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# 2025-07-20 - V. Lydiat by L. Adams Beck | |
Intergalactic Rose | |
I found Dreams and Delights by L. Adams Beck in Project Gutenberg's | |
new books feed. Reading the Wikipedia page, i see that she wrote | |
Algernon Blackwood pastiche, among other things. Interesting! | |
L. Adams Beck | |
Of the stories in this book, the ones i enjoyed the most were | |
V. Lydiat, Stately Julia, and The Man Without A Sword. I think | |
their more personal approach made them more accessible to me. They | |
all "rang true" to their form. For example, The Man Without A Sword is | |
set in Japan, and it feels familiar, similar in spirit to other | |
supernatural Japanese fiction i have read. | |
Here is the full text of V. Lydiat for inclusion in my Interludes | |
personal anthology. | |
I felt amused to read the protagonist, a woman author, used the pen | |
name V. Lydiat to hide her gender. It made me wonder whether this | |
was also true for L. Adams Beck. | |
* * * | |
She sat and looked at the signature written under the name of the | |
story in readiness for typing. | |
# The Ninefold Flower | |
It was a fine story, she knew, and the signature satisfied her | |
also as it always did. _V._ is the most beautiful letter in the | |
alphabet to write and look at, the ends curving over from the | |
slender base like the uprush of a fountain from its tense spring. | |
When she *commenced author,* as the eighteenth century puts it, | |
she devoted days and days to the consideration of that pen-name. | |
For several reasons it must not reveal identity. Most women | |
prefer the highwayman's mask when they ride abroad to hold up the | |
public. It gives a freedom impossible when one is tethered to | |
the responsibilities of name and family. One becomes a foundling | |
in the great city of Literature and the pebble-cold eye of human | |
relationship passes unaware over what would have stung it into anger | |
or jealousy if it had held the key of the mystery. That is, if the | |
secret is guarded as carefully as V. Lydiat's. | |
But, for all I know, her strange reason for secrecy may never in | |
this world have swayed man or woman before. | |
In reality she was Beatrice Veronica Law Leslie. | |
A mouthful indeed! You can make as many combinations with that as | |
with the trick lock of a safe, and it will be as difficult to pick | |
the secret. She had a strong superstition about keeping to her own | |
initials, anagrammed or reversed and twisted. It seemed to her that | |
this was part of a bond of honour of which another held the pledge. | |
With this pen-name a most astonishing thing had befallen Beatrice | |
Veronica Law Leslie, for she won a literary success so sudden and | |
singular that the very management of it required a statesmanship she | |
never before knew she possessed. | |
A little must here be said of her life that this strange thing may | |
be understood. She was the only child of a well-known Oxford don | |
and a somewhat remarkable mystically-minded mother who died when | |
the girl was fourteen. Her father, after that loss, "tried life | |
a little, liked it not, and died" four years later, and Beatrice | |
Veronica who was known in her family as B. V. then betook herself to | |
the guardianship of an aunt in Montreal. Here, she also tried life a | |
little, on the society side, and certainly liked it not. There was | |
an urge within her that cried aloud for adventure, for the sight | |
of the dissolving glories of the Orient and contact with strange | |
lives that called to her dumbly in books. They peeped and mocked and | |
vanished to their unknown countries taking her longing with them, | |
and life lay about her vapid, flat, dominated by an Aunt of Fashion. | |
She floated on a duck pond and sighed for the ocean. What is a young | |
woman of spirit, not too beautiful to be dangerous, of small but | |
sufficient means, to do in such a case? Beatrice Veronica knew very | |
well. | |
She waited until she was twenty-one, meanwhile securing the | |
allegiance of a girl, Sidney Verrier, in like case, an enthusiast | |
like herself, and on a May morning of dreamy sweetness they got | |
themselves into a C.P.R. train for Victoria, B. C., leaving two | |
ill-auguring aunts on the platform, and away with them on a trip to | |
the Orient _via_ Japan. They were under bond to return in a year. | |
It was a wonderful, a heavenly experience--that wander-year of | |
theirs. The things they saw, the men and women they met, the marvels | |
which appealed to every sense! But I must not dwell on these for | |
they are but the pedestal to the story of V. Lydiat. | |
A year! Impossible. Four, six, eight years went by and still | |
unheeded aunts clamoured, and the pavements of Montreal lacked their | |
footsteps. | |
And then, in Agra, Sidney Verrier married, and apologetically, | |
doubtfully, dissolved the fair companionship, and Beatrice Veronica | |
was left to solitude. | |
When the bridal car rolled off to the station and the honeymoon | |
at Mussoori, she sat down and considered. She had not realized it | |
until then. The ways of the world were open, for experience had made | |
them plain. She had acquaintances, go where she would. There was no | |
material reason why she should not continue this delightful nomad | |
existence delightfully. But she was lonely, and suddenly it became | |
clear to her that she wanted quiet, time, recollection. She had | |
assisted at a great feast of the senses and had eaten to satiety. | |
Now--imperatively--something in her heart cried "Enough." | |
Afterwards she wondered if that had been the voice of V. Lydiat | |
crying in the wilderness. The note of preparation. | |
But where to go? Her aunt was still treading the daily round of | |
bridge and luncheon parties in Montreal and the soul of Beatrice | |
Veronica shuddered in the remembrance. No, no. The bird set free | |
does not re-enter its gilded cage, however temptingly the little | |
dish of seed is set forth. But she loved Canada for all that. | |
She remembered, as she and Sidney Verrier had passed through the | |
glorious giant-land of the Rockies, how broadly uplifted and vast | |
had been the heights and spaces, how enormous the glee of the rivers | |
tumbling from hidden sources, and they called her across far waters | |
and beneath strange stars. | |
But could one live in such colossal companionship? Is it possible to | |
dine and sleep and yawn in the presence of Gods and Emperors? There | |
was the doubt. And then she remembered a shining city laving her | |
feet in shining seas, with quiet gardens where the roses blush and | |
bloom in a calm so deep that you may count the fall of every petal | |
in the drowsy summer afternoons. A city of pines and oaks, of happy | |
homes great and small,--a city above all, bearing the keys of the | |
Orient at her golden girdle,--for it is but to step aboard a boat, | |
swift almost as the Magic Carpet, and you wake one happy morning | |
with all the dear remembered scents and sights before you once more. | |
And her heart said "Victoria,"--where Westernmost West leans forward | |
to kiss Easternmost East across the Pacific. | |
So she went there--now a woman of twenty-nine, self-possessed, and | |
capable, and settled herself in a great hostelry to choose and build | |
her home. Her home, mark you!--not her prison. It was not to be so | |
large as to hamper flight when the inevitable call came-- | |
> Take down your golden wings now | |
> From the hook behind the door, | |
> The wind is calling from the East | |
> And you must fly once more. | |
I wish I might write of the building of Beatrice Veronica's home | |
for it developed into one of the immense joys of her life. But | |
more important things are ahead, so it must suffice to say that it | |
was long, low and brown with sunny verandas and windows avid of | |
sunshine, and that all the plunder of travel, and books, books, | |
books found happy place in it and grew there as inevitably as leaves | |
on a tree. | |
But it was while all this was in embryo that the thought of writing | |
impressed itself on Beatrice Veronica. Partly because the house | |
adventure was expensive and she wanted a larger margin, partly | |
because she had seen with delighted interest and intelligence all | |
the splendid spectacle of men and cities. Her sound knowledge of | |
history and cultivated taste in literature should count for pebbles | |
in the writer's sling who goes forth to conquer the great Goliath | |
of the public. She revolved this thought often as she walked by | |
murmurous seas or nested in a niche of rock to watch the mountains | |
opposite reflecting every change of sunlight as a soul in adoration | |
reflects its deity. It really seemed a waste not to turn all this to | |
some sort of account. And success would be sweet. But how to begin! | |
She bought an armful of the magazines which make gay the streets | |
of Victoria. "I ought to be able to do this kind of thing," she | |
reflected. "I have a good vocabulary. Father always thought about | |
eight thousand words, and that should go a long way. Besides I've | |
seen nearly all there is to see. Let's try." | |
She did, and ended with more respect for the average author. The | |
eight thousand were as unmanageable as mutineers or idiots. They | |
marched doggedly in heavy columns, they right-about-faced and | |
deployed; but there was no life in them. The veriest man-handler | |
of a grizzly or a cow-boy could do better. Being a young person of | |
quick insight and decision she decided to waste no more time in that | |
direction. She laid away the magazines and decided to be a spectator | |
with memory and hope for companions. She burned her manuscripts and | |
turned her attention to planning her garden. | |
And it was then that V. Lydiat dawned on the horizon. | |
Dawned. That is the only word, for it came and the sun came after. | |
It happened in this way. | |
One night, in the usual way Beatrice Veronica fell asleep and | |
dreamed, but not in the usual way. She was standing by a temple she | |
remembered very well in Southern India, the Temple of Govindhar. | |
It stood there, under its palms wonderful as a giant rock of | |
majolica, coloured lavishly in the hard fierce sunshine, monstrously | |
sculptured with gods and goddesses, and mythical creatures of land | |
and water in all the acts of their supernal life, writhing and | |
tapering upwards to the great architectural crown supported by | |
tigers and monkeys which finished the building,--a crown gemmed with | |
worshipping spirits for jewels, a nightmare conception of violence | |
in form and colour; the last barbaric touch to the misbegotten | |
splendour. Vaguely the whole thing reminded Beatrice Veronica of her | |
literary efforts and she stood among the palms looking up to the | |
blaze against the blue and smiling a little. | |
Suddenly she became aware that a man was standing near the great | |
gate which no unbeliever's foot may pass, looking up also, shading | |
his eyes with his hand from the intolerable sunlight. His face | |
was sensitive and strong, an unusual blending, his eyes grey and | |
noticeable. She liked his figure in the light tropical clothing. He | |
had the air of birth and breeding. But he seemed wearied, as if the | |
climate had been too much for him, a look one knows very well where | |
the Peninsula runs down to Cape Cormorin, and the sun beats on the | |
head like a mighty man of valour. | |
Then, as dream-people will, he came towards her as if they had known | |
each other all their lives, and said, slowly, meditatively: | |
"I have tried and tried. I can't do it." | |
With a sense that she knew what he meant though she could not drag | |
it to the surface, she found herself saying earnestly: | |
"But have you tried hard enough? _Really_ tried?" | |
He put his hands to his forehead with a tired gesture: | |
"I'm always trying. But _you_ could do it." | |
She said, "Could I?" in great astonishment. | |
They stood a moment side by side, looking at each other and then as | |
if from a blurred distance she heard his voice again. | |
"It was said long ago that if any creatures united their psychic | |
forces they could conquer the world, though singly they could do | |
nothing." | |
Temple and palms dissolved into coloured mist; they swam away on | |
another wave of dream and vanished. She floated up to the surface of | |
consciousness again, awake, with the pale morning gold streaming in | |
through the east window. | |
She knew she had dreamed, for a sense of something lost haunted her | |
all day, yet could not remember anything, and things went on in | |
their usual course. | |
That evening sitting in a corner of the hotel lounge, with the | |
babble of music and talk about her, she had the irresistible impulse | |
to write,--to write something; she did not in the least know what. | |
It was so urgent that she walked quickly to the elevator and so to | |
her sitting room, and there she snatched pen and paper and wrote | |
the beginning of a story of modern life in India, but strangely | |
influenced by and centring about the Temple of Govindhar. As she | |
wrote the name she remembered that she had seen it among the palm | |
trees in its hideous beauty, and now, like a human personality, it | |
forced itself upon her and compelled her to be its mouthpiece. | |
How it happened she could not in the least tell. Certainly she | |
had travelled, kept her ears and eyes open and learned as much | |
as any woman can do who keeps on the beaten track in the Orient | |
and consorts with her own kind in preference to the natives. The | |
two worlds are very far apart--so far that nothing from below the | |
surface can pass over the well-defined limits. Moreover she was not | |
a learned woman,--Indian thought of the mystic order had never come | |
her way, and Indian history except at the point where it touches | |
European was a closed book. Therefore this story astonished her | |
very much. She read it over breathlessly when it was finished. If | |
she had had that knowledge when she was there how all the mysteries | |
of the temple would have leaped to light--what drama, what strange | |
suspense would have lurked in its monstrous form and colour! The | |
critic in her brain who, standing aside, watched the posturing and | |
mouthing of the characters, told her austerely that the work was | |
good--excellent. But something behind her brain had told her that | |
already. She read it over ardently, lingeringly, with an astonishing | |
sense of ownership yet of doubt. _How_ had it come? And the writing? | |
No longer did the eight thousand of her vocabulary march in dull | |
squadrons, heavy-footed, languid. They sped, ran, flew, with perfect | |
grace, like the dancers of princes. They were beautiful exceedingly. | |
They bore the tale like a garland. She read it again and again, with | |
bewildered delight. | |
She tapped it out herself on the keys of her Corona and sent it to | |
the editor of a very famous magazine, with the signature of "V. | |
Lydiat." As I have said, that matter took long thought, prompted | |
from behind by instincts. | |
It was done and V. Lydiat, a climbing star, shed a faint beam over | |
the world. For the editor wrote back eagerly. He knew he had found | |
a new flavour. "Your work impresses me as extremely original. I am | |
anxious to see more of it. I need hardly say I accept it for the | |
magazine and I shall hope to hear from you again before long." A | |
cheque followed. | |
No need to dwell on Beatrice Veronica's feelings, mixed beyond | |
disentanglement. She was not astonished that the work should be | |
recognized as good, but--V. Lydiat! What had happened to her and | |
how? Strange tales are told to-day of sudden brain-stimulations and | |
complexes. Was she the happy victim of such an adventure, and if so, | |
would it be recurrent? How should she know? What should she do? She | |
felt herself moving in worlds not realized, and could not in the | |
least decide the simple question of whether it was honest to accept | |
commendation for a thing she felt in her very soul she had not done | |
and could not do. | |
But then, who? What was V. Lydiat? | |
He, she, or it, came from starrier spheres than hers. Wings | |
plumed its shoulders, while hers were merely becomingly draped | |
in seasonable materials. She knew that the visitor was a subtler | |
spirit, dwelling beyond the mysteries, saturated with the colour and | |
desire of dead ages which can never die--an authentic voice, hailed | |
at once by the few, to be blown at last on the winds of the soul | |
which, wandering the world, let fall here and there the seeds of | |
amaranth and asphodel. | |
Yes--V. Lydiat was entirely beyond her. | |
But you will understand that, though Beatrice Veronica could not | |
enter into the secret places, it was a most wonderful thing to | |
be amanuensis and business manager. To her fell the letters from | |
editors and publishers, the correspondence which rained in from the | |
ends of the earth, protesting gratitude, praise, entreaties for | |
counsel in all things from routes to religions. These latter were | |
the most difficult, for it would have taken V. Lydiat to answer them | |
adequately. But Beatrice Veronica did the best she could, and her | |
life moved onward aureoled and haloed. | |
She learned at last the rules of the game. V. Lydiat's ethereal | |
approach could only be secured by the wand of a fountain pen. She | |
must sit thus armed with a fair sheet before her and wait, fixing | |
her mind on some idle point of light or persistent trembling of | |
leaves, and suddenly the world would pass miraculously from her | |
and she would awake in another--an amazing world, most beautiful, | |
brimming with romance, lit by suns of gallant men and moons of | |
loveliest women. The great jewels of the Orient shed starry | |
splendours, and ghostly creeping figures pursued them through | |
jungles and mountain passes. Strange magics lurked in the dark and | |
drew the soul along the Way of Wonder. | |
The strangest experience. It began always in the same way. The blue | |
Canadian sky, the hyacinth gleam of the sea through oak and pine | |
dissolved in unrealities of mist, and sultry Oriental skies, yellow | |
as a lion's eyes or the brazen boom of a gong, beat their fierce | |
sunlight downward as from an inverted bowl. And then--then, she knew | |
V. Lydiat was at hand. But never with companionship. It was a despot | |
and entered in, with flags flying, to the annihilation of Beatrice | |
Veronica. She wrote like a thing driven on a wind, and woke to find | |
it done. The possession obliterated her, and when she could collect | |
her routed forces it was gone. | |
So time went on and V. Lydiat's fame was established and Beatrice | |
Veronica wore it as a woman too poor to appear at Court with fitting | |
magnificence shines in borrowed jewels and trembles to wear them. | |
One night in the moonlit warmth, with the vast Princesses of the | |
Dark hidden in the ambush of breathless trees, she sat in the high | |
veranda of her little house with the broad vista through pines to | |
the sea. | |
It was a heavenly night; if the baby waves broke in the little | |
bay they must break in diamonds,--the wet stones must shine like | |
crystals. | |
That day V. Lydiat had transported her to a great and silent | |
jungle in Cambodia and they went up together through the crowding | |
whispering trees to the ruined palaces where once great kings | |
dwelt, and passed together through sounding halls sculptured with | |
dead myths to the chambers, once secret, whence queens looked forth | |
languidly from wildly-carved casements into the wilderness of sweets | |
in the gardens. | |
V. Lydiat had led her to a great tank of crystal water in the | |
knotted shade, paved with strange stones inlaid with human figures | |
in wrought metal,--a place where women with gold-embraced heads once | |
idly bathed their slender limbs in the warm lymph--a secret place | |
then, but now open to cruel sunlight and cold incurious stars. | |
So far she knew it all. She had photographed that tank with its | |
stony cobras while Sidney Verrier timed the exposure. But of the | |
story told to-day she knew nothing. | |
A wonderful story, old as time, new as to-morrow, for the figures | |
in it were of to-day, people who had gone there, as she herself | |
had done, only to see, and were captured, subjugated by the old | |
alarming magic which lurks in the jungle and behind the carven walls | |
and eyeless windows. A dangerous place, and she had not known it | |
then--had thought of it only as a sight to be seen, a memory to be | |
treasured. But V. Lydiat knew better--knew it was alive and terrible | |
still. | |
She leaned her arms on the sill and looked out to the sea that led | |
towards the hidden Orient and in her heart she spoke to the strange | |
visitor. | |
"I wish I knew you," she whispered. "You come and go and I can't | |
touch you even while you are within and about me. You interpret. You | |
make life wonderful, but perhaps you are more wonderful still. If | |
I could only lay hold of you, touch you, have one glimpse of you! | |
_What_ are you? Where do you come from? Where do you go? I hear. O, | |
let me see!" | |
It was like a prayer, and the more intense because the dead | |
stillness of the night presented it as its own cry and entreaty. | |
Dead silence. Not even the voice of the sea. | |
She laid her head on her folded arms. | |
"I've been obedient. I've laid myself down on the threshold that | |
you might walk over me and take possession. Have you no reward for | |
me? Are you just some strange cell of my own brain suddenly awake | |
and working, or are you some other--what?--but nearer to me than | |
breathing, as near as my own soul?" | |
The longing grew inarticulate and stronger, like the dumb yearning | |
instincts which move the world of unspeaking creatures. It | |
seemed to her that she sent her soul through the night pleading, | |
pleading. Then very slowly she relaxed into sleep as she lay in the | |
moonlight--deep, soul-satisfying sleep. And so dreamed. | |
She stood in the Shalimar Garden of the dead Mogul Empresses in | |
Kashmir. How well she knew it, how passionately she loved it! She | |
and Sidney Verrier had moored their houseboat on the Dal Lake not | |
far away one happy summer and had wandered almost daily to the | |
Shalimar, glorying in the beauty of its fountains and rushing | |
cascades, and the roses--roses everywhere in a most bewildering | |
sweetness. How often she had gone up the long garden ways to the | |
foot of the hills that rise into mountains and catch the snows and | |
stars upon their heights. It was no wonder she should dream of it. | |
So in her dream she walked up to the great pavilion supported on | |
noble pillars of black marble from Pampoor, and the moon swam in a | |
wavering circle in the water before it, and she held back a moment | |
to see it break into a thousand reflections, and then became aware | |
of a man leaning with folded arms by the steps: his face clear in | |
the moonlight. | |
Instantly she knew him, as he did her--the man of her dream of the | |
Temple of Govindhar. | |
As before he turned and came toward her. | |
"I have waited for you by the temple and here and in many other | |
places. I wait every night. How is it you come so seldom?" he said. | |
His voice was stronger, his bearing more alert and eager than at | |
Govindhar. He spoke with a kind of assurance of welcome which she | |
responded to instantly. | |
"I would have come. I didn't know. How can I tell?" | |
He looked at her smiling. | |
"There is only one way. Why didn't you learn it in India? It was all | |
round you and you didn't even notice. You don't know your powers. | |
Listen." | |
Beatrice Veronica drew towards him, eyes rapt on his face, scarcely | |
breathing. Yes--in India she had felt there were mighty stirrings | |
about her, thrills of an unknown spiritual life, crisping the | |
surface like a breeze, and passing--passing before ever you could | |
say it was there. But it did not touch her with so much as an | |
outermost ripple. She was too ignorant. Now--she could learn. | |
"You see--this is the way of it," he said, leaning against the black | |
pillar. "The soul is sheer thought and knowledge, but, prisoned | |
in the body, it is the slave of the senses and all its powers | |
are limited by these. And they lead it into acts which in their | |
consequences are fetters of iron. Still, at a certain point of | |
attainment one can be freer than most men believe possible. When | |
this is so, you use the Eight Means of Mental Concentration and are | |
free. You step into a new dimension." | |
"Is this true? Do you know it?" she said earnestly. | |
"Because, if there is any way which can be taken, I have a | |
quest--something--someone----" | |
She stammered, and could not finish. | |
"I know. Someone you want to find in the dark. Well, it can be | |
done. You would not believe the possibilities of that freed state | |
of consciousness. Here, in the Shalimar you think you see nothing | |
but moonlight and water--nothing in fact but what your senses tell | |
you. But that is nonsense. Your eyes are shut. You are asleep in | |
Canada and yet you see them by the inner light of memory even now | |
and the help I am giving you! Well--use the Eight Means, and you | |
will see them waking and as clearly as you do in sleep. But I, | |
who am instructed, see more. This garden to me is peopled with | |
those who made it--the dead kings and queens who rejoiced in its | |
beauty. See--" he laid his hand on hers and suddenly she saw. | |
Amazing--amazing! They were alone no longer. | |
Sitting on the floor of the pavilion, looking down into the | |
moon-mirroring water was a woman in the ancient dress of Persia, | |
golden and jewelled,--she flung her head up magnificently as if at | |
the words, and looked at them, the moon full in her eyes. The garden | |
was peopled now not only with roses but white blossoms sending | |
out fierce hot shafts of perfume. They struck Beatrice Veronica | |
like something tangible, and half dazed her as she stared at the | |
startling beauty of the unveiled woman revealed like a flaming jewel | |
in the black and white glory of the night. | |
With his hand on hers, she knew without words. Nourmahal the | |
Empress, ruler of the Emperor who made the Shalimar for her | |
pleasure, who put India with all its glories at her feet. Who else | |
should be the soul of the garden? | |
It seemed to Beatrice Veronica that she had never beheld beauty | |
before. It was beyond all pictures, all images in its sultry | |
passionate loveliness,--it was---- | |
But as she watched spellbound, the man lifted his hand from hers and | |
the garden was empty of all but moonlight and roses once more, and | |
he and she alone. She could have wept for utter loss. | |
"Was it a ghost?" she asked trembling. | |
"No, no,--an essential something that remains in certain places, not | |
a ghost. There is nothing of what you mean by that word. Don't be | |
frightened! You'll often see them." | |
She stared at him perplexed, and he added: | |
"You see? One has only to put oneself in the receptive state and | |
time is no more. One sees--one hears. You are only a beginner so I | |
cannot show you much. But you _are_ a beginner or you would not be | |
here in the Shalimar with me now. There is a bond between us which | |
goes back--" He paused, looking keenly at her, and said quickly | |
"Centuries, and further." | |
She was stunned, dazed by the revelations. They meant so much more | |
that it is possible to record. Also the sensation was beginning | |
in her which we all know before waking. The dream wavers on its | |
foundation, loosens, becomes misty, makes ready to disappear. It | |
would be gone--gone before she could know. She caught his hand as if | |
to steady it. | |
"Are you V. Lydiat?" she cried.--"You must be. You are. You come to | |
me every day--a voice. O let me come to you like this, and teach | |
me, teach me, that I may know and see. I am a blind creature in a | |
universe of wonders. Let me come every night." | |
His face was receding, palpitating, collapsing, but his voice came | |
as if from something beyond it. | |
"That is what you call me. Names are nothing. Yes, come every | |
night." | |
It was gone. She was in the Shalimar alone, and somewhere in the | |
distance she heard Sidney Verrier's voice calling clear as a bird. | |
Beatrice Veronica woke that morning with the sun glorying through | |
the eastern arch of her veranda. She was still dressed. She had | |
slept there all night. Of the dream she remembered snatches, hints, | |
which left new hopes and impulses germinating in her soul. The | |
unknown flowers were sown in spring. They would blossom in summer in | |
unimaginable beauty. | |
That was the beginning of a time of strange and enchanting | |
happiness. Thus one may imagine the joy of a man born blind who | |
by some miraculous means is made to see, and wakes in a world of | |
wonders. It is impossible that anyone should know greater bliss. The | |
very weight of it made her methodical and practical lest a grain | |
of heavenly gold should escape her in its transmutation to earthly | |
terms. | |
The morning was V. Lydiat's. At ten o'clock she betook herself to | |
her high veranda, and folding her hands and composing her mind | |
looked out to sea through the wide way of pines which terminated | |
in its azure beauty. Then, as has been told before, it would blow | |
softly away on a dream-wind, and the story begin. | |
And at night there was now invariably the meeting. At first that | |
was always in some place she knew--somewhere she recognized from | |
memory, haunts of her own with Sidney Verrier. But one night a new | |
thing happened--she woke into dream by the Ganges at Cawnpore, at | |
the terrible Massacre Ghaut, a place she had always avoided because | |
of the horrible memories of the Indian mutiny which sicken the soul | |
of every European who stands there. | |
Now she stood at the top of the beautiful broken steps under the | |
dense shade of the very trees where the mutineers ambushed, and he | |
was below, beckoning her. | |
"Well done, well done!" he said, as she came slowly down to where | |
holy Ganges lips the lowest step. "This was a great experiment. You | |
could never have come here alone,--I could not have brought you | |
until now, and I had to fight the repugnance in you, but here you | |
are. You see? We have been putting stepping-stones, you and I, each | |
from our own side, and now the bridge is made and we hold hands in | |
the middle. You can come anywhere now. And listen--I too am learning | |
to go where I have never been. The world will be open to us soon." | |
He looked at her with glowing eyes--the eyes of the explorer, the | |
discoverer, on the edge of triumph. | |
"But why here--in this horrible place?" She shrank a little even | |
from him as she looked about her. He laughed: | |
"That is no more now than a last year's winter storm. They know. | |
They were not afraid even then. They laugh now as they go on their | |
way. Be happy, beloved. They are beyond the mysteries." | |
Of that dream, she carried back to earth the word "beloved." Who | |
had said it, she could not tell, but in the dark--the warm friendly | |
dark--there was someone who loved her, whom she loved with a perfect | |
union. Was it--could it be V. Lydiat? She did not know. Also she | |
remembered that she had dreamed the Massacre Ghaut at Cawnpore, and | |
took pains to search for pictures and stories of the place to verify | |
her dream. Yes--it was true. Things were becoming clearer. | |
Also, her power in writing increased very noticeably about this | |
time. V. Lydiat was recognized as holding a unique place amongst | |
writers of the Orient. On the one side were the scholars, the | |
learned men who wrote in terms of ancient Oriental thought, terms | |
no ordinary reader could understand, and on the other, the writers | |
of the many-faceted surface, the adventurers, toying with the | |
titillating life of zenana and veiled dangerous love-affairs,--a | |
tissue of coloured crime. V. Lydiat recorded all, and with a method | |
of his own which approached perfect loveliness in word and phrase. | |
The faiths of the East were his,--in India and China alike his soul | |
sheltered under the Divine Wings, at home in strange heavens, and | |
hells which one day would blossom into heavens. As he and Beatrice | |
Veronica had posed stepping-stones until they met in the middle, so | |
he built a splendid bridge across the wide seas of misunderstanding | |
between east and west, and many souls passed across it going and | |
coming and were glad. | |
"I'm only a pioneer," he said to Beatrice Veronica one day (she | |
could dream the day as well as the night) sitting in the gardens of | |
the Taj. "You too. It will be done much better soon. See how we are | |
out-growing our limitations and feeling out after the wonders of | |
the sub-conscious self, the essential that hands on the torch when | |
we die. Die? No, I hate that word. Let's say, climb a step higher | |
on the ladder of existence. Every inch gives us a wider view of the | |
country. You see?" | |
She liked that "You see?" which came so often. It was so eager--so | |
fraternal in a way. Yes, they were good comrades, she and V. Lydiat. | |
"Do you know I write for you?" she ventured to ask. "I have often | |
wondered if you speak as unconsciously as I write." | |
"No, no. I know. I always know. Longer ago than you would believe | |
you used to work for me. We are in the same whirl-pool, you and I. | |
Our atoms must always be whirled together again. You can't escape | |
me, Beatrice Veronica." | |
"Do you think I want to?" she asked. | |
But in daily life she clung to her secret like grim death. She would | |
not have been burdened with V. Lydiat's laurels for the world. | |
The dishonesty of it! And yet one could never explain. Hopeless! | |
Who would believe? And apart from that, she had a kind of growing | |
certainty that V. Lydiat would enter upon his own one day. Not that | |
she remembered him as any more than a vague dream influence; she | |
did not, but yet the realization of a Presence was growing, and she | |
herself developing daily. | |
There is not much space here to tell the wondrous sights she saw | |
with V. Lydiat, and holding by his hand. That would be a book in | |
itself--and a beautiful one. And though she could only remember | |
them in drifts like a waft of far-off music on a breeze, it was | |
incomparable food for the sub-conscious self, and strengthened | |
every latent faculty of memory and experience. Beatrice Veronica | |
promised to be a very remarkable woman if some day the inner and | |
outer faculties should unite. | |
But what was to be the solvent? That, this story can only indicate | |
faintly for the end is not yet. | |
She went out a little less into her small world of daily life--not | |
shunning it certainly, but her inner life was so crowded, so | |
blissful that the outer seemed insipid enough. Why figure at teas | |
and bridge parties, and struggle with the boredom of mah jong when | |
the veranda was waiting with the green way before it that led to | |
the silence of the sea, and the lover beyond? For it had come to | |
that--the lover. All joy summed up in that word, joy unmeasurable as | |
the oceans of sunlight--a perfect union. She walked as one carefully | |
bearing a brimmed cup,--not a drop, not a drop must spill,--so she | |
carried herself a little stiffly as it might seem to the outer world | |
which could not guess the reason. | |
People liked her--but she moved on her own orbit, and it only | |
intersected theirs at certain well-defined points. Her soft | |
abstracted air won but eluded;--it put an atmosphere of strangeness | |
about her, of thoughts she could not share with anyone. | |
"She must have rather a lonely life of it!" they said. But she never | |
had. | |
One day came a letter from Sidney Verrier, now Sidney Mourilyan, | |
from her husband's coffee plantation in the Shevaroy Hills in | |
southern India. She wrote from the settlement of Yercaud-- "Not a | |
town," she wrote, "but dear little scattered houses in the trees. We | |
have even a club, think of it!--after the wilds where you and I have | |
been!--and there are pleasant people, and Tony expects to do well | |
with coffee here. I wish half the day that you could come. You would | |
like it, B. V.-- You would like it! And you would like my boy--two | |
years old now, and a sheer delight. Not to mention my garden. The | |
growth here! The heliotropes are almost trees. The jasmines have | |
giant stars. The house is stormed with flowers--almost too sweet. | |
Couldn't you come? Don't you hear the east calling? At all events | |
you hear me calling, for I want you. And you must be having very | |
idle lazy days, for I remember I never could imagine what you would | |
find to do if you stopped travelling. Your whole soul was in that. | |
It's a cold country you're in--frigid pines, and stark mountains and | |
icy seas. Do come out into the sunshine again." | |
She laid down the letter there and looked at the beloved pines | |
almost glittering in the sunshine as it slid off their smooth | |
needles. And idle?--her life, her wonderful secret life! Little | |
indeed did Sidney know if she could write like that. She took up the | |
letter again, smiling. | |
"And listen, B. V.--there's a man going round by Japan to Canada, | |
a man called Martin Welland. I should like you to know him for two | |
reasons. First, he can tell you all about this place. Second, I | |
think he is interesting. If you don't find him so, shunt him. My | |
love, my dear B. V., and do come. Think of all you might do with | |
this as a starting point." | |
There was more, but that is the essential. You may think at this | |
point that you know exactly how this story must inevitably end. But | |
no. | |
It was about four months after this that Beatrice Veronica was | |
rung up on the telephone in her veranda as she sat reading. The | |
imperative interruption annoyed her;--she put down her book. A man's | |
voice. | |
"Miss Leslie? I think your friend Mrs. Mourilyan told you I was | |
coming to Victoria. My name is Welland." | |
Polite assurances from the veranda. | |
"Yes, I am staying at the Empress. May I come out and see you this | |
afternoon? I have a small parcel for you from Mrs. Mourilyan." | |
So it was settled, and with her Chinese servant she made the little | |
black oak table beautiful with silver and long-stemmed flowers in | |
beautiful old English glass bowls. If he went back to Yercaud he | |
should at least tell Sidney that her home in "that cold country" was | |
desirable. | |
He came at four and she could hear his voice in the little hall as | |
Wing admitted him. | |
She liked it. The words were clear, well-cut, neither blurred | |
nor bungled. Then he came in. A tall man, broad-shouldered, with | |
grey eyes and hair that sprang strongly from a broad forehead, | |
clean-shaven, a sensitive mouth, possibly thirty-eight, or so. All | |
these things flashed together in an impression of something to be | |
liked and trusted. On his side he saw a young woman in a blue-grey | |
gown with hazel eyes and hair to match--a harmony of delicate browns | |
enhancing an almond-pale face with faintly coloured lips and a look | |
of fragility which belied the nervous strength beneath. | |
The parcel was given and received; a chain of Indian moonstones in | |
silver, very lovely in its shifting lights, and then came news, much | |
news, of the home at Yercaud. | |
"I heard of you so much there that you are no stranger to me," he | |
said, watching with curious interest while she filled the Chinese | |
cups of pink and jade porcelain with jasmine tea from a hidden | |
valley in Anhui. It fascinated him--the white hands flitting like | |
little quick birds on their quick errands, the girl, so calm and | |
self-possessed, mistress of herself and her house. Many years of | |
wandering had opened his heart to the feminine charm of it all, the | |
quiet, the rose-leaf scent in the air, the things which group by | |
instinct about a refined woman. | |
"You have a delightful home!" he said at last, rather abruptly. | |
"Yes-- When you return do try to convince Mrs. Mourilyan that I | |
don't live in a hut on an iceberg. You agree with me, I am sure, | |
that only Kashmir and perhaps one or two other places can be more | |
beautiful than this." | |
"Yes. I fully agree. Yet it misses something which permeates India | |
in places far less beautiful. It lacks atmosphere. Just as the | |
fallen leaves of a forest make up a rich soil in which all growth is | |
luxuriant, so the dead ancientry of India makes earth and air rich | |
with memory and tradition--and more. You can't get it in these new | |
countries." | |
"I know," she said eagerly. "Here it's just a beautiful child with | |
all her complexities before her. It rests one, you know. I felt it | |
an amazing rest when I came here." | |
"I can understand that. And they tell me the climate is delightful. | |
I wish I could stay here. I may come back some day. But I must | |
return to India in four months." | |
"You have work?" | |
"Yes and no. I have collected an immense quantity of notes for | |
several books, but--now you will laugh!--I shall never write them." | |
"But why--why? I know there's an immense opening for true books | |
about the Orient." | |
"I think so too. But you allow it's a drawback that I am entirely | |
devoid of the writing gift. I have my knowledge. I have the | |
thing flame-clear in my mind. But let me put it on paper and it | |
evaporates. Dull as ditchwater! You see?" | |
That last little phrase sent a blush flying up her cheek. It | |
recalled many things. | |
"Yes, I see. But couldn't you put it in skilful hands?" | |
He laid down his cup and turned suddenly on her. | |
"Could _you_ do it?" | |
"I? I wish I could, but I am doing work at present----" | |
"Literary?" | |
"Of a sort. Secretarial. I write from dictation." | |
"May I ask what sort of things?" | |
With a curious reluctance she answered. | |
"Indian," and said no more. | |
He seemed to meditate a moment on that; then said slowly: | |
"It appears you have experience of the very things that interest me. | |
Tell me--for I have been so long in the wilds-- Is there any writer | |
nowadays taking the place with regard to things Indian that Lafcadio | |
Hearn did with things Japanese? A man who gets at the soul of it as | |
well as the beautiful surface?" | |
With her eyes on the ground and a sense of something startling in | |
the air, she answered with a question. | |
"Have you ever heard of V. Lydiat's books?" | |
There was a puzzled furrow between his eyebrows. | |
"Not that I know of. Up in Kulu and beyond, the new books don't | |
penetrate. A man or a woman?" | |
"People are not certain. The initial might mean either. But the | |
critics all say a man. The last is called the 'The Unstruck Music,' | |
the one before 'The Dream of Stars.' The first, 'The Ninefold | |
Flower.'" | |
"Beautiful names," he said. "Can I get them here?" | |
"I can lend them to you." | |
They talked long after that, in a curiously intimate way that gave | |
her secret but intense happiness. It was almost in fear that she | |
asked when he was going on and where. | |
When he went off he carried the three books under his arm. | |
"I shall read 'The Ninefold Flower,' first. It interests me to see | |
how a writer's mind develops." | |
That night she had no dream and next day she tried even more eagerly | |
than usual to get in touch with V. Lydiat, but in vain. The oracle | |
was dumb. It frightened her, for the whole thing was so strange that | |
she had never felt sure it might not vanish as suddenly as it came. | |
She sat patiently all that morning, hoping and sorely disturbed, but | |
the Pacific hung a relentless azure curtain before her fairyland and | |
the pines dreamed their own sunshine-fragrance and made no way for | |
palms. | |
At one o'clock the telephone rang sharply, | |
"Welland speaking. May I come and see you this afternoon?" | |
It was impossible for she had an engagement, but she named the | |
evening at eight. He caught at it--his voice was evidence of that | |
eagerness. | |
He came a minute or two before the time, and a book was in his hand. | |
She knew the cover with a drift of stars across it before he spoke. | |
It broke out the moment he was in the room. | |
"A most amazing thing. I hardly know how to tell you. You'll think | |
I'm mad. It's my book--_mine_, yet I never wrote it." | |
They stared at each other in a kind of consternation and the little | |
colour in her face fell away and left her lily-pale. She could feel | |
but not control the trembling of her hands. | |
"You mean----" | |
"I mean--there are my notes one after another, but expressed in a | |
way I never could hope for, exquisitely expressed. But it's mine all | |
the same. A cruel, enchanting robbery! You don't believe me. How | |
could you? But I can prove it. See here." | |
With passionate haste he pulled a roll of paper from his pocket, and | |
pushed the typed sheets before her. The first story in "The Ninefold | |
Flower," was called "The Lady of Beauty." The notes began, "The | |
Queen of Beauty," and went on _seriatim_ with the scaffolding of the | |
story. | |
"The way it's done here, in this book, is the very way I used to see | |
it in my dreams, but it was utterly beyond me. For God's sake, tell | |
me what you think." | |
She laid it down. | |
"Of course it's yours. No doubt of that. But his too. You blocked | |
out the marble. He made the statue. The very judgment of Solomon | |
could not decide between you." | |
"That's true," he said hopelessly. "But the mystery of it. The | |
appalling hopeless mystery. No eye but mine has ever seen that paper | |
till now." | |
Silence. A grey moth flew in from the garden and circled about the | |
lamp. The little flutter of its wings was the only sound. Then in a | |
shaken voice very unlike its usual sedate sweetness, she asked. | |
"Mr. Welland, do you ever dream?" | |
"Awake? Constantly." | |
"Asleep?" | |
She saw caution steal into his frank eyes and drop a curtain before | |
them. | |
"Why do you ask? Everyone dreams." | |
She gathered up all her courage for the next question. | |
"Were you ever in the Shalimar?" | |
"Certainly. Does anyone ever go to Kashmir and miss it?" | |
He was fencing, that was palpable. It gave her hope for a golden | |
gleam through her fear. She clasped her shaking hands tightly in | |
each other. | |
"I have the strangest dreams. I can only bring back snatches. Yet I | |
know there is a wonderful connected story behind them. I dreamt the | |
Shalimar not long ago,--I brought back one image. A woman in an old | |
Persian dress sitting by the black Pampoor pillars and looking down | |
into the water where the moon dipped and swam all gold." | |
"Yes, yes, go on!" he breathed. | |
"There were flowers--white flowers. I never saw them there in the | |
daylight." | |
"Unbearably sweet," he interjected. "The scent is like the thrust | |
of a lance. I know, I know. But there was another woman. I can't | |
remember her face." | |
"How did she stand?" asked Beatrice Veronica. | |
"Near me--but she could see nothing. The day still blinded her, | |
until----" | |
"Until you laid your hand on hers. Then she saw." | |
Another long silence. Only the beating of the moth's wings. He | |
leaned forward from his chair and laid his hands on the clasp of | |
hers. Their eyes met, absorbing each other; the way for the electric | |
current was clear. | |
"I remember now," he said, very softly. "It was you. It was you at | |
the Temple of Govindhar. At the Massacre Ghaut of Cawnpore. Ah, I | |
dragged you there against your will to show I was the stronger. It | |
is you--always you." | |
What was she to say? With his hands on hers it was a union of | |
strength which put the past before both like an open book. She | |
remembered all the dreams now. Impossible to tell them here--they | |
were so many, like and unlike, shaken shifting jewels in a | |
kaleidoscope held in some unseen hand. But jewels. They sat a long | |
time in this way, rapt in wordless memories, their eyes absorbing | |
each other--the strangest reunion. When speech came it brought | |
rapture which needed little explanation. They bathed in wonder as | |
in clear water, they flung the sparkle of it over their heads and | |
glittered to each other in its radiance. When had such a miracle | |
been wrought for any two people in all the world? The dreams of the | |
visionary were actual for them and heaven and earth instinct with | |
miracle. | |
"When we are married--when we pass our lives utterly together the | |
bond will be stronger," he said, kissing her hand passionately two | |
hours later. "We shall be awake with reason and intellect as well as | |
vision to help our work, we shall do such things as the world has | |
never dreamed, prove that miracle is the daily bread of those who | |
know. Two halves of a perfect whole made one forever and ever. You | |
see?" | |
He looked at her a moment with shining eyes and added, "The wise | |
will come to us for wisdom, the poets for beauty, and we shall make | |
our meeting-places the shrines of a new worship." | |
Beatrice Veronica agreed with every pulse of her blood. The Great | |
Adventure, and together!--what bliss could equal that marvel? | |
They were together perpetually, and surely human happiness was never | |
greater than that of these two adventurers with the blue capes | |
of Wonderland in sight at last over leagues of perilous seas. In | |
another image, their caravan halted outside the gates of Paradise, | |
and in a short few weeks those gates would swing open for them and, | |
closing, shut out Fate. | |
But she did not dream of Martin Welland now, nor he of her. The | |
discovery and all it involved was so thrilling that it brought every | |
emotion to the surface as blood flushes the face when the heart | |
beats violently. The inner centres were depleted. | |
They were married and Paradise was at hand, but for a while the | |
happy business of settling their life engrossed them. It would be | |
better to live in Canada and make long delightful visits to the | |
Orient to refill the cisterns of marvel, they thought. A room for | |
mutual work must be plotted in the bungalow; then there was the | |
anxious question of a southern aspect. Then it was built, and it | |
became a debatable decision whether some of the pines must fall to | |
enlarge the vista to the sea. Friends rallied about her on the news | |
of the marriage, and rejoiced to see the irradiation of Beatrice | |
Veronica's pale face. Then they must be entertained. | |
Then the endless joyful discussions as to whether the author should | |
still be V. Lydiat or whether collaboration should be admitted. | |
These things and many more filled the happy world they dwelt in. | |
Can the end be foreseen? They never foresaw it. | |
The hungry claim of human bliss fixed its roots in the inner soil | |
where the Rosa Mystica had blossomed, and exhausted it for all else. | |
That, at least, is the way in which one endeavours to state the | |
mysterious enervation of the sub-conscious self which had built the | |
stepping-stones between them to the meeting-point. | |
She went hopefully to her table when they had settled down, and he | |
sat beside her doing his utmost to force the impulse across inches | |
which had made nothing of oceans. It was dead. He could think of | |
nothing but the sweet mist of brown tendrils in the nape of her | |
neck, the pure line from ear to chin, the delights of the day to be. | |
She sat with the poor remnant of his notes before her--for nearly | |
all had been exhausted in the three books--and tried to shape them | |
into V. Lydiat's clear and sensitive beauty of words. It could not | |
be done. Her eight thousand words marched and deployed heavy-footed | |
as before. They were as unmanageable as mutineers or idiots. There | |
was no life in them. | |
So it all descended to calmer levels. They slept in each other's | |
arms, but they never dreamed of each other now. They had really been | |
nearer in their ghostly meeting by the Taj Mahal or in the evil | |
splendours of Govindhar--far nearer, when she wrote and could not | |
cease for joy, than when Martin Welland sat beside her and struggled | |
to find what had flashed like light in the old days. They had to | |
face it at last--V. Lydiat was dead. | |
It troubled them much for a while, but troubled the world more. The | |
publishers were besieged with questions and entreaties. Finally | |
those also slackened and died off. | |
V. Lydiat was buried. | |
They thought that perhaps if they returned to India the dead fire | |
would re-kindle under that ardent sun. But no. | |
One day, at Benares, standing near the great Monkey Temple of Durga, | |
Martin stopped suddenly, and a light came into his eyes. | |
"B. V. I've just remembered that one of the wisest of the pandits | |
lives near here--a wonderful old fellow called Jadrup Gosein. Let's | |
go and state the case to him. The wisest man I know." | |
They went, Beatrice Veronica ashamed to feel a little uprush of | |
regret at the sacrifice of a part of the wonderful day. Martin knew | |
so much. It was heavenly to go to these places with him, and have | |
them illumined by his research. But they went to the pandit. | |
The holy man was seated under the shadow of a great image of Ganesha | |
the Elephant-Headed One, the Giver of Counsel, and when they sat | |
themselves before him at a measured distance the case was stated. | |
There was a long pause--a deep silence filled with hot sunshine | |
smelling of marigolds, and the patter of bare feet on sun-baked | |
floors, as curious quick eyes watched the conclave from afar. | |
Jadrup Gosein meditated deeply, then raised his serene dark face | |
upon them with the dim look that peers from the very recesses of | |
being. His words, incomprehensible to Beatrice Veronica, had the | |
hollow resonance of a bell, near at hand but softened. | |
"There was a man long since," he began, "to whom the high Gods | |
offered in reward of merit, a rose-tree--very small and weak,--a | |
suckling, as it were, among trees, with feeble fibrous root, | |
accessible to all the dangers of drought and sun, and as he | |
stretched his hand doubting, they offered him for choice a rose | |
from the trees of Paradise, crimson and perfumed, its hidden bosom | |
pearled with dew and wafting divine odours. And they said 'Choose.' | |
So he said within his soul, 'The tree may die--who knows the | |
management of its frail roots? But the rose is here, sweeter than | |
sweet, immortal since it grew in Paradise! I choose the rose.' | |
"And they put it in his hand. And the wise Elephant-Headed One said: | |
"'O fool! What is a rose compared to a rose-tree that bears myriads | |
of roses? Also the rose dies in the heat of human hands. The tree | |
lives; a gathered rose is dead.' | |
"My children, you have chosen the rose. Be content. Yet in another | |
life remember and cling to that which unsevered from the parent tree | |
sends roots into the Now, the Then, and the Future, and blossoms | |
immortally." | |
So he dismissed them kindly. | |
"He means," said Martin with troubled brow, "that ordinary household | |
happiness shuts a man in from the stars. Do you remember the flute | |
of Pan, B. V.? He tore the reed from the river and massacred it as a | |
reed to make it a music-bearer for the Gods. | |
> The true Gods sigh for the cost and pain, | |
> For the reed that grows never more again | |
> As a reed with the reeds in the river. | |
"But we are so happy!" she whispered, clinging against him to feel | |
the warmth of his love. "The outer spaces are cold, cold. I don't | |
regret V. Lydiat. I have you. The reeds were happier in the river." | |
Martin Welland sighed. | |
"You had both," he said. "You have only me now." | |
But that regret also slipped away. They forgot. It all faded into | |
the light of common day and they were extremely happy. | |
The two could never account for the way in which they had come | |
together in that dream-land of theirs. They had lost the clue of the | |
mystery once and for all. | |
Jadrup Gosein could have told them, but it never occurred to them | |
to ask him. There are however many lives and the Gods have a long | |
patience. | |
* * * | |
source: gopher://gopher.pglaf.org/1/6/9/7/8/69786/ | |
tags: fantasy,personal anthology | |
# Tags | |
fantasy | |
personal anthology | |
short story |