<h2> Chapter 10 </h2><br/>
<br/>
<p>At length the joyful day arrived when I was to cease, in
outward appearance at all events, to be an alien; for
returning at noon from the fields, on entering my cell I
beheld my beautiful new garments—two complete suits,
besides underwear: one, the most soberly colored, intended
only for working hours; but the second, which was for the
house, claimed my first attention. Trembling with eagerness,
I flung off the old tweeds, the cracked boots, and other
vestiges of a civilization which they had perhaps survived,
and soon found that I had been measured with faultless
accuracy; for everything, down to the shoes, fitted to
perfection. Green was the prevailing or ground tint—a
soft sap green; the pattern on it, which was very beautiful,
being a somewhat obscure red, inclining to purple. My delight
culminated when I drew on the hose, which had, like those
worn by the others, a curious design, evidently borrowed from
the skin of some kind of snake. The ground color was light
green, almost citron yellow, in fact, and the pattern a
bright maroon red, with bronze reflections.</p>
<p>I had no sooner arrayed myself than, with a flushed face and
palpitating heart, I flew to exhibit myself to my friends,
and found them assembled and waiting to see and admire the
result of their work. The pleasure I saw reflected in their
transparent faces increased my happiness a hundredfold, and I
quite astonished them with the torrent of eloquence in which
I expressed my overflowing gratitude.</p>
<p>"Now, tell me one secret," I exclaimed, when the excitement
began to abate a little. "Why is green the principal color in
my clothes, when no other person in the house wears more than
a very little of it?"</p>
<p>I had no sooner spoken than I heartily wished that I had held
my peace; for it all at once occurred to me that green was
perhaps the color for an alien or mere hireling, in which
light they perhaps regarded me.</p>
<p>"Oh, Smith, can you not guess so simple a thing?" said Edra,
placing her white hands on my shoulders and smiling straight
into my face.</p>
<p>How beautiful she looked, standing there with her eyes so
near to mine! "Tell me why, Edra?" I said, still with a
lingering apprehension.</p>
<p>"Why, look at the color of my eyes and skin—would this
green tint be suitable for me to wear?"</p>
<p>"Oh, is that the reason!" cried I, immensely relieved. "I
think, Edra, you would look very beautiful in any color that
is on the earth, or in the rainbow above the earth. But am I
so different from you all?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, quite different—have you never looked at
yourself? Your skin is whiter and redder, and your hair has a
very different color. It will look better when it grows long,
I think. And your eyes—do you know that they never
change! for when we look at you closely they are still
blue-gray, and not green."</p>
<p>"No; I wish they were," said I. "Now I shall value my clothes
a hundred times more, since you have taken so much pains to
make them—well, what shall I say?—harmonize, I
suppose, with the peculiar color of my mug. Dash it all, I'm
blundering again! I mean—I mean—don't you
know——"</p>
<p>Edra laughed and gave it up. Then we all laughed; for now
evidently my blundering did not so much matter, since I had
shed my outer integument, and come forth like a snake (with a
divided tail) in a brand new skin.</p>
<p>Presently I missed Yoletta from the room, and desiring above
all things to have some word of congratulation from her lips,
I went off to seek her. She was standing under the portico
waiting for me. "Come," she said, and proceeded to lead me
into the music-room, where we sat down on one of the couches
close to the dais; there she produced some large white
tablets, and red chalk pencils or crayons.</p>
<p>"Now, Smith, I am going to begin teaching you," said she,
with the grave air of a young schoolmistress; "and every
afternoon, when your work is done, you must come to me here."</p>
<p>"I hope I am very stupid, and that it will take me a long
time to learn," said I.</p>
<p>"Oh"—she laughed—"do you think it will be so
pleasant sitting by me here? I am glad you think that; but if
you prefer me for a teacher you must not try to be stupid,
because if you do I shall ask some one else to take my
place."</p>
<p>"Would you really do that, Yoletta?"</p>
<p>"Yes. Shall I tell you why? Because I have a quick, impatient
temper. Everything wrong I have ever done, for which I have
been punished, has been through my hasty temper."</p>
<p>"And have you ever undergone that sad punishment of being
shut up by yourself for many days, Yoletta?"</p>
<p>"Yes, often; for what other punishment is there? But oh, I
hope it will never happen again, because I think—I know
that I suffer more than any one can imagine. To tread on the
grass, to feel the sun and wind on my face, to see the earth
and sky and animals—this is like life to me; and when I
am shut up alone, every day seems—oh, a year at least!"
She did not know how much dearer this confession of one
little human weakness made her seem to me. "Come, let us
begin," she said. "I waited for your new clothes to be
finished, and we must make up for lost time."</p>
<p>"But do you know, Yoletta, that you have not said anything
about them? Do I look nice; and will you like me any better
now?"</p>
<p>"Yes, much better. You were a poor caterpillar before; I
liked you a little because I knew what a pretty butterfly you
would be in time. I helped to make your wings. Now, listen."</p>
<p>For two hours she taught me, making her red letters or marks,
which I copied on my tablet, and explaining them to me; and
at the conclusion of the lesson, I had got a general idea
that the writing was to a great extent phonographic, and that
I was in for rather a tough job.</p>
<p>"Do you think that you will be able to teach me to sing
also?" I asked, when she had put the tablets aside.</p>
<p>The memory of that miserable failure, when I "had led the
singing," was a constant sore in my mind. I had begun to
think that I had not done myself justice on that memorable
occasion, and the desire to make another trial under more
favorable circumstances was very strong in me.</p>
<p>She looked a little startled at my question, but said
nothing.</p>
<p>"I know now," I continued pleadingly, "that you all sing
softly. If you will only consent to try me once I promise to
stick like cobbler's wax—I beg your pardon, I mean I
will endeavor to adhere to the morendo and perdendosi
style—don't you know? What am I saying! But I promise
you, Yoletta, I shan't frighten you, if you will only let me
try and sing to you once."</p>
<p>She turned from me with a somewhat clouded expression of
face, and walked with slow steps to the dais, and placing her
hands on the keys, caused two of the small globes to revolve,
sending soft waves of sound through the room.</p>
<p>I advanced towards her, but she raised her hand
apprehensively. "No, no, no; stand there," she said, "and
sing low."</p>
<p>It was hard to see her troubled face and obey, but I was not
going to bellow at her like a bull, and I had set my heart on
this trial. For the last three days, while working in the
fields, I had been incessantly practicing my dear old master
Campana's exquisite <i>M'appar sulla tomba</i>, the only
melody I happened to know which had any resemblance to their
divine music. To my surprise she seemed to play as I sang a
suitable accompaniment on the globes, which aided and
encouraged me, and, although singing in a subdued tone, I
felt that I had never sung so well before. When I finished, I
quite expected some word of praise, or to be asked why I had
not sung this melody on that unhappy evening when I was asked
to lead; but she spoke no word.</p>
<p>"Will you sing something now?" I said.</p>
<p>"Not now—this evening," she replied absently, slowly
walking across the floor with eyes cast down.</p>
<p>"What are you thinking of, Yoletta, that you look so
serious?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Nothing," she returned, a little impatiently.</p>
<p>"You look very solemn about nothing, then. But you have not
said one word about my singing—did you not like it?"</p>
<p>"Your singing? Oh no! It was a pleasant-tasting little kernel
in a very rough rind—I should like one without the
other."</p>
<p>"You talk in riddles, Yoletta; but I'm afraid the answers to
them would not sound very flattering to me. But if you would
like to know the song I shall be only too glad to teach it to
you. The words are in Italian, but I can translate them."</p>
<p>"The words?" she said absently.</p>
<p>"The words of the song," I said.</p>
<p>"I do not know what you mean by the words of a song. Do not
speak to me now, Smith."</p>
<p>"Oh, very well," said I, thinking it all very strange, and
sitting down I divided my attention between my beautiful hose
and Yoletta, still slowly pacing the floor with that absent
look on her face.</p>
<p>At length the curious mood changed, but I did not venture to
talk any more about music, and before very long we repaired
to the eating-room, where, for the next two or three hours,
we occupied ourselves very agreeably with those processes
which, some new theorist informs us, constitute our chief
pleasure in life.</p>
<p>That evening I overheard a curious little dialogue. The
father of the house, as I had now grown accustomed to call
our head, after rising from his seat, stood for a few minutes
talking near me, while Yoletta, with her hand on his arm,
waited for him to finish. When he had done speaking, and
turned to her, she said in a low voice, which I, however,
overheard: "Father, I shall lead to-night."</p>
<p>He put his hand on her head, and, looking down, studied her
upturned face. "Ah, my daughter," he said with a smile,
"shall I guess what has inspired you to-day? You have been
listening to the passage birds. I also heard them this
morning passing in flocks. And you have been following them
in thought far away into those sun-bright lands where winter
never comes."</p>
<p>"No, father," she returned, "I have only been a little way
from home in thought—only to that spot where the grass
has not yet grown to hide the ashes and loose mold." He
stooped and kissed her forehead, and then left the room; and
she, never noticing the hungry look with which I witnessed
the tender caress, also went away.</p>
<p>That some person was supposed to lead the singing every
evening I knew, but it was impossible for me ever to discover
who the leader was; now, however, after overhearing this
conversation, I knew that on this particular occasion it
would be Yoletta, and in spite of the very poor opinion she
had expressed of my musical abilities, I was prepared to
admire the performance more than I had ever done before.</p>
<p>It commenced in the usual mysterious and indefinable manner;
but after a time, when it began to shape itself into
melodies, the idea possessed me that I was listening to
strains once familiar, but long unheard and forgotten. At
length I discovered that this was Campana's music, only not
as I had ever heard it sung; for the melody of <i>M'appar
sulla tomba</i> had been so transmuted and etherealized, as
it were, that the composer himself would have listened in
wondering ecstasy to the mournful strains, which had passed
through the alembic of their more delicately organized minds.
Listening, I remembered with an unaccountable feeling of
sadness, that poor Campana had recently died in London; and
almost at the same moment there came to me a remembrance of
my beloved mother, whose early death was my first great grief
in boyhood. All the songs I had ever heard her sing came back
to me, ringing in my mind with a wonderful joy, but ever
ending in a strange, funereal sadness. And not only my
mother, but many a dear one besides returned "in beauty from
the dust" appeared to be present—white-haired old men
who had spoken treasured words to me in bygone years;
schoolfellows and other boyish friends and companions; and
men, too, in the prime of life, of whose premature death in
this or that far-off region of the world-wide English empire
I had heard from time to time. They came back to me, until
the whole room seemed filled with a pale, shadowy procession,
moving past me to the sound of that mysterious melody.
Through all the evening it came back, in a hundred
bewildering disguises, filling me with a melancholy
infinitely precious, which was yet almost more than my heart
could bear. Again and yet again that despairing
<i>Ah-i-me</i> fell like a long shuddering sob from the
revolving globes, and from voices far and near, to be taken
up and borne yet further away by far-off, dying sounds, yet
again responded to by nearer, clearer voices, in tones which
seemed wrung "from the depths of some divine despair"; then
to pass away, but not wholly pass, for all the hidden cells
were stirred, and the vibrating air, like mysterious,
invisible hands, swept the suspended strings, until the
exquisite bliss and pain of it made me tremble and shed
tears, as I sat there in the dark, wondering, as men will
wonder at such moments, what this tempest of the soul which
music wakes in us can mean: whether it is merely a growth of
this our earth-life, or a something added, a divine hunger of
the heart which is part of our immortality.</p>
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