<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXII </h2>
<p>'A woman's way.'<br/></p>
<p>Haggard cliffs, of every ugly altitude, are as common as sea-fowl along
the line of coast between Exmoor and Land's End; but this outflanked and
encompassed specimen was the ugliest of them all. Their summits are not
safe places for scientific experiment on the principles of air-currents,
as Knight had now found, to his dismay.</p>
<p>He still clutched the face of the escarpment—not with the frenzied
hold of despair, but with a dogged determination to make the most of his
every jot of endurance, and so give the longest possible scope to
Elfride's intentions, whatever they might be.</p>
<p>He reclined hand in hand with the world in its infancy. Not a blade, not
an insect, which spoke of the present, was between him and the past. The
inveterate antagonism of these black precipices to all strugglers for life
is in no way more forcibly suggested than by the paucity of tufts of
grass, lichens, or confervae on their outermost ledges.</p>
<p>Knight pondered on the meaning of Elfride's hasty disappearance, but could
not avoid an instinctive conclusion that there existed but a doubtful hope
for him. As far as he could judge, his sole chance of deliverance lay in
the possibility of a rope or pole being brought; and this possibility was
remote indeed. The soil upon these high downs was left so untended that
they were unenclosed for miles, except by a casual bank or dry wall, and
were rarely visited but for the purpose of collecting or counting the
flock which found a scanty means of subsistence thereon.</p>
<p>At first, when death appeared improbable, because it had never visited him
before, Knight could think of no future, nor of anything connected with
his past. He could only look sternly at Nature's treacherous attempt to
put an end to him, and strive to thwart her.</p>
<p>From the fact that the cliff formed the inner face of the segment of a
huge cylinder, having the sky for a top and the sea for a bottom, which
enclosed the cove to the extent of more than a semicircle, he could see
the vertical face curving round on each side of him. He looked far down
the facade, and realized more thoroughly how it threatened him. Grimness
was in every feature, and to its very bowels the inimical shape was
desolation.</p>
<p>By one of those familiar conjunctions of things wherewith the inanimate
world baits the mind of man when he pauses in moments of suspense,
opposite Knight's eyes was an imbedded fossil, standing forth in low
relief from the rock. It was a creature with eyes. The eyes, dead and
turned to stone, were even now regarding him. It was one of the early
crustaceans called Trilobites. Separated by millions of years in their
lives, Knight and this underling seemed to have met in their death. It was
the single instance within reach of his vision of anything that had ever
been alive and had had a body to save, as he himself had now.</p>
<p>The creature represented but a low type of animal existence, for never in
their vernal years had the plains indicated by those numberless slaty
layers been traversed by an intelligence worthy of the name. Zoophytes,
mollusca, shell-fish, were the highest developments of those ancient
dates. The immense lapses of time each formation represented had known
nothing of the dignity of man. They were grand times, but they were mean
times too, and mean were their relics. He was to be with the small in his
death.</p>
<p>Knight was a geologist; and such is the supremacy of habit over occasion,
as a pioneer of the thoughts of men, that at this dreadful juncture his
mind found time to take in, by a momentary sweep, the varied scenes that
had had their day between this creature's epoch and his own. There is no
place like a cleft landscape for bringing home such imaginings as these.</p>
<p>Time closed up like a fan before him. He saw himself at one extremity of
the years, face to face with the beginning and all the intermediate
centuries simultaneously. Fierce men, clothed in the hides of beasts, and
carrying, for defence and attack, huge clubs and pointed spears, rose from
the rock, like the phantoms before the doomed Macbeth. They lived in
hollows, woods, and mud huts—perhaps in caves of the neighbouring
rocks. Behind them stood an earlier band. No man was there. Huge
elephantine forms, the mastodon, the hippopotamus, the tapir, antelopes of
monstrous size, the megatherium, and the myledon—all, for the
moment, in juxtaposition. Further back, and overlapped by these, were
perched huge-billed birds and swinish creatures as large as horses. Still
more shadowy were the sinister crocodilian outlines—alligators and
other uncouth shapes, culminating in the colossal lizard, the iguanodon.
Folded behind were dragon forms and clouds of flying reptiles: still
underneath were fishy beings of lower development; and so on, till the
lifetime scenes of the fossil confronting him were a present and modern
condition of things. These images passed before Knight's inner eye in less
than half a minute, and he was again considering the actual present. Was
he to die? The mental picture of Elfride in the world, without himself to
cherish her, smote his heart like a whip. He had hoped for deliverance,
but what could a girl do? He dared not move an inch. Was Death really
stretching out his hand? The previous sensation, that it was improbable he
would die, was fainter now.</p>
<p>However, Knight still clung to the cliff.</p>
<p>To those musing weather-beaten West-country folk who pass the greater part
of their days and nights out of doors, Nature seems to have moods in other
than a poetical sense: predilections for certain deeds at certain times,
without any apparent law to govern or season to account for them. She is
read as a person with a curious temper; as one who does not scatter
kindnesses and cruelties alternately, impartially, and in order, but
heartless severities or overwhelming generosities in lawless caprice.
Man's case is always that of the prodigal's favourite or the miser's
pensioner. In her unfriendly moments there seems a feline fun in her
tricks, begotten by a foretaste of her pleasure in swallowing the victim.</p>
<p>Such a way of thinking had been absurd to Knight, but he began to adopt it
now. He was first spitted on to a rock. New tortures followed. The rain
increased, and persecuted him with an exceptional persistency which he was
moved to believe owed its cause to the fact that he was in such a wretched
state already. An entirely new order of things could be observed in this
introduction of rain upon the scene. It rained upwards instead of down.
The strong ascending air carried the rain-drops with it in its race up the
escarpment, coming to him with such velocity that they stuck into his
flesh like cold needles. Each drop was virtually a shaft, and it pierced
him to his skin. The water-shafts seemed to lift him on their points: no
downward rain ever had such a torturing effect. In a brief space he was
drenched, except in two places. These were on the top of his shoulders and
on the crown of his hat.</p>
<p>The wind, though not intense in other situations was strong here. It
tugged at his coat and lifted it. We are mostly accustomed to look upon
all opposition which is not animate, as that of the stolid, inexorable
hand of indifference, which wears out the patience more than the strength.
Here, at any rate, hostility did not assume that slow and sickening form.
It was a cosmic agency, active, lashing, eager for conquest:
determination; not an insensate standing in the way.</p>
<p>Knight had over-estimated the strength of his hands. They were getting
weak already. 'She will never come again; she has been gone ten minutes,'
he said to himself.</p>
<p>This mistake arose from the unusual compression of his experiences just
now: she had really been gone but three.</p>
<p>'As many more minutes will be my end,' he thought.</p>
<p>Next came another instance of the incapacity of the mind to make
comparisons at such times.</p>
<p>'This is a summer afternoon,' he said, 'and there can never have been such
a heavy and cold rain on a summer day in my life before.'</p>
<p>He was again mistaken. The rain was quite ordinary in quantity; the air in
temperature. It was, as is usual, the menacing attitude in which they
approached him that magnified their powers.</p>
<p>He again looked straight downwards, the wind and the water-dashes lifting
his moustache, scudding up his cheeks, under his eyelids, and into his
eyes. This is what he saw down there: the surface of the sea—visually
just past his toes, and under his feet; actually one-eighth of a mile, or
more than two hundred yards, below them. We colour according to our moods
the objects we survey. The sea would have been a deep neutral blue, had
happier auspices attended the gazer it was now no otherwise than
distinctly black to his vision. That narrow white border was foam, he knew
well; but its boisterous tosses were so distant as to appear a pulsation
only, and its plashing was barely audible. A white border to a black sea—his
funeral pall and its edging.</p>
<p>The world was to some extent turned upside down for him. Rain descended
from below. Beneath his feet was aerial space and the unknown; above him
was the firm, familiar ground, and upon it all that he loved best.</p>
<p>Pitiless nature had then two voices, and two only. The nearer was the
voice of the wind in his ears rising and falling as it mauled and thrust
him hard or softly. The second and distant one was the moan of that
unplummetted ocean below and afar—rubbing its restless flank against
the Cliff without a Name.</p>
<p>Knight perseveringly held fast. Had he any faith in Elfride? Perhaps. Love
is faith, and faith, like a gathered flower, will rootlessly live on.</p>
<p>Nobody would have expected the sun to shine on such an evening as this.
Yet it appeared, low down upon the sea. Not with its natural golden
fringe, sweeping the furthest ends of the landscape, not with the strange
glare of whiteness which it sometimes puts on as an alternative to colour,
but as a splotch of vermilion red upon a leaden ground—a red face
looking on with a drunken leer.</p>
<p>Most men who have brains know it, and few are so foolish as to disguise
this fact from themselves or others, even though an ostentatious display
may be called self-conceit. Knight, without showing it much, knew that his
intellect was above the average. And he thought—he could not help
thinking—that his death would be a deliberate loss to earth of good
material; that such an experiment in killing might have been practised
upon some less developed life.</p>
<p>A fancy some people hold, when in a bitter mood, is that inexorable
circumstance only tries to prevent what intelligence attempts. Renounce a
desire for a long-contested position, and go on another tack, and after a
while the prize is thrown at you, seemingly in disappointment that no more
tantalizing is possible.</p>
<p>Knight gave up thoughts of life utterly and entirely, and turned to
contemplate the Dark Valley and the unknown future beyond. Into the
shadowy depths of these speculations we will not follow him. Let it
suffice to state what ensued.</p>
<p>At that moment of taking no more thought for this life, something
disturbed the outline of the bank above him. A spot appeared. It was the
head of Elfride.</p>
<p>Knight immediately prepared to welcome life again.</p>
<p>The expression of a face consigned to utter loneliness, when a friend
first looks in upon it, is moving in the extreme. In rowing seaward to a
light-ship or sea-girt lighthouse, where, without any immediate terror of
death, the inmates experience the gloom of monotonous seclusion, the
grateful eloquence of their countenances at the greeting, expressive of
thankfulness for the visit, is enough to stir the emotions of the most
careless observer.</p>
<p>Knight's upward look at Elfride was of a nature with, but far
transcending, such an instance as this. The lines of his face had deepened
to furrows, and every one of them thanked her visibly. His lips moved to
the word 'Elfride,' though the emotion evolved no sound. His eyes passed
all description in their combination of the whole diapason of eloquence,
from lover's deep love to fellow-man's gratitude for a token of
remembrance from one of his kind.</p>
<p>Elfride had come back. What she had come to do he did not know. She could
only look on at his death, perhaps. Still, she had come back, and not
deserted him utterly, and it was much.</p>
<p>It was a novelty in the extreme to see Henry Knight, to whom Elfride was
but a child, who had swayed her as a tree sways a bird's nest, who
mastered her and made her weep most bitterly at her own insignificance,
thus thankful for a sight of her face. She looked down upon him, her face
glistening with rain and tears. He smiled faintly.</p>
<p>'How calm he is!' she thought. 'How great and noble he is to be so calm!'
She would have died ten times for him then.</p>
<p>The gliding form of the steamboat caught her eye: she heeded it no longer.</p>
<p>'How much longer can you wait?' came from her pale lips and along the wind
to his position.</p>
<p>'Four minutes,' said Knight in a weaker voice than her own.</p>
<p>'But with a good hope of being saved?'</p>
<p>'Seven or eight.'</p>
<p>He now noticed that in her arms she bore a bundle of white linen, and that
her form was singularly attenuated. So preternaturally thin and flexible
was Elfride at this moment, that she appeared to bend under the light
blows of the rain-shafts, as they struck into her sides and bosom, and
splintered into spray on her face. There is nothing like a thorough
drenching for reducing the protuberances of clothes, but Elfride's seemed
to cling to her like a glove.</p>
<p>Without heeding the attack of the clouds further than by raising her hand
and wiping away the spirts of rain when they went more particularly into
her eyes, she sat down and hurriedly began rending the linen into strips.
These she knotted end to end, and afterwards twisted them like the strands
of a cord. In a short space of time she had formed a perfect rope by this
means, six or seven yards long.</p>
<p>'Can you wait while I bind it?' she said, anxiously extending her gaze
down to him.</p>
<p>'Yes, if not very long. Hope has given me a wonderful instalment of
strength.'</p>
<p>Elfride dropped her eyes again, tore the remaining material into narrow
tape-like ligaments, knotted each to each as before, but on a smaller
scale, and wound the lengthy string she had thus formed round and round
the linen rope, which, without this binding, had a tendency to spread
abroad.</p>
<p>'Now,' said Knight, who, watching the proceedings intently, had by this
time not only grasped her scheme, but reasoned further on, 'I can hold
three minutes longer yet. And do you use the time in testing the strength
of the knots, one by one.'</p>
<p>She at once obeyed, tested each singly by putting her foot on the rope
between each knot, and pulling with her hands. One of the knots slipped.</p>
<p>'Oh, think! It would have broken but for your forethought,' Elfride
exclaimed apprehensively.</p>
<p>She retied the two ends. The rope was now firm in every part.</p>
<p>'When you have let it down,' said Knight, already resuming his position of
ruling power, 'go back from the edge of the slope, and over the bank as
far as the rope will allow you. Then lean down, and hold the end with both
hands.'</p>
<p>He had first thought of a safer plan for his own deliverance, but it
involved the disadvantage of possibly endangering her life.</p>
<p>'I have tied it round my waist,' she cried, 'and I will lean directly upon
the bank, holding with my hands as well.'</p>
<p>It was the arrangement he had thought of, but would not suggest.</p>
<p>'I will raise and drop it three times when I am behind the bank,' she
continued, 'to signify that I am ready. Take care, oh, take the greatest
care, I beg you!'</p>
<p>She dropped the rope over him, to learn how much of its length it would be
necessary to expend on that side of the bank, went back, and disappeared
as she had done before.</p>
<p>The rope was trailing by Knight's shoulders. In a few moments it twitched
three times.</p>
<p>He waited yet a second or two, then laid hold.</p>
<p>The incline of this upper portion of the precipice, to the length only of
a few feet, useless to a climber empty-handed, was invaluable now. Not
more than half his weight depended entirely on the linen rope. Half a
dozen extensions of the arms, alternating with half a dozen seizures of
the rope with his feet, brought him up to the level of the soil.</p>
<p>He was saved, and by Elfride.</p>
<p>He extended his cramped limbs like an awakened sleeper, and sprang over
the bank.</p>
<p>At sight of him she leapt to her feet with almost a shriek of joy.
Knight's eyes met hers, and with supreme eloquence the glance of each told
a long-concealed tale of emotion in that short half-moment. Moved by an
impulse neither could resist, they ran together and into each other's
arms.</p>
<p>At the moment of embracing, Elfride's eyes involuntarily flashed towards
the Puffin steamboat. It had doubled the point, and was no longer to be
seen.</p>
<p>An overwhelming rush of exultation at having delivered the man she revered
from one of the most terrible forms of death, shook the gentle girl to the
centre of her soul. It merged in a defiance of duty to Stephen, and a
total recklessness as to plighted faith. Every nerve of her will was now
in entire subjection to her feeling—volition as a guiding power had
forsaken her. To remain passive, as she remained now, encircled by his
arms, was a sufficiently complete result—a glorious crown to all the
years of her life. Perhaps he was only grateful, and did not love her. No
matter: it was infinitely more to be even the slave of the greater than
the queen of the less. Some such sensation as this, though it was not
recognized as a finished thought, raced along the impressionable soul of
Elfride.</p>
<p>Regarding their attitude, it was impossible for two persons to go nearer
to a kiss than went Knight and Elfride during those minutes of impulsive
embrace in the pelting rain. Yet they did not kiss. Knight's peculiarity
of nature was such that it would not allow him to take advantage of the
unguarded and passionate avowal she had tacitly made.</p>
<p>Elfride recovered herself, and gently struggled to be free.</p>
<p>He reluctantly relinquished her, and then surveyed her from crown to toe.
She seemed as small as an infant. He perceived whence she had obtained the
rope.</p>
<p>'Elfride, my Elfride!' he exclaimed in gratified amazement.</p>
<p>'I must leave you now,' she said, her face doubling its red, with an
expression between gladness and shame 'You follow me, but at some
distance.'</p>
<p>'The rain and wind pierce you through; the chill will kill you. God bless
you for such devotion! Take my coat and put it on.'</p>
<p>'No; I shall get warm running.'</p>
<p>Elfride had absolutely nothing between her and the weather but her
exterior robe or 'costume.' The door had been made upon a woman's wit, and
it had found its way out. Behind the bank, whilst Knight reclined upon the
dizzy slope waiting for death, she had taken off her whole clothing, and
replaced only her outer bodice and skirt. Every thread of the remainder
lay upon the ground in the form of a woollen and cotton rope.</p>
<p>'I am used to being wet through,' she added. 'I have been drenched on
Pansy dozens of times. Good-bye till we meet, clothed and in our right
minds, by the fireside at home!'</p>
<p>She then ran off from him through the pelting rain like a hare; or more
like a pheasant when, scampering away with a lowered tail, it has a mind
to fly, but does not. Elfride was soon out of sight.</p>
<p>Knight felt uncomfortably wet and chilled, but glowing with fervour
nevertheless. He fully appreciated Elfride's girlish delicacy in refusing
his escort in the meagre habiliments she wore, yet felt that necessary
abstraction of herself for a short half-hour as a most grievous loss to
him.</p>
<p>He gathered up her knotted and twisted plumage of linen, lace, and
embroidery work, and laid it across his arm. He noticed on the ground an
envelope, limp and wet. In endeavouring to restore this to its proper
shape, he loosened from the envelope a piece of paper it had contained,
which was seized by the wind in falling from Knight's hand. It was blown
to the right, blown to the left—it floated to the edge of the cliff
and over the sea, where it was hurled aloft. It twirled in the air, and
then flew back over his head.</p>
<p>Knight followed the paper, and secured it. Having done so, he looked to
discover if it had been worth securing.</p>
<p>The troublesome sheet was a banker's receipt for two hundred pounds,
placed to the credit of Miss Swancourt, which the impractical girl had
totally forgotten she carried with her.</p>
<p>Knight folded it as carefully as its moist condition would allow, put it
in his pocket, and followed Elfride.</p>
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