<SPAN name="2HCH0034"></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER IX. A HUMAN SOUL. </h2>
<p>Ericson lay for several weeks, during which time Robert and Shargar were
his only nurses. They contrived, by abridging both rest and labour,
to give him constant attendance. Shargar went to bed early and got up
early, so as to let Robert have a few hours' sleep before his classes
began. Robert again slept in the evening, after Shargar came home, and
made up for the time by reading while he sat by his friend. Mrs. Fyvie's
attendance was in requisition only for the hours when he had to be at
lectures. By the greatest economy of means, consisting of what Shargar
brought in by jobbing about the quay and the coach-offices, and what
Robert had from Dr. Anderson for copying his manuscript, they contrived
to procure for Ericson all that he wanted. The shopping of the two boys,
in their utter ignorance of such delicacies as the doctor told them to
get for him, the blunders they made as to the shops at which they were
to be bought, and the consultations they held, especially about the
preparing of the prescribed nutriment, afforded them many an amusing
retrospect in after years. For the house was so full of lodgers, that
Robert begged Mrs. Fyvie to give herself no trouble in the matter. Her
conscience, however, was uneasy, and she spoke to Dr. Anderson; but he
assured her that she might trust the boys. What cooking they could not
manage, she undertook cheerfully, and refused to add anything to the
rent on Shargar's account.</p>
<p>Dr. Anderson watched everything, the two boys as much as his patient. He
allowed them to work on, sending only the wine that was necessary from
his own cellar. The moment the supplies should begin to fail, or
the boys to look troubled, he was ready to do more. About Robert's
perseverance he had no doubt: Shargar's faithfulness he wanted to prove.</p>
<p>Robert wrote to his grandmother to tell her that Shargar was with him,
working hard. Her reply was somewhat cold and offended, but was inclosed
in a parcel containing all Shargar's garments, and ended with the
assurance that as long as he did well she was ready to do what she
could.</p>
<p>Few English readers will like Mrs. Falconer; but her grandchild
considered her one of the noblest women ever God made; and I, from his
account, am of the same mind. Her care was fixed</p>
<p>To fill her odorous lamp with deeds of light,<br/>
And hope that reaps not shame.<br/></p>
<p>And if one must choose between the how and the what, let me have the
what, come of the how what may. I know of a man so sensitive, that he
shuts his ears to his sister's griefs, because it spoils his digestion
to think of them.</p>
<p>One evening Robert was sitting by the table in Ericson's room. Dr.
Anderson had not called that day, and he did not expect to see him now,
for he had never come so late. He was quite at his ease, therefore, and
busy with two things at once, when the doctor opened the door and walked
in. I think it is possible that he came up quietly with some design
of surprising him. He found him with a stocking on one hand, a darning
needle in the other, and a Greek book open before him. Taking no
apparent notice of him, he walked up to the bedside, and Robert put
away his work. After his interview with his patient was over, the doctor
signed to him to follow him to the next room. There Shargar lay on the
rug already snoring. It was a cold night in December, but he lay in his
under-clothing, with a single blanket round him.</p>
<p>'Good training for a soldier,' said the doctor; 'and so was your work a
minute ago, Robert.'</p>
<p>'Ay,' answered Robert, colouring a little; 'I was readin' a bit o' the
Anabasis.'</p>
<p>The doctor smiled a far-off sly smile.</p>
<p>'I think it was rather the Katabasis, if one might venture to judge from
the direction of your labours.'</p>
<p>'Weel,' answered Robert, 'what wad ye hae me do? Wad ye hae me lat Mr.
Ericson gang wi' holes i' the heels o' 's hose, whan I can mak them a'
snod, an' learn my Greek at the same time? Hoots, doctor! dinna lauch at
me. I was doin' nae ill. A body may please themsel's—whiles surely, ohn
sinned.'</p>
<p>'But it's such waste of time! Why don't you buy him new ones?'</p>
<p>''Deed that's easier said than dune. I hae eneuch ado wi' my siller as
'tis; an' gin it warna for you, doctor, I do not ken what wad come o'
's; for ye see I hae no richt to come upo' my grannie for ither fowk.
There wad be nae en' to that.'</p>
<p>'But I could lend you the money to buy him some stockings.'</p>
<p>'An' whan wad I be able to pay ye, do ye think, doctor? In anither
warl' maybe, whaur the currency micht be sae different there wad be no
possibility o' reckonin' the rate o' exchange. Na, na.'</p>
<p>'But I will give you the money if you like.'</p>
<p>'Na, na. You hae dune eneuch already, an' mony thanks. Siller's no sae
easy come by to be wastit, as lang's a darn 'll do. Forbye, gin ye began
wi' his claes, ye wadna ken whaur to haud; for it wad jist be the new
claith upo' the auld garment: ye micht as weel new cleed him at ance.'</p>
<p>'And why not if I choose, Mr. Falconer?'</p>
<p>'Speir ye that at him, an' see what ye'll get—a luik 'at wad fess a
corbie (carrion crow) frae the lift (sky). I wadna hae ye try that. Some
fowk's poverty maun be han'let jist like a sair place, doctor. He
canna weel compleen o' a bit darnin'.—He canna tak that ill,' repeated
Robert, in a tone that showed he yet felt some anxiety on the subject;
'but new anes! I wadna like to be by whan he fand that oot. Maybe he
micht tak them frae a wuman; but frae a man body!—na, na; I maun jist
darn awa'. But I'll mak them dacent eneuch afore I hae dune wi' them. A
fiddler has fingers.'</p>
<p>The doctor smiled a pleased smile; but when he got into his carriage,
again he laughed heartily.</p>
<p>The evening deepened into night. Robert thought Ericson was asleep. But
he spoke.</p>
<p>'Who is that at the street door?' he said.</p>
<p>They were at the top of the house, and there was no window to the
street. But Ericson's senses were preternaturally acute, as is often the
case in such illnesses.</p>
<p>'I dinna hear onybody,' answered Robert.</p>
<p>'There was somebody,' returned Ericson.</p>
<p>From that moment he began to be restless, and was more feverish than
usual throughout the night.</p>
<p>Up to this time he had spoken little, was depressed with a suffering to
which he could give no name—not pain, he said—but such that he could
rouse no mental effort to meet it: his endurance was passive altogether.
This night his brain was more affected. He did not rave, but often
wandered; never spoke nonsense, but many words that would have seemed
nonsense to ordinary people: to Robert they seemed inspired. His
imagination, which was greater than any other of his fine faculties, was
so roused that he talked in verse—probably verse composed before and
now recalled. He would even pray sometimes in measured lines, and go
on murmuring petitions, till the words of the murmur became
undistinguishable, and he fell asleep. But even in his sleep he would
speak; and Robert would listen in awe; for such words, falling from
such a man, were to him as dim breaks of coloured light from the rainbow
walls of the heavenly city.</p>
<p>'If God were thinking me,' said Ericson, 'ah! But if he be only dreaming
me, I shall go mad.'</p>
<p>Ericson's outside was like his own northern clime—dark, gentle, and
clear, with gray-blue seas, and a sun that seems to shine out of the
past, and know nothing of the future. But within glowed a volcanic
angel of aspiration, fluttering his half-grown wings, and ever reaching
towards the heights whence all things are visible, and where all
passions are safe because true, that is divine. Iceland herself has her
Hecla.</p>
<p>Robert listened with keenest ear. A mist of great meaning hung about the
words his friend had spoken. He might speak more. For some minutes
he listened in vain, and was turning at last towards his book in
hopelessness, when he did speak yet again: Robert's ear soon detected
the rhythmic motion of his speech.</p>
<p>'Come in the glory of thine excellence;<br/>
Rive the dense gloom with wedges of clear light;<br/>
And let the shimmer of thy chariot wheels<br/>
Burn through the cracks of night.—So slowly, Lord,<br/>
To lift myself to thee with hands of toil,<br/>
Climbing the slippery cliff of unheard prayer!<br/>
Lift up a hand among my idle days—<br/>
One beckoning finger. I will cast aside<br/>
The clogs of earthly circumstance, and run<br/>
Up the broad highways where the countless worlds<br/>
Sit ripening in the summer of thy love.'<br/></p>
<p>Breathless for fear of losing a word, Robert yet remembered that he had
seen something like these words in the papers Ericson had given him to
read on the night when his illness began. When he had fallen asleep and
silent, he searched and found the poem from which I give the following
extracts. He had not looked at the papers since that night.</p>
<center>
A PRAYER.
</center>
<p>O Lord, my God, how long<br/>
Shall my poor heart pant for a boundless joy?<br/>
How long, O mighty Spirit, shall I hear<br/>
The murmur of Truth's crystal waters slide<br/>
From the deep caverns of their endless being,<br/>
But my lips taste not, and the grosser air<br/>
Choke each pure inspiration of thy will?<br/>
<br/>
I would be a wind,<br/>
Whose smallest atom is a viewless wing,<br/>
All busy with the pulsing life that throbs<br/>
To do thy bidding; yea, or the meanest thing<br/>
That has relation to a changeless truth<br/>
Could I but be instinct with thee—each thought<br/>
The lightning of a pure intelligence,<br/>
And every act as the loud thunder-clap<br/>
Of currents warring for a vacuum.<br/>
<br/>
Lord, clothe me with thy truth as with a robe.<br/>
Purge me with sorrow. I will bend my head,<br/>
And let the nations of thy waves pass over,<br/>
Bathing me in thy consecrated strength.<br/>
And let the many-voiced and silver winds<br/>
Pass through my frame with their clear influence.<br/>
O save me—I am blind; lo! thwarting shapes<br/>
Wall up the void before, and thrusting out<br/>
Lean arms of unshaped expectation, beckon<br/>
Down to the night of all unholy thoughts.<br/>
<br/>
I have seen<br/>
Unholy shapes lop off my shining thoughts,<br/>
Which I had thought nursed in thine emerald light;<br/>
And they have lent me leathern wings of fear,<br/>
Of baffled pride and harrowing distrust;<br/>
And Godhead with its crown of many stars,<br/>
Its pinnacles of flaming holiness,<br/>
And voice of leaves in the green summer-time,<br/>
Has seemed the shadowed image of a self.<br/>
Then my soul blackened; and I rose to find<br/>
And grasp my doom, and cleave the arching deeps<br/>
Of desolation.<br/>
<br/>
O Lord, my soul is a forgotten well;<br/>
Clad round with its own rank luxuriance;<br/>
A fountain a kind sunbeam searches for,<br/>
Sinking the lustre of its arrowy finger<br/>
Through the long grass its own strange virtue <SPAN href="#note-5" name="noteref-5"><small>5</small></SPAN><br/>
Hath blinded up its crystal eye withal:<br/>
Make me a broad strong river coming down<br/>
With shouts from its high hills, whose rocky hearts<br/>
Throb forth the joy of their stability<br/>
In watery pulses from their inmost deeps,<br/>
And I shall be a vein upon thy world,<br/>
Circling perpetual from the parent deep.<br/>
O First and Last, O glorious all in all,<br/>
In vain my faltering human tongue would seek<br/>
To shape the vesture of the boundless thought,<br/>
Summing all causes in one burning word;<br/>
Give me the spirit's living tongue of fire,<br/>
Whose only voice is in an attitude<br/>
Of keenest tension, bent back on itself<br/>
With a strong upward force; even as thy bow<br/>
Of bended colour stands against the north,<br/>
And, in an attitude to spring to heaven,<br/>
Lays hold of the kindled hills.<br/>
<br/>
Most mighty One,<br/>
Confirm and multiply my thoughts of good;<br/>
Help me to wall each sacred treasure round<br/>
With the firm battlements of special action.<br/>
Alas my holy, happy thoughts of thee<br/>
Make not perpetual nest within my soul,<br/>
But like strange birds of dazzling colours stoop<br/>
The trailing glories of their sunward speed,<br/>
For one glad moment filling my blasted boughs<br/>
With the sunshine of their wings.<br/>
<br/>
Make me a forest<br/>
Of gladdest life, wherein perpetual spring<br/>
Lifts up her leafy tresses in the wind.<br/>
<br/>
Lo! now I see<br/>
Thy trembling starlight sit among my pines,<br/>
And thy young moon slide down my arching boughs<br/>
With a soft sound of restless eloquence.<br/>
And I can feel a joy as when thy hosts<br/>
Of trampling winds, gathering in maddened bands,<br/>
Roar upward through the blue and flashing day<br/>
Round my still depths of uncleft solitude.<br/>
<br/>
Hear me, O Lord,<br/>
When the black night draws down upon my soul,<br/>
And voices of temptation darken down<br/>
The misty wind, slamming thy starry doors,<br/>
With bitter jests. 'Thou fool!' they seem to say<br/>
'Thou hast no seed of goodness in thee; all<br/>
Thy nature hath been stung right through and through.<br/>
Thy sin hath blasted thee, and made thee old.<br/>
Thou hadst a will, but thou hast killed it—dead—<br/>
And with the fulsome garniture of life<br/>
Built out the loathsome corpse. Thou art a child<br/>
Of night and death, even lower than a worm.<br/>
Gather the skirts up of thy shadowy self,<br/>
And with what resolution thou hast left,<br/>
Fall on the damned spikes of doom.'<br/>
<br/>
O take me like a child,<br/>
If thou hast made me for thyself, my God,<br/>
And lead me up thy hills. I shall not fear<br/>
So thou wilt make me pure, and beat back sin<br/>
With the terrors of thine eye.<br/>
<br/>
Lord hast thou sent<br/>
Thy moons to mock us with perpetual hope?<br/>
Lighted within our breasts the love of love,<br/>
To make us ripen for despair, my God?<br/>
<br/>
Oh, dost thou hold each individual soul<br/>
Strung clear upon thy flaming rods of purpose?<br/>
Or does thine inextinguishable will<br/>
Stand on the steeps of night with lifted hand,<br/>
Filling the yawning wells of monstrous space<br/>
With mixing thought—drinking up single life<br/>
As in a cup? and from the rending folds<br/>
Of glimmering purpose, the gloom do all thy navied stars<br/>
Slide through the gloom with mystic melody,<br/>
Like wishes on a brow? Oh, is my soul,<br/>
Hung like a dew-drop in thy grassy ways,<br/>
Drawn up again into the rack of change,<br/>
Even through the lustre which created it?<br/>
O mighty one, thou wilt not smite me through<br/>
With scorching wrath, because my spirit stands<br/>
Bewildered in thy circling mysteries.<br/></p>
<p>Here came the passage Robert had heard him repeat, and then the
following paragraph:</p>
<p>Lord, thy strange mysteries come thickening down<br/>
Upon my head like snow-flakes, shutting out<br/>
The happy upper fields with chilly vapour.<br/>
Shall I content my soul with a weak sense<br/>
Of safety? or feed my ravenous hunger with<br/>
Sore-purged hopes, that are not hopes, but fears<br/>
Clad in white raiment?<br/>
I know not but some thin and vaporous fog,<br/>
Fed with the rank excesses of the soul,<br/>
Mocks the devouring hunger of my life<br/>
With satisfaction: lo! the noxious gas<br/>
Feeds the lank ribs of gaunt and ghastly death<br/>
With double emptiness, like a balloon,<br/>
Borne by its lightness o'er the shining lands,<br/>
A wonder and a laughter.<br/>
The creeds lie in the hollow of men's hearts<br/>
Like festering pools glassing their own corruption:<br/>
The slimy eyes stare up with dull approval,<br/>
And answer not when thy bright starry feet<br/>
Move on the watery floors.<br/>
<br/>
O wilt thou hear me when I cry to thee?<br/>
I am a child lost in a mighty forest;<br/>
The air is thick with voices, and strange hands<br/>
Reach through the dusk and pluck me by the skirts.<br/>
There is a voice which sounds like words from home,<br/>
But, as I stumble on to reach it, seems<br/>
To leap from rock to rock. Oh! if it is<br/>
Willing obliquity of sense, descend,<br/>
Heal all my wanderings, take me by the hand,<br/>
And lead me homeward through the shadows.<br/>
Let me not by my wilful acts of pride<br/>
Block up the windows of thy truth, and grow<br/>
A wasted, withered thing, that stumbles on<br/>
Down to the grave with folded hands of sloth<br/>
And leaden confidence.<br/></p>
<p>There was more of it, as my type indicates. Full of faults, I have given
so much to my reader, just as it stood upon Ericson's blotted papers,
the utterance of a true soul 'crying for the light.' But I give also
another of his poems, which Robert read at the same time, revealing
another of his moods when some one of the clouds of holy doubt and
questioning love which so often darkened his sky, did at length</p>
<p>Turn forth her silver lining on the night:<br/></p>
<center>
SONG.
</center>
<p>They are blind and they are dead:<br/>
We will wake them as we go;<br/>
There are words have not been said;<br/>
There are sounds they do not know.<br/>
We will pipe and we will sing—<br/>
With the music and the spring,<br/>
Set their hearts a wondering.<br/>
<br/>
They are tired of what is old:<br/>
We will give it voices new;<br/>
For the half hath not been told<br/>
Of the Beautiful and True.<br/>
Drowsy eyelids shut and sleeping!<br/>
Heavy eyes oppressed with weeping!<br/>
Flashes through the lashes leaping!<br/>
<br/>
Ye that have a pleasant voice,<br/>
Hither come without delay;<br/>
Ye will never have a choice<br/>
Like to that ye have to-day:<br/>
Round the wide world we will go,<br/>
Singing through the frost and snow,<br/>
Till the daisies are in blow.<br/>
<br/>
Ye that cannot pipe or sing,<br/>
Ye must also come with speed;<br/>
Ye must come and with you bring<br/>
Weighty words and weightier deed:<br/>
Helping hands and loving eyes,<br/>
These will make them truly wise—<br/>
Then will be our Paradise.<br/></p>
<p>As Robert read, the sweetness of the rhythm seized upon him, and, almost
unconsciously, he read the last stanza aloud. Looking up from the paper
with a sigh of wonder and delight—there was the pale face of Ericson
gazing at him from the bed! He had risen on one arm, looking like a dead
man called to life against his will, who found the world he had left
already stranger to him than the one into which he had but peeped.</p>
<p>'Yes,' he murmured; 'I could say that once. It's all gone now. Our world
is but our moods.'</p>
<p>He fell back on his pillow. After a little, he murmured again:</p>
<p>'I might fool myself with faith again. So it is better not. I would
not be fooled. To believe the false and be happy is the very belly
of misery. To believe the true and be miserable, is to be true—and
miserable. If there is no God, let me know it. I will not be fooled.
I will not believe in a God that does not exist. Better be miserable
because I am, and cannot help it.—O God!'</p>
<p>Yet in his misery, he cried upon God.</p>
<p>These words came upon Robert with such a shock of sympathy, that they
destroyed his consciousness for the moment, and when he thought about
them, he almost doubted if he had heard them. He rose and approached
the bed. Ericson lay with his eyes closed, and his face contorted as by
inward pain. Robert put a spoonful of wine to his lips. He swallowed it,
opened his eyes, gazed at the boy as if he did not know him, closed them
again, and lay still.</p>
<p>Some people take comfort from the true eyes of a dog—and a precious
thing to the loving heart is the love of even a dumb animal. <SPAN href="#note-6" name="noteref-6"><small>6</small></SPAN> What
comfort then must not such a boy as Robert have been to such a man as
Ericson! Often and often when he was lying asleep as Robert thought,
he was watching the face of his watcher. When the human soul is not yet
able to receive the vision of the God-man, God sometimes—might I not
say always?—reveals himself, or at least gives himself, in some
human being whose face, whose hands are the ministering angels of his
unacknowledged presence, to keep alive the fire of love on the altar
of the heart, until God hath provided the sacrifice—that is, until the
soul is strong enough to draw it from the concealing thicket. Here were
two, each thinking that God had forsaken him, or was not to be found
by him, and each the very love of God, commissioned to tend the other's
heart. In each was he present to the other. The one thought himself the
happiest of mortals in waiting upon his big brother, whose least smile
was joy enough for one day; the other wondered at the unconscious
goodness of the boy, and while he gazed at his ruddy-brown face,
believed in God.</p>
<p>For some time after Ericson was taken ill, he was too depressed and
miserable to ask how he was cared for. But by slow degrees it dawned
upon him that a heart deep and gracious, like that of a woman, watched
over him. True, Robert was uncouth, but his uncouthness was that of a
half-fledged angel. The heart of the man and the heart of the boy were
drawn close together. Long before Ericson was well he loved Robert
enough to be willing to be indebted to him, and would lie pondering—not
how to repay him, but how to return his kindness.</p>
<p>How much Robert's ambition to stand well in the eyes of Miss St. John
contributed to his progress I can only imagine; but certainly his
ministrations to Ericson did not interfere with his Latin and Greek. I
venture to think that they advanced them, for difficulty adds to result,
as the ramming of the powder sends the bullet the further. I have heard,
indeed, that when a carrier wants to help his horse up hill, he sets a
boy on his back.</p>
<p>Ericson made little direct acknowledgment to Robert: his tones, his
gestures, his looks, all thanked him; but he shrunk from words, with
the maidenly shamefacedness that belongs to true feeling. He would even
assume the authoritative, and send him away to his studies, but Robert
knew how to hold his own. The relation of elder brother and younger was
already established between them. Shargar likewise took his share in the
love and the fellowship, worshipping in that he believed.</p>
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