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Prisoner in Fairyland, A
CHAPTER XII
Algernon Blackwood
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       _ O star benignant and serene,
       I take the good to-morrow,
       That fills from verge to verge my dream,
       With all its joy and sorrow!
       The old sweet spell is unforgot
       That turns to June December;
       And, though the world remember not,
       Love, we would remember.
       _Life and Death_, W. E. HENLEY.
       And Rogers went over to unpack. It was soon done. He sat at his window
       in the carpenter's house and enjoyed the peace. The spell of evening
       stole down from the woods. London and all his strenuous life seemed
       very far away. Bourcelles drew up beside him, opened her robe, let
       down her forest hair, and whispered to him with her voice of many
       fountains....
       She lies just now within the fringe of an enormous shadow, for the sun
       has dipped behind the blue-domed mountains that keep back France.
       Small hands of scattered mist creep from the forest, fingering the
       vineyards that troop down towards the lake. A dog barks. Gygi, the
       gendarme, leaves the fields and goes home to take his uniform from its
       peg. Pere Langel walks among his beehives. There is a distant tinkling
       of cow-bells from the heights, where isolated pastures gleam like a
       patchwork quilt between the spread of forest; and farther down a train
       from Paris or Geneva, booming softly, leaves a trail of smoke against
       the background of the Alps where still the sunshine lingers.
       But trains, somehow, do not touch the village; they merely pass it.
       Busy with vines, washed by its hill-fed stream, swept by the mountain
       winds, it lies unchallenged by the noisy world, remote, un-noticed,
       half forgotten. And on its outskirts stands the giant poplar that
       guards it--_la sentinelle_ the peasants call it, because its lofty
       crest, rising to every wind, sends down the street first warning of
       any coming change. They see it bend or hear the rattle of its leaves.
       The _coup de Joran_, most sudden and devastating of mountain winds, is
       on the way from the precipice of the Creux du Van. It comes howling
       like artillery down the deep Gorges de l'Areuse. They run to fasten
       windows, collect the washing from roof and garden, drive the cattle
       into shelter, and close the big doors of the barns. The children clap
       their hands and cry to Gygi, 'Plus vite! Plus vite!' The lake turns
       dark. Ten minutes later it is raging with an army of white horses like
       the sea.
       Darkness drapes the village. It comes from the whole long line of
       Jura, riding its troop of purple shadows--slowly curtaining out the
       world. For the carpenter's house stands by itself, apart. Perched upon
       a knoll beside his little patch of vineyard, it commands perspective.
       From his upper window Rogers saw and remembered....
       High up against the fading sky ridges of limestone cliff shine out
       here and there, and upon the vast slopes of Boudry--_l'immense geant
       de Boudry_--lies a flung cloak of forest that knows no single seam.
       The smoke from _bucheron_ fires, joining the scarves of mist, weaves
       across its shoulder a veil of lace-like pattern, and at its feet, like
       some great fastening button, hides the village of the same name, where
       Marat passed his brooding youth. Its evening lights are already
       twinkling. They signal across the vines to the towers of Colombier,
       rising with its columns of smoke and its poplars against the sheet of
       darkening water--Colombier, in whose castle _milord marechal Keith_
       had his headquarters as Governor of the Principality of Neuchatel
       under the King of Prussia. And, higher up, upon the flank of wooded
       mountains, is just visible still the great red-roofed farm of
       Cotendard, built by his friend Lord Wemyss, another Jacobite refugee,
       who had strange parties there and entertained Jean Jacques Rousseau in
       his exile. La Citadelle in the village was the wing of another castle
       he began to build, but left unfinished.
       White in the gathering dusk, Rogers saw the strip of roadway where
       passed the gorgeous coach--_cette fameuse diligence du milord marshal
       Keith_--or more recent, but grimmer memory, where General Bourbaki's
       division of the French army, 80,000 strong, trailed in unspeakable
       anguish, hurrying from the Prussians. At Les Verrieres, upon the
       frontier, they laid down their arms, and for three consecutive days
       and nights the pitiful destitute procession passed down that strip of
       mountain road in the terrible winter of 1870-71.
       Some among the peasants still hear that awful tramping in their sleep:
       the kindly old _vigneron_ who stood in front of his chalet from dawn
       to sunset, giving each man bread and wine; and the woman who nursed
       three soldiers through black small-pox, while neighbours left food
       upon the wall before the house.... Memories of his boyhood crowded
       thick and fast. The spell of the place deepened about him with the
       darkness. He recalled the village postman--fragment of another
       romance, though a tattered and discredited one. For this postman was
       the descendant of that audacious pale-frenier who married Lord Wemyss'
       daughter, to live the life of peasants with her in a yet tinier hamlet
       higher up the slopes. If you asked him, he would proudly tell you,
       with his bullet-shaped, close-cropped head cocked impertinently on one
       side, how his brother, now assistant in a Paris shop, still owned the
       title of baron by means of which his reconciliated lordship sought
       eventually to cover up the unfortunate escapade. He would hand you
       English letters--and Scotch ones too!--with an air of covert insolence
       that was the joy of half the village. And on Sundays he was to be
       seen, garbed in knickerbockers, gaudy stockings, and sometimes high,
       yellowish spats, walking with his peasant girl along the very road his
       more spirited forbear covered in his runaway match....
       The night stepped down more quickly every minute from the heights.
       Deep-noted bells floated upwards to him from Colombier, bringing upon
       the evening wind some fragrance of these faded boyhood memories. The
       stars began to peep above the peaks and ridges, and the mountains of
       the Past moved nearer. A veil of gossamer rose above the tree-tops,
       hiding more and more of the landscape; he just could see the slim new
       moon dip down to drink from her own silver cup within the darkening
       lake. Workmen, in twos and threes, came past the little house from
       their toil among the vines, and fragments of the Dalcroze songs rose
       to his ear--songs that the children loved, and that he had not heard
       for nearly a quarter of a century. Their haunting refrains completed
       then the spell, for all genuine spells are set to some peculiar music
       of their own. These Dalcroze melodies were exactly right.... The
       figures melted away into the single shadow of the village street. The
       houses swallowed them, voices, footsteps, and all.
       And his eye, wandering down among the lights that twinkled against the
       wall of mountains, picked out the little ancient house, nestling so
       close beside the church that they shared a wall in common. Twenty-five
       years had passed since first he bowed his head beneath the wistaria
       that still crowned the Pension doorway. He remembered bounding up the
       creaking stairs. He felt he could still bound as swiftly and with as
       sure a step, only--he would expect less at the top now. More truly
       put, perhaps, he would expect less for himself. That ambition of his
       life was over and done with. It was for others now that his desires
       flowed so strongly. Mere personal aims lay behind him in a faded heap,
       their seductiveness exhausted.... He was a man with a Big Scheme now--
       a Scheme to help the world....
       The village seemed a dull enough place in those days, for the big Alps
       beckoned beyond, and day and night he longed to climb them instead of
       reading dull French grammar. But now all was different. It dislocated
       his sense of time to find the place so curiously unchanged. The years
       had played some trick upon him. While he himself had altered,
       developed, and the rest, this village had remained identically the
       same, till it seemed as if no progress of the outer world need ever
       change it. The very people were so little altered--hair grown a little
       whiter, shoulders more rounded, steps here and there a trifle slower,
       but one and all following the old routine he knew so well as a boy.
       Tante Jeanne, in particular, but for wrinkles that looked as though a
       night of good sound sleep would smooth them all away, was the same
       brave woman, still 'running' that Wistaria Pension against the burden
       of inherited debts and mortgages. 'We're still alive,' she had said to
       him, after greetings delayed a quarter of a century, 'and if we
       haven't got ahead much, at least we haven't gone back!' There was no
       more hint of complaint than this. It stirred in him a very poignant
       sense of admiration for the high courage that drove the ageing fighter
       forward still with hope and faith. No doubt she still turned the
       kitchen saucer that did duty for planchette, unconsciously pushing its
       blunted pencil towards the letters that should spell out coming help.
       No doubt she still wore that marvellous tea-gown garment that did duty
       for so many different toilettes, even wearing it when she went with
       goloshes and umbrella to practise Sunday's hymns every Saturday night
       on the wheezy church harmonium. And most likely she still made
       underskirts from the silk of discarded umbrellas because she loved the
       sound of frou-frou thus obtained, while the shape of the silk exactly
       adapted itself to the garment mentioned. And doubtless, too, she still
       gave away a whole week's profits at the slightest call of sickness in
       the village, and then wondered how it was the Pension did not pay...!
       A voice from below interrupted his long reverie.
       'Ready for supper, Henry?' cried his cousin up the stairs. 'It's past
       seven. The children have already left the Citadelle.'
       And as the two middle-aged dreamers made their way along the winding
       street of darkness through the vines, one of them noticed that the
       stars drew down their grand old network, fastening it to the heights
       of Boudry and La Tourne. He did not mention it to his companion, who
       was wumbling away in his beard about some difficult details of his
       book, but the thought slipped through his mind like the trail of a
       flying comet: 'I'd like to stay a long time in this village and get
       the people straight a bit,'--which, had he known it, was another
       thought carefully paraphrased so that he should not notice it and feel
       alarm: 'It will be difficult to get away from here. My feet are in
       that net of stars. It's catching about my heart.'
       Low in the sky a pale, witched moon of yellow watched them go....
       'The Starlight Express is making this way, I do believe,' he thought.
       But perhaps he spoke the words aloud instead of thinking them.
       'Eh! What's that you said, Henry?' asked the other, taking it for a
       comment of value upon the plot of a story he had referred to.
       'Oh, nothing particular,' was the reply. 'But just look at those stars
       above La Tourne. They shine like beacons burning on the trees.' Minks
       would have called them 'braziers.'
       'They are rather bright, yes,' said the other, disappointed. 'The air
       here is so very clear.' And they went up the creaking wooden stairs to
       supper in the Wistaria Pension as naturally as though the years had
       lifted them behind the mountains of the past in a single bound--
       twenty-five years ago. _