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Jurgen: A Comedy of Justice
Chapter 46. The Desire of Anaitis
James Branch Cabell
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       _ And again Koshchei waved his hand. Then came to Jurgen a woman who was strangely gifted and perverse. Her dark eyes glittered: upon her head was a net-work of red coral, with branches radiating downward, and her tunic was of two colors, being shot with black and crimson curiously mingled.
       And Anaitis also had forgotten Jurgen, or else she did not recognize him in this man of forty and something: and again belief awoke in Jurgen's heart that this was the only woman whom Jurgen had really loved, as he listened to Anaitis and to her talk of marvelous things.
       Of the lore of Thais she spoke, and of the schooling of Sappho, and of the secrets of Rhodope, and of the mourning for Adonis: and the refrain of all her talking was not changed. "For we have but a little while to live, and none knows his fate thereafter. So that a man possesses nothing certainly save a brief loan of his own body: and yet the body of man is capable of much curious pleasure. As thus and thus," says she. And the bright-colored pensive woman spoke with antique directness of matters that Jurgen, being no longer a scapegrace of twenty-one, found rather embarrassing.
       "Come, come!" thinks he, "but it will never do to seem provincial. I believe that I am actually blushing."
       Aloud he said: "Sweetheart, there was--why, not a half-hour since!--a youth who sought quite zealously for the over-mastering frenzies you prattle about. But, candidly, he could not find the flesh whose touch would rouse insanity. The lad had opportunities, too, let me tell you! Hah, I recall with tenderness the glitter of eyes and hair, and the gay garments, and the soft voices of those fond foolish women, even now. But he went from one pair of lips to another, with an ardor that was always half-feigned, and with protestations which were conscious echoes of some romance or other. Such escapades were pleasant enough: but they were not very serious, after all. For these things concerned his body alone: and I am more than an edifice of viands reared by my teeth. To pretend that what my body does or endures is of importance seems rather silly nowadays. I prefer to regard it as a necessary beast of burden which I maintain, at considerable expense and trouble. So I shall make no more pother about it."
       But then again Queen Anaitis spoke of marvelous things; and he listened, fair-mindedly; for the Queen spoke now of that which was hers to share with him.
       "Well, I have heard," says Jurgen, "that you have a notable residence in Cocaigne."
       "But that is only a little country place, to which I sometimes repair in summer, in order to live rustically. No, Jurgen, you must see my palaces. In Babylon I have a palace where many abide with cords about them and burn bran for perfume, while they await that thing which is to befall them. In Armenia I have a palace surrounded by vast gardens, where only strangers have the right to enter: they there receive a hospitality that is more than gallant. In Paphos I have a palace wherein is a little pyramid of white stone, very curious to see: but still more curious is the statue in my palace at Amathus, of a bearded woman, which displays other features that women do not possess. And in Alexandria I have a palace that is tended by thirty-six exceedingly wise and sacred persons, and wherein it is always night: and there folk seek for monstrous pleasures, even at the price of instant death, and win to both of these swiftly. Everywhere my palaces stand upon high places near the sea: so they are beheld from afar by those whom I hold dearest, my beautiful broad-chested mariners, who do not fear even me, but know that in my palaces they will find notable employment. For I must tell you of what is to be encountered within these places that are mine, and of how pleasantly we pass our time there." Then she told him.
       Now he listened more attentively than ever, and his eyes were narrowed, and his lips were lax and motionless and foolish-looking, and he was deeply interested. For Anaitis had thought of some new diversions since their last meeting: and to Jurgen, even at forty and something, this queen's voice was all a horrible and strange and lovely magic. "She really tempts very nicely, too," he reflected, with a sort of pride in her.
       Then Jurgen growled and shook himself, half angrily: and he tweaked the ear of Queen Anaitis.
       "Sweetheart," says he, "you paint a glowing picture: but you are shrewd enough to borrow your pigments from the day-dreams of inexperience. What you prattle about is not at all as you describe it. You forget you are talking to a widely married man of varied experience. Moreover, I shudder to think of what might happen if Lisa were to walk in unexpectedly. And for the rest, all this to-do over nameless delights and unspeakable caresses and other anonymous antics seems rather naive. My ears are beset by eloquent gray hairs which plead at closer quarters than does that fibbing little tongue of yours. And so be off with you!"
       With that Queen Anaitis smiled very cruelly, and she said: "Farewell to you, then Jurgen, for it is I that am leaving you forever. Henceforward you must fret away much sunlight by interminably shunning discomfort and by indulging tepid preferences. For I, and none but I, can waken that desire which uses all of a man, and so wastes nothing, even though it leave that favored man forever after like wan ashes in the sunlight. And with you I have no more concern, for it is I that am leaving you forever. Join with your graying fellows, then! and help them to affront the clean sane sunlight, by making guilds and laws and solemn phrases wherewith to rid the world of me. I, Anaitis, laugh, and my heart is a wave in the sunlight. For there is no power like my power, and no living thing which can withstand my power; and those who deride me, as I well know, are but the dead dry husks that a wind moves, with hissing noises, while I harvest in open sunlight. For I am the desire that uses all of a man: and it is I that am leaving you forever."
       Said Jurgen: "I could not see all this in you, not quite all this, because of a shadow that followed me. Now it is too late, and this is a sorrowful thing which is happening. I am become as a puzzled ghost who furtively observes the doings of loud-voiced ruddy persons: and I am compact of weariness and apprehension, for I no longer discern what thing is I, nor what is my desire, and I fear that I am already dead. So farewell to you, Queen Anaitis, for this, too, is a sorrowful thing and a very unfair thing that is happening."
       Thus he cried farewell to the Sun's daughter. And all the colors of her loveliness flickered and merged into the likeness of a tall thin flame, that aspired; and then this flame was extinguished. _
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本书目录

Preface
Chapter 1. Why Jurgen Did the Manly Thing
Chapter 2. Assumption of a Noted Garment
Chapter 3. The Garden between Dawn and Sunrise
Chapter 4. The Dorothy Who Did Not Understand
Chapter 5. Requirements of Bread and Butter
Chapter 6. Showing that Sereda Is Feminine
Chapter 7. Of Compromises on a Wednesday
Chapter 8. Old Toys and a New Shadow
Chapter 9. The Orthodox Rescue of Guenevere
Chapter 10. Pitiful Disguises of Thragnar
Chapter 11. Appearance of the Duke of Logreus
Chapter 12. Excursus of Yolande's Undoing
Chapter 13. Philosophy of Gogyrvan Gawr
Chapter 14. Preliminary Tactics of Duke Jurgen
Chapter 15. Of compromises in Glathion
Chapter 16. Divers Imbroglios of King Smoit
Chapter 17. About a Cock That Crowed Too Soon
Chapter 18. Why Merlin Talked in Twilight
Chapter 19. The Brown Man with Queer Feet
Chapter 20. Efficacy of Prayer
Chapter 21. How Anaitis Voyaged
Chapter 22. As to a Veil They Broke
Chapter 23. Shortcomings of Prince Jurgen
Chapter 24. Of Compromises in Cocaigne
Chapter 25. Cantraps of the Master Philologist
Chapter 26. In Time's Hour-Glass
Chapter 27. Vexatious Estate of Queen Helen
Chapter 28. Of Compromises in Leuke
Chapter 29. Concerning Horvendile's Nonsense
Chapter 30. Economics of King Jurgen
Chapter 31. The Fall of Pseudopolis
Chapter 32. Sundry Devices of the Philistines
Chapter 33. Farewell to Chloris
Chapter 34. How Emperor Jurgen Fared Infernally
Chapter 35. What Grandfather Satan Reported
Chapter 36. Why Coth was Contradicted
Chapter 37. Invention of the Lovely Vampire
Chapter 38. As to Applauded Precedents
Chapter 39. Of Compromises in Hell
Chapter 40. The Ascension of Pope Jurgen
Chapter 41. Of Compromises in Heaven
Chapter 42. Twelve That are Fretted Hourly
Chapter 43. Postures before a Shadow
Chapter 44. In the Manager's Office
Chapter 45. The Faith of Guenevere
Chapter 46. The Desire of Anaitis
Chapter 47. The Vision of Helen
Chapter 48. Candid Opinions of Dame Lisa
Chapter 49. Of the Compromise with Koshchei
Chapter 50. The Moment That Did Not Count