In the midst of the extreme weariness
and depression which had followed those last days,
Cornelius, then, as it happened, on a journey and
travelling near the place, finding traces of him, had
become his guest at White-nights. It was just
then that Marius felt, as he had never done before,
the value to himself, the overpowering charm, of his
friendship. “More than brother!” — he
felt — like a son also!” contrasting
the fatigue of soul which made himself in effect an
older man, with the irrepressible youth of his companion.
For it was still the marvellous hopefulness of Cornelius,
his seeming prerogative over the future, that determined,
and kept alive, all other sentiment concerning him.
A new hope had sprung up in the world of which he,
Cornelius, was a depositary, which he was to bear onward
in it. Identifying himself with Cornelius in
so dear a friendship, through him, Marius seemed to
touch, to ally himself to, actually to become
a possessor of the coming world; even as happy parents
reach out, and take possession of it, in and through
the survival of their children. For in these
days their intimacy had grown very close, as they
moved hither and thither, leisurely, among the country-places
thereabout, Cornelius being on his way back to Rome,
till they came one evening to a little town (Marius
remembered that he had been there on his first journey
to Rome) which had even then its church and legend — the
legend and holy relics of the martyr Hyacinthus, a
young Roman soldier, whose blood had stained the soil
of this place in the reign of the emperor Trajan.
The thought of that so recent death,
haunted Marius through the night, as if with audible
crying and sighs above the restless wind, which came
and went around their lodging. But towards dawn
he slept heavily; and awaking in broad daylight, and
finding Cornelius absent, set forth to seek him.
The plague was still in the place — had indeed
just broken out afresh; with an outbreak also of cruel
superstition among its wild and miserable inhabitants.
Surely, the old gods were wroth at the presence of
this new enemy among them! And it was no ordinary
morning into which Marius stepped forth. There
was a menace in the dark masses of hill, and motionless
wood, against the gray, although apparently unclouded
sky. Under this sunless heaven the earth
itself seemed to fret and fume with a heat of its
own, in spite of the strong night-wind. And
now the wind had fallen.
Marius felt that he breathed some
strange heavy fluid, denser than any common air.
He could have fancied that the world had sunken in
the night, far below its proper level, into some close,
thick abysm of its own atmosphere. The Christian
people of the town, hardly less terrified and overwrought
by the haunting sickness about them than their pagan
neighbours, were at prayer before the tomb of the martyr;
and even as Marius pressed among them to a place beside
Cornelius, on a sudden the hills seemed to roll like
a sea in motion, around the whole compass of the horizon.
For a moment Marius supposed himself attacked with
some sudden sickness of brain, till the fall of a great
mass of building convinced him that not himself but
the earth under his feet was giddy. A few moments
later the little marketplace was alive with the rush
of the distracted inhabitants from their tottering
houses; and as they waited anxiously for the second
shock of earthquake, a long-smouldering suspicion
leapt precipitately into well-defined purpose, and
the whole body of people was carried forward towards
the band of worshippers below. An hour later,
in the wild tumult which followed, the earth had been
stained afresh with the blood of the martyrs Felix
and Faustinus — Flores apparuerunt
in terra nostra! — and their brethren,
together with Cornelius and Marius, thus, as it had
happened, taken among them, were prisoners, reserved
for the action of the law. Marius and his friend,
with certain others, exercising the privilege of their
rank, made claim to be tried in Rome, or at least
in the chief town of the district; where, indeed, in
the troublous days that had now begun, a legal process
had been already instituted. Under the care
of a military guard the captives were removed on the
same day, one stage of their journey; sleeping, for
security, during the night, side by side with their
keepers, in the rooms of a shepherd’s deserted
house by the wayside.
It was surmised that one of the prisoners
was not a Christian: the guards were forward
to make the utmost pecuniary profit of this circumstance,
and in the night, Marius, taking advantage of the loose
charge kept over them, and by means partly of a large
bribe, had contrived that Cornelius, as the really
innocent person, should be dismissed in safety on
his way, to procure, as Marius explained, the proper
means of defence for himself, when the time of trial
came.
And in the morning Cornelius in fact
set forth alone, from their miserable place of detention.
Marius believed that Cornelius was to be the husband
of Cecilia; and that, perhaps strangely, had but added
to the desire to get him away safely. — We
wait for the great crisis which is to try what
is in us: we can hardly bear the pressure of our
hearts, as we think of it: the lonely wrestler,
or victim, which imagination foreshadows to us, can
hardly be one’s self; it seems an outrage of
our destiny that we should be led along so gently and
imperceptibly, to so terrible a leaping-place in the
dark, for more perhaps than life or death. At
last, the great act, the critical moment itself comes,
easily, almost unconsciously. Another motion
of the clock, and our fatal line — the “great
climacteric point” — has been passed,
which changes ourselves or our lives. In one
quarter of an hour, under a sudden, uncontrollable
impulse, hardly weighing what he did, almost as a
matter of course and as lightly as one hires a bed
for one’s night’s rest on a journey, Marius
had taken upon himself all the heavy risk of the position
in which Cornelius had then been — the long
and wearisome delays of judgment, which were possible;
the danger and wretchedness of a long journey in this
manner; possibly the danger of death. He had
delivered his brother, after the manner he had sometimes
vaguely anticipated as a kind of distinction in his
destiny; though indeed always with wistful calculation
as to what it might cost him: and in the first
moment after the thing was actually done, he felt only
satisfaction at his courage, at the discovery of his
possession of “nerve.”
Yet he was, as we know, no hero, no
heroic martyr — had indeed no right
to be; and when he had seen Cornelius depart, on his
blithe and hopeful way, as he believed, to become
the husband of Cecilia; actually, as it had happened,
without a word of farewell, supposing Marius was almost
immediately afterwards to follow (Marius indeed having
avoided the moment of leave-taking with its possible
call for an explanation of the circumstances), the
reaction came. He could only guess, of course,
at what might really happen. So far, he had but
taken upon himself, in the stead of Cornelius, a certain
amount of personal risk; though he hardly supposed
himself to be facing the danger of death. Still,
especially for one such as he, with all the sensibilities
of which his whole manner of life had been but a promotion,
the situation of a person under trial on a criminal
charge was actually full of distress. To him,
in truth, a death such as the recent death of those
saintly brothers, seemed no glorious end. In
his case, at least, the Martyrdom, as it was called — the
overpowering act of testimony that Heaven had come
down among men — would be but a common execution:
from the drops of his blood there would spring no
miraculous, poetic flowers; no eternal aroma would
indicate the place of his burial; no plenary grace,
overflowing for ever upon those who might stand around
it. Had there been one to listen just then, there
would have come, from the very depth of his desolation,
an eloquent utterance at last, on the irony
of men’s fates, on the singular accidents of
life and death.
The guards, now safely in possession
of whatever money and other valuables the prisoners
had had on them, pressed them forward, over the rough
mountain paths, altogether careless of their sufferings.
The great autumn rains were falling. At night
the soldiers lighted a fire; but it was impossible
to keep warm. From time to time they stopped
to roast portions of the meat they carried with them,
making their captives sit round the fire, and pressing
it upon them. But weariness and depression of
spirits had deprived Marius of appetite, even if the
food had been more attractive, and for some days he
partook of nothing but bad bread and water.
All through the dark mornings they dragged over boggy
plains, up and down hills, wet through sometimes with
the heavy rain. Even in those deplorable circumstances,
he could but notice the wild, dark beauty of those
regions — the stormy sunrise, and placid
spaces of evening. One of the keepers, a very
young soldier, won him at times, by his simple kindness,
to talk a little, with wonder at the lad’s half-conscious,
poetic delight in the adventures of the journey.
At times, the whole company would lie down for rest
at the roadside, hardly sheltered from the storm;
and in the deep fatigue of his spirit, his old longing
for inopportune sleep overpowered him. — Sleep
anywhere, and under any conditions, seemed just
then a thing one might well exchange the remnants
of one’s life for.
It must have been about the fifth
night, as he afterwards conjectured, that the soldiers,
believing him likely to die, had finally left him
unable to proceed further, under the care of some country
people, who to the extent of their power certainly
treated him kindly in his sickness. He awoke
to consciousness after a severe attack of fever, lying
alone on a rough bed, in a kind of hut. It seemed
a remote, mysterious place, as he looked around in
the silence; but so fresh — lying, in fact,
in a high pasture-land among the mountains — that
he felt he should recover, if he might but just lie
there in quiet long enough. Even during those
nights of delirium he had felt the scent of the new-mown
hay pleasantly, with a dim sense for a moment that
he was lying safe in his old home. The sunlight
lay clear beyond the open door; and the sounds of
the cattle reached him softly from the green places
around. Recalling confusedly the torturing hurry
of his late journeys, he dreaded, as his consciousness
of the whole situation returned, the coming of the
guards. But the place remained in absolute stillness.
He was, in fact, at liberty, but for his own disabled
condition. And it was certainly a genuine clinging
to life that he felt just then, at the very bottom
of his mind. So it had been, obscurely, even
through all the wild fancies of his delirium, from
the moment which followed his decision against
himself, in favour of Cornelius.
The occupants of the place were to
be heard presently, coming and going about him on
their business: and it was as if the approach
of death brought out in all their force the merely
human sentiments. There is that in death which
certainly makes indifferent persons anxious to forget
the dead: to put them — those aliens — away
out of their thoughts altogether, as soon as may be.
Conversely, in the deep isolation of spirit which
was now creeping upon Marius, the faces of these people,
casually visible, took a strange hold on his affections;
the link of general brotherhood, the feeling of human
kinship, asserting itself most strongly when it was
about to be severed for ever. At nights he would
find this face or that impressed deeply on his fancy;
and, in a troubled sort of manner, his mind would
follow them onwards, on the ways of their simple,
humdrum, everyday life, with a peculiar yearning to
share it with them, envying the calm, earthy cheerfulness
of all their days to be, still under the sun, though
so indifferent, of course, to him! — as if
these rude people had been suddenly lifted into some
height of earthly good-fortune, which must needs isolate
them from himself.
Tristem neminen fecit+ — he
repeated to himself; his old prayer shaping itself
now almost as his epitaph. Yes! so much the very
hardest judge must concede to him. And
the sense of satisfaction which that thought left
with him disposed him to a conscious effort of recollection,
while he lay there, unable now even to raise his head,
as he discovered on attempting to reach a pitcher
of water which stood near. Revelation, vision,
the discovery of a vision, the seeing of a perfect
humanity, in a perfect world — through all
his alternations of mind, by some dominant instinct,
determined by the original necessities of his own
nature and character, he had always set that above
the having, or even the doing, of anything. For,
such vision, if received with due attitude on his
part, was, in reality, the being something, and as
such was surely a pleasant offering or sacrifice to
whatever gods there might be, observant of him.
And how goodly had the vision been! — one
long unfolding of beauty and energy in things, upon
the closing of which he might gratefully utter his
“Vixi!"+ Even then, just ere his eyes
were to be shut for ever, the things they had seen
seemed a veritable possession in hand; the persons,
the places, above all, the touching image of Jesus,
apprehended dimly through the expressive faces, the
crying of the children, in that mysterious drama,
with a sudden sense of peace and satisfaction now,
which he could not explain to himself. Surely,
he had prospered in life! And again, as of old,
the sense of gratitude seemed to bring with it the
sense also of a living person at his side.
And yet it was the fact, again, that
the vision of men and things, actually revealed to
him on his way through the world, had developed, with
a wonderful largeness, the faculties to which it addressed
itself, his general capacity of vision; and in that
too was a success, in the view of certain, very definite,
well-considered, undeniable possibilities. Throughout
that elaborate and lifelong education of his receptive
powers, he had ever kept in view the purpose of preparing
himself towards possible further revelation some day — towards
some ampler vision, which should take up into
itself and explain this world’s delightful shows,
as the scattered fragments of a poetry, till then
but half-understood, might be taken up into the text
of a lost epic, recovered at last. At this moment,
his unclouded receptivity of soul, grown so steadily
through all those years, from experience to experience,
was at its height; the house ready for the possible
guest; the tablet of the mind white and smooth, for
whatsoever divine fingers might choose to write there.
And was not this precisely the condition, the attitude
of mind, to which something higher than he, yet akin
to him, would be likely to reveal itself; to which
that influence he had felt now and again like a friendly
hand upon his shoulder, amid the actual obscurities
of the world, would be likely to make a further explanation?
Surely, the aim of a true philosophy must lie, not
in futile efforts towards the complete accommodation
of man to the circumstances in which he chances to
find himself, but in the maintenance of a kind of
candid discontent, in the face of the very highest
achievement; the unclouded and receptive soul quitting
the world finally, with the same fresh wonder with
which it had entered the world still unimpaired, and
going on its blind way at last with the consciousness
of some profound enigma in things, as but a pledge
of something further to come. Marius seemed
to understand how one might look back upon life here,
and its excellent visions, as but the portion
of a race-course left behind him by a runner still
swift of foot: for a moment he experienced a
singular curiosity, almost an ardent desire to enter
upon a future, the possibilities of which seemed so
large.
And just then, again amid the memory
of certain touching actual words and images, came
the thought of the great hope, that hope against hope,
which, as he conceived, had arisen — Lux sedentibus
in tenebris+ — upon the aged world; the hope
Cornelius had seemed to bear away upon him in his
strength, with a buoyancy which had caused Marius to
feel, not so much that by a caprice of destiny, he
had been left to die in his place, as that Cornelius
was gone on a mission to deliver him also from death.
There had been a permanent protest established in
the world, a plea, a perpetual after-thought, which
humanity henceforth would ever possess in reserve,
against any wholly mechanical and disheartening theory
of itself and its conditions. That was a thought
which relieved for him the iron outline of the horizon
about him, touching it as if with soft light from
beyond; filling the shadowy, hollow places to which
he was on his way with the warmth of definite affections;
confirming also certain considerations by which he
seemed to link himself to the generations to come
in the world he was leaving. Yes! through the
survival of their children, happy parents are able
to think calmly, and with a very practical affection,
of a world in which they are to have no direct share;
planting with a cheerful good-humour, the acorns they
carry about with them, that their grand-children may
be shaded from the sun by the broad oak-trees of the
future. That is nature’s way of easing
death to us. It was thus too, surprised, delighted,
that Marius, under the power of that new hope among
men, could think of the generations to come after
him. Without it, dim in truth as it was, he could
hardly have dared to ponder the world which limited
all he really knew, as it would be when he should have
departed from it. A strange lonesomeness, like
physical darkness, seemed to settle upon the thought
of it; as if its business hereafter must be, as far
as he was concerned, carried on in some inhabited,
but distant and alien, star. Contrariwise, with
the sense of that hope warm about him, he seemed to
anticipate some kindly care for himself; never to fail
even on earth, a care for his very body-that dear sister
and companion of his soul, outworn, suffering, and
in the very article of death, as it was now.
For the weariness came back tenfold;
and he had finally to abstain from thoughts like these,
as from what caused physical pain. And then, as
before in the wretched, sleepless nights of those forced
marches, he would try to fix his mind, as it were
impassively, and like a child thinking over the toys
it loves, one after another, that it may fall
asleep thus, and forget all about them the sooner,
on all the persons he had loved in life — on
his love for them, dead or living, grateful for his
love or not, rather than on theirs for him — letting
their images pass away again, or rest with him, as
they would. In the bare sense of having loved
he seemed to find, even amid this foundering of the
ship, that on which his soul might “assuredly
rest and depend.” One after another, he
suffered those faces and voices to come and go, as
in some mechanical exercise, as he might have repeated
all the verses he knew by heart, or like the telling
of beads one by one, with many a sleepy nod between-whiles.
For there remained also, for the old
earthy creature still within him, that great blessedness
of physical slumber. To sleep, to lose one’s
self in sleep — that, as he had always recognised,
was a good thing. And it was after a space of
deep sleep that he awoke amid the murmuring voices
of the people who had kept and tended him so carefully
through his sickness, now kneeling around his bed:
and what he heard confirmed, in the then perfect clearness
of his soul, the inevitable suggestion of his own
bodily feelings. He had often dreamt he was condemned
to die, that the hour, with wild thoughts of escape,
was arrived; and waking, with the sun all around him,
in complete liberty of life, had been full of gratitude
for his place there, alive still, in the land
of the living. He read surely, now, in the manner,
the doings, of these people, some of whom were passing
out through the doorway, where the heavy sunlight
in very deed lay, that his last morning was come, and
turned to think once more of the beloved. Often
had he fancied of old that not to die on a dark or
rainy day might itself have a little alleviating grace
or favour about it. The people around his bed
were praying fervently — Abi! Abi!
Anima Christiana!+ In the moments of his extreme
helplessness their mystic bread had been placed, had
descended like a snow-flake from the sky, between
his lips. Gentle fingers had applied to hands
and feet, to all those old passage-ways of the senses,
through which the world had come and gone for him,
now so dim and obstructed, a medicinable oil.
It was the same people who, in the gray, austere
evening of that day, took up his remains, and buried
them secretly, with their accustomed prayers; but
with joy also, holding his death, according to their
generous view in this matter, to have been of the
nature of martyrdom; and martyrdom, as the church had
always said, a kind of sacrament with plenary grace.
1881-1884.