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<h2> 2. VI. THE PAST SHINES IN THE PRESENT </h2>
<p>It was the evening of Pierston's arrival at Sylvania Castle, a dignified
manor-house in a nook by the cliffs, with modern castellations and
battlements; and he had walked through the rooms, about the lawn, and into
the surrounding plantation of elms, which on this island of treeless rock
lent a unique character to the enclosure. In name, nature, and accessories
the property within the girdling wall formed a complete antithesis to
everything in its precincts. To find other trees between Pebble-bank and
Beal, it was necessary to recede a little in time—to dig down to a
loose stratum of the underlying stone-beds, where a forest of conifers lay
as petrifactions, their heads all in one direction, as blown down by a
gale in the Secondary geologic epoch.</p>
<p>Dusk had closed in, and he now proceeded with what was, after all, the
real business of his sojourn. The two servants who had been left to take
care of the house were in their own quarters, and he went out unobserved.
Crossing a hollow overhung by the budding boughs he approached an empty
garden-house of Elizabethan design, which stood on the outer wall of the
grounds, and commanded by a window the fronts of the nearest cottages.
Among them was the home of the resuscitated Avice.</p>
<p>He had chosen this moment for his outlook through knowing that the
villagers were in no hurry to pull down their blinds at nightfall. And, as
he had divined, the inside of the young woman's living-room was visible to
him as formerly, illuminated by the rays of its own lamp.</p>
<p>A subdued thumping came every now and then from the apartment. She was
ironing linen on a flannel table-cloth, a row of such apparel hanging on a
clothes-horse by the fire. Her face had been pale when he encountered her,
but now it was warm and pink with her exertions and the heat of the stove.
Yet it was in perfect and passionless repose, which imparted a Minerva
cast to the profile. When she glanced up, her lineaments seemed to have
all the soul and heart that had characterized her mother's, and had been
with her a true index of the spirit within. Could it be possible that in
this case the manifestation was fictitious? He had met with many such
examples of hereditary persistence without the qualities signified by the
traits. He unconsciously hoped that it was at least not entirely so here.</p>
<p>The room was less furnished than when he had last beheld it. The 'bo-fet,'
or double corner-cupboard, where the china was formerly kept, had
disappeared, its place being taken by a plain board. The tall old clock,
with its ancient oak carcase, arched brow, and humorous mouth, was also
not to be seen, a cheap, white-dialled specimen doing its work. What these
displacements might betoken saddened his humanity less than it cheered his
primitive instinct in pointing out how her necessities might bring them
together.</p>
<p>Having fixed his residence near her for some lengthy time he felt in no
hurry to obtrude his presence just now, and went indoors. That this girl's
frame was doomed to be a real embodiment of that olden seductive one—that
Protean dream-creature, who had never seen fit to irradiate the mother's
image till it became a mere memory after dissolution—he doubted less
every moment.</p>
<p>There was an uneasiness in recognizing such. There was something abnormal
in his present proclivity. A certain sanity had, after all, accompanied
his former idealizing passions: the Beloved had seldom informed a
personality which, while enrapturing his soul, simultaneously shocked his
intellect. A change, perhaps, had come.</p>
<p>It was a fine morning on the morrow. Walking in the grounds towards the
gate he saw Avice entering his hired castle with a broad oval
wicker-basket covered with a white cloth, which burden she bore round to
the back door. Of course, she washed for his own household: he had not
thought of that. In the morning sunlight she appeared rather as a sylph
than as a washerwoman; and he could not but think that the slightness of
her figure was as ill adapted to this occupation as her mother's had been.</p>
<p>But, after all, it was not the washerwoman that he saw now. In front of
her, on the surface of her, was shining out that more real, more
inter-penetrating being whom he knew so well! The occupation of the
subserving minion, the blemishes of the temporary creature who formed the
background, were of the same account in the presentation of the
indispensable one as the supporting posts and framework in a pyrotechnic
display.</p>
<p>She left the house and went homeward by a path of which he was not aware,
having probably changed her course because she had seen him standing
there. It meant nothing, for she had hardly become acquainted with him;
yet that she should have avoided him was a new experience. He had no
opportunity for a further study of her by distant observation, and hit
upon a pretext for bringing her face to face with him. He found fault with
his linen, and directed that the laundress should be sent for.</p>
<p>'She is rather young, poor little thing,' said the housemaid
apologetically. 'But since her mother's death she has enough to do to keep
above water, and we make shift with her. But I'll tell her, sir.'</p>
<p>'I will see her myself. Send her in when she comes,' said Pierston.</p>
<p>One morning, accordingly, when he was answering a spiteful criticism of a
late work of his, he was told that she waited his pleasure in the hall. He
went out.</p>
<p>'About the washing,' said the sculptor stiffly. 'I am a very particular
person, and I wish no preparation of lime to be used.'</p>
<p>'I didn't know folks used it,' replied the maiden, in a scared and
reserved tone, without looking at him.</p>
<p>'That's all right. And then, the mangling smashes the buttons.'</p>
<p>'I haven't got a mangle, sir,' she murmured.</p>
<p>'Ah! that's satisfactory. And I object to so much borax in the starch.'</p>
<p>'I don't put any,' Avice returned in the same close way; 'never heard the
name o't afore!'</p>
<p>'O I see.'</p>
<p>All this time Pierston was thinking of the girl—or as the scientific
might say, Nature was working her plans for the next generation under the
cloak of a dialogue on linen. He could not read her individual character,
owing to the confusing effect of her likeness to a woman whom he had
valued too late. He could not help seeing in her all that he knew of
another, and veiling in her all that did not harmonize with his sense of
metempsychosis.</p>
<p>The girl seemed to think of nothing but the business in hand. She had
answered to the point, and was hardly aware of his sex or of his shape.</p>
<p>'I knew your mother, Avice,' he said. 'You remember my telling you so?'</p>
<p>'Yes.'</p>
<p>'Well—I have taken this house for two or three months, and you will
be very useful to me. You still live just outside the wall?'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir,' said the self-contained girl.</p>
<p>Demurely and dispassionately she turned to leave—this pretty
creature with features so still. There was something strange in seeing
move off thus that form which he knew passing well, she who was once so
throbbingly alive to his presence that, not many yards from this spot, she
had flung her arms round him and given him a kiss which, despised in its
freshness, had revived in him latterly as the dearest kiss of all his
life. And now this 'daps' of her mother (as they called her in the dialect
here), this perfect copy, why did she turn away?</p>
<p>'Your mother was a refined and well-informed woman, I think I remember?'</p>
<p>'She was, sir; everybody said so.'</p>
<p>'I hope you resemble her.'</p>
<p>She archly shook her head, and drew warily away.</p>
<p>'O! one thing more, Avice. I have not brought much linen, so you must come
to the house every day.'</p>
<p>'Very good, sir.'</p>
<p>'You won't forget that?'</p>
<p>'O no.'</p>
<p>Then he let her go. He was a town man, and she an artless islander, yet he
had opened himself out, like a sea-anemone, without disturbing the epiderm
of her nature. It was monstrous that a maiden who had assumed the
personality of her of his tenderest memory should be so impervious.
Perhaps it was he who was wanting. Avice might be Passion masking as
Indifference, because he was so many years older in outward show.</p>
<p>This brought him to the root of it. In his heart he was not a day older
than when he had wooed the mother at the daughter's present age. His
record moved on with the years, his sentiments stood still.</p>
<p>When he beheld those of his fellows who were defined as buffers and fogeys—imperturbable,
matter-of-fact, slightly ridiculous beings, past masters in the art of
populating homes, schools, and colleges, and present adepts in the science
of giving away brides—how he envied them, assuming them to feel as
they appeared to feel, with their commerce and their politics, their
glasses and their pipes. They had got past the distracting currents of
passionateness, and were in the calm waters of middle-aged philosophy. But
he, their contemporary, was tossed like a cork hither and thither upon the
crest of every fancy, precisely as he had been tossed when he was half his
present age, with the burden now of double pain to himself in his growing
vision of all as vanity.</p>
<p>Avice had gone, and he saw her no more that day. Since he could not again
call upon her, she was as inaccessible as if she had entered the military
citadel on the hill-top beyond them.</p>
<p>In the evening he went out and paced down the lane to the Red King's
castle overhanging the cliff, beside whose age the castle he occupied was
but a thing of yesterday. Below the castle precipice lay enormous blocks,
which had fallen from it, and several of them were carved over with names
and initials. He knew the spot and the old trick well, and by searching in
the faint moon-rays he found a pair of names which, as a boy, he himself
had cut. They were 'AVICE' and 'JOCELYN'—Avice Caro's and his own.
The letters were now nearly worn away by the weather and the brine. But
close by, in quite fresh letters, stood 'ANN AVICE,' coupled with the name
'ISAAC.' They could not have been there more than two or three years, and
the 'Ann Avice' was probably Avice the Second. Who was Isaac? Some boy
admirer of her child-time doubtless.</p>
<p>He retraced his steps, and passed the Caros' house towards his own. The
revivified Avice animated the dwelling, and the light within the room fell
upon the window. She was just inside that blind.</p>
<p>* * *<br/></p>
<p>Whenever she unexpectedly came to the castle he started, and lost
placidity. It was not at her presence as such, but at the new condition,
which seemed to have something sinister in it. On the other hand, the most
abrupt encounter with him moved her to no emotion as it had moved her
prototype in the old days. She was indifferent to, almost unconscious of,
his propinquity. He was no more than a statue to her; she was a growing
fire to him.</p>
<p>A sudden Sapphic terror of love would ever and anon come upon the
sculptor, when his matured reflecting powers would insist upon informing
him of the fearful lapse from reasonableness that lay in this infatuation.
It threw him into a sweat. What if now, at last, he were doomed to do
penance for his past emotional wanderings (in a material sense) by being
chained in fatal fidelity to an object that his intellect despised? One
night he dreamt that he saw dimly masking behind that young countenance
'the Weaver of Wiles' herself, 'with all her subtle face laughing aloud.'</p>
<p>However, the Well-Beloved was alive again, had been lost and was found. He
was amazed at the change of front in himself. She had worn the guise of
strange women; she had been a woman of every class, from the dignified
daughter of some ecclesiastic or peer to a Nubian Almeh with her
handkerchief, undulating to the beats of the tom-tom; but all these
embodiments had been endowed with a certain smartness, either of the flesh
or spirit: some with wit, a few with talent, and even genius. But the new
impersonation had apparently nothing beyond sex and prettiness. She knew
not how to sport a fan or handkerchief, hardly how to pull on a glove.</p>
<p>But her limited life was innocent, and that went far. Poor little Avice!
her mother's image: there it all lay. After all, her parentage was as good
as his own; it was misfortune that had sent her down to this. Odd as it
seemed to him, her limitations were largely what he loved her for. Her
rejuvenating power over him had ineffable charm. He felt as he had felt
when standing beside her predecessor; but, alas! he was twenty years
further on towards the shade.</p>
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