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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64612 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64612)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Twentieth Century Idealist, by Henry Pettit
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Twentieth Century Idealist
-
-
-Author: Henry Pettit
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 23, 2021 [eBook #64612]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TWENTIETH CENTURY IDEALIST***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Charlene Taylor, Susan Carr, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org).
-
-This ebook was created in honour of Distributed Proofreaders'
-20th Anniversary.
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 61612-h.htm or 61612-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61612/61612-h/61612-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61612/61612-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/twentiethcentury00pett
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: View from Pinnacle on Roof of Cathedral--the
-Delectable Mountains beyond.
-
- Among the Himalayas. Supposed highest summits on the earth’s
- surface. Elevation, 29,000 feet. From near Sundookphoo, 1885.]
-
-
-A TWENTIETH CENTURY IDEALIST
-
-by
-
-HENRY PETTIT
-
- Under the Surface of the Ordinary Life Lie Great Mysteries--
- The Real Part of Man Is in His Ideals
-
-
-[Illustration: (Colophon)]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Grafton Press
-Publishers New York
-
-Copyright, 1905,
-by
-Henry Pettit
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- AND
-
- PLAN OF THE BOOK
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- _PROLOGUE._
-
- I. (a) INQUISITIVE ADMIRATION--TWO KINDS 1
-
- II. (b) HOW THE PROFESSOR WAS WON 7
-
-
- _PART FIRST._
-
- _At Home in the States. The Physical Dominant._
-
- III. ADELE HERSELF 17
-
- IV. SHE HEARS THE WORDS OF A SONG 23
-
- V. AFTER DARK IN THE PARK--THE DOCTOR 39
-
- VI. AN AVATAR IN THE OCCIDENT 44
-
- (a) Conversation with Papa.
-
- (b) The Theophany of Spring. Adele in the Park.
-
- VII. OFF TO ASIA 55
-
-
- _PART SECOND._
-
- _Crossing the Atlantic--Up the Mediterranean.
- Mentality Dominant._
-
- VIII. A STUDIO FOR IMPRESSIONS 61
-
- IX. A BUDGET OF NEW SCIENCES 64
-
- X. PALMISTRY POSES AS MENTAL SCIENCE 71
-
- XI. AMATEUR MENTAL SCIENCE 76
-
- XII. AMATEUR TACTICS--A FRIGHT-FULL CURE 83
-
- XIII. ADELE’S MEDITATIONS 89
-
- XIV. ANOTHER COMMOTION--RELIGIOUS-CURATIVE 92
-
- What is Perfection?
-
- XV. TWO SIMULTANEOUS SOLILOQUIES 105
-
- XVI. COURAGE VERSUS FOOLHARDINESS 110
-
- XVII. TWO RESCUES, AND TWO GIRLS 115
-
- XVIII. A SENSATION VERSUS AN IMPRESSION 120
-
- XIX. GIBRALTAR APPEARS AND DISAPPEARS 124
-
- XX. THE ARTISTIC SENSE. AT CAPRI 130
-
- XXI. AN ARTIST WITH DOUBLE VISION 135
-
- XXII. THE SECRET OF A LIFE 144
-
- XXIII. OLYMPUS--COURT FESTIVITIES 149
-
- XXIV. THE GODS INTERFERE 152
-
- XXV. APHRODITE RISES FROM THE SEA 159
-
- Eros-Cupid--The Modern-Antique.
-
- _Intermezzo._
-
- XXVI. ALLEGRO--THE WORLD’S HIGHWAY 169
-
- XXVII. ANDANTE--THE ROYAL ROUTE 173
-
- XXVIII. THE AFTERGLOW 174
-
-
- _PART THIRD._
-
- _In the Far East. Spirituality Dominant._
-
- XXIX. MYSTIFICATION--ILLNESS AND HALLUCINATION 180
-
- XXX. CONVALESCENCE AND COMMON SENSE 188
-
- XXXI. OFF TO THE HIMALAYAS 196
-
- XXXII. THE START UPWARDS 200
-
- The Himalaya Railway--Fly Express.
-
- XXXIII. A GLIMPSE OF THE PRIMITIVE 214
-
- THE HIMALAYA CATHEDRAL.
-
- XXXIV. ADELE SEES THE DELECTABLE MOUNTAINS 217
-
- XXXV. THE CATHEDRAL BY THE SUPREME ARCHITECT 225
-
- XXXVI. PROGRESS OF THE BUILDING 229
-
- XXXVII. PRIMATE OF THE CATHEDRAL 233
-
- The Message of the Seer--Ex-Cathedra.
-
- _Intermezzo._
-
- _The Voice in Nature._
-
- XXXVIII. CATHEDRAL ORCHESTRA AND ORGAN 241
-
- Divine Solos.
-
- XXXIX. ON A PINNACLE IN NATURE 243
-
- XL. A GLIMPSE OF TAOISM 253
-
- XLI. PROCESSIONAL BEFORE THE VEIL 262
-
- XLII. ON HOLY GROUND 269
-
- XLIII. SACRIFICE 274
-
- XLIV. THE EVERYDAY RITUAL 282
-
- Adele and Paul. A Dandy passes by.
-
- XLV. RITUAL OF THE HUMAN RACE 292
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- VIEW FROM PINNACLE ON ROOF OF CATHEDRAL--THE DELECTABLE
- MOUNTAINS BEYOND.
-
- Among the Himalayas. Supposed highest summits on
- the earth’s surface. Elevation, 29,000 feet. From near
- Sundookphoo, 1885 _Frontispiece_
-
- AS INCENSE ASCENDS--SYMBOLIC, FROM AGES PAST, OF THE
- PRAYERS OF HUMANITY.
-
- The Kunchingunga Snowy Range. Elevation, 28,156
- feet. Scene from Observatory Hill, Darjeeling 268
-
-
-
-
- “Nature herself is an idea of the mind and is never presented to
- the senses. She lies under the veil of appearances, but is herself
- never apparent. To the art of the ideal is lent, or, rather,
- absolutely given, the privilege to grasp the spirit of all, and
- bind it in a corporeal form.”
-
- “Art has for its object not merely to afford a transient pleasure,
- to excite to a momentary dream of liberty; its aim is to make us
- absolutely free. And this is accomplished by awakening, exercising,
- and perfecting in us a power to remove to an objective distance the
- sensible world (which otherwise only burdens us as rugged matter,
- and presses us down with a brute influence); to transform it into
- the free working of our spirit, and thus acquire a dominion over
- the material by means of ideas. For the very reason also that
- true art requires somewhat of the objective and real, it is not
- satisfied with a show of truth: it rears its ideal edifice on truth
- itself--on the solid and deep foundation of Nature.”
-
- --From Schiller’s _The Use of the Chorus in Tragedy_.
-
-
-
-
- A TWENTIETH CENTURY IDEALIST
-
-
-
-
- I
-
- INQUISITIVE ADMIRATION
-
-
-There certainly is a subtle charm from personal intercourse with
-those who seek a comprehensive view of life, and strive to live
-according to their own ideals. People who live upon broader lines
-than their neighbors are apt to be interesting from that fact alone,
-and the charm becomes quite fascinating when these ideals take form
-and they practice what they profess. Even if they do not succeed
-according to our notions, and fail to grasp until late in life some
-of the profound concepts which underlie the manifest workings of the
-mind of nature, the effort on their part counts in their favor--their
-actions speak louder than words.
-
-The Doctor was in his library when he mused thus. Books upon peculiar
-subjects lay around him, some open, others closed; and his eye
-fell upon a few articles which had been selected for their special
-significance quite as carefully as the books. The Doctor was much
-interested in what he called “the hidden meaning of things,” and the
-character of his library, with its peculiar contents, showed the fact.
-
-Putting aside his cigar, he looked across the room, as if to give
-audible expression to his thoughts, towards a younger man of quite a
-different type, an individual whose very presence suggested he had
-not ignored athletics while at college, even if the studies had been
-exacting.
-
-The Doctor was about to call him by name, when he hesitated, his
-deeper interest in the young fellow asserted itself; he concluded to
-take a good look at him first, and avoid if possible any error in
-approaching the subject he wished to bring up. He already knew him so
-well that it did not take long to recall certain facts bearing upon
-the situation.
-
-Paul was not as a general thing given to bothering about hidden
-meanings. His diving below the surface had been chiefly as a swimmer,
-from early boyhood until more recent experience. He possessed a
-keener appreciation of surface values and the exhilaration from a
-good bath rather than what he might bring up by deep diving. But
-being young, energetic, and sincere, his very energy itself was
-bound to bring him down to the verge of deeper experience. In fact
-as the Doctor looked at him he appeared like unto one standing upon
-the rockbound coast of the ocean of life ready to take the plunge,
-whenever--he felt like it.
-
-“Take things as they are,” was one of Paul’s favorite expressions.
-
-The Doctor concluded he would, and broke the silence:
-
-“How did you enjoy last evening?”
-
-“Immensely.”
-
-“Thought you would.”
-
-“Yes? Greatly obliged for the introduction,” and Paul continued
-examining some illustrations in a periodical apropos of the coming
-coronation in England.
-
-The Doctor determined to rivet his attention.
-
-“I admire Adele Cultus greatly, don’t you?”
-
-“No doubt she would look well, wearing a coronet like this--look at
-it.”
-
-The Doctor did not look, but continued:
-
-“She certainly has some ideal of her own about life in general, and,
-I suspect, about herself in particular.”
-
-“Shouldn’t wonder,” said Paul, laconic.
-
-“But she is thoroughly sincere about it.”
-
-“Possibly, but last night the sincerity was all on my side.”
-
-“How so?”
-
-“Well, I would have danced with her the evening through, if she had
-let me--she loves dancing.”
-
-The Doctor’s eyes twinkled: “Don’t you think she is a striking
-personality?”
-
-“Striking? Oh, yes! gracefully so, deux-temps spirituelle. I felt the
-effect at once.”
-
-“In character?”
-
-Paul smiled. “I call it strikingly practical--no nonsense; she
-wouldn’t let me, and that settled it.”
-
-“Of course she had her own way--at a ball,” remarked the Doctor dryly.
-
-“Oh, of course! of course! She certainly would support a coronet
-first-rate; it would not be the coronet’s part to support her.”
-
-“No doubt you are right, Paul. I was only asking some test
-questions,” and the Doctor subsided, as if he had more to say but
-would not venture.
-
-“Test questions? Whom were you testing?” asked Paul.
-
-“Both of you,” said the Doctor.
-
-“Where did you first meet her?” asked Paul, still examining the
-periodical.
-
-“Where?--we didn’t meet! I heard her voice through the crack of a
-door.”
-
-“H’m!” And Paul put down his book.
-
-“It was while I was convalescent at the hospital after that bicycle
-accident. She was a volunteer nurse, and a remarkably good one among
-not a few devoted women. You were right about her being practical and
-spirituelle, and so was I about her being spiritual.”
-
-Paul took up a cigarette. A cloud of smoke enveloped his head, his
-facial expression hid behind the cloud. The Doctor continued:
-
-“You know it takes a fair combination of the practical and spiritual
-to make a true nurse?”
-
-Paul agreed mentally, but all the Doctor heard was a voice from
-behind the cloud, “she dances like an angel.”
-
-Angelic dancing not being in the Doctor’s repertoire of investigation,
-he changed to another point of view.
-
-“While I was convalescent at the hospital it was very amusing to read
-hands by palmistry. I read her hand.”
-
-“You held her hand, you mean?”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“You don’t mean to tell me you read her character by the lines
-written in her hand! Nonsense!”
-
-“I did not. I merely noticed the natural tendencies of the individual
-as shown by the form of the hand. Her characteristics, not her
-character.”
-
-“I don’t believe in it,” remarked Paul, positive.
-
-“You don’t? Well, just swap hands with some other fellow and observe
-the consequences.”
-
-Paul laughed. “Excuse me--quite satisfied with my own.”
-
-“Just so,” said the Doctor, “and there is good reason why you feel
-the satisfaction; the consequences would be not only absurd, but
-positively disastrous.”
-
-Paul began to feel interested as the Doctor forced the practical
-issue upon his attention.
-
-“The consequences of any change from the special form of your own
-hand would only prove that the other fellow’s hands do not fit your
-personality.”
-
-Paul, who really knew much more about persons than personalities,
-blew another cloud of smoke towards the ceiling, and listened.
-
-“You know, Nature never makes any mistakes.”
-
-“I hope not, or I’m a goner,” quizzed Paul.
-
-“And personality is really made up of three in one, a trinity of the
-physical, mental, and spiritual. You’re a sort of trinity yourself,
-my boy. You’ll find it out some day if you don’t swap hands with
-some other fellow and spoil your own combination.”
-
-“What did you learn by holding Miss Cultus’ hand?”
-
-The Doctor was a little slow in replying, in fact, choosing which of
-the many things he had observed was the particular one to which he
-had best call Paul’s attention. Then he spoke:
-
-“She shows marked individuality based upon rather a rare type, yet
-a mixed hand; most Americans and Chinese are mixed. You know, pure
-types are very rare.”
-
-“You don’t say so?” quizzed Paul; “‘mixed,’ and like the Chinese.
-What a wonderful insight for diagnosis palmistry possesses!” The
-Doctor continued:
-
-“In the main, her hand manifests the exceeding rare psychic
-type,--that is, she loves and seeks the truth for its own sake.”
-
-“There! I told you she was angelic, a practical angel,” interrupted
-Paul. The Doctor kept straight on:
-
-“And with this there are other features indicating both the useful
-and the philosophic elements in her make-up, very strong, each in its
-own relative domain.”
-
-“Extraordinary! truly!” quoth Paul. “The useful must have come to the
-front when she was acting nurse, and the philosophic when she told me
-we had danced enough for one evening. As to the psychic,--let me see!
-the psychic!--well, to be frank, Doctor, I can’t say I have seen that
-as yet.”
-
-“Oh, yes, you have,” thought the Doctor, “or you would not be showing
-the interest you are taking just now.” This _sub rosa_, and then he
-turned the topic once more:
-
-“Where do you suppose she got those traits, so forcible in
-combination?”
-
-“Got her hands?” exclaimed Paul the practical. “Inherited them of
-course, even the skin-deep profundity of palmistry is not required to
-guess a diagnosis for that.”
-
-The Doctor’s eyes again twinkled. “Whom did she inherit them from?”
-
-“Father and mother,--what nonsense to ask!”
-
-“Why not her grandparents?”
-
-“Give it up,” said Paul. “Take things as they are.”
-
-Now, the result of this decidedly mixed but suggestive conversation
-was to excite curiosity in both the Doctor and Paul. Not that they
-formed a conspiracy to learn about Miss Cultus’ forbears; quite
-the contrary. Simply by friction in time they learned something of
-the natural causes which had produced her charming personality, so
-attractive to all who met her.
-
-That they both had been led to respect and admire her upon short
-acquaintance was only too evident,--on the surface. What was not
-quite so evident, for neither of them had said so, was that each had
-noticed her devotion to her mother, constant, ever thoughtful, as
-if to make her appear to the best advantage: as to her father, she
-simply idolized him.
-
-Some of the items they learned had best be stated at once, for her
-ancestors, in immediate relationship, certainly did cast their
-shadows before; and the blending of the shades and shadows later on
-in her life, formed a character that was lovely and inspiring.
-
-
-
-
- II
-
- HOW THE PROFESSOR WAS WON
-
-
-Few who knew Mrs. Cultus in after years, when as an active woman of
-the world she displayed much tact dominated by kindly consideration
-for others, would have suspected the peculiar phases of development
-through which she passed in younger days, during the immature period
-of youth when the same natural tendencies took different forms, and
-were so different in degree. From one point of view the difference
-in degree produced a difference in kind--she appeared to be a
-different sort of woman. What she did when young was often mistaken
-for selfishness alone, whereas the same natural tendency, operating
-as reasonable ambition, after finding its true sphere, exerted a far
-nobler activity, profoundly different in both degree and kind. Not
-a few expressed surprise when her ambition to lead became coupled
-with a determination to help others along at the same time. Always
-ambitious, and with strong social instincts, she read the book of
-life rather than literary productions; but when she did deign to
-peruse a popular novel, her criticism punctured the absurdities of
-modern snap-shot incongruity. She was never selfish at heart, but
-she certainly did have a way of using the world without abusing it,
-personally; and her own way of expressing herself.
-
-As to the Professor, her husband, he found himself going to be
-married without having fully analyzed the case.
-
-Charming manners and cultivated tastes, largely inherited from
-antecedents in the professional walks of life, had led Professor
-Cultus to fascinate and charm not a few during his youth and early
-manhood,--what more natural! He was slow however to realize that in
-so doing he might encounter another, gifted as himself yet of an
-entirely different type, complementary; and so it came to pass.
-
-While returning from a congress of anthropologists which met on the
-Continent, where there had been much discussion of the _genus homo_
-through many stages of development, the Professor was fated to be
-himself taught a lesson in anthropology which never after lost its
-hold upon him. It gave him much subject for thought, but not exactly
-of the kind suitable for a technical paper before the next congress.
-
-He met an individual whose antecedents no doubt did have the same
-number of fingers and toes as his own, but whose “thinking matter”
-in her brain seemed to operate differently from his own; and whose
-experience in life had been very different; one of whose position in
-the chain of physiological development he knew much intellectually,
-but whose innate appreciation of facts and ability to perform he had
-no adequate realizing sense whatever; her avenue to truth, through
-heredity, being quite different from his own.
-
-They were fellow passengers upon one of the palatial steamers which
-then first appeared upon the North Atlantic, and it took her only the
-ten days’ voyage to capture the Professor, his charming manners, his
-intellectual efforts and his anthropological researches, all complete.
-
-How did she do it? and what did she propose to do with him after she
-got him?
-
-The answer might be given in a single sentence: she met him first
-with his own weapons, charming manners and an intellect as bright as
-his own; then caught him because he was objectively philosophic and
-for pure science, so called, while she was subjectively philosophic
-and for pure material results. She was quite as philosophic as he
-was,--also knew chalk from cheese when she saw it. The Professor
-preferred to analyze the composition before forming an opinion.
-While he was analyzing, she so mixed the ingredients in his mental
-laboratory that he could no longer differentiate or reason upon the
-subject of a marriage at all: and in truth it must be stated, his own
-youth was not much inclined that way either. His heart got the better
-of his head.
-
-Thus was the youthful Professor actually forced to accept the
-situation philosophically. He flattered himself that in time he would
-be able to investigate more fully, and make any needed adjustments
-later on. She flattered herself that she would be quite equal to any
-emergency that might arise, as she proposed not only to push him to
-the very front among his contemporaries, but also use his exalted
-position to attain her own social ends.
-
-When they first met, both away from home, in mid-ocean, their mental
-activities alert, stimulated by what each had experienced abroad, and
-little on hand to occupy the time, the conditions were favorable.
-Even the menu on board ship was highly seasoned after its kind,
-during the day, and after dark the stars twinkled doubly in the
-heavens above, and the mysterious depths below, while they looked at
-“the Dipper” together.
-
-No sooner did the charmingly vivacious young lady observe the
-Professor’s attractive appearance than she made up her mind; and
-noticing that he sat at the Captain’s table as one of the selected
-few on board, she determined to know him personally.
-
-Professor Cultus in young manhood certainly did look handsome, of
-the intellectual type. His dark eyes were noticed by others besides
-Miss Carlotta Gains. The prospect of this new acquaintance was quite
-enough to cause her to exert herself, so she frankly told Fraulein
-Ritter, under whose care she was returning home, that she would like
-immensely to have that gentleman presented to her.
-
-Carlotta had been to Berlin, taking lessons in singing under Fraulein
-Ritter’s direction and chaperonage; had been under rather strict
-surveillance while studying, and had not much enjoyed that particular
-phase of a young woman’s student life in Berlin. When once clear of
-the Continental proprieties, the American girl began again to assert
-herself. Carlotta was certainly fortunate in having such a one as
-Fraulein Ritter to consult, for she in turn was quite an authority
-in her own branch. Educated at Weimar during the days of Liszt’s
-supremacy, Fraulein Ritter had no small reputation afterwards from
-her publications relating to music in general and voice culture
-in particular. Incidentally she had met not a few of the members
-attending the congress,--in fact, Professor Cultus had already
-been presented to her in Berlin; so there being nothing to shock
-Fraulein’s German sense of propriety in granting Carlotta’s request,
-an introduction followed.
-
-“Professor, allow me to present you to my pupil, Miss Carlotta
-Gains. Possibly you have heard of her father, Mr. Anthony G. Gains,
-of Silverton, Eldorado.” Why Fraulein should have supposed that
-any knowledge of Anthony Gains out in Eldorado could possibly have
-reached the Professor can only be attributed to the benign influence
-of Carlotta’s lucky star, and the other well authenticated fact that
-“the world is not so big after all.” As luck would have it, the
-Professor had known Mr. Gains fairly well, and not so many years
-back, when at the early stage of his career he had been called upon
-to give expert testimony in a certain law suit involving technical
-information. The Professor had found Mr. Gains a first-rate,
-all-round, square-minded American, from his point of view, and Grab
-Gains, as his Eldorado friends dubbed him, had much appreciated the
-young scientist’s unbiased clear statements as a witness. Being
-astute and practical in business, upon gaining the law suit he had
-given his expert, on the spot, the biggest fee he had received up
-to that time,--not for his testimony--oh, no,--for some other work
-which came up incidentally, quite beyond his expenses and regular
-charge.
-
-Gains’s business foresight was not devoid of results. The Professor
-at once thought he knew much about the antecedents of the young
-lady, and expressed himself as delighted to meet the daughter of his
-former friend. Of course he referred to the general circumstances
-under which they had met, and praised Eldorado as a locality of great
-scientific interest.
-
-Miss Carlotta put two and two together, and recalled her father’s
-remark that he would never have gained that case if the Professor had
-not “talked science so that the jury could understand.” The Professor
-seemed pleased to know it. Carlotta at once determined to appreciate
-the Professor just as that jury had done; so she immediately
-introduced a topic bound to be of interest to him.
-
-“What a success your congress proved to be, Professor.”
-
-“Quite so,--more than we anticipated. But I did not suspect it would
-attract your attention.”
-
-“Why not? Fraulein takes all the publications; I intend to read your
-paper with special interest,” her ambition leading her more than half
-way.
-
-The Professor looked quizzical. “I fear you will find it rather slow
-for cursory reading.” Then his responsive manner getting the best of
-him he added with considerable effect: “It will give me the greatest
-pleasure to make it clear if I can.”
-
-Carlotta took him up at once,--but on a topic she did know something
-about as well as he, and stated it after her own fashion.
-
-“I noticed that one of the discussions was about the peculiar
-costumes of certain tribes. Now, I never did understand why the
-darker races should introduce brilliant colors in dress so much more
-naturally and effectively than we do.”
-
-The Professor instantly looked at her own dress and thought it very
-effective, in excellent taste. Carlotta continued:
-
-“Now, with us color is often so arbitrary, mere fashion, the
-arrangement artificial, and when the thing is unbecoming you feel
-just like a martyr;” then, musingly, “but he won’t find that in me.”
-
-Professor Cultus laughingly replied that “he really knew little about
-dress”--which was a fib for an anthropologist--but he supposed that
-“Dame Fashion was a capricious jade who often made her reputation
-by producing whims to meet the demand for something new; she had
-certainly been known to introduce what was hideous to many, simply to
-cover up the defects of a favorite patron.”
-
-Carlotta at once thought, “Well, there’s nothing hideous about me. I
-wonder what he means?”
-
-The Professor once started, went on about the darker races using the
-primitive and secondary colors only with such marked effect; that
-they really knew little about hues and shades as our civilization
-differentiates colors and effects. He was then going on to add
-something about color in jewels adding great effect to rich costumes,
-when Carlotta gave a little start, drew her wrap about her and said
-she felt cold and chilly.
-
-Fraulein at once suggested they should leave the deck for the saloon.
-Carlotta acquiesced as if very grateful, and begged the Professor to
-excuse her.
-
-Of course he did so promptly, with sympathy excited by fear lest she
-might have suffered in consequence of his keeping her standing too
-long in a cold wind.
-
-Nothing of the sort. It was the reference made to jewels by the
-Professor which had caused her impromptu nervous chill. Could he
-possibly have noticed the too many rings she wore and concluded
-she might be rather loud in her taste? That must be rectified at
-once,--so Carlotta caught a chill on the spot, merely a little
-sympathetic chill, but enough to get away and arrange things better
-for the next interview. Certainly her tact showed foresight as well
-as power to meet an emergency from her point of view.
-
-She knew instinctively the value of sympathy as well as propinquity.
-She had gained her first point, an introduction; now for the
-second, sympathy: and she was not slow to act,--much quicker than
-the Professor dreamed of. She did things first and discussed them
-afterwards; that was one of her accomplishments which he often
-observed later on.
-
-No sooner in her state-room than Miss Gains snatched off every
-ring, all but one, a fine ruby rich in color but not too large;
-“rubies never are,” she said, pensive. On this one she looked with
-much satisfaction, it would meet her requirements yet not excite
-suspicion, the removal of all might do so.
-
-But why the ruby?
-
-Carlotta was astute, like her papa, much more so than the Professor
-imagined,--he learned that also later on. What troubled her now
-was no new matter, and largely in her own imagination. A biologist
-would have told her it was inherited. Being a pronounced blonde
-of the florid type, vivacious, fond of excitement, she had often
-noticed that her hands became rather rosy in color. So the ardent yet
-astute Miss Gains had evolved the brilliant yet practical idea that
-the ruby would be “the very thing to throw the other red into the
-shade--people will notice the ruby and speak of that.” If she could
-not avoid being too rosy, in her own imagination, the ruby should
-take the blame.
-
-Carlotta was politic also, like her papa, much more so than the
-Professor thought--he found that out also later on. So she retained
-the ruby only, and wore a red tocque when next on deck. She would no
-doubt have put on her golf jacket if on shore, so determined was she
-to make those hands look as refined as possible.
-
-The Professor’s sympathy was now to be encouraged. If the too many
-rings were to be kept out of sight, it was far more important to keep
-the object of sympathy in sight. Carlotta determined not to get over
-that chill too soon,--not to remain so chilly that the state-room was
-the only warm place, but just chilly enough to seek convalescence
-wrapped up in a becoming garment, resting in an easy chair in some
-retired corner, or on deck where the lights illumined others, and not
-herself. Just chilly enough to require the little attentions of a
-sympathetic friend, whose sympathy she could make warmer as her own
-cold chill wore off.
-
-Miss Carlotta was diplomatic, as the Professor also found out.
-Once ensconced in that easy chair with the Professor to keep the
-chills off, her success was already assured. Her greatest triumph
-consisted undoubtedly in that she displayed such a bright intelligent
-appreciation of the Professor’s point of view about everything,
-anything from chalk and cheese to volcanoes and earthquakes, not
-omitting the science of games, especially ping-pong, and the usual
-dose of theosophy; and so much policy and diplomacy as to her own
-point of view, that to this day the intellectual scientist ascribes
-the results primarily to his own ability in courting.
-
-It was in fact a double game of life and chances, the game of all
-games, of heart and head, that two can play at. Carlotta won for
-life, whereas the Professor began by taking chances. Propinquity at
-sea,--floating on the waves from which rose Aphrodite.
-
-Of course it became evident to the Professor that Carlotta was
-precisely the person he most desired in life,--so appreciative,
-intellectually bright, much knowledge of the world for her age; and
-as she had incidentally remarked on one occasion, quite comfortable
-as to worldly goods;--although, to be frank, he laid little stress
-upon the latter at that time, having much confidence in his own
-resources. He was often glad of it, however, later on; it also proved
-one of the things he learned subsequently.
-
-Before they left the steamer there was an understanding, and the way
-seemed smooth to expect a favorable consideration from Carlotta’s
-parental governor. Her mother was no longer living, which accounted
-for Carlotta’s being under the care of Fraulein.
-
-As a matter of fact Anthony Gains was not surprised in the least when
-his daughter returned engaged to be married, and easily accepted
-the situation philosophically; indeed, rather congratulated himself
-that she had not been too independent, like some, but deigned to go
-through the formalities of making the announcement subject to his
-approval.
-
-“Much better to avoid unnecessary fuss,” he said to himself, “and it
-gives me a good chance to spare the Professor’s feelings. In case
-they had given me the slip, I suppose a rumpus would have been in
-order. Carlotta’s sensible,--I know her well,--I’m glad she lived in
-the West before going to Europe.” Her father did know her well, much
-better really than he who then desired to take the chances. Papa also
-remembered with much satisfaction the young scientist who had given
-“plain talk to that jury.” He concluded he might be able to give
-plain talk to his household if emergency required it. Finally he told
-them frankly:
-
-“Having gone through the mill myself, I guess you two can manage your
-own business first-rate. I don’t suppose you object if I coöperate.”
-
-As his practical coöperation took effect even before the marriage,
-when he settled a handsome sum upon Carlotta, the Professor thought
-still more highly of his prospective father-in-law.
-
-Not till all was over, the ceremony an accomplished fact, and the
-young people off on another tour apropos of the occasion,--not till
-then did Anthony Gains allow himself to whisper in a room where there
-was no telephone:
-
-“They’ll be comfortable anyhow. These scientific fellows make so
-little they are not extravagant as a class. I guess it will be all
-right--God bless ’em.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Such had been an early but important chapter in the experience of
-the immediate ancestors of Adele Cultus;--of her whom both the Doctor
-and Paul had admired,--Paul because she was practical, the Doctor
-because she was spiritual.
-
-
-
-
- III
-
- ADELE HERSELF
-
-
-It is not so much what was said, as who said it and how they said it,
-that will convey an adequate impression of the charm exerted by Adele
-upon those she met. Of her two dozen desperately intimate friends at
-school, each had been known to exclaim, “Why, of course I know her;
-isn’t she just too lovely for anything?” and that covered the whole
-ground.
-
-When during college days a coterie of Juniors decided to invite
-some Seniors to “a tea,”--not “to tea,” for all were excruciatingly
-academic at that period, there was a spirited debate as to the
-special duties of each girl during the function, but not the
-slightest doubt that Adele should head the Reception Committee. “Why,
-my dear, she’s just the one for that place. Don’t you see it? We’ll
-show them the proper ‘pose.’”
-
-As a matter of fact, Adele did receive; also “poured out” at times;
-also introduced some strangers to her own kindred spirits to banish
-any feeling of uneasiness; and finally achieved the undoubted triumph
-of making two girls friends again, the girls much excited, holding
-diametrically opposite opinions upon the momentous question of
-Cleopatra’s cruelty to animals.
-
-When she graduated, valedictorian of her class, she made an address
-neither too long nor too short, not unlike her gown, precisely
-as it should be,--pointedly academic to start with and meet the
-case, then somewhat more colloquial, recalling the good times they
-all had passed, and concluding with a touching appeal “never to
-forget Alma Mater.” The entire class mentally promised they never
-would, “nor you either, Adele,” and she was deluged with so many
-future-correspondents that the prospect became really alarming.
-
-When she made her début, scarcely an evening passed that some “man”
-did not tell her confidentially: “You look lovely to-night, Miss
-Cultus;” and when upon a certain full-dress occasion she sat with Mr.
-Warder on the stairway, presumably with none but the old stand-up
-clock to listen, the first remark she heard was, “Oh, I’m so glad,
-Miss Cultus, we can have a chat, alone!” “Alone!” exclaimed Adele.
-“Why, certainly, alone in the crowd,”--and as she drew her skirts
-aside to allow four other couples and a queue of waiters to pass, her
-clear responsive laugh appreciative of the situation, made Mr. Warder
-enjoy the public seclusion immensely.
-
-Evidently there was a personal magnetism about Adele which affected
-all more or less, and many whose own characteristics were totally
-unlike hers.
-
-At a glance anyone would have noticed her light hair flowing free,
-yet under control, tinged with sunlight, the sunlight of youth;
-hers was a fair complexion like her mother’s, yet with her father’s
-lustrous eyes. She was a blonde with dark eyes; once seen, a picture
-in the mind’s eye.
-
-Her father’s facial expression played over her countenance,
-manifesting that responsive personal interest which drew many to
-her. Her mother, as we already know, could express that responsive
-attitude also, and exercise the personal influence when she chose,
-but with Adele it was spontaneous, perfectly natural, and her smile
-sincere, ingenuous, rather than ingenious, one of the most precious
-and potent gifts a woman can possess.
-
-And some of her other gifts by heredity were also very evident, but
-modified. Dame Nature had been exceedingly kind, and given her as it
-were only those elements which intensified the better traits of the
-previous generations. Her active mind reminded one of her father’s
-intellectual ability in science, but it was so modified by her
-mother’s more comprehensive susceptibility and impressionability in
-many directions, her worldly wisdom and promptness, that in Adele
-it took a different turn from either one of the parents. Her social
-instincts could not be suppressed, but fundamentally they tended
-towards an appreciation and insight of the humanities and ethical
-subjects rather than the material interests one might look for in
-the granddaughter of Anthony Gains, or the intellectual abstractions
-which might have come from the Professor’s mode of thought.
-
-Before graduating, some one asked her what she proposed to do after
-leaving college, for all felt a brilliant career was open. Adele was
-rather reserved in answering this question, and generally replied
-that there was so much which ought to be done in the world, no
-doubt she would be very busy. But to her mother she confided on
-one occasion her innermost thought, she “would like to work in the
-slums.” This so horrified Mamma that Adele’s name was entered upon
-the fashionable Assembly list for the coming season without delay, as
-an antidote in case of emergency, although somewhat premature as to
-time.
-
-It would never do to oppose Adele. She was already unaccustomed
-to that sort of management, and would assert herself even if she
-regretted it afterwards. A compromise was in order. She did not go
-to work in the slums, and did attend fashionable functions with her
-mother, but after serious conversation with her father on the subject
-of the practice of medicine by women, and her own observations of
-the constant demand for trained nurses who would not upset the whole
-household, she concluded to look into that matter herself, and
-volunteered to serve in the hospital during war times.
-
-“I must do something to help along; and nobody need know, unless I
-choose.” It was while thus serving that the Doctor and Paul had first
-met her, when the Doctor was a patient after his bicycle accident in
-a miniature cyclone. It was in the hospital that Doctor Wise had
-first read her hand, and made a note of it as approaching the psychic
-type more clearly than any other he had then met.
-
-From the Doctor’s point of view Adele’s hand was indeed suggestive,
-but not so purely psychical as to intimate mysticism to excess.
-It was rather that of a vivid idealist than a moody mystic,--too
-much intellectuality in the upper part, as well as assertion in the
-thumb and clearness in the head-line, not to influence and modify
-the natural tendency and scope as shown by the general form. It
-was not the hand of one whose vague aspirations after the good but
-unattainable would lead to extremes either in the activities of
-communism or socialistic vagaries, nor in the opposite direction
-towards the passive life of an ascetic. Either one would have soon
-disgusted Adele. It was the hand of one who endeavored to be logical,
-and did have common sense; yet in the exuberance of feeling sometimes
-put her hero upon a pedestal only to find the pedestal had a crack
-in it and the hero was in danger. As to the hero himself, he was
-never affected; she remained true to her hero, no sawdust in him; but
-she certainly did put him quietly aside on the shelf when she found
-herself beyond his point of view. She simply put him on the shelf
-to “think it out for himself,” as she had done for herself,--and in
-consequence had more would-be heroes following in her train, striving
-to catch up, than is generally found in the domain of hero worship.
-
-Youth has its sway. Adele was most delightfully enthusiastic at
-times, often bent upon what she called “having a good time.” Then
-she was a picture worthy of Fortuny’s art in a sunny Spanish patio;
-but in quieter moments as introspective as one of Millais’ peasants;
-rather over-confident in her own resources, having really not met as
-yet any opposition worthy of the name, unless perhaps a weak patient
-who refused to take medicine. Then she took a sip herself, and told
-him “Now you’ve got to take it,” and he did,--because her actions
-spoke louder even than her words.
-
-Her father had several times told her to read the world as if it were
-a book, and she had heard her mother refer to certain society leaders
-who acted a part that did not suit their own style. She determined
-to know and read all passers-by, from cooks with a sauce-pan to
-princesses with a crooked coronet, including Tom, Dick and Harry
-of course; and she found it so highly interesting, that when about
-eighteen she thought she might--yes--she might, in time,--write a
-novel herself; in fact she did write the title page, and the chapter
-on “Direful Conflict,” in which the sauce-pan and coronet almost came
-to blows. Whether to make that chapter the beginning of her novel or
-the ending, proved the poser, so it too was put upon the shelf with
-the heroes.
-
-The most interesting thing to people is people themselves. Adele’s
-maternal instincts told her this very soon.
-
-Things are of real value about in proportion to the effort they cost.
-Her instincts from her father suggested this, but she did not believe
-it at first. It might be, but was not pleasant to think of. She knew
-well enough that all that glitters is not gold, but sometimes thought
-that glitter might be when it wasn’t. When she found herself deceived
-in this respect her conclusions took a pronounced feminine form of
-expression. “Mother! I don’t think so very much of Mr. Upham they all
-talk about. He tries to show off--absurdly condescending, and talks
-as if he knew more about it than anybody else. Nobody really thinks
-of what he says, only of him. I think him a bore.”
-
-“Well, don’t let him know it, my dear,” promptly answered Mrs.
-Cultus. “One has to become accustomed to trifles. I generally look
-the other way and avoid them.”
-
-“I’m not going through the world on stilts, anyhow,” laughed Adele.
-
-“No, my dear, I trust not, nor on a bicycle either; neither is
-becoming.”
-
-Adele watched her father whenever they went out together, with
-almost precocious interest. She wished to discover how he made
-himself so agreeable to others and finally concluded that “Father’s
-manners are perfection.” She followed her father’s advice quite as
-naturally as she did her mother’s, the wisdom of which often appealed
-to her also; but in spite of her affection for both, she soon began
-to perceive there was something much more subtle in life than worldly
-wisdom. Things seen were by no means so potent as some other things
-unseen. She would use the world, but not let it use her. “I shall
-soon be used up myself” was the way she expressed it after having had
-rather too much of a good time.
-
-Without actually formulating the pros and cons in her own mind, she
-really decided not to attempt any part unless she could do justice to
-it under the stimulus of her own approval.
-
-Things seen, and never ignored, were already becoming subservient to
-things unseen.
-
-Such was Adele as a girl, and during the few years when her college
-experience was prime factor in her life.
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
- ADELE HEARS THE WORDS OF A SONG
-
-
-There was just enough of chilly winter left to make the springtime
-fascinating and a wood fire still acceptable in the cozy library
-where Doctor Wise and his younger friend Paul Warder sat together
-expecting guests. They occupied bachelor apartments in common. A
-delicious aroma from wood logs permeated the atmosphere.
-
-There was music also, for the eye as well as the ear. The firelight
-played in crescendo and diminuendo, with now and again marked rhythm
-and very peculiar accents. The sound of wheels reverberated clearly
-in the cool night air and ceased opposite the portal. An expectant
-waiting, but no response, no frou-frou from silken skirts passing
-along the hallway as anticipated. Instead, Benson,--Benson the
-butler, his countenance a foot long.
-
-“Some one, sir!”
-
-“I presume so.”
-
-“Some one, with his--his trunk.”
-
-“His trunk!” The Doctor lowered the bridge of his nose, and peered at
-Benson over his eye-glasses.
-
-“Yes, sir! a big one.”
-
-“What’s that for? What will he do with it? What will we do with it?”
-
-“Show him up, Benson,” said Paul, promptly; “trunk and all.”
-
-Paul’s eyes twinkled as he vanished through the doorway.
-
-“Never heard of such a thing,” mused the Doctor, “bringing a trunk
-to a musicale. Must be some mistake! Benson! I say, Benson! Show him
-next door.”
-
-“Not yet I hope,” and amid shouts of laughter in rushed two
-fellows,--Paul bringing Henri Semple--“Harry”--of all their musical
-friends the one most welcome and opportune.
-
-The Doctor was delighted, and gave him a good squeeze--no time for
-much else.
-
-“Benson! put Mr. Semple’s trunk in his own room, you know the one I
-mean; and now, Harry, if you don’t get inside that trunk quickly as
-possible the state of the country will not be safe, an invasion is
-threatened at any minute. Put on your regimentals at once, and help
-us out.”
-
-Semple, who understood the Doctor’s lingo from many years back, took
-in the situation at a glance. He had hardly time to laugh about the
-Doctor’s being “the same old chappie as ever,” when he was literally
-thrust towards the stairway, to follow the trunk, and put on his
-evening clothes.
-
-The episode had been one of Paul’s agreeable surprises so often had
-in store for the Doctor.
-
-Semple’s name had appeared upon the passenger list of an ocean flyer
-just arrived. Paul sought him by telephone, caught him, and insisted
-upon his coming. Semple, already in traveler’s shape, had “hustled”
-to reach his old friends. The time was short, but Harry in true
-American fashion had “got there”--that was all, with the regimentals
-ready to be put on.
-
-It is not necessary to produce the bachelor’s visiting list and
-mark off all those who honored the occasion with their presence.
-Paul always made it a point to have plenty of men on hand at his
-entertainments; whether at chit-chat-musicale or conversational game
-of whist, all went off with a rush. Those who took their pleasure
-more seriously were furnished excellent opportunity in the library,
-while the conversational music-racket progressed in the parlor.
-
-The trio, Doctor, Paul and Semple, were already standing in line,
-like three serenaders in white waistcoats, when Mrs. Maxwell was
-ushered in. She had kindly consented to act as matron, knowing all so
-well; in fact had entertained both Paul and Semple at her picturesque
-cottage, “The Kedge.” Her vivacious presence at once brought with
-it a breezy atmosphere from the romantic coast of Maine, where “The
-Kedge” stood perched like a barnacle upon a boulder, and the winds
-wafted white spray falling like a lace mantle upon dahlias and
-nasturtiums at her feet.
-
-And with her Miss Dorothy, her niece, whose charming letters the
-winter previous from Ischl had given vivid pictures of experience
-abroad, Vienna life, and Egyptian mysteries known only to herself and
-the Sphinx.
-
-A dozen or more soon followed. Conversation already at its height
-when Professor and Mrs. Cultus entered, also their daughter Adele
-whom the Doctor had before met under such peculiar circumstances
-at the hospital. Adele looked radiant, having brought with her an
-intimate friend, Miss Winchester, for whom she had requested an
-invitation. The Doctor greeted them with both hands, for he had
-already detected the devotion which had sprung up between these two
-girls. They seemed a host in themselves wherever they went. He made
-Miss Winchester feel at home at once, and she accepted the situation
-promptly; she had the happy faculty of doing that sort of thing.
-The Doctor enjoyed her frankness. She was like, yet very unlike
-Adele; no doubt much in common between them, yet of a very different
-temperament. The inquisitive Doctor perceived this at a glance.
-“Must read her hand,” he cogitated, for his interest in Adele made
-him curious to know more of the one to whom Adele seemed especially
-devoted.
-
-Others dropped in later, the rooms became well filled. The guests
-sought easy chairs, Paul taking special pains to see that Mrs. Cultus
-was comfortably settled. Mrs. Cultus in turn had made up her mind to
-hear Paul sing with the Doctor as accompanist. She had heard that
-they performed “stunts,” whatever they might prove to be, and now
-was her opportunity; also, she wished the stunts just as soon as
-possible. “Keep it up,” said Mrs. Cultus, _sotto voce_.
-
-Of course Paul could not refuse point blank, but he must be permitted
-to do so in his own way, for none knew better than he and the Doctor
-that their music together was of such a peculiar nature that unless
-led up to judiciously the effect would be utterly ruined. In fact
-there was nothing in it but “the spirit of the thing,” and little
-technique whatever except to meet the demand of this spirit of the
-thing. They had never had either time or inclination to cultivate
-and keep technique-on-tap,--a thing to be turned on and off like a
-fountain before an admiring public. Nevertheless, the little they
-could do gave a deal of pleasure to those not already hypnotized
-by digital gymnastics, or become satiated from eating too much
-candy-music.
-
-Unfortunately, Mrs. Cultus’ ideas about leading up to anything in
-the domain of music had been originally formed upon her experience
-when leading in the german, and in spite of her short but higher
-experience in Germany, her natural propensities often prevailed. As
-to any preparation of the mind and ear for the reception of given
-musical sounds and kindred forms of artistic and poetic expression,
-she was lamentably wanting, in fact her tactics often little better
-than a box of tacks to irritate the acuter sensibilities of those to
-whom she appealed with so much apparent appreciation. Mrs. Cultus
-never listened for the tone-color, simply because she could not
-constitutionally; she really could not, it was not in her to hear
-what she could hear.
-
-The music commenced, and Mrs. Cultus waited for the stunts. Henri
-Semple opened with some of Brahms’ Hungarian Dances, charmingly
-vivacious and contagious, also played in some duets with the Doctor
-on Creole and Florida negro themes. Racial and national dance music
-seemed not a bad overture to harmonize with the gay spirits already
-in vogue, yet lead on to something else. Herr Krantz then favored
-the company with some German songs; he appreciated the value of
-continuity, yet did not ignore the power of contrast. Herr Krantz
-was an artist; his first song in rather quick tempo with a dramatic
-climax, his second full of suppressed emotion; each most artistic
-in effect. All enjoyed his robust tenor voice, also his admirable
-interpretation of the sentiment of what he sang. Mrs. Cultus and the
-Doctor led in the applause; Mrs. Cultus because she detected that the
-whole thing was as it ought to be, especially the dramatic climax of
-the first song, and the tears suggested when the second song died
-away. Mrs. Cultus was much given to applauding when songs died away
-in tears, she wished the singer to understand that he died with good
-effect. The Doctor admired all artistic productions and renditions
-of any kind; even a good performance on a jew’s-harp or a xylophone
-was appreciated by him from the standpoint of art as art. If it did
-not manifest the sacred fire of the soul above all else, it was to be
-enjoyed and applauded nevertheless, as truth for its own sake, if not
-the highest form of truth through musical expression. He had heard
-mocking-birds sing like nightingales, yet they were not the veritable
-rossignole; he had long since learned that perfect technique was
-not the only way of expression, since the sacred fire burst through
-all bounds and made terrible mistakes (technical), yet was truth
-enduring, truth soaring towards immortality and enduring as memory
-endures.
-
-Paul in the meantime had induced Miss Winchester to follow Herr
-Krantz; and since his German artistic rendition had excited her
-imagination, her fingers fairly twitched with desire to respond,
-ready to the interpretation of what she felt. She knew she could play
-well because in the mood, delicious sensation.
-
-Miss Winchester’s talent for melodic expression was decidedly of the
-romantic school. Her idol was Schumann, and at times Tschaikowsky,
-but never when in their morbid humor, then she shut up their
-compositions and left them to be morbid alone, not with her. Fact is,
-Miss Winchester’s versatility and intellectual vivacious activity
-were so pronounced that she could render many original or rare wild
-fanciful “_morceaux_,” provided they were vivacious and embodied with
-personal experience, or what one might call the racial or national
-rhythm of those people who did sing and dance naturally. She and
-her brother were both extremely gifted in this respect, and to hear
-them play together was not unlike attempting to enjoy two glasses of
-champagne at the same time.
-
-Miss Winchester was soon leading the whole company through some
-Mexican danzas with a spontaneous abandon perfectly delightful; then
-some half-Spanish or old-time Creole reminiscences, very dansante in
-their time and place, and yet with a peculiar strain of languor which
-pictured the sunny southern clime in one of its most characteristic
-moods. Also one of her brother’s waltzes which quite lifted the
-hearer off his feet, very difficult to interpret as she did; simply
-because not being a singing waltz, neither of the kind that draws
-the feet downwards towards the floor in tempo strict and strong, but
-quite the contrary lifts the dancer up, carries him beyond, without
-fatigue, borne upon the wings of time into the realm of graceful
-motion.
-
-Mrs. Cultus could not quite make out whether this strange rhapsodical
-style of waltzing was quite up to the standard of the occasion.
-It certainly was rather effective, but not as she ever remembered
-hearing it in the german. “’Twas impossible to count two or three to
-such a thing as that and keep up with it;” therefore suspicious. So
-the politic Mrs. Cultus hid behind her jewelled lorgnette, looking
-alternately at the performer and the audience before making up her
-mind.
-
-The susceptible Doctor was quite fascinated, translated, as he
-entered into the spirit of the thing. He thought of scenes in
-Delibes’ ballets, of Sylvia and Coppelia, also of the wonderful grace
-of Beaugrand upon Walpurgis night when she first appears enveloped by
-a cloud descending upon the stage, the cloud disappearing, the dancer
-wafted forward to whirl amid a maze of fascinating melody.
-
-Adele and Paul also could not resist the temptation to “try it in
-the hall,” but soon gave that up; Adele expecting to sing herself,
-therefore careful of her voice, and Paul because the fascination
-was quite sufficient without the dancing just then. They were again
-caught sitting on the stairs under the benign countenance of “Fanny,”
-the old family clock, who ticked on solemnly as if accustomed
-to witness waltzing and flirtations, in past times as well as
-to-night,--this when the Doctor put in an appearance to ask Adele to
-sing.
-
-Adele was an enchanting personification of youthful enjoyment when
-Paul led her into the room, her dark eyes lustrous and full of fire,
-yet but little conscious of self when she at once dropped Paul’s arm
-to rush up to Miss Winchester and thank her for the treat she had
-given them. “I never heard you play better in my life, my dear! Oh,
-how I wish I could do it!” and then, feeling her own position, became
-more subdued in manner as she approached the piano. Henri Semple had
-kindly offered to accompany her--they had often sung together as she
-called it, so felt in unity at once. Only a word was necessary to
-Henri, “Please go straight on, if I should trip I’ll catch up again.”
-Henri smiled and began the introduction.
-
-Adele first sang a rather pretentious florid aria. Her mother had
-insisted upon this, evidently thinking that all should be informed
-at once that her daughter had been educated under the best masters,
-as she herself had been under Fraulein Ritter. Adele complied with
-her mother’s request, even if she herself had different notions as
-to the result. Mrs. Cultus had “dropped her music” soon after the
-bills had been paid for her education, and never picked it up again
-except in nursery rhymes for Adele. Those nursery songs had won
-their way to Adele’s heart, she sometimes sang them yet, but their
-greatest triumph had been to excite within her a desire to really
-sing herself. She now proposed to hold on and not drop what she had
-striven for, to make her voice the means towards expression of higher
-things, feelings which words could not always express. As to the
-florid aria to commence with, “Oh, yes! it would do to try the voice
-and bring out the notes, but the real thing must not be expected
-until later.”
-
-Her innermost thoughts were quite in this vein when enthusiastic
-applause greeted her singing. She had sung well. Herr Krantz
-complimented her, evidently sincere, so she took his appreciation
-sincerely, but soon turned to Mr. Semple to select something more
-to her own taste. She chose a composition with which she was very
-familiar, one of her special favorites, and passed it to Henri.
-
-Semple glanced it over, and being himself of kindred spirit with
-her own at once detected certain signs,--how it had been well used
-but carefully handled, certain passages marked, some private marks,
-evidently her own.
-
-“Miss Cultus, don’t you play this accompaniment yourself?”
-
-“Oh, yes!”
-
-“I thought so--let me resign!”
-
-“Don’t you know it?--it’s not difficult.”
-
-“So I see, but I’m sure none could play it exactly as you would feel
-it.”
-
-Adele knew this to be true; no one could really accompany the songs
-she really loved so completely to her own satisfaction as herself,
-that was the way she had learned to love them.
-
-“You won’t be offended if I do?”
-
-Semple responded at once and stood beside her, but he felt intensely
-curious to know exactly why, since she was so different from many,
-she desired to do so with this particular piece,--the accompaniment
-did not appear to be especially exacting, so he asked her about the
-peculiarities of the composition.
-
-“I like to be near the composer, near as I can,” was all she said in
-reply, and without further ado seated herself at the instrument.
-
-Some noticing her movement were disappointed, others delighted; the
-latter were those who loved music which came from the heart,--the
-former those who admired what came from the head.
-
-The Doctor asked her father if she preferred to accompany herself.
-“Only at times,” said the Professor, and he appeared rather serious
-himself when he observed the mood she was in. It would probably
-be Adele at her best, but by no means likely to command the most
-general appreciation. Then he told the Doctor: “She knows that head
-and heart must work together as one if any true emotion is to come
-with the music, and she thinks this is such a subtle matter in her
-own case that she must become as near like the composer himself as
-she possibly can to render the music as he originally conceived and
-felt it. She insists that every good song is fundamentally emotional,
-the spirit dominating the art. To get close to this spirit in the
-piece, to become the composer and try to re-create the piece, is what
-she is after. One soul and mind, the voice soul and the artistic
-accompaniment; both had come originally from one creative source, the
-composer, whose whole being must have throbbed with one emotion when
-he wrote the piece if worth anything. Those who would really feel the
-same emotion must try to be like him and follow him in spirit and in
-truth. She wishes to reproduce the intimate sympathetic blending of
-voice and accompaniment which the composer had felt when he wrote the
-song.”
-
-“How intensely she must feel!” said the Doctor, pensive, and
-turned to listen, giving attention to the singer to recognize her
-personality as creator for the time being of the song,--the singer
-giving new life, a renaissance or resurrection to the song.
-
-What Adele sang was a melody by Gounod with simple chords in the
-accompaniment, the piano filling in like a second voice when her own
-was not prominent. The second voice sang with her, that is, to her
-and for her, and the two blended as one, a veritable duet of heart
-and head as one. The piano gave the atmosphere in which the melody
-lived, moved and had its being, and the melody itself was the voice
-of a living soul singing in truth and purity.
-
-To sing it as she did required intense mental effort, herself under
-admirable control;--the dominating emotional spirit within. It was
-the divine art, the purity in the art, hence divine in origin. Art
-dominated by the Spirit of Truth that is Holy, in Music. Music as
-Truth, for a religious fervor lay deep within the song. It was
-the overflow of her own feelings which others heard and felt, yet
-she sang as if no one was present,--none,--herself alone,--Adele
-an Idyl. As she continued, the melody seemed to gain in spiritual
-significance, so pure, so true, so simply lovely, the good, true and
-beautiful, as one, a trinity of inner experience, and thus possessing
-a high spiritual significance. All who heard, associated with her
-voice their own best thoughts. They “became one” with her,--and
-while she thus led them towards higher and better things, the melody
-soared upon the wings of a dove, rising as if nearing the celestial
-choir. It did not diminish, grow less, nor die away, but passed from
-hearing; it was heard, and then it was not heard, gone--gone to live
-among the melodies of immortality, for the truth in her music had
-made it an immortal song--none could ever forget, neither her, her
-song, nor how she sang it.
-
-“How angelic!” whispered those who heard her.
-
-“She is an angel,” said her mother, who knew her best.
-
-The Doctor mused; he was still thinking some time after the
-song ceased. There was to him a feeling of both exhaustion and
-exaltation,--the human and the divine in his own personality.
-
-As to Paul,--the emotion was rather strong for him, rather too
-much just then, the complications of feeling decidedly confusing,
-especially as he would be called upon to sing next. He felt perfectly
-limp. “What on earth can I do, after an angel has carried the whole
-crowd into the upper regions!”
-
-The suppressed applause which followed Adele’s sacred song had hardly
-ceased, the hum of appreciation still heard, and Adele herself about
-to ask Henri Semple for the bouquet of American Beauties which he
-held for her, when she caught the eye of Paul and gave him a slight
-inclination of the head to approach.
-
-Paul had been asked to sing next. She knew it,--she also knew the
-style of his music, that it could not possibly sound to advantage
-immediately after her own success. She also knew Paul’s sensibility,
-yet desire to oblige. In the kindness of her heart, now so sensitive
-from the holy spirit in music which had prompted her singing, she
-wished in some way to aid Paul to bridge over the dilemma into which
-her mother’s lack of appreciation of the personal element in music
-threatened to lead him, for it was Mrs. Cultus who had insisted upon
-his singing as soon as Adele finished.
-
-May it not also be said that Adele herself was about to take another
-step forward in her musical career? namely, by a very practical
-appreciation of the vast domain of melodic expression,--in other
-words the comprehensiveness of “the art of putting things” and the
-wonderful difference in methods and means by which spiritual effects
-may be produced. She knew that Paul’s voice did appeal to mankind, at
-least to some, quite as positively as her own; he also was sensitive
-about it, but his emotional feeling was so different from her own.
-She wished to be altruistic, and assure Paul fair treatment.
-
-Paul joined her. “I never heard you sing better.”
-
-“I’m glad you were here,--I felt like it,--Gounod is a great friend
-of mine.”
-
-“I wish I had a friend on hand.”
-
-“How so?”
-
-“To sing for me, my voice is scared to death.”
-
-“It doesn’t sound that way, but I know what you mean.”
-
-“’Pon honor!--the crudity of it! and then to be asked to sing after
-you.”
-
-“Never mind that, think of the music, and forget yourself.”
-
-“What! forget the music and think of myself!” He had hardly uttered
-the thought upside down before it seemed to suggest something to him.
-He said nothing, however, for a moment, and then seemed to brace up,
-and began talking about other things, until Mrs. Cultus approached.
-
-Adele knew, or rather thought she knew, that if her mother pressed
-him too hard in his present mood she might receive a refusal in
-return, a polite apology for not singing. Much to her surprise,
-Paul consented with considerable cordiality, saying he would do his
-best gladly; but there was a twinkle in his eye which he could not
-disguise as he said it. Adele wondered what the twinkle meant. Mamma
-felt sure he would do “stunts.”
-
-What had influenced Paul so suddenly? The twisted words giving a new
-association of ideas had suggested yet another motive for singing.
-“Forget the music, and think of you, Adele.” He had thought of a
-songlet which did just that sort of thing--he would try it.
-
-Why had Adele failed to appreciate the twinkle? Simply because she
-did not then know him well enough to recognize one of the strongest
-elements in his character, namely, a certain sure reserve power which
-men of his type are apt to possess, and manifest in positions of this
-sort with marked individuality in form of expression. Paul was just
-such a man.
-
-With him it had been Adele’s first song, the florid aria to show off
-her voice, which had made the passing impression, not the second; in
-fact, the train of thought first excited had continued on through
-Adele’s second song, blinding him to a certain extent,--so that
-although he did hear the beautiful finale when her voice passed from
-hearing, he was preoccupied; he heard it only as another instance of
-her highly cultivated technique, nothing more. Its real spiritual
-significance had been lost upon him because his mind was preoccupied
-in another direction. Having ears he had not heard, yet being what
-he was, he had; consequently his impressions of her performance
-were complicated. He had appreciated her cultivated voice as fully,
-probably, as any in the room, but also remembered how at the hospital
-some time before she had sung much less ambitious music which excited
-even greater sympathy, bringing tears rather than applause. He did
-not wish Adele to lose her charm in that respect, and now, in his
-present frame of mind, feared lest she might do so. In fact, being
-somewhat askew in his own mind, yet rather sensitive about her, he
-jumped to the conclusion that she might give up the old simplicity of
-real power in order to electrify society by flights of vocalization.
-Thus the spirituality of a sincere, practical man did not differ
-fundamentally from that of another with greater æsthetic and artistic
-development, but the manifestation of it took an entirely different
-form.
-
-Evidently Paul was quite as much interested in Adele’s success as
-she was in his,--but how different the motive and varied the form
-of expressing the emotion. Paul determined to give her some sort of
-a hint as to how he felt, and in a way she alone would recognize.
-If he had been older, no doubt he would have told her so direct,
-but youth is fonder of playing games in which self-reliance takes a
-prominent part. He made up his mind to sing anyhow, and quick as a
-flash the thought had come to him, “her effect was through the music,
-not the words, why not forget the music and think of the words?--try
-it with a style and with a purpose so different from hers that no
-comparison can possibly be in order?” He would force attention to
-the words rather than the music, and compel the audience to listen
-for the sake of the words. As to sentiment! His eyes twinkled as he
-thought of it; the audience could interpret that, each after his own
-fashion,--as for him, he would forget the music and think of Adele.
-
-Paul went to the piano, telling Adele not to listen, as it was only
-some verses from “_Life_” which the Doctor had set to music. This was
-quite enough to excite Adele’s curiosity, and made her more attentive
-even than the others.
-
-Paul’s voice was a rich baritone with but little cultivation, and
-fresh as nature had given it to him, with some few rich masculine
-notes as soft as velvet. When he felt intensely, yet kept himself
-under control, and the song brought into play those particular notes,
-Paul could make even a society reporter listen with sincerity. His
-articulation being clear, the listeners heard the words without
-effort, and the music became a harmonious medium of communication.
-
-Much to his satisfaction he felt this mood coming over him. The
-Doctor, too, knew by his manner that Paul would be at his best, so
-played the accompaniment to sustain the voice, yet allow expression
-absolutely free with Paul,--a condition of things only possible to
-those who have personal sympathy as well as melodic instinct.
-
-Each line of the song told its own tale;--the sentiment, not the
-cultivation of the voice nor accompaniment, attracted attention;--a
-few gestures gave the proper emphasis.
-
- “She is so fair,
- And yet to me
- She is unfair
- As she can be.
-
- “Were she less fair,
- I should be free;
- Or less unfair,
- Her slave I’d be.
-
- “Fair, or unfair--
- Ah! woe is me;
- So ill I fare--
- Farewell to thee!”
-
-The effect was peculiar. Some caught what they thought were puns in
-the words, and called for a repetition to catch them better; others
-said the fellow was a fool to give up the girl so soon,--she was not
-really so unfair as she appeared to him. Society amused itself hugely
-over the absurd situation.
-
-Adele turned to the Doctor. “I don’t care for that song.”
-
-“No! Why?”
-
-“The girl was misunderstood.”
-
-“How strange! I didn’t see it that way at all,” said the Doctor.
-
-“What did you see?”
-
-“The young lady did not appreciate her admirer.”
-
-“What is it called?” asked Adele.
-
-“A Paradox.”
-
-Paul overheard them and noticed an introspective expression on
-Adele’s countenance. Was she trying to recall the words? He would
-make sure of them, so in response to the encore repeated after this
-fashion:
-
- “Thou art so fair, and yet to me
- Thou art unfair as thou canst be.
-
- “Wert thou less fair, I should be free;
- Or less unfair, thy slave I’d be.
-
- “Fair, or unfair--Ah! woe is me;
- So ill I fare,--farewell to thee.”
-
-And as he sang, the peculiar twinkle in his eyes again appeared.
-To the hearers it seemed very appropriate to the song, part of the
-spirit of the thing. Paul was more interested as to how it would
-affect Adele.
-
-Adele was more confused than ever. Did he, or did he not, intend
-anything? She hardly knew how she ought to address him the next
-minute. It would be foolish to lay any stress upon such a song,
-merely a _play upon words_ at best; yet her womanly instinct told her
-it might mean a great deal. She had no time, however, to think much
-about it, and did not care much anyhow, so tried to put the matter
-quite aside.
-
-“What absurd words!--not so bad either ... but he certainly made them
-tell,” and she looked around the room as if to notice what others
-thought.
-
-People were still discussing the Paradox.
-
-“The impression seems to last,” said she.
-
-The Doctor caught her final word.
-
-“What lasts, Miss Adele?”
-
-A twinkle in her eye this time.
-
-“Paul’s song,--wasn’t it amusing?” and they both laughed heartily.
-
-“The supper is served,” whispered a waiter to the Doctor, and shortly
-after Adele was seen entering the supper-room on the Doctor’s arm.
-Paul escorted Miss Winchester.
-
-
-
-
- V
-
- AFTER DARK IN THE PARK
-
-
-After the guests had departed the Doctor decided he would fill his
-lungs with fresh air by a short stroll in the park before retiring.
-Thus to saunter was a favorite experience with him after an evening
-spent in close quarters. He could be alone, yet not alone,--in the
-world, yet not of it.
-
-“These breathing places are delicious,” he mused, “good for all, day
-or night; to the poor a blessed change from close and narrow homes,
-and to the wealthy if they only knew it, from their over-heated
-rooms. Fresh air in the lungs and a good quaff of pure water are the
-most healthy somnorifics I know. Thank Heaven, this park furnishes
-such luxuries to all.” This as he took a seat near a fountain which
-overflowed conveniently for the thirsty wayfarer.
-
-The trees overhead were coming into new leaf, and the grass plots
-newly trimmed,--the resurrection of spring evidently near at hand.
-Arc lights from a distance shone through, giving a silvery lustre to
-the undersides of the new foliage, and a radiant glow which permeated
-the long vista.
-
-He looked above into the azure,--it was a starlit night; also towards
-the horizon, down one of the wide avenues which intersected at the
-park. Upon a public building in the distance some statuary above the
-cornice stood distinct in outline against the sky, but from time to
-time the figures were obscured by clouds of smoke or steam enveloping
-as in a luminous mist. The figures came and went as if they
-themselves were endowed with movement. He watched the smoke-mist,
-tracing to its source,--a press establishment,--the newspaper workers
-busy while the public slept. He hoped that to-morrow’s issue might
-bring news of something better than the smoke of war, mists of
-politics, and the vile conflicts of the debased side of humanity. Why
-not accentuate the good in the world instead of the evil? Such would
-be the way of truth in life, to overcome the evil with the good. But
-he did not feel very sanguine that to-morrow’s issue would be of
-that sort,--certainly not so long as the use and abuse of head-lines
-purposely to mislead the public for the sake of cash obtained.
-
-He then looked more carefully at the fountain. It was a gift to the
-city from a dear friend of both himself and Paul, their old friend
-John Burlington, whose philanthropy took many practical forms for
-the benefit of the public. He skirted the park on his way out, and
-noticed a barber shop across the street in which a few days previous
-he had been shaved. Why that particular shop? Because therein he had
-been shaved by a young woman, of whom in justice it must be said she
-did it remarkably well. “Woman’s sphere is rapidly increasing,” he
-mused, “but in such matters, at what a terrible risk and sacrifice of
-womanly reserve; a gain in wages and publicity, a loss of refinement
-and the other feminine attributes. Is not woman’s head-gear
-sufficiently complicated already to furnish employment to experts of
-her own sex without attempting to scrape a man’s chin? Certainly the
-latter was a risky business for a woman to attempt on short notice.”
-
-There was a hotel on the corner. He stopped to purchase a cigar,
-but it was too late. Too late for that, but not too late for others
-passing in and out. A couple passed through an inconspicuous entrance
-with a peculiar dim lantern in the vestibule near by, and soon
-disappeared. They appeared to be sneaking in, yet perfectly familiar
-with the premises.
-
-A gay crowd of young people on bicycles passed by; it seemed
-unusually late to see so many out. As they wheeled off, talking in
-high spirits, there was naught, however, to distinguish them from a
-party of industrious young workers who had been kept indoors during
-the day, and whose youth demanded outdoor exercise, even if it had to
-be taken after dark.
-
-“Where are their parents? still snoozing?” queried the Doctor,--“a
-ride after midnight may lead to a ‘skip by the light of the moon,’
-but that’s none of my business,” and the bachelor doctor wended his
-way back towards his own domicile.
-
-He was just about to enter when he spied a slight, agile figure, an
-elderly lady dressed in black, approaching and motioning to detain
-him. He could not mistake that light airy step, the nervous activity,
-the characteristic gestures. It must surely be she whose activity in
-good works he had known so long and well, yet he little expected to
-see her alone in the public street at that hour.
-
-He ran down to meet her, took her arm under his and begged her to
-come in.
-
-“I can’t, my dear, positively I can’t,” in a voice sweet and
-cheerful, as if she wished it but was too busy.
-
-“Well, let me escort you home, then,” insisted the Doctor.
-
-“No, my dear, not necessary at all, not a bit. I never have any
-difficulty at night. I wouldn’t take you on any account. I’ve been to
-the----” and she hesitated.
-
-“Well, what can I do for you, Aunt Mary?”
-
-She smiled as if the name was most welcome,--patted the Doctor on the
-back, called him one of “her boys,” and stopped a minute to chat.
-
-But who was Aunt Mary?
-
-One of those excellent, self-sacrificing Christian women, loving and
-lovable, whose whole life was devoted to helping and encouraging
-those in distress. Her vocation especially among the worthy poor,
-where her heart was ever willing, and her activity constant in their
-behalf; striving to bring hope and efficient aid to those who were
-struggling against adversity, kindness where it was most needed,
-affection where it was seldom met. Among many friends she had a small
-coterie of gentlemen whom she called her boys. To these she appealed
-in emergencies, and was sure to receive without further inquiry,
-simply because “Aunt Mary wanted it.” As sometimes the case with
-Christian women of her active, sympathetic, sanguine type, she had
-been led to join a few others in the work of redemption conducted
-under the auspices of the Midnight Mission. Aunt Mary was returning
-from the Mission when she caught sight of the Doctor, her heart
-full to overflowing about some hopeful cases among the unfortunate
-outcasts she had met. Like an Angel of Mercy she had been spending
-her evening talking with purity of thought and action to some,
-and waiting for others who might wander in from the streets. She
-had been holding out her arms to welcome, to give shelter in the
-Home--Christ-like--“Come unto Me, all ye that are weary and heavy
-laden, and I will give you rest.”
-
-As the Doctor left Aunt Mary at the door of her own modest home, his
-thoughts reverted irresistibly to his evening’s experience considered
-as a whole.
-
-The lights and shadows of city life, the contrasts, the changes that
-a day may bring forth. Then of the countless fields of work for truth
-as each one sees it in his own environment. Surely the Christ life
-was the most beautiful and helpful of all.
-
-He recalled how Adele Cultus had once experienced an ardent desire to
-work in the slums and been prevented by circumstances, yet continued
-to progress in her own sphere. He thought he detected a spiritual
-similarity between her and Aunt Mary, yet to outward view there was
-little to suggest such comparison; yet again there was, for the
-elderly sympathy for others might have once in youth taken a youthful
-form of expression,--and the present youthful girl who began by
-sympathy for others might yet attain to her ideals.
-
-Then his thoughts wandered off in quite another direction. The
-fresh foliage in the park had forcibly reminded him of the coming
-season for travel, the time had arrived to make final arrangements
-for a contemplated trip abroad. Paul and he had so decided during
-the winter, and already engaged state-rooms. They had often spent
-summers in England and on the Continent, and this time looked forward
-to a longer absence than usual,--a visit to Greece, and possibly to
-the Far East. The Doctor had longed to stand upon a pinnacle of the
-Himalayas, having then about as much idea of what a pinnacle in that
-region might prove to be, as many possess of the veritable north pole.
-
-His thoughts were certainly vague, yet again quite definite after
-their kind. When he turned in to bed and began to enter the domain
-of Travellers’ Hope, he thought he saw Aunt Mary attending meeting
-in Exeter Hall, London, and Adele Cultus playing golf with the
-divinities on Olympus. He was hoping Adele would win, when--he forgot
-to notice whether she did or not.
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
- AN AVATAR IN THE OCCIDENT--THE THEOPHANY OF SPRING
-
-
-The advent of spring brought with it the spirit of locomotion to many
-others besides the Doctor and Paul,--it generally does to a sane
-mind in a healthy body. With the resurrection of new life comes the
-exuberant desire to live in the open, more freely, and have one’s
-being in action, to exercise “thought, being and joy” to the fullest
-extent.
-
-To none was this more forcibly true than to Adele Cultus, whose whole
-being responded when the sun shone forth and the birds sang. This
-condition of things had been greatly strengthened in her limited
-experience thus far, by a conversation she once had with her father,
-when she sought his advice in connection with teaching a class in
-Sunday-School. It was soon after she graduated, and although she was
-by no means ignorant of academic phraseology in regard to certain
-matters, she was not satisfied; she wanted a simpler, useful way
-of expressing facts involving doctrine, and had asked her father a
-direct question which might have proved a poser to some parents, but
-certainly not to Professor Cultus, who earnestly desired that his
-daughter should be spared the mental strife in his own experience
-over moral and ethical questions involving discussion which really
-did not help towards better living. The Professor detected that
-she wished to talk with him seriously; so he drew her towards him,
-made her sit upon his knee that she might feel near him in love and
-affection,--comfortably at home while her spirit sought the truth.
-
-“Well, my daughter, what can Father do to help you? Any college
-conundrums? Life is full of conundrums, you know!”
-
-Adele smiled. “Oh, yes, I suppose so. But what I want is a simple
-answer--my class must understand, and think about it afterwards.”
-
-“Perhaps you know the answer yourself, already,” said the Professor,
-“and only wish to quiz me.”
-
-Adele shifted her position on his knee, as if uneasy. “Why, of course
-I know; I suppose everybody knows,--but I want to be helped. Knowing
-is not enough. What is sin, anyhow? I know it’s detestable, but I
-can’t help it. That’s about all I do know, really.”
-
-The Professor drew a breath of relief. Adele saw her father’s eyes
-brighten, and instantly felt that he would help her.
-
-“Not such a poser as you think,” said the Professor, with marvelous
-cheerfulness, considering the topic, “although an immense amount has
-been written about it which certainly is confusing.” Adele, noticing
-that to him it certainly was not so gloomy as she had expected, at
-once felt at ease also.
-
-“I don’t care what has been written about it to confuse,--what is it?
-Some speak of a particular sin first committed by Adam and Eve, and
-we have inherited it from them. Well, Father dear, I don’t believe I
-inherited sin from you, even if I do have it myself. God in Heaven
-is Love,--I can’t believe such a thing of Him. Every baby I look at
-tells me it isn’t sinful. Why, they stretch out their little hands to
-you to take ’em in your arms.”
-
-Her father appeared rather more solemn in aspect than before;
-experiencing a peculiar paternal sensation of mysterious
-responsibility. He let Adele continue.
-
-“Others,” said she, “speak as if it were a condition we each have to
-experience for some reason or other. That seems reasonable, because
-we do. But it’s very confusing to teach, or even to talk of to
-any one else, even if we all do have the experience. What is it,
-anyhow?” and she looked at her father straight in the eyes.
-
-A strong, impressive, additional experience, which was inspiring for
-both of them, resulted; and Adele afterwards looked back upon it as
-one of life’s turning points, if not a veritable crisis.
-
-Truth paternal, as if direct from “Our Father,” rose instantly
-within the innermost consciousness of Professor Cultus, father of
-his beloved daughter sitting on his knee, seeking the truth where
-she believed it could be found. He knew intuitively what sort of
-definition could alone satisfy Adele at that time in her life. He
-must speak the pure helpful truth in sincerity, just as he saw it
-himself, no more, no less:--and this being the case, the Holy Spirit
-of Truth in Life gave him power of utterance. He answered promptly.
-Adele never forgot his words, or to be more precise, the wonderful
-concept as to facts in nature which his words instilled within her
-own personality. The thoughts engendered became a part of her being,
-and produced a purer atmosphere for body, mind and heart.
-
-“Adele, my darling, think of life this way. Truth is like the
-light, the light you see with your physical eyes;--and light is as
-righteousness. Sin, as you know, your conscience tells you so, is
-the absence of righteousness; and this precisely as darkness is the
-absence of light. Christ, the historic Jesus of Nazareth, is well
-known, to those who know Him personally, and therefore most competent
-to judge, as the Light of the World in regard to spiritual life.
-It was He, among all the founders of the great historic religions,
-who really, truly, brought that spiritual life and immortality
-into the brighter light we now enjoy. His personality, as the very
-source of this light which enlightens, grows clearer and more
-potent as the history of the world progresses; His personality the
-most enlightening influence ever known in human experience and the
-progress of civilizations. He was a thoroughly truthful, righteous
-man, actuated by love for humanity; whose life, words, deeds and
-sufferings for truth’s sake, embodied the truth, and nothing but the
-truth. And now, Adele, with these thoughts about the Light of the
-World one can understand better, and more light will shine upon your
-inquiry.
-
-“If one does not live in the good light of righteousness and seek the
-very brightest and best he can get, then such a person will certainly
-be more or less in the dark,--the darkness of sin. Of course this
-condition of living away from the light given us will result in
-violations of the divine laws in nature, a breaking of the divine
-rule of duty which is to seek the light of truth, not darkness.
-Adele, your conscience will tell you the truth, therefore always turn
-from darkness towards light. Go out into the world somewhere when
-you can’t see clearly in your mind, and look upwards, the spiritual
-light will soon come to you, my darling; but be sure to look upwards,
-always upwards, beyond yourself,--toward the Light of the World.”
-
-“I never did like cloudy days,” mused Adele,--and then audibly, to
-encourage her father to continue--“I think I know what you mean,
-Father; please go on.”
-
-“Let me tell you a great secret,” said her father, drawing her still
-closer. He loved her as the apple of his eye, and was intensely
-desirous that she should be spared those unnecessary troubles in
-this life from which he himself had suffered. “Let me tell you a
-great secret, Adele, one of the most practical mysteries in nature,
-because able to banish many worries from your own heart-life. Don’t
-bother, my dear, about overcoming sin, or sins, simply turn from them
-when they seem near by, moving out into the light, any light you
-can find,--and the darkness will flee away. Do you understand, my
-daughter? All sin, but only when they deliberately choose to seek and
-stay in the dark; all sin, just as we all walk in the dark sometimes,
-but it is useless to fight in the dark except to get out of it;
-therefore turn at once toward the light so that you may see what you
-can see, the better the light the more clearly you will see;--this
-is a fact in nature both as to physical and spiritual sight, a great
-secret in nature, hid from many ‘who love darkness.’ Go out into the
-sunlight whenever you can, so warm and beautiful, and the darkness
-of sin will flee away,--you will see truth clearer and brighter than
-ever before.”
-
-“Father, I begin to see a little already,” and she kissed him.
-
-Her natural tendencies were to look upwards and enjoy things. The
-Professor’s little sermon on Light as Righteousness appealed to
-her strongly as the truth; and what he had hoped for, namely, that
-sin, as such, should be put in the dark background so that her mind
-would not dwell upon it at all, was for once an actual experience in
-her life. This practical experience was what she most needed then
-and there. Her father had helped her to look upwards towards the
-Light of the World, and when she did, she saw no sin nor darkness
-whatsoever. This was indeed a secret worth knowing to live by. It not
-only gave her a chance for practical application in her class which
-she immediately decided to put in practice, but it generated a train
-of thought which she applied many times in later experience. On the
-very next Sunday she took her own way to bring the matter home to
-her class, several members of which would have been much improved by
-a judicious use of soap and water. She touched upon this somewhat
-delicate subject by simply suggesting that if any one wished to
-know what sin was, he could easily find out by looking at his dirty
-hands in the bright sunshine,--the sin spots could then be easily
-seen. “Your inside is just like your outside,” said she, “both want
-watching and washing _in a good light_ to find those dirty sin spots,
-and get rid of them.” The class understood her perfectly; the boys
-especially, the girls, too, each after his own kind.
-
-As to the train of thought generated within herself, that also took
-form, and in a way to strengthen her ideals of what good thoughts
-should be. She retired to bed that blessed night after her father
-had told her about the Light of the World and of always looking
-upwards, with no fear of sin whatever. It is something to be turned
-from, like many other kinds of dirt in nature, only one had to look
-upwards in order to avoid it because it soiled the mind as well as
-the body. There was a lovely picture of the Christ Child in the arms
-of His Mother, hanging over her writing-desk in her room. As she
-looked upwards, it appeared bathed in sunlight, and the Baby was so
-very fresh and clean.
-
-And when the morning rays came into her bedroom, Adele whispered to
-herself, “Oh, there’s the dawn! the light is coming! The roseate
-first, and then the golden rays! How beautiful! The Angels of Light!
-coming to drive away darkness--and sin.” She cherished this symbolism
-her father had given her, throughout her whole life; and from that
-day sunrise meant much more to Adele than to many who had none to
-tell them how the beauties and mysteries of nature are really blended
-together as one. All may see the facts and be helped, if they will
-only look upwards towards the Light of the World.
-
-It was not surprising, therefore, at the present period of her
-career, when the advent of spring approached, that Adele enjoyed the
-prospect exceedingly. Incidentally she had heard of several who were
-going abroad that season, among them the Doctor and Paul. “Oh, how I
-wish I were going! The very thought is exhilarating; what would the
-realization be! If----”
-
-She went to the window and looked upwards. “What a lovely day!--I
-think I will take a stroll in the park,” and she picked up a little
-book which the Doctor had loaned her. “I’ll take this with me and
-read it; it’s something about Oriental theophanies, whatever that
-may be. I’ll just read it and imagine I’m out in the Orient. If one
-cannot go, the next best thing is to imagine one is there,--with a
-book.”
-
-She was dressing to go out when her thoughts took another flight.
-“People talk about waiting for things to turn up, they always say
-circumstances don’t suit just now, and then collapse. Of course they
-collapse,--I should if always waiting--I am sure I should. I couldn’t
-stand it. Why not hurry up the circumstances? Mother often makes the
-circumstances, and then people fall in; I’ve seen her do it fifty
-times. Oh, how I wish I could go abroad!”--then taking her book she
-set out for a stroll.
-
-Adele in the park, how different from the Doctor, the circumstances
-altogether different. Not at night and alone, but when the sunlight
-gave brilliancy and she was liable at any moment to meet some one she
-knew.
-
-There was, however, a quiet nook where she hoped to be able to
-read undisturbed, an inconspicuous seat partially surrounded by a
-cultivated thicket of shrubbery. This seemed to suit her present
-mood, and she was soon engrossed in the little book so full of the
-Oriental way of looking at things, figures of speech in which the
-forces of nature were personified, and the most ordinary facts
-described in language which might lead plain people to imagine
-supernatural operations in nature. It was not so easy as she
-imagined, however, to keep her mind in focus. Of course she had to
-nod to several of the girls as they passed by, and with one eye
-still following them she observed how the birds were ruining a newly
-planted flower bed, nipping off the young shoots and gobbling up
-the seed which should be left to sprout later. Of course that had
-to be stopped,--she must frighten off the birds to save the plants.
-Returning to her book, she noticed some manuscript leaves inserted.
-They were in the Doctor’s handwriting and so palpably intended to
-be read with the text in order to elucidate further the author’s
-ideas, that Adele had no hesitation whatever in reading them, and
-became absorbed at once. They seemed like what her father had told
-her, only in another form. The Doctor had used Western phraseology
-to convey Oriental imagery and ideas,--to show how Oriental imagery
-may still be forcible to Western sense,--how the truth was in all, to
-be perceived by each after his own fashion. Of course the Doctor’s
-effort was crude, and well showed how such ideas may lose force when
-separated from the civilization which had originally called them
-forth; but of this Adele had no realizing sense. They spoke to her
-so that she could understand. She did not criticise, but sought the
-truth no matter how crude the effort,--thereby manifesting the prime
-element essential in all true criticism, namely, sympathy with the
-author. What she read was entitled:
-
-
- THE THEOPHANY OF SPRING.
-
-In the Domain of Nature, during early Spring, one sees the Spirit of
-New Life as an avatar, a coming of the Deity, or manifestation of the
-Mind in Nature, down to earth--to produce a resurrection of thought,
-being, joy, from an apparent death and past.
-
-To rescue mankind from destruction, the Spirit form is clothed with
-Hope as with a garment, hope in tangible manifestation, an admirable
-exhibition of an abstract idea, a law in nature, in concrete
-fulfilment,--obedience.
-
-Clothed in delicate, lace-like foliage and young blossoms, the
-verdant coloring of many shades, the Presence of the Spirit is
-manifest. As movement tells of the wind, so do the youthful forms
-tell of refinement, modesty, purity. How exquisite the affinity, the
-relationship to the azure blue, the heavens above from which new
-life must come with light, warmth, and nourishment; and with the
-fleecy clouds floating in the vast expanse, white, the blending of
-all colors; marking the heavenly route by which the Spirit had passed
-in coming down to Mother Earth. Sparkling gems, the gift from April
-showers, decked her hopeful garments; not after man’s arrangement;
-there was a method in the natural spirit-art which embodied both the
-good and the true with the beautiful. Wherever the brilliant points
-could accentuate a graceful fold, or enlighten the mind, or give
-nourishment, produce good results in any way, as moisture gives life
-and sustentation, there were the sparkling gems upon the Theophany of
-New Life.
-
-As one gazes with holy admiration at this theophany of truth in
-renewed manifestation, and watches the changing effects, the action
-of the Spirit of New Life becomes apparent; the adaptation of the
-new growth to progress becomes a living experience, the facts become
-vital in significance to help others to live beautifully and truly.
-The pure white light from the azure sky, the composite of all colors,
-differentiates itself when touching the new growth and youthful
-forms. Topaz flowers, and garlands of ruby blossoms, rich golden
-stamens set in sapphire corollas, the royal purple, bloomed upon the
-garments of Hope, turquoise opaque tints and alexandrite changing
-hues took proper place as life took time.
-
-The New Life advances, treading the way all plants and men should
-follow--must follow. The always true, always good, always beautiful,
-in motion or effect. And at times the theophany is seen in effects
-too dazzling for mortal eye to gaze upon with sight in nakedness--the
-naked eye cannot see and live. From behind the cumuli of clouds such
-radiant outbursts of effulgent splendor that a transfiguration of
-the Presence itself seems imminent, a veritable foresight of what
-the pure in heart above can see and live,--a glimpse of what is
-implied by the immanence of the Creator of all life. It is then that
-scintillations of brilliancy shine forth from every gem, from every
-good thought, from every beautiful action, responsive to Him who
-created them. It is then that the truth is visible to the naked eye
-so that man can see upon the earth that for which he prays, “as it is
-in heaven.” It is then that the Spirit of New Life becomes enveloped
-as with a halo around her own presence, and vision is blinded by the
-increasing effulgence of the truthful atmospheric effects.
-
-Man closes his eyes, his vision is too weak, too limited in power
-and scope, to behold that which is actually before his eyesight. And
-while his sight is sealed by the very glory of the fact itself, and
-his mental vision strives to retain permanently that which he has
-been permitted to witness, then the Spirit speaks, speaks into the
-heart-life of those who have sought by striving to learn how to hear
-as well as to see. It is then when the eye is closed, yet all in
-the presence of New Life, that the avatar, theophany, renaissance,
-resurrection of truth in springtime, speaks the pure word of the Mind
-of Nature, the Creator Father,--the still small voice is heard.
-
-Softly as a murmur it comes from all directions. To him whose life
-work is in one field it is a voice profound and comprehensive in
-nature, and he calls it the music of the spheres. To another, it
-seems as tender, loving and true as parental affection in its
-holiest moments, and this one takes his children into the fields and
-wood to see and hear. It pervades all life, this Voice of Thought,
-Being, Joy, in the resurrection of New Life. It is heard in the
-bird-notes from every bush as the little songsters sing to their
-mates, rejoicing in renewed virility and hope of cozy nests amid
-the youthful foliage; it is the voice of renewed youth speaking
-unto itself, yet not itself, but through itself into those whom it
-had created, preserved, saved,--a simple, child-like voice, asking
-questions.
-
-Man pauses to listen. What are the questions asked in the early
-childhood of springtime?
-
-Oh, how pure, sincere! Transparent, clear! How loving the motive and
-desire which prompts the children of men when close to nature to look
-up wistfully for an answer.
-
-“Whence comes this Spirit of New Life?”
-
-And lo! the inner voice:
-
-“All things were made by Him, and without Him was not anything made
-that was made.”
-
-And lo! again the voice:
-
-“In Him was Life, and the Life was the Light of Men.”
-
-And lo! yet again the voice--for the third time,--the voice of a man
-to his brother man:
-
-“I am the Resurrection and the Life. Come unto Me.”
-
-Adele heard this inner voice,--the Trinity in Nature operative,
-speaking to her, to her personally.
-
-She closed the book, pressing it against her heart, and wended her
-way homeward, absorbed in thought, verily as one in the world, yet
-now above it, spiritually.
-
-Her father had spoken to her of the Light of the World, as
-Intelligence and Righteousness. He who is the Light of the World had
-said to her, spiritually:
-
-“I am the Resurrection and the Life.”
-
-She had sought the sunshine, and heard the Voice;--the Voice of the
-Trinity in the springtime of her youth.
-
-Not until next morning did the practical application of what Adele
-had heard take hold upon her as something demanding prompt attention.
-The concept once accepted, at once acted like a seed-word, producing
-new life, and the beautiful blossoms of a new intelligence appeared.
-She herself became a part of this springtime resurrection. Being what
-she was, youthful, intelligent, sincere, it of course took form,
-naturally, in connection with that phase of life and activity which
-was uppermost in her own environment at the time,--but the motive now
-much more heartfelt and spiritual.
-
-She had longed to go abroad, and often said so, merely, however, for
-the hope of enjoyment, now the desire was to see and learn more of
-humanity at large for a given purpose; and especially that region,
-the Orient, from which such thoughts, so practical yet spiritual,
-had originally come. She wanted a broader knowledge of the world and
-of the great religions; of the Light of the World as a universal
-spiritual as well as physical experience, and this, simply in order
-to live better, truer, and to help others.
-
-“I must go!--really must,” she whispered, “even if I have to make the
-circumstances.”
-
- “_Oh, ye who may survive me when the spring returns,
- Remember how I loved its loveliness._”
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
- OFF TO ASIA
-
-
-It was at the Club, only a few days later, where the Doctor met
-Professor Cultus. The usual preliminaries of greeting had hardly
-passed from hearing before the Professor seemed unusually anxious
-to know certain details about the Far East, details about modes of
-travel and such things,--in fact, asked so many questions quite
-unlike his usual mode of conversation, that the Doctor pricked up
-his ears with delight, evidently having some suspicions, and finally
-asked the direct question: “Why don’t you go and see for yourself?”
-
-Professor Cultus laughed, and then frankly acknowledged the
-situation: “Mrs. Cultus and Adele are so bent on seeing the Orient
-before it becomes civilized, as they evidently expect, that I have
-no peace. Mrs. Cultus is reading ‘O. K.’ between the lines of ‘The
-Incarnation of Krishna Mulvaney,’ as if one ought to throw some light
-upon the other. She says she wants to make the acquaintance of some
-of those Khidmatgars and Maharajas while they yet stand upon their
-native heath. I’ve told her they don’t wear kilts like MacGregor,
-but ’twas no use. She immediately wished to know what they did wear.
-I suppose I’m in for it. They’ve been talking the matter over at
-intervals all winter, but now! now! O now! we have it from thin soup
-to thick coffee.”
-
-“Better give in,” said the Doctor, laughing heartily.
-
-“Well, just between us, I have;--but I haven’t told them so, not as
-yet. I rather take to the notion myself since I can see my way to
-get off, but I don’t quite understand the _modus operandi_--how one
-man can manage civilized women in a land where women don’t generally
-count for much. Did you say the Taj could now be seen without an
-elephant ride? That’s the sort of thing I must know beforehand; two
-civilized women on one wild beast might demoralize the beast.”
-
-The bare possibility of having the Cultus party in the East at the
-same time with themselves, sent Paul to call upon Adele as quickly
-as he could pick up his hat and rush out. These two young members
-put their heads together and practically settled all details, both
-possible and impossible, before the older members of the party could
-well realize what they were talking about. Youth forever! American
-style! Action! Action! Action! with occasional application of the
-brake.
-
-Mrs. Cultus was greatly in favor of having four in their own party.
-
-“_Une partie carree_ is always so much more workable when
-travelling,” she said, “and besides, Adele ought to have some one
-nearer her own age. I don’t intend to follow Adele into every dirty
-native haunt she may take a notion to visit. Now if we can only
-find some one of the modern Investigating-Civil Club, or of the
-Literary-Reformation Reportorial Society, we shall be in clover all
-through the tour; we can report progress in print whenever we wish,
-and have a book ready as soon as we return.”
-
-“But, Mother, you are too grasping,” exclaimed Adele, “only a
-literary corps can assimilate the whole thing.”
-
-“No! Not quite!” said Mrs. Cultus. “We need only report our own
-progress, not the rotation-progress-of-the-earth. Now that I come to
-think of it, perhaps I’d better do the reporting myself. The society
-column generally puts in what I send them,--and then I’m sure of what
-is said. Oh! I have an idea! It’s a companion for you, Adele, that
-troubles me! Now I come to think of it, whom would you like?” But
-before any one could reply, Mrs. Cultus continued:
-
-“Why, Miss Winchester, of course! Now if she can be persuaded,--Adele,
-you know how to coax her,--that will be the very thing.” Professor
-Cultus made no objection, and the delighted Adele took it up as if the
-persuasion of Miss Winchester were a foregone conclusion.
-
-Adele and Paul found Miss Winchester in her own study, her
-writing-table littered with odds and ends, apparently, really notes
-such as literary workers are apt to jot down when a passing thought
-or phrase seems worth keeping; loose slips of paper and packages
-held by gum bands, pieces pinched at the ends with mysterious folds,
-also things tucked away under blotters where she couldn’t find them,
-and so forth. The Persuasion Committee, Adele Chairman, entered,--a
-gale of wind among the papers. Action first and the ideas picked up
-afterwards. Rapturous greeting between the girl chums;--then Adele
-exclaimed, “Oh! Frank! If you love me do consent to come with us.”
-
-“Caramels or Gibraltars? Which is it this time?” laughed Miss
-Winchester.
-
-“Please put on your bonnet and come,” gushed Paul, manly mindful of
-the importance of such things.
-
-“O Frank! We’re just wild to have you.”
-
-“Well, please become sane again, take a seat;--no, not on that box,
-it’s precious!”
-
-Adele dashed her hat and gloves on the writing-table, utterly
-regardless of pens, ink, papers or blotters. “Now, my dear, no
-nonsense,--do say yes.”
-
-“My dear Adele, I do love you very much, but I haven’t the faintest
-idea what you’re talking about.”
-
-Adele produced a printed list of routes for travellers. “There!”
-Miss Winchester noticed an illustration of the Sphynx on the cover.
-“I never made her acquaintance,” said she, and a comical expression
-played over her features as she tried to divine what Adele expected
-the Sphynx to tell.
-
-Adele took it up at once. “You never met the Sphynx! Why, that’s
-just it! Now’s our chance,--don’t you see?” And the Committee started
-in, one hundred and twenty words to the minute, to explain matters.
-
-Miss Winchester, somewhat confused by the rapidity of Adele’s jumps
-from place to place in mental travelling, but as responsively elastic
-as either of the others, took several turns in her office-chair while
-the others were chatting; but when they landed her among the Himalaya
-mountains as part of the journey, she gasped for utterance:
-
-“Bless me! You take my breath away.”
-
-“Never mind! Catch it again. Oh, do please! Please do! and come
-along!”
-
-“But you must give me time to think,” and Miss Winchester began
-cogitating how she would turn an apparent impossibility into an
-assured fact.
-
-“Oh, don’t think too much,” exclaimed Adele, when the result of
-thinking looked precarious. “Just do it,--why, don’t you see? The
-opportunity of our lives! We shall learn so much.”
-
-Now it so happened, the circumstances being favorable, that Adele’s
-last appeal touched upon a matter in Miss Winchester’s past
-experience, and excited a far more potent incentive to join the party
-than any amount of contagious enthusiasm could ever have accomplished.
-
-Miss Winchester had not long before published a successful novel
-based upon results of travel, including character sketches, the
-result of careful observation amid episodes of ordinary life. She
-had given it the whimsical title of “Upside Down.” Now what could
-possibly be more opportune than to follow this with others,--say on
-“Downside Up,” or, better still, “Outside and Inside”? And where
-could more be found of circumstantial interest than in the Orient?
-Who knows!--it might lead to still another, “Turned Inside Out,”
-for the East undoubtedly had many examples of that sort of thing.
-Being already a member of the literary craft, the opportunity was
-altogether too good to be lost, every nerve must be strained to
-reach the other side. It goes without saying that the Chairman of
-the Persuasion Committee was caught dancing an impromptu tarantelle
-when Miss Winchester finally told them it might, possibly might, be
-arranged.
-
-“Oh, then it’s settled positively,” exclaimed Adele; “for if you
-hesitate you’re lost.”
-
-Paul thought Adele a little witch as she danced with glee, all the
-time encouraging her friend. He remembered how Adele had bewitched
-himself also not long before, when she was in quite another mood.
-Paul laughed outright, but could not keep his eyes from noticing her
-every movement.
-
-As to Miss Winchester, she took hold of the problem with a vim
-characteristic of some of the characters of her own creation; she
-tackled at once the ubiquitous problem known to all men on both
-sides of the globe as, “How to make both ends meet,” and of course
-solved it satisfactorily. Some few of the craft-literary, and in some
-degree all women of whatever persuasion, usually do. So Adele was
-right,--that settled it. Miss Winchester finally saw her way clear,
-and joined their party.
-
-It would have been difficult to find a more congenial and vivacious
-group than Professor and Mrs. Cultus, Miss Winchester and Adele,
-with their friends the Doctor and Paul, as they met in the salon
-of the steamer on the eve of departure. Henri Semple, who looked
-forward to meeting them later on the other side, led the party of
-chosen friends who came to see them off, and while trying to aid the
-Doctor and Paul with their hand-baggage, kept dodging Mr. Hammond,
-one of those antipathetic, ghostly individuals who throw cold water
-upon such occasions. Mrs. Maxwell sent her butler with an exquisite
-kedge anchor in rose-buds for Adele, “in case you have no wireless
-telegraph when wrecked, my dear.”
-
-Amid friends, and flowers sent in kind remembrance, with many kind
-messages “bon voyage,” there was, nevertheless, just a touch of
-regret when some one asked Adele how she liked leaving America. She
-had thus far thought of it as leaving home. Now home was “America”
-in reference to where she was going,--her first sensation of the
-broadening effects of travel.
-
-A few moments later all were on deck in gay spirits, Miss Winchester
-striving to avoid an impolite kodak-fiend in search of celebrities,
-who was taking snap-shots from the bridge; but she only succeeded in
-getting herself into a most unconventional attitude, almost doubled
-up with laughter, strongly suggestive in a finished picture that
-some one had the _mal de mer_ already. “One ought never to judge by
-appearances,” remarked the Doctor, as he attempted to shield Miss
-Winchester from the kodak.
-
-The bell sounded, only passengers were permitted to remain longer
-on board. The Doctor was saying “I trust we meet again” to one of
-his trunks, when Semple hurried down the gang-plank waving back “au
-revoir”; a gamin on the dock instantly echoed back what sounded like
-“moo-swore, take moo-swore.” Adele waved her handkerchief to Semple,
-and a Frenchman near by took off his hat, smiling as if the salute
-were intended for him.
-
-The steamer swung out from the wharf and glided into midstream; amid
-cheers, and adieus waved in many directions, and kisses thrown to
-loved ones left behind. America and home, now one and the same, began
-to recede. They were actually on their way to the Far East.
-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
- A STUDIO FOR IMPRESSIONS
-
-
-The voyage across the Atlantic from New York to the Gibraltar
-proved a constant series of sapphire days. Skies light azure often
-cloudless, the ocean a richer shade with enough wind to curl the
-sea-foam into delicate lace-like patterns. When the billows rose
-into the domain of direct sunlight, myriads of brilliant points
-scintillated like sparkling gems decorating the wave crests,--the
-sea-foam not unlike flossy embroidery or ruffles of lace upon silk of
-blue.
-
-Adele’s first experience of things as they are in the great motion
-constant, onward, ever forward, in the very being of the boundless
-deep; also her first impressions of the ways and means amid a
-cosmopolitan crowd on board an ocean-flyer. Nature and humanity, each
-in constant movement, the former with majesty and potency profound,
-the latter on the grand rush, often to obtain something to eat.
-
-Towards sunset she stood with the Doctor watching the crimson disk
-grow less and less in brilliancy, and finally through a veil of
-luminous atmosphere disappear in the mysterious beyond.
-
-They spoke little, as if under some fascination. The varied
-movements in the sky and unstable water-foundation were indeed
-somewhat hypnotic in effect, but a psychologist would have been
-puzzled to detect the outcome of their meditations. While they
-gazed, a passing breeze crossed the surface immediately before them,
-changing the delicate traceries in nature’s handiwork. The Doctor
-at once responded, for the complications appealed to him, and most
-naturally he spoke in terms of his own previous experience of similar
-impressions.
-
-“Those changes in the wave curves are not unlike harmonic
-modulations, and I can actually hear the difference.” Adele seemed
-surprised.
-
-“Yes,” continued the Doctor, “the slow, dignified progression is
-certainly symphonic in character, yet the infinite variety in less
-melodic forms piles up little by little until the greater movement is
-itself influenced. How wonderful, majestic, yet exceedingly subtle,
-and always refined! It is certainly sound-color or color as sound,
-and the drawing of the design--well, ’pon my soul, the drawing is
-too quick for me. I can’t see how it is done, it flits from me, is
-gone, living only in memory, not unlike the technical element in the
-rendition of music. But the sound-color, the real harmony. Ah! that I
-hear in my mind’s ear and see in my mind’s eye for long afterwards.”
-Adele, much younger than the Doctor, was also working out her own
-impressions according to previous experience, the experience of youth.
-
-“Oh, yes! I see what you see,--very artistic,--you can talk about it
-in that style if you choose, but----” and she seemed in doubt how to
-describe what she really felt. The Doctor waited till she was ready.
-
-“It’s so awfully real! It’s alive!”
-
-“H’m!”
-
-“Yes, a great real picture, that which I like in pictures.”
-
-“No doubt an original,” remarked the Doctor, smiling. “The original
-of many marines.”
-
-Adele called attention to the magnificent contour lines which
-themselves swayed to and fro over the curved surface.
-
-“Don’t you see, it’s alive; the whole thing moves, it’s so true; and
-you and I with it, we’re all going. Isn’t that just glorious!”
-
-“Oh!” exclaimed the Doctor, “in Him we live and move and have our
-being,--that’s what you mean?”
-
-“Just so,” and she paused before continuing: “He was the Artist, and
-it is a living picture, a real one, just ready to be painted.”
-
-It was the apparent living earth, the breathing of the deep sea which
-had impressed Adele, the suppressed emotion of the planet, ever
-existing, ever apparent to those who had eyes to see and ears to hear
-for observation; and this over the whole vast expanse.
-
-“Of course,” whispered Adele, “a living picture, by so great an
-Artist, must be sublimely artistic.”
-
-“True,” mused the Doctor, “the greater will include the less,--a
-masterpiece, an original, to lead the artistic sense onward and
-upward.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-But there were few on board who gave even a passing thought to this
-physical breathing of the earth, nor to the invisible moisture
-ascending by evaporation. The majority thought no more of it than
-they did of their own individual breathing; they took it as a matter
-of course, no more, no less. They had, however, other impressions,
-quite as mundane, and equally apparent. Some sought impressions from
-watching card-sharpers in the smoking-room; others by listening
-to fluent talkers who really abused good natural endowments by
-promiscuous discussion of any and every subject that came up; men who
-did not hesitate an instant to suggest what they considered to be
-improvements upon nature. The conceit of some seemed indeed colossal,
-especially when they, too, waved their arms about, forming contour
-lines over curved ideas, to carry their impressions far beyond the
-briny deep. Even such, however, were really small harmless game
-compared to what Mrs. Cultus soon encountered.
-
-
-
-
- IX
-
- A BUDGET OF NEW SCIENCES
-
-
-Previous to leaving home Mrs. Cultus had flattered herself she
-was taking the Professor abroad to obtain rest from his arduous
-scientific pursuits--alas! only to find herself at once in a very
-vortex of new sciences and arts, so-called. Authorities discussed
-Ping Pong as an art, also skittles, and the nomenclature of golf
-was quite enough in matter of differentiations to establish it as a
-science. Then there were new methods in the practice of medicine.
-Thoughts warranted to cure were for sale under the title of Mental
-Science;--and even a religious science, said to be popular and quite
-new to the orthodox Science of Religions. All were on board and much
-in evidence.
-
-None of these things would have much troubled the Professor, but to
-Mrs. Cultus they afforded a glorious opportunity to pick up odd bits
-of information. She herself was certainly not suffering from fatigue
-from the perusal of scientific publications, so when the book of
-experience opened a chapter new to her, written by folk who prided
-themselves upon the especial efficacy of their own mental efforts,
-why, that appealed as the sort of science and art quite in her line
-rather than the Professor’s. Having no lack of worldly wisdom in her
-own mentality she at once took her stand. With regard to any new
-phase of religious science, so-called, she would be very inquisitive,
-not opinionated, much less dogmatic; but as to any mental racket,
-scientific or otherwise, she thought she might venture further. In
-fact ought to have some opinion of her own, being entitled to it,
-_ex-officio_, as a Professor’s spouse. Such was Mrs. Cultus’ point of
-view.
-
-Matters were soon brought to a focus. She overheard repeated remarks
-about patients who had been healed simply by receiving new mental
-impressions easily obtained, generally by correspondence, fixed
-charge, five dollars for epistolary impression. Some one who had
-been victimized had told her of a bushel-basket full of impressions
-shipped by mail each day from a single office.
-
-“There must be some good ones in the lot,” thought Mrs. Cultus. “We
-must investigate a little.”
-
-Then she heard of others cured by thought-transference, either
-with or without faith,--and finally of cures which tax credulity
-to extreme limits of sanity, namely, by the persuasive efficacy of
-belief, even in spite of the Creator Father’s natural laws to the
-contrary, as if natural laws were inadequate to suit the Creator’s
-purpose. Surely enough this to excite Mrs. Cultus’ curiosity. “What’s
-the use of travelling unless you take things in, without being taken
-in yourself?”--and she determined to caution her daughter. “Adele,
-my dear, when your father and I first crossed the ocean together,
-some time since, before you appeared, the ship’s company contained
-many pilgrims from a sacred shrine, very sacred and very profitable.
-We then heard much about cures. If I mistake not I have yet a bottle
-of the sacred water from that European shrine, stowed away in our
-medicine closet, warranted to be very efficacious to the faithful.”
-
-“Did you ever test its efficacy?” asked Adele.
-
-“Well, to be frank, I never saw it used except just previous to
-funerals, which struck me as rather late in the day. It certainly
-acted like a sedative upon those who administered it, but that’s
-another matter. What I was going to remark is, that to-day the tide
-of curative waters seems to flow all the other way. America does the
-quick-cure business whether the patient is faithful or not.”
-
-“Well, that’s certainly great gain for the medicine,” remarked Miss
-Winchester. Mrs. Cultus continued:
-
-“Yes, indeed; one might have guessed Americans would introduce
-improvements in the system. I always did believe in practical
-science, practical metaphysics they call it now, and all that sort of
-thing, specially when the thing looks a little mysterious to begin
-with,--it clears out the system.”
-
-“Whose system? What system?” wondered Miss Winchester, “the
-medicine’s or the patient’s?” but she said nothing, and smiled
-inwardly as Mrs. Cultus continued her drolling.
-
-“But tell me, are the new medicines proprietary, patented, or merely
-bottles for sale, duly authenticated like the old bottles? I wonder
-if it would be safe to put some of this new wine, beg pardon,
-curative water, into the old bottles?”
-
-“Oh, dear no!” exclaimed Miss Winchester, promptly. “All medicines
-are quite out of date. All you have to do is to think you think, pay
-the price, and there you are--cured. I was cured myself.”
-
-“Why, bless me, child! of what?”
-
-“Nothing serious--merely of my former impression.”
-
-“What was your impression of an impressionist, Frank?” said Adele,
-laughing. “I don’t believe all of them are quacks, certainly not
-until I first hear what they have to say.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now Miss Winchester, being of the literary craft, indulged in methods
-not unlike those practiced by the Doctor in connection with his
-palmistry pranks. They both were much given to observing individuals
-whose outward appearance suggested a personality from whom they could
-learn something. Studying types, the Doctor called it; studying human
-nature, Miss Winchester considered it. All was grist that came to
-their mill, good, bad, and even the indifferent, cranks and amiables
-included. It so happened that in the course of her study of human
-nature Miss Winchester had encountered a pronounced specimen of the
-genus Professoress, said to occupy the chair of Thought-Cure in a
-would-be Sanitorium-University. This had been some time ago. What
-was her surprise now to find said Professoress on board, occupying
-a deck-chair among the innocents abroad. Not wishing to claim any
-acquaintance (having already written her up in an article upon “The
-Inside Cure”) unless forced to do so, she had avoided a meeting. It
-had been this same individual of whom she had thought when telling
-Mrs. Cultus of her own cure; and as luck would have it, there the
-healer appeared,--on deck, in a chair, quite near them when Adele
-innocently asked for an impression of an impressionist.
-
-Not wishing, however, to disclose this coincidence until she could
-lead up to it after her own fashion, Miss Winchester kept one eye
-upon the occupant of the chair, and the other upon Professor Cultus,
-and yet answered Adele at the same time; all of which goes to show
-that she herself was somewhat of an expert in impressions, and
-in leading others up to them; observing others while not herself
-perceived. When she was ready she replied:
-
-“No, Adele, I do not believe they are all quacks; but I do believe in
-nerves and hysterics. There is such a thing as self-deception;--the
-little tin-Solomon within the most of us does sometimes assert
-himself;--you know the saying, ‘Everybody’s crazy except you and me,
-and you’re a little off!’ I certainly believe in nerves and hysteria.”
-
-“What has that got to do with it?” asked Mrs. Cultus, curious.
-
-“May I refer to the Professor?” quoth Miss Winchester, blandly.
-
-Professor Cultus thus unwillingly drawn in, gave some points simply
-as the quickest way to get rid of the talking. “There is a class of
-disease known as hysteria, nervous, yet involving no recognizable
-anatomical hurt, wound or injury. The nervous system plays a
-very important part in the problem, and nerves, you know, affect
-mentality.”
-
-“No doubt of it, my dear,” interrupted Mrs. Cultus; “a pinch always
-makes me start up as nervous as a witch, and I never could talk sense
-during an electric storm. I feel nervous now just to think of it.”
-
-The Professor continued: “To meddle unadvisedly with the nervous
-system is dangerous; yet with shrewd sense based upon clinical
-observation it is possible to perfect cures.”
-
-“Not without some smelling salts,” chimed in Mrs. Cultus, laughing.
-“But bless me! are these new doctors experts like that?”
-
-“Specialists in the shrewd-sense department,” remarked Miss
-Winchester. “Please go on, Professor Cultus.”
-
-“When mental science encounters cases of hysteria, it is quite
-possible a cure may be accomplished now and then, but from the
-standpoint of what you would call orthodox treatment, mental
-derangement of any kind requires most careful consideration and
-perhaps prolonged treatment in the full light of scientific research.
-To attempt such practice irregularly is to court the consequences of
-ignorance, or perhaps worse, really to injure the patient.”
-
-“Oh, I understand it perfectly!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus. “I might be
-accidentally cured by irregular treatment, but would not stay cured.
-My dear, I prefer to be orthodox. Adele, where are my salts? Look in
-that bag, please,--I haven’t used them for some time.”
-
-“Nonsense, Mother! You’re cured already and don’t want any salting,
-the sea air is quite enough;--nor do I believe that all mental
-scientists have the hysterics, I mean their patients haven’t.”
-
-“No, indeed!” said the sprightly Frank Winchester; “it is those who
-are cured who had the hysterics or something equivalent; and the
-practitioners who now have the shrewd sense and cash perquisite,--I
-know from experience.”
-
-“What! Oh, my!” exclaimed Adele, “you have the hysterics! Frank, I
-should never have accused you of such accomplishments,” then, as if
-musing: “Isn’t it strange that when you begin to describe an ache, so
-many others soon find they have the same thing. Mild case I suppose,
-Frank?”
-
-Miss Winchester enjoyed immensely this little rap; but having been
-caught concluded to make the next sensational remark more specific.
-
-“I’m thankful to say, in my case there was no hysterics;--but I
-did visit a mental science center, where ‘vibrations’ were said to
-radiate marvellously. I went there on strictly professional business,
-to hunt up a case, and on arriving was received by--by----”
-
-The speaker came to a sudden halt, her eyes fixed upon a remarkable
-individual, the Professoress, now standing by the deck-rail,
-overlooking the sea;--a short, very stout personage under a
-broad-brimmed hat decorated with enough feathers to have plumed a
-male ostrich in the month of January. Her attendant, a tall, slender
-man with long neck, sharp eyes, and gold eye-glasses. Fortunately the
-couple stood far enough away to be out of hearing, or Miss Winchester
-would not have continued:
-
-“Speak of angels! there she is herself! She of the winged thoughts!
-the redoubtable Angelica Thorn, popularly known as ‘Madame,’ the
-honorary title conferred exclusively by the Sanitorium-University.
-You may not believe it, but that impressive angel with wings in her
-hat and honorary degree on her own University register, is gifted
-with a marvellous power of radiating thoughts,--her words fly up but
-thoughts remain below, credited with realizing thousands of dollars
-per annum by giving and taking mental impressions, sent and received
-by the bushel-basket full, all by mail.” Mrs. Cultus put up her
-lorgnette to see if any ships were passing in that direction--then
-whispered:
-
-“You surely don’t mean that person with flowing tresses and all
-those waving plumes? She’s Milesian Frinch, not Parisian French. You
-can’t deceive me. And what is she here for?”
-
-Mrs. Thorn had taken off her hat; the tall, slim attendant held it;
-while she, resting both elbows on the rail, and her chin on her
-wrists, gazed out o’er the mighty deep.
-
-“The pose is certainly cherubic,” remarked Mrs. Cultus, cynical.
-
-“No doubt she is radiating now,” remarked Frank Winchester. Adele
-noticed her hair parted on one side, and plastered flat over the
-temples, also wavy ringlets round her neck.
-
-The Doctor, who thus far had not taken any part in this
-impressionistic séance, no sooner observed her hands exposed to
-display an unusual assortment of rings glistening in the sunlight,
-than he concluded his turn for investigation had arrived. Possibly
-here palmistry might be in order,--and diamond cut diamond. There
-might be some real sport in it. Before the others noticed, he
-sauntered off towards the couple. Little did he then realize the
-consequences.
-
-
-
-
- X
-
- PALMISTRY POSES AS MENTAL SCIENCE
-
-
-It was not difficult for the Doctor to obtain an interview, and
-this without really introducing himself, simply by some casual
-remark suggested by the surroundings. He soon succeeded in directing
-conversation away from the immediate vicinity and called attention
-to objects at a distance, of course interjecting the highly
-original remark that distance lends enchantment. Mrs. Thorn at once
-appreciated the enchantment part of the proceedings, and pointed
-with her forefinger at certain objects as not being exactly what
-they seemed,--thereby illustrating what was really more important
-for the Doctor to find out, namely, that she had no real objection
-from refinement of feeling to specify given objects by pointing
-at them. If she did appreciate enchantment, so-called, she was
-certainly very practical in its application. From the Doctor’s
-point of view this was simply “delicious” on her part, and made him
-more blandly-persuasive-appreciative than ever. Within five minutes
-more he had Mrs. Thorn and her attendant both pointing at various
-features, clouds, waves, ripples, a passing ship, the capstan and
-the captain’s signals, anything, in fact, that would cause them to
-use their hands; even soiled spots on the hand-rail and some very
-sticky tar on a rope he made them avoid touching by withdrawing their
-hands, any movement, in fact, that would show both the form and
-action of their hands in connection with the spoken words,--the hands
-suiting the action to the word (thoughts). Mrs. Thorn was, in fact,
-betraying herself by every word and action, and the expert Doctor
-reading “the natural tendencies of the individuals” as if an open
-book.
-
-The Cultus group privately watched these proceedings. Paul and
-Adele, with heads rather close together, having their own fun, Paul
-imitating the Doctor, and interjecting the platitudes-of-humbuggery
-he had often heard the Doctor use before in similar palmistry cases.
-
-“You are a person with strong social instincts,” remarked Paul, wise
-as an owl.
-
-“Yes! not a hermit,--thanks!” said Adele.
-
-“Very popular. Lot of fellows might fall in--h’m!--admiration of you.”
-
-“Thanks again, but don’t look at me, watch the Doctor.”
-
-The Doctor was peering into Mrs. Thorn’s hand, which she held out to
-him with evident satisfaction. Of course Paul seized Adele’s hand
-while watching.
-
-What was the Doctor examining with such apparent interest? In general
-terms, a short fleshy hand, soft, with thin skin, and ruddy color
-easily suppressed or caused under pressure. Fingers only slightly
-tapering, with tips of the well known “useful” curve when viewed from
-the under side, yet curiously suggestive of the spatulate when seen
-from the back. Thumb well proportioned and turning back spontaneously
-with considerable self-assertion. But most noticeable of all, where
-the roots of the fingers joined the palm, materialism developed to an
-exceptional degree, almost of the “elementary” type. A combination
-more curious than rare, designating certain womanly instincts likely
-to operate by methods presumably masculine in character. It was not
-easy to formulate a specific diagnosis until after hearing such a
-person converse on subjects about which she had had an interested
-experience, for no mortal could reasonably conjecture, not even she
-herself, how things would go eventually. Certainly a woman of the
-world with strong emotions, no doubt loquacious at times, yet a very
-clear head when it came to action; and material results never lost
-sight of. Strange to say, however, the hands themselves were soon
-forgotten, attention being drawn to their adornment. The woman had an
-inordinate passion for precious gems. Mrs. Thorn wore upon each hand
-exquisite rings, superb stones set in excellent taste, but rather a
-mixture when displayed together. The usual solitaires, also set with
-sapphires of peculiar peacock hue; a changeable alexandrite, and
-a ruby amid emeralds as leaves, evidently some color-scheme taken
-direct from nature; not a topaz nor white sapphire among the lot, and
-evidently the wearer knew cat’s-eyes from Norwegian opals, even if
-others did not. Even these, however, were secondary to a fire-opal
-of true Indian iridescence. A cleft-opal, that mysterious gem so
-suggestive to mystics in all climes. The light came from within the
-stone, through an irregular cleft, the exterior still rough;--by no
-means a conspicuous ornament, but when the eye upon close examination
-penetrated the cleft, the mysterious interior was ablaze with
-variegated colors. It was this fire-opal the Doctor was examining
-when Adele caught him holding the impressionist hand. The Cultus
-group saw little more of the Doctor until after-dinner-promenade on
-deck; he was occupied with Mrs. Thorn. Then Miss Winchester at once
-applied at the bureau of information.
-
-“What are the probabilities, Doctor Wise? mystic, or merely
-gymnastic? One must never judge by appearances, of course, but----”
-and Miss Winchester gave a little cough to suggest her impression.
-
-“Oh, a very interesting case,--very intelligent and thoroughly
-practical. She talks mysticism like a California theosophist, but
-acts like a cool-headed politician. Her thoughts are about mysticism
-in its useful aspects; her words mystical because a good business
-method for her; and her acts businesslike, very, from the mystical
-point of view. How do you like that for a type?”
-
-“Evidently interesting to talk to,--also good to keep clear of, in
-business,” thought Miss Winchester.
-
-“So that’s what you palm-cranks call a mixed type!” exclaimed Mrs.
-Cultus. “I call her variegated.”
-
-“Oh, of course she is bound to be contradictory, in appearance at
-least, at odd times,” said the Doctor. “Moody as a mystic, dogmatic
-as a sectarian theologian, and will take risks like a Wall Street
-speculator. She is made that way, she is constitutionally so. Oh,
-yes, she is a bundle of mystical impressions held together by very
-clear ideas of what she wants, also has fearless business methods
-to obtain it. The seeming contradiction is more apparent than real,
-however.”
-
-“How about those rings?” quizzed Adele, when Paul’s back was turned.
-
-“Well, only one thing worth remembering. She wears her largest upon
-her forefinger, the most conspicuous position possible, a sure sign
-of--but let that pass.”
-
-“No, Doctor! no passing allowed in this game--just tell me, but
-please don’t tell Paul, or I shall never hear the end, no matter what
-it is;” and she put her arm in the Doctor’s, drawing him off for a
-deck promenade.
-
-“Well, my dear, if you must know, the woman can’t help advertising
-herself,--a most unrefined quality in woman, to my notion. Men, you
-know, no matter how much they may do it themselves, generally detest
-that sort of thing in women. That’s one way in which her feminine
-instinct for appreciation takes a somewhat masculine form in action.
-I could only find it out surely by conversation with her. Now I
-expect to hear of her some day as President of the International
-Impressionists’ Mental-Mystic Board of Trade. She will make a good
-thing of it and possibly then disappear, mystically.”
-
-Adele shuddered. The Doctor felt the motion on his arm. Evidently
-that sort of talk was antipathetic to Adele.
-
-After a little while she asked quietly:
-
-“Does she presume to practice when travelling?”
-
-“I should not be surprised if she were at it now. She told me there
-was a patient on board whom she knew she could cure, whether he had
-faith or not.” Adele twitched again.
-
-“That sort of thing ought to be counteracted in some way. I’ve not
-served in a hospital without learning at least that much. But here!
-Oh, what can we do?”
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
- AMATEUR MENTAL SCIENCE
-
-
-Many on board had noticed an invalid who took his airing in a rolling
-chair. It seemed very natural that he should appear melancholy at
-times, for he was said to be partially helpless, in fact paralyzed
-on one side. This was the unfortunate Mr. Onset, whom Mrs. Thorn
-desired to treat according to the impressionistic methods of the
-Mental-Mystic University-Sanitorium.
-
-How it came to be rumored that she had obtained his consent and that
-he was already acting under her direction is really of little moment,
-for the fact soon became evident,--Mr. Onset himself willingly
-alluded to it. He explained that after trying many regular physicians
-he was about to visit certain baths on the Continent when he
-incidentally met Mrs. Thorn, and was only too glad to avail himself,
-in passing, of any hopeful aid; especially since “the method required
-no medicines which might interfere with subsequent treatment at the
-Spa, and demanded no faith,”--of the latter commodity he had little
-left to give to any system whatsoever. Mr. Onset was certainly trying
-conscientiously to be frank with himself.
-
-The next thing known was that Mrs. Thorn had held a good orthodox
-business-mystic interview properly to diagnose the case; and had
-given the patient some published articles to read, the wording of
-which was most dexterously adapted to excite curiosity for--what
-next; and later on some manuscript letters to be perused when
-alone, the lights turned low so that no one else could read them by
-looking over his shoulder, nor find out how he kept them next the
-fifth-rib-covering of his heart. These latter letters must be made
-mysterious, simply because they communicated to the patient the
-mystical line of thought he was to follow while the Commandant of the
-Thought Center sat in her state-room meditating.
-
-“Oh! I know exactly how it works!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus.
-
-“How? What?” asked Miss Winchester, laughing.
-
-“Why, lying in your state-room bunk, meditating. I know the whole
-business, so does the steward. He brings me champagne in one hand and
-porridge-mush in the other. He reads my thoughts perfectly.”
-
-What the printed matter given to Mr. Onset contained was soon known
-all over the ship,--an excellent advertisement; what the written
-pages contained Onset kept to himself, as if the subject-matter was
-rather too personal for discussion in either the men’s or women’s
-smoking departments.
-
-Mutual meditations continued, however; mental impressions were
-presumably radiating, the vibrations presumably acting in a
-marvellous manner, having been promised to take a straight course
-direct from the state-room bunk to Mr. Onset’s legs and none other,
-which certainly was a vast improvement upon the expansion method of
-wireless telegraphy in communicating thoughts. And this even if the
-paralysis did remain as evident as before.
-
-Yet curious to relate, these mysterious vibrations certainly
-did expand with most positive effects upon others; Mrs. Cultus
-continually on the lookout for substantial results, Frank Winchester
-jotting down absurd notes as they flew by, Paul continually vibrating
-between Adele and what she wanted. This until Adele asked if there
-was any book in the library upon “Practical Metaphysics.” Then Paul
-flunked, and sat down beside her. As to the Doctor----
-
-One morning he and the Professor inquired of the patient how he was
-progressing:
-
-“Slowly,” said Mr. Onset. “I still have little hope, but I certainly
-caught a new idea.”
-
-Onset’s voice was unquestionably melancholy, from his own point of
-view,--but not of that peculiar timbre, nor in any degree involved,
-as might reasonably be expected from a partially helpless paralytic.
-
-“There is something strange about that fellow,” remarked the Doctor.
-
-“I think so myself, but have not defined it as yet,” added the
-Professor.
-
-“Did you ever observe a man paralyzed on the right side who could
-speak as he does, to say nothing of his power to talk and converse
-connectedly and with ease?”
-
-Their conversation naturally became more technical than is desirable
-in this record, but it may be remarked that Professor Cultus’ mode
-of thought displayed an insight into the nature of mental processes
-in general, from the standpoint of the modern psychology; whereas
-the Doctor accentuated certain facts he had observed in Mr. Onset in
-particular. The Professor, very careful in what he stated and very
-cautious as to conclusions; the Doctor intensely appreciative, and
-ultra sanguine as to results. The Professor much better informed
-as to how details of anatomy were supposed to work; the Doctor
-understanding how they actually had worked in cases he had observed.
-They were, each of them, truth-seeking;--the Professor exceptionally
-explicit as to the anatomy, nerves, nerve-centers; especially clear
-as to “a veritable nerve-center having a strange domination over the
-memory of articulating words.” The Doctor insisted that Onset ought
-to manifest phenomena different from what he did if he suffered from
-veritable paralysis. Both being sure that paralysis of the right
-side of the body is undoubtedly connected by the nervous system with
-the left side of the brain; the careful Professor would not commit
-himself further as to Onset’s case; the sanguine Doctor did so at
-once:
-
-“Onset is paralyzed on the right side. The organs of speech in his
-case are not affected, yet if speech should be affected, and is not,
-what becomes of the paralysis?”
-
-A twinkle in the Doctor’s eye as he said this was noticed by the
-Professor.
-
-“You seem to have discovered something,” said the Professor, smiling.
-
-Another twinkle in the Doctor’s eye. “Rather! I think it must be
-another opportunity for the palmistry humbug. Mrs. Thorn and he are
-a pair, complementary, positive and negative. He a good subject, for
-her, perhaps a medium and all that sort of thing.”
-
-“Go tell it to the marines on board,” said the Professor, laughing,
-as the Doctor hurried off to find Onset.
-
-Onset’s hands amused the Doctor greatly. He found vitality much
-stronger than he had expected, but much less vivid characteristics of
-health:--color thin, action weak; texture smooth, fingers pointed;
-palm hollow and much crossed; groups of little lines on certain
-mounts (versatility); a fine development of a certain part of the
-hand (imagination, Mount Luna); thumb lacking in force of will, just
-the opposite to Mrs. Thorn; in fact, a number of details which in
-combination might be read several ways, but invariably showing marked
-susceptibility to fleeting impressions, mental-sensitiveness,--an
-active mind yet unstable characteristics, a liability to vagaries of
-some sort;--the natural tendencies of the individual also suggested
-in certain directions,--but let that pass.
-
-Yes. Onset’s hands were amusing. The Doctor would not assert that the
-man was actually hipped then and there, but there was ample chance
-that he should be if circumstances led that way, the conditions
-favorable. He was just such a patient as Mrs. Thorn might succeed in
-curing. And then came the gist of the whole situation:
-
-If Mrs. Thorn, why not anyone else? provided a counter-impression was
-given, vivid and forcible enough to convince the patient _in spite of
-himself_.
-
-That afternoon found the Doctor, Miss Winchester, Adele and Paul,
-putting their heads together, mysteriously cogitating; evidently a
-plot on hand to give Mr. Onset another new idea.
-
-“It can do no harm and may do the poor fellow some good,” whispered
-the optimistic Doctor. “Adele, your father will find it out soon
-enough himself, so we needn’t bother him just yet. In case of a
-rumpus the Professor will be just the one to fall back upon. He told
-me to go to the marines; we’ll make him our guardian angel,--our
-marine.”
-
-Adele, laughing, wondered how angelic her father would appear acting
-as a marine.
-
-“Remember!” whispered the Doctor, “all at your stations when the
-invalid is brought down to his state-room to retire at nine o’clock
-this evening,--now don’t forget. You see we’ve got to catch an idea
-before it gets away from us,--quick work;” and the chief conspirator
-bustled off to find Onset.
-
-“There’s nothing like having a patient toned up previous to an
-operation,” said the Doctor, musing. “If we can succeed in directing
-the mind previously, and put him in a proper mood to receive the
-impression, the work will be well under way before he himself
-is aware of it. Mrs. Thorn seems quite an adept at preliminary
-work,--correct, but the preliminaries may reasonably include a
-counter-irritant. If we can produce premonitory suggestions leading
-up to an idea, the impression will have a better chance to operate,
-the idea to cure in its own way.”
-
-“How are you this afternoon, Mr. Onset?” and he took a seat near the
-invalid.
-
-“Not much encouraged. No doubt Mrs. Thorn is thinking the thing out
-in her room;--can’t say I feel any worse, and that may be her doings;
-but really this arm and leg are still so helpless that possibly when
-I retire to-night I ought to remain in my berth to give her a better
-chance.”
-
-“Not if I know it,” thought the Doctor; then audibly, “Would you
-oblige me by attempting to stand up, if only on one foot, and allow
-me to support your weak side,--just for the effort?”
-
-“It’s no use, my dear sir, not the slightest; I can’t move, for the
-life of me. I only wish I could.”
-
-“Then let me roll your chair for a turn or two,” and without waiting
-for a reply he gently moved Onset to a place where both could observe
-some steam issuing from an aperture.
-
-“What complicated machinery!” remarked the Doctor. “This ship must
-be a network of pipes, steam here at the side, and also from the top
-of the funnel, no doubt both connected with the boilers--boilers
-and live steam, live boilers and steam everywhere! Fortunately,
-explosions seldom occur.”
-
-“What terrible things accidents must be,” quoth Onset, evidently
-interested and nervous; “terrible when one is helpless.”
-
-“Sometimes not fatal,” quoth the dismal-cheerful Doctor; “it
-frequently depends upon one’s own exertions at the critical moment.
-I was myself once in a collision of passenger trains, our car turned
-upside down--thrown twenty feet. I lit head-foremost in one of those
-overhead parcel baskets which had been above my seat and was now
-below. Fortunately, I was able to pick himself up by the seat of
-another fellow’s breeches, and scrambled out through a window. If I
-hadn’t scrambled out that window I should certainly have been burnt
-alive!”
-
-“Heavens!” exclaimed Onset, “there’s not even a window on this ship
-downstairs to crawl through. I should never get my leg through a
-port-hole, and probably be caught head out and legs in. Do you think
-there’s any danger, Doctor?”
-
-“Well, there’s a good deal of live steam under high pressure about
-here; I really don’t know much about steam-fitters’ work, but if it
-were plumbing I should certainly say, yes. Thank fortune, it is not
-plumbing, Mr. Onset.”
-
-“But it is steam-fitting,” quoth Onset, now becoming positive, his
-mental process very inconsequent, as with many of his type. “Now,
-Doctor, I’d like to ask you just one question, seriously you know,
-strictly private. I ought not to ask it but I really must, under the
-circumstances. Mrs. Thorn has told me considerable about vibrations;
-now any fool can see that vibrations are not good for steam pipes,
-yet here we are. Now tell me frankly, do you think Mrs. Thorn’s
-meditations can affect or be affected by all this around us. She told
-me, most positively, that her meditations vibrating to me must not
-leak out---- Oh I wish she would accelerate a little if any good is
-to come of it.”
-
-The Doctor at once made a plunge for his handkerchief, and blew his
-nose, enough to create more vibrations; then,
-
-“Well, Mr. Onset, your perspicacity is remarkable; I never met anyone
-who detected possibilities, aye, even probabilities, more quickly
-than you do.” Onset felt flattered, the Doctor gave him time to pat
-himself on the back, and then,
-
-“But there’s nothing like having one’s mind prepared for emergencies.
-If anything should happen, why, just call on me, Mr. Onset. Fact is,
-I’m now so accustomed to accidents both mental and physical that when
-not killed in the first crash I generally pull through.”
-
-“Thanks awfully, I certainly shall. Doctor, my man James is good
-enough in ordinary emergencies, but I doubt his use in accidents.
-James! Jamie! here, Jimmy! take me back where I won’t see this steam,
-the odor and its suggestions are both unpleasant. Good-bye, Doctor, I
-must now take a rest.”
-
-Onset’s organs of speech were certainly all right, but his mental
-apparatus decidedly leaky, and something the matter with his legs.
-
-“I trust the preliminary tonic may not lose its effect before nine P.
-M.,” mused the Doctor as he went to report to the other conspirators.
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- AMATEUR TACTICS--A FRIGHTFUL CURE
-
-
-Dinner served, the conspirators enjoyed a promenade on deck, keeping
-an eye upon Mr. Onset and Mrs. Thorn as they sat conversing. No doubt
-vibrations were at work, the most approved methods of the wonderful
-Mystic Department of the Sanitorium Universitasque making some sort
-of an impression; because, as Mrs. Thorn remarked afterwards, “Mr.
-Onset was already oscillating between the old and the new, and
-whenever that condition arose she felt sure that the preliminary
-tendencies of the occult influences towards a cure were already
-taking effect.” Mrs. Thorn could be quite as perspicacious as the
-Doctor when she chose, her theories decidedly new as well as lucid,
-in fact unique.
-
-At last James appeared, to take the patient to his state-room; this
-was the signal for the Doctor’s party to fly to their stations. The
-rolling chair was brought to one of the narrow gangways leading
-directly to Mr. Onset’s quarters below; the passage entered through a
-door at the top, the short flight of steps down closed by partitions
-on either side. The chief conspirator noticed that when James went
-off with the patient Professor Cultus was engaged in conversation
-with Mrs. Thorn; evidently one of those curious coincidences most
-opportune, which occult influences often exert in favor of the
-one conspired against. “Good!” exclaimed the Doctor. “I now know
-where our marine-angel is to be found when I want him; now for an
-impression less occult.”
-
-When James reached the head of the gangway, there stood the Doctor,
-apparently by accident; and of course he offered to assist in
-carrying the invalid down the steps. Onset appeared more helpless
-than usual when, the Doctor supporting his shoulders and James his
-feet, the trio began to descend. If ever a subject for treatment had
-weak legs, it was Onset at that moment.
-
-All progressed favorably until they reached the bottom, and were
-about to make the turn into the state-room passage; “Look out for
-that awkward corner, James.”
-
-“All right, sir! Keep his head up, I’ll take his feet round first.”
-
-“Go ahead!” exclaimed the Doctor. (The signal.)
-
-No sooner said than a brilliant flash of light burst forth, a little
-way ahead down the passage, accompanied by a hissing noise not unlike
-an explosion.
-
-Onset gave a start. “What’s that? Look there! Oh, Lord!” replied
-to by shrieks from female voices, and a cloud of white smoke with
-pungent odor. In an instant the passage seemed filled with frightened
-voices and smoke.
-
-It was merely some of Paul’s photographic flash-light powder,
-accompanied by very realistic exclamations in consequence, but in
-such close quarters it seemed much more serious.
-
-“God help us!” cried Jimmy, dropping Onset’s legs and turning
-around to discover what had happened. Through the smoke he saw
-Paul violently beating back flames which came from one of the
-cross-passages.
-
-It was only Miss Winchester and Adele, invisible behind the angle,
-holding at arm’s length some burning paper upon a plate, but quite
-enough for faithful James. Seizing Onset by the ankles he would
-probably have dragged him on deck feet foremost if the Doctor had not
-ordered him in sharp tones:
-
-“Keep your head, man! Don’t yell! I’ll attend to this! Go find
-Professor Cultus near the head of the gangway, quick! Don’t yell!
-It’s bad enough as it is!”
-
-The last remark settled Jimmy; he vanished up the steps, and Onset
-groaned at the thought of being caught helpless below decks.
-
-“Now,” said the Doctor, quickly turning to the patient, “we’ve got to
-hustle--it looks like an explosion, near by!--before a panic seizes
-the passengers.” Poor Onset, in the narrow passage lit by the flames,
-seized the Doctor with a grip of terrible fright, his well arm
-jerking the Doctor as if he had a spasm. “For God’s sake, don’t leave
-me!”
-
-“I don’t intend to, I’ll stick by you,” said the arch conspirator,
-“but you must make an effort, too,” and he lifted the fellow upon his
-feet.
-
-At this instant, down the steps came Professor Cultus and, by another
-prearranged “coincidence” to which he was not a party, the door above
-closed behind him.
-
-Darkness indeed. The place might prove a veritable death-trap,
-surely, so thought Onset.
-
-“What mischief are you up to?” exclaimed the Professor, serious in
-tone, but his countenance (which none could see) somewhat suspicious
-if not humorous.
-
-“Lend a hand!” cried the Doctor, and then in a whisper, “I’m trying
-to get an idea into this chap’s legs---- Sh!”
-
-Professor Cultus took hold of Onset’s opposite shoulder, and together
-they turned him around, moved him in an upright position towards the
-steps. He seemed indeed helpless, but his eye was now fixed toward
-that gangway, the way to escape. To get there and escape was the
-only thought potent in his mind. The Doctor turned and again nodded
-to Paul. Off went another flash-explosion, more pungent smoke, the
-sort of choking fumes that scare you off. This time nearer, the vivid
-light and more excited screams seemed hardly ten feet away.
-
-Onset gave a plunge with his well leg, and would certainly have
-fallen flat but for his strong support.
-
-“Now for it, Onset,” urged the Doctor, lifting the limp limb,
-assisting to put it on the next step. Professor Cultus nodded and
-took the weight.
-
-“Now for another step!” urged the Doctor. Onset put his well leg up
-by his own effort, but when the Doctor helped the other to follow he
-noticed a change for the better, the paralyzed limb was not quite
-such a non-active member as before. Onset’s fright and desire to
-escape were getting their hold on him in spite of himself, his legs
-asserting and maintaining themselves without his realizing the fact
-that paralyzed legs should not be able to behave that way.
-
-The critical moment was approaching, the crucial test, the final
-effort to force Onset to put forth his whole strength spontaneously
-as for his life. The closed door above made the passage still darker
-at the top, the smoke from behind made the atmosphere more oppressive
-each moment. “Only three more steps,” exclaimed the Doctor, “to burst
-through that door or be suffocated.” Onset heard this. The Doctor
-pressed his elbow against Professor Cultus to signal he was now
-ready. The Professor gradually lessened his support, and then quietly
-let go, slipping behind him to catch the man if he fell.
-
-Nothing of the kind occurred. Onset was so frantically determined to
-get out that he stood supported on one side only without realizing
-the fact, both legs commencing to work together. Almost alone he
-managed to force himself higher. Seizing the auspicious moment the
-Doctor gave Paul the final signal. Flash! hiss-s-s-s-s! red lights,
-jumping shadows; cries, more jumps; something yellow--ghastly! “Rush
-for your life!” Onset and the infernal regions close behind him, at
-the foot of the steps!
-
-Paul had prolonged the agony by some red-burning powder from one
-of the ship’s signal lights. Miss Winchester waving a sheet of
-yellow glass from Paul’s photographic lantern before her portable
-flames--great effect! Screams certainly diabolical; one could hear
-the wild laughter amid the cries. At such close quarters none could
-stand the racket a moment longer. Professor Cultus, in the thick of
-the fumes, was the first to protest. “Open that door! open I tell
-you, we’ll be smothered!” which was a fact. Onset in a spasm of
-despair, “Let me out! Let me out!” Miss Winchester, also spasmodic,
-“I’m getting roasted--fried!” Adele, “I _am_ roasted!”
-
-Onset never knew the exact moment when the Doctor left him standing
-alone; all he realized was the bursting open of the door, the flood
-of electric light--it seemed like daylight--and the Doctor above
-offering his hand to assist, the hand not quite within reach, an
-effort necessary to reach it; all depended upon the invalid’s own
-effort.
-
-Without a thought but to escape, Onset started up those remaining
-steps as one flying for his life, forgetful of weak legs, paralysis,
-or any other incumbrance. Actuated by the mental and spiritual
-impulse towards self-preservation he plunged through the opening out
-upon the deck. Thoroughly scared by a vivid realization of things as
-they were, his previous hysteria which had clouded the mind vanished
-before a more potent impression which cleared his mental atmosphere,
-vanquished by a forced acceptance of the actual facts--he was not
-paralyzed.
-
-The Doctor steadied him an instant; only a moment of assistance was
-necessary, until he realized himself standing without support. Dazed
-and frightened, choking from the fumes, while those who followed made
-an uproar of coughs and laughter, the poor fellow could not take in
-the situation at a glance. No one seemed excited, however, about any
-explosion; all interest seemed centered in himself, congratulations
-from everybody, Mrs. Cultus in particular.
-
-“Why, Mr. Onset! I’m delighted to see you looking so well” (social
-fib; Onset looked like an escaped lunatic), “and able to walk”
-(conversational stretch), “cured” (perhaps), “and quite like yourself
-again” (since when?).
-
-Not until Onset heard these highly appropriate congratulations did
-the whole situation dawn upon him. Yes, he had escaped by his own
-unaided efforts at the last, and of course it was too ridiculously
-evident to be denied that he was then and there standing alone. The
-very thought was paralyzing to the former impression that he could
-not stand. And behold the power of a new lively idea, affecting
-matter as well as mind--instead of melancholy Onset and an old scared
-impression, behold Onset smiling in spite of himself. Everybody
-thought he was going to make a speech. He did.
-
-“Ho there, Jimmy! James, where are you?--Jim!”
-
-Now, James had been in a terrible quandary during all the latter
-part of these proceedings. After Professor Cultus had descended, at
-his request, James had been confronted by Mrs. Cultus, who calmly
-moved her seat directly in front of the passageway and with apparent
-carelessness closed the door. She had moved not an inch until just
-in time for the Doctor to make his exit, followed by the demoralized
-Onset. It was Mrs. Cultus who had amused herself by giving her
-impressions as to the vibrating Jimmy, keeping him there until the
-proper time came. The valet was as much surprised as the master when
-he saw the melancholy Onset rise to the surface in a cloud of smoke
-and then favor the company with a smile. He received a further new
-impression when Onset remarked:
-
-“We’ll clear the deck, Jimmy; I go it alone.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Would Onset remain cured? Could a man so unstable in legs, mode of
-thought, and possibly character, remain steadfast? Adele was the
-first to ask herself this question.
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- ADELE’S MEDITATIONS
-
-
-Nothing succeeds like success. The Doctor’s party had broken so many
-of the ship’s rules, by igniting flash-powder and burning paper below
-decks, that a lively time was expected when they were called upon to
-explain matters. No real harm had, however, been done to the vessel;
-no more than if they had taken a flash-light picture after dark. A
-few good fees to the stewards and a draft of fresh air through the
-passage soon cleared the atmosphere. When the officers put in an
-appearance to make an examination, merely the fragrance from some
-pastilles which Miss Winchester thoughtfully used to overcome the
-odor from charred paper was noticeable, and every one was talking
-about the paralytic who had rushed up the gangway in a state of
-terror.
-
-Onset’s cure became the general topic of conversation on board, and
-forty people had forty differences of opinion as to what had happened
-and the propriety of such proceedings. Adele had taken only a minor
-part, but after it was over came a reaction which made her very
-thoughtful:
-
-“Onset must be very weak, weak in mind as well as body; something
-must be wanting in his make-up. I don’t believe that any one with
-real strength of character could be cured exactly as he was; and
-what’s more, I don’t believe he is cured.”
-
-Then she mused more comprehensively, and being a well-educated girl
-at once sought for the most notable example she could recall of the
-antithesis of this weakness. Her thoughts had been much on serious
-matters since her meditations in the Park and her previous talk with
-her Father. “What is it this man lacks?--strength of character, force
-of character? What is that?
-
-“Well, it strikes me most impressively in one particular
-personality--historical; and in Him so strong that you feel this
-strength to-day precisely as if He were yet alive. He told the weak
-to take up their beds and walk, and they obeyed--really weak legs
-walked. There was something wonderful about such a character and the
-cures He made. He certainly had a force which never failed, and the
-patients were permanently better through and through, mental as well
-as physical--a deepening of the whole character. He seems to me the
-only perfect practitioner of healing ever known, and the first great
-Psychologist, and although living so long ago is modern yet. He seems
-like one who had then conquered even Science itself.”
-
-Adele then sought the opposition to her own view, her college
-training having taught her to reason in that way.
-
-“I never heard any one say that the Historic Christ lacked in force
-of character. Let me think! Yes, I did, too--once; and curiously
-enough it was a Jewish Rabbi disparaging the greatest historic
-character of the chosen people. He insisted that Christ was
-‘deluded,’ and deluded forsooth in direct consequence of His own good
-thoughts and actions. Now, how could a Personality setting the most
-notable example of force and power be deluded like an ordinary man or
-self-constituted critic? As to the ancient golden rule, known so well
-to Confucius in Chinese form, and the Lord’s Prayer, also possibly
-known in some form to the Rabbi Hillel in Hebrew fashion previously,
-were they not each shown by Christ Himself in a manner far more
-potent to all men, each after his kind?--I might say acceptable
-to all creation in a way never dreamed of by either Confucius or
-Hillel. Don’t tell me that such a character could be deluded. If such
-was the case, then truth itself in character is a delusion, and
-expediency takes its place. All sciences and religions know better,
-all creation knows better, all except the few who delude themselves
-in order to bolster up a previous impression as to character to which
-they feel committed. Don’t tell me that the greatest Hebrew who ever
-lived, great because He developed force and strength of character in
-civilizations strong unto this day, was deluded! That is illogical
-and unsound, intellect misused, the twaddle of criticism.”
-
-Thus Adele, the young modern educated girl, free to think of truth
-as she saw it, decided this question for herself, and put the result
-of her meditations away in her mental storehouse, little realizing
-how soon she would have occasion to congratulate herself upon having
-crystallized her views on this weighty subject.
-
-“I’m glad,” she said inwardly, “I’m glad Christianity is founded
-upon Christ’s personality still alive, His own words and deeds still
-active, and not upon what other people, ancient or modern, say about
-Him.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Adele went to join her mother, and found Mrs. Thorn already in
-evidence. The latter had indeed found her curative vibrations
-somewhat counteracted by events due to others also meditating more
-actively than she. And Mrs. Thorn showed much worldly wisdom and tact
-in saying very little about it; simply remarking that “Mr. Onset was
-already in a fair way to recovery when the accident happened. Indeed,
-Mrs. Cultus, I feel quite confident I should have cured him with much
-less fuss about it.”
-
-This latter remark was made as they sat in the same vicinity on deck
-enjoying the air, the day following. Much to their surprise some one
-answered promptly:
-
-“I’m sure I should.”
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- ANOTHER COMMOTION--RELIGIOUS-CURATIVE
-
- “Will that you won’t be sick, and you won’t be,” quoth a volunteer
- adviser.
-
- “It’s my will itself that is sick,” replied a real sufferer.
-
-
-“I’m sure I should.”
-
-Mrs. Cultus turned quickly, to find the speaker, a placid-looking
-person, sitting near, presumably a lady, yet who had evidently
-been eavesdropping. A person of matronly aspect, whose voice and
-expression suggested a desire to tell others something that might
-be of benefit to them. Not at all one whose appearance suggested
-mysticism in any degree; on the contrary rather ingenuous,
-consequently a surprise to all present when she launched at them the
-following dogmatic statements:
-
-“The practice of healing, of course I mean metaphysical healing, is
-based upon certain ethical and religious principles, because we know
-that mind holds utter control over matter.”
-
-Mrs. Cultus, at first taken aback, then much amused, replied
-promptly: “Mind over matter! well, I should hope so. But it strikes
-me mind often controls matter better than it controls itself--h’m!”
-and Mrs. Cultus gave a little cough, as if the very idea had produced
-“something-the-matter” in her own anatomy.
-
-Miss Winchester whispered to Adele: “My dear, we have found
-another--metaphysical specimen this time. The ship is full of them.”
-
-“No more cures for me,” retorted Adele. “That magnesium powder is not
-out of my head yet--I mean my hair.”
-
-“Never mind that, dear. Your head will save your hair; beg pardon, I
-mean your heels.”
-
-“Well,” thought Adele, laughing, “even if this individual is another
-new-science-expert, she can’t possibly be of the loud, vociferous
-variety.” Adele judged by the placid manner and quiet voice,
-insinuating even when making such positive and surprising assertions.
-She had yet to learn how extremes sometimes meet in the same
-personality. The Doctor could have told her that the woman’s hands
-showed a most ardent temperament, and that in some types suppressed
-zeal could assume the appearance of placidity personified.
-
-Mrs. Thorn regarded the matronly lady with especial interest, because
-new mental impressions of any kind, from any source, might at any
-time be of use to her. Her smile was bland, mild, courtesy itself,
-with just a humorous tinge for business with it, as she leaned
-forward to catch every word. Some new point in the game might be
-played at any moment. This when the placid matron remarked: “No
-medicines are now needed, no such disturbances as we have had on
-board. The true method by which mind may overcome all disease in
-suffering humanity we have now learned.”
-
-“You don’t say so!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus. “No medicines? What a
-blessing! But what takes their place, massage, or change of climate?
-We’re trying the latter.”
-
-The placid lady, as she soon informed them, was Mrs. Geyser, of
-Wyoming, claiming to be an expert in the modern field of _popular_
-metaphysics. Miss Winchester, who knew what popularity implied,
-interrupted, “Oh, tell us, Mrs. Geyser, Wyoming is noted, is it not,
-as a locality where the natural ebullitions produced by physical
-forces are very remarkable?”
-
-“Assuredly; in the volcanic region of our Park we have many instances
-of nature’s activity, in the boiling springs and water volcanoes,
-mud----”
-
-“Baths and smothered combustion?” interrupted Frank Winchester. Mrs.
-Geyser paid no attention, except to intensify her previous statement.
-
-“I’m quite accustomed to such sights. Nature often looks so quiet
-and harmless, yet the ebullitions you speak of take effect when not
-expected.”
-
-“Anybody scalded?” asked Miss Winchester. Mrs. Geyser began to
-suspect that she was being chaffed.
-
-“Gushers by nature, don’t you think so, Mrs. Geyser?”
-
-Mrs. Geyser could not question this undoubted fact. How could she?
-Her own ebullitions of thought were already seething. She couldn’t
-get a word in edgewise without interruptions. How could any one
-preach practical metaphysics, metaphysics with interruptions? The
-conditions were most unfavorable. She determined, however, not to be
-balked in a good cause. No! not by a flippant damsel, anyhow, with
-her unseemly intrusions. So she fired off one of her big statements
-to back up what she considered to be practical metaphysics.
-
-“You know, I presume, that we preach the gospel or good news
-according to doctrine found in the Bible and stated in the tenets of
-religious Science.”
-
-Mrs. Cultus remarked that she hoped her knowledge of the Bible was
-sufficient, but, really, she knew little about the tenets. “What are
-tenets, anyhow?”
-
-“One of our tenets reads this way,” and Mrs. Geyser assumed a tone of
-voice most serious, as if she were uttering a revelation of mystery
-never before vouchsafed to ordinary mortals. “We acknowledge the way
-of salvation to be the power of truth over all error, sin, sickness
-and death, and the resurrection of human faith and understanding
-to seize the great possibilities, yes, possibilities, and living
-energies of divine life.”
-
-Mrs. Cultus drew a long breath. “Oh, dear, tenets are awful things;
-so complicated! May I ask what becomes of the simplicity of the
-gospel?”
-
-Adele became very attentive while Mrs. Geyser was speaking. There was
-something in it which appealed to her as very true, yet that word
-“possibilities,” it was so easy to stretch it into the impossible and
-unreasonable.
-
-“Please give us a simple tenet,” asked Mrs. Cultus, now the placid
-speaker.
-
-“There is nothing easier, it’s as easy as reading a book. We have
-keys of our own--you must use our keys--our own book to both science
-and health.”
-
-Frank Winchester gave a start, as if struck by an idea. “Keys! those
-everlasting keys! There must be two sets!”
-
-“Three, my dear, three! I remember them well,” said Mrs. Cultus, her
-memory also startled into activity. “I knew St. Peter by reputation
-only, but Louis also had keys. I remember Louis XVI of France very
-well, when I was at school. He was a locksmith also, and made
-Bourbon keys for the government. Poor man! he lost both his keys
-and his head. Why, Mrs. Geyser, I’m astonished! Don’t you know the
-religious-government-locksmith-business is entirely obsolete?”
-
-“In both science and religion,” mused Adele, while her mother still
-kept the floor.
-
-“Why, St. Peter himself said his keys were worn out. He told the
-whole world he couldn’t lock the door on those Philippine friars,
-when they had been caught interfering with the Government.”
-
-“Don’t mix politics and religion with metaphysics!” exclaimed Adele,
-greatly amused, but beginning to feel interested in the serio-comic
-discussion. “Please don’t--it’s bad form.”
-
-“I won’t, daughter. I was only thinking, thinking how astute St.
-Peter was to find it out before The Hague conference told him so.
-I rather liked that in Peter, because Paul generally showed more
-intellect in the long run. Peter probably was the better manager, but
-I suspect Paul had more--more--Oh, what shall I call it?”
-
-“Metaphysics?” suggested Frank Winchester, struggling to conceal
-intense amusement.
-
-Mrs. Geyser, in the meantime, was not the sort of person to remain
-“sat upon,” as she thought, “in this outrageous manner.” Her own
-mental ebullitions began to demand utterance, but she managed to
-suppress external evidence. Nevertheless the cause she represented
-must be defended. Yes; in spite of Paul, Apollos, Cephas, Mrs. Cephas
-and Miss Cephas, the truth must prevail. She must witness to show how
-it could and would. She must tell how the greatest thing on earth
-should be applied as medicine. Sincerity called for strenuosity, the
-fundamental element in “our religion” must be made known, preached,
-and she did so, thusly:
-
-“The maintenance of health and cure of disease occupy a large space
-in the religious faith of our society. Love is the greatest thing
-on earth, the fundamental thing with us. Love conquers all things,
-headache and neuralgia, backache and lumbago, all included, annual
-and perennial, the whole list, non-chronic and chronic. To apply
-religion scientifically we first fix truth and love steadfastly in
-the patient’s thoughts and explain what religious science is, but not
-too soon, not until the patient is prepared for it;” and then Mrs.
-Geyser continued to elucidate her method, incidentally remarking that
-medicine was never needed, not even for babies, not even in the mild
-form of a preparatory mixture. Frank Winchester recalled to memory
-the recent preparatory mental dose given by the Doctor to Mr. Onset,
-but said nothing. Adele, recently graduated, could not avoid asking
-the question:
-
-“Have you a diploma?”
-
-A very dignified attitude struck Mrs. Geyser in the small of
-her back when Adele innocently propounded this touchy question.
-She straightened up to reply. “Our diplomas are attested by the
-supernatural powers we exert. I deny that natural causes can account
-for our proceedings, I mean our results.”
-
-“It looks just that way,” remarked Mrs. Cultus, while Mrs. Geyser
-continued:
-
-“But to comply with the laws of the land and render unto Cæsar
-the things that are his I did take a course at our Metaphysical
-College--twelve half-days’ instruction at three hundred dollars
-for the course. Ample, I assure you, to satisfy any materialistic
-law-maker, and quite as expensive as many other colleges.” After
-this incidental announcement Mrs. Geyser seemed ready to resume the
-practice of her profession as teacher, but Adele, by this time, did
-not seem inclined to let it be done so easily. Evidently a climax was
-approaching in Adele’s own mind as to the duty of graduates.
-
-“I notice, Mrs. Geyser, that you lay great stress upon cures.”
-
-“Yes, they bear witness to the truth in our religious-science.”
-
-“Do you keep any account of failures?”
-
-“None whatever.”
-
-“Then you notice what suits you and ignore the rest. Is that truth in
-science?”
-
-“Failures do not depend upon phenomena or cases.”
-
-“Then upon what?” inquired Adele, intensely interested.
-
-“Failures depend upon the Divine Word.”
-
-A pause--Adele as one astounded at what she considered the fearful
-abuse of both thoughts and words in Mrs. Geyser’s statements.
-
-No doubt Mrs. G. imagined she was protecting her faith and religion
-by this placing of blame for failure upon the Spirit of Truth in the
-Divine Word, as if Truth itself could ever be a delusion, a fallacy,
-a failure; but, unfortunately, or fortunately perhaps, Adele Cultus
-grasped the fuller import of such assertions--so abusive of facts in
-nature scientific and philosophical, so diametrically in opposition,
-or else ignoring Christ’s especial teaching by word and work. Such
-was Adele’s point of view.
-
-To Adele this was utterly illogical, antagonistic to truth as
-she saw it. Such an atrocious conception from one who had just
-been talking about love, the greatest thing on earth, struck
-through Adele like an electric shock, and, as usual with her, the
-spiritual dominant. She was also outwardly calm, but mentally that
-violent tension which comes with strenuous effort to find the
-truest utterance. The horrible words again sounded in her ears:
-“Failures--depend--upon----”
-
-“Mrs. Geyser, to the Divine Word let us appeal. The record states
-that our Saviour did depend upon the phenomena to sustain his claims,
-‘Believe me for the very works’ sake,’ and He never failed. When
-science, some day, progresses to the standpoint of our Saviour’s
-knowledge and practice we too may understand the application of
-natural laws as He did. What is the so-called supernatural? Merely
-that which science has not yet explained: miracles to-day are not
-miracles to-morrow.”
-
-All attention was now focused upon Adele, her eyes flashing as they
-often had done when tackling a difficult problem at college. Her
-mentality was concentrated. Mrs. Cultus thought she “looked like
-Portia” when she continued:
-
-“Our Heavenly Father wrote the Divine Word in all things. Science and
-religion must agree. They have the same Author.”
-
-Now if Adele had only stopped at this point and by silence let the
-truth further speak for itself in the heart, much of what followed
-would have been avoided. But youth is impulsive in method and often
-abuses strenuosity by becoming indiscreet. Her youth led her to
-jump at a conclusion embodying personal reference, which of course
-broke away from the direct route to assurance of faith by spiritual
-discernment of actual facts. The bane of both science and religion
-came nearer wrecking the truthful impression already germinated in
-Mrs. Geyser’s consciousness.
-
-“You are a religious thaumaturgist, Mrs. Geyser--a dealer in
-wonder-work. Your results are not real miracles, because you have
-failures and abuse truthful words. Having failures when you attempt
-to heal, you can’t possibly be apostles of the truly ordained
-religious and scientific type.”
-
-Quick as a flash, Mrs. Geyser spoke the historic truth:
-
-“Christ’s Apostles did have failures. Your remarks have no force.”
-
-Adele also quick as a flash:
-
-“Precisely so! which shows the real difference between them and Him.
-In every instance when they did fail He called them a faithless and
-perverse generation. Do you know why, Mrs. Geyser?”
-
-Mrs. Geyser refused to reply.
-
-“Because they neglected well known means, considered scientific in
-those days, and so recognized yet by reasonable people. The Apostles
-neglected to employ prayer and fasting, that is to say, proper mental
-and physical treatment. They had not adequately examined the case
-themselves, conscientiously nor in a prayerful spirit, nor given the
-proper medicine already known to be useful in such cases. Our Saviour
-always applied common sense to his physical and spiritual healing and
-had no failures.” Then she added mentally, “He does it yet.”
-
-Mrs. Geyser had never before heard the historic Christ spoken of as a
-physician of the regular school, which eventually resulted in modern
-practice. She had always thought of Him as an Oriental Healer with no
-pretence to manifesting cures by reasonable specific methods, such
-as have since been learned by the Holy Spirit of Truth in medicine,
-psychology, and the science of religion; by the Spirit which is Holy,
-which Christ promised He would send. She had often said that the
-Scriptures gave no direct interpretation of the scientific basis for
-demonstrating until the new key was discovered. In fact, Mrs. Geyser
-was herself very mediæval in her notions of what Christ’s personality
-stands for as enlightenment, the Holy Spirit of Truth in all things,
-the Light of the World.
-
-Therefore what Adele asserted made little real impression other
-than antagonism, not as yet, not until Adele, more roused than ever,
-continued:
-
-“No record of failures is shirking responsibility, and personal
-responsibility is one of the truest things in any religion worthy of
-the name. Denial of dependence upon phenomena is a false position,
-totally unlike our Saviour. It is a pseudo-Christianity, and it is
-rank pseudo-science to quote in the same breath only those phenomena
-which you think will suit your purpose.” She was going on to add
-“preposterous abuse of the Divine Word,” when her mother beckoned
-her to be less extreme and impulsive. Her youth therefore satisfied
-itself by turning the personal allusions half-way round towards
-herself: “I think your position is preposterous, Mrs. Geyser, and
-your science an imposition upon the public.”
-
-Adele regretted her words almost as soon as uttered, but too late; an
-eruption imminent, it must come.
-
-Mrs. Geyser, the mystic, had been in a suppressed condition, but
-the mental-effervescence was approaching nearer and nearer to
-the surface. Personalities which she often applied to others she
-could not stand when turned towards herself--they acted still more
-potently; in effect not unlike that of soap-suds upon the water
-volcanoes of her native region, temporary suppression followed by
-ebullitions worse than usual. She could no longer sit still, so she
-rose to her feet, without fear but with much trembling, and gave vent
-to a torrent of expostulations, hurling her words at Adele as if to
-deluge her with facts.
-
-“You don’t pretend to say there have been no cures by faith?”
-
-“I do not,” said Adele firmly, “but----”
-
-“But what, young miss? Can you deny facts in life? Facts! facts as
-well authenticated as the New Testament itself!”
-
-“I neither deny facts in nature nor the testimony of honest
-witnesses, but----”
-
-“Cures which the Founder of Christianity promised His followers they
-should perform!” cried the Geyser, still more excited.
-
-Adele’s indignation at this became irresistible, neither could she
-stand it; and the result?
-
-A remarkable thing yet perfectly natural, phenomenon well known to
-both religion and science, a sudden intense appreciation that “the
-letter killeth but the Spirit giveth life,” affecting her whole
-personality, physical, mental, spiritual.
-
-Adele’s ideal became realized in her own person.
-
-The psychological influence of that which is Holy became manifest.
-
-She became, as it were, the personification of that which she
-believed to be true. Sober enthusiasm and convictions, both
-scientific and religious, came to her rescue.
-
-She spoke, but with a revulsion in manner, quietly, slowly, each
-sentence distinct, and her words were the truth in soberness, moral
-courage and reason at its best, the Holy Spirit over all:
-
-“Pardon me, Mrs. Geyser. I am really very sorry I offended you.”
-Then, after a little pause, “I can’t express all that I feel and
-would like to say; but it seems to me our Saviour was always
-reasonable. He never did imply what is unreasonable, no matter what
-marvels and mysteries He may have revealed to enlighten further.
-It seems to me nature has ever since witnessed to His wonderful
-obedience to her laws and His profound knowledge of the Divine Word
-wherever written in nature, physical or spiritual. He came not to
-destroy but to fulfil laws in nature, and this in spite of all that
-has ever been said of Him to the contrary.”
-
-All were now absorbed, blending their own spiritual experience with
-hers as Adele continued:
-
-“Now in religion the claims you make demand a marvellous thing in
-nature, a marvel indeed, quite unreasonable to expect in the brighter
-light of known truths,” and she rested her eyes calmly on Mrs.
-Geyser, she too having become quieter under the better influences at
-work.
-
-“A marvel, indeed, Mrs. Geyser, no less than the actual presence of a
-perfect human being.”
-
-Mrs. Geyser repeated the words, musing self-consciously, “A perfect
-human being!”
-
-“Yes, indeed,” continued Adele. “Taking things as they are, as the
-truth in science has already taught us, the performance of cures by
-the means you attempt would demand perfection in both knowledge and
-technic--one who knows and one who does to perfection--a perfect man.
-Of course I must mean perfect in reason, reasonably perfect as nature
-manifests truth, at the period when the man lives.”
-
-“What do you mean by perfection?” asked Mrs. Geyser, evidently
-sincere. “I don’t quite understand what you mean by that sort of
-high-flown talk.” This was only too true, for Mrs. Geyser, with all
-her pretence to metaphysics, had never formulated a definition of
-that word “perfection;” she knew little and perceived less in that
-very mode of thought to which she made claim as an expert.
-
-Adele’s youthful eyes certainly did show a human-nature-twinkle when
-thus called upon to define what should have been elementary to Mrs.
-Geyser if an expert; and so very important to remember when “perfect
-cures” were claimed in spite of the known imperfections of all other
-systems of treatment. Adele never appreciated her college training
-more than when she found that she could use the knowledge thus
-obtained in reasoning with Mrs. Geyser.
-
-“Well, in metaphysics as well as other studies, perfection is
-something like this: it is not only ‘finished in every part,
-completed,’ but much more, it is ‘whole, entire, existing in the
-widest extent, and in the highest degree--in spiritual relations
-_divine_ in character and quality.’ You surely believe this, Mrs.
-Geyser!”
-
-Mrs. Geyser made a heroic mental effort to grasp this statement and
-answer the question; Adele tried to help her, anxious to share the
-very best of her own mental conclusions, her own spirit dominated by
-the Spirit that is Holy, to help others and not antagonize.
-
-“Now to me the two words, perfection and divinity, are precisely the
-same in significance in relation to our present discussion, and they
-both touch the very highest point in reason, the acme of reason. We
-cannot go higher than that, can we, Mrs. Geyser?”
-
-Mrs. Geyser acknowledged it was “pretty well up.”
-
-Adele, properly gauging the calibre of her patient by this remark,
-repeated the idea:
-
-“No, I can think of nothing higher than perfection and what it
-implies. No, not in physics, metaphysics, nor religion. Can you, Mrs.
-Geyser?”
-
-The listener seemed somewhat confused, but sincerely anxious to
-learn. Adele continued:
-
-“Religion and Philosophy both teach me that Divinity alone manifests
-Perfection to the extent your claims call for. No doubt you have
-examined into the matter thoroughly, Mrs. Geyser. May I ask what your
-key says on the subject?”
-
-The matronly Mrs. Geyser, ever self-conscious, yet trying to be
-sincere, immediately directed her thoughts inwardly, to a sort of
-self-examination which her system was apt to call for in such cases;
-a system of self-examination very peculiar in its operation, as if
-trying to detect how-much-of-perfection she had within herself to
-be depended upon to influence or exert the Supreme Power to perfect
-cures. If anybody ever did try to work out her own salvation (cure
-herself) by means of complicated theories distorting good intentions,
-it was this earnest woman, misguided by a mist of words applied to
-the veritable mysteries in nature, a mystical abuse of the unseen
-truths so well recognized by all truth-seekers as mysterious. Thou
-canst not tell whence it cometh nor whither it goeth. Mrs. Geyser
-seemed worried, but in no way daunted; rather troubled because she
-could not state her own case as she thought it should be stated. Very
-like a matron indeed, with an enormous bunch of keys at her side, not
-one of which would fit.
-
-Adele, also uneasy lest she had not shown that kindness and
-consideration in manner and tone for one older than herself, which
-the case called for--a case in which the Perfect Spirit alone, the
-Holy Spirit of Truth in Love, can do the “perfect work.”
-
-Adele felt this deeply. “What shall I do now? Talk on? No; no more
-talk. I hate this rumpus, hate it! but must do something. Never again
-will I be caught in such a discussion and controversy. Never! but I
-must do something. Poor soul, she can’t even see what she can see.
-I wish I could see for her,” and Adele cast her eyes about, as if
-looking for inspiration in the surrounding objects.
-
-A book lay upon Miss Winchester’s lap. She had been using it at the
-piano in the salon. The title caught Adele’s eye. “Songs Without
-Words,” the musical association with the title she well knew, but
-now, what?
-
-Her active mind, trained to work by association of ideas, and her
-spiritual faculties longing to determine what to do then and there,
-the two worked together. If the beautiful art of music she loved so
-well could speak without words through the ear, why, surely there
-must be a way to speak by--by----
-
-She left her chair, crossed over to where Mrs. Geyser sat, and held
-out a friendly hand, her attitude the reverse of antagonistic, her
-eyes speaking the meekness which is always followed by the promised
-reward. There was no mistake as to the words uttered by those lovely
-eyes, they asked first for peace, peace first, then hope, then
-charity, showing that meekness which inherits the earth. Herself
-illumined by that wonderful light that never was by sea or land, but
-sometimes is reflected on the human face.
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- TWO SIMULTANEOUS SOLILOQUIES
-
-
-The countenance of Mrs. Cultus after this trying scene was a study in
-itself. She was attempting to understand her own daughter. Worldly
-wisdom was well developed in Mrs. Cultus, and it was fortunate for
-Adele that her mother had suppressed dangerous personalities early
-in the interview, else the result would have been permanently bad
-instead of what it proved to be. Much of what Adele said Mrs. Cultus
-had fully appreciated, but not all; not when her daughter began
-talking of what constituted perfection, and the consequences. Then
-worldly wisdom failed, and the mother regarded her daughter with
-amazement.
-
-“The child! What does she know of metaphysics? Yet she talked as
-if she knew all about it as well as she knows her own classmates.
-She must have studied both religion and science at college. I don’t
-wonder they made her valedictorian of her class, to get in the last
-word. She is just like her father, intellectual, and I certainly
-was with her when she became angry with that woman for not giving
-medicine to sick babies. Extraordinary, isn’t it, how some people
-can crowd out their natural instincts for an idea--it is not safe
-to live, not with such notions. What new-fangled medical schools
-without medicine are being propagated! Here are two new ones on board
-this ship--even in mid-ocean there’s no getting rid of them. Well,
-I’m rejoiced that Adele has not been educated out of her natural
-instincts. It is so much safer to be orthodox about such things, and
-take medicine; and these fads, why, never bother with fads except
-for amusement. Now that telepathic reading we had one night at home
-was almost as good as the other evening with hypnotics, both were so
-diverting. But, oh! deliver me from these new sciences. Now I mustn’t
-forget; I must tell Adele how much I admired her standing up for
-old-fashioned medicine and orthodoxy in religion.”
-
-Thus soliloquized Mrs. Cultus in her state-room, while a door,
-slamming every ten seconds in the passageway, somewhat interfered
-with the continuity of her thoughts.
-
-There was yet another of the party whose estimation of Adele rose
-immensely. Paul Warder had overheard the discussion; it gave him an
-insight as to Adele’s character which he would have been a long time
-discovering, and he felt strengthened himself by the thoughts she had
-expressed. Paul was not given to ostentation in religious matters any
-more than Adele herself, nor did he feel quite able to discuss such
-things even if opportunity offered. He was not so constituted, either
-by heredity or education. His antecedents had been of good Quaker
-stock, his own affiliations with churchmen, his daily associations
-with Doctor Wise, from whom he had heard views almost to the verge of
-heterodoxy.
-
-Paul kept his own counsel and, like Adele, preferred to show by
-acts rather than words what his principles were. He and Adele were
-physically and mentally different, but spiritually not at all unlike.
-Without appreciating it themselves at this time they already embodied
-that potent yet mysterious combination in nature which affords the
-most solid, durable foundation for true friendship, the secure and
-real basis upon which marriage should stand. To hear Adele speak her
-mind freely, as she did, was a new experience to Paul, an insight
-which from its very nature forced him to think about her. It was
-one of these incidents in his own life he could never forget, never
-forget her nor what she had said.
-
-Paul’s vernacular when he soliloquized was not so Emersonian as
-it might have been; if it lacked anything it certainly was even a
-suspicion of transcendentalism. No; Paul had a vernacular of his own,
-equally characteristic and, from his own point of view, even more
-forcible. He still retained some of his college idioms when talking
-aloud to the bed-post, and there was in them a peculiar virility.
-When he found himself alone after this new experience his youth
-effervesced in this style:
-
-“By Jove, what a girl! No nonsense there! And she was right, too; O.
-K. every time. How she did pick out the flaws in that queer woman’s
-racket. I could see that it was absurd myself, but I never could
-have spotted the thing as Adele did and then finally smoothed things
-down so well. She must be an awfully good girl. I wonder if a man
-can ever be as good as a woman. And these college girls get on to
-things we fellows never grasp by the right end, and then they put
-them in practice, too. I detest women preachers, but, hang it! I
-believe Adele Cultus could preach first-rate if she wished. I hope
-she won’t get into the habit, but it is a deuced good thing to be
-able to say exactly what you really think when occasion arises. By
-Jove, she is a stunner! Take care, old boy, and don’t fall in love
-with a strong-minded girl, whatever you do. I never heard her talk so
-before, and if it had not been for the provocation given her by that
-crank and the preposterous statements she made about all-metaphysics
-and no-medicine Adele would never have been roused. No, it was not
-that either which aroused her--it was the abuse of the serious words
-and what Adele saw differently that roused her. No, that was not
-uncalled-for interference, but a regular spontaneous stand-up for
-the truth as she saw it. But she must have gone over it somehow
-beforehand, in her mind. We fellows always have to peg over such
-things, or get the exact words from books, so we can be sure of our
-ground. I expect she has a good verbal memory; I wish I had. Science,
-religion, and metaphysics all mixed up in the same breath. I believe
-she’s right, metaphysics and religion do go together in brain work,
-but it’s very dangerous ground for weak minds. Great Scott! when a
-bright girl does use her intellect how attractive she can be, and a
-fellow can’t help seeing and feeling how lovely she is.”
-
-Why should Paul have been so moved? He had just learned something
-well worth knowing of a truly good woman whose intellect worked
-comprehensively, not in grooves; one who really knew more than he
-did on certain lines, and had the courage of her convictions, the
-convictions being precisely what he himself most highly approved,
-instinctively and by education. His youth did the rest.
-
-He was attracted to her, as he said, and even more than he thought,
-but he was not enamored of her--the masculine desire for possession
-had not yet asserted itself; he was being unconsciously led, however,
-in that direction. Nature’s preparatory course was on a much higher
-plane than was the human style of preparation given by the Doctor to
-Mr. Onset. Paul felt beginning to blossom within him such an honest
-regard, such a profound admiration for Adele, for her sincerity and
-the truth in her, that he was led to “believe in her,” trusted her
-perfectly, and was ready to defend her in all things. But he did not
-love her in the complete sense of the term under natural laws: the
-“for better or for worse” in the supreme sense had not yet made its
-appeal, nor had either of them yet seen Aphrodite rising from the sea.
-
-What was Paul’s condition from a purely philosophical standpoint?
-He had acquired through Adele’s force of character that which was
-far better, the permeating sacred spirit in which all true affection
-must rest if it is to endure. Paul was as true in type as Adele. Her
-mentality had conquered by manifesting her spirit from within, he
-had obtained a firm intellectual belief based upon certain phenomena
-in nature. Would the realizing sense of the need of each other
-follow? If so, what direction, what line would it take--physical or
-spiritual, downwards or upwards, for better or for worse? The blossom
-might fall blighted before the perfect fruit was formed.
-
-As a matter of fact they themselves were absorbed simply in the
-beauty of the flower as it unclosed, with little thought of else than
-the enjoyable present.
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- COURAGE VERSUS FOOLHARDINESS
-
-
-While yet thinking about Adele, Paul stood near the stern of the
-vessel, overlooking the foamy roadway produced by the constantly
-revolving propeller; he noticed the rapid progress made by the ship
-which bore him onwards. Looking outwards his thoughts at first turned
-hopefully towards the future--towards the region to which they were
-going; but soon, very soon, that which was before his very eyes drew
-his mind towards the past, suggested by the boiling wake extending in
-imagination clear back to the land they had quitted. Yet as a matter
-of fact it was neither the past nor the future that was just then
-most urgent with a crucial test for him; he was about to realize that
-the present is always more urgent and important than either.
-
-Paul stood musing about this luminous pathway which led back to their
-native land, their home, yet each moment took him farther away from
-such associations, to meet strangers from whom in the very nature of
-things he could not expect such spontaneous sympathy as with his own
-countrymen.
-
-Phosphorescence shone upon the troubled waters, marking the wake
-of the ship for some distance. The sky clear, and in the sheen of
-the moonlight details of the white-crested waves could easily be
-defined. It was one of those glorious evenings when the seascape
-appears artistically perfect, but cold and unsympathetic. Moonbeams
-are not inherently sympathetic, they have no warmth, they come not
-direct from that source of heat and life which gives the vital energy
-to all material things. But to imagination and in idealization
-moonbeams may excite or allay fear, and they often give a clearer
-vision of what sympathy really is, namely, hope and succor when most
-needed. Nature is always kind if we have the spiritual discernment to
-appreciate her, but variable according to her own methods.
-
-Paul had but little of the red-hot-heroic in his physical make-up,
-nor was he especially romantic, but he did have something a great
-deal better. As often with those of his type, his sound mind in
-healthy body was supplemented by a keen sense of duty. Moonbeams and
-romanticism he could joke about, but underneath the jokes he had most
-decided opinions that a fellow ought to help others when necessity
-arose, and also his own ideas as to what was practical and what was
-foolhardy.
-
-While still musing he could not avoid admiring the scene, and
-spontaneously associating it with one he knew could enjoy it; the
-picture was complete, ready to be admired. “I think Adele would enjoy
-it, she ought to see it. The ship is not going too rapidly, so the
-noise of the propeller amounts to little. I’ll go and find her,”
-and he turned to seek her whose pleasure was now more to him than
-heretofore.
-
-Hurrying away, he had taken but a few steps before his attention was
-arrested by a commotion forward. There were voices, then the rapid
-patter and scuffling of feet on the deck, then a sharp cry, a cry the
-most soul-stirring a landsman can hear when in mid-ocean:
-
-“Man overboard!”
-
-“Which side?” exclaimed Paul, spontaneous.
-
-“Port, sir!”
-
-This caused such a complete revolution in Paul’s emotion that for
-an instant he was confused. Like many a landsman, with little fear
-of the water itself, yet with little or no practice at sea, the
-simplest nautical phrase was apt to convey confused ideas. He could
-not on the instant remember whether he should look forward or aft
-(as in a theatre) to determine port from starboard on board ship,
-and as usual rushed over to the wrong side. The light was bad, the
-moon shone the wrong way to see clearly, he rushed back again, leaned
-over the hand rail and thought he saw something bobbing about on the
-water, but was not sure--only an instant, then could distinguish the
-waving arms of some one struggling. The figure was yet ahead, but
-approaching, not quite near yet, but about to pass as he looked on.
-
-The situation was painfully dramatic, but from the deck as Paul saw
-it not so perilous if actions were prompt.
-
-“Where are those life preservers?” and with pocket-knife he cut
-one loose and threw it overboard, then a second, and some smaller
-cork-floats. Why several? He did not stop to think, for another cry,
-this time from the deep, reached his ear, the cry of a drowning
-man. It came sharp on the night air, like a personal appeal, and so
-sounded to Paul--a personal appeal, for none could have now heard it
-as clearly as he.
-
-This was more than Paul could stand without making instant response.
-Two more rips of the knife blade, this time on his own shoe-strings,
-off went the shoes, then coat and waistcoat.
-
-He answered with his college call, “All right, old fellow!” then
-sprang on the hand rail and plunged headlong into the ocean, a clear
-dive from the deck outwards, to find the drowning man.
-
-None but a deck hand caught a glimpse of the youthful figure
-springing into space, of course too late for him to interfere. “Two
-overboard!” cried the sailor promptly, then giving vent to his own
-reflections, “Some blasted fool who wants to do the thing hisself!”
-mumbling as he went forward to report.
-
-Increased excitement, passengers calling for help.
-
-“Where was the other man?” exclaimed several voices among a group
-coming aft to the new center of interest. “Where?”
-
-“There, ma’am!” said the deck hand, pointing; “he left his boots.”
-
-“Poor fellow!” exclaimed Miss Winchester. “Oh, Adele, what a legacy!
-Just think of it, boots!”
-
-The crowd rushed to look at the boots. They were held up for
-inspection. Frank Winchester no sooner turned her eyes upon them than
-she rushed forward, recognized the coat and waistcoat, and stood
-aghast.
-
-“It’s Paul!”
-
-Adele did not move, she seemed turned to stone.
-
-Her eyes were fixed, looking straight ahead, trying to pierce the
-shadowy deep, the boundless expanse. The ocean seemed enormous,
-terrible, and, oh, so cold, heartless, consuming! “What! There? Lost!”
-
-But she was quiet only for an instant, then seizing any loose
-articles she could find threw them overboard, and with strong emotion
-invited others to do the same. “Anything that will float--will float!
-It may reach them; it may, it must!” and the passengers followed her
-example.
-
-More life preservers, several deck stools and steamer chairs then
-followed overboard before the enraged boatswain could interfere to
-stop their useless efforts.
-
-“Don’t you see we’re b’arin’ round?” growled the old salt. “The
-boats’ll pick ’em up. There’s no sea on now.”
-
-“I truly hope so,” breathed Adele.
-
-“They’ve got plenty of floats already,” said the sailor.
-
-“How do you know?” demanded Miss Winchester, nettled at the fellow’s
-brusque manner.
-
-“Well, he’s got plenty anyway. Look here!” and it was indeed a great
-relief to see the dangling ends of those cut ropes, cut by Paul only
-a few minutes before, not insignificant items, for they told of
-presence of mind and foresight instead of reckless venture.
-
-A lull followed, while the vessel began to turn in its course.
-Several boats were made ready to be lowered into the water.
-
-“Adele,” said Miss Winchester, striving to grasp the situation,
-“Adele, I knew he could swim, all right, but, really, really I did
-not take him for that sort of man.”
-
-“H’m!”
-
-“He’s very brave, Adele.”
-
-“Perhaps you don’t understand him as well as I do,” and Adele’s voice
-betrayed a greater intensity of feeling than she had intended. Then,
-as if catching herself before too late, she added in a very different
-tone, and casting her eyes towards the center of the ship, where the
-officer of the deck was giving directions:
-
-“Frank, he’ll not be left--not if I can help it. Just wait a minute.”
-
-Each had done what she could thus far.
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
- TWO RESCUES--AND TWO GIRLS
-
-
-The turning of the steamer appeared to take an interminable time,
-especially to the only two members of the Cultus party who knew that
-Paul was overboard. The passengers watched the great curve of foam
-left behind as the huge monster crept around in its course. Then
-whispers were heard, irrepressible, nervous whispers from people who
-could not keep still, and who jerked their hands up and down as if
-they themselves were in a dilemma.
-
-“We’ll never find ’em, never! We’re only getting further off! Will
-she never turn round? We’re miles away now! Why don’t they steer
-straight for where they are?”
-
-“I wish I had my hands on that wheel, I’d yank her around in a
-jiffy.” This critic was judging by a cruise he had made in a cat-boat
-on Barnegat Bay.
-
-“I hope they’ve got them preservers hitched up high,” quoth a kind,
-thoughtful old dame, wearing a knitted hood and shawl crosswise.
-“It’s awful important not to be top-heavy in the sea, nor to swallow
-too much water; it’s awful salt, you know”--this kind suggestion the
-result of experience in a surf bath at Atlantic City.
-
-The boatswain’s whiskers surrounded a capacious grin as he listened
-to this sagacious advice, while at the same time he was watching the
-great semicircle of foam change to a horseshoe curve, the two ends
-converging toward a point in the open. He took a shy glance towards
-the bridge, observing what was going on there, and then called out:
-
-“Keep a lookout for’ard! Who’s got the best eyes?”
-
-All strained their necks to catch a glimpse ahead.
-
-The vessel had by this time veered and was ploughing back in a direct
-course. Suddenly a beam of light shot out from above the bridge,
-illuminating far ahead, penetrating the moonlight, making objects on
-the surface distinctly visible.
-
-“The search light! The search light!” and a burst of cheers went
-forth loud enough to be heard a long distance.
-
-“Give ’em another, boatswain!” exclaimed the Barnegat critic.
-
-“Those fellows ain’t deaf, give ’em another, boatswain!” This from
-the thoughtful hood and shawl.
-
-The old salt looked disgusted, for he had not taken part in this
-demonstration, but the advisory committee took it up at once,
-cheering again and again, as if the rescue depended upon the noise
-they made.
-
-Adele put her arm in Frank Winchester’s and drew her away towards one
-of the life boats amidship. The boat was already manned, waiting to
-be lowered at the right time.
-
-Professor Cultus and the Doctor were standing near these boats, when
-Adele touched the latter on the shoulder.
-
-He turned quickly, something in her manner impressed him, and he drew
-her aside.
-
-“Please go in that boat, Doctor Wise.”
-
-“What, you want _me_ to go?”
-
-“Yes, by all means.”
-
-“I don’t understand.”
-
-“Oh, but you will, if you’ll only go.”
-
-“But there’s no reason for my going.”
-
-“Yes, there is. Don’t ask me, but go, please, you really ought to go.”
-
-“Ought, ought to?” repeated the Doctor curious, very thoughtful.
-
-Now Doctor Wise had already learned that the first man overboard
-was Mr. Onset, the very man he had frightened by his amateur mental
-science treatment. Could the hysteria have returned in some new
-form? Was it no cure after all? Could the man have attempted suicide?
-If so, didn’t he himself have some personal responsibility from
-tampering with such a case? He should have left it for regular
-treatment. A successful cure would probably have brought no such
-adverse consequences as this; but if unsuccessful who would be to
-blame? At any rate he was now identified with Onset on board that
-ship and could not remain passive in such an emergency, even if the
-ship’s crew could do the work better.
-
-Such thoughts rushed through the Doctor’s mind when Adele told him he
-ought to go with the rescue party, as he supposed, to help Onset.
-
-An executive officer was superintending the boat close by, when
-Doctor Wise approached and asked nervously:
-
-“Where is the physician of the ship?”
-
-“With the next boat ahead.”
-
-“Then I should like to go with this one.”
-
-“Contrary to all rules,” said the officer, sharply.
-
-Adele overheard this and before Doctor Wise decided what to do she
-had the executive officer by the sleeve, holding on firmly.
-
-He politely but forcibly told her to let go and keep cool, but she
-would not, not until she drew herself near enough to whisper in his
-ear. If he could have seen her eyes he would have listened even more
-quickly than he did, but she made her voice speak from her heart.
-
-Those close by only heard the first words, “Doctor Wise will be of
-the greatest use, he----” the rest in an undertone.
-
-Several of the self-constituted advisory critics at once volunteered
-the opinion that two doctors were not too many for two men overboard.
-The title “Doctor” carried its own weight and the rush of events
-prevented any questions.
-
-Miss Winchester meanwhile had worked her way through the crowd to
-the side of the vessel and was straining every nerve to discover the
-whereabouts of the two men struggling in the water. No doubt they
-had been sighted already by the officers on the bridge, because the
-speed of the vessel had been slackened and the search light kept
-in a definite direction, but Frank wanted to see them with her own
-eyes, alive and kicking, if possible, especially the kicking, to
-make sure they were alive. She thought she saw them, then knew she
-did not; she put up her hands to look through the fingers curved to
-form binoculars, but this was no better. Then eagerly looking around
-she spied a pair of glasses in the hands of a lady. “Oh, excuse me,
-just a minute!” and without waiting for a response, took the glasses
-without ceremony. Mrs. Thorn let her keep the glasses, but watched
-her excited fingers attempting to focus them in the dim light.
-
-The speed was now so much less that boats could be lowered, ready
-to be let adrift at a moment’s notice. Miss Winchester saw the
-Doctor in the second boat, then noticed a small white spot in the
-distance upon the surface of the sea, and while struggling to focus
-those “obstinate glasses” on the white spot only made matters worse.
-Annoyed, clumsy just when most anxious and impatient, she pressed
-her lips together to steady her usually strong nerves, almost biting
-the end of her tongue, and lo! the glasses were all right, and into
-vision sprang the white spot, a life preserver supporting some one
-waving a handkerchief; one end of it was in his teeth and the other
-corner was held at full length, not at all unlike a flag of truce or
-a “peace-flag” amid all the commotion and excitement.
-
-“Oh, Adele, I see them! He doesn’t seem to mind it in the least.”
-
-“Both?” asked Adele, eagerly.
-
-“Yes! no! yes!--I can’t make out what he’s got. Yes, two! I think so.”
-
-“They’re both there, ma’am,” said a sailor, respectfully. “The
-Captain gave orders for each boat to bring a man. He’s seen ’em ’way
-back.”
-
-The boats were cast off; they rose and fell upon the undulations
-of the mighty deep, now more impressive than when traversed at the
-more rapid speed. The tiny boats ascended to the summits of the
-white-crested waves and then were hidden in the deep valleys of the
-dark sea. Paul, fluttering his little white flag, rose and fell with
-them. They approached each other with the movements of a stately
-minuet upon the ocean. The fixed lights in the heavens above and the
-creeping search light of man below illumined the scene.
-
-When Doctor Wise recognized Paul it gave him an icy chill down
-the middle of his back. It will never be known which was really
-experiencing the worst chill at the instant, the Doctor or Paul.
-However, the Doctor managed to shake himself back into a normal
-condition, then stood up in the boat and motioned with a peculiar
-movement, knowing Paul would recognize one of their private signals.
-Paul did recognize it and gave the reply. The Doctor then felt in his
-hip pocket for his whiskey flask--it was all right--and then waited
-until the boat was near enough to throw a line; Paul seized it.
-
-The rescued Mr. Warder was found floating in a circular life
-preserver as serenely as a duck in a pond. He held Onset tightly with
-one arm, while Onset clung to him with both, though safe enough if he
-could but have realized it. There was nothing tragic whatever about
-either of them, except Onset’s state of mind, which he showed by his
-convulsed clasp of Paul.
-
-Paul had taken a great risk, from the popular point of view, but in
-so doing had trusted to the good faith of others to aid him and had
-not been deceived. Without formulating these facts in his own mind
-on the instant, he had acted nevertheless upon the presumption that
-the science of navigation was able to meet such a case, and he had
-faith in human nature when embodied in sincere men. He had trusted
-the truth, and that had made him free to act for the best, as he saw
-it; and all this spontaneously, because he had the courage of such
-convictions ingrained in his character.
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
- A SENSATION VERSUS AN IMPRESSION
-
-
-“Why did you do it?” asked the Doctor, as they rowed back to the ship.
-
-“He called me.”
-
-“Who? Onset?”
-
-“Yes. There was no real danger, only some risk.”
-
-“The deuce there wasn’t,” rather surprised at Paul’s nonchalance.
-
-“I knew you would pick me up. Onset floated, but was nearly a goner
-when I reached him.”
-
-“What possessed the fellow?”
-
-“I don’t know. He was scared wild when I first saw him, beating his
-arms about in every direction. That’s what kept him from sinking,
-even if his head went under at times. Got any more whiskey?”
-
-Paul had been in the water only about half an hour, no longer than
-during many a previous dip in the surf, but the nervous tension had
-been severe.
-
-The Doctor took hold of his hands and found the finger tips were
-merely cold, not blue, and as usual the form and vitality of the hand
-showed every element of power to give many a good grip yet.
-
-“Ah!” thought the Doctor, “your type can put forth the strenuous
-effort if your spirit calls for it, and it does sometimes draw upon
-the physical too much; the best swimmers are for this cause sometimes
-drowned. Don’t do it again, my boy. When the reaction comes you
-require stimulants even more than at the time of exertion,” and he
-again gave Paul the flask.
-
-Mr. Onset was similarly cared for in the other boat. When the two
-crews came together near the steamer Doctor Wise inquired of the
-physician in charge what Onset had to say for himself.
-
-“He says he became giddy and fell over. I don’t believe him.”
-
-“H’m,” mused the Doctor, “weak head and hysterical legs--what will he
-do next?”
-
-Once on board again and the steamer well on her course, the incident
-produced quite a little sensation, a surface ripple, but very little
-serious impression.
-
-Paul, in spite of himself, had to gratify curiosity and explain
-details--how he first caught one of the floating deck stools (“the
-one I threw over,” said the benign countenance with the woollen
-hood), then swam towards where he thought Onset might be, and saw his
-head against the sheen on the water, and then kept his eye on the
-head while swimming; how it did not seem a long swim, but a little
-slow after finding a life preserver to tow along; how he managed to
-get the floats under Onset, after first boxing his ears to keep him
-quiet, and then ducked into the life preserver himself, “and there we
-were until the steamer turned head on and the search light became so
-blinding that I could not see what I could see.”
-
-“Oh, you good boy!” again exclaimed the beaming hooded countenance,
-who had evidently been reading one of Mr. Frank Stockton’s stories.
-“Do tell us, is it true, as Miss Frank says, that you wore black
-stockings to keep off sharks?”
-
-“Trousers, this time, madame--trousers! I really didn’t have time to
-change.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“All’s well that ends well,” but with Adele it was not the end, much
-more the real beginning.
-
-The part she had taken in connection with the case of Onset’s
-hysteria, her mental activity during the discussion with Mrs. Geyser
-and the spiritual experience she had just encountered in learning
-Paul’s decided force of character, made the young woman live and
-breathe intensely. Her whole being had been brought into play. She
-developed more during that eventful week of their life in mid-ocean
-than she might have done in a whole year on land. Not that aught
-of her past was lost or ignored, but it was made effective and she
-herself made more completely alive. She was now indeed amid the
-turmoils of life, where she found herself taking an active part.
-
-The strange and varied motives which actuated many, also the lofty
-aspirations and the power to act, seemed very similar to her own
-ideals, far more so than she had expected. This took away some of
-her own youthful conceit, but gave her a much deeper and stronger
-appreciation of things as a whole.
-
-Naturally a strong conviction arose within her that two individuals
-with different characteristics, yet harmonious in purpose, must be
-able to work better together than alone. She had always felt rather
-independent as to any methods she chose to adopt, but now she felt
-herself confronted by a whole series of things she could not do, no
-matter how good the motive. Paul, for instance, being a man, had done
-just what she would have liked to do, but could not, being a woman.
-She felt quite able to have done it--oh, yes; she could dive and swim
-and keep it up; but somehow, for her to have jumped overboard--well,
-don’t do it--foolishness--ridiculous. But Paul could--no foolishness,
-nothing ridiculous; in fact, a praiseworthy act, a reasonable risk,
-approved by his conscience at the time and eventually strengthening
-his character. She began to obtain a realizing sense of the
-complementary equivalent in human nature.
-
-Unavoidably Paul rose higher in her estimation. Twice he had shown
-himself her equal, perhaps even her superior, not mentally, but
-somehow in a forcible manner which taxed her spirit as well as
-her intellect to comprehend. He had once proved how her own vocal
-accomplishments, so much more highly developed than his, could be in
-spirit most potent when made subsidiary to the words and sentiment of
-a song; now he had shown that actions are more convincing than words
-themselves in spiritual significance. She no longer thought of Paul
-as like other men, two-sided, one side good and the other--well, not
-so good; but rather as good all round, a really good man. Being an
-idealist, she put Paul on a pedestal and took a good look at him.
-Certainly he was very sensible and brave, also fascinating, now that
-she saw him in a good light.
-
-This was the state of affairs when the crossing of the Atlantic ended
-by their entering the Straits of Gibraltar.
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
- GIBRALTAR APPEARS AND DISAPPEARS
-
-
-It may seem superfluous to observe that the military spirit dominated
-every other at “The Gib,” but the ladies of the Cultus party had
-little idea how forcibly it would affect them until they were behind
-the guns.
-
-Four regiments were quartered at the station--brilliant uniforms
-in all directions. Regulation scarlet most in vogue; also “the
-sporty Rifles,” parti-colored like paroquets, green predominating;
-also Scotch Highlanders in white and flesh tints of nature. Bands
-and bag-pipes, fifers and drum corps perambulated the narrow
-streets--action, color, martial music in the air--the spirit of the
-place exhilarating at first and its activity contagious.
-
-“Look at those red-breasts, and, oh, dear, how very perky!” exclaimed
-Miss Winchester, as Tommy Atkins and a group of his chums went
-by--Tommy had winked at her when passing.
-
-“Come, Paul, fall in! Keep step! We’ll take that battery just ahead.”
-
-“Look before you leap!” cried Adele, laughing.
-
-“Oh, that’s only a military mote in your eye,” laughed Miss
-Winchester, “soldiers don’t mind a small matter like that----” and
-she drew the young people off along the crooked street which led
-to the hotel, Convent (headquarters), Park and Alameda beyond,
-Professor and Mrs. Cultus following in a carriage. As they looked
-upward the Rock frowned upon them from a great height, and O’Hara’s
-Tower appeared near as the bird flies, but a fatiguing ascent for
-those on foot. At the Signal House flags were fluttering, and with
-a glass one could distinguish “wig-wagging” in the direction of the
-Mediterranean, possibly to an approaching steamer many miles distant,
-on the way from that Far East which they all hoped soon to reach.
-
-Life at “The Gib” not forming an integral part of this narrative,
-it is enough to recall that during their stop-over between steamers
-they were fortunate in assisting at a battle upon the neutral-ground,
-after which they attended a ball at the “Convent.” Our interest
-just now is to note how well Mrs. Cultus improved her opportunity,
-especially after visiting Tangiers.
-
-When at home Mrs. Cultus was a busy member in several clubs,
-all fashionably active in good works. She had a pigeonhole
-for each particular style of club letter paper, with headings
-artistically engraved. Among them, “Politely Civil Club,” “Amateurs’
-Topographical,” “Domestic Relief Association,” “Cat Home,” and “Old
-Man’s Depository.” Mrs. Cultus doted on cats and variety in good
-works, and was determined to prove all things and hold fast to that
-which is good. In a spasm of zeal previous to her departure she had
-faithfully promised to report from abroad such of her observations
-“obtained by travel on the spot,” as might be interesting in
-connection with the club work at home. It goes without saying that
-both Gibraltar and Tangiers each proved to be a bonanza to Mrs.
-Cultus, and she very wisely determined to get rid of the troublesome
-business at once.
-
-“I know I can write something better than that communication about
-‘Tobogganing in St. Petersburg,’ and as to the one on ‘Seesawing in
-Alaska,’ it was a very trivial production. In civil matters it’s
-quite as important to know what not to do as what to do, and I
-certainly do see here on ‘The Gib’ many things highly instructive to
-Uncle Sam in connection with our new colonies. Now, let me see! Let
-me arrange my thoughts before writing them out.
-
-“Why, I feel quite an embarrassment of riches” (she repeated it in
-French): “Gibraltar! certainly the most cosmopolitan region we have
-yet reached, a perfect conglomeration of diversified interests,
-and yet they are not at loggerheads; military, also millinery,
-costumes very important; not so much commercial as confidential;
-financial, with four kinds of currency; national yet international,
-geographically considered; diplomatic, aromatic, and ethical; all
-substantial problems working in harmony--not a gun fired to keep the
-peace, only for salutes.”
-
-Mrs. Cultus’ finished production proved to be in a style
-quite unique, what might be called demi-semi-official or
-colloquial-realistic, with “side tags” to inform the Club in what
-direction the region might be further “explored.” Of course her full
-text became part of the archives of the Society, but her opening and
-closing sentences were in this case so brilliant that the world at
-large should really have the benefit of their luminosity. No expert
-in the modern school of English composition had greater appreciation
-than Mrs. Cultus of the real value of an opening sentence to attract
-attention in the right direction. What she fired off at the Amateurs’
-Topographical thus began:
-
-“We are supposed to be in Europe, en route from America to Asia; as
-a matter of fact we are in Africa, just across the way. I write from
-the Café Maure, in order to get the flavor of the place.” With her
-literary feet thus planted on four continents at once, why, of course
-the Club knew precisely where she stood, and obtained a glimpse of
-the habits and customs of the population, also of Mrs. Cultus in
-particular. Her closing sentence was also a masterpiece, this time
-of imagery and charming retrospection, all carefully led up to by a
-vivid description of the Zok or market place; introducing a group
-of snake-charmers at work charming, fascinating to watch, especially
-fascinating when the charmers, accompanied by tom-toms and a sana
-(tambourine), appeared to eat the snakes.
-
-“It was diabolical,” wrote Mrs. Cultus; “I fled, and called the
-others to escape fascination also. We had enough of the Zok and
-snakes. Unfortunately, camels were in our way. I had nothing but my
-parasol to keep the beasts off. No doubt they too had been fascinated
-by the snakes, for a hubbub arose which completely demoralized the
-dromedaries. A camel with both humps up and rear legs in the air
-and his front legs helping him to scream is calculated to make one
-leave his vicinity unceremoniously. We did, we made our exit--_sans
-ceremonie_--as I have the profound honor of now doing at the end of
-this report.”
-
-And the Society sent her a note of appreciation later on for the
-sincere observation and vivid realism displayed in her graphic
-report--_noblesse oblige_.
-
-But in the meantime, while the report was on its way home, Mrs.
-Cultus, when thinking it over, seemed not quite sure as to its
-effect, in fact rather worried.
-
-“I know,” said she, “that my style embodies that happy medium between
-dignity and frivolity which is sure to take at the Club, but, oh,
-just suppose somebody has described Tangiers before!”
-
-Miss Winchester overheard this terrible conjecture with the keen
-interest of a real member of the literary craft, and naturally came
-to the rescue of Mrs. Cultus, who was yet a novice.
-
-“Tangiers!--sung about before? Not more frequently than some other
-good songs.”
-
-“What song are you talking about, Frank? I sang no song.”
-
-“‘Thou art like unto a flower, O Tangiers! so pure, so white,’ et
-cetera. A Morocco rose by any other name will always smell as sweet.”
-
-“Anyhow, it’s Oriental,” quoth Mrs. Cultus, “and that’s what I’m
-after just at present.”
-
-Oriental--yes; they had been fascinated by their first glimpse of the
-Orient and its surfeit of varied impressions. From this time forward
-Adele was continually looking Eastward with great and increasing
-eagerness. The shores of the Mediterranean had yet in store for
-her some experiences quite as forcible as those of the Atlantic
-mid-ocean, but she knew it not. No doubt this had something to do
-with her present mood when they came to leave Gibraltar, and she
-stood with Paul and the Doctor upon deck, watching the disappearance
-of the Rock.
-
-The steamer took a southerly course when leaving port, heading
-for the African shore, then bore off towards the Orient, which
-was the real goal of their voyage. When passing Europa Point the
-impregnable Rock, with terraced fortifications, loomed up in gigantic
-proportions; seen edgewise, its decreased width added to the apparent
-height. Lofty and massive, it was indeed a Pillar of Hercules at the
-Gateway of the Inland Sea.
-
-The steamer passed into more open waters, the Rock rising higher and
-higher, as if determined to assert its majesty, no longer a pillar
-but a column of Victory, a strong and mighty outpost of Europe,
-an advance guard of that domain which lay behind, a bulwark of
-defence, a salient point for attack, a formidable diplomatic menace
-to the nomads of Africa--“Thus far shalt thou go and no farther.”
-And they sailed onwards, out upon the blue expanse of sea and sky;
-the landscape receded from view and different objects sank in turn
-beneath the horizon. The graceful curves of the Iberian coast faded
-away in the background, the mainland of Europe but a thin line in the
-distance; the gateway of the Straits soon followed, and the Atlantic,
-highway to America and home, was lost to sight. There was naught left
-in what they saw to suggest America.
-
-As the ship sailed on, the sunlight pouring upon the sands of Africa
-produced a hazy, luminous, rose-tinted mist o’er the Land of the
-Moors, the mountains of Morocco blended away amid the fleecy clouds
-in the azure of distance.
-
-And they gazed until the sombre outline of the Rock alone remained,
-an isolated dot upon the waters. A fisherman’s craft scudded across
-the open, the Rock was hidden behind a sail. A sea gull flitted along
-the horizon, the Rock was no larger than a bird. The human eye grew
-weak in the effort to retain its whereabouts. Could it yet be seen?
-Yes, it is there--a mere speck in space! No, ’tis gone! Gibraltar had
-disappeared.
-
-Adele, standing between the Doctor and Paul, clinging to the arms of
-her good friends, looked dreamily upon the vacancy. In thoughtful
-silence this vivid experience in life had become but a thing of the
-past.
-
-
-
-
- XX
-
- THE ARTISTIC SENSE
-
- What is the long and short of it?
- Art is long, life is short.
-
-
-After a short tour through Italy, they had reached the Vesuvian Bay.
-As Mrs. Cultus expressed it, “Heretofore we have been visiting lakes
-and crypts, ruins and picture galleries, and now at last have met
-a volcano. It’s really beautiful, I assure you, quite as artistic
-as in pictures, and set in a frame of landscape which I don’t
-wonder artists love to paint. I feel just that way myself. Oh, it
-is so exquisite with these sloping shores! and in the distance that
-beautiful Island of Capri.”
-
-Capri, the haunt of so many emperors in art as well as in government.
-Capri, favorite of the imagination, one of the enchanted isles,
-legendary locality, with its rustic stone ladder to ascend
-heavenward. Capricious Capri, with its grotto in blue, whereas
-ordinary mortals would be satisfied with grottoes in green.
-Picturesque Capri, with rocky foreground, no middle distance
-whatever, and several Paradises in the background. Mythological
-Capri, ever under the watchful eye of Minerva of the Promontory.
-Sportive Capri, with quails on toast, and woodcocks twice a year.
-Historic Capri, famous to the antiquary and modern economist;
-infamous, but only in days gone by.
-
-All this appeared very mysterious on the morning that the Doctor
-looked from Capo da Monti over the Bay of Naples. The island,
-enveloped in light mist, hung, as it were, in mid-air between sea and
-sky. Adele and Paul were with him.
-
-“Hazy atmosphere,” remarked the Doctor.
-
-“I see violet tints,” remarked Adele. “I love violets.”
-
-“It looks as if the island had no weight,” said Paul; “it might be
-blown away by the wind.”
-
-“One of those atmospheric effects,” continued the Doctor, “which
-some artists portray with great success because much is left to the
-imagination.”
-
-“Then the other fellow imagines what he likes best; safe, sure plan
-that; it just suits me,” said Paul. “All the pictures I had in my
-room at college had a ‘go’ in them, and I imagined what was coming.”
-
-“Happy the artist who has the art of suggestion. It is a rare gift;
-inborn, I think--the power to make others complete the picture by
-reading their own best thoughts into it.”
-
-“Some seem to care very little about what they say,” remarked Adele.
-“I never could understand why they paint a woman looking at herself
-in a glass; one’s back hair should not be the most conspicuous thing
-in the picture; and as to those extraordinary soap-bubble-cherubs,
-they don’t appeal to me, no matter how well they are painted.”
-
-“What sort do you like?” asked Paul the innocent.
-
-“Why, dancing, of course--dancing on one’s knee--that’s the place
-they would enjoy it most, stretching out their arms in play, not
-catching flies. Those fly-catching cherubs are just as bad as the
-bubblers.”
-
-“How much you’re like your mother at times,” thought the Doctor while
-laughing; then audibly: “You’re right, Adele; art never is very high
-unless it reaches for something better than catching flies--fleeting
-impressions.”
-
-“Then from your point of view,” said Paul, “the technical part and
-the science _per se_ may appeal to the physical and mental only; but
-if you want a picture to be thought about afterwards, the subject
-must speak to the spiritual sense.”
-
-“Well, rather!” exclaimed the Doctor, now getting somewhat excited;
-“and more than that, many a well executed work of art has been
-utterly forgotten simply because the subject had better be forgotten.
-Some artists have actually killed their pictures before they first
-touched brush to canvas.”
-
-Adele appeared to agree to this, but said nothing. Paul was not so
-loftily mystical in his appreciation.
-
-“Perhaps they belong to the ‘yellow’ school?”
-
-“And have the jaundice themselves?” quoth the Doctor, warming up;
-“perhaps, for a bad subject is apt to have bad influence. No picture
-worthy the title of masterpiece endures as such unless it possesses
-the spiritual element and excites spiritual perception of the right
-kind. In the final analysis, the higher spiritual element is the
-salvation of any artistic production. Woe betide the artist who
-belittles his art by what might be called aspiration towards the low,
-and thinks to justify it by a perfect technique! That is a false
-position for a true man; for there is but one art--the Art Divine,
-which cannot be debased by unworthy association.”
-
-“Of course you mean Music,” said Paul, smiling. “Now you’re off on
-your hobby; every man thinks his own hobby the best--his art divine.
-You’re just like ’em all, Doc! Look out! don’t measure everything by
-your own pocket-rule.” The Doctor paid no attention.
-
-“In other arts than Music,” said he, “the physical association is so
-intimate and permanent that the artist has increased responsibility
-in consequence.”
-
-“Then greater achievement when he does succeed,” interrupted Adele.
-
-“Possibly, but not probably,” said the Doctor. “I only referred to
-music because it furnishes an ideal standard by which to judge of
-the unlimited power (of course divine, if unlimited) which may be
-exercised through the artistic sense. For instance, Mozart’s ability
-to excite pure spiritual aspirations towards the good and true by
-means of the beautiful in melodic phrase, was, and is (for he is
-immortal), so great that those who yield themselves to his art are
-often led to forget even the debased Don Juan (miserable subject),
-and have pure emotions and beautiful visions suggested by the melodic
-beauty of the music. One might almost say Mozart’s inspired art
-awakens the dormant Angel who sleeps within the nature of every man.
-You know what we find stated in Rau’s ‘Tone King’ about him?”
-
-Adele drew close to listen.
-
-“Mozart, when on the border land, when his lovely spirit so melodious
-in expression could see upwards even more clearly than around and
-about him, said something like this:
-
-“‘All work is divine, and raises man above earth. We all love
-earthly things, but there are higher delights than these. I, too,
-know something of this higher joy of creating. The faculties God has
-given me render me happy; but I feel that these powers within me are
-capable of fuller development in eternity. To think that my power of
-producing something great and fine could cease just when it begins
-to rise to the full consciousness of all that might be accomplished,
-would be to doubt the perfection of Divine Wisdom--perhaps my whole
-being may be absorbed in one flow of immortal harmony, for the
-musical spheres within one cannot perish.’”
-
-After a pause, the Doctor asked, with much feeling:
-
-“I suppose you know what all this means?”
-
-“Tell us,” whispered Adele.
-
-“It means that all true art in this life springs from Love Divine,
-and aids in bringing life and immortality to light.”
-
-As the Doctor said this the sound of a simple, plaintive melody came
-floating upward toward the crest of the hill on which they stood.
-Paul went forward to see whence it came.
-
-“Some peasants in the next field; one is singing, another playing a
-pipe, before a shrine.”
-
-“Ah!” exclaimed the Doctor; “not the first time that shepherds
-abiding in a field have heard music with a spiritual significance.”
-
-“And neither a Mozart nor very fine art,” remarked Paul.
-
-Adele stood musing, then added, in a subdued voice:
-
-“Yes; it is yet bringing Life and Immortality to Light.”
-
-
-
-
- XXI
-
- AN ARTIST WITH DOUBLE VISION
-
-
-They were again overlooking the Vesuvian Bay, Capri still in the
-distance, but more distinct, not unlike a phantom appearing and
-disappearing as the mist passed by. The intermediate space was much
-clearer, more light, better definition, as photographers say.
-
-“Paul,” began the Doctor, “you remember George Le Roy, the artist we
-met at Tarpon Bayou, Florida? He is now at Capri.”
-
-“Good!” exclaimed Paul. “A genius if ever there was one. He takes me
-a walk out into the country whenever I look at his pictures.”
-
-“‘Art is his religion,’ so he says,” quoth the Doctor. “His palette
-and his Bible tell the same story, or something like that.”
-
-“I can’t tell exactly why I like his pictures,” said Paul, “but I do.”
-
-“His pictures speak,” said the Doctor; “they echo the Mind of Nature,
-the Voice, yet he never copies a tree or a cloud. You hear something
-said to you, yet not a word spoken. Now, Paul, that’s quite as high a
-flight for the artist as one is apt to find in figure painting.”
-
-“Oh, I can’t agree with you there. The human form requires far
-greater ability to portray; one must depict action, and emotions,
-too--in fact, a better draughtsman is required.”
-
-The Doctor took him up.
-
-“No doubt greater accuracy in detail, correct eye for form, knowledge
-of anatomy to make the figure plastic, and intense feeling to give
-power to convey to others the idea of emotions; but when it comes to
-_exciting emotions_ the landscape artist has a field bountiful with
-opportunity for spiritual insight and significance--as a matter of
-fact, figures themselves need not be ignored, but made accessory.”
-
-“The world and his wife don’t value landscapes as highly as you
-do,” remarked Paul, cogitating. “Who ever sees all that in a
-landscape?--why, the average man wouldn’t like it if he did see it.”
-This somewhat nettled the Doctor.
-
-“The average man! that pretentious individual who always thinks of
-himself as Lord of Creation--let him keep on thinking of his physique
-and physical comforts. I enjoy good landscapes for the very reason
-that they lift one above all that; they respond to something better,
-and that settles it for me. I enjoy having inspiring landscapes
-always where I can see them; there are precious few faces of which
-I can say the same thing.” Then he added, as if mindful of one in
-particular: “Some faces never respond; I take to the woods to get rid
-of ’em, as I often leave a portrait for a landscape.”
-
-The Doctor was getting roused. Paul detected it and concluded to
-laugh the matter off.
-
-“Why not take your piano with you, Doctor--to the woods?”
-
-“I would if I could. Gottschalk did; and others to-day, like him in
-that respect, do seek fresh thoughts and sounds direct from Nature.
-Saint-Saëns does; he told me so during some talks we had when out
-in far east Ceylon; and he is the most notable living expert in
-different forms of musical composition, ranging from complicated
-rhythmic conceits to serious harmonies well nigh sublime. As to
-Edvard Grieg, I caught him in the very act, entranced by Nature’s
-strange moods and melodies amid the waterfalls of his beloved
-Norway. And Beethoven! ah! there is the real test! Beethoven’s most
-profound utterances are but the unadulterated deep sounds and chords
-from Nature, both felt and heard when others thought him deaf. His
-experience was in the woods of Austria, and if we do not hear now,
-elsewhere, when he yet speaks, we do not really comprehend Beethoven,
-how he transmuted into another form that which exists in Nature.
-Blessed be his name! for he did it that we, too, might hear. And we
-call that Art.”
-
-“Well, there’s one advantage about a piano in the woods,” teased Paul.
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“You’ll be more comfortable, and possibly less moist than the other
-fellow.”
-
-“What other fellow?”
-
-“The one who sat on a wet cloud pecking at a harp--ask Widow Bedot.”
-
-Evidently Paul was trying to escape a serious discussion. Fortunately
-for both, Adele came to the rescue. She perceived that men of such
-different temperaments could seldom see anything from the same
-point of view unless it was the result of a similar or simultaneous
-experience, and that with Paul the personality of the artist should
-go far to promote a thorough appreciation of his work.
-
-“It strikes me,” said Adele, “neither of you knows all that may be
-said on that subject.”
-
-“H’m!” ejaculated the Doctor, looking out of the corner of his eye.
-
-“Or else you’re not thinking about the same thing.”
-
-“Give it up,” laughed Paul. “I was with the Widow on that cloud.”
-
-“Then, isn’t it just possible, a wee bit possible, that a landscape
-artist himself, Mr. Le Roy, for instance, should know more about such
-things than either of us?”
-
-“All right; we’ll visit him,” said the Doctor; “take a run over to
-Capri for the sake of our--artistic health.”
-
-“You mean your credit as a critic,” thought Adele.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The venerable artist, nearly seventy years of age, gave them a
-cordial welcome, his sharp eyes sparkling behind his old-fashioned
-spectacles; a man of medium height, with evidently no thought to
-throw away on mere matter of dress. His light-colored soft hat
-covered a mass of touzled hair, with a few streaks of gray; his beard
-was sparse on the cheeks and luxuriant on the chin.
-
-The Doctor looked with interest at his thin hands and his hectic
-cheeks; then noticed his forcible action as he walked and talked.
-Outward signs of a highly nervous, impulsive temperament were very
-pronounced.
-
-“He looks more like an impractical, enthusiastic mystic than ever,”
-pondered the Doctor; “even more so than when I met him years
-ago--no doubt Italy suits him as he ages in spiritual discernment.
-He certainly can give very powerful impressions when he paints,
-and to all sorts and conditions of men; how remarkable, yet quite
-reasonable, that a man so frail as he should produce such effects of
-power. I suppose it is the intensity of his visions which makes him
-great. I wonder how Paul the practical will size him up?”
-
-The artist was talking to Paul about fresh air and the delightful
-life at Capri.
-
-“Then you paint in the open?” asked Paul.
-
-“Well, yes, and no. Of course, one must go out, but not necessarily
-far--all is near at hand. The _paysage intime_, as it was called
-at Barbizon, is here, too, as we also found it in Florida. There’s
-a sort of unity in nature, and in it we live and move and have our
-being. It is a vast thing, that unity, but it is close to us also.
-The landscape picture may convey a comprehensive impression very
-large, out of proportion to its actual subject. Art, you know, is but
-part of the universal-plan, and like both science and religion, must
-drop into its appropriate place.”
-
-Paul seemed interested, also somewhat amused. “Fresh air certainly
-does surround everything, and no doubt there is a universal-plan
-in nature; but why mix up art, fresh air and the universal-plan
-in that way?” Paul wondered how a fellow who could paint such
-practical pictures, so true to life, should talk so vaguely. “He’s
-a high-flyer. I like his fresh air and his pictures better than his
-queer sentiments.”
-
-Now, what Doctor Wise especially desired to learn was, not what other
-people thought of Mr. Le Roy, but how he himself satisfied his own
-keen, analytical sense. How Le Roy worked, not in mere allegorical
-figure, but, going directly to nature, discovered and conveyed
-something worth portraying. For it was well known in art circles that
-Le Roy had slowly gathered together his own theories as to nature
-and what nature could give him, and of the Immortality of Art. The
-conversation, therefore, took that turn.
-
-“Every artist,” said Le Roy, “has his own feeling, and if he develops
-it, may be a great artist in his way; yet, the other schools, the
-men with other methods and ideas, may not recognize the merit in his
-work.”
-
-“Can this matter of feeling be explained in words?” asked Adele.
-
-“I think so, having made a thorough and complete theory of it. I am
-now seventy years of age, and the whole study of my life has been
-to find out what it is that is in myself--what is this thing we
-call Life--and how does it operate. The idea has become clearer and
-clearer; and as we see that the Creator never makes any two things
-alike, nor any two men alike, therefore every man has a different
-impression of what he sees, and that impression constitutes feeling,
-so every man has a different feeling.”
-
-The Doctor’s face lighted up as he eagerly drank in these words. Here
-was the “unlimited,” the very thing he had heard so much about--the
-unlimited with a vengeance. He knew that varied mentality and
-temperament among musicians who were artists often produced discord,
-but here was a successful artist of ripest maturity who insisted that
-no two artists were ever alike--all received different impressions,
-all had different feelings. Evidently everything or anything
-might be expected from an artist. “Hurrah for the typical artistic
-capacity and temperament; feelings of endless variety and scope,
-hence unlimited.” Such was the Doctor’s interpretation--the way it
-impressed him.
-
-Le Roy continued:
-
-“As to sitting at the feet of nature for inspiration, that came to my
-mind in the beginning of my career. I went instinctively to her, and
-drawn by a sympathetic feeling, I put something on canvas. It was not
-always a correct portrayal of the scene, but only something more or
-less like what I had in mind. Other artists and certain Philistines
-would see it and exclaim, “Yes! there is a certain charm about it.
-Did you paint it outside?--because if you did, you could not have
-seen this, that and the other.”
-
-“Of course I could not deny it, and thought I ought to improve
-my method. Being young, I then took it for granted that we saw
-physically, and with the physical eye only. What I had to learn was
-that a true artist has two sets of eyes: the one physical, the other
-spiritual.”
-
-Adele began to be uneasy lest the Doctor should at once claim three
-pairs of eyes, physical, mental, and spiritual, one of his own
-theories about such things, so she appealed to the artist as quickly
-as possible.
-
-“What did you do about it, Mr. Le Roy?”
-
-“At first I tried to paint what I thought I saw, calling memory to
-supply the missing details.”
-
-“And the result?”
-
-“The picture had no charm whatever; there was nothing beautiful about
-it. I asked myself why it is that when I try to do my duty and paint
-faithfully I achieve so little, but when I care little for so-called
-faithful duty and accuracy I get something more or less admirable.”
-
-“Oh!” exclaimed the Doctor, “I presume the first pair of eyes is
-always imitative, that is to say, photographic, and copies; the
-second, artistic or spiritual--but how about the third pair, the
-intermediate?”
-
-“Whose?” asked Le Roy.
-
-“The highly intellectual critic’s, self-constituted.”
-
-“Oh, the critic! He always sees more than I do,” laughed Le Roy. “Let
-him pass; what I wish to tell you is this:
-
-“Little by little I began to find out that my feeling was governed by
-a principle, and I needed to find out the law under which it would
-act--the law of the unit, that is, of impression; although I did not
-then understand it as such.”
-
-Paul thought this a rather big undertaking, to discover any law which
-would apply to all feelings, no two alike. Le Roy continued:
-
-“Landscape is a constant repetition of the same thing under different
-forms and in a different feeling. When we go outdoors our minds are
-underloaded in some, overloaded in others--we don’t know where to
-go to work. We can only achieve something if we have an ambition so
-powerful as to forget ourselves and grasp whatever nature may give
-from any source; that is to say, one must be up in the science of his
-art. To be able to draw what you feel, you must first of all be able
-to draw what you see. There can be no true color without true form.
-In other words, to create an impression you must have both knowledge
-and technique to do so.”
-
-This statement pleased the Doctor immensely, a clear recognition of
-the great philosophic truth that in the nature of things science
-and art are both essential under the law of impression in order to
-produce the best work. Now, what could the artist say about the
-higher spiritual element?
-
-The reply came: “If a man could be as God when he is painting outside
-(perfection, thought the Doctor), then it would be easy enough; but,
-as he cannot, he must fall back on science. It is not possible for us
-to establish a measuring point in art--not in a broad, general sense.
-Even the early masters of the Renaissance were not always perfect in
-technique; they sought sympathy, not applause; and their results
-will always remain pre-eminent and authoritative in the domain of
-impression.” Le Roy seemed strong in his convictions about this, and
-followed up his thoughts with a still more comprehensive statement:
-“The worst of it is that all thinkers are apt to become dogmatic, and
-every dogma fails because it does not give us the other side.”
-
-“Then it restricts the truth to one point of view?” inquired the
-Doctor.
-
-“Yes--and the same applies to all things, to religion as well as to
-art. A man who thinks must find a third element besides the science
-of his art for his standpoint of reason. There is a Trinity operative
-in regard to this.”
-
-All the party now strained every nerve to catch the words as they
-fell from the great artist’s lips.
-
-“At one time I took up the science of geometry because I
-considered it the only abstract truth; the diversion of the arc of
-consciousness, and so on. No one can conceive the mental struggles
-and torments I endured before I could master the whole thing. I knew
-the principle was true, but in practice it seemed contradictory. I
-had constantly to violate my principles to get in my feeling.”
-
-“Purely intellectual effort,” thought the Doctor, “must ever fail, in
-the very nature of things.” Le Roy continued:
-
-“I used this mathematical mode of thought as my third, together with
-natural science and the art, to form the stable tripod-standpoint of
-reason. I found it enabled me to keep the understanding under perfect
-control, except----”
-
-“Except when?” interrupted the Doctor, nervously. “Was not pure
-mathematics always invariably sufficient to attain stability and
-confidence?”
-
-“Except when I overworked myself, then I was mentally tired, _my
-spirit not satisfied_--I got wobbly, like any one else.”
-
-“Now what do you do?” asked Adele, in thorough sympathy, her lovely
-black eyes, full of intelligence, meeting those of the venerable
-philosopher in art.
-
-“What do I do, my child? What do I do?”
-
-“Therein lies the secret of my life.”
-
-
-
-
- XXII
-
- THE SECRET OF A LIFE
-
-
-All waited reverently until the venerable artist was ready to
-explain. They watched him take off his spectacles and polish them,
-so that his physical sight might aid his mental vision, and his
-spiritual insight assert its potency. He stepped across his studio
-toward one of his superb paintings--a landscape in which a wealth of
-rich coloring streamed forth from behind dark, luxuriant foliage.
-At first sight “the related masses of color rather than the linear
-extensions” was what appealed to the beholder, as if, as a work of
-art, it was not intended to instruct or edify, but to awaken an
-emotion. Le Roy stood with one hand held forth toward the picture;
-his other, as the Doctor noticed, rested naturally, unostentatiously,
-upon a sacred volume lying upon a table at his left, as if he wished
-to feel in physical touch with that book while he spoke.
-
-“You ask me what I do in the final resort--what I do when both
-science and art grow weak and unstable.
-
-“I retire to be alone, take only certain books with me, and write,
-applying the principles I have already experienced as true in art
-to the purest of all forms of reasoning, theology--religious truths
-scientifically stated. Speaking of and with God in nature is the
-saving, the salvation of my art. The impressions I then receive
-are what you see in my pictures and ask me to explain. That is the
-feeling you recognize and the sentiment you appreciate. You see
-and appreciate precisely in accordance with your own experience
-in personal religion, no more, no less. You are part of the truth
-in unity just as I am; we all have the soul for the beautiful, the
-beautiful soul within us. One Father breathed into each man when
-he became a living soul in beauty of mind and spirit. In a way, I
-worship through my paintings.
-
-“I know I have always had this power; all of us, when at our best,
-know we have it in some degree, creative or responsive--but I did not
-always understand the principles which govern it. Science now assures
-me it is the truth. The unit law of impression, you now see, demands
-the three in one, Science, Art, and Communion with the Holy Spirit of
-Truth, God in nature.
-
-“People ask me why I keep on painting, old as I am, and I answer:
-Simply because of a constraining force from beyond me, from without,
-something which lifts me higher and higher toward finding the very
-best forms of truthful expression. Of course this development must
-depend in a measure on physical strength and individual endowment. I
-am obliged to watch myself that I do not overwork, and when I grow
-weary of painting then I open the Book--the Source of Wisdom. This
-gives me the only point of view, except the artistic, which interests
-me--in fact, art and religion are very closely connected.”
-
-Le Roy ceased speaking and stood thoughtfully before his wonderful
-picture--verily his masterpiece, in that it rose to a height of
-spiritual suggestion he had not before attained, and by means the
-best he knew. His eyes were fixed upon it, and he seemed to become
-oblivious to his surroundings.
-
-Adele drew near, the Doctor and Paul close behind her; the grouping
-itself was suggestive. The artist-philosopher, mystic and artistic;
-the inquisitive Doctor, sincere and at times metaphysical; the
-practical Paul, true and observing; and Adele, an idealist--all
-dominated by a landscape utterly devoid of figures.
-
-A pure landscape. The beholder stood upon a moderate elevation, a
-grove of trees on his left, the branches covering the upper part
-of the canvas. Looking forward, a valley; a village nestled below,
-telling of happy homes and playgrounds, and near by the parish
-church, where the belfry chimes could almost be heard. Through
-openings in the grove and in the broader expanse were cultivated
-fields, and faintly outlined was a winding stream meandering off
-toward the horizon; the course of the stream broken by woodlands and
-far distant bluffs, the bluffs lessening to a point in mid-distance,
-where the stream for a time was concealed behind the foliage on its
-banks. As observed by the physical eye trained to seek many lines and
-complicated perspective it was truly a very simple, modern subject,
-embodying little more than elementary drawing. But what had this
-great artist seen by spiritual insight dominating his art? What
-impression had the Spirit that is Holy, the Creator with whom he
-had spoken when alone, revealed to him? What had “the candle of the
-Lord,” within himself, illumined?
-
-An early morning, the atmosphere clear and transparent, with fleecy
-clouds pure and chaste, late draperies of the flying night, so
-delicately refined in form and shade, with light and shadow, that
-with the birth of a new day the resurrection from the dawn became
-brilliant with color. Every cloud and celestial vista, every
-hillside, undulation, meadow, stream, stone, branch, leaf and
-leaflet gave its own responsive reflection of the Brightness of
-the Coming. Each diversified form was alive with the inspiration
-caught and expressed by tints and hues in the harmony of colors. So
-brilliant were some of the combinations nature had called for, that
-the artistic sense demanded that they should be partly hidden behind
-the darker foliage. A vision of this world as it is, yet looking
-towards something more beautiful, heavenward. Earth idealized by
-the artist’s dream, to a reality too lavish for the credulity of
-ordinary experience. None, unless with the artist (he had seen with
-the eyes of the Spirit as well as of Science and of Art), would have
-credited the glorious impression so simple a landscape could give;
-therefore the sombre contrast had been introduced. The artistic
-sense had controlled the flight of imagination, and deeper shadows
-told each beholder to look within and complete the scenes from his
-own experience. Let us approach more closely, and go with the artist
-nearer to the inner recesses of the heart of nature.
-
-Among the shadows what had the Spirit suggested? “The place whereon
-thou standest is Holy Ground.”
-
-The beholders are upon an elevation, and close at hand in the subdued
-light a group of trees, modestly conspicuous among others in the
-grove. Vines encircle and climb their trunks, and blossoms glorify
-the branches on either side. The central vine is more luxuriant than
-the others, and its flowers, tinged with a roseate glow, much akin to
-flesh tints in nature.
-
-The vine and its branches are waving in the wind; they take graceful
-forms and scatter blossoms at the beholders’ feet. To every lover of
-nature and weary one who seeks repose it is a vision of beauty and
-rest now, and a promise of rest to come.
-
-The artist seemed especially fond of this feature in his work; his
-eyes repeatedly reverted from the glorious coloring he had given to
-the sky and the heavens above, to this notable detail in shadow.
-
-“May I ask what flower you intend to suggest?” said Adele.
-
-“A passion vine. It climbs aloft among the ordinary forest
-trees; some life-plants grow at its feet; the Rose of Sharon is
-in bloom among the shrubs, and I leave to your imagination the
-lilies-of-the-valley in the grass beneath. One of my impressions when
-alone was, that a cross might have once stood in such a place in the
-years gone by, when the mount was bare and bleak; since then nature
-has shown her constant kindness, for she abhors the void of bleakness
-and barrenness in such a place, and has covered the mount with
-lovely foliage. But the vision, the sight and the site of the cross
-remain; you may find the suggestion here--it upholds the vine and the
-branches, and the flowers are cradled in its arms.
-
-“The cross is conceived as in bloom; and to me all the beauty is
-greatly enhanced by one precious significance--the same light in
-nature which so brilliantly illumines the celestial cloud vistas also
-gives the roseate tint to the flowers upon the cross.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“That is ‘a creation’--by the artist,” meditated Adele.
-
-“Through nature, looking upward,” remarked Paul, pensive.
-
-“The crucifixion itself is marvellously beautiful,” said the Doctor,
-“when portrayed in landscape without a figure upon the scene. How
-great is genius in art, if it is endowed with a gift for spiritual
-impressions.”
-
-Adele put her arm in Paul’s as they walked along, pondering over what
-they had seen. “The Cross in bloom, illumined by the Light of the
-World. The Divine in Art has both sought and spoken the Word.” She
-thought of how the artist had searched the Book of Wisdom; and she
-recalled what had long since been written therein about such Words
-spoken in nature and in history: “They are they which testify of Me.”
-
-
-
-
- XXIII
-
- OLYMPUS--COURT FESTIVITIES
-
-
-Sailing down the Adriatic, the Ionian Isles finally rose above the
-bosom of the sea; before them lay modern Greece, with its landscape
-and atmosphere still populated with the legendary divinities of
-ancient times. Mrs. Cultus adjusted her eye-glasses to catch first
-glimpse of Olympus, evidently under the impression that the Mountain
-of the Gods towered over Greece much as Fuji Yama does over Japan.
-She found it did, but not precisely as she had anticipated.
-
-As to Adele and Paul, they were becoming more susceptible to
-impressions subtle, if not mystical, than ever before. Being in the
-region of the old-time divinities the influence of those deities at
-the Court of Olympus, whose especial duty was to direct love affairs,
-began to be felt. So potent was this influence that the lovers became
-intensely absorbed in watching for Aphrodite, lest she might rise
-from the sea at any turn of the tide. They had heard how, in modern
-times, she often arose at other points than Cyprus.
-
-As the vessel proceeded southward, a new Olympus was constantly
-discovered and pointed out. This was great sport to Miss Winchester;
-such an accommodating guide-book mountain she had not before
-encountered.
-
-“How many mountain resorts does our present Zeus keep up?” asked she
-of the Captain, a jolly sailor.
-
-“Oh, wherever you see storm clouds around the highlands, there’s some
-fun going on.”
-
-“Any court festivities, any Apollo bands or musical sands to
-entertain Court circles?”
-
-“Apollo is not popular at this season--since rag-time came in, the
-lyrique and doggerel have gone out--the old accompaniment was too
-sleepy.”
-
-“But I must hear Orpheus on a lute, or Pan give a toot.”
-
-“Orpheus played last at a ball game,” said the Captain.
-
-“Too dulcet?”
-
-“Not enough wood wind and brassy; the boys said too lugubrious. They
-came to play ball, not to shed tears.”
-
-“And poor Orpheus?”
-
-“Went off with an organ grinder; now his name only appears on Club
-letter paper and headings for concert programmes. He manages to get
-into print, but he never plays.”
-
-“How discouraging to art and musicians! Alas! alas! But apropos of
-games, what is the popular athletic sport now-a-days around Olympus?”
-
-“Chasing quinine pills--a caddy holds the pills. You take the pills
-and then chase ’em ‘over the hills and far away.’”
-
-“For the health, I presume?”
-
-“Of course; the discus has gone out, but this later game makes more
-discussion than the discus ever did. Golf goes first-rate in Greek
-costume. You ought to see it. Scotchmen outdone.”
-
-“How about ‘events’--athletic events?”
-
-“Oh, events always occur in the Stadium.”
-
-“Bless me, how exciting! But it sounds very stationary.”
-
-“The victor generally does feel puffed up,” said the Captain. “During
-the last Olympiad a local divinity came down (from up the country)
-and accumulated such centrifugal force in running that he flew off to
-Thermopylæ or Marathon, some outside place or other, caught hold of
-the post there, swung himself round and slid into the Stadium in fine
-style.”
-
-“What honors did he receive--laurel or oak wreath?”
-
-“Think it was fig leaves,” remarked the sailor Captain, “but I am
-not sure. At any rate he was a hero. The town gave him free entrance
-to all the beer saloons for life, a new pair of sandals with wings
-and honors galore.”
-
-“How appreciative! Discriminating public!”
-
-“Sure! His name was engraved in the most honorable place possible.”
-
-“How was that?”
-
-“At the foot of the list of victors from B. C. 1776, or thereabouts,
-to A. D. 1896. He can no doubt stand the honor, but I doubt about the
-beer.”
-
-“May I ask his name?”
-
-“Name--his name--let me see, what was his name? It escapes me just at
-present. I’ll ask the steward some time, he’s up in such things,” and
-the Captain went off to superintend the passage of his vessel through
-the narrow channel between the islands and the mainland.
-
-“There’s modern fame!” thought Miss Winchester. “After winning an
-Olympiad, to be labeled No. 3672, approx., name forgotten and soon
-marked ‘Unknown.’”
-
-
-
-
- XXIV
-
- THE GODS INTERFERE
-
-
-While in the vicinity of Olympus it was, of course, quite natural
-for the gods to take an interest in Adele and Paul at this critical
-period in their affairs. They had heard of Adele as an Idyl--and
-assumed her to be an interesting, romantic and possibly poetic little
-creature, and in their old-time way of looking at things were far
-from imagining what a modern American Idyl might have become.
-
-Mrs. Cultus in turn also had her own ideal. “Those Grecian gods,”
-said she, “are so frightfully anthro-popo--something, I forget the
-exact word, but it means meddlesome men. If I had my way we would
-leave this place at once. Who is Aphrodite, anyhow? I thought Venus
-was the most popular at Olympus. Oh, dear, my Greek is awfully rusty.
-I wish I had a copy of Took’s--good old Took’s Pantheon was full of
-such things.”
-
-Now, unfortunately for Mrs. Cultus, her flippant words flew upwards.
-They were heard in Olympus by the great Aphrodite herself, ever one
-of the most influential of the Twelve Court Divinities. Hearing
-herself referred to in this trivial manner she determined to prove
-to this modern woman her potency, and that too by hastening events
-before madame and daughter could escape from her realm. The campaign
-opened at once.
-
-Aphrodite whispered in Adele’s ear to be sure to make herself
-attractive to Paul, especially in personal appearance, for he was
-acutely sensitive to certain impressions just at that time.
-
-Adele’s natural instincts would no doubt have taught her that much,
-but as she was under the brow of Olympus it is better to call natural
-instincts and some other forces in nature by their proper names.
-
-At any rate Adele was thus affected, using every natural womanly
-effort to make herself agreeable, and Paul responded with a keen
-sense of appreciation. If Adele expressed a desire to stroll on deck,
-Paul cleared the deck to give plenty of room; if she wished to rest
-after a promenade he hurried to bring two chairs, one in either hand;
-if she said the night was dark, he said “ebony;” and if she expressed
-admiration for the heavenly moonlight he was ready to agree they were
-together in a Paradise.
-
-Things would have worked admirably if some of the deities other than
-Aphrodite and some busybodies who hang around Courts and courting
-in general had not further interfered. Juno the Jealous and Diana
-the Golf-player, both Roman divinities visiting Zeus and his consort
-Hera, conceived the idea that the course-links in the game Adele and
-Paul were playing were entirely too smooth for real life, and it was
-astonishing how many of the lesser dignitaries with their relations
-came to the same conclusion. Complications at once arose, since all
-were in the secret.
-
-Juno promptly stirred up Boreas, whose special domain was a little
-farther round the coast in the Ægean Sea, inciting him to blow great
-guns which reverberated from shore to shore across the billows. This
-in turn ruffled up Neptune, and in consequence there was a tremendous
-commotion in the roadstead where the steamer lay. Neptune’s venerable
-locks shone like white-caps in all directions at once.
-
-As to Adele, she admired the sea in commotion and Paul agreed it was
-“the most magnificent spectacle.” Adele thought she could stand the
-movement, in fact did at first, until the united efforts of Boreas
-and Neptune acting simultaneously produced a very peculiar motion of
-the vessel, and a diversity of feelings so complicated within herself
-that she naturally took to her state-room on short notice. Paul at
-once pronounced the weather “beastly,” and the previous magnificence
-took flight on the wings of the wind.
-
-Now, with all these divinities conspiring against her, Adele’s
-resemblance to her mother was certainly brought into prominence as
-never before, and all the romance of her nature seemed to vanish.
-
-Adele in her state-room: “It is a physical impossibility to look
-well, much less be agreeable, when things are tossing about in this
-frightful way. Where’s my trunk?” and as she reached down to open it,
-the trunk slid across the room. Alas, too late! When she raised her
-head a new sensation.
-
-“Oh, what’s that? Oh, dear, what a peculiar pain! Call the steward,
-somebody. Steward, steward!”
-
-Enter steward. “Yes, ma’am.”
-
-“I’m miserable, steward.”
-
-“Yes, ma’am, take tea and toast and a little porridge.”
-
-Adele, sharply: “Go for Miss Winchester at once, steward. Tell her
-I’m--I’m----”
-
-“Yes, ma’am.”
-
-Enter Miss Winchester. “Awful sorry you feel so upset, Adele. What
-can I do for you?”
-
-“I never felt so collapsed in my life,” moaned the sufferer. “Now,
-tell me, Frank, shall I really die of this or not? Really, I couldn’t
-stand a joke!” Miss Winchester smiled when she perceived this
-universal symptom.
-
-“No joke? Not even an antique in Greece, good yet? You know what
-Ulysses said when he passed this way: ‘You fear you will, then fear
-you won’t, and don’t’; that’s what he thought, I’m sure.”
-
-“Frank Winchester, you’re positively heartless! You make me feel like
-throwing both you and Ulysses through that port-hole. Oh, dear, dear!
-How badly I do feel!”
-
-Miss Winchester did what she could to quiet matters. “No, Adele, you
-certainly won’t die on purpose, not just yet.”
-
-“Oh, Frank, what an awful thing to say, when you know it’s really so
-critical;” then musing as if of unutterable things, “what will Paul
-think of me?”
-
-Now Paul, as luck would have it, was constitutionally opposed to
-seasickness even in the roughest weather; and as for Adele she had
-never before been so badly affected. “Owing to too much ‘Egyptian
-Delight’ and dates,” said Miss Winchester, feeling her pulse.
-
-Paul thought the trouble would prove merely a trivial matter on
-Adele’s part. If he had suspected how miserable she really felt
-he would have acted differently, but being a veritable tease at
-times, he sent her, by Miss Winchester, the following verses from a
-newspaper clipping “for consolation.”
-
-Frank proceeded to console Adele by reading these newspaper verses:
-
-
- I
-
- “In the steamer, oh, my darling!
- When the fog horns shriek and blow,
- And the footsteps of the stewards
- Softly come and softly go;
- When the passengers are moaning
- With a deep and heartfelt woe,
- Will you think of me and love me
- As you did a week ago?
-
- II
-
- “In the cabin, oh, my darling!
- Think not bitterly of me,
- Tho’ I rushed away and left you
- In the middle of our tea;
- I was seized with sudden longing,
- Wished to gaze upon the sea,
- It was best to leave you thus, dear,
- Best for you and best for me.”
-
-“In the gloaming,” said Frank, and finished with a deep sigh. Adele
-looked unutterable things. “Best keep Paul out of my presence--to
-send me such stuff, and just now, too!” The vessel gave an awful
-lurch, and a tumbler broke in falling. “Oh, Frank, I feel those
-terrible twists again! Is that awful propeller still at it?--it feels
-just that way.”
-
-“It will soon untwist, dear--don’t mind; think of the consolation in
-those lovely verses.”
-
-“I shall never speak to him again!” said Adele--“never!”
-
-“Oh, yes, you will, and before the moon sets.” Miss Winchester was
-thinking of other lovers’ quarrels in her experience.
-
-“Moon!” exclaimed Adele. “If this continues there’ll be no moon and I
-will be a lunatic. I have a thunder-gust headache.”
-
-Frank bathed her temples with cologne.
-
-“Oh, how delicious that is! It’s so kind of you, Frank. The Doctor
-would say your hand is sympathetic; I think it’s you, Frank. How much
-better I should feel if this ship would only keep still one minute,
-just one minute, half a minute, quarter of a----”
-
-“That’s right, dear, go to sleep,” and Miss Winchester kissed her on
-the forehead as she slept.
-
-And while she slept, one should remember the season when these events
-occurred--during the early autumn, the period when summer changes and
-a purer radiancy obtains in nature. The compensations of age in the
-year supplied the “unthought-of deficiencies of an ardent past.”
-
-Luna, the Italian goddess, was also visiting Olympus at this time.
-She was behind a cloud during the pranks of Boreas and Neptune, but
-overheard the conversation between Adele and Miss Winchester, and her
-appeal to Adele that the lovers’ quarrel should be settled before
-she sank beneath the horizon touched her pride as a goddess. Luna
-was generally considered cold and purely philosophic and at times
-artistic in relation to lovers, but when in her march across the
-heavens her pride and power were touched or called in question, she
-could see very clearly and influence coming events with great force.
-In fact all the tides in mundane revolutions were affected by Luna.
-
-Being a great personal friend of Aphrodite, the two goddesses put
-their heads together and approached Zeus. The very sight of two such
-exquisitely beautiful creatures of his own creation, embodying both
-philosophy and love in league towards one accomplishment, proved
-eminently effective. Their anthropomorphous paternal progenitor, as
-usual, listened to their request and granted it, his reason for so
-doing being markedly paternal in its character. In order to keep
-peace in the family while strangers were looking on, Zeus directed
-Neptune to cease his uproarious behavior, and sent Zephyr to take
-the place of Boreas. Zephyr, well known as the mildest and gentlest
-of the sylvan deities, was only too glad of the opportunity to take
-his family for an outing at the seaside. He and the little Zephyrs
-played with ripples on the waves like children enjoying themselves on
-the beach, while Mrs. Zephyr waved the tree branches to and fro when
-fanning herself in a hammock beneath. Thus, while Boreas scudded off
-with the heavy clouds from above, the Zephyr family wafted in gentle
-and delicious breezes below.
-
-Luna looked down, smiling at intervals between clouds, at the result
-of her visit to Zeus, and her open countenance, often mistaken for
-that of a man, assumed the likeness of a cameo goddess.
-
-While this went on Paul, on deck, was watching the heavens clearing
-after the storm, the breaking away of the clouds, the falling of the
-wind, the quieting of the sea. Through rifts in the sombre sky he
-caught glimpses of a silvery glow in the mysterious depths, the glow
-became a radiancy, and darker clouds hurried by in troops, their
-places taken by delicate draperies, gauze-like, upon which the
-silvery light played in form of a halo.
-
-This celestial scenery riveted Paul’s attention. As the last
-shadow-cloud passed away the gauze-like draperies also receded from
-view, as a veil withdrawn from before a beautiful face.
-
-Luna of Italy--Queen of the Night--shone forth.
-
-Paul, keenly susceptible and appreciative, became absorbed in
-admiration, but such his mood at this time that never before had he
-been so affected by the moon’s glory.
-
-“Our harvest moon at home,” thought he, “the merrymaking moon for
-lads and lassies, so they say. I like it better for yachting; no, I
-don’t, either;--the cozy twosing moon when one feels like confiding
-after the day’s work is done. Yes, I feel just that way--in some one
-we love best: Yes, I think so, too. The moon which settles things
-before the winter comes on--the moon--the--confound it! that moon
-knows entirely too much! let me think for myself.” He imagined he
-heard a whisper putting his secret longings into words, and telling
-him he ought not to live alone--that is to say, not enjoying this
-moon alone--no! And off he started, as if something very urgent
-suggested itself.
-
-It was Aphrodite who had whispered to him.
-
-
-
-
- XXV
-
- APHRODITE RISES FROM THE SEA
-
-
-In the meantime the quieting of the sea had produced a most
-beneficial effect upon Adele. Thanks to the kind ministrations of
-her mother and Miss Winchester, the thunder-gust headache had passed
-away as suddenly as it came. The steward entered again to open the
-port-holes in her state-room; a delicious breeze, soft and balmy,
-entered, most refreshing.
-
-“How quickly the storm has passed,” said Adele to her mother.
-
-“Yes, my child, and you had better leave this stuffy state-room as
-quickly as possible. I feel sure you will recover as soon as you
-breathe the invigorating air.”
-
-“I had a whiff just now.”
-
-“These coast storms are very fussy while they last,” said Mamma, “but
-I suppose ’twill be like all those along the Riviera; we often had
-superb nights following terrible gusts. You had better get up, Adele.”
-
-“Do you think it safe to venture?”
-
-“Not the slightest risk, not the slightest. I’ll ask your father to
-have the chair ready; you can take his arm at first.”
-
-The soft, balmy air was again wafted in through the port, and passed
-with healing touch over Adele’s cheek.
-
-“How delicious that is,” and she repeated the line:
-
- “Soft as downy zephyrs are.”
-
-Why Adele used the word zephyrs instead of pillows, Zeus only
-knows;--it must have been Zeus, not Aphrodite, for the latter seldom
-troubled herself about either zephyrs or garments; and yet the
-association of ideas aroused in the mind of her mother by Adele’s
-talking about zephyrs was most potent in results.
-
-“That reminds me, Adele, I have a zephyr-shawl that is just the very
-thing. I’ll go and get it,” and off she hurried.
-
-In the passage outside she met Paul, also in haste, and they stumbled
-over one another.
-
-“I’m after a shawl for Adele; she ought to be on deck.”
-
-“Ah! just what I think,” said Paul, enchanted to find matters already
-so favorable.
-
-“Her father will bring her up.”
-
-“I shall be delighted; let me.”
-
-“No, thanks very much; but, no, it’s not at all necessary,” probably
-thinking of her daughter’s appearance. “But you may arrange her chair
-in some protected place.”
-
-“Better than ever,” thought Paul. “I’ll find it; a first-class
-protection, to suit us all round.”
-
-When Mrs. Cultus put the shawl around her daughter’s shoulders and
-mentioned incidentally that Paul was arranging things for her on
-deck, Adele had a violent revulsion of feeling. Still thinking of
-those trashy verses Paul had sent her, she felt little disposition
-to meet him; then noticed again how stuffy was the air of the
-state-room; then her mother insisted.
-
-“But those verses, mother!”
-
-“Never mind poetry,” said Mrs. Cultus, laughing. “Think of what
-you’ve done in that line yourself. You’re just like me. I did it,”
-and her mother shook all over with amusement.
-
-“What are you laughing at?”--Adele serious.
-
-“Why, my dear, you’ve been singing verses about ‘doves’ and ‘loves,’
-and ‘toujours’ and ‘amours’ ever since you began singing lessons. If
-I believed half of what you’ve sung in public, I would not know what
-to think. Never mind poetry, verses don’t count. Now go on deck.”
-
-“It was half Frank’s fault, anyhow,” mused Adele, “to read me such
-stuff when I felt so wretched. Never mind, I’ll have a good crow to
-pick with Paul when I get him alone.”
-
-Aphrodite also laughed--one of her most bewitching ripples of
-laughter--when she overheard Adele’s last conclusion, and promptly
-sent for her accomplished son, Eros.
-
-Eros was a youngster, at least in appearance, but very precocious.
-Like his father, the ancient Hermes (Mercury), he was very quick in
-his movements, and affected considerable style in his undress, for
-a divinity. He even appeared wearing a collar, with the very latest
-style of neck-tie, a cordon of blue ribbon over his shoulder instead
-of a belt around his waist; which fact often troubled artists and
-“fotographers” when they took his “picture.” Being thus ultra, he
-carried at times a torch, then again bow and arrows, in lieu of a
-walking stick; and sometimes put the name “Cupid” on his visiting
-cards, because he said it sounded “cute.” The modern divinities
-elsewhere, as well as at Olympus, were much divided in their opinions
-about this Eros-Cupid, “modern-antique.” Some said he was a good
-boy; others, the most mischievous little urchin that was to be found
-sporting around the Mount of the Gods; some contended that the
-mischief he wrought showed him to be a charming little elf with his
-mother’s dimples and ripples of laughter. Later, some foreigners
-dubbed him Puck, but he was never so designated at Olympus, never,
-not even by his mother; only by those who never ate apples, the
-apples of discord, nor sported with him in the Gardens of Hesperides.
-
-Cupid, himself, however, when among the Romans generally followed
-their example and called her Venus, which he never did in Greece.
-The Greeks would have been shocked; they were artistic and saw
-nothing improper, even under the electric lightning-lights of
-Olympus; the Romans merely commonplace, practical, useful. It was
-rumored, however, that the pair of them, Aphrodite and Eros, did work
-together, as Venus and Cupid even in Greece, on the sly as it were,
-when Juno was off with her swans, and Diana gone out fishing; beg
-pardon, it was hunting in those days, fishing came in later.
-
-On this occasion Eros appeared in due time, obedient to his mother’s
-call. But, marvellous to relate, in appearance quite different from
-what Aphrodite had expected. He became visible in his most ancient
-Greek garb, his aspect the Beauty of Youth. He bore a flaming torch
-which Zeus had given him, the torch with which he had been armed from
-the beginning of human experience, the torch which was lighted in the
-Garden of Eden. The most youth-full as well as ancient of all the
-divinities approached. From remote ages he had been known to exist in
-some form, not only as an epiphany or an apparition of youthful life
-and beauty, but more than this, far more: the personification of the
-principle of union among the disunited elements of the world, drawn
-together by that “enthusiastic congeniality of spirit” which is the
-basis of all true love; potent among human kind as the power which
-operates for that sincere friendship which continues and develops,
-ever ascending through the domain of mutual respect and regard, into
-the glorious realm of devotion, self-sacrifice. This, the purity of
-union among human kind, the purity of marriage, the birth of souls,
-the realm of Immortal Youth.
-
-Such was the unexpected aspect of Eros when he first appeared; and
-such the significance of his presence.
-
-Being a divinity, in the old Greek sense of the term, that is to say,
-a personification of the natural forces and instincts and passions,
-he could not appear reasonably in other garb or aspect at this time,
-when active in relation to the affairs of such a one as Adele Cultus,
-an Idyl, an ideal girl.
-
-Upon Adele, in modern times, the same forces of nature were still
-operative as they had ever been since the beginning. Adele, too,
-possessed the divine spark or flame, within her, as given by her
-Creator Father, and she was both lovely and lovable. Paul adored her
-for her beauty of character, and her youthful form as _he_ saw it;
-and her devotion to the truth as they _both_ saw it; the true union,
-earthly, heavenly, eternal.
-
-Alas, that such a divinity or personification, this original, ancient
-Eros, should ever have been dethroned by others less spiritual than
-Adele; dethroned, aye, dragged down from the lofty pedestal, the rock
-of ages; and his torch of flame become but an urn of ashes to be
-scattered by every vagrant wind; he, himself, in time, represented
-as a thoughtless wayward child, often as a wanton sporting with bows
-and arrows as if at play; and forcing himself where no true affection
-exists, not even regard. His unhappy victims deluded, and wandering
-in a region of shadows where the light ever grows more dim; alas!
-forever failing to enter the realm of Immortal Youth, the realm
-illumined by the unfailing radiance of true love.
-
-Yet such are the vicissitudes involving changes and irregularities in
-mortal experience, especially in connection with the materialistic
-tendencies of modern times, that the original aspect of Eros has
-suffered, as with many other similar conceptions. His aspect only,
-not the natural forces which he personified; hence, in relation
-to Adele, the truth in Eros remained untouched, whereas, his
-interview with Aphrodite in this case certainly did illustrate the
-deterioration which had overtaken the region of Olympus since so many
-of the old divinities have fallen from their pedestals.
-
-The Eros of the ancient Greeks could no longer retain his lofty
-attitude and position amid modern requirements, and his behavior in
-this instance certainly did demonstrate the deterioration. He became,
-in aspect only, by various stages, the versatile modern imp, Cupid,
-the Cupid now so often represented as blindfolded, or even blind; and
-with or without wings when used for decorative purposes. In fact, he
-might easily be mistaken for an all-day-vaudeville performer, or a
-cherub brought up upon the latest cereal, so little is left of the
-original mythological divinity.
-
-As before noted, Eros responded promptly to his mother’s call, his
-appearance as it had been in the beginning.
-
-Aphrodite was struck with amazement, it had been so long since she
-had seen him in that guise. It recalled to her the early Grecian
-period, soon after she herself had risen, born by the forces of
-nature from the foam of the sea at Cyprus; of the time when Eros
-(Amor) and the Graces were ever in her train, and she herself the
-deity of reproduction and love; of the time when the myrtle, the
-rose, and the apple were especially sacred to her, and the dove, the
-swan and certain other animals were symbolic of her activities. And
-she looked upon him with affection.
-
-“Eros! Oh, Eros! my lovely boy! son of my youth!” and her voice
-failed. Overwhelmed by surging memories, some time elapsed before she
-could again speak.
-
-“How long, Eros! how long since thou camest to me as now?”
-
-Eros knelt before her as if to receive her blessing.
-
-Verily, no Phidias, or Praxiteles, among the ancients, could have
-worshiped by means of the sacred art of their day, and found a better
-subject to crystallize in form for the good of future generations,
-than this, an Olympian Madonna, a son at his mother’s knee. Maternal
-love and the responsive trust and veneration of Youth.
-
-The nearer approach of Eros naturally brought his torch in closer
-proximity. Its brilliancy became dazzling, in fact blinding to eyes
-long since unused to its power.
-
-Aphrodite, conscious only of the physical inconvenience, placed her
-hand before her face as if to shade the eyes. This was enough for
-Eros, he placed his torch upon a tripod at greater distance, where
-it remained, so near and yet so far; so subtle are the adverse
-influences when the physical becomes dominant over the spiritual.
-
-And instantly the natural consequence:
-
-Eros separated from his torch was no longer the same. He had entered
-the shadows; his aspect at once changed. His form, still exquisite to
-behold, was like sculptured marble, faultless in outline, yet without
-the flesh tint, the warmth of color; complete except the illuminating
-flame which Zeus had given him.
-
-Aphrodite still gazed with admiration, but, alas! strange to say, his
-aspect having become more familiar to present conditions and himself
-speechless, she also said nothing; and Eros continued to manifest the
-beauty of form alone.
-
-And again the natural consequence:
-
-Aphrodite had called him for a purpose, and must talk with him; must
-cause the exquisite form to manifest life, the statue must respond.
-And she called him anew:
-
-“Eros! Oh, Eros! why not speak? Come to me from amid those shadows!
-Eros! answer!”
-
-Alas, no response.
-
-And again she called him.
-
-He was but a stone.
-
-And again, for the third time.
-
-No response possible.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yet while she waited, a profound and thrilling change did take
-place, both in form and expression. Not that Eros spake, but his
-form manifested a movement or evolution towards another phase of his
-nature. So impressive had he been as a statue of divine suggestion,
-that many a Greek would have placed him within the precincts of a
-sacred temple as most appropriate locality for his abode. Once there,
-his heavenly youth would serve to uplift the hearts of all who beheld
-him. Once so conceived, any religion might have felt enriched from
-an artistic point of view, to possess him among the treasures of
-the sacred enclosure, as a symbol of the countless babes within the
-heavenly realm; for “of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.”
-
-And so Eros now appeared, as a mediæval cherub, a concomitant to
-a sacred picture. His religious aspect still apparent, but now as
-accessory; and often represented only as “head and wings,” gazing
-upwards.
-
-And still he was silent; significant, but silent.
-
-To Aphrodite he seemed as one fading away from her forever, to be
-lost amid enveloping clouds; possibly to be appropriated by other
-worshipers than those who frequented Olympus. And such would have
-been the case if the torch of Zeus, ever radiant, so near and yet so
-far, had not still cast some light upon the scene. To Aphrodite, Eros
-was still hers, of her, and from her, by whatever name he might be
-addressed; and who more potent than she to call him by any name she
-chose, any endearing term that sprang from her heart?
-
-“Eros, my own! Eros, my darling! My cherub! surely you wish not to
-offend me, and rest gazing at others. Cupid! speak!”
-
-She had called him by his later and modern name; and again the
-natural consequence, the final change. Of course he spoke. Being what
-he was as Cupid in modern conception, he could not do otherwise, he
-could not avoid conversation. Also, his youthful wings commenced to
-flutter; and his beauty, never lost since the beginning, made him,
-from the worldly point of view, adorable.
-
-But, alas! not as Eros, simply the modern fascinating Cupid. Sad,
-also! no longer the Aphrodite of early times, but the Roman Venus
-still in vogue; Venus who at once asserted herself by giving orders
-to her attendant Cherub. The Cherub carried his bow and arrows, and
-the torch of Zeus grew very dim as Venus spake:
-
-“Cupid! you certainly are clever! but you gave me such a shock! I
-thought you never would wake up, or speak to me again!”
-
-The Cherub fluttered about her person not unlike a butterfly to
-fascinate by graceful movement; the poetry of motion, an admirable
-motif for decoration; activity, new sensations; no more, no less.
-
-“Cupid! if ever that occurs again, you will be caught and imprisoned,
-imprisoned within a picture gallery, and there you will remain. Zeus
-help you! Naughty boy!”
-
-The beautiful winged youth, the spritely Cupid, at once answered:
-
-“I’ll girdle the earth in forty minutes. Catch me, who catch can.”
-
-Venus smiled. Some would have thought this smile “bewitching,” others
-could have called her expression “a cynical smile.” But it soon faded
-away, and in no degree prevented her proceeding at once to the object
-of their interview.
-
-“Cupid! there is going to be an engagement.”
-
-“Ah! then the fight comes later on,” remarked the precocious Sprite.
-
-“Are you ready?”
-
-“Always ready,” and as if to suit the action to the word, he
-fluttered in graceful curves, and finally, _en passant_, kissed her
-upon the cheek.
-
-“Good. I see you are! You may amuse yourself with bow and arrows when
-the time comes.”
-
-“May I respectfully inquire when this momentous engagement is to
-transpire?”
-
-“When you see me----”
-
-“Do what, my Lady Venus?”
-
-“Rise from the sea, and give the usual signal.”
-
-The confab ended for the present. Lady Venus and Cupid understood
-each other perfectly.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A moonlit night and zephyrs wafted in; an easy chair, and no one
-looking on. Two in shadow, gazing upon legendary Greece; talking
-mythology such as they alone could understand; feeling fluctuations
-of quite another kind.
-
-A convalescent lassie, and a sympathizing lad, old friends for at
-least a year, it seemed as if from childhood. A timely aid, and a
-grateful maid; compliments in words, and nature’s complementary. A
-man’s stout heart, and a woman’s tender sympathy, sincerity and truth.
-
-The conditions were favorable.
-
-What else?
-
-A secret, a secret to all but Cupid who stood behind a celestial-rose
-bush on the heights nearby, his bow and arrows ready. An event not to
-be seen by the binoculars of newsy gossips, nor even perceived by the
-mental eyes of inquisitives. All is left to the spiritual discernment
-of those who have loved.
-
-What actually occurred during that heavenly evening when they drifted
-upon the bosom of the Adriatic, when the stars shone brightly or
-when cloud-draperies hid some endearing charm, can only fully be
-known to two (and the divinities), these two nature’s lovely, lovable
-and loved. But sure it is, before the evening closed, Aphrodite
-again arose from the sea, a Vision of Loveliness. Gliding by in her
-graceful shell, floating amid foam on the crest of a wave, illumined
-by a divine radiance, she threw a kiss of affection, the signal. And
-from behind the celestial-rose bush sped Love’s Arrow, borne upon
-the wings of the unseen. As this sweet messenger enters the hearts
-of those ready to respond, so it was welcomed by Adele and Paul,
-reclining beneath the brow of Olympus.
-
-
-
-
- XXVI
-
- INTERMEZZO--ALLEGRO
-
-
-Oh, that voyage! From the brow of Olympus, across the Mediterranean,
-down the Roseate Sea, the two lovers journeyed. As they skirted the
-shore, never did delicate tints upon a sapphire surface give back
-more heavenly reflections! Those sunny days, under double awnings,
-when none dared look at a thermometer lest he himself should melt
-away. Those first-magnitude starlit nights when sleeping on deck,
-with glimpses of others passing like spooks in the dark; and in the
-distance, on “P. and O.” boats, the invisible friends known to be
-there.
-
-The last glimpse of Boreas was in a storm brewing off in the
-direction of the Ægean Sea. Some thought they saw him in
-propria-persona, gesticulating upon the high cliffs of Candia as the
-vessel sailed by in the teeth of the wind, but this individual proved
-to be merely a Turkish brigand, one of the gang which infested that
-region.
-
-But are not all such minor incidents already recorded in the
-chronicles of the Cultus family for publication in future
-genealogical records? How at Alexandria the Doctor took little
-interest in the modern city upon the island of Pharos, but much
-interest in the Ancient Library with no books left! How, since said
-Library was destroyed some time ago, Paul and Adele managed to
-reconstruct a brand new temple with lamps, incense, and priests--all
-complete, to say nothing of singing birds, and vestal virgins each
-carrying a sieve instead of a lamp! How Miss Winchester met the Four
-Hundred élite of Alexandria at the base of Pompey’s Pillar, and was
-kodaked by Paul with the four hundred gamins at her feet, asking for
-backsheesh; this historic picture labeled, “Hypatia Addressing the
-Multitude. A. D. MDCCCLXXXXIX.” How Mrs. Cultus took in the situation
-from a barouche, positively refusing to set foot on the sward of
-a country famous for asps and beetles; and also how Mrs. Cultus
-announced that Cleopatra’s relish for pearls was in good taste, only
-it carried her too far. How the unfortunate noseless Sphynx turned
-up her nose, as usual, at all innocents abroad; and how Mrs. Cultus,
-when entering the memorial bridal chamber of Cheops, slipped upon
-the inclined staircase which leads thereto, and fell into the arms
-of a modern bridegroom--a young sheik. How the Professor stood upon
-the apex of Cheops and took notes, alternate notes upon lichens
-which grew there, and upon Memphis where it once was. Is it not also
-recorded among the archives of modern Egypt how, during the period of
-occupation of Shepherd’s, cards were left in due form upon Pharaoh’s
-mummy in the Boulak Museum; and how Mrs. Cultus received in turn a
-scarab, and some little scarabei, of Manchester manufacture, taken
-from the left pocket of Pharaoh’s forty-second cousin, after reposing
-there since A. D. 1492 (some said from 4000 B. C.)--a slight token
-of regard from the Pharonic dynasty to the latest Republic on earth?
-Was it not recorded also at the time, in the society column of the
-“Pyramid Times,” that “Miss Pearline Cultus and Mr. Adolph Warder
-were last seen behind an umbrella on the top of the Pyramid with
-their feet hanging over the top step?” probably the most conspicuous
-perch on the globe for two lovers.
-
-And above all, was it not also jotted down in the private
-memoranda of both Paul and Adele, when passing Mocha and Perim
-and Aden, in and out of the gloaming, that the voyage was perfect
-bliss, the coffee--nectar fit for the gods, and the coals of
-Perim--black diamonds? As to Aden, the much-abused Aden, said
-to be separated only by a thin sheet of Manila paper from the
-infernal-region-frying-pan--such assertions proved absolutely false.
-Aden was a Paradise of fruit and flowers, its reservoir like Lake
-Tahoe, and its inhabitants--white-robed angels with Chinese features,
-flying hither and thither in phantom jinrikishas. Was it not here at
-Aden that Paul had the innocent audacity to open that delicious but
-appalling fruit, the dorian, chopping it with a hatchet under their
-very noses, only to hurl both dorian and hatchet into the sea for
-the delectation of fishes whose noses were equal to the occasion?
-And finally, did not the whole party, except Mrs. Cultus, visit
-Mother Eve at Djeddah, and find her the most attenuated specimen
-of humanity, both physically and historically, that anyone could
-imagine, at least forty feet long, aged six millenniums (some say
-eight or nine; possibly seven times seven, or thereabouts), with her
-toes turned up about two feet? And did they not make the astonishing
-discovery which Mrs. Cultus at once reported to the Politely Civil
-Archæological Society, that our own Mother Eve was really very dark
-in complexion; in fact, quite a fast black (since local tradition
-said so, and tradition was invariably exact, if not too exact)?--a
-case of proving too much; which wonderful discovery made them all
-wonder and debate if they themselves, being white at present, might
-not possibly be changed backwards, and revert to original color and
-type before entering Mahomet’s Paradise.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Youth! Oh, Youth! how many are thy pleasures and privileges, and
-thou dost not realize it. Thine the period when all things are
-interesting, new sensations at every turn, and little responsibility
-to interfere with whims. Go to the circus, go globe-trotting in
-an automobile, and take part in the show. Oh, Youth! thine is the
-blessed time of freedom, although thou mayst not think so. Thou wilt,
-no doubt, hear much good advice, but follow thine own inclinations,
-and enjoy the happy privilege of changing thy mind on short notice.
-Mrs. Cultus was no longer youthful, but she held on to the privileges
-just the same.
-
-“I always change my mind, Frank, when it suits me. I fully intended
-to call upon Eva at Djeddah, certainly the first lady in the land,
-even if she were only Mahomet’s wife, and not our mutual ancestress;
-but, Frank, when it turned out so midsummer hot, with such a brazen
-sky, I gave it up. Why, Frank Winchester, I wouldn’t appear in
-the condition you were, in that bedraggled gown and hat and felt
-slippers--no! not if I really wished to call. That’s wisdom, my
-dear; take an elder’s advice. Never hesitate to change your mind,
-especially when it suits you.”
-
-
-
-
- XXVII
-
- INTERMEZZO--ANDANTE
-
- _The Royal Route._
-
-
-_O Science!_ How true thou art! How true thou strivest to be! Yet,
-what is not claimed in thy name, when few are the golden gems picked
-up upon the limited shore of this single world! We learn of thee,
-O Science! through thee! by thee! but ever when we ask of thee the
-Bread of Life, thou givest us a stone; and when we ask for a fish,
-thou givest us a serpent. From the beginning it has been so. Know
-thyself, O Science! thy finite place. Learn even as a little child
-sitting at the feet of Infinite Knowledge.
-
-_O Philosophy!_ How noble thou art, to seek the truth in all things
-as they are; ignoring nothing in nature, in any province of thought,
-word or deed--in Science or Religion. But thou revealest nothing.
-Thy intellect is finite--not infinite; thy standpoint mortal--not
-immortal. Thou art god-like--but not God.
-
-_O Religion!_ Thou Voice of the Mind of Nature! of Our
-Almighty-Father, Creator; accepting all of Truth in Science and
-Philosophy; yet, ever speaking of a higher and better life, here and
-hereafter. How many untruths have been spoken in Thy name, even spoken
-as _ex cathedra_, taking Thy name in vain; yet, verily none can escape
-Thee, Thyself, O Thou Holy Spirit of Truth in Love, in the heart of
-Humanity--Immanuel, God with us!
-
-
-
-
- XXVIII
-
- THE AFTERGLOW
-
-
-Again the shores had vanished, this time Europe left behind, and the
-Orient lifting before them. It was after the sun had plunged beneath
-the waves, and the distance was illumined with the afterglow; when
-the Parsee matrons had retired to rest, publicly, upon the saloon
-floors, and some mysterious figures re-entered to recline on deck
-in awkward pose, with crooked necks against chairs and skylights,
-that Paul and Adele also glided forward, past captain and capstan,
-to their favorite spot. Only the prow of the vessel when it mounted
-the billows, and a spooky lanthorn aloft, hung in space between them
-and the constellations. Together they gazed forwards and upwards,
-listening to the thoughts of the stilly night.
-
-“Fond memories for other days,” remarked Adele.
-
-Paul looked round to discover the object supposed to suggest
-memories, and then concluded his chair was not quite close enough to
-hers.
-
-“There it is,” said she, looking toward the constellation of the
-Southern Cross, resplendent in the heavens. “I never shall forget it.”
-
-“Beautiful, each star a gem, all gems; but----”
-
-“I cannot conceive anything more suggestive or more appropriate in
-the heavens than that cross,” said Adele.
-
-“I am yet inclined to think that perhaps Orion is still more
-magnificent.”
-
-“Don’t let’s make comparisons, Paul. I don’t feel in the mood just
-now; that only spoils our present enjoyment.”
-
-“All right; take things as they are,” and Paul looked again at the
-constellation.
-
-“See those four stars, Adele; they would make an exquisite pin. Would
-you like one in that form?”
-
-“Pin! Please don’t think I care only for trinkets, and at such a
-time as this! Please don’t, it only belittles everything;” her voice
-betraying a slight trace of emotion.
-
-Paul vowed inwardly that he would acquiesce in everything she said,
-so in duty bound endeavored to be philosophic himself.
-
-“There’s nothing like being natural, even when it feels unnatural.”
-
-Adele laughed outright.
-
-“My dear Paul, philosophy never did sit well on you; please don’t.”
-Paul felt somewhat subdued, and immediately changed the subject.
-
-“What was it you said you wished to ask me?”
-
-“Oh, yes, about being inquisitive. We’re all getting so horribly
-inquisitive that I’ve had a curious experience. I really don’t know
-what I think.”
-
-It was Paul’s turn to laugh. “Oh, that comes from thinking too much.
-Give it up; we’ve got something else on hand just now; don’t let’s
-think.”
-
-This idea seemed to impress Adele rather favorably in her present
-mood, but she could not resist the temptation to continue.
-
-“Paul, I really feel that I must exert my will--yes, I must will that
-I won’t--no! I mustn’t won’t anything, that is not what I mean. I
-can’t untangle my thoughts while talking. Paul, try to help me; you
-do the talking.”
-
-“I know exactly what’s the matter with you, Adele; what Frank
-Winchester would call your ‘thinking apparatus’ is a little weary,
-and I have a sure cure--put it here;” his shoulder being very
-convenient. “Now we can talk without thinking or think without
-talking; just as you please.”
-
-Adele felt safer, and her mind much less disturbed.
-
-“I’m so very inquisitive,” said she.
-
-“That’s perfectly natural,” acquiesced Paul, who was himself feeling
-quite comfortable; “most women, I mean most people, are.”
-
-“Doctor Wise is,” said Adele. “I like to hear him talk.”
-
-“Oh, that’s the way the wind blows, is it?” exclaimed Paul. “I knew
-you would tell me sooner or later. I know the Doctor like a book.
-He’s the best friend I have in the world; but I’ll tell you something
-about him.”
-
-“I don’t wish to know unless it’s good,” said Adele, then paused an
-instant; “but I think he can trust both of us.”
-
-“Oh, yes, but the Doctor’s this way; now I tell you this in
-confidence. He often forgets how old he is, and thinks we are about
-the same age.”
-
-“I don’t see anything very confidential in that; besides, I rather
-like these middle-aged old fellows who must wear glasses and won’t
-wear ‘specs;’ they keep their youth.”
-
-“You surely don’t like frisky old boys?” laughed Paul.
-
-“Nonsense! People may live many years and yet not be aged. The
-Doctor’s not frisky.”
-
-“Nor very slow, either,” laughed Paul. “Only he will persist in
-looking backward, and above one’s head, and sometimes inside of one,
-while you and I always look forward; don’t we, Adele?”
-
-“Why, of course.”
-
-“Well, then, when we reach his age, we may find some satisfaction
-in the other thing, but just at present I don’t feel like it. The
-Doctor mixes me up, too, sometimes; even when I understand his words
-perfectly. It’s the after-effects.”
-
-“‘After-effects’ is good,” said Adele. “I’ve felt ’em myself,
-lately--in my state-room; but even before that, when they talked in
-the Sunday-school about Jebusites and Perizites, the most mixed-up
-crowd I ever met; almost as bad as those so-called scientists we met
-on the Atlantic. Now, I really care more about Porto Rico and the
-Philippine Islanders than any of those ancient or modern mixtures;
-and to return to what I started with, don’t you think the Doctor
-attempts to explain too much?”
-
-“Well, yes--and no. Of course there are some things no fellow can
-find out, but the Doctor is not really trying to discover; he merely
-tries to arrange after his own fashion what he already has read and
-experienced. He really sees much more than most of us, and he told me
-he had discovered that fact written in the palm of his own hand.”
-
-“I see he has you well in hand,” said Adele, thoughtlessly.
-
-Paul winced.
-
-Adele felt a slight shiver, and was sorry she had so spoken.
-
-“He has helped me greatly,” said Paul, reminiscent of the Doctor’s
-friendship. “I never met a man who tried more to give his friends
-something worth thinking and talking about instead of twaddle and
-bosh.”
-
-“And that’s just where my trouble comes in,” said Adele. “I don’t
-care for twaddle and bosh, but isn’t there such a thing as too much
-thinking; I mean too much thinking about too many things? I’ve a
-great notion to do something radical.”
-
-“Gracious! You a Radical? What do you propose to do?”
-
-“Change my mind.”
-
-“Don’t do that; it’s too radical! Change your method, or your
-climate; but for heaven’s sake leave your mind alone.” And Paul’s
-sudden outburst of laughter attracted attention from the night
-watchman, who came forward to see if anything was wanted.
-
-“Nothing. Thanks!” answered Paul.
-
-“Oh, yes, there is,” continued Adele; “something must be done. I
-cannot undertake to keep up with all that’s going on above, below,
-outside, inside and underneath. I used to think so at college, but
-now it’s fatiguing. It’s not safe to live with all creation coming
-down on you at every turn.”
-
-“I never thought Atlas a happy man,” interjected Paul.
-
-“He gives me the backache to look at him,” said Adele; “and I’ve a
-notion not even to listen to philosophers or, in fact, any talk that
-involves so many ifs and buts in one’s own mind. Others may enjoy
-that game; I don’t. I told Father I detested ‘exceptions’ to rules
-when at school, and now it’s worse. I’m getting to think that most
-people had best leave such things alone in real life. What do you
-think about it?”
-
-Paul felt a thrill of satisfaction run through him as Adele allowed
-herself to run on, giving vent to her feelings; and she also felt a
-pressure of endearment which thrilled also.
-
-“My dearest,” said he, “that’s the wisest thing you ever thought out
-in your life. You’re the most level-headed girl I ever met in all
-my days.” He spoke as if both he and she were quite as old as the
-Doctor. Then, wishing to be very profound, Paul tried to be eloquent.
-
-“Adele! do you know what you have done?--the most--h’m!--the most
-satisfactory thing I could have wished for in life.”
-
-“Nothing radical, I trust, or I probably shall regret it;” her voice
-fading away towards the last in secret amusement.
-
-“God knows! The Lord only knows how much trouble it will save
-us--after we’re settled.”
-
-“Don’t swear, my dear, don’t swear! I’ve been thinking about it for
-some time. It’s the kind of philosophy I really believe in.”
-
-“So do I,” said Paul, his voice betraying strong feeling.
-
-“Not to bother with ’osophies or sophistries, anthropologies or any
-other apologies,” said Adele. “I want to live a free, open life--a
-life in the open.”
-
-“Take things as they are.”
-
-“Yes, and people as we find them--try to do them good.”
-
-A pause followed.
-
-Paul was striving to grasp within his own consciousness what an
-admirable girl Adele was, and how happy he ought to be with such a
-true woman for his wife; but such thoughts only confused him. All he
-could do was to whisper, more to himself than to her, the old, old
-words, “How I do love you, love you with all my heart!”
-
-She heard him, and her heart responded.
-
-“Do you know what _you_ have done?” asked Adele softly, intertwining
-her fingers in his. The sympathetic touch, the currents of emotion,
-vitality and supreme strength entered his very soul.
-
-“Given me,” said she, “for my very own that which I most crave.”
-
-He bowed his head in reverence, and could not lift so much as his
-eyes towards heaven.
-
-“Oh, Paul, do you know what that means? Faith in one to love and
-trust.”
-
-He made a movement as if trying to speak, but she grasped his hand
-anew, and pressed it.
-
-They did not speak, only thought, and loved each other.
-
-The Southern Cross shone resplendent in the heavens above.
-
- “Let Nature be your teacher;
- Sweet is the love which Nature brings;
- Our meddling intellect
- Misshapes the beauteous form of things.
- We murder to dissect--
- Enough of Science and of Art;
- Close up those barren leaves;
- Come forth and bring with you a heart
- That watches and receives.”
-
- --WORDSWORTH.
-
-
-
-
- XXIX
-
- ILLNESS AND HALLUCINATION
-
-
-At last they had reached the Far East--a new world densely populated
-with darker races, dark forms clothed in white or multi-colored
-garments; many with little clothing at all. The faces intelligent,
-the profiles often more clear-cut and refined than their own. People
-who told them frankly that their physiognomy showed “pink faces with
-green eyes”--quite a revelation, since they had never before seen
-themselves as others see them, from that point of view.
-
-It was at Bombay Mrs. Cultus first encountered the prolific
-assortment of “boys,” Khidmatgars and Jadoo Wallahs, punka boys,
-and boys from Goa. It did not take her long to grasp the situation,
-simply because she purposely kept her own personal assortment
-constantly on “the grand jump.” “I must find out what each fellow
-can do, but won’t; and what he can’t do, but will. As Paul would
-say, ‘This caste-business and somebody else’s business is most
-distracting.’”
-
-As to the Jadoo Wallahs and their famous tricks, Mrs. Cultus had set
-her heart upon detecting the manner of growth of that celebrated
-mango-tree, and in consequence had an experience.
-
-The magician went through his whole performance as it is usually
-given, and was about to take up his bush and walk, when Mrs. Cultus
-at once exclaimed: “Not so quick, please! You say it grew in ten
-minutes; that mango bush?”
-
-“You saw it, Mem Sahib,” said the magician respectfully.
-
-“Then there’s a humbug in that tree,” remarked Mrs. Cultus blandly.
-
-The Wallah seemed a little thrown off his guard.
-
-“Show us the roots! the roots!” demanded Mrs. Cultus, as if giving
-orders.
-
-“Pardon, pardon, Mem Sahib! I thought you said a bug was in the
-tree;” and instantly the magician’s acting became superb; his whole
-attitude changed. One might have supposed he considered it most
-unreasonable to ask to see the roots of a tree. Possibly, this one
-had roots, but then they might be so small you could not see them.
-Who knows what really was there under ground? He didn’t; but he could
-take the risk of digging to discover.
-
-Considering the little pile of earth was only six inches high and
-stood upon a cemented pavement, Mrs. Cultus told him to “go to work
-and dig them up.” And then came the surprise for her; a surprise
-which caused her never to forget that she had been in India.
-
-The Jadoo Wallah, taking the bush by the stem near the ground with
-one hand, loosened it carefully from the earth. In lifting it into
-the air, a half-opened seed, still attached below ground, and the
-tendrils of new roots appeared. As the small clods of earth fell
-away from these roots, the whole bush from topmost leaf to lowest
-root-tendril, was exposed to view at full length. Tremendous applause
-followed. Mrs. Cultus was thoroughly nonplussed, mystified; but not
-too much to find her purse and pay the Wallah well for his skill and
-preparation.
-
-“Those roots,” whispered Adele, “made me feel uncanny when the little
-clods of earth fell from them.”
-
-“Bits of string, soiled with moist earth, make very good roots when
-seen from a distance,” remarked the Doctor, laughing. “Even better
-imitations than the tendrils and flowers in your hat, my dear.”
-
-Thus, during their very first glimpses of India, they realized they
-were encountering an intelligent people, a branch of their own Aryan
-race, but of dark complexion, and given over to skilful mystification.
-
-Before reaching Calcutta, the physical exertions of the tourists had
-been considerable. Mrs. Cultus in particular, owing to her natural
-antipathy to a warm climate, seemed to suffer more than any, and
-in consequence became seriously ill. One cannot say suddenly ill,
-as often the case, although her perambulations at Benares, and
-in the vicinity of Patna to visit the Buddha’s bo-tree, had been
-quite enough to produce serious results. Her strong nerves and
-her persistent determination not to be a burden to others unless
-physically incapacitated, carried her through until Calcutta was
-reached. Upon their arrival she would have broken down at once
-if Western “grit” and feminine curiosity had not again asserted
-themselves. She would not give up; not at least until she had
-obtained her own impression of the Bengalese capital and Government
-House, to be able to talk about them afterwards at home. Then she did
-succumb, half-purposely as it were, really when she had left it until
-too late.
-
-“If I must take my turn at collapsing, this is a much better place
-than some of the bungalows where we were forced to bunk. I might as
-well give in and have done with it. Adele, my dear, I really do feel
-wretched.” This, when she was already so feeble as to be unable to
-stand.
-
-The daughter of Anthony “Grab” Gains, of Colorado, had both grit and
-worldly wisdom by inheritance, but she had little suspicion then
-that these characteristics could be so forcibly demonstrated, even
-while the spiritual element was in the ascendant. This spiritual
-element had not before been especially evident--in fact, it had lain
-dormant, making her appear one-sided, and often unappreciative of
-much that interested her daughter as well as her husband and Doctor
-Wise. The Calcutta physician soon pronounced her case important if
-not serious, due to over-exposure in regions where malaria of various
-kinds should have been guarded against. Evidently few precautions had
-been taken; malarial germs of some sort had entered her system; what
-particular fever would result could only be determined after further
-observation and certain tests. This much the physician told the
-Professor.
-
-Mrs. Cultus, who could interpret every change of expression in her
-husband’s countenance, and could read his thoughts in such matters
-much more quickly than he suspected, took in the exact situation a
-few minutes after the physician left her, when her husband entered
-and began to potter around her room, anxious, but striving to appear
-just the opposite. She noticed him, a little later, take up a bottle
-of medicine, tasting it as if he wished to make sure as to its
-contents. After he had gone out, she said to Adele:
-
-“My daughter, your father is such a dear man. Do you know what he
-did?--tasted that medicine himself first, just to satisfy himself it
-was all right for me. Now just suppose it had been poison?”
-
-Adele looked tenderly at her mother, fearing lest the fever had
-already begun to affect her brain, and was causing absurd notions.
-This proved to be the case. Mrs. Cultus became more and more flighty,
-complaining: “My head feels so light; it seems to be sailing off like
-a balloon.” Then, again, speaking in disconnected phrases, her ideas
-all mixed and inconsequent. Adele concluded she did not always say
-what she meant to say, and therefore did not give the impression she
-intended to convey.
-
-All of which, being quite natural, was not surprising; only when at
-intervals among her absurd vagaries the patient startled them all by
-some exceptionally sane remark, indicating a very level head, indeed.
-It was then that Adele felt confused, and hardly knew what to do; she
-did not understand the case.
-
-Drawing affection led her to put her arm around her mother’s neck, to
-place her cheek next hers, and to cherish her. The invalid did not
-even whisper in reply, but her tacit acceptance seemed to indicate
-that she knew it was her daughter near, very near, and felt her
-touch--that was enough. Fevered imagination was thus often soothed by
-the reality of love.
-
-“Nothing does mother so much good as to love her; it’s better than
-medicine,” said Adele. “It’s very curious how quickly her mind
-becomes quiet when I don’t say a word, only let her know with
-caresses _how we all love her_.”
-
-When Adele made this remark to the Doctor, he could only reiterate
-what Adele and her mother had already told each other by sympathetic
-touch. “Yes, the greatest thing on earth is love, the beginning and
-ending of the greatest good; and it is indeed a notable fact in
-sacred history that Christ made more cures by the instrumentality of
-touch, bloodless operations so to speak, than in any other way; in
-fact, Christ conquered Science and soared away beyond.”
-
-This assertion seemed to impress Adele most seriously; then her mind
-turned towards some particular incident in her own experience.
-
-“I made several cures myself when I was nursing in the hospital. I
-cured one of the physicians, a young man, a mere boy.”
-
-“How, may I ask?” The Doctor was very inquisitive.
-
-“Put my first finger on his lips--he knew instantly what I said--‘You
-had better not talk so much.’”
-
-“Was he indeed cured?”
-
-“Yes, instantly. He had been rather verdant before, but after his
-cure he turned a lovely pea-green. Doctor, physicians ought to look
-into this touchy-method; there’s more psychology than medicine in
-it--that’s why it cures.”
-
-“What a queer girl you are,” thought the Doctor, serious himself; and
-then recalled what she had just said about her mother, “we all love
-her,” not “how I love her,” but “how we all love her”; assuming that
-her own affection for her mother must be common to all the party.
-
-The Doctor cogitated over this: “I can understand mother’s love,
-and its response in all human kind; filial love, brother’s love,
-sisterly affection, and much that is implied thereby, they are innate
-in all races; but when it comes to thinking and speaking and acting
-as if all others are sharing our affection for the one we love in
-particular, as Adele assumed, then I think a still nobler spirit
-exists, something borne in from without must have been granted
-her. She seems even unnaturally good. Here am I looking for this
-something-worth-knowing as manifested by races at large to-day, and
-I hear much in India about the brotherhood-of-man; yet, right here
-under my eyes appears a girl manifesting it in her experience, as if
-she knew more about it and its differentiations, truly, than any of
-us. Now one might say that each individual loves his own parents,
-or ought to; and certainly here in Asia what they call ancestral
-veneration does obtain without necessarily much ardent love; but all
-that is a very different thing from seeing the very best of one’s
-self in others, and acknowledging it--feeling that one is but an
-exponent of the good in all, yet without conceit. That appeals to me
-as the work of the Holy Spirit in man; one may say unnatural, because
-more than natural; and that is to be born again--spiritual rebirth.”
-
-The illness of Mrs. Cultus soon manifested another phase. No matter
-how incongruous her delusions or hallucinations might be, her own
-character, the principle of her own individuality, always dominated;
-the energy which lies deeper than even the manifestation of life,
-on which the identity of man and his existence and the continuance
-of his existence depend, was never inactive; the principle of
-individuality which determines both the form of character and the
-physical frame, as well as the connection between them, was never
-violated. It was Carlotta Gains Cultus _herself_; from her came the
-thoughts. They were not words put into her mind by suggestions from
-others.
-
-One of her delusions was that she had lost all her money, her
-fortune, and was now in a foreign land among many strangers to whom
-she might be obliged to appeal, in case family necessities forced
-them to work for their living. From her point of view this was the
-direst calamity conceivable. She expressed herself, however, with
-that peculiar tact which showed how all the characteristics she had
-inherited from her father were rooted and grounded in her very being.
-She was talking to Miss Winchester:
-
-“Frank, do you think the people over here would like it if the
-Professor should lecture before them? Would he draw good houses?”
-
-Miss Winchester smiled, but knowing full well that Mrs. Cultus could
-not be easily deceived, and would not be satisfied by anything
-indefinite, answered as if serious:
-
-“Of course, he’d draw, once or twice, on account of his reputation;
-but I doubt about keeping it up.”
-
-“Why not, Frank?”
-
-“India’s a complicated place, you know; only Jadoo Wallahs and
-balloon ascensions draw intelligent people--h’m!--native crowds don’t
-count any more than middle-of-the-road people do at home; now and
-again a polo or cricket match, even the theatres are at a discount.”
-
-“Couldn’t we try the Bishop and his set?”
-
-“Certainly; if for charitable purposes.”
-
-“Oh, dear! dear!” said the patient dolefully, “not yet charity, not
-yet.” Then in a low, troubled voice: “I suppose Adele and I must do
-something, ourselves. What can we do? I feel so helpless, so weak!”
-Another expedient soon suggested itself. It was sad to see her thus
-frantically trying to think to some purpose; finally the effort was
-successful.
-
-“Frank, do they play whist over here?” and then realizing that the
-object must be clearly understood: “I could give lessons myself, but
-dear Adele, my precious darling! it would be too much for her, she
-never took to whist.” The poor woman seemed so serious, the situation
-was really pathetic.
-
-
-
-
- XXX
-
- CONVALESCENCE AND COMMON SENSE
-
-
-These periods of hallucination, mingled with very practical
-considerations, continued for some days, until the fever ran its
-course. Fortunately it is not within the scope of this story to note
-the progress of physical ailments; it is more timely to note the
-effects upon the mental and the spiritual life of an excellent woman
-ever true to herself and to others, even during hallucinations. It
-was fortunate also that Mrs. Cultus herself relieved her attendants
-of any uncertainty in the matter.
-
-She had just passed through a period of exceptionally vivid
-impressions of disaster, when one of those flashes of clearer
-perception, before referred to, came to her rescue; whether merely
-a reaction from her previous weak condition, or because she was so
-thoroughly frightened by what she had conceived as possible, need not
-now be discussed. That she did brighten up marvelously and manifest
-then and there a permanent change for the better, was a fact. And
-again it was Miss Winchester who was with her.
-
-“Frank,” said Mrs. Cultus composedly, and with an air of finality,
-“I’ve made up my mind; I’m determined.”
-
-“You don’t say so--good!--about what?”
-
-“To get well, that’s the first thing. I can’t stand this being a care
-to others.”
-
-“You are better, I’m sure; much better.”
-
-“Not much as yet, but I can see it. I will be.”
-
-Miss Winchester gave a little start. “See it? see what?” fearing lest
-the patient was again off at a tangent after more disasters. But Mrs.
-Cultus, having obtained a mental grip upon herself, would not let go,
-even if she still felt weak physically.
-
-“Tell me what you see,” said Miss Winchester gently, taking her by
-the hand, and continuing to wave the fan she held.
-
-“Oh, Frank! what a terrible thing it would be to be caught in such a
-predicament, and unprepared!”
-
-“How, my dear?”
-
-“I’ve been imagining all sorts of things--these Indian beds are not
-the best sort for me, I fear; I’ve been imagining--nonsense, of
-course, for us--but just think how awful it would be to lose one’s
-means of support! be forced to work for a living! and then not be
-able to succeed; I mean when the real thing does happen.”
-
-“The world is full of cases like that.”
-
-“Yes, I knew that before; but now I have actually felt it, just as if
-it were true in our own case. I was sort of luny all the time, even
-when my head floated off like a balloon. I thought it was serious,
-and I suffered as much as if it had really been true. Why, poor
-Adele--it would have killed me to see her in such hard circumstances.
-Adele would have--let me think--I’m wrong! Adele would not have----”
-
-A strange expression came over her countenance, as if something
-ineffably joyous and precious was just revealed to her. She closed
-her eyes, and evidently was seeing the image of her daughter in a new
-light.
-
-Miss Winchester kept on fanning her gently, hoping she would soon
-fall asleep.
-
-But Mrs. Cultus’ spiritual discernment had been quickened; and with
-it came the real, true conquest over both physical weakness and
-mental vagaries. Her eyes opened again, they were clearer than
-ever; her voice had a new depth, and was certainly more sympathetic
-than before the fever began--it manifested the spiritually melodious
-quality in essence.
-
-“What about Adele?” asked Miss Winchester tenderly.
-
-“Oh! I love her so much! She is so much to me; I cannot tell you how
-much.”
-
-“We all love her,” said Miss Winchester, innocently repeating the
-very words Adele had used when speaking of her mother.
-
-“Yes, I know that, too; no one knows it better than I; but I now see
-something about her I never saw before so clearly.”
-
-“Tell me what it is.”
-
-“Frank!--a mystery! Adele _is_ prepared. She is ready for anything
-that may happen. None of us need ever fear for Adele, I’m sure of
-that; and I can see that she acts as she does because she feels
-prepared. I must tell you about her; it is a mystery, yet at the same
-time the most practical thing.”
-
-All the positive elements in Mrs. Cultus now seemed focused on the
-conviction that Adele was “prepared,” as she called it, for anything,
-any emergency.
-
-“She has many to look to,” said Miss Winchester, “more than most
-girls.”
-
-“Yes, but I’m not thinking of that. I mean her own strength,
-something within herself, something I suppose all girls could have if
-they were like Adele. I’m beginning now to understand that--beginning
-to understand a little of how she acts and why she does as she does.
-Adele could endure and overcome adversity; she enjoys pleasure, more
-than any of us; she lives what she believes, and is not afraid of
-anything. Do you notice it, Frank, Adele is never afraid?”
-
-Miss Winchester felt a little incredulous, but she said nothing. Mrs.
-Cultus continued:
-
-“I never before so well understood Adele, although I am her mother.
-At times she talks like a chatterbox, but she never says anything
-unkind about people. Perhaps I shouldn’t say ‘never,’ for she did
-once give a regular scolding to a rascally brute who was abusing his
-horse--a dumb creature that couldn’t retaliate. Adele did speak for
-the dumb brute, but that was an exceptional case, and she did right
-to interfere.”
-
-“She has my full approval,” remarked Miss Winchester. Mrs. Cultus
-continued:
-
-“Then she is interested in all babies--would you believe it?--of any
-color. ‘Cherubs’ she calls them if she thinks it will stop their
-crying. I heard her one day call a cherub, ‘Cupid,’ and kiss him.
-Bless me, I saw nothing attractive in that particular child. She says
-she likes babies just as God made them, of any color. Now, Frank, I
-call that practical religion, and Adele turns from nothing; she is
-interested in all humanity.”
-
-“No doubt of it,” said Miss Winchester thoughtfully, as if recalling
-an instance known to her personally.
-
-Mrs. Cultus continued: “But when it comes to talkative religion,
-Adele is more conservative, says little or nothing--only acts
-naturally what she feels. And the strangest thing of all is----” and
-Adele’s mother paused an instant as if she ought to be careful about
-what she wished to say.
-
-“What?” asked Miss Winchester, closely attentive.
-
-“Why, she is always so sure, so perfectly sure in her own mind, as if
-under the influence of some invisible power--something mystical, you
-see, but very practical, too. I never heard her say much about it but
-once--you remember when she spoke to that Geyser Science woman on the
-Atlantic steamer?--and then she certainly did express herself like a
-girl much older, very precocious, to my notion. Do you know what I
-think, Frank?”
-
-“No, I can’t imagine.”
-
-“Well, Adele was talking about Christ, and she was perfectly
-fearless; you remember how He talked, when only a youth, to the
-Doctors in the Temple?”
-
-It was difficult for Miss Winchester to accept this comparison; and
-seeing her hesitate, Mrs. Cultus tried to express herself in better
-form:
-
-“It seems to me Adele had the same spirit, and that’s what I feel.
-Now you remember that Geyser Doctor, who at first appeared so placid,
-and talked about what she really knew so little; and then ended
-by exploding her ideas? Frank, I shall never forget her, or the
-explosion, and its effect on Adele. It was the first, last, and only
-time I ever saw Adele in a religious discussion, and I never expect
-to see her so caught again; in fact, she told me she would never
-indulge again, not if she knew it in time.”
-
-Miss Winchester nodded in remembrance, and was much surprised that
-Mrs. Cultus should be able to display so much of her old-time
-vigor, when lately she was so weak. “Her spirit is stronger than
-ever,” thought Miss Winchester. Another pause, and then Mrs. Cultus
-continued:
-
-“I shall never forget that scene, because the child talked as if she
-knew personally Him in whom she believed; as if the One in whom she
-believed was being misquoted, if not actually slandered, and all that
-sort of thing.”
-
-Miss Winchester listened more attentively than ever.
-
-“My dear, the child was right. I can see it all now. A sort of holy
-jealousy, because she was averse to hearing anything so misleading
-attributed to Him in whom she believed. Now, for a girl to feel that
-way means a great deal, a very great deal--it means everything. Adele
-was far more than interested; she felt intensely all she said. How
-did she do it? Why did she do it? Had the Holy Spirit spoken in her
-heart? Frank, that is a mystery! Nobody, I trust, can deceive me
-about such things, and I can see so much more than ever now, and in a
-new light. Now, I know God is Love, because He gave me Adele, and I
-try to love Him for it; and just between us, you and me, myself, it
-is going to be very hard for me to give her up, even to Paul.”
-
-Miss Winchester would not have interrupted Mrs. Cultus on any account
-as she was thus opening her own heart freely, fearlessly. There was a
-beauty in these revelations fundamentally holy.
-
-“One of the strange things,” continued Adele’s mother, “is how
-nothing has been changed with Adele since she became engaged to Paul;
-just the reverse, her feelings seem even more intense; and her love
-for Paul influences her for good in every way.”
-
-Miss Winchester, not wishing to intrude in these family matters,
-made an effort to change the subject; but it was of no use. Mrs.
-Cultus was too much interested in her daughter’s future to talk of
-anything else; while her natural tact was too vigilant to admit of
-any indiscretion.
-
-“Adele and Paul,” said she, “with all their nonsense and lovers’
-pranks, get more out of their fun than any young people I ever saw.
-I’ve watched ’em often. Adele does not give up a thing worth seeing,
-and she goes into unspeakable places with her Father and Paul. They
-tell me not to worry about her, for she is always equal to any
-emergency. I wasn’t so fearless when I was a girl. But Adele is
-different. I shouldn’t be surprised if she did get into trouble some
-time.”
-
-“Of course she may--that’s where the fun comes in,” said Miss
-Winchester, less serious.
-
-Adele’s mother looked up in alarm. “What are you laughing at, Frank?
-Has she already been getting into scrapes?”
-
-“Oh, no scrape, but I saw her on her dignity in a little scene at
-Benares.”
-
-“What was it?”
-
-“We were in one of the temples, and a young Brahmin approached
-her when she was a little distance from us and alone. He was a
-good-looking young fellow, and he seemed to know it. What he said I
-don’t know, and what she saw wrong in him I can only conjecture, but
-the few glances she gave him put him in a different frame of mind. He
-certainly changed his manner and bearing as if forced to recognize
-some superiority in her. One doesn’t often see that sort of thing in
-young Brahmins, or their elders either. Only too often that caste
-seems to arrogate to itself a special license to do as it pleases.”
-
-“There! I told you she was never afraid!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus.
-“Adele changed that fellow’s mind by a glance--and a Brahmin at that;
-overcome by the use of his own weapons. No, she is fearless. Whatever
-she does, she’s never afraid. Very mysterious, yet so much common
-sense to make it effective. It is as if--as if--oh, how shall I
-express what I want to say in a few words? as if--the truth had made
-her free.”
-
-“Why, she must be a veritable Christian Psychologist,” said Miss
-Winchester, seriously.
-
-“There is no doubt of it,” answered Adele’s mother, confidently.
-“Adele believes in the Greatest Psychologist that ever lived.”
-
-No more was said, and Mrs. Cultus pondered over these things in her
-heart. The exertion of talking had fatigued her, in spite of the
-increased spiritual strength which had been born of her suffering.
-While looking at some flowers which Paul had brought into her room,
-their beauty seemed to lift her soul beyond them. Was it into the
-region of her own youth, or of Adele’s youth?--or more beautiful
-still, the realm of Perpetual Youth? Sleep came nigh.
-
-She noticed that Paul’s flowers were buds just ready to bloom.
-There was among them a lily, not a lily of the valley but of the
-Annunciation; an Easter lily, double emblem of new life--new life
-here, and resurrection into the New Life of Perpetual Youth. It was
-the same sort of lily that she remembered seeing in a sacred picture
-representing an Angel’s Visit.
-
-As Nature’s Comforter, restful slumber, closed her eyelids in blessed
-peace, she seemed to behold herself in the act of giving this lily
-to Paul. Miss Winchester heard the whispering as she dozed off:
-
-“Take it, Paul; it is a priceless treasure. This bud in blooming will
-sweeten all your life. Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like
-one of these.”
-
-Certainly an unexpected conclusion to be reached by the worldly-minded
-Mrs. Cultus; but practical, as truth itself is both mystical and
-practical. How different the hallucinations during illness and bodily
-weakness, from the spiritual experience, the visions of truth which
-really conquer physical weakness and rise into the Realm of Perpetual
-Youth!
-
-“Verily, a double blessing she gave them,” said Miss
-Winchester--“youth here, youth perpetual.”
-
-
-
-
- XXXI
-
- OFF TO THE HIMALAYAS
-
-
-During the convalescence of Mrs. Cultus the physicians recommended
-that she be taken to a more salubrious climate, a higher altitude;
-and suggested Darjeeling in North Bengal near the borders of Sikhim
-as an admirable sanitarium. Adele was delegated to suggest it to her
-mother. She entered the sick-room in great glee, drawing Paul in with
-her.
-
-“Little Mother, we’ve all been ordered off; Paul and I have already
-thought of flying upwards to the Himalayas, and now we all must go.”
-
-“What’s that you say about flying away? Who’s ordered it? I didn’t.”
-
-“The physicians,” said Paul much amused. “We need to take the usual
-Oriental prescription for foreigners--Vamoose the ranchibus; get out!”
-
-“Do Hindoos prescribe in Latin? What does it mean?”
-
-“To be taken instantly,” said Miss Winchester, laughing, “and all
-take the same dose.”
-
-“Where did you say we are to go? Up where?” persisted Mrs. Cultus,
-now beginning to enter into the spirit of the thing.
-
-“To the mountains,” said Adele joyfully, “up to Sikhim.”
-
-“Sic ’em!” and Mrs. Cultus’ eyes twinkled. “Is it a hunting scheme
-for Paul and the Doctor? Are there dogs up there?”
-
-Evidently mental alertness had returned to the invalid. Adele thought
-so, and nodded to Paul:
-
-“Come, boys! get your guns, and call the dogs--I mean your tickets
-for the trip; I’ll attend to the rest.”
-
-Paul vanished to make arrangements for the journey.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never did a more interested and hilarious party start northward
-towards Kunchingunga; towards the foot-hills of Sikhim, between
-Nepaul and Bhootan. From the crest of these foot-hills they hoped
-to see the Himalaya range stretching east and west, like unto a
-barrier insurmountable, towering aloft into thin air which no man
-could breathe and yet live; terra firma supporting glaciers a mile in
-vertical height; _terra incognita_, for no man had yet been able to
-tread thereon. Region of the seen, yet unseen, because unlivable to
-mortals as at present constituted.
-
-No other portion of their tour gave better opportunity to bring out
-individual traits of character than this; for nature herself was to
-be met in many moods. Professor Cultus suggested that each member of
-the party should select a specialty for personal observation.
-
-Miss Winchester jumped at this idea, like a reporter for a woman’s
-home journal. She selected the varied ejaculations of the natives;
-“grunts,” as she called them.
-
-“Every race seems to grunt differently, and every idol swears
-differently. I suppose prayers are diverse also, but the grunts will
-be enough for me. We shall have hot-weather sighs, and cold-weather
-shivers; torrid zone lassitude and temperate zone platitude; Hindoo
-shuffles and Mongolian shrugs, each accompanied by its appropriate
-ejaculation or grunt. It is astonishing how much grunting is heard.
-Asia is like a Florida razor-back settlement on a large scale.
-I shall be kept quite busy; and no doubt myself become quite
-accomplished.” Miss Winchester was evidently in high feather, finding
-her surroundings inspiring from a literary point of view.
-
-“The Himalayas will suit your purpose admirably,” remarked the Doctor.
-
-“How so?”
-
-“You may write a dialect story on your way--all grunts, and nothing
-else.”
-
-Paul thought the subject of the rapid changes from one kind of
-vegetation to another would suit him as a specialty. “There ought
-to be enough variety in ferns, palms, and natural shrubbery, to say
-nothing of tea, quinine and poppies (opium) to excite or soothe as
-we require doses.” Paul was evidently hoping to obtain some plants
-for his Florida Garden, his winter home, between Pelican Lodge and
-the salt waves. There the Pelicans were omnivorous birds, not being
-restricted to ordinary pelican diet.
-
-Adele said she expected to be engaged chiefly in “looking up.”
-
-“Not guide-books, I hope?” quizzed Miss Winchester.
-
-“Only when I lie down, to take a siesta; they will serve as a
-sedative.”
-
-“Whatever you do,” said Mrs. Cultus, ever practical and worldly-wise,
-“be sure to jot down notes. You remember my report on Tangiers to our
-Politely Civil League? Memoranda came in splendidly then; I’ve just
-received a note of thanks for my ‘communications.’”
-
-“You mean your ‘proceedings,’ my dear,” grunted the Professor.
-
-Miss Winchester at once made mental note of the Professor’s
-mode of ejaculation, as indicative of the Occidental grunt in
-contradistinction to the Asiatic.
-
-“Miss Cultus is correct,” interrupted the Doctor, champion inquisitor
-and note-jotter of the party. “No brain could remember, much less
-assimilate, all that we are going to see, without taking notes.”
-
-At this point they were interrupted by the call to take their places
-in the railway carriage at Calcutta, for their first four hours by
-rail to Damookdea on the Ganges.
-
-
-
-
- XXXII
-
- THE START UPWARDS
-
-
-En route from Calcutta, many villages were situated amid luxuriant
-bamboos, palms and grasses, where the Bengali cultivators of the soil
-worked hard for a portion of the year, and then during the heated
-term put in their time loafing, bathing in puddles, and raising
-children; some of the children looked as if so raised--in puddles.
-Life was known to ebb and flow spasmodically in that region, at times
-receding to the very verge of famine, only to return and overflow the
-country with abundance. Life was like a candle burning at both ends
-in days of plenty, to be followed by total darkness, where skeletons
-groped, wailing and gnashing their teeth.
-
-The foliage was luxuriant, and of rapid growth; but not calculated
-to endure much strife with wind and storm. Very beautiful, however,
-were some of the compensations in nature: when the graceful banana
-leaves were blighted by the adverse forces, and fell limp, black,
-and apparently useless; in the very act of dying they fell over the
-clusters of fruit below, thus protecting their offspring after they
-themselves had returned to dust, in some cases cremated by the sun,
-ashes to ashes. Many human beings had no doubt sacrificed themselves
-in the same way, involving physical and nervous prostration,
-since Vishnu was the real preserver, and they were Vishnubs. A
-mysterious parallel. Altruism, to a certain degree, exists between
-plant life and humanity; and one often hears the natives speak of
-the transmigration of souls. Numerous birds of brilliant plumage
-flitted about, and rows of paroquets sat on the telegraph wires; as
-the natives said, reading and reporting the messages. Did not the
-monkeys show great wisdom and skill in constructing bridges of their
-own bodies for Krishna to escape by passing over? Surely birds must
-know something if monkeys were so wise. So also reasoned the natives,
-with variations, each man after his own kind.
-
-Miss Winchester in time took down a number of the native ejaculations
-apropos of these things; and Mrs. Cultus, of course, reported all
-such facts to her special committee of the “Pet-Monkey Section” of
-the “Kindness to Animal League.”
-
-“I did not know that Asia was so kind to animals,” said she. The
-Doctor laughed: “I fear it is a sort of ‘touch-me-not, taste-me-not’
-kindness.” “More absurd proceedings,” thought the Professor. Adele
-did not laugh; on the contrary she was as usual much interested in
-children, and these people seemed to her to be in the childhood
-period of the human race. “They believe it all,” said Adele, “and so
-did I when I was in the nursery; my dolly always talked, and monkeys
-scared us both.”
-
-The river Ganges was crossed at Damookdea, in the darkness, on the
-steamer “Vampire.” Torchlights upon the distant shore showed the
-river to be nearly a mile wide, the further sides rising to form
-low bluffs. A huge sand-bar lay opposite the primitive wharf, and
-had to be circumnavigated; which was made difficult by the strong
-current and the tortuous eddies whirling in many directions. They saw
-fishing-smacks etched against the sky, with their lights bobbing up
-and down; the nets were carried on enormous bamboo frames which shone
-against the lights like spider webs. The prows and sterns of the
-boats were pointed and rose high in peculiar curves. The same boats,
-seen afterwards in daylight, propelled by a single boatman, whose
-form showed against the blue waves, were quite as picturesque as the
-gondolas at Venice.
-
-Then all night on the train, crossing the plains, and in the morning
-Silliguri, the station at the track’s end, apparently.
-
-Paul proceeded to reconnoitre among the crowds who gathered about
-and under the railway sheds. There were officials, indigo planters,
-race-course frequenters, Anglo-Saxons and Germans, among the much
-more numerous dark-skinned natives.
-
-The preponderance of white garments showed the district to be yet on
-the comparatively low-level, but a glance northward told a different
-story; woodlands rising in billows of foliage.
-
-Paul beckoned to the party to hasten; his expression an amused
-interrogation point.
-
-“The railway has shrunk; prepare to shrink, or you will not be
-comfortable in your new quarters;” and he escorted them to the
-miniature Himalaya train which stood at the end of the shed ready to
-ascend skyward.
-
-Miss Winchester at once dubbed it “The Fly Express.”
-
-Mrs. Cultus, looking over the top of one of the cars and then bending
-down to see inside, exclaimed: “Are we really to go up in--that
-thing? It’s a big toy, for little children.”
-
-Miss Winchester at once crawled in; then peeping out like a bird in a
-cage: “I have already shrunk--it feels quite cozy.”
-
-Adele did not much relish such close quarters, and asked: “Can’t we
-ride on top?”
-
-Only the first-class coaches were inclosed; the second-class had low
-partitions; the third-class had seats in rows, open on all sides,
-covered overhead not unlike American trolleys in summer. The width
-of the train accommodated only three abreast, without any aisle;
-the car wheels were about eighteen inches high; the car floor, into
-which the wheels were set, was only a little over a foot above the
-ground. Sitting within, one could easily touch the ground with an
-umbrella. The engine appeared like a toy in dimensions, but it was
-very powerful; like a strong healthy boy who could successfully pull
-or push, but not very effective for sprinting.
-
-“I like that engine,” said Paul, “he’s chunky, but tough; I guess
-we’ll get there all right.”
-
-The luggage was carried on platform trucks, covered with tarpaulins;
-and this whole remarkable cortége was capable of advancing at the
-reckless speed of eight miles an hour.
-
-Some French tourists at once took places in “the first,” hereby
-assuming the usual American prerogative to pay more and receive
-less than was due. Mrs. Cultus entered the same apartment, as she
-required protection on account of her health and some one constantly
-in attendance. Thus cooped up, Mrs. Cultus, Miss Winchester, and
-the Frenchmen, made a coterie of their own; Mrs. Cultus somewhat
-uneasy lest the movement of the train might deposit a Frenchman in
-her lap at any moment. The ladies, intensely curious, thrust their
-heads through the little windows, like children on an excursion; the
-Professor called, “Look out!”
-
-Mrs. Cultus quickly drew in her head.
-
-A Frenchman instantly asked, most politely in manner:
-
-“What have you, Madame? Monsieur said, ‘Look out!’”
-
-“But he meant just the opposite,” quoth Mrs. Cultus.
-
-“Hein! what a diabolical language!”
-
-Miss Winchester here made a double addition to her collection. Adele,
-since her mother was comfortably settled, began looking around to
-locate herself; she espied a place just suited to her ideas, at the
-rear of the train, on the last trolley truck. She and Paul perched
-themselves on a good square trunk, and were not visible to those in
-front when the Flyer showed symptoms of flying. This resulted in the
-Professor and Doctor Wise being greatly puzzled to know “what had
-become of those children.”
-
-The whistle gave a Himalaya shriek, and the foremost coaches
-commenced to joggle before the “children” were discovered. In the
-hurry there was nothing for the dignified elders to do but to
-scramble on, as best they could, the same truck with Adele and Paul.
-
-Thus this inquisitive-exploration party commenced their ascent of
-the famous Himalayas with a detachment of inquisitives at each end
-of the train. Hilarious? who could help being so on the Fly Express,
-rushing through the exhilarating air direct from the Himalayas, at
-eight miles an hour? when none would wish a moment curtailed; there
-was so much to be seen, sitting there on a trunk and looking in the
-direction of Kunchingunga!
-
-Adele adjusted some robes taken from her strapped luggage, in an
-effort to make her father more comfortable. It was fortunate she
-had done so, for the joggle-train began a frightful series of
-alternate jerks and bumps. Doctor Wise described its construction
-as “articulated,” especially adapted to requirements of the line.
-When on a level each car took its own gait, the equipment loosely
-hung together to facilitate running around sharp curves; a comical
-rattling arrangement more ludicrous than agreeable, until it was
-stretched out in making the ascent. Adele seized Paul and her father
-alternately in convulsive efforts to hold on.
-
-“I think I’d better get inside the trunk,” she gasped, when a
-tremendous lurch threatened to tilt over the whole combination.
-
-It was the last lurch, however, for the train had now struck the
-high grade of one foot in twenty-eight, and at certain points one in
-twenty-two. It drew itself out to full length, the strong-boy engine
-sturdily dragging the apparatus after him.
-
-From the start the lift was perceptible.
-
-Silliguri lies at an elevation of less than five hundred feet above
-the sea. Ghoom Station, the summit of the line, is only thirty-six
-miles distant, at an elevation approximating seven thousand feet
-higher. That this difference should be surmounted in one short
-stretch of road was, in its day, a marvel of engineering skill. The
-Himalaya spur-hills upon the southern side are often thus abrupt,
-hence the topographical difficulties to be overcome by the miniature
-railway. The line followed the old cart-road built by the English
-Government some eighty years previous, crossing and recrossing,
-oscillating from one side to the other to gain distance. Doctor Wise
-could not help expressing admiration for those early engineers who
-had originally penetrated this region, and had located the cart-road
-where the native trails were little better than the trails of wild
-animals; and for their later brothers in the same profession whose
-skill had adapted rails and motive power to such peculiar conditions.
-
-Adele said she felt herself ascending the mountain “squirrel fashion,
-by zigzags, and the longest way round was the shortest way up.”
-
-The train, after a short run through the thick woods, crept out
-upon a knoll, and before them opened upwards a superb vista; seen
-through a ravine it expanded heavenward; and they caught sight of
-a mountain-spur jutting out against the sky, far above them in the
-cloud region. It was indented; they could plainly see the dent with
-their glasses--it looked as if a roadway might pass through. The
-point stood boldly out in space, with clouds beyond; the main range
-hidden from view, the impression conveyed was that this promontory
-might be near their destination.
-
-“Can that be the summit?” exclaimed Adele; and an answer came to her
-in rather an interesting fashion.
-
-While they had been joggling along, a party of civil engineers
-connected with the railway, waiting to take the train, had noticed a
-pretty girl sitting upon the rear truck, evidently in for a frolic,
-and at once concluded it was a good location for themselves also.
-They had boarded the truck, and were sitting upon the lower part
-quite ready for any innocents abroad, reportorial or globe trotting,
-when Adele noticed the railway cut far up on the mountain-side; of
-course they volunteered the necessary information:
-
-“Oh, that’s only chilly Kurseong, where passengers begin to sneeze,”
-answered the civil engineer.
-
-Adele, also responsive, gave an appreciative mock sneeze at once,
-adding she “needed a little practice after being so long down on the
-plains.”
-
-“Others take tea for colds,” responded the civil engineer. “Kurseong
-tea is, you know, tip-top.”
-
-“Then it is the summit?” quizzed Paul.
-
-“No, only halfway up, when you reach that point; the real summit will
-appear as far aloft as that does now.”
-
-“Oh!” said the Doctor, “then, as the Florida ‘crackers’ would say, we
-are just ‘two sights’ from the real summit.”
-
-“They measure by sights there, do they?” remarked the Professor. “In
-Switzerland they measure by hours; and down in Calcutta I noticed
-Hindoos who measured time by the numbers of pipes they could smoke.”
-
-Adele gazed in amazement. It seemed hardly credible that this lofty
-point, over one thousand feet higher than the famous view-point on
-the Gemmi Pass in the Alps, should be only halfway up, that the
-foot-hills of the Himalayas covered with verdure were as lofty as
-Mont Blanc covered with snow fields and glaciers. All the party began
-to realize the grand scale upon which the Himalayas are built.
-
-“So much for low latitude and high snow-line,” remarked the
-Professor. “Now look out for changes in vegetation, races and
-costumes;” all of which soon became apparent.
-
-These southern slopes being protected by the high range beyond, and
-the low latitude in which they are situated, make it possible to
-reproduce the vegetation of all the zones within an incredibly short
-distance. The Doctor remarked: “It is as if we were traveling, in
-the short distance of about forty miles, from Cuba to Canada.” The
-effect as if the earth’s surface had been tilted upwards, so that to
-ascend the mountain spurs was really to travel towards the Frigid
-Zone; and that the north-pole must be up above them instead of being
-in its supposed proper place, the middle of the north. This state of
-things, so unusual to Adele, made a vivid impression upon her as they
-advanced upwards.
-
-The marshy lands and thatched houses of the type to be found on the
-plains, enclosed by fences of matting hung upon bamboo poles, with
-mud-puddles for public bathing--all these began to disappear. There
-were fewer clumps of tall grasses twenty feet in height with tufted
-heads, and of plume like pampas; the mighty bamboo, and the giant
-cactus ever grotesque, always on the defensive, even while bearing
-down vegetation mightier than itself--these were left below. Soon
-there were less fruits, wild mulberries, pomegranates, dates, figs,
-lady-finger bananas of delicious strawberry flavor. These became
-less and less frequent, although there were still to be seen some of
-the five varieties of figs and twelve varieties of bamboos. These
-continued with them to an elevation of one thousand feet. What they
-now began to admire was the profusion of roses and the luxuriant
-boughanvillia with rich dark-red blossoms, much richer and darker
-even than in Florida, more akin to that in the Bermudas, or at Hong
-Kong. But even these souvenirs of the South passed from view as the
-panorama continued to move; semi-tropical luxuriance constantly
-giving place to stronger growths. Wild orange, also peaches and
-lemons, were seen among the bananas. Banyans with pendant branch
-roots spreading the parent growth through the forest; cotton-wood
-trees built with buttress-roots, as the Doctor remembered seeing
-them at Nassau; and wormwood twelve feet high. Ferns in profusion,
-graceful as ever, some of them old friends of the Alleghanies; for
-the ferns are the most inveterate gad-abouts, constantly visiting
-poor relations in almost every zone and climate.
-
-Here and there were now to be seen terrestrial orchids, vigorous
-specimens, holding their own amid the foliage of their adopted
-parents, pines, oaks and other hardwood trees--a curious combination.
-Persistent bamboos of hardier varieties still obtained; they
-flourished along the water courses at the foot-hills, and swept their
-graceful curves over adjacent knolls. Such slender growths, although
-tough and strong, became too attenuated to support themselves in an
-upright position; their immense copious fountains of foliage took
-not only curves of ascent like the cocoanut, palmetto, and superb
-talipot, but also the return curves of leafy spray ruffling the
-surface of the little streams.
-
-Then there were glens and shady hollows decorated with lichens and
-pendulous mosses; trailing growths of verdure of countless kinds,
-carpets of tiny ferns--some mysterious growths of sombre reds
-with vitreous lustre, as well as greens so delicate that they hid
-themselves from the direct rays of the sun; not to mention horrible
-nettles and poison vines; terrors to thin-skinned visitors, but as
-little regarded by the natives as were the leeches in the swamps, and
-the pestiferous insects in the jungles. Bad plants, which the natives
-said had been bad people in some previous incarnation; hence had been
-incarnated backwards and downwards, not forwards and upwards.
-
-Adele much appreciated these flights of fancy among the natives;
-they seemed so much like nursery stories when she was in the nursery
-herself. She was on the lookout to kodak each new scene, and at times
-almost in despair.
-
-“I might as well acknowledge that the Himalayas, like Niagara, cannot
-be crowded into a small picture, but some of those crazy cacti I
-really must catch; there now is something already posing to be
-taken--let me catch him;” and she balanced herself on the top of the
-trunk to photograph a large tree festooned with vines suggesting the
-doleful tree decorations in some of the cemeteries at home, only more
-luxuriant.
-
-“How artistically tearful! How festive-funereal!” exclaimed Miss
-Winchester, now with them, having changed places with the Professor
-who had gone to Mrs. Cultus.
-
-“That’s where you’re a little off,” said the civil engineer quizzer.
-“The botanists would probably call it ‘leguminosa’--have some?”
-
-“Thanks, awfully,” said Miss Winchester with English style and
-intonation. “Himalaya vegetables may prove more inviting than that
-one looks, but please don’t risk your precious neck to pick them off
-the vines.”
-
-The English engineer said that he did not propose to die before
-reaching the Sanitarium, which remark seemed to strike the Doctor
-as “not bad, for a colonial living in a warm climate.” So Adele
-settled the matter by kodaking the whole party overshadowed by the
-artistically-tearful funereal-festive vegetable-vine.
-
-Near this locality the track indulged in numerous twists and turns,
-squirming like a huge snake encircling the mountain spur. The train
-slid out to the verge of a precipice, and then backed off, just
-before the crash came.
-
-“What a narrow escape!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus, “I felt as if well
-shaken, and was about to be taken. I hope to goodness they won’t do
-it again”--but they did.
-
-They were now rounding a projecting knoll, before passing through a
-short cut; they then crept under a bridge which, curious to relate,
-they crossed over hardly a minute later. These engineering gymnastics
-were utterly preposterous to our explorers.
-
-“Has the train lost its way?” laughed Adele. “Where are we? What
-next?”
-
-“If I don’t fly off like a bird,” said Miss Winchester, “I expect to
-enter the bowels of the earth and be a gnome; that will surely be my
-next incarnation.”
-
-“I prefer the bird,” remarked Adele.
-
-“Which? parrot or peacock? India’s choice. Considering altitude and
-climate, I think a gnome will suit me. What will you be, Paul?”
-
-“Oh, leave things as they are.”
-
-“But you’ve got to be something if in India,” persisted Miss
-Winchester.
-
-“Rats!” exclaimed Paul, “as lief as anything else--what nonsense you
-are talking!”
-
-“There’s method in this railway madness,” suggested the civil
-engineer; and he showed them some rough sketches he had hurriedly
-made illustrating the series of loops and zigzags the line had
-followed between Tindharia and Gumti. “How is that for horseshoe
-curves, mule-shoes, and other adaptations to the requirements of the
-road--‘feats of engineering’ we call them.” The Englishman was trying
-to be facetious.
-
-The lines he had drawn were curious. Paul said they reminded him of
-the marks left upon the surface of ice by an expert-fancy skater.
-Miss Winchester said she could use them for an embroidery pattern,
-the art of embroidery being one of her favorite occupations. The
-Doctor said they reminded him of a fly travelling over an orange
-to find out what it was like. Adele said they reminded her of
-exactly what they represented, only now she had a bird’s-eye view
-looking down on the whole thing. “I understand it now, but until I
-saw this drawing I did feel all twisted up.” Curious, indeed, was
-the association of ideas, each traveller finding suggested by the
-engineer’s drawing his own tastes, or the memory of some previous
-experience.
-
-Still higher up, say between four and six thousand feet, the
-Americans felt really quite at home in the woods; no matter what part
-of the Middle or Northern States they might have come from there were
-glimpses to remind them of home; not unlike the loftier parts of the
-Alleghany range as seen from Blowing Rock, or Cloudland in the Land
-of the Sky (North and South Carolina), also glimpses suggesting the
-magnificent distant scenery of Colorado, and even of the Northwest
-Rockies; but in every case with much greater luxuriance of foliage,
-and a realizing sense that they were only on the foot-hills, the
-first steps leading to the Celestial region, still away up and beyond.
-
-Adele searched in her pocket and brought forth her little
-Stars-and-Stripes badge, and pinned it on her left shoulder. It took
-very little to make Adele show her colors, and just here where the
-woods were full of oaks, hemlocks, maples and many other trees which
-reminded her of home, she concluded this was the proper time to bring
-out the pocket edition of Old Glory.
-
-The Englishman wondered why she selected that particular time to
-do such a thing; it seemed such a superfluous proceeding. He would
-have scorned the idea if he had known that she associated oaks with
-America in particular. As it was he could not suppress his curiosity.
-
-“May I ask why you show your colors?”
-
-“Because here I feel quite at home.”
-
-“Oh, you Americans think the States take in all creation, don’t you?”
-
-“Well, pretty much; but this is the Queen’s Empire--we admire the
-Queen immensely, she’s a home-body; and personally I quite envy her.”
-
-“No doubt she would appreciate your appreciation,” remarked the
-Englishman, again touching the facetious. “May I ask why you envy
-her?”
-
-“We are going into the expansion business ourselves: the Queen knows
-all about it.”
-
-“Once you are in, you’ll wish you were out.”
-
-“You made a success; why shouldn’t we? Of course we’ll add some
-improvements.”
-
-The Englishman laughed heartily. “What do you call success?”
-
-“Making people feel at home,” said Adele.
-
-“And the improvements--some new ’ism or religion, I suppose?”
-
-“Every man to his own religion,” said Adele; “it’s the same as with
-one’s own home. Religion ought to suit one’s nature as your home
-suits your life.”
-
-“These people have a great variety of religion,” remarked the
-Englishman.
-
-“There seems to be no lack,” said Adele, “but really I don’t know
-yet. I can’t say that I have really worshiped with them, according to
-their ritual here in their own homes.”
-
-“Well, I wish you joy, but really I don’t understand fully yet as to
-your idea of home here. I don’t feel at home; we all go back to our
-homes--Merry England.”
-
-“That’s not what I mean,” said Adele; “this region is the most
-extraordinary home-country I ever saw, even more so than our own
-mixed-up country, and that’s saying a great deal.”
-
-“I don’t understand yet,” said the Briton.
-
-“Why, it’s this way, I feel perfectly at home in these woods; the
-Hindoos were just as much at home a few miles back; the place seems
-to suit all sorts and conditions of different civilizations, not
-one civilization only; and the Queen lets them live at home here in
-peace.”
-
-“They fight like cats and dogs,” said the engineer promptly. “We have
-the devil’s own time to keep the home, as you call it, quiet.”
-
-“It must be the children that cut up so,” laughed Adele. “Every home
-is supposed to have its nursery--the world no doubt has; people often
-call Asia the cradle of the human race. This seems to me to be like
-God’s nursery.”
-
-“And England’s the nurse!” shouted the Briton.
-
-“Yes, that’s about it.”
-
-“Well, here comes another baby, fresh from the woods, to be taken
-into the nursery. What do you think of this precious babe? I hand her
-over to you.”
-
-What Adele saw for the first time was a large, stout Mongolian woman,
-broad-visaged with slanting eyes, very dirty and unkempt, accompanied
-by two men of similar mien, neither of whom appeared so masculine
-as the precious babe herself. These had wandered down from the upper
-regions--the first glimpse to Adele of the next race they were to
-encounter.
-
-“Babes in the woods,” remarked the Englishman.
-
-Adele concluded not to call this one a cherub.
-
-
-
-
- XXXIII
-
- A GLIMPSE OF THE PRIMITIVE
-
-
-The miniature Fly Express having crept over the summit now slid down
-on the other side for a few miles, into Darjeeling. The mountain
-resort, though upon such high ground, was surrounded by still
-loftier elevations; a veritable Sanitorium protected on all sides.
-It contained more buildings of a public nature than the inquisitive
-Cultus explorers had expected to find; the Sanitorium and bazaar were
-surrounded by many substantially built structures, generally upon
-picturesque sites, schools, a convent, villas, bungalows, and here
-and there native shanties in unexpected nooks and corners. There
-were valleys within valleys, and hills upon hills; and domiciles
-were scattered broadcast over the landscape. No time was consumed,
-however, in gazing around them when they first arrived. The station
-and bazaar nearby were lively with Nepaulese, Bhootans, Lepchas,
-members of the hill tribes of Sikhim, inhabitants of the Darjeeling
-Terai, with a much smaller contingent of English who seemed to be
-there to keep the rest in order.
-
-The tiny train had hardly come to a stand-still before a Bhootan
-woman, a fine specimen physically and decidedly noisy in manner,
-thrust her broad Mongolian visage, with its high cheek bones and
-slanting eyes, into the little car window where sat Mrs. Cultus. If
-a demon had suddenly appeared at close quarters and offered to rub
-noses with Mrs. C. the effect could not have been more startling.
-The Mongolian, talking and gesticulating and holding a strap in
-her hand, made it plain to them that she wished to carry their
-luggage--she was a woman-porter.
-
-Mrs. Cultus, not ordinarily disconcerted by sudden apparitions,
-was this time fairly taken aback. Aside from the novelty of a
-woman-porter, her repulsive appearance was disconcerting; the
-broad cheeks smeared with red pigment and distorted with grimaces
-seemed to Mrs. Cultus at first glance as more than grotesque, even
-appalling. Drawing herself up with dignity she gave a piercing look,
-as if in defiance, only to discover that the Bhootanesque wild grin
-was intended for a polite smile, and the smile was that of a young
-girl trying to be serviceable and obliging. Mrs. Cultus burst out
-laughing, which the Bhootan girl of course mistook for a cordial
-acceptance of her offered assistance; and forthwith through the
-window she seized all such loose articles as lay within reach, piling
-them in a heap on the platform previous to depositing them in her
-strap which she placed over her forehead and let fall in a loop down
-her back. Several articles had already disappeared out of the window
-before Mrs. Cultus grasped the misunderstanding of her own laughter;
-but when she found the woman was actually doing the heavy work of a
-porter, and for her personally, Mrs. Cultus’ American ideas about
-woman’s sphere and woman’s work asserted themselves. As a member of
-the Ethical-Social Culturist’s-Reversal Association, she must become
-an impromptu missionary to enter her protest, and even set things
-right.
-
-“I can’t allow it!” she exclaimed, shaking her head. “Get me a man! a
-man! why, it’s outrageous! You’re only a young girl!” and Mrs. Cultus
-turned to look for the Professor who had already gone in search of a
-man.
-
-The Bhootan damsel grinned once more, as if astonished, then spoke
-her mind not unlike the historic waiter who “roared it.” “No
-man!--don’t want a man! I take! I take all! easy!” and proceeded
-to show how easily she could take all by lifting a huge bundle of
-travelling rugs, rezais, nearly as bulky as herself, putting them in
-the loop of her strap as foundation piece, the smaller heavy things
-on top, and gave a good grunt of satisfaction when the weight settled
-on her forehead; and then--smiled again.
-
-Mrs. Cultus, equally practical, at once changed her mind; she
-concluded it was utterly useless to waste sympathy upon a damsel so
-eminently qualified to take care of herself; especially since the
-woman-porter had her own ideas of woman’s sphere, and did not intend
-to permit any man to take away her trade. If Miss Winchester had been
-near at the time no doubt she would have been much impressed by the
-Bhootan grunt of satisfaction for the privilege of carrying luggage;
-for verily it was a notable addition to her collection.
-
-Such was Mrs. Cultus’ first interview with a specimen of womankind
-from the immense area of Central Asia, where woman’s rights were
-already granted after their fashion, and woman’s work performed with
-a vengeance. Mrs. Cultus little realized that there, in the crowd
-around her, were not only women-porters, but Thibetan mothers to whom
-polyandry was no new thing, being in fact a custom of their district.
-Women who had several husbands because they were the proper things to
-have; and felt themselves quite equal to do man’s work and a little
-more, besides. Mrs. Cultus learned this and other items, when a few
-days later she noticed a pair of rough sandal-boots standing at the
-door of a hut occupied by a polyandrist household. She was informed
-that these were equivalent to a notice left outside by one of the
-husbands that he was on the premises, therefore for the present
-the others had best keep away. Mrs. Cultus learned, too, that the
-several husbands were often brothers, hence the household was a more
-united family than if it were otherwise. Mrs. Cultus was obtaining
-a realizing sense of relationships among some of the primitives yet
-upon the earth, and she soon concluded that the more primitive the
-people the less she personally cared to visit them socially.
-
-
-
-
- XXXIV
-
- ADELE SEES THE DELECTABLE MOUNTAINS
-
- “_On the mountains is freedom! The breath of decay
- Never sullies the fresh-flowing air._”
-
- --SCHILLER.
-
-
-The next day the whole party were domiciled in a little stone
-structure one-story high, hung like an eyrie upon a cliff. The
-site overlooked great depths, and their domicile much like a tiny
-doll’s house perched upon a mantelpiece. Above and beyond were
-insurmountable heights, and only a narrow pony-path separated this
-little dwelling from the forest-clad valleys thousands of feet below.
-Within a few steps a remarkable view-point, a promontory jutting out
-in mid-air; and before them rose “The Five Points of Eternal Snow.”
-
-Kunchingunga was no “Jungfrau,” but a matron, with her children and
-grandchildren clustered around her imperial throne.
-
-Adele wandered off alone, and stood upon the promontory, looking
-forward. On a level with her eye and apparently not far off, soared
-a giant bird, poised in space, he being thousands of feet above
-the earth beneath him. Adele waved her handkerchief to attract his
-attention; the majestic areonaut merely changed the angle of his
-wings to bring his eye into better position, and refused to approach.
-A chilly current of air came over the crest of the mountain;
-Adele drew her wrap about her, and in so doing lost hold upon her
-kerchief--it floated off on the breeze. It was no sooner free from
-her hand, than the expert bird sweeping round in majestic curves upon
-the wings of the wind, picked it up in mid-air, and soon disappeared
-amid the foliage of the forest. This wild denizen of the woods, who
-could sustain himself at a perilous height in space, apparently had
-an instinctive fear of man, even of a young girl, yet no fear of
-man’s inanimate production, the handkerchief; and his penetrating eye
-had evidently grasped the situation from the distance of half a mile.
-Such was the clearness of the atmosphere, and such the acute vision
-of the bird.
-
-Adele admired his quickness of sight, his natural cleverness, and
-his wild knowledge of the world, as he sailed away with what she had
-held in her hand an instant before. “I don’t mind the loss,” said
-she, “but I do dislike extremely to have things snatched away, first
-by the wind and then by that eagle. What the Doctor calls ‘the wild
-forces’ in nature, surely do require taming.”
-
-She looked across the valley. The lower ranges rose above a belt of
-haze, the mountains above did not appear to rest upon any solid base,
-and the summits of eternal snows appeared as if in another world--a
-world where corruption had put on incorruption, the world of purity
-and whiteness. Seen through the rarefied air above, the apparent
-nearness of such stupendous masses, solid and firm yet resting upon
-an ethereal base, somewhat appalled Adele; and she drew her wrap
-closer about her as her eyes wandered from peak to peak extending in
-endless length on either side, yet all above and beyond the reach of
-man. She knew them to be the backbone of a continent, which (when
-seen from certain elevations, at the end of the rainy season when
-the southeast monsoon ceases to blow) was visible over an expanse of
-two hundred miles. She knew this range of peaks must be miles away
-as the bird flies, yet so wide was the angle between the horizon and
-those celestial summits, and so great the difference between her
-own level and that of the Eternal Pure Whiteness, that she felt
-their presence near, and herself in the presence of the sublime in
-nature. Her natural eye told her this, and gave her a new physical
-sensation which was exhilarating, uplifting and inspiring. And with
-this inspiration came a new incentive to spiritual perception, a
-tremendous stimulant to idealize. It was, indeed, what she saw--a
-Celestial Vision.
-
-She caught her breath as she gazed afar; and a sense of wonder, aye,
-of adoration, welled up from within, and a comprehending love for
-the beautiful and for the sublime. These emotions, like a powerful
-impulse heavenward, filled her whole being, and words came--breathed
-rather than spoken--towards the One who ever dwells in nature, ever
-listens, and always hears. Forgetting self, unconscious that she was
-actually praying, she yet prayed. Such is the compelling force of the
-sublime in nature.
-
-“Our Father who art!--art in Heaven!--Father in Heaven! where all is
-beautiful!
-
-“And what is this? Oh, how beautiful! just where our Father has built
-His mansions. Look! those snows and glaciers reflect His Glory! I can
-see it! That blue canopy overhead, and those forests below, are like
-the Earth-Beautiful He made for us, and there is the roseate light of
-a Holy Place. God is there! Yes! I know it--I feel it! He is here,
-too! Yes! surely. He is here! How holy is this place!”
-
-Then assured of the nearness of her Father Creator, she tried to
-grasp some idea of the meaning of His Presence to her; and unto her
-was granted a glimpse of the very highest possible conception of the
-facts visible in nature, of things as they are, for the study of both
-science and religion.
-
-She stood in the presence of the loftiest mountains upon the globe;
-and what were they? What was this earth at her feet?--the world and
-all that is therein!
-
-“The Lord is in His Holy Temple! The Lord! and His Temple! Holy! both
-Holy--God and His Temple. I can see that, too! He made it, and all
-that is therein. He said it was ‘good,’--it is--it must be Holy! It
-is His own.”
-
-The word “Temple,” and what it implied, impressed itself upon
-her mind, as if it revealed some tremendous fact in nature which
-before she had not fully realized. She gazed right and left, up the
-cross-valleys, and into the forest depths; then finally towards the
-Celestial Summits bathed in that roseate light which symbolized
-so much to her personally since her earlier experience when her
-attention had been called to it by her earthly father. What before
-she had really seen but dimly, yet strong enough to be a constant
-aid to enlightenment, now became a living reality. It was verily a
-temple; and anew she began to idealize her surroundings.
-
-“It is a Cathedral! this whole region! a mighty Cathedral! God’s own,
-built by Him here in these mountains, the Himalaya Cathedral!--the
-greatest upon Earth!” And while possessed by this vivid thought,
-there came a still small voice, as if from a sub-intelligence,
-whispering: “His service is here, His ritual.” She heard this but
-faintly; then, rejoicing in her idealization, she went straight on to
-picture the Cathedral.
-
-“Look! there is the Nave, this great valley! and there is the crypt
-beneath, that sombre forest far below! There is plenty of room in
-that Nave for the congregation--free seats everywhere. I can see
-it filled with all sorts of people. There! there is some one now,
-in that tea-garden under those tree ferns, a party of them looking
-towards the blue sky. They wish to know what the weather is going to
-be like, wish to know what God intends it to be, for they are looking
-upwards; perhaps that is their way of worshiping! who knows?
-
-“And there is the Transept! there is more than one, those valleys;
-they reach to the end of the earth. How curious that so many of these
-valleys lead directly up to the front, not so ‘crosswise’ as in other
-churches. I never saw a Cathedral so well arranged for approaching
-and hearing. Ah! there’s a Chapel in that transept! it looks more
-like a hut! some one within is burning incense--it comes out of the
-chimney! Well, we’ll call it incense, and that home is a chapel.”
-
-And while she mused, a little group of natives crossed an open field
-and entered a clump of trees surrounded by shrubbery, a thicket.
-“Some other sort of worship,” she thought. “I wonder what they are
-going to do? I’ll wait and see.”
-
-Numerous parties on ponies passed along the mountain roads, ascending
-and descending from different levels. “Why, this Cathedral has most
-extensive galleries, and how many real workers all on the move! Well,
-I rather like a gallery at times; one can sit up there and not feel
-too conspicuous, only worship.”
-
-Then she noticed that the majority on ponies were going in one
-direction--northward. “Why are they going that way, I wonder?--why
-not towards the East as so many do in Cathedrals? No, I forgot;
-the Moslems turn towards Mecca no matter in what direction they
-may be from it; but here it is different. These people seem to be
-approaching and observing their ritual in a different manner and in
-a different direction. Everything here seems to draw one’s attention
-northward,” and she mused about this for some time, then:
-
-“The pole star itself is hidden behind that mountain; we are too far
-south to see it, but I heard Father say it was in that direction.
-Yes, I remember it was very low in the heavens when I last saw
-it sparkling there. It is there now, always behind the crest of
-Kunchingunga. Even if these worshipers cannot see it, they see
-Kunchingunga, their Holy Mountain, pointing the same way--northward.
-Now, what does this mean?” and she mused again, but this time only
-for an instant.
-
-“Oh! I can see why! I understand it!” she exclaimed. “In other
-directions, stars, as well as lesser things on earth, seem ever
-moving, revolving, changing; Kunchingunga and the North Star seem
-never to change. The North Star is towards the centre, all revolve
-around that fixed point; it is marvellous what a magnificent Clock
-there is to this Cathedral--the Great Clock in the Heavens, the Clock
-of Ages, ever revolving around the permanent fixed centre. But then
-again God is the only Permanent, Unchangeable; and to Him a thousand
-years are as one day--the Clock says so. Why, of course, in His
-Cathedral one must look northward; it is like looking towards Him,
-towards something fixed, that does not change. Oh, I shall always
-think of this Cathedral with Kunchingunga, its Great Clock, and the
-hidden star,” and she quoted from Bryant’s “Hymn to the North Star”:
-
- “And thou dost see them rise,
- Star of the pole! and thou dost see them set.
- Alone in thy cold skies
- Thou keepest thy old unmoving station yet.”
-
-“Yes, I understand it; in this Cathedral the worshiper should look
-towards the north, towards the visible centre as Nature and Science
-have made it appear to us. To consult that Clock one must look
-straight ahead, towards the Only One who is from the ever-existent
-past to the everlasting future--the Ancient of Days.”
-
-This thought naturally led to her next and final impression on this
-memorable day in her spiritual life, alone with the sublime in nature.
-
-“Where is it?” she thought. “Where should I look to find it? the Holy
-of Holies in this Cathedral,” and again she turned northward.
-
-“That Celestial region!--it is very near it, yet not exactly of it.
-There! I can see the Choir, and almost hear the angels singing, but
-I cannot approach nearer--not yet. Oh! those Celestial summits!--the
-Delectable Mountains! Look! Oh, look!”
-
-Now as a matter of fact in Adele’s history, a kind Providence did
-see fit to respond to her yearnings to appreciate this marvelous
-scenery. As to all who seek the beautiful, sublime and holy in nature
-she saw what she did see, and through it she perceived the invisible;
-through things seen she was in the presence of the unseen.
-
-The sun’s rays falling upon the snow-fields and glaciers on the
-higher elevations were reflected upwards and on either side with
-intense brilliancy--prismatic colors of exquisite delicacy were
-diffused over the whole landscape; these and the various hues and
-shades bathed the whole of nature visible with a glory that could be
-seen. The human eye was satisfied, the artistic sense enraptured, and
-the holy spirit in man at rest in peace.
-
-No “dim religious light” had this Cathedral, but a Glory, sublime,
-sacred; the Creator’s own handiwork, which man’s artistic efforts may
-often suggest but can never equal.
-
-To Adele in her frame of mind, it was a veritable Shekinah.
-
-“The Holy of Holies! white and glistening! It is too bright! too
-bright for me! I cannot see--the altar,--too bright!” and she covered
-her eyes. “Weak humanity cannot look upon His Face, and live.”
-
-Not long after a voice was heard--a melodious voice, a young and
-cultivated voice, singing; one who strove to make her art holy--a
-means to spiritual ends; for it is in the spirit that is the real
-growth. It was Adele--Adele worshiping after her own fashion. She
-had prayed in her Cathedral, and now she lifted her voice in praise;
-the melody rose heavenward to mingle with the music she had heard
-spiritually--the Celestial Choir. She sang with her whole soul:
-
- “Angels ever bright and fair,
- Take, oh, take me----”
-
-None on earth heard her, so far as she knew.
-
-None, indeed, but a poor unfortunate human being clothed in rags who
-sat at the door of her hut under the brow of the hill. Being out of
-sight, and dull of hearing, and a Taoist priestess withal, this poor
-soul, sincere and true in _her_ faith, told her followers she had
-heard the Good Spirits talking in the air above her.
-
-“In a strange language,” she said, “but clear and sweet. I knew it
-was the Good Spirits--and I called: ‘Buddha! Buddha! O Sakya! take me
-from existence! O Sakya Muni!’”
-
-He who ever listens, heard them both.
-
-
-
-
- XXXV
-
- HIMALAYA CATHEDRAL BY THE SUPREME ARCHITECT
-
-
-Adele’s idealization was correct. The inquisitive explorers found
-themselves face to face with nature in one of the Creator’s own
-Temples, where the good and true and the beautiful were embodied in a
-place made for worship by the Creator. A Cathedral whose architecture
-was appropriate and soul-stirring (æsthetic) even unto sublimity; and
-beyond man’s capacity to appreciate fully. A Cathedral whose vaulting
-was the heavens above, its floor the earth beneath, and its religious
-life as profound as the depths under the earth. And as the sequel
-proved, our travelers were also to find all types of worship there,
-existing even unto this day in this Temple of the Lord; from the
-early sacrifice to the latest enlightenment--the Divine Light of the
-World.
-
-“Why so? Why all this? Upon what ground scientific, philosophical,
-moral and religious? Freedom obtained--Life in the open--the open
-life--physically, intellectually, spiritually. The Truth as each man
-saw it was able to make him free.”
-
-The sense of the beautiful, the artistic sense, first asserted itself
-in this particular group of Nineteenth Century inquisitives. They
-were accustomed to temples made with hands in which art had striven
-to express the truth; here in this scene they found it rising through
-all gradations of beauty, and realized that in nature we have the
-mother source of truth and beauty in architecture. Of course, they
-first noticed and criticised as seeing with the eyes of their own
-civilization. What did they see? Lines as studied, yet free, as
-in any masterpiece of Greece or basilica of early Christianity,
-as full of aspiration, arching heavenward, as any Gothic work of
-later day. And not only this; they soon recognized other forms,
-outlines marked in character as a Hindoo Temple or Burmese Pagoda,
-peculiar as a Chinese Tower or Japanese Torii--pure and chaste as the
-Moslem Taj Mahal. They were astounded at the many forms, originally
-obtained direct from nature or suggested by natural forms, which had
-been subsequently conventionalized by art. Evidently all sorts and
-conditions of men had at one time or another sat at the feet of the
-Supreme Architect.
-
-Then they observed more critically.
-
-The growth stood upon basal lines, founded upon the earth itself,
-plain areas; then massive foundation rocks; terraces to suit the
-location; knolls to accentuate the demands of perspective; spurs
-to act as buttresses and bind together the rising masses; hills to
-invite one to ascend higher; mountains towering towards the realm
-of the unseen. The work suggesting solidity, firmness, and all the
-essentials for majesty dominating heavenward. The elementary design
-simple in form, simple in combination, simple even as a Chaldean or
-Egyptian monumental pyramid, Tomb, Library or Portal; as straight and
-as true as a Persepolis House of Prayer; as flat and as positive, and
-yet as significant and as symbolic as any Parsee devotee of old, or
-a Mason from the days of Solomon, would have chosen to signify Basic
-Truth in Religion or Simple Life in Morality--the simplicity of the
-Gospel of Architecture.
-
-A palpable fact began to manifest itself, namely: that man never
-did learn anything worth knowing unless he came to nature to see
-and perceive, to observe how the lilies of the field were arrayed,
-and how the mountains towered heavenward to Our Father who Art, to
-Him who is Art--the Way, the Truth, the Beautiful; and this was not
-only visible to the eye, but the Cathedral was resonant--it spoke.
-There was heard the very Voice of the Creator Architect, the Mind of
-Nature; and the sound thereof echoed to the ends of the Earth. The
-great instruction had been given, learned practically, and practiced.
-
-The motifs and details, conceived for application in working out the
-design, had come direct from the original source, the Artist-Mind of
-the Almighty, whose prolific unlimited power of artistic expression
-manifested knowledge of all form and substance; and this was
-impressed upon the beholder and heard by him, an unobtrusive still
-small voice whispering from that Spirit which had conceived it. Such
-manifestations in nature were exquisite to both eye and ear; one
-did not feel disposed to be loquacious about it, but only note and
-apply what had been done by the Trinity of Usefulness, Beauty and
-Adaptability. The Voice had said, “Follow me,” and men had tried to
-do so.
-
-The style chosen was that which in time became the Parent of all
-styles subsequently born--born through man’s observance of natural
-forms, his environment, his mental endowments, and his intellectual
-appreciation; his virility to produce artistic work. The Supreme
-Architect had been unceasingly painstaking and exact; in human
-parlance, He had been sensitive, conscientious, profuse yet never
-wasteful of His virile powers; in fact, to the last degree jealous
-for what He knew to be the truth in art. Being the One who knows, He
-knew how, and would not otherwise. He would have naught unless it
-were equally good, true and beautiful, the three combined in one--a
-Trinity of Truth, like Himself, Himself in His Work.
-
-The doctrine of the Trinity pervaded this Cathedral, as ever with
-truth physical, intellectual, spiritual.
-
-To Professor Cultus and the Doctor after noting these things, it
-seemed really to imply much more; namely, as if the truth, the whole
-truth, and nothing but the truth, could only be expressed in terms of
-Three in One.
-
-“I love to think of it,” said Adele, “it’s so helpful.”
-
-Thus appeared the Himalaya Cathedral to these Nineteenth Century
-inquisitives. A place of worship--not the Lord’s barn, but his
-Temple, His Holy Dwelling Place, adequate, artistic and pure; worthy
-of humanity endowed by Heaven with the power to worship in Spirit and
-in Truth; worthy of its Master Architect.
-
-
-
-
- XXXVI
-
- PROGRESS OF THE BUILDING
-
-
-Professor Cultus and the Doctor had many talks concerning the
-progress of this Himalaya Cathedral during construction, its
-“evolution,” as they expressed it; and geological records were found
-safely deposited for those who know how to read rocks. It appeared
-that the design had been originally conceived and sketched by the
-hand of the Master, and then worked out, or developed according to
-forms suitable to all climes, from the tropical in the valleys below
-to the arctic amid glaciers and domes of eternal snow. Pupils of the
-Master had embodied His ideas; His own assistants and workmen, the
-forces of Nature; born, brought up, educated in His own industrial
-and artistic schools; where His own master mind, masterful technique,
-and masterly spirit dominated--the Trinity of Mind, Matter, and
-Spirit.
-
-There had never been a period during the work when the real progress
-had been arrested, nor had the original purpose of design ever been
-changed by alterations, extras, or further information on the subject.
-
-In the beginning He had conceived it; the work commenced; it grew; it
-continues. In itself manifesting a clear distinct purpose, namely;
-a place in which to live, learn, and worship; thereby manifesting
-the Trinity existent and operative, in action, action, action; three
-as one. Within and without its needs and decorations have ever been
-growing and progressing, as the world grows older and the worshipers
-grow wiser. The purpose pointed clearly towards what the intellect
-of man designated as “perfection;” and of what the Holy Spirit in man
-dreamed of as “The Perfect Day.”
-
-At various periods in time poor humanity standing aside like helpless
-children, had seen great commotions on the premises, apparent
-catastrophes, and seeming opposition to things as they should be.
-Humanity had actually seen the lightning “strike” and demolish; and
-there was marvelous unity in co-operation of labor when the lightning
-did strike. Nevertheless the real status of things was not thereby
-changed. Man imagined that the edifice itself would fall, and the
-world come to an end; a mass of débris to be blown away, much like
-nebulous mist or a comet’s tail is scattered and disappears in space.
-Man had seen such things with his “field-glasses;” similarly man
-presumed to know. He really knew just so much of the building and
-its eternal purpose as the present stage of progress permitted--no
-more, no less. Of many things he could be but a spectator; and when
-he manufactured his glasses for greater depths of penetration, he
-reduced his scope (field), and less and less grew the light upon his
-lens.
-
-Thus far there had been no real catastrophe; it was merely the taking
-down of scaffolding amid a cloud of dust and rubbish. The scaffolding
-removed, the Temple stood behind safe and erect; its beauty more
-apparent than ever before. A new façade had been brought to light
-for the admiration of all who cultivated their inborn capacity for
-appreciation; both worshipers and non-worshipers alike.
-
-It was during the crises of scaffold-demolishing, when there was
-much talk of what would happen when the world dissolved, that absurd
-disputes had arisen among the crowd of lookers-on. Non-worshipers, in
-their conceit, offered criticisms, although in fact they knew only
-“the little” that is vouchsafed to all mankind. Theological fanatics
-asserted themselves, saying with intensity:
-
-“You have neglected your opportunities, and now it’s too late. You’ll
-be condemned.”
-
-To which came, of course, the practical responsive application:
-
-“Be condemned!--yourself!” Hence the sobriquet, “condemned,” popular
-in application to this day as a verb of intensity.
-
-Such dogmatic assertions and petty recriminations were really absurd
-in this presence; disputes embodying mere words; since naught is
-condemned in nature where each day’s work is pronounced “good,” and
-where “there is no condemnation” to those who seek the Truth and
-follow in it; and where the Divine Voice of a man to his brother man
-has pronounced the dictum: “For this cause came I, the Truth, into
-this world, to save it.”
-
-This Himalaya Cathedral stood in a region where the rain-fall
-was appalling. It was more sudden and more terrific than occurs
-elsewhere. Torrents, apparently devastating, passed that way,
-carrying all loose impedimenta before them, gathering fresh strength
-by momentum as they rushed headlong into the depths. Humanity stood
-aghast, wiseacres felt confident that nothing could withstand the
-force of these downpours. Having observed similar phenomena on a
-smaller scale, therefore these reasoners concluded it must, must
-forebode the worst, annihilation.
-
-It was then that the voice in nature, resonant through the Cathedral,
-actually laughed them to scorn for their blindness.
-
-From the beginning nature had abhorred the idea of annihilation,
-and would never permit a vacuum where she had built so beautiful
-a Temple. Truth destroys not, but fulfils; it is not destructive,
-but constructive. Annihilation, a vacuum, is an abstract conception
-without a concrete embodiment even in physics; and less still where
-the Mind of Nature and the Spirit that is Holy dominate.
-
-The phenomena of apparent devastation in this Cathedral were but
-changes or transmutations of the forces employed by the Great Master
-Builder. A change from lightning to rain was simply a change of
-workmen, from those of one trade to those of another, neither more
-nor less; only the removal of that which had done its work, and
-now would interfere with the progress of the building, the Temple,
-its greater usefulness and its greater beauty. The torrents which
-seemed to devastate were in fact cleansing, purging, sweeping
-henceforth the accumulation within and around which had served
-its purpose, and in that form was no longer needed. Acting under
-natural laws, as recognized in geology, biology, natural history
-and botany, the Divine Administration had cleaned and purified that
-region. Cleanliness being a feature of godliness, even the odor
-of the unkempt, the unwashed, and the unclean, must be scrubbed
-out--the Cathedral to remain holy must be kept fresh, clean and pure;
-befitting those who would be pure, and thus able to pray and to
-praise.
-
-And again was the Voice Divine of a man to his brother man heard
-resonant through the Cathedral arches:
-
-“I came not to destroy, but to fulfil. Wash and be clean! Cleanse
-your hearts, and not your garments only.”
-
-
-
-
- XXXVII
-
- PRIMATE OF THE CATHEDRAL--EX CATHEDRA
-
-
-It was during one of these cleansing periods, in years gone by, when
-the terrific rain-fall scoured out the useless and hideous from this
-Himalaya Cathedral, that a company of poor native Lepchas stood upon
-the hill-side watching. Comparatively safe in their own position they
-witnessed and heard the forces of nature at work.
-
-Among them was one whom they accounted as a wise man, a Seer, who saw
-more in nature than most people can see; a prophet who had foresight
-founded on close observation of facts. Some of his neighbors would
-have designated him a Lama, others would have called him a Buddha,
-and some, more distant still, would have said a Medicine Man. Yet,
-all listened to his words of wisdom, repeating them, until they
-became in time the folk-lore of the land.
-
-This Seer, who was so clear-sighted, stood for much, both
-historically and ecclesiastically; also in Wisdom Literature.
-
-He, and no one else, was the venerable and venerated Primate of
-this Cathedral where a thousand years are as one day and one day as
-a thousand years. As Primate-Leader he received many visitations
-from distinguished ecclesiastics, men with other titles; notably a
-primitive nature-worshiper named Abel, whose parents, according to
-one form of record, were quasi-divinities in the Garden of Eden;
-and another named Tenno, himself also, according to another form of
-record, a semi-divinity, his mother a Goddess--father of a dynasty
-ruling upon earth to this day, the Mikado. There were also Holy
-Rishis of the Vedic Period with their descendants, Brahmins, Chief
-Yogis; also Buddhas, Grand Lamas, and Superior Men; Priests after
-the order of many things; Priests from Adab, “the oldest city in the
-world,” founded in the misty years of the fifth millennium B. C.;
-Priests of Bel at Nippur, 3800 B. C.; Priests of the Sun God from
-Sippar (Biblical Sepharain), 3750 B. C.; Priests from Lagash, the
-Sumerian Priest (King Gudea) who reigned 2800 B. C., fully 500 years
-before the days of Abraham; Priests from Assyria, 860 B. C.; Priests
-of the North and of the South, of the Highlands and of the Lowlands,
-and of the “Unknown,” after the order of Melchisedek. Also Priests
-of Isis, from Egypt; and the Great Priest of Ormuzd, Zoroaster,
-through whom the brightest light as to conscience over intellect
-enlightened the world for one thousand years--representing millions
-upon millions of worshipers born from the womb of ancient time. Also
-Wise Men of the East, Apostles, Elders, Deacons, Metropolitans, Popes
-and Archbishops; Archdeacons, Priests, and Fathers; Rectors, Pastors
-Emeritus, Ministers of the Word of God, Preachers of the Gospel of
-Salvation; and Evangelists who brought both the Word and the Bread of
-Life; of latter day experience; all filling offices acknowledged to
-be sacred, and some using words which sounded almost profane.
-
-While he, the Himalaya Seer, was often clothed in rags, and fed upon
-the flesh of wild beasts, and upon edible locusts and excellent
-wild honey, and his loud ringing voice was as one crying in the
-wilderness, the others often officiated in robes of state. While he
-carried a staff in his hand, and had little change of raiment, they
-often bore relics they considered sacred, rings through their noses,
-and even iron bars thrust through their cheeks, and others bore a
-gilded shepherd’s crook so weighty in importance that it proved an
-incumbrance even unto themselves. While he, in hot weather, wore but
-a cloth about his loins, and a band across his forehead to absorb the
-sweat of his brow, bowing his head in reverence and fear when he saw
-the manifestations of Energy in the Supreme Force in nature; another
-manifested the life of asceticism and callousness to both heat and
-cold; another brought lotus leaves and meditated, trying to think
-of nothing at all--of absorption into nature; another brought the
-Sacred Fire and preached the higher light which did enlighten for a
-millennium of years: “O Ormuzd, Fountain of Light! thy Light is in
-all that shines;” another brought his artistic image and preached
-justification by faith in Ameda. Another brought his crude and
-immoral images, yet preached justification by faith in Krishna, and
-the enfranchisement of women; and another, a fearless man, a married
-priest as God had made them so from the beginning, who preached
-justification by faith in Him who had said, “I am the Light of the
-World; believest thou this? follow Me.”
-
-And when he, the Seer, cried with a loud voice: “Repent! I say unto
-thee, Repent!” the others also preached as they had ability; using
-diverse institutions and rituals according to the spiritual needs
-of the times and places. Thus it was these who embodied the diverse
-manifestations of the Spirit that is Holy; their experience in
-history proving that intellectual effort only stimulates the craving
-of the soul, whereas religious consciousness is never satisfied
-except by spiritual growth.
-
-Thus, there were many, very many, sincere preachers who appeared and
-labored conscientiously, each after his own belief, and officiated
-in this Cathedral, Nature’s own Temple; some proselyting, others
-not--only trusting to natural growth. And while all “took up
-collections,” yet, strange to say, one only possessed the ancient
-veritable title of Seer, the one in primitive costume, with primitive
-sincerity; the Venerable Primate who lived in the open “without money
-and no scrip,” and thus preserved his loud sonorous voice in nature;
-he who lived very close to his Creator-God, the Creator and Father
-of all.
-
-What did this Seer see?
-
-Standing in the presence of the storm, none realized his own
-helplessness more devoutly than this poor Himalaya Seer himself,
-following in the footsteps of his own primitive ancestry since the
-beginning of man’s appearance as a religious animal upon earth; hence
-known, in consequence, as a nature-worshiper. Calling his group of
-followers about him he spake to them as if in a trance, as if he
-saw what they could not see: the Evil Spirits, or spirits for evil,
-flying hither and thither over the land. While in this trance-like
-condition of religious rapture, he spoke of the wind, the rain, and
-the lightning as antagonistic personalities. He gesticulated, as
-if he saw them as such, wild and irresistible, in indiscriminate
-conflict with things as they are. Being himself human he could not
-conceive personality as otherwise than subject to human influences;
-therefore he called upon his fellow-worshipers to send up some sweet
-odor, to propitiate, to offer a sacrifice, to attract attention to
-something good and not evil--aye, to crowd out the evil by the good.
-
-The people obeyed him. Then and there arose the good influence, and
-lo! a marvelous change took place in the heart-life of each primitive
-worshiper. The evil spirits in the storm ceased their warfare and
-dispersed--the tempest ceased, nature smiled, each heart was filled
-with peace. “Peace, be still! I say unto thee, peace, be still! My
-peace I give unto thee.”
-
-When in due course of nature the heavens had again cleared, the Seer
-spake anew; but not now from a trance. He had no trances after it
-cleared off, and he stood in the bright sunlight of nature. No! He
-was as other men--no more, no less--in all ages. What he now saw was
-also different, and the tenor of his voice had changed.
-
-He announced a message to be delivered.
-
-His followers fell upon their faces before him.
-
-He kept them waiting; in fact, being no longer in physical fear
-himself he began to lack his primitive simplicity. The sight of
-others bowing with their faces to the earth before _him_ was not
-unpleasant. Weak human nature asserted itself; he posed, after his
-fashion. He kept the people waiting; and he flattered himself that
-this was due to his office as Seer, as if the office made the man,
-and not man the office.
-
-The people waited; they had long since learned to wait, and to wait
-upon others. The Seer then raised his hands heavenward and spake;
-a message so ancient that its form now sounds archaic, from before
-Abraham, from Job, from primitive man; a poet of the Vedas of the
-South, or a historian of the Northern Sagas, might have said it each
-after his own fashion; it is recorded in the Holy Bible, the truth
-from the beginning.
-
-
- THE MESSAGE OF THE SEER.
-
- “The God of thy fathers hath sent me.”
-
- The people respected the speaker--messenger--apostle--the one sent.
-
- “I know that my Bondsman, my Redeemer, liveth.”
-
- The people were glad there was some one to call upon in time of
- trouble.
-
- “Thou shalt not be afraid of destruction when it cometh, at
- destruction and famine thou shalt laugh. The Almighty shall deliver
- thee in six troubles; yea! in seven there shall no evil touch thee;
- therefore despise not thou the chastening of the Almighty. Thou
- shalt be hid from the scourge, even the scourge of the tongue; it
- shall not come nigh thee. I know that my Redeemer-Bondsman liveth!
- and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth.”
-
-Such was the message, god-like, short and to the point; natural,
-personal, spiritual; the Trinity in Speech.
-
-The first message of Truth Immortal signaled from the Fortress of the
-Primitive in nature; signaled from the “hills whence cometh our Help.”
-
-This thrilling message was heard around the world, in all religions
-in some mysterious form or degree. A divine utterance, original, it
-has continued to resound through all the ages. It was the beginning
-of Hope, the assurance of Help, from “Our Father who art”--art “ever
-present.”
-
-The primitive populace wondered at the wisdom of their Seer; his
-strange words which spoke of the God of their fathers, as if He
-would help them and would save them from destruction. They then, at
-first, thought little of that historical significance of the message
-which referred to His coming to the earth at a “latter day,” perhaps
-after they themselves had departed; they were interested only in the
-present. They wanted Him now; why would He not come at once?
-
-The Seer satisfied them, explaining by application of the message
-sent to them each individually. He did it in his own way. The Seer
-had seen according to his capacity then and there; he continued to
-preach as he had ability.
-
-“The Good Spirit is here. I heard Him above the wind and storm. I saw
-Him when He took me to the seventh-heaven where I did see more than
-I do now. But He is here!--the thunderings and lightnings were the
-noise of His horn (trumpet), and the light of His Countenance?--the
-dust you saw was the mountain smoking under Him.”
-
-The people trembled with dread of what their Seer had seen.
-
-“I saw the Evil Spirits driven before Him, as the torrent drives the
-wild beasts from the forest; and when He made a scourge of small
-cords He drove them from his Temple as sheep and oxen are driven.
-Some had disguised themselves as those who sold doves--they fled at
-His approach. Deceivers offered Him money, to tempt--He overthrew
-their tables, tore their shams (hypocrisy) to shreds, and banished
-them from His sight. And they cried: Peace! peace! and there was no
-peace.”
-
-The populace thought of demons let loose, and of a “hell upon earth.”
-The Seer instantly thrust home his vivid thoughts:
-
-“You, yourselves, saw how He cleared the sky! You, yourselves, know
-how His rains and storms cleaned out the dirt and sickness. You saw
-it! You saw it yourselves! You sent up the sweet odor! You made the
-sacrifice! See how you were answered, your prayers answered.”
-
-And a great shout went up: “We did! We saw it! a miracle! when the
-sun shone again.”
-
-And then the Seer closed with a statement so terrible, that none in
-reason, among them, could doubt the truth depicted:
-
-“These are they--these evil ones--who fell into deserted graves;
-graves that men walk over them and are not aware of them.”
-
-The hearers shivered with abhorrence--the direful thought! deserted
-graves! terrible consequence of disrespect to ancestors, frightful
-neglect of ancestral veneration, abhorrent disrespect to that source
-from which they had received their being, as the Great Good Spirit
-had granted them life.
-
-Thus ended the Seer’s message, and his own application of it. Such
-was the imagery he used, such the emotion he endeavored to portray
-and to excite. And yet, with all his flights, from the Divine
-Message to the human application, this Primitive Primate of Nature’s
-Cathedral had been profound. He had touched upon the three great
-facts in things as they are, and reasonably shall be:
-
-“Dependence, Right Living, Eternal Security.”
-
-Or, to employ another category of later date in Asia:
-
-“Thought, Being, Joy.” (Hindoo formula for Brahm.)
-
-Or another, philosophic:
-
-“Science, Morality, Religion.”
-
-Or as Christianity teaches:
-
-“Faith, Hope, Love.”
-
-And when seen as “The Light of the World”:
-
- “The Almighty, the Saviour, the Holy Spirit of Truth, Immanuel.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- “The Soul of Man is the candle of the Lord.”
-
- --PHILLIPS BROOKS.
-
-
-
-
- XXXVIII
-
- INTERMEZZO--THE VOICE IN NATURE
-
- Cathedral Orchestra and Organ.
- Chorus, with Divine Solos.
-
- O Man! Blessed is thine inquisitiveness--to learn and to know:
- Cursed is thine inquisition of others.
- O Man! Blessed is thy longing--to look upwards and beyond:
- Cursed is thy willingness to sink downwards;
- Where vice brings vileness in its train.
- O Man! Blessed is thine altruism--to help others:
- Cursed is thy selfishness, to bury thy talent of help.
-
- Blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness--for
- they shall be filled.
- Blessed are they who seek the Truth--for they shall know.
- Blessed are they who follow the Way--for they shall attain.
- Seek and ye shall find. Knock!--it shall be opened.
- I have the words--
- The Words of Eternal Life.
-
- Arise! O Soul! I say to thee, Come forth!
- The Truth hath made thee free.
- Arise! O Soul! and stretch thy wings;
- Thy better portion seek.
- Arise! and soar! towards greater things,
- Enlightenment--and Peace.
- Peace and Rest--Rest in Peace.
- I am the Resurrection--and the Life.
-
-
-This triple comprehensive chorus from nature, with its Divine Solos,
-was heard by both Professor Cultus and the Doctor with profound
-feeling and a deep sense of responsibility. They had never heard an
-inner voice (solo) blending with sounds in nature (chorus) quite like
-this. And a veritable intermezzo in their experience, a recitative
-of the wonderful harmonious truths in nature accompanying the pure
-melody of Christ’s words; and corroborated by others who knew Him,
-personally. All so true when sung in concert of harmony and rhythm;
-the sacred music of this sphere.
-
-It seemed as if the Voices sang of truth ever present, ever active,
-with men at work or a man at rest. All who entered the Door of Truth
-in experience had the Words of Eternal Life spoken unto them; and the
-words implied action, greater light, intelligence, and peace; rest
-from trouble, in an immortal active existence--a life immortal:
-
-“Activity for all our powers, and power for all our activities.”[1]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Such was the deep impression made in the Himalaya Cathedral upon the
-elder members of the party. Being elderly they saw things that way.
-How about the younger members? Youth does not see things in nature as
-elders do; youth has much to learn yet; and old heads rarely grow on
-young shoulders.
-
-Adele had insisted upon going to a greater height up the mountains.
-She longed to reach some high summit. She wished to lose nothing of
-the lofty that could be reached; and neither Paul nor the Doctor
-failed to second her motion.
-
-
-
-
- XXXIX
-
- ON A PINNACLE IN NATURE
-
-
-From the time that this region of the Himalayas first impressed
-itself as a Cathedral upon the mind of Adele, an idealist, she
-invariably spoke of the various natural beauties of the locality as
-parts of the Grand Edifice.
-
-“This Cathedral has magnificent proportions. I must explore it, and
-go all over it, from crypt to dome, visit the baptistry, and, as the
-Doctor says, ‘mount upon a pinnacle;’” then musingly: “I should like
-to attend a service.”
-
-“All right,” said Doctor Wise, the liberal, “we can have a service of
-some sort, even if we are obliged to read prayers ourselves.”
-
-“It would be better to have the natives officiate--one of the local
-bishops,” said Adele.
-
-“He would not have Apostolic succession,” said Paul, of Non-conformist
-proclivities.
-
-“Apostolic, nevertheless,” remarked Professor Cultus, who habitually
-looked at things from a literary point of view. “He would consider
-himself sent by some one--that makes him apostolic. He would
-have been ‘called’ to preach, or to write, or to do something,
-fundamentally apostolic, if he is a true man.”
-
-“I should like to see a primitive cassock or stole,” said Miss
-Winchester, who was inclined to ritualism, “and a real old-time monk
-with his beads and a rope around his waist.”
-
-“You shall,” said the Doctor, “and we will investigate to see whether
-the clergy face towards the East.”
-
-“Not here,” said Adele promptly; “they would not if they knew.”
-
-“Why not?” exclaimed Miss Winchester.
-
-“Because they must look up.”
-
-“Oh, of course.”
-
-“Northward, I mean--up north.”
-
-“What has that got to do with it?”
-
-“It’s towards the centre of things--the pole star in the heavens.”
-
-“Dear me!” said Miss Winchester, “you’re so ‘broad’, you’ll flatten
-out, become thin. I don’t like my bread buttered too thin; but tell
-me, Adele, why here, in this place?”
-
-“This Cathedral is so constructed.”
-
-Miss Winchester said she had not before observed it in that light.
-
-“Which way shall we start?” inquired Paul.
-
-“For a good view, down the nave,” said Adele. “Let’s ask a verger to
-show us around.”
-
-The verger presented himself in the person of a Bhootan peasant
-astride of a Manchu pony, and leading others saddled for members of
-the party.
-
-“I’m not accustomed to attending church on horseback,” remarked Miss
-Winchester. “But I rather like the idea.”
-
-“Our ancestors did; often two on the same pony,” laughed Paul.
-“That’s why I like it; heredity, I suppose.”
-
-“It strikes me it was a case of go-as-you-please with our primitive
-ancestors,” said the Doctor, jovial. “That’s why we all like it.”
-
-“If you mean liberty in worship,” whispered Adele, “that’s why it
-suits me.”
-
-“That’s about it,” thought the Doctor.
-
-This was as they ascended Mt. Senshal towards Tiger Head. The valley
-below was filled with cloud-billows which the cool morning air still
-kept intact, the atmosphere above more clear and transparent. As they
-and the sun rose higher and higher the cloud-billows became vapor,
-and the mist twirled amid the foliage of the forest, or was dissolved
-and disappeared in the general atmosphere.
-
-The Bhootan verger took them to a lofty crest from which they could
-look down the vista of the valley, and before them the nave of the
-Cathedral. Verdant hills lifted their heads on either side, making
-a sky-line as lofty as many in the Alps; yet here they were merely
-spurs of the mighty range beyond.
-
-A pause. Adele stood gazing through the Nave; and there was the
-congregation, a world-full, at her feet.
-
-Some one suggested to Paul that he ask her to sing. The request
-seemed injudicious just then and there, but some people have no sixth
-sense. Paul drew up his pony near hers while she was still absorbed
-in the prospect. It certainly was inopportune, but he ventured:
-
-“If my voice would carry, I should try to sing. How do you feel about
-it, Adele?”
-
-She shook her head.
-
-“No? you don’t feel like singing! That’s not like you!”
-
-“I like it too much, that’s why.”
-
-“Oh, is that it?”
-
-“Not here--I could not.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“Perhaps--perhaps in the choir, when they have service.”
-
-Evidently she had her own ideas about sentiments appropriate in
-this Cathedral. There was a place and time for all things. This was
-not the time nor place to make herself prominent, not even with the
-divine art; rather the time for meditation upon the infinite grandeur
-of the scene.
-
-And the verger took them to other points of view, even as far as
-Tongloo (altitude 10,000 feet), and Sunkukphoo (altitude 12,000
-feet), consuming several days for these journeys. Over hill and dale
-they went, from the Forest Bungalow mounting to Goom Rock; passing
-by the pools (porkri) on to the Manay Bhunjun (temple); up zigzags to
-a way-station hut. They passed through bamboo groves, and were off
-and on their ponies as the route became too steep for riding. The
-view at Tongloo was comprehensive and superb. Then they continued on
-by descending, before surmounting another range; past waterfalls,
-towards the base of Pionothumna Hills (S. E.); to rise again rapidly
-by endless zigzags, seventeen at one time alone, towards the Kala
-Porkri, a loftier point than they had yet reached; then more zigzags,
-much puffing and blowing, through pines; then across the country, the
-open upon a high level; and finally up and up, terrific pull, higher
-and higher, by what Adele called the Himalaya Ladder, as extended as
-Jacob’s, twenty-five zigzags in succession, a steep climb and hard
-work, requiring an extra pair of wings, and double-bellows lungs--to
-the summit at Sunkukphoo.
-
-“Out on the roof!” exclaimed Miss Winchester.
-
-“Among the flying buttresses,” thought the Professor.
-
-“On a pinnacle of the Temple!” exclaimed the Doctor.
-
-“All the world beneath us,” said Paul in admiration.
-
-“All but those Delectable Mountains,” thought Adele, glancing at
-once towards the snowy peaks which still towered above them at an
-elevation of some twenty-nine thousand feet.
-
-They stood in the presence of mountains five and a half miles high,
-with comparatively little intervening; in the presence of some of
-the highest summits upon the globe, and themselves literally on a
-pinnacle.[2]
-
-The sublimity of the Himalayas, now enhanced by greater proximity of
-the beholder, presented a more pictorial effect than heretofore: the
-grouping of the Trio of Mountains a composition from the Artistic
-Mind of Nature; an inspiration full of aspiration, for the earth
-itself seemed inspired by a desire to ascend. Such was the first
-impression.
-
-Attention was at once focused upon the Three Eternal Peaks, rather
-than the extended Snowy Range which on either side disappeared in the
-dim distance; and the forms and arrangement of the landscape seemed
-almost ideal. Imagination might have conjured up such a tableau, but
-its realization and potency in spiritual influences would hardly have
-been expected as reasonable--the constant ascension of jagged glacial
-ever-pointing summits (material substance) towards the Celestial
-unseen realm of azure blue. Yet, there it was--an actuality--fixing
-itself in the mind’s eye and on the physical retina, to be remembered
-ever afterwards.
-
-In the centre rose the Majesty of the Mountains, the Majestic Father
-Peak, clad in Nature’s robes of State Existence; simple in outline,
-exquisite in texture, the dignified sweep of lines and folds,
-draperies and half-hidden illusive forms seemingly mysterious which
-characterized the vestments of Nature’s Royal Presence--robes of
-state flowing from the heavens above to the earth beneath.
-
-Through the crystal atmosphere one could distinguish Celestial
-Valleys, and ravines set amid rugged crags and mountain “needles” of
-stone attenuated to an extent greater than any Cathedral spire ever
-constructed by man: and in and about the deeper recesses were local
-mists and hazy atmosphere, as if to hinder or prevent too inquisitive
-curiosity as to the hidden depths within. Curious and admirable
-indeed was this seemingly mysterious element in Nature; yet, verily
-not so, not mysterious, but only secrets yet to be explored and
-divulged by scientific research.
-
-Although the tourists had thus ascended heavenward somewhat
-differently from Jacob’s angels with wings, rather upon winged
-ponies following the legendary hero upon his white horse; yet when
-they arrived, the after-effects were quite according to ordinary
-experience.
-
-Miss Winchester was the first to illustrate her human nature under
-such conditions. The altitude affected her peculiarly, not as it did
-the others.
-
-“No wonder,” said she, “that some people are tempted to jump off when
-they find themselves on high places!--the exhilaration is intense.
-There is a fascination in the depth, it draws one; it makes me feel
-as if I could sail off in space, like the birds.”
-
-“Be careful,” thought the Doctor, moving near her to steady her
-nerves, if necessary.
-
-“It is as if I should spread my arms--and leap!” cried she. “I could
-sail on the air like the eagle; there is no thought of danger.”
-
-“No danger! no danger!” instantly shouted the Bhootan pony driver,
-noticing her actions which spoke quite as loud as her words. “No
-danger! my horses are sure-footed. No danger with me! The Good
-Spirits take care of all I bring, and will not let them dash their
-foot against the stones;” and he continued to praise his sure-footed
-ponies as able to carry anyone with safety. Miss Winchester concluded
-to dismount, nevertheless, and the Doctor assisted her.
-
-Adele began to feel nervous; the atmosphere being rarefied, and she
-more sensitive than the others, it told upon her physically, and at
-the same time affected her spiritually. She was glad that Paul kept
-his pony next hers.
-
-“What is it? are you tired?” asked Paul, noting her pallor.
-
-“No! it’s so really high; we’re so high I don’t feel easy--it’s not
-natural; it takes my breath away.”
-
-“Oh, then you feel the effect of the thin air; open your mouth wide
-and get the air on both sides of your ear-drums. The pressure will
-then be even; you’ll feel better.” Adele did so and felt more at ease.
-
-“How resourceful you are, Paul--so practical; that pressure was
-becoming too much for me--I felt faint.” Then after looking around
-for some time and observing other things, she remarked with
-considerable energy, yet serious:
-
-“These pinnacle views are too much!”
-
-“What is it now?” asked Paul.
-
-“Why--look before you--those are mountains beneath us, yet they look
-flat.”
-
-“Yes, they do.”
-
-“They are neither picturesque nor artistic, when you look down upon
-them.”
-
-“Then don’t look at them, my dear! Look at me.”
-
-Adele smiled, but continued in her mood.
-
-“Paul! from above, those mountains are not true to nature, they are
-not mountains at all.”
-
-“From your point of view, no.”
-
-“From here, the world is all out of drawing, it does not give you a
-true idea of itself.”
-
-“It certainly doesn’t look very round,” remarked Paul; “it’s rather
-concave, with the horizon as high up as we are.”
-
-“No, the idea is not true,” continued Adele; “seen from here, one
-might think our journey had been over a flat country--easy to walk
-over--but you know it wasn’t.”
-
-Paul laughed. “No, it wasn’t, my saddle tells me so--it was a hard
-road to travel. But the view! that’s all right; Adele, it is the
-grandest we have seen. I never expect to see anything finer.”
-
-“It’s too grand for me--it overwhelms.”
-
-“How, Adele?”
-
-“I’m deceived, in so many ways; deceived as to distance and heights,
-and I can’t tell what I’m looking at. There now--over there, is a
-large bare place, I suppose, but it looks like a small field; and
-just the reverse, there is a clump of foliage, it may be a jungle
-with tigers, although from here it looks so harmless.”
-
-“Oh, but you must use your common sense and gumption, and not be
-misled by experiences.”
-
-“Indeed! Well, what do you call that?”
-
-“Where?”
-
-“That thing over there--what is it?” pointing with her whip.
-
-Paul looked. Far away an irregular cloud-like something stood out
-clearly as if raised above the surface of the earth; it gleamed or
-glistened faintly in the distance, but being irregular in form,
-light in color, and doubtless lifted up because it appeared so, Paul
-pronounced it to be a cloud drifting between the lower hills.
-
-“No, Mr. Common Sense with gumption, it is a lake--the pony man just
-told me so; the reflection makes it stand up above the forest. I
-don’t think much of common sense that mistakes a mud-puddle for a
-cloud, do you?”
-
-“Then we won’t photograph it, for cloud effects,” said Paul, feeling
-less sure of himself.
-
-“Paul, these high places give a sort of false perspective. I don’t
-know how to describe it, but it takes too much common sense to get
-correct impressions. I don’t like to be deceived, especially about
-things so intensely interesting; or when I’m doing my best to see,
-and I don’t see the real thing in return.”
-
-“Well, keep your head level; if I had been on the lower level I
-wouldn’t have been mistaken about that lake.”
-
-“That’s just it,” said Adele. “No ifs are allowed on pinnacles,” and
-on the instant her pony gave a lurch which threatened to unseat her.
-She pulled him up sharply, and in so doing was thrown forward, into
-a most uncomfortable position, on the pommel of her saddle. Bracing
-up she tugged at the reins, drawing them tighter than was necessary,
-which only made the animal more restive. Paul patted the beast on the
-neck, and held him until the guide approached.
-
-The Bhootanese came up, swearing outrageously in his native lingo;
-declaring that the very devil was in the beast. He had bragged about
-his sure-footed ponies, but had not mentioned that they, too, when
-in unaccustomed places and particularly on elevations where the
-air was thin, were apt to become restless, and were then given to
-shyings and backings and misbehaviors quite foreign to them when
-on a lower level. The pony was anxious to get down and return
-home; the beast knew what was best for him. His Bhootanese master,
-enraged at the animal for behaving so, swore until the air was full
-of Himalaya imps, Bhootanese blue-devils, Nepaulese demons, and a
-varied assortment of ejaculatory grunts, both human and equine, all
-summoned for the occasion. Even in Occidental parlance it might be
-said that the Devil and his imps had been summoned to meet there on
-the pinnacle.
-
-Fortunately this assortment of demon-devils were of native
-production; therefore not recognizable by the rest of the party;
-although not unknown to the ponies, who soon quieted down.
-
-Miss Winchester, completely surrounded by the ejaculations, of course
-secured a choice assortment for literary purposes; she and the demons
-seemed to have it all their own way for the time being.
-
-Adele was so preoccupied with keeping her seat in the saddle that
-she was conscious of neither imps nor sounds, but after peace was
-restored she turned to Paul:
-
-“That man swore, didn’t he?”
-
-“Yes, like a trooper.”
-
-“Well, tell him the Bad Spirit will catch him if he does that sort of
-thing.”
-
-“Then, perhaps, he’ll set the Old Boy on us.”
-
-“I would like to see what the Bhootanese Old Boy is like, if he
-doesn’t scare my pony.”
-
-“What would you do if you’d see him?”
-
-“Tell him to keep his eye on his servant here--this mule! But we’ll
-have no more trouble now, this pony only needs watching.”
-
-“You held on first-rate.”
-
-“Yes, but I didn’t come up here to watch a mule; I came for something
-better.”
-
-“Let me rub his nose,” said Paul, leaning over, making friends with
-the pony.
-
-Adele, who was indeed rather shaken up and agitated by the incident,
-continued to feel nervous. She finally spoke:
-
-“Would you like to know, Paul, how this really makes me feel--this
-being so high up in the world?”
-
-“Yes; I’d like to know how being elevated above the level of ordinary
-experience affects you.”
-
-“Well! sitting on a pinnacle, as the Doctor calls it, is a fraud.”
-
-“You really think so!”
-
-“Yes, it is deluding; it demands more than I can manage; it takes
-entirely too much time trying to hold on.”
-
-“What do you propose to do about it?”
-
-“Why, get down--to our own level--soon as possible.”
-
-There had come into their experience one phase of the great Asiatic
-lesson to humanity, namely; to be content in the position, humble or
-exalted, to which they had been born. The things seen had actually
-embodied things unseen.
-
-
-
-
- XL
-
- A GLIMPSE OF TAOISM
-
-
-After the exhilarating ascent and sudden descent from Sunkukphoo,
-Adele expressed a desire to see the valleys. “We’ve been on the roof
-garden, amid the flying buttresses; let us visit the cloisters, and
-see the crypt.”
-
-The Bhootan verger led the way along the pony-path in front of
-their Peek-o’-Tip-Bungalow, to the left--the descent was rapid. The
-mountains closed in upon them. Rhododendrons as lofty as oaks shaded
-them from the outer world. A strikingly beautiful region of another
-type, where blossoms fringed the trees against the azure blue;
-and what was still more beautiful, there were bouquets of scarlet
-appearing against the snow-fields and glaciers.
-
-“What striking contrasts!” exclaimed Paul, “yet the effect is not
-overdone; it’s quite natural.”
-
-“Nothing seems overdone in this Cathedral,” said Adele, not dreaming
-what she was about to encounter. Miss Winchester helped her out. “I
-must make a sketch of these wonderful contrasts; it will suggest a
-superb color-scheme for an embroidered altar cloth. I wish I knew one
-of the monks or ecclesiastics in charge here; we could ask him to
-show us the vestments in the Sacristy.”
-
-Miss Winchester’s wish for a monk was soon gratified. A turn in
-the road brought them face to face with a Taoist Temple; a row of
-so-called young monks sat upon the ground before the door. The
-Lamas wore masks, as well as parti-colored garments, and they
-carried long, slender bell trumpets, which they kindly tooted to
-the accompaniment of cracked drums. The colors of their vestments
-and costume in general were æsthetic as a patchwork quilt from the
-revolutionary period of Sally Ross--only far more ancient.
-
-Mrs. Cultus and Miss Winchester, both Colonial Dames, were at once
-sentimentally affected by the color schemes and the designs of these
-very old historical vestments. It was impossible to be “moved” by
-their artistic excellence, so their historical value became at once
-more important to notice. As to the masks, they were supposed to
-represent demons, being in design diabolical, no doubt very true to
-the life; and the trumpets shrill.
-
-Adele and the Doctor had little appreciation for the crude colors, or
-the terrific din. The latter, finding himself an unwilling listener
-to a “Rhapsodie Lamanesque” on drums, searched for something to stuff
-in his ears to soften the sound; he would have been willing to put
-his fist in the bell of the leading trumpet, but such things were
-inopportune. The effect was startling in the extreme; so very abrupt
-after the exquisite tone-color contrasts they had just been admiring.
-In fact, even their Manchu ponies halted, and wagged their ears to
-shake off the sound. Adele’s animal turned one ear backward and the
-other forward in astonishment.
-
-Adele gave a new twist to the old line: “Where every prospect pleases
-and only the music is vile.”
-
-Miss Winchester’s churchly expectations received a severe shock, for
-in this Cathedral monks were grotesque; but still they were monks,
-although the ideal peaceful life of a monk did not appear.
-
-Curiosity got the better of Paul; he was off his pony and confabbing
-with the Lamas before the others had recovered from their amazement.
-A Lama took off his mask to allow his own voice to be heard more
-distinctly. He was a young fellow and rather good-looking, although
-shaven with a tonsure; and quite as healthy in appearance as many a
-monk who advocated asceticism. In fact, he seemed to be enjoying the
-racket and also the masquerade. They were all of them, the Lamas, not
-unlike a party of children playing at “theatre” in a nursery.
-
-“Come,” said Paul, “we are invited to enter--it is one of your
-chapels, Adele.”
-
-The Taoist Temple was an unpretentious, one-storied structure, of
-small dimensions, with projecting eaves. To the heathen inquisitives
-who accepted this invitation, it proved to be a curio shop without
-and within. Under the eaves were set vertically, into the front and
-side walls, cylinders about two feet high and a foot in diameter
-each, a double row, each cylinder held in position by a vertical
-spindle through the middle. The double rows extended around these
-three sides of the building.
-
-The Chief Lama entered by the central door, the foreign heathen
-following him. Passing around the interior, he gave each cylinder
-a smart spank with the flat of his hand, causing it to revolve
-rapidly on its vertical spindle. In a moment all were in motion, and
-the whole house buzzing. The cylinders were reeling off prayers by
-machinery at a rapid rate; and the Lama, holding his simple rosary
-made of beans, stood ready to accelerate any particular cylinder
-which lagged behind.
-
-There could be no doubt as to the exact intention, the sincerity
-and consequent efficacy of such prayers, simply because the proper
-wording for a prayer was printed upon a slip of paper carefully
-wrapped around the spindle inside the cylinder. Even if one’s
-thoughts did wander, the printed matter did not--the machine did
-the rest. All the worshipers had to do was to obey orders to attend
-service, and whirl the machine; the Lamas would take care of these
-wheels both inside and out, and would also give any stranger within
-their gates a little wheel for hand use, to take home with him, if he
-chose to pay for it.
-
-Mrs. Cultus, who was still far from strong, no sooner entered the
-Temple than she found herself surrounded by buzzing wheels on three
-sides of the room; the fourth side occupied by what she called a
-“cabinet of curios.” So many rotary prayers, whirling simultaneously,
-were very confusing, especially as some of the wheels prayed in one
-direction and some others in just the opposite. Mrs. Cultus soon
-grasped the situation, however.
-
-“I must have one. They are the most convenient things I ever saw. I
-did not know these Taoists had such Yankee notions in this line.”
-
-An innocent (_sic_) Lama promptly offered to sell her a small wheel,
-which, upon her return, she discovered had been especially adapted
-to heathen requirements. The thoughtful Lama had removed some of
-his own prayers and had substituted items for which he knew the
-Christians were constantly praying. He had inserted slips cut from
-advertisements in the bazaar.
-
-“Wanted, to rent--a bungalow! Wanted, bachelor’s quarters with good
-drainage! Wanted, a good ayah (nurse);” and he had also kindly left
-those petitions which all humanity should offer, of course:
-
-“Wanted, a baby; boy preferred. Girls need not apply.”
-
-It was lucky that Mrs. Cultus did not discover the tenor of these new
-prayers until later, or she might have felt constrained to preach
-a heathen sermon herself to the innocent Lamas in that chapel. At
-this time, however, she held the wheel in her hand, twirling it,
-innocently praying (according to the service interpretation) for what
-would have surprised her greatly had her prayers been answered.
-
-The Lama felt well pleased. The heathens were doing as they were
-told. In time they would make good Taoists.
-
-Miss Winchester also took much interest in this service, but with a
-tinge of the missionary spirit which had escaped Mrs. Cultus.
-
-“It is curious, isn’t it?” said she. “I feel like spinning round
-and round, myself--not alone, like those dancing dervishes we saw
-at Cairo; I want a partner. But I can’t decide which wheel to
-choose--curious, isn’t it?”
-
-“I would not have believed it,” said Adele, “if I had not seen it.
-It affects my eyes in exactly the same way that my ears are affected
-when a congregation repeat the same words over and over again without
-thinking what they are saying.”
-
-“It is very monotonous,” said Paul. “I suppose the Lamas use wheels
-to save talking--possibly to save preaching; it does save the sermon,
-yet brings people to church.”
-
-“It must amuse them, too,” said Adele; “they are only children, you
-know.”
-
-“But grown-up children,” remarked the Doctor.
-
-“Yes, and that reminds me; I’ve heard before of folk condemned for
-much speaking without thinking, and for sounding trumpets in the
-synagogue and streets; we’ve certainly found it here by the roadside.”
-
-The scene thus far had been antipathetic to Adele, to both her
-artistic and to her religious sense; still her sympathy for the poor
-Taoists was excited. The real missionary spirit arose within her;
-but what could she do? It seemed preposterous to attempt or to say
-anything just then; she turned toward Doctor Wise.
-
-The Doctor was standing near a very old woman who had just entered, a
-poor creature in rags and tatters, her face smeared with dried blood
-and other red pigments, a veritable hag in outer appearance, bowed
-down with hard work and suffering. Even the Lamas made way for her,
-however, for she was known to be a very devout old creature, who
-spent much time in the Temple, who almost lived there; in fact, she
-was a sort of priestess among them, the very priestess who had heard
-Adele singing on the heights above her, and had said it was the Good
-Spirits talking in the air.
-
-The poor old soul had come to her customary holy place, and was
-now evidently surprised to find it invaded by such a coterie of
-strangers. Her attitude of intense curiosity soon changed to an
-obsequious inclination of the body--the poor creature was doing her
-very best to meet the case, to welcome them to her temple.
-
-Adele felt drawn to her because she was so hideous to behold--so
-sure is it that extremes will meet if truth is in each. Both being
-sincere, each after her own fashion, the poor Taoist quickly
-appreciated when one of her own sex came nearer to her; and an
-experience altogether truthful followed.
-
-The eyes of the priestess surveyed Adele from hat to shoes; and
-womanly instinct once gratified, her eyes brightened. Adele smiled
-responsively; utterly forgetful that she herself was indeed
-beautiful, her heart went straight forward in visible sympathy with
-the poor creature before her.
-
-The light in those old Taoist eyes became still brighter--it was
-wonderful this time--with that Asiatic fire which characterizes the
-religious enthusiast. An idea had evidently struck the priestess;
-what was it?
-
-Turning from Adele she hobbled across the room, each step an effort,
-to where stood an enormous prayer-wheel over six feet high, the most
-important wheel in the Temple. Squatting on the floor beside it, she
-fumbled under it as if trying to find something.
-
-It was Adele’s turn to be curious.
-
-The priestess, now fired by religious zeal, drew from underneath an
-iron bar bent at one end, not unlike a heavy poker. She adjusted it
-underneath to a crank on the wheel, and began tugging and struggling.
-
-Paul exclaimed at once: “She’s trying to start that immense machine!”
-
-“It looks so,” said Adele quietly.
-
-“To pray with that is hard work.”
-
-“She is not conscious of the effort.”
-
-“Well, I should be.”
-
-“I never knew before what it meant,” said Adele.
-
-“What?”
-
-“Why, to pray with all your strength--don’t you see?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“She has a motive to give her strength; I see it in her eyes.”
-
-“Possibly! but don’t tell me you can detect motives in people’s eyes.”
-
-“I can; she is a woman, you are not.”
-
-“I give it up,” said Paul. “You have the advantage of me in feminine
-insight; what is her motive?”
-
-“To pray for us,” said Adele seriously. “I feel sure of it; the good
-old soul, she looks it and acts it; she’s going to pray.”
-
-“By machinery?”
-
-“It is for us, I tell you, Paul; I don’t care if she doesn’t say a
-word; she’s doing it for us!--don’t you see her?”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“Watch, and pray yourself, and you will see.”
-
-Paul watched, but he couldn’t pray, not just then, so he whispered:
-“Taoists and Buddhists don’t pray, anyhow--they only mutter.”
-
-“Well, no matter, nor mutter either,” said Adele. “It’s the way they
-get at it. She is not beautiful, but she has something better--she
-can----”
-
-“Use machinery,” muttered Paul, the incorrigible. “No, Adele, she is
-not handsome----”
-
-“No, but she is good and true, poor old woman. If I had to make the
-choice, I would rather have her prayerful spirit than even beauty.”
-
-Paul looked at the lovely girl to whom he was betrothed, and thought
-her an enthusiast quite equal to the old woman; then upon second
-thought:
-
-“Adele!”
-
-“Well?”
-
-“I suppose you are right, but I’m glad you don’t look like her.”
-
-While they watched, the poor priestess was still tugging at her
-wheel; she had but little strength and it was so heavy. None of her
-people offered to help.
-
-Adele’s interest increased, until a glow came into her eyes also;
-seizing Paul by the arm, she whispered:
-
-“It’s--it’s too much for her, Paul; see! she cannot move it. You must
-help--no, I;” and the next instant Adele was beside the Taoist on the
-floor; each helping the other to turn the wheel, each trying to pray
-according to her own previous experience. Adele said afterwards it
-took about all the strength she had.
-
-Between them, the wheel began to turn slowly, very slowly; the dead
-weight, the inertia, the figurative indifference to be overcome was
-typical of mundane matters generally, forming a heavy impediment to
-be overcome in spiritual relationship. But the wheel did move, the
-momentum increased, it gained force, and was soon revolving at a
-good rate of speed by the sole effort of the poor, weak, but sincere
-Taoist.
-
-Adele slipped aside, and stood listening to the low musical hum of
-the large machine instead of the sharp buzzing of the smaller wheels
-she had heard before. Her musical ear at once noticed the profound
-difference in the tone; it sounded solemn--aye, sweet and peaceful;
-if continued it would be a veritable lullaby dominated by spiritual
-significance; it would be truly musical, spiritual music; all the
-greater harmonies condensed in one solemn tone; a single spiritual
-tone. The greatest orchestra of man could do no more.
-
-Could it be possible that this wild priestess was also affected by
-the sacred solemn sound? Do even the crude forms of religion have
-such subtle distinctions of feeling? Do they not, as well as we,
-hear the solemn sounds in nature? Why not? Nature’s tones are full
-of significance. And who would “know” this better than those who
-worship in the forest where the trees bow their heads and the leaves
-rustle; or by the stream where zephyrs blow and the birds warble; or
-before the majestic mountains when the rushing mighty wind blows its
-diapason, and the avalanche gives the basal note at the end? Such
-are the nocturnes, the largos, aye, the symphonic sounds in nature.
-Does not a “nature-worshiper” hear them? They have been from the
-beginning, are now, and ever shall be.
-
-Strange, oh, passing strange, the low tone of this mighty wheel now
-sounded much like nature’s tones in harmony with one at her devotions.
-
-“I have heard the Taoist organ,” thought Adele, “its sacred solemn
-sound.”
-
-But for this solemn music, there was silence in the Temple while the
-Taoist muttered.
-
-So long as the strangers remained in that Cathedral chapel the huge
-wheel continued to revolve--emblem of perpetual prayer--praying
-without ceasing. The priestess who thus prayed had much to say--to
-repeat--being old, and with little time left in which to say her
-prayers. She kept on, oblivious to all surroundings, absorbed in
-contemplation of the unseen; for with all humanity there is nothing
-so real as the unseen. She kept on oblivious to all the outer world
-who might be gazing with curiosity; she remained crouched on the
-floor of the Temple, simply muttering, over and over again, some
-mystic phrase or the name of Buddha, which none of the strangers
-could understand.
-
-When the party left she was still praying after her fashion. As they
-mounted their ponies and journeyed out into the great world, she
-was still meditating on the best she knew, as the Good Spirit had
-taught her. As they descended the ravine, Adele could still hear the
-hum of the wheels; and above all the low solemn tone was profoundly
-significant. It now came to her from above, through the tree-tops; it
-blended with the rustling of the leaves, and was lost in the sough of
-the forest.
-
-
-
-
- XLI
-
- PROCESSIONAL BEFORE THE VEIL
-
-
-Atmospheric changes were varied and rapid in the vicinity of the
-Himalaya “Five Peaks of Eternal Snow.” Clear days were by no means
-constant around Darjeeling. There were periods when “the view
-towards the chancel,” as Adele called it, was obstructed; days when
-the clouds hung low, even resting upon the forests in the ravines
-beneath. Yet the forms of the trees were not always hid, they
-appeared as darker lines of delicate tracery against the lighter
-background.
-
-At such times Adele idealized with much refinement of vision. “Those
-trees are the rood-screen; I can see through into the chancel when
-it is clear; but to-day the chancel is misty, the clouds hang like a
-veil. It is astonishing how much is hidden by fog and mist in nature;
-that veil hides a great deal.”
-
-The Doctor also was very appreciative of such atmospheric changes,
-since they often resulted in superb effects, cloud scenery, sunbursts
-never to be forgotten for their magnificence.
-
-It thus happened while they were all assembled on a Saturday evening
-discussing projects for the morrow, that Adele and the Doctor each
-felt the impulse to rise early on the same morning to watch some of
-the atmospheric changes which made beautiful the dawn.
-
-The Doctor remembered having seen remarkable effects at Banff in the
-Rockies; and Adele recalled having met Tartarin de Tarascon on the
-Righi pretty early in the morning; no doubt there might be some
-greater things than these to be found among the Himalayas. Why it
-was, that only these two of the party should have been so moved,
-and upon the same particular morning, and without saying anything
-about it previously, the Doctor could never quite understand; unless
-on the general principle that if people will follow their natural
-inclinations to see the best in life they need not be surprised
-to find others doing the same thing at the same time. When they
-discussed it subsequently, Adele accounted for it in her own way.
-
-“I so often dislike to make the necessary effort. That sort of effort
-is very trying, when to see something extra which I know can be seen
-I must force myself. Getting up early, for instance; I don’t like
-getting up early as a general thing, but I just forced myself to do
-so on that morning.”
-
-Thus it happened to be the first day of the week very early in the
-morning that she and the Doctor found themselves abroad when it was
-yet somewhat dark. Adele was the first to appear upon the scene; she
-was standing in the road opposite Peek-o’-Tip when the Doctor came
-out of the bungalow. Neither one was in the mood for conversation,
-and the morning air was fresh. After the first agreeable surprise
-Adele put her arm in his and they moved off together briskly. She
-was in sympathy with him also, as with Paul, but the mutual feeling
-manifested itself very differently. The cloud hung low.
-
-“The sun will drink up the mist,” remarked the Doctor in peasant
-parlance.
-
-“I hope so, but I never can tell. Let us go to Observatory Hill;
-that’s the best place.” She seemed to take it as a matter of course
-that they each had the same object in view.
-
-“Your Cathedral is gloomy,” said the Doctor, looking around.
-
-“One can’t see the chancel.”
-
-“No.”
-
-“It’s the veil,” said Adele, thoughtful.
-
-“What did you say?”
-
-“The cloud-curtains, the veil of the Temple is down.”
-
-After walking some distance they entered a grove; of course it became
-still darker because they entered the grove. What they did not notice
-was that the clouds, instead of dispersing, were becoming more dense.
-They only remembered that the path led upwards towards higher ground
-in the open.
-
-At one point on the way Adele stopped, and looked into a dark glen
-where she said she heard running water. The Doctor pushed aside
-bushes that stood in the way, and they were sprinkled by the moisture
-that had condensed on the bushes. If there had been more light they
-would have seen the diamond drops upon the scarlet blossoms; but
-these were hidden in the shadows at the mouth of the glen.
-
-Before them was an exquisite cascade falling over rocks; coming down
-the mountain it was tossed upon either side of a heavy stone which
-had been rolled there in past ages by natural forces, and now stood
-with white foam enveloping its rugged sides.
-
-This unexpected gem of natural scenery compelled them to halt and
-admire.
-
-“What a surprise, how beautiful!” exclaimed Adele.
-
-“Yes, even in this dull light.”
-
-“The water looks like delicate cambric.”
-
-“Why, so it does--draped round the stone; the rocks are sombre and
-solemn. You know it is said that some animals, wild and savage, like
-to find such places as this to nestle down and take their last long
-sleep.”
-
-“I think I know why, too,” said Adele.
-
-“Ah!”
-
-“It is the music of the waterfall perhaps, and the movement too. The
-water is so much alive, it’s living water.”
-
-“All life seeks life,” said the Doctor. “Some sort of companionship;
-even a hermit likes the life in his glen. It’s not uncheerful here,
-after all, is it--even if it seems gloomy?”
-
-“No, listen; the waterfall is singing. I could catch the rhythm, and
-perhaps a cadence, in a short time if I were to try; it seems to say
-something.”
-
-“What does it say, to you?”
-
-“Oh, ’tis ‘the water of life repeating,’” said Adele, quoting one of
-her favorite lines. “I cannot tell you exactly what it says in words,
-but the music in it is hopeful; I love to listen to it.”
-
-“So do I,” said the Doctor. “Would you like a drink?”
-
-“Indeed, I would; just for remembrance, to say we have been here
-together. Let us take a drink in remembrance.”
-
-They both drank from a cup made of leaves--both of the same cup--“the
-water of life,” as Adele called it; and as they drank a bird flew
-down from its nest, perched itself on a rock near the cascade above
-them, and drank also; a little bird with a red breast. They did not
-see the bird, emblem of suffering unto death for others, and only
-took a drop or two themselves, for verily the realities of life made
-the glen damp and cold, yet the thought symbolized by the bird was
-ever with them and the moment precious.
-
-“I should like to drink that water always,” said Adele.
-
-“Always is a long time.”
-
-“Well, I did not mean exactly that--until----”
-
-The Doctor waited.
-
-“Well, if I must tell you, until the resurrection.”
-
-“I trust we may,” said he solemnly.
-
-They understood each other perfectly, and after a pause, while the
-robin sang a morning hymn, they continued their walk.
-
-Drops of rain began to fall upon the tree-tops. Adele and the Doctor
-caught the sound.
-
-“Only a little condensation,” said he, “a draught of cooler air has
-passed over. We will be out of it in a few minutes.”
-
-Adele felt chilly, but would not say so. She drew her hooded-wrap
-about her, and felt quite safe with the Doctor.
-
-“A Lepcha shanty is just beyond here,” said he, “if it comes to the
-worst we can find shelter.”
-
-“And plenty of dirt,” thought Adele. “No doubt, lots of insects,
-especially on a damp day.”
-
-The patter of rain increased, a very wet drop fell upon her cheek,
-several big drops struck the Doctor full in the face. Having no
-umbrellas they hurried along instinctively, then broke into a
-trot--then ran to escape as best they could. When crossing an open
-space between the woods and the hut the rain fell in torrents.
-
-“You will be drenched through and through,” said the Doctor.
-
-“I don’t mind it at all. It’s only on the outside, anyhow, and I’m
-warmly clad; still it’s a little chilly--let’s hurry,” and off
-she started, the Doctor after her, on a bee-line for the shelter.
-Panting, they rushed up to the shanty.
-
-The hut was almost full--full of Lepchas--men, women and children,
-unkempt specimens of humanity whose clothes when once on seemed
-seldom to be taken off until they fell off. The Lepchas had also
-taken refuge from the storm, and were all wet and bedraggled, like
-themselves.
-
-“A sweet party, truly!” thought the Doctor, and so it was. Poor
-natives lying round like drowned rats--the Americans in exterior
-appeared not much better; all but Adele’s cheeks which glowed after
-the exercise of running.
-
-She pulled back her hood, and a ripple of smiles played over her
-countenance--the Lepchas laughed too. Then as if they were all
-friends together, she asked: “Can you take us in--take us in?” and
-began shaking the rain from her garments at the outer stone. It must
-have been her cheerful manner that induced one of the women to make
-room next herself on a seat; the Lepcha men were more stolid, but all
-began to move when the strangers entered.
-
-The Doctor soon detected a goat in the shanty--there was no doubt
-about it--and concluded to escape as soon as possible. But there
-they were--caught; caught as in a net of circumstances. Little did
-he or Adele know to what the circumstances would lead, but he said
-afterwards that it reminded him of St. Paul’s experience at Joppa
-with a sheet-net full of common things, four-footed beasts and fowls,
-unclean things in general; which later on proved not so unclean as he
-had at first thought; only in this case Adele and he were inside the
-net with the rest.
-
-Some of the Lepchas knew a few words of English, but the more ancient
-universal language of signs and grunts proved to be more useful.
-Adele patted a chicken, and a Lepcha damsel patted the young goat,
-a kid. Both chicken and kid seemed of special value to the natives.
-Adele could not conjecture the reason. When the rain ceased and
-they all stepped outside she was further enlightened. Neither the
-wet Lepchas nor the bedraggled Christians desired to remain in that
-stuffy hut, both hurried to seek the fresh air and to reach the open;
-the whole crowd in fact, kid and chicken included. And out they
-scrambled, pell-mell, with a unanimity of action as natural as it
-was prompt. The natives formed a little group in the open, looking
-around to satisfy themselves that the clouds were dispersing. Through
-rifts in the mist near them came the clearer morning light, to all,
-from whatever part of the earth they had come, a foretaste of the
-brightest of days.
-
-The natives gathered together, a little company, their leader
-carrying the kid, a boy following with the fowl, others straggling by
-twos and threes, yet now all of sober countenance.
-
-Adele and the Doctor looked after them; there was evidently some
-purpose in the manner of those natives as they proceeded up the hill
-towards its crest, to the very place of observation they themselves
-had selected for the best view, and where they were going when
-they had been arrested by the shower. More than mere curiosity,
-a fellow-feeling, now suggested that they all go together; so,
-regardless of their wet and soiled garments, Adele and the Doctor
-soon found themselves willingly tramping up that hill along with
-the ragged natives. The leader looked askance at first, but when
-he noticed Adele beside one of his women, and the Doctor with his
-men, he made the best of it, accepted the situation, and kept ahead
-carrying the kid.
-
-The path wound upwards, the ascent growing more steep. None could see
-far ahead when the processional commenced. Not until their march was
-well under way, not until the very last stage of the climb, not until
-near approach to the place they sought, not in fact until their own
-forms arose above the near foreground, did they witness the Glory in
-nature which was, and is, and is to be.
-
-And as they surmounted the crest of the hill, so did the Celestial
-scenery beyond become visible to their mortal eyes, rising before
-them a sublime transformation scene--an ascension of truth beautiful
-in nature.
-
-To Adele and the Doctor, a veritable transfiguration of the earth as
-they might imagine it glorified on the morning of a Resurrection.
-
-The mighty summits, the eternal peaks, on this first day of the week,
-shone forth in the purer atmosphere of greater altitude, magnificent
-in proportions as a work in Creation, impressive in their glorious
-grandeur, refulgent as with the sacred glow of a physical rebirth.
-
-The clouds were moving aside, as a curtain is withdrawn; and from the
-depths below, the valley and ravine, from forest and waterfall, rose
-the mist. That which covers, screens, or conceals in nature, like
-the fog, was passing away; that which is more permanent, ascending
-heavenward to form clouds; ascending as incense ascends; incense
-symbolic from ages past of the prayers of humanity.
-
-The Holy of Holies of the Himalaya Cathedral was open before them.
-
-The Veil of the Temple had been rent in twain.
-
-[Illustration: As Incense Ascends--Symbolic, from Ages Past, of the
-Prayers of Humanity.
-
-The Kunchingunga Snowy Range. Elevation, 28,156 feet.
-
-Scene from Observatory Hill, Darjeeling.]
-
-
-
-
- XLII
-
- ON HOLY GROUND
-
-
-As the impressive scene unfolded, the Cathedral becoming more
-sublimely beautiful each moment, Adele watched the wonderful play
-of light--the refulgence. She was also profoundly impressed by the
-magnificent proportions of the picture then being illuminated before
-her very eyes by the Creator; and felt the breath of life come and go
-with emotion.
-
-“It is the Glorious Beauty of Holiness,” she murmured, and then, kept
-silence before Him.
-
-Now, next to Adele stood the native woman; and before them both
-was unrolled the same scene. To this Himalaya worshiper, Lepcha,
-Bhootanese, Nepaulese, Thibetan, or whatever tribe she might have
-been born, the effect was not the same as upon Adele. Familiarity
-with such sunrises in the mountains had dulled what little
-appreciation she might ever have had; but her religion had told her
-something which Adele did not know. From untold generations her
-people had been taught to regard that place as sacred. She had been
-brought there as a child, and now she was leading her own children
-there; and told the little ones: “The place whereon thou standest is
-holy ground.” She had also her own ideas as to why it was sacred; and
-that very morning had come to the holy ground to show the children
-why it was holy; but Adele knew nothing of all this.
-
-Worldly wisdom might have judged this woman and Adele to be in no
-way alike, yet, here in this presence, where the holiness of beauty
-and the beauty of holiness were both in evidence, there was really a
-fundamental similarity.
-
-Adele drew near the Doctor; he, too, had been keeping silent in the
-Holy Place.
-
-“The Veil has been taken away,” said she.
-
-“H’m, yes.”
-
-“It is the most impressive sight I ever beheld.”
-
-“Why so?”
-
-“It is as a chancel should be.”
-
-“Of course, the most beautiful portion of a cathedral.”
-
-“Beauty is not all, I feel more than I see; the beauty is sacred
-here; the sacred feeling comes first, and then--oh, it is so
-beautiful!”
-
-“It must be a Holy Place if it affects you that way.”
-
-“Yes, a place for prayer, it seems natural to pray here; here one
-thinks upwards, and looks upwards.”
-
-“Then the effect is spiritual as well as artistic.”
-
-“Oh, don’t analyze! I don’t wish to reason at all,” said Adele. “For
-me it’s perfect. I’m satisfied. Just let me rest here, let me go and
-sit down, _and be a part of it_.”
-
-She seated herself at the foot of a tree.
-
-It would have been sacrilege to disturb her at that moment--a
-violation of sacred things in her experience. So, on the instant,
-thought the Doctor.
-
-After a little reflection, the Doctor said to himself that this was
-not the time for Adele to “loaf and invite her soul.” He feared lest
-she was carrying her idealization entirely too far. Even the best in
-the world, if carried to excess, leads one into danger; and spiritual
-excesses are especially dangerous, either to youth or old age.
-
-To sit at the feet of Nature, to admire and enjoy the Creator’s
-work, was one thing; to be so absorbed in Nature’s moods, and to
-become such a slave to emotion that all else is forgotten, would
-be quite another thing. Adele seemed to have forgotten the Lepchas,
-and himself, and even her own self; and to be totally absorbed in
-adoration of the scenery.
-
-The Doctor had many times seen pious worshipers in certain phases of
-Hindooism, Buddhism, and Christianity, indulge in that sort of thing;
-but never in Shintoism or any really old form of faith which brought
-one close to nature, through nature’s activities and manifestations
-unidealized; where nature spoke for herself and mankind was silent
-before her. He suspected this excess of idealization, this becoming
-“a part of it,” as Adele had wished for, might become really a
-weakness in her character, and might lead her into danger. Such a
-frame of mind would certainly be fascinating to Adele, she was so
-made, she was constitutionally an idealist; but certainly it was not
-mentally healthful in relation to her duty to others; not a thing
-to be rooted out, but to be controlled lest the result should prove
-injurious.
-
-The Doctor determined to break in upon her mood in some way. He
-recalled her last remark, that she was perfectly satisfied with her
-Cathedral, and only wished to rest and be a part of it.
-
-“Adele, you said this Cathedral was complete.”
-
-“It is to me.”
-
-“Not if it is a cathedral as usually understood.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“You have idealized what we now see as the chancel?”
-
-“Certainly, the place where the service is conducted.”
-
-“May I ask what is the central feature in the service to which you
-and I are accustomed?”
-
-“To administer; no doubt.”
-
-“To administer; certainly--but what?”
-
-She thought very seriously, trying to find suitable words. She was
-not accustomed to this sort of stand-up-and-deliver catechism; but
-finally she spoke:
-
-“Some might say to administer the sacrifice; but I do not see how
-this can be possible. It is not a fact in nature; I cannot consider
-it true.”
-
-“May I ask, why not?”
-
-“You can never kill the truth; and Christ is not dead, but living;
-they are the same no matter how you think about it--Christ and the
-Truth.”
-
-“But Truth was sacrificed in Him.”
-
-“Never!” she cried. “That is an impossibility in nature. It only
-seems sacrificed; it never really is.”
-
-“But He was sacrificed.”
-
-“His great sacrifice of Himself for Truth’s sake was really His whole
-life work, and it was Perfection,” said Adele.
-
-“His life, as well as His death,” acquiesced the Doctor, solemnly.
-
-“Yes, a perfect work.”
-
-“Well then, Adele, no other _idealized sacrifice_ in administering
-could make the service more complete, nor the atonement more adequate
-than it is.”
-
-The atonement!
-
-Yes. The at-one-ment--the Saving of the World--the Salvation of
-Mankind by the Truth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And as they conversed thus, upon the Lepcha Holy Ground, the Doctor
-concluded that Adele’s meditations had not led her astray; but he
-felt constrained to say something further which had been on his mind
-from the first.
-
-“Adele, with us the ministration is usually at the chancel rail.”
-
-“Yes, or what corresponds to it.”
-
-“Where from?”
-
-“The altar; why do you ask?”
-
-“Have you seen any altar in this Cathedral?”
-
-Adele looked around in different directions, continually reverting
-to the chancel region she had idealized, as if it ought to be there.
-Surely there must be an altar in nature, or something she could
-idealize as such; for so many religions professed to have altars,
-from the earliest times down to the present day. She began to fear
-lest her imagery as to the Cathedral had failed her in a vital point.
-Once before she had thought she could discover some form or shape in
-the higher altitudes which might suggest an altar; in every case the
-light had been so dazzling, or what she tried to see was so vague,
-that her ideal had never been satisfied in its most vital need; and
-now with the chancel itself open, the veil rent, she saw nothing to
-suggest an altar. Where was it? Had it been there? If so, then what
-had become of it--the altar?
-
-
-
-
- XLIII
-
- SACRIFICE
-
-
-Adele was still sitting at the foot of the tree; some said it was a
-bo-tree; others did not have knowledge enough to tell what kind of a
-tree it was. She did not think of this at all, as she sat dreaming
-upon the magnificent spectacle before her. In her mind she was
-seeking for an answer to the Doctor’s inquiry; then her eyes, while
-searching for some object which might be idealized in some degree
-as an altar, were drawn to the immediate foreground, away from the
-chancel, to something in her own vicinity, quite near herself.
-
-Upon the same knoll, a short distance from her, boughs of foliage
-were festooned with cords and ropes upon which hung hundreds of
-small pieces of bright-colored muslin cut fantastically; also pieces
-of white textile, the size of a large napkin, covered with printed
-or crudely stamped characters in the native language. Hanging in
-garlands from bough to bough, fluttering in the wind among the
-leaves, they were about as effective as yacht signals strung out for
-decoration. Signals they were, indeed, but of quite another kind;
-the fluttering prayer-signals of the poor Lepchas, or Bhootanese,
-or Thibetans, arranged in a semi-circle around their sacred place.
-Wafted heavenward by the breeze, such signals were presented as
-acceptable to the Good Spirits, and were considered to bear upwards
-the supplications of poor humanity. They were the symbols of prayer
-used by the same worshipers in whose hut Adele and the Doctor had
-found a welcome shelter from the storm.
-
-At first sight Adele thought: “How very crude and tawdry!” A second
-glance told her the decorations symbolized something, and she felt
-more sympathetic. The bright colors and the printed texts on white
-were certainly newer, fresher, and cleaner than the garments of the
-Lepchas themselves; they must have been selected, and they had cost
-something; only a few annas perhaps, or possibly some widow’s mite.
-
-“Yes, the effect is cheerful; a happy one,” thought Adele. “One
-doesn’t feel despondent when looking at them.” How could it be
-otherwise when each praying-signal fluttered a message of thanks,
-or propitiation?--all of them in remembrance of the Good Spirits.
-And then she thought she detected among them a familiar arrangement
-of colors; what!--could it be possible? Yes, an old faded-out,
-partly-torn specimen of “Old Glory,” hardly recognizable, but yet
-there, for the sake of its being a new arrangement of colors,
-probably its true significance utterly unknown. This moved Adele
-intensely, giving her a curious new emotion, blending her patriotic
-feeling with the sacred things of others. Finally she concluded
-that all the signals were really artistic from the Lepcha point
-of view, for she noticed an expression of much satisfaction pass
-over the countenances of the natives when they found their sacred
-prayer-colors were still so bravely fluttering after the storm; still
-in motion where the Spirit of the Air could easily see and hear. The
-poor woman with whom Adele had walked up pointed to some as if they
-were her own private signals, but as Adele did not manifest much
-outward enthusiasm about them, a sad expression came over the face
-of the nature-worshiper. She seemed to realize that she ought not
-to expect these strangers to understand her feelings. Perhaps the
-strangers would scorn such things--old pieces of muslin picked up in
-the bazaar; they could afford yards and yards of it if they chose.
-So the poor woman turned away disappointed, to seek sympathy among
-her own kindred who could better understand how such things were
-acceptable to the Good Spirit.
-
-It was profoundly interesting to see those two at this time, so near
-in body, and yet so far apart in religious interpretations; yet
-each upon what was to her “holy ground.” Such are the mysterious
-operations of the Spirit of Religion in Nature.
-
-Adele was just beginning to realize the varied conflicting elements
-in her surroundings when she and the Doctor heard voices behind
-them--a weird chant--a primitive monotonous crooning, but wild--the
-natives’ hymn. Around a thicket the people had gathered, singing
-this invocation. Adele and the Doctor drew near, and both of them
-being musical they involuntarily attempted to catch the higher notes
-and to join in; but it proved to be too much for them in every way,
-especially to Adele’s cultivated ear. The very simplicity of the
-strange sounds, all spirit and no art, made it difficult to detect
-any method, only variations of monotonous notes and cries; sometimes
-rhythm, but no trace of melody, at least to civilized ears. It was
-painfully monotonous; aye, there was pain indeed in that native chant
-of invocation. No grand aria of the art divine, nor “wail of the
-orchestra” in modern times, had more pain to the spirit in man, than
-that primitive wail. All that Adele and the Doctor could do was to
-feel for them, yet not be of them.
-
-The thicket was formed by underbrush which had sprung up around some
-taller trees. There was an open space inside, with several rocks and
-stones which had evidently been brought there by the worshipers. One
-rock larger than the rest stood on one side, the others scattered
-with apparent lack of method. The entrance was wide, so that all near
-at hand could witness what was going on within the circle. And while
-the weird song continued outside, the people drew nearer and nearer;
-the solemn moment arrived for the Leader and his Helper to enter this
-thicket--the Lepcha Holy of Holies--and stand before their altar.
-
-As Abraham of old, in mature manhood, Leader of “the Chosen People”
-among races, did enter a thicket and there offer a sacrifice well
-pleasing to the Lord: so did this poor native at the end of the
-Nineteenth Century, enter his Holy Place, a thicket in the Creator’s
-Cathedral of the Himalayas; and there did offer a sacrifice well
-pleasing to the Good Spirit to whom a thousand years are as one day,
-and one day as a thousand years.
-
-The first offering was the fowl; and as the dying spasms of the bird
-scattered blood upon the stones, and upon the primitive priest, and
-upon others who stood near enough, the wild chant rose above the
-sound of flapping wings, and with the final throes of death mingled
-the wails of the worshipers.
-
-To Adele, whose experience in killing of any kind was limited, the
-sight of life-blood flowing was most painful, even obnoxious. When a
-little girl in the country during her school-day vacations, she had
-always avoided seeing the fowls killed; not only because it destroyed
-her appetite for them afterwards, but because she felt a most
-positive and acute sympathy for the fowls. In later years, if anyone
-had called such proceedings “a sacrifice,” she would have been much
-surprised. On this occasion, face to face with it, her sympathy was
-strong enough to give her a sympathetic pain in the back of her own
-neck when the fowl was stabbed, pierced unto death.
-
-When Adele was in the hospital acting as volunteer nurse, her
-experience had been to assist in curing, not in the surgical
-department; and if such had been the case, she would not have
-remained there a day. Now, when she found herself a quasi-participant
-in these Lepcha proceedings, eye-witness of a bloody wounded fowl
-flapping about, the situation was positively repulsive; and very
-difficult to sympathize with, even when she knew the act to be a
-feature in religious worship. She looked up at the Doctor.
-
-Doctor Wise was absorbed in studying the movements of the priest.
-
-The Lepcha stood over the kid, with his knife drawn ready to take its
-innocent life.
-
-Adele caught sight of him in that attitude, and gave a shudder. She
-knew she could not endure to witness the next act. Naught could have
-induced her to turn spiritually from the poor nature-worshipers at
-such a moment, yet she could not accept their primitive methods as
-other than downright cruelty to-day. The sharp glittering knife, the
-rough stone, the priest’s stolid expression; and above all else, the
-unsuspecting little kid, so docile, as if among friends. Verily, the
-trustful eyes of the little animal seemed to speak the very words:
-“Ye are my friends, while I am yet with you.”
-
-Adele buried her face upon the Doctor’s shoulder, and only heard
-without seeing the sacrifice which followed.
-
-And behold! one of the most natural yet mysterious of all the
-phenomena in nature at once followed: Adele, embodying in her own
-personality the progress made in appreciation of religious ritual
-upon earth since primitive times, while spared the terror of realism,
-was more deeply affected than by realism itself; the things done
-had greater scope and power, the spiritual impression was far
-more profound and lasting than the effect of any spectacle which
-had actually been witnessed, and this in the very nature of truth
-progressive. The mind is greater than the eye, the Spirit of Truth is
-greater than the mind, the real growth is not in the intellect but
-in the spirit; aye, “the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life.
-Knowledge is power, but the spirit giveth immortality.”
-
-Adele heard the cry of pain, the cry of life departing. It was only
-that of an animal, an innocent kid, but it and its innocence stood in
-lieu of many human beings. She heard the chant of the natives calling
-aloud, heavenward! above the cries of the innocent sacrifice; the
-people seemed themselves to be suffering. They were, yet they were
-not; not physically, yet their cries sounded as if the knife might be
-entering their very vitals. No realism apparent to mortal eyes could
-have been so powerful to affect them spiritually--the noblest, the
-divine in their personality; not unless nature itself had witnessed
-by taking part; not unless the veil of the Himalaya Temple had
-closed again, or “the sun had been darkened over all the earth,” or
-some such occurrence had transpired to direct attention to an event
-affecting humanity at large.
-
-Then the strangest part of this primitive ritual followed; enduring
-in its action, and lasting in memory. An event implying mystery
-took place, a seeming mystery was suggested, a philosophic truth
-inculcated. How so by such a primitive uneducated people, yet able
-to embody what to this day dominates the profoundest concepts of
-philosophic man?
-
-With the passing of the life by sacrifice, the life from the shed
-blood as it curdled and sank into the ground, went also the moans
-and dirges of those for whom the sacrifice had been made. The Lepcha
-voices changed in quality, manifesting great gain in force of
-conviction, rose higher and higher, and finally gave vent to cries of
-exultation, aspiration, exaltation--they chanted a triumph: a victory
-leading them onwards and upwards towards something beyond in the
-direction of the Eternal Summits magnificent before their very eyes.
-It was as if they saw the truth in their faith no longer militant and
-sacrificing, but triumphant in the Celestial Realm.
-
-Strange, yet a natural consequence of the truth as they saw it: as
-the life of the kid departed by the blood of sacrifice returning into
-the earth among the grass of the field from which it had come and
-upon which it had fed, there arose a new life--a resurrection from
-the depths of misery and woe; a new song--a triumphal song--a song of
-the Saved Ones. The native choristers seemed possessed with renewed
-hope and vitality; and acting under these influences they found the
-burden of their song changed to suit a new condition which they
-certainly discerned.
-
-In the case of these Himalaya nature-worshipers, this ordinary
-killing of a beast for food, as practiced by their ancestors from
-time immemorial, had been used by the Mind of Nature, the Creator
-Father, to teach a philosophic truth through the religious sense;
-the full significance of which was not learned by humanity until
-millenniums after those primitive ancestors had found it to be a fact
-in nature.
-
-Truly, this ancient ritual was profound in significance; it had been
-so from the beginning.
-
-Adele next heard the priest speaking aloud in a clear exulting tone;
-it sounded as if he were addressing a multitude. She would have
-given much to have comprehended fully what he said, but it was lost
-to her; his words passed into the distance over the tree-tops, into
-space, off towards the Celestial region where the Good Spirit would
-both hear and understand. Then ensued an interval of suspense; all
-she heard was the sound of broken twigs and a slight tapping. It was
-the worshipers attaching some feathers of the fowl and small pieces
-of raw flesh of the kid to the trees. The feathers were to flutter
-in the wind as more signals to the Spirits of the Air. The hair of
-the goat was to be blown by the breeze as more prayers or symbols of
-propitiation, ever active before the Good Spirits.
-
-After the ceremony was finished, the primitive procession started
-upon its recessional, wended its way down the hillside, to enter
-again their huts, and feast upon the burnt offering--cooked.
-
-Adele looked up. The Ancient Service, in vogue from the beginning in
-the development of religious consciousness in man, and held to-day
-in the Himalaya Cathedral, was finished. The altar had not been in
-the chancel, but as of old, in the outer court of the Temple, in
-the world at large. The daily sacrifice could be made by any man
-in his own daily life--it was a part of the ritual of day-by-day
-devotion--the sacrifice of things seen to attain spiritually to
-things unseen. The altar might be in any man’s hearth or home, in his
-heart or soul-life.
-
-Adele had been present at a primitive realistic ceremony, but she
-had not been able to witness it with her bodily eyes, so great was
-the progress of truth in life “since the days of sacrifice.” She
-understood now why the Creator had led humanity to abjure and abolish
-actual burnt sacrifices, substituting the spiritual experience, in
-remembrance.
-
-Adele and the Doctor entered the thicket where the service had been
-held. They noticed how the life-blood had already sunk into the
-ground and been absorbed and become a part of it, “earth to earth.”
-If they had visited the Lepcha huts, they would have found “ashes
-to ashes.” They noticed also how the recently added signals, the
-feathers and the hair of the innocent kid, were fluttering with the
-other color-signals; these latter new ones in remembrance of the
-day’s service. And as they looked around they heard the Lepchas still
-off in the distance, singing. They had plenty of fresh food now, and
-a joyful spirit within. They sang as man often sings, when at his
-daily work, at home, in his shop, or in the field.
-
-What more philosophically true in man’s religious development, from
-before Abraham, from primitive man, from the beginning so far as
-humanity knows about itself? The Spirit of Truth in ancient man had
-ever testified to the shedding of innocent life-blood instead of
-the sacrifice of self, or personal surrender, as the visible sign
-of propitiation, or of at-one-ment, the atonement. A tangible sign,
-symbolic, which could not in the very nature of things be understood
-in fuller significance until mankind was ready for the comprehension
-of the unseen, the spiritual sacrifice or atonement, until
-civilizations had sufficiently developed to comprehend spiritually
-what had always transpired naturally. The revelation culminating
-in the voluntary sacrifice of Him who said: “I am the Truth, the
-Life”--the Saviour of mankind.
-
-Verily the Ancient Ritual was worthy of the Cathedral built by the
-Mind of Nature--our Creator-Father.
-
-
-
-
- XLIV
-
- THE EVERYDAY RITUAL
-
-
-Adele and Paul spent much time together wandering about exploring
-the Cathedral. Adele said she heard sermons in stones, and voices in
-running brooks, and all that sort of thing. Paul hurled stones down
-precipices, and said he didn’t care much for sermons, anyway. Adele
-laughed when he stopped her at a spring in the woods and insisted
-upon her tasting the water when he himself enjoyed it freely.
-
-“It goes all through me,” said Paul. “Delicious, the best mountain
-spring I ever found.”
-
-“Of course it goes all through you; such pure cold water exhilarates
-as if giving a new life.”
-
-“Oh, if you put it that way--why, of course. I know what you mean;
-but what is life, anyway? No fellow can find out; nobody knows much
-about it.”
-
-“Well I do, and I intend to enjoy it,” and she filled her lungs with
-the mountain air, which gave her such buoyancy that she took off her
-hat, and shook back her hair to be en rapport with her own ideal.
-
-“That’s all right, while you feel like it.” To Paul she looked like
-the personification of New Life for him; and he came near kissing her
-to assure himself she was not a wood-nymph who might vanish in a tree.
-
-“People are not so stupid as you think,” said Adele.
-
-“Well, what do they really know?” asked Paul, his double-self amused
-to hear a girl assume that she knew more of life than he, a man.
-
-Their attention was distracted for a moment.
-
-On the road close by they heard the tramp of feet approaching, and
-they were near enough to speak if it proved to be anyone they knew. A
-dandy, a variety of palanquin, was passing, and inside was a woman of
-the English Colony. The livery of her bearers was rather conspicuous,
-being yellow with blue trimmings, yet not in bad taste for that
-region. The toilet of the beauty inside the dandy was decidedly
-“chic,” and the pose between the curtains drawn aside was certainly
-most captivating. Many had said of her: “Thy bright smile haunts me
-still.”
-
-Paul recognized the occupant at a glance; to Adele she was a
-stranger. Paul had met her accidentally and incidentally; and upon
-so slight an acquaintance had received an invitation to join a
-card-party at her apartments. The invitation had been sent him before
-the soi-disant widow knew that Paul was there a member of a family
-party, or she would have known it was useless to waste a thought on
-him.
-
-Not being a man who played cards for money, and for some other
-reasons, Paul had sent a polite regret; after acknowledging to
-himself with a laugh that he had been innocently caught by that sort
-of thing once before, and didn’t intend to be again. But the fellows
-persisted that he was “a fool not to go and see the fun,” as the fair
-creature was only one of many birds of passage stranded in India, and
-“devilish amusing” when sitting at the head of her own table.
-
-Paul preferred not to sit at that sort of a table; and when this
-dashing woman of the world, a notable representative of her set, thus
-appeared on the public road in her dandy state-conveyance, so very
-near Adele, he instinctively stepped between them; and became so much
-engrossed with Adele’s wraps and her comfort, getting her things
-all mixed up when no attention was necessary, that the fair one had
-passed without receiving the slightest sign of recognition from
-either of them.
-
-Paul flattered himself he had disguised the situation fairly well,
-and so he had from a man’s point of view, but not from a woman’s.
-Adele at once spoke up:
-
-“Don’t you know that lady, Paul? Why didn’t you speak to her?”
-
-Paul turned aside after his fashion, to avoid meeting Adele’s eyes,
-but promptly answered:
-
-“Yes, slightly--very slightly.”
-
-“Then why not speak to her? A gentleman never cuts a lady; never.”
-
-“No, of course,” remarked Paul. “It’s the lady’s prerogative to do
-the snubbing; some women seem to think men enjoy being snubbed.”
-
-“A well-bred woman always protects herself,” said Adele briskly. “If
-I had been in that dandy, and you had turned your back on me, that
-would not have been the end of it.”
-
-Paul laughed, incredulous.
-
-“No, Paul, I should not permit any acquaintance to treat me so
-cavalierly. I should demand an explanation.”
-
-“My dear Adele, no one would ever treat you that way,” said Paul,
-rather surprised at her vehemence. “That sort of thing is not apt to
-happen to you.”
-
-“No, I suppose not, but I should resent it if it did. Now tell me,
-Paul, frankly, why did you avoid speaking to that lady?”
-
-Paul pulled himself together as best he could and tried to explain.
-
-“Adele, you saw her yourself; you had a good look at her, did you
-not?”
-
-“Yes, I glanced at her, slightly--very slightly;” using inadvertently
-Paul’s own words, which still rung in her ears.
-
-“I think you must have seen her better than I did, for I did not look
-at her at all. I was looking at you.”
-
-“Well, perhaps I did.”
-
-“Then we both know her slightly--very slightly.”
-
-“Paul, don’t be evasive; I don’t like it. You were introduced, I was
-not.”
-
-“Well to be frank, Adele, I was introduced; yet I wasn’t.”
-
-“Explain!”
-
-“She introduced herself, and that’s not woman’s prerogative.”
-
-“It might be, under some circumstances,” said Adele with some
-asperity. “I know what you mean, however; go on.”
-
-“I thought she held herself very cheap,” said Paul. “I never could
-recognize, as a friend, one who undervalued herself.”
-
-“Oh, dear, I never would have thought it! was she that sort of
-person?” exclaimed Adele. “She didn’t look at all commonplace, not
-with that stylish turn-out and liveried bearers.”
-
-Paul laughed again; he couldn’t help it.
-
-“I don’t see anything funny,” said Adele, as they moved towards an
-old stump, took a seat under the trees, and sat looking forward
-between the crimson rhododendrons, towards the Celestial scenery
-beyond.
-
-“Adele, unfortunately she didn’t pay for the style herself,” remarked
-Paul, sub rosa; then correcting himself: “Yes, she did, too!--no! she
-didn’t, either!--oh, bosh! you know what I mean.”
-
-This only made Adele more pointedly inquisitive.
-
-“What are you talking about? Who did? her husband, I suppose.”
-
-“No, luckily she has none.”
-
-“Paul, you’re outrageous to say that; who did?”
-
-“I don’t know. I only know what a cruel, unkind world says.”
-
-“I’m sure you do know; tell me.”
-
-“You’re extremely inquisitive, Adele--excruciatingly so; you’re just
-as bad as Elsa.”
-
-“Who’s Elsa?”
-
-“In Lohengrin, but never mind her or him; if you must know now, if
-you insist about this woman, why, then--some other fellow, or other’s
-husband, has paid for it,” said Paul reluctantly.
-
-Adele was confused, and her manner showed it. She felt uneasy, and
-her words told on what account. “Oh, Paul, that is terrible--poor
-woman--poor soul!” and Adele turned her head away to avoid Paul’s
-eyes--her heart sensitive--pained at the thought of the poor soul.
-
-Paul drew Adele to him and placed her head on his shoulder.
-
-“Now, my darling, you do know why I could not recognize that woman.”
-
-“Why you came between us?” whispered Adele.
-
-“Yes. I couldn’t help it.”
-
-“To shield me--you felt that way?”
-
-“H’m--but it isn’t necessary to say so.”
-
-“I understand--only do it,” and she took the hand of him who thus
-loved her, in her own, and pressed it to her, her heart going out to
-him in tenderness.
-
-A thrill of blissful content passed through Paul’s innermost being.
-He knew her in whom he had believed; and she had faith and trust in
-her protector for life. They were truly happy.
-
-The dandy had passed--gone forever--a mere episode in their
-experience.
-
-Their lives were thus becoming as one.
-
-“I shall never forget our walks in this Cathedral,” said Adele.
-
-“I hope not,” said Paul, laconic, and not nearly so enthusiastic as
-Adele had anticipated.
-
-“You hope not? Why, what on earth is to prevent our remembering?”
-
-At this point Paul’s natural tendency to tease a little got the
-better of him; but Adele also by this time had had enough experience
-to recognize his moods, and to meet him on his own ground.
-
-“I should like to clinch it,” said he, “so that we couldn’t forget.”
-
-“I’ll remind you if I see your memory weakening,” said Adele.
-
-Paul’s countenance exhibited that sort of smile usually described as
-capacious. “I should like something to happen before we left,” and he
-looked doubtfully at her. Being a man of normal growth, the masculine
-desire for actual possession of his future wife had grown upon Paul
-recently in a marked degree; and the incidents of that particular day
-led him to speak out. He felt sure Adele would be sincere with him in
-response.
-
-Adele as natural as he was, woman’s instinct told her to be cautious,
-in fact shy; and her intellect suggested that she act upon what she
-had just heard Paul say about people who undervalued themselves. Of
-course, Adele suspected at once what Paul hoped would happen; but she
-took her own way to make him ask for it.
-
-“What’s going to happen?” said Adele, leading him on. “I mean what do
-you hope for?”
-
-“It’s just this way; let me tell you.”
-
-“I’m listening.”
-
-“You call this a Cathedral, don’t you? I think it a first-rate place,
-myself.”
-
-“Admirable for a short sojourn.”
-
-“And more, it’s very suitable for something special--something for us
-two.”
-
-“Not to live in; it’s too breezy.”
-
-“I don’t mind a breeze, if it don’t result in something worse--a
-squall.”
-
-“Squalls! I don’t permit squalls,” said Adele.
-
-“No, nor I, either; especially when another fellow tells you squarely
-to ‘forever after hold your peace.’”
-
-Adele did not quite enjoy this turn in the conversation, so changed
-it a little.
-
-“But you missed seeing the Lepcha ritual; you should see how the
-natives make their sacrifices.”
-
-“Sacrifices? God forbid, my dear. No! it’s all gain for us here;
-please don’t even think of sacrificing anything.”
-
-“Then we can attend some other ritual,” said Adele; which remark was
-so very much of an acknowledgment on her part that Paul imagined she
-would consent at once.
-
-“All right!” said he. “There is a Church of England curate in the
-village--I’m not particular.”
-
-“Also Taoist monks with masks and wheels. I’m not so very particular
-myself about the form,” quizzed Adele.
-
-“Don’t keep me on the rack, my dear; just tell me which you prefer.”
-
-“Well, the Taoist ritual is the most spectacular, the Lepcha the most
-thrilling, and the Church of England the most serious--probably, but
-I have my doubts.”
-
-“I never was more serious in my life,” said Paul. “The English will
-do; that is, if it suits you?”
-
-“Me! suits me!” she exclaimed, but her expression told him well
-enough his allusions were clearly understood.
-
-“Yes, of course, you have the final say.”
-
-“To decide what? It was you who spoke about something you hoped would
-happen before we left. You haven’t told me what it is, have you?”
-
-“But you guessed it at once, Adele, I’m sure; and better than I can
-tell you. Would not this be an ideal place for our marriage? Just
-arrange it to suit yourself.”
-
-Adele turned her face away--a little embarrassed, rather confused.
-
-“Oh, don’t be in such a hurry, Paul. I really must think.”
-
-“I am not, my dear. I’ve thought of it for a week,” said the ardent
-lover.
-
-“A week! you don’t call that much time to decide for life!” Adele was
-now as serious as her lover was ardent.
-
-“I decided at Olympus--oh, months ago,” said Paul, a little nervous.
-“Didn’t you?”
-
-“Yes, but this is like a surprise, after all, when it comes to the
-actual. I must have some time. Oh, Paul, you’re so--impatient; just
-like a boy.”
-
-“Why shouldn’t I be? I feel as if we were really married that evening
-when under the brow of Olympus”--and in one sense this was true; Paul
-had felt so, conscientiously, as to the bond between them.
-
-“Do you? I don’t,” said Adele.
-
-“Why you must have thought so,” said Paul, very inconsiderate in his
-ardor.
-
-Adele thought him too harsh to her, at such a time; and her manner
-showed how uncomfortable he had made her feel.
-
-It took Paul some little time to quiet his own ardor, and appreciate
-things from her point of view; finally he succeeded.
-
-“Adele, I suppose it is sudden; I had a wrong notion, an idea that
-the suddenness was only read about in novels of impulse, written to
-pass the time quickly. I know differently now; you see I never did it
-before. Forgive me now, Adele; I never dreamed of hurting you in any
-way--it is too serious.” Paul’s ardor had only taken another form.
-
-“Yes, this is real life; sudden and serious,” said Adele, “more
-serious than when we were at Olympus.”
-
-“Tell me why you think so?”
-
-“A betrothal is truth in words; marriage is truth in deeds.”
-
-Paul put his arm around her and told her again how he felt and
-thought and wished to act for the very best, for both of them. His
-manner changed, however. It was less ardent and more devout. He
-held her hand as if it were very precious to him, that to touch
-her was a sacred privilege. Never before had she a realizing sense
-so intense, of that manly virtue, which she then recognized in her
-future husband; and for the first time she noticed he used a new
-expression. His words were forcible, indeed.
-
-“Adele, I love you with all my soul and strength.” Then he bowed his
-head as if overcome.
-
-From that moment Adele knew he was her husband both in spirit and
-in truth. It was a complete answer to her prayers for Paul’s good,
-when she had prayed in spirit and in truth for him; the natural
-consequence of her prayers, her belief in Paul, and her sincerity
-towards him. She might have reasonably called him her husband
-in her own mind, in the presence of the Holy Spirit of truth in
-nature and in religion; but she did not. If Paul had died suddenly,
-however, before their marriage, she no doubt would have done so--in
-spirit--and it would have been the truth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A pause, yet not a rest. Thoughts active, although neither could
-speak. There was nothing more Paul could say. He had spoken the whole
-truth, in love--an ineffable divine experience. Youth’s foretaste of
-“Love divine, all love excelling.”
-
-Adele was meditating as never before. Her thoughts flew as a bird
-flies hither and thither, from possibilities to other probabilities,
-future plans, future joys; flew outwards, then inwards, as a bird
-among the branches of the Tree of Life; seeking to know the good
-from the evil, the best from the better; wishing to pluck fruit
-from the Tree of Life, and yet preserve the integrity of her own
-conscious-self, her conscientious-self, as to what she ought to do.
-
-Conscience flew to her mother to throw her arms around her mother’s
-neck and find sympathy, while mother’s love told the truth in
-maternal affection into her daughter’s ear; conscience flew to her
-father for consent and advice, to sit on his knee once more, and
-look in his face, and press his cheek, and run her fingers through
-his hair, and be caressed as “father’s little girl.” The thought of
-separation from loved ones, in any degree, what might it mean?--a
-leap in the dark?
-
-No, not into the dark. She could see that, positively, in Paul’s
-character: then what?--a rising upwards, an ascension into the
-brighter light of a new life.
-
-Nature indeed took its course, and with the experience came the
-comforting voice speaking in nature where the Tree of Life grows.
-
-She looked towards the chancel of her Cathedral; and how exquisitely
-beautiful was the scene! The place was decorated as for a wedding;
-and she saw spiritually, “as in a dream,” Paul standing at the
-chancel rail, waiting for her to come to him.
-
-That was enough--the dream became real.
-
-She looked up, to speak to Paul; putting her arm on his shoulder
-their faces met. Like as a bird, which had flown from branch to
-branch in the springtime of existence, returns to build a nest of its
-own among the beautiful foliage of life, so she returned in spirit
-and in truth to him who loved her and was willing to give himself for
-her.
-
-Only a word was uttered:
-
-“I am ready; I will go with you, Paul;” and in her own thoughts, “I
-am yours.”
-
-
-
-
- XLV
-
- RITUAL OF THE HUMAN RACE
-
-
-Thus it came to pass that Adele and Paul were to be married in the
-most majestic and impressive Cathedral upon earth. Under the canopy
-of heaven, in a domicile as well as edifice, constructed by the
-forces of nature from designs by the Supreme Architect, their own
-Father-Creator; married in a sacred place, purposed expressly for
-the Creator’s own service, and their own use; where all the rituals
-testified in ways practical yet mysterious to the Way of Truth in
-Life.
-
-If they had chosen the ritual of the nature-worshipers they would
-have found themselves in harmony with the most ancient of all, from
-the beginning; and the most widespread upon the surface of the earth
-as historically known.
-
-If they had chosen that of the Taoists considered as a peculiar phase
-of Buddhism, they would have found themselves in harmony with the
-most numerous, including both gnostic and agnostic, and the most
-devoted to expediency as the goal of existence, where the knowledge
-of human nature took the most practical forms of application to be
-found upon the globe to-day. They would have had the majority with
-them.
-
-They chose neither; for truth progressive had taught them to ignore
-naught in their own past experience, nor in the experience of others;
-and to seek “the greater things than these” which enlightenment is
-ever revealing through religion, philosophy and science.
-
-The Christian ritual of the marriage ceremony as it was then
-performed in the open air, differed greatly from that of the
-Lepchas, in that it was not held in a thicket partly screened, as
-if it were a quasi-secret to be seen darkly by both natural eye and
-spiritual sense: nor like the Taoist, in which are prayers in endless
-repetition, perfunctory effort as if by machinery, prayer wheels and
-decorations of the curio order. The Christian ritual as given in this
-Cathedral under the auspices of the Creator himself, ignored none of
-these; but showed that the truth had made men free, freedom in the
-individual, freedom by co-operation--for in union there is strength
-and propagation, proselyting truth.
-
-Strange to say, it was only those who officiated in strait-laced
-garments of the local form of ecclesiasticism who appeared awkward,
-stiff and unnatural in manner, and uneasy in mind when they found
-themselves administering in the open before a public which had thus
-become free in spirit.
-
-The wedding took place upon a grassy hill-side, a beautiful location
-where natural flowers bloomed, and crimson rhododendrons hung in
-bouquets and garlands overhead, framing in the Peaks of Eternal
-Whiteness (purity); a marvelous symbolic landscape, symbolizing that
-humanity must pass through and under the crimson of suffering in
-order to attain the pure whiteness beyond.
-
-The wedding took place where the Celestial scenery was ever before
-them; fleecy clouds hanging like wedding draperies in the azure blue
-around the Cathedral spires--the spires rising heavenwards, ever
-pointing upward.
-
-But at this particular time it was not so much these everyday
-manifestations of natural facts in this Cathedral which impressed
-those who officiated, as the astonishing cosmopolitan aspect of the
-crowd which came to see and be seen. Representatives of all sorts and
-conditions, racial and religious, which the region contained, engaged
-in various occupations, yet all now actuated by the same spirit, to
-share and rejoice in the happiness of others. Many among the crowd
-of witnesses had gone through the marriage ceremony themselves;
-others looked forward with rejoicing to the time when they would.
-Some, a limited number chiefly from the Latin races, spoke of it as
-of very serious “sacramental” character; but the enormous majority
-did not; and very many did not know what such a word meant; yet
-every individual present knew it was a “holy” condition to live in,
-for mortals. To all, the tenor of it was to induce mankind to be
-happier, to gain strength by co-operation in personal experience; an
-experience never to be forgotten in this case, for natural methods in
-religious ceremonial were about to take their course, and make it the
-most interesting wedding any of the guests had ever attended.
-
-The first impulse of those asked to officiate was to robe themselves,
-each to put on his own official cassock, stole, or academical gown.
-Lo! there was no robing room--positively no place suitable, not
-even an enclosure to screen a change of garments; all must be done
-in the open before God and man. If the officiating prelate had not
-brought his vestments in a grip-sack he would have had difficulty
-in assuming, as custom required, his usual official aspect. One
-unfortunate who laid great stress upon his official garb, his robes
-of office, found himself exposing a very soiled undergarment, much
-less decent, really, than the occasion required. Never was mortal man
-more ashamed of his personal underwear than this unfortunate who had
-previously been covered in public by outer sacerdotal garments.
-
-Another, profiting by his experience, sought a little briar bush he
-had discovered at the last minute, behind which to robe himself; and
-ere he had assumed his wedding garments, the bridegroom came.
-
-Paul approached, and stood waiting for his bride. He was dressed
-as often before when freedom of life and thought had characterized
-his actions; in fact, very nearly as when he won his bride and told
-her of his love. He and Adele had chosen to commence their future
-life by identifying it with the very freest and happiest of past
-experiences; hence Paul wore a spotless suit of white flannels, with
-an inner white waistcoat for the occasion; his necktie of light
-blue, which suited his complexion admirably. Verily new garments in
-one sense, but such as preserved his own sense of freedom just when
-he wanted it most. Some cigars had peeped out of one of his pockets
-just before he came forward, but the Doctor concealed them at the
-last moment. The lapels of his coat were thrown back upon his breast;
-his athletic frame was vigorous and active, and his countenance was
-sincere and truthful; his dark hair natural in its folds, and his
-eyes more forcible, energetic, intense than ever before.
-
-“I want you just as you are,” Adele had said to him, “without one
-plea, not dressed up for an occasion;” and the healthy groom came so,
-fresh, and clean, and free--a true man.
-
-Other lovers of nature present said he was “a splendid fellow--he
-looks it! Any girl ought to be proud of him”--the truth. He was
-indeed much more a veritable nobleman in appearance than when clothed
-in black.
-
-He waited for Adele.
-
-The bride, “arrayed in fine linen pure and white,” wore orange
-blossoms because symbolic among her people, the emblems festooning
-the bridal veil upon her shoulders. Her forehead was uncovered;
-and naught in her hair but a spray of blossoms held by a diamond
-cross--Paul’s gift. The cross glowed and sparkled in the sunlight,
-not unlike a flame. Some of the natives called it a “tongue of fire.”
-It was so, a flame of affection from Paul to herself. Her blonde hair
-like her mother’s, and intellectual dark eyes from her father, gave
-an alluring and mysterious beauty; a combination which appealed to
-the Orientals as angelic, and to many others as fascinating; human,
-yet spiritual.
-
-Adele at first looked upwards, but not in assumption--it was her
-natural attitude when moving freely without fear; then bowed her
-head as in the presence of God whom she loved, and because she was
-with her beloved in human experience.
-
-Upon her father’s arm she came forward, leaning in submission to
-him from whom she had received her life (_bios_); and embraced her
-mother, kissing her with arms around her neck, before the Creator
-and men, in token of that mother’s love she had received, namely her
-creation and preservation in this life; which she considered were
-divine attributes, divine gifts to be bequeathed to her own hereafter.
-
-To Paul she seemed as one looking towards the Celestial regions from
-which she must have come, and to which he felt sure she was destined
-some day. And the Orientals present looked on rapturously, and some
-drew in their breath between their teeth with admiration and respect;
-their manner of doing this seemed to say that they wished to imbibe
-some of the happiness which her presence near them suggested. Another
-voiced the sentiment of all mankind: “She is too lovely to live, she
-will be taken;” but on the instant a twig in the grass caught the
-skirt of her gown, and as she felt inclined to pause and loosen it,
-the Doctor stooped to detach it, and the bride passed on.
-
-Her father’s dignified presence, markedly paternal, was also
-suggestive--of what research after higher knowledge in systems may
-accomplish when Christianity is recognized as the great incentive to
-knowledge and ultimate unity. Truth was the one goal in Professor
-Cultus’ scientific investigations; but he was not one to accept
-mere knowledge as adequate. _He must have the truth also._ His
-intellectual head stood upon his finely proportioned shoulders,
-witness to the honesty and thoroughness of truth as he saw it; an
-honest man--God’s noblest work.
-
-Mrs. Cultus, Carlotta Gains Cultus, the bride’s mother, was by
-heredity a positive character, practical, active and worldly-wise.
-She was the embodiment of that womanly knowledge of the science
-of social intercourse, the ethics of society; one, who after
-encountering men and things, learns to appreciate them at their
-real value--a value not set by fashion, but by the true commonsense
-standards. Mrs. Cultus was one not always properly appreciated by
-others, but ever active on principle whether appreciated or not; not
-solely in intellectual lines of various heterogeneous clubs, but
-also in the humanities when the appeal to her seemed reasonable,
-and therefore natural. Mrs. Cultus had learned through severe
-illness certain truths in life which appealed to her personally
-with practical force and significance; an avenue to conviction very
-different from that of her husband. Her presence now manifested that
-other dignity of truth and worldly wisdom which did not repel, but
-attracted all who really knew her, for confidence, aid and affection;
-her husband and daughter most of all, for they knew her best. Being a
-mother who had suffered, she had learned to feel a mother-tenderness
-for all--that divine affection for humanity ever characteristic of
-Him who took even little babes in His arms and blessed them. So did
-Mrs. Cultus, in this way, now strive to follow Him. Devoid of either
-hypocrisy or guile, she was ever “true to the life”--her natural life
-as God had made her.
-
-And the bride’s friend, the friend of her own age; Adele and “Frank”
-Winchester, intimates; the one with whom her youthful thoughts and
-pranks had been unrestrained and free. It was this friend who had
-arrayed her in fine linen, pure and white, for her bridal, and by
-working faithfully, almost without ceasing, had embellished her
-wedding garment with an exquisite vine embroidered in white floss
-silk, encircling her bosom, trailing down to the hem. Affection
-and artistic skill guiding the willing fingers had produced this
-simple vine and branches. The art of loving simply, yet constantly,
-entwining truly, was in that vine, for there had been neither time
-nor place for elaboration; yet the vine was finished in season, and
-decked the bride at her wedding. It was a secret between these
-chums, how the worker had added clandestinely a small bunch of thorns
-embroidered in among the folds near the hem of her garment, where
-Adele could tread upon them if she chose. “Merely to remind you, my
-dear,” said Frank, laughing, “what a thorn in the flesh I’ve often
-been; these are the last--all future thorns are for Paul.” Adele
-cherished those precious thorns as if they were jewels; she would not
-have trod on them--no! no more than she would have wished her friend
-a pathway of thorns.
-
-And the Doctor, the inquisitive, sincere Doctor Wise--he asked no
-further questions when he stood aside as the groom’s best man; no
-questions about things in the heavens above and the earth beneath,
-nor even about the spirits of just men made perfect, here or anywhere
-else. The Doctor would have much enjoyed wearing knickerbockers as
-when he went outing with Paul, particularly so since Paul appeared
-in white flannels, and if need be he could be ready for tennis or
-cricket as soon as the ceremony was over; but propriety forbade.
-Proprieties were apt to be a wee bit inconvenient from the Doctor’s
-point of view; and just at present he was more nervous than the
-groom, nervous to get the thing over and have done with it. Such was
-the Doctor as he appeared on the surface; fundamentally he was the
-very personification of congratulation and joy. He knew that nature
-had taken the true course with these two, both so endeared to him.
-He rejoiced in being able to witness and appreciate so much that was
-good in nature and in co-operation. He was supremely happy too, but
-from yet another cause in nature; that the Creator in kindness had
-thus made him, a very ordinary man, able to see so much clearly, and
-yet not himself be lost in the mysterious maelstrom of life.
-
-The ladies gave the Doctor precious little opportunity to do anything
-whatever on an occasion when bachelors-on-the-shelf do not count;
-but he did search the country from Calcutta to Nepaul to obtain some
-flowers which he knew were desired by Adele, the bridal bouquet.
-A very simple one after all, white rose-buds amid cultivated
-heliotrope. It seemed at one time as if every sort of flower and
-shrub flourished in the Himalaya region except what he wanted. He
-had parties hunting heliotrope as if it might grow on berry bushes;
-and when from a lofty tree mistletoe was brought him by mistake,
-he nearly sent the bearer to the foot of a precipice. But he got
-it. It was finally obtained, near by in a private conservatory,
-much to his relief and Adele’s delight. The bouquet held attached
-an exquisite lace handkerchief passed through a ring; the ring was
-set with a sapphire of purest quality, that peculiar shade in depth
-and delicacy which in the Orient is supposed to characterize the
-plumage of the Bird of Immortality. This gem, ever constant day or
-night, responsive to every ray of light, symbolized the true blue
-of precious worth--truth in purity and love. This was the Doctor’s
-gift. Adele had heard him speak of such a stone and its significance
-among sapphires of so many colors. She read his very thoughts as she
-pressed his hand when accepting this significant and beautiful gift.
-The fragrance of the flowers direct from nature; the handkerchief a
-work of art; and the gem a true blue symbol--all brought memories of
-their search after something worth knowing in many fields. Never did
-Adele appear more idyllic, poetic, aye, pastoral in the higher sense,
-than at this moment; and the Doctor blessed her--in spirit.
-
-Thus, when Paul advanced to meet his bride, they stood among their
-own; the bridal party among their own race and nationality, together
-with cousins from their Mother Country, England--their faces radiant
-with hope and pleasure. A choral of mixed voices, volunteers from the
-Christian Colony, sang the processional; and the anthem was heard
-upon earth as it ascended heavenward. This near a chancel rail of
-natural growths, the line suggested by a carpet of wild flowers with
-cultivated beauties placed at intervals. And there were tree-ferns
-and palms, fountains of foliage at either end; the freshness of the
-fountains springing from the centre of the plant, its life within,
-not from near the exterior bark. Adele had expressed a desire for
-these plants with their heart-life in the centre; also because their
-significance was simple in nature, their natural beauty artistic,
-and their natural meaning too exalted and widespread to be affected
-seriously by passing fashions or fads. And the crimson rhododendrons
-decorated the background, while before them the Delectable Mountains
-and the azure blue.
-
-The ceremony was first directed towards the world at large, for each
-individual to learn, mark, and spiritually digest that which this
-couple manifested of truth in humanity. It was a solemn period, while
-the people gave heed, each reading his or her personal experience
-into that of the new couple; to each (such was the condition in
-nature), from his individual point of view. As a matter of fact Adele
-felt as if the minister was speaking of some other than herself, and
-Paul felt as if all eyes must be turned on Adele.
-
-Then the Servant of God turned towards this man and woman who would
-be one; a sacred moment when he pronounced them husband and wife.
-They knelt together, her hand in his--their first united prayer to
-“Our Father who art,” for this, from Him, unto themselves--as also
-One.
-
-And when they arose, and together turned to face the world, behold
-a cloud of witnesses, out in the nave of the Cathedral, a multitude
-upon the hill-slopes and skirting the forests, every vantage ground
-occupied by natives drawn hither by the world-wide desire to see “a
-bride adorned for her husband;” actuated by countless motives which
-primitive and natural curiosity suggested; curious to see what the
-dominant people, English or Americans, would do when worshiping
-in the outer air like themselves; curious to see what a Christian
-marriage was like. Would it be gay and festive like their own?
-what sort of a dress would be worn by the bride? and would all her
-belongings and presents be carried along the road so that all could
-see that she was rich? and would there be a real feast? Thus many
-had been attracted by very practical reasons which they considered
-suitable to the occasion.
-
-And who were these in bright array after their fashion? a little
-group not far from the bride herself. As if they had been especially
-invited, they stood before some bamboo wands, decorated for a
-gala-day; not before a thicket as once before, but with their bright
-signals in the open, the prayer-signals floating in the wind to
-attract the Good Spirits of the air.
-
-And who were these in yellow robes? with trumpets and bowls in their
-hands, and outlandish masks pendant from their girdles; yet cheerful
-faces withal, and wearing fillets and earrings of turquoise and coral
-taken from the “curio-case” in their Temple. And one poor decrepit
-native priestess with her good old prayer-wheel and bean rosary,
-twirling the wheel and rattling the beans regardless of all else; one
-who knew her wheel and rosary were good, because they were very old,
-like herself--she had used them from childhood. Who were they?
-
-Because they were not arrayed in modern dress, some thought them
-intruders, sheep of another fold gotten astray. Many thought so, all
-except Paul and the Doctor who knew what Adele herself had done;
-how she had gone out into the highways and hedges to compel them to
-come in and take their place near her. They were surely entitled as
-members of the congregation of the original Primate of the Cathedral,
-these poor Lepchas now Adele’s friends, to a place very far front.
-And the gay Taoists, also her Himalaya friends, whom she had met,
-and with whom she had worshiped in their own chapel, learning to be
-with them and of them, in spirit. Although crude and tawdry now,
-these Taoists, they were the professed followers of Laotze, a highly
-spiritual man who had given to the world one of the most abstruse,
-recondite, metaphysical forms of religion ever known to humanity.
-“Oh, what a fall was there!” thought Adele as she saw the Taoists
-of to-day; but she invited them just the same, she wished them to be
-with her now on an occasion she considered sacred.
-
-And more surprising still, in this region:
-
-Who were those two men, splendid examples of physical manhood, men
-of darker complexions? They had been engaged in distributing corsage
-bouquets and boutonnières among the bridal party, and they now stood
-side by side as the bride passed by. They saluted her, in a polite
-manner and with a style quite their own, and the bride recognized
-with sincere satisfaction their presence. Who were they? Verily
-of the race she knew best, next her own. Originally from Nubia in
-Africa, where their near ancestors had worshiped in the forests, they
-were now, already, by the will of the Creator, full citizens of her
-own beloved land. Adele had found them in the bazaar, where they had
-drifted in from God-knows-where in “God’s Own Country;” but to Adele
-they represented the colored people of her own United States. They
-were men who had shed their life-blood for the cause of Truth in
-Freedom, and the Truth had made them free. They were true men as God
-had made them such, in His own way, but young in the experience of
-civilization. They were now educating themselves by knowledge of the
-world for greater things to come; educating themselves with an energy
-and rapidity never before excelled by any race. Adele had determined
-to help them along; for woe betide anyone who dares ignore or impede
-the way of the Almighty in nature, where the progress of the race is
-in unity with the progress of religion itself. She said afterwards,
-that there was no feature more home-like among the incidents
-connected with her wedding, than to have these Freedmen from “God’s
-Own Country,” from home, to distribute the cultivated flowers of
-civilization which they themselves, that very morning, had helped to
-collect, to arrange, and to give to others.
-
-Thus to some few of the native witnesses to this wedding, to some
-few whom Adele had met personally, she became known as “The Lady of
-Loving-Kindness;” and no doubt they would in time, some of them, have
-erected a shrine to her memory, for they well remembered her beauty
-and the Flaming Cross Light which sparkled upon her forehead. And
-still later their descendants would have bowed down to an image of
-her, saying they did not worship the image, but the Loving-Kindness
-which she represented.
-
-As a matter of fact, to the majority of the Orientals actually
-present, but to whom she was not known personally, strangers to her,
-the effect was very different. To them the bride was now as one
-separated from them more than before: this because she had become
-subject to the will of her husband, and must hereafter walk behind
-him, not beside him, when she went abroad; and in time must present
-him with a son, or else perhaps it was better she herself had never
-been born. Such were the actual facts with regard to some of the
-witnesses. Yet, how natural, yet unnatural, are such conceptions;
-natural to man in the primitive or childhood period of his spiritual
-life, yet truly unnatural when taught otherwise by more matured
-civilizations, when mankind has become enlightened further by the
-brighter spiritual Light of the World.
-
-To Paul and Adele, now as one, it was just the reverse. They stood
-side by side, with their religious consciousness turned to One whose
-bride was the Church Spiritual, of whom all nations of the earth are
-blessed.
-
-As the bridal party returned homewards through this throng of
-sympathetic spectators, it was as if all had been invited to this
-Marriage Feast.
-
-The Spirit and the Bride had said, “Come.”
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Phillips Brooks.
-
-[2] See frontispiece. A view from near Sundookphoo.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Inconsistencies in hyphenation such as “hill-side”/“hillside”
- have been maintained.
-
- Minor punctuation and spelling errors have been silently corrected
- and, except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the
- text, especially in dialogue, and inconsistent or archaic usage,
- have been retained.
-
- Page 26: “Semple opened with some of Brahams’” changed to “Semple
- opened with some of Brahms’”.
-
- Page 73: “fire-opal of true Indian irridescence” changed to
- “fire-opal of true Indian iridescence”.
-
- Page 108: “had the courage of her convicions” changed to “had the
- courage of her convictions”.
-
- Page 117: “consequences as this; but if unsucessful” changed to
- “consequences as this; but if unsuccessful”.
-
- Page 163: “the true union, earthly, heavenly, etrenal” changed to
- “the true union, earthly, heavenly, eternal”.
-
- Page 226: “and all the essentials for majesty domnating” changed to
- “and all the essentials for majesty dominating”.
-
- Page 275: “fluttered a message of thanks, or propitation” changed
- to “fluttered a message of thanks, or propitiation”.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TWENTIETH CENTURY IDEALIST***
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Twentieth Century Idealist, by Henry Pettit</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
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-<p>Title: A Twentieth Century Idealist</p>
-<p>Author: Henry Pettit</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 23, 2021 [eBook #64612]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TWENTIETH CENTURY IDEALIST***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by Charlene Taylor, Susan Carr,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (https://www.pgdp.net)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (https://archive.org)</h4>
-<h2 class="pgx" title="">This ebook was created in honour of<br />
- Distributed Proofreaders’ 20th Anniversary.</h2>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/twentiethcentury00pett
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp48" id="cover" style="max-width: 62.5em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter" />
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp99" id="frontis" style="max-width: 66.4375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/frontis.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><span class="bold">View from Pinnacle on Roof of Cathedral&mdash;the Delectable Mountains beyond.</span><br />
-<span class="fs90">Among the Himalayas. Supposed highest summits on the earth’s surface.</span><br />
-<span class="fs90">Elevation, 29,000 feet. From near Sundookphoo, 1885.</span></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1 class="pg-brk">A TWENTIETH<br />
-CENTURY<br />
-IDEALIST</h1>
-
-<p class="pfs80">BY</p>
-
-<p class="pfs120">HENRY PETTIT</p>
-
-<p class="pfs90 p2">Under the Surface of the Ordinary Life Lie Great Mysteries&mdash;<br />
-The Real Part of Man Is in His Ideals</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowe5_5625" id="colophon">
- <img class="w100 p4" src="images/colophon.jpg" alt="Colophon" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs150 p4">THE GRAFTON PRESS</p>
-<p class="pfs90">PUBLISHERS <span class="pad8">NEW YORK</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p class="pfs90 p8 pg-brk pb8"><span class="smcap">Copyright</span>, 1905,<br />
-<span class="fs80">BY</span><br />
-HENRY PETTIT</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="TABLE_OF_CONTENTS">TABLE OF CONTENTS<br />
-<span class="fs60">AND</span><br />
-
-<span class="fs70">PLAN OF THE BOOK</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="autotable fs90" width="95%" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr fs70">CHAP.</td>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr fs70">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>PROLOGUE.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">I.</td>
-<td class="tdl">(a) <span class="smcap">Inquisitive Admiration&mdash;Two Kinds</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">II.</td>
-<td class="tdl">(b) <span class="smcap">How the Professor Was Won</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>PART FIRST.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>At Home in the States. The Physical Dominant.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">III.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Adele Herself</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">She Hears the Words of a Song</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">V.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">After Dark in the Park&mdash;The Doctor</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_39">39</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Avatar in the Occident</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad4">(a) Conversation with Papa.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdl pad4">(b) The Theophany of Spring. Adele in the Park.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Off to Asia</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>PART SECOND.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>Crossing the Atlantic&mdash;Up the Mediterranean.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>Mentality Dominant.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Studio for Impressions</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">IX.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Budget of New Sciences</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">X.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Palmistry Poses as Mental Science</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Amateur Mental Science</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Amateur Tactics&mdash;A Fright-full Cure</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Adele’s Meditations</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XIV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Another Commotion&mdash;Religious-Curative</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">What is Perfection?</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Two Simultaneous Soliloquies</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XVI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Courage versus Foolhardiness</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_110">110</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XVII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Two Rescues, and Two Girls</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XVIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Sensation versus an Impression</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XIX.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Gibraltar Appears and Disappears</span><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">[iv]</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_124">124</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XX.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Artistic Sense. At Capri</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_130">130</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Artist with Double Vision</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_135">135</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Secret of a Life</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Olympus&mdash;Court Festivities</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXIV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Gods Interfere</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Aphrodite Rises from the Sea</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">Eros-Cupid&mdash;The Modern-Antique.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>Intermezzo.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXVI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Allegro&mdash;The World’s Highway</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_169">169</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXVII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Andante&mdash;The Royal Route</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_173">173</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXVIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Afterglow</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>PART THIRD.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>In the Far East. Spirituality Dominant.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXIX.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Mystification&mdash;Illness and Hallucination</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_180">180</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXX.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Convalescence and Common Sense</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Off to the Himalayas</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Start Upwards</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">The Himalaya Railway&mdash;Fly Express.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Glimpse of the Primitive</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">THE HIMALAYA CATHEDRAL.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXIV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Adele Sees the Delectable Mountains</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Cathedral by the Supreme Architect</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXVI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Progress of the Building</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_229">229</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXVII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Primate of the Cathedral</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">The Message of the Seer&mdash;Ex-Cathedra.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>Intermezzo.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3"><em>The Voice in Nature.</em></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXVIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Cathedral Orchestra and Organ</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">Divine Solos.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XXXIX.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">On a Pinnacle in Nature</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_243">243</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XL.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Glimpse of Taoism</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XLI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Processional Before the Veil</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_262">262</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XLII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">On Holy Ground</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_269">269</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XLIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sacrifice</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_274">274</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XLIV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Everyday Ritual</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_282">282</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="3">Adele and Paul. A Dandy passes by.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XLV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Ritual of the Human Race</span></td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_292">292</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="autotable fs90" width="95%" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"></td>
-<td class="tdr fs70">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">View from Pinnacle on Roof of Cathedral&mdash;the Delectable Mountains Beyond.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">Among the Himalayas. Supposed highest summits on the earth’s surface. Elevation, 29,000 feet. From near Sundookphoo, 1885</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#frontis"><em>Frontispiece</em></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">As Incense Ascends&mdash;Symbolic, from Ages Past, of the Prayers of Humanity.</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl pad3">The Kunchingunga Snowy Range. Elevation, 28,156 feet. Scene from Observatory Hill, Darjeeling</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#facing268">268</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter pg-brk" />
-
-<p class="p4">“Nature herself is an idea of the mind and is never presented
-to the senses. She lies under the veil of appearances, but is herself
-never apparent. To the art of the ideal is lent, or, rather,
-absolutely given, the privilege to grasp the spirit of all, and bind
-it in a corporeal form.”</p>
-
-<p>“Art has for its object not merely to afford a transient
-pleasure, to excite to a momentary dream of liberty; its aim is
-to make us absolutely free. And this is accomplished by awakening,
-exercising, and perfecting in us a power to remove to an
-objective distance the sensible world (which otherwise only burdens
-us as rugged matter, and presses us down with a brute
-influence); to transform it into the free working of our spirit,
-and thus acquire a dominion over the material by means of ideas.
-For the very reason also that true art requires somewhat of the
-objective and real, it is not satisfied with a show of truth: it rears
-its ideal edifice on truth itself&mdash;on the solid and deep foundation
-of Nature.”</p>
-
-<p class="pb4 pad30pc">&mdash;From Schiller’s <cite>The Use of the Chorus in Tragedy</cite>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PROLOGUE"><span class="hidden"><em>PROLOGUE</em></span></h2>
-
-<p class="title">A TWENTIETH CENTURY<br />
-IDEALIST</p>
-
-<h3 id="I">I<br />
-<span class="fs80">INQUISITIVE ADMIRATION</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THERE certainly is a subtle charm from personal intercourse
-with those who seek a comprehensive view
-of life, and strive to live according to their own ideals.
-People who live upon broader lines than their neighbors are
-apt to be interesting from that fact alone, and the charm
-becomes quite fascinating when these ideals take form and they
-practice what they profess. Even if they do not succeed
-according to our notions, and fail to grasp until late in life
-some of the profound concepts which underlie the manifest
-workings of the mind of nature, the effort on their part counts
-in their favor&mdash;their actions speak louder than words.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was in his library when he mused thus. Books
-upon peculiar subjects lay around him, some open, others
-closed; and his eye fell upon a few articles which had been
-selected for their special significance quite as carefully as the
-books. The Doctor was much interested in what he called
-“the hidden meaning of things,” and the character of his
-library, with its peculiar contents, showed the fact.</p>
-
-<p>Putting aside his cigar, he looked across the room, as if to
-give audible expression to his thoughts, towards a younger man
-of quite a different type, an individual whose very presence
-suggested he had not ignored athletics while at college, even if
-the studies had been exacting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was about to call him by name, when he hesitated,
-his deeper interest in the young fellow asserted itself;
-he concluded to take a good look at him first, and avoid if
-possible any error in approaching the subject he wished to
-bring up. He already knew him so well that it did not take
-long to recall certain facts bearing upon the situation.</p>
-
-<p>Paul was not as a general thing given to bothering about
-hidden meanings. His diving below the surface had been
-chiefly as a swimmer, from early boyhood until more recent
-experience. He possessed a keener appreciation of surface
-values and the exhilaration from a good bath rather than what
-he might bring up by deep diving. But being young, energetic,
-and sincere, his very energy itself was bound to bring him
-down to the verge of deeper experience. In fact as the Doctor
-looked at him he appeared like unto one standing upon the
-rockbound coast of the ocean of life ready to take the plunge,
-whenever&mdash;he felt like it.</p>
-
-<p>“Take things as they are,” was one of Paul’s favorite
-expressions.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor concluded he would, and broke the silence:</p>
-
-<p>“How did you enjoy last evening?”</p>
-
-<p>“Immensely.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you would.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes? Greatly obliged for the introduction,” and Paul continued
-examining some illustrations in a periodical apropos
-of the coming coronation in England.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor determined to rivet his attention.</p>
-
-<p>“I admire Adele Cultus greatly, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt she would look well, wearing a coronet like this&mdash;look
-at it.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor did not look, but continued:</p>
-
-<p>“She certainly has some ideal of her own about life in
-general, and, I suspect, about herself in particular.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shouldn’t wonder,” said Paul, laconic.</p>
-
-<p>“But she is thoroughly sincere about it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Possibly, but last night the sincerity was all on my
-side.”</p>
-
-<p>“How so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I would have danced with her the evening through,
-if she had let me&mdash;she loves dancing.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor’s eyes twinkled: “Don’t you think she is a
-striking personality?”</p>
-
-<p>“Striking? Oh, yes! gracefully so, deux-temps spirituelle.
-I felt the effect at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“In character?”</p>
-
-<p>Paul smiled. “I call it strikingly practical&mdash;no nonsense;
-she wouldn’t let me, and that settled it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she had her own way&mdash;at a ball,” remarked the
-Doctor dryly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, of course! of course! She certainly would support a
-coronet first-rate; it would not be the coronet’s part to support
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt you are right, Paul. I was only asking some
-test questions,” and the Doctor subsided, as if he had more
-to say but would not venture.</p>
-
-<p>“Test questions? Whom were you testing?” asked Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“Both of you,” said the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you first meet her?” asked Paul, still examining
-the periodical.</p>
-
-<p>“Where?&mdash;we didn’t meet! I heard her voice through the
-crack of a door.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m!” And Paul put down his book.</p>
-
-<p>“It was while I was convalescent at the hospital after that
-bicycle accident. She was a volunteer nurse, and a remarkably
-good one among not a few devoted women. You were
-right about her being practical and spirituelle, and so was I
-about her being spiritual.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul took up a cigarette. A cloud of smoke enveloped his
-head, his facial expression hid behind the cloud. The Doctor
-continued:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You know it takes a fair combination of the practical and
-spiritual to make a true nurse?”</p>
-
-<p>Paul agreed mentally, but all the Doctor heard was a voice
-from behind the cloud, “she dances like an angel.”</p>
-
-<p>Angelic dancing not being in the Doctor’s repertoire of
-investigation, he changed to another point of view.</p>
-
-<p>“While I was convalescent at the hospital it was very amusing
-to read hands by palmistry. I read her hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“You held her hand, you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t mean to tell me you read her character by the
-lines written in her hand! Nonsense!”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not. I merely noticed the natural tendencies of the
-individual as shown by the form of the hand. Her characteristics,
-not her character.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe in it,” remarked Paul, positive.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t? Well, just swap hands with some other fellow
-and observe the consequences.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul laughed. “Excuse me&mdash;quite satisfied with my own.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just so,” said the Doctor, “and there is good reason why
-you feel the satisfaction; the consequences would be not only
-absurd, but positively disastrous.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul began to feel interested as the Doctor forced the practical
-issue upon his attention.</p>
-
-<p>“The consequences of any change from the special form
-of your own hand would only prove that the other fellow’s
-hands do not fit your personality.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul, who really knew much more about persons than personalities,
-blew another cloud of smoke towards the ceiling,
-and listened.</p>
-
-<p>“You know, Nature never makes any mistakes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not, or I’m a goner,” quizzed Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“And personality is really made up of three in one, a trinity
-of the physical, mental, and spiritual. You’re a sort of trinity
-yourself, my boy. You’ll find it out some day if you don’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-swap hands with some other fellow and spoil your own combination.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you learn by holding Miss Cultus’ hand?”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was a little slow in replying, in fact, choosing
-which of the many things he had observed was the particular
-one to which he had best call Paul’s attention. Then he spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“She shows marked individuality based upon rather a rare
-type, yet a mixed hand; most Americans and Chinese are
-mixed. You know, pure types are very rare.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t say so?” quizzed Paul; “‘mixed,’ and like the
-Chinese. What a wonderful insight for diagnosis palmistry
-possesses!” The Doctor continued:</p>
-
-<p>“In the main, her hand manifests the exceeding rare psychic
-type,&mdash;that is, she loves and seeks the truth for its own sake.”</p>
-
-<p>“There! I told you she was angelic, a practical angel,”
-interrupted Paul. The Doctor kept straight on:</p>
-
-<p>“And with this there are other features indicating both the
-useful and the philosophic elements in her make-up, very
-strong, each in its own relative domain.”</p>
-
-<p>“Extraordinary! truly!” quoth Paul. “The useful must
-have come to the front when she was acting nurse, and the
-philosophic when she told me we had danced enough for one
-evening. As to the psychic,&mdash;let me see! the psychic!&mdash;well,
-to be frank, Doctor, I can’t say I have seen that as yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, you have,” thought the Doctor, “or you would not
-be showing the interest you are taking just now.” This <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">sub
-rosa</i>, and then he turned the topic once more:</p>
-
-<p>“Where do you suppose she got those traits, so forcible in
-combination?”</p>
-
-<p>“Got her hands?” exclaimed Paul the practical. “Inherited
-them of course, even the skin-deep profundity of palmistry
-is not required to guess a diagnosis for that.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor’s eyes again twinkled. “Whom did she inherit
-them from?”</p>
-
-<p>“Father and mother,&mdash;what nonsense to ask!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why not her grandparents?”</p>
-
-<p>“Give it up,” said Paul. “Take things as they are.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, the result of this decidedly mixed but suggestive conversation
-was to excite curiosity in both the Doctor and Paul.
-Not that they formed a conspiracy to learn about Miss Cultus’
-forbears; quite the contrary. Simply by friction in time they
-learned something of the natural causes which had produced
-her charming personality, so attractive to all who met her.</p>
-
-<p>That they both had been led to respect and admire her upon
-short acquaintance was only too evident,&mdash;on the surface.
-What was not quite so evident, for neither of them had said
-so, was that each had noticed her devotion to her mother,
-constant, ever thoughtful, as if to make her appear to the best
-advantage: as to her father, she simply idolized him.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the items they learned had best be stated at once,
-for her ancestors, in immediate relationship, certainly did cast
-their shadows before; and the blending of the shades and shadows
-later on in her life, formed a character that was lovely
-and inspiring.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="II">II<br />
-<span class="fs80">HOW THE PROFESSOR WAS WON</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">FEW who knew Mrs. Cultus in after years, when as an
-active woman of the world she displayed much tact
-dominated by kindly consideration for others, would
-have suspected the peculiar phases of development through
-which she passed in younger days, during the immature
-period of youth when the same natural tendencies took different
-forms, and were so different in degree. From one point
-of view the difference in degree produced a difference in
-kind&mdash;she appeared to be a different sort of woman. What
-she did when young was often mistaken for selfishness alone,
-whereas the same natural tendency, operating as reasonable
-ambition, after finding its true sphere, exerted a far nobler
-activity, profoundly different in both degree and kind. Not
-a few expressed surprise when her ambition to lead became
-coupled with a determination to help others along at the same
-time. Always ambitious, and with strong social instincts, she
-read the book of life rather than literary productions; but
-when she did deign to peruse a popular novel, her criticism
-punctured the absurdities of modern snap-shot incongruity.
-She was never selfish at heart, but she certainly did have a way
-of using the world without abusing it, personally; and her
-own way of expressing herself.</p>
-
-<p>As to the Professor, her husband, he found himself going
-to be married without having fully analyzed the case.</p>
-
-<p>Charming manners and cultivated tastes, largely inherited<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-from antecedents in the professional walks of life, had led
-Professor Cultus to fascinate and charm not a few during his
-youth and early manhood,&mdash;what more natural! He was slow
-however to realize that in so doing he might encounter
-another, gifted as himself yet of an entirely different type,
-complementary; and so it came to pass.</p>
-
-<p>While returning from a congress of anthropologists which
-met on the Continent, where there had been much discussion
-of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">genus homo</i> through many stages of development, the
-Professor was fated to be himself taught a lesson in anthropology
-which never after lost its hold upon him. It gave him
-much subject for thought, but not exactly of the kind suitable
-for a technical paper before the next congress.</p>
-
-<p>He met an individual whose antecedents no doubt did have
-the same number of fingers and toes as his own, but whose
-“thinking matter” in her brain seemed to operate differently
-from his own; and whose experience in life had been very
-different; one of whose position in the chain of physiological
-development he knew much intellectually, but whose innate
-appreciation of facts and ability to perform he had no adequate
-realizing sense whatever; her avenue to truth, through heredity,
-being quite different from his own.</p>
-
-<p>They were fellow passengers upon one of the palatial
-steamers which then first appeared upon the North Atlantic,
-and it took her only the ten days’ voyage to capture the
-Professor, his charming manners, his intellectual efforts and
-his anthropological researches, all complete.</p>
-
-<p>How did she do it? and what did she propose to do with
-him after she got him?</p>
-
-<p>The answer might be given in a single sentence: she met
-him first with his own weapons, charming manners and an
-intellect as bright as his own; then caught him because he
-was objectively philosophic and for pure science, so called,
-while she was subjectively philosophic and for pure material
-results. She was quite as philosophic as he was,&mdash;also knew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-chalk from cheese when she saw it. The Professor preferred
-to analyze the composition before forming an opinion. While
-he was analyzing, she so mixed the ingredients in his mental
-laboratory that he could no longer differentiate or reason upon
-the subject of a marriage at all: and in truth it must be stated,
-his own youth was not much inclined that way either. His
-heart got the better of his head.</p>
-
-<p>Thus was the youthful Professor actually forced to accept
-the situation philosophically. He flattered himself that in
-time he would be able to investigate more fully, and make
-any needed adjustments later on. She flattered herself that
-she would be quite equal to any emergency that might arise,
-as she proposed not only to push him to the very front among
-his contemporaries, but also use his exalted position to attain
-her own social ends.</p>
-
-<p>When they first met, both away from home, in mid-ocean,
-their mental activities alert, stimulated by what each had
-experienced abroad, and little on hand to occupy the time, the
-conditions were favorable. Even the menu on board ship
-was highly seasoned after its kind, during the day, and after
-dark the stars twinkled doubly in the heavens above, and the
-mysterious depths below, while they looked at “the Dipper”
-together.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner did the charmingly vivacious young lady observe
-the Professor’s attractive appearance than she made up her
-mind; and noticing that he sat at the Captain’s table as one of
-the selected few on board, she determined to know him personally.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Cultus in young manhood certainly did look
-handsome, of the intellectual type. His dark eyes were noticed
-by others besides Miss Carlotta Gains. The prospect of this
-new acquaintance was quite enough to cause her to exert herself,
-so she frankly told Fraulein Ritter, under whose care she
-was returning home, that she would like immensely to have
-that gentleman presented to her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span></p>
-
-<p>Carlotta had been to Berlin, taking lessons in singing under
-Fraulein Ritter’s direction and chaperonage; had been under
-rather strict surveillance while studying, and had not much
-enjoyed that particular phase of a young woman’s student
-life in Berlin. When once clear of the Continental proprieties,
-the American girl began again to assert herself. Carlotta was
-certainly fortunate in having such a one as Fraulein Ritter
-to consult, for she in turn was quite an authority in her own
-branch. Educated at Weimar during the days of Liszt’s
-supremacy, Fraulein Ritter had no small reputation afterwards
-from her publications relating to music in general and
-voice culture in particular. Incidentally she had met not a
-few of the members attending the congress,&mdash;in fact, Professor
-Cultus had already been presented to her in Berlin; so there
-being nothing to shock Fraulein’s German sense of propriety
-in granting Carlotta’s request, an introduction followed.</p>
-
-<p>“Professor, allow me to present you to my pupil, Miss
-Carlotta Gains. Possibly you have heard of her father,
-Mr. Anthony G. Gains, of Silverton, Eldorado.” Why Fraulein
-should have supposed that any knowledge of Anthony
-Gains out in Eldorado could possibly have reached the
-Professor can only be attributed to the benign influence
-of Carlotta’s lucky star, and the other well authenticated fact
-that “the world is not so big after all.” As luck would have
-it, the Professor had known Mr. Gains fairly well, and not so
-many years back, when at the early stage of his career he had
-been called upon to give expert testimony in a certain law
-suit involving technical information. The Professor had
-found Mr. Gains a first-rate, all-round, square-minded American,
-from his point of view, and Grab Gains, as his Eldorado
-friends dubbed him, had much appreciated the young scientist’s
-unbiased clear statements as a witness. Being astute and
-practical in business, upon gaining the law suit he had given
-his expert, on the spot, the biggest fee he had received up to
-that time,&mdash;not for his testimony&mdash;oh, no,&mdash;for some other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-work which came up incidentally, quite beyond his expenses
-and regular charge.</p>
-
-<p>Gains’s business foresight was not devoid of results. The
-Professor at once thought he knew much about the antecedents
-of the young lady, and expressed himself as delighted to meet
-the daughter of his former friend. Of course he referred to
-the general circumstances under which they had met, and
-praised Eldorado as a locality of great scientific interest.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Carlotta put two and two together, and recalled her
-father’s remark that he would never have gained that case if
-the Professor had not “talked science so that the jury could
-understand.” The Professor seemed pleased to know it. Carlotta
-at once determined to appreciate the Professor just as
-that jury had done; so she immediately introduced a topic
-bound to be of interest to him.</p>
-
-<p>“What a success your congress proved to be, Professor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,&mdash;more than we anticipated. But I did not
-suspect it would attract your attention.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not? Fraulein takes all the publications; I intend to
-read your paper with special interest,” her ambition leading
-her more than half way.</p>
-
-<p>The Professor looked quizzical. “I fear you will find it
-rather slow for cursory reading.” Then his responsive manner
-getting the best of him he added with considerable effect: “It
-will give me the greatest pleasure to make it clear if I can.”</p>
-
-<p>Carlotta took him up at once,&mdash;but on a topic she did know
-something about as well as he, and stated it after her own
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>“I noticed that one of the discussions was about the peculiar
-costumes of certain tribes. Now, I never did understand why
-the darker races should introduce brilliant colors in dress so
-much more naturally and effectively than we do.”</p>
-
-<p>The Professor instantly looked at her own dress and thought
-it very effective, in excellent taste. Carlotta continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Now, with us color is often so arbitrary, mere fashion, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-arrangement artificial, and when the thing is unbecoming you
-feel just like a martyr;” then, musingly, “but he won’t find
-that in me.”</p>
-
-<p>Professor Cultus laughingly replied that “he really knew
-little about dress”&mdash;which was a fib for an anthropologist&mdash;but
-he supposed that “Dame Fashion was a capricious jade who
-often made her reputation by producing whims to meet the
-demand for something new; she had certainly been known
-to introduce what was hideous to many, simply to cover up the
-defects of a favorite patron.”</p>
-
-<p>Carlotta at once thought, “Well, there’s nothing hideous
-about me. I wonder what he means?”</p>
-
-<p>The Professor once started, went on about the darker races
-using the primitive and secondary colors only with such
-marked effect; that they really knew little about hues and
-shades as our civilization differentiates colors and effects. He
-was then going on to add something about color in jewels
-adding great effect to rich costumes, when Carlotta gave a
-little start, drew her wrap about her and said she felt cold and
-chilly.</p>
-
-<p>Fraulein at once suggested they should leave the deck for
-the saloon. Carlotta acquiesced as if very grateful, and begged
-the Professor to excuse her.</p>
-
-<p>Of course he did so promptly, with sympathy excited by
-fear lest she might have suffered in consequence of his keeping
-her standing too long in a cold wind.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing of the sort. It was the reference made to jewels
-by the Professor which had caused her impromptu nervous
-chill. Could he possibly have noticed the too many rings she
-wore and concluded she might be rather loud in her taste?
-That must be rectified at once,&mdash;so Carlotta caught a chill on
-the spot, merely a little sympathetic chill, but enough to get
-away and arrange things better for the next interview. Certainly
-her tact showed foresight as well as power to meet an
-emergency from her point of view.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span></p>
-
-<p>She knew instinctively the value of sympathy as well as
-propinquity. She had gained her first point, an introduction;
-now for the second, sympathy: and she was not slow to
-act,&mdash;much quicker than the Professor dreamed of. She did
-things first and discussed them afterwards; that was one of
-her accomplishments which he often observed later on.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner in her state-room than Miss Gains snatched off
-every ring, all but one, a fine ruby rich in color but not too
-large; “rubies never are,” she said, pensive. On this one she
-looked with much satisfaction, it would meet her requirements
-yet not excite suspicion, the removal of all might do so.</p>
-
-<p>But why the ruby?</p>
-
-<p>Carlotta was astute, like her papa, much more so than the
-Professor imagined,&mdash;he learned that also later on. What
-troubled her now was no new matter, and largely in her own
-imagination. A biologist would have told her it was inherited.
-Being a pronounced blonde of the florid type, vivacious, fond
-of excitement, she had often noticed that her hands became
-rather rosy in color. So the ardent yet astute Miss Gains had
-evolved the brilliant yet practical idea that the ruby would be
-“the very thing to throw the other red into the shade&mdash;people
-will notice the ruby and speak of that.” If she could
-not avoid being too rosy, in her own imagination, the ruby
-should take the blame.</p>
-
-<p>Carlotta was politic also, like her papa, much more so than
-the Professor thought&mdash;he found that out also later on. So she
-retained the ruby only, and wore a red tocque when next on
-deck. She would no doubt have put on her golf jacket if on
-shore, so determined was she to make those hands look as
-refined as possible.</p>
-
-<p>The Professor’s sympathy was now to be encouraged. If
-the too many rings were to be kept out of sight, it was far
-more important to keep the object of sympathy in sight. Carlotta
-determined not to get over that chill too soon,&mdash;not to
-remain so chilly that the state-room was the only warm place,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-but just chilly enough to seek convalescence wrapped up in a
-becoming garment, resting in an easy chair in some retired
-corner, or on deck where the lights illumined others, and not
-herself. Just chilly enough to require the little attentions of
-a sympathetic friend, whose sympathy she could make warmer
-as her own cold chill wore off.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Carlotta was diplomatic, as the Professor also found
-out. Once ensconced in that easy chair with the Professor to
-keep the chills off, her success was already assured. Her
-greatest triumph consisted undoubtedly in that she displayed
-such a bright intelligent appreciation of the Professor’s point
-of view about everything, anything from chalk and cheese to
-volcanoes and earthquakes, not omitting the science of games,
-especially ping-pong, and the usual dose of theosophy; and
-so much policy and diplomacy as to her own point of view,
-that to this day the intellectual scientist ascribes the results
-primarily to his own ability in courting.</p>
-
-<p>It was in fact a double game of life and chances, the game
-of all games, of heart and head, that two can play at. Carlotta
-won for life, whereas the Professor began by taking chances.
-Propinquity at sea,&mdash;floating on the waves from which rose
-Aphrodite.</p>
-
-<p>Of course it became evident to the Professor that Carlotta
-was precisely the person he most desired in life,&mdash;so appreciative,
-intellectually bright, much knowledge of the world for
-her age; and as she had incidentally remarked on one occasion,
-quite comfortable as to worldly goods;&mdash;although, to be frank,
-he laid little stress upon the latter at that time, having much
-confidence in his own resources. He was often glad of it,
-however, later on; it also proved one of the things he learned
-subsequently.</p>
-
-<p>Before they left the steamer there was an understanding,
-and the way seemed smooth to expect a favorable consideration
-from Carlotta’s parental governor. Her mother was no longer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-living, which accounted for Carlotta’s being under the care of
-Fraulein.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact Anthony Gains was not surprised in the
-least when his daughter returned engaged to be married, and
-easily accepted the situation philosophically; indeed, rather
-congratulated himself that she had not been too independent,
-like some, but deigned to go through the formalities of making
-the announcement subject to his approval.</p>
-
-<p>“Much better to avoid unnecessary fuss,” he said to himself,
-“and it gives me a good chance to spare the Professor’s feelings.
-In case they had given me the slip, I suppose a rumpus
-would have been in order. Carlotta’s sensible,&mdash;I know her
-well,&mdash;I’m glad she lived in the West before going to Europe.”
-Her father did know her well, much better really than he who
-then desired to take the chances. Papa also remembered with
-much satisfaction the young scientist who had given “plain
-talk to that jury.” He concluded he might be able to give
-plain talk to his household if emergency required it. Finally
-he told them frankly:</p>
-
-<p>“Having gone through the mill myself, I guess you two can
-manage your own business first-rate. I don’t suppose you
-object if I coöperate.”</p>
-
-<p>As his practical coöperation took effect even before the
-marriage, when he settled a handsome sum upon Carlotta, the
-Professor thought still more highly of his prospective father-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>Not till all was over, the ceremony an accomplished fact,
-and the young people off on another tour apropos of the
-occasion,&mdash;not till then did Anthony Gains allow himself to
-whisper in a room where there was no telephone:</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll be comfortable anyhow. These scientific fellows
-make so little they are not extravagant as a class. I guess it
-will be all right&mdash;God bless ’em.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Such had been an early but important chapter in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-experience of the immediate ancestors of Adele Cultus;&mdash;of
-her whom both the Doctor and Paul had admired,&mdash;Paul
-because she was practical, the Doctor because she was spiritual.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PART_FIRST"><span class="hidden"><em>PART FIRST</em></span></h2>
-
-<h3 id="III">III<br />
-<span class="fs80">ADELE HERSELF</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">IT is not so much what was said, as who said it and how
-they said it, that will convey an adequate impression of
-the charm exerted by Adele upon those she met. Of
-her two dozen desperately intimate friends at school, each had
-been known to exclaim, “Why, of course I know her; isn’t she
-just too lovely for anything?” and that covered the whole
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>When during college days a coterie of Juniors decided to
-invite some Seniors to “a tea,”&mdash;not “to tea,” for all were
-excruciatingly academic at that period, there was a spirited
-debate as to the special duties of each girl during the function,
-but not the slightest doubt that Adele should head the Reception
-Committee. “Why, my dear, she’s just the one for that
-place. Don’t you see it? We’ll show them the proper ’pose.’”</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, Adele did receive; also “poured out”
-at times; also introduced some strangers to her own kindred
-spirits to banish any feeling of uneasiness; and finally
-achieved the undoubted triumph of making two girls friends
-again, the girls much excited, holding diametrically opposite
-opinions upon the momentous question of Cleopatra’s cruelty
-to animals.</p>
-
-<p>When she graduated, valedictorian of her class, she made
-an address neither too long nor too short, not unlike her gown,
-precisely as it should be,&mdash;pointedly academic to start with
-and meet the case, then somewhat more colloquial, recalling
-the good times they all had passed, and concluding with a
-touching appeal “never to forget Alma Mater.” The entire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-class mentally promised they never would, “nor you either,
-Adele,” and she was deluged with so many future-correspondents
-that the prospect became really alarming.</p>
-
-<p>When she made her début, scarcely an evening passed that
-some “man” did not tell her confidentially: “You look lovely
-to-night, Miss Cultus;” and when upon a certain full-dress
-occasion she sat with Mr. Warder on the stairway, presumably
-with none but the old stand-up clock to listen, the first
-remark she heard was, “Oh, I’m so glad, Miss Cultus, we can
-have a chat, alone!” “Alone!” exclaimed Adele. “Why, certainly,
-alone in the crowd,”&mdash;and as she drew her skirts aside
-to allow four other couples and a queue of waiters to pass, her
-clear responsive laugh appreciative of the situation, made Mr.
-Warder enjoy the public seclusion immensely.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently there was a personal magnetism about Adele
-which affected all more or less, and many whose own characteristics
-were totally unlike hers.</p>
-
-<p>At a glance anyone would have noticed her light hair flowing
-free, yet under control, tinged with sunlight, the sunlight
-of youth; hers was a fair complexion like her mother’s, yet
-with her father’s lustrous eyes. She was a blonde with dark
-eyes; once seen, a picture in the mind’s eye.</p>
-
-<p>Her father’s facial expression played over her countenance,
-manifesting that responsive personal interest which drew many
-to her. Her mother, as we already know, could express that
-responsive attitude also, and exercise the personal influence
-when she chose, but with Adele it was spontaneous, perfectly
-natural, and her smile sincere, ingenuous, rather than ingenious,
-one of the most precious and potent gifts a woman can
-possess.</p>
-
-<p>And some of her other gifts by heredity were also very
-evident, but modified. Dame Nature had been exceedingly
-kind, and given her as it were only those elements which
-intensified the better traits of the previous generations. Her
-active mind reminded one of her father’s intellectual ability<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-in science, but it was so modified by her mother’s more comprehensive
-susceptibility and impressionability in many directions,
-her worldly wisdom and promptness, that in Adele it
-took a different turn from either one of the parents. Her
-social instincts could not be suppressed, but fundamentally
-they tended towards an appreciation and insight of the humanities
-and ethical subjects rather than the material interests
-one might look for in the granddaughter of Anthony Gains,
-or the intellectual abstractions which might have come from
-the Professor’s mode of thought.</p>
-
-<p>Before graduating, some one asked her what she proposed
-to do after leaving college, for all felt a brilliant career was
-open. Adele was rather reserved in answering this question,
-and generally replied that there was so much which ought to
-be done in the world, no doubt she would be very busy. But
-to her mother she confided on one occasion her innermost
-thought, she “would like to work in the slums.” This so
-horrified Mamma that Adele’s name was entered upon the
-fashionable Assembly list for the coming season without
-delay, as an antidote in case of emergency, although somewhat
-premature as to time.</p>
-
-<p>It would never do to oppose Adele. She was already
-unaccustomed to that sort of management, and would assert
-herself even if she regretted it afterwards. A compromise was
-in order. She did not go to work in the slums, and did attend
-fashionable functions with her mother, but after serious
-conversation with her father on the subject of the practice of
-medicine by women, and her own observations of the constant
-demand for trained nurses who would not upset the whole
-household, she concluded to look into that matter herself, and
-volunteered to serve in the hospital during war times.</p>
-
-<p>“I must do something to help along; and nobody need know,
-unless I choose.” It was while thus serving that the
-Doctor and Paul had first met her, when the Doctor was a
-patient after his bicycle accident in a miniature cyclone. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-was in the hospital that Doctor Wise had first read her hand,
-and made a note of it as approaching the psychic type more
-clearly than any other he had then met.</p>
-
-<p>From the Doctor’s point of view Adele’s hand was indeed
-suggestive, but not so purely psychical as to intimate mysticism
-to excess. It was rather that of a vivid idealist than a moody
-mystic,&mdash;too much intellectuality in the upper part, as well
-as assertion in the thumb and clearness in the head-line, not
-to influence and modify the natural tendency and scope as
-shown by the general form. It was not the hand of one whose
-vague aspirations after the good but unattainable would lead
-to extremes either in the activities of communism or socialistic
-vagaries, nor in the opposite direction towards the passive life
-of an ascetic. Either one would have soon disgusted Adele.
-It was the hand of one who endeavored to be logical, and did
-have common sense; yet in the exuberance of feeling sometimes
-put her hero upon a pedestal only to find the pedestal had a
-crack in it and the hero was in danger. As to the hero himself,
-he was never affected; she remained true to her hero, no sawdust
-in him; but she certainly did put him quietly aside on
-the shelf when she found herself beyond his point of view.
-She simply put him on the shelf to “think it out for himself,”
-as she had done for herself,&mdash;and in consequence had more
-would-be heroes following in her train, striving to catch up,
-than is generally found in the domain of hero worship.</p>
-
-<p>Youth has its sway. Adele was most delightfully enthusiastic
-at times, often bent upon what she called “having a good
-time.” Then she was a picture worthy of Fortuny’s art in a
-sunny Spanish patio; but in quieter moments as introspective
-as one of Millais’ peasants; rather over-confident in her own resources,
-having really not met as yet any opposition worthy of
-the name, unless perhaps a weak patient who refused to take
-medicine. Then she took a sip herself, and told him “Now
-you’ve got to take it,” and he did,&mdash;because her actions spoke
-louder even than her words.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span></p>
-
-<p>Her father had several times told her to read the world as
-if it were a book, and she had heard her mother refer to
-certain society leaders who acted a part that did not suit their
-own style. She determined to know and read all passers-by,
-from cooks with a sauce-pan to princesses with a crooked
-coronet, including Tom, Dick and Harry of course; and she
-found it so highly interesting, that when about eighteen she
-thought she might&mdash;yes&mdash;she might, in time,&mdash;write a novel
-herself; in fact she did write the title page, and the chapter on
-“Direful Conflict,” in which the sauce-pan and coronet almost
-came to blows. Whether to make that chapter the beginning
-of her novel or the ending, proved the poser, so it too was
-put upon the shelf with the heroes.</p>
-
-<p>The most interesting thing to people is people themselves.
-Adele’s maternal instincts told her this very soon.</p>
-
-<p>Things are of real value about in proportion to the effort
-they cost. Her instincts from her father suggested this, but
-she did not believe it at first. It might be, but was not pleasant
-to think of. She knew well enough that all that glitters is not
-gold, but sometimes thought that glitter might be when it
-wasn’t. When she found herself deceived in this respect her
-conclusions took a pronounced feminine form of expression.
-“Mother! I don’t think so very much of Mr. Upham they all
-talk about. He tries to show off&mdash;absurdly condescending,
-and talks as if he knew more about it than anybody else.
-Nobody really thinks of what he says, only of him. I think
-him a bore.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, don’t let him know it, my dear,” promptly answered
-Mrs. Cultus. “One has to become accustomed to trifles. I
-generally look the other way and avoid them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not going through the world on stilts, anyhow,”
-laughed Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“No, my dear, I trust not, nor on a bicycle either; neither
-is becoming.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele watched her father whenever they went out together,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-with almost precocious interest. She wished to discover how
-he made himself so agreeable to others and finally concluded
-that “Father’s manners are perfection.” She followed her
-father’s advice quite as naturally as she did her mother’s,
-the wisdom of which often appealed to her also; but in spite
-of her affection for both, she soon began to perceive there was
-something much more subtle in life than worldly wisdom.
-Things seen were by no means so potent as some other things
-unseen. She would use the world, but not let it use her. “I
-shall soon be used up myself” was the way she expressed it
-after having had rather too much of a good time.</p>
-
-<p>Without actually formulating the pros and cons in her own
-mind, she really decided not to attempt any part unless she
-could do justice to it under the stimulus of her own approval.</p>
-
-<p>Things seen, and never ignored, were already becoming
-subservient to things unseen.</p>
-
-<p>Such was Adele as a girl, and during the few years when
-her college experience was prime factor in her life.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="IV">IV<br />
-<span class="fs80">ADELE HEARS THE WORDS OF A SONG</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THERE was just enough of chilly winter left to make
-the springtime fascinating and a wood fire still acceptable
-in the cozy library where Doctor Wise and his
-younger friend Paul Warder sat together expecting guests.
-They occupied bachelor apartments in common. A delicious
-aroma from wood logs permeated the atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>There was music also, for the eye as well as the ear. The
-firelight played in crescendo and diminuendo, with now and
-again marked rhythm and very peculiar accents. The sound
-of wheels reverberated clearly in the cool night air and ceased
-opposite the portal. An expectant waiting, but no response,
-no frou-frou from silken skirts passing along the hallway as
-anticipated. Instead, Benson,&mdash;Benson the butler, his countenance
-a foot long.</p>
-
-<p>“Some one, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>“I presume so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some one, with his&mdash;his trunk.”</p>
-
-<p>“His trunk!” The Doctor lowered the bridge of his nose,
-and peered at Benson over his eye-glasses.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir! a big one.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that for? What will he do with it? What will
-we do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Show him up, Benson,” said Paul, promptly; “trunk and
-all.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul’s eyes twinkled as he vanished through the doorway.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Never heard of such a thing,” mused the Doctor, “bringing
-a trunk to a musicale. Must be some mistake! Benson! I
-say, Benson! Show him next door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet I hope,” and amid shouts of laughter in rushed
-two fellows,&mdash;Paul bringing Henri Semple&mdash;“Harry”&mdash;of all
-their musical friends the one most welcome and opportune.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was delighted, and gave him a good squeeze&mdash;no
-time for much else.</p>
-
-<p>“Benson! put Mr. Semple’s trunk in his own room, you
-know the one I mean; and now, Harry, if you don’t get inside
-that trunk quickly as possible the state of the country will not
-be safe, an invasion is threatened at any minute. Put on your
-regimentals at once, and help us out.”</p>
-
-<p>Semple, who understood the Doctor’s lingo from many years
-back, took in the situation at a glance. He had hardly time
-to laugh about the Doctor’s being “the same old chappie as
-ever,” when he was literally thrust towards the stairway, to
-follow the trunk, and put on his evening clothes.</p>
-
-<p>The episode had been one of Paul’s agreeable surprises so
-often had in store for the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>Semple’s name had appeared upon the passenger list of an
-ocean flyer just arrived. Paul sought him by telephone,
-caught him, and insisted upon his coming. Semple, already
-in traveler’s shape, had “hustled” to reach his old friends.
-The time was short, but Harry in true American fashion had
-“got there”&mdash;that was all, with the regimentals ready to be
-put on.</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessary to produce the bachelor’s visiting list
-and mark off all those who honored the occasion with their
-presence. Paul always made it a point to have plenty of men
-on hand at his entertainments; whether at chit-chat-musicale
-or conversational game of whist, all went off with a rush.
-Those who took their pleasure more seriously were furnished
-excellent opportunity in the library, while the conversational
-music-racket progressed in the parlor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span></p>
-
-<p>The trio, Doctor, Paul and Semple, were already standing
-in line, like three serenaders in white waistcoats, when Mrs.
-Maxwell was ushered in. She had kindly consented to act as
-matron, knowing all so well; in fact had entertained both
-Paul and Semple at her picturesque cottage, “The Kedge.”
-Her vivacious presence at once brought with it a breezy
-atmosphere from the romantic coast of Maine, where “The
-Kedge” stood perched like a barnacle upon a boulder, and the
-winds wafted white spray falling like a lace mantle upon
-dahlias and nasturtiums at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>And with her Miss Dorothy, her niece, whose charming
-letters the winter previous from Ischl had given vivid pictures
-of experience abroad, Vienna life, and Egyptian mysteries
-known only to herself and the Sphinx.</p>
-
-<p>A dozen or more soon followed. Conversation already at its
-height when Professor and Mrs. Cultus entered, also their
-daughter Adele whom the Doctor had before met under such
-peculiar circumstances at the hospital. Adele looked radiant,
-having brought with her an intimate friend, Miss Winchester,
-for whom she had requested an invitation. The Doctor greeted
-them with both hands, for he had already detected the devotion
-which had sprung up between these two girls. They seemed
-a host in themselves wherever they went. He made Miss
-Winchester feel at home at once, and she accepted the situation
-promptly; she had the happy faculty of doing that sort of
-thing. The Doctor enjoyed her frankness. She was like, yet
-very unlike Adele; no doubt much in common between them,
-yet of a very different temperament. The inquisitive Doctor
-perceived this at a glance. “Must read her hand,” he cogitated,
-for his interest in Adele made him curious to know more of
-the one to whom Adele seemed especially devoted.</p>
-
-<p>Others dropped in later, the rooms became well filled. The
-guests sought easy chairs, Paul taking special pains to see that
-Mrs. Cultus was comfortably settled. Mrs. Cultus in turn had
-made up her mind to hear Paul sing with the Doctor as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-accompanist. She had heard that they performed “stunts,”
-whatever they might prove to be, and now was her opportunity;
-also, she wished the stunts just as soon as possible. “Keep it
-up,” said Mrs. Cultus, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">sotto voce</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Of course Paul could not refuse point blank, but he must
-be permitted to do so in his own way, for none knew better
-than he and the Doctor that their music together was of such
-a peculiar nature that unless led up to judiciously the effect
-would be utterly ruined. In fact there was nothing in it but
-“the spirit of the thing,” and little technique whatever except
-to meet the demand of this spirit of the thing. They had
-never had either time or inclination to cultivate and keep
-technique-on-tap,&mdash;a thing to be turned on and off like a
-fountain before an admiring public. Nevertheless, the little
-they could do gave a deal of pleasure to those not already
-hypnotized by digital gymnastics, or become satiated from
-eating too much candy-music.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, Mrs. Cultus’ ideas about leading up to anything
-in the domain of music had been originally formed upon
-her experience when leading in the german, and in spite of
-her short but higher experience in Germany, her natural propensities
-often prevailed. As to any preparation of the mind
-and ear for the reception of given musical sounds and kindred
-forms of artistic and poetic expression, she was lamentably
-wanting, in fact her tactics often little better than a box of
-tacks to irritate the acuter sensibilities of those to whom she
-appealed with so much apparent appreciation. Mrs. Cultus
-never listened for the tone-color, simply because she could not
-constitutionally; she really could not, it was not in her to
-hear what she could hear.</p>
-
-<p>The music commenced, and Mrs. Cultus waited for the
-stunts. Henri <ins class="corr" id="tn26" title="Transcriber’s Note—“Semple opened with some of Brahams’” changed to “Semple opened with some of Brahms’”.">Semple opened with some of Brahms’</ins>
-Hungarian Dances, charmingly vivacious and contagious, also
-played in some duets with the Doctor on Creole and Florida
-negro themes. Racial and national dance music seemed not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-a bad overture to harmonize with the gay spirits already in
-vogue, yet lead on to something else. Herr Krantz then
-favored the company with some German songs; he appreciated
-the value of continuity, yet did not ignore the power of contrast.
-Herr Krantz was an artist; his first song in rather
-quick tempo with a dramatic climax, his second full of suppressed
-emotion; each most artistic in effect. All enjoyed his
-robust tenor voice, also his admirable interpretation of the
-sentiment of what he sang. Mrs. Cultus and the Doctor led in
-the applause; Mrs. Cultus because she detected that the whole
-thing was as it ought to be, especially the dramatic climax
-of the first song, and the tears suggested when the second song
-died away. Mrs. Cultus was much given to applauding when
-songs died away in tears, she wished the singer to understand
-that he died with good effect. The Doctor admired all artistic
-productions and renditions of any kind; even a good performance
-on a jew’s-harp or a xylophone was appreciated by him
-from the standpoint of art as art. If it did not manifest the
-sacred fire of the soul above all else, it was to be enjoyed and
-applauded nevertheless, as truth for its own sake, if not the
-highest form of truth through musical expression. He had
-heard mocking-birds sing like nightingales, yet they were not
-the veritable rossignole; he had long since learned that perfect
-technique was not the only way of expression, since the sacred
-fire burst through all bounds and made terrible mistakes
-(technical), yet was truth enduring, truth soaring towards
-immortality and enduring as memory endures.</p>
-
-<p>Paul in the meantime had induced Miss Winchester to
-follow Herr Krantz; and since his German artistic rendition
-had excited her imagination, her fingers fairly twitched with
-desire to respond, ready to the interpretation of what she felt.
-She knew she could play well because in the mood, delicious
-sensation.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester’s talent for melodic expression was decidedly
-of the romantic school. Her idol was Schumann, and at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-times Tschaikowsky, but never when in their morbid humor,
-then she shut up their compositions and left them to be
-morbid alone, not with her. Fact is, Miss Winchester’s versatility
-and intellectual vivacious activity were so pronounced
-that she could render many original or rare wild fanciful
-“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">morceaux</i>,” provided they were vivacious and embodied with
-personal experience, or what one might call the racial or
-national rhythm of those people who did sing and dance
-naturally. She and her brother were both extremely gifted in
-this respect, and to hear them play together was not unlike
-attempting to enjoy two glasses of champagne at the same
-time.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester was soon leading the whole company
-through some Mexican danzas with a spontaneous abandon
-perfectly delightful; then some half-Spanish or old-time
-Creole reminiscences, very dansante in their time and place,
-and yet with a peculiar strain of languor which pictured the
-sunny southern clime in one of its most characteristic moods.
-Also one of her brother’s waltzes which quite lifted the hearer
-off his feet, very difficult to interpret as she did; simply
-because not being a singing waltz, neither of the kind that
-draws the feet downwards towards the floor in tempo strict
-and strong, but quite the contrary lifts the dancer up, carries
-him beyond, without fatigue, borne upon the wings of time
-into the realm of graceful motion.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus could not quite make out whether this strange
-rhapsodical style of waltzing was quite up to the standard of
-the occasion. It certainly was rather effective, but not as she
-ever remembered hearing it in the german. “’Twas impossible
-to count two or three to such a thing as that and keep up with
-it;” therefore suspicious. So the politic Mrs. Cultus hid
-behind her jewelled lorgnette, looking alternately at the performer
-and the audience before making up her mind.</p>
-
-<p>The susceptible Doctor was quite fascinated, translated, as
-he entered into the spirit of the thing. He thought of scenes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-in Delibes’ ballets, of Sylvia and Coppelia, also of the wonderful
-grace of Beaugrand upon Walpurgis night when she
-first appears enveloped by a cloud descending upon the stage,
-the cloud disappearing, the dancer wafted forward to whirl
-amid a maze of fascinating melody.</p>
-
-<p>Adele and Paul also could not resist the temptation to “try
-it in the hall,” but soon gave that up; Adele expecting to sing
-herself, therefore careful of her voice, and Paul because the
-fascination was quite sufficient without the dancing just then.
-They were again caught sitting on the stairs under the benign
-countenance of “Fanny,” the old family clock, who ticked on
-solemnly as if accustomed to witness waltzing and flirtations,
-in past times as well as to-night,&mdash;this when the Doctor put
-in an appearance to ask Adele to sing.</p>
-
-<p>Adele was an enchanting personification of youthful enjoyment
-when Paul led her into the room, her dark eyes lustrous
-and full of fire, yet but little conscious of self when she at
-once dropped Paul’s arm to rush up to Miss Winchester and
-thank her for the treat she had given them. “I never heard
-you play better in my life, my dear! Oh, how I wish I could
-do it!” and then, feeling her own position, became more subdued
-in manner as she approached the piano. Henri Semple
-had kindly offered to accompany her&mdash;they had often sung
-together as she called it, so felt in unity at once. Only a word
-was necessary to Henri, “Please go straight on, if I should trip
-I’ll catch up again.” Henri smiled and began the introduction.</p>
-
-<p>Adele first sang a rather pretentious florid aria. Her
-mother had insisted upon this, evidently thinking that all
-should be informed at once that her daughter had been
-educated under the best masters, as she herself had been under
-Fraulein Ritter. Adele complied with her mother’s request,
-even if she herself had different notions as to the result. Mrs.
-Cultus had “dropped her music” soon after the bills had been
-paid for her education, and never picked it up again except in
-nursery rhymes for Adele. Those nursery songs had won their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-way to Adele’s heart, she sometimes sang them yet, but their
-greatest triumph had been to excite within her a desire to
-really sing herself. She now proposed to hold on and not drop
-what she had striven for, to make her voice the means towards
-expression of higher things, feelings which words could not
-always express. As to the florid aria to commence with, “Oh,
-yes! it would do to try the voice and bring out the notes, but
-the real thing must not be expected until later.”</p>
-
-<p>Her innermost thoughts were quite in this vein when enthusiastic
-applause greeted her singing. She had sung well. Herr
-Krantz complimented her, evidently sincere, so she took his
-appreciation sincerely, but soon turned to Mr. Semple to select
-something more to her own taste. She chose a composition
-with which she was very familiar, one of her special favorites,
-and passed it to Henri.</p>
-
-<p>Semple glanced it over, and being himself of kindred spirit
-with her own at once detected certain signs,&mdash;how it had been
-well used but carefully handled, certain passages marked, some
-private marks, evidently her own.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Cultus, don’t you play this accompaniment yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes!”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought so&mdash;let me resign!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know it?&mdash;it’s not difficult.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I see, but I’m sure none could play it exactly as you
-would feel it.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele knew this to be true; no one could really accompany
-the songs she really loved so completely to her own satisfaction
-as herself, that was the way she had learned to love them.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t be offended if I do?”</p>
-
-<p>Semple responded at once and stood beside her, but he felt
-intensely curious to know exactly why, since she was so different
-from many, she desired to do so with this particular piece,&mdash;the
-accompaniment did not appear to be especially exacting, so
-he asked her about the peculiarities of the composition.</p>
-
-<p>“I like to be near the composer, near as I can,” was all she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-said in reply, and without further ado seated herself at the
-instrument.</p>
-
-<p>Some noticing her movement were disappointed, others
-delighted; the latter were those who loved music which came
-from the heart,&mdash;the former those who admired what came
-from the head.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor asked her father if she preferred to accompany
-herself. “Only at times,” said the Professor, and he appeared
-rather serious himself when he observed the mood she was in.
-It would probably be Adele at her best, but by no means likely
-to command the most general appreciation. Then he told the
-Doctor: “She knows that head and heart must work together
-as one if any true emotion is to come with the music, and she
-thinks this is such a subtle matter in her own case that she
-must become as near like the composer himself as she possibly
-can to render the music as he originally conceived and felt it.
-She insists that every good song is fundamentally emotional,
-the spirit dominating the art. To get close to this spirit in the
-piece, to become the composer and try to re-create the piece, is
-what she is after. One soul and mind, the voice soul and the
-artistic accompaniment; both had come originally from one
-creative source, the composer, whose whole being must have
-throbbed with one emotion when he wrote the piece if worth
-anything. Those who would really feel the same emotion must
-try to be like him and follow him in spirit and in truth. She
-wishes to reproduce the intimate sympathetic blending of voice
-and accompaniment which the composer had felt when he
-wrote the song.”</p>
-
-<p>“How intensely she must feel!” said the Doctor, pensive,
-and turned to listen, giving attention to the singer to recognize
-her personality as creator for the time being of the song,&mdash;the
-singer giving new life, a renaissance or resurrection to the
-song.</p>
-
-<p>What Adele sang was a melody by Gounod with simple
-chords in the accompaniment, the piano filling in like a second<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-voice when her own was not prominent. The second voice
-sang with her, that is, to her and for her, and the two blended
-as one, a veritable duet of heart and head as one. The piano
-gave the atmosphere in which the melody lived, moved and
-had its being, and the melody itself was the voice of a living
-soul singing in truth and purity.</p>
-
-<p>To sing it as she did required intense mental effort, herself
-under admirable control;&mdash;the dominating emotional spirit
-within. It was the divine art, the purity in the art, hence
-divine in origin. Art dominated by the Spirit of Truth that
-is Holy, in Music. Music as Truth, for a religious fervor
-lay deep within the song. It was the overflow of her own
-feelings which others heard and felt, yet she sang as if no one
-was present,&mdash;none,&mdash;herself alone,&mdash;Adele an Idyl. As she
-continued, the melody seemed to gain in spiritual significance,
-so pure, so true, so simply lovely, the good, true and beautiful,
-as one, a trinity of inner experience, and thus possessing
-a high spiritual significance. All who heard, associated with
-her voice their own best thoughts. They “became one” with
-her,&mdash;and while she thus led them towards higher and better
-things, the melody soared upon the wings of a dove, rising as
-if nearing the celestial choir. It did not diminish, grow less,
-nor die away, but passed from hearing; it was heard, and
-then it was not heard, gone&mdash;gone to live among the melodies
-of immortality, for the truth in her music had made it an
-immortal song&mdash;none could ever forget, neither her, her song,
-nor how she sang it.</p>
-
-<p>“How angelic!” whispered those who heard her.</p>
-
-<p>“She is an angel,” said her mother, who knew her best.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor mused; he was still thinking some time after
-the song ceased. There was to him a feeling of both exhaustion
-and exaltation,&mdash;the human and the divine in his
-own personality.</p>
-
-<p>As to Paul,&mdash;the emotion was rather strong for him, rather
-too much just then, the complications of feeling decidedly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-confusing, especially as he would be called upon to sing next.
-He felt perfectly limp. “What on earth can I do, after an
-angel has carried the whole crowd into the upper regions!”</p>
-
-<p>The suppressed applause which followed Adele’s sacred
-song had hardly ceased, the hum of appreciation still heard,
-and Adele herself about to ask Henri Semple for the bouquet
-of American Beauties which he held for her, when she caught
-the eye of Paul and gave him a slight inclination of the head
-to approach.</p>
-
-<p>Paul had been asked to sing next. She knew it,&mdash;she also
-knew the style of his music, that it could not possibly sound
-to advantage immediately after her own success. She also
-knew Paul’s sensibility, yet desire to oblige. In the kindness
-of her heart, now so sensitive from the holy spirit in music
-which had prompted her singing, she wished in some way to
-aid Paul to bridge over the dilemma into which her mother’s
-lack of appreciation of the personal element in music threatened
-to lead him, for it was Mrs. Cultus who had insisted
-upon his singing as soon as Adele finished.</p>
-
-<p>May it not also be said that Adele herself was about to
-take another step forward in her musical career? namely, by
-a very practical appreciation of the vast domain of melodic
-expression,&mdash;in other words the comprehensiveness of “the
-art of putting things” and the wonderful difference in methods
-and means by which spiritual effects may be produced.
-She knew that Paul’s voice did appeal to mankind, at least
-to some, quite as positively as her own; he also was sensitive
-about it, but his emotional feeling was so different from her
-own. She wished to be altruistic, and assure Paul fair treatment.</p>
-
-<p>Paul joined her. “I never heard you sing better.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad you were here,&mdash;I felt like it,&mdash;Gounod is a great
-friend of mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had a friend on hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“How so?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span></p>
-
-<p>“To sing for me, my voice is scared to death.”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t sound that way, but I know what you mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Pon honor!&mdash;the crudity of it! and then to be asked to
-sing after you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind that, think of the music, and forget yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! forget the music and think of myself!” He had
-hardly uttered the thought upside down before it seemed to
-suggest something to him. He said nothing, however, for a
-moment, and then seemed to brace up, and began talking
-about other things, until Mrs. Cultus approached.</p>
-
-<p>Adele knew, or rather thought she knew, that if her mother
-pressed him too hard in his present mood she might receive a
-refusal in return, a polite apology for not singing. Much to
-her surprise, Paul consented with considerable cordiality, saying
-he would do his best gladly; but there was a twinkle in
-his eye which he could not disguise as he said it. Adele wondered
-what the twinkle meant. Mamma felt sure he would
-do “stunts.”</p>
-
-<p>What had influenced Paul so suddenly? The twisted words
-giving a new association of ideas had suggested yet another
-motive for singing. “Forget the music, and think of you,
-Adele.” He had thought of a songlet which did just that sort
-of thing&mdash;he would try it.</p>
-
-<p>Why had Adele failed to appreciate the twinkle? Simply
-because she did not then know him well enough to recognize
-one of the strongest elements in his character, namely, a certain
-sure reserve power which men of his type are apt to
-possess, and manifest in positions of this sort with marked
-individuality in form of expression. Paul was just such a
-man.</p>
-
-<p>With him it had been Adele’s first song, the florid aria to
-show off her voice, which had made the passing impression,
-not the second; in fact, the train of thought first excited had
-continued on through Adele’s second song, blinding him to a
-certain extent,&mdash;so that although he did hear the beautiful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-finale when her voice passed from hearing, he was preoccupied;
-he heard it only as another instance of her highly cultivated
-technique, nothing more. Its real spiritual significance
-had been lost upon him because his mind was preoccupied
-in another direction. Having ears he had not heard,
-yet being what he was, he had; consequently his impressions
-of her performance were complicated. He had appreciated
-her cultivated voice as fully, probably, as any in the room,
-but also remembered how at the hospital some time before
-she had sung much less ambitious music which excited even
-greater sympathy, bringing tears rather than applause. He
-did not wish Adele to lose her charm in that respect, and now,
-in his present frame of mind, feared lest she might do so.
-In fact, being somewhat askew in his own mind, yet rather
-sensitive about her, he jumped to the conclusion that she
-might give up the old simplicity of real power in order to
-electrify society by flights of vocalization. Thus the spirituality
-of a sincere, practical man did not differ fundamentally
-from that of another with greater æsthetic and artistic development,
-but the manifestation of it took an entirely different
-form.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently Paul was quite as much interested in Adele’s
-success as she was in his,&mdash;but how different the motive and
-varied the form of expressing the emotion. Paul determined
-to give her some sort of a hint as to how he felt, and in a way
-she alone would recognize. If he had been older, no doubt
-he would have told her so direct, but youth is fonder of playing
-games in which self-reliance takes a prominent part. He
-made up his mind to sing anyhow, and quick as a flash the
-thought had come to him, “her effect was through the music,
-not the words, why not forget the music and think of the
-words?&mdash;try it with a style and with a purpose so different
-from hers that no comparison can possibly be in order?” He
-would force attention to the words rather than the music, and
-compel the audience to listen for the sake of the words. As<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-to sentiment! His eyes twinkled as he thought of it; the
-audience could interpret that, each after his own fashion,&mdash;as
-for him, he would forget the music and think of Adele.</p>
-
-<p>Paul went to the piano, telling Adele not to listen, as it
-was only some verses from “<cite>Life</cite>” which the Doctor had set to
-music. This was quite enough to excite Adele’s curiosity, and
-made her more attentive even than the others.</p>
-
-<p>Paul’s voice was a rich baritone with but little cultivation,
-and fresh as nature had given it to him, with some few rich
-masculine notes as soft as velvet. When he felt intensely, yet
-kept himself under control, and the song brought into play
-those particular notes, Paul could make even a society reporter
-listen with sincerity. His articulation being clear, the
-listeners heard the words without effort, and the music became
-a harmonious medium of communication.</p>
-
-<p>Much to his satisfaction he felt this mood coming over him.
-The Doctor, too, knew by his manner that Paul would be at
-his best, so played the accompaniment to sustain the voice,
-yet allow expression absolutely free with Paul,&mdash;a condition
-of things only possible to those who have personal sympathy
-as well as melodic instinct.</p>
-
-<p>Each line of the song told its own tale;&mdash;the sentiment, not
-the cultivation of the voice nor accompaniment, attracted attention;&mdash;a
-few gestures gave the proper emphasis.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“She is so fair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And yet to me</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She is unfair</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As she can be.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Were she less fair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">I should be free;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or less unfair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Her slave I’d be.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Fair, or unfair&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Ah! woe is me;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So ill I fare&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Farewell to thee!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span></p>
-<p>The effect was peculiar. Some caught what they thought
-were puns in the words, and called for a repetition to catch
-them better; others said the fellow was a fool to give up the
-girl so soon,&mdash;she was not really so unfair as she appeared to
-him. Society amused itself hugely over the absurd situation.</p>
-
-<p>Adele turned to the Doctor. “I don’t care for that song.”</p>
-
-<p>“No! Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“The girl was misunderstood.”</p>
-
-<p>“How strange! I didn’t see it that way at all,” said the
-Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you see?”</p>
-
-<p>“The young lady did not appreciate her admirer.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it called?” asked Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“A Paradox.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul overheard them and noticed an introspective expression
-on Adele’s countenance. Was she trying to recall the
-words? He would make sure of them, so in response to the
-encore repeated after this fashion:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Thou art so fair, and yet to me</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thou art unfair as thou canst be.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Wert thou less fair, I should be free;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Or less unfair, thy slave I’d be.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Fair, or unfair&mdash;Ah! woe is me;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">So ill I fare,&mdash;farewell to thee.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And as he sang, the peculiar twinkle in his eyes again
-appeared. To the hearers it seemed very appropriate to the
-song, part of the spirit of the thing. Paul was more interested
-as to how it would affect Adele.</p>
-
-<p>Adele was more confused than ever. Did he, or did he not,
-intend anything? She hardly knew how she ought to address
-him the next minute. It would be foolish to lay any
-stress upon such a song, merely a <em>play upon words</em> at best;
-yet her womanly instinct told her it might mean a great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-deal. She had no time, however, to think much about it,
-and did not care much anyhow, so tried to put the matter
-quite aside.</p>
-
-<p>“What absurd words!&mdash;not so bad either ... but he
-certainly made them tell,” and she looked around the room as
-if to notice what others thought.</p>
-
-<p>People were still discussing the Paradox.</p>
-
-<p>“The impression seems to last,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor caught her final word.</p>
-
-<p>“What lasts, Miss Adele?”</p>
-
-<p>A twinkle in her eye this time.</p>
-
-<p>“Paul’s song,&mdash;wasn’t it amusing?” and they both laughed
-heartily.</p>
-
-<p>“The supper is served,” whispered a waiter to the Doctor,
-and shortly after Adele was seen entering the supper-room on
-the Doctor’s arm. Paul escorted Miss Winchester.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="V">V<br />
-<span class="fs80">AFTER DARK IN THE PARK</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">AFTER the guests had departed the Doctor decided he
-would fill his lungs with fresh air by a short stroll
-in the park before retiring. Thus to saunter was a
-favorite experience with him after an evening spent in close
-quarters. He could be alone, yet not alone,&mdash;in the world,
-yet not of it.</p>
-
-<p>“These breathing places are delicious,” he mused, “good for
-all, day or night; to the poor a blessed change from close and
-narrow homes, and to the wealthy if they only knew it, from
-their over-heated rooms. Fresh air in the lungs and a good
-quaff of pure water are the most healthy somnorifics I know.
-Thank Heaven, this park furnishes such luxuries to all.” This
-as he took a seat near a fountain which overflowed conveniently
-for the thirsty wayfarer.</p>
-
-<p>The trees overhead were coming into new leaf, and the
-grass plots newly trimmed,&mdash;the resurrection of spring evidently
-near at hand. Arc lights from a distance shone
-through, giving a silvery lustre to the undersides of the new
-foliage, and a radiant glow which permeated the long vista.</p>
-
-<p>He looked above into the azure,&mdash;it was a starlit night; also
-towards the horizon, down one of the wide avenues which intersected
-at the park. Upon a public building in the distance
-some statuary above the cornice stood distinct in outline
-against the sky, but from time to time the figures were obscured
-by clouds of smoke or steam enveloping as in a
-luminous mist. The figures came and went as if they themselves
-were endowed with movement. He watched the smoke-mist,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-tracing to its source,&mdash;a press establishment,&mdash;the newspaper
-workers busy while the public slept. He hoped that
-to-morrow’s issue might bring news of something better than
-the smoke of war, mists of politics, and the vile conflicts of
-the debased side of humanity. Why not accentuate the good
-in the world instead of the evil? Such would be the way of
-truth in life, to overcome the evil with the good. But he
-did not feel very sanguine that to-morrow’s issue would be of
-that sort,&mdash;certainly not so long as the use and abuse of
-head-lines purposely to mislead the public for the sake of
-cash obtained.</p>
-
-<p>He then looked more carefully at the fountain. It was a
-gift to the city from a dear friend of both himself and Paul,
-their old friend John Burlington, whose philanthropy took
-many practical forms for the benefit of the public. He skirted
-the park on his way out, and noticed a barber shop across the
-street in which a few days previous he had been shaved.
-Why that particular shop? Because therein he had been
-shaved by a young woman, of whom in justice it must be said
-she did it remarkably well. “Woman’s sphere is rapidly increasing,”
-he mused, “but in such matters, at what a terrible
-risk and sacrifice of womanly reserve; a gain in wages and
-publicity, a loss of refinement and the other feminine attributes.
-Is not woman’s head-gear sufficiently complicated
-already to furnish employment to experts of her own sex
-without attempting to scrape a man’s chin? Certainly the
-latter was a risky business for a woman to attempt on short
-notice.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a hotel on the corner. He stopped to purchase
-a cigar, but it was too late. Too late for that, but not too
-late for others passing in and out. A couple passed through
-an inconspicuous entrance with a peculiar dim lantern in the
-vestibule near by, and soon disappeared. They appeared to
-be sneaking in, yet perfectly familiar with the premises.</p>
-
-<p>A gay crowd of young people on bicycles passed by; it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-seemed unusually late to see so many out. As they wheeled off,
-talking in high spirits, there was naught, however, to distinguish
-them from a party of industrious young workers who
-had been kept indoors during the day, and whose youth demanded
-outdoor exercise, even if it had to be taken after dark.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are their parents? still snoozing?” queried the
-Doctor,&mdash;“a ride after midnight may lead to a ‘skip by the
-light of the moon,’ but that’s none of my business,” and the
-bachelor doctor wended his way back towards his own domicile.</p>
-
-<p>He was just about to enter when he spied a slight, agile
-figure, an elderly lady dressed in black, approaching and
-motioning to detain him. He could not mistake that light
-airy step, the nervous activity, the characteristic gestures.
-It must surely be she whose activity in good works he had
-known so long and well, yet he little expected to see her alone
-in the public street at that hour.</p>
-
-<p>He ran down to meet her, took her arm under his and
-begged her to come in.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t, my dear, positively I can’t,” in a voice sweet and
-cheerful, as if she wished it but was too busy.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, let me escort you home, then,” insisted the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“No, my dear, not necessary at all, not a bit. I never have
-any difficulty at night. I wouldn’t take you on any account.
-I’ve been to the&mdash;&mdash;” and she hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what can I do for you, Aunt Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled as if the name was most welcome,&mdash;patted the
-Doctor on the back, called him one of “her boys,” and stopped
-a minute to chat.</p>
-
-<p>But who was Aunt Mary?</p>
-
-<p>One of those excellent, self-sacrificing Christian women,
-loving and lovable, whose whole life was devoted to helping
-and encouraging those in distress. Her vocation especially
-among the worthy poor, where her heart was ever willing, and
-her activity constant in their behalf; striving to bring hope
-and efficient aid to those who were struggling against adversity,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-kindness where it was most needed, affection where it
-was seldom met. Among many friends she had a small coterie
-of gentlemen whom she called her boys. To these she
-appealed in emergencies, and was sure to receive without further
-inquiry, simply because “Aunt Mary wanted it.” As
-sometimes the case with Christian women of her active, sympathetic,
-sanguine type, she had been led to join a few others
-in the work of redemption conducted under the auspices of
-the Midnight Mission. Aunt Mary was returning from the
-Mission when she caught sight of the Doctor, her heart full to
-overflowing about some hopeful cases among the unfortunate
-outcasts she had met. Like an Angel of Mercy she had been
-spending her evening talking with purity of thought and
-action to some, and waiting for others who might wander in
-from the streets. She had been holding out her arms to welcome,
-to give shelter in the Home&mdash;Christ-like&mdash;“Come unto
-Me, all ye that are weary and heavy laden, and I will give
-you rest.”</p>
-
-<p>As the Doctor left Aunt Mary at the door of her own modest
-home, his thoughts reverted irresistibly to his evening’s experience
-considered as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>The lights and shadows of city life, the contrasts, the
-changes that a day may bring forth. Then of the countless
-fields of work for truth as each one sees it in his own environment.
-Surely the Christ life was the most beautiful and helpful
-of all.</p>
-
-<p>He recalled how Adele Cultus had once experienced an ardent
-desire to work in the slums and been prevented by circumstances,
-yet continued to progress in her own sphere. He
-thought he detected a spiritual similarity between her and
-Aunt Mary, yet to outward view there was little to suggest
-such comparison; yet again there was, for the elderly sympathy
-for others might have once in youth taken a youthful
-form of expression,&mdash;and the present youthful girl who began
-by sympathy for others might yet attain to her ideals.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span></p>
-
-<p>Then his thoughts wandered off in quite another direction.
-The fresh foliage in the park had forcibly reminded him of
-the coming season for travel, the time had arrived to make
-final arrangements for a contemplated trip abroad. Paul and
-he had so decided during the winter, and already engaged
-state-rooms. They had often spent summers in England and
-on the Continent, and this time looked forward to a longer
-absence than usual,&mdash;a visit to Greece, and possibly to the
-Far East. The Doctor had longed to stand upon a pinnacle
-of the Himalayas, having then about as much idea of what a
-pinnacle in that region might prove to be, as many possess
-of the veritable north pole.</p>
-
-<p>His thoughts were certainly vague, yet again quite definite
-after their kind. When he turned in to bed and began to
-enter the domain of Travellers’ Hope, he thought he saw
-Aunt Mary attending meeting in Exeter Hall, London, and
-Adele Cultus playing golf with the divinities on Olympus.
-He was hoping Adele would win, when&mdash;he forgot to notice
-whether she did or not.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="VI">VI<br />
-<span class="fs80">AN AVATAR IN THE OCCIDENT&mdash;THE THEOPHANY OF SPRING</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THE advent of spring brought with it the spirit of locomotion
-to many others besides the Doctor and Paul,&mdash;it
-generally does to a sane mind in a healthy body.
-With the resurrection of new life comes the exuberant desire
-to live in the open, more freely, and have one’s being in action,
-to exercise “thought, being and joy” to the fullest extent.</p>
-
-<p>To none was this more forcibly true than to Adele Cultus,
-whose whole being responded when the sun shone forth and
-the birds sang. This condition of things had been greatly
-strengthened in her limited experience thus far, by a conversation
-she once had with her father, when she sought his
-advice in connection with teaching a class in Sunday-School.
-It was soon after she graduated, and although she was by no
-means ignorant of academic phraseology in regard to certain
-matters, she was not satisfied; she wanted a simpler, useful
-way of expressing facts involving doctrine, and had asked her
-father a direct question which might have proved a poser to
-some parents, but certainly not to Professor Cultus, who earnestly
-desired that his daughter should be spared the mental
-strife in his own experience over moral and ethical questions
-involving discussion which really did not help towards better
-living. The Professor detected that she wished to talk with
-him seriously; so he drew her towards him, made her sit upon
-his knee that she might feel near him in love and affection,&mdash;comfortably
-at home while her spirit sought the truth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, my daughter, what can Father do to help you? Any
-college conundrums? Life is full of conundrums, you know!”</p>
-
-<p>Adele smiled. “Oh, yes, I suppose so. But what I want
-is a simple answer&mdash;my class must understand, and think
-about it afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you know the answer yourself, already,” said the
-Professor, “and only wish to quiz me.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele shifted her position on his knee, as if uneasy. “Why,
-of course I know; I suppose everybody knows,&mdash;but I want
-to be helped. Knowing is not enough. What is sin, anyhow?
-I know it’s detestable, but I can’t help it. That’s about all I
-do know, really.”</p>
-
-<p>The Professor drew a breath of relief. Adele saw her
-father’s eyes brighten, and instantly felt that he would help
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Not such a poser as you think,” said the Professor, with
-marvelous cheerfulness, considering the topic, “although an
-immense amount has been written about it which certainly is
-confusing.” Adele, noticing that to him it certainly was not
-so gloomy as she had expected, at once felt at ease also.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care what has been written about it to confuse,&mdash;what
-is it? Some speak of a particular sin first committed
-by Adam and Eve, and we have inherited it from them. Well,
-Father dear, I don’t believe I inherited sin from you, even if
-I do have it myself. God in Heaven is Love,&mdash;I can’t believe
-such a thing of Him. Every baby I look at tells me it isn’t
-sinful. Why, they stretch out their little hands to you to
-take ’em in your arms.”</p>
-
-<p>Her father appeared rather more solemn in aspect than before;
-experiencing a peculiar paternal sensation of mysterious
-responsibility. He let Adele continue.</p>
-
-<p>“Others,” said she, “speak as if it were a condition we each
-have to experience for some reason or other. That seems
-reasonable, because we do. But it’s very confusing to teach,
-or even to talk of to any one else, even if we all do have the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-experience. What is it, anyhow?” and she looked at her
-father straight in the eyes.</p>
-
-<p>A strong, impressive, additional experience, which was inspiring
-for both of them, resulted; and Adele afterwards
-looked back upon it as one of life’s turning points, if not a
-veritable crisis.</p>
-
-<p>Truth paternal, as if direct from “Our Father,” rose
-instantly within the innermost consciousness of Professor
-Cultus, father of his beloved daughter sitting on his knee,
-seeking the truth where she believed it could be found. He
-knew intuitively what sort of definition could alone satisfy
-Adele at that time in her life. He must speak the pure helpful
-truth in sincerity, just as he saw it himself, no more, no
-less:&mdash;and this being the case, the Holy Spirit of Truth in
-Life gave him power of utterance. He answered promptly.
-Adele never forgot his words, or to be more precise, the wonderful
-concept as to facts in nature which his words instilled
-within her own personality. The thoughts engendered became
-a part of her being, and produced a purer atmosphere
-for body, mind and heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele, my darling, think of life this way. Truth is like
-the light, the light you see with your physical eyes;&mdash;and light
-is as righteousness. Sin, as you know, your conscience tells
-you so, is the absence of righteousness; and this precisely as
-darkness is the absence of light. Christ, the historic Jesus of
-Nazareth, is well known, to those who know Him personally,
-and therefore most competent to judge, as the Light of the
-World in regard to spiritual life. It was He, among all the
-founders of the great historic religions, who really, truly,
-brought that spiritual life and immortality into the brighter
-light we now enjoy. His personality, as the very source of
-this light which enlightens, grows clearer and more potent as
-the history of the world progresses; His personality the most
-enlightening influence ever known in human experience and
-the progress of civilizations. He was a thoroughly truthful,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-righteous man, actuated by love for humanity; whose life,
-words, deeds and sufferings for truth’s sake, embodied the
-truth, and nothing but the truth. And now, Adele, with these
-thoughts about the Light of the World one can understand
-better, and more light will shine upon your inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>“If one does not live in the good light of righteousness
-and seek the very brightest and best he can get, then such a
-person will certainly be more or less in the dark,&mdash;the darkness
-of sin. Of course this condition of living away from the light
-given us will result in violations of the divine laws in nature,
-a breaking of the divine rule of duty which is to seek the light
-of truth, not darkness. Adele, your conscience will tell you
-the truth, therefore always turn from darkness towards light.
-Go out into the world somewhere when you can’t see clearly in
-your mind, and look upwards, the spiritual light will soon
-come to you, my darling; but be sure to look upwards, always
-upwards, beyond yourself,&mdash;toward the Light of the World.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never did like cloudy days,” mused Adele,&mdash;and then
-audibly, to encourage her father to continue&mdash;“I think I know
-what you mean, Father; please go on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me tell you a great secret,” said her father, drawing
-her still closer. He loved her as the apple of his eye, and
-was intensely desirous that she should be spared those unnecessary
-troubles in this life from which he himself had suffered.
-“Let me tell you a great secret, Adele, one of the most
-practical mysteries in nature, because able to banish many
-worries from your own heart-life. Don’t bother, my dear,
-about overcoming sin, or sins, simply turn from them when
-they seem near by, moving out into the light, any light you
-can find,&mdash;and the darkness will flee away. Do you understand,
-my daughter? All sin, but only when they deliberately
-choose to seek and stay in the dark; all sin, just as we
-all walk in the dark sometimes, but it is useless to fight in the
-dark except to get out of it; therefore turn at once toward
-the light so that you may see what you can see, the better the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-light the more clearly you will see;&mdash;this is a fact in nature
-both as to physical and spiritual sight, a great secret in nature,
-hid from many ‘who love darkness.’ Go out into the sunlight
-whenever you can, so warm and beautiful, and the darkness
-of sin will flee away,&mdash;you will see truth clearer and
-brighter than ever before.”</p>
-
-<p>“Father, I begin to see a little already,” and she kissed him.</p>
-
-<p>Her natural tendencies were to look upwards and enjoy
-things. The Professor’s little sermon on Light as Righteousness
-appealed to her strongly as the truth; and what he had
-hoped for, namely, that sin, as such, should be put in the dark
-background so that her mind would not dwell upon it at all,
-was for once an actual experience in her life. This practical
-experience was what she most needed then and there. Her
-father had helped her to look upwards towards the Light of
-the World, and when she did, she saw no sin nor darkness
-whatsoever. This was indeed a secret worth knowing to live
-by. It not only gave her a chance for practical application
-in her class which she immediately decided to put in practice,
-but it generated a train of thought which she applied many
-times in later experience. On the very next Sunday she took
-her own way to bring the matter home to her class, several
-members of which would have been much improved by a
-judicious use of soap and water. She touched upon this somewhat
-delicate subject by simply suggesting that if any one
-wished to know what sin was, he could easily find out by looking
-at his dirty hands in the bright sunshine,&mdash;the sin spots
-could then be easily seen. “Your inside is just like your outside,”
-said she, “both want watching and washing <em>in a good
-light</em> to find those dirty sin spots, and get rid of them.” The
-class understood her perfectly; the boys especially, the girls,
-too, each after his own kind.</p>
-
-<p>As to the train of thought generated within herself, that
-also took form, and in a way to strengthen her ideals of what
-good thoughts should be. She retired to bed that blessed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-night after her father had told her about the Light of the
-World and of always looking upwards, with no fear of sin
-whatever. It is something to be turned from, like many other
-kinds of dirt in nature, only one had to look upwards in
-order to avoid it because it soiled the mind as well as the
-body. There was a lovely picture of the Christ Child in the
-arms of His Mother, hanging over her writing-desk in her
-room. As she looked upwards, it appeared bathed in sunlight,
-and the Baby was so very fresh and clean.</p>
-
-<p>And when the morning rays came into her bedroom, Adele
-whispered to herself, “Oh, there’s the dawn! the light is coming!
-The roseate first, and then the golden rays! How
-beautiful! The Angels of Light! coming to drive away darkness&mdash;and
-sin.” She cherished this symbolism her father had
-given her, throughout her whole life; and from that day sunrise
-meant much more to Adele than to many who had none
-to tell them how the beauties and mysteries of nature are really
-blended together as one. All may see the facts and be helped,
-if they will only look upwards towards the Light of the World.</p>
-
-<p>It was not surprising, therefore, at the present period of
-her career, when the advent of spring approached, that Adele
-enjoyed the prospect exceedingly. Incidentally she had heard
-of several who were going abroad that season, among them the
-Doctor and Paul. “Oh, how I wish I were going! The very
-thought is exhilarating; what would the realization be!
-If&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>She went to the window and looked upwards. “What a
-lovely day!&mdash;I think I will take a stroll in the park,” and she
-picked up a little book which the Doctor had loaned her. “I’ll
-take this with me and read it; it’s something about Oriental
-theophanies, whatever that may be. I’ll just read it and
-imagine I’m out in the Orient. If one cannot go, the next
-best thing is to imagine one is there,&mdash;with a book.”</p>
-
-<p>She was dressing to go out when her thoughts took another
-flight. “People talk about waiting for things to turn up,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-they always say circumstances don’t suit just now, and then
-collapse. Of course they collapse,&mdash;I should if always waiting&mdash;I
-am sure I should. I couldn’t stand it. Why not
-hurry up the circumstances? Mother often makes the circumstances,
-and then people fall in; I’ve seen her do it fifty times.
-Oh, how I wish I could go abroad!”&mdash;then taking her book
-she set out for a stroll.</p>
-
-<p>Adele in the park, how different from the Doctor, the circumstances
-altogether different. Not at night and alone, but
-when the sunlight gave brilliancy and she was liable at any
-moment to meet some one she knew.</p>
-
-<p>There was, however, a quiet nook where she hoped to be
-able to read undisturbed, an inconspicuous seat partially surrounded
-by a cultivated thicket of shrubbery. This seemed
-to suit her present mood, and she was soon engrossed in the
-little book so full of the Oriental way of looking at things,
-figures of speech in which the forces of nature were personified,
-and the most ordinary facts described in language which might
-lead plain people to imagine supernatural operations in nature.
-It was not so easy as she imagined, however, to keep her mind
-in focus. Of course she had to nod to several of the girls as
-they passed by, and with one eye still following them she observed
-how the birds were ruining a newly planted flower
-bed, nipping off the young shoots and gobbling up the seed
-which should be left to sprout later. Of course that had to be
-stopped,&mdash;she must frighten off the birds to save the plants.
-Returning to her book, she noticed some manuscript leaves inserted.
-They were in the Doctor’s handwriting and so palpably
-intended to be read with the text in order to elucidate
-further the author’s ideas, that Adele had no hesitation whatever
-in reading them, and became absorbed at once. They
-seemed like what her father had told her, only in another form.
-The Doctor had used Western phraseology to convey Oriental
-imagery and ideas,&mdash;to show how Oriental imagery may still
-be forcible to Western sense,&mdash;how the truth was in all, to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-perceived by each after his own fashion. Of course the Doctor’s
-effort was crude, and well showed how such ideas may
-lose force when separated from the civilization which had
-originally called them forth; but of this Adele had no realizing
-sense. They spoke to her so that she could understand.
-She did not criticise, but sought the truth no matter how
-crude the effort,&mdash;thereby manifesting the prime element essential
-in all true criticism, namely, sympathy with the author.
-What she read was entitled:</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The Theophany of Spring.</span></p>
-
-<p>In the Domain of Nature, during early Spring, one sees
-the Spirit of New Life as an avatar, a coming of the Deity,
-or manifestation of the Mind in Nature, down to earth&mdash;to
-produce a resurrection of thought, being, joy, from an apparent
-death and past.</p>
-
-<p>To rescue mankind from destruction, the Spirit form is
-clothed with Hope as with a garment, hope in tangible manifestation,
-an admirable exhibition of an abstract idea, a law
-in nature, in concrete fulfilment,&mdash;obedience.</p>
-
-<p>Clothed in delicate, lace-like foliage and young blossoms,
-the verdant coloring of many shades, the Presence of the Spirit
-is manifest. As movement tells of the wind, so do the youthful
-forms tell of refinement, modesty, purity. How exquisite the
-affinity, the relationship to the azure blue, the heavens above
-from which new life must come with light, warmth, and nourishment;
-and with the fleecy clouds floating in the vast expanse,
-white, the blending of all colors; marking the heavenly
-route by which the Spirit had passed in coming down to
-Mother Earth. Sparkling gems, the gift from April showers,
-decked her hopeful garments; not after man’s arrangement;
-there was a method in the natural spirit-art which embodied
-both the good and the true with the beautiful. Wherever the
-brilliant points could accentuate a graceful fold, or enlighten
-the mind, or give nourishment, produce good results in any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-way, as moisture gives life and sustentation, there were the
-sparkling gems upon the Theophany of New Life.</p>
-
-<p>As one gazes with holy admiration at this theophany of
-truth in renewed manifestation, and watches the changing
-effects, the action of the Spirit of New Life becomes apparent;
-the adaptation of the new growth to progress becomes a living
-experience, the facts become vital in significance to help others
-to live beautifully and truly. The pure white light from the
-azure sky, the composite of all colors, differentiates itself when
-touching the new growth and youthful forms. Topaz flowers,
-and garlands of ruby blossoms, rich golden stamens set in
-sapphire corollas, the royal purple, bloomed upon the garments
-of Hope, turquoise opaque tints and alexandrite changing hues
-took proper place as life took time.</p>
-
-<p>The New Life advances, treading the way all plants and
-men should follow&mdash;must follow. The always true, always
-good, always beautiful, in motion or effect. And at times the
-theophany is seen in effects too dazzling for mortal eye to
-gaze upon with sight in nakedness&mdash;the naked eye cannot see
-and live. From behind the cumuli of clouds such radiant outbursts
-of effulgent splendor that a transfiguration of the
-Presence itself seems imminent, a veritable foresight of what
-the pure in heart above can see and live,&mdash;a glimpse of what is
-implied by the immanence of the Creator of all life. It is
-then that scintillations of brilliancy shine forth from every
-gem, from every good thought, from every beautiful action,
-responsive to Him who created them. It is then that the truth
-is visible to the naked eye so that man can see upon the earth
-that for which he prays, “as it is in heaven.” It is then that
-the Spirit of New Life becomes enveloped as with a halo
-around her own presence, and vision is blinded by the increasing
-effulgence of the truthful atmospheric effects.</p>
-
-<p>Man closes his eyes, his vision is too weak, too limited in
-power and scope, to behold that which is actually before his
-eyesight. And while his sight is sealed by the very glory of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-the fact itself, and his mental vision strives to retain permanently
-that which he has been permitted to witness, then
-the Spirit speaks, speaks into the heart-life of those who have
-sought by striving to learn how to hear as well as to see. It is
-then when the eye is closed, yet all in the presence of New Life,
-that the avatar, theophany, renaissance, resurrection of truth
-in springtime, speaks the pure word of the Mind of Nature,
-the Creator Father,&mdash;the still small voice is heard.</p>
-
-<p>Softly as a murmur it comes from all directions. To him
-whose life work is in one field it is a voice profound and comprehensive
-in nature, and he calls it the music of the spheres.
-To another, it seems as tender, loving and true as parental
-affection in its holiest moments, and this one takes his children
-into the fields and wood to see and hear. It pervades all
-life, this Voice of Thought, Being, Joy, in the resurrection of
-New Life. It is heard in the bird-notes from every bush as
-the little songsters sing to their mates, rejoicing in renewed
-virility and hope of cozy nests amid the youthful foliage; it
-is the voice of renewed youth speaking unto itself, yet not
-itself, but through itself into those whom it had created, preserved,
-saved,&mdash;a simple, child-like voice, asking questions.</p>
-
-<p>Man pauses to listen. What are the questions asked in the
-early childhood of springtime?</p>
-
-<p>Oh, how pure, sincere! Transparent, clear! How loving
-the motive and desire which prompts the children of men
-when close to nature to look up wistfully for an answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Whence comes this Spirit of New Life?”</p>
-
-<p>And lo! the inner voice:</p>
-
-<p>“All things were made by Him, and without Him was not
-anything made that was made.”</p>
-
-<p>And lo! again the voice:</p>
-
-<p>“In Him was Life, and the Life was the Light of Men.”</p>
-
-<p>And lo! yet again the voice&mdash;for the third time,&mdash;the voice
-of a man to his brother man:</p>
-
-<p>“I am the Resurrection and the Life. Come unto Me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span></p>
-
-<p>Adele heard this inner voice,&mdash;the Trinity in Nature
-operative, speaking to her, to her personally.</p>
-
-<p>She closed the book, pressing it against her heart, and
-wended her way homeward, absorbed in thought, verily as
-one in the world, yet now above it, spiritually.</p>
-
-<p>Her father had spoken to her of the Light of the World, as
-Intelligence and Righteousness. He who is the Light of the
-World had said to her, spiritually:</p>
-
-<p>“I am the Resurrection and the Life.”</p>
-
-<p>She had sought the sunshine, and heard the Voice;&mdash;the
-Voice of the Trinity in the springtime of her youth.</p>
-
-<p>Not until next morning did the practical application of
-what Adele had heard take hold upon her as something demanding
-prompt attention. The concept once accepted, at
-once acted like a seed-word, producing new life, and the beautiful
-blossoms of a new intelligence appeared. She herself
-became a part of this springtime resurrection. Being what
-she was, youthful, intelligent, sincere, it of course took form,
-naturally, in connection with that phase of life and activity
-which was uppermost in her own environment at the time,&mdash;but
-the motive now much more heartfelt and spiritual.</p>
-
-<p>She had longed to go abroad, and often said so, merely, however,
-for the hope of enjoyment, now the desire was to see
-and learn more of humanity at large for a given purpose; and
-especially that region, the Orient, from which such thoughts,
-so practical yet spiritual, had originally come. She wanted a
-broader knowledge of the world and of the great religions; of
-the Light of the World as a universal spiritual as well as
-physical experience, and this, simply in order to live better,
-truer, and to help others.</p>
-
-<p>“I must go!&mdash;really must,” she whispered, “even if I have
-to make the circumstances.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“<em>Oh, ye who may survive me when the spring returns,</em></div>
- <div class="verse indent2"><em>Remember how I loved its loveliness.</em>”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span></p>
-<h3 id="VII">VII<br />
-<span class="fs80">OFF TO ASIA</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">IT was at the Club, only a few days later, where the Doctor
-met Professor Cultus. The usual preliminaries of
-greeting had hardly passed from hearing before the
-Professor seemed unusually anxious to know certain details
-about the Far East, details about modes of travel and such
-things,&mdash;in fact, asked so many questions quite unlike his
-usual mode of conversation, that the Doctor pricked up his
-ears with delight, evidently having some suspicions, and
-finally asked the direct question: “Why don’t you go and
-see for yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>Professor Cultus laughed, and then frankly acknowledged
-the situation: “Mrs. Cultus and Adele are so bent on seeing
-the Orient before it becomes civilized, as they evidently
-expect, that I have no peace. Mrs. Cultus is reading ‘O. K.’
-between the lines of ‘The Incarnation of Krishna Mulvaney,’
-as if one ought to throw some light upon the other. She
-says she wants to make the acquaintance of some of those
-Khidmatgars and Maharajas while they yet stand upon their
-native heath. I’ve told her they don’t wear kilts like MacGregor,
-but ’twas no use. She immediately wished to know
-what they did wear. I suppose I’m in for it. They’ve been
-talking the matter over at intervals all winter, but now!
-now! O now! we have it from thin soup to thick coffee.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better give in,” said the Doctor, laughing heartily.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, just between us, I have;&mdash;but I haven’t told them
-so, not as yet. I rather take to the notion myself since I can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-see my way to get off, but I don’t quite understand the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">modus
-operandi</i>&mdash;how one man can manage civilized women in a
-land where women don’t generally count for much. Did
-you say the Taj could now be seen without an elephant ride?
-That’s the sort of thing I must know beforehand; two civilized
-women on one wild beast might demoralize the beast.”</p>
-
-<p>The bare possibility of having the Cultus party in the East
-at the same time with themselves, sent Paul to call upon Adele
-as quickly as he could pick up his hat and rush out. These
-two young members put their heads together and practically
-settled all details, both possible and impossible, before the
-older members of the party could well realize what they were
-talking about. Youth forever! American style! Action!
-Action! Action! with occasional application of the brake.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus was greatly in favor of having four in their
-own party.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Une partie carree</i> is always so much more workable when
-travelling,” she said, “and besides, Adele ought to have some
-one nearer her own age. I don’t intend to follow Adele into
-every dirty native haunt she may take a notion to visit. Now
-if we can only find some one of the modern Investigating-Civil
-Club, or of the Literary-Reformation Reportorial Society,
-we shall be in clover all through the tour; we can report
-progress in print whenever we wish, and have a book
-ready as soon as we return.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Mother, you are too grasping,” exclaimed Adele,
-“only a literary corps can assimilate the whole thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“No! Not quite!” said Mrs. Cultus. “We need only report
-our own progress, not the rotation-progress-of-the-earth.
-Now that I come to think of it, perhaps I’d better do the reporting
-myself. The society column generally puts in what
-I send them,&mdash;and then I’m sure of what is said. Oh! I have
-an idea! It’s a companion for you, Adele, that troubles me!
-Now I come to think of it, whom would you like?” But
-before any one could reply, Mrs. Cultus continued:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, Miss Winchester, of course! Now if she can be
-persuaded,&mdash;Adele, you know how to coax her,&mdash;that will be
-the very thing.” Professor Cultus made no objection, and the
-delighted Adele took it up as if the persuasion of Miss Winchester
-were a foregone conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>Adele and Paul found Miss Winchester in her own study,
-her writing-table littered with odds and ends, apparently,
-really notes such as literary workers are apt to jot down when
-a passing thought or phrase seems worth keeping; loose slips
-of paper and packages held by gum bands, pieces pinched at
-the ends with mysterious folds, also things tucked away under
-blotters where she couldn’t find them, and so forth. The
-Persuasion Committee, Adele Chairman, entered,&mdash;a gale of
-wind among the papers. Action first and the ideas picked
-up afterwards. Rapturous greeting between the girl chums;&mdash;then
-Adele exclaimed, “Oh! Frank! If you love me do consent
-to come with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Caramels or Gibraltars? Which is it this time?” laughed
-Miss Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>“Please put on your bonnet and come,” gushed Paul, manly
-mindful of the importance of such things.</p>
-
-<p>“O Frank! We’re just wild to have you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, please become sane again, take a seat;&mdash;no, not
-on that box, it’s precious!”</p>
-
-<p>Adele dashed her hat and gloves on the writing-table, utterly
-regardless of pens, ink, papers or blotters. “Now, my
-dear, no nonsense,&mdash;do say yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Adele, I do love you very much, but I haven’t
-the faintest idea what you’re talking about.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele produced a printed list of routes for travellers.
-“There!” Miss Winchester noticed an illustration of the
-Sphynx on the cover. “I never made her acquaintance,” said
-she, and a comical expression played over her features as she
-tried to divine what Adele expected the Sphynx to tell.</p>
-
-<p>Adele took it up at once. “You never met the Sphynx!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-Why, that’s just it! Now’s our chance,&mdash;don’t you see?” And
-the Committee started in, one hundred and twenty words to
-the minute, to explain matters.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester, somewhat confused by the rapidity of
-Adele’s jumps from place to place in mental travelling, but as
-responsively elastic as either of the others, took several turns
-in her office-chair while the others were chatting; but when
-they landed her among the Himalaya mountains as part of the
-journey, she gasped for utterance:</p>
-
-<p>“Bless me! You take my breath away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind! Catch it again. Oh, do please! Please
-do! and come along!”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must give me time to think,” and Miss Winchester
-began cogitating how she would turn an apparent impossibility
-into an assured fact.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t think too much,” exclaimed Adele, when the
-result of thinking looked precarious. “Just do it,&mdash;why, don’t
-you see? The opportunity of our lives! We shall learn so
-much.”</p>
-
-<p>Now it so happened, the circumstances being favorable,
-that Adele’s last appeal touched upon a matter in Miss Winchester’s
-past experience, and excited a far more potent incentive
-to join the party than any amount of contagious enthusiasm
-could ever have accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester had not long before published a successful
-novel based upon results of travel, including character
-sketches, the result of careful observation amid episodes of
-ordinary life. She had given it the whimsical title of “Upside
-Down.” Now what could possibly be more opportune than to
-follow this with others,&mdash;say on “Downside Up,” or, better
-still, “Outside and Inside”? And where could more be
-found of circumstantial interest than in the Orient? Who
-knows!&mdash;it might lead to still another, “Turned Inside Out,”
-for the East undoubtedly had many examples of that sort of
-thing. Being already a member of the literary craft, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-opportunity was altogether too good to be lost, every nerve
-must be strained to reach the other side. It goes without
-saying that the Chairman of the Persuasion Committee was
-caught dancing an impromptu tarantelle when Miss Winchester
-finally told them it might, possibly might, be arranged.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then it’s settled positively,” exclaimed Adele; “for if
-you hesitate you’re lost.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul thought Adele a little witch as she danced with glee,
-all the time encouraging her friend. He remembered how
-Adele had bewitched himself also not long before, when she
-was in quite another mood. Paul laughed outright, but could
-not keep his eyes from noticing her every movement.</p>
-
-<p>As to Miss Winchester, she took hold of the problem with
-a vim characteristic of some of the characters of her own creation;
-she tackled at once the ubiquitous problem known to all
-men on both sides of the globe as, “How to make both ends
-meet,” and of course solved it satisfactorily. Some few of the
-craft-literary, and in some degree all women of whatever persuasion,
-usually do. So Adele was right,&mdash;that settled it.
-Miss Winchester finally saw her way clear, and joined their
-party.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been difficult to find a more congenial and
-vivacious group than Professor and Mrs. Cultus, Miss Winchester
-and Adele, with their friends the Doctor and Paul, as
-they met in the salon of the steamer on the eve of departure.
-Henri Semple, who looked forward to meeting them later on
-the other side, led the party of chosen friends who came to see
-them off, and while trying to aid the Doctor and Paul with
-their hand-baggage, kept dodging Mr. Hammond, one of those
-antipathetic, ghostly individuals who throw cold water upon
-such occasions. Mrs. Maxwell sent her butler with an exquisite
-kedge anchor in rose-buds for Adele, “in case you have
-no wireless telegraph when wrecked, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>Amid friends, and flowers sent in kind remembrance, with
-many kind messages “bon voyage,” there was, nevertheless,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-just a touch of regret when some one asked Adele how she
-liked leaving America. She had thus far thought of it as
-leaving home. Now home was “America” in reference to
-where she was going,&mdash;her first sensation of the broadening
-effects of travel.</p>
-
-<p>A few moments later all were on deck in gay spirits, Miss
-Winchester striving to avoid an impolite kodak-fiend in search
-of celebrities, who was taking snap-shots from the bridge; but
-she only succeeded in getting herself into a most unconventional
-attitude, almost doubled up with laughter, strongly suggestive
-in a finished picture that some one had the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mal de mer</i>
-already. “One ought never to judge by appearances,” remarked
-the Doctor, as he attempted to shield Miss Winchester
-from the kodak.</p>
-
-<p>The bell sounded, only passengers were permitted to remain
-longer on board. The Doctor was saying “I trust we
-meet again” to one of his trunks, when Semple hurried down
-the gang-plank waving back “au revoir”; a gamin on the
-dock instantly echoed back what sounded like “moo-swore,
-take moo-swore.” Adele waved her handkerchief to Semple,
-and a Frenchman near by took off his hat, smiling as if the
-salute were intended for him.</p>
-
-<p>The steamer swung out from the wharf and glided into midstream;
-amid cheers, and adieus waved in many directions,
-and kisses thrown to loved ones left behind. America and
-home, now one and the same, began to recede. They were
-actually on their way to the Far East.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PART_SECOND"><span class="hidden"><em>PART SECOND</em></span></h2>
-
-<h3 id="VIII">VIII<br />
-<span class="fs80">A STUDIO FOR IMPRESSIONS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THE voyage across the Atlantic from New York to the
-Gibraltar proved a constant series of sapphire days.
-Skies light azure often cloudless, the ocean a richer
-shade with enough wind to curl the sea-foam into delicate
-lace-like patterns. When the billows rose into the domain
-of direct sunlight, myriads of brilliant points scintillated like
-sparkling gems decorating the wave crests,&mdash;the sea-foam
-not unlike flossy embroidery or ruffles of lace upon silk of blue.</p>
-
-<p>Adele’s first experience of things as they are in the great
-motion constant, onward, ever forward, in the very being of
-the boundless deep; also her first impressions of the ways and
-means amid a cosmopolitan crowd on board an ocean-flyer.
-Nature and humanity, each in constant movement, the former
-with majesty and potency profound, the latter on the grand
-rush, often to obtain something to eat.</p>
-
-<p>Towards sunset she stood with the Doctor watching the
-crimson disk grow less and less in brilliancy, and finally
-through a veil of luminous atmosphere disappear in the mysterious
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p>They spoke little, as if under some fascination. The varied
-movements in the sky and unstable water-foundation were indeed
-somewhat hypnotic in effect, but a psychologist would
-have been puzzled to detect the outcome of their meditations.
-While they gazed, a passing breeze crossed the surface immediately
-before them, changing the delicate traceries in nature’s
-handiwork. The Doctor at once responded, for the complications<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-appealed to him, and most naturally he spoke in terms
-of his own previous experience of similar impressions.</p>
-
-<p>“Those changes in the wave curves are not unlike harmonic
-modulations, and I can actually hear the difference.” Adele
-seemed surprised.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” continued the Doctor, “the slow, dignified progression
-is certainly symphonic in character, yet the infinite
-variety in less melodic forms piles up little by little until the
-greater movement is itself influenced. How wonderful, majestic,
-yet exceedingly subtle, and always refined! It is certainly
-sound-color or color as sound, and the drawing of the
-design&mdash;well, ’pon my soul, the drawing is too quick for me.
-I can’t see how it is done, it flits from me, is gone, living
-only in memory, not unlike the technical element in the rendition
-of music. But the sound-color, the real harmony.
-Ah! that I hear in my mind’s ear and see in my mind’s eye
-for long afterwards.” Adele, much younger than the Doctor,
-was also working out her own impressions according to previous
-experience, the experience of youth.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes! I see what you see,&mdash;very artistic,&mdash;you can
-talk about it in that style if you choose, but&mdash;&mdash;” and she
-seemed in doubt how to describe what she really felt. The
-Doctor waited till she was ready.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so awfully real! It’s alive!”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a great real picture, that which I like in pictures.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt an original,” remarked the Doctor, smiling.
-“The original of many marines.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele called attention to the magnificent contour lines
-which themselves swayed to and fro over the curved surface.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you see, it’s alive; the whole thing moves, it’s so
-true; and you and I with it, we’re all going. Isn’t that just
-glorious!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” exclaimed the Doctor, “in Him we live and move
-and have our being,&mdash;that’s what you mean?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Just so,” and she paused before continuing: “He was
-the Artist, and it is a living picture, a real one, just ready to
-be painted.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the apparent living earth, the breathing of the deep
-sea which had impressed Adele, the suppressed emotion of
-the planet, ever existing, ever apparent to those who had eyes
-to see and ears to hear for observation; and this over the
-whole vast expanse.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” whispered Adele, “a living picture, by so great
-an Artist, must be sublimely artistic.”</p>
-
-<p>“True,” mused the Doctor, “the greater will include the
-less,&mdash;a masterpiece, an original, to lead the artistic sense onward
-and upward.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But there were few on board who gave even a passing
-thought to this physical breathing of the earth, nor to the
-invisible moisture ascending by evaporation. The majority
-thought no more of it than they did of their own individual
-breathing; they took it as a matter of course, no more, no less.
-They had, however, other impressions, quite as mundane, and
-equally apparent. Some sought impressions from watching
-card-sharpers in the smoking-room; others by listening to
-fluent talkers who really abused good natural endowments by
-promiscuous discussion of any and every subject that came
-up; men who did not hesitate an instant to suggest what they
-considered to be improvements upon nature. The conceit of
-some seemed indeed colossal, especially when they, too, waved
-their arms about, forming contour lines over curved ideas, to
-carry their impressions far beyond the briny deep. Even
-such, however, were really small harmless game compared to
-what Mrs. Cultus soon encountered.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="IX">IX<br />
-<span class="fs80">A BUDGET OF NEW SCIENCES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">PREVIOUS to leaving home Mrs. Cultus had flattered
-herself she was taking the Professor abroad to obtain
-rest from his arduous scientific pursuits&mdash;alas! only
-to find herself at once in a very vortex of new sciences and
-arts, so-called. Authorities discussed Ping Pong as an art,
-also skittles, and the nomenclature of golf was quite enough
-in matter of differentiations to establish it as a science. Then
-there were new methods in the practice of medicine. Thoughts
-warranted to cure were for sale under the title of Mental
-Science;&mdash;and even a religious science, said to be popular and
-quite new to the orthodox Science of Religions. All were on
-board and much in evidence.</p>
-
-<p>None of these things would have much troubled the Professor,
-but to Mrs. Cultus they afforded a glorious opportunity
-to pick up odd bits of information. She herself was certainly
-not suffering from fatigue from the perusal of scientific publications,
-so when the book of experience opened a chapter new
-to her, written by folk who prided themselves upon the especial
-efficacy of their own mental efforts, why, that appealed as
-the sort of science and art quite in her line rather than the
-Professor’s. Having no lack of worldly wisdom in her own
-mentality she at once took her stand. With regard to any
-new phase of religious science, so-called, she would be very
-inquisitive, not opinionated, much less dogmatic; but as to any
-mental racket, scientific or otherwise, she thought she might
-venture further. In fact ought to have some opinion of her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-own, being entitled to it, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ex-officio</i>, as a Professor’s spouse.
-Such was Mrs. Cultus’ point of view.</p>
-
-<p>Matters were soon brought to a focus. She overheard repeated
-remarks about patients who had been healed simply
-by receiving new mental impressions easily obtained, generally
-by correspondence, fixed charge, five dollars for epistolary
-impression. Some one who had been victimized had told her
-of a bushel-basket full of impressions shipped by mail each
-day from a single office.</p>
-
-<p>“There must be some good ones in the lot,” thought Mrs.
-Cultus. “We must investigate a little.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she heard of others cured by thought-transference,
-either with or without faith,&mdash;and finally of cures which tax
-credulity to extreme limits of sanity, namely, by the persuasive
-efficacy of belief, even in spite of the Creator Father’s
-natural laws to the contrary, as if natural laws were inadequate
-to suit the Creator’s purpose. Surely enough this to
-excite Mrs. Cultus’ curiosity. “What’s the use of travelling
-unless you take things in, without being taken in yourself?”&mdash;and
-she determined to caution her daughter. “Adele, my
-dear, when your father and I first crossed the ocean together,
-some time since, before you appeared, the ship’s company
-contained many pilgrims from a sacred shrine, very sacred
-and very profitable. We then heard much about cures. If
-I mistake not I have yet a bottle of the sacred water from
-that European shrine, stowed away in our medicine closet,
-warranted to be very efficacious to the faithful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever test its efficacy?” asked Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, to be frank, I never saw it used except just previous
-to funerals, which struck me as rather late in the day. It
-certainly acted like a sedative upon those who administered
-it, but that’s another matter. What I was going to remark
-is, that to-day the tide of curative waters seems to flow all the
-other way. America does the quick-cure business whether
-the patient is faithful or not.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s certainly great gain for the medicine,” remarked
-Miss Winchester. Mrs. Cultus continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed; one might have guessed Americans would
-introduce improvements in the system. I always did believe
-in practical science, practical metaphysics they call it now,
-and all that sort of thing, specially when the thing looks a
-little mysterious to begin with,&mdash;it clears out the system.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whose system? What system?” wondered Miss Winchester,
-“the medicine’s or the patient’s?” but she said nothing,
-and smiled inwardly as Mrs. Cultus continued her
-drolling.</p>
-
-<p>“But tell me, are the new medicines proprietary, patented,
-or merely bottles for sale, duly authenticated like the old bottles?
-I wonder if it would be safe to put some of this new
-wine, beg pardon, curative water, into the old bottles?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear no!” exclaimed Miss Winchester, promptly. “All
-medicines are quite out of date. All you have to do is to
-think you think, pay the price, and there you are&mdash;cured. I
-was cured myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, bless me, child! of what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing serious&mdash;merely of my former impression.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was your impression of an impressionist, Frank?”
-said Adele, laughing. “I don’t believe all of them are quacks,
-certainly not until I first hear what they have to say.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Now Miss Winchester, being of the literary craft, indulged
-in methods not unlike those practiced by the Doctor in connection
-with his palmistry pranks. They both were much
-given to observing individuals whose outward appearance suggested
-a personality from whom they could learn something.
-Studying types, the Doctor called it; studying human nature,
-Miss Winchester considered it. All was grist that came to
-their mill, good, bad, and even the indifferent, cranks and
-amiables included. It so happened that in the course of her
-study of human nature Miss Winchester had encountered a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-pronounced specimen of the genus Professoress, said to occupy
-the chair of Thought-Cure in a would-be Sanitorium-University.
-This had been some time ago. What was her surprise
-now to find said Professoress on board, occupying a deck-chair
-among the innocents abroad. Not wishing to claim any
-acquaintance (having already written her up in an article
-upon “The Inside Cure”) unless forced to do so, she had
-avoided a meeting. It had been this same individual of whom
-she had thought when telling Mrs. Cultus of her own cure;
-and as luck would have it, there the healer appeared,&mdash;on deck,
-in a chair, quite near them when Adele innocently asked for
-an impression of an impressionist.</p>
-
-<p>Not wishing, however, to disclose this coincidence until she
-could lead up to it after her own fashion, Miss Winchester
-kept one eye upon the occupant of the chair, and the other
-upon Professor Cultus, and yet answered Adele at the same
-time; all of which goes to show that she herself was somewhat
-of an expert in impressions, and in leading others up to
-them; observing others while not herself perceived. When
-she was ready she replied:</p>
-
-<p>“No, Adele, I do not believe they are all quacks; but I do
-believe in nerves and hysterics. There is such a thing as self-deception;&mdash;the
-little tin-Solomon within the most of us does
-sometimes assert himself;&mdash;you know the saying, ‘Everybody’s
-crazy except you and me, and you’re a little off!’ I certainly
-believe in nerves and hysteria.”</p>
-
-<p>“What has that got to do with it?” asked Mrs. Cultus,
-curious.</p>
-
-<p>“May I refer to the Professor?” quoth Miss Winchester,
-blandly.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Cultus thus unwillingly drawn in, gave some
-points simply as the quickest way to get rid of the talking.
-“There is a class of disease known as hysteria, nervous, yet
-involving no recognizable anatomical hurt, wound or injury.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-The nervous system plays a very important part in the problem,
-and nerves, you know, affect mentality.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt of it, my dear,” interrupted Mrs. Cultus; “a
-pinch always makes me start up as nervous as a witch, and I
-never could talk sense during an electric storm. I feel nervous
-now just to think of it.”</p>
-
-<p>The Professor continued: “To meddle unadvisedly with
-the nervous system is dangerous; yet with shrewd sense based
-upon clinical observation it is possible to perfect cures.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not without some smelling salts,” chimed in Mrs. Cultus,
-laughing. “But bless me! are these new doctors experts like
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Specialists in the shrewd-sense department,” remarked
-Miss Winchester. “Please go on, Professor Cultus.”</p>
-
-<p>“When mental science encounters cases of hysteria, it is
-quite possible a cure may be accomplished now and then, but
-from the standpoint of what you would call orthodox treatment,
-mental derangement of any kind requires most careful
-consideration and perhaps prolonged treatment in the full
-light of scientific research. To attempt such practice irregularly
-is to court the consequences of ignorance, or perhaps
-worse, really to injure the patient.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I understand it perfectly!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus.
-“I might be accidentally cured by irregular treatment, but
-would not stay cured. My dear, I prefer to be orthodox.
-Adele, where are my salts? Look in that bag, please,&mdash;I
-haven’t used them for some time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense, Mother! You’re cured already and don’t want
-any salting, the sea air is quite enough;&mdash;nor do I believe that
-all mental scientists have the hysterics, I mean their patients
-haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, indeed!” said the sprightly Frank Winchester; “it
-is those who are cured who had the hysterics or something
-equivalent; and the practitioners who now have the shrewd
-sense and cash perquisite,&mdash;I know from experience.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What! Oh, my!” exclaimed Adele, “you have the hysterics!
-Frank, I should never have accused you of such accomplishments,”
-then, as if musing: “Isn’t it strange that
-when you begin to describe an ache, so many others soon find
-they have the same thing. Mild case I suppose, Frank?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester enjoyed immensely this little rap; but having
-been caught concluded to make the next sensational remark
-more specific.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m thankful to say, in my case there was no hysterics;&mdash;but
-I did visit a mental science center, where ‘vibrations’ were
-said to radiate marvellously. I went there on strictly professional
-business, to hunt up a case, and on arriving was received
-by&mdash;by&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The speaker came to a sudden halt, her eyes fixed upon a
-remarkable individual, the Professoress, now standing by the
-deck-rail, overlooking the sea;&mdash;a short, very stout personage
-under a broad-brimmed hat decorated with enough feathers to
-have plumed a male ostrich in the month of January. Her
-attendant, a tall, slender man with long neck, sharp eyes, and
-gold eye-glasses. Fortunately the couple stood far enough
-away to be out of hearing, or Miss Winchester would not have
-continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Speak of angels! there she is herself! She of the winged
-thoughts! the redoubtable Angelica Thorn, popularly known
-as ‘Madame,’ the honorary title conferred exclusively by the
-Sanitorium-University. You may not believe it, but that impressive
-angel with wings in her hat and honorary degree on
-her own University register, is gifted with a marvellous power
-of radiating thoughts,&mdash;her words fly up but thoughts remain
-below, credited with realizing thousands of dollars per annum
-by giving and taking mental impressions, sent and received
-by the bushel-basket full, all by mail.” Mrs. Cultus put up
-her lorgnette to see if any ships were passing in that direction&mdash;then
-whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“You surely don’t mean that person with flowing tresses and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-all those waving plumes? She’s Milesian Frinch, not Parisian
-French. You can’t deceive me. And what is she here for?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Thorn had taken off her hat; the tall, slim attendant
-held it; while she, resting both elbows on the rail, and her chin
-on her wrists, gazed out o’er the mighty deep.</p>
-
-<p>“The pose is certainly cherubic,” remarked Mrs. Cultus,
-cynical.</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt she is radiating now,” remarked Frank Winchester.
-Adele noticed her hair parted on one side, and plastered
-flat over the temples, also wavy ringlets round her neck.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor, who thus far had not taken any part in this impressionistic
-séance, no sooner observed her hands exposed to
-display an unusual assortment of rings glistening in the sunlight,
-than he concluded his turn for investigation had arrived.
-Possibly here palmistry might be in order,&mdash;and diamond cut
-diamond. There might be some real sport in it. Before the
-others noticed, he sauntered off towards the couple. Little did
-he then realize the consequences.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="X">X<br />
-<span class="fs80">PALMISTRY POSES AS MENTAL SCIENCE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">IT was not difficult for the Doctor to obtain an interview,
-and this without really introducing himself, simply
-by some casual remark suggested by the surroundings.
-He soon succeeded in directing conversation away from the immediate
-vicinity and called attention to objects at a distance,
-of course interjecting the highly original remark that distance
-lends enchantment. Mrs. Thorn at once appreciated the enchantment
-part of the proceedings, and pointed with her forefinger
-at certain objects as not being exactly what they
-seemed,&mdash;thereby illustrating what was really more important
-for the Doctor to find out, namely, that she had no real objection
-from refinement of feeling to specify given objects by
-pointing at them. If she did appreciate enchantment, so-called,
-she was certainly very practical in its application.
-From the Doctor’s point of view this was simply “delicious”
-on her part, and made him more blandly-persuasive-appreciative
-than ever. Within five minutes more he had Mrs. Thorn
-and her attendant both pointing at various features, clouds,
-waves, ripples, a passing ship, the capstan and the captain’s
-signals, anything, in fact, that would cause them to use their
-hands; even soiled spots on the hand-rail and some very sticky
-tar on a rope he made them avoid touching by withdrawing
-their hands, any movement, in fact, that would show both
-the form and action of their hands in connection with the
-spoken words,&mdash;the hands suiting the action to the word<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-(thoughts). Mrs. Thorn was, in fact, betraying herself by
-every word and action, and the expert Doctor reading “the
-natural tendencies of the individuals” as if an open book.</p>
-
-<p>The Cultus group privately watched these proceedings.
-Paul and Adele, with heads rather close together, having their
-own fun, Paul imitating the Doctor, and interjecting the
-platitudes-of-humbuggery he had often heard the Doctor use
-before in similar palmistry cases.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a person with strong social instincts,” remarked
-Paul, wise as an owl.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! not a hermit,&mdash;thanks!” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Very popular. Lot of fellows might fall in&mdash;h’m!&mdash;admiration
-of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks again, but don’t look at me, watch the Doctor.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was peering into Mrs. Thorn’s hand, which she
-held out to him with evident satisfaction. Of course Paul
-seized Adele’s hand while watching.</p>
-
-<p>What was the Doctor examining with such apparent interest?
-In general terms, a short fleshy hand, soft, with thin
-skin, and ruddy color easily suppressed or caused under pressure.
-Fingers only slightly tapering, with tips of the well
-known “useful” curve when viewed from the under side, yet
-curiously suggestive of the spatulate when seen from the back.
-Thumb well proportioned and turning back spontaneously
-with considerable self-assertion. But most noticeable of all,
-where the roots of the fingers joined the palm, materialism
-developed to an exceptional degree, almost of the “elementary”
-type. A combination more curious than rare, designating
-certain womanly instincts likely to operate by methods presumably
-masculine in character. It was not easy to formulate
-a specific diagnosis until after hearing such a person converse
-on subjects about which she had had an interested experience,
-for no mortal could reasonably conjecture, not even she herself,
-how things would go eventually. Certainly a woman of
-the world with strong emotions, no doubt loquacious at times,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-yet a very clear head when it came to action; and material
-results never lost sight of. Strange to say, however, the hands
-themselves were soon forgotten, attention being drawn to
-their adornment. The woman had an inordinate passion for
-precious gems. Mrs. Thorn wore upon each hand exquisite
-rings, superb stones set in excellent taste, but rather a mixture
-when displayed together. The usual solitaires, also set with
-sapphires of peculiar peacock hue; a changeable alexandrite,
-and a ruby amid emeralds as leaves, evidently some color-scheme
-taken direct from nature; not a topaz nor white sapphire
-among the lot, and evidently the wearer knew cat’s-eyes
-from Norwegian opals, even if others did not. Even these,
-however, were secondary to a <ins class="corr" id="tn73" title="Transcriber’s Note—“fire-opal of true Indian irridescence” changed to “fire-opal of true Indian iridescence”.">fire-opal of true Indian iridescence</ins>.
-A cleft-opal, that mysterious gem so suggestive to
-mystics in all climes. The light came from within the stone,
-through an irregular cleft, the exterior still rough;&mdash;by no
-means a conspicuous ornament, but when the eye upon close
-examination penetrated the cleft, the mysterious interior was
-ablaze with variegated colors. It was this fire-opal the Doctor
-was examining when Adele caught him holding the impressionist
-hand. The Cultus group saw little more of the Doctor
-until after-dinner-promenade on deck; he was occupied with
-Mrs. Thorn. Then Miss Winchester at once applied at the
-bureau of information.</p>
-
-<p>“What are the probabilities, Doctor Wise? mystic, or merely
-gymnastic? One must never judge by appearances, of course,
-but&mdash;&mdash;” and Miss Winchester gave a little cough to suggest
-her impression.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a very interesting case,&mdash;very intelligent and thoroughly
-practical. She talks mysticism like a California theosophist,
-but acts like a cool-headed politician. Her thoughts
-are about mysticism in its useful aspects; her words mystical
-because a good business method for her; and her acts businesslike,
-very, from the mystical point of view. How do you like
-that for a type?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Evidently interesting to talk to,&mdash;also good to keep clear
-of, in business,” thought Miss Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>“So that’s what you palm-cranks call a mixed type!” exclaimed
-Mrs. Cultus. “I call her variegated.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, of course she is bound to be contradictory, in appearance
-at least, at odd times,” said the Doctor. “Moody as a
-mystic, dogmatic as a sectarian theologian, and will take risks
-like a Wall Street speculator. She is made that way, she is
-constitutionally so. Oh, yes, she is a bundle of mystical impressions
-held together by very clear ideas of what she wants,
-also has fearless business methods to obtain it. The seeming
-contradiction is more apparent than real, however.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about those rings?” quizzed Adele, when Paul’s back
-was turned.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, only one thing worth remembering. She wears her
-largest upon her forefinger, the most conspicuous position
-possible, a sure sign of&mdash;but let that pass.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Doctor! no passing allowed in this game&mdash;just tell
-me, but please don’t tell Paul, or I shall never hear the end,
-no matter what it is;” and she put her arm in the Doctor’s,
-drawing him off for a deck promenade.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my dear, if you must know, the woman can’t help
-advertising herself,&mdash;a most unrefined quality in woman, to
-my notion. Men, you know, no matter how much they may
-do it themselves, generally detest that sort of thing in women.
-That’s one way in which her feminine instinct for appreciation
-takes a somewhat masculine form in action. I could only
-find it out surely by conversation with her. Now I expect to
-hear of her some day as President of the International Impressionists’
-Mental-Mystic Board of Trade. She will make
-a good thing of it and possibly then disappear, mystically.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele shuddered. The Doctor felt the motion on his arm.
-Evidently that sort of talk was antipathetic to Adele.</p>
-
-<p>After a little while she asked quietly:</p>
-
-<p>“Does she presume to practice when travelling?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I should not be surprised if she were at it now. She told
-me there was a patient on board whom she knew she could
-cure, whether he had faith or not.” Adele twitched again.</p>
-
-<p>“That sort of thing ought to be counteracted in some way.
-I’ve not served in a hospital without learning at least that
-much. But here! Oh, what can we do?”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XI">XI<br />
-<span class="fs80">AMATEUR MENTAL SCIENCE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">MANY on board had noticed an invalid who took his
-airing in a rolling chair. It seemed very natural
-that he should appear melancholy at times, for he
-was said to be partially helpless, in fact paralyzed on one side.
-This was the unfortunate Mr. Onset, whom Mrs. Thorn
-desired to treat according to the impressionistic methods of
-the Mental-Mystic University-Sanitorium.</p>
-
-<p>How it came to be rumored that she had obtained his consent
-and that he was already acting under her direction is
-really of little moment, for the fact soon became evident,&mdash;Mr.
-Onset himself willingly alluded to it. He explained that after
-trying many regular physicians he was about to visit certain
-baths on the Continent when he incidentally met Mrs. Thorn,
-and was only too glad to avail himself, in passing, of any hopeful
-aid; especially since “the method required no medicines
-which might interfere with subsequent treatment at the Spa,
-and demanded no faith,”&mdash;of the latter commodity he had
-little left to give to any system whatsoever. Mr. Onset was
-certainly trying conscientiously to be frank with himself.</p>
-
-<p>The next thing known was that Mrs. Thorn had held a good
-orthodox business-mystic interview properly to diagnose the
-case; and had given the patient some published articles to
-read, the wording of which was most dexterously adapted to
-excite curiosity for&mdash;what next; and later on some manuscript
-letters to be perused when alone, the lights turned low so that
-no one else could read them by looking over his shoulder, nor
-find out how he kept them next the fifth-rib-covering of his
-heart. These latter letters must be made mysterious, simply<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-because they communicated to the patient the mystical line of
-thought he was to follow while the Commandant of the
-Thought Center sat in her state-room meditating.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I know exactly how it works!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus.</p>
-
-<p>“How? What?” asked Miss Winchester, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, lying in your state-room bunk, meditating. I know
-the whole business, so does the steward. He brings me champagne
-in one hand and porridge-mush in the other. He reads
-my thoughts perfectly.”</p>
-
-<p>What the printed matter given to Mr. Onset contained was
-soon known all over the ship,&mdash;an excellent advertisement;
-what the written pages contained Onset kept to himself, as
-if the subject-matter was rather too personal for discussion in
-either the men’s or women’s smoking departments.</p>
-
-<p>Mutual meditations continued, however; mental impressions
-were presumably radiating, the vibrations presumably acting
-in a marvellous manner, having been promised to take a
-straight course direct from the state-room bunk to Mr. Onset’s
-legs and none other, which certainly was a vast improvement
-upon the expansion method of wireless telegraphy in communicating
-thoughts. And this even if the paralysis did remain as
-evident as before.</p>
-
-<p>Yet curious to relate, these mysterious vibrations certainly
-did expand with most positive effects upon others; Mrs. Cultus
-continually on the lookout for substantial results, Frank Winchester
-jotting down absurd notes as they flew by, Paul continually
-vibrating between Adele and what she wanted. This
-until Adele asked if there was any book in the library upon
-“Practical Metaphysics.” Then Paul flunked, and sat down
-beside her. As to the Doctor&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>One morning he and the Professor inquired of the patient
-how he was progressing:</p>
-
-<p>“Slowly,” said Mr. Onset. “I still have little hope, but I
-certainly caught a new idea.”</p>
-
-<p>Onset’s voice was unquestionably melancholy, from his own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-point of view,&mdash;but not of that peculiar timbre, nor in any
-degree involved, as might reasonably be expected from a partially
-helpless paralytic.</p>
-
-<p>“There is something strange about that fellow,” remarked
-the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“I think so myself, but have not defined it as yet,” added
-the Professor.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever observe a man paralyzed on the right side
-who could speak as he does, to say nothing of his power to
-talk and converse connectedly and with ease?”</p>
-
-<p>Their conversation naturally became more technical than
-is desirable in this record, but it may be remarked that Professor
-Cultus’ mode of thought displayed an insight into the
-nature of mental processes in general, from the standpoint of
-the modern psychology; whereas the Doctor accentuated certain
-facts he had observed in Mr. Onset in particular. The Professor,
-very careful in what he stated and very cautious as to conclusions;
-the Doctor intensely appreciative, and ultra sanguine
-as to results. The Professor much better informed as to how
-details of anatomy were supposed to work; the Doctor understanding
-how they actually had worked in cases he had
-observed. They were, each of them, truth-seeking;&mdash;the Professor
-exceptionally explicit as to the anatomy, nerves, nerve-centers;
-especially clear as to “a veritable nerve-center having
-a strange domination over the memory of articulating words.”
-The Doctor insisted that Onset ought to manifest phenomena
-different from what he did if he suffered from veritable paralysis.
-Both being sure that paralysis of the right side of the body
-is undoubtedly connected by the nervous system with the left
-side of the brain; the careful Professor would not commit
-himself further as to Onset’s case; the sanguine Doctor did
-so at once:</p>
-
-<p>“Onset is paralyzed on the right side. The organs of speech
-in his case are not affected, yet if speech should be affected,
-and is not, what becomes of the paralysis?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span></p>
-
-<p>A twinkle in the Doctor’s eye as he said this was noticed
-by the Professor.</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to have discovered something,” said the Professor,
-smiling.</p>
-
-<p>Another twinkle in the Doctor’s eye. “Rather! I think
-it must be another opportunity for the palmistry humbug.
-Mrs. Thorn and he are a pair, complementary, positive
-and negative. He a good subject, for her, perhaps a
-medium and all that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go tell it to the marines on board,” said the Professor,
-laughing, as the Doctor hurried off to find Onset.</p>
-
-<p>Onset’s hands amused the Doctor greatly. He found vitality
-much stronger than he had expected, but much less vivid
-characteristics of health:&mdash;color thin, action weak; texture
-smooth, fingers pointed; palm hollow and much crossed;
-groups of little lines on certain mounts (versatility); a fine
-development of a certain part of the hand (imagination, Mount
-Luna); thumb lacking in force of will, just the opposite to
-Mrs. Thorn; in fact, a number of details which in combination
-might be read several ways, but invariably showing
-marked susceptibility to fleeting impressions, mental-sensitiveness,&mdash;an
-active mind yet unstable characteristics, a liability
-to vagaries of some sort;&mdash;the natural tendencies of the individual
-also suggested in certain directions,&mdash;but let that pass.</p>
-
-<p>Yes. Onset’s hands were amusing. The Doctor would not
-assert that the man was actually hipped then and there, but
-there was ample chance that he should be if circumstances led
-that way, the conditions favorable. He was just such a
-patient as Mrs. Thorn might succeed in curing. And then
-came the gist of the whole situation:</p>
-
-<p>If Mrs. Thorn, why not anyone else? provided a counter-impression
-was given, vivid and forcible enough to convince
-the patient <em>in spite of himself</em>.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon found the Doctor, Miss Winchester, Adele
-and Paul, putting their heads together, mysteriously cogitating;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-evidently a plot on hand to give Mr. Onset another
-new idea.</p>
-
-<p>“It can do no harm and may do the poor fellow some good,”
-whispered the optimistic Doctor. “Adele, your father will find
-it out soon enough himself, so we needn’t bother him just yet.
-In case of a rumpus the Professor will be just the one to fall
-back upon. He told me to go to the marines; we’ll make him
-our guardian angel,&mdash;our marine.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele, laughing, wondered how angelic her father would
-appear acting as a marine.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember!” whispered the Doctor, “all at your stations
-when the invalid is brought down to his state-room to retire
-at nine o’clock this evening,&mdash;now don’t forget. You see
-we’ve got to catch an idea before it gets away from us,&mdash;quick
-work;” and the chief conspirator bustled off to find Onset.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing like having a patient toned up previous to
-an operation,” said the Doctor, musing. “If we can succeed
-in directing the mind previously, and put him in a proper
-mood to receive the impression, the work will be well under
-way before he himself is aware of it. Mrs. Thorn seems quite
-an adept at preliminary work,&mdash;correct, but the preliminaries
-may reasonably include a counter-irritant. If we can produce
-premonitory suggestions leading up to an idea, the impression
-will have a better chance to operate, the idea to cure in its
-own way.”</p>
-
-<p>“How are you this afternoon, Mr. Onset?” and he took a
-seat near the invalid.</p>
-
-<p>“Not much encouraged. No doubt Mrs. Thorn is thinking
-the thing out in her room;&mdash;can’t say I feel any worse,
-and that may be her doings; but really this arm and leg are
-still so helpless that possibly when I retire to-night I ought to
-remain in my berth to give her a better chance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if I know it,” thought the Doctor; then audibly,
-“Would you oblige me by attempting to stand up, if only on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-one foot, and allow me to support your weak side,&mdash;just for
-the effort?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no use, my dear sir, not the slightest; I can’t move,
-for the life of me. I only wish I could.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then let me roll your chair for a turn or two,” and without
-waiting for a reply he gently moved Onset to a place where
-both could observe some steam issuing from an aperture.</p>
-
-<p>“What complicated machinery!” remarked the Doctor.
-“This ship must be a network of pipes, steam here at the side,
-and also from the top of the funnel, no doubt both connected
-with the boilers&mdash;boilers and live steam, live boilers and steam
-everywhere! Fortunately, explosions seldom occur.”</p>
-
-<p>“What terrible things accidents must be,” quoth Onset, evidently
-interested and nervous; “terrible when one is helpless.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sometimes not fatal,” quoth the dismal-cheerful Doctor;
-“it frequently depends upon one’s own exertions at the critical
-moment. I was myself once in a collision of passenger trains,
-our car turned upside down&mdash;thrown twenty feet. I lit head-foremost
-in one of those overhead parcel baskets which had
-been above my seat and was now below. Fortunately, I was
-able to pick himself up by the seat of another fellow’s breeches,
-and scrambled out through a window. If I hadn’t scrambled
-out that window I should certainly have been burnt alive!”</p>
-
-<p>“Heavens!” exclaimed Onset, “there’s not even a window
-on this ship downstairs to crawl through. I should never get
-my leg through a port-hole, and probably be caught head out
-and legs in. Do you think there’s any danger, Doctor?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there’s a good deal of live steam under high pressure
-about here; I really don’t know much about steam-fitters’
-work, but if it were plumbing I should certainly say, yes.
-Thank fortune, it is not plumbing, Mr. Onset.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it is steam-fitting,” quoth Onset, now becoming positive,
-his mental process very inconsequent, as with many of his
-type. “Now, Doctor, I’d like to ask you just one question,
-seriously you know, strictly private. I ought not to ask it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-but I really must, under the circumstances. Mrs. Thorn has
-told me considerable about vibrations; now any fool can see
-that vibrations are not good for steam pipes, yet here we are.
-Now tell me frankly, do you think Mrs. Thorn’s meditations
-can affect or be affected by all this around us. She told me,
-most positively, that her meditations vibrating to me must
-not leak out&mdash;&mdash; Oh I wish she would accelerate a little if
-any good is to come of it.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor at once made a plunge for his handkerchief,
-and blew his nose, enough to create more vibrations; then,</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mr. Onset, your perspicacity is remarkable; I never
-met anyone who detected possibilities, aye, even probabilities,
-more quickly than you do.” Onset felt flattered, the Doctor
-gave him time to pat himself on the back, and then,</p>
-
-<p>“But there’s nothing like having one’s mind prepared for
-emergencies. If anything should happen, why, just call on me,
-Mr. Onset. Fact is, I’m now so accustomed to accidents both
-mental and physical that when not killed in the first crash I
-generally pull through.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks awfully, I certainly shall. Doctor, my man James
-is good enough in ordinary emergencies, but I doubt his use
-in accidents. James! Jamie! here, Jimmy! take me back
-where I won’t see this steam, the odor and its suggestions are
-both unpleasant. Good-bye, Doctor, I must now take a rest.”</p>
-
-<p>Onset’s organs of speech were certainly all right, but his
-mental apparatus decidedly leaky, and something the matter
-with his legs.</p>
-
-<p>“I trust the preliminary tonic may not lose its effect before
-nine P. M.,” mused the Doctor as he went to report to the
-other conspirators.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XII">XII<br />
-<span class="fs80">AMATEUR TACTICS&mdash;A FRIGHTFUL CURE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">DINNER served, the conspirators enjoyed a promenade
-on deck, keeping an eye upon Mr. Onset and Mrs.
-Thorn as they sat conversing. No doubt vibrations
-were at work, the most approved methods of the wonderful
-Mystic Department of the Sanitorium Universitasque making
-some sort of an impression; because, as Mrs. Thorn remarked
-afterwards, “Mr. Onset was already oscillating between
-the old and the new, and whenever that condition arose she
-felt sure that the preliminary tendencies of the occult influences
-towards a cure were already taking effect.” Mrs. Thorn
-could be quite as perspicacious as the Doctor when she chose,
-her theories decidedly new as well as lucid, in fact unique.</p>
-
-<p>At last James appeared, to take the patient to his state-room;
-this was the signal for the Doctor’s party to fly to their
-stations. The rolling chair was brought to one of the narrow
-gangways leading directly to Mr. Onset’s quarters below; the
-passage entered through a door at the top, the short flight of
-steps down closed by partitions on either side. The chief
-conspirator noticed that when James went off with the patient
-Professor Cultus was engaged in conversation with Mrs.
-Thorn; evidently one of those curious coincidences most
-opportune, which occult influences often exert in favor of the
-one conspired against. “Good!” exclaimed the Doctor. “I
-now know where our marine-angel is to be found when I want
-him; now for an impression less occult.”</p>
-
-<p>When James reached the head of the gangway, there stood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-the Doctor, apparently by accident; and of course he offered
-to assist in carrying the invalid down the steps. Onset appeared
-more helpless than usual when, the Doctor supporting
-his shoulders and James his feet, the trio began to descend.
-If ever a subject for treatment had weak legs, it was Onset at
-that moment.</p>
-
-<p>All progressed favorably until they reached the bottom, and
-were about to make the turn into the state-room passage;
-“Look out for that awkward corner, James.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, sir! Keep his head up, I’ll take his feet round
-first.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead!” exclaimed the Doctor. (The signal.)</p>
-
-<p>No sooner said than a brilliant flash of light burst forth,
-a little way ahead down the passage, accompanied by a hissing
-noise not unlike an explosion.</p>
-
-<p>Onset gave a start. “What’s that? Look there! Oh, Lord!”
-replied to by shrieks from female voices, and a cloud of white
-smoke with pungent odor. In an instant the passage seemed
-filled with frightened voices and smoke.</p>
-
-<p>It was merely some of Paul’s photographic flash-light powder,
-accompanied by very realistic exclamations in consequence,
-but in such close quarters it seemed much more
-serious.</p>
-
-<p>“God help us!” cried Jimmy, dropping Onset’s legs and
-turning around to discover what had happened. Through the
-smoke he saw Paul violently beating back flames which came
-from one of the cross-passages.</p>
-
-<p>It was only Miss Winchester and Adele, invisible behind the
-angle, holding at arm’s length some burning paper upon a
-plate, but quite enough for faithful James. Seizing Onset by
-the ankles he would probably have dragged him on deck feet
-foremost if the Doctor had not ordered him in sharp tones:</p>
-
-<p>“Keep your head, man! Don’t yell! I’ll attend to this!
-Go find Professor Cultus near the head of the gangway, quick!
-Don’t yell! It’s bad enough as it is!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span></p>
-
-<p>The last remark settled Jimmy; he vanished up the steps,
-and Onset groaned at the thought of being caught helpless
-below decks.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said the Doctor, quickly turning to the patient,
-“we’ve got to hustle&mdash;it looks like an explosion, near by!&mdash;before
-a panic seizes the passengers.” Poor Onset, in the
-narrow passage lit by the flames, seized the Doctor with a
-grip of terrible fright, his well arm jerking the Doctor as if
-he had a spasm. “For God’s sake, don’t leave me!”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t intend to, I’ll stick by you,” said the arch conspirator,
-“but you must make an effort, too,” and he lifted
-the fellow upon his feet.</p>
-
-<p>At this instant, down the steps came Professor Cultus and,
-by another prearranged “coincidence” to which he was not a
-party, the door above closed behind him.</p>
-
-<p>Darkness indeed. The place might prove a veritable death-trap,
-surely, so thought Onset.</p>
-
-<p>“What mischief are you up to?” exclaimed the Professor,
-serious in tone, but his countenance (which none could see)
-somewhat suspicious if not humorous.</p>
-
-<p>“Lend a hand!” cried the Doctor, and then in a whisper,
-“I’m trying to get an idea into this chap’s legs&mdash;&mdash; Sh!”</p>
-
-<p>Professor Cultus took hold of Onset’s opposite shoulder, and
-together they turned him around, moved him in an upright
-position towards the steps. He seemed indeed helpless, but
-his eye was now fixed toward that gangway, the way to escape.
-To get there and escape was the only thought potent in his
-mind. The Doctor turned and again nodded to Paul. Off
-went another flash-explosion, more pungent smoke, the sort
-of choking fumes that scare you off. This time nearer, the
-vivid light and more excited screams seemed hardly ten feet
-away.</p>
-
-<p>Onset gave a plunge with his well leg, and would certainly
-have fallen flat but for his strong support.</p>
-
-<p>“Now for it, Onset,” urged the Doctor, lifting the limp<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-limb, assisting to put it on the next step. Professor Cultus
-nodded and took the weight.</p>
-
-<p>“Now for another step!” urged the Doctor. Onset put his
-well leg up by his own effort, but when the Doctor helped the
-other to follow he noticed a change for the better, the paralyzed
-limb was not quite such a non-active member as before.
-Onset’s fright and desire to escape were getting their hold on
-him in spite of himself, his legs asserting and maintaining
-themselves without his realizing the fact that paralyzed legs
-should not be able to behave that way.</p>
-
-<p>The critical moment was approaching, the crucial test, the
-final effort to force Onset to put forth his whole strength
-spontaneously as for his life. The closed door above made
-the passage still darker at the top, the smoke from behind
-made the atmosphere more oppressive each moment. “Only
-three more steps,” exclaimed the Doctor, “to burst through
-that door or be suffocated.” Onset heard this. The Doctor
-pressed his elbow against Professor Cultus to signal he was
-now ready. The Professor gradually lessened his support,
-and then quietly let go, slipping behind him to catch the man
-if he fell.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing of the kind occurred. Onset was so frantically
-determined to get out that he stood supported on one side
-only without realizing the fact, both legs commencing to work
-together. Almost alone he managed to force himself higher.
-Seizing the auspicious moment the Doctor gave Paul the
-final signal. Flash! hiss-s-s-s-s! red lights, jumping shadows;
-cries, more jumps; something yellow&mdash;ghastly! “Rush
-for your life!” Onset and the infernal regions close behind
-him, at the foot of the steps!</p>
-
-<p>Paul had prolonged the agony by some red-burning powder
-from one of the ship’s signal lights. Miss Winchester waving
-a sheet of yellow glass from Paul’s photographic lantern before
-her portable flames&mdash;great effect! Screams certainly
-diabolical; one could hear the wild laughter amid the cries.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-At such close quarters none could stand the racket a moment
-longer. Professor Cultus, in the thick of the fumes, was the
-first to protest. “Open that door! open I tell you, we’ll be
-smothered!” which was a fact. Onset in a spasm of despair,
-“Let me out! Let me out!” Miss Winchester, also spasmodic,
-“I’m getting roasted&mdash;fried!” Adele, “I <em>am</em> roasted!”</p>
-
-<p>Onset never knew the exact moment when the Doctor left
-him standing alone; all he realized was the bursting open of
-the door, the flood of electric light&mdash;it seemed like daylight&mdash;and
-the Doctor above offering his hand to assist, the hand not
-quite within reach, an effort necessary to reach it; all depended
-upon the invalid’s own effort.</p>
-
-<p>Without a thought but to escape, Onset started up those
-remaining steps as one flying for his life, forgetful of weak
-legs, paralysis, or any other incumbrance. Actuated by the
-mental and spiritual impulse towards self-preservation he
-plunged through the opening out upon the deck. Thoroughly
-scared by a vivid realization of things as they were, his previous
-hysteria which had clouded the mind vanished before a more
-potent impression which cleared his mental atmosphere, vanquished
-by a forced acceptance of the actual facts&mdash;he was not
-paralyzed.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor steadied him an instant; only a moment of
-assistance was necessary, until he realized himself standing
-without support. Dazed and frightened, choking from the
-fumes, while those who followed made an uproar of coughs
-and laughter, the poor fellow could not take in the situation
-at a glance. No one seemed excited, however, about any explosion;
-all interest seemed centered in himself, congratulations
-from everybody, Mrs. Cultus in particular.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Mr. Onset! I’m delighted to see you looking so well”
-(social fib; Onset looked like an escaped lunatic), “and able
-to walk” (conversational stretch), “cured” (perhaps), “and
-quite like yourself again” (since when?).</p>
-
-<p>Not until Onset heard these highly appropriate congratulations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-did the whole situation dawn upon him. Yes, he had
-escaped by his own unaided efforts at the last, and of course
-it was too ridiculously evident to be denied that he was then
-and there standing alone. The very thought was paralyzing
-to the former impression that he could not stand. And behold
-the power of a new lively idea, affecting matter as well as
-mind&mdash;instead of melancholy Onset and an old scared impression,
-behold Onset smiling in spite of himself. Everybody
-thought he was going to make a speech. He did.</p>
-
-<p>“Ho there, Jimmy! James, where are you?&mdash;Jim!”</p>
-
-<p>Now, James had been in a terrible quandary during all the
-latter part of these proceedings. After Professor Cultus had
-descended, at his request, James had been confronted by Mrs.
-Cultus, who calmly moved her seat directly in front of the
-passageway and with apparent carelessness closed the door.
-She had moved not an inch until just in time for the Doctor
-to make his exit, followed by the demoralized Onset. It was
-Mrs. Cultus who had amused herself by giving her impressions
-as to the vibrating Jimmy, keeping him there until the
-proper time came. The valet was as much surprised as the
-master when he saw the melancholy Onset rise to the surface
-in a cloud of smoke and then favor the company with a smile.
-He received a further new impression when Onset remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll clear the deck, Jimmy; I go it alone.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Would Onset remain cured? Could a man so unstable in
-legs, mode of thought, and possibly character, remain steadfast?
-Adele was the first to ask herself this question.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XIII">XIII<br />
-<span class="fs80">ADELE’S MEDITATIONS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">NOTHING succeeds like success. The Doctor’s party
-had broken so many of the ship’s rules, by igniting
-flash-powder and burning paper below decks, that
-a lively time was expected when they were called upon to explain
-matters. No real harm had, however, been done to the
-vessel; no more than if they had taken a flash-light picture
-after dark. A few good fees to the stewards and a draft of
-fresh air through the passage soon cleared the atmosphere.
-When the officers put in an appearance to make an examination,
-merely the fragrance from some pastilles which Miss
-Winchester thoughtfully used to overcome the odor from
-charred paper was noticeable, and every one was talking about
-the paralytic who had rushed up the gangway in a state of
-terror.</p>
-
-<p>Onset’s cure became the general topic of conversation on
-board, and forty people had forty differences of opinion as to
-what had happened and the propriety of such proceedings.
-Adele had taken only a minor part, but after it was over came
-a reaction which made her very thoughtful:</p>
-
-<p>“Onset must be very weak, weak in mind as well as body;
-something must be wanting in his make-up. I don’t believe
-that any one with real strength of character could be cured
-exactly as he was; and what’s more, I don’t believe he is
-cured.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she mused more comprehensively, and being a well-educated
-girl at once sought for the most notable example she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-could recall of the antithesis of this weakness. Her thoughts
-had been much on serious matters since her meditations in
-the Park and her previous talk with her Father. “What is it
-this man lacks?&mdash;strength of character, force of character?
-What is that?</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it strikes me most impressively in one particular
-personality&mdash;historical; and in Him so strong that you feel this
-strength to-day precisely as if He were yet alive. He told the
-weak to take up their beds and walk, and they obeyed&mdash;really
-weak legs walked. There was something wonderful about such
-a character and the cures He made. He certainly had a force
-which never failed, and the patients were permanently better
-through and through, mental as well as physical&mdash;a deepening
-of the whole character. He seems to me the only perfect practitioner
-of healing ever known, and the first great Psychologist,
-and although living so long ago is modern yet. He
-seems like one who had then conquered even Science itself.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele then sought the opposition to her own view, her
-college training having taught her to reason in that way.</p>
-
-<p>“I never heard any one say that the Historic Christ lacked
-in force of character. Let me think! Yes, I did, too&mdash;once;
-and curiously enough it was a Jewish Rabbi disparaging the
-greatest historic character of the chosen people. He insisted
-that Christ was ‘deluded,’ and deluded forsooth in direct consequence
-of His own good thoughts and actions. Now, how
-could a Personality setting the most notable example of force
-and power be deluded like an ordinary man or self-constituted
-critic? As to the ancient golden rule, known so well to Confucius
-in Chinese form, and the Lord’s Prayer, also possibly
-known in some form to the Rabbi Hillel in Hebrew fashion
-previously, were they not each shown by Christ Himself in a
-manner far more potent to all men, each after his kind?&mdash;I
-might say acceptable to all creation in a way never dreamed of
-by either Confucius or Hillel. Don’t tell me that such a character
-could be deluded. If such was the case, then truth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-itself in character is a delusion, and expediency takes its place.
-All sciences and religions know better, all creation knows
-better, all except the few who delude themselves in order to
-bolster up a previous impression as to character to which they
-feel committed. Don’t tell me that the greatest Hebrew who
-ever lived, great because He developed force and strength of
-character in civilizations strong unto this day, was deluded!
-That is illogical and unsound, intellect misused, the twaddle
-of criticism.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Adele, the young modern educated girl, free to think
-of truth as she saw it, decided this question for herself, and
-put the result of her meditations away in her mental storehouse,
-little realizing how soon she would have occasion to
-congratulate herself upon having crystallized her views on this
-weighty subject.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad,” she said inwardly, “I’m glad Christianity is
-founded upon Christ’s personality still alive, His own words
-and deeds still active, and not upon what other people, ancient
-or modern, say about Him.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Adele went to join her mother, and found Mrs. Thorn already
-in evidence. The latter had indeed found her curative
-vibrations somewhat counteracted by events due to others also
-meditating more actively than she. And Mrs. Thorn showed
-much worldly wisdom and tact in saying very little about it;
-simply remarking that “Mr. Onset was already in a fair way
-to recovery when the accident happened. Indeed, Mrs.
-Cultus, I feel quite confident I should have cured him with
-much less fuss about it.”</p>
-
-<p>This latter remark was made as they sat in the same vicinity
-on deck enjoying the air, the day following. Much to their
-surprise some one answered promptly:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I should.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XIV">XIV<br />
-<span class="fs80">ANOTHER COMMOTION&mdash;RELIGIOUS-CURATIVE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="fs90 pad4">“Will that you won’t be sick, and you won’t be,” quoth a volunteer adviser.<br />
-<span class="pad2">“It’s my will itself that is sick,” replied a real sufferer.</span></p>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">I’M sure I should.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus turned quickly, to find the speaker, a
-placid-looking person, sitting near, presumably a lady,
-yet who had evidently been eavesdropping. A person of
-matronly aspect, whose voice and expression suggested a desire
-to tell others something that might be of benefit to them.
-Not at all one whose appearance suggested mysticism in any
-degree; on the contrary rather ingenuous, consequently a surprise
-to all present when she launched at them the following
-dogmatic statements:</p>
-
-<p>“The practice of healing, of course I mean metaphysical
-healing, is based upon certain ethical and religious principles,
-because we know that mind holds utter control over matter.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus, at first taken aback, then much amused, replied
-promptly: “Mind over matter! well, I should hope so. But
-it strikes me mind often controls matter better than it controls
-itself&mdash;h’m!” and Mrs. Cultus gave a little cough, as if the
-very idea had produced “something-the-matter” in her own
-anatomy.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester whispered to Adele: “My dear, we have
-found another&mdash;metaphysical specimen this time. The ship
-is full of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“No more cures for me,” retorted Adele. “That magnesium
-powder is not out of my head yet&mdash;I mean my hair.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Never mind that, dear. Your head will save your hair;
-beg pardon, I mean your heels.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” thought Adele, laughing, “even if this individual
-is another new-science-expert, she can’t possibly be of the loud,
-vociferous variety.” Adele judged by the placid manner and
-quiet voice, insinuating even when making such positive and
-surprising assertions. She had yet to learn how extremes
-sometimes meet in the same personality. The Doctor could
-have told her that the woman’s hands showed a most ardent
-temperament, and that in some types suppressed zeal could
-assume the appearance of placidity personified.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Thorn regarded the matronly lady with especial interest,
-because new mental impressions of any kind, from any
-source, might at any time be of use to her. Her smile was
-bland, mild, courtesy itself, with just a humorous tinge for
-business with it, as she leaned forward to catch every word.
-Some new point in the game might be played at any moment.
-This when the placid matron remarked: “No medicines are
-now needed, no such disturbances as we have had on board.
-The true method by which mind may overcome all disease in
-suffering humanity we have now learned.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t say so!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus. “No medicines?
-What a blessing! But what takes their place, massage,
-or change of climate? We’re trying the latter.”</p>
-
-<p>The placid lady, as she soon informed them, was Mrs.
-Geyser, of Wyoming, claiming to be an expert in the modern
-field of <em>popular</em> metaphysics. Miss Winchester, who knew
-what popularity implied, interrupted, “Oh, tell us, Mrs.
-Geyser, Wyoming is noted, is it not, as a locality where the
-natural ebullitions produced by physical forces are very remarkable?”</p>
-
-<p>“Assuredly; in the volcanic region of our Park we have
-many instances of nature’s activity, in the boiling springs
-and water volcanoes, mud&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Baths and smothered combustion?” interrupted Frank<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-Winchester. Mrs. Geyser paid no attention, except to intensify
-her previous statement.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m quite accustomed to such sights. Nature often looks
-so quiet and harmless, yet the ebullitions you speak of take
-effect when not expected.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anybody scalded?” asked Miss Winchester. Mrs. Geyser
-began to suspect that she was being chaffed.</p>
-
-<p>“Gushers by nature, don’t you think so, Mrs. Geyser?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Geyser could not question this undoubted fact. How
-could she? Her own ebullitions of thought were already
-seething. She couldn’t get a word in edgewise without interruptions.
-How could any one preach practical metaphysics,
-metaphysics with interruptions? The conditions were most
-unfavorable. She determined, however, not to be balked in
-a good cause. No! not by a flippant damsel, anyhow, with her
-unseemly intrusions. So she fired off one of her big statements
-to back up what she considered to be practical metaphysics.</p>
-
-<p>“You know, I presume, that we preach the gospel or good
-news according to doctrine found in the Bible and stated in
-the tenets of religious Science.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus remarked that she hoped her knowledge of the
-Bible was sufficient, but, really, she knew little about the
-tenets. “What are tenets, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“One of our tenets reads this way,” and Mrs. Geyser
-assumed a tone of voice most serious, as if she were uttering
-a revelation of mystery never before vouchsafed to ordinary
-mortals. “We acknowledge the way of salvation to be the
-power of truth over all error, sin, sickness and death, and the
-resurrection of human faith and understanding to seize the
-great possibilities, yes, possibilities, and living energies of
-divine life.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus drew a long breath. “Oh, dear, tenets are awful
-things; so complicated! May I ask what becomes of the simplicity
-of the gospel?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span></p>
-
-<p>Adele became very attentive while Mrs. Geyser was speaking.
-There was something in it which appealed to her as very true,
-yet that word “possibilities,” it was so easy to stretch it into
-the impossible and unreasonable.</p>
-
-<p>“Please give us a simple tenet,” asked Mrs. Cultus, now the
-placid speaker.</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing easier, it’s as easy as reading a book.
-We have keys of our own&mdash;you must use our keys&mdash;our own
-book to both science and health.”</p>
-
-<p>Frank Winchester gave a start, as if struck by an idea.
-“Keys! those everlasting keys! There must be two sets!”</p>
-
-<p>“Three, my dear, three! I remember them well,” said Mrs.
-Cultus, her memory also startled into activity. “I knew St.
-Peter by reputation only, but Louis also had keys. I remember
-Louis XVI of France very well, when I was at school.
-He was a locksmith also, and made Bourbon keys for the government.
-Poor man! he lost both his keys and his head.
-Why, Mrs. Geyser, I’m astonished! Don’t you know the
-religious-government-locksmith-business is entirely obsolete?”</p>
-
-<p>“In both science and religion,” mused Adele, while her
-mother still kept the floor.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, St. Peter himself said his keys were worn out. He
-told the whole world he couldn’t lock the door on those Philippine
-friars, when they had been caught interfering with the
-Government.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t mix politics and religion with metaphysics!” exclaimed
-Adele, greatly amused, but beginning to feel interested
-in the serio-comic discussion. “Please don’t&mdash;it’s bad
-form.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t, daughter. I was only thinking, thinking how
-astute St. Peter was to find it out before The Hague conference
-told him so. I rather liked that in Peter, because Paul
-generally showed more intellect in the long run. Peter probably
-was the better manager, but I suspect Paul had more&mdash;more&mdash;Oh,
-what shall I call it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Metaphysics?” suggested Frank Winchester, struggling to
-conceal intense amusement.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Geyser, in the meantime, was not the sort of person to
-remain “sat upon,” as she thought, “in this outrageous manner.”
-Her own mental ebullitions began to demand utterance,
-but she managed to suppress external evidence. Nevertheless
-the cause she represented must be defended. Yes; in
-spite of Paul, Apollos, Cephas, Mrs. Cephas and Miss Cephas,
-the truth must prevail. She must witness to show how it could
-and would. She must tell how the greatest thing on earth
-should be applied as medicine. Sincerity called for strenuosity,
-the fundamental element in “our religion” must be
-made known, preached, and she did so, thusly:</p>
-
-<p>“The maintenance of health and cure of disease occupy a
-large space in the religious faith of our society. Love is the
-greatest thing on earth, the fundamental thing with us. Love
-conquers all things, headache and neuralgia, backache and
-lumbago, all included, annual and perennial, the whole list,
-non-chronic and chronic. To apply religion scientifically we
-first fix truth and love steadfastly in the patient’s thoughts
-and explain what religious science is, but not too soon, not
-until the patient is prepared for it;” and then Mrs. Geyser
-continued to elucidate her method, incidentally remarking
-that medicine was never needed, not even for babies, not even
-in the mild form of a preparatory mixture. Frank Winchester
-recalled to memory the recent preparatory mental dose
-given by the Doctor to Mr. Onset, but said nothing. Adele,
-recently graduated, could not avoid asking the question:</p>
-
-<p>“Have you a diploma?”</p>
-
-<p>A very dignified attitude struck Mrs. Geyser in the small
-of her back when Adele innocently propounded this touchy
-question. She straightened up to reply. “Our diplomas are
-attested by the supernatural powers we exert. I deny that
-natural causes can account for our proceedings, I mean our
-results.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It looks just that way,” remarked Mrs. Cultus, while Mrs.
-Geyser continued:</p>
-
-<p>“But to comply with the laws of the land and render unto
-Cæsar the things that are his I did take a course at our Metaphysical
-College&mdash;twelve half-days’ instruction at three hundred
-dollars for the course. Ample, I assure you, to satisfy
-any materialistic law-maker, and quite as expensive as many
-other colleges.” After this incidental announcement Mrs.
-Geyser seemed ready to resume the practice of her profession
-as teacher, but Adele, by this time, did not seem inclined to
-let it be done so easily. Evidently a climax was approaching
-in Adele’s own mind as to the duty of graduates.</p>
-
-<p>“I notice, Mrs. Geyser, that you lay great stress upon cures.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they bear witness to the truth in our religious-science.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you keep any account of failures?”</p>
-
-<p>“None whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you notice what suits you and ignore the rest. Is
-that truth in science?”</p>
-
-<p>“Failures do not depend upon phenomena or cases.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then upon what?” inquired Adele, intensely interested.</p>
-
-<p>“Failures depend upon the Divine Word.”</p>
-
-<p>A pause&mdash;Adele as one astounded at what she considered
-the fearful abuse of both thoughts and words in Mrs. Geyser’s
-statements.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt Mrs. G.imagined she was protecting her faith and
-religion by this placing of blame for failure upon the Spirit
-of Truth in the Divine Word, as if Truth itself could ever be
-a delusion, a fallacy, a failure; but, unfortunately, or fortunately
-perhaps, Adele Cultus grasped the fuller import of
-such assertions&mdash;so abusive of facts in nature scientific and
-philosophical, so diametrically in opposition, or else ignoring
-Christ’s especial teaching by word and work. Such was
-Adele’s point of view.</p>
-
-<p>To Adele this was utterly illogical, antagonistic to truth as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-she saw it. Such an atrocious conception from one who had
-just been talking about love, the greatest thing on earth,
-struck through Adele like an electric shock, and, as usual with
-her, the spiritual dominant. She was also outwardly calm,
-but mentally that violent tension which comes with strenuous
-effort to find the truest utterance. The horrible words again
-sounded in her ears: “Failures&mdash;depend&mdash;upon&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Geyser, to the Divine Word let us appeal. The record
-states that our Saviour did depend upon the phenomena to
-sustain his claims, ‘Believe me for the very works’ sake,’ and
-He never failed. When science, some day, progresses to the
-standpoint of our Saviour’s knowledge and practice we too
-may understand the application of natural laws as He did.
-What is the so-called supernatural? Merely that which science
-has not yet explained: miracles to-day are not miracles to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>All attention was now focused upon Adele, her eyes flashing
-as they often had done when tackling a difficult problem at
-college. Her mentality was concentrated. Mrs. Cultus
-thought she “looked like Portia” when she continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Our Heavenly Father wrote the Divine Word in all things.
-Science and religion must agree. They have the same Author.”</p>
-
-<p>Now if Adele had only stopped at this point and by silence
-let the truth further speak for itself in the heart, much of
-what followed would have been avoided. But youth is impulsive
-in method and often abuses strenuosity by becoming indiscreet.
-Her youth led her to jump at a conclusion embodying
-personal reference, which of course broke away from the direct
-route to assurance of faith by spiritual discernment of actual
-facts. The bane of both science and religion came nearer
-wrecking the truthful impression already germinated in Mrs.
-Geyser’s consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a religious thaumaturgist, Mrs. Geyser&mdash;a dealer
-in wonder-work. Your results are not real miracles, because
-you have failures and abuse truthful words. Having failures<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-when you attempt to heal, you can’t possibly be apostles of
-the truly ordained religious and scientific type.”</p>
-
-<p>Quick as a flash, Mrs. Geyser spoke the historic truth:</p>
-
-<p>“Christ’s Apostles did have failures. Your remarks have
-no force.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele also quick as a flash:</p>
-
-<p>“Precisely so! which shows the real difference between them
-and Him. In every instance when they did fail He called
-them a faithless and perverse generation. Do you know why,
-Mrs. Geyser?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Geyser refused to reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Because they neglected well known means, considered
-scientific in those days, and so recognized yet by reasonable
-people. The Apostles neglected to employ prayer and fasting,
-that is to say, proper mental and physical treatment. They
-had not adequately examined the case themselves, conscientiously
-nor in a prayerful spirit, nor given the proper medicine
-already known to be useful in such cases. Our Saviour
-always applied common sense to his physical and spiritual
-healing and had no failures.” Then she added mentally, “He
-does it yet.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Geyser had never before heard the historic Christ
-spoken of as a physician of the regular school, which eventually
-resulted in modern practice. She had always thought of
-Him as an Oriental Healer with no pretence to manifesting
-cures by reasonable specific methods, such as have since been
-learned by the Holy Spirit of Truth in medicine, psychology,
-and the science of religion; by the Spirit which is Holy,
-which Christ promised He would send. She had often said that
-the Scriptures gave no direct interpretation of the scientific
-basis for demonstrating until the new key was discovered.
-In fact, Mrs. Geyser was herself very mediæval in her notions
-of what Christ’s personality stands for as enlightenment, the
-Holy Spirit of Truth in all things, the Light of the World.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore what Adele asserted made little real impression<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-other than antagonism, not as yet, not until Adele, more
-roused than ever, continued:</p>
-
-<p>“No record of failures is shirking responsibility, and personal
-responsibility is one of the truest things in any religion
-worthy of the name. Denial of dependence upon phenomena
-is a false position, totally unlike our Saviour. It is a pseudo-Christianity,
-and it is rank pseudo-science to quote in the
-same breath only those phenomena which you think will suit
-your purpose.” She was going on to add “preposterous abuse
-of the Divine Word,” when her mother beckoned her to be less
-extreme and impulsive. Her youth therefore satisfied itself
-by turning the personal allusions half-way round towards herself:
-“I think your position is preposterous, Mrs. Geyser,
-and your science an imposition upon the public.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele regretted her words almost as soon as uttered, but
-too late; an eruption imminent, it must come.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Geyser, the mystic, had been in a suppressed condition,
-but the mental-effervescence was approaching nearer and
-nearer to the surface. Personalities which she often applied
-to others she could not stand when turned towards herself&mdash;they
-acted still more potently; in effect not unlike that of soap-suds
-upon the water volcanoes of her native region, temporary
-suppression followed by ebullitions worse than usual. She
-could no longer sit still, so she rose to her feet, without fear
-but with much trembling, and gave vent to a torrent of
-expostulations, hurling her words at Adele as if to deluge her
-with facts.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t pretend to say there have been no cures by
-faith?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not,” said Adele firmly, “but&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But what, young miss? Can you deny facts in life?
-Facts! facts as well authenticated as the New Testament
-itself!”</p>
-
-<p>“I neither deny facts in nature nor the testimony of honest
-witnesses, but&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Cures which the Founder of Christianity promised His
-followers they should perform!” cried the Geyser, still more
-excited.</p>
-
-<p>Adele’s indignation at this became irresistible, neither could
-she stand it; and the result?</p>
-
-<p>A remarkable thing yet perfectly natural, phenomenon well
-known to both religion and science, a sudden intense appreciation
-that “the letter killeth but the Spirit giveth life,”
-affecting her whole personality, physical, mental, spiritual.</p>
-
-<p>Adele’s ideal became realized in her own person.</p>
-
-<p>The psychological influence of that which is Holy became
-manifest.</p>
-
-<p>She became, as it were, the personification of that which
-she believed to be true. Sober enthusiasm and convictions,
-both scientific and religious, came to her rescue.</p>
-
-<p>She spoke, but with a revulsion in manner, quietly, slowly,
-each sentence distinct, and her words were the truth in soberness,
-moral courage and reason at its best, the Holy Spirit
-over all:</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon me, Mrs. Geyser. I am really very sorry I offended
-you.” Then, after a little pause, “I can’t express all that I
-feel and would like to say; but it seems to me our Saviour
-was always reasonable. He never did imply what is unreasonable,
-no matter what marvels and mysteries He may have
-revealed to enlighten further. It seems to me nature has ever
-since witnessed to His wonderful obedience to her laws and
-His profound knowledge of the Divine Word wherever written
-in nature, physical or spiritual. He came not to destroy but
-to fulfil laws in nature, and this in spite of all that has ever
-been said of Him to the contrary.”</p>
-
-<p>All were now absorbed, blending their own spiritual experience
-with hers as Adele continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Now in religion the claims you make demand a marvellous
-thing in nature, a marvel indeed, quite unreasonable to
-expect in the brighter light of known truths,” and she rested<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-her eyes calmly on Mrs. Geyser, she too having become quieter
-under the better influences at work.</p>
-
-<p>“A marvel, indeed, Mrs. Geyser, no less than the actual
-presence of a perfect human being.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Geyser repeated the words, musing self-consciously,
-“A perfect human being!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed,” continued Adele. “Taking things as they
-are, as the truth in science has already taught us, the performance
-of cures by the means you attempt would demand
-perfection in both knowledge and technic&mdash;one who knows
-and one who does to perfection&mdash;a perfect man. Of course I
-must mean perfect in reason, reasonably perfect as nature
-manifests truth, at the period when the man lives.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by perfection?” asked Mrs. Geyser,
-evidently sincere. “I don’t quite understand what you mean
-by that sort of high-flown talk.” This was only too true, for
-Mrs. Geyser, with all her pretence to metaphysics, had never
-formulated a definition of that word “perfection;” she knew
-little and perceived less in that very mode of thought to which
-she made claim as an expert.</p>
-
-<p>Adele’s youthful eyes certainly did show a human-nature-twinkle
-when thus called upon to define what should have
-been elementary to Mrs. Geyser if an expert; and so very important
-to remember when “perfect cures” were claimed in
-spite of the known imperfections of all other systems of treatment.
-Adele never appreciated her college training more than
-when she found that she could use the knowledge thus obtained
-in reasoning with Mrs. Geyser.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, in metaphysics as well as other studies, perfection is
-something like this: it is not only ‘finished in every part, completed,’
-but much more, it is ‘whole, entire, existing in the
-widest extent, and in the highest degree&mdash;in spiritual relations
-<em>divine</em> in character and quality.’ You surely believe this,
-Mrs. Geyser!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Geyser made a heroic mental effort to grasp this statement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-and answer the question; Adele tried to help her,
-anxious to share the very best of her own mental conclusions,
-her own spirit dominated by the Spirit that is Holy, to help
-others and not antagonize.</p>
-
-<p>“Now to me the two words, perfection and divinity, are
-precisely the same in significance in relation to our present
-discussion, and they both touch the very highest point in
-reason, the acme of reason. We cannot go higher than that,
-can we, Mrs. Geyser?”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Geyser acknowledged it was “pretty well up.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele, properly gauging the calibre of her patient by this
-remark, repeated the idea:</p>
-
-<p>“No, I can think of nothing higher than perfection and
-what it implies. No, not in physics, metaphysics, nor religion.
-Can you, Mrs. Geyser?”</p>
-
-<p>The listener seemed somewhat confused, but sincerely
-anxious to learn. Adele continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Religion and Philosophy both teach me that Divinity alone
-manifests Perfection to the extent your claims call for. No
-doubt you have examined into the matter thoroughly, Mrs.
-Geyser. May I ask what your key says on the subject?”</p>
-
-<p>The matronly Mrs. Geyser, ever self-conscious, yet trying to
-be sincere, immediately directed her thoughts inwardly, to a
-sort of self-examination which her system was apt to call for
-in such cases; a system of self-examination very peculiar in
-its operation, as if trying to detect how-much-of-perfection
-she had within herself to be depended upon to influence or
-exert the Supreme Power to perfect cures. If anybody ever
-did try to work out her own salvation (cure herself) by means
-of complicated theories distorting good intentions, it was this
-earnest woman, misguided by a mist of words applied to the
-veritable mysteries in nature, a mystical abuse of the unseen
-truths so well recognized by all truth-seekers as mysterious.
-Thou canst not tell whence it cometh nor whither it goeth.
-Mrs. Geyser seemed worried, but in no way daunted; rather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-troubled because she could not state her own case as she
-thought it should be stated. Very like a matron indeed, with
-an enormous bunch of keys at her side, not one of which would
-fit.</p>
-
-<p>Adele, also uneasy lest she had not shown that kindness and
-consideration in manner and tone for one older than herself,
-which the case called for&mdash;a case in which the Perfect Spirit
-alone, the Holy Spirit of Truth in Love, can do the “perfect
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele felt this deeply. “What shall I do now? Talk on?
-No; no more talk. I hate this rumpus, hate it! but must do
-something. Never again will I be caught in such a discussion
-and controversy. Never! but I must do something. Poor
-soul, she can’t even see what she can see. I wish I could see
-for her,” and Adele cast her eyes about, as if looking for inspiration
-in the surrounding objects.</p>
-
-<p>A book lay upon Miss Winchester’s lap. She had been using
-it at the piano in the salon. The title caught Adele’s eye.
-“Songs Without Words,” the musical association with the
-title she well knew, but now, what?</p>
-
-<p>Her active mind, trained to work by association of ideas,
-and her spiritual faculties longing to determine what to do
-then and there, the two worked together. If the beautiful art
-of music she loved so well could speak without words through
-the ear, why, surely there must be a way to speak by&mdash;by&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>She left her chair, crossed over to where Mrs. Geyser sat,
-and held out a friendly hand, her attitude the reverse of
-antagonistic, her eyes speaking the meekness which is always
-followed by the promised reward. There was no mistake as
-to the words uttered by those lovely eyes, they asked first for
-peace, peace first, then hope, then charity, showing that meekness
-which inherits the earth. Herself illumined by that
-wonderful light that never was by sea or land, but sometimes
-is reflected on the human face.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XV">XV<br />
-<span class="fs80">TWO SIMULTANEOUS SOLILOQUIES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THE countenance of Mrs. Cultus after this trying scene
-was a study in itself. She was attempting to understand
-her own daughter. Worldly wisdom was well
-developed in Mrs. Cultus, and it was fortunate for Adele that
-her mother had suppressed dangerous personalities early in
-the interview, else the result would have been permanently
-bad instead of what it proved to be. Much of what Adele said
-Mrs. Cultus had fully appreciated, but not all; not when her
-daughter began talking of what constituted perfection, and
-the consequences. Then worldly wisdom failed, and the
-mother regarded her daughter with amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“The child! What does she know of metaphysics? Yet
-she talked as if she knew all about it as well as she knows her
-own classmates. She must have studied both religion and
-science at college. I don’t wonder they made her valedictorian
-of her class, to get in the last word. She is just like
-her father, intellectual, and I certainly was with her when
-she became angry with that woman for not giving medicine to
-sick babies. Extraordinary, isn’t it, how some people can
-crowd out their natural instincts for an idea&mdash;it is not safe to
-live, not with such notions. What new-fangled medical schools
-without medicine are being propagated! Here are two new
-ones on board this ship&mdash;even in mid-ocean there’s no getting
-rid of them. Well, I’m rejoiced that Adele has not been educated
-out of her natural instincts. It is so much safer to be
-orthodox about such things, and take medicine; and these fads,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-why, never bother with fads except for amusement. Now that
-telepathic reading we had one night at home was almost as
-good as the other evening with hypnotics, both were so diverting.
-But, oh! deliver me from these new sciences. Now I
-mustn’t forget; I must tell Adele how much I admired her
-standing up for old-fashioned medicine and orthodoxy in
-religion.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus soliloquized Mrs. Cultus in her state-room, while a
-door, slamming every ten seconds in the passageway, somewhat
-interfered with the continuity of her thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>There was yet another of the party whose estimation of
-Adele rose immensely. Paul Warder had overheard the discussion;
-it gave him an insight as to Adele’s character which
-he would have been a long time discovering, and he felt
-strengthened himself by the thoughts she had expressed. Paul
-was not given to ostentation in religious matters any more
-than Adele herself, nor did he feel quite able to discuss such
-things even if opportunity offered. He was not so constituted,
-either by heredity or education. His antecedents had been of
-good Quaker stock, his own affiliations with churchmen, his
-daily associations with Doctor Wise, from whom he had heard
-views almost to the verge of heterodoxy.</p>
-
-<p>Paul kept his own counsel and, like Adele, preferred to show
-by acts rather than words what his principles were. He and
-Adele were physically and mentally different, but spiritually
-not at all unlike. Without appreciating it themselves at this
-time they already embodied that potent yet mysterious combination
-in nature which affords the most solid, durable foundation
-for true friendship, the secure and real basis upon which
-marriage should stand. To hear Adele speak her mind freely,
-as she did, was a new experience to Paul, an insight which
-from its very nature forced him to think about her. It was
-one of these incidents in his own life he could never forget,
-never forget her nor what she had said.</p>
-
-<p>Paul’s vernacular when he soliloquized was not so Emersonian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-as it might have been; if it lacked anything it certainly
-was even a suspicion of transcendentalism. No; Paul had a
-vernacular of his own, equally characteristic and, from his own
-point of view, even more forcible. He still retained some of
-his college idioms when talking aloud to the bed-post, and
-there was in them a peculiar virility. When he found himself
-alone after this new experience his youth effervesced in this
-style:</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove, what a girl! No nonsense there! And she was
-right, too; O. K. every time. How she did pick out the flaws
-in that queer woman’s racket. I could see that it was absurd
-myself, but I never could have spotted the thing as Adele did
-and then finally smoothed things down so well. She must be
-an awfully good girl. I wonder if a man can ever be as good
-as a woman. And these college girls get on to things we
-fellows never grasp by the right end, and then they put them
-in practice, too. I detest women preachers, but, hang it! I
-believe Adele Cultus could preach first-rate if she wished. I
-hope she won’t get into the habit, but it is a deuced good
-thing to be able to say exactly what you really think when
-occasion arises. By Jove, she is a stunner! Take care, old
-boy, and don’t fall in love with a strong-minded girl, whatever
-you do. I never heard her talk so before, and if it had not been
-for the provocation given her by that crank and the preposterous
-statements she made about all-metaphysics and no-medicine
-Adele would never have been roused. No, it was not
-that either which aroused her&mdash;it was the abuse of the serious
-words and what Adele saw differently that roused her. No,
-that was not uncalled-for interference, but a regular spontaneous
-stand-up for the truth as she saw it. But she must have
-gone over it somehow beforehand, in her mind. We fellows
-always have to peg over such things, or get the exact words
-from books, so we can be sure of our ground. I expect she
-has a good verbal memory; I wish I had. Science, religion,
-and metaphysics all mixed up in the same breath. I believe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-she’s right, metaphysics and religion do go together in brain
-work, but it’s very dangerous ground for weak minds. Great
-Scott! when a bright girl does use her intellect how attractive
-she can be, and a fellow can’t help seeing and feeling how
-lovely she is.”</p>
-
-<p>Why should Paul have been so moved? He had just learned
-something well worth knowing of a truly good woman whose
-intellect worked comprehensively, not in grooves; one who
-really knew more than he did on certain lines, and <ins class="corr" id="tn108" title="Transcriber’s Note—“had the courage of her convicions” changed to “had the courage of her convictions”.">had the courage of her convictions</ins>,
-the convictions being precisely what he himself most highly approved,
-instinctively and by education. His youth did the rest.</p>
-
-<p>He was attracted to her, as he said, and even more than he
-thought, but he was not enamored of her&mdash;the masculine
-desire for possession had not yet asserted itself; he was being
-unconsciously led, however, in that direction. Nature’s preparatory
-course was on a much higher plane than was the
-human style of preparation given by the Doctor to Mr. Onset.
-Paul felt beginning to blossom within him such an honest
-regard, such a profound admiration for Adele, for her sincerity
-and the truth in her, that he was led to “believe in her,”
-trusted her perfectly, and was ready to defend her in all
-things. But he did not love her in the complete sense of the
-term under natural laws: the “for better or for worse” in the
-supreme sense had not yet made its appeal, nor had either of
-them yet seen Aphrodite rising from the sea.</p>
-
-<p>What was Paul’s condition from a purely philosophical
-standpoint? He had acquired through Adele’s force of character
-that which was far better, the permeating sacred spirit
-in which all true affection must rest if it is to endure. Paul
-was as true in type as Adele. Her mentality had conquered
-by manifesting her spirit from within, he had obtained a
-firm intellectual belief based upon certain phenomena in
-nature. Would the realizing sense of the need of each other
-follow? If so, what direction, what line would it take&mdash;physical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-or spiritual, downwards or upwards, for better or for
-worse? The blossom might fall blighted before the perfect
-fruit was formed.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact they themselves were absorbed simply
-in the beauty of the flower as it unclosed, with little thought
-of else than the enjoyable present.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XVI">XVI<br />
-<span class="fs80">COURAGE VERSUS FOOLHARDINESS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">WHILE yet thinking about Adele, Paul stood near
-the stern of the vessel, overlooking the foamy
-roadway produced by the constantly revolving
-propeller; he noticed the rapid progress made by the ship
-which bore him onwards. Looking outwards his thoughts at
-first turned hopefully towards the future&mdash;towards the region
-to which they were going; but soon, very soon, that which was
-before his very eyes drew his mind towards the past, suggested
-by the boiling wake extending in imagination clear back to the
-land they had quitted. Yet as a matter of fact it was neither
-the past nor the future that was just then most urgent with a
-crucial test for him; he was about to realize that the present
-is always more urgent and important than either.</p>
-
-<p>Paul stood musing about this luminous pathway which led
-back to their native land, their home, yet each moment took
-him farther away from such associations, to meet strangers
-from whom in the very nature of things he could not expect
-such spontaneous sympathy as with his own countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>Phosphorescence shone upon the troubled waters, marking
-the wake of the ship for some distance. The sky clear, and in
-the sheen of the moonlight details of the white-crested waves
-could easily be defined. It was one of those glorious evenings
-when the seascape appears artistically perfect, but cold and
-unsympathetic. Moonbeams are not inherently sympathetic,
-they have no warmth, they come not direct from that source
-of heat and life which gives the vital energy to all material<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-things. But to imagination and in idealization moonbeams
-may excite or allay fear, and they often give a clearer vision of
-what sympathy really is, namely, hope and succor when most
-needed. Nature is always kind if we have the spiritual discernment
-to appreciate her, but variable according to her
-own methods.</p>
-
-<p>Paul had but little of the red-hot-heroic in his physical
-make-up, nor was he especially romantic, but he did have something
-a great deal better. As often with those of his type, his
-sound mind in healthy body was supplemented by a keen sense
-of duty. Moonbeams and romanticism he could joke about,
-but underneath the jokes he had most decided opinions that a
-fellow ought to help others when necessity arose, and also his
-own ideas as to what was practical and what was foolhardy.</p>
-
-<p>While still musing he could not avoid admiring the scene,
-and spontaneously associating it with one he knew could enjoy
-it; the picture was complete, ready to be admired. “I
-think Adele would enjoy it, she ought to see it. The ship is
-not going too rapidly, so the noise of the propeller amounts to
-little. I’ll go and find her,” and he turned to seek her whose
-pleasure was now more to him than heretofore.</p>
-
-<p>Hurrying away, he had taken but a few steps before his
-attention was arrested by a commotion forward. There were
-voices, then the rapid patter and scuffling of feet on the deck,
-then a sharp cry, a cry the most soul-stirring a landsman can
-hear when in mid-ocean:</p>
-
-<p>“Man overboard!”</p>
-
-<p>“Which side?” exclaimed Paul, spontaneous.</p>
-
-<p>“Port, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>This caused such a complete revolution in Paul’s emotion
-that for an instant he was confused. Like many a landsman,
-with little fear of the water itself, yet with little or no practice
-at sea, the simplest nautical phrase was apt to convey confused
-ideas. He could not on the instant remember whether he
-should look forward or aft (as in a theatre) to determine port<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-from starboard on board ship, and as usual rushed over to the
-wrong side. The light was bad, the moon shone the wrong
-way to see clearly, he rushed back again, leaned over the hand
-rail and thought he saw something bobbing about on the water,
-but was not sure&mdash;only an instant, then could distinguish the
-waving arms of some one struggling. The figure was yet
-ahead, but approaching, not quite near yet, but about to pass
-as he looked on.</p>
-
-<p>The situation was painfully dramatic, but from the deck
-as Paul saw it not so perilous if actions were prompt.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are those life preservers?” and with pocket-knife he
-cut one loose and threw it overboard, then a second, and some
-smaller cork-floats. Why several? He did not stop to think,
-for another cry, this time from the deep, reached his ear, the
-cry of a drowning man. It came sharp on the night air, like
-a personal appeal, and so sounded to Paul&mdash;a personal appeal,
-for none could have now heard it as clearly as he.</p>
-
-<p>This was more than Paul could stand without making instant
-response. Two more rips of the knife blade, this time on
-his own shoe-strings, off went the shoes, then coat and waistcoat.</p>
-
-<p>He answered with his college call, “All right, old fellow!”
-then sprang on the hand rail and plunged headlong into the
-ocean, a clear dive from the deck outwards, to find the drowning
-man.</p>
-
-<p>None but a deck hand caught a glimpse of the youthful
-figure springing into space, of course too late for him to
-interfere. “Two overboard!” cried the sailor promptly, then
-giving vent to his own reflections, “Some blasted fool who
-wants to do the thing hisself!” mumbling as he went forward
-to report.</p>
-
-<p>Increased excitement, passengers calling for help.</p>
-
-<p>“Where was the other man?” exclaimed several voices
-among a group coming aft to the new center of interest.
-“Where?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There, ma’am!” said the deck hand, pointing; “he left his
-boots.”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor fellow!” exclaimed Miss Winchester. “Oh, Adele,
-what a legacy! Just think of it, boots!”</p>
-
-<p>The crowd rushed to look at the boots. They were held up
-for inspection. Frank Winchester no sooner turned her eyes
-upon them than she rushed forward, recognized the coat and
-waistcoat, and stood aghast.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Paul!”</p>
-
-<p>Adele did not move, she seemed turned to stone.</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes were fixed, looking straight ahead, trying to pierce
-the shadowy deep, the boundless expanse. The ocean seemed
-enormous, terrible, and, oh, so cold, heartless, consuming!
-“What! There? Lost!”</p>
-
-<p>But she was quiet only for an instant, then seizing any loose
-articles she could find threw them overboard, and with strong
-emotion invited others to do the same. “Anything that will
-float&mdash;will float! It may reach them; it may, it must!” and
-the passengers followed her example.</p>
-
-<p>More life preservers, several deck stools and steamer chairs
-then followed overboard before the enraged boatswain could
-interfere to stop their useless efforts.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you see we’re b’arin’ round?” growled the old salt.
-“The boats’ll pick ’em up. There’s no sea on now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I truly hope so,” breathed Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve got plenty of floats already,” said the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?” demanded Miss Winchester, nettled
-at the fellow’s brusque manner.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he’s got plenty anyway. Look here!” and it was
-indeed a great relief to see the dangling ends of those cut
-ropes, cut by Paul only a few minutes before, not insignificant
-items, for they told of presence of mind and foresight instead
-of reckless venture.</p>
-
-<p>A lull followed, while the vessel began to turn in its course.
-Several boats were made ready to be lowered into the water.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Adele,” said Miss Winchester, striving to grasp the situation,
-“Adele, I knew he could swim, all right, but, really,
-really I did not take him for that sort of man.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m!”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s very brave, Adele.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you don’t understand him as well as I do,” and
-Adele’s voice betrayed a greater intensity of feeling than she
-had intended. Then, as if catching herself before too late, she
-added in a very different tone, and casting her eyes towards
-the center of the ship, where the officer of the deck was giving
-directions:</p>
-
-<p>“Frank, he’ll not be left&mdash;not if I can help it. Just wait
-a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Each had done what she could thus far.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XVII">XVII<br />
-<span class="fs80">TWO RESCUES&mdash;AND TWO GIRLS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THE turning of the steamer appeared to take an interminable
-time, especially to the only two members of
-the Cultus party who knew that Paul was overboard.
-The passengers watched the great curve of foam left behind
-as the huge monster crept around in its course. Then whispers
-were heard, irrepressible, nervous whispers from people
-who could not keep still, and who jerked their hands up and
-down as if they themselves were in a dilemma.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll never find ’em, never! We’re only getting further
-off! Will she never turn round? We’re miles away now!
-Why don’t they steer straight for where they are?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had my hands on that wheel, I’d yank her around
-in a jiffy.” This critic was judging by a cruise he had made
-in a cat-boat on Barnegat Bay.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope they’ve got them preservers hitched up high,” quoth
-a kind, thoughtful old dame, wearing a knitted hood and
-shawl crosswise. “It’s awful important not to be top-heavy
-in the sea, nor to swallow too much water; it’s awful salt, you
-know”&mdash;this kind suggestion the result of experience in a
-surf bath at Atlantic City.</p>
-
-<p>The boatswain’s whiskers surrounded a capacious grin as he
-listened to this sagacious advice, while at the same time he
-was watching the great semicircle of foam change to a horseshoe
-curve, the two ends converging toward a point in the
-open. He took a shy glance towards the bridge, observing
-what was going on there, and then called out:</p>
-
-<p>“Keep a lookout for’ard! Who’s got the best eyes?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span></p>
-
-<p>All strained their necks to catch a glimpse ahead.</p>
-
-<p>The vessel had by this time veered and was ploughing back
-in a direct course. Suddenly a beam of light shot out from
-above the bridge, illuminating far ahead, penetrating the
-moonlight, making objects on the surface distinctly visible.</p>
-
-<p>“The search light! The search light!” and a burst of cheers
-went forth loud enough to be heard a long distance.</p>
-
-<p>“Give ’em another, boatswain!” exclaimed the Barnegat
-critic.</p>
-
-<p>“Those fellows ain’t deaf, give ’em another, boatswain!”
-This from the thoughtful hood and shawl.</p>
-
-<p>The old salt looked disgusted, for he had not taken part in
-this demonstration, but the advisory committee took it up at
-once, cheering again and again, as if the rescue depended upon
-the noise they made.</p>
-
-<p>Adele put her arm in Frank Winchester’s and drew her away
-towards one of the life boats amidship. The boat was already
-manned, waiting to be lowered at the right time.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Cultus and the Doctor were standing near these
-boats, when Adele touched the latter on the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>He turned quickly, something in her manner impressed him,
-and he drew her aside.</p>
-
-<p>“Please go in that boat, Doctor Wise.”</p>
-
-<p>“What, you want <em>me</em> to go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, by all means.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you will, if you’ll only go.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there’s no reason for my going.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there is. Don’t ask me, but go, please, you really
-ought to go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ought, ought to?” repeated the Doctor curious, very
-thoughtful.</p>
-
-<p>Now Doctor Wise had already learned that the first man
-overboard was Mr. Onset, the very man he had frightened by
-his amateur mental science treatment. Could the hysteria<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-have returned in some new form? Was it no cure after all?
-Could the man have attempted suicide? If so, didn’t he himself
-have some personal responsibility from tampering with
-such a case? He should have left it for regular treatment.
-A successful cure would probably have brought no such adverse
-<ins class="corr" id="tn117" title="Transcriber’s Note—“consequences as this; but if unsucessful” changed to “consequences as this; but if unsuccessful”.">consequences as this; but if unsuccessful</ins>
-who would be to blame? At any rate he was now identified with Onset
-on board that ship and could not remain passive in such an emergency,
-even if the ship’s crew could do the work better.</p>
-
-<p>Such thoughts rushed through the Doctor’s mind when
-Adele told him he ought to go with the rescue party, as he
-supposed, to help Onset.</p>
-
-<p>An executive officer was superintending the boat close by,
-when Doctor Wise approached and asked nervously:</p>
-
-<p>“Where is the physician of the ship?”</p>
-
-<p>“With the next boat ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I should like to go with this one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Contrary to all rules,” said the officer, sharply.</p>
-
-<p>Adele overheard this and before Doctor Wise decided what
-to do she had the executive officer by the sleeve, holding on
-firmly.</p>
-
-<p>He politely but forcibly told her to let go and keep cool,
-but she would not, not until she drew herself near enough to
-whisper in his ear. If he could have seen her eyes he would
-have listened even more quickly than he did, but she made her
-voice speak from her heart.</p>
-
-<p>Those close by only heard the first words, “Doctor Wise will
-be of the greatest use, he&mdash;&mdash;” the rest in an undertone.</p>
-
-<p>Several of the self-constituted advisory critics at once volunteered
-the opinion that two doctors were not too many for
-two men overboard. The title “Doctor” carried its own weight
-and the rush of events prevented any questions.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester meanwhile had worked her way through the
-crowd to the side of the vessel and was straining every nerve
-to discover the whereabouts of the two men struggling in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-water. No doubt they had been sighted already by the officers
-on the bridge, because the speed of the vessel had been slackened
-and the search light kept in a definite direction, but
-Frank wanted to see them with her own eyes, alive and kicking,
-if possible, especially the kicking, to make sure they were
-alive. She thought she saw them, then knew she did not; she
-put up her hands to look through the fingers curved to form
-binoculars, but this was no better. Then eagerly looking
-around she spied a pair of glasses in the hands of a lady. “Oh,
-excuse me, just a minute!” and without waiting for a response,
-took the glasses without ceremony. Mrs. Thorn let
-her keep the glasses, but watched her excited fingers attempting
-to focus them in the dim light.</p>
-
-<p>The speed was now so much less that boats could be lowered,
-ready to be let adrift at a moment’s notice. Miss Winchester
-saw the Doctor in the second boat, then noticed a small white
-spot in the distance upon the surface of the sea, and while
-struggling to focus those “obstinate glasses” on the white spot
-only made matters worse. Annoyed, clumsy just when most
-anxious and impatient, she pressed her lips together to steady
-her usually strong nerves, almost biting the end of her tongue,
-and lo! the glasses were all right, and into vision sprang the
-white spot, a life preserver supporting some one waving a
-handkerchief; one end of it was in his teeth and the other
-corner was held at full length, not at all unlike a flag of truce
-or a “peace-flag” amid all the commotion and excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Adele, I see them! He doesn’t seem to mind it in the
-least.”</p>
-
-<p>“Both?” asked Adele, eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes! no! yes!&mdash;I can’t make out what he’s got. Yes, two!
-I think so.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re both there, ma’am,” said a sailor, respectfully.
-“The Captain gave orders for each boat to bring a man. He’s
-seen ’em ’way back.”</p>
-
-<p>The boats were cast off; they rose and fell upon the undulations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-of the mighty deep, now more impressive than when
-traversed at the more rapid speed. The tiny boats ascended
-to the summits of the white-crested waves and then were
-hidden in the deep valleys of the dark sea. Paul, fluttering
-his little white flag, rose and fell with them. They approached
-each other with the movements of a stately minuet upon the
-ocean. The fixed lights in the heavens above and the creeping
-search light of man below illumined the scene.</p>
-
-<p>When Doctor Wise recognized Paul it gave him an icy chill
-down the middle of his back. It will never be known which
-was really experiencing the worst chill at the instant, the
-Doctor or Paul. However, the Doctor managed to shake himself
-back into a normal condition, then stood up in the boat
-and motioned with a peculiar movement, knowing Paul would
-recognize one of their private signals. Paul did recognize it
-and gave the reply. The Doctor then felt in his hip pocket
-for his whiskey flask&mdash;it was all right&mdash;and then waited until
-the boat was near enough to throw a line; Paul seized it.</p>
-
-<p>The rescued Mr. Warder was found floating in a circular
-life preserver as serenely as a duck in a pond. He held
-Onset tightly with one arm, while Onset clung to him with
-both, though safe enough if he could but have realized it.
-There was nothing tragic whatever about either of them,
-except Onset’s state of mind, which he showed by his convulsed
-clasp of Paul.</p>
-
-<p>Paul had taken a great risk, from the popular point of view,
-but in so doing had trusted to the good faith of others to aid
-him and had not been deceived. Without formulating these
-facts in his own mind on the instant, he had acted nevertheless
-upon the presumption that the science of navigation was able
-to meet such a case, and he had faith in human nature when
-embodied in sincere men. He had trusted the truth, and that
-had made him free to act for the best, as he saw it; and all
-this spontaneously, because he had the courage of such convictions
-ingrained in his character.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XVIII">XVIII<br />
-<span class="fs80">A SENSATION VERSUS AN IMPRESSION</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">WHY did you do it?” asked the Doctor, as they
-rowed back to the ship.</p>
-
-<p>“He called me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who? Onset?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. There was no real danger, only some risk.”</p>
-
-<p>“The deuce there wasn’t,” rather surprised at Paul’s nonchalance.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you would pick me up. Onset floated, but was
-nearly a goner when I reached him.”</p>
-
-<p>“What possessed the fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. He was scared wild when I first saw him,
-beating his arms about in every direction. That’s what kept
-him from sinking, even if his head went under at times. Got
-any more whiskey?”</p>
-
-<p>Paul had been in the water only about half an hour, no
-longer than during many a previous dip in the surf, but the
-nervous tension had been severe.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor took hold of his hands and found the finger tips
-were merely cold, not blue, and as usual the form and vitality
-of the hand showed every element of power to give many a
-good grip yet.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” thought the Doctor, “your type can put forth the
-strenuous effort if your spirit calls for it, and it does sometimes
-draw upon the physical too much; the best swimmers
-are for this cause sometimes drowned. Don’t do it again, my
-boy. When the reaction comes you require stimulants even<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-more than at the time of exertion,” and he again gave Paul
-the flask.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Onset was similarly cared for in the other boat. When
-the two crews came together near the steamer Doctor Wise inquired
-of the physician in charge what Onset had to say for
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>“He says he became giddy and fell over. I don’t believe
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m,” mused the Doctor, “weak head and hysterical legs&mdash;what
-will he do next?”</p>
-
-<p>Once on board again and the steamer well on her course, the
-incident produced quite a little sensation, a surface ripple,
-but very little serious impression.</p>
-
-<p>Paul, in spite of himself, had to gratify curiosity and explain
-details&mdash;how he first caught one of the floating deck
-stools (“the one I threw over,” said the benign countenance
-with the woollen hood), then swam towards where he thought
-Onset might be, and saw his head against the sheen on the
-water, and then kept his eye on the head while swimming;
-how it did not seem a long swim, but a little slow after finding
-a life preserver to tow along; how he managed to get the
-floats under Onset, after first boxing his ears to keep him
-quiet, and then ducked into the life preserver himself, “and
-there we were until the steamer turned head on and the search
-light became so blinding that I could not see what I could
-see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you good boy!” again exclaimed the beaming hooded
-countenance, who had evidently been reading one of Mr.
-Frank Stockton’s stories. “Do tell us, is it true, as Miss
-Frank says, that you wore black stockings to keep off sharks?”</p>
-
-<p>“Trousers, this time, madame&mdash;trousers! I really didn’t
-have time to change.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“All’s well that ends well,” but with Adele it was not the
-end, much more the real beginning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span></p>
-
-<p>The part she had taken in connection with the case of
-Onset’s hysteria, her mental activity during the discussion
-with Mrs. Geyser and the spiritual experience she had just
-encountered in learning Paul’s decided force of character,
-made the young woman live and breathe intensely. Her whole
-being had been brought into play. She developed more during
-that eventful week of their life in mid-ocean than she might
-have done in a whole year on land. Not that aught of her past
-was lost or ignored, but it was made effective and she herself
-made more completely alive. She was now indeed amid the
-turmoils of life, where she found herself taking an active part.</p>
-
-<p>The strange and varied motives which actuated many, also
-the lofty aspirations and the power to act, seemed very similar
-to her own ideals, far more so than she had expected. This
-took away some of her own youthful conceit, but gave her a
-much deeper and stronger appreciation of things as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally a strong conviction arose within her that two
-individuals with different characteristics, yet harmonious in
-purpose, must be able to work better together than alone. She
-had always felt rather independent as to any methods she chose
-to adopt, but now she felt herself confronted by a whole series
-of things she could not do, no matter how good the motive.
-Paul, for instance, being a man, had done just what she
-would have liked to do, but could not, being a woman. She
-felt quite able to have done it&mdash;oh, yes; she could dive and
-swim and keep it up; but somehow, for her to have jumped
-overboard&mdash;well, don’t do it&mdash;foolishness&mdash;ridiculous. But
-Paul could&mdash;no foolishness, nothing ridiculous; in fact, a
-praiseworthy act, a reasonable risk, approved by his conscience
-at the time and eventually strengthening his character. She
-began to obtain a realizing sense of the complementary equivalent
-in human nature.</p>
-
-<p>Unavoidably Paul rose higher in her estimation. Twice
-he had shown himself her equal, perhaps even her superior,
-not mentally, but somehow in a forcible manner which taxed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-her spirit as well as her intellect to comprehend. He had once
-proved how her own vocal accomplishments, so much more
-highly developed than his, could be in spirit most potent when
-made subsidiary to the words and sentiment of a song; now he
-had shown that actions are more convincing than words themselves
-in spiritual significance. She no longer thought of
-Paul as like other men, two-sided, one side good and the other&mdash;well,
-not so good; but rather as good all round, a really good
-man. Being an idealist, she put Paul on a pedestal and
-took a good look at him. Certainly he was very sensible and
-brave, also fascinating, now that she saw him in a good light.</p>
-
-<p>This was the state of affairs when the crossing of the Atlantic
-ended by their entering the Straits of Gibraltar.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XIX">XIX<br />
-<span class="fs80">GIBRALTAR APPEARS AND DISAPPEARS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">IT may seem superfluous to observe that the military spirit
-dominated every other at “The Gib,” but the ladies of
-the Cultus party had little idea how forcibly it would
-affect them until they were behind the guns.</p>
-
-<p>Four regiments were quartered at the station&mdash;brilliant
-uniforms in all directions. Regulation scarlet most in vogue;
-also “the sporty Rifles,” parti-colored like paroquets, green
-predominating; also Scotch Highlanders in white and flesh
-tints of nature. Bands and bag-pipes, fifers and drum corps
-perambulated the narrow streets&mdash;action, color, martial music
-in the air&mdash;the spirit of the place exhilarating at first and its
-activity contagious.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at those red-breasts, and, oh, dear, how very perky!”
-exclaimed Miss Winchester, as Tommy Atkins and a group
-of his chums went by&mdash;Tommy had winked at her when
-passing.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Paul, fall in! Keep step! We’ll take that battery
-just ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look before you leap!” cried Adele, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s only a military mote in your eye,” laughed
-Miss Winchester, “soldiers don’t mind a small matter like
-that&mdash;&mdash;” and she drew the young people off along the crooked
-street which led to the hotel, Convent (headquarters), Park
-and Alameda beyond, Professor and Mrs. Cultus following<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-in a carriage. As they looked upward the Rock frowned upon
-them from a great height, and O’Hara’s Tower appeared near
-as the bird flies, but a fatiguing ascent for those on foot. At
-the Signal House flags were fluttering, and with a glass one
-could distinguish “wig-wagging” in the direction of the Mediterranean,
-possibly to an approaching steamer many miles
-distant, on the way from that Far East which they all hoped
-soon to reach.</p>
-
-<p>Life at “The Gib” not forming an integral part of this narrative,
-it is enough to recall that during their stop-over between
-steamers they were fortunate in assisting at a battle
-upon the neutral-ground, after which they attended a ball at
-the “Convent.” Our interest just now is to note how well
-Mrs. Cultus improved her opportunity, especially after visiting
-Tangiers.</p>
-
-<p>When at home Mrs. Cultus was a busy member in several
-clubs, all fashionably active in good works. She had a pigeonhole
-for each particular style of club letter paper, with headings
-artistically engraved. Among them, “Politely Civil
-Club,” “Amateurs’ Topographical,” “Domestic Relief Association,”
-“Cat Home,” and “Old Man’s Depository.” Mrs.
-Cultus doted on cats and variety in good works, and was determined
-to prove all things and hold fast to that which is good.
-In a spasm of zeal previous to her departure she had faithfully
-promised to report from abroad such of her observations “obtained
-by travel on the spot,” as might be interesting in connection
-with the club work at home. It goes without saying
-that both Gibraltar and Tangiers each proved to be a bonanza
-to Mrs. Cultus, and she very wisely determined to get rid of
-the troublesome business at once.</p>
-
-<p>“I know I can write something better than that communication
-about ‘Tobogganing in St. Petersburg,’ and as to the
-one on ‘Seesawing in Alaska,’ it was a very trivial production.
-In civil matters it’s quite as important to know what not to do
-as what to do, and I certainly do see here on ‘The Gib’ many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-things highly instructive to Uncle Sam in connection with
-our new colonies. Now, let me see! Let me arrange my
-thoughts before writing them out.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I feel quite an embarrassment of riches” (she repeated
-it in French): “Gibraltar! certainly the most cosmopolitan
-region we have yet reached, a perfect conglomeration
-of diversified interests, and yet they are not at loggerheads;
-military, also millinery, costumes very important; not
-so much commercial as confidential; financial, with four kinds
-of currency; national yet international, geographically considered;
-diplomatic, aromatic, and ethical; all substantial
-problems working in harmony&mdash;not a gun fired to keep the
-peace, only for salutes.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus’ finished production proved to be in a style
-quite unique, what might be called demi-semi-official or colloquial-realistic,
-with “side tags” to inform the Club in what
-direction the region might be further “explored.” Of course
-her full text became part of the archives of the Society, but her
-opening and closing sentences were in this case so brilliant
-that the world at large should really have the benefit of their
-luminosity. No expert in the modern school of English composition
-had greater appreciation than Mrs. Cultus of the
-real value of an opening sentence to attract attention in the
-right direction. What she fired off at the Amateurs’ Topographical
-thus began:</p>
-
-<p>“We are supposed to be in Europe, en route from America
-to Asia; as a matter of fact we are in Africa, just across the
-way. I write from the Café Maure, in order to get the flavor
-of the place.” With her literary feet thus planted on four
-continents at once, why, of course the Club knew precisely
-where she stood, and obtained a glimpse of the habits and
-customs of the population, also of Mrs. Cultus in particular.
-Her closing sentence was also a masterpiece, this time of
-imagery and charming retrospection, all carefully led up to
-by a vivid description of the Zok or market place; introducing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-a group of snake-charmers at work charming, fascinating to
-watch, especially fascinating when the charmers, accompanied
-by tom-toms and a sana (tambourine), appeared to eat the
-snakes.</p>
-
-<p>“It was diabolical,” wrote Mrs. Cultus; “I fled, and called
-the others to escape fascination also. We had enough of the
-Zok and snakes. Unfortunately, camels were in our way.
-I had nothing but my parasol to keep the beasts off. No
-doubt they too had been fascinated by the snakes, for a hubbub
-arose which completely demoralized the dromedaries. A camel
-with both humps up and rear legs in the air and his front
-legs helping him to scream is calculated to make one leave his
-vicinity unceremoniously. We did, we made our exit&mdash;<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sans
-ceremonie</i>&mdash;as I have the profound honor of now doing at the
-end of this report.”</p>
-
-<p>And the Society sent her a note of appreciation later on for
-the sincere observation and vivid realism displayed in her
-graphic report&mdash;<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">noblesse oblige</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But in the meantime, while the report was on its way home,
-Mrs. Cultus, when thinking it over, seemed not quite sure as
-to its effect, in fact rather worried.</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said she, “that my style embodies that happy
-medium between dignity and frivolity which is sure to take
-at the Club, but, oh, just suppose somebody has described
-Tangiers before!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester overheard this terrible conjecture with
-the keen interest of a real member of the literary craft, and
-naturally came to the rescue of Mrs. Cultus, who was yet a
-novice.</p>
-
-<p>“Tangiers!&mdash;sung about before? Not more frequently than
-some other good songs.”</p>
-
-<p>“What song are you talking about, Frank? I sang no song.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Thou art like unto a flower, O Tangiers! so pure, so
-white,’ et cetera. A Morocco rose by any other name will
-always smell as sweet.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow, it’s Oriental,” quoth Mrs. Cultus, “and that’s
-what I’m after just at present.”</p>
-
-<p>Oriental&mdash;yes; they had been fascinated by their first
-glimpse of the Orient and its surfeit of varied impressions.
-From this time forward Adele was continually looking Eastward
-with great and increasing eagerness. The shores of the
-Mediterranean had yet in store for her some experiences quite
-as forcible as those of the Atlantic mid-ocean, but she knew it
-not. No doubt this had something to do with her present
-mood when they came to leave Gibraltar, and she stood with
-Paul and the Doctor upon deck, watching the disappearance
-of the Rock.</p>
-
-<p>The steamer took a southerly course when leaving port,
-heading for the African shore, then bore off towards the
-Orient, which was the real goal of their voyage. When passing
-Europa Point the impregnable Rock, with terraced fortifications,
-loomed up in gigantic proportions; seen edgewise,
-its decreased width added to the apparent height. Lofty and
-massive, it was indeed a Pillar of Hercules at the Gateway of
-the Inland Sea.</p>
-
-<p>The steamer passed into more open waters, the Rock rising
-higher and higher, as if determined to assert its majesty, no
-longer a pillar but a column of Victory, a strong and mighty
-outpost of Europe, an advance guard of that domain which
-lay behind, a bulwark of defence, a salient point for attack,
-a formidable diplomatic menace to the nomads of Africa&mdash;“Thus
-far shalt thou go and no farther.” And they sailed
-onwards, out upon the blue expanse of sea and sky; the landscape
-receded from view and different objects sank in turn
-beneath the horizon. The graceful curves of the Iberian coast
-faded away in the background, the mainland of Europe but a
-thin line in the distance; the gateway of the Straits soon followed,
-and the Atlantic, highway to America and home, was
-lost to sight. There was naught left in what they saw to
-suggest America.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span></p>
-
-<p>As the ship sailed on, the sunlight pouring upon the sands
-of Africa produced a hazy, luminous, rose-tinted mist o’er the
-Land of the Moors, the mountains of Morocco blended away
-amid the fleecy clouds in the azure of distance.</p>
-
-<p>And they gazed until the sombre outline of the Rock alone
-remained, an isolated dot upon the waters. A fisherman’s
-craft scudded across the open, the Rock was hidden behind a
-sail. A sea gull flitted along the horizon, the Rock was no
-larger than a bird. The human eye grew weak in the effort
-to retain its whereabouts. Could it yet be seen? Yes, it is
-there&mdash;a mere speck in space! No, ’tis gone! Gibraltar had
-disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Adele, standing between the Doctor and Paul, clinging to
-the arms of her good friends, looked dreamily upon the
-vacancy. In thoughtful silence this vivid experience in life
-had become but a thing of the past.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XX">XX<br />
-<span class="fs80">THE ARTISTIC SENSE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">What is the long and short of it?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Art is long, life is short.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">AFTER a short tour through Italy, they had reached the
-Vesuvian Bay. As Mrs. Cultus expressed it, “Heretofore
-we have been visiting lakes and crypts, ruins
-and picture galleries, and now at last have met a volcano.
-It’s really beautiful, I assure you, quite as artistic as in
-pictures, and set in a frame of landscape which I don’t
-wonder artists love to paint. I feel just that way myself. Oh,
-it is so exquisite with these sloping shores! and in the distance
-that beautiful Island of Capri.”</p>
-
-<p>Capri, the haunt of so many emperors in art as well as in
-government. Capri, favorite of the imagination, one of the
-enchanted isles, legendary locality, with its rustic stone ladder
-to ascend heavenward. Capricious Capri, with its grotto in
-blue, whereas ordinary mortals would be satisfied with grottoes
-in green. Picturesque Capri, with rocky foreground, no
-middle distance whatever, and several Paradises in the background.
-Mythological Capri, ever under the watchful eye of
-Minerva of the Promontory. Sportive Capri, with quails on
-toast, and woodcocks twice a year. Historic Capri, famous
-to the antiquary and modern economist; infamous, but only
-in days gone by.</p>
-
-<p>All this appeared very mysterious on the morning that the
-Doctor looked from Capo da Monti over the Bay of Naples.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-The island, enveloped in light mist, hung, as it were, in mid-air
-between sea and sky. Adele and Paul were with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hazy atmosphere,” remarked the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“I see violet tints,” remarked Adele. “I love violets.”</p>
-
-<p>“It looks as if the island had no weight,” said Paul; “it
-might be blown away by the wind.”</p>
-
-<p>“One of those atmospheric effects,” continued the Doctor,
-“which some artists portray with great success because much
-is left to the imagination.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then the other fellow imagines what he likes best; safe,
-sure plan that; it just suits me,” said Paul. “All the pictures
-I had in my room at college had a ‘go’ in them, and I imagined
-what was coming.”</p>
-
-<p>“Happy the artist who has the art of suggestion. It is
-a rare gift; inborn, I think&mdash;the power to make others complete
-the picture by reading their own best thoughts into it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some seem to care very little about what they say,” remarked
-Adele. “I never could understand why they paint
-a woman looking at herself in a glass; one’s back hair should
-not be the most conspicuous thing in the picture; and as to
-those extraordinary soap-bubble-cherubs, they don’t appeal to
-me, no matter how well they are painted.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort do you like?” asked Paul the innocent.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, dancing, of course&mdash;dancing on one’s knee&mdash;that’s
-the place they would enjoy it most, stretching out their arms
-in play, not catching flies. Those fly-catching cherubs are just
-as bad as the bubblers.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much you’re like your mother at times,” thought the
-Doctor while laughing; then audibly: “You’re right, Adele;
-art never is very high unless it reaches for something better
-than catching flies&mdash;fleeting impressions.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then from your point of view,” said Paul, “the technical
-part and the science <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">per se</i> may appeal to the physical and
-mental only; but if you want a picture to be thought about
-afterwards, the subject must speak to the spiritual sense.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, rather!” exclaimed the Doctor, now getting somewhat
-excited; “and more than that, many a well executed work
-of art has been utterly forgotten simply because the subject
-had better be forgotten. Some artists have actually killed
-their pictures before they first touched brush to canvas.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele appeared to agree to this, but said nothing. Paul
-was not so loftily mystical in his appreciation.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps they belong to the ‘yellow’ school?”</p>
-
-<p>“And have the jaundice themselves?” quoth the Doctor,
-warming up; “perhaps, for a bad subject is apt to have bad
-influence. No picture worthy the title of masterpiece endures
-as such unless it possesses the spiritual element and excites
-spiritual perception of the right kind. In the final analysis,
-the higher spiritual element is the salvation of any artistic
-production. Woe betide the artist who belittles his art by
-what might be called aspiration towards the low, and thinks
-to justify it by a perfect technique! That is a false position
-for a true man; for there is but one art&mdash;the Art Divine,
-which cannot be debased by unworthy association.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you mean Music,” said Paul, smiling. “Now
-you’re off on your hobby; every man thinks his own
-hobby the best&mdash;his art divine. You’re just like ’em all, Doc!
-Look out! don’t measure everything by your own pocket-rule.”
-The Doctor paid no attention.</p>
-
-<p>“In other arts than Music,” said he, “the physical association
-is so intimate and permanent that the artist has increased
-responsibility in consequence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then greater achievement when he does succeed,” interrupted
-Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Possibly, but not probably,” said the Doctor. “I only
-referred to music because it furnishes an ideal standard by
-which to judge of the unlimited power (of course divine, if
-unlimited) which may be exercised through the artistic sense.
-For instance, Mozart’s ability to excite pure spiritual aspirations
-towards the good and true by means of the beautiful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-in melodic phrase, was, and is (for he is immortal), so great
-that those who yield themselves to his art are often led to forget
-even the debased Don Juan (miserable subject), and have
-pure emotions and beautiful visions suggested by the melodic
-beauty of the music. One might almost say Mozart’s inspired
-art awakens the dormant Angel who sleeps within the nature
-of every man. You know what we find stated in Rau’s ‘Tone
-King’ about him?”</p>
-
-<p>Adele drew close to listen.</p>
-
-<p>“Mozart, when on the border land, when his lovely spirit
-so melodious in expression could see upwards even more clearly
-than around and about him, said something like this:</p>
-
-<p>“‘All work is divine, and raises man above earth. We all
-love earthly things, but there are higher delights than these.
-I, too, know something of this higher joy of creating. The
-faculties God has given me render me happy; but I feel that
-these powers within me are capable of fuller development in
-eternity. To think that my power of producing something
-great and fine could cease just when it begins to rise to the
-full consciousness of all that might be accomplished, would
-be to doubt the perfection of Divine Wisdom&mdash;perhaps my
-whole being may be absorbed in one flow of immortal harmony,
-for the musical spheres within one cannot perish.’”</p>
-
-<p>After a pause, the Doctor asked, with much feeling:</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you know what all this means?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell us,” whispered Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“It means that all true art in this life springs from Love
-Divine, and aids in bringing life and immortality to light.”</p>
-
-<p>As the Doctor said this the sound of a simple, plaintive
-melody came floating upward toward the crest of the hill on
-which they stood. Paul went forward to see whence it came.</p>
-
-<p>“Some peasants in the next field; one is singing, another
-playing a pipe, before a shrine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!” exclaimed the Doctor; “not the first time that shepherds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-abiding in a field have heard music with a spiritual
-significance.”</p>
-
-<p>“And neither a Mozart nor very fine art,” remarked Paul.</p>
-
-<p>Adele stood musing, then added, in a subdued voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; it is yet bringing Life and Immortality to Light.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXI">XXI<br />
-<span class="fs80">AN ARTIST WITH DOUBLE VISION</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THEY were again overlooking the Vesuvian Bay, Capri
-still in the distance, but more distinct, not unlike a
-phantom appearing and disappearing as the mist
-passed by. The intermediate space was much clearer, more
-light, better definition, as photographers say.</p>
-
-<p>“Paul,” began the Doctor, “you remember George Le Roy,
-the artist we met at Tarpon Bayou, Florida? He is now at
-Capri.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good!” exclaimed Paul. “A genius if ever there was one.
-He takes me a walk out into the country whenever I look at
-his pictures.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Art is his religion,’ so he says,” quoth the Doctor. “His
-palette and his Bible tell the same story, or something like
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t tell exactly why I like his pictures,” said Paul,
-“but I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“His pictures speak,” said the Doctor; “they echo the Mind
-of Nature, the Voice, yet he never copies a tree or a cloud.
-You hear something said to you, yet not a word spoken. Now,
-Paul, that’s quite as high a flight for the artist as one is apt
-to find in figure painting.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I can’t agree with you there. The human form requires
-far greater ability to portray; one must depict action,
-and emotions, too&mdash;in fact, a better draughtsman is required.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor took him up.</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt greater accuracy in detail, correct eye for form,
-knowledge of anatomy to make the figure plastic, and intense<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-feeling to give power to convey to others the idea of emotions;
-but when it comes to <em>exciting emotions</em> the landscape artist has
-a field bountiful with opportunity for spiritual insight and significance&mdash;as
-a matter of fact, figures themselves need not
-be ignored, but made accessory.”</p>
-
-<p>“The world and his wife don’t value landscapes as highly
-as you do,” remarked Paul, cogitating. “Who ever sees all
-that in a landscape?&mdash;why, the average man wouldn’t like
-it if he did see it.” This somewhat nettled the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“The average man! that pretentious individual who always
-thinks of himself as Lord of Creation&mdash;let him keep on thinking
-of his physique and physical comforts. I enjoy good
-landscapes for the very reason that they lift one above all that;
-they respond to something better, and that settles it for me.
-I enjoy having inspiring landscapes always where I can see
-them; there are precious few faces of which I can say the same
-thing.” Then he added, as if mindful of one in particular:
-“Some faces never respond; I take to the woods to get rid
-of ’em, as I often leave a portrait for a landscape.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was getting roused. Paul detected it and concluded
-to laugh the matter off.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not take your piano with you, Doctor&mdash;to the woods?”</p>
-
-<p>“I would if I could. Gottschalk did; and others to-day,
-like him in that respect, do seek fresh thoughts and sounds
-direct from Nature. Saint-Saëns does; he told me so during
-some talks we had when out in far east Ceylon; and he is the
-most notable living expert in different forms of musical composition,
-ranging from complicated rhythmic conceits to
-serious harmonies well nigh sublime. As to Edvard Grieg,
-I caught him in the very act, entranced by Nature’s strange
-moods and melodies amid the waterfalls of his beloved Norway.
-And Beethoven! ah! there is the real test! Beethoven’s most
-profound utterances are but the unadulterated deep sounds
-and chords from Nature, both felt and heard when others
-thought him deaf. His experience was in the woods of Austria,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-and if we do not hear now, elsewhere, when he yet speaks,
-we do not really comprehend Beethoven, how he transmuted
-into another form that which exists in Nature. Blessed be his
-name! for he did it that we, too, might hear. And we call
-that Art.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there’s one advantage about a piano in the woods,”
-teased Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be more comfortable, and possibly less moist than
-the other fellow.”</p>
-
-<p>“What other fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>“The one who sat on a wet cloud pecking at a harp&mdash;ask
-Widow Bedot.”</p>
-
-<p>Evidently Paul was trying to escape a serious discussion.
-Fortunately for both, Adele came to the rescue. She perceived
-that men of such different temperaments could seldom see
-anything from the same point of view unless it was the result
-of a similar or simultaneous experience, and that with Paul
-the personality of the artist should go far to promote a thorough
-appreciation of his work.</p>
-
-<p>“It strikes me,” said Adele, “neither of you knows all that
-may be said on that subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m!” ejaculated the Doctor, looking out of the corner
-of his eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Or else you’re not thinking about the same thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give it up,” laughed Paul. “I was with the Widow on
-that cloud.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, isn’t it just possible, a wee bit possible, that a landscape
-artist himself, Mr. Le Roy, for instance, should know
-more about such things than either of us?”</p>
-
-<p>“All right; we’ll visit him,” said the Doctor; “take a run
-over to Capri for the sake of our&mdash;artistic health.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean your credit as a critic,” thought Adele.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The venerable artist, nearly seventy years of age, gave them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-a cordial welcome, his sharp eyes sparkling behind his old-fashioned
-spectacles; a man of medium height, with evidently
-no thought to throw away on mere matter of dress. His light-colored
-soft hat covered a mass of touzled hair, with a few
-streaks of gray; his beard was sparse on the cheeks and luxuriant
-on the chin.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor looked with interest at his thin hands and his
-hectic cheeks; then noticed his forcible action as he walked
-and talked. Outward signs of a highly nervous, impulsive
-temperament were very pronounced.</p>
-
-<p>“He looks more like an impractical, enthusiastic mystic
-than ever,” pondered the Doctor; “even more so than when
-I met him years ago&mdash;no doubt Italy suits him as he ages in
-spiritual discernment. He certainly can give very powerful
-impressions when he paints, and to all sorts and conditions
-of men; how remarkable, yet quite reasonable, that a man
-so frail as he should produce such effects of power. I suppose
-it is the intensity of his visions which makes him great. I
-wonder how Paul the practical will size him up?”</p>
-
-<p>The artist was talking to Paul about fresh air and the delightful
-life at Capri.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you paint in the open?” asked Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, yes, and no. Of course, one must go out, but not
-necessarily far&mdash;all is near at hand. The <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">paysage intime</i>, as
-it was called at Barbizon, is here, too, as we also found it
-in Florida. There’s a sort of unity in nature, and in it we
-live and move and have our being. It is a vast thing, that
-unity, but it is close to us also. The landscape picture may
-convey a comprehensive impression very large, out of proportion
-to its actual subject. Art, you know, is but part of the
-universal-plan, and like both science and religion, must drop
-into its appropriate place.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul seemed interested, also somewhat amused. “Fresh
-air certainly does surround everything, and no doubt there
-is a universal-plan in nature; but why mix up art, fresh air<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-and the universal-plan in that way?” Paul wondered how a
-fellow who could paint such practical pictures, so true to life,
-should talk so vaguely. “He’s a high-flyer. I like his fresh
-air and his pictures better than his queer sentiments.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, what Doctor Wise especially desired to learn was, not
-what other people thought of Mr. Le Roy, but how he himself
-satisfied his own keen, analytical sense. How Le Roy
-worked, not in mere allegorical figure, but, going directly to
-nature, discovered and conveyed something worth portraying.
-For it was well known in art circles that Le Roy had slowly
-gathered together his own theories as to nature and what nature
-could give him, and of the Immortality of Art. The
-conversation, therefore, took that turn.</p>
-
-<p>“Every artist,” said Le Roy, “has his own feeling, and if
-he develops it, may be a great artist in his way; yet, the other
-schools, the men with other methods and ideas, may not recognize
-the merit in his work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can this matter of feeling be explained in words?” asked
-Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“I think so, having made a thorough and complete theory
-of it. I am now seventy years of age, and the whole study
-of my life has been to find out what it is that is in myself&mdash;what
-is this thing we call Life&mdash;and how does it operate. The
-idea has become clearer and clearer; and as we see that the
-Creator never makes any two things alike, nor any two men
-alike, therefore every man has a different impression of what
-he sees, and that impression constitutes feeling, so every man
-has a different feeling.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor’s face lighted up as he eagerly drank in these
-words. Here was the “unlimited,” the very thing he had
-heard so much about&mdash;the unlimited with a vengeance. He
-knew that varied mentality and temperament among musicians
-who were artists often produced discord, but here was a successful
-artist of ripest maturity who insisted that no two artists
-were ever alike&mdash;all received different impressions, all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-had different feelings. Evidently everything or anything
-might be expected from an artist. “Hurrah for the typical
-artistic capacity and temperament; feelings of endless variety
-and scope, hence unlimited.” Such was the Doctor’s interpretation&mdash;the
-way it impressed him.</p>
-
-<p>Le Roy continued:</p>
-
-<p>“As to sitting at the feet of nature for inspiration, that
-came to my mind in the beginning of my career. I went
-instinctively to her, and drawn by a sympathetic feeling, I put
-something on canvas. It was not always a correct portrayal
-of the scene, but only something more or less like what I had
-in mind. Other artists and certain Philistines would see it
-and exclaim, “Yes! there is a certain charm about it. Did
-you paint it outside?&mdash;because if you did, you could not have
-seen this, that and the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I could not deny it, and thought I ought to
-improve my method. Being young, I then took it for granted
-that we saw physically, and with the physical eye only. What
-I had to learn was that a true artist has two sets of eyes: the
-one physical, the other spiritual.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele began to be uneasy lest the Doctor should at once
-claim three pairs of eyes, physical, mental, and spiritual, one
-of his own theories about such things, so she appealed to
-the artist as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you do about it, Mr. Le Roy?”</p>
-
-<p>“At first I tried to paint what I thought I saw, calling
-memory to supply the missing details.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the result?”</p>
-
-<p>“The picture had no charm whatever; there was nothing
-beautiful about it. I asked myself why it is that when I try
-to do my duty and paint faithfully I achieve so little, but when
-I care little for so-called faithful duty and accuracy I get
-something more or less admirable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” exclaimed the Doctor, “I presume the first pair of
-eyes is always imitative, that is to say, photographic, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-copies; the second, artistic or spiritual&mdash;but how about the
-third pair, the intermediate?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whose?” asked Le Roy.</p>
-
-<p>“The highly intellectual critic’s, self-constituted.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the critic! He always sees more than I do,” laughed
-Le Roy. “Let him pass; what I wish to tell you is this:</p>
-
-<p>“Little by little I began to find out that my feeling was
-governed by a principle, and I needed to find out the law under
-which it would act&mdash;the law of the unit, that is, of impression;
-although I did not then understand it as such.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul thought this a rather big undertaking, to discover any
-law which would apply to all feelings, no two alike. Le Roy
-continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Landscape is a constant repetition of the same thing under
-different forms and in a different feeling. When we go outdoors
-our minds are underloaded in some, overloaded in others&mdash;we
-don’t know where to go to work. We can only achieve
-something if we have an ambition so powerful as to forget
-ourselves and grasp whatever nature may give from any
-source; that is to say, one must be up in the science of his
-art. To be able to draw what you feel, you must first of all
-be able to draw what you see. There can be no true color
-without true form. In other words, to create an impression
-you must have both knowledge and technique to do so.”</p>
-
-<p>This statement pleased the Doctor immensely, a clear recognition
-of the great philosophic truth that in the nature of
-things science and art are both essential under the law of impression
-in order to produce the best work. Now, what could
-the artist say about the higher spiritual element?</p>
-
-<p>The reply came: “If a man could be as God when he is
-painting outside (perfection, thought the Doctor), then it
-would be easy enough; but, as he cannot, he must fall back
-on science. It is not possible for us to establish a measuring
-point in art&mdash;not in a broad, general sense. Even the early
-masters of the Renaissance were not always perfect in technique;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-they sought sympathy, not applause; and their results
-will always remain pre-eminent and authoritative in the domain
-of impression.” Le Roy seemed strong in his convictions
-about this, and followed up his thoughts with a still more
-comprehensive statement: “The worst of it is that all thinkers
-are apt to become dogmatic, and every dogma fails because
-it does not give us the other side.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it restricts the truth to one point of view?” inquired
-the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;and the same applies to all things, to religion as well
-as to art. A man who thinks must find a third element besides
-the science of his art for his standpoint of reason. There
-is a Trinity operative in regard to this.”</p>
-
-<p>All the party now strained every nerve to catch the words
-as they fell from the great artist’s lips.</p>
-
-<p>“At one time I took up the science of geometry because
-I considered it the only abstract truth; the diversion of the
-arc of consciousness, and so on. No one can conceive the
-mental struggles and torments I endured before I could master
-the whole thing. I knew the principle was true, but in practice
-it seemed contradictory. I had constantly to violate my
-principles to get in my feeling.”</p>
-
-<p>“Purely intellectual effort,” thought the Doctor, “must
-ever fail, in the very nature of things.” Le Roy continued:</p>
-
-<p>“I used this mathematical mode of thought as my third,
-together with natural science and the art, to form the stable
-tripod-standpoint of reason. I found it enabled me to keep
-the understanding under perfect control, except&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Except when?” interrupted the Doctor, nervously. “Was
-not pure mathematics always invariably sufficient to attain
-stability and confidence?”</p>
-
-<p>“Except when I overworked myself, then I was mentally
-tired, <em>my spirit not satisfied</em>&mdash;I got wobbly, like any one else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now what do you do?” asked Adele, in thorough sympathy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-her lovely black eyes, full of intelligence, meeting those
-of the venerable philosopher in art.</p>
-
-<p>“What do I do, my child? What do I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Therein lies the secret of my life.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXII">XXII<br />
-<span class="fs80">THE SECRET OF A LIFE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">ALL waited reverently until the venerable artist was
-ready to explain. They watched him take off his
-spectacles and polish them, so that his physical sight
-might aid his mental vision, and his spiritual insight assert its
-potency. He stepped across his studio toward one of his superb
-paintings&mdash;a landscape in which a wealth of rich coloring
-streamed forth from behind dark, luxuriant foliage. At first
-sight “the related masses of color rather than the linear extensions”
-was what appealed to the beholder, as if, as a work of
-art, it was not intended to instruct or edify, but to awaken an
-emotion. Le Roy stood with one hand held forth toward the
-picture; his other, as the Doctor noticed, rested naturally, unostentatiously,
-upon a sacred volume lying upon a table at his
-left, as if he wished to feel in physical touch with that book
-while he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“You ask me what I do in the final resort&mdash;what I do when
-both science and art grow weak and unstable.</p>
-
-<p>“I retire to be alone, take only certain books with me, and
-write, applying the principles I have already experienced as
-true in art to the purest of all forms of reasoning, theology&mdash;religious
-truths scientifically stated. Speaking of and with
-God in nature is the saving, the salvation of my art. The
-impressions I then receive are what you see in my pictures
-and ask me to explain. That is the feeling you recognize and
-the sentiment you appreciate. You see and appreciate precisely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-in accordance with your own experience in personal
-religion, no more, no less. You are part of the truth in unity
-just as I am; we all have the soul for the beautiful, the beautiful
-soul within us. One Father breathed into each man when
-he became a living soul in beauty of mind and spirit. In a
-way, I worship through my paintings.</p>
-
-<p>“I know I have always had this power; all of us, when at
-our best, know we have it in some degree, creative or responsive&mdash;but
-I did not always understand the principles which
-govern it. Science now assures me it is the truth. The unit
-law of impression, you now see, demands the three in one,
-Science, Art, and Communion with the Holy Spirit of Truth,
-God in nature.</p>
-
-<p>“People ask me why I keep on painting, old as I am, and
-I answer: Simply because of a constraining force from beyond
-me, from without, something which lifts me higher and higher
-toward finding the very best forms of truthful expression.
-Of course this development must depend in a measure on
-physical strength and individual endowment. I am obliged to
-watch myself that I do not overwork, and when I grow weary
-of painting then I open the Book&mdash;the Source of Wisdom.
-This gives me the only point of view, except the artistic, which
-interests me&mdash;in fact, art and religion are very closely connected.”</p>
-
-<p>Le Roy ceased speaking and stood thoughtfully before his
-wonderful picture&mdash;verily his masterpiece, in that it rose to
-a height of spiritual suggestion he had not before attained,
-and by means the best he knew. His eyes were fixed upon it,
-and he seemed to become oblivious to his surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>Adele drew near, the Doctor and Paul close behind her; the
-grouping itself was suggestive. The artist-philosopher, mystic
-and artistic; the inquisitive Doctor, sincere and at times
-metaphysical; the practical Paul, true and observing; and
-Adele, an idealist&mdash;all dominated by a landscape utterly devoid
-of figures.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span></p>
-
-<p>A pure landscape. The beholder stood upon a moderate
-elevation, a grove of trees on his left, the branches covering
-the upper part of the canvas. Looking forward, a valley; a
-village nestled below, telling of happy homes and playgrounds,
-and near by the parish church, where the belfry chimes could
-almost be heard. Through openings in the grove and in the
-broader expanse were cultivated fields, and faintly outlined
-was a winding stream meandering off toward the horizon; the
-course of the stream broken by woodlands and far distant
-bluffs, the bluffs lessening to a point in mid-distance, where
-the stream for a time was concealed behind the foliage on its
-banks. As observed by the physical eye trained to seek many
-lines and complicated perspective it was truly a very simple,
-modern subject, embodying little more than elementary drawing.
-But what had this great artist seen by spiritual insight
-dominating his art? What impression had the Spirit that is
-Holy, the Creator with whom he had spoken when alone, revealed
-to him? What had “the candle of the Lord,” within
-himself, illumined?</p>
-
-<p>An early morning, the atmosphere clear and transparent,
-with fleecy clouds pure and chaste, late draperies of the flying
-night, so delicately refined in form and shade, with light and
-shadow, that with the birth of a new day the resurrection
-from the dawn became brilliant with color. Every cloud and
-celestial vista, every hillside, undulation, meadow, stream,
-stone, branch, leaf and leaflet gave its own responsive reflection
-of the Brightness of the Coming. Each diversified form
-was alive with the inspiration caught and expressed by tints
-and hues in the harmony of colors. So brilliant were some
-of the combinations nature had called for, that the artistic
-sense demanded that they should be partly hidden behind the
-darker foliage. A vision of this world as it is, yet looking
-towards something more beautiful, heavenward. Earth idealized
-by the artist’s dream, to a reality too lavish for the
-credulity of ordinary experience. None, unless with the artist<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-(he had seen with the eyes of the Spirit as well as of Science
-and of Art), would have credited the glorious impression
-so simple a landscape could give; therefore the sombre contrast
-had been introduced. The artistic sense had controlled the
-flight of imagination, and deeper shadows told each beholder
-to look within and complete the scenes from his own experience.
-Let us approach more closely, and go with the artist
-nearer to the inner recesses of the heart of nature.</p>
-
-<p>Among the shadows what had the Spirit suggested? “The
-place whereon thou standest is Holy Ground.”</p>
-
-<p>The beholders are upon an elevation, and close at hand in
-the subdued light a group of trees, modestly conspicuous
-among others in the grove. Vines encircle and climb their
-trunks, and blossoms glorify the branches on either side. The
-central vine is more luxuriant than the others, and its flowers,
-tinged with a roseate glow, much akin to flesh tints in nature.</p>
-
-<p>The vine and its branches are waving in the wind; they
-take graceful forms and scatter blossoms at the beholders’
-feet. To every lover of nature and weary one who seeks repose
-it is a vision of beauty and rest now, and a promise of
-rest to come.</p>
-
-<p>The artist seemed especially fond of this feature in his
-work; his eyes repeatedly reverted from the glorious coloring
-he had given to the sky and the heavens above, to this notable
-detail in shadow.</p>
-
-<p>“May I ask what flower you intend to suggest?” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“A passion vine. It climbs aloft among the ordinary forest
-trees; some life-plants grow at its feet; the Rose of Sharon
-is in bloom among the shrubs, and I leave to your imagination
-the lilies-of-the-valley in the grass beneath. One of my impressions
-when alone was, that a cross might have once stood in
-such a place in the years gone by, when the mount was bare
-and bleak; since then nature has shown her constant kindness,
-for she abhors the void of bleakness and barrenness in
-such a place, and has covered the mount with lovely foliage.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-But the vision, the sight and the site of the cross remain;
-you may find the suggestion here&mdash;it upholds the vine and the
-branches, and the flowers are cradled in its arms.</p>
-
-<p>“The cross is conceived as in bloom; and to me all the
-beauty is greatly enhanced by one precious significance&mdash;the
-same light in nature which so brilliantly illumines the celestial
-cloud vistas also gives the roseate tint to the flowers upon the
-cross.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>“That is ‘a creation’&mdash;by the artist,” meditated Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Through nature, looking upward,” remarked Paul, pensive.</p>
-
-<p>“The crucifixion itself is marvellously beautiful,” said the
-Doctor, “when portrayed in landscape without a figure upon
-the scene. How great is genius in art, if it is endowed with a
-gift for spiritual impressions.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele put her arm in Paul’s as they walked along, pondering
-over what they had seen. “The Cross in bloom, illumined
-by the Light of the World. The Divine in Art has both sought
-and spoken the Word.” She thought of how the artist had
-searched the Book of Wisdom; and she recalled what had long
-since been written therein about such Words spoken in nature
-and in history: “They are they which testify of Me.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXIII">XXIII<br />
-<span class="fs80">OLYMPUS&mdash;COURT FESTIVITIES</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">SAILING down the Adriatic, the Ionian Isles finally rose
-above the bosom of the sea; before them lay modern
-Greece, with its landscape and atmosphere still populated
-with the legendary divinities of ancient times. Mrs.
-Cultus adjusted her eye-glasses to catch first glimpse of
-Olympus, evidently under the impression that the Mountain
-of the Gods towered over Greece much as Fuji Yama does
-over Japan. She found it did, but not precisely as she had
-anticipated.</p>
-
-<p>As to Adele and Paul, they were becoming more susceptible
-to impressions subtle, if not mystical, than ever before. Being
-in the region of the old-time divinities the influence of those
-deities at the Court of Olympus, whose especial duty was to
-direct love affairs, began to be felt. So potent was this influence
-that the lovers became intensely absorbed in watching for
-Aphrodite, lest she might rise from the sea at any turn of
-the tide. They had heard how, in modern times, she often
-arose at other points than Cyprus.</p>
-
-<p>As the vessel proceeded southward, a new Olympus was constantly
-discovered and pointed out. This was great sport to
-Miss Winchester; such an accommodating guide-book
-mountain she had not before encountered.</p>
-
-<p>“How many mountain resorts does our present Zeus keep
-up?” asked she of the Captain, a jolly sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, wherever you see storm clouds around the highlands,
-there’s some fun going on.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Any court festivities, any Apollo bands or musical sands
-to entertain Court circles?”</p>
-
-<p>“Apollo is not popular at this season&mdash;since rag-time came
-in, the lyrique and doggerel have gone out&mdash;the old accompaniment
-was too sleepy.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I must hear Orpheus on a lute, or Pan give a toot.”</p>
-
-<p>“Orpheus played last at a ball game,” said the Captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Too dulcet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not enough wood wind and brassy; the boys said too
-lugubrious. They came to play ball, not to shed tears.”</p>
-
-<p>“And poor Orpheus?”</p>
-
-<p>“Went off with an organ grinder; now his name only appears
-on Club letter paper and headings for concert programmes.
-He manages to get into print, but he never plays.”</p>
-
-<p>“How discouraging to art and musicians! Alas! alas!
-But apropos of games, what is the popular athletic sport now-a-days
-around Olympus?”</p>
-
-<p>“Chasing quinine pills&mdash;a caddy holds the pills. You take
-the pills and then chase ’em ‘over the hills and far away.’”</p>
-
-<p>“For the health, I presume?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course; the discus has gone out, but this later game
-makes more discussion than the discus ever did. Golf goes
-first-rate in Greek costume. You ought to see it. Scotchmen
-outdone.”</p>
-
-<p>“How about ‘events’&mdash;athletic events?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, events always occur in the Stadium.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bless me, how exciting! But it sounds very stationary.”</p>
-
-<p>“The victor generally does feel puffed up,” said the Captain.
-“During the last Olympiad a local divinity came down (from
-up the country) and accumulated such centrifugal force in
-running that he flew off to Thermopylæ or Marathon, some
-outside place or other, caught hold of the post there, swung
-himself round and slid into the Stadium in fine style.”</p>
-
-<p>“What honors did he receive&mdash;laurel or oak wreath?”</p>
-
-<p>“Think it was fig leaves,” remarked the sailor Captain, “but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-I am not sure. At any rate he was a hero. The town gave him
-free entrance to all the beer saloons for life, a new pair of
-sandals with wings and honors galore.”</p>
-
-<p>“How appreciative! Discriminating public!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! His name was engraved in the most honorable place
-possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“How was that?”</p>
-
-<p>“At the foot of the list of victors from B. C. 1776, or thereabouts,
-to A. D. 1896. He can no doubt stand the honor, but
-I doubt about the beer.”</p>
-
-<p>“May I ask his name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Name&mdash;his name&mdash;let me see, what was his name? It
-escapes me just at present. I’ll ask the steward some time,
-he’s up in such things,” and the Captain went off to superintend
-the passage of his vessel through the narrow channel
-between the islands and the mainland.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s modern fame!” thought Miss Winchester. “After
-winning an Olympiad, to be labeled No. 3672, approx., name
-forgotten and soon marked ‘Unknown.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXIV">XXIV<br />
-<span class="fs80">THE GODS INTERFERE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">WHILE in the vicinity of Olympus it was, of course,
-quite natural for the gods to take an interest in
-Adele and Paul at this critical period in their
-affairs. They had heard of Adele as an Idyl&mdash;and assumed
-her to be an interesting, romantic and possibly poetic little
-creature, and in their old-time way of looking at things were
-far from imagining what a modern American Idyl might have
-become.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus in turn also had her own ideal. “Those Grecian
-gods,” said she, “are so frightfully anthro-popo&mdash;something,
-I forget the exact word, but it means meddlesome men. If I
-had my way we would leave this place at once. Who is Aphrodite,
-anyhow? I thought Venus was the most popular at
-Olympus. Oh, dear, my Greek is awfully rusty. I wish I had
-a copy of Took’s&mdash;good old Took’s Pantheon was full of such
-things.”</p>
-
-<p>Now, unfortunately for Mrs. Cultus, her flippant words
-flew upwards. They were heard in Olympus by the great
-Aphrodite herself, ever one of the most influential of the
-Twelve Court Divinities. Hearing herself referred to in this
-trivial manner she determined to prove to this modern woman
-her potency, and that too by hastening events before madame
-and daughter could escape from her realm. The campaign
-opened at once.</p>
-
-<p>Aphrodite whispered in Adele’s ear to be sure to make herself
-attractive to Paul, especially in personal appearance, for
-he was acutely sensitive to certain impressions just at that
-time.</p>
-
-<p>Adele’s natural instincts would no doubt have taught her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-that much, but as she was under the brow of Olympus it is
-better to call natural instincts and some other forces in nature
-by their proper names.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate Adele was thus affected, using every natural
-womanly effort to make herself agreeable, and Paul responded
-with a keen sense of appreciation. If Adele expressed a desire
-to stroll on deck, Paul cleared the deck to give plenty of room;
-if she wished to rest after a promenade he hurried to bring
-two chairs, one in either hand; if she said the night was dark,
-he said “ebony;” and if she expressed admiration for the
-heavenly moonlight he was ready to agree they were together
-in a Paradise.</p>
-
-<p>Things would have worked admirably if some of the deities
-other than Aphrodite and some busybodies who hang around
-Courts and courting in general had not further interfered.
-Juno the Jealous and Diana the Golf-player, both Roman
-divinities visiting Zeus and his consort Hera, conceived the
-idea that the course-links in the game Adele and Paul were
-playing were entirely too smooth for real life, and it was
-astonishing how many of the lesser dignitaries with their
-relations came to the same conclusion. Complications at once
-arose, since all were in the secret.</p>
-
-<p>Juno promptly stirred up Boreas, whose special domain was
-a little farther round the coast in the Ægean Sea, inciting
-him to blow great guns which reverberated from shore to shore
-across the billows. This in turn ruffled up Neptune, and in
-consequence there was a tremendous commotion in the roadstead
-where the steamer lay. Neptune’s venerable locks shone
-like white-caps in all directions at once.</p>
-
-<p>As to Adele, she admired the sea in commotion and Paul
-agreed it was “the most magnificent spectacle.” Adele thought
-she could stand the movement, in fact did at first, until the
-united efforts of Boreas and Neptune acting simultaneously
-produced a very peculiar motion of the vessel, and a diversity
-of feelings so complicated within herself that she naturally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-took to her state-room on short notice. Paul at once pronounced
-the weather “beastly,” and the previous magnificence
-took flight on the wings of the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Now, with all these divinities conspiring against her,
-Adele’s resemblance to her mother was certainly brought into
-prominence as never before, and all the romance of her nature
-seemed to vanish.</p>
-
-<p>Adele in her state-room: “It is a physical impossibility to
-look well, much less be agreeable, when things are tossing
-about in this frightful way. Where’s my trunk?” and as she
-reached down to open it, the trunk slid across the room. Alas,
-too late! When she raised her head a new sensation.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what’s that? Oh, dear, what a peculiar pain! Call
-the steward, somebody. Steward, steward!”</p>
-
-<p>Enter steward. “Yes, ma’am.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m miserable, steward.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ma’am, take tea and toast and a little porridge.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele, sharply: “Go for Miss Winchester at once, steward.
-Tell her I’m&mdash;I’m&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, ma’am.”</p>
-
-<p>Enter Miss Winchester. “Awful sorry you feel so upset,
-Adele. What can I do for you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never felt so collapsed in my life,” moaned the sufferer.
-“Now, tell me, Frank, shall I really die of this or not? Really,
-I couldn’t stand a joke!” Miss Winchester smiled when she
-perceived this universal symptom.</p>
-
-<p>“No joke? Not even an antique in Greece, good yet? You
-know what Ulysses said when he passed this way: ‘You fear
-you will, then fear you won’t, and don’t’; that’s what he
-thought, I’m sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank Winchester, you’re positively heartless! You make
-me feel like throwing both you and Ulysses through that port-hole.
-Oh, dear, dear! How badly I do feel!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester did what she could to quiet matters. “No,
-Adele, you certainly won’t die on purpose, not just yet.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Frank, what an awful thing to say, when you know
-it’s really so critical;” then musing as if of unutterable
-things, “what will Paul think of me?”</p>
-
-<p>Now Paul, as luck would have it, was constitutionally opposed
-to seasickness even in the roughest weather; and as for
-Adele she had never before been so badly affected. “Owing
-to too much ‘Egyptian Delight’ and dates,” said Miss Winchester,
-feeling her pulse.</p>
-
-<p>Paul thought the trouble would prove merely a trivial
-matter on Adele’s part. If he had suspected how miserable
-she really felt he would have acted differently, but being a
-veritable tease at times, he sent her, by Miss Winchester, the
-following verses from a newspaper clipping “for consolation.”</p>
-
-<p>Frank proceeded to console Adele by reading these newspaper
-verses:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="center">I</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“In the steamer, oh, my darling!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">When the fog horns shriek and blow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the footsteps of the stewards</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Softly come and softly go;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When the passengers are moaning</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With a deep and heartfelt woe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Will you think of me and love me</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As you did a week ago?</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse center">II</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“In the cabin, oh, my darling!</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Think not bitterly of me,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tho’ I rushed away and left you</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In the middle of our tea;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I was seized with sudden longing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Wished to gaze upon the sea,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">It was best to leave you thus, dear,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Best for you and best for me.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span></p>
-<p>“In the gloaming,” said Frank, and finished with a deep
-sigh. Adele looked unutterable things. “Best keep Paul out
-of my presence&mdash;to send me such stuff, and just now, too!”
-The vessel gave an awful lurch, and a tumbler broke in falling.
-“Oh, Frank, I feel those terrible twists again! Is that
-awful propeller still at it?&mdash;it feels just that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will soon untwist, dear&mdash;don’t mind; think of the consolation
-in those lovely verses.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never speak to him again!” said Adele&mdash;“never!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, you will, and before the moon sets.” Miss Winchester
-was thinking of other lovers’ quarrels in her experience.</p>
-
-<p>“Moon!” exclaimed Adele. “If this continues there’ll be no
-moon and I will be a lunatic. I have a thunder-gust headache.”</p>
-
-<p>Frank bathed her temples with cologne.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, how delicious that is! It’s so kind of you, Frank.
-The Doctor would say your hand is sympathetic; I think it’s
-you, Frank. How much better I should feel if this ship would
-only keep still one minute, just one minute, half a minute,
-quarter of a&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right, dear, go to sleep,” and Miss Winchester
-kissed her on the forehead as she slept.</p>
-
-<p>And while she slept, one should remember the season when
-these events occurred&mdash;during the early autumn, the period
-when summer changes and a purer radiancy obtains in nature.
-The compensations of age in the year supplied the “unthought-of
-deficiencies of an ardent past.”</p>
-
-<p>Luna, the Italian goddess, was also visiting Olympus at
-this time. She was behind a cloud during the pranks of
-Boreas and Neptune, but overheard the conversation between
-Adele and Miss Winchester, and her appeal to Adele that the
-lovers’ quarrel should be settled before she sank beneath the
-horizon touched her pride as a goddess. Luna was generally
-considered cold and purely philosophic and at times artistic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-in relation to lovers, but when in her march across the heavens
-her pride and power were touched or called in question, she
-could see very clearly and influence coming events with great
-force. In fact all the tides in mundane revolutions were
-affected by Luna.</p>
-
-<p>Being a great personal friend of Aphrodite, the two goddesses
-put their heads together and approached Zeus. The
-very sight of two such exquisitely beautiful creatures of his
-own creation, embodying both philosophy and love in league
-towards one accomplishment, proved eminently effective.
-Their anthropomorphous paternal progenitor, as usual, listened
-to their request and granted it, his reason for so doing
-being markedly paternal in its character. In order to keep
-peace in the family while strangers were looking on, Zeus
-directed Neptune to cease his uproarious behavior, and sent
-Zephyr to take the place of Boreas. Zephyr, well known as
-the mildest and gentlest of the sylvan deities, was only too
-glad of the opportunity to take his family for an outing at the
-seaside. He and the little Zephyrs played with ripples on the
-waves like children enjoying themselves on the beach, while
-Mrs. Zephyr waved the tree branches to and fro when fanning
-herself in a hammock beneath. Thus, while Boreas scudded
-off with the heavy clouds from above, the Zephyr family
-wafted in gentle and delicious breezes below.</p>
-
-<p>Luna looked down, smiling at intervals between clouds, at
-the result of her visit to Zeus, and her open countenance,
-often mistaken for that of a man, assumed the likeness of a
-cameo goddess.</p>
-
-<p>While this went on Paul, on deck, was watching the heavens
-clearing after the storm, the breaking away of the clouds, the
-falling of the wind, the quieting of the sea. Through rifts
-in the sombre sky he caught glimpses of a silvery glow in the
-mysterious depths, the glow became a radiancy, and darker
-clouds hurried by in troops, their places taken by delicate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>
-draperies, gauze-like, upon which the silvery light played in
-form of a halo.</p>
-
-<p>This celestial scenery riveted Paul’s attention. As the last
-shadow-cloud passed away the gauze-like draperies also receded
-from view, as a veil withdrawn from before a beautiful face.</p>
-
-<p>Luna of Italy&mdash;Queen of the Night&mdash;shone forth.</p>
-
-<p>Paul, keenly susceptible and appreciative, became absorbed
-in admiration, but such his mood at this time that never before
-had he been so affected by the moon’s glory.</p>
-
-<p>“Our harvest moon at home,” thought he, “the merrymaking
-moon for lads and lassies, so they say. I like it better for
-yachting; no, I don’t, either;&mdash;the cozy twosing moon when
-one feels like confiding after the day’s work is done. Yes, I
-feel just that way&mdash;in some one we love best: Yes, I think so,
-too. The moon which settles things before the winter comes
-on&mdash;the moon&mdash;the&mdash;confound it! that moon knows entirely
-too much! let me think for myself.” He imagined he heard a
-whisper putting his secret longings into words, and telling
-him he ought not to live alone&mdash;that is to say, not enjoying
-this moon alone&mdash;no! And off he started, as if something very
-urgent suggested itself.</p>
-
-<p>It was Aphrodite who had whispered to him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXV">XXV<br />
-<span class="fs80">APHRODITE RISES FROM THE SEA</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">IN the meantime the quieting of the sea had produced a
-most beneficial effect upon Adele. Thanks to the kind
-ministrations of her mother and Miss Winchester, the
-thunder-gust headache had passed away as suddenly as it
-came. The steward entered again to open the port-holes in
-her state-room; a delicious breeze, soft and balmy, entered,
-most refreshing.</p>
-
-<p>“How quickly the storm has passed,” said Adele to her
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, my child, and you had better leave this stuffy state-room
-as quickly as possible. I feel sure you will recover as
-soon as you breathe the invigorating air.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had a whiff just now.”</p>
-
-<p>“These coast storms are very fussy while they last,” said
-Mamma, “but I suppose ’twill be like all those along the
-Riviera; we often had superb nights following terrible gusts.
-You had better get up, Adele.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think it safe to venture?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not the slightest risk, not the slightest. I’ll ask your
-father to have the chair ready; you can take his arm at first.”</p>
-
-<p>The soft, balmy air was again wafted in through the port,
-and passed with healing touch over Adele’s cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“How delicious that is,” and she repeated the line:</p>
-
-<p class="center pb1">“Soft as downy zephyrs are.”</p>
-
-<p>Why Adele used the word zephyrs instead of pillows, Zeus
-only knows;&mdash;it must have been Zeus, not Aphrodite, for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-latter seldom troubled herself about either zephyrs or garments;
-and yet the association of ideas aroused in the mind of
-her mother by Adele’s talking about zephyrs was most potent
-in results.</p>
-
-<p>“That reminds me, Adele, I have a zephyr-shawl that is just
-the very thing. I’ll go and get it,” and off she hurried.</p>
-
-<p>In the passage outside she met Paul, also in haste, and they
-stumbled over one another.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m after a shawl for Adele; she ought to be on deck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! just what I think,” said Paul, enchanted to find matters
-already so favorable.</p>
-
-<p>“Her father will bring her up.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be delighted; let me.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thanks very much; but, no, it’s not at all necessary,”
-probably thinking of her daughter’s appearance. “But you
-may arrange her chair in some protected place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Better than ever,” thought Paul. “I’ll find it; a first-class
-protection, to suit us all round.”</p>
-
-<p>When Mrs. Cultus put the shawl around her daughter’s
-shoulders and mentioned incidentally that Paul was arranging
-things for her on deck, Adele had a violent revulsion of
-feeling. Still thinking of those trashy verses Paul had sent
-her, she felt little disposition to meet him; then noticed again
-how stuffy was the air of the state-room; then her mother
-insisted.</p>
-
-<p>“But those verses, mother!”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind poetry,” said Mrs. Cultus, laughing. “Think
-of what you’ve done in that line yourself. You’re just like me.
-I did it,” and her mother shook all over with amusement.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you laughing at?”&mdash;Adele serious.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, my dear, you’ve been singing verses about ‘doves’
-and ‘loves,’ and ‘toujours’ and ‘amours’ ever since you began
-singing lessons. If I believed half of what you’ve sung in
-public, I would not know what to think. Never mind poetry,
-verses don’t count. Now go on deck.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It was half Frank’s fault, anyhow,” mused Adele, “to read
-me such stuff when I felt so wretched. Never mind, I’ll have
-a good crow to pick with Paul when I get him alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Aphrodite also laughed&mdash;one of her most bewitching ripples
-of laughter&mdash;when she overheard Adele’s last conclusion, and
-promptly sent for her accomplished son, Eros.</p>
-
-<p>Eros was a youngster, at least in appearance, but very precocious.
-Like his father, the ancient Hermes (Mercury), he
-was very quick in his movements, and affected considerable
-style in his undress, for a divinity. He even appeared wearing
-a collar, with the very latest style of neck-tie, a cordon of
-blue ribbon over his shoulder instead of a belt around his
-waist; which fact often troubled artists and “fotographers”
-when they took his “picture.” Being thus ultra, he carried
-at times a torch, then again bow and arrows, in lieu of a walking
-stick; and sometimes put the name “Cupid” on his visiting
-cards, because he said it sounded “cute.” The modern
-divinities elsewhere, as well as at Olympus, were much divided
-in their opinions about this Eros-Cupid, “modern-antique.”
-Some said he was a good boy; others, the most mischievous
-little urchin that was to be found sporting around the Mount
-of the Gods; some contended that the mischief he wrought
-showed him to be a charming little elf with his mother’s dimples
-and ripples of laughter. Later, some foreigners dubbed
-him Puck, but he was never so designated at Olympus, never,
-not even by his mother; only by those who never ate apples,
-the apples of discord, nor sported with him in the Gardens
-of Hesperides.</p>
-
-<p>Cupid, himself, however, when among the Romans generally
-followed their example and called her Venus, which he
-never did in Greece. The Greeks would have been shocked;
-they were artistic and saw nothing improper, even under the
-electric lightning-lights of Olympus; the Romans merely
-commonplace, practical, useful. It was rumored, however,
-that the pair of them, Aphrodite and Eros, did work together,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-as Venus and Cupid even in Greece, on the sly as it were,
-when Juno was off with her swans, and Diana gone out fishing;
-beg pardon, it was hunting in those days, fishing came
-in later.</p>
-
-<p>On this occasion Eros appeared in due time, obedient to his
-mother’s call. But, marvellous to relate, in appearance quite
-different from what Aphrodite had expected. He became
-visible in his most ancient Greek garb, his aspect the Beauty
-of Youth. He bore a flaming torch which Zeus had given him,
-the torch with which he had been armed from the beginning
-of human experience, the torch which was lighted in the
-Garden of Eden. The most youth-full as well as ancient of
-all the divinities approached. From remote ages he had been
-known to exist in some form, not only as an epiphany or an
-apparition of youthful life and beauty, but more than this, far
-more: the personification of the principle of union among the
-disunited elements of the world, drawn together by that “enthusiastic
-congeniality of spirit” which is the basis of all true
-love; potent among human kind as the power which operates
-for that sincere friendship which continues and develops, ever
-ascending through the domain of mutual respect and regard,
-into the glorious realm of devotion, self-sacrifice. This, the
-purity of union among human kind, the purity of marriage,
-the birth of souls, the realm of Immortal Youth.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the unexpected aspect of Eros when he first appeared;
-and such the significance of his presence.</p>
-
-<p>Being a divinity, in the old Greek sense of the term, that
-is to say, a personification of the natural forces and instincts
-and passions, he could not appear reasonably in other garb or
-aspect at this time, when active in relation to the affairs of
-such a one as Adele Cultus, an Idyl, an ideal girl.</p>
-
-<p>Upon Adele, in modern times, the same forces of nature
-were still operative as they had ever been since the beginning.
-Adele, too, possessed the divine spark or flame, within her, as
-given by her Creator Father, and she was both lovely and lovable.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-Paul adored her for her beauty of character, and her
-youthful form as <em>he</em> saw it; and her devotion to the truth as
-they <em>both</em> saw it; <ins class="corr" id="tn163" title="Transcriber’s Note—“the true union, earthly, heavenly, etrenal” changed to “the true union, earthly, heavenly, eternal”.">the true union, earthly, heavenly, eternal</ins>.</p>
-
-<p>Alas, that such a divinity or personification, this original,
-ancient Eros, should ever have been dethroned by others less
-spiritual than Adele; dethroned, aye, dragged down from the
-lofty pedestal, the rock of ages; and his torch of flame become
-but an urn of ashes to be scattered by every vagrant wind; he,
-himself, in time, represented as a thoughtless wayward child,
-often as a wanton sporting with bows and arrows as if at play;
-and forcing himself where no true affection exists, not even
-regard. His unhappy victims deluded, and wandering in a
-region of shadows where the light ever grows more dim; alas!
-forever failing to enter the realm of Immortal Youth, the
-realm illumined by the unfailing radiance of true love.</p>
-
-<p>Yet such are the vicissitudes involving changes and irregularities
-in mortal experience, especially in connection with the
-materialistic tendencies of modern times, that the original
-aspect of Eros has suffered, as with many other similar conceptions.
-His aspect only, not the natural forces which he
-personified; hence, in relation to Adele, the truth in Eros remained
-untouched, whereas, his interview with Aphrodite in
-this case certainly did illustrate the deterioration which had
-overtaken the region of Olympus since so many of the old
-divinities have fallen from their pedestals.</p>
-
-<p>The Eros of the ancient Greeks could no longer retain his
-lofty attitude and position amid modern requirements, and
-his behavior in this instance certainly did demonstrate the
-deterioration. He became, in aspect only, by various stages,
-the versatile modern imp, Cupid, the Cupid now so often represented
-as blindfolded, or even blind; and with or without
-wings when used for decorative purposes. In fact, he might
-easily be mistaken for an all-day-vaudeville performer, or a
-cherub brought up upon the latest cereal, so little is left of the
-original mythological divinity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span></p>
-
-<p>As before noted, Eros responded promptly to his mother’s
-call, his appearance as it had been in the beginning.</p>
-
-<p>Aphrodite was struck with amazement, it had been so long
-since she had seen him in that guise. It recalled to her the
-early Grecian period, soon after she herself had risen, born
-by the forces of nature from the foam of the sea at Cyprus;
-of the time when Eros (Amor) and the Graces were ever in
-her train, and she herself the deity of reproduction and love;
-of the time when the myrtle, the rose, and the apple were especially
-sacred to her, and the dove, the swan and certain other
-animals were symbolic of her activities. And she looked upon
-him with affection.</p>
-
-<p>“Eros! Oh, Eros! my lovely boy! son of my youth!” and
-her voice failed. Overwhelmed by surging memories, some
-time elapsed before she could again speak.</p>
-
-<p>“How long, Eros! how long since thou camest to me as
-now?”</p>
-
-<p>Eros knelt before her as if to receive her blessing.</p>
-
-<p>Verily, no Phidias, or Praxiteles, among the ancients, could
-have worshiped by means of the sacred art of their day, and
-found a better subject to crystallize in form for the good of
-future generations, than this, an Olympian Madonna, a son at
-his mother’s knee. Maternal love and the responsive trust
-and veneration of Youth.</p>
-
-<p>The nearer approach of Eros naturally brought his torch
-in closer proximity. Its brilliancy became dazzling, in fact
-blinding to eyes long since unused to its power.</p>
-
-<p>Aphrodite, conscious only of the physical inconvenience,
-placed her hand before her face as if to shade the eyes. This
-was enough for Eros, he placed his torch upon a tripod at
-greater distance, where it remained, so near and yet so far;
-so subtle are the adverse influences when the physical becomes
-dominant over the spiritual.</p>
-
-<p>And instantly the natural consequence:</p>
-
-<p>Eros separated from his torch was no longer the same. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-had entered the shadows; his aspect at once changed. His
-form, still exquisite to behold, was like sculptured marble,
-faultless in outline, yet without the flesh tint, the warmth of
-color; complete except the illuminating flame which Zeus had
-given him.</p>
-
-<p>Aphrodite still gazed with admiration, but, alas! strange to
-say, his aspect having become more familiar to present conditions
-and himself speechless, she also said nothing; and Eros
-continued to manifest the beauty of form alone.</p>
-
-<p>And again the natural consequence:</p>
-
-<p>Aphrodite had called him for a purpose, and must talk with
-him; must cause the exquisite form to manifest life, the
-statue must respond. And she called him anew:</p>
-
-<p>“Eros! Oh, Eros! why not speak? Come to me from amid
-those shadows! Eros! answer!”</p>
-
-<p>Alas, no response.</p>
-
-<p>And again she called him.</p>
-
-<p>He was but a stone.</p>
-
-<p>And again, for the third time.</p>
-
-<p>No response possible.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Yet while she waited, a profound and thrilling change did
-take place, both in form and expression. Not that Eros
-spake, but his form manifested a movement or evolution towards
-another phase of his nature. So impressive had he been
-as a statue of divine suggestion, that many a Greek would have
-placed him within the precincts of a sacred temple as most
-appropriate locality for his abode. Once there, his heavenly
-youth would serve to uplift the hearts of all who beheld him.
-Once so conceived, any religion might have felt enriched from
-an artistic point of view, to possess him among the treasures
-of the sacred enclosure, as a symbol of the countless babes
-within the heavenly realm; for “of such is the Kingdom of
-Heaven.”</p>
-
-<p>And so Eros now appeared, as a mediæval cherub, a concomitant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-to a sacred picture. His religious aspect still apparent,
-but now as accessory; and often represented only as “head
-and wings,” gazing upwards.</p>
-
-<p>And still he was silent; significant, but silent.</p>
-
-<p>To Aphrodite he seemed as one fading away from her forever,
-to be lost amid enveloping clouds; possibly to be appropriated
-by other worshipers than those who frequented
-Olympus. And such would have been the case if the torch of
-Zeus, ever radiant, so near and yet so far, had not still cast
-some light upon the scene. To Aphrodite, Eros was still hers,
-of her, and from her, by whatever name he might be addressed;
-and who more potent than she to call him by any
-name she chose, any endearing term that sprang from her
-heart?</p>
-
-<p>“Eros, my own! Eros, my darling! My cherub! surely
-you wish not to offend me, and rest gazing at others. Cupid!
-speak!”</p>
-
-<p>She had called him by his later and modern name; and
-again the natural consequence, the final change. Of course he
-spoke. Being what he was as Cupid in modern conception,
-he could not do otherwise, he could not avoid conversation.
-Also, his youthful wings commenced to flutter; and his beauty,
-never lost since the beginning, made him, from the worldly
-point of view, adorable.</p>
-
-<p>But, alas! not as Eros, simply the modern fascinating
-Cupid. Sad, also! no longer the Aphrodite of early times,
-but the Roman Venus still in vogue; Venus who at once asserted
-herself by giving orders to her attendant Cherub. The
-Cherub carried his bow and arrows, and the torch of Zeus
-grew very dim as Venus spake:</p>
-
-<p>“Cupid! you certainly are clever! but you gave me such a
-shock! I thought you never would wake up, or speak to me
-again!”</p>
-
-<p>The Cherub fluttered about her person not unlike a butterfly
-to fascinate by graceful movement; the poetry of motion,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-an admirable motif for decoration; activity, new sensations;
-no more, no less.</p>
-
-<p>“Cupid! if ever that occurs again, you will be caught and
-imprisoned, imprisoned within a picture gallery, and there
-you will remain. Zeus help you! Naughty boy!”</p>
-
-<p>The beautiful winged youth, the spritely Cupid, at once
-answered:</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll girdle the earth in forty minutes. Catch me, who
-catch can.”</p>
-
-<p>Venus smiled. Some would have thought this smile “bewitching,”
-others could have called her expression “a cynical
-smile.” But it soon faded away, and in no degree prevented
-her proceeding at once to the object of their interview.</p>
-
-<p>“Cupid! there is going to be an engagement.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! then the fight comes later on,” remarked the precocious
-Sprite.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you ready?”</p>
-
-<p>“Always ready,” and as if to suit the action to the word,
-he fluttered in graceful curves, and finally, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en passant</i>, kissed
-her upon the cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“Good. I see you are! You may amuse yourself with bow
-and arrows when the time comes.”</p>
-
-<p>“May I respectfully inquire when this momentous engagement
-is to transpire?”</p>
-
-<p>“When you see me&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Do what, my Lady Venus?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rise from the sea, and give the usual signal.”</p>
-
-<p>The confab ended for the present. Lady Venus and Cupid
-understood each other perfectly.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A moonlit night and zephyrs wafted in; an easy chair, and
-no one looking on. Two in shadow, gazing upon legendary
-Greece; talking mythology such as they alone could understand;
-feeling fluctuations of quite another kind.</p>
-
-<p>A convalescent lassie, and a sympathizing lad, old friends<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-for at least a year, it seemed as if from childhood. A timely
-aid, and a grateful maid; compliments in words, and nature’s
-complementary. A man’s stout heart, and a woman’s tender
-sympathy, sincerity and truth.</p>
-
-<p>The conditions were favorable.</p>
-
-<p>What else?</p>
-
-<p>A secret, a secret to all but Cupid who stood behind a
-celestial-rose bush on the heights nearby, his bow and arrows
-ready. An event not to be seen by the binoculars of newsy
-gossips, nor even perceived by the mental eyes of inquisitives.
-All is left to the spiritual discernment of those who have loved.</p>
-
-<p>What actually occurred during that heavenly evening when
-they drifted upon the bosom of the Adriatic, when the stars
-shone brightly or when cloud-draperies hid some endearing
-charm, can only fully be known to two (and the divinities),
-these two nature’s lovely, lovable and loved. But sure it is,
-before the evening closed, Aphrodite again arose from the
-sea, a Vision of Loveliness. Gliding by in her graceful shell,
-floating amid foam on the crest of a wave, illumined by a
-divine radiance, she threw a kiss of affection, the signal. And
-from behind the celestial-rose bush sped Love’s Arrow, borne
-upon the wings of the unseen. As this sweet messenger enters
-the hearts of those ready to respond, so it was welcomed by
-Adele and Paul, reclining beneath the brow of Olympus.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXVI">XXVI<br />
-<span class="fs80">INTERMEZZO&mdash;ALLEGRO</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">OH, that voyage! From the brow of Olympus, across the
-Mediterranean, down the Roseate Sea, the two lovers
-journeyed. As they skirted the shore, never did
-delicate tints upon a sapphire surface give back more heavenly
-reflections! Those sunny days, under double awnings, when
-none dared look at a thermometer lest he himself should melt
-away. Those first-magnitude starlit nights when sleeping on
-deck, with glimpses of others passing like spooks in the dark;
-and in the distance, on “P. and O.” boats, the invisible friends
-known to be there.</p>
-
-<p>The last glimpse of Boreas was in a storm brewing off in
-the direction of the Ægean Sea. Some thought they saw him
-in propria-persona, gesticulating upon the high cliffs of Candia
-as the vessel sailed by in the teeth of the wind, but this
-individual proved to be merely a Turkish brigand, one of the
-gang which infested that region.</p>
-
-<p>But are not all such minor incidents already recorded in
-the chronicles of the Cultus family for publication in future
-genealogical records? How at Alexandria the Doctor took
-little interest in the modern city upon the island of Pharos,
-but much interest in the Ancient Library with no books left!
-How, since said Library was destroyed some time ago, Paul
-and Adele managed to reconstruct a brand new temple with
-lamps, incense, and priests&mdash;all complete, to say nothing of
-singing birds, and vestal virgins each carrying a sieve instead
-of a lamp! How Miss Winchester met the Four Hundred<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-élite of Alexandria at the base of Pompey’s Pillar, and was
-kodaked by Paul with the four hundred gamins at her feet,
-asking for backsheesh; this historic picture labeled, “Hypatia
-Addressing the Multitude. A. D. MDCCCLXXXXIX.”
-How Mrs. Cultus took in the situation from a barouche, positively
-refusing to set foot on the sward of a country famous
-for asps and beetles; and also how Mrs. Cultus announced
-that Cleopatra’s relish for pearls was in good taste, only it
-carried her too far. How the unfortunate noseless Sphynx
-turned up her nose, as usual, at all innocents abroad; and how
-Mrs. Cultus, when entering the memorial bridal chamber of
-Cheops, slipped upon the inclined staircase which leads thereto,
-and fell into the arms of a modern bridegroom&mdash;a young
-sheik. How the Professor stood upon the apex of Cheops and
-took notes, alternate notes upon lichens which grew there, and
-upon Memphis where it once was. Is it not also recorded
-among the archives of modern Egypt how, during the period
-of occupation of Shepherd’s, cards were left in due form upon
-Pharaoh’s mummy in the Boulak Museum; and how
-Mrs. Cultus received in turn a scarab, and some little scarabei,
-of Manchester manufacture, taken from the left pocket of
-Pharaoh’s forty-second cousin, after reposing there since A. D.
-1492 (some said from 4000 B. C.)&mdash;a slight token of regard
-from the Pharonic dynasty to the latest Republic on earth?
-Was it not recorded also at the time, in the society column of
-the “Pyramid Times,” that “Miss Pearline Cultus and Mr.
-Adolph Warder were last seen behind an umbrella on the top
-of the Pyramid with their feet hanging over the top step?”
-probably the most conspicuous perch on the globe for two
-lovers.</p>
-
-<p>And above all, was it not also jotted down in the private
-memoranda of both Paul and Adele, when passing Mocha and
-Perim and Aden, in and out of the gloaming, that the voyage
-was perfect bliss, the coffee&mdash;nectar fit for the gods, and the
-coals of Perim&mdash;black diamonds? As to Aden, the much-abused<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-Aden, said to be separated only by a thin sheet of
-Manila paper from the infernal-region-frying-pan&mdash;such assertions
-proved absolutely false. Aden was a Paradise of
-fruit and flowers, its reservoir like Lake Tahoe, and its inhabitants&mdash;white-robed
-angels with Chinese features, flying
-hither and thither in phantom jinrikishas. Was it not here
-at Aden that Paul had the innocent audacity to open that
-delicious but appalling fruit, the dorian, chopping it with a
-hatchet under their very noses, only to hurl both dorian and
-hatchet into the sea for the delectation of fishes whose noses
-were equal to the occasion? And finally, did not the whole
-party, except Mrs. Cultus, visit Mother Eve at Djeddah, and
-find her the most attenuated specimen of humanity, both
-physically and historically, that anyone could imagine, at
-least forty feet long, aged six millenniums (some say eight or
-nine; possibly seven times seven, or thereabouts), with her toes
-turned up about two feet? And did they not make the astonishing
-discovery which Mrs. Cultus at once reported to the
-Politely Civil Archæological Society, that our own Mother Eve
-was really very dark in complexion; in fact, quite a fast black
-(since local tradition said so, and tradition was invariably
-exact, if not too exact)?&mdash;a case of proving too much; which
-wonderful discovery made them all wonder and debate if they
-themselves, being white at present, might not possibly be
-changed backwards, and revert to original color and type before
-entering Mahomet’s Paradise.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Youth! Oh, Youth! how many are thy pleasures and privileges,
-and thou dost not realize it. Thine the period when all
-things are interesting, new sensations at every turn, and little
-responsibility to interfere with whims. Go to the circus, go
-globe-trotting in an automobile, and take part in the show.
-Oh, Youth! thine is the blessed time of freedom, although
-thou mayst not think so. Thou wilt, no doubt, hear much
-good advice, but follow thine own inclinations, and enjoy the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
-happy privilege of changing thy mind on short notice. Mrs.
-Cultus was no longer youthful, but she held on to the privileges
-just the same.</p>
-
-<p>“I always change my mind, Frank, when it suits me. I
-fully intended to call upon Eva at Djeddah, certainly the first
-lady in the land, even if she were only Mahomet’s wife, and
-not our mutual ancestress; but, Frank, when it turned out
-so midsummer hot, with such a brazen sky, I gave it up. Why,
-Frank Winchester, I wouldn’t appear in the condition you
-were, in that bedraggled gown and hat and felt slippers&mdash;no!
-not if I really wished to call. That’s wisdom, my dear;
-take an elder’s advice. Never hesitate to change your mind,
-especially when it suits you.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXVII">XXVII<br />
-<span class="fs80">INTERMEZZO&mdash;ANDANTE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="pfs80 p0"><em>The Royal Route.</em></p>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">O <em>SCIENCE!</em> How true thou art! How true thou
-strivest to be! Yet, what is not claimed in thy name,
-when few are the golden gems picked up upon the
-limited shore of this single world! We learn of thee, O
-Science! through thee! by thee! but ever when we ask of thee
-the Bread of Life, thou givest us a stone; and when we ask
-for a fish, thou givest us a serpent. From the beginning it
-has been so. Know thyself, O Science! thy finite place. Learn
-even as a little child sitting at the feet of Infinite Knowledge.</p>
-
-<p><em>O Philosophy!</em> How noble thou art, to seek the truth in
-all things as they are; ignoring nothing in nature, in any
-province of thought, word or deed&mdash;in Science or Religion.
-But thou revealest nothing. Thy intellect is finite&mdash;not infinite;
-thy standpoint mortal&mdash;not immortal. Thou art god-like&mdash;but
-not God.</p>
-
-<p><em>O Religion!</em> Thou Voice of the Mind of Nature! of Our
-Almighty-Father, Creator; accepting all of Truth in Science
-and Philosophy; yet, ever speaking of a higher and better
-life, here and hereafter. How many untruths have been
-spoken in Thy name, even spoken as <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ex cathedra</i>, taking Thy
-name in vain; yet, verily none can escape Thee, Thyself, O
-Thou Holy Spirit of Truth in Love, in the heart of Humanity&mdash;Immanuel,
-God with us!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXVIII">XXVIII<br />
-<span class="fs80">THE AFTERGLOW</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">AGAIN the shores had vanished, this time Europe left
-behind, and the Orient lifting before them. It was
-after the sun had plunged beneath the waves, and
-the distance was illumined with the afterglow; when the
-Parsee matrons had retired to rest, publicly, upon the saloon
-floors, and some mysterious figures re-entered to recline on
-deck in awkward pose, with crooked necks against chairs and
-skylights, that Paul and Adele also glided forward, past captain
-and capstan, to their favorite spot. Only the prow of the
-vessel when it mounted the billows, and a spooky lanthorn
-aloft, hung in space between them and the constellations. Together
-they gazed forwards and upwards, listening to the
-thoughts of the stilly night.</p>
-
-<p>“Fond memories for other days,” remarked Adele.</p>
-
-<p>Paul looked round to discover the object supposed to suggest
-memories, and then concluded his chair was not quite
-close enough to hers.</p>
-
-<p>“There it is,” said she, looking toward the constellation
-of the Southern Cross, resplendent in the heavens. “I never
-shall forget it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Beautiful, each star a gem, all gems; but&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot conceive anything more suggestive or more appropriate
-in the heavens than that cross,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“I am yet inclined to think that perhaps Orion is still
-more magnificent.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t let’s make comparisons, Paul. I don’t feel in the
-mood just now; that only spoils our present enjoyment.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right; take things as they are,” and Paul looked
-again at the constellation.</p>
-
-<p>“See those four stars, Adele; they would make an exquisite
-pin. Would you like one in that form?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pin! Please don’t think I care only for trinkets, and at
-such a time as this! Please don’t, it only belittles everything;”
-her voice betraying a slight trace of emotion.</p>
-
-<p>Paul vowed inwardly that he would acquiesce in everything
-she said, so in duty bound endeavored to be philosophic himself.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing like being natural, even when it feels unnatural.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele laughed outright.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Paul, philosophy never did sit well on you; please
-don’t.” Paul felt somewhat subdued, and immediately
-changed the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“What was it you said you wished to ask me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, about being inquisitive. We’re all getting so horribly
-inquisitive that I’ve had a curious experience. I really
-don’t know what I think.”</p>
-
-<p>It was Paul’s turn to laugh. “Oh, that comes from thinking
-too much. Give it up; we’ve got something else on hand
-just now; don’t let’s think.”</p>
-
-<p>This idea seemed to impress Adele rather favorably in her
-present mood, but she could not resist the temptation to continue.</p>
-
-<p>“Paul, I really feel that I must exert my will&mdash;yes, I must
-will that I won’t&mdash;no! I mustn’t won’t anything, that is not
-what I mean. I can’t untangle my thoughts while talking.
-Paul, try to help me; you do the talking.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know exactly what’s the matter with you, Adele; what
-Frank Winchester would call your ‘thinking apparatus’ is a
-little weary, and I have a sure cure&mdash;put it here;” his shoulder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-being very convenient. “Now we can talk without thinking
-or think without talking; just as you please.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele felt safer, and her mind much less disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so very inquisitive,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s perfectly natural,” acquiesced Paul, who was himself
-feeling quite comfortable; “most women, I mean most
-people, are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doctor Wise is,” said Adele. “I like to hear him talk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s the way the wind blows, is it?” exclaimed Paul.
-“I knew you would tell me sooner or later. I know the Doctor
-like a book. He’s the best friend I have in the world; but I’ll
-tell you something about him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wish to know unless it’s good,” said Adele, then
-paused an instant; “but I think he can trust both of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, but the Doctor’s this way; now I tell you this in
-confidence. He often forgets how old he is, and thinks we
-are about the same age.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see anything very confidential in that; besides, I
-rather like these middle-aged old fellows who must wear
-glasses and won’t wear ‘specs;’ they keep their youth.”</p>
-
-<p>“You surely don’t like frisky old boys?” laughed Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense! People may live many years and yet not be
-aged. The Doctor’s not frisky.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor very slow, either,” laughed Paul. “Only he will persist
-in looking backward, and above one’s head, and sometimes
-inside of one, while you and I always look forward;
-don’t we, Adele?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, when we reach his age, we may find some satisfaction
-in the other thing, but just at present I don’t feel like
-it. The Doctor mixes me up, too, sometimes; even when I
-understand his words perfectly. It’s the after-effects.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘After-effects’ is good,” said Adele. “I’ve felt ’em myself,
-lately&mdash;in my state-room; but even before that, when
-they talked in the Sunday-school about Jebusites and Perizites,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-the most mixed-up crowd I ever met; almost as bad as
-those so-called scientists we met on the Atlantic. Now, I
-really care more about Porto Rico and the Philippine Islanders
-than any of those ancient or modern mixtures; and to return
-to what I started with, don’t you think the Doctor attempts
-to explain too much?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, yes&mdash;and no. Of course there are some things no
-fellow can find out, but the Doctor is not really trying to
-discover; he merely tries to arrange after his own fashion
-what he already has read and experienced. He really sees
-much more than most of us, and he told me he had discovered
-that fact written in the palm of his own hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see he has you well in hand,” said Adele, thoughtlessly.</p>
-
-<p>Paul winced.</p>
-
-<p>Adele felt a slight shiver, and was sorry she had so spoken.</p>
-
-<p>“He has helped me greatly,” said Paul, reminiscent of the
-Doctor’s friendship. “I never met a man who tried more to
-give his friends something worth thinking and talking about
-instead of twaddle and bosh.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that’s just where my trouble comes in,” said Adele.
-“I don’t care for twaddle and bosh, but isn’t there such a
-thing as too much thinking; I mean too much thinking about
-too many things? I’ve a great notion to do something radical.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gracious! You a Radical? What do you propose to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Change my mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t do that; it’s too radical! Change your method, or
-your climate; but for heaven’s sake leave your mind alone.”
-And Paul’s sudden outburst of laughter attracted attention
-from the night watchman, who came forward to see if anything
-was wanted.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing. Thanks!” answered Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, there is,” continued Adele; “something must be
-done. I cannot undertake to keep up with all that’s going on
-above, below, outside, inside and underneath. I used to think<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-so at college, but now it’s fatiguing. It’s not safe to live with
-all creation coming down on you at every turn.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought Atlas a happy man,” interjected Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“He gives me the backache to look at him,” said Adele;
-“and I’ve a notion not even to listen to philosophers or, in
-fact, any talk that involves so many ifs and buts in one’s own
-mind. Others may enjoy that game; I don’t. I told Father
-I detested ‘exceptions’ to rules when at school, and now it’s
-worse. I’m getting to think that most people had best leave
-such things alone in real life. What do you think about it?”</p>
-
-<p>Paul felt a thrill of satisfaction run through him as Adele
-allowed herself to run on, giving vent to her feelings; and
-she also felt a pressure of endearment which thrilled also.</p>
-
-<p>“My dearest,” said he, “that’s the wisest thing you ever
-thought out in your life. You’re the most level-headed girl
-I ever met in all my days.” He spoke as if both he and she
-were quite as old as the Doctor. Then, wishing to be very
-profound, Paul tried to be eloquent.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele! do you know what you have done?&mdash;the most&mdash;h’m!&mdash;the
-most satisfactory thing I could have wished for
-in life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing radical, I trust, or I probably shall regret it;”
-her voice fading away towards the last in secret amusement.</p>
-
-<p>“God knows! The Lord only knows how much trouble it
-will save us&mdash;after we’re settled.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t swear, my dear, don’t swear! I’ve been thinking
-about it for some time. It’s the kind of philosophy I really
-believe in.”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I,” said Paul, his voice betraying strong feeling.</p>
-
-<p>“Not to bother with ’osophies or sophistries, anthropologies
-or any other apologies,” said Adele. “I want to live a free,
-open life&mdash;a life in the open.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take things as they are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and people as we find them&mdash;try to do them good.”</p>
-
-<p>A pause followed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span></p>
-
-<p>Paul was striving to grasp within his own consciousness
-what an admirable girl Adele was, and how happy he ought to
-be with such a true woman for his wife; but such thoughts only
-confused him. All he could do was to whisper, more to himself
-than to her, the old, old words, “How I do love you, love
-you with all my heart!”</p>
-
-<p>She heard him, and her heart responded.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know what <em>you</em> have done?” asked Adele softly,
-intertwining her fingers in his. The sympathetic touch, the
-currents of emotion, vitality and supreme strength entered his
-very soul.</p>
-
-<p>“Given me,” said she, “for my very own that which I most
-crave.”</p>
-
-<p>He bowed his head in reverence, and could not lift so much
-as his eyes towards heaven.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Paul, do you know what that means? Faith in one
-to love and trust.”</p>
-
-<p>He made a movement as if trying to speak, but she grasped
-his hand anew, and pressed it.</p>
-
-<p>They did not speak, only thought, and loved each other.</p>
-
-<p>The Southern Cross shone resplendent in the heavens
-above.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Let Nature be your teacher;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Sweet is the love which Nature brings;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Our meddling intellect</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Misshapes the beauteous form of things.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We murder to dissect&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Enough of Science and of Art;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Close up those barren leaves;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Come forth and bring with you a heart</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That watches and receives.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent20">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Wordsworth.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PART_THIRD"><span class="hidden"><em>PART THIRD</em></span></h2>
-
-<h3 id="XXIX">XXIX<br />
-<span class="fs80">ILLNESS AND HALLUCINATION</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">AT last they had reached the Far East&mdash;a new world
-densely populated with darker races, dark forms
-clothed in white or multi-colored garments; many
-with little clothing at all. The faces intelligent, the profiles
-often more clear-cut and refined than their own. People who
-told them frankly that their physiognomy showed “pink faces
-with green eyes”&mdash;quite a revelation, since they had never
-before seen themselves as others see them, from that point of
-view.</p>
-
-<p>It was at Bombay Mrs. Cultus first encountered the prolific
-assortment of “boys,” Khidmatgars and Jadoo Wallahs, punka
-boys, and boys from Goa. It did not take her long to grasp
-the situation, simply because she purposely kept her own personal
-assortment constantly on “the grand jump.” “I must
-find out what each fellow can do, but won’t; and what he can’t
-do, but will. As Paul would say, ‘This caste-business and
-somebody else’s business is most distracting.’”</p>
-
-<p>As to the Jadoo Wallahs and their famous tricks, Mrs.
-Cultus had set her heart upon detecting the manner of growth
-of that celebrated mango-tree, and in consequence had an experience.</p>
-
-<p>The magician went through his whole performance as it is
-usually given, and was about to take up his bush and walk,
-when Mrs. Cultus at once exclaimed: “Not so quick, please!
-You say it grew in ten minutes; that mango bush?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You saw it, Mem Sahib,” said the magician respectfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Then there’s a humbug in that tree,” remarked Mrs.
-Cultus blandly.</p>
-
-<p>The Wallah seemed a little thrown off his guard.</p>
-
-<p>“Show us the roots! the roots!” demanded Mrs. Cultus, as
-if giving orders.</p>
-
-<p>“Pardon, pardon, Mem Sahib! I thought you said a bug
-was in the tree;” and instantly the magician’s acting became
-superb; his whole attitude changed. One might have supposed
-he considered it most unreasonable to ask to see the roots of a
-tree. Possibly, this one had roots, but then they might be so
-small you could not see them. Who knows what really was
-there under ground? He didn’t; but he could take the risk
-of digging to discover.</p>
-
-<p>Considering the little pile of earth was only six inches high
-and stood upon a cemented pavement, Mrs. Cultus told him to
-“go to work and dig them up.” And then came the surprise
-for her; a surprise which caused her never to forget that she
-had been in India.</p>
-
-<p>The Jadoo Wallah, taking the bush by the stem near the
-ground with one hand, loosened it carefully from the earth.
-In lifting it into the air, a half-opened seed, still attached
-below ground, and the tendrils of new roots appeared. As
-the small clods of earth fell away from these roots, the whole
-bush from topmost leaf to lowest root-tendril, was exposed to
-view at full length. Tremendous applause followed. Mrs.
-Cultus was thoroughly nonplussed, mystified; but not too
-much to find her purse and pay the Wallah well for his skill
-and preparation.</p>
-
-<p>“Those roots,” whispered Adele, “made me feel uncanny
-when the little clods of earth fell from them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bits of string, soiled with moist earth, make very good
-roots when seen from a distance,” remarked the Doctor, laughing.
-“Even better imitations than the tendrils and flowers in
-your hat, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus, during their very first glimpses of India, they realized
-they were encountering an intelligent people, a branch
-of their own Aryan race, but of dark complexion, and given
-over to skilful mystification.</p>
-
-<p>Before reaching Calcutta, the physical exertions of the tourists
-had been considerable. Mrs. Cultus in particular, owing
-to her natural antipathy to a warm climate, seemed to suffer
-more than any, and in consequence became seriously ill. One
-cannot say suddenly ill, as often the case, although her perambulations
-at Benares, and in the vicinity of Patna to visit the
-Buddha’s bo-tree, had been quite enough to produce serious
-results. Her strong nerves and her persistent determination
-not to be a burden to others unless physically incapacitated,
-carried her through until Calcutta was reached. Upon their
-arrival she would have broken down at once if Western “grit”
-and feminine curiosity had not again asserted themselves. She
-would not give up; not at least until she had obtained her own
-impression of the Bengalese capital and Government House,
-to be able to talk about them afterwards at home. Then she
-did succumb, half-purposely as it were, really when she had
-left it until too late.</p>
-
-<p>“If I must take my turn at collapsing, this is a much better
-place than some of the bungalows where we were forced to
-bunk. I might as well give in and have done with it. Adele,
-my dear, I really do feel wretched.” This, when she was already
-so feeble as to be unable to stand.</p>
-
-<p>The daughter of Anthony “Grab” Gains, of Colorado, had
-both grit and worldly wisdom by inheritance, but she had
-little suspicion then that these characteristics could be so
-forcibly demonstrated, even while the spiritual element was
-in the ascendant. This spiritual element had not before been
-especially evident&mdash;in fact, it had lain dormant, making her
-appear one-sided, and often unappreciative of much that interested
-her daughter as well as her husband and Doctor
-Wise. The Calcutta physician soon pronounced her case important<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-if not serious, due to over-exposure in regions where
-malaria of various kinds should have been guarded against.
-Evidently few precautions had been taken; malarial germs
-of some sort had entered her system; what particular fever
-would result could only be determined after further observation
-and certain tests. This much the physician told the Professor.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus, who could interpret every change of expression
-in her husband’s countenance, and could read his thoughts in
-such matters much more quickly than he suspected, took in the
-exact situation a few minutes after the physician left her,
-when her husband entered and began to potter around her
-room, anxious, but striving to appear just the opposite. She
-noticed him, a little later, take up a bottle of medicine, tasting
-it as if he wished to make sure as to its contents. After he
-had gone out, she said to Adele:</p>
-
-<p>“My daughter, your father is such a dear man. Do you
-know what he did?&mdash;tasted that medicine himself first, just
-to satisfy himself it was all right for me. Now just suppose
-it had been poison?”</p>
-
-<p>Adele looked tenderly at her mother, fearing lest the fever
-had already begun to affect her brain, and was causing absurd
-notions. This proved to be the case. Mrs. Cultus became
-more and more flighty, complaining: “My head feels so light;
-it seems to be sailing off like a balloon.” Then, again, speaking
-in disconnected phrases, her ideas all mixed and inconsequent.
-Adele concluded she did not always say what she
-meant to say, and therefore did not give the impression she
-intended to convey.</p>
-
-<p>All of which, being quite natural, was not surprising; only
-when at intervals among her absurd vagaries the patient
-startled them all by some exceptionally sane remark, indicating
-a very level head, indeed. It was then that Adele felt
-confused, and hardly knew what to do; she did not understand
-the case.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span></p>
-
-<p>Drawing affection led her to put her arm around her
-mother’s neck, to place her cheek next hers, and to cherish her.
-The invalid did not even whisper in reply, but her tacit acceptance
-seemed to indicate that she knew it was her daughter
-near, very near, and felt her touch&mdash;that was enough.
-Fevered imagination was thus often soothed by the reality of
-love.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing does mother so much good as to love her; it’s
-better than medicine,” said Adele. “It’s very curious how
-quickly her mind becomes quiet when I don’t say a word,
-only let her know with caresses <em>how we all love her</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>When Adele made this remark to the Doctor, he could only
-reiterate what Adele and her mother had already told each
-other by sympathetic touch. “Yes, the greatest thing on
-earth is love, the beginning and ending of the greatest good;
-and it is indeed a notable fact in sacred history that Christ
-made more cures by the instrumentality of touch, bloodless
-operations so to speak, than in any other way; in fact, Christ
-conquered Science and soared away beyond.”</p>
-
-<p>This assertion seemed to impress Adele most seriously;
-then her mind turned towards some particular incident in her
-own experience.</p>
-
-<p>“I made several cures myself when I was nursing in the
-hospital. I cured one of the physicians, a young man, a mere
-boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“How, may I ask?” The Doctor was very inquisitive.</p>
-
-<p>“Put my first finger on his lips&mdash;he knew instantly what I
-said&mdash;‘You had better not talk so much.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Was he indeed cured?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, instantly. He had been rather verdant before, but
-after his cure he turned a lovely pea-green. Doctor, physicians
-ought to look into this touchy-method; there’s more
-psychology than medicine in it&mdash;that’s why it cures.”</p>
-
-<p>“What a queer girl you are,” thought the Doctor, serious
-himself; and then recalled what she had just said about her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-mother, “we all love her,” not “how I love her,” but “how we
-all love her”; assuming that her own affection for her mother
-must be common to all the party.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor cogitated over this: “I can understand
-mother’s love, and its response in all human kind; filial love,
-brother’s love, sisterly affection, and much that is implied
-thereby, they are innate in all races; but when it comes to
-thinking and speaking and acting as if all others are sharing
-our affection for the one we love in particular, as Adele assumed,
-then I think a still nobler spirit exists, something
-borne in from without must have been granted her. She
-seems even unnaturally good. Here am I looking for this
-something-worth-knowing as manifested by races at large
-to-day, and I hear much in India about the brotherhood-of-man;
-yet, right here under my eyes appears a girl manifesting
-it in her experience, as if she knew more about it and
-its differentiations, truly, than any of us. Now one might
-say that each individual loves his own parents, or ought to;
-and certainly here in Asia what they call ancestral veneration
-does obtain without necessarily much ardent love; but all that
-is a very different thing from seeing the very best of one’s self
-in others, and acknowledging it&mdash;feeling that one is but an
-exponent of the good in all, yet without conceit. That appeals
-to me as the work of the Holy Spirit in man; one may
-say unnatural, because more than natural; and that is to be
-born again&mdash;spiritual rebirth.”</p>
-
-<p>The illness of Mrs. Cultus soon manifested another phase.
-No matter how incongruous her delusions or hallucinations
-might be, her own character, the principle of her own individuality,
-always dominated; the energy which lies deeper
-than even the manifestation of life, on which the identity of
-man and his existence and the continuance of his existence
-depend, was never inactive; the principle of individuality
-which determines both the form of character and the physical
-frame, as well as the connection between them, was never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-violated. It was Carlotta Gains Cultus <em>herself</em>; from her
-came the thoughts. They were not words put into her mind by
-suggestions from others.</p>
-
-<p>One of her delusions was that she had lost all her money,
-her fortune, and was now in a foreign land among many
-strangers to whom she might be obliged to appeal, in case family
-necessities forced them to work for their living. From her
-point of view this was the direst calamity conceivable. She
-expressed herself, however, with that peculiar tact which
-showed how all the characteristics she had inherited from her
-father were rooted and grounded in her very being. She was
-talking to Miss Winchester:</p>
-
-<p>“Frank, do you think the people over here would like it if
-the Professor should lecture before them? Would he draw
-good houses?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester smiled, but knowing full well that Mrs.
-Cultus could not be easily deceived, and would not be satisfied
-by anything indefinite, answered as if serious:</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, he’d draw, once or twice, on account of his
-reputation; but I doubt about keeping it up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not, Frank?”</p>
-
-<p>“India’s a complicated place, you know; only Jadoo Wallahs
-and balloon ascensions draw intelligent people&mdash;h’m!&mdash;native
-crowds don’t count any more than middle-of-the-road
-people do at home; now and again a polo or cricket match,
-even the theatres are at a discount.”</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t we try the Bishop and his set?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly; if for charitable purposes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear! dear!” said the patient dolefully, “not yet charity,
-not yet.” Then in a low, troubled voice: “I suppose Adele
-and I must do something, ourselves. What can we do? I feel
-so helpless, so weak!” Another expedient soon suggested itself.
-It was sad to see her thus frantically trying to think to some
-purpose; finally the effort was successful.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank, do they play whist over here?” and then realizing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-that the object must be clearly understood: “I could give lessons
-myself, but dear Adele, my precious darling! it would
-be too much for her, she never took to whist.” The poor
-woman seemed so serious, the situation was really pathetic.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXX">XXX<br />
-<span class="fs80">CONVALESCENCE AND COMMON SENSE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THESE periods of hallucination, mingled with very
-practical considerations, continued for some days,
-until the fever ran its course. Fortunately it is not
-within the scope of this story to note the progress of physical
-ailments; it is more timely to note the effects upon the mental
-and the spiritual life of an excellent woman ever true to herself
-and to others, even during hallucinations. It was fortunate
-also that Mrs. Cultus herself relieved her attendants of
-any uncertainty in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>She had just passed through a period of exceptionally vivid
-impressions of disaster, when one of those flashes of clearer
-perception, before referred to, came to her rescue; whether
-merely a reaction from her previous weak condition, or because
-she was so thoroughly frightened by what she had conceived as
-possible, need not now be discussed. That she did brighten
-up marvelously and manifest then and there a permanent
-change for the better, was a fact. And again it was Miss
-Winchester who was with her.</p>
-
-<p>“Frank,” said Mrs. Cultus composedly, and with an air of
-finality, “I’ve made up my mind; I’m determined.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t say so&mdash;good!&mdash;about what?”</p>
-
-<p>“To get well, that’s the first thing. I can’t stand this
-being a care to others.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are better, I’m sure; much better.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Not much as yet, but I can see it. I will be.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester gave a little start. “See it? see what?”
-fearing lest the patient was again off at a tangent after more
-disasters. But Mrs. Cultus, having obtained a mental grip
-upon herself, would not let go, even if she still felt weak
-physically.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me what you see,” said Miss Winchester gently, taking
-her by the hand, and continuing to wave the fan she
-held.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Frank! what a terrible thing it would be to be caught
-in such a predicament, and unprepared!”</p>
-
-<p>“How, my dear?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been imagining all sorts of things&mdash;these Indian beds
-are not the best sort for me, I fear; I’ve been imagining&mdash;nonsense,
-of course, for us&mdash;but just think how awful it would be
-to lose one’s means of support! be forced to work for a living!
-and then not be able to succeed; I mean when the real thing
-does happen.”</p>
-
-<p>“The world is full of cases like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I knew that before; but now I have actually felt it,
-just as if it were true in our own case. I was sort of luny all
-the time, even when my head floated off like a balloon. I
-thought it was serious, and I suffered as much as if it had
-really been true. Why, poor Adele&mdash;it would have killed me
-to see her in such hard circumstances. Adele would have&mdash;let
-me think&mdash;I’m wrong! Adele would not have&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>A strange expression came over her countenance, as if something
-ineffably joyous and precious was just revealed to her.
-She closed her eyes, and evidently was seeing the image of
-her daughter in a new light.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester kept on fanning her gently, hoping she
-would soon fall asleep.</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Cultus’ spiritual discernment had been quickened;
-and with it came the real, true conquest over both physical
-weakness and mental vagaries. Her eyes opened again, they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-were clearer than ever; her voice had a new depth, and was
-certainly more sympathetic than before the fever began&mdash;it
-manifested the spiritually melodious quality in essence.</p>
-
-<p>“What about Adele?” asked Miss Winchester tenderly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I love her so much! She is so much to me; I cannot
-tell you how much.”</p>
-
-<p>“We all love her,” said Miss Winchester, innocently repeating
-the very words Adele had used when speaking of her
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know that, too; no one knows it better than I; but
-I now see something about her I never saw before so clearly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me what it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Frank!&mdash;a mystery! Adele <em>is</em> prepared. She is ready for
-anything that may happen. None of us need ever fear for
-Adele, I’m sure of that; and I can see that she acts as she does
-because she feels prepared. I must tell you about her; it is
-a mystery, yet at the same time the most practical thing.”</p>
-
-<p>All the positive elements in Mrs. Cultus now seemed
-focused on the conviction that Adele was “prepared,” as she
-called it, for anything, any emergency.</p>
-
-<p>“She has many to look to,” said Miss Winchester, “more
-than most girls.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but I’m not thinking of that. I mean her own
-strength, something within herself, something I suppose all
-girls could have if they were like Adele. I’m beginning now
-to understand that&mdash;beginning to understand a little of how
-she acts and why she does as she does. Adele could endure
-and overcome adversity; she enjoys pleasure, more than any
-of us; she lives what she believes, and is not afraid of anything.
-Do you notice it, Frank, Adele is never afraid?”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester felt a little incredulous, but she said nothing.
-Mrs. Cultus continued:</p>
-
-<p>“I never before so well understood Adele, although I am
-her mother. At times she talks like a chatterbox, but she
-never says anything unkind about people. Perhaps I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-shouldn’t say ‘never,’ for she did once give a regular scolding
-to a rascally brute who was abusing his horse&mdash;a dumb creature
-that couldn’t retaliate. Adele did speak for the dumb
-brute, but that was an exceptional case, and she did right to
-interfere.”</p>
-
-<p>“She has my full approval,” remarked Miss Winchester.
-Mrs. Cultus continued:</p>
-
-<p>“Then she is interested in all babies&mdash;would you believe it?&mdash;of
-any color. ‘Cherubs’ she calls them if she thinks it will
-stop their crying. I heard her one day call a cherub, ‘Cupid,’
-and kiss him. Bless me, I saw nothing attractive in that
-particular child. She says she likes babies just as God made
-them, of any color. Now, Frank, I call that practical religion,
-and Adele turns from nothing; she is interested in
-all humanity.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt of it,” said Miss Winchester thoughtfully, as if
-recalling an instance known to her personally.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus continued: “But when it comes to talkative
-religion, Adele is more conservative, says little or nothing&mdash;only
-acts naturally what she feels. And the strangest thing
-of all is&mdash;&mdash;” and Adele’s mother paused an instant as if she
-ought to be careful about what she wished to say.</p>
-
-<p>“What?” asked Miss Winchester, closely attentive.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, she is always so sure, so perfectly sure in her own
-mind, as if under the influence of some invisible power&mdash;something
-mystical, you see, but very practical, too. I never
-heard her say much about it but once&mdash;you remember when
-she spoke to that Geyser Science woman on the Atlantic
-steamer?&mdash;and then she certainly did express herself like a
-girl much older, very precocious, to my notion. Do you know
-what I think, Frank?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I can’t imagine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Adele was talking about Christ, and she was perfectly
-fearless; you remember how He talked, when only a
-youth, to the Doctors in the Temple?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was difficult for Miss Winchester to accept this comparison;
-and seeing her hesitate, Mrs. Cultus tried to express
-herself in better form:</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to me Adele had the same spirit, and that’s what
-I feel. Now you remember that Geyser Doctor, who at first
-appeared so placid, and talked about what she really knew so
-little; and then ended by exploding her ideas? Frank, I
-shall never forget her, or the explosion, and its effect on
-Adele. It was the first, last, and only time I ever saw Adele
-in a religious discussion, and I never expect to see her so
-caught again; in fact, she told me she would never indulge
-again, not if she knew it in time.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester nodded in remembrance, and was much
-surprised that Mrs. Cultus should be able to display so much
-of her old-time vigor, when lately she was so weak. “Her
-spirit is stronger than ever,” thought Miss Winchester. Another
-pause, and then Mrs. Cultus continued:</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never forget that scene, because the child talked
-as if she knew personally Him in whom she believed; as if the
-One in whom she believed was being misquoted, if not actually
-slandered, and all that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester listened more attentively than ever.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear, the child was right. I can see it all now. A sort
-of holy jealousy, because she was averse to hearing anything
-so misleading attributed to Him in whom she believed. Now,
-for a girl to feel that way means a great deal, a very great
-deal&mdash;it means everything. Adele was far more than interested;
-she felt intensely all she said. How did she do it?
-Why did she do it? Had the Holy Spirit spoken in her
-heart? Frank, that is a mystery! Nobody, I trust, can deceive
-me about such things, and I can see so much more than
-ever now, and in a new light. Now, I know God is Love, because
-He gave me Adele, and I try to love Him for it; and
-just between us, you and me, myself, it is going to be very
-hard for me to give her up, even to Paul.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span></p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester would not have interrupted Mrs. Cultus
-on any account as she was thus opening her own heart freely,
-fearlessly. There was a beauty in these revelations fundamentally
-holy.</p>
-
-<p>“One of the strange things,” continued Adele’s mother, “is
-how nothing has been changed with Adele since she became
-engaged to Paul; just the reverse, her feelings seem even more
-intense; and her love for Paul influences her for good in every
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester, not wishing to intrude in these family
-matters, made an effort to change the subject; but it was of
-no use. Mrs. Cultus was too much interested in her daughter’s
-future to talk of anything else; while her natural tact
-was too vigilant to admit of any indiscretion.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele and Paul,” said she, “with all their nonsense and
-lovers’ pranks, get more out of their fun than any young people
-I ever saw. I’ve watched ’em often. Adele does not give
-up a thing worth seeing, and she goes into unspeakable places
-with her Father and Paul. They tell me not to worry about
-her, for she is always equal to any emergency. I wasn’t so
-fearless when I was a girl. But Adele is different. I shouldn’t
-be surprised if she did get into trouble some time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she may&mdash;that’s where the fun comes in,” said
-Miss Winchester, less serious.</p>
-
-<p>Adele’s mother looked up in alarm. “What are you laughing
-at, Frank? Has she already been getting into scrapes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no scrape, but I saw her on her dignity in a little
-scene at Benares.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was it?”</p>
-
-<p>“We were in one of the temples, and a young Brahmin approached
-her when she was a little distance from us and
-alone. He was a good-looking young fellow, and he seemed
-to know it. What he said I don’t know, and what she saw
-wrong in him I can only conjecture, but the few glances she
-gave him put him in a different frame of mind. He certainly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-changed his manner and bearing as if forced to recognize
-some superiority in her. One doesn’t often see that sort of
-thing in young Brahmins, or their elders either. Only too
-often that caste seems to arrogate to itself a special license to
-do as it pleases.”</p>
-
-<p>“There! I told you she was never afraid!” exclaimed Mrs.
-Cultus. “Adele changed that fellow’s mind by a glance&mdash;and
-a Brahmin at that; overcome by the use of his own weapons.
-No, she is fearless. Whatever she does, she’s never afraid.
-Very mysterious, yet so much common sense to make it effective.
-It is as if&mdash;as if&mdash;oh, how shall I express what I
-want to say in a few words? as if&mdash;the truth had made her
-free.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, she must be a veritable Christian Psychologist,” said
-Miss Winchester, seriously.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no doubt of it,” answered Adele’s mother, confidently.
-“Adele believes in the Greatest Psychologist that
-ever lived.”</p>
-
-<p>No more was said, and Mrs. Cultus pondered over these
-things in her heart. The exertion of talking had fatigued
-her, in spite of the increased spiritual strength which had
-been born of her suffering. While looking at some flowers
-which Paul had brought into her room, their beauty seemed
-to lift her soul beyond them. Was it into the region of her
-own youth, or of Adele’s youth?&mdash;or more beautiful still, the
-realm of Perpetual Youth? Sleep came nigh.</p>
-
-<p>She noticed that Paul’s flowers were buds just ready to
-bloom. There was among them a lily, not a lily of the valley
-but of the Annunciation; an Easter lily, double emblem of
-new life&mdash;new life here, and resurrection into the New Life
-of Perpetual Youth. It was the same sort of lily that she
-remembered seeing in a sacred picture representing an Angel’s
-Visit.</p>
-
-<p>As Nature’s Comforter, restful slumber, closed her eyelids
-in blessed peace, she seemed to behold herself in the act of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-giving this lily to Paul. Miss Winchester heard the whispering
-as she dozed off:</p>
-
-<p>“Take it, Paul; it is a priceless treasure. This bud in
-blooming will sweeten all your life. Solomon in all his glory
-was not arrayed like one of these.”</p>
-
-<p>Certainly an unexpected conclusion to be reached by the
-worldly-minded Mrs. Cultus; but practical, as truth itself is
-both mystical and practical. How different the hallucinations
-during illness and bodily weakness, from the spiritual experience,
-the visions of truth which really conquer physical
-weakness and rise into the Realm of Perpetual Youth!</p>
-
-<p>“Verily, a double blessing she gave them,” said Miss Winchester&mdash;“youth
-here, youth perpetual.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXXI">XXXI<br />
-<span class="fs80">OFF TO THE HIMALAYAS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">DURING the convalescence of Mrs. Cultus the physicians
-recommended that she be taken to a more
-salubrious climate, a higher altitude; and suggested
-Darjeeling in North Bengal near the borders of Sikhim as an
-admirable sanitarium. Adele was delegated to suggest it to
-her mother. She entered the sick-room in great glee, drawing
-Paul in with her.</p>
-
-<p>“Little Mother, we’ve all been ordered off; Paul and I have
-already thought of flying upwards to the Himalayas, and now
-we all must go.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that you say about flying away? Who’s ordered
-it? I didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“The physicians,” said Paul much amused. “We need to
-take the usual Oriental prescription for foreigners&mdash;Vamoose
-the ranchibus; get out!”</p>
-
-<p>“Do Hindoos prescribe in Latin? What does it mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“To be taken instantly,” said Miss Winchester, laughing,
-“and all take the same dose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you say we are to go? Up where?” persisted
-Mrs. Cultus, now beginning to enter into the spirit of the
-thing.</p>
-
-<p>“To the mountains,” said Adele joyfully, “up to Sikhim.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sic ’em!” and Mrs. Cultus’ eyes twinkled. “Is it a hunting
-scheme for Paul and the Doctor? Are there dogs up
-there?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span></p>
-
-<p>Evidently mental alertness had returned to the invalid.
-Adele thought so, and nodded to Paul:</p>
-
-<p>“Come, boys! get your guns, and call the dogs&mdash;I mean
-your tickets for the trip; I’ll attend to the rest.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul vanished to make arrangements for the journey.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Never did a more interested and hilarious party start northward
-towards Kunchingunga; towards the foot-hills of Sikhim,
-between Nepaul and Bhootan. From the crest of these
-foot-hills they hoped to see the Himalaya range stretching
-east and west, like unto a barrier insurmountable, towering
-aloft into thin air which no man could breathe and yet live;
-terra firma supporting glaciers a mile in vertical height; <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">terra
-incognita</i>, for no man had yet been able to tread thereon.
-Region of the seen, yet unseen, because unlivable to mortals
-as at present constituted.</p>
-
-<p>No other portion of their tour gave better opportunity to
-bring out individual traits of character than this; for nature
-herself was to be met in many moods. Professor Cultus suggested
-that each member of the party should select a specialty
-for personal observation.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester jumped at this idea, like a reporter for a
-woman’s home journal. She selected the varied ejaculations
-of the natives; “grunts,” as she called them.</p>
-
-<p>“Every race seems to grunt differently, and every idol
-swears differently. I suppose prayers are diverse also, but the
-grunts will be enough for me. We shall have hot-weather
-sighs, and cold-weather shivers; torrid zone lassitude and
-temperate zone platitude; Hindoo shuffles and Mongolian
-shrugs, each accompanied by its appropriate ejaculation or
-grunt. It is astonishing how much grunting is heard. Asia
-is like a Florida razor-back settlement on a large scale. I
-shall be kept quite busy; and no doubt myself become quite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-accomplished.” Miss Winchester was evidently in high
-feather, finding her surroundings inspiring from a literary
-point of view.</p>
-
-<p>“The Himalayas will suit your purpose admirably,” remarked
-the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“How so?”</p>
-
-<p>“You may write a dialect story on your way&mdash;all grunts,
-and nothing else.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul thought the subject of the rapid changes from one
-kind of vegetation to another would suit him as a specialty.
-“There ought to be enough variety in ferns, palms, and natural
-shrubbery, to say nothing of tea, quinine and poppies
-(opium) to excite or soothe as we require doses.” Paul was
-evidently hoping to obtain some plants for his Florida Garden,
-his winter home, between Pelican Lodge and the salt
-waves. There the Pelicans were omnivorous birds, not being
-restricted to ordinary pelican diet.</p>
-
-<p>Adele said she expected to be engaged chiefly in “looking
-up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not guide-books, I hope?” quizzed Miss Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>“Only when I lie down, to take a siesta; they will serve as
-a sedative.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whatever you do,” said Mrs. Cultus, ever practical and
-worldly-wise, “be sure to jot down notes. You remember my
-report on Tangiers to our Politely Civil League? Memoranda
-came in splendidly then; I’ve just received a note of thanks
-for my ‘communications.’”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean your ‘proceedings,’ my dear,” grunted the Professor.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester at once made mental note of the Professor’s
-mode of ejaculation, as indicative of the Occidental
-grunt in contradistinction to the Asiatic.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Cultus is correct,” interrupted the Doctor, champion
-inquisitor and note-jotter of the party. “No brain could remember,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-much less assimilate, all that we are going to see,
-without taking notes.”</p>
-
-<p>At this point they were interrupted by the call to take their
-places in the railway carriage at Calcutta, for their first four
-hours by rail to Damookdea on the Ganges.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXXII">XXXII<br />
-<span class="fs80">THE START UPWARDS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">EN ROUTE from Calcutta, many villages were situated
-amid luxuriant bamboos, palms and grasses, where
-the Bengali cultivators of the soil worked hard for a
-portion of the year, and then during the heated term put in
-their time loafing, bathing in puddles, and raising children;
-some of the children looked as if so raised&mdash;in puddles. Life
-was known to ebb and flow spasmodically in that region, at
-times receding to the very verge of famine, only to return and
-overflow the country with abundance. Life was like a candle
-burning at both ends in days of plenty, to be followed by
-total darkness, where skeletons groped, wailing and gnashing
-their teeth.</p>
-
-<p>The foliage was luxuriant, and of rapid growth; but not
-calculated to endure much strife with wind and storm. Very
-beautiful, however, were some of the compensations in nature:
-when the graceful banana leaves were blighted by the adverse
-forces, and fell limp, black, and apparently useless; in the
-very act of dying they fell over the clusters of fruit below,
-thus protecting their offspring after they themselves had returned
-to dust, in some cases cremated by the sun, ashes to
-ashes. Many human beings had no doubt sacrificed themselves
-in the same way, involving physical and nervous prostration,
-since Vishnu was the real preserver, and they were Vishnubs.
-A mysterious parallel. Altruism, to a certain degree, exists
-between plant life and humanity; and one often hears the
-natives speak of the transmigration of souls. Numerous
-birds of brilliant plumage flitted about, and rows of paroquets
-sat on the telegraph wires; as the natives said, reading and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-reporting the messages. Did not the monkeys show great
-wisdom and skill in constructing bridges of their own bodies
-for Krishna to escape by passing over? Surely birds must
-know something if monkeys were so wise. So also reasoned
-the natives, with variations, each man after his own kind.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester in time took down a number of the native
-ejaculations apropos of these things; and Mrs. Cultus, of
-course, reported all such facts to her special committee of the
-“Pet-Monkey Section” of the “Kindness to Animal League.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not know that Asia was so kind to animals,” said
-she. The Doctor laughed: “I fear it is a sort of ‘touch-me-not,
-taste-me-not’ kindness.” “More absurd proceedings,” thought
-the Professor. Adele did not laugh; on the contrary she was
-as usual much interested in children, and these people seemed
-to her to be in the childhood period of the human race. “They
-believe it all,” said Adele, “and so did I when I was in the
-nursery; my dolly always talked, and monkeys scared us
-both.”</p>
-
-<p>The river Ganges was crossed at Damookdea, in the darkness,
-on the steamer “Vampire.” Torchlights upon the distant
-shore showed the river to be nearly a mile wide, the
-further sides rising to form low bluffs. A huge sand-bar lay
-opposite the primitive wharf, and had to be circumnavigated;
-which was made difficult by the strong current and the tortuous
-eddies whirling in many directions. They saw fishing-smacks
-etched against the sky, with their lights bobbing up
-and down; the nets were carried on enormous bamboo frames
-which shone against the lights like spider webs. The prows
-and sterns of the boats were pointed and rose high in peculiar
-curves. The same boats, seen afterwards in daylight, propelled
-by a single boatman, whose form showed against the
-blue waves, were quite as picturesque as the gondolas at
-Venice.</p>
-
-<p>Then all night on the train, crossing the plains, and in the
-morning Silliguri, the station at the track’s end, apparently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span></p>
-
-<p>Paul proceeded to reconnoitre among the crowds who gathered
-about and under the railway sheds. There were officials,
-indigo planters, race-course frequenters, Anglo-Saxons and
-Germans, among the much more numerous dark-skinned
-natives.</p>
-
-<p>The preponderance of white garments showed the district
-to be yet on the comparatively low-level, but a glance northward
-told a different story; woodlands rising in billows of
-foliage.</p>
-
-<p>Paul beckoned to the party to hasten; his expression an
-amused interrogation point.</p>
-
-<p>“The railway has shrunk; prepare to shrink, or you will
-not be comfortable in your new quarters;” and he escorted
-them to the miniature Himalaya train which stood at the
-end of the shed ready to ascend skyward.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester at once dubbed it “The Fly Express.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus, looking over the top of one of the cars and
-then bending down to see inside, exclaimed: “Are we really
-to go up in&mdash;that thing? It’s a big toy, for little children.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester at once crawled in; then peeping out like
-a bird in a cage: “I have already shrunk&mdash;it feels quite cozy.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele did not much relish such close quarters, and asked:
-“Can’t we ride on top?”</p>
-
-<p>Only the first-class coaches were inclosed; the second-class
-had low partitions; the third-class had seats in rows, open on
-all sides, covered overhead not unlike American trolleys in
-summer. The width of the train accommodated only three
-abreast, without any aisle; the car wheels were about eighteen
-inches high; the car floor, into which the wheels were set,
-was only a little over a foot above the ground. Sitting within,
-one could easily touch the ground with an umbrella. The
-engine appeared like a toy in dimensions, but it was very
-powerful; like a strong healthy boy who could successfully
-pull or push, but not very effective for sprinting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I like that engine,” said Paul, “he’s chunky, but tough;
-I guess we’ll get there all right.”</p>
-
-<p>The luggage was carried on platform trucks, covered with
-tarpaulins; and this whole remarkable cortége was capable
-of advancing at the reckless speed of eight miles an hour.</p>
-
-<p>Some French tourists at once took places in “the first,”
-hereby assuming the usual American prerogative to pay more
-and receive less than was due. Mrs. Cultus entered the same
-apartment, as she required protection on account of her health
-and some one constantly in attendance. Thus cooped up,
-Mrs. Cultus, Miss Winchester, and the Frenchmen, made a
-coterie of their own; Mrs. Cultus somewhat uneasy lest the
-movement of the train might deposit a Frenchman in her
-lap at any moment. The ladies, intensely curious, thrust
-their heads through the little windows, like children on an
-excursion; the Professor called, “Look out!”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus quickly drew in her head.</p>
-
-<p>A Frenchman instantly asked, most politely in manner:</p>
-
-<p>“What have you, Madame? Monsieur said, ‘Look out!’”</p>
-
-<p>“But he meant just the opposite,” quoth Mrs. Cultus.</p>
-
-<p>“Hein! what a diabolical language!”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester here made a double addition to her collection.
-Adele, since her mother was comfortably settled,
-began looking around to locate herself; she espied a place
-just suited to her ideas, at the rear of the train, on the last
-trolley truck. She and Paul perched themselves on a good
-square trunk, and were not visible to those in front when the
-Flyer showed symptoms of flying. This resulted in the Professor
-and Doctor Wise being greatly puzzled to know “what
-had become of those children.”</p>
-
-<p>The whistle gave a Himalaya shriek, and the foremost
-coaches commenced to joggle before the “children” were discovered.
-In the hurry there was nothing for the dignified
-elders to do but to scramble on, as best they could, the same
-truck with Adele and Paul.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus this inquisitive-exploration party commenced their
-ascent of the famous Himalayas with a detachment of inquisitives
-at each end of the train. Hilarious? who could help
-being so on the Fly Express, rushing through the exhilarating
-air direct from the Himalayas, at eight miles an hour? when
-none would wish a moment curtailed; there was so much to
-be seen, sitting there on a trunk and looking in the direction
-of Kunchingunga!</p>
-
-<p>Adele adjusted some robes taken from her strapped luggage,
-in an effort to make her father more comfortable. It
-was fortunate she had done so, for the joggle-train began a
-frightful series of alternate jerks and bumps. Doctor Wise
-described its construction as “articulated,” especially adapted
-to requirements of the line. When on a level each car took
-its own gait, the equipment loosely hung together to facilitate
-running around sharp curves; a comical rattling arrangement
-more ludicrous than agreeable, until it was stretched out in
-making the ascent. Adele seized Paul and her father alternately
-in convulsive efforts to hold on.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I’d better get inside the trunk,” she gasped, when
-a tremendous lurch threatened to tilt over the whole combination.</p>
-
-<p>It was the last lurch, however, for the train had now struck
-the high grade of one foot in twenty-eight, and at certain
-points one in twenty-two. It drew itself out to full length,
-the strong-boy engine sturdily dragging the apparatus after
-him.</p>
-
-<p>From the start the lift was perceptible.</p>
-
-<p>Silliguri lies at an elevation of less than five hundred feet
-above the sea. Ghoom Station, the summit of the line, is
-only thirty-six miles distant, at an elevation approximating
-seven thousand feet higher. That this difference should be
-surmounted in one short stretch of road was, in its day, a
-marvel of engineering skill. The Himalaya spur-hills upon
-the southern side are often thus abrupt, hence the topographical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-difficulties to be overcome by the miniature railway.
-The line followed the old cart-road built by the English
-Government some eighty years previous, crossing and recrossing,
-oscillating from one side to the other to gain
-distance. Doctor Wise could not help expressing admiration
-for those early engineers who had originally penetrated this
-region, and had located the cart-road where the native trails
-were little better than the trails of wild animals; and for
-their later brothers in the same profession whose skill had
-adapted rails and motive power to such peculiar conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Adele said she felt herself ascending the mountain “squirrel
-fashion, by zigzags, and the longest way round was the
-shortest way up.”</p>
-
-<p>The train, after a short run through the thick woods, crept
-out upon a knoll, and before them opened upwards a superb
-vista; seen through a ravine it expanded heavenward; and
-they caught sight of a mountain-spur jutting out against the
-sky, far above them in the cloud region. It was indented;
-they could plainly see the dent with their glasses&mdash;it looked
-as if a roadway might pass through. The point stood boldly
-out in space, with clouds beyond; the main range hidden from
-view, the impression conveyed was that this promontory might
-be near their destination.</p>
-
-<p>“Can that be the summit?” exclaimed Adele; and an
-answer came to her in rather an interesting fashion.</p>
-
-<p>While they had been joggling along, a party of civil engineers
-connected with the railway, waiting to take the train,
-had noticed a pretty girl sitting upon the rear truck, evidently
-in for a frolic, and at once concluded it was a good
-location for themselves also. They had boarded the truck,
-and were sitting upon the lower part quite ready for any innocents
-abroad, reportorial or globe trotting, when Adele
-noticed the railway cut far up on the mountain-side; of course
-they volunteered the necessary information:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s only chilly Kurseong, where passengers begin
-to sneeze,” answered the civil engineer.</p>
-
-<p>Adele, also responsive, gave an appreciative mock sneeze at
-once, adding she “needed a little practice after being so long
-down on the plains.”</p>
-
-<p>“Others take tea for colds,” responded the civil engineer.
-“Kurseong tea is, you know, tip-top.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it is the summit?” quizzed Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“No, only halfway up, when you reach that point; the real
-summit will appear as far aloft as that does now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” said the Doctor, “then, as the Florida ‘crackers’
-would say, we are just ‘two sights’ from the real summit.”</p>
-
-<p>“They measure by sights there, do they?” remarked the
-Professor. “In Switzerland they measure by hours; and
-down in Calcutta I noticed Hindoos who measured time by
-the numbers of pipes they could smoke.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele gazed in amazement. It seemed hardly credible that
-this lofty point, over one thousand feet higher than the
-famous view-point on the Gemmi Pass in the Alps, should be
-only halfway up, that the foot-hills of the Himalayas covered
-with verdure were as lofty as Mont Blanc covered with
-snow fields and glaciers. All the party began to realize the
-grand scale upon which the Himalayas are built.</p>
-
-<p>“So much for low latitude and high snow-line,” remarked
-the Professor. “Now look out for changes in vegetation, races
-and costumes;” all of which soon became apparent.</p>
-
-<p>These southern slopes being protected by the high range
-beyond, and the low latitude in which they are situated, make
-it possible to reproduce the vegetation of all the zones within
-an incredibly short distance. The Doctor remarked: “It is
-as if we were traveling, in the short distance of about forty
-miles, from Cuba to Canada.” The effect as if the earth’s
-surface had been tilted upwards, so that to ascend the mountain
-spurs was really to travel towards the Frigid Zone; and
-that the north-pole must be up above them instead of being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-in its supposed proper place, the middle of the north. This
-state of things, so unusual to Adele, made a vivid impression
-upon her as they advanced upwards.</p>
-
-<p>The marshy lands and thatched houses of the type to be
-found on the plains, enclosed by fences of matting hung upon
-bamboo poles, with mud-puddles for public bathing&mdash;all these
-began to disappear. There were fewer clumps of tall grasses
-twenty feet in height with tufted heads, and of plume like
-pampas; the mighty bamboo, and the giant cactus ever
-grotesque, always on the defensive, even while bearing down
-vegetation mightier than itself&mdash;these were left below. Soon
-there were less fruits, wild mulberries, pomegranates, dates,
-figs, lady-finger bananas of delicious strawberry flavor. These
-became less and less frequent, although there were still to be
-seen some of the five varieties of figs and twelve varieties of
-bamboos. These continued with them to an elevation of one
-thousand feet. What they now began to admire was the profusion
-of roses and the luxuriant boughanvillia with rich dark-red
-blossoms, much richer and darker even than in Florida,
-more akin to that in the Bermudas, or at Hong Kong. But
-even these souvenirs of the South passed from view as the
-panorama continued to move; semi-tropical luxuriance constantly
-giving place to stronger growths. Wild orange, also
-peaches and lemons, were seen among the bananas. Banyans
-with pendant branch roots spreading the parent growth
-through the forest; cotton-wood trees built with buttress-roots,
-as the Doctor remembered seeing them at Nassau; and
-wormwood twelve feet high. Ferns in profusion, graceful as
-ever, some of them old friends of the Alleghanies; for the
-ferns are the most inveterate gad-abouts, constantly visiting
-poor relations in almost every zone and climate.</p>
-
-<p>Here and there were now to be seen terrestrial orchids,
-vigorous specimens, holding their own amid the foliage of
-their adopted parents, pines, oaks and other hardwood trees&mdash;a
-curious combination. Persistent bamboos of hardier varieties<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-still obtained; they flourished along the water courses at
-the foot-hills, and swept their graceful curves over adjacent
-knolls. Such slender growths, although tough and strong,
-became too attenuated to support themselves in an upright
-position; their immense copious fountains of foliage took not
-only curves of ascent like the cocoanut, palmetto, and superb
-talipot, but also the return curves of leafy spray ruffling the
-surface of the little streams.</p>
-
-<p>Then there were glens and shady hollows decorated with
-lichens and pendulous mosses; trailing growths of verdure of
-countless kinds, carpets of tiny ferns&mdash;some mysterious
-growths of sombre reds with vitreous lustre, as well as greens
-so delicate that they hid themselves from the direct rays of
-the sun; not to mention horrible nettles and poison vines;
-terrors to thin-skinned visitors, but as little regarded by the
-natives as were the leeches in the swamps, and the pestiferous
-insects in the jungles. Bad plants, which the natives said had
-been bad people in some previous incarnation; hence had been
-incarnated backwards and downwards, not forwards and upwards.</p>
-
-<p>Adele much appreciated these flights of fancy among the
-natives; they seemed so much like nursery stories when she
-was in the nursery herself. She was on the lookout to kodak
-each new scene, and at times almost in despair.</p>
-
-<p>“I might as well acknowledge that the Himalayas, like
-Niagara, cannot be crowded into a small picture, but some
-of those crazy cacti I really must catch; there now is something
-already posing to be taken&mdash;let me catch him;” and she
-balanced herself on the top of the trunk to photograph a
-large tree festooned with vines suggesting the doleful tree
-decorations in some of the cemeteries at home, only more luxuriant.</p>
-
-<p>“How artistically tearful! How festive-funereal!” exclaimed
-Miss Winchester, now with them, having changed
-places with the Professor who had gone to Mrs. Cultus.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s where you’re a little off,” said the civil engineer
-quizzer. “The botanists would probably call it ‘leguminosa’&mdash;have
-some?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, awfully,” said Miss Winchester with English style
-and intonation. “Himalaya vegetables may prove more inviting
-than that one looks, but please don’t risk your precious
-neck to pick them off the vines.”</p>
-
-<p>The English engineer said that he did not propose to die
-before reaching the Sanitarium, which remark seemed to
-strike the Doctor as “not bad, for a colonial living in a warm
-climate.” So Adele settled the matter by kodaking the whole
-party overshadowed by the artistically-tearful funereal-festive
-vegetable-vine.</p>
-
-<p>Near this locality the track indulged in numerous twists
-and turns, squirming like a huge snake encircling the mountain
-spur. The train slid out to the verge of a precipice, and
-then backed off, just before the crash came.</p>
-
-<p>“What a narrow escape!” exclaimed Mrs. Cultus, “I felt
-as if well shaken, and was about to be taken. I hope to goodness
-they won’t do it again”&mdash;but they did.</p>
-
-<p>They were now rounding a projecting knoll, before passing
-through a short cut; they then crept under a bridge which,
-curious to relate, they crossed over hardly a minute later.
-These engineering gymnastics were utterly preposterous to
-our explorers.</p>
-
-<p>“Has the train lost its way?” laughed Adele. “Where are
-we? What next?”</p>
-
-<p>“If I don’t fly off like a bird,” said Miss Winchester, “I expect
-to enter the bowels of the earth and be a gnome; that
-will surely be my next incarnation.”</p>
-
-<p>“I prefer the bird,” remarked Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Which? parrot or peacock? India’s choice. Considering
-altitude and climate, I think a gnome will suit me. What will
-you be, Paul?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, leave things as they are.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span></p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve got to be something if in India,” persisted Miss
-Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>“Rats!” exclaimed Paul, “as lief as anything else&mdash;what
-nonsense you are talking!”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s method in this railway madness,” suggested the
-civil engineer; and he showed them some rough sketches he
-had hurriedly made illustrating the series of loops and zigzags
-the line had followed between Tindharia and Gumti. “How
-is that for horseshoe curves, mule-shoes, and other adaptations
-to the requirements of the road&mdash;‘feats of engineering’ we
-call them.” The Englishman was trying to be facetious.</p>
-
-<p>The lines he had drawn were curious. Paul said they reminded
-him of the marks left upon the surface of ice by an
-expert-fancy skater. Miss Winchester said she could use them
-for an embroidery pattern, the art of embroidery being one
-of her favorite occupations. The Doctor said they reminded
-him of a fly travelling over an orange to find out what it was
-like. Adele said they reminded her of exactly what they represented,
-only now she had a bird’s-eye view looking down on
-the whole thing. “I understand it now, but until I saw this
-drawing I did feel all twisted up.” Curious, indeed, was the
-association of ideas, each traveller finding suggested by the
-engineer’s drawing his own tastes, or the memory of some
-previous experience.</p>
-
-<p>Still higher up, say between four and six thousand feet, the
-Americans felt really quite at home in the woods; no matter
-what part of the Middle or Northern States they might have
-come from there were glimpses to remind them of home; not
-unlike the loftier parts of the Alleghany range as seen from
-Blowing Rock, or Cloudland in the Land of the Sky (North
-and South Carolina), also glimpses suggesting the magnificent
-distant scenery of Colorado, and even of the Northwest
-Rockies; but in every case with much greater luxuriance of
-foliage, and a realizing sense that they were only on the foot-hills,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-the first steps leading to the Celestial region, still away
-up and beyond.</p>
-
-<p>Adele searched in her pocket and brought forth her little
-Stars-and-Stripes badge, and pinned it on her left shoulder.
-It took very little to make Adele show her colors, and just
-here where the woods were full of oaks, hemlocks, maples and
-many other trees which reminded her of home, she concluded
-this was the proper time to bring out the pocket edition of Old
-Glory.</p>
-
-<p>The Englishman wondered why she selected that particular
-time to do such a thing; it seemed such a superfluous proceeding.
-He would have scorned the idea if he had known
-that she associated oaks with America in particular. As it
-was he could not suppress his curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“May I ask why you show your colors?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because here I feel quite at home.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you Americans think the States take in all creation,
-don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, pretty much; but this is the Queen’s Empire&mdash;we
-admire the Queen immensely, she’s a home-body; and personally
-I quite envy her.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt she would appreciate your appreciation,” remarked
-the Englishman, again touching the facetious. “May
-I ask why you envy her?”</p>
-
-<p>“We are going into the expansion business ourselves: the
-Queen knows all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Once you are in, you’ll wish you were out.”</p>
-
-<p>“You made a success; why shouldn’t we? Of course we’ll
-add some improvements.”</p>
-
-<p>The Englishman laughed heartily. “What do you call success?”</p>
-
-<p>“Making people feel at home,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“And the improvements&mdash;some new ’ism or religion, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Every man to his own religion,” said Adele; “it’s the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-same as with one’s own home. Religion ought to suit one’s
-nature as your home suits your life.”</p>
-
-<p>“These people have a great variety of religion,” remarked
-the Englishman.</p>
-
-<p>“There seems to be no lack,” said Adele, “but really I don’t
-know yet. I can’t say that I have really worshiped with them,
-according to their ritual here in their own homes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wish you joy, but really I don’t understand fully
-yet as to your idea of home here. I don’t feel at home; we
-all go back to our homes&mdash;Merry England.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not what I mean,” said Adele; “this region is the
-most extraordinary home-country I ever saw, even more so
-than our own mixed-up country, and that’s saying a great
-deal.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand yet,” said the Briton.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, it’s this way, I feel perfectly at home in these woods;
-the Hindoos were just as much at home a few miles back; the
-place seems to suit all sorts and conditions of different civilizations,
-not one civilization only; and the Queen lets them
-live at home here in peace.”</p>
-
-<p>“They fight like cats and dogs,” said the engineer promptly.
-“We have the devil’s own time to keep the home, as you call it,
-quiet.”</p>
-
-<p>“It must be the children that cut up so,” laughed Adele.
-“Every home is supposed to have its nursery&mdash;the world no
-doubt has; people often call Asia the cradle of the human
-race. This seems to me to be like God’s nursery.”</p>
-
-<p>“And England’s the nurse!” shouted the Briton.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, here comes another baby, fresh from the woods, to
-be taken into the nursery. What do you think of this precious
-babe? I hand her over to you.”</p>
-
-<p>What Adele saw for the first time was a large, stout Mongolian
-woman, broad-visaged with slanting eyes, very dirty
-and unkempt, accompanied by two men of similar mien,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-neither of whom appeared so masculine as the precious babe
-herself. These had wandered down from the upper regions&mdash;the
-first glimpse to Adele of the next race they were to encounter.</p>
-
-<p>“Babes in the woods,” remarked the Englishman.</p>
-
-<p>Adele concluded not to call this one a cherub.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXXIII">XXXIII<br />
-<span class="fs80">A GLIMPSE OF THE PRIMITIVE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THE miniature Fly Express having crept over the summit
-now slid down on the other side for a few miles,
-into Darjeeling. The mountain resort, though upon
-such high ground, was surrounded by still loftier elevations;
-a veritable Sanitorium protected on all sides. It contained
-more buildings of a public nature than the inquisitive Cultus
-explorers had expected to find; the Sanitorium and bazaar
-were surrounded by many substantially built structures, generally
-upon picturesque sites, schools, a convent, villas, bungalows,
-and here and there native shanties in unexpected
-nooks and corners. There were valleys within valleys, and
-hills upon hills; and domiciles were scattered broadcast over
-the landscape. No time was consumed, however, in gazing
-around them when they first arrived. The station and bazaar
-nearby were lively with Nepaulese, Bhootans, Lepchas, members
-of the hill tribes of Sikhim, inhabitants of the Darjeeling
-Terai, with a much smaller contingent of English who seemed
-to be there to keep the rest in order.</p>
-
-<p>The tiny train had hardly come to a stand-still before a
-Bhootan woman, a fine specimen physically and decidedly
-noisy in manner, thrust her broad Mongolian visage, with its
-high cheek bones and slanting eyes, into the little car window
-where sat Mrs. Cultus. If a demon had suddenly appeared
-at close quarters and offered to rub noses with Mrs. C. the
-effect could not have been more startling. The Mongolian,
-talking and gesticulating and holding a strap in her hand,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-made it plain to them that she wished to carry their luggage&mdash;she
-was a woman-porter.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus, not ordinarily disconcerted by sudden apparitions,
-was this time fairly taken aback. Aside from the novelty
-of a woman-porter, her repulsive appearance was disconcerting;
-the broad cheeks smeared with red pigment and distorted
-with grimaces seemed to Mrs. Cultus at first glance as
-more than grotesque, even appalling. Drawing herself up
-with dignity she gave a piercing look, as if in defiance, only
-to discover that the Bhootanesque wild grin was intended for
-a polite smile, and the smile was that of a young girl trying
-to be serviceable and obliging. Mrs. Cultus burst out laughing,
-which the Bhootan girl of course mistook for a cordial
-acceptance of her offered assistance; and forthwith through
-the window she seized all such loose articles as lay within
-reach, piling them in a heap on the platform previous to depositing
-them in her strap which she placed over her forehead
-and let fall in a loop down her back. Several articles had
-already disappeared out of the window before Mrs. Cultus
-grasped the misunderstanding of her own laughter; but when
-she found the woman was actually doing the heavy work of a
-porter, and for her personally, Mrs. Cultus’ American ideas
-about woman’s sphere and woman’s work asserted themselves.
-As a member of the Ethical-Social Culturist’s-Reversal Association,
-she must become an impromptu missionary to enter
-her protest, and even set things right.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t allow it!” she exclaimed, shaking her head. “Get
-me a man! a man! why, it’s outrageous! You’re only a young
-girl!” and Mrs. Cultus turned to look for the Professor who
-had already gone in search of a man.</p>
-
-<p>The Bhootan damsel grinned once more, as if astonished,
-then spoke her mind not unlike the historic waiter who
-“roared it.” “No man!&mdash;don’t want a man! I take! I take
-all! easy!” and proceeded to show how easily she could take
-all by lifting a huge bundle of travelling rugs, rezais, nearly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-as bulky as herself, putting them in the loop of her strap as
-foundation piece, the smaller heavy things on top, and gave
-a good grunt of satisfaction when the weight settled on her
-forehead; and then&mdash;smiled again.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus, equally practical, at once changed her mind;
-she concluded it was utterly useless to waste sympathy upon a
-damsel so eminently qualified to take care of herself; especially
-since the woman-porter had her own ideas of woman’s
-sphere, and did not intend to permit any man to take away her
-trade. If Miss Winchester had been near at the time no doubt
-she would have been much impressed by the Bhootan grunt
-of satisfaction for the privilege of carrying luggage; for verily
-it was a notable addition to her collection.</p>
-
-<p>Such was Mrs. Cultus’ first interview with a specimen of
-womankind from the immense area of Central Asia, where
-woman’s rights were already granted after their fashion, and
-woman’s work performed with a vengeance. Mrs. Cultus little
-realized that there, in the crowd around her, were not only
-women-porters, but Thibetan mothers to whom polyandry
-was no new thing, being in fact a custom of their district.
-Women who had several husbands because they were the proper
-things to have; and felt themselves quite equal to do man’s
-work and a little more, besides. Mrs. Cultus learned this and
-other items, when a few days later she noticed a pair of
-rough sandal-boots standing at the door of a hut occupied by
-a polyandrist household. She was informed that these were
-equivalent to a notice left outside by one of the husbands that
-he was on the premises, therefore for the present the others
-had best keep away. Mrs. Cultus learned, too, that the several
-husbands were often brothers, hence the household was
-a more united family than if it were otherwise. Mrs. Cultus
-was obtaining a realizing sense of relationships among some
-of the primitives yet upon the earth, and she soon concluded
-that the more primitive the people the less she personally
-cared to visit them socially.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_HIMALAYA_CATHEDRAL"><span class="hidden"><em>THE HIMALAYA CATHEDRAL</em></span></h2>
-
-<h3 id="XXXIV">XXXIV<br />
-<span class="fs80">ADELE SEES THE DELECTABLE MOUNTAINS</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container p0">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“<em>On the mountains is freedom! The breath of decay</em></div>
- <div class="verse indent0"><em>Never sullies the fresh-flowing air.</em>”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="pad50pc p0">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Schiller.</span></p>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THE next day the whole party were domiciled in a little
-stone structure one-story high, hung like an eyrie
-upon a cliff. The site overlooked great depths, and
-their domicile much like a tiny doll’s house perched upon a
-mantelpiece. Above and beyond were insurmountable
-heights, and only a narrow pony-path separated this little
-dwelling from the forest-clad valleys thousands of feet below.
-Within a few steps a remarkable view-point, a promontory jutting
-out in mid-air; and before them rose “The Five Points
-of Eternal Snow.”</p>
-
-<p>Kunchingunga was no “Jungfrau,” but a matron, with her
-children and grandchildren clustered around her imperial
-throne.</p>
-
-<p>Adele wandered off alone, and stood upon the promontory,
-looking forward. On a level with her eye and apparently not
-far off, soared a giant bird, poised in space, he being thousands
-of feet above the earth beneath him. Adele waved her handkerchief
-to attract his attention; the majestic areonaut merely
-changed the angle of his wings to bring his eye into better
-position, and refused to approach. A chilly current of air
-came over the crest of the mountain; Adele drew her wrap
-about her, and in so doing lost hold upon her kerchief&mdash;it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-floated off on the breeze. It was no sooner free from her
-hand, than the expert bird sweeping round in majestic curves
-upon the wings of the wind, picked it up in mid-air, and soon
-disappeared amid the foliage of the forest. This wild denizen
-of the woods, who could sustain himself at a perilous height
-in space, apparently had an instinctive fear of man, even of
-a young girl, yet no fear of man’s inanimate production, the
-handkerchief; and his penetrating eye had evidently grasped
-the situation from the distance of half a mile. Such was the
-clearness of the atmosphere, and such the acute vision of the
-bird.</p>
-
-<p>Adele admired his quickness of sight, his natural cleverness,
-and his wild knowledge of the world, as he sailed away with
-what she had held in her hand an instant before. “I don’t
-mind the loss,” said she, “but I do dislike extremely to have
-things snatched away, first by the wind and then by that eagle.
-What the Doctor calls ‘the wild forces’ in nature, surely do
-require taming.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked across the valley. The lower ranges rose above
-a belt of haze, the mountains above did not appear to rest
-upon any solid base, and the summits of eternal snows appeared
-as if in another world&mdash;a world where corruption had
-put on incorruption, the world of purity and whiteness. Seen
-through the rarefied air above, the apparent nearness of such
-stupendous masses, solid and firm yet resting upon an ethereal
-base, somewhat appalled Adele; and she drew her wrap closer
-about her as her eyes wandered from peak to peak extending
-in endless length on either side, yet all above and beyond the
-reach of man. She knew them to be the backbone of a continent,
-which (when seen from certain elevations, at the end
-of the rainy season when the southeast monsoon ceases to
-blow) was visible over an expanse of two hundred miles. She
-knew this range of peaks must be miles away as the bird flies,
-yet so wide was the angle between the horizon and those
-celestial summits, and so great the difference between her own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-level and that of the Eternal Pure Whiteness, that she felt
-their presence near, and herself in the presence of the sublime
-in nature. Her natural eye told her this, and gave her a new
-physical sensation which was exhilarating, uplifting and inspiring.
-And with this inspiration came a new incentive to
-spiritual perception, a tremendous stimulant to idealize. It
-was, indeed, what she saw&mdash;a Celestial Vision.</p>
-
-<p>She caught her breath as she gazed afar; and a sense of
-wonder, aye, of adoration, welled up from within, and a comprehending
-love for the beautiful and for the sublime. These
-emotions, like a powerful impulse heavenward, filled her whole
-being, and words came&mdash;breathed rather than spoken&mdash;towards
-the One who ever dwells in nature, ever listens, and always
-hears. Forgetting self, unconscious that she was actually
-praying, she yet prayed. Such is the compelling force of the
-sublime in nature.</p>
-
-<p>“Our Father who art!&mdash;art in Heaven!&mdash;Father in Heaven!
-where all is beautiful!</p>
-
-<p>“And what is this? Oh, how beautiful! just where our
-Father has built His mansions. Look! those snows and glaciers
-reflect His Glory! I can see it! That blue canopy overhead,
-and those forests below, are like the Earth-Beautiful He made
-for us, and there is the roseate light of a Holy Place. God is
-there! Yes! I know it&mdash;I feel it! He is here, too! Yes!
-surely. He is here! How holy is this place!”</p>
-
-<p>Then assured of the nearness of her Father Creator, she
-tried to grasp some idea of the meaning of His Presence to
-her; and unto her was granted a glimpse of the very highest
-possible conception of the facts visible in nature, of things as
-they are, for the study of both science and religion.</p>
-
-<p>She stood in the presence of the loftiest mountains upon
-the globe; and what were they? What was this earth at her
-feet?&mdash;the world and all that is therein!</p>
-
-<p>“The Lord is in His Holy Temple! The Lord! and His
-Temple! Holy! both Holy&mdash;God and His Temple. I can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-see that, too! He made it, and all that is therein. He said
-it was ‘good,’&mdash;it is&mdash;it must be Holy! It is His own.”</p>
-
-<p>The word “Temple,” and what it implied, impressed itself
-upon her mind, as if it revealed some tremendous fact in
-nature which before she had not fully realized. She gazed
-right and left, up the cross-valleys, and into the forest depths;
-then finally towards the Celestial Summits bathed in that
-roseate light which symbolized so much to her personally since
-her earlier experience when her attention had been called to
-it by her earthly father. What before she had really seen but
-dimly, yet strong enough to be a constant aid to enlightenment,
-now became a living reality. It was verily a temple;
-and anew she began to idealize her surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a Cathedral! this whole region! a mighty Cathedral!
-God’s own, built by Him here in these mountains, the Himalaya
-Cathedral!&mdash;the greatest upon Earth!” And while possessed
-by this vivid thought, there came a still small voice, as
-if from a sub-intelligence, whispering: “His service is here,
-His ritual.” She heard this but faintly; then, rejoicing in her
-idealization, she went straight on to picture the Cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>“Look! there is the Nave, this great valley! and there is the
-crypt beneath, that sombre forest far below! There is plenty
-of room in that Nave for the congregation&mdash;free seats everywhere.
-I can see it filled with all sorts of people. There!
-there is some one now, in that tea-garden under those tree
-ferns, a party of them looking towards the blue sky. They
-wish to know what the weather is going to be like, wish to
-know what God intends it to be, for they are looking upwards;
-perhaps that is their way of worshiping! who knows?</p>
-
-<p>“And there is the Transept! there is more than one, those
-valleys; they reach to the end of the earth. How curious that
-so many of these valleys lead directly up to the front, not so
-‘crosswise’ as in other churches. I never saw a Cathedral so
-well arranged for approaching and hearing. Ah! there’s a
-Chapel in that transept! it looks more like a hut! some one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-within is burning incense&mdash;it comes out of the chimney!
-Well, we’ll call it incense, and that home is a chapel.”</p>
-
-<p>And while she mused, a little group of natives crossed an
-open field and entered a clump of trees surrounded by shrubbery,
-a thicket. “Some other sort of worship,” she thought.
-“I wonder what they are going to do? I’ll wait and see.”</p>
-
-<p>Numerous parties on ponies passed along the mountain
-roads, ascending and descending from different levels. “Why,
-this Cathedral has most extensive galleries, and how many
-real workers all on the move! Well, I rather like a gallery
-at times; one can sit up there and not feel too conspicuous,
-only worship.”</p>
-
-<p>Then she noticed that the majority on ponies were going
-in one direction&mdash;northward. “Why are they going that way,
-I wonder?&mdash;why not towards the East as so many do in
-Cathedrals? No, I forgot; the Moslems turn towards Mecca
-no matter in what direction they may be from it; but here
-it is different. These people seem to be approaching and observing
-their ritual in a different manner and in a different
-direction. Everything here seems to draw one’s attention
-northward,” and she mused about this for some time, then:</p>
-
-<p>“The pole star itself is hidden behind that mountain; we
-are too far south to see it, but I heard Father say it was in
-that direction. Yes, I remember it was very low in the heavens
-when I last saw it sparkling there. It is there now, always
-behind the crest of Kunchingunga. Even if these worshipers
-cannot see it, they see Kunchingunga, their Holy Mountain,
-pointing the same way&mdash;northward. Now, what does this
-mean?” and she mused again, but this time only for an instant.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I can see why! I understand it!” she exclaimed.
-“In other directions, stars, as well as lesser things on earth,
-seem ever moving, revolving, changing; Kunchingunga and
-the North Star seem never to change. The North Star is
-towards the centre, all revolve around that fixed point; it is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-marvellous what a magnificent Clock there is to this Cathedral&mdash;the
-Great Clock in the Heavens, the Clock of Ages, ever
-revolving around the permanent fixed centre. But then again
-God is the only Permanent, Unchangeable; and to Him a
-thousand years are as one day&mdash;the Clock says so. Why, of
-course, in His Cathedral one must look northward; it is like
-looking towards Him, towards something fixed, that does not
-change. Oh, I shall always think of this Cathedral with
-Kunchingunga, its Great Clock, and the hidden star,” and she
-quoted from Bryant’s “Hymn to the North Star”:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“And thou dost see them rise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Star of the pole! and thou dost see them set.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Alone in thy cold skies</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Thou keepest thy old unmoving station yet.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Yes, I understand it; in this Cathedral the worshiper
-should look towards the north, towards the visible centre as
-Nature and Science have made it appear to us. To consult
-that Clock one must look straight ahead, towards the Only
-One who is from the ever-existent past to the everlasting future&mdash;the
-Ancient of Days.”</p>
-
-<p>This thought naturally led to her next and final impression
-on this memorable day in her spiritual life, alone with the
-sublime in nature.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is it?” she thought. “Where should I look to find
-it? the Holy of Holies in this Cathedral,” and again she
-turned northward.</p>
-
-<p>“That Celestial region!&mdash;it is very near it, yet not exactly
-of it. There! I can see the Choir, and almost hear the angels
-singing, but I cannot approach nearer&mdash;not yet. Oh! those
-Celestial summits!&mdash;the Delectable Mountains! Look! Oh,
-look!”</p>
-
-<p>Now as a matter of fact in Adele’s history, a kind Providence
-did see fit to respond to her yearnings to appreciate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-this marvelous scenery. As to all who seek the beautiful,
-sublime and holy in nature she saw what she did see, and
-through it she perceived the invisible; through things seen she
-was in the presence of the unseen.</p>
-
-<p>The sun’s rays falling upon the snow-fields and glaciers
-on the higher elevations were reflected upwards and on either
-side with intense brilliancy&mdash;prismatic colors of exquisite
-delicacy were diffused over the whole landscape; these and the
-various hues and shades bathed the whole of nature visible
-with a glory that could be seen. The human eye was satisfied,
-the artistic sense enraptured, and the holy spirit in man
-at rest in peace.</p>
-
-<p>No “dim religious light” had this Cathedral, but a Glory,
-sublime, sacred; the Creator’s own handiwork, which man’s
-artistic efforts may often suggest but can never equal.</p>
-
-<p>To Adele in her frame of mind, it was a veritable Shekinah.</p>
-
-<p>“The Holy of Holies! white and glistening! It is too
-bright! too bright for me! I cannot see&mdash;the altar,&mdash;too
-bright!” and she covered her eyes. “Weak humanity cannot
-look upon His Face, and live.”</p>
-
-<p>Not long after a voice was heard&mdash;a melodious voice, a
-young and cultivated voice, singing; one who strove to make
-her art holy&mdash;a means to spiritual ends; for it is in the spirit
-that is the real growth. It was Adele&mdash;Adele worshiping after
-her own fashion. She had prayed in her Cathedral, and now
-she lifted her voice in praise; the melody rose heavenward to
-mingle with the music she had heard spiritually&mdash;the Celestial
-Choir. She sang with her whole soul:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“Angels ever bright and fair,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Take, oh, take me&mdash;&mdash;”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>None on earth heard her, so far as she knew.</p>
-
-<p>None, indeed, but a poor unfortunate human being clothed
-in rags who sat at the door of her hut under the brow of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-hill. Being out of sight, and dull of hearing, and a Taoist
-priestess withal, this poor soul, sincere and true in <em>her</em> faith,
-told her followers she had heard the Good Spirits talking in
-the air above her.</p>
-
-<p>“In a strange language,” she said, “but clear and sweet. I
-knew it was the Good Spirits&mdash;and I called: ‘Buddha!
-Buddha! O Sakya! take me from existence! O Sakya
-Muni!’”</p>
-
-<p>He who ever listens, heard them both.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXXV">XXXV<br />
-<span class="fs80">HIMALAYA CATHEDRAL BY THE SUPREME ARCHITECT</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">ADELE’S idealization was correct. The inquisitive explorers
-found themselves face to face with nature in
-one of the Creator’s own Temples, where the good
-and true and the beautiful were embodied in a place made for
-worship by the Creator. A Cathedral whose architecture was
-appropriate and soul-stirring (æsthetic) even unto sublimity;
-and beyond man’s capacity to appreciate fully. A Cathedral
-whose vaulting was the heavens above, its floor the earth beneath,
-and its religious life as profound as the depths under
-the earth. And as the sequel proved, our travelers were also
-to find all types of worship there, existing even unto this day
-in this Temple of the Lord; from the early sacrifice to the
-latest enlightenment&mdash;the Divine Light of the World.</p>
-
-<p>“Why so? Why all this? Upon what ground scientific,
-philosophical, moral and religious? Freedom obtained&mdash;Life
-in the open&mdash;the open life&mdash;physically, intellectually, spiritually.
-The Truth as each man saw it was able to make him
-free.”</p>
-
-<p>The sense of the beautiful, the artistic sense, first asserted
-itself in this particular group of Nineteenth Century inquisitives.
-They were accustomed to temples made with hands in
-which art had striven to express the truth; here in this scene
-they found it rising through all gradations of beauty, and
-realized that in nature we have the mother source of truth
-and beauty in architecture. Of course, they first noticed and
-criticised as seeing with the eyes of their own civilization.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-What did they see? Lines as studied, yet free, as in any masterpiece
-of Greece or basilica of early Christianity, as full of
-aspiration, arching heavenward, as any Gothic work of later
-day. And not only this; they soon recognized other forms,
-outlines marked in character as a Hindoo Temple or Burmese
-Pagoda, peculiar as a Chinese Tower or Japanese Torii&mdash;pure
-and chaste as the Moslem Taj Mahal. They were astounded
-at the many forms, originally obtained direct from nature or
-suggested by natural forms, which had been subsequently
-conventionalized by art. Evidently all sorts and conditions
-of men had at one time or another sat at the feet of the
-Supreme Architect.</p>
-
-<p>Then they observed more critically.</p>
-
-<p>The growth stood upon basal lines, founded upon the earth
-itself, plain areas; then massive foundation rocks; terraces
-to suit the location; knolls to accentuate the demands of perspective;
-spurs to act as buttresses and bind together the rising
-masses; hills to invite one to ascend higher; mountains towering
-towards the realm of the unseen. The work suggesting
-solidity, firmness, <ins class="corr" id="tn226" title="Transcriber’s Note—“and all the essentials for majesty domnating” changed to “and all the essentials for majesty dominating”.">and all the essentials for majesty dominating</ins>
-heavenward. The elementary design simple in form,
-simple in combination, simple even as a Chaldean or Egyptian
-monumental pyramid, Tomb, Library or Portal; as straight
-and as true as a Persepolis House of Prayer; as flat and as
-positive, and yet as significant and as symbolic as any Parsee
-devotee of old, or a Mason from the days of Solomon, would
-have chosen to signify Basic Truth in Religion or Simple
-Life in Morality&mdash;the simplicity of the Gospel of Architecture.</p>
-
-<p>A palpable fact began to manifest itself, namely: that man
-never did learn anything worth knowing unless he came to
-nature to see and perceive, to observe how the lilies of the field
-were arrayed, and how the mountains towered heavenward to
-Our Father who Art, to Him who is Art&mdash;the Way, the Truth,
-the Beautiful; and this was not only visible to the eye, but
-the Cathedral was resonant&mdash;it spoke. There was heard the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-very Voice of the Creator Architect, the Mind of Nature; and
-the sound thereof echoed to the ends of the Earth. The great
-instruction had been given, learned practically, and practiced.</p>
-
-<p>The motifs and details, conceived for application in working
-out the design, had come direct from the original source, the
-Artist-Mind of the Almighty, whose prolific unlimited power
-of artistic expression manifested knowledge of all form and
-substance; and this was impressed upon the beholder and
-heard by him, an unobtrusive still small voice whispering
-from that Spirit which had conceived it. Such manifestations
-in nature were exquisite to both eye and ear; one did not feel
-disposed to be loquacious about it, but only note and apply
-what had been done by the Trinity of Usefulness, Beauty and
-Adaptability. The Voice had said, “Follow me,” and men had
-tried to do so.</p>
-
-<p>The style chosen was that which in time became the Parent
-of all styles subsequently born&mdash;born through man’s observance
-of natural forms, his environment, his mental endowments,
-and his intellectual appreciation; his virility to
-produce artistic work. The Supreme Architect had been unceasingly
-painstaking and exact; in human parlance, He had
-been sensitive, conscientious, profuse yet never wasteful of
-His virile powers; in fact, to the last degree jealous for what
-He knew to be the truth in art. Being the One who knows,
-He knew how, and would not otherwise. He would have
-naught unless it were equally good, true and beautiful, the
-three combined in one&mdash;a Trinity of Truth, like Himself,
-Himself in His Work.</p>
-
-<p>The doctrine of the Trinity pervaded this Cathedral, as ever
-with truth physical, intellectual, spiritual.</p>
-
-<p>To Professor Cultus and the Doctor after noting these
-things, it seemed really to imply much more; namely, as if
-the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, could
-only be expressed in terms of Three in One.</p>
-
-<p>“I love to think of it,” said Adele, “it’s so helpful.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus appeared the Himalaya Cathedral to these Nineteenth
-Century inquisitives. A place of worship&mdash;not the Lord’s
-barn, but his Temple, His Holy Dwelling Place, adequate,
-artistic and pure; worthy of humanity endowed by Heaven
-with the power to worship in Spirit and in Truth; worthy of
-its Master Architect.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXXVI">XXXVI<br />
-<span class="fs80">PROGRESS OF THE BUILDING</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">PROFESSOR CULTUS and the Doctor had many talks
-concerning the progress of this Himalaya Cathedral
-during construction, its “evolution,” as they expressed
-it; and geological records were found safely deposited
-for those who know how to read rocks. It appeared that the
-design had been originally conceived and sketched by the hand
-of the Master, and then worked out, or developed according to
-forms suitable to all climes, from the tropical in the valleys
-below to the arctic amid glaciers and domes of eternal snow.
-Pupils of the Master had embodied His ideas; His own assistants
-and workmen, the forces of Nature; born, brought up,
-educated in His own industrial and artistic schools; where
-His own master mind, masterful technique, and masterly spirit
-dominated&mdash;the Trinity of Mind, Matter, and Spirit.</p>
-
-<p>There had never been a period during the work when the
-real progress had been arrested, nor had the original purpose
-of design ever been changed by alterations, extras, or further
-information on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>In the beginning He had conceived it; the work commenced;
-it grew; it continues. In itself manifesting a clear distinct
-purpose, namely; a place in which to live, learn, and worship;
-thereby manifesting the Trinity existent and operative, in
-action, action, action; three as one. Within and without its
-needs and decorations have ever been growing and progressing,
-as the world grows older and the worshipers grow wiser. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-purpose pointed clearly towards what the intellect of man
-designated as “perfection;” and of what the Holy Spirit in
-man dreamed of as “The Perfect Day.”</p>
-
-<p>At various periods in time poor humanity standing aside
-like helpless children, had seen great commotions on the premises,
-apparent catastrophes, and seeming opposition to things
-as they should be. Humanity had actually seen the lightning
-“strike” and demolish; and there was marvelous unity in co-operation
-of labor when the lightning did strike. Nevertheless
-the real status of things was not thereby changed. Man
-imagined that the edifice itself would fall, and the world
-come to an end; a mass of débris to be blown away, much like
-nebulous mist or a comet’s tail is scattered and disappears in
-space. Man had seen such things with his “field-glasses;”
-similarly man presumed to know. He really knew just so
-much of the building and its eternal purpose as the present
-stage of progress permitted&mdash;no more, no less. Of many
-things he could be but a spectator; and when he manufactured
-his glasses for greater depths of penetration, he reduced
-his scope (field), and less and less grew the light upon his
-lens.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far there had been no real catastrophe; it was merely
-the taking down of scaffolding amid a cloud of dust and rubbish.
-The scaffolding removed, the Temple stood behind safe
-and erect; its beauty more apparent than ever before. A new
-façade had been brought to light for the admiration of all who
-cultivated their inborn capacity for appreciation; both worshipers
-and non-worshipers alike.</p>
-
-<p>It was during the crises of scaffold-demolishing, when there
-was much talk of what would happen when the world dissolved,
-that absurd disputes had arisen among the crowd of
-lookers-on. Non-worshipers, in their conceit, offered criticisms,
-although in fact they knew only “the little” that is
-vouchsafed to all mankind. Theological fanatics asserted
-themselves, saying with intensity:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You have neglected your opportunities, and now it’s too
-late. You’ll be condemned.”</p>
-
-<p>To which came, of course, the practical responsive application:</p>
-
-<p>“Be condemned!&mdash;yourself!” Hence the sobriquet, “condemned,”
-popular in application to this day as a verb of intensity.</p>
-
-<p>Such dogmatic assertions and petty recriminations were
-really absurd in this presence; disputes embodying mere
-words; since naught is condemned in nature where each day’s
-work is pronounced “good,” and where “there is no condemnation”
-to those who seek the Truth and follow in it; and where
-the Divine Voice of a man to his brother man has pronounced
-the dictum: “For this cause came I, the Truth, into this
-world, to save it.”</p>
-
-<p>This Himalaya Cathedral stood in a region where the rain-fall
-was appalling. It was more sudden and more terrific than
-occurs elsewhere. Torrents, apparently devastating, passed
-that way, carrying all loose impedimenta before them, gathering
-fresh strength by momentum as they rushed headlong
-into the depths. Humanity stood aghast, wiseacres felt confident
-that nothing could withstand the force of these downpours.
-Having observed similar phenomena on a smaller
-scale, therefore these reasoners concluded it must, must forebode
-the worst, annihilation.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that the voice in nature, resonant through the
-Cathedral, actually laughed them to scorn for their blindness.</p>
-
-<p>From the beginning nature had abhorred the idea of annihilation,
-and would never permit a vacuum where she had
-built so beautiful a Temple. Truth destroys not, but fulfils;
-it is not destructive, but constructive. Annihilation, a
-vacuum, is an abstract conception without a concrete embodiment
-even in physics; and less still where the Mind of Nature
-and the Spirit that is Holy dominate.</p>
-
-<p>The phenomena of apparent devastation in this Cathedral<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-were but changes or transmutations of the forces employed by
-the Great Master Builder. A change from lightning to rain
-was simply a change of workmen, from those of one trade to
-those of another, neither more nor less; only the removal of
-that which had done its work, and now would interfere with
-the progress of the building, the Temple, its greater usefulness
-and its greater beauty. The torrents which seemed to
-devastate were in fact cleansing, purging, sweeping henceforth
-the accumulation within and around which had served
-its purpose, and in that form was no longer needed. Acting
-under natural laws, as recognized in geology, biology, natural
-history and botany, the Divine Administration had cleaned
-and purified that region. Cleanliness being a feature of godliness,
-even the odor of the unkempt, the unwashed, and the
-unclean, must be scrubbed out&mdash;the Cathedral to remain holy
-must be kept fresh, clean and pure; befitting those who would
-be pure, and thus able to pray and to praise.</p>
-
-<p>And again was the Voice Divine of a man to his brother
-man heard resonant through the Cathedral arches:</p>
-
-<p>“I came not to destroy, but to fulfil. Wash and be clean!
-Cleanse your hearts, and not your garments only.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXXVII">XXXVII<br />
-<span class="fs80">PRIMATE OF THE CATHEDRAL&mdash;EX CATHEDRA</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">IT was during one of these cleansing periods, in years gone
-by, when the terrific rain-fall scoured out the useless
-and hideous from this Himalaya Cathedral, that a company
-of poor native Lepchas stood upon the hill-side watching.
-Comparatively safe in their own position they witnessed
-and heard the forces of nature at work.</p>
-
-<p>Among them was one whom they accounted as a wise man,
-a Seer, who saw more in nature than most people can see; a
-prophet who had foresight founded on close observation of
-facts. Some of his neighbors would have designated him a
-Lama, others would have called him a Buddha, and some,
-more distant still, would have said a Medicine Man. Yet, all
-listened to his words of wisdom, repeating them, until they
-became in time the folk-lore of the land.</p>
-
-<p>This Seer, who was so clear-sighted, stood for much, both
-historically and ecclesiastically; also in Wisdom Literature.</p>
-
-<p>He, and no one else, was the venerable and venerated
-Primate of this Cathedral where a thousand years are as one
-day and one day as a thousand years. As Primate-Leader
-he received many visitations from distinguished ecclesiastics,
-men with other titles; notably a primitive nature-worshiper
-named Abel, whose parents, according to one form of record,
-were quasi-divinities in the Garden of Eden; and another
-named Tenno, himself also, according to another form
-of record, a semi-divinity, his mother a Goddess&mdash;father<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-of a dynasty ruling upon earth to this day, the Mikado.
-There were also Holy Rishis of the Vedic Period with
-their descendants, Brahmins, Chief Yogis; also Buddhas,
-Grand Lamas, and Superior Men; Priests after the order of
-many things; Priests from Adab, “the oldest city in the
-world,” founded in the misty years of the fifth millennium
-B. C.; Priests of Bel at Nippur, 3800 B. C.; Priests of the
-Sun God from Sippar (Biblical Sepharain), 3750 B. C.;
-Priests from Lagash, the Sumerian Priest (King Gudea)
-who reigned 2800 B. C., fully 500 years before the days of
-Abraham; Priests from Assyria, 860 B. C.; Priests of the
-North and of the South, of the Highlands and of the Lowlands,
-and of the “Unknown,” after the order of Melchisedek.
-Also Priests of Isis, from Egypt; and the Great Priest
-of Ormuzd, Zoroaster, through whom the brightest light as to
-conscience over intellect enlightened the world for one thousand
-years&mdash;representing millions upon millions of worshipers
-born from the womb of ancient time. Also Wise Men of the
-East, Apostles, Elders, Deacons, Metropolitans, Popes and
-Archbishops; Archdeacons, Priests, and Fathers; Rectors,
-Pastors Emeritus, Ministers of the Word of God, Preachers
-of the Gospel of Salvation; and Evangelists who brought both
-the Word and the Bread of Life; of latter day experience;
-all filling offices acknowledged to be sacred, and some using
-words which sounded almost profane.</p>
-
-<p>While he, the Himalaya Seer, was often clothed in rags,
-and fed upon the flesh of wild beasts, and upon edible locusts
-and excellent wild honey, and his loud ringing voice was as
-one crying in the wilderness, the others often officiated in
-robes of state. While he carried a staff in his hand, and had
-little change of raiment, they often bore relics they considered
-sacred, rings through their noses, and even iron bars
-thrust through their cheeks, and others bore a gilded shepherd’s
-crook so weighty in importance that it proved an incumbrance
-even unto themselves. While he, in hot weather,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-wore but a cloth about his loins, and a band across his forehead
-to absorb the sweat of his brow, bowing his head in
-reverence and fear when he saw the manifestations of Energy
-in the Supreme Force in nature; another manifested the life
-of asceticism and callousness to both heat and cold; another
-brought lotus leaves and meditated, trying to think of nothing
-at all&mdash;of absorption into nature; another brought the Sacred
-Fire and preached the higher light which did enlighten for a
-millennium of years: “O Ormuzd, Fountain of Light! thy
-Light is in all that shines;” another brought his artistic image
-and preached justification by faith in Ameda. Another
-brought his crude and immoral images, yet preached justification
-by faith in Krishna, and the enfranchisement of women;
-and another, a fearless man, a married priest as God had
-made them so from the beginning, who preached justification
-by faith in Him who had said, “I am the Light of the World;
-believest thou this? follow Me.”</p>
-
-<p>And when he, the Seer, cried with a loud voice: “Repent!
-I say unto thee, Repent!” the others also preached as they
-had ability; using diverse institutions and rituals according
-to the spiritual needs of the times and places. Thus it was
-these who embodied the diverse manifestations of the Spirit
-that is Holy; their experience in history proving that intellectual
-effort only stimulates the craving of the soul, whereas
-religious consciousness is never satisfied except by spiritual
-growth.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, there were many, very many, sincere preachers who
-appeared and labored conscientiously, each after his own belief,
-and officiated in this Cathedral, Nature’s own Temple;
-some proselyting, others not&mdash;only trusting to natural growth.
-And while all “took up collections,” yet, strange to say, one
-only possessed the ancient veritable title of Seer, the one in
-primitive costume, with primitive sincerity; the Venerable
-Primate who lived in the open “without money and no scrip,”
-and thus preserved his loud sonorous voice in nature; he who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-lived very close to his Creator-God, the Creator and Father
-of all.</p>
-
-<p>What did this Seer see?</p>
-
-<p>Standing in the presence of the storm, none realized his
-own helplessness more devoutly than this poor Himalaya Seer
-himself, following in the footsteps of his own primitive ancestry
-since the beginning of man’s appearance as a religious
-animal upon earth; hence known, in consequence, as a nature-worshiper.
-Calling his group of followers about him he spake
-to them as if in a trance, as if he saw what they could not
-see: the Evil Spirits, or spirits for evil, flying hither and
-thither over the land. While in this trance-like condition of
-religious rapture, he spoke of the wind, the rain, and the
-lightning as antagonistic personalities. He gesticulated, as if
-he saw them as such, wild and irresistible, in indiscriminate
-conflict with things as they are. Being himself human he
-could not conceive personality as otherwise than subject to
-human influences; therefore he called upon his fellow-worshipers
-to send up some sweet odor, to propitiate, to offer a
-sacrifice, to attract attention to something good and not evil&mdash;aye,
-to crowd out the evil by the good.</p>
-
-<p>The people obeyed him. Then and there arose the good influence,
-and lo! a marvelous change took place in the heart-life
-of each primitive worshiper. The evil spirits in the
-storm ceased their warfare and dispersed&mdash;the tempest ceased,
-nature smiled, each heart was filled with peace. “Peace, be
-still! I say unto thee, peace, be still! My peace I give unto
-thee.”</p>
-
-<p>When in due course of nature the heavens had again
-cleared, the Seer spake anew; but not now from a trance. He
-had no trances after it cleared off, and he stood in the bright
-sunlight of nature. No! He was as other men&mdash;no more, no
-less&mdash;in all ages. What he now saw was also different, and the
-tenor of his voice had changed.</p>
-
-<p>He announced a message to be delivered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span></p>
-
-<p>His followers fell upon their faces before him.</p>
-
-<p>He kept them waiting; in fact, being no longer in physical
-fear himself he began to lack his primitive simplicity. The
-sight of others bowing with their faces to the earth before <em>him</em>
-was not unpleasant. Weak human nature asserted itself; he
-posed, after his fashion. He kept the people waiting; and he
-flattered himself that this was due to his office as Seer, as if
-the office made the man, and not man the office.</p>
-
-<p>The people waited; they had long since learned to wait, and
-to wait upon others. The Seer then raised his hands heavenward
-and spake; a message so ancient that its form now
-sounds archaic, from before Abraham, from Job, from primitive
-man; a poet of the Vedas of the South, or a historian of
-the Northern Sagas, might have said it each after his own
-fashion; it is recorded in the Holy Bible, the truth from the
-beginning.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center smcap">the message of the seer.</p>
-
-<p>“The God of thy fathers hath sent me.”</p>
-
-<p>The people respected the speaker&mdash;messenger&mdash;apostle&mdash;the
-one sent.</p>
-
-<p>“I know that my Bondsman, my Redeemer, liveth.”</p>
-
-<p>The people were glad there was some one to call upon in
-time of trouble.</p>
-
-<p>“Thou shalt not be afraid of destruction when it cometh,
-at destruction and famine thou shalt laugh. The Almighty
-shall deliver thee in six troubles; yea! in seven there shall no
-evil touch thee; therefore despise not thou the chastening of
-the Almighty. Thou shalt be hid from the scourge, even the
-scourge of the tongue; it shall not come nigh thee. I know
-that my Redeemer-Bondsman liveth! and that he shall stand
-at the latter day upon the earth.”</p>
-
-<p>Such was the message, god-like, short and to the point;
-natural, personal, spiritual; the Trinity in Speech.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span></p>
-
-<p>The first message of Truth Immortal signaled from the
-Fortress of the Primitive in nature; signaled from the “hills
-whence cometh our Help.”</p>
-
-<p>This thrilling message was heard around the world, in all
-religions in some mysterious form or degree. A divine utterance,
-original, it has continued to resound through all the
-ages. It was the beginning of Hope, the assurance of Help,
-from “Our Father who art”&mdash;art “ever present.”</p>
-
-<p>The primitive populace wondered at the wisdom of their
-Seer; his strange words which spoke of the God of their
-fathers, as if He would help them and would save them from
-destruction. They then, at first, thought little of that historical
-significance of the message which referred to His coming
-to the earth at a “latter day,” perhaps after they themselves
-had departed; they were interested only in the present.
-They wanted Him now; why would He not come at once?</p>
-
-<p>The Seer satisfied them, explaining by application of the
-message sent to them each individually. He did it in his own
-way. The Seer had seen according to his capacity then and
-there; he continued to preach as he had ability.</p>
-
-<p>“The Good Spirit is here. I heard Him above the wind and
-storm. I saw Him when He took me to the seventh-heaven
-where I did see more than I do now. But He is here!&mdash;the
-thunderings and lightnings were the noise of His horn
-(trumpet), and the light of His Countenance?&mdash;the dust you
-saw was the mountain smoking under Him.”</p>
-
-<p>The people trembled with dread of what their Seer had
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw the Evil Spirits driven before Him, as the torrent
-drives the wild beasts from the forest; and when He made a
-scourge of small cords He drove them from his Temple as
-sheep and oxen are driven. Some had disguised themselves
-as those who sold doves&mdash;they fled at His approach. Deceivers
-offered Him money, to tempt&mdash;He overthrew their
-tables, tore their shams (hypocrisy) to shreds, and banished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-them from His sight. And they cried: Peace! peace! and
-there was no peace.”</p>
-
-<p>The populace thought of demons let loose, and of a “hell
-upon earth.” The Seer instantly thrust home his vivid
-thoughts:</p>
-
-<p>“You, yourselves, saw how He cleared the sky! You, yourselves,
-know how His rains and storms cleaned out the dirt and
-sickness. You saw it! You saw it yourselves! You sent up
-the sweet odor! You made the sacrifice! See how you were
-answered, your prayers answered.”</p>
-
-<p>And a great shout went up: “We did! We saw it! a
-miracle! when the sun shone again.”</p>
-
-<p>And then the Seer closed with a statement so terrible, that
-none in reason, among them, could doubt the truth depicted:</p>
-
-<p>“These are they&mdash;these evil ones&mdash;who fell into deserted
-graves; graves that men walk over them and are not aware
-of them.”</p>
-
-<p>The hearers shivered with abhorrence&mdash;the direful thought!
-deserted graves! terrible consequence of disrespect to ancestors,
-frightful neglect of ancestral veneration, abhorrent disrespect
-to that source from which they had received their
-being, as the Great Good Spirit had granted them life.</p>
-
-<p>Thus ended the Seer’s message, and his own application of
-it. Such was the imagery he used, such the emotion he endeavored
-to portray and to excite. And yet, with all his
-flights, from the Divine Message to the human application,
-this Primitive Primate of Nature’s Cathedral had been profound.
-He had touched upon the three great facts in things
-as they are, and reasonably shall be:</p>
-
-<p>“Dependence, Right Living, Eternal Security.”</p>
-
-<p>Or, to employ another category of later date in Asia:</p>
-
-<p>“Thought, Being, Joy.” (Hindoo formula for Brahm.)</p>
-
-<p>Or another, philosophic:</p>
-
-<p>“Science, Morality, Religion.”</p>
-
-<p>Or as Christianity teaches:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Faith, Hope, Love.”</p>
-
-<p>And when seen as “The Light of the World”:</p>
-
-<p>“The Almighty, the Saviour, the Holy Spirit of Truth, Immanuel.”</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p class="pfs90">“The Soul of Man is the candle of the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p class="pad50pc fs90">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phillips Brooks.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXXVIII">XXXVIII<br />
-<span class="fs80">INTERMEZZO&mdash;THE VOICE IN NATURE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class="poetry-container p0">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent10">Cathedral Orchestra and Organ.</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">Chorus, with Divine Solos.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">O Man! Blessed is thine inquisitiveness&mdash;to learn and to know:</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Cursed is thine inquisition of others.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O Man! Blessed is thy longing&mdash;to look upwards and beyond:</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Cursed is thy willingness to sink downwards;</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Where vice brings vileness in its train.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">O Man! Blessed is thine altruism&mdash;to help others:</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Cursed is thy selfishness, to bury thy talent of help.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness&mdash;for they shall be filled.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Blessed are they who seek the Truth&mdash;for they shall know.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Blessed are they who follow the Way&mdash;for they shall attain.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Seek and ye shall find. Knock!&mdash;it shall be opened.</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">I have the words&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">The Words of Eternal Life.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent6">Arise! O Soul! I say to thee, Come forth!</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">The Truth hath made thee free.</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Arise! O Soul! and stretch thy wings;</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">Thy better portion seek.</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">Arise! and soar! towards greater things,</div>
- <div class="verse indent10">Enlightenment&mdash;and Peace.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">Peace and Rest&mdash;Rest in Peace.</div>
- <div class="verse indent8">I am the Resurrection&mdash;and the Life.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THIS triple comprehensive chorus from nature, with its
-Divine Solos, was heard by both Professor Cultus
-and the Doctor with profound feeling and a deep
-sense of responsibility. They had never heard an inner voice
-(solo) blending with sounds in nature (chorus) quite like
-this. And a veritable intermezzo in their experience, a recitative
-of the wonderful harmonious truths in nature accompanying
-the pure melody of Christ’s words; and corroborated
-by others who knew Him, personally. All so true when sung
-in concert of harmony and rhythm; the sacred music of this
-sphere.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span></p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if the Voices sang of truth ever present, ever
-active, with men at work or a man at rest. All who entered
-the Door of Truth in experience had the Words of Eternal
-Life spoken unto them; and the words implied action, greater
-light, intelligence, and peace; rest from trouble, in an immortal
-active existence&mdash;a life immortal:</p>
-
-<p>“Activity for all our powers, and power for all our activities.”<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Such was the deep impression made in the Himalaya
-Cathedral upon the elder members of the party. Being elderly
-they saw things that way. How about the younger members?
-Youth does not see things in nature as elders do; youth has
-much to learn yet; and old heads rarely grow on young
-shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>Adele had insisted upon going to a greater height up the
-mountains. She longed to reach some high summit. She
-wished to lose nothing of the lofty that could be reached; and
-neither Paul nor the Doctor failed to second her motion.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XXXIX">XXXIX<br />
-<span class="fs80">ON A PINNACLE IN NATURE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">FROM the time that this region of the Himalayas first
-impressed itself as a Cathedral upon the mind of
-Adele, an idealist, she invariably spoke of the various
-natural beauties of the locality as parts of the Grand Edifice.</p>
-
-<p>“This Cathedral has magnificent proportions. I must explore
-it, and go all over it, from crypt to dome, visit the baptistry,
-and, as the Doctor says, ‘mount upon a pinnacle;’”
-then musingly: “I should like to attend a service.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Doctor Wise, the liberal, “we can have
-a service of some sort, even if we are obliged to read prayers
-ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be better to have the natives officiate&mdash;one of
-the local bishops,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“He would not have Apostolic succession,” said Paul, of
-Non-conformist proclivities.</p>
-
-<p>“Apostolic, nevertheless,” remarked Professor Cultus, who
-habitually looked at things from a literary point of view.
-“He would consider himself sent by some one&mdash;that makes
-him apostolic. He would have been ‘called’ to preach, or to
-write, or to do something, fundamentally apostolic, if he is a
-true man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to see a primitive cassock or stole,” said
-Miss Winchester, who was inclined to ritualism, “and a real
-old-time monk with his beads and a rope around his waist.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You shall,” said the Doctor, “and we will investigate to
-see whether the clergy face towards the East.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not here,” said Adele promptly; “they would not if they
-knew.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” exclaimed Miss Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>“Because they must look up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Northward, I mean&mdash;up north.”</p>
-
-<p>“What has that got to do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s towards the centre of things&mdash;the pole star in the
-heavens.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dear me!” said Miss Winchester, “you’re so ‘broad’, you’ll
-flatten out, become thin. I don’t like my bread buttered too
-thin; but tell me, Adele, why here, in this place?”</p>
-
-<p>“This Cathedral is so constructed.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester said she had not before observed it in that
-light.</p>
-
-<p>“Which way shall we start?” inquired Paul.</p>
-
-<p>“For a good view, down the nave,” said Adele. “Let’s ask
-a verger to show us around.”</p>
-
-<p>The verger presented himself in the person of a Bhootan
-peasant astride of a Manchu pony, and leading others saddled
-for members of the party.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not accustomed to attending church on horseback,”
-remarked Miss Winchester. “But I rather like the idea.”</p>
-
-<p>“Our ancestors did; often two on the same pony,” laughed
-Paul. “That’s why I like it; heredity, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“It strikes me it was a case of go-as-you-please with our
-primitive ancestors,” said the Doctor, jovial. “That’s why
-we all like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you mean liberty in worship,” whispered Adele, “that’s
-why it suits me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s about it,” thought the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>This was as they ascended Mt. Senshal towards Tiger Head.
-The valley below was filled with cloud-billows which the cool<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-morning air still kept intact, the atmosphere above more clear
-and transparent. As they and the sun rose higher and higher
-the cloud-billows became vapor, and the mist twirled amid the
-foliage of the forest, or was dissolved and disappeared in the
-general atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>The Bhootan verger took them to a lofty crest from which
-they could look down the vista of the valley, and before them
-the nave of the Cathedral. Verdant hills lifted their heads
-on either side, making a sky-line as lofty as many in the Alps;
-yet here they were merely spurs of the mighty range beyond.</p>
-
-<p>A pause. Adele stood gazing through the Nave; and there
-was the congregation, a world-full, at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>Some one suggested to Paul that he ask her to sing. The
-request seemed injudicious just then and there, but some
-people have no sixth sense. Paul drew up his pony near hers
-while she was still absorbed in the prospect. It certainly was
-inopportune, but he ventured:</p>
-
-<p>“If my voice would carry, I should try to sing. How do
-you feel about it, Adele?”</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“No? you don’t feel like singing! That’s not like you!”</p>
-
-<p>“I like it too much, that’s why.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is that it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not here&mdash;I could not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps&mdash;perhaps in the choir, when they have service.”</p>
-
-<p>Evidently she had her own ideas about sentiments appropriate
-in this Cathedral. There was a place and time for all
-things. This was not the time nor place to make herself
-prominent, not even with the divine art; rather the time for
-meditation upon the infinite grandeur of the scene.</p>
-
-<p>And the verger took them to other points of view, even as
-far as Tongloo (altitude 10,000 feet), and Sunkukphoo (altitude
-12,000 feet), consuming several days for these journeys.
-Over hill and dale they went, from the Forest Bungalow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-mounting to Goom Rock; passing by the pools (porkri) on to
-the Manay Bhunjun (temple); up zigzags to a way-station hut.
-They passed through bamboo groves, and were off and on their
-ponies as the route became too steep for riding. The view at
-Tongloo was comprehensive and superb. Then they continued
-on by descending, before surmounting another range; past
-waterfalls, towards the base of Pionothumna Hills (S. E.);
-to rise again rapidly by endless zigzags, seventeen at one time
-alone, towards the Kala Porkri, a loftier point than they had
-yet reached; then more zigzags, much puffing and blowing,
-through pines; then across the country, the open upon a high
-level; and finally up and up, terrific pull, higher and higher,
-by what Adele called the Himalaya Ladder, as extended as
-Jacob’s, twenty-five zigzags in succession, a steep climb and
-hard work, requiring an extra pair of wings, and double-bellows
-lungs&mdash;to the summit at Sunkukphoo.</p>
-
-<p>“Out on the roof!” exclaimed Miss Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>“Among the flying buttresses,” thought the Professor.</p>
-
-<p>“On a pinnacle of the Temple!” exclaimed the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“All the world beneath us,” said Paul in admiration.</p>
-
-<p>“All but those Delectable Mountains,” thought Adele,
-glancing at once towards the snowy peaks which still towered
-above them at an elevation of some twenty-nine thousand feet.</p>
-
-<p>They stood in the presence of mountains five and a half
-miles high, with comparatively little intervening; in the
-presence of some of the highest summits upon the globe, and
-themselves literally on a pinnacle.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<p>The sublimity of the Himalayas, now enhanced by greater
-proximity of the beholder, presented a more pictorial effect
-than heretofore: the grouping of the Trio of Mountains a
-composition from the Artistic Mind of Nature; an inspiration
-full of aspiration, for the earth itself seemed inspired by a
-desire to ascend. Such was the first impression.</p>
-
-<p>Attention was at once focused upon the Three Eternal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-Peaks, rather than the extended Snowy Range which on either
-side disappeared in the dim distance; and the forms and arrangement
-of the landscape seemed almost ideal. Imagination
-might have conjured up such a tableau, but its realization
-and potency in spiritual influences would hardly have been
-expected as reasonable&mdash;the constant ascension of jagged
-glacial ever-pointing summits (material substance) towards
-the Celestial unseen realm of azure blue. Yet, there it was&mdash;an
-actuality&mdash;fixing itself in the mind’s eye and on the
-physical retina, to be remembered ever afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>In the centre rose the Majesty of the Mountains, the Majestic
-Father Peak, clad in Nature’s robes of State Existence;
-simple in outline, exquisite in texture, the dignified sweep of
-lines and folds, draperies and half-hidden illusive forms seemingly
-mysterious which characterized the vestments of
-Nature’s Royal Presence&mdash;robes of state flowing from the
-heavens above to the earth beneath.</p>
-
-<p>Through the crystal atmosphere one could distinguish
-Celestial Valleys, and ravines set amid rugged crags and
-mountain “needles” of stone attenuated to an extent greater
-than any Cathedral spire ever constructed by man: and in and
-about the deeper recesses were local mists and hazy atmosphere,
-as if to hinder or prevent too inquisitive curiosity as to
-the hidden depths within. Curious and admirable indeed was
-this seemingly mysterious element in Nature; yet, verily not
-so, not mysterious, but only secrets yet to be explored and
-divulged by scientific research.</p>
-
-<p>Although the tourists had thus ascended heavenward somewhat
-differently from Jacob’s angels with wings, rather upon
-winged ponies following the legendary hero upon his white
-horse; yet when they arrived, the after-effects were quite according
-to ordinary experience.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester was the first to illustrate her human nature
-under such conditions. The altitude affected her peculiarly,
-not as it did the others.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No wonder,” said she, “that some people are tempted to
-jump off when they find themselves on high places!&mdash;the exhilaration
-is intense. There is a fascination in the depth, it
-draws one; it makes me feel as if I could sail off in space, like
-the birds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Be careful,” thought the Doctor, moving near her to steady
-her nerves, if necessary.</p>
-
-<p>“It is as if I should spread my arms&mdash;and leap!” cried
-she. “I could sail on the air like the eagle; there is no
-thought of danger.”</p>
-
-<p>“No danger! no danger!” instantly shouted the Bhootan
-pony driver, noticing her actions which spoke quite as loud
-as her words. “No danger! my horses are sure-footed. No
-danger with me! The Good Spirits take care of all I bring,
-and will not let them dash their foot against the stones;” and
-he continued to praise his sure-footed ponies as able to carry
-anyone with safety. Miss Winchester concluded to dismount,
-nevertheless, and the Doctor assisted her.</p>
-
-<p>Adele began to feel nervous; the atmosphere being rarefied,
-and she more sensitive than the others, it told upon her
-physically, and at the same time affected her spiritually. She
-was glad that Paul kept his pony next hers.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it? are you tired?” asked Paul, noting her pallor.</p>
-
-<p>“No! it’s so really high; we’re so high I don’t feel easy&mdash;it’s
-not natural; it takes my breath away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, then you feel the effect of the thin air; open your
-mouth wide and get the air on both sides of your ear-drums.
-The pressure will then be even; you’ll feel better.” Adele
-did so and felt more at ease.</p>
-
-<p>“How resourceful you are, Paul&mdash;so practical; that pressure
-was becoming too much for me&mdash;I felt faint.” Then
-after looking around for some time and observing other
-things, she remarked with considerable energy, yet serious:</p>
-
-<p>“These pinnacle views are too much!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it now?” asked Paul.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Why&mdash;look before you&mdash;those are mountains beneath us,
-yet they look flat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, they do.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are neither picturesque nor artistic, when you look
-down upon them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then don’t look at them, my dear! Look at me.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele smiled, but continued in her mood.</p>
-
-<p>“Paul! from above, those mountains are not true to nature,
-they are not mountains at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“From your point of view, no.”</p>
-
-<p>“From here, the world is all out of drawing, it does not
-give you a true idea of itself.”</p>
-
-<p>“It certainly doesn’t look very round,” remarked Paul; “it’s
-rather concave, with the horizon as high up as we are.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, the idea is not true,” continued Adele; “seen from
-here, one might think our journey had been over a flat country&mdash;easy
-to walk over&mdash;but you know it wasn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul laughed. “No, it wasn’t, my saddle tells me so&mdash;it
-was a hard road to travel. But the view! that’s all right;
-Adele, it is the grandest we have seen. I never expect to see
-anything finer.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s too grand for me&mdash;it overwhelms.”</p>
-
-<p>“How, Adele?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m deceived, in so many ways; deceived as to distance
-and heights, and I can’t tell what I’m looking at. There now&mdash;over
-there, is a large bare place, I suppose, but it looks like
-a small field; and just the reverse, there is a clump of foliage,
-it may be a jungle with tigers, although from here it looks so
-harmless.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you must use your common sense and gumption,
-and not be misled by experiences.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed! Well, what do you call that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p>“That thing over there&mdash;what is it?” pointing with her
-whip.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span></p>
-
-<p>Paul looked. Far away an irregular cloud-like something
-stood out clearly as if raised above the surface of the
-earth; it gleamed or glistened faintly in the distance, but
-being irregular in form, light in color, and doubtless lifted
-up because it appeared so, Paul pronounced it to be a cloud
-drifting between the lower hills.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Mr. Common Sense with gumption, it is a lake&mdash;the
-pony man just told me so; the reflection makes it stand up
-above the forest. I don’t think much of common sense that
-mistakes a mud-puddle for a cloud, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we won’t photograph it, for cloud effects,” said Paul,
-feeling less sure of himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Paul, these high places give a sort of false perspective.
-I don’t know how to describe it, but it takes too much common
-sense to get correct impressions. I don’t like to be deceived,
-especially about things so intensely interesting; or
-when I’m doing my best to see, and I don’t see the real thing
-in return.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, keep your head level; if I had been on the lower
-level I wouldn’t have been mistaken about that lake.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just it,” said Adele. “No ifs are allowed on pinnacles,”
-and on the instant her pony gave a lurch which
-threatened to unseat her. She pulled him up sharply, and in
-so doing was thrown forward, into a most uncomfortable position,
-on the pommel of her saddle. Bracing up she tugged at
-the reins, drawing them tighter than was necessary, which
-only made the animal more restive. Paul patted the beast on
-the neck, and held him until the guide approached.</p>
-
-<p>The Bhootanese came up, swearing outrageously in his
-native lingo; declaring that the very devil was in the beast.
-He had bragged about his sure-footed ponies, but had not
-mentioned that they, too, when in unaccustomed places and
-particularly on elevations where the air was thin, were apt
-to become restless, and were then given to shyings and backings
-and misbehaviors quite foreign to them when on a lower<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-level. The pony was anxious to get down and return home;
-the beast knew what was best for him. His Bhootanese master,
-enraged at the animal for behaving so, swore until the
-air was full of Himalaya imps, Bhootanese blue-devils, Nepaulese
-demons, and a varied assortment of ejaculatory
-grunts, both human and equine, all summoned for the occasion.
-Even in Occidental parlance it might be said that the
-Devil and his imps had been summoned to meet there on the
-pinnacle.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately this assortment of demon-devils were of native
-production; therefore not recognizable by the rest of the
-party; although not unknown to the ponies, who soon quieted
-down.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester, completely surrounded by the ejaculations,
-of course secured a choice assortment for literary purposes;
-she and the demons seemed to have it all their own
-way for the time being.</p>
-
-<p>Adele was so preoccupied with keeping her seat in the saddle
-that she was conscious of neither imps nor sounds, but
-after peace was restored she turned to Paul:</p>
-
-<p>“That man swore, didn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, like a trooper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, tell him the Bad Spirit will catch him if he does
-that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, perhaps, he’ll set the Old Boy on us.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would like to see what the Bhootanese Old Boy is like,
-if he doesn’t scare my pony.”</p>
-
-<p>“What would you do if you’d see him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him to keep his eye on his servant here&mdash;this mule!
-But we’ll have no more trouble now, this pony only needs
-watching.”</p>
-
-<p>“You held on first-rate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but I didn’t come up here to watch a mule; I came
-for something better.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Let me rub his nose,” said Paul, leaning over, making
-friends with the pony.</p>
-
-<p>Adele, who was indeed rather shaken up and agitated by
-the incident, continued to feel nervous. She finally spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Would you like to know, Paul, how this really makes me
-feel&mdash;this being so high up in the world?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I’d like to know how being elevated above the level of
-ordinary experience affects you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! sitting on a pinnacle, as the Doctor calls it, is a
-fraud.”</p>
-
-<p>“You really think so!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it is deluding; it demands more than I can manage;
-it takes entirely too much time trying to hold on.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you propose to do about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, get down&mdash;to our own level&mdash;soon as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>There had come into their experience one phase of the great
-Asiatic lesson to humanity, namely; to be content in the
-position, humble or exalted, to which they had been born. The
-things seen had actually embodied things unseen.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XL">XL<br />
-<span class="fs80">A GLIMPSE OF TAOISM</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">AFTER the exhilarating ascent and sudden descent
-from Sunkukphoo, Adele expressed a desire to see
-the valleys. “We’ve been on the roof garden, amid
-the flying buttresses; let us visit the cloisters, and see the
-crypt.”</p>
-
-<p>The Bhootan verger led the way along the pony-path in
-front of their Peek-o’-Tip-Bungalow, to the left&mdash;the descent
-was rapid. The mountains closed in upon them. Rhododendrons
-as lofty as oaks shaded them from the outer world. A
-strikingly beautiful region of another type, where blossoms
-fringed the trees against the azure blue; and what was still
-more beautiful, there were bouquets of scarlet appearing
-against the snow-fields and glaciers.</p>
-
-<p>“What striking contrasts!” exclaimed Paul, “yet the effect
-is not overdone; it’s quite natural.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing seems overdone in this Cathedral,” said Adele,
-not dreaming what she was about to encounter. Miss Winchester
-helped her out. “I must make a sketch of these wonderful
-contrasts; it will suggest a superb color-scheme for an
-embroidered altar cloth. I wish I knew one of the monks or
-ecclesiastics in charge here; we could ask him to show us the
-vestments in the Sacristy.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester’s wish for a monk was soon gratified. A
-turn in the road brought them face to face with a Taoist
-Temple; a row of so-called young monks sat upon the ground
-before the door. The Lamas wore masks, as well as parti-colored<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-garments, and they carried long, slender bell trumpets,
-which they kindly tooted to the accompaniment of cracked
-drums. The colors of their vestments and costume in general
-were æsthetic as a patchwork quilt from the revolutionary
-period of Sally Ross&mdash;only far more ancient.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus and Miss Winchester, both Colonial Dames,
-were at once sentimentally affected by the color schemes and
-the designs of these very old historical vestments. It was impossible
-to be “moved” by their artistic excellence, so their
-historical value became at once more important to notice. As
-to the masks, they were supposed to represent demons, being in
-design diabolical, no doubt very true to the life; and the
-trumpets shrill.</p>
-
-<p>Adele and the Doctor had little appreciation for the crude
-colors, or the terrific din. The latter, finding himself an unwilling
-listener to a “Rhapsodie Lamanesque” on drums,
-searched for something to stuff in his ears to soften the sound;
-he would have been willing to put his fist in the bell of the
-leading trumpet, but such things were inopportune. The
-effect was startling in the extreme; so very abrupt after the
-exquisite tone-color contrasts they had just been admiring.
-In fact, even their Manchu ponies halted, and wagged their
-ears to shake off the sound. Adele’s animal turned one ear
-backward and the other forward in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>Adele gave a new twist to the old line: “Where every prospect
-pleases and only the music is vile.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester’s churchly expectations received a severe
-shock, for in this Cathedral monks were grotesque; but still
-they were monks, although the ideal peaceful life of a monk
-did not appear.</p>
-
-<p>Curiosity got the better of Paul; he was off his pony and
-confabbing with the Lamas before the others had recovered
-from their amazement. A Lama took off his mask to allow
-his own voice to be heard more distinctly. He was a young
-fellow and rather good-looking, although shaven with a tonsure;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-and quite as healthy in appearance as many a monk who
-advocated asceticism. In fact, he seemed to be enjoying the
-racket and also the masquerade. They were all of them, the
-Lamas, not unlike a party of children playing at “theatre” in
-a nursery.</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” said Paul, “we are invited to enter&mdash;it is one of
-your chapels, Adele.”</p>
-
-<p>The Taoist Temple was an unpretentious, one-storied
-structure, of small dimensions, with projecting eaves. To
-the heathen inquisitives who accepted this invitation, it proved
-to be a curio shop without and within. Under the eaves were
-set vertically, into the front and side walls, cylinders about
-two feet high and a foot in diameter each, a double row, each
-cylinder held in position by a vertical spindle through the
-middle. The double rows extended around these three sides
-of the building.</p>
-
-<p>The Chief Lama entered by the central door, the foreign
-heathen following him. Passing around the interior, he gave
-each cylinder a smart spank with the flat of his hand, causing
-it to revolve rapidly on its vertical spindle. In a moment all
-were in motion, and the whole house buzzing. The cylinders
-were reeling off prayers by machinery at a rapid rate; and the
-Lama, holding his simple rosary made of beans, stood ready
-to accelerate any particular cylinder which lagged behind.</p>
-
-<p>There could be no doubt as to the exact intention, the sincerity
-and consequent efficacy of such prayers, simply because
-the proper wording for a prayer was printed upon a slip of
-paper carefully wrapped around the spindle inside the cylinder.
-Even if one’s thoughts did wander, the printed matter
-did not&mdash;the machine did the rest. All the worshipers had to
-do was to obey orders to attend service, and whirl the machine;
-the Lamas would take care of these wheels both inside
-and out, and would also give any stranger within their gates
-a little wheel for hand use, to take home with him, if he chose
-to pay for it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus, who was still far from strong, no sooner entered
-the Temple than she found herself surrounded by buzzing
-wheels on three sides of the room; the fourth side occupied
-by what she called a “cabinet of curios.” So many rotary
-prayers, whirling simultaneously, were very confusing, especially
-as some of the wheels prayed in one direction and some
-others in just the opposite. Mrs. Cultus soon grasped the
-situation, however.</p>
-
-<p>“I must have one. They are the most convenient things
-I ever saw. I did not know these Taoists had such Yankee
-notions in this line.”</p>
-
-<p>An innocent (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">sic</i>) Lama promptly offered to sell her a
-small wheel, which, upon her return, she discovered had been
-especially adapted to heathen requirements. The thoughtful
-Lama had removed some of his own prayers and had substituted
-items for which he knew the Christians were constantly
-praying. He had inserted slips cut from advertisements in
-the bazaar.</p>
-
-<p>“Wanted, to rent&mdash;a bungalow! Wanted, bachelor’s quarters
-with good drainage! Wanted, a good ayah (nurse);”
-and he had also kindly left those petitions which all humanity
-should offer, of course:</p>
-
-<p>“Wanted, a baby; boy preferred. Girls need not apply.”</p>
-
-<p>It was lucky that Mrs. Cultus did not discover the tenor
-of these new prayers until later, or she might have felt constrained
-to preach a heathen sermon herself to the innocent
-Lamas in that chapel. At this time, however, she held the
-wheel in her hand, twirling it, innocently praying (according
-to the service interpretation) for what would have surprised
-her greatly had her prayers been answered.</p>
-
-<p>The Lama felt well pleased. The heathens were doing as
-they were told. In time they would make good Taoists.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Winchester also took much interest in this service, but
-with a tinge of the missionary spirit which had escaped Mrs.
-Cultus.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It is curious, isn’t it?” said she. “I feel like spinning
-round and round, myself&mdash;not alone, like those dancing
-dervishes we saw at Cairo; I want a partner. But I can’t decide
-which wheel to choose&mdash;curious, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I would not have believed it,” said Adele, “if I had not
-seen it. It affects my eyes in exactly the same way that my
-ears are affected when a congregation repeat the same words
-over and over again without thinking what they are saying.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is very monotonous,” said Paul. “I suppose the Lamas
-use wheels to save talking&mdash;possibly to save preaching; it does
-save the sermon, yet brings people to church.”</p>
-
-<p>“It must amuse them, too,” said Adele; “they are only children,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“But grown-up children,” remarked the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and that reminds me; I’ve heard before of folk condemned
-for much speaking without thinking, and for sounding
-trumpets in the synagogue and streets; we’ve certainly
-found it here by the roadside.”</p>
-
-<p>The scene thus far had been antipathetic to Adele, to both
-her artistic and to her religious sense; still her sympathy for
-the poor Taoists was excited. The real missionary spirit arose
-within her; but what could she do? It seemed preposterous
-to attempt or to say anything just then; she turned toward
-Doctor Wise.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor was standing near a very old woman who had
-just entered, a poor creature in rags and tatters, her face
-smeared with dried blood and other red pigments, a veritable
-hag in outer appearance, bowed down with hard work and
-suffering. Even the Lamas made way for her, however, for
-she was known to be a very devout old creature, who spent
-much time in the Temple, who almost lived there; in fact,
-she was a sort of priestess among them, the very priestess
-who had heard Adele singing on the heights above her, and
-had said it was the Good Spirits talking in the air.</p>
-
-<p>The poor old soul had come to her customary holy place,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-and was now evidently surprised to find it invaded by such
-a coterie of strangers. Her attitude of intense curiosity soon
-changed to an obsequious inclination of the body&mdash;the poor
-creature was doing her very best to meet the case, to welcome
-them to her temple.</p>
-
-<p>Adele felt drawn to her because she was so hideous to behold&mdash;so
-sure is it that extremes will meet if truth is in each.
-Both being sincere, each after her own fashion, the poor
-Taoist quickly appreciated when one of her own sex came
-nearer to her; and an experience altogether truthful followed.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the priestess surveyed Adele from hat to shoes;
-and womanly instinct once gratified, her eyes brightened.
-Adele smiled responsively; utterly forgetful that she herself
-was indeed beautiful, her heart went straight forward in visible
-sympathy with the poor creature before her.</p>
-
-<p>The light in those old Taoist eyes became still brighter&mdash;it
-was wonderful this time&mdash;with that Asiatic fire which characterizes
-the religious enthusiast. An idea had evidently
-struck the priestess; what was it?</p>
-
-<p>Turning from Adele she hobbled across the room, each step
-an effort, to where stood an enormous prayer-wheel over six
-feet high, the most important wheel in the Temple. Squatting
-on the floor beside it, she fumbled under it as if trying to find
-something.</p>
-
-<p>It was Adele’s turn to be curious.</p>
-
-<p>The priestess, now fired by religious zeal, drew from underneath
-an iron bar bent at one end, not unlike a heavy poker.
-She adjusted it underneath to a crank on the wheel, and began
-tugging and struggling.</p>
-
-<p>Paul exclaimed at once: “She’s trying to start that immense
-machine!”</p>
-
-<p>“It looks so,” said Adele quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“To pray with that is hard work.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is not conscious of the effort.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I should be.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I never knew before what it meant,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, to pray with all your strength&mdash;don’t you see?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“She has a motive to give her strength; I see it in her
-eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Possibly! but don’t tell me you can detect motives in people’s
-eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can; she is a woman, you are not.”</p>
-
-<p>“I give it up,” said Paul. “You have the advantage of me
-in feminine insight; what is her motive?”</p>
-
-<p>“To pray for us,” said Adele seriously. “I feel sure of it;
-the good old soul, she looks it and acts it; she’s going to
-pray.”</p>
-
-<p>“By machinery?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is for us, I tell you, Paul; I don’t care if she doesn’t
-say a word; she’s doing it for us!&mdash;don’t you see her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p>“Watch, and pray yourself, and you will see.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul watched, but he couldn’t pray, not just then, so he
-whispered: “Taoists and Buddhists don’t pray, anyhow&mdash;they
-only mutter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, no matter, nor mutter either,” said Adele. “It’s the
-way they get at it. She is not beautiful, but she has something
-better&mdash;she can&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Use machinery,” muttered Paul, the incorrigible. “No,
-Adele, she is not handsome&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but she is good and true, poor old woman. If I had
-to make the choice, I would rather have her prayerful spirit
-than even beauty.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul looked at the lovely girl to whom he was betrothed,
-and thought her an enthusiast quite equal to the old woman;
-then upon second thought:</p>
-
-<p>“Adele!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you are right, but I’m glad you don’t look like
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>While they watched, the poor priestess was still tugging at
-her wheel; she had but little strength and it was so heavy.
-None of her people offered to help.</p>
-
-<p>Adele’s interest increased, until a glow came into her eyes
-also; seizing Paul by the arm, she whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“It’s&mdash;it’s too much for her, Paul; see! she cannot move it.
-You must help&mdash;no, I;” and the next instant Adele was beside
-the Taoist on the floor; each helping the other to turn the
-wheel, each trying to pray according to her own previous experience.
-Adele said afterwards it took about all the strength
-she had.</p>
-
-<p>Between them, the wheel began to turn slowly, very slowly;
-the dead weight, the inertia, the figurative indifference to be
-overcome was typical of mundane matters generally, forming
-a heavy impediment to be overcome in spiritual relationship.
-But the wheel did move, the momentum increased, it gained
-force, and was soon revolving at a good rate of speed by the
-sole effort of the poor, weak, but sincere Taoist.</p>
-
-<p>Adele slipped aside, and stood listening to the low musical
-hum of the large machine instead of the sharp buzzing of the
-smaller wheels she had heard before. Her musical ear at once
-noticed the profound difference in the tone; it sounded
-solemn&mdash;aye, sweet and peaceful; if continued it would be a
-veritable lullaby dominated by spiritual significance; it would
-be truly musical, spiritual music; all the greater harmonies
-condensed in one solemn tone; a single spiritual tone. The
-greatest orchestra of man could do no more.</p>
-
-<p>Could it be possible that this wild priestess was also affected
-by the sacred solemn sound? Do even the crude forms
-of religion have such subtle distinctions of feeling? Do they
-not, as well as we, hear the solemn sounds in nature? Why
-not? Nature’s tones are full of significance. And who would
-“know” this better than those who worship in the forest where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-the trees bow their heads and the leaves rustle; or by the
-stream where zephyrs blow and the birds warble; or before
-the majestic mountains when the rushing mighty wind blows
-its diapason, and the avalanche gives the basal note at the
-end? Such are the nocturnes, the largos, aye, the symphonic
-sounds in nature. Does not a “nature-worshiper” hear them?
-They have been from the beginning, are now, and ever shall be.</p>
-
-<p>Strange, oh, passing strange, the low tone of this mighty
-wheel now sounded much like nature’s tones in harmony with
-one at her devotions.</p>
-
-<p>“I have heard the Taoist organ,” thought Adele, “its sacred
-solemn sound.”</p>
-
-<p>But for this solemn music, there was silence in the Temple
-while the Taoist muttered.</p>
-
-<p>So long as the strangers remained in that Cathedral chapel
-the huge wheel continued to revolve&mdash;emblem of perpetual
-prayer&mdash;praying without ceasing. The priestess who thus
-prayed had much to say&mdash;to repeat&mdash;being old, and with little
-time left in which to say her prayers. She kept on, oblivious
-to all surroundings, absorbed in contemplation of the unseen;
-for with all humanity there is nothing so real as the unseen.
-She kept on oblivious to all the outer world who might be
-gazing with curiosity; she remained crouched on the floor of
-the Temple, simply muttering, over and over again, some
-mystic phrase or the name of Buddha, which none of the
-strangers could understand.</p>
-
-<p>When the party left she was still praying after her fashion.
-As they mounted their ponies and journeyed out into the great
-world, she was still meditating on the best she knew, as the
-Good Spirit had taught her. As they descended the ravine,
-Adele could still hear the hum of the wheels; and above all
-the low solemn tone was profoundly significant. It now came
-to her from above, through the tree-tops; it blended with the
-rustling of the leaves, and was lost in the sough of the forest.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XLI">XLI<br />
-<span class="fs80">PROCESSIONAL BEFORE THE VEIL</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">ATMOSPHERIC changes were varied and rapid in the
-vicinity of the Himalaya “Five Peaks of Eternal
-Snow.” Clear days were by no means constant
-around Darjeeling. There were periods when “the view towards
-the chancel,” as Adele called it, was obstructed; days
-when the clouds hung low, even resting upon the forests in
-the ravines beneath. Yet the forms of the trees were not
-always hid, they appeared as darker lines of delicate tracery
-against the lighter background.</p>
-
-<p>At such times Adele idealized with much refinement of
-vision. “Those trees are the rood-screen; I can see through
-into the chancel when it is clear; but to-day the chancel is
-misty, the clouds hang like a veil. It is astonishing how much
-is hidden by fog and mist in nature; that veil hides a great
-deal.”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor also was very appreciative of such atmospheric
-changes, since they often resulted in superb effects, cloud
-scenery, sunbursts never to be forgotten for their magnificence.</p>
-
-<p>It thus happened while they were all assembled on a Saturday
-evening discussing projects for the morrow, that Adele
-and the Doctor each felt the impulse to rise early on the same
-morning to watch some of the atmospheric changes which
-made beautiful the dawn.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor remembered having seen remarkable effects at
-Banff in the Rockies; and Adele recalled having met Tartarin
-de Tarascon on the Righi pretty early in the morning;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-no doubt there might be some greater things than these to be
-found among the Himalayas. Why it was, that only these two
-of the party should have been so moved, and upon the same
-particular morning, and without saying anything about it
-previously, the Doctor could never quite understand; unless
-on the general principle that if people will follow their natural
-inclinations to see the best in life they need not be surprised to
-find others doing the same thing at the same time. When
-they discussed it subsequently, Adele accounted for it in her
-own way.</p>
-
-<p>“I so often dislike to make the necessary effort. That sort
-of effort is very trying, when to see something extra which I
-know can be seen I must force myself. Getting up early, for
-instance; I don’t like getting up early as a general thing, but
-I just forced myself to do so on that morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus it happened to be the first day of the week very early
-in the morning that she and the Doctor found themselves
-abroad when it was yet somewhat dark. Adele was the first
-to appear upon the scene; she was standing in the road opposite
-Peek-o’-Tip when the Doctor came out of the bungalow.
-Neither one was in the mood for conversation, and the morning
-air was fresh. After the first agreeable surprise Adele put
-her arm in his and they moved off together briskly. She was
-in sympathy with him also, as with Paul, but the mutual feeling
-manifested itself very differently. The cloud hung low.</p>
-
-<p>“The sun will drink up the mist,” remarked the Doctor in
-peasant parlance.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope so, but I never can tell. Let us go to Observatory
-Hill; that’s the best place.” She seemed to take it as a matter
-of course that they each had the same object in view.</p>
-
-<p>“Your Cathedral is gloomy,” said the Doctor, looking
-around.</p>
-
-<p>“One can’t see the chancel.”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the veil,” said Adele, thoughtful.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What did you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“The cloud-curtains, the veil of the Temple is down.”</p>
-
-<p>After walking some distance they entered a grove; of course
-it became still darker because they entered the grove. What
-they did not notice was that the clouds, instead of dispersing,
-were becoming more dense. They only remembered that the
-path led upwards towards higher ground in the open.</p>
-
-<p>At one point on the way Adele stopped, and looked into a
-dark glen where she said she heard running water. The Doctor
-pushed aside bushes that stood in the way, and they were
-sprinkled by the moisture that had condensed on the bushes.
-If there had been more light they would have seen the diamond
-drops upon the scarlet blossoms; but these were hidden
-in the shadows at the mouth of the glen.</p>
-
-<p>Before them was an exquisite cascade falling over rocks;
-coming down the mountain it was tossed upon either side of a
-heavy stone which had been rolled there in past ages by natural
-forces, and now stood with white foam enveloping its
-rugged sides.</p>
-
-<p>This unexpected gem of natural scenery compelled them to
-halt and admire.</p>
-
-<p>“What a surprise, how beautiful!” exclaimed Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, even in this dull light.”</p>
-
-<p>“The water looks like delicate cambric.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, so it does&mdash;draped round the stone; the rocks are
-sombre and solemn. You know it is said that some animals,
-wild and savage, like to find such places as this to nestle down
-and take their last long sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I know why, too,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah!”</p>
-
-<p>“It is the music of the waterfall perhaps, and the movement
-too. The water is so much alive, it’s living water.”</p>
-
-<p>“All life seeks life,” said the Doctor. “Some sort of companionship;
-even a hermit likes the life in his glen. It’s not
-uncheerful here, after all, is it&mdash;even if it seems gloomy?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No, listen; the waterfall is singing. I could catch the
-rhythm, and perhaps a cadence, in a short time if I were to
-try; it seems to say something.”</p>
-
-<p>“What does it say, to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ’tis ‘the water of life repeating,’” said Adele, quoting
-one of her favorite lines. “I cannot tell you exactly what it
-says in words, but the music in it is hopeful; I love to listen
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I,” said the Doctor. “Would you like a drink?”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, I would; just for remembrance, to say we have
-been here together. Let us take a drink in remembrance.”</p>
-
-<p>They both drank from a cup made of leaves&mdash;both of the
-same cup&mdash;“the water of life,” as Adele called it; and as they
-drank a bird flew down from its nest, perched itself on a rock
-near the cascade above them, and drank also; a little bird with
-a red breast. They did not see the bird, emblem of suffering
-unto death for others, and only took a drop or two themselves,
-for verily the realities of life made the glen damp and cold,
-yet the thought symbolized by the bird was ever with them and
-the moment precious.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to drink that water always,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Always is a long time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I did not mean exactly that&mdash;until&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor waited.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if I must tell you, until the resurrection.”</p>
-
-<p>“I trust we may,” said he solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>They understood each other perfectly, and after a pause,
-while the robin sang a morning hymn, they continued their
-walk.</p>
-
-<p>Drops of rain began to fall upon the tree-tops. Adele and
-the Doctor caught the sound.</p>
-
-<p>“Only a little condensation,” said he, “a draught of cooler
-air has passed over. We will be out of it in a few minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele felt chilly, but would not say so. She drew her
-hooded-wrap about her, and felt quite safe with the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A Lepcha shanty is just beyond here,” said he, “if it
-comes to the worst we can find shelter.”</p>
-
-<p>“And plenty of dirt,” thought Adele. “No doubt, lots of
-insects, especially on a damp day.”</p>
-
-<p>The patter of rain increased, a very wet drop fell upon her
-cheek, several big drops struck the Doctor full in the face.
-Having no umbrellas they hurried along instinctively, then
-broke into a trot&mdash;then ran to escape as best they could.
-When crossing an open space between the woods and the hut
-the rain fell in torrents.</p>
-
-<p>“You will be drenched through and through,” said the
-Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind it at all. It’s only on the outside, anyhow,
-and I’m warmly clad; still it’s a little chilly&mdash;let’s hurry,”
-and off she started, the Doctor after her, on a bee-line for the
-shelter. Panting, they rushed up to the shanty.</p>
-
-<p>The hut was almost full&mdash;full of Lepchas&mdash;men, women
-and children, unkempt specimens of humanity whose clothes
-when once on seemed seldom to be taken off until they fell off.
-The Lepchas had also taken refuge from the storm, and were
-all wet and bedraggled, like themselves.</p>
-
-<p>“A sweet party, truly!” thought the Doctor, and so it was.
-Poor natives lying round like drowned rats&mdash;the Americans
-in exterior appeared not much better; all but Adele’s cheeks
-which glowed after the exercise of running.</p>
-
-<p>She pulled back her hood, and a ripple of smiles played over
-her countenance&mdash;the Lepchas laughed too. Then as if they
-were all friends together, she asked: “Can you take us in&mdash;take
-us in?” and began shaking the rain from her garments
-at the outer stone. It must have been her cheerful manner
-that induced one of the women to make room next herself on
-a seat; the Lepcha men were more stolid, but all began to
-move when the strangers entered.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor soon detected a goat in the shanty&mdash;there was
-no doubt about it&mdash;and concluded to escape as soon as possible.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-But there they were&mdash;caught; caught as in a net of circumstances.
-Little did he or Adele know to what the circumstances
-would lead, but he said afterwards that it reminded
-him of St. Paul’s experience at Joppa with a sheet-net full of
-common things, four-footed beasts and fowls, unclean things
-in general; which later on proved not so unclean as he had at
-first thought; only in this case Adele and he were inside the
-net with the rest.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the Lepchas knew a few words of English, but
-the more ancient universal language of signs and grunts
-proved to be more useful. Adele patted a chicken, and a
-Lepcha damsel patted the young goat, a kid. Both chicken
-and kid seemed of special value to the natives. Adele could
-not conjecture the reason. When the rain ceased and they all
-stepped outside she was further enlightened. Neither the wet
-Lepchas nor the bedraggled Christians desired to remain in
-that stuffy hut, both hurried to seek the fresh air and to reach
-the open; the whole crowd in fact, kid and chicken included.
-And out they scrambled, pell-mell, with a unanimity of action
-as natural as it was prompt. The natives formed a little group
-in the open, looking around to satisfy themselves that the
-clouds were dispersing. Through rifts in the mist near them
-came the clearer morning light, to all, from whatever part of
-the earth they had come, a foretaste of the brightest of days.</p>
-
-<p>The natives gathered together, a little company, their leader
-carrying the kid, a boy following with the fowl, others straggling
-by twos and threes, yet now all of sober countenance.</p>
-
-<p>Adele and the Doctor looked after them; there was evidently
-some purpose in the manner of those natives as they proceeded
-up the hill towards its crest, to the very place of observation
-they themselves had selected for the best view, and where they
-were going when they had been arrested by the shower. More
-than mere curiosity, a fellow-feeling, now suggested that they
-all go together; so, regardless of their wet and soiled garments,
-Adele and the Doctor soon found themselves willingly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-tramping up that hill along with the ragged natives. The
-leader looked askance at first, but when he noticed Adele beside
-one of his women, and the Doctor with his men, he made
-the best of it, accepted the situation, and kept ahead carrying
-the kid.</p>
-
-<p>The path wound upwards, the ascent growing more steep.
-None could see far ahead when the processional commenced.
-Not until their march was well under way, not until the very
-last stage of the climb, not until near approach to the place
-they sought, not in fact until their own forms arose above the
-near foreground, did they witness the Glory in nature which
-was, and is, and is to be.</p>
-
-<p>And as they surmounted the crest of the hill, so did the
-Celestial scenery beyond become visible to their mortal eyes,
-rising before them a sublime transformation scene&mdash;an ascension
-of truth beautiful in nature.</p>
-
-<p>To Adele and the Doctor, a veritable transfiguration of the
-earth as they might imagine it glorified on the morning of a
-Resurrection.</p>
-
-<p>The mighty summits, the eternal peaks, on this first day
-of the week, shone forth in the purer atmosphere of greater
-altitude, magnificent in proportions as a work in Creation,
-impressive in their glorious grandeur, refulgent as with the
-sacred glow of a physical rebirth.</p>
-
-<p>The clouds were moving aside, as a curtain is withdrawn;
-and from the depths below, the valley and ravine, from forest
-and waterfall, rose the mist. That which covers, screens, or
-conceals in nature, like the fog, was passing away; that which
-is more permanent, ascending heavenward to form clouds;
-ascending as incense ascends; incense symbolic from ages past
-of the prayers of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>The Holy of Holies of the Himalaya Cathedral was open before
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The Veil of the Temple had been rent in twain.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp99" id="facing268" style="max-width: 66.4375em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/facing268.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><span class="bold">As Incense Ascends&mdash;Symbolic, from Ages Past, of the Prayers of Humanity.</span><br />
-<span class="fs90">The Kunchingunga Snowy Range. Elevation, 28,156 feet.<br />
-Scene from Observatory Hill, Darjeeling.</span></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XLII">XLII<br />
-<span class="fs80">ON HOLY GROUND</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">AS the impressive scene unfolded, the Cathedral becoming
-more sublimely beautiful each moment, Adele
-watched the wonderful play of light&mdash;the refulgence.
-She was also profoundly impressed by the magnificent proportions
-of the picture then being illuminated before her very
-eyes by the Creator; and felt the breath of life come and go
-with emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the Glorious Beauty of Holiness,” she murmured, and
-then, kept silence before Him.</p>
-
-<p>Now, next to Adele stood the native woman; and before
-them both was unrolled the same scene. To this Himalaya
-worshiper, Lepcha, Bhootanese, Nepaulese, Thibetan, or whatever
-tribe she might have been born, the effect was not the
-same as upon Adele. Familiarity with such sunrises in the
-mountains had dulled what little appreciation she might ever
-have had; but her religion had told her something which Adele
-did not know. From untold generations her people had been
-taught to regard that place as sacred. She had been brought
-there as a child, and now she was leading her own children
-there; and told the little ones: “The place whereon thou standest
-is holy ground.” She had also her own ideas as to why it
-was sacred; and that very morning had come to the holy
-ground to show the children why it was holy; but Adele knew
-nothing of all this.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span></p>
-
-<p>Worldly wisdom might have judged this woman and Adele
-to be in no way alike, yet, here in this presence, where the
-holiness of beauty and the beauty of holiness were both in
-evidence, there was really a fundamental similarity.</p>
-
-<p>Adele drew near the Doctor; he, too, had been keeping silent
-in the Holy Place.</p>
-
-<p>“The Veil has been taken away,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“H’m, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is the most impressive sight I ever beheld.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why so?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is as a chancel should be.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, the most beautiful portion of a cathedral.”</p>
-
-<p>“Beauty is not all, I feel more than I see; the beauty is
-sacred here; the sacred feeling comes first, and then&mdash;oh, it
-is so beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>“It must be a Holy Place if it affects you that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a place for prayer, it seems natural to pray here;
-here one thinks upwards, and looks upwards.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then the effect is spiritual as well as artistic.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t analyze! I don’t wish to reason at all,” said
-Adele. “For me it’s perfect. I’m satisfied. Just let me rest
-here, let me go and sit down, <em>and be a part of it</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>She seated herself at the foot of a tree.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been sacrilege to disturb her at that moment&mdash;a
-violation of sacred things in her experience. So, on the
-instant, thought the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>After a little reflection, the Doctor said to himself that
-this was not the time for Adele to “loaf and invite her soul.”
-He feared lest she was carrying her idealization entirely too
-far. Even the best in the world, if carried to excess, leads one
-into danger; and spiritual excesses are especially dangerous,
-either to youth or old age.</p>
-
-<p>To sit at the feet of Nature, to admire and enjoy the
-Creator’s work, was one thing; to be so absorbed in Nature’s
-moods, and to become such a slave to emotion that all else is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-forgotten, would be quite another thing. Adele seemed to
-have forgotten the Lepchas, and himself, and even her own
-self; and to be totally absorbed in adoration of the scenery.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor had many times seen pious worshipers in certain
-phases of Hindooism, Buddhism, and Christianity, indulge
-in that sort of thing; but never in Shintoism or any
-really old form of faith which brought one close to nature,
-through nature’s activities and manifestations unidealized;
-where nature spoke for herself and mankind was silent before
-her. He suspected this excess of idealization, this becoming
-“a part of it,” as Adele had wished for, might become really
-a weakness in her character, and might lead her into danger.
-Such a frame of mind would certainly be fascinating to Adele,
-she was so made, she was constitutionally an idealist; but certainly
-it was not mentally healthful in relation to her duty to
-others; not a thing to be rooted out, but to be controlled lest
-the result should prove injurious.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor determined to break in upon her mood in some
-way. He recalled her last remark, that she was perfectly satisfied
-with her Cathedral, and only wished to rest and be a part
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele, you said this Cathedral was complete.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not if it is a cathedral as usually understood.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have idealized what we now see as the chancel?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, the place where the service is conducted.”</p>
-
-<p>“May I ask what is the central feature in the service to
-which you and I are accustomed?”</p>
-
-<p>“To administer; no doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>“To administer; certainly&mdash;but what?”</p>
-
-<p>She thought very seriously, trying to find suitable words.
-She was not accustomed to this sort of stand-up-and-deliver
-catechism; but finally she spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Some might say to administer the sacrifice; but I do not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-see how this can be possible. It is not a fact in nature; I cannot
-consider it true.”</p>
-
-<p>“May I ask, why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“You can never kill the truth; and Christ is not dead, but
-living; they are the same no matter how you think about it&mdash;Christ
-and the Truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“But Truth was sacrificed in Him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never!” she cried. “That is an impossibility in nature.
-It only seems sacrificed; it never really is.”</p>
-
-<p>“But He was sacrificed.”</p>
-
-<p>“His great sacrifice of Himself for Truth’s sake was really
-His whole life work, and it was Perfection,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“His life, as well as His death,” acquiesced the Doctor, solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a perfect work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well then, Adele, no other <em>idealized sacrifice</em> in administering
-could make the service more complete, nor the atonement
-more adequate than it is.”</p>
-
-<p>The atonement!</p>
-
-<p>Yes. The at-one-ment&mdash;the Saving of the World&mdash;the Salvation
-of Mankind by the Truth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>And as they conversed thus, upon the Lepcha Holy Ground,
-the Doctor concluded that Adele’s meditations had not led
-her astray; but he felt constrained to say something further
-which had been on his mind from the first.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele, with us the ministration is usually at the chancel
-rail.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, or what corresponds to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where from?”</p>
-
-<p>“The altar; why do you ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you seen any altar in this Cathedral?”</p>
-
-<p>Adele looked around in different directions, continually
-reverting to the chancel region she had idealized, as if it ought
-to be there. Surely there must be an altar in nature, or something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-she could idealize as such; for so many religions professed
-to have altars, from the earliest times down to the
-present day. She began to fear lest her imagery as to the
-Cathedral had failed her in a vital point. Once before she
-had thought she could discover some form or shape in the
-higher altitudes which might suggest an altar; in every case
-the light had been so dazzling, or what she tried to see was so
-vague, that her ideal had never been satisfied in its most vital
-need; and now with the chancel itself open, the veil rent, she
-saw nothing to suggest an altar. Where was it? Had it been
-there? If so, then what had become of it&mdash;the altar?</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XLIII">XLIII<br />
-<span class="fs80">SACRIFICE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">ADELE was still sitting at the foot of the tree; some
-said it was a bo-tree; others did not have knowledge
-enough to tell what kind of a tree it was. She did
-not think of this at all, as she sat dreaming upon the magnificent
-spectacle before her. In her mind she was seeking for an
-answer to the Doctor’s inquiry; then her eyes, while searching
-for some object which might be idealized in some degree as an
-altar, were drawn to the immediate foreground, away from
-the chancel, to something in her own vicinity, quite near herself.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the same knoll, a short distance from her, boughs of
-foliage were festooned with cords and ropes upon which hung
-hundreds of small pieces of bright-colored muslin cut fantastically;
-also pieces of white textile, the size of a large napkin,
-covered with printed or crudely stamped characters in the
-native language. Hanging in garlands from bough to bough,
-fluttering in the wind among the leaves, they were about as
-effective as yacht signals strung out for decoration. Signals
-they were, indeed, but of quite another kind; the fluttering
-prayer-signals of the poor Lepchas, or Bhootanese, or Thibetans,
-arranged in a semi-circle around their sacred place.
-Wafted heavenward by the breeze, such signals were presented
-as acceptable to the Good Spirits, and were considered to bear
-upwards the supplications of poor humanity. They were the
-symbols of prayer used by the same worshipers in whose hut
-Adele and the Doctor had found a welcome shelter from the
-storm.</p>
-
-<p>At first sight Adele thought: “How very crude and tawdry!”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-A second glance told her the decorations symbolized
-something, and she felt more sympathetic. The bright colors
-and the printed texts on white were certainly newer, fresher,
-and cleaner than the garments of the Lepchas themselves;
-they must have been selected, and they had cost something;
-only a few annas perhaps, or possibly some widow’s mite.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, the effect is cheerful; a happy one,” thought Adele.
-“One doesn’t feel despondent when looking at them.” How
-could it be otherwise when each praying-signal <ins class="corr" id="tn275" title="Transcriber’s Note—“fluttered a message of thanks, or propitation” changed to “fluttered a message of thanks, or propitiation”.">fluttered a message of thanks, or propitiation</ins>?&mdash;all
-of them in remembrance of the Good Spirits. And then she thought
-she detected among them a familiar arrangement of colors;
-what!&mdash;could it be possible? Yes, an old faded-out, partly-torn
-specimen of “Old Glory,” hardly recognizable, but yet there, for the
-sake of its being a new arrangement of colors, probably its true
-significance utterly unknown. This moved Adele intensely, giving
-her a curious new emotion, blending her patriotic feeling with the
-sacred things of others. Finally she concluded that all the signals
-were really artistic from the Lepcha point of view, for she noticed
-an expression of much satisfaction pass over the countenances of
-the natives when they found their sacred prayer-colors were still
-so bravely fluttering after the storm; still in motion where the
-Spirit of the Air could easily see and hear. The poor woman with whom
-Adele had walked up pointed to some as if they were her own private
-signals, but as Adele did not manifest much outward enthusiasm about
-them, a sad expression came over the face of the nature-worshiper.
-She seemed to realize that she ought not to expect these strangers
-to understand her feelings. Perhaps the strangers would scorn such
-things&mdash;old pieces of muslin picked up in the bazaar; they
-could afford yards and yards of it if they chose. So the poor woman
-turned away disappointed, to seek sympathy among her own kindred who
-could better understand how such things were acceptable to the Good
-Spirit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was profoundly interesting to see those two at this time,
-so near in body, and yet so far apart in religious interpretations;
-yet each upon what was to her “holy ground.” Such
-are the mysterious operations of the Spirit of Religion in
-Nature.</p>
-
-<p>Adele was just beginning to realize the varied conflicting
-elements in her surroundings when she and the Doctor heard
-voices behind them&mdash;a weird chant&mdash;a primitive monotonous
-crooning, but wild&mdash;the natives’ hymn. Around a thicket the
-people had gathered, singing this invocation. Adele and the
-Doctor drew near, and both of them being musical they involuntarily
-attempted to catch the higher notes and to join in;
-but it proved to be too much for them in every way, especially
-to Adele’s cultivated ear. The very simplicity of the
-strange sounds, all spirit and no art, made it difficult to detect
-any method, only variations of monotonous notes and cries;
-sometimes rhythm, but no trace of melody, at least to civilized
-ears. It was painfully monotonous; aye, there was pain indeed
-in that native chant of invocation. No grand aria of the
-art divine, nor “wail of the orchestra” in modern times, had
-more pain to the spirit in man, than that primitive wail. All
-that Adele and the Doctor could do was to feel for them, yet
-not be of them.</p>
-
-<p>The thicket was formed by underbrush which had sprung
-up around some taller trees. There was an open space inside,
-with several rocks and stones which had evidently been
-brought there by the worshipers. One rock larger than the
-rest stood on one side, the others scattered with apparent lack
-of method. The entrance was wide, so that all near at hand
-could witness what was going on within the circle. And while
-the weird song continued outside, the people drew nearer and
-nearer; the solemn moment arrived for the Leader and his
-Helper to enter this thicket&mdash;the Lepcha Holy of Holies&mdash;and
-stand before their altar.</p>
-
-<p>As Abraham of old, in mature manhood, Leader of “the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-Chosen People” among races, did enter a thicket and there
-offer a sacrifice well pleasing to the Lord: so did this poor
-native at the end of the Nineteenth Century, enter his Holy
-Place, a thicket in the Creator’s Cathedral of the Himalayas;
-and there did offer a sacrifice well pleasing to the Good Spirit
-to whom a thousand years are as one day, and one day as a
-thousand years.</p>
-
-<p>The first offering was the fowl; and as the dying spasms of
-the bird scattered blood upon the stones, and upon the primitive
-priest, and upon others who stood near enough, the wild
-chant rose above the sound of flapping wings, and with the
-final throes of death mingled the wails of the worshipers.</p>
-
-<p>To Adele, whose experience in killing of any kind was limited,
-the sight of life-blood flowing was most painful, even
-obnoxious. When a little girl in the country during her
-school-day vacations, she had always avoided seeing the fowls
-killed; not only because it destroyed her appetite for them
-afterwards, but because she felt a most positive and acute
-sympathy for the fowls. In later years, if anyone had called
-such proceedings “a sacrifice,” she would have been much surprised.
-On this occasion, face to face with it, her sympathy
-was strong enough to give her a sympathetic pain in the back
-of her own neck when the fowl was stabbed, pierced unto death.</p>
-
-<p>When Adele was in the hospital acting as volunteer nurse,
-her experience had been to assist in curing, not in the surgical
-department; and if such had been the case, she would not have
-remained there a day. Now, when she found herself a quasi-participant
-in these Lepcha proceedings, eye-witness of a
-bloody wounded fowl flapping about, the situation was positively
-repulsive; and very difficult to sympathize with, even
-when she knew the act to be a feature in religious worship.
-She looked up at the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Wise was absorbed in studying the movements of
-the priest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Lepcha stood over the kid, with his knife drawn ready
-to take its innocent life.</p>
-
-<p>Adele caught sight of him in that attitude, and gave a
-shudder. She knew she could not endure to witness the next
-act. Naught could have induced her to turn spiritually from
-the poor nature-worshipers at such a moment, yet she could not
-accept their primitive methods as other than downright cruelty
-to-day. The sharp glittering knife, the rough stone, the
-priest’s stolid expression; and above all else, the unsuspecting
-little kid, so docile, as if among friends. Verily, the trustful
-eyes of the little animal seemed to speak the very words: “Ye
-are my friends, while I am yet with you.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele buried her face upon the Doctor’s shoulder, and only
-heard without seeing the sacrifice which followed.</p>
-
-<p>And behold! one of the most natural yet mysterious of all
-the phenomena in nature at once followed: Adele, embodying
-in her own personality the progress made in appreciation of
-religious ritual upon earth since primitive times, while spared
-the terror of realism, was more deeply affected than by realism
-itself; the things done had greater scope and power, the
-spiritual impression was far more profound and lasting than
-the effect of any spectacle which had actually been witnessed,
-and this in the very nature of truth progressive. The mind
-is greater than the eye, the Spirit of Truth is greater than the
-mind, the real growth is not in the intellect but in the spirit;
-aye, “the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life. Knowledge
-is power, but the spirit giveth immortality.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele heard the cry of pain, the cry of life departing. It
-was only that of an animal, an innocent kid, but it and its
-innocence stood in lieu of many human beings. She heard
-the chant of the natives calling aloud, heavenward! above the
-cries of the innocent sacrifice; the people seemed themselves
-to be suffering. They were, yet they were not; not physically,
-yet their cries sounded as if the knife might be entering their
-very vitals. No realism apparent to mortal eyes could have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-been so powerful to affect them spiritually&mdash;the noblest, the
-divine in their personality; not unless nature itself had witnessed
-by taking part; not unless the veil of the Himalaya
-Temple had closed again, or “the sun had been darkened over
-all the earth,” or some such occurrence had transpired to direct
-attention to an event affecting humanity at large.</p>
-
-<p>Then the strangest part of this primitive ritual followed;
-enduring in its action, and lasting in memory. An event implying
-mystery took place, a seeming mystery was suggested,
-a philosophic truth inculcated. How so by such a primitive
-uneducated people, yet able to embody what to this day dominates
-the profoundest concepts of philosophic man?</p>
-
-<p>With the passing of the life by sacrifice, the life from the
-shed blood as it curdled and sank into the ground, went also
-the moans and dirges of those for whom the sacrifice had been
-made. The Lepcha voices changed in quality, manifesting
-great gain in force of conviction, rose higher and higher, and
-finally gave vent to cries of exultation, aspiration, exaltation&mdash;they
-chanted a triumph: a victory leading them onwards and
-upwards towards something beyond in the direction of the
-Eternal Summits magnificent before their very eyes. It was
-as if they saw the truth in their faith no longer militant and
-sacrificing, but triumphant in the Celestial Realm.</p>
-
-<p>Strange, yet a natural consequence of the truth as they saw
-it: as the life of the kid departed by the blood of sacrifice returning
-into the earth among the grass of the field from which
-it had come and upon which it had fed, there arose a new
-life&mdash;a resurrection from the depths of misery and woe; a
-new song&mdash;a triumphal song&mdash;a song of the Saved Ones. The
-native choristers seemed possessed with renewed hope and
-vitality; and acting under these influences they found the
-burden of their song changed to suit a new condition which
-they certainly discerned.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of these Himalaya nature-worshipers, this ordinary
-killing of a beast for food, as practiced by their ancestors<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-from time immemorial, had been used by the Mind of Nature,
-the Creator Father, to teach a philosophic truth through the
-religious sense; the full significance of which was not learned
-by humanity until millenniums after those primitive ancestors
-had found it to be a fact in nature.</p>
-
-<p>Truly, this ancient ritual was profound in significance; it
-had been so from the beginning.</p>
-
-<p>Adele next heard the priest speaking aloud in a clear exulting
-tone; it sounded as if he were addressing a multitude.
-She would have given much to have comprehended fully what
-he said, but it was lost to her; his words passed into the distance
-over the tree-tops, into space, off towards the Celestial
-region where the Good Spirit would both hear and understand.
-Then ensued an interval of suspense; all she heard was the
-sound of broken twigs and a slight tapping. It was the worshipers
-attaching some feathers of the fowl and small pieces
-of raw flesh of the kid to the trees. The feathers were to
-flutter in the wind as more signals to the Spirits of the Air.
-The hair of the goat was to be blown by the breeze as more
-prayers or symbols of propitiation, ever active before the
-Good Spirits.</p>
-
-<p>After the ceremony was finished, the primitive procession
-started upon its recessional, wended its way down the hillside,
-to enter again their huts, and feast upon the burnt offering&mdash;cooked.</p>
-
-<p>Adele looked up. The Ancient Service, in vogue from the
-beginning in the development of religious consciousness in
-man, and held to-day in the Himalaya Cathedral, was finished.
-The altar had not been in the chancel, but as of old,
-in the outer court of the Temple, in the world at large. The
-daily sacrifice could be made by any man in his own daily
-life&mdash;it was a part of the ritual of day-by-day devotion&mdash;the
-sacrifice of things seen to attain spiritually to things unseen.
-The altar might be in any man’s hearth or home, in his heart
-or soul-life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span></p>
-
-<p>Adele had been present at a primitive realistic ceremony,
-but she had not been able to witness it with her bodily eyes,
-so great was the progress of truth in life “since the days of
-sacrifice.” She understood now why the Creator had led
-humanity to abjure and abolish actual burnt sacrifices, substituting
-the spiritual experience, in remembrance.</p>
-
-<p>Adele and the Doctor entered the thicket where the service
-had been held. They noticed how the life-blood had already
-sunk into the ground and been absorbed and become a part of
-it, “earth to earth.” If they had visited the Lepcha huts, they
-would have found “ashes to ashes.” They noticed also how
-the recently added signals, the feathers and the hair of the
-innocent kid, were fluttering with the other color-signals;
-these latter new ones in remembrance of the day’s service.
-And as they looked around they heard the Lepchas still off in
-the distance, singing. They had plenty of fresh food now, and
-a joyful spirit within. They sang as man often sings, when at
-his daily work, at home, in his shop, or in the field.</p>
-
-<p>What more philosophically true in man’s religious development,
-from before Abraham, from primitive man, from the
-beginning so far as humanity knows about itself? The Spirit
-of Truth in ancient man had ever testified to the shedding of
-innocent life-blood instead of the sacrifice of self, or personal
-surrender, as the visible sign of propitiation, or of at-one-ment,
-the atonement. A tangible sign, symbolic, which could
-not in the very nature of things be understood in fuller significance
-until mankind was ready for the comprehension of the
-unseen, the spiritual sacrifice or atonement, until civilizations
-had sufficiently developed to comprehend spiritually what had
-always transpired naturally. The revelation culminating in
-the voluntary sacrifice of Him who said: “I am the Truth,
-the Life”&mdash;the Saviour of mankind.</p>
-
-<p>Verily the Ancient Ritual was worthy of the Cathedral
-built by the Mind of Nature&mdash;our Creator-Father.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XLIV">XLIV<br />
-<span class="fs80">THE EVERYDAY RITUAL</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">ADELE and Paul spent much time together wandering
-about exploring the Cathedral. Adele said she heard
-sermons in stones, and voices in running brooks, and
-all that sort of thing. Paul hurled stones down precipices,
-and said he didn’t care much for sermons, anyway. Adele
-laughed when he stopped her at a spring in the woods and insisted
-upon her tasting the water when he himself enjoyed it
-freely.</p>
-
-<p>“It goes all through me,” said Paul. “Delicious, the best
-mountain spring I ever found.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it goes all through you; such pure cold water
-exhilarates as if giving a new life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if you put it that way&mdash;why, of course. I know what
-you mean; but what is life, anyway? No fellow can find out;
-nobody knows much about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well I do, and I intend to enjoy it,” and she filled her
-lungs with the mountain air, which gave her such buoyancy
-that she took off her hat, and shook back her hair to be en
-rapport with her own ideal.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right, while you feel like it.” To Paul she
-looked like the personification of New Life for him; and he
-came near kissing her to assure himself she was not a wood-nymph
-who might vanish in a tree.</p>
-
-<p>“People are not so stupid as you think,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what do they really know?” asked Paul, his double-self
-amused to hear a girl assume that she knew more of life
-than he, a man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span></p>
-
-<p>Their attention was distracted for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>On the road close by they heard the tramp of feet approaching,
-and they were near enough to speak if it proved to be
-anyone they knew. A dandy, a variety of palanquin, was
-passing, and inside was a woman of the English Colony. The
-livery of her bearers was rather conspicuous, being yellow
-with blue trimmings, yet not in bad taste for that region. The
-toilet of the beauty inside the dandy was decidedly “chic,” and
-the pose between the curtains drawn aside was certainly most
-captivating. Many had said of her: “Thy bright smile haunts
-me still.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul recognized the occupant at a glance; to Adele she was
-a stranger. Paul had met her accidentally and incidentally;
-and upon so slight an acquaintance had received an invitation
-to join a card-party at her apartments. The invitation had
-been sent him before the soi-disant widow knew that Paul was
-there a member of a family party, or she would have known
-it was useless to waste a thought on him.</p>
-
-<p>Not being a man who played cards for money, and for some
-other reasons, Paul had sent a polite regret; after acknowledging
-to himself with a laugh that he had been innocently
-caught by that sort of thing once before, and didn’t intend to
-be again. But the fellows persisted that he was “a fool not to
-go and see the fun,” as the fair creature was only one of many
-birds of passage stranded in India, and “devilish amusing”
-when sitting at the head of her own table.</p>
-
-<p>Paul preferred not to sit at that sort of a table; and when
-this dashing woman of the world, a notable representative of
-her set, thus appeared on the public road in her dandy state-conveyance,
-so very near Adele, he instinctively stepped between
-them; and became so much engrossed with Adele’s
-wraps and her comfort, getting her things all mixed up when
-no attention was necessary, that the fair one had passed without
-receiving the slightest sign of recognition from either of
-them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span></p>
-
-<p>Paul flattered himself he had disguised the situation fairly
-well, and so he had from a man’s point of view, but not from
-a woman’s. Adele at once spoke up:</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know that lady, Paul? Why didn’t you speak
-to her?”</p>
-
-<p>Paul turned aside after his fashion, to avoid meeting Adele’s
-eyes, but promptly answered:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, slightly&mdash;very slightly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why not speak to her? A gentleman never cuts a
-lady; never.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, of course,” remarked Paul. “It’s the lady’s prerogative
-to do the snubbing; some women seem to think men enjoy
-being snubbed.”</p>
-
-<p>“A well-bred woman always protects herself,” said Adele
-briskly. “If I had been in that dandy, and you had turned
-your back on me, that would not have been the end of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul laughed, incredulous.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Paul, I should not permit any acquaintance to treat
-me so cavalierly. I should demand an explanation.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Adele, no one would ever treat you that way,”
-said Paul, rather surprised at her vehemence. “That sort of
-thing is not apt to happen to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I suppose not, but I should resent it if it did. Now
-tell me, Paul, frankly, why did you avoid speaking to that
-lady?”</p>
-
-<p>Paul pulled himself together as best he could and tried to
-explain.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele, you saw her yourself; you had a good look at her,
-did you not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I glanced at her, slightly&mdash;very slightly;” using inadvertently
-Paul’s own words, which still rung in her ears.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you must have seen her better than I did, for I
-did not look at her at all. I was looking at you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, perhaps I did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we both know her slightly&mdash;very slightly.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Paul, don’t be evasive; I don’t like it. You were introduced,
-I was not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well to be frank, Adele, I was introduced; yet I wasn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Explain!”</p>
-
-<p>“She introduced herself, and that’s not woman’s prerogative.”</p>
-
-<p>“It might be, under some circumstances,” said Adele with
-some asperity. “I know what you mean, however; go on.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought she held herself very cheap,” said Paul. “I
-never could recognize, as a friend, one who undervalued herself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, I never would have thought it! was she that sort
-of person?” exclaimed Adele. “She didn’t look at all commonplace,
-not with that stylish turn-out and liveried bearers.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul laughed again; he couldn’t help it.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see anything funny,” said Adele, as they moved
-towards an old stump, took a seat under the trees, and sat
-looking forward between the crimson rhododendrons, towards
-the Celestial scenery beyond.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele, unfortunately she didn’t pay for the style herself,”
-remarked Paul, sub rosa; then correcting himself: “Yes, she
-did, too!&mdash;no! she didn’t, either!&mdash;oh, bosh! you know what
-I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>This only made Adele more pointedly inquisitive.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you talking about? Who did? her husband, I
-suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, luckily she has none.”</p>
-
-<p>“Paul, you’re outrageous to say that; who did?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I only know what a cruel, unkind world
-says.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure you do know; tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re extremely inquisitive, Adele&mdash;excruciatingly so;
-you’re just as bad as Elsa.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s Elsa?”</p>
-
-<p>“In Lohengrin, but never mind her or him; if you must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-know now, if you insist about this woman, why, then&mdash;some
-other fellow, or other’s husband, has paid for it,” said Paul
-reluctantly.</p>
-
-<p>Adele was confused, and her manner showed it. She felt
-uneasy, and her words told on what account. “Oh, Paul, that
-is terrible&mdash;poor woman&mdash;poor soul!” and Adele turned
-her head away to avoid Paul’s eyes&mdash;her heart sensitive&mdash;pained
-at the thought of the poor soul.</p>
-
-<p>Paul drew Adele to him and placed her head on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, my darling, you do know why I could not recognize
-that woman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why you came between us?” whispered Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I couldn’t help it.”</p>
-
-<p>“To shield me&mdash;you felt that way?”</p>
-
-<p>“H’m&mdash;but it isn’t necessary to say so.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understand&mdash;only do it,” and she took the hand of him
-who thus loved her, in her own, and pressed it to her, her
-heart going out to him in tenderness.</p>
-
-<p>A thrill of blissful content passed through Paul’s innermost
-being. He knew her in whom he had believed; and she
-had faith and trust in her protector for life. They were truly
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>The dandy had passed&mdash;gone forever&mdash;a mere episode in
-their experience.</p>
-
-<p>Their lives were thus becoming as one.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never forget our walks in this Cathedral,” said
-Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not,” said Paul, laconic, and not nearly so enthusiastic
-as Adele had anticipated.</p>
-
-<p>“You hope not? Why, what on earth is to prevent our remembering?”</p>
-
-<p>At this point Paul’s natural tendency to tease a little got
-the better of him; but Adele also by this time had had enough<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-experience to recognize his moods, and to meet him on his own
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to clinch it,” said he, “so that we couldn’t
-forget.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll remind you if I see your memory weakening,” said
-Adele.</p>
-
-<p>Paul’s countenance exhibited that sort of smile usually described
-as capacious. “I should like something to happen before
-we left,” and he looked doubtfully at her. Being a man
-of normal growth, the masculine desire for actual possession
-of his future wife had grown upon Paul recently in a marked
-degree; and the incidents of that particular day led him to
-speak out. He felt sure Adele would be sincere with him
-in response.</p>
-
-<p>Adele as natural as he was, woman’s instinct told her to be
-cautious, in fact shy; and her intellect suggested that she act
-upon what she had just heard Paul say about people who
-undervalued themselves. Of course, Adele suspected at once
-what Paul hoped would happen; but she took her own way to
-make him ask for it.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s going to happen?” said Adele, leading him on. “I
-mean what do you hope for?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s just this way; let me tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m listening.”</p>
-
-<p>“You call this a Cathedral, don’t you? I think it a first-rate
-place, myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Admirable for a short sojourn.”</p>
-
-<p>“And more, it’s very suitable for something special&mdash;something
-for us two.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not to live in; it’s too breezy.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind a breeze, if it don’t result in something worse&mdash;a
-squall.”</p>
-
-<p>“Squalls! I don’t permit squalls,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“No, nor I, either; especially when another fellow tells you
-squarely to ‘forever after hold your peace.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span></p>
-
-<p>Adele did not quite enjoy this turn in the conversation, so
-changed it a little.</p>
-
-<p>“But you missed seeing the Lepcha ritual; you should see
-how the natives make their sacrifices.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sacrifices? God forbid, my dear. No! it’s all gain for us
-here; please don’t even think of sacrificing anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then we can attend some other ritual,” said Adele; which
-remark was so very much of an acknowledgment on her part
-that Paul imagined she would consent at once.</p>
-
-<p>“All right!” said he. “There is a Church of England curate
-in the village&mdash;I’m not particular.”</p>
-
-<p>“Also Taoist monks with masks and wheels. I’m not so
-very particular myself about the form,” quizzed Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t keep me on the rack, my dear; just tell me which
-you prefer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the Taoist ritual is the most spectacular, the Lepcha
-the most thrilling, and the Church of England the most serious&mdash;probably,
-but I have my doubts.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never was more serious in my life,” said Paul. “The
-English will do; that is, if it suits you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me! suits me!” she exclaimed, but her expression told him
-well enough his allusions were clearly understood.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course, you have the final say.”</p>
-
-<p>“To decide what? It was you who spoke about something
-you hoped would happen before we left. You haven’t told me
-what it is, have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“But you guessed it at once, Adele, I’m sure; and better
-than I can tell you. Would not this be an ideal place for our
-marriage? Just arrange it to suit yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele turned her face away&mdash;a little embarrassed, rather
-confused.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t be in such a hurry, Paul. I really must think.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not, my dear. I’ve thought of it for a week,” said
-the ardent lover.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A week! you don’t call that much time to decide for life!”
-Adele was now as serious as her lover was ardent.</p>
-
-<p>“I decided at Olympus&mdash;oh, months ago,” said Paul, a little
-nervous. “Didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but this is like a surprise, after all, when it comes
-to the actual. I must have some time. Oh, Paul, you’re so&mdash;impatient;
-just like a boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t I be? I feel as if we were really married
-that evening when under the brow of Olympus”&mdash;and in one
-sense this was true; Paul had felt so, conscientiously, as to
-the bond between them.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you? I don’t,” said Adele.</p>
-
-<p>“Why you must have thought so,” said Paul, very inconsiderate
-in his ardor.</p>
-
-<p>Adele thought him too harsh to her, at such a time; and
-her manner showed how uncomfortable he had made her feel.</p>
-
-<p>It took Paul some little time to quiet his own ardor, and
-appreciate things from her point of view; finally he succeeded.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele, I suppose it is sudden; I had a wrong notion, an
-idea that the suddenness was only read about in novels of impulse,
-written to pass the time quickly. I know differently
-now; you see I never did it before. Forgive me now, Adele;
-I never dreamed of hurting you in any way&mdash;it is too serious.”
-Paul’s ardor had only taken another form.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, this is real life; sudden and serious,” said Adele,
-“more serious than when we were at Olympus.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me why you think so?”</p>
-
-<p>“A betrothal is truth in words; marriage is truth in deeds.”</p>
-
-<p>Paul put his arm around her and told her again how he
-felt and thought and wished to act for the very best, for both
-of them. His manner changed, however. It was less ardent
-and more devout. He held her hand as if it were very precious
-to him, that to touch her was a sacred privilege. Never before
-had she a realizing sense so intense, of that manly virtue,
-which she then recognized in her future husband; and for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-first time she noticed he used a new expression. His words
-were forcible, indeed.</p>
-
-<p>“Adele, I love you with all my soul and strength.” Then
-he bowed his head as if overcome.</p>
-
-<p>From that moment Adele knew he was her husband both in
-spirit and in truth. It was a complete answer to her prayers
-for Paul’s good, when she had prayed in spirit and in truth for
-him; the natural consequence of her prayers, her belief in
-Paul, and her sincerity towards him. She might have reasonably
-called him her husband in her own mind, in the presence
-of the Holy Spirit of truth in nature and in religion; but she
-did not. If Paul had died suddenly, however, before their
-marriage, she no doubt would have done so&mdash;in spirit&mdash;and it
-would have been the truth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>A pause, yet not a rest. Thoughts active, although neither
-could speak. There was nothing more Paul could say. He
-had spoken the whole truth, in love&mdash;an ineffable divine experience.
-Youth’s foretaste of “Love divine, all love excelling.”</p>
-
-<p>Adele was meditating as never before. Her thoughts flew
-as a bird flies hither and thither, from possibilities to other
-probabilities, future plans, future joys; flew outwards, then
-inwards, as a bird among the branches of the Tree of Life;
-seeking to know the good from the evil, the best from the better;
-wishing to pluck fruit from the Tree of Life, and yet
-preserve the integrity of her own conscious-self, her conscientious-self,
-as to what she ought to do.</p>
-
-<p>Conscience flew to her mother to throw her arms around
-her mother’s neck and find sympathy, while mother’s love told
-the truth in maternal affection into her daughter’s ear; conscience
-flew to her father for consent and advice, to sit on his
-knee once more, and look in his face, and press his cheek, and
-run her fingers through his hair, and be caressed as “father’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-little girl.” The thought of separation from loved ones, in
-any degree, what might it mean?&mdash;a leap in the dark?</p>
-
-<p>No, not into the dark. She could see that, positively, in
-Paul’s character: then what?&mdash;a rising upwards, an ascension
-into the brighter light of a new life.</p>
-
-<p>Nature indeed took its course, and with the experience came
-the comforting voice speaking in nature where the Tree of
-Life grows.</p>
-
-<p>She looked towards the chancel of her Cathedral; and how
-exquisitely beautiful was the scene! The place was decorated
-as for a wedding; and she saw spiritually, “as in a dream,”
-Paul standing at the chancel rail, waiting for her to come to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>That was enough&mdash;the dream became real.</p>
-
-<p>She looked up, to speak to Paul; putting her arm on his
-shoulder their faces met. Like as a bird, which had flown
-from branch to branch in the springtime of existence, returns
-to build a nest of its own among the beautiful foliage
-of life, so she returned in spirit and in truth to him who
-loved her and was willing to give himself for her.</p>
-
-<p>Only a word was uttered:</p>
-
-<p>“I am ready; I will go with you, Paul;” and in her own
-thoughts, “I am yours.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="XLV">XLV<br />
-<span class="fs80">RITUAL OF THE HUMAN RACE</span></h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-capy">THUS it came to pass that Adele and Paul were to be
-married in the most majestic and impressive Cathedral
-upon earth. Under the canopy of heaven, in a
-domicile as well as edifice, constructed by the forces of nature
-from designs by the Supreme Architect, their own Father-Creator;
-married in a sacred place, purposed expressly for the
-Creator’s own service, and their own use; where all the rituals
-testified in ways practical yet mysterious to the Way of Truth
-in Life.</p>
-
-<p>If they had chosen the ritual of the nature-worshipers they
-would have found themselves in harmony with the most
-ancient of all, from the beginning; and the most widespread
-upon the surface of the earth as historically known.</p>
-
-<p>If they had chosen that of the Taoists considered as a peculiar
-phase of Buddhism, they would have found themselves in
-harmony with the most numerous, including both gnostic and
-agnostic, and the most devoted to expediency as the goal of
-existence, where the knowledge of human nature took the
-most practical forms of application to be found upon the
-globe to-day. They would have had the majority with them.</p>
-
-<p>They chose neither; for truth progressive had taught them
-to ignore naught in their own past experience, nor in the experience
-of others; and to seek “the greater things than these”
-which enlightenment is ever revealing through religion, philosophy
-and science.</p>
-
-<p>The Christian ritual of the marriage ceremony as it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
-then performed in the open air, differed greatly from that of
-the Lepchas, in that it was not held in a thicket partly
-screened, as if it were a quasi-secret to be seen darkly by both
-natural eye and spiritual sense: nor like the Taoist, in which
-are prayers in endless repetition, perfunctory effort as if by
-machinery, prayer wheels and decorations of the curio order.
-The Christian ritual as given in this Cathedral under the auspices
-of the Creator himself, ignored none of these; but
-showed that the truth had made men free, freedom in the individual,
-freedom by co-operation&mdash;for in union there is
-strength and propagation, proselyting truth.</p>
-
-<p>Strange to say, it was only those who officiated in strait-laced
-garments of the local form of ecclesiasticism who appeared
-awkward, stiff and unnatural in manner, and uneasy
-in mind when they found themselves administering in the
-open before a public which had thus become free in spirit.</p>
-
-<p>The wedding took place upon a grassy hill-side, a beautiful
-location where natural flowers bloomed, and crimson rhododendrons
-hung in bouquets and garlands overhead, framing
-in the Peaks of Eternal Whiteness (purity); a marvelous
-symbolic landscape, symbolizing that humanity must pass
-through and under the crimson of suffering in order to attain
-the pure whiteness beyond.</p>
-
-<p>The wedding took place where the Celestial scenery was ever
-before them; fleecy clouds hanging like wedding draperies in
-the azure blue around the Cathedral spires&mdash;the spires rising
-heavenwards, ever pointing upward.</p>
-
-<p>But at this particular time it was not so much these everyday
-manifestations of natural facts in this Cathedral which
-impressed those who officiated, as the astonishing cosmopolitan
-aspect of the crowd which came to see and be seen. Representatives
-of all sorts and conditions, racial and religious,
-which the region contained, engaged in various occupations,
-yet all now actuated by the same spirit, to share and rejoice
-in the happiness of others. Many among the crowd of witnesses<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-had gone through the marriage ceremony themselves;
-others looked forward with rejoicing to the time when they
-would. Some, a limited number chiefly from the Latin races,
-spoke of it as of very serious “sacramental” character; but
-the enormous majority did not; and very many did not know
-what such a word meant; yet every individual present knew
-it was a “holy” condition to live in, for mortals. To all, the
-tenor of it was to induce mankind to be happier, to gain
-strength by co-operation in personal experience; an experience
-never to be forgotten in this case, for natural methods in religious
-ceremonial were about to take their course, and make
-it the most interesting wedding any of the guests had ever
-attended.</p>
-
-<p>The first impulse of those asked to officiate was to robe
-themselves, each to put on his own official cassock, stole, or
-academical gown. Lo! there was no robing room&mdash;positively
-no place suitable, not even an enclosure to screen a change of
-garments; all must be done in the open before God and man.
-If the officiating prelate had not brought his vestments in a
-grip-sack he would have had difficulty in assuming, as custom
-required, his usual official aspect. One unfortunate who laid
-great stress upon his official garb, his robes of office, found
-himself exposing a very soiled undergarment, much less decent,
-really, than the occasion required. Never was mortal man
-more ashamed of his personal underwear than this unfortunate
-who had previously been covered in public by outer sacerdotal
-garments.</p>
-
-<p>Another, profiting by his experience, sought a little briar
-bush he had discovered at the last minute, behind which to
-robe himself; and ere he had assumed his wedding garments,
-the bridegroom came.</p>
-
-<p>Paul approached, and stood waiting for his bride. He was
-dressed as often before when freedom of life and thought had
-characterized his actions; in fact, very nearly as when he won
-his bride and told her of his love. He and Adele had chosen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-to commence their future life by identifying it with the very
-freest and happiest of past experiences; hence Paul wore a
-spotless suit of white flannels, with an inner white waistcoat
-for the occasion; his necktie of light blue, which suited his
-complexion admirably. Verily new garments in one sense,
-but such as preserved his own sense of freedom just when he
-wanted it most. Some cigars had peeped out of one of his
-pockets just before he came forward, but the Doctor concealed
-them at the last moment. The lapels of his coat were thrown
-back upon his breast; his athletic frame was vigorous and
-active, and his countenance was sincere and truthful; his
-dark hair natural in its folds, and his eyes more forcible, energetic,
-intense than ever before.</p>
-
-<p>“I want you just as you are,” Adele had said to him, “without
-one plea, not dressed up for an occasion;” and the healthy
-groom came so, fresh, and clean, and free&mdash;a true man.</p>
-
-<p>Other lovers of nature present said he was “a splendid fellow&mdash;he
-looks it! Any girl ought to be proud of him”&mdash;the
-truth. He was indeed much more a veritable nobleman in appearance
-than when clothed in black.</p>
-
-<p>He waited for Adele.</p>
-
-<p>The bride, “arrayed in fine linen pure and white,” wore
-orange blossoms because symbolic among her people, the emblems
-festooning the bridal veil upon her shoulders. Her
-forehead was uncovered; and naught in her hair but a spray of
-blossoms held by a diamond cross&mdash;Paul’s gift. The cross
-glowed and sparkled in the sunlight, not unlike a flame.
-Some of the natives called it a “tongue of fire.” It was so, a
-flame of affection from Paul to herself. Her blonde hair like
-her mother’s, and intellectual dark eyes from her father, gave
-an alluring and mysterious beauty; a combination which appealed
-to the Orientals as angelic, and to many others as fascinating;
-human, yet spiritual.</p>
-
-<p>Adele at first looked upwards, but not in assumption&mdash;it
-was her natural attitude when moving freely without fear;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>
-then bowed her head as in the presence of God whom she
-loved, and because she was with her beloved in human experience.</p>
-
-<p>Upon her father’s arm she came forward, leaning in submission
-to him from whom she had received her life (<em>bios</em>); and
-embraced her mother, kissing her with arms around her neck,
-before the Creator and men, in token of that mother’s love
-she had received, namely her creation and preservation in this
-life; which she considered were divine attributes, divine gifts
-to be bequeathed to her own hereafter.</p>
-
-<p>To Paul she seemed as one looking towards the Celestial
-regions from which she must have come, and to which he felt
-sure she was destined some day. And the Orientals present
-looked on rapturously, and some drew in their breath between
-their teeth with admiration and respect; their manner of doing
-this seemed to say that they wished to imbibe some of the
-happiness which her presence near them suggested. Another
-voiced the sentiment of all mankind: “She is too lovely to
-live, she will be taken;” but on the instant a twig in the grass
-caught the skirt of her gown, and as she felt inclined to pause
-and loosen it, the Doctor stooped to detach it, and the bride
-passed on.</p>
-
-<p>Her father’s dignified presence, markedly paternal, was
-also suggestive&mdash;of what research after higher knowledge in
-systems may accomplish when Christianity is recognized as
-the great incentive to knowledge and ultimate unity. Truth
-was the one goal in Professor Cultus’ scientific investigations;
-but he was not one to accept mere knowledge as adequate.
-<em>He must have the truth also.</em> His intellectual head stood upon
-his finely proportioned shoulders, witness to the honesty and
-thoroughness of truth as he saw it; an honest man&mdash;God’s
-noblest work.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Cultus, Carlotta Gains Cultus, the bride’s mother, was
-by heredity a positive character, practical, active and worldly-wise.
-She was the embodiment of that womanly knowledge of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>
-the science of social intercourse, the ethics of society; one,
-who after encountering men and things, learns to appreciate
-them at their real value&mdash;a value not set by fashion, but by
-the true commonsense standards. Mrs. Cultus was one not
-always properly appreciated by others, but ever active on principle
-whether appreciated or not; not solely in intellectual
-lines of various heterogeneous clubs, but also in the humanities
-when the appeal to her seemed reasonable, and therefore natural.
-Mrs. Cultus had learned through severe illness certain
-truths in life which appealed to her personally with practical
-force and significance; an avenue to conviction very different
-from that of her husband. Her presence now manifested that
-other dignity of truth and worldly wisdom which did not
-repel, but attracted all who really knew her, for confidence,
-aid and affection; her husband and daughter most of all, for
-they knew her best. Being a mother who had suffered, she
-had learned to feel a mother-tenderness for all&mdash;that divine
-affection for humanity ever characteristic of Him who took
-even little babes in His arms and blessed them. So did Mrs.
-Cultus, in this way, now strive to follow Him. Devoid of
-either hypocrisy or guile, she was ever “true to the life”&mdash;her
-natural life as God had made her.</p>
-
-<p>And the bride’s friend, the friend of her own age; Adele
-and “Frank” Winchester, intimates; the one with whom her
-youthful thoughts and pranks had been unrestrained and free.
-It was this friend who had arrayed her in fine linen, pure and
-white, for her bridal, and by working faithfully, almost without
-ceasing, had embellished her wedding garment with an
-exquisite vine embroidered in white floss silk, encircling her
-bosom, trailing down to the hem. Affection and artistic skill
-guiding the willing fingers had produced this simple vine and
-branches. The art of loving simply, yet constantly, entwining
-truly, was in that vine, for there had been neither time nor
-place for elaboration; yet the vine was finished in season, and
-decked the bride at her wedding. It was a secret between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
-these chums, how the worker had added clandestinely a small
-bunch of thorns embroidered in among the folds near the hem
-of her garment, where Adele could tread upon them if she
-chose. “Merely to remind you, my dear,” said Frank, laughing,
-“what a thorn in the flesh I’ve often been; these are
-the last&mdash;all future thorns are for Paul.” Adele cherished
-those precious thorns as if they were jewels; she would not
-have trod on them&mdash;no! no more than she would have wished
-her friend a pathway of thorns.</p>
-
-<p>And the Doctor, the inquisitive, sincere Doctor Wise&mdash;he
-asked no further questions when he stood aside as the groom’s
-best man; no questions about things in the heavens above and
-the earth beneath, nor even about the spirits of just men
-made perfect, here or anywhere else. The Doctor would have
-much enjoyed wearing knickerbockers as when he went outing
-with Paul, particularly so since Paul appeared in white flannels,
-and if need be he could be ready for tennis or cricket
-as soon as the ceremony was over; but propriety forbade.
-Proprieties were apt to be a wee bit inconvenient from the
-Doctor’s point of view; and just at present he was more
-nervous than the groom, nervous to get the thing over and
-have done with it. Such was the Doctor as he appeared on the
-surface; fundamentally he was the very personification of
-congratulation and joy. He knew that nature had taken the
-true course with these two, both so endeared to him. He rejoiced
-in being able to witness and appreciate so much that
-was good in nature and in co-operation. He was supremely
-happy too, but from yet another cause in nature; that the
-Creator in kindness had thus made him, a very ordinary man,
-able to see so much clearly, and yet not himself be lost in the
-mysterious maelstrom of life.</p>
-
-<p>The ladies gave the Doctor precious little opportunity to do
-anything whatever on an occasion when bachelors-on-the-shelf
-do not count; but he did search the country from Calcutta to
-Nepaul to obtain some flowers which he knew were desired<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>
-by Adele, the bridal bouquet. A very simple one after all,
-white rose-buds amid cultivated heliotrope. It seemed at one
-time as if every sort of flower and shrub flourished in the
-Himalaya region except what he wanted. He had parties
-hunting heliotrope as if it might grow on berry bushes; and
-when from a lofty tree mistletoe was brought him by mistake,
-he nearly sent the bearer to the foot of a precipice. But he
-got it. It was finally obtained, near by in a private conservatory,
-much to his relief and Adele’s delight. The bouquet held
-attached an exquisite lace handkerchief passed through a ring;
-the ring was set with a sapphire of purest quality, that peculiar
-shade in depth and delicacy which in the Orient is supposed
-to characterize the plumage of the Bird of Immortality.
-This gem, ever constant day or night, responsive to every ray
-of light, symbolized the true blue of precious worth&mdash;truth
-in purity and love. This was the Doctor’s gift. Adele had
-heard him speak of such a stone and its significance among
-sapphires of so many colors. She read his very thoughts as
-she pressed his hand when accepting this significant and beautiful
-gift. The fragrance of the flowers direct from nature;
-the handkerchief a work of art; and the gem a true blue symbol&mdash;all
-brought memories of their search after something
-worth knowing in many fields. Never did Adele appear more
-idyllic, poetic, aye, pastoral in the higher sense, than at this
-moment; and the Doctor blessed her&mdash;in spirit.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, when Paul advanced to meet his bride, they stood
-among their own; the bridal party among their own race and
-nationality, together with cousins from their Mother Country,
-England&mdash;their faces radiant with hope and pleasure. A
-choral of mixed voices, volunteers from the Christian Colony,
-sang the processional; and the anthem was heard upon earth
-as it ascended heavenward. This near a chancel rail of natural
-growths, the line suggested by a carpet of wild flowers with
-cultivated beauties placed at intervals. And there were tree-ferns
-and palms, fountains of foliage at either end; the freshness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>
-of the fountains springing from the centre of the plant,
-its life within, not from near the exterior bark. Adele had
-expressed a desire for these plants with their heart-life in the
-centre; also because their significance was simple in nature,
-their natural beauty artistic, and their natural meaning too
-exalted and widespread to be affected seriously by passing
-fashions or fads. And the crimson rhododendrons decorated
-the background, while before them the Delectable Mountains
-and the azure blue.</p>
-
-<p>The ceremony was first directed towards the world at large,
-for each individual to learn, mark, and spiritually digest that
-which this couple manifested of truth in humanity. It was a
-solemn period, while the people gave heed, each reading his or
-her personal experience into that of the new couple; to each
-(such was the condition in nature), from his individual point
-of view. As a matter of fact Adele felt as if the minister was
-speaking of some other than herself, and Paul felt as if all
-eyes must be turned on Adele.</p>
-
-<p>Then the Servant of God turned towards this man and
-woman who would be one; a sacred moment when he pronounced
-them husband and wife. They knelt together, her
-hand in his&mdash;their first united prayer to “Our Father who
-art,” for this, from Him, unto themselves&mdash;as also One.</p>
-
-<p>And when they arose, and together turned to face the world,
-behold a cloud of witnesses, out in the nave of the Cathedral,
-a multitude upon the hill-slopes and skirting the forests,
-every vantage ground occupied by natives drawn hither
-by the world-wide desire to see “a bride adorned for her husband;”
-actuated by countless motives which primitive and natural
-curiosity suggested; curious to see what the dominant
-people, English or Americans, would do when worshiping in
-the outer air like themselves; curious to see what a Christian
-marriage was like. Would it be gay and festive like their own?
-what sort of a dress would be worn by the bride? and would
-all her belongings and presents be carried along the road so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
-that all could see that she was rich? and would there be a real
-feast? Thus many had been attracted by very practical reasons
-which they considered suitable to the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>And who were these in bright array after their fashion? a
-little group not far from the bride herself. As if they had
-been especially invited, they stood before some bamboo wands,
-decorated for a gala-day; not before a thicket as once before,
-but with their bright signals in the open, the prayer-signals
-floating in the wind to attract the Good Spirits of the air.</p>
-
-<p>And who were these in yellow robes? with trumpets and
-bowls in their hands, and outlandish masks pendant from their
-girdles; yet cheerful faces withal, and wearing fillets and earrings
-of turquoise and coral taken from the “curio-case” in
-their Temple. And one poor decrepit native priestess with
-her good old prayer-wheel and bean rosary, twirling the wheel
-and rattling the beans regardless of all else; one who knew
-her wheel and rosary were good, because they were very old,
-like herself&mdash;she had used them from childhood. Who were
-they?</p>
-
-<p>Because they were not arrayed in modern dress, some
-thought them intruders, sheep of another fold gotten astray.
-Many thought so, all except Paul and the Doctor who knew
-what Adele herself had done; how she had gone out into the
-highways and hedges to compel them to come in and take their
-place near her. They were surely entitled as members of the
-congregation of the original Primate of the Cathedral, these
-poor Lepchas now Adele’s friends, to a place very far front.
-And the gay Taoists, also her Himalaya friends, whom she
-had met, and with whom she had worshiped in their own
-chapel, learning to be with them and of them, in spirit. Although
-crude and tawdry now, these Taoists, they were the
-professed followers of Laotze, a highly spiritual man who had
-given to the world one of the most abstruse, recondite, metaphysical
-forms of religion ever known to humanity. “Oh,
-what a fall was there!” thought Adele as she saw the Taoists<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span>
-of to-day; but she invited them just the same, she wished
-them to be with her now on an occasion she considered sacred.</p>
-
-<p>And more surprising still, in this region:</p>
-
-<p>Who were those two men, splendid examples of physical
-manhood, men of darker complexions? They had been engaged
-in distributing corsage bouquets and boutonnières
-among the bridal party, and they now stood side by side as the
-bride passed by. They saluted her, in a polite manner and
-with a style quite their own, and the bride recognized with
-sincere satisfaction their presence. Who were they? Verily
-of the race she knew best, next her own. Originally from
-Nubia in Africa, where their near ancestors had worshiped
-in the forests, they were now, already, by the will of the
-Creator, full citizens of her own beloved land. Adele had
-found them in the bazaar, where they had drifted in from
-God-knows-where in “God’s Own Country;” but to Adele they
-represented the colored people of her own United States.
-They were men who had shed their life-blood for the cause
-of Truth in Freedom, and the Truth had made them free.
-They were true men as God had made them such, in His own
-way, but young in the experience of civilization. They were
-now educating themselves by knowledge of the world for
-greater things to come; educating themselves with an energy
-and rapidity never before excelled by any race. Adele had
-determined to help them along; for woe betide anyone who
-dares ignore or impede the way of the Almighty in nature,
-where the progress of the race is in unity with the progress
-of religion itself. She said afterwards, that there was no
-feature more home-like among the incidents connected with
-her wedding, than to have these Freedmen from “God’s Own
-Country,” from home, to distribute the cultivated flowers of
-civilization which they themselves, that very morning, had
-helped to collect, to arrange, and to give to others.</p>
-
-<p>Thus to some few of the native witnesses to this wedding,
-to some few whom Adele had met personally, she became<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>
-known as “The Lady of Loving-Kindness;” and no doubt
-they would in time, some of them, have erected a shrine to her
-memory, for they well remembered her beauty and the Flaming
-Cross Light which sparkled upon her forehead. And still
-later their descendants would have bowed down to an image
-of her, saying they did not worship the image, but the Loving-Kindness
-which she represented.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, to the majority of the Orientals
-actually present, but to whom she was not known personally,
-strangers to her, the effect was very different. To them the
-bride was now as one separated from them more than before:
-this because she had become subject to the will of her husband,
-and must hereafter walk behind him, not beside him, when
-she went abroad; and in time must present him with a son,
-or else perhaps it was better she herself had never been born.
-Such were the actual facts with regard to some of the witnesses.
-Yet, how natural, yet unnatural, are such conceptions;
-natural to man in the primitive or childhood period of
-his spiritual life, yet truly unnatural when taught otherwise
-by more matured civilizations, when mankind has become enlightened
-further by the brighter spiritual Light of the World.</p>
-
-<p>To Paul and Adele, now as one, it was just the reverse.
-They stood side by side, with their religious consciousness
-turned to One whose bride was the Church Spiritual, of whom
-all nations of the earth are blessed.</p>
-
-<p>As the bridal party returned homewards through this
-throng of sympathetic spectators, it was as if all had been invited
-to this Marriage Feast.</p>
-
-<p>The Spirit and the Bride had said, “Come.”</p>
-
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Phillips Brooks.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> <a href="#frontis">See frontispiece</a>. A view from near Sundookphoo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="transnote pg-brk">
-<p class="center bold">Transcriber’s Note</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation such as “hill-side”/“hillside” have
-been maintained.</p>
-
-<p>Minor punctuation and spelling errors have been silently corrected
-and, except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the
-text, especially in dialogue, and inconsistent or archaic usage, have
-been retained.</p>
-</div>
-
-<ol>
-<li><a href="#tn26">Page 26</a>: “Semple opened with some of Brahams’” changed to “Semple opened with some of Brahms’”.</li>
-
-<li><a href="#tn73">Page 73</a>: “fire-opal of true Indian irridescence” changed to “fire-opal of true Indian iridescence”.</li>
-
-<li><a href="#tn108">Page 108</a>: “had the courage of her convicions” changed to “had the courage of her convictions”.</li>
-
-<li><a href="#tn117">Page 117</a>: “consequences as this; but if unsucessful” changed to “consequences as this; but if unsuccessful”.</li>
-
-<li><a href="#tn163">Page 163</a>: “the true union, earthly, heavenly, etrenal” changed to “the true union, earthly, heavenly, eternal”.</li>
-
-<li><a href="#tn226">Page 226</a>: “and all the essentials for majesty domnating” changed to “and all the essentials for majesty dominating”.</li>
-
-<li><a href="#tn275">Page 275</a>: “fluttered a message of thanks, or propitation” changed to “fluttered a message of thanks, or propitiation”.</li>
-</ol>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A TWENTIETH CENTURY IDEALIST***</p>
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