GUESTS
“Your old
men shall dream dreams."+
It was with a feeling of half-humorous
concession to his own early boyish hero-worship, yet
with some sense of superiority in himself, seeing
his old curiosity grown now almost to indifference
when on the point of satisfaction at last, and upon
a juster estimate of its object, that he mounted to
the little town on the hillside, the foot-ways of
which were so many flights of easy-going steps gathered
round a single great house under shadow of the “haunted”
ruins of Cicero’s villa on the wooded heights.
He found a touch of weirdness in the circumstance
that in so romantic a place he had been bidden to meet
the writer who was come to seem almost like one of
the personages in his own fiction. As he turned
now and then to gaze at the evening scene through
the tall narrow openings of the street, up which the
cattle were going home slowly from the pastures
below, the Alban mountains, stretched between the
great walls of the ancient houses, seemed close at
hand — a screen of vaporous dun purple against
the setting sun — with those waves of surpassing
softness in the boundary lines which indicate volcanic
formation. The coolness of the little brown
market-place, for profit of which even the working-people,
in long file through the olive-gardens, were leaving
the plain for the night, was grateful, after the heats
of Rome. Those wild country figures, clad in
every kind of fantastic patchwork, stained by wind
and weather fortunately enough for the eye, under
that significant light inclined him to poetry.
And it was a very delicate poetry of its kind that
seemed to enfold him, as passing into the poet’s
house he paused for a moment to glance back towards
the heights above; whereupon, the numerous cascades
of the precipitous garden of the villa, framed in the
doorway of the hall, fell into a harmless picture,
in its place among the pictures within, and scarcely
more real than they — a landscape-piece,
in which the power of water (plunging into what unseen
depths!) done to the life, was pleasant, and without
its natural terrors.
At the further end of this bland apartment,
fragrant with the rare woods of the old inlaid panelling,
the falling of aromatic oil from the ready-lighted
lamps, the iris-root clinging to the dresses of the
guests, as with odours from the altars of the
gods, the supper-table was spread, in all the daintiness
characteristic of the agreeable petit-maitre, who
entertained. He was already most carefully dressed,
but, like Martial’s Stella, perhaps consciously,
meant to change his attire once and again during the
banquet; in the last instance, for an ancient vesture
(object of much rivalry among the young men of fashion,
at that great sale of the imperial wardrobes) a toga,
of altogether lost hue and texture. He wore it
with a grace which became the leader of a thrilling
movement then on foot for the restoration of that
disused garment, in which, laying aside the customary
evening dress, all the visitors were requested to appear,
setting off the delicate sinuosities and well-disposed
“golden ways” of its folds, with harmoniously
tinted flowers. The opulent sunset, blending
pleasantly with artificial light, fell across the quiet
ancestral effigies of old consular dignitaries,
along the wide floor strewn with sawdust of sandal-wood,
and lost itself in the heap of cool coronals,
lying ready for the foreheads of the guests on a sideboard
of old citron. The crystal vessels darkened
with old wine, the hues of the early autumn fruit — mulberries,
pomegranates, and grapes that had long been hanging
under careful protection upon the vines, were almost
as much a feast for the eye, as the dusky fires of
the rare twelve-petalled roses. A favourite
animal, white as snow, brought by one of the visitors,
purred its way gracefully among the wine-cups,
coaxed onward from place to place by those at table,
as they reclined easily on their cushions of German
eider-down, spread over the long-legged, carved couches.
A highly refined modification of the
acroama — a musical performance during
supper for the diversion of the guests — was
presently heard hovering round the place, soothingly,
and so unobtrusively that the company could not guess,
and did not like to ask, whether or not it had been
designed by their entertainer. They inclined
on the whole to think it some wonderful peasant-music
peculiar to that wild neighbourhood, turning, as it
did now and then, to a solitary reed-note, like a
bird’s, while it wandered into the distance.
It wandered quite away at last, as darkness with
a bolder lamplight came on, and made way for another
sort of entertainment. An odd, rapid, phantasmal
glitter, advancing from the garden by torchlight, defined
itself, as it came nearer, into a dance of young men
in armour. Arrived at length in a portico, open
to the supper-chamber, they contrived that their mechanical
march-movement should fall out into a kind of highly
expressive dramatic action; and with the utmost possible
emphasis of dumb motion, their long swords weaving
a silvery network in the air, they danced the Death
of Paris. The young Commodus, already an adept
in these matters, who had condescended to welcome
the eminent Apuleius at the banquet, had mysteriously
dropped from his place to take his share in the performance;
and at its conclusion reappeared, still wearing the
dainty accoutrements of Paris, including a breastplate,
composed entirely of overlapping tigers’ claws,
skilfully gilt. The youthful prince had lately
assumed the dress of manhood, on the return of the
emperor for a brief visit from the North; putting up
his hair, in imitation of Nero, in a golden box dedicated
to Capitoline Jupiter. His likeness to Aurelius,
his father, was become, in consequence, more striking
than ever; and he had one source of genuine interest
in the great literary guest of the occasion, in that
the latter was the fortunate possessor of a monopoly
for the exhibition of wild beasts and gladiatorial
shows in the province of Carthage, where he resided.
Still, after all complaisance to the
perhaps somewhat crude tastes of the emperor’s
son, it was felt that with a guest like Apuleius whom
they had come prepared to entertain as veritable connoisseurs,
the conversation should be learned and superior, and
the host at last deftly led his company round to literature,
by the way of bindings. Elegant rolls of manuscript
from his fine library of ancient Greek books passed
from hand to hand about the table. It was a sign
for the visitors themselves to draw their own choicest
literary curiosities from their bags, as their contribution
to the banquet; and one of them, a famous reader,
choosing his lucky moment, delivered in tenor voice
the piece which follows, with a preliminary query as
to whether it could indeed be the composition of Lucian
of Samosata,+ understood to be the great mocker of
that day: —
“What sound was that, Socrates?”
asked Chaerephon. “It came from the beach
under the cliff yonder, and seemed a long way off. — And
how melodious it was! Was it a bird, I wonder.
I thought all sea-birds were songless.”
“Aye! a sea-bird,” answered
Socrates, “a bird called the Halcyon, and has
a note full of plaining and tears. There is an
old story people tell of it. It was a mortal
woman once, daughter of Aeolus, god of the winds.
Ceyx, the son of the morning-star, wedded her in her
early maidenhood. The son was not less fair
than the father; and when it came to pass that he
died, the crying of the girl as she lamented his sweet
usage, was, Just that! And some while after,
as Heaven willed, she was changed into a bird.
Floating now on bird’s wings over the sea she
seeks her lost Ceyx there; since she was not able to
find him after long wandering over the land.”
“That then is the Halcyon — the
kingfisher,” said Chaerephon. “I
never heard a bird like it before. It has truly
a plaintive note. What kind of a bird is it,
Socrates?”
“Not a large bird, though she
has received large honour from the gods on account
of her singular conjugal affection. For whensoever
she makes her nest, a law of nature brings round what
is called Halcyon’s weather, — days
distinguishable among all others for their serenity,
though they come sometimes amid the storms of winter — days
like to-day! See how transparent is the sky above
us, and how motionless the sea! — like a
smooth mirror.”
True! A Halcyon day, indeed!
and yesterday was the same. But tell me, Socrates,
what is one to think of those stories which have been
told from the beginning, of birds changed into mortals
and mortals into birds? To me nothing seems
more incredible.”
“Dear Chaerephon,” said
Socrates, “methinks we are but half-blind judges
of the impossible and the possible. We try the
question by the standard of our human faculty, which
avails neither for true knowledge, nor for faith,
nor vision. Therefore many things seem to us
impossible which are really easy, many things unattainable
which are within our reach; partly through inexperience,
partly through the childishness of our minds.
For in truth, every man, even the oldest of us, is
like a little child, so brief and babyish are the
years of our life in comparison of eternity.
Then, how can we, who comprehend not the faculties
of gods and of the heavenly host, tell whether aught
of that kind be possible or no? — What a
tempest you saw three days ago! One trembles
but to think of the lightning, the thunderclaps, the
violence of the wind! You might have thought
the whole world was going to ruin. And then,
after a little, came this wonderful serenity of weather,
which has continued till to-day. Which do you
think the greater and more difficult thing to do:
to exchange the disorder of that irresistible whirlwind
to a clarity like this, and becalm the whole world
again, or to refashion the form of a woman into that
of a bird? We can teach even little children
to do something of that sort, — to take wax
or clay, and mould out of the same material many kinds
of form, one after another, without difficulty.
And it may be that to the Deity, whose power is too
vast for comparison with ours, all processes of that
kind are manageable and easy. How much wider
is the whole circle of heaven than thyself? — Wider
than thou canst express.
“Among ourselves also, how vast
the difference we may observe in men’s degrees
of power! To you and me, and many another like
us, many things are impossible which are quite easy
to others. For those who are unmusical, to play
on the flute; to read or write, for those who have
not yet learned; is no easier than to make birds of
women, or women of birds. From the dumb and
lifeless egg Nature moulds her swarms of winged creatures,
aided, as some will have it, by a divine and secret
art in the wide air around us. She takes
from the honeycomb a little memberless live thing;
she brings it wings and feet, brightens and beautifies
it with quaint variety of colour: — and Lo!
the bee in her wisdom, making honey worthy of the
gods.
“It follows, that we mortals,
being altogether of little account, able wholly to
discern no great matter, sometimes not even a little
one, for the most part at a loss regarding what happens
even with ourselves, may hardly speak with security
as to what may be the powers of the immortal gods
concerning Kingfisher, or Nightingale. Yet the
glory of thy mythus, as my fathers bequeathed it to
me, O tearful songstress! that will I too hand on
to my children, and tell it often to my wives, Xanthippe
and Myrto: — the story of thy pious love to
Ceyx, and of thy melodious hymns; and, above all,
of the honour thou hast with the gods!”
The reader’s well-turned periods
seemed to stimulate, almost uncontrollably, the eloquent
stirrings of the eminent man of letters then present.
The impulse to speak masterfully was visible, before
the recital was well over, in the moving lines about
his mouth, by no means designed, as detractors were
wont to say, simply to display the beauty of his teeth.
One of the company, expert in his humours, made ready
to transcribe what he would say, the sort of
things of which a collection was then forming, the
“Florida” or Flowers, so to call them,
he was apt to let fall by the way — no impromptu
ventures at random; but rather elaborate, carved ivories
of speech, drawn, at length, out of the rich treasure-house
of a memory stored with such, and as with a fine savour
of old musk about them. Certainly in this case,
as Marius thought, it was worth while to hear a charming
writer speak. Discussing, quite in our modern
way, the peculiarities of those suburban views, especially
the sea-views, of which he was a professed lover,
he was also every inch a priest of Aesculapius, patronal
god of Carthage. There was a piquancy in his
rococo, very African, and as it were perfumed personality,
though he was now well-nigh sixty years old, a mixture
there of that sort of Platonic spiritualism which can
speak of the soul of man as but a sojourner m the
prison of the body — a blending of that with
such a relish for merely bodily graces as availed
to set the fashion in matters of dress, deportment,
accent, and the like, nay! with something also which
reminded Marius of the vein of coarseness he had found
in the “Golden Book.” All this made
the total impression he conveyed a very uncommon one.
Marius did not wonder, as he watched him speaking,
that people freely attributed to him many of the marvellous
adventures he had recounted in that famous romance,
over and above the wildest version of his own
actual story — his extraordinary marriage,
his religious initiations, his acts of mad generosity,
his trial as a sorcerer.
But a sign came from the imperial
prince that it was time for the company to separate.
He was entertaining his immediate neighbours at the
table with a trick from the streets; tossing his olives
in rapid succession into the air, and catching them,
as they fell, between his lips. His dexterity
in this performance made the mirth around him noisy,
disturbing the sleep of the furry visitor: the
learned party broke up; and Marius withdrew, glad
to escape into the open air. The courtesans
in their large wigs of false blond hair, were lurking
for the guests, with groups of curious idlers.
A great conflagration was visible in the distance.
Was it in Rome; or in one of the villages of the
country? Pausing for a few minutes on the terrace
to watch it, Marius was for the first time able to
converse intimately with Apuleius; and in this moment
of confidence the “illuminist,” himself
with locks so carefully arranged, and seemingly so
full of affectations, almost like one of those light
women there, dropped a veil as it were, and appeared,
though still permitting the play of a certain element
of theatrical interest in his bizarre tenets, to be
ready to explain and defend his position reasonably.
For a moment his fantastic foppishness and his pretensions
to ideal vision seemed to fall into some intelligible
congruity with each other. In truth, it was
the Platonic Idealism, as he conceived it, which for
him literally animated, and gave him so lively an
interest in, this world of the purely outward aspects
of men and things. — Did material things,
such things as they had had around them all that evening,
really need apology for being there, to interest one,
at all? Were not all visible objects — the
whole material world indeed, according to the consistent
testimony of philosophy in many forms — “full
of souls”? embarrassed perhaps, partly imprisoned,
but still eloquent souls? Certainly, the contemplative
philosophy of Plato, with its figurative imagery and
apologue, its manifold aesthetic colouring, its measured
eloquence, its music for the outward ear, had been,
like Plato’s old master himself, a two-sided
or two-coloured thing. Apuleius was a Platonist:
only, for him, the Ideas of Plato were no creatures
of logical abstraction, but in very truth informing
souls, in every type and variety of sensible things.
Those noises in the house all supper-time, sounding
through the tables and along the walls: — were
they only startings in the old rafters, at the impact
of the music and laughter; or rather importunities
of the secondary selves, the true unseen selves, of
the persons, nay! of the very things around, essaying
to break through their frivolous, merely transitory
surfaces, to remind one of abiding essentials beyond
them, which might have their say, their judgment
to give, by and by, when the shifting of the meats
and drinks at life’s table would be over?
And was not this the true significance of the Platonic
doctrine? — a hierarchy of divine beings,
associating themselves with particular things and
places, for the purpose of mediating between God and
man — man, who does but need due attention
on his part to become aware of his celestial company,
filling the air about him, thick as motes in
the sunbeam, for the glance of sympathetic intelligence
he casts through it.
“Two kinds there are, of animated
beings,” he exclaimed: “Gods, entirely
differing from men in the infinite distance of their
abode, since one part of them only is seen by our
blunted vision — those mysterious stars! — in
the eternity of their existence, in the perfection
of their nature, infected by no contact with ourselves:
and men, dwelling on the earth, with frivolous and
anxious minds, with infirm and mortal members, with
variable fortunes; labouring in vain; taken altogether
and in their whole species perhaps, eternal; but,
severally, quitting the scene in irresistible succession.
“What then? Has nature
connected itself together by no bond, allowed itself
to be thus crippled, and split into the divine and
human elements? And you will say to me:
If so it be, that man is thus entirely exiled from
the immortal gods, that all communication is denied
him, that not one of them occasionally visits
us, as a shepherd his sheep — to whom shall
I address my prayers? Whom, shall I invoke as
the helper of the unfortunate, the protector of the
good?
“Well! there are certain divine
powers of a middle nature, through whom our aspirations
are conveyed to the gods, and theirs to us. Passing
between the inhabitants of earth and heaven, they carry
from one to the other prayers and bounties, supplication
and assistance, being a kind of interpreters.
This interval of the air is full of them! Through
them, all revelations, miracles, magic processes, are
effected. For, specially appointed members of
this order have their special provinces, with a ministry
according to the disposition of each. They go
to and fro without fixed habitation: or dwell
in men’s houses” —
Just then a companion’s hand
laid in the darkness on the shoulder of the speaker
carried him away, and the discourse broke off suddenly.
Its singular intimations, however, were sufficient
to throw back on this strange evening, in all its
detail — the dance, the readings, the distant
fire — a kind of allegoric expression:
gave it the character of one of those famous Platonic
figures or apologues which had then been in fact
under discussion. When Marius recalled its circumstances
he seemed to hear once more that voice of genuine
conviction, pleading, from amidst a scene at
best of elegant frivolity, for so boldly mystical
a view of man and his position in the world.
For a moment, but only for a moment, as he listened,
the trees had seemed, as of old, to be growing “close
against the sky.” Yes! the reception of
theory, of hypothesis, of beliefs, did depend a great
deal on temperament. They were, so to speak,
mere equivalents of temperament. A celestial
ladder, a ladder from heaven to earth: that was
the assumption which the experience of Apuleius had
suggested to him: it was what, in different forms,
certain persons in every age had instinctively supposed:
they would be glad to find their supposition accredited
by the authority of a grave philosophy. Marius,
however, yearning not less than they, in that hard
world of Rome, and below its unpeopled sky, for the
trace of some celestial wing across it, must still
object that they assumed the thing with too much facility,
too much of self-complacency. And his second
thought was, that to indulge but for an hour fantasies,
fantastic visions of that sort, only left the actual
world more lonely than ever. For him certainly,
and for his solace, the little godship for whom the
rude countryman, an unconscious Platonist, trimmed
his twinkling lamp, would never slip from the bark
of these immemorial olive-trees. — No! not
even in the wildest moonlight. For himself, it
was clear, he must still hold by what his eyes really
saw. Only, he had to concede also, that
the very boldness of such theory bore witness, at
least, to a variety of human disposition and a consequent
variety of mental view, which might — who
can tell? — be correspondent to, be defined
by and define, varieties of facts, of truths, just
“behind the veil,” regarding the world
all alike had actually before them as their original
premiss or starting-point; a world, wider, perhaps,
in its possibilities than all possible fancies concerning
it.