Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated) (423 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated)
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She seemed to recover herself at that, turned without a word, walked rapidly through the garden, and disappeared into the house, leaving Will in some confusion as to the result.  He walked up and down the garden, whistling softly to himself.  Sometimes he stopped and contemplated the sky and hill-tops; sometimes he went down to the tail of the weir and sat there, looking foolishly in the water.  All this dubiety and perturbation was so foreign to his nature and the life which he had resolutely chosen for himself, that he began to regret Marjory’s arrival.  ‘After all,’ he thought, ‘I was as happy as a man need be.  I could come down here and watch my fishes all day long if I wanted: I was as settled and contented as my old mill.’

Marjory came down to dinner, looking very trim and quiet; and no sooner were all three at table than she made her father a speech, with her eyes fixed upon her plate, but showing no other sign of embarrassment or distress.

‘Father,’ she began, ‘Mr. Will and I have been talking things over.  We see that we have each made a mistake about our feelings, and he has agreed, at my request, to give up all idea of marriage, and be no more than my very good friend, as in the past.  You see, there is no shadow of a quarrel, and indeed I hope we shall see a great deal of him in the future, for his visits will always be welcome in our house.  Of course, father, you will know best, but perhaps we should do better to leave Mr. Will’s house for the present.  I believe, after what has passed, we should hardly be agreeable inmates for some days.’

Will, who had commanded himself with difficulty from the first, broke out upon this into an inarticulate noise, and raised one hand with an appearance of real dismay, as if he were about to interfere and contradict.  But she checked him at once looking up at him with a swift glance and an angry flush upon her cheek.

‘You will perhaps have the good grace,’ she said, ‘to let me explain these matters for myself.’

Will was put entirely out of countenance by her expression and the ring of her voice.  He held his peace, concluding that there were some things about this girl beyond his comprehension, in which he was exactly right.

The poor parson was quite crestfallen.  He tried to prove that this was no more than a true lovers’ tiff, which would pass off before night; and when he was dislodged from that position, he went on to argue that where there was no quarrel there could be no call for a separation; for the good man liked both his entertainment and his host.  It was curious to see how the girl managed them, saying little all the time, and that very quietly, and yet twisting them round her finger and insensibly leading them wherever she would by feminine tact and generalship.  It scarcely seemed to have been her doing — it seemed as if things had merely so fallen out — that she and her father took their departure that same afternoon in a farm-cart, and went farther down the valley, to wait, until their own house was ready for them, in another hamlet.  But Will had been observing closely, and was well aware of her dexterity and resolution.  When he found himself alone he had a great many curious matters to turn over in his mind.  He was very sad and solitary, to begin with.  All the interest had gone out of his life, and he might look up at the stars as long as he pleased, he somehow failed to find support or consolation.  And then he was in such a turmoil of spirit about Marjory.  He had been puzzled and irritated at her behaviour, and yet he could not keep himself from admiring it.  He thought he recognised a fine, perverse angel in that still soul which he had never hitherto suspected; and though he saw it was an influence that would fit but ill with his own life of artificial calm, he could not keep himself from ardently desiring to possess it.  Like a man who has lived among shadows and now meets the sun, he was both pained and delighted.

As the days went forward he passed from one extreme to another; now pluming himself on the strength of his determination, now despising his timid and silly caution.  The former was, perhaps, the true thought of his heart, and represented the regular tenor of the man’s reflections; but the latter burst forth from time to time with an unruly violence, and then he would forget all consideration, and go up and down his house and garden or walk among the fir-woods like one who is beside himself with remorse.  To equable, steady-minded Will this state of matters was intolerable; and he determined, at whatever cost, to bring it to an end.  So, one warm summer afternoon he put on his best clothes, took a thorn switch in his hand, and set out down the valley by the river.  As soon as he had taken his determination, he had regained at a bound his customary peace of heart, and he enjoyed the bright weather and the variety of the scene without any admixture of alarm or unpleasant eagerness.  It was nearly the same to him how the matter turned out.  If she accepted him he would have to marry her this time, which perhaps was, all for the best.  If she refused him, he would have done his utmost, and might follow his own way in the future with an untroubled conscience.  He hoped, on the whole, she would refuse him; and then, again, as he saw the brown roof which sheltered her, peeping through some willows at an angle of the stream, he was half inclined to reverse the wish, and more than half ashamed of himself for this infirmity of purpose.

Marjory seemed glad to see him, and gave him her hand without affectation or delay.

‘I have been thinking about this marriage,’ he began.

‘So have I,’ she answered.  ‘And I respect you more and more for a very wise man.  You understood me better than I understood myself; and I am now quite certain that things are all for the best as they are.’

‘At the same time — ,’ ventured Will.

‘You must be tired,’ she interrupted.  ‘Take a seat and let me fetch you a glass of wine.  The afternoon is so warm; and I wish you not to be displeased with your visit.  You must come quite often; once a week, if you can spare the time; I am always so glad to see my friends.’

‘O, very well,’ thought Will to himself.  ‘It appears I was right after all.’  And he paid a very agreeable visit, walked home again in capital spirits, and gave himself no further concern about the matter.

For nearly three years Will and Marjory continued on these terms, seeing each other once or twice a week without any word of love between them; and for all that time I believe Will was nearly as happy as a man can be.  He rather stinted himself the pleasure of seeing her; and he would often walk half-way over to the parsonage, and then back again, as if to whet his appetite.  Indeed there was one corner of the road, whence he could see the church-spire wedged into a crevice of the valley between sloping firwoods, with a triangular snatch of plain by way of background, which he greatly affected as a place to sit and moralise in before returning homewards; and the peasants got so much into the habit of finding him there in the twilight that they gave it the name of ‘Will o’ the Mill’s Corner.’

At the end of the three years Marjory played him a sad trick by suddenly marrying somebody else.  Will kept his countenance bravely, and merely remarked that, for as little as he knew of women, he had acted very prudently in not marrying her himself three years before.  She plainly knew very little of her own mind, and, in spite of a deceptive manner, was as fickle and flighty as the rest of them.  He had to congratulate himself on an escape, he said, and would take a higher opinion of his own wisdom in consequence.  But at heart, he was reasonably displeased, moped a good deal for a month or two, and fell away in flesh, to the astonishment of his serving-lads.

It was perhaps a year after this marriage that Will was awakened late one night by the sound of a horse galloping on the road, followed by precipitate knocking at the inn-door.  He opened his window and saw a farm servant, mounted and holding a led horse by the bridle, who told him to make what haste he could and go along with him; for Marjory was dying, and had sent urgently to fetch him to her bedside.  Will was no horseman, and made so little speed upon the way that the poor young wife was very near her end before he arrived.  But they had some minutes’ talk in private, and he was present and wept very bitterly while she breathed her last.

CHAPTER III.  DEATH

Year after year went away into nothing, with great explosions and outcries in the cities on the plain: red revolt springing up and being suppressed in blood, battle swaying hither and thither, patient astronomers in observatory towers picking out and christening new stars, plays being performed in lighted theatres, people being carried into hospital on stretchers, and all the usual turmoil and agitation of men’s lives in crowded centres.  Up in Will’s valley only the winds and seasons made an epoch; the fish hung in the swift stream, the birds circled overhead, the pine-tops rustled underneath the stars, the tall hills stood over all; and Will went to and fro, minding his wayside inn, until the snow began to thicken on his head.  His heart was young and vigorous; and if his pulses kept a sober time, they still beat strong and steady in his wrists.  He carried a ruddy stain on either cheek, like a ripe apple; he stooped a little, but his step was still firm; and his sinewy hands were reached out to all men with a friendly pressure.  His face was covered with those wrinkles which are got in open air, and which rightly looked at, are no more than a sort of permanent sunburning; such wrinkles heighten the stupidity of stupid faces; but to a person like Will, with his clear eyes and smiling mouth, only give another charm by testifying to a simple and easy life.  His talk was full of wise sayings.  He had a taste for other people; and other people had a taste for him.  When the valley was full of tourists in the season, there were merry nights in Will’s arbour; and his views, which seemed whimsical to his neighbours, were often enough admired by learned people out of towns and colleges.  Indeed, he had a very noble old age, and grew daily better known; so that his fame was heard of in the cities of the plain; and young men who had been summer travellers spoke together in
cafés
of Will o’ the Mill and his rough philosophy.  Many and many an invitation, you may be sure, he had; but nothing could tempt him from his upland valley.  He would shake his head and smile over his tobacco-pipe with a deal of meaning.  ‘You come too late,’ he would answer.  ‘I am a dead man now: I have lived and died already.  Fifty years ago you would have brought my heart into my mouth; and now you do not even tempt me.  But that is the object of long living, that man should cease to care about life.’  And again: ‘There is only one difference between a long life and a good dinner: that, in the dinner, the sweets come last.’  Or once more: ‘When I was a boy, I was a bit puzzled, and hardly knew whether it was myself or the world that was curious and worth looking into.  Now, I know it is myself, and stick to that.’

He never showed any symptom of frailty, but kept stalwart and firm to the last; but they say he grew less talkative towards the end, and would listen to other people by the hour in an amused and sympathetic silence.  Only, when he did speak, it was more to the point and more charged with old experience.  He drank a bottle of wine gladly; above all, at sunset on the hill-top or quite late at night under the stars in the arbour.  The sight of something attractive and unatttainable seasoned his enjoyment, he would say; and he professed he had lived long enough to admire a candle all the more when he could compare it with a planet.

One night, in his seventy-second year, he awoke in bed in such uneasiness of body and mind that he arose and dressed himself and went out to meditate in the arbour.  It was pitch dark, without a star; the river was swollen, and the wet woods and meadows loaded the air with perfume.  It had thundered during the day, and it promised more thunder for the morrow.  A murky, stifling night for a man of seventy-two!  Whether it was the weather or the wakefulness, or some little touch of fever in his old limbs, Will’s mind was besieged by tumultuous and crying memories.  His boyhood, the night with the fat young man, the death of his adopted parents, the summer days with Marjory, and many of those small circumstances, which seem nothing to another, and are yet the very gist of a man’s own life to himself — things seen, words heard, looks misconstrued — arose from their forgotten corners and usurped his attention.  The dead themselves were with him, not merely taking part in this thin show of memory that defiled before his brain, but revisiting his bodily senses as they do in profound and vivid dreams.  The fat young man leaned his elbows on the table opposite; Marjory came and went with an apronful of flowers between the garden and the arbour; he could hear the old parson knocking out his pipe or blowing his resonant nose.  The tide of his consciousness ebbed and flowed: he was sometimes half-asleep and drowned in his recollections of the past; and sometimes he was broad awake, wondering at himself.  But about the middle of the night he was startled by the voice of the dead miller calling to him out of the house as he used to do on the arrival of custom.  The hallucination was so perfect that Will sprang from his seat and stood listening for the summons to be repeated; and as he listened he became conscious of another noise besides the brawling of the river and the ringing in his feverish ears.  It was like the stir of horses and the creaking of harness, as though a carriage with an impatient team had been brought up upon the road before the courtyard gate.  At such an hour, upon this rough and dangerous pass, the supposition was no better than absurd; and Will dismissed it from his mind, and resumed his seat upon the arbour chair; and sleep closed over him again like running water.  He was once again awakened by the dead miller’s call, thinner and more spectral than before; and once again he heard the noise of an equipage upon the road.  And so thrice and four times, the same dream, or the same fancy, presented itself to his senses: until at length, smiling to himself as when one humours a nervous child, he proceeded towards the gate to set his uncertainty at rest.

From the arbour to the gate was no great distance, and yet it took Will some time; it seemed as if the dead thickened around him in the court, and crossed his path at every step.  For, first, he was suddenly surprised by an overpowering sweetness of heliotropes; it was as if his garden had been planted with this flower from end to end, and the hot, damp night had drawn forth all their perfumes in a breath.  Now the heliotrope had been Marjory’s favourite flower, and since her death not one of them had ever been planted in Will’s ground.

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