A FLOCK OF FLYING SWANS
One day (it was before he knew David
Cairns) Bedient picked up the Bhagavad Gita
from a book-stand in Shanghai. It was limp, little,
strong, and looked meaty. As he raised his eyes
wonderingly from a certain sentence, he encountered
the glance of the fat old German dealer.
“Will this little book stand
reading more than once, sir?” Bedient asked.
“Ja but vat a little-boy
question! Ven you haf read sefen times the year
for sefen years you a man vill haf become.”
Bedient had been through the Song
of the Divine One many times before he heard of it
from anyone else. He had liked to think of it
as a particular treasure which he shared with the
queer old German, sick with fat. Now, it was
the old Japanese sage who had turned the young man’s
mind to the comparative moderns Carlyle,
Emerson, Thoreau, and several others and
it was with a shock of joy he discovered that almost
all of these light-bringers had lived with his
little book. So queerly things happen....
However, the Bhagavad Gita gave him a brighter
sense of the world under his feet, of a Force other
than its own balance and momentum, and of its first
fruits the soul of man.... In the beginning
God created Heaven and Earth that morning
star of Hebrew revelation was not at all dimmed; indeed,
it shone with fairer lustre in the more spacious heavens
of the Farther East.
Directly from his old Japanese teacher,
and subtly from the Bhagavad Gita and the modern
prophets, Bedient felt strongly urged to India.
This culminated in 1903, when he was twenty-five years
old. Hatred of Russia was powerfully fomenting
through the Japanese nation at this time. Bedient
grew sick at the thought of the coming struggle, but
delayed leaving for several weeks, in the hope of seeing
David Cairns, who, surely enough, was one of the first
of the war-correspondents to reach Tokyo late that
year. Cairns had put on pounds and power, and
only Bedient knew at the end of certain fine days together,
that the beauty of their first relation had not returned
in its fullness.... They parted (a third time
during five years) in the wintry rain on the water-front
at Yokohama, Cairns remaining and Bedient taking ship
for Calcutta.
Up into the Punjab he went with the
new year; and there, all but lost trace of time and
the world. He seemed to have come home an
ineffable emotion. When they told him quite seriously
that the Ganges was sent from heaven, and had wandered
a thousand years in the hair of Shiv before flowing
down upon the plains with beauty and plenty and healing
for sin-spent man Bedient instantly comprehended
the meaning of the figure: that the hair of Shiv
was the Himalayas, whose peaks continually rape the
rain-clouds. And the lotos name, fragrance
and sight of this flower started a little
lyrical wheel tinkling in his mind, turning off snatches
of verses that sung themselves; and fluttering bits
of romance, half-religious and altogether impersonal;
and strange pictures, lovely, though all but effaced.
Indeed, he was one with the Hindus
in a love for the bees, the silence, the mountains,
rivers, the moon, and the heaven-protected cattle,
in whose great soft eyes he found the completion of
animal peace.... The legend that the bees had
come from Venus, with the perfect cereal, wheat, as
patterns of perfection from that farther evolved planet fascinated,
became the leit-motif of his thoughts for weeks.
Earth had earned a special dispensation, it was said,
and bright messengers came with a swarm and a sheaf,
each milléniums advanced beyond any species of
its kind here.
From a little boy he had loved the
bees. Afternoons long ago (this was clear to
him as the memory of that sinister hall-way of yellow-green
light which returned on the afternoon of the great
wind) he had lain upon the grass somewhere, and heard
the hum of the honey-gatherers in thistle and clover.
The hum was like the far singing of a child-choir,
and the dreamings it started then were altogether too
big for the memory mechanism of a little boy’s
head; but the vastness and wonder of those dreamings
left a kind of bushed beauty far back in his mind.
He had loved the bees as he had loved the Bhagavad
Gita, thinking it peculiarly his own attraction,
but when the world’s great poets and prophets
became known to him through their writings, he discovered,
again with glad emotion, that bees had stirred the
fancy of each, stimulated their conceptions of service
and communistic blessedness; furnished their symbols
for laws of beauty and cleanliness, brotherhood, race-spirit,
the excellence of sacrifice a thousand
perfect analogies to show the way of human ethics and
ideal performance.... But beyond all their service
to literature, he perceived that these masters among
men had loved the bees. This was the only
verb that conveyed Bedient’s feelings for them;
and he found that they literally swarmed through Hindu
simile in its expressions of song and story and faith.
Northward, he made his leisure way
almost to the borders of Kashmir, before he found
his place of abode Preshbend, a little town
of many Sikhs, which clung like a babe to the sloping
hip of a mountain. He was taken on by the English
of the forestry service, and liked the ranging life;
liked, too, the rare meetings with his fellow-workers
and superiors, quiet, steady-eyed men, quick-handed
and slow of speech. With all his growth and knowledge
of the finer sort, Bedient carried no equipment for
earning a living except through his hands.
There was no hesitation with him in making a choice between
patrolling a forest, and the columns of a ledger.
All the indoor ways of making money that intervene
between the artisan and artist were to him out of the
question. When asked his occupation, he had answered,
“Cook.”
One week in each month he spent in
the town, and he came to love Preshbend and the people;
the tall young men, many taller than he, and the great
lean-armed, gaunt-breasted Sikh women. The boys
were so studious, so simple and gentle, compared with
the few others he had known, and the women such adepts
at mothering! Then the shy, slender girls, impassable
ranges between him and any romantic sense; yet, he
was glad to be near them, glad to hear their voices
and their laughter in the evenings.... He loved
the long shadow of the mountains, the still dusty
roads where the cattle moved so softly that the dust
never rose above their knees; the smell of wood-smoke
in the dusk, the legends of the gods, scents of the
high forest, the thoughts which nourished his days
and nights, and the brilliant stars, so steady and
eternal, and so different from the steaming constellations
of Luzon; he loved it all, and saw these
things, as one home from bitter exile.
And then with the cool dark and the
mountain winds, after the long, pitiless day of fierce,
devouring sunlight, the moon glided over the fainting
world with peace and healing like an angel
over a battle-field.... The two are mystic in
every Indian ideal of beauty, and alike cosmic woman
and the moon.
There was a certain trail that rose
from Preshbend, and ended after an hour’s walk
in a high cliff of easy ascent. Bedient often
went there alone when the moon was full and
waited for her rising. At last through a rift
in the far mountains, a faint ghost would appear, and
waveringly whiten the glacial breast of old God-Mother the
highest peak in the vision of Preshbend. Just
a nucleus of light at first, like a shimmering mist,
but it steadied and brightened until that
snowy summit was configured in the midst of her lowlier
brethren on the borders of Kashmir and
Bedient, turning from his deep reflections, would
find the source of the miracle, trailing her glory
up from the South.
Often he lost the sense of personality
in these meditations. His eyes turned at first
upon that dead, dark mountain, which presently caught
the reflection of the moon (in itself a miracle of
loveliness); then the moon which held the reflection
of the hidden sun, which in its turn reflected the
power of All; and he, a bit of suppressed animation
among the rocks of the cliff, audaciously comprehending
that chain of reflections and adding his own!
The marvel of it all carried him a dimension beyond
the responsiveness of mere brain-tissue, and for hours
in which he was not Bedient, but one with some
Unity that swept over the pageant of the universe,
his body lay hunched and chill in the cold of the
heights.... That was his first departure, and
he was in his twenty-eighth year.
Another time, as he watched old God-Mother,
he suddenly felt himself an instrument upon
which played the awful yearning of the younger peoples
of Europe and America. Greatly startled, he saw
them hungering for this vastness, this beauty and
peace; yet enchanted among little things, condemned
to chattering and pecking at each other, and through
interminable centuries to tread dim hot ways of spite
and weariness, cruelty and nervous pain. He,
Bedient, had found peace here, but it was not for
him to take always. He seemed held by that awful
yearning across the world; as if he were an envoy commissioned
to find Content to bring back the secret
that would break their enchantment.... No, he
was not yet detached from his people; he could only
accept tentatively these mighty virtues of wonder and
silence, gird his loins with them and finally take
back the rich tidings.... Was he dwelling in
silence to walk in power over there? This excited
and puzzled him at first. Bedient as a bearer
of light was new....
Yet hunger was growing within for
his own people; a passion to tell them; rather to
make them see that all their aims and possessions were
not worth one moment, such as he had spent, watching
the breast of old God-Mother whiten, with the
consciousness of God walking in the mountain-winds,
the scent of camphor, lotos, sandal and wild-honey
in His garments. A passion, indeed, grew within
him to make his people see that real life has no concern
with wrestlings in fetid valleys, but up, up the rising
roads poised with faith, and laughing with
power until through a rift in the mountains,
they are struck by the light of God’s face,
and shine back like the peaks of Kashmir
to the moon.
And another night it came to him that
he had something to say to the women of his people.
This thought emerged clean-cut from the deeps of abstraction,
and he trembled before it, for his recent life had
kept him far apart from women. And now, the thought
occurred that he was better prepared to inspire women because
of this separateness. He had preserved the boyish
ideal of their glowing mystery, their lovely cosmic
magnetism. India had stimulated it. All the
lights of his mind had fallen upon this ideal, all
the colors of the spectrum and many from heaven certain
swift flashes of glory, such as are brought, in queer
angles of light, from a butterfly’s wing.
He had been mercifully spared from moving among the
infinitudes of small men who hold such a large
estimate of the incapacity and commonness of women....
Even among the Sikh mothers (Bedient did not dream
how his spirit prospered during these Indian years)
his ideal was strengthened. He found among the
mothers of the Punjab a finer courage than ever the
wars had shown him the courage that bends
and bears and an answering sweetness for
all the good that men brought to their feet....
So one night at last he found himself
thanking God in the great silence that
he could see the natural greatness of women; that he
was alive to help them; that he could pity those who
knew only the toiling, not the mystic, hands of women;
pity those and tell them who
knew her only as a sense creature.... And swiftly
he wanted to tell women how high he held
them that one man in the world had kept his vision of them brighter and brighter
in substance and spirit. He had the queer, almost feminine, sense, of
their needing to know this, and of impatience to give them their happiness.
Perhaps they did not continually hold this in mind; perhaps the men of their
world had taught them to forget.... They would be happier for his coming.
He would put into each womans heart as
only a man could do a quickened sense
of her incomparable importance; make her remember that
mothering is the loveliest of all the arts; that only
in the lower and savage orders of life the male is
ascendant; that as the human race evolves in the finer
regions of the spirit when growth becomes
centred in the ethereal dimension of the soul woman,
invariably a step nearer the great creative source,
must assume supremacy.... Among the dark mountains
the essence of all these thoughts came to him during
many nights.
He would make women happier by restoring
to them their own. He must show how
dreadful for them to forget for an instant that
they are the real inspirers of man; that they ignite
his every conception; that it is men who follow and
interpret, and the clumsy world is to blame because
the praise so often goes to the interpreter, and not
to the inspiration. But praise is a puny thing.
Women must see that they only are lovely who remain
true to their dreams, for of their dreams is made
the spiritual loaf, the real vitality of the race;
that by remaining true to their dreams, though starved
of heart, the sons that come to them will be the lovers
they dream of and bring the happiness they
missed, to the daughters of other women. For love
is spirit the stuff of dreams and
love is Giving.... He must bring to women again,
lest they forget, this word: that never yet has
man sung, painted, prophesied, made a woman happy,
nor in any way woven finer the spirit of his time,
but that God first covenanted with his mother for the
gift and, more often than not, the gift
was startled into its supreme expression by the daughter
of another.... All in a sentence, it summed at
last, to Bedient alone, a flaming sentence
for all women to hear: Only through the potential
greatness of women can come the militant greatness
of men.
And so things appeared unto him to
do, as he watched the miracle of the moon bringing
forth the linéaments of the old God-Mother;
and so the cliff became his Sinai. On this last
night, for a moment at least, he felt as must an immortal
lover who has seen clearly the way of chivalry the
task which was to be, as the Hindus say, the fruit
of his birth.... Thus he would go down, face
glowing with new and luminous resolves.... And
once dawn was breaking as he descended, and the whir
of wings aroused him. Looking upward he saw (as
did Another of visions), in the red beauty of morning a
flock of swans flying off to the South.
Gobind must not be forgotten old
Gobind, who appeared in Preshbend at certain seasons,
and sat down in the shade of a camphor-tree, old and
gnarled as he; but a sumptuous refuge, as, in truth
was Gobind in the spirit. The natives said that
the austerities of Gobind were the envy of the gods;
that he could hold still the blood in his veins from
dusk to dawn; and make the listener understand many
wonderful things about himself and the meaning of
life.
The language had come to Bedient marvellously.
Literally it flowed into his mind, as in the rains
a rising river finds its old bed of an earlier season.
“This is your home, Wanderer,”
Gobind told him. “Long have you travelled
to and fro and long still must you wander, but you
will come back again to the cool shadows, and to these ”
Gobind lifted his hand to point to the roof of the
world. The yellow cloth fell away from his arm,
which looked like a dead bough blackened from many
rains. “For these are your mountains and
you love these long shadows. All Asia and the
Islands you have searched for these shadows, and here
you are content, for your soul is Brahman....
But you are not ready for Home. You are not yet
tired. Long still must you wander. Some sin
of a former birth caused you to sink into the womb
of a woman of the younger peoples. You have yet
to return to them as one coming down from
the mountains, after the long summer, brings a song
and a story for the heat-sick people of the plains
to hear at evening
This was the substance of many talks.
It was always the same when Gobind shut his eyes.
“You say I shall come back here,
good Gobind?” Bedient asked.
“Yes, you will come back here to abandon the
body
“Alone?”
“Yes.”
Bedient was filled with grave questions.
One can always put a mystic meaning to the direct
saying of a Hindu holy man, but there seemed no equivocation
here. The young man was slow to believe that all
his dreaming must come to naught. It seemed as
if his whole inner life had been built about the dream
of a woman; and of late she had seemed nearer than
ever, and different from any woman, he had ever known the
mate of his mind and soul and flesh. For a long
time he progressed no farther than this, for falling
into his own thoughts, he would find only the aged
body of Gobind before him the rest having
stolen away on night-marches of deep moment, while
he, Bedient, had tried to realize his life loneliness.
At last he could think of nothing else throughout
the long day, and he went early in the semi-light and
sat before the holy man. The dusk darkened, and
a new moon rose, but Gobind did not rise to mere physical
consciousness that night, though Bedient sat very
still before him for hours. The bony knees of
the old ascetic, covered with dust, were moveless
as the black roots of the camphor-tree; and a dog
of the village sat afar off on his haunches and whined
at intervals, waiting for the white man to go, that
he might have the untouched supper, which a woman
of Preshbend had brought to Gobind’s begging-bowl.
And again the next night Bedient came,
but Gobind was away playing with the gods of his youth just
the old withered body there and the dog
whining.
But the third night, the eyes of Gobind filled with his young
friend
“You say, good father Gobind,”
Bedient said quickly, “that I shall come back
here alone to die?”
“Yes,” the Sannyasin
answered simply, but a moment later, he shivered,
and seemingly divined all that was in the young man’s
mind, for he added: “You will learn to
look within for the woman.... You would
not find favor in finding her without....
It is not for you the red desire of love!”
It was during these years in India
that Bedient began to put down the thoughts which
delighted him during the long rides through the forest;
and something of the thrill of his reflections, as
he watched old God-Mother from his cliff.
He found great delight in this, and his mind was integrated
by expression. He recalled many little pictures
of the early years not the actions, but
the reflections of action. It was fascinating.
He found that his journal would bulk big presently,
so he took to polishing as he went along; chose the
finest, toughest Indian parchment and wrote
finely as this print for it was clear to
him that he had entered upon what was to prove a life-habit.
The letters from Captain Carreras
had become more frequent in late years; in fact, there
was almost always a letter en route either from Preshbend
or Equatoria.... The Captain wanted him to come;
stronger and stronger became the call. So far
as money was concerned, he had done extraordinarily
well. He always wrote of this half-humorously....
At last when Bedient was beginning his seventh year
in the Punjab, there came a letter which held a plaint
not to be put aside.
Bedient was in his thirty-second year;
and just at this time old Gobind left his body for
a last time beneath the camphor-tree. The young
man had sat before him the night before, and the holy
man had told him in symbolism that the
poor murky river of his life had made its last bend
through the forests, and was swiftly flowing into the
sea of time and space. Though he sat long after
silence had settled down, Bedient did not know (so
softly and sweetly did the old saint depart) that the
Sannyasin was tranced in death instead of meditation.
It was not until the next morning, when he heard the
Sikh women of the village weeping one above
all that he understood. It was not
a shock of grief to these women, for such is their
depth that the little matters which concern all flesh
and which are inevitable, cannot be made much ado of.
Still it was feminine and beautiful to him, their weeping;
and possibly the one who wept loudest had mothered
old Gobind in her heart, and there was emptiness in
the thought that she could not fill his begging-bowl
again. Bedient, as well as others of the village,
knew that to Gobind, death was a long-awaited consummation;
that he was gone only from the physical eye of the
village. That missed him as did
Bedient, who had loved to sit at the fleshly feet of
the holy man.... But he loved all Preshbend,
too.
And at length, he set out on foot
for Lahore often looking back.