<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">LOVE</h2>
<p class="drop-cap">THE night received the moonlight in the manner
of a sophisticated braggart who slaps the face of
an old, impassive man. Mrs. Robert Calvin
Taylor observed this illusion and painted it upon one of
the lanterns lighting a little party within her heart. The
guests at the party, fat sophists and slatterns in gay,
patched clothes, gathered around the lantern and felt relieved
at the impersonal novelty of its decoration. If
Mrs. Robert Calvin Taylor had been a philosopher or
a scientist she would have changed the night to an unseen
background, or a chemical diagram; she would
have ignored the pleading of her heart for pictorial distraction.
But since she was a society-woman, tired of
sensual toys and a mental twilight, she welcomed the
night as her first effectual lover. Sitting in the garden
of her country home she could see the lighted windows
of her crowded ballroom, and hear the saccharine pandemonium
of a jazz orchestra. The noise reminded her
of a middle-aged roué, snickering as he rolled his huge
dice while gambling for a new mistress. She felt glad
that her new lover, the night, did not seek to court her
with such a blustering clatter.</p>
<p>The night was incredibly sophisticated but held the
pungently awkward body of a youth, crashing against
trees and bushes. This mixture pierced Mrs. Robert
Calvin Taylor and slid far beneath those sensual routines
which are the delight of psycho-analysts—slid to a
depth where aesthetic passion slays the flesh and blends
it into a sexless potency. She felt a sense of bodiless
conflagration striding with wide steps beside the night.
When the limitless glow died within her, she glanced
down and found that she was naked. The complicated
shrewdness of her clothes had disappeared.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>By this time she had ceased to be Mrs. Robert Calvin
Taylor—she had become an expectant novice in a
new world, and even the jazz music and ballroom
laughter had changed to the mumbled rumours of a
past existence. Therefore her nakedness failed to disconcert
her. She touched her shoulder, with a gesture
of matter-of-fact congratulation, and loosened her hair
to rid herself of a last dab of incongruity. Then she rose
from the stone bench and walked down a pathway leading
to the great lake that bounded one side of her country
estate. She felt the powerful and sober curiosity of one
who has decided to become a recluse and examines the
deserted possibilities of his roofless plateau. She reached
a high bluff rising over the placid vanity of the huge
lake, combing its bluish black hair with moonlight. Suddenly
she became aware of a figure standing beside her.
She turned with a gasp of strangled aloofness. The
ethereal composure of her small face, defended by moonlight,
sheered into an ebony cast of hermit-like annoyance.
But when the color and outlines of the figure
shrunk within her eyes, her face changed again. An
astounded immersion crowned her head, tugging at her
short nose, straightening her thick lips, and cleaving her
gray eyes. The slightly deteriorated slenderness of her
short body lowered a bit toward the earth, not from
fear but because of a weakening incredulity. The figure
before her was that of a sexless human being, small and
slim of statute, nude, and hued with an inhumanly concentrated
black. The head held large eyes that shone
like metaphysical diamonds, as though ten thousand
stars were carousing together, in a realm of compressed
light. The figure spoke to Mrs. Robert Calvin Taylor,
and its voice seemed thrown forth by the rays from its
eyes. The voice was distinct and subdued.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>“You are not a hermit who has turned a garden into
a solitary castle,” said the figure.</p>
<p>“What am I?” asked Mrs. Robert Calvin Taylor.</p>
<p>“Your mind and heart are no longer clad in their
heavy mirages of love, fear, and sleep,” said the figure.
“The surface pictures have gone and the twin bazaars
of your heart and mind are exchanging a long-deferred
greeting. Within the now mingled bazaars emotions and
thoughts have become friends and sell each other endless
variations in color, light, and form. I am the being who
rules this proceeding.”</p>
<p>“Have you a name?” asked Mrs. Robert Calvin
Taylor, using the unashamed naïveté of a child.</p>
<p>“Men call me Aesthetics,” answered the figure. “In
my weakest form I make the eyes of the shop-girl hesitate
a bit, as she views an unusually gaudy sunset. In
my strongest manifestations I help poets and artists to
contradict their personal lives. But these are merely
my outward indications. I line the hearts and minds of
all human beings, often remaining within them, unfelt,
until they die. In rare cases such as yours the mirages
hiding and dividing me are slain, and I clap my hands,
sending motion to the twin bazaars of heart and mind.”</p>
<p>“What caused me to uncover you within myself?”
said Mrs. Robert Calvin Taylor.</p>
<p>“You yielded to a whim and made the night your
lover. Dissatisfied with the loves and fears he found
within you, the night threw them aside, one by one, thus
slaying the mirages that hid me. Your other lovers of
the past were content with more material gifts and did
not seek to uncover you.”</p>
<p>“I am bare now. What will you do with me?” said
Mrs. Robert Calvin Taylor. The figure laid a hand upon
her shoulder. His eyes burnt her to a petal of ashes
that fell down between them.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Mr. Robert Calvin Taylor stood over the form of his
young wife, who sat slouched down upon a stone bench
within their garden. He shook her shoulder, lightly. She
uttered a perturbed mumble and did not raise the head
resting upon one of her arms. The moonlight fell upon
the silken complexities of her dress.</p>
<p>“Poor Dot, I warned her not to take a third glass,”
he muttered to himself as he raised her in his arms and
staggered down the garden pathway.</p>
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