The Broad Highway - Page 196/374

The moon was rising as, hungry and weary, I came to that steep

descent I have mentioned more than once, which leads down into

the Hollow, and her pale radiance was already, upon the world--a

sleeping world wherein I seemed alone. And as I stood to gaze

upon the wonder of the heavens, and the serene beauty of the

earth, the clock in Cranbrook Church chimed nine.

All about me was a soft stirring of leaves, and the rustle of

things unseen, which was as the breathing of a sleeping host.

Borne to my nostrils came the scent of wood and herb and dewy

earth, while upstealing from the shadow of the trees below, the

voice of the brook reached me, singing its never-ending song--now

loud and clear, now sinking to a rippling murmur--a melody of joy

and sorrow, of laughter and tears, like the greater melody of Life.

And, presently, I descended into the shadows, and, walking on

beside the brook, sat me down upon a great boulder; and,

straightway, my weariness and hunger were forgotten, and I fell

a-dreaming.

Truly it was a night to dream in--a white night, full of the moon

and the magic of the moon. Slowly she mounted upwards, peeping

down at me through whispering leaves, checkering the shadows with

silver, and turning the brook into a path of silver for the feet

of fairies. Yes, indeed, the very air seemed fraught with a

magic whereby the unreal became the real and things impossible

the manifestly possible.

And so, staring up at the moon's pale loveliness, I dreamed the

deathless dreams of long-dead poets and romancers, wherein were

the notes of dreamy lutes, the soft whisper of trailing garments,

and sighing voices that called beneath the breath. Between

Petrarch's Laura and Dante's Beatrice came one as proud and

gracious and beautiful as they, deep-bosomed, broad-hipped, with

a red, red mouth, and a subtle witchery of the eyes. I dreamed

of nymphs and satyrs, of fauns and dryads, and of the young

Endymion who, on just such another night, in just such another

leafy bower, waited the coming of his goddess.

Now as I sat thus, chin in hand, I heard a little sound behind

me, the rustling of leaves, and, turning my head, beheld one who

stood half in shadow, half in moonlight, looking down at me

beneath a shy languor of drooping lids, with eyes hidden by their

lashes--a woman tall and fair, and strong as Dian's self.

Very still she stood, and half wistful, as if waiting for me to

speak, and very silent I sat, staring up at her as she had been

the embodiment of my dreams conjured tip by the magic of the

night, while, from the mysteries of the woods, stole the soft,

sweet song of a nightingale.