All
things seemed dream-like to her. Tahar’s
voice was low and monotonous, and sounded far away.
“‘It is fate,’ he said. He
paused, gazing upon her.
“‘In the tents they all
sleep,’ he murmured. ’Even the watchman
sleeps, for I have given him a powder of hashish,
and hashish gives long dreams long dreams.’
“From beneath his robe he drew
a small box, opened it, and showed to mademoiselle
a dark brown powder, which he shook into a tiny cup
of water.
“‘Mademoiselle shall drink,
as the watchman has drunk,’ he said ’shall
drink and dream.’
“He held the cup to her lips,
and she, fascinated by his eyes, as by the eyes of
a mesmerist, could not disobey him. She swallowed
the hashish, swayed, and fell forward into his arms.
“A moment later, across the
spaces of the desert, whitened by the moon, rode the
figure mademoiselle had seen in the mirage. Upon
his saddle he bore a dreaming woman. And in the
ears of the woman through all the night beat the thunderous
music of a horse’s hoofs spurning the desert
sand. Mademoiselle had taken her place in the
vision which she no longer saw.”
My companion paused. His pipe
had gone out. He did not relight it, but sat
looking at me in silence.
“The Spahi?” I asked.
“Had claimed the giver of the roses.”
“And Tahar?”
“The shots he fired after the
Spahi missed fire. Yet Tahar was a notable shot.”
“A strange tale,” I said. “How
did you come to hear it?”
“A year ago I penetrated very
far into the Sahara on a sporting expedition.
One day I came upon an encampment of nomads. The
story was told me by one of them as we sat in the
low doorway of an earth-coloured tent and watched
the sun go down.”
“Told you by an Arab?”
He shook his head.
“By whom, then?”
“By a woman with a clear little
bird’s voice, with an angel and a devil in her
dark beauty, a woman with the gesture of Paris the
grace, the diablerie of Paris.”
Light broke on me.
“By mademoiselle!” I exclaimed.
“Pardon,” he answered; “by madame.”
“She was married?”
“To the figure in the mirage; and she was content.”
“Content!” I cried.
“Content with her two little
dark children dancing before her in the twilight,
content when the figure of the mirage galloped at evening
across the plain, shouting an Eastern love song, with
a gazelle instead of a woman slung
across his saddle-bow. Did I not say that, as
the desert is the strangest thing in nature, so a
woman is the strangest thing in human nature?
Which heart is most mysterious?”
“Its heart?” I said.
“Or the heart of mademoiselle?”
“I give the palm to the latter.”
“And I,” he answered,
taking off his wide-brimmed hat “I
gave it when I saluted her as madame before the
tent door, out there in the great desert.”