by E R Eddison
‘Where is Madam Anthea?’ said the doctor.
‘She passed by this way, reverend sir, about midnight on her way to the snows. Frighted me, me being in this dress and she in her teeth and claws.’
‘What, frighted of your sister? How shall we call this, but the most gross unknowing of God? She could not hurt you, my Campaspe, even if she would.’
‘It is not fit she should come in her dresses when I am in mine. Hers are too rough: mine, so easily torn.’
‘You can take your true shape.’
‘I like my little dresses. One must play and be merry a little: not duty and service all the time.’ She whisked across from the weedy raft she had rested on and so up the bank, and sat there washing her face and ears. ‘O we are all in our humours: grown a little restless, as you may conceive, sir, with all these doings.’
Under Vandermast’s nose the little nymphish creature changed in the twinkling of an eye her fur dress for feathers: for the silk-smooth brownish green dress, creaming to greenish buff in the under-parts, of a peggy-whitethroat: fluttered her wings, and was gone. From a hiding-place among the branches she ran him a descant, sweet falling notes of her woodland warble. His eye followed the sound to a flicker in the alderleaves; and there she was with her eyebrows. ‘There’s been double-dealings of late,’ she said; ‘where neither of them had seen the other, nor none of them knew other’s person, nor knew of other’s coming.’ She hopped from twig to twig; daintily picked an insect or two. ‘Tell me, who is this King then? And this son of his, this Duke?’
‘That question’, said Vandermast, ‘raiseth problems of high dubitation: a problem de natura substantiarum; a problem of selfness. Lieth not in man to resolve it, save so far as to peradventures, and by guess-work.’
‘And what is your guess?’ She perched now in the tip-most leaves of the alder, bobbing and flirting her tail, looking down at him.
‘You must be content with your own guesses, my little lovebird: I with mine.’
‘Why?’
She paused on the spray a moment; then flew down into the grass before his feet. ‘Well, I will tell you my guess so far,’ she said: ‘that they are one and the same, even as She in Her shapes is one and the same; and yet other. And this world his world: even as it is the King’s. And by Her giving.’
All the whole arch of day above them widened and rose moment by moment to new infinitudes of dawn-washed golden light. That old man resumed his walk, slowly onward.
She flew after him: settled on his finger. ‘Shall I take my true shape?’
‘As you please. But you are very well suited thus.’
‘But I long to do as shall please you. You are so strange in your likes and dislikes. Why are you so?’
‘Well,’ said Vandermast smiling, ‘you must remember, for one thing, I am very orderly in years.’
‘Do you choose, then.’
‘Your little dresses? there’s none prettier, I think, than my water-rat.’
She ran along his sleeve to the crook of his elbow and sat there eyeing him, while she washed her face with her paws. ‘Why?’
‘In these matters, is but one answer why.’
‘Our Lady? She likes me thus?’
‘Surely.’
‘She likes me all ways. We are part of Her empiredom. Is it not so?’
‘Please Her,’ said the learned doctor, ‘it is so.’
‘There was a word in your mouth the other day: deificatio. What is that?’
‘It is,’ answered the doctor, ‘a term of art, signifying a condition we can sooner imagine than understand: the fusing and merging of God and the soul into each other,’
‘Why?’ The mouse-like hand and arm of Campaspe, suddenly in her own shape now, gloved to the elbow with soft brown leather that gave out a sharp odour of water-plants under a hot sun, rested light as air on his sleeve. Her grown of pale satin wrought all over with carnation silk made, as she walked, little summer-noises as of wind coming and going among reeds and willows. ‘Why?’
Vandermast smiled and shook his head. ‘Naiad: dryad,’ he began to say, slowly: ‘hamadryad: oread: nymphs of the woods and of gentle waters and of the kinless mountain, what can you learn by me? For you know all that is needful to know: know it as to the knowing born, without knowing that you know it: knowing it from within. Whereas I, that am but a looker on from withoutward—’
Campaspe looked up into his face with her bead-like eyes. ‘But who are you, then?’ she said, and her hand tightened on his arm.
As from a window in the clouds a shaft of sunlight passes over the cold sea, so seemed for a moment the thought-furrowed lean countenance of Vandermast. ‘I am, I suppose,’ answered he, ‘an old man that am yet in love with youth.’
‘I had not thought of youth. Why with youth?’ she said. ‘What is youth?’
But that learned philosopher, armed with so questionable a she-disciple, but came his way in silence.
Mary, walking ahead up the pass (a practice grounded, by tacit agreement, in two sufficient reasons: to feed the eyes behind her, and to leave it to her to set the pace), paused now in the shortening shadow of a pine. They were by this time come up a thousand feet from the floor of the valley, to where the hollow mountain side is a maze of hills and dells, with wide turfy stretches starred all over with flowers, and on every hand little watercourses: some alive with beck or waterfall, some but dry beds where water comes down after rain. And at every turn, with the winding upwards of that intermittent and stony path, the cliffs of the Sella constantly changed their aspect, lying back in ever more and more forced distortions of perspective as the way led nearer their roots, and thrusting up in succession ever a fresh spur of foot-stool to eclipse by its nearness the loftier summits behind it, and, in a vast illusion of instability, lean out from the body of the mountain. Under the gathering power of the sun the whole hillside was alive with grass-hoppers both great and small, taking hither and thither their low criss-cross flights, some with scarlet wings some with orange some with blue, and filling the air with the hot metallic thrill of their chirping. Lessingham, halting a few paces below her in the open, shaded his eyes to see her where she stood looking upwards to the thin roof made by the pine-tree fronds. Air stirred in the branches, sending ever changing tesselated patterns of white sunshine and amethystine luminous shadow across Mary’s upturned face: her beautiful fire-red hair, done in the beautiful Austrian way, gleamed where the sun caught it, like polished metal; and every loose tendril floating on the air was at one instant invisible, the next instant a trembling of flame.
‘The stillness of the trunk,’ she said, ‘Incessant little movements in the top branches. Do you think the world has its roots in heaven, and its branches spread out earthwards?’
Lessingham sat himself down on a rock at her feet.
‘What a blessing,’ she said, ‘to have you real lazy, for once. The first proper lazy holiday we shall have had, for over three years. Never since Egypt, that last winter before Janet was born.’
‘We’ve not done badly. Honeymoon in Greece, nineteen hundred and eight Caucasus, nineteen-nine: pure laze—’
He looked up at her: the Grecian profile, sweet serene forehead, very slight depression between brow and nose: eyebrows sweeping upward from the nose, then levelling: nose finely modelled, straight, pointed, with an almost imperceptible tilt up rather than down: cheekbones just sufficiently showing their presence to bring strength to the dove-like contours of her cheek: chin firm, throat and neck lithe, tender and strong: lips like the lips of a Goddess, tranquil and cool, yet of a most quicksilver mobility to fit every thought, mood, and feeling, as now a kind of satirical merry luxury of self-pleasuring comedy that blesses where it strikes, as she said, ‘The indolence of it, that Caucasus expedition! Nothing at all to show for it – except Ushba, of course, and about five virgin peaks!’
‘Well and then next year, nineteen-ten,’ he said, ‘in the yacht to Lofoten in the early summer – true, I did dart across to
Stockholm about those statues they wanted me to do for them. But, on the whole, pure lazes, both that and the month on the Italian lakes in the autumn. Still, I’ll promise to be bone-lazy now for a bit. First instalment: I wrote and told brother Eric the other day (from Paris) to go to the devil, about the Parliament question. Too many jobs that want doing without that.’
‘O I am so glad!’ said she.
‘And I didn’t give him an address. I’m very fond of Eric, and very fond of Jacqueline; but really we don’t want them butting in again like that on our voyage to Kythera, as they did at Avignon.’
They went on again, Mary ahead; maintaining for the best part of an hour a companionship of silence in which, the deeplier for no word spoken, presence quiveringly underfelt presence. From the top of the pass a ten minutes’ pull up over steep grass and scree brought them to a shoulder of flowerclad alp, whence, out of sight of the path, you look east to the square-cut Towers of the Sella and west, further away beyond the hollow of the pass, to the rose-coloured wild fantastical spires and ridges of the Langkofel massif; Langkofel, Plattkofel, and Fünffingerspitze: a spectacle at first blush unbelievable, unveiling at that moment above breaking clouds in the broad unreached sky.
‘Like nectar!’ she said, taking in through eye and deep-drawn breath the thing before her. ‘Don’t you love to get up?’
‘Up to a point.’
‘Where would you stop?’
‘Here.’
Mary drank the air again, standing tip-toe in an eagerness and poise liker to some creature of the woods and hills that is so fitted to its body that every changing motion expresses wholly and subtly, as music, the inward mood. Such a carriage, may be, had those swan maidens, king’s daughters, flown from the south through Mirkwood to fulfil their fates; whom Weyland Smith and his brethren surprising at their upland bath, stole the swan-skin dresses of, and caught them so, and wedded them, and for a time sat in peace so. ‘O I would not stop. I would go always higher. Wouldn’t you come with me?’
‘Would I, do you think?’
‘Have to!’
‘Well, but, say, twenty thousand feet: that might stop us. Heights above that, I’ve climbed at in the Himalaya. Can’t breathe properly, lose your strength, can’t sleep. And an awful depression: the sense of something watch, watch, watching you, always from behind. Like an oyster might feel, if it has an imagination, when the cook opens the shell with an oyster-knife and looks at it.’
‘I know. But we’d choose to be creatures that can enjoy it. I’d like to be that,’ she said, pointing, as a party of choughs, glossy black plumage and yellow beaks, glided, dived, and soared below the edge of the hill, balancing on air, uttering their soft rippling cries.
She came and sat beside him: began to investigate and spread out the lunch which Lessingham produced from his rucksack. ‘Mass of eggs: I hope they’ve ducked them in cold water so that they’ll peel properly. Rolls with ham in them. Chicken: I asked for that instead of veal today. All these snippety bits of sausage. Peaches. Plums – O you’ve squashed them! with your great coarse camera jabbing against them! A great wodge of butter. – Shall we ever grow old?’ she said, as they began eating.
‘No.’
‘We shall. I’m twenty-six today. You’ll be thirty-two in November. We’ll have to start being middle-aged. Thirty-three is a generation.’
‘You haven’t given me my birthday present yet.’ Lessingham said, when they had finished and buried the remains.
‘Do you want it?’
‘It’s part of the bargain.’
‘O stupid bargain.’
‘I like to go on with it. I like outward and visible signs.’
‘So do I. But this part of it – I mean the taking off – has lost its meaning. My dear, my dear, it has. The first time: even the second: but after that—’
‘Well, you must think it a kind of exercise – a kind of – for me. Come. Only once a year.’
‘Very well.’ She took off her wedding-ring and gave it him.
‘“Ours”,’ he said, examining it: reading the Greek cut deeply on the inside of the ring. ‘HMETEPA. Feminine singular. Neuter plural. Mine, and yours.’
Their eyes, turned together, rested in each other a minute, grave, uncommunicative, as with the straining between them of some secret chain in nature.
‘Suppose,’ said Lessingham after a long pause, ‘one of us were to die. Do you think then there could still be any question of “ours”?’
It was as if dogs howled on the shore. Mary looked away: across to the pale precipices of the Langkofel, rearing skyward above fans of scree that opened downward to the vast scatter of fallen boulders which fills the hollow below, called the Steinerne Stadt. ‘What makes you say that?’ she said.
‘To hear you say Yes. I wish I could say credo quia absurdum, as you can.’
‘I don’t. I do believe. But not because it’s absurd.’
Between Langkofel and Plattkofel, lower but more venomous to look at than either, with its knife-edged reddish pinnacles, stands the Fünffingerspitze. ‘I climbed that thing twice; before I had a Mary,’ he said. ‘Alone, both times, like a lunatic. By the Schmidt Kamin. Deserved to be killed. No, it’s not absurd,’ he said: ‘what we were talking about. But it’s not believable. Not to me.’ He ground his nailed boot into the earth. ‘And the alternative,’ he said, ‘is, unfortunately, not asburd. And I find it unbearable: the mere thought, unbearable.’
She shivered a little, still looking at those mountains. ‘I don’t think we really know what we mean,’ she said, very low, ‘when we speak of Death.’
‘I don’t think we do,’ said Lessingham. ‘But all philosophizing on that subject comes back to an earth of wretchedness and of darkness. The Red King’s dream in Alice. Go out – bang! – just like a candle.’
‘I don’t like it when you talk like that.’
‘I used not to mind. Now I do.’
They sat silent. He began considering the ring once more, turning it about in the sun, fitting it on his little finger first of his right hand then of his left: it would not pass the second joint. At last, offering it to her with a grave courtliness of manner, ‘Señorita,’ he said, ‘will you accept it back again?’
But Mary was stood up now, against the sky, looking down on him from above. And now, that minor diabolus twisting in its sleep there near her mouth’s corner as if in the sweet unbusked luxury of some naughty dream, she replied, ‘No. I shall not. By your own stubbornness you’ve unmarried yourself. I’ll think it over in cooler blood: possibly answer your proposal tomorrow.’
‘I’ll come for the answer tonight,’ he said.
‘You’ll find the door locked.’
‘I’ll get in at the window when you’re asleep.’
‘You won’t. I’ll scream: create an appalling scandalismos! No, I mean it.’
‘You’re a cruel wicked girl.’
‘If you’re not nice to me, it’ll be the day after tomorrow.’
He stood up, safely pocketing the ring. ‘Well. Couldn’t I even have a kiss?’
Sideways, tentatively, as she was used to do in the days before the era of grace, Mary submitted a very sweet but very Artemisian cheek. His lips nearly cornered the little horned thing in its bed; but Mary jumped away. And now as they stood and laughed at each other, the thing said privately to Lessingham: ‘Yes. A cruel wicked girl. Unpardonable. But what poverty of riches if she wasn’t!’
It was ten of the clock in the forenoon, of Wednesday the fifteenth of July, in the lieutenant’s house at Reisma. The master of the house was from home. The home-men and women were out in the fields along the lakeside, making hay. Under the sun’s heat the house stood deserted, save only for its mistress, lazing herself on a bench of precious asterite stone under the cool of an open trellis of vines before the fore-court. Cushions made soft the bench for her reclining. Campaspe sat at her feet, holding up to her a mirror framed in pale mountain-gold garnished with sparks of small diamonds,
sparks of aquamarines, and sparks of emeralds. Anthea, sitting sideways on the back of the bench, was fanning her mistress with a fan of white peacock-feathers which, at every to and fro, altered their sheen like a halo about the moon. The fingernails of Anthea tapered to claws: her hair seemed as lighted from within with a sun-like glory: white-skinned she was, of a classic cold perfection of form and feature, yet with eyes the pupils of which were upright slips opening to some inside hotness of fire, and with scarlet lips which disclosed, when she smiled, teeth of a mountain lynx. Behind Campaspe, there leaned against a pillar of the trellis-work that ancient doctor, resting, as in the contemplation of things of a higher strain than earth’s, his regard upon the lady of the house.
‘Signor Vandermast,’ said she, ‘it is now well onward in summer, and the days are hot and long. The Duke of Zayana, his eyes over-gazed in my excellencies, ceases not to solicit me in the unlawful purpose. My jealous husband sleeps dog-sleeps. Cool me a little, I pray you, with your unemptiable fountain of wisdom, and tell me why must I (being that I am) be teased with these inconveniences?’
‘Why will your ladyship ask me such a question?’ replied the doctor, ‘to which You (being that you are) are Yourself the alonely one and unsoilable answer.’
‘That answer,’ said she, ‘I could have had at any time this fortnight past, and without the asking: from his grace, who, as my true lover and humble servitor unguerdoned, is become to be as melancholy as a gib-cat. But I will not have lovers’ answers, nor courtiers’ answers, but an answer in philosophy.’
‘Mine was an answer in philosophy, madam; not sustentable, indeed, in the very point of logic, but as by fingerly demonstration: as we term it, a probation ostensive. And it is the only answer.’
‘Which, being unhooded, is to retort the whole upon poor me?’ She reached an idle hand to pluck one of the moonlight-coloured feathers from Anthea’s fan; considered curiously for a minute its shifting sheen. ‘O wherefore hath nature made the lawful undelightful?’