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Prisoner in Fairyland, A
CHAPTER XXIII
Algernon Blackwood
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       _ Even as a luminous haze links star to star,
       I would supply all chasms with music, breathing
       Mysterious motions of the soul, no way
       To be defined save in strange melodies.
       _Paracelsus_, R. BROWNING.
       Daddy's story, meanwhile, continued to develop itself with wonder and
       enthusiasm. It was unlike anything he had ever written. His other
       studies had the brilliance of dead precious stones, perhaps, but this
       thing moved along with a rushing life of its own. It grew, fed by
       sources he was not aware of. It developed of itself--changed and lived
       and flashed. Some creative fairy hand had touched him while he slept
       perhaps. The starry sympathy poured through him, and he thought with
       his feelings as well as with his mind.
       At first he was half ashamed of it; the process was so new and
       strange; he even attempted to conceal his method, because he could not
       explain or understand it. 'This is emotional, not intellectual,' he
       sighed to himself; 'it must be second childhood. I'm old. They'll call
       it decadent!' Presently, however, he resigned himself to the delicious
       flow of inspiration, and let it pour out till it flowed over into his
       daily life as well. Through his heart it welled up and bubbled forth,
       a thing of children, starlight, woods, and fairies.
       Yet he was shy about it. He would talk about the story, but would not
       read it out. 'It's a new _genre_ for me,' he explained shyly, 'an
       attempt merely. We'll see what comes of it. My original idea, you see,
       has grown out of hand rather. I wake every morning with something
       fresh, as though'--he hesitated a moment, glancing towards his wife--
       'as if it came to me in sleep,' he concluded. He felt her common sense
       might rather despise him for it.
       'Perhaps it does,' said Rogers.
       'Why not?' said Mother, knitting on the sofa that was her bed at
       night.
       She had put her needles down and was staring at her husband; he stared
       at Rogers; all three stared at each other. Something each wished to
       conceal moved towards utterance and revelation. Yet no one of them
       wished to be the first to mention it. A great change had come of late
       upon Bourcelles. It no longer seemed isolated from the big world
       outside as before; something had linked it up with the whole
       surrounding universe, and bigger, deeper currents of life flowed
       through it. And with the individual life of each it was the same. All
       dreamed the same enormous, splendid dream, yet dared not tell it--yet.
       Both parents realised vaguely that it was something their visitor had
       brought, but what could it be exactly? It was in his atmosphere, he
       himself least of all aware of it; it was in his thought, his attitude
       to life, yet he himself so utterly unconscious of it. It brought out
       all the best in everybody, made them feel hopeful, brighter, more
       courageous. Yes, certainly, _he,_ brought it. He believed in them, in
       the best of them--they lived up to it or tried to. Was that it? Was it
       belief and vision that he brought into their lives, though
       unconsciously, because these qualities lay so strongly in himself?
       Belief is constructive. It is what people _are_ rather than what they
       preach that affects others. Two strangers meet and bow and separate
       without a word, yet each has changed; neither leaves the other quite
       as he was before. In the society of children, moreover, one believes
       everything in the world--for the moment. Belief is constructive and
       creative; it is doubt and cynicism that destroy. In the presence of a
       child these latter are impossible. Was this the explanation of the
       effect he produced upon their little circle--the belief and wonder and
       joy of Fairyland?
       For a moment something of this flashed through Daddy's mind. Mother,
       in her way, was aware of something similar. But neither of them spoke
       it. The triangular staring was its only evidence. Mother resumed her
       knitting. She was not given to impulsive utterance. Her husband once
       described her as a solid piece of furniture. She was.
       'You see,' said Daddy bravely, as the moment's tension passed, 'my
       original idea was simply to treat Bourcelles as an epitome, a
       miniature, so to speak, of the big world, while showing how Nature
       sweetened and kept it pure as by a kind of alchemy. But that idea has
       grown. I have the feeling now that the Bourcelles we know is a mere
       shadowy projection cast by a more real Bourcelles behind. It is only
       the dream village we know in our waking life. The real one--er--we
       know only in sleep.' There!--it was partly out!
       Mother turned with a little start. 'You mean when we sleep?' she
       asked. She knitted vigorously again at once, as though ashamed of this
       sudden betrayal into fantasy. 'Why not?' she added, falling back upon
       her customary non-committal phrase. Yet this was not the superior
       attitude he had dreaded; she was interested. There was something she
       wanted to confess, if she only dared. Mother, too, had grown softer in
       some corner of her being. Something shone through her with a tiny
       golden radiance.
       'But this idea is not my own,' continued Daddy, dangerously near to
       wumbling. 'It comes _through_ me only. It develops, apparently, when
       I'm asleep,' he repeated. He sat up and leaned forward. 'And, I
       believe,' he added, as on sudden reckless impulse, 'it comes from you,
       Henry. Your mind, I feel, has brought this cargo of new suggestion and
       discharged it into me--into every one--into the whole blessed village.
       Man, I think you've bewitched us all!'
       Mother dropped a stitch, so keenly was she listening. A moment later
       she dropped a needle too, and the two men picked it up, and handed it
       back together as though it weighed several pounds.
       'Well,' said Rogers slowly, 'I suppose all minds pour into one another
       somewhere--in and out of one another, rather--and that there's a
       common stock or pool all draw upon according to their needs and power
       to assimilate. But I'm not conscious, old man, of driving anything
       deliberately into you--'
       'Only you think and feel these things vividly enough for me to get
       them too,' said Daddy. Luckily 'thought transference' was not actually
       mentioned, or Mother might have left the room, or at least have
       betrayed an uneasiness that must have chilled them.
       'As a boy I imagined pretty strongly,' in a tone of apology, 'but
       never since. I was in the City, remember, twenty years--'
       'It's the childhood things, then,' Daddy interrupted eagerly. 'You've
       brought the great childhood imagination with you--the sort of
       gorgeous, huge, and endless power that goes on fashioning of its own
       accord just as dreams do--'
       'I _did,_ indulge in that sort of thing as a boy, yes,' was the half-
       guilty reply; 'but that was years and years ago, wasn't it?'
       'They have survived, then,' said Daddy with decision. 'The sweetness
       of this place has stimulated them afresh. The children'--he glanced
       suspiciously at his wife for a moment--'have appropriated them too.
       It's a powerful combination. After a pause he added, 'I might develop
       that idea in my story--that you've brought back the sweet creations of
       childhood with you and captured us all--a sort of starry army.'
       'Why not?' interpolated Mother, as who should say there was no harm in
       _that_. 'They certainly have been full of mischief lately.'
       'Creation _is_ mischievous,' murmured her husband. 'But since you have
       come,' he continued aloud,--'how can I express it exactly?--the days
       have seemed larger, fuller, deeper, the forest richer and more
       mysterious, the sky much closer, and the stars more soft and intimate.
       I dream of them, and they all bring me messages that help my story. Do
       you know what I mean? There were days formerly, when life seemed
       empty, thin, peaked, impoverished, its scale of values horribly
       reduced, whereas now--since you've been up to your nonsense with the
       children--some tide stands at the full, and things are always
       happening.'
       'Well, really, Daddy!' said the expression on Mother's face and hands
       and knitting-needles, 'you _are_ splendid to-day'; but aloud she only
       repeated her little hold-all phrase, 'Why not?'
       Yet somehow he recognised that she understood him better than usual.
       Her language had not changed--things in Mother worked slowly, from
       within outwards as became her solid personality--but it held new
       meaning. He felt for the first time that he could make her understand,
       and more--that she was ready to understand. That is, he felt new
       sympathy with her. It was very delightful, stimulating; he instantly
       loved her more, and felt himself increased at the same time.
       'I believe a story like that might even sell,' he observed, with a
       hint of reckless optimism. 'People might recognise a touch of their
       own childhood in it, eh?'
       He longed for her to encourage him and pat him on the back.
       'True,' said Mother, smiling at him, 'for every one likes to keep in
       touch with their childhood--if they can. It makes one feel young and
       hopeful--jolly; doesn't it? Why not?'
       Their eyes met. Something, long put aside and buried under a burden of
       exaggerated care, flashed deliciously between them. Rogers caught it
       flying and felt happy. Bridges were being repaired, if not newly
       built.
       'Nature, you see, is always young really,' he said; 'it's full of
       children. The very meaning of the word, eh, John?' turning to his
       cousin as who should say, 'We knew our grammar once.'
       '_Natura_, yes--something about to produce.' They laughed in their
       superior knowledge of a Latin word, but Mother, stirred deeply though
       she hardly knew why, was not to be left out. Would the bridge bear
       her, was perhaps her thought.
       'And of the feminine gender,' she added slyly, with a touch of pride.
       The bridge creaked, but did not give way. She said it very quickly.
       She had suddenly an air of bouncing on her sofa.
       'Bravo, Mother,' said her husband, looking at her, and there was a
       fondness in his voice that warmed and blessed and melted down into
       her. She had missed it so long that it almost startled her. 'There's
       the eternal old magic, Mother; you're right. And if I had more of you
       in me--more of the creative feminine--I should do better work, I'm
       sure. You must give it to me.'
       She kept her eyes upon her needles. The others, being unobservant
       'mere men,' did not notice that the stitches she made must have
       produced queer kind of stockings if continued. 'We'll be
       collaborators,' Daddy added, in the tone of a boy building on the
       sands at Margate.
       'I will,' she said in a low voice, 'if only I know how.'
       'Well,' he answered enthusiastically, looking from one to the other,
       delighted to find an audience to whom he could talk of his new dream,
       'you see, this is really a great jolly fairy-tale I'm trying to write.
       I'm blessed if I know where the ideas come from, or how they pour into
       me like this, but--anyhow it's a new experience, and I want to make
       the most of it. I've never done imaginative work before, and--though
       it is a bit fantastical, mean to keep in touch with reality and show
       great truths that emerge from the commonest facts of life. The
       critics, of course, will blame me for not giving 'em the banal thing
       they expect from me, but what of that?' He was dreadfully reckless.
       'I see,' said Mother, gazing open-mindedly into his face; 'but where
       does _my_ help come in, please?'
       She leaned back, half-sighing, half-smiling. 'Here's my life'--she
       held up her needles--'and that's the soul of prosaic dulness, isn't
       it?'
       'On the contrary,' he answered eagerly, 'it's reality. It's courage,
       patience, heroism. You're a spring-board for my fairy-tale, though I'd
       never realised it before. I shall put you in, just as you are. You'll
       be one of the earlier chapters.'
       'Every one'll skip me, then, I'm afraid.'
       'Not a bit,' he laughed gaily; 'they'll feel you all through the book.
       Their minds will rest on you. You'll be a foundation. "Mother's
       there," they'll say, "so it's all right. This isn't nonsense. We'll
       read on." And they will read on.'
       'I'm all through it, then?'
       'Like the binding that mothers the whole book, you see,' put in
       Rogers, delighted to see them getting on so well, yet amazed to hear
       his cousin talk so openly with her of his idea.
       Daddy continued, unabashed and radiant. Hitherto, he knew, his wife's
       attitude, though never spoken, had been very different. She almost
       resented his intense preoccupation with stories that brought in so
       little cash. It would have been better if he taught English or gave
       lessons in literature for a small but regular income. He gave too much
       attention to these unremunerative studies of types she never met in
       actual life. She was proud of the reviews, and pasted them neatly in a
       big book, but his help and advice on the practical details of the
       children's clothing and education were so scanty. Hers seemed ever the
       main burden.
       Now, for the first time, though she distrusted fantasy and deemed it
       destructive of action, she felt something real. She listened with a
       kind of believing sympathy. She noticed, moreover, with keen pleasure,
       that her attitude fed him. He talked so freely, happily about it all.
       Already her sympathy, crudely enough expressed, brought fuel to his
       fires. Some one had put starlight into her.
       'He's been hungry for this all along,' she reflected; 'I never
       realised it. I've thought only of myself without knowing it.'
       'Yes, I'll put you in, old Mother,' he went on, 'and Rogers and the
       children too. In fact, you're in it already,' he chuckled, 'if you
       want to know. Each of you plays his part all day long without knowing
       it.' He changed his seat, going over to the window-sill, and staring
       down upon them as he talked on eagerly. 'Don't you feel,' he said,
       enthusiasm growing and streaming from him, 'how all this village life
       is a kind of dream we act out against the background of the sunshine,
       while our truer, deeper life is hidden somewhere far below in half
       unconsciousness? Our daily doings are but the little bits that emerge,
       tips of acts and speech that poke up and out, masquerading as
       complete? In that vaster sea of life we lead below the surface lies my
       big story, my fairy-tale--when we sleep.' He paused and looked down
       questioningly upon them. 'When we sleep,' he repeated impressively,
       struggling with his own thought. 'You, Mother, while you knit and sew,
       slip down into that enormous under-sea and get a glimpse of the
       coloured pictures that pass eternally behind the veil. I do the same
       when I watch the twilight from my window in reverie. Sunshine
       obliterates them, but they go just the same. _You_ call it day-
       dreaming. Our waking hours are the clothes we dress the spirit in
       after its nightly journeys and activities. Imagination does not create
       so much as remember. Then, by transforming, it reveals.'
       Mother sat staring blankly before her, utterly lost, while her husband
       flung these lumps of the raw material of his story at her--of its
       atmosphere, rather. Even Rogers felt puzzled, and hardly followed what
       he heard. The intricacies of an artistic mind were indeed bewildering.
       How in the world would these wild fragments weave together into any
       intelligible pattern?
       'You mean that we travel when we sleep,' he ventured, remembering a
       phrase that Minks had somewhere used, 'and that our real life is out
       of the body?' His cousin was taking his thought---or was it originally
       Minks's?--wholesale.
       Mother looked up gratefully. 'I often dream I'm flying,' she put in
       solemnly. 'Lately, in particular, I've dreamed of stars and funny
       things like that a lot.'
       Daddy beamed his pleasure. 'In my fairy-tale we shall all see stars,'
       he laughed, 'and we shall all get "out." For our thoughts will
       determine the kind of experience and adventure we have when the spirit
       is free and unhampered. And contrariwise, the kind of things we do at
       night--in sleep, in dream--will determine our behaviour during the
       day. There's the importance of thinking rightly, you see. Out of the
       body is eternal, and thinking is more than doing--it's more complete.
       The waking days are brief intervals of test that betray the character
       of our hidden deeper life. We are judged in sleep. We last for ever
       and ever. In the day, awake, we stand before the easel on which our
       adventures of the night have painted those patterns which are the very
       structure of our outer life's behaviour. When we sleep again we re-
       enter the main stream of our spirit's activity. In the day we forget,
       of course--as a rule, and most of us--but we follow the pattern just
       the same, unwittingly, because we can't help it. It's the mould we've
       made.'
       'Then your story,' Rogers interrupted, 'will show the effect in the
       daytime of what we do at night? Is that it?' It amazed him to hear his
       cousin borrowing thus the entire content of his own mind, sucking it
       out whole like a ripe plum from its skin.
       'Of course,' he answered; 'and won't it be a lark? We'll all get out
       in sleep and go about the village together in a bunch, helping,
       soothing, cleaning up, and putting everybody straight, so that when
       they wake up they'll wonder why in the world they feel so hopeful,
       strong, and happy all of a sudden. We'll put thoughts of beauty into
       them--beauty, you remember, which "is a promise of happiness."'
       'Ah!' said Mother, seizing at his comprehensible scrap with energy.
       'That _is_ a story.'
       'If I don't get it wumbled in the writing down,' her husband
       continued, fairly bubbling over. 'You must keep me straight, remember,
       with your needles--your practical aspirations, that is. I'll read it
       out to you bit by bit, and you'll tell me where I've dropped a stitch
       or used the wrong wool, eh?'
       'Mood?' she asked.
       'No, wool,' he said, louder.
       There was a pause.
       'But you see my main idea, don't you--that the sources of our life lie
       hid with beauty very very far away, and that our real, big, continuous
       life is spiritual--out of the body, as I shall call it. The waking-day
       life uses what it can bring over from this enormous under-running sea
       of universal consciousness where we're all together, splendid, free,
       untamed, and where thinking is creation and we feel and know each
       other face to face? See? Sympathy the great solvent? All linked
       together by thought as stars are by their rays. Ah! You get my idea--
       the great Network?'
       He looked straight into his wife's eyes. They were opened very wide.
       Her mouth had opened a little, too. She understood vaguely that he was
       using a kind of shorthand really. These cryptic sentences expressed in
       emotional stenography mere odds and ends that later would drop into
       their proper places, translated into the sequence of acts that are the
       scaffolding of a definite story. This she firmly grasped--but no more.
       'It's grand-a wonderful job,' she answered, sitting back upon the sofa
       with a sigh of relief, and again bouncing a little in the process, so
       that Rogers had a horrible temptation to giggle. The tension of
       listening had been considerable. 'People, you mean, will realise how
       important thinking is, and that sympathy---er---' and she hesitated,
       floundering.
       'Is the great way to grow,' Rogers quickly helped her, 'because by
       feeling with another person you add his mind to yours and so get
       bigger. And '--turning to his cousin--' you're taking starlight as the
       symbol of sympathy? You told me that the other day, I remember.' But
       the author did not hear or did not answer; his thought was far away in
       his dream again.
       The situation was saved. All the bridges had borne well. Daddy, having
       relieved his overcharged mind, seemed to have come to a full stop. The
       Den was full of sunlight. A delightful feeling of intimacy wove the
       three humans together. Mother caught herself thinking of the far-off
       courtship days when their love ran strong and clear. She felt at one
       with her husband, and remembered him as lover. She felt in touch with
       him all over. And Rogers was such a comfortable sort of person. Tact
       was indeed well named--sympathy so delicately adjusted that it
       involved feeling-with to the point of actual touch.
       Daddy came down from his perch upon the window-sill, stretched his
       arms, and drew a great happy sigh.
       'Mother,' he added, rising to go out, 'you shall help me, dearie.
       We'll write this great fairy-tale of mine together, eh?' He stooped
       and kissed her, feeling love and tenderness and sympathy in his heart.
       'You brave old Mother!' he laughed; 'we'll send Eddie to Oxford yet,
       see if we don't. A book like that might earn 100 pounds or even 200
       pounds.'
       Another time she would have answered, though not bitterly, 'Meanwhile
       I'll go on knitting stockings,' or 'Why not? we shall see what we
       shall see'--something, at any rate, corrective and rather sober,
       quenching. But this time she said nothing. She returned the kiss
       instead, without looking up from her needles, and a great big thing
       like an unborn child moved near her heart. He had not called her
       'dearie' for so long a time, it took her back to their earliest days
       together at a single, disconcerting bound. She merely stroked his
       shoulder as he straightened up and left the room. Her eyes then
       followed him out, and he turned at the door and waved his hand.
       Rogers, to her relief, saw him to the end of the passage, and her
       handkerchief was out of sight again before he returned. As he came in
       she realised even more clearly than before that he somehow was the
       cause of the changing relationship. He it was who brought this
       something that bridged the years--made old bridges safe to use again.
       And her love went out to him. He was a man she could open her heart to
       even.
       Patterns of starry beauty had found their way in and were working out
       in all of them. But Mother, of course, knew nothing of this. There was
       a tenderness in him that won her confidence. That was all she felt.
       'Oh, dear,' she thought in her odd way, 'what a grand thing a man is
       to be sure, when he's got that!' It was like one of Jane Anne's
       remarks.
       As he came in she had laid the stocking aside and was threading a
       needle for darning and buttons, and the like.
       '"Threading the eye of a yellow star," eh?' he laughed, 'and always at
       it. You've stirred old Daddy up this time. He's gone off to his story,
       simply crammed full. What a help and stimulus you must be to him!'
       'I,' she said, quite flabbergasted; 'I only wish it were true--again.'
       The last word slipped out by accident; she had not meant it.
       But Rogers ignored it, even if he noticed it.
       'I never can help him in his work. I don't understand it enough. I
       don't understand it at all.' She was ashamed to hedge with this man.
       She looked him straight in the eye.
       'But he feels your sympathy,' was his reply. 'It's not always
       necessary to understand. That might only muddle him. You help by
       wishing, feeling, sympathising--believing.'
       'You really think so?' she asked simply. 'What wonderful thoughts you
       have I One has read, of course, of wives who inspired their husbands'
       work; but it seemed to belong to books rather than to actual life.'
       Rogers looked at her thoughtful, passionate face a moment before he
       answered. He realised that his words would count with her. They
       approached delicate ground. She had an absurd idea of his importance
       in their lives; she exaggerated his influence; if he said a wrong
       thing its effect upon her would be difficult to correct.
       'Well,' he said, feeling mischief in him, 'I don't mind telling _you_
       that I should never have understood that confused idea of his story
       but for one thing.'
       'What was that?' she asked, relieved to feel more solid ground at
       last.
       'That I saw the thing from his own point of view,' he replied;
       'because I have had similar thoughts all my life. I mean that he's
       bagged it all unconsciously out of my own mind; though, of course,' he
       hastened to add, 'I could never, never have made use of it as he will.
       I could never give it shape and form.'
       Mother began to laugh too. He caught the twinkle in her eyes. She
       bounced again a little on the springy sofa as she turned towards him,
       confession on her lips at last.
       'And I do believe you've felt it too, haven't you?' he asked quickly,
       before she could change her mind.
       'I've felt something--yes,' she assented; 'odd, unsettled; new things
       rushing everywhere about us; the children mysterious and up to all
       sorts of games and wickedness; and bright light over everything, like-
       like a scene in a theatre, somehow. It's exhilarating, but I can't
       quite make it out. It can't be right to feel so frivolous and jumpy-
       about at my age, can it?'
       'You feel lighter, eh?
       She burst out laughing. Mother was a prosaic person; that is, she had
       strong common-sense; yet through her sober personality there ran like
       a streak of light some hint of fairy lightness, derived probably from
       her Celtic origin. Now, as Rogers watched her, he caught a flash of
       that raciness and swift mobility, that fluid, protean elasticity of
       temperament which belonged to the fairy kingdom. The humour and pathos
       in her had been smothered by too much care. She accepted old age
       before her time. He saw her, under other conditions, dancing, singing,
       full of Ariel tricks and mischief--instead of eternally mending
       stockings and saving centimes for peat and oil and washerwomen. He
       even saw her feeding fantasy--poetry--to Daddy like a baby with a
       spoon. The contrast made him laugh out loud.
       'You've lived here five years,' he went on, 'but lived too heavily.
       Care has swamped imagination. I did the same-in the City-for twenty
       years. It's all wrong. One has to learn to live carelessly as well as
       carefully. When I came here I felt all astray at first, but now I see
       more clearly. The peace and beauty have soaked into me.' He hesitated
       an instant, then continued. Even if she didn't grasp his meaning now
       with her brains, it would sink down into her and come through later.
       'The important things of life are very few really. They stand out
       vividly here. You've both vegetated, fossilised, atrophied a bit. I
       discovered it in my own case when I went back to Crayfield and--'
       He told her about his sentimental journey, and how he found all the
       creations of his childhood's imagination still so alive and kicking in
       a forgotten backwater of his mind that they all hopped out and took
       objective form--the sprites, the starlight express, the boundless
       world of laughter, fun and beauty.
       'And, without exactly knowing it, I suppose I've brought them all out
       here,' he continued, seeing that she drank it in thirstily, 'and--
       somehow or other--you all have felt it and responded. It's not my
       doing, of course,' he added; 'it's simply that I'm the channel as it
       were, and Daddy, with his somewhat starved artist's hunger of mind,
       was the first to fill up. It's pouring through him now in a story,
       don't you see; but we're all in it--'
       'In a way, yes, that's what I've felt,' Mother interrupted. 'It's all
       a kind of dream here, and I've just waked up. The unchanging village,
       the forests, the Pension with its queer people, the Magic Box--'
       'Like a play in a theatre,' he interrupted, 'isn't it?'
       'Exactly,' she laughed, yet half-seriously.
       'While your husband is the dramatist that writes it down in acts and
       scenes. You see, his idea is, perhaps, that life as we know it is
       never a genuine story, complete and leading to a climax. It's all in
       disconnected fragments apparently. It goes backwards and forwards, up
       and down, in and out in a wumbled muddle, just anyhow, as it were. The
       fragments seem out of their proper place, the first ones often last,
       and _vice versa_. It seems inconsequential, because we only see the
       scraps that break through from below, from the true inner, deeper life
       that flows on steadily and dramatically out of sight. That's what he
       means by "out of the body" and "sleep" and "dreaming." The great
       pattern is too big and hidden for us to see it whole, just as when you
       knit I only see the stitches as you make them, although the entire
       pattern is in your mind complete. Our daily, external acts are the
       stitches we show to others and that everybody sees. A spiritual person
       sees the whole.'
       'Ah!' Mother interrupted, 'I understand now. To know the whole pattern
       in my mind you'd have to get in sympathy with my thought below. Is
       that it?'
       'Sometimes we look over the fence of mystery, yes, and see inside--see
       the entire stage as it were.'
       'It _is_ like a great play, isn't it?' she repeated, grasping again at
       the analogy with relief. 'We give one another cues, and so on---'
       'While each must know the whole play complete in order to act his part
       properly--be in sympathy, that is, with all the others. The tiniest
       details so important, too,' he added, glancing significantly at the
       needles on her lap. 'To act your own part faithfully you must carry
       all the others in your mind, or else--er--get your own part out of
       proportion.'
       'It will be a wonderful story, won't it?' she said, after a pause in
       which her eyes travelled across the sunshine towards the carpenter's
       house where her husband, seen now in a high new light, laboured
       steadily.
       There was a clatter in the corridor before he could reply, and Jimbo
       and Monkey flew in with a rush of wings and voices from school. They
       were upon him in an instant, smelling of childhood, copy-books, ink,
       and rampagious with hunger. Their skins and hair were warm with
       sunlight. 'After tea we'll go out,' they cried, 'and show you
       something in the forest---oh, an enormous and wonderful thing that
       nobody knows of but me and Jimbo, and comes over every night from
       France and hides inside a cave, and goes back just before sunrise with
       a sack full of thinkings---'
       'Thoughts,' corrected Jimbo.
       '---that haven't reached the people they were meant for, and then---'
       'Go into the next room, wash yourselves and tidy up,' said Mother
       sternly, 'and then lay the table for tea. Jinny isn't in yet. Put the
       charcoal in the samovar. I'll come and light it in a moment.'
       They disappeared obediently, though once behind the door there were
       sounds that resembled a pillow-fight rather than tidying-up; and when
       Mother presently went after them to superintend, Rogers sat by the
       window and stared across the vineyards and blue expanse of lake at the
       distant Alps. It was curious. This vague, disconnected, rambling talk
       with Mother had helped to clear his own mind as well. In trying to
       explain to her something he hardly understood himself, his own
       thinking had clarified. All these trivial scenes were little bits of
       rehearsal. The Company was still waiting for the arrival of the Star
       Player who should announce the beginning of the real performance. It
       was a woman's role, yet Mother certainly could not play it. To get the
       family really straight was equally beyond his powers. 'I really must
       have more common-sense,' he reflected uneasily; 'I am getting out of
       touch with reality somewhere. I'll write to Minks again.'
       Minks, at the moment, was the only definite, positive object in the
       outer world he could recall. 'I'll write to him about---' His thought
       went wumbling. He quite forgot what it was he had to say to him--'Oh,
       about lots of things,' he concluded, 'his wife and children and--and
       his own future and so on.'
       The Scheme had melted into air, it seemed. People lost in Fairyland,
       they say, always forget the outer world of unimportant happenings.
       They live too close to the source of things to recognise their
       clownish reflections in the distorted mirrors of the week-day level.
       Yes, it was curious, very curious. Did Thought, then, issue primarily
       from some single source and pass thence along the channels of men's
       minds, each receiving and interpreting according to his needs and
       powers? Was the Message--the Prophet's Vision---merely the more
       receipt of it than most? Had, perhaps, this whole wonderful story his
       cousin wrote originated, not in his, Rogers's mind, nor in that of
       Minks, but in another's altogether--the mind of her who was destined
       for the principal role? Thrills of absurd, electric anticipation
       rushed through him--very boyish, wildly impossible, yet utterly
       delicious.
       Two doors opened suddenly--one from the kitchen, admitting Monkey with
       a tray of cups and saucers, steam from the hissing samovar wrapping
       her in a cloud, the other from the corridor, letting in
       Jane Anne, her arms full of packages. She had been shopping for the
       family in Neuchatel, and was arrayed in garments from the latest Magic
       Box. She was eager and excited.
       'Cousinenry,' she cried, dropping half the parcels in her fluster,
       'I've had a letter!' It was in her hand, whereas the parcels had been
       merely under her arms. 'The postman gave it me himself as I came up
       the steps. I'm a great correspondencer, you know.' And she darted
       through the steam to tell her mother. Jimbo passed her, carrying the
       tea-pot, the sugar-basin dangerously balanced upon spoons and knives
       and butter-dish. He said nothing, but glanced at his younger sister
       significantly. Rogers saw the entire picture through the cloud of
       steam, shot through with sunlight from the window. It was like a
       picture in the clouds. But he intercepted that glance and knew then
       the writer of the letter.
       'But did you get the mauve ribbon, child?' asked Mother.
       Instead of answer, the letter was torn noisily open. Jinny never had
       letters. It was far more important than ribbons.
       'And how much change have you left out of the five francs? Daddy will
       want to know.'
       Jimbo and Monkey were listening carefully, while pretending to lay the
       table. Mother's silence betrayed that she was reading the letter with
       interest and curiosity equal to those of its recipient. 'Who wrote it?
       Who's it from? I must answer it at once,' Jinny was saying with great
       importance. 'What time does the post go, I wonder? I mustn't miss it.'
       'The post-mark,' announced Mother, 'is Bourcelles. It's very
       mysterious.' She tapped the letter with one hand, like the villain in
       the theatre. Rogers heard her and easily imagined the accompanying
       stage gesture. 'The handwriting on the envelope is like Tante Anna,'
       he heard, 'but the letter itself is different. It's all capitals, and
       wrongly spelt.' Mlle. Lemaire was certainly not the writer.
       Jimbo and Monkey were busy hanging the towel out of the window, signal
       to Daddy that tea was ready. But as Daddy was already coming down the
       street at a great pace, apparently excited too, they waved it instead.
       Rogers suddenly remembered that Jimbo that morning had asked him for a
       two-centime stamp. He made no remark, however, merely wondering what
       was in the letter itself.
       'It's a joke, of course,' Mother was heard to say in an odd voice.
       'Oh no, Mother, for how could anybody know? It's what I've been
       dreaming about for nights and nights. It's so aromantic, isn't it?'
       The louder hissing of the samovar buried the next words, and at that
       moment Daddy came into the room. He was smiling and his eyes were
       bright. He glanced at the table and sat down by his cousin on the
       sofa.
       'I've done a lot of work since you saw me,' he said happily, patting
       him on the knee, 'although in so short a time. And I want my cup of
       tea. It came so easily and fluently for a wonder; I don't believe I
       shall have to change a word--though usually I distrust this sort of
       rapid composition.'
       'Where are you at now?' asked Rogers. 'We're all "out,"' was the
       reply, 'and the Starlight Express is just about to start and--Mother,
       let me carry that for you,' he exclaimed, turning round as his wife
       appeared in the doorway with more tea-things. He got up quickly, but
       before he could reach her side Jinny flew into his arms and kissed
       him.
       'Did you get my tobacco, Jinny?' he asked. She thrust the letter under
       his nose. What was tobacco, indeed, compared to an important letter!
       'You can keep the change for yourself.'
       He read it slowly with a puzzled expression, while Mother and the
       children watched him. Riquette jumped down from her chair and rubbed
       herself against his leg while he scratched himself with his boot,
       thinking it was the rough stocking that tickled him.
       'Eh? This is very queer,' he muttered, slapping the open sheet just as
       his wife had done, and reading it again at arm's-length. 'Somebody'--
       he looked suspiciously round the room--'has been reading my notes or
       picking out my thoughts while I'm asleep, eh?'
       'But it's a real letter,' objected Jinny; 'it's correspondence, isn't
       it, Daddy?'
       'It is certainly a correspondence,' he comforted her, and then,
       reading it aloud, he proceeded to pin it on the wall above the
       mantelpiece:--
       'The Starlight Xpress starts to-night, Be reddy and punctuel. Sleep
       titely and get out.'
       That was all. But everybody exchanged glances.
       'Odd,' thought Mother, again remembering her dreams.
       Jimbo upset the milk-jug. Usually there would have been a rumpus over
       this. To-day it seemed like something happening far away--something
       that had not really happened at all.
       'We must all be ready then,' said Rogers, noticing vaguely that
       Mother's sleeve had smeared the butter as she mopped up the mess.
       Daddy was making a note on his shirt sleeve:--
       The Sweep, the Laugher and the Tramp,
       The running man who lights the lamp,
       The Woman of the Haystack, too,
       The Gardener and Man of Dust
       Are passengers because they must
       Follow the Guard with eyes of blue.
       Over the forests and into the Cave
       That is the way we must all behave---
       'Please, Daddy, will you move? It's dripping on to your boot.'
       They all looked down; the milk had splashed from the cloth and fallen
       upon the toe of his big mountain boots. It made a pretty, white star.
       Riquette was daintily lapping it up with her long pink Tongue. Ray by
       ray the star set in her mysterious interior.
       'Riquette must come too,' said Rogers gravely. 'She's full of white
       starlight now.'
       And Jimbo left his chair and went seriously over to the book-shelf
       above Mother's sofa-bed to arrange the signals. For between the
       tightly-wedged books he had inserted all the available paper-knives
       and book-markers he could find to represent railway-signals. They
       stuck out at different angles. He altered several, putting some up,
       some down, and some at right angles.
       'The line's all clear for to-night,' he announced to Daddy with a
       covert significance he hardly grasped himself, then coming back to
       home-made jam and crusty village bread.
       Jane Anne caught her father's answering glance-mysterious, full of
       unguessed meanings. 'Oh, excuse me, Mother,' she said, feeling the
       same thing in herself and a little frightened; 'but I do believe
       they're conspiring, aren't they?'
       And Mother gave a sudden start, whose cause she equally failed to
       analyse. 'Hush, dear,' she said. 'Don't criticise your elders, and
       when you do, don't use long words you cannot possibly understand.'
       And everybody understood something none of them understood-while tea
       went on as usual to the chatter of daily details of external life. _