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<h2> CHAPTER XLV. THE JOURNEY HOME </h2>
<p>It had ceased to be dark; we walked in a dim twilight, breathing through
the dimness the breath of the spring. A wondrous change had passed upon
the world—or was it not rather that a change more marvellous had
taken place in us? Without light enough in the sky or the air to reveal
anything, every heather-bush, every small shrub, every blade of grass was
perfectly visible—either by light that went out from it, as fire
from the bush Moses saw in the desert, or by light that went out of our
eyes. Nothing cast a shadow; all things interchanged a little light. Every
growing thing showed me, by its shape and colour, its indwelling idea—the
informing thought, that is, which was its being, and sent it out. My bare
feet seemed to love every plant they trod upon. The world and my being,
its life and mine, were one. The microcosm and macrocosm were at length
atoned, at length in harmony! I lived in everything; everything entered
and lived in me. To be aware of a thing, was to know its life at once and
mine, to know whence we came, and where we were at home—was to know
that we are all what we are, because Another is what he is! Sense after
sense, hitherto asleep, awoke in me—sense after sense indescribable,
because no correspondent words, no likenesses or imaginations exist,
wherewithal to describe them. Full indeed—yet ever expanding, ever
making room to receive—was the conscious being where things kept
entering by so many open doors! When a little breeze brushing a bush of
heather set its purple bells a ringing, I was myself in the joy of the
bells, myself in the joy of the breeze to which responded their sweet
TIN-TINNING**, myself in the joy of the sense, and of the soul that
received all the joys together. To everything glad I lent the hall of my
being wherein to revel. I was a peaceful ocean upon which the ground-swell
of a living joy was continually lifting new waves; yet was the joy ever
the same joy, the eternal joy, with tens of thousands of changing forms.
Life was a cosmic holiday.</p>
<p>Now I knew that life and truth were one; that life mere and pure is in
itself bliss; that where being is not bliss, it is not life, but
life-in-death. Every inspiration of the dark wind that blew where it
listed, went out a sigh of thanksgiving. At last I was! I lived, and
nothing could touch my life! My darling walked beside me, and we were on
our way home to the Father!</p>
<p>So much was ours ere ever the first sun rose upon our freedom: what must
not the eternal day bring with it!</p>
<p>We came to the fearful hollow where once had wallowed the monsters of the
earth: it was indeed, as I had beheld it in my dream, a lovely lake. I
gazed into its pellucid depths. A whirlpool had swept out the soil in
which the abortions burrowed, and at the bottom lay visible the whole
horrid brood: a dim greenish light pervaded the crystalline water, and
revealed every hideous form beneath it. Coiled in spires, folded in
layers, knotted on themselves, or "extended long and large," they weltered
in motionless heaps—shapes more fantastic in ghoulish, blasting
dismay, than ever wine-sodden brain of exhausted poet fevered into
misbeing. He who dived in the swirling Maelstrom saw none to compare with
them in horror: tentacular convolutions, tumid bulges, glaring orbs of
sepian deformity, would have looked to him innocence beside such
incarnations of hatefulness—every head the wicked flower that,
bursting from an abominable stalk, perfected its evil significance.</p>
<p>Not one of them moved as we passed. But they were not dead. So long as
exist men and women of unwholesome mind, that lake will still be peopled
with loathsomenesses.</p>
<p>But hark the herald of the sun, the auroral wind, softly trumpeting his
approach! The master-minister of the human tabernacle is at hand! Heaping
before his prow a huge ripple-fretted wave of crimson and gold, he rushes
aloft, as if new launched from the urging hand of his maker into the upper
sea—pauses, and looks down on the world. White-raving storm of
molten metals, he is but a coal from the altar of the Father's
never-ending sacrifice to his children. See every little flower straighten
its stalk, lift up its neck, and with outstretched head stand expectant:
something more than the sun, greater than the light, is coming, is coming—none
the less surely coming that it is long upon the road! What matters to-day,
or to-morrow, or ten thousand years to Life himself, to Love himself! He
is coming, is coming, and the necks of all humanity are stretched out to
see him come! Every morning will they thus outstretch themselves, every
evening will they droop and wait—until he comes.—Is this but
an air-drawn vision? When he comes, will he indeed find them watching
thus?</p>
<p>It was a glorious resurrection-morning. The night had been spent in
preparing it!</p>
<p>The children went gamboling before, and the beasts came after us.
Fluttering butterflies, darting dragon-flies hovered or shot hither and
thither about our heads, a cloud of colours and flashes, now descending
upon us like a snow-storm of rainbow flakes, now rising into the humid air
like a rolling vapour of embodied odours. It was a summer-day more like
itself, that is, more ideal, than ever man that had not died found
summer-day in any world. I walked on the new earth, under the new heaven,
and found them the same as the old, save that now they opened their minds
to me, and I saw into them. Now, the soul of everything I met came out to
greet me and make friends with me, telling me we came from the same, and
meant the same. I was going to him, they said, with whom they always were,
and whom they always meant; they were, they said, lightnings that took
shape as they flashed from him to his. The dark rocks drank like sponges
the rays that showered upon them; the great world soaked up the light, and
sent out the living. Two joy-fires were Lona and I. Earth breathed
heavenward her sweet-savoured smoke; we breathed homeward our longing
desires. For thanksgiving, our very consciousness was that.</p>
<p>We came to the channels, once so dry and wearyful: they ran and flashed
and foamed with living water that shouted in its gladness! Far as the eye
could see, all was a rushing, roaring, dashing river of water made vocal
by its rocks.</p>
<p>We did not cross it, but "walked in glory and in joy" up its right bank,
until we reached the great cataract at the foot of the sandy desert,
where, roaring and swirling and dropping sheer, the river divided into its
two branches. There we climbed the height—and found no desert:
through grassy plains, between grassy banks, flowed the deep, wide, silent
river full to the brim. Then first to the Little Ones was revealed the
glory of God in the limpid flow of water. Instinctively they plunged and
swam, and the beasts followed them.</p>
<p>The desert rejoiced and blossomed as the rose. Wide forests had sprung up,
their whole undergrowth flowering shrubs peopled with song-birds. Every
thicket gave birth to a rivulet, and every rivulet to its water-song.</p>
<p>The place of the buried hand gave no sign. Beyond and still beyond, the
river came in full volume from afar. Up and up we went, now along grassy
margin, and now through forest of gracious trees. The grass grew sweeter
and its flowers more lovely and various as we went; the trees grew larger,
and the wind fuller of messages.</p>
<p>We came at length to a forest whose trees were greater, grander, and more
beautiful than any we had yet seen. Their live pillars upheaved a thick
embowed roof, betwixt whose leaves and blossoms hardly a sunbeam filtered.
Into the rafters of this aerial vault the children climbed, and through
them went scrambling and leaping in a land of bloom, shouting to the
unseen elephants below, and hearing them trumpet their replies. The
conversations between them Lona understood while I but guessed at them
blunderingly. The Little Ones chased the squirrels, and the squirrels,
frolicking, drew them on—always at length allowing themselves to be
caught and petted. Often would some bird, lovely in plumage and form,
light upon one of them, sing a song of what was coming, and fly away. Not
one monkey of any sort could they see.</p>
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