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ITS WALLS WERE AS OF
JASPER.
IN the
long winter evenings, when we had the picture-books out on the floor,
and sprawled together over them, with elbows deep in the hearth-rug,
the first business to be gone through was the process of allotment. All
the characters in the pictures had to be assigned and dealt out among
us, according to seniority, as far as they would go. When once that had
been satisfactorily completed, the story was allowed to proceed; and
thereafter, in addition to the excitement of the plot, one always
possessed a personal interest in some particular member of the cast,
whose successes or rebuffs one took as so much private gain or loss. For
Edward this was
satisfactory enough. Claiming his right of the eldest, he would annex
the hero in the very frontispiece; and for the rest of the story his
career, if chequered at intervals, was sure of heroic episodes and a
glorious close. But his juniors, who had to put up with characters of a
clay more mixed — nay, sometimes with undiluted
villainy — were hard put to it on occasion to defend their
other selves (as it was Strict etiquette to do) from ignominy perhaps
only too justly merited. Edward was indeed a
hopeless
grabber. In the “Buffalo-book,” for instance (so
named from the subject of its principal picture, though indeed it dealt
with varied slaughter in every zone), Edward was the stalwart, bearded
figure, with yellow leggings and a powder-horn, who undauntedly
discharged the fatal bullet into the shoulder of the great bull bison,
charging home to within a yard of his muzzle. To me was allotted the
subsidiary character of the friend who had succeeded in bringing down a
cow; while Harold had to be content to hold Edward’s spare
rifle in the background, with evident signs of uneasiness. Farther on,
again, where the magnificent chamois sprang rigid into mid - air,
Edward, crouched
dizzily against the precipice — face, was the
sportsman from
whose weapon a puff of white smoke was floating away. A bare-kneed
guide was all that fell to my share, while poor Harold had to take the
boy with the haversack, or abandon, for this occasion at least, all
Alpine ambitions. Of course the girls
fared
badly in this book, and it was not surprising that they preferred the “
Pilgrim’s
Progress” (for instance), where women had a fair show, and
there was generally enough of ‘em to go round,; or a good
fairy story, wherein princesses met with a healthy appreciation. But
indeed we were all best pleased with a picture wherein, the characters
just fitted us, in number, sex, and qualifications; and this, td us,
stood for artistic merit. All the Christmas
numbers,
in their gilt frames on the nursery-wall, had been gone through and
allotted long ago; and in these, sooner or later, each one of us got a
chance to figure in some satisfactory and brightly coloured situation.
Few of the other pictures about the house afforded equal facilities.
They were generally wanting in figures, and even when these were
present they lacked dramatic interest. In this picture that I have to
speak about, although the characters had a stupid way of not doing
anything, and apparently not wanting
to do anything,
there was at least a sufficiency of them; so in due course they were
allotted, too. In itself the picture,
which—in its ebony and tortoise-shell frame—hung in
a corner of the dining-room, had hitherto possessed no special interest
for us, and would probably never have been dealt with at all but for a
revolt of the girls against a succession of books on sport, in which
the illustrator seemed to have forgotten that there were such things as
women in the world. Selina accordingly made for it one rainy morning,
and announced that she was the lady seated in the centre, whose gown of
rich, flowered brocade fell in such straight, severe lines to her feet,
whose cloak of dark blue was held by a jewelled clasp, and whose long,
fair hair was crowned with a diadem of gold and pearl. Well, we had no
objection to that; it seemed fair enough, especially to Edward, who
promptly proceeded to “grab” the armour-man who
stood leaning on his shield at the lady’s right hand. A
dainty and delicate armour-man this! And I confess, though I knew it
was all right and fair and orderly, I felt a slight pang when he passed
out of my reach into Edward’s possession. His armour was just
the sort I wanted myself—scalloped and fluted and shimmering
and spotless; and, though he was but a boy by his beardless face and
golden hair, the shattered spear-shaft in his grasp proclaimed him a
genuine fighter and fresh from some such agreeable work. Yes, I grudged
Edward the armour-man, and when he said I could have the fellow on the
other side, I hung back and said I’d think about it. This fellow had no
armour
nor weapons, but wore a plain jerkin with a leather pouch—a
mere civilian—and with one hand he pointed to a wound in his
thigh. I didn’t care about him, and when Harold eagerly put
in his claim, I gave way and let him have the man. The cause of
Harold’s anxiety only came out later. It was the wound he
coveted, it seemed. He wanted to have a big, sore wound of his very
own, and go about and show it to people, and excite their envy or win
their respect. Charlotte was only too pleased to take the child-angel
seated at the lady’s feet, grappling with a musical
instrument much too big for her. Charlotte wanted wings badly, and,
next to those, a guitar or a banjo. The angel, besides, wore an amber
necklace, which took her fancy immensely. This left the picture
allotted, with the exception of two or three more angels, who peeped or
perched behind the main figures with a certain subdued drollery in
their faces, as if the thing had gone on long enough, and it was now
time to upset something or kick up a row of some sort. We knew these
good folk to be saints and angels, because we had been told they were;
otherwise we should never have guessed it. Angels, as we knew them in
our Sunday books, were vapid, colourless; uninteresting characters,
with straight up-and-down sort of figures, white nightgowns, white
wings, and the same straight yellow hair parted in the middle. They
were serious, even melancholy; and we had no desire to have any traffic
with them. These bright bejewelled little persons, however, piquant of
face and radiant of feather, were evidently hatched from quite a
different egg, and we felt we might have interests in common with them.
Short-nosed, shock—headed, with mouths that went up at the
corners and with an evident disregard for all their fine’
clothes, they would be the best of good company, we felt sure, if only
we could manage to get at them. One doubt alone disturbed my mind. In
games requiring agility, those wings of theirs would give them a
tremendous pull. Could they be trusted to play fair? I asked Selina,
who replied scornfully that angels always played fair. But I went back
and had another look at the brown-faced one peeping over the back of
the lady’s chair, and still I had my doubts. When Edward went off to
school a great deal of adjustment and reallotment took place, and all
the heroes of illustrated literature were at my call, did I choose to
possess them. In this particular case, however, I made no haste to
seize upon the armour-man. Perhaps it was because I wanted afresh saint
of my own, not a stale saint that Edward had been for so long a time.
Perhaps it was rather that, ever since I had elected to be saintless, I
had got into the habit of strolling off into the background, and
amusing myself with what I found there. A very fascinating
background it was, and held a great deal, though so tiny. Meadow-land
came first, set with flowers, blue and red, like gems. Then a white
road ran, with wilful, uncalled-for loops, up a steep, conical hill,
crowned with towers, bastioned walls, and belfries; and down the road
the little knights came riding, two and two. The hill on one side
descended to water, tranquil, far-reaching, and blue; and a very curly
ship lay at anchor, with one mast having an odd sort of
crow’s-nest at the top of it. There was plenty to do
in
this pleasant land. The annoying thing about it was, one could never
penetrate beyond a certain point. I might wander up that road as often
as I liked, I was bound to be brought up at the gateway, the funny
galleried, top-heavy gateway, of the little walled town. Inside,
doubtless, there were high jinks going on; but the password was denied
to me. I could get on board a boat and row up as far as the curly ship,
but around the headland I might not go. On the other side, of a surety,
the shipping lay thick. The merchants walked on the quay, and the
sailors sang as they swung out the corded bales. But as for me, I must
stay down in the meadow, and imagine it all as best I could. Once I broached the
subject
to Charlotte, and found, to my surprise, that she had had the same joys
and encountered the same disappointments in this detectable country.
She, too, had walked up that road and flattened her nose against that
portcullis ; and she pointed out
something that I had overlooked-—to wit, that if you rowed
off in a boat to the curly ship, and got hold of a rope, and clambered
aboard of her, and swarmed up the mast, and got into the
crow’s - nest, you could just see
over the headland, and take in at your ease the life and bustle of the
port. She proceeded to describe all the fun that was going on there, at
such length and with so much particularity that I looked at her
suspiciously. “Why, you talk as if you’d been in
that crow’s-nest yourself!” I said. Charlotte
answered nothing, but pursed her mouth up and nodded violently for some
minutes; and I could get nothing more out of her. I felt rather hurt.
Evidently she had managed, somehow or other, to get up into that
crow’s-nest. Charlotte had got ahead of me on this occasion. It was necessary, no doubt, that grown-up people should dress themselves up and go forth to pay calls. I don’t mean that
we saw any sense in the practice. It would have been so much more
reasonable to stay at home in your old clothes and play. But we
recognized that these folk had to do many unaccountable things, and
after all it was their life; and not ours, and we were not in a
position to criticise. Besides, they had many habits more objectionable
than this one, which to us generally meant a free and untrammelled
afternoon, wherein to play the devil in our own way. The case was
different, however, when the press - gang
was abroad, when
prayers and excuses were alike disregarded, and we were forced into the
service, like native levies impelled toward the foe less by the
inherent righteousness of the cause than by the indisputable, rifles of
their white allies. This was unpardonable and altogether detestable.
Still, the thing happened, now and again;, and when it did, there was
no arguing about it. The order was for the front, and we just had to
shut up and march. Selina, to be sure, had
a
sneaking fondness for dressing up and paying calls, though she
pretended to dislike it, just to keep on the soft side of public
opinion. So I thought it extremely mean in her to have ‘the
earache on that particular afternoon when Aunt Eliza ordered the
pony-carriage and went on the war-path. I was ordered also, in the same
breath as the pony-carriage; and, as we eventually trundled off, it
seemed to me that the utter waste of that afternoon, for which I had
planned so much, could never be made up nor atoned for in all the
tremendous stretch of years that still lay before me. The house that we were
bound
for on this occasion was a “big house;” a generic
title applied by us to the class of residence that had a long
carriage-drive through rhododendrons; and a portico propped by fluted
pillars; and a grave butler who bolted back swing-doors, and came down
steps, and pretended to have entirely forgotten his familiar
intercourse with you at less serious moments; and a big hall, where no
boots or shoes or upper garments were allowed to lie about frankly and
easily, as with us; and where, finally, people were apt to sit about
dressed up as if they were going on to a party. The lady who received
us was
effusive to Aunt Eliza and hollowly gracious to me. In ten seconds they
had their heads together and were hard at it talking clothes. I was
left high and dry on a straight-backed chair, longing to kick the legs
of it, yet not daring. For a time I was content to stare; there was
lots to stare at, high and low and around. Then the inevitable fidgets
came on, and scratching one’s legs mitigated slightly, but
did not entirely disperse them. My two warders were still deep in
clothes; I slipped off my chair and edged cautiously around the room,
exploring, examining, recording. Many strange, fine
things
lay along my route—pictures and gimcracks on the walls,
trinkets and globular old watches and snuff-boxes on the tables; and I
took good care to finger everything within reach thoroughly and
conscientiously. Some articles, in addition, I smelt. At last in my
orbit I happened on an open door, half concealed by the folds of a
curtain. I glanced carefully around. They were still deep in clothes,
both talking together, and I slipped through. This was altogether a
more
sensible sort of room that I had got into; for the walls were honestly
upholstered with books, though these for the most part glimmered
provoking through the glass doors of their tall cases. I read their
titles longingly, breathing on every accessible pane of glass, for I
dared not attempt to open the doors, with the enemy encamped so near.
In the window, though, on a high sort of desk, there lay, all by
itself, a most promising-looking book, gorgeously bound. I raised the
leaves by one corner, and like scent from a pot-pourri jar there
floated out a brief vision of blues and reds, telling of pictures, and
pictures all highly coloured! Here was the right sort of thing at last,
and my afternoon would not be entirely wasted. I inclined an ear to the
door by which I had entered. Like the brimming tide of a full-fed river
the grand, eternal, inexhaustible clothes-problem bubbled and eddied
and surged along. It seemed safe enough. I slid the book off its desk
with some difficulty, for it was very fine and large, and staggered
with it to the hearthrug—the only fit and proper place for
books of quality, such as this. They were excellent
hearth
rugs in that house; soft and wide, with the thickest of pile, and
one’s knees sank into them most comfortably. When I got the
book open there was a difficulty at first in making the great stiff
pages lie down. Most fortunately the coal-scuttle was actually at my
elbow, and it was easy to find a flat bit of coal to lay on the
refractory page. Really, it was just as if everything had been arranged
for me. This was not such a bad sort of house after all. The beginnings of the
thing
were gay borders—scrolls and strap-work and diapered
backgrounds, a maze of colour, with small misshapen figures clambering
cheerily up and down everywhere. But first I eagerly scanned what text
there was in the middle, in order to get a hint of what it was all
about. Of course I was not going to waste any time in reading. A clue,
a sign-board, a finger-post was all I required. To my dismay and
disgust it was all in a stupid foreign language! Really, the perversity
of some people made one at times almost despair of the whole race.
However, the pictures remained; pictures never lied, never shuffled nor
evaded; and as for the story, I could invent it myself. Over the page I went,
shifting the bit of coal to a new position; and, as the scheme of the
picture disengaged itself from out the medley of colour that met my
delighted eyes, first there was a warm sense of familiarity, then a
dawning recognition, and then—O then! along with blissful
certainty came the imperious need to clasp my stomach with both hands,
in order to repress the shout of rapture that struggled to
escape—it was my own little city! I knew it well enough,
I
recognized it at once, though I bad never been quite so near it before.
Here was the familiar gateway, to the left that strange, slender tower
with its grim, square head shot far above the walls ; to the right,
outside the town, the hill—as of old-broke steeply down to
the sea. But to-day everything was bigger and fresher and clearer, the
walls seemed newly hewn, gay carpets were hung out over them, fair
ladies and long-haired children peeped and crowded on the battlements.
Better still, the portcullis was up—I could even catch a
glimpse of the sunlit square within—and a dainty company was
trooping through the gate on horseback, two and two. Their horses, in
trappings that swept the ground, were gay as themselves ; and they were
the gayest crew, for dress and bearing, I had ever yet beheld. It could
mean nothing else but a wedding, I thought, this holiday attire, this
festal and solemn entry ; and, wedding or whatever it was, I meant to
be there. This time I would not be balked by any grim portcullis; this
time I would slip in with the rest of the crowd, find out just what my
little town was like, within those exasperating walls that had so long
confronted me, and, moreover, have my share of the fun that was
evidently going on inside. Confident, yet breathless with expectation,
I turned the page. Joy! At last I was in
it, at
last I was on the right side of those provoking walls ; and, needless
to say, I looked about me with much curiosity. A public place, clearly,
though not such as I was used to. The houses at the back stood on a
sort of colonnade, beneath which the people jostled and crowded. The
upper stories were all painted with wonderful pictures. Above the
straight line of the roofs the deep blue of a cloudless sky stretched
from side to side. Lords and ladies thronged the fore-ground, while on
a dais in the centre a gallant gentleman, just alighted off his horse,
stooped to the fingers of a girl as bravely dressed out as
Seliņa’s lady between the saints; and round about
stood venerable personages, robed in the most variegated clothing.
There were boys, too, in plenty, with tiny red caps on their thick
hair; and their shirts had bunched up and worked out at the waist, just
as my own did so often, after chasing anybody; and each boy of them
wore an odd pair of stockings, one blue and the other red. This system
of attire went straight to my heart. I had tried the same thing so
often, and had met with so much discouragement; and here, at last, was
my justification, painted deliberately in a grown-up book! I looked
about for my saint-friends—the armour-man and the other
fellow—but they were not to be seen. Evidently they were
unable to get off duty, even for a wedding, and still stood on guard in
that green meadow down below. I was disappointed, too, that not an
angel was visible. One or two of them, surely, could easily have been
spared for an hour, to run up and see the show; and they would have
been thoroughly at home here, in the midst of all the colour and the
movement and the fun. But it was time to get
on,
for clearly the interest was only just beginning. Over went the next
page, and there we were, the whole crowd of us, assembled in a noble
church. It was not easy to make Out exactly what was going on; but in
the throng I was delighted to recognize my angels at last, happy and
very much at home. They had managed to get leave off evidently, and
must have run up the hill and scampered breathlessly through the gate;
and perhaps they cried a little when they found the square empty, and
thought the fun must be all over. Two of them had got hold of a great
wax candle apiece, as much as they could stagger under, and were
tittering sideways at each other as the grease ran bountifully over
their clothes. A third had strolled in among the company, and was
chatting to a young gentleman, with whom she appeared to be on the best
of terms. Decidedly, this was the right breed of angel for us. None of
your sick-bed or night-nursery business for them! Well, no doubt they
were now
being married, He and She, just as always happened. And then, of
course, they were going to live happily ever after; and that was the
part I wanted to get to. Storybooks were so stupid, always stopping at
the point where they became ‘really nice ; but this
picture-story was only in its first chapters, and at last I was to have
a chance of knowing how people lived happily ever after. We would all
go home together, He and She and the angels, and I ; and the armour-man
would be invited to come and stay. And then the story would really
begin, at the point where those other ones always left off. I turned
the page, and found myself free of the dim and splendid church and once
more in the open country. This was all right ;
this
was just as it should be. The sky was a fleckless blue, the flags
danced in the breeze, and our merry bridal party, with jest and
laughter, jogged down to the waterside. I was through the town by this
time, and out on the other side of the hill, where I had always wanted
to be and, sure enough, there was the harbour, all thick with curly
ships. Most of them were piled high with
wedding-presents—bales of silk, and gold and silver plate,
and comfortable-looking bags suggesting
bullion; and the gayest ship of all lay close up to the carpeted
landing-stage. Already the bride was stepping daintily down the
gangway, her ladies following primly, one by one; a few minutes more
and we should all be aboard, the hawsers would splash in the water, the
sails would fill and strain. From the deck I should see the little
walled town recede and sink and grow dim, while every plunge of our
bows brought us nearer to the happy island—it was an island
we were bound for, I knew well! Already I could see the island-people
waving hands on the crowded quay, whence the little houses ran up the
hill to the castle, crowning all with its towers and battlements. Once
more we should ride together, a merry procession, clattering up the
steep street and through the grim gateway; and then we should have
arrived, then we should all dine together, then we should have reached
home! And then— Ow! Ow! Ow! Bitter it is to stumble
out
of an opalescent dream into the cold daylight ; cruel to lose in a
second a sea voyage, an island, and a castle that was to be practically
your own ; but cruellest and bitterest of all to know, in addition to
your loss, that the fingers of an angry aunt have you tight by the
scruff of your neck. My beautiful book was gone too— ravished
from my grasp by the dressy lady, who joined in the outburst of
denunciation as heartily as if she had been a, relative—and
naught was left me but to blubber dismally, awakened of a sudden to the
harshness of real things and the unnumbered hostilities of the actual
world. I cared little for their reproaches, their abuse ; but I
sorrowed heartily for my lost ship, my vanished island, my uneaten
dinner, and for the knowledge that, if I wanted any angels to play
with, I must henceforth put up with the anaemic, night-gowned
nonentities that hovered over the bed of the Sunday-school child in the
pages of the Sabbath Improver. I was led ignominiously out of the house, in a pulpy, watery state, while the butler handled his swing doors with a stony, impassive countenance, intended for the deception of the very elect, though it did not deceive me. I knew well enough that next time he was off duty, and strolled around our way, we should meet in our kitchen as man to man, and I would punch him and ask him riddles, and he would teach me tricks with corks and bits of string. So his unsympathetic manner did not add to my depression. I
maintained a diplomatic blubber long after we had been packed into our
pony-carriage and the lodge-gate had clicked behind us, because it
served as a
sort of armour—plating against heckling and argument and
abuse, and I was
thinking hard and wanted to be let alone. And the thoughts that I was
thinking
were two. First
I thought, “I’ve got ahead of Charlotte this time." And
next I thought, “When I’ve grown up big, and have
money of my own, and a
full-sized walking-stick, I will set out early one morning, and never
stop till
I get to that little walled town.” There
ought to be no real difficulty in the task. It only meant asking here
and asking
there, and people were very obliging, and I could describe every stick
and stone
of it. As for the island which I had never even seen, that was not so easy. Yet I felt confident that somehow, at some time, sooner or later, I was destined to arrive. |