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The Glory Of The Conquered
part three   Chapter XXXIX. Ash Heap and Rose Jar
Susan Glaspell
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       As she broke then to the sobs for which he had hoped, something of tremendous force stirred within the man; and he felt that if he could bring her from the outer darkness where she had been carried, back to the things which were her soul's own, that his own life, his whole life, with all of the dark things through which it had passed, would have found justification. He had tried to save Karl, and failed. But there was left Ernestine. And it seemed to him--he saw it simply, directly, unquestioningly--that after all he would not have failed Karl if he could do what it was in his heart to do now for her.
       Looking at her bowed head he saw it all--the complete overthrow, the rich field of life rendered barren waste. Barren waste--but was that true for Ernestine? Did there not remain for her the scent of the field? The memory of that glorious, luxuriant growth? With him barren waste--but for her did there not grow in the field of life some things which were everlasting? With the quickness with which he saw everything he saw that it was the picture of his own barrenness could show her most surely the things which for her remained.
       He drew back from the thought as one draws away from the rude touch upon a wound. Lay bare the scars of his life that another profit by their ugliness? Years of habit were against it; everything fundamentally himself was against it. But he was a man who had never yet shrunk from the thing he saw was right to do. The cost of an accomplishment never deterred him from a thing he saw must be accomplished. With each second of listening to her sobs, he was becoming once more the man who masters, the man ruthless and unsparing in his purposefulness.
       "Ernestine," he began, and his voice was very strange, for it knew it was to carry things it had never carried before, "you and I are similarly placed in that we have both lost the great thing of life. But there is something remains to each of us. Life has left something to us both. To you it has left a rose jar. To me--a heap of ashes."
       It came with the moment's need. It comprehended it so well the channels long closed seemed of themselves to open. In the clearness with which he saw it, the fullness with which he felt it, he lost himself.
       "Do you know that you have no right to cry out against life? Do you know that there are men and women who would lay down their lives--yes, and give up their immortal souls--for hours which you have had? Do you know that you have no right to say Karl Hubers was mocked by fate, made sport of, buffetted about? Do you know,"--his face went white as he said this, slowly--"that I would be a thousand times willing to give up my two eyes--yes, and lay down my life--just to know, as he knew, that love was great and life was good?"
       The tears remained undried upon her cheek. He held her.
       "Look deeper. There is another way to read Karl's life--a deeper truth than those truths you have been seeing.
       "Ernestine, we all dream of love; we all desire it. It is only at rare, rare times it comes as it came to you. And I say to you--and I mean it from the bottom of my heart--that if you had been forced to give up your love in the first hour of its fulfillment, for all that you should thank God through the remainder of your life that it had been yours. For you had it!--and nothing, loss, death, defeat, disappointment of every kind, can strip from your soul the consciousness that once, no matter for how short a time, love in its fullness and perfection was yours. Long, lonely years may come, and all hard things may come, but through it all the thing to keep your soul in tune is the memory of some one perfect hour."
       Stillness followed that, the stillness which was silence. She had not moved.
       "You dreamed your dream,"--and in his voice now the beautiful things of appreciation and understanding. "I know your dream. You dreamed of growing old together; of taking from life everything there was together; of achieving to the uttermost; of rejoicing in each other's victories, growing more and more close together. I know your dream--a beautiful dream. Giving up some things as the changing years do their work, and taking on the other things, the more quiet, in fact finer things, that come with the years. Oh, yes--don't think I do not know that dream. To walk together down the years, meet them fearlessly, gladly, in the thought that they but add to the fullness of your love--I know--I know. And now that it is not to be as you thought, you say life has left nothing to you; that you hate it; will have none of it. Oh, Ernestine, if you could only know how rich you are!"
       Then harshly, rudely, the change; the voice which had seemed to caress each word was now like a lash.
       "Suppose you didn't have the luxury of giving yourself up to your own heart? Suppose that every day and night of your life, you had to fight memory, knowing it held nothing for you but jeers and mockery and things too damnable for words! Suppose you had to fairly forbid yourself to think of the beautiful things of life! Suppose that what had been the most beautiful moments of your life were made, by memory, the most hideous! Suppose the memory of his kiss always brought with it the consciousness of his falseness; that his words of love never came back to you without the knowledge that he had been laughing at you in his heart all the time! Suppose you could never get away from the damning truth that what you gave from the depth of your heart was tossed aside with a laugh! Suppose you had given the great passion of your life, the best that was in you, to a liar and a hypocrite! Suppose you had been made a fool of!--easy game! Then what of life?--your belief in love?--thoughts of fate? Great God, woman, can't you see what you have got?"
       After the throbbing moment which followed that there came a great quiet; slowly passion settled to sadness. He seemed to have forgotten her, to be speaking instead to his own heart, as he said, very low, his voice touched with the tenderness of unrelinquished dreams: "To have had one hour--just one perfect hour, and then the memory of that untarnished forever--it would be enough."
       Her heart rushed passionately to its own defence; she wanted to tell him no! She wanted to tell him it was cruel to be permitted to live for a time in a beautiful country, only to be turned out into the dark. She wanted to tell him that to know love was to need it forever. But his head had fallen to his hand; he seemed entirely lost to her, and even now she knew his answer to what she would say. "But you had it," he would reply. "The cruel thing would be to awaken and find no such country had ever existed." They would get no closer than that, and with new passionateness her heart went out to Karl. Karl would understand it as it was to her!
       He too felt that they could come no closer than this. They sat there in the gathering twilight with their separate thoughts as souls sit together almost in the dark, seeing one another in shadow, across dim spaces.
       The tearing open of his heart had left him weakened with pain. Perhaps that was why he was so very tired, and perhaps it was because he was so tired that this thought of growing old came back to him. It seemed to him now, leaning back in his chair and filled with the things of which he had spoken, that almost as great as a living presence with which to share the years, would be that thing of growing old with a beautiful memory. It would be a supreme thing to have a hand in your hand, a face against your face, a heart against your heart as you stepped on into the years; but if that could not be, and perfection is not given freely in this life, surely it would keep the note of cheer in one's voice, the kindly gleam in one's eye, to bring with one into old age the memory of a perfect love. It would be lonely then when one sat in the twilight and dreamed--but what another loneliness! If instead of holding one's self away from one's own heart, one could turn to it with: "She loved me like that. Her arms have been about my neck in true affection; her whole being radiated love for me; she had no words to tell it and could tell it only with her eyes and with the richness and the lavishness of her kisses. She would have given up the world for me; she inspired me to my best deeds; she comforted me in my times of discouragement and rejoiced with me in my hours of cheer. She is not here now, and it is lonely, but she has left me, in spirit, the warmth of her presence, the consciousness that she loved me with a love in which there was no selfishness nor faltering, and the things she has left me I can carry through life and into eternity."
       And all of that was Ernestine's could she but see her way to take it!
       He knew that it was growing late. "I must go," he said, but still he sat there, knowing he had not finished what he had come to say. But need he say it? Would it avail anything? Must not all human souls work their own way through the darkness? And when the right word came, must it not come from Karl himself, through some memory, some strange breath of the spirit? He knew, but she would have to see it for herself. That each one's seeing it for one's self was what made life hard. Would there not surely come a day, somewhere in the upward scale, where souls could reach one another better than this?
       But he had stirred her; he knew that by the way she was looking at him now. Finally she asked, tremblingly, a little resentfully: "Dr. Parkman, what is it you would have me do?"
       "Do something with your life," was his prompt reply. "Help make it right for Karl."
       She caught that up breathlessly. "Make it right for Karl?"
       "You say he was always cut off just this side of achievement. Then you achieve something which will at least show what he was able to inspire."
       That sunk so deep that her face went very white.
       "But you do not understand," she whispered passionately. "You mean that I should paint--and I tell you I cannot. I tell you it is dead!"
       "Not necessarily that you should paint. Not just now, if you cannot. But come back into touch with life. Do something to force yourself back into it, and then let life itself show you that the other things are not dead after all."
       "But I do not want to!" came bitterly from her.
       "Sometimes," he said, with more of his usual manner, "we do things we do not want to, and through the doing of them, we get to want to. Do something!--whether you want to or not. Stop doing futile things and dwelling on the sense of their futility. Why, Ernestine, come up to the hospital and go to work as a nurse! Heaven knows I never expected to advise you to do that, but anything--painting pictures or scrubbing floors--that will bring you back to a sense of living--the obligations of life--show you that something is yours that life and death and hell can't take from you!"
       And still he sat there, thinking. In just a moment he must go--go away leaving her alone with the years which awaited her. For just an instant it seemed as though all of the past and all of the future were in his keeping. What word leave with her? He knew by her passionate breathing that he had reached her. And now he was going away. Could he have done more--reached deeper? In this, too, had he failed? What word leave with her? His heart was so full of many things that his mind did not know what to choose. He remembered the day she had come to him filled with the spirit to ride down an adverse fate and win triumph from defeat. Her splendid spirit then! Would that spirit ever come again? Could it?
       Karl was very close in those final moments, and even more close than Karl was the spirit of love. Many precious things seemed in his keeping just then.
       "Ernestine," he said at the last, and his face was white and his voice trembled, "you have known. It came to you. You had it. It came to you as June to the roses,--in season, right. I grant you it was short. I grant you it was hard to see it go. But you had it! Say that to yourself when you go to sleep at night. Say it to yourself when you wake in the morning. And some day you will come to see what it means just to know that you know, and then your understanding and your heart will go out to all who have never known. You will pity all who scoff and all who yearn, and you will say to yourself: 'The world needs to know more about love. More than knowledge or science or any other thing, the world needs more faith in love.' Then some day you will see that you not only know but have power to make it plain, and you will not hold back any longer then. And there is to be the real victory and completion of Karl Hubers' life!--there the real triumph over fate--that triumph of the spirit of love. I see it now. I see it all now. And my good-bye word to you is just this--I do not believe you are going to withhold from Karl the immortality which should be his."
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本书目录

part one
   Chapter I. Ernestine
   Chapter II. The Letter
   Chapter III. Karl
   Chapter IV. Facts and "Higher Truth"
   Chapter V. The Home-Coming
   Chapter VI. "Gloria Victis"
   Chapter VII. Ernestine in Her Studio
   Chapter VIII. Science, Art, and Love
   Chapter IX. As the Surgeon Saw It
   Chapter X. Karl in His Laboratory
   Chapter XI. Pictures in the Embers
   Chapter XII. A Warning and a Premonition
   Chapter XIII. An Uncrossed Bridge
   Chapter XIV. "To the Great Unwhimpering!"
   Chapter XV. The Verdict
   Chapter XVI. "Good Luck, Beason!"
   Chapter XVII. Distant Strains of Triumph
   Chapter XVIII. Telling Ernestine
   Chapter XIX. Into the Dark
part two
   Chapter XX. Marriage and Paper Bags
   Chapter XXI. Factory-Made Optimism
   Chapter XXII. A Blind Man's Twilight
   Chapter XXIII. Her Vision
   Chapter XXIV. Love Challenges Fate
   Chapter XXV. Dr. Parkman's Way
   Chapter XXVI. Old-Fashioned Love
   Chapter XXVII. Learning to be Karl's Eyes
   Chapter XXVIII. With Broken Sword
   Chapter XXIX. Unpainted Masterpieces
   Chapter XXX. Eyes for Two
   Chapter XXXI. Science and Super-Science
   Chapter XXXII. The Doctor Has His Way
   Chapter XXXIII. Love's Own Hour
   Chapter XXXIV. Almost Dawn
   Chapter XXXV. "Oh, Hurry--Hurry!"
   Chapter XXXVI. With the Outgoing Tide
part three
   Chapter XXXVII. Beneath Dead Leaves
   Chapter XXXVIII. Patchwork Quilts
   Chapter XXXIX. Ash Heap and Rose Jar
   Chapter XL. "Let There be Light"
   Chapter XLI. When the Tide Came In
   Chapter XLII. Work the Saviour