<h2><SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN> CHAPTER XIX</h2>
<p>Away with Systems! Away with a corrupt World! Let us breathe the air of the
Enchanted Island.</p>
<p>Golden lie the meadows: golden run the streams; red gold is on the pine-stems.
The sun is coming down to earth, and walks the fields and the waters.</p>
<p>The sun is coming down to earth, and the fields and the waters shout to him
golden shouts. He comes, and his heralds run before him, and touch the leaves
of oaks and planes and beeches lucid green, and the pine-stems redder gold;
leaving brightest footprints upon thickly-weeded banks, where the
foxglove’s last upper-bells incline, and bramble-shoots wander amid moist
rich herbage. The plumes of the woodland are alight; and beyond them, over the
open, ’tis a race with the long-thrown shadows; a race across the heaths
and up the hills, till, at the farthest bourne of mounted eastern cloud, the
heralds of the sun lay rosy fingers and rest.</p>
<p>Sweet are the shy recesses of the woodland. The ray treads softly there. A film
athwart the pathway quivers many-hued against purple shade fragrant with warm
pines, deep moss-beds, feathery ferns. The little brown squirrel drops tail,
and leaps; the inmost bird is startled to a chance tuneless note. From silence
into silence things move.</p>
<p>Peeps of the revelling splendour above and around enliven the conscious full
heart within. The flaming West, the crimson heights, shower their glories
through voluminous leafage. But these are bowers where deep bliss dwells,
imperial joy, that owes no fealty to yonder glories, in which the young lamb
gambols and the spirits of men are glad. Descend, great Radiance! embrace
creation with beneficent fire, and pass from us! You and the vice-regal light
that succeeds to you, and all heavenly pageants, are the ministers and the
slaves of the throbbing content within.</p>
<p>For this is the home of the enchantment. Here, secluded from vexed shores, the
prince and princess of the island meet: here like darkling nightingales they
sit, and into eyes and ears and hands pour endless ever-fresh treasures of
their souls.</p>
<p>Roll on, grinding wheels of the world: cries of ships going down in a calm,
groans of a System which will not know its rightful hour of exultation,
complain to the universe. You are not heard here.</p>
<p>He calls her by her name, Lucy: and she, blushing at her great boldness, has
called him by his, Richard. Those two names are the key-notes of the wonderful
harmonies the angels sing aloft.</p>
<p>“Lucy! my beloved!”</p>
<p>“O Richard!”</p>
<p>Out in the world there, on the skirts of the woodland, a sheep-boy pipes to
meditative eye on a penny-whistle.</p>
<p>Love’s musical instrument is as old, and as poor: it has but two stops;
and yet, you see, the cunning musician does thus much with it!</p>
<p>Other speech they have little; light foam playing upon waves of feeling, and of
feeling compact, that bursts only when the sweeping volume is too wild, and is
no more than their sigh of tenderness spoken.</p>
<p>Perhaps love played his tune so well because their natures had unblunted edges,
and were keen for bliss, confiding in it as natural food. To gentlemen and
ladies he fine-draws upon the viol, ravishingly; or blows into the mellow
bassoon; or rouses the heroic ardours of the trumpet; or, it may be, commands
the whole Orchestra for them. And they are pleased. He is still the cunning
musician. They languish, and taste ecstasy: but it is, however sonorous, an
earthly concert. For them the spheres move not to two notes. They have lost, or
forfeited and never known, the first super-sensual spring of the ripe senses
into passion; when they carry the soul with them, and have the privileges of
spirits to walk disembodied, boundlessly to feel. Or one has it, and the other
is a dead body. Ambrosia let them eat, and drink the nectar: here sit a couple
to whom Love’s simple bread and water is a finer feast.</p>
<p>Pipe, happy sheep-bop, Love! Irradiated angels, unfold your wings and lift your
voices!</p>
<p>They have out-flown philosophy. Their instinct has shot beyond the ken of
science. They were made for their Eden.</p>
<p>“And this divine gift was in store for me!”</p>
<p>So runs the internal outcry of each, clasping each: it is their recurring
refrain to the harmonies. How it illumined the years gone by and suffused the
living Future!</p>
<p>“You for me: I for you!”</p>
<p>“We are born for each other!”</p>
<p>They believe that the angels have been busy about them from their cradles. The
celestial hosts have worthily striven to bring them together. And, O victory! O
wonder! after toil and pain, and difficulties exceeding, the celestial hosts
have succeeded!</p>
<p>“Here we two sit who are written above as one!”</p>
<p>Pipe, happy Love! pipe on to these dear innocents!</p>
<p>The tide of colour has ebbed from the upper sky. In the West the sea of sunken
fire draws back; and the stars leap forth, and tremble, and retire before the
advancing moon, who slips the silver train of cloud from her shoulders, and,
with her foot upon the pine-tops, surveys heaven.</p>
<p>“Lucy, did you never dream of meeting me?”</p>
<p>“O Richard! yes; for I remembered you.”</p>
<p>“Lucy! and did you pray that we might meet?”</p>
<p>“I did!”</p>
<p>Young as when she looked upon the lovers in Paradise, the fair Immortal
journeys onward. Fronting her, it is not night but veiled day. Full half the
sky is flushed. Not darkness, not day, but the nuptials of the two.</p>
<p>“My own! my own for ever! You are pledged to me? Whisper!”</p>
<p>He hears the delicious music.</p>
<p>“And you are mine?”</p>
<p>A soft beam travels to the fern-covert under the pinewood where they sit, and
for answer he has her eyes turned to him an instant, timidly fluttering over
the depths of his, and then downcast; for through her eyes her soul is naked to
him.</p>
<p>“Lucy! my bride! my life!”</p>
<p>The night-jar spins his dark monotony on the branch of the pine. The soft beam
travels round them, and listens to their hearts. Their lips are locked.</p>
<p>Pipe no more, Love, for a time! Pipe as you will you cannot express their first
kiss; nothing of its sweetness, and of the sacredness of it nothing. St.
Cecilia up aloft, before the silver organ-pipes of Paradise, pressing fingers
upon all the notes of which Love is but one, from her you may hear it.</p>
<p>So Love is silent. Out in the world there, on the skirts of the woodland, the
self-satisfied sheep-boy delivers a last complacent squint down the length of
his penny-whistle, and, with a flourish correspondingly awry, he also marches
into silence, hailed by supper. The woods are still. There is heard but the
night-jar spinning on the pine-branch, circled by moonlight.</p>
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