[To Mrs. WILLIAM H. GRENFELL of TAPLOW
court—Lady DESBOROUGH]
It was the birthday of the Infanta.
She was just twelve years of age, and the sun was
shining brightly in the gardens of the palace.
Although she was a real Princess and
the Infanta of Spain, she had only one birthday every
year, just like the children of quite poor people,
so it was naturally a matter of great importance to
the whole country that she should have a really fine
day for the occasion. And a really fine day
it certainly was. The tall striped tulips stood
straight up upon their stalks, like long rows of soldiers,
and looked defiantly across the grass at the roses,
and said: ‘We are quite as splendid as
you are now.’ The purple butterflies fluttered
about with gold dust on their wings, visiting each
flower in turn; the little lizards crept out of the
crevices of the wall, and lay basking in the white
glare; and the pomegranates split and cracked with
the heat, and showed their bleeding red hearts.
Even the pale yellow lemons, that hung in such profusion
from the mouldering trellis and along the dim arcades,
seemed to have caught a richer colour from the wonderful
sunlight, and the magnolia trees opened their great
globe-like blossoms of folded ivory, and filled the
air with a sweet heavy perfume.
The little Princess herself walked
up and down the terrace with her companions, and played
at hide and seek round the stone vases and the old
moss-grown statues. On ordinary days she was
only allowed to play with children of her own rank,
so she had always to play alone, but her birthday
was an exception, and the King had given orders that
she was to invite any of her young friends whom she
liked to come and amuse themselves with her.
There was a stately grace about these slim Spanish
children as they glided about, the boys with their
large-plumed hats and short fluttering cloaks, the
girls holding up the trains of their long brocaded
gowns, and shielding the sun from their eyes with
huge fans of black and silver. But the Infanta
was the most graceful of all, and the most tastefully
attired, after the somewhat cumbrous fashion of the
day. Her robe was of grey satin, the skirt and
the wide puffed sleeves heavily embroidered with silver,
and the stiff corset studded with rows of fine pearls.
Two tiny slippers with big pink rosettes peeped out
beneath her dress as she walked. Pink and pearl
was her great gauze fan, and in her hair, which like
an aureole of faded gold stood out stiffly round her
pale little face, she had a beautiful white rose.
From a window in the palace the sad
melancholy King watched them. Behind him stood
his brother, Don Pedro of Aragon, whom he hated, and
his confessor, the Grand Inquisitor of Granada, sat
by his side. Sadder even than usual was the
King, for as he looked at the Infanta bowing with
childish gravity to the assembling counters, or laughing
behind her fan at the grim Duchess of Albuquerque who
always accompanied her, he thought of the young Queen,
her mother, who but a short time before—so
it seemed to him—had come from the gay
country of France, and had withered away in the sombre
splendour of the Spanish court, dying just six months
after the birth of her child, and before she had seen
the almonds blossom twice in the orchard, or plucked
the second year’s fruit from the old gnarled
fig-tree that stood in the centre of the now grass-grown
courtyard. So great had been his love for her
that he had not suffered even the grave to hide her
from him. She had been embalmed by a Moorish
physician, who in return for this service had been
granted his life, which for heresy and suspicion of
magical practices had been already forfeited, men
said, to the Holy Office, and her body was still lying
on its tapestried bier in the black marble chapel
of the Palace, just as the monks had borne her in on
that windy March day nearly twelve years before.
Once every month the King, wrapped in a dark cloak
and with a muffled lantern in his hand, went in and
knelt by her side calling out, ’Mi reina!
Mi reina!’ and sometimes breaking through the
formal etiquette that in Spain governs every separate
action of life, and sets limits even to the sorrow
of a King, he would clutch at the pale jewelled hands
in a wild agony of grief, and try to wake by his mad
kisses the cold painted face.
To-day he seemed to see her again,
as he had seen her first at the Castle of Fontainebleau,
when he was but fifteen years of age, and she still
younger. They had been formally betrothed on
that occasion by the Papal Nuncio in the presence
of the French King and all the Court, and he had returned
to the Escurial bearing with him a little ringlet
of yellow hair, and the memory of two childish lips
bending down to kiss his hand as he stepped into his
carriage. Later on had followed the marriage,
hastily performed at Burgos, a small town on the frontier
between the two countries, and the grand public entry
into Madrid with the customary celebration of high
mass at the Church of La Atocha, and a more than usually
solemn auto-da-fe, in which nearly three hundred heretics,
amongst whom were many Englishmen, had been delivered
over to the secular arm to be burned.
Certainly he had loved her madly,
and to the ruin, many thought, of his country, then
at war with England for the possession of the empire
of the New World. He had hardly ever permitted
her to be out of his sight; for her, he had forgotten,
or seemed to have forgotten, all grave affairs of
State; and, with that terrible blindness that passion
brings upon its servants, he had failed to notice
that the elaborate ceremonies by which he sought to
please her did but aggravate the strange malady from
which she suffered. When she died he was, for
a time, like one bereft of reason. Indeed, there
is no doubt but that he would have formally abdicated
and retired to the great Trappist monastery at Granada,
of which he was already titular Prior, had he not
been afraid to leave the little Infanta at the mercy
of his brother, whose cruelty, even in Spain, was
notorious, and who was suspected by many of having
caused the Queen’s death by means of a pair of
poisoned gloves that he had presented to her on the
occasion of her visiting his castle in Aragon.
Even after the expiration of the three years of public
mourning that he had ordained throughout his whole
dominions by royal edict, he would never suffer his
ministers to speak about any new alliance, and when
the Emperor himself sent to him, and offered him the
hand of the lovely Archduchess of Bohemia, his niece,
in marriage, he bade the ambassadors tell their master
that the King of Spain was already wedded to Sorrow,
and that though she was but a barren bride he loved
her better than Beauty; an answer that cost his crown
the rich provinces of the Netherlands, which soon after,
at the Emperor’s instigation, revolted against
him under the leadership of some fanatics of the Reformed
Church.
His whole married life, with its fierce,
fiery-coloured joys and the terrible agony of its
sudden ending, seemed to come back to him to-day as
he watched the Infanta playing on the terrace.
She had all the Queen’s pretty petulance of
manner, the same wilful way of tossing her head, the
same proud curved beautiful mouth, the same wonderful
smile—vrai sourire de France indeed—as
she glanced up now and then at the window, or stretched
out her little hand for the stately Spanish gentlemen
to kiss. But the shrill laughter of the children
grated on his ears, and the bright pitiless sunlight
mocked his sorrow, and a dull odour of strange spices,
spices such as embalmers use, seemed to taint—or
was it fancy?—the clear morning air.
He buried his face in his hands, and when the Infanta
looked up again the curtains had been drawn, and the
King had retired.
She made a little moue of disappointment,
and shrugged her shoulders. Surely he might
have stayed with her on her birthday. What did
the stupid State-affairs matter? Or had he gone
to that gloomy chapel, where the candles were always
burning, and where she was never allowed to enter?
How silly of him, when the sun was shining so brightly,
and everybody was so happy! Besides, he would
miss the sham bull-fight for which the trumpet was
already sounding, to say nothing of the puppet-show
and the other wonderful things. Her uncle and
the Grand Inquisitor were much more sensible.
They had come out on the terrace, and paid her nice
compliments. So she tossed her pretty head, and
taking Don Pedro by the hand, she walked slowly down
the steps towards a long pavilion of purple silk that
had been erected at the end of the garden, the other
children following in strict order of precedence,
those who had the longest names going first.
A procession of noble boys, fantastically
dressed as toreadors, came out to meet her, and the
young Count of Tierra-Nueva, a wonderfully handsome
lad of about fourteen years of age, uncovering his
head with all the grace of a born hidalgo and grandee
of Spain, led her solemnly in to a little gilt and
ivory chair that was placed on a raised dais above
the arena. The children grouped themselves all
round, fluttering their big fans and whispering to
each other, and Don Pedro and the Grand Inquisitor
stood laughing at the entrance. Even the Duchess—the
Camerera-Mayor as she was called—a thin,
hard-featured woman with a yellow ruff, did not look
quite so bad-tempered as usual, and something like
a chill smile flitted across her wrinkled face and
twitched her thin bloodless lips.
It certainly was a marvellous bull-fight,
and much nicer, the Infanta thought, than the real
bull-fight that she had been brought to see at Seville,
on the occasion of the visit of the Duke of Parma
to her father. Some of the boys pranced about
on richly-caparisoned hobby-horses brandishing long
javelins with gay streamers of bright ribands attached
to them; others went on foot waving their scarlet
cloaks before the bull, and vaulting lightly over
the barrier when he charged them; and as for the bull
himself, he was just like a live bull, though he was
only made of wicker-work and stretched hide, and
sometimes insisted on running round the arena on his
hind legs, which no live bull ever dreams of doing.
He made a splendid fight of it too, and the children
got so excited that they stood up upon the benches,
and waved their lace handkerchiefs and cried out:
Bravo toro! Bravo toro! just as sensibly as
if they had been grown-up people. At last, however,
after a prolonged combat, during which several of the
hobby-horses were gored through and through, and,
their riders dismounted, the young Count of Tierra-Nueva
brought the bull to his knees, and having obtained
permission from the Infanta to give the coup de grace,
he plunged his wooden sword into the neck of the animal
with such violence that the head came right off, and
disclosed the laughing face of little Monsieur de
Lorraine, the son of the French Ambassador at Madrid.
The arena was then cleared amidst
much applause, and the dead hobbyhorses dragged solemnly
away by two Moorish pages in yellow and black liveries,
and after a short interlude, during which a French
posture-master performed upon the tightrope, some Italian
puppets appeared in the semi-classical tragedy of Sophonisba
on the stage of a small theatre that had been built
up for the purpose. They acted so well, and their
gestures were so extremely natural, that at the close
of the play the eyes of the Infanta were quite dim
with tears. Indeed some of the children really
cried, and had to be comforted with sweetmeats, and
the Grand Inquisitor himself was so affected that
he could not help saying to Don Pedro that it seemed
to him intolerable that things made simply out of wood
and coloured wax, and worked mechanically by wires,
should be so unhappy and meet with such terrible misfortunes.
An African juggler followed, who brought
in a large flat basket covered with a red cloth, and
having placed it in the centre of the arena, he took
from his turban a curious reed pipe, and blew through
it. In a few moments the cloth began to move,
and as the pipe grew shriller and shriller two green
and gold snakes put out their strange wedge-shaped
heads and rose slowly up, swaying to and fro with
the music as a plant sways in the water. The
children, however, were rather frightened at their
spotted hoods and quick darting tongues, and were
much more pleased when the juggler made a tiny orange-tree
grow out of the sand and bear pretty white blossoms
and clusters of real fruit; and when he took the fan
of the little daughter of the Marquess de Las-Torres,
and changed it into a blue bird that flew all round
the pavilion and sang, their delight and amazement
knew no bounds. The solemn minuet, too, performed
by the dancing boys from the church of Nuestra Senora
Del Pilar, was charming. The Infanta had never
before seen this wonderful ceremony which takes place
every year at Maytime in front of the high altar of
the Virgin, and in her honour; and indeed none of
the royal family of Spain had entered the great cathedral
of Saragossa since a mad priest, supposed by many
to have been in the pay of Elizabeth of England, had
tried to administer a poisoned wafer to the Prince
of the Asturias. So she had known only by hearsay
of ‘Our Lady’s Dance,’ as it was
called, and it certainly was a beautiful sight.
The boys wore old-fashioned court dresses of white
velvet, and their curious three-cornered hats were
fringed with silver and surmounted with huge plumes
of ostrich feathers, the dazzling whiteness of their
costumes, as they moved about in the sunlight, being
still more accentuated by their swarthy faces and
long black hair. Everybody was fascinated by
the grave dignity with which they moved through the
intricate figures of the dance, and by the elaborate
grace of their slow gestures, and stately bows, and
when they had finished their performance and doffed
their great plumed hats to the Infanta, she acknowledged
their reverence with much courtesy, and made a vow
that she would send a large wax candle to the shrine
of Our Lady of Pilar in return for the pleasure that
she had given her.
A troop of handsome Egyptians—as
the gipsies were termed in those days—then
advanced into the arena, and sitting down cross-legs,
in a circle, began to play softly upon their zithers,
moving their bodies to the tune, and humming, almost
below their breath, a low dreamy air. When they
caught sight of Don Pedro they scowled at him, and
some of them looked terrified, for only a few weeks
before he had had two of their tribe hanged for sorcery
in the market-place at Seville, but the pretty Infanta
charmed them as she leaned back peeping over her fan
with her great blue eyes, and they felt sure that
one so lovely as she was could never be cruel to anybody.
So they played on very gently and just touching the
cords of the zithers with their long pointed nails,
and their heads began to nod as though they were falling
asleep. Suddenly, with a cry so shrill that
all the children were startled and Don Pedro’s
hand clutched at the agate pommel of his dagger, they
leapt to their feet and whirled madly round the enclosure
beating their tambourines, and chaunting some wild
love-song in their strange guttural language.
Then at another signal they all flung themselves again
to the ground and lay there quite still, the dull
strumming of the zithers being the only sound that
broke the silence. After that they had done
this several times, they disappeared for a moment and
came back leading a brown shaggy bear by a chain,
and carrying on their shoulders some little Barbary
apes. The bear stood upon his head with the
utmost gravity, and the wizened apes played all kinds
of amusing tricks with two gipsy boys who seemed to
be their masters, and fought with tiny swords, and
fired off guns, and went through a regular soldier’s
drill just like the King’s own bodyguard.
In fact the gipsies were a great success.
But the funniest part of the whole
morning’s entertainment, was undoubtedly the
dancing of the little Dwarf. When he stumbled
into the arena, waddling on his crooked legs and wagging
his huge misshapen head from side to side, the children
went off into a loud shout of delight, and the Infanta
herself laughed so much that the Camerera was obliged
to remind her that although there were many precedents
in Spain for a King’s daughter weeping before
her equals, there were none for a Princess of the
blood royal making so merry before those who were
her inferiors in birth. The Dwarf, however,
was really quite irresistible, and even at the Spanish
Court, always noted for its cultivated passion for
the horrible, so fantastic a little monster had never
been seen. It was his first appearance, too.
He had been discovered only the day before, running
wild through the forest, by two of the nobles who happened
to have been hunting in a remote part of the great
cork-wood that surrounded the town, and had been carried
off by them to the Palace as a surprise for the Infanta;
his father, who was a poor charcoal-burner, being
but too well pleased to get rid of so ugly and useless
a child. Perhaps the most amusing thing about
him was his complete unconsciousness of his own grotesque
appearance. Indeed he seemed quite happy and
full of the highest spirits. When the children
laughed, he laughed as freely and as joyously as any
of them, and at the close of each dance he made them
each the funniest of bows, smiling and nodding at
them just as if he was really one of themselves, and
not a little misshapen thing that Nature, in some
humourous mood, had fashioned for others to mock at.
As for the Infanta, she absolutely fascinated him.
He could not keep his eyes off her, and seemed to
dance for her alone, and when at the close of the
performance, remembering how she had seen the great
ladies of the Court throw bouquets to Caffarelli, the
famous Italian treble, whom the Pope had sent from
his own chapel to Madrid that he might cure the King’s
melancholy by the sweetness of his voice, she took
out of her hair the beautiful white rose, and partly
for a jest and partly to tease the Camerera, threw
it to him across the arena with her sweetest smile,
he took the whole matter quite seriously, and pressing
the flower to his rough coarse lips he put his hand
upon his heart, and sank on one knee before her, grinning
from ear to ear, and with his little bright eyes sparkling
with pleasure.
This so upset the gravity of the Infanta
that she kept on laughing long after the little Dwarf
had ran out of the arena, and expressed a desire to
her uncle that the dance should be immediately repeated.
The Camerera, however, on the plea that the sun was
too hot, decided that it would be better that her
Highness should return without delay to the Palace,
where a wonderful feast had been already prepared
for her, including a real birthday cake with her own
initials worked all over it in painted sugar and a
lovely silver flag waving from the top. The
Infanta accordingly rose up with much dignity, and
having given orders that the little dwarf was to dance
again for her after the hour of siesta, and conveyed
her thanks to the young Count of Tierra-Nueva for his
charming reception, she went back to her apartments,
the children following in the same order in which
they had entered.
Now when the little Dwarf heard that
he was to dance a second time before the Infanta,
and by her own express command, he was so proud that
he ran out into the garden, kissing the white rose
in an absurd ecstasy of pleasure, and making the most
uncouth and clumsy gestures of delight.
The Flowers were quite indignant at
his daring to intrude into their beautiful home, and
when they saw him capering up and down the walks,
and waving his arms above his head in such a ridiculous
manner, they could not restrain their feelings any
longer.
’He is really far too ugly to
be allowed to play in any place where we are,’
cried the Tulips.
’He should drink poppy-juice,
and go to sleep for a thousand years,’ said
the great scarlet Lilies, and they grew quite hot and
angry.
‘He is a perfect horror!’
screamed the Cactus. ’Why, he is twisted
and stumpy, and his head is completely out of proportion
with his legs. Really he makes me feel prickly
all over, and if he comes near me I will sting him
with my thorns.’
‘And he has actually got one
of my best blooms,’ exclaimed the White Rose-Tree.
’I gave it to the Infanta this morning myself,
as a birthday present, and he has stolen it from her.’
And she called out: ‘Thief, thief, thief!’
at the top of her voice.
Even the red Geraniums, who did not
usually give themselves airs, and were known to have
a great many poor relations themselves, curled up
in disgust when they saw him, and when the Violets
meekly remarked that though he was certainly extremely
plain, still he could not help it, they retorted with
a good deal of justice that that was his chief defect,
and that there was no reason why one should admire
a person because he was incurable; and, indeed, some
of the Violets themselves felt that the ugliness of
the little Dwarf was almost ostentatious, and that
he would have shown much better taste if he had looked
sad, or at least pensive, instead of jumping about
merrily, and throwing himself into such grotesque and
silly attitudes.
As for the old Sundial, who was an
extremely remarkable individual, and had once told
the time of day to no less a person than the Emperor
Charles V. himself, he was so taken aback by the little
Dwarf’s appearance, that he almost forgot to
mark two whole minutes with his long shadowy finger,
and could not help saying to the great milk-white
Peacock, who was sunning herself on the balustrade,
that every one knew that the children of Kings were
Kings, and that the children of charcoal-burners were
charcoal-burners, and that it was absurd to pretend
that it wasn’t so; a statement with which the
Peacock entirely agreed, and indeed screamed out,
‘Certainly, certainly,’ in such a loud,
harsh voice, that the gold-fish who lived in the basin
of the cool splashing fountain put their heads out
of the water, and asked the huge stone Tritons what
on earth was the matter.
But somehow the Birds liked him.
They had seen him often in the forest, dancing about
like an elf after the eddying leaves, or crouched
up in the hollow of some old oak-tree, sharing his
nuts with the squirrels. They did not mind his
being ugly, a bit. Why, even the nightingale
herself, who sang so sweetly in the orange groves
at night that sometimes the Moon leaned down to listen,
was not much to look at after all; and, besides, he
had been kind to them, and during that terribly bitter
winter, when there were no berries on the trees, and
the ground was as hard as iron, and the wolves had
come down to the very gates of the city to look for
food, he had never once forgotten them, but had always
given them crumbs out of his little hunch of black
bread, and divided with them whatever poor breakfast
he had.
So they flew round and round him,
just touching his cheek with their wings as they passed,
and chattered to each other, and the little Dwarf
was so pleased that he could not help showing them
the beautiful white rose, and telling them that the
Infanta herself had given it to him because she loved
him.
They did not understand a single word
of what he was saying, but that made no matter, for
they put their heads on one side, and looked wise,
which is quite as good as understanding a thing, and
very much easier.
The Lizards also took an immense fancy
to him, and when he grew tired of running about and
flung himself down on the grass to rest, they played
and romped all over him, and tried to amuse him in
the best way they could. ’Every one cannot
be as beautiful as a lizard,’ they cried; ’that
would be too much to expect. And, though it
sounds absurd to say so, he is really not so ugly after
all, provided, of course, that one shuts one’s
eyes, and does not look at him.’ The Lizards
were extremely philosophical by nature, and often
sat thinking for hours and hours together, when there
was nothing else to do, or when the weather was too
rainy for them to go out.
The Flowers, however, were excessively
annoyed at their behaviour, and at the behaviour of
the birds. ‘It only shows,’ they
said, ’what a vulgarising effect this incessant
rushing and flying about has. Well-bred people
always stay exactly in the same place, as we do.
No one ever saw us hopping up and down the walks,
or galloping madly through the grass after dragon-flies.
When we do want change of air, we send for the gardener,
and he carries us to another bed. This is dignified,
and as it should be. But birds and lizards have
no sense of repose, and indeed birds have not even
a permanent address. They are mere vagrants
like the gipsies, and should be treated in exactly
the same manner.’ So they put their noses
in the air, and looked very haughty, and were quite
delighted when after some time they saw the little
Dwarf scramble up from the grass, and make his way
across the terrace to the palace.
’He should certainly be kept
indoors for the rest of his natural life,’ they
said. ’Look at his hunched back, and his
crooked legs,’ and they began to titter.
But the little Dwarf knew nothing
of all this. He liked the birds and the lizards
immensely, and thought that the flowers were the most
marvellous things in the whole world, except of course
the Infanta, but then she had given him the beautiful
white rose, and she loved him, and that made a great
difference. How he wished that he had gone back
with her! She would have put him on her right
hand, and smiled at him, and he would have never left
her side, but would have made her his playmate, and
taught her all kinds of delightful tricks. For
though he had never been in a palace before, he knew
a great many wonderful things. He could make
little cages out of rushes for the grasshoppers to
sing in, and fashion the long jointed bamboo into
the pipe that Pan loves to hear. He knew the
cry of every bird, and could call the starlings from
the tree-top, or the heron from the mere. He
knew the trail of every animal, and could track the
hare by its delicate footprints, and the boar by the
trampled leaves. All the wild-dances he knew,
the mad dance in red raiment with the autumn, the
light dance in blue sandals over the corn, the dance
with white snow-wreaths in winter, and the blossom-dance
through the orchards in spring. He knew where
the wood-pigeons built their nests, and once when
a fowler had snared the parent birds, he had brought
up the young ones himself, and had built a little
dovecot for them in the cleft of a pollard elm.
They were quite tame, and used to feed out of his
hands every morning. She would like them, and
the rabbits that scurried about in the long fern,
and the jays with their steely feathers and black
bills, and the hedgehogs that could curl themselves
up into prickly balls, and the great wise tortoises
that crawled slowly about, shaking their heads and
nibbling at the young leaves. Yes, she must
certainly come to the forest and play with him.
He would give her his own little bed, and would watch
outside the window till dawn, to see that the wild
horned cattle did not harm her, nor the gaunt wolves
creep too near the hut. And at dawn he would
tap at the shutters and wake her, and they would go
out and dance together all the day long. It was
really not a bit lonely in the forest. Sometimes
a Bishop rode through on his white mule, reading out
of a painted book. Sometimes in their green
velvet caps, and their jerkins of tanned deerskin,
the falconers passed by, with hooded hawks on their
wrists. At vintage-time came the grape-treaders,
with purple hands and feet, wreathed with glossy ivy
and carrying dripping skins of wine; and the charcoal-burners
sat round their huge braziers at night, watching the
dry logs charring slowly in the fire, and roasting
chestnuts in the ashes, and the robbers came out of
their caves and made merry with them. Once,
too, he had seen a beautiful procession winding up
the long dusty road to Toledo. The monks went
in front singing sweetly, and carrying bright banners
and crosses of gold, and then, in silver armour, with
matchlocks and pikes, came the soldiers, and in their
midst walked three barefooted men, in strange yellow
dresses painted all over with wonderful figures, and
carrying lighted candles in their hands. Certainly
there was a great deal to look at in the forest, and
when she was tired he would find a soft bank of moss
for her, or carry her in his arms, for he was very
strong, though he knew that he was not tall.
He would make her a necklace of red bryony berries,
that would be quite as pretty as the white berries
that she wore on her dress, and when she was tired
of them, she could throw them away, and he would find
her others. He would bring her acorn-cups and
dew-drenched anemones, and tiny glow-worms to be stars
in the pale gold of her hair.
But where was she? He asked
the white rose, and it made him no answer. The
whole palace seemed asleep, and even where the shutters
had not been closed, heavy curtains had been drawn
across the windows to keep out the glare. He
wandered all round looking for some place through
which he might gain an entrance, and at last he caught
sight of a little private door that was lying open.
He slipped through, and found himself in a splendid
hall, far more splendid, he feared, than the forest,
there was so much more gilding everywhere, and even
the floor was made of great coloured stones, fitted
together into a sort of geometrical pattern.
But the little Infanta was not there, only some wonderful
white statues that looked down on him from their jasper
pedestals, with sad blank eyes and strangely smiling
lips.
At the end of the hall hung a richly
embroidered curtain of black velvet, powdered with
suns and stars, the King’s favourite devices,
and broidered on the colour he loved best. Perhaps
she was hiding behind that? He would try at
any rate.
So he stole quietly across, and drew
it aside. No; there was only another room, though
a prettier room, he thought, than the one he had just
left. The walls were hung with a many-figured
green arras of needle-wrought tapestry representing
a hunt, the work of some Flemish artists who had spent
more than seven years in its composition. It
had once been the chamber of Jean le Fou, as he was
called, that mad King who was so enamoured of the chase,
that he had often tried in his delirium to mount the
huge rearing horses, and to drag down the stag on
which the great hounds were leaping, sounding his
hunting horn, and stabbing with his dagger at the
pale flying deer. It was now used as the council-room,
and on the centre table were lying the red portfolios
of the ministers, stamped with the gold tulips of
Spain, and with the arms and emblems of the house
of Hapsburg.
The little Dwarf looked in wonder
all round him, and was half-afraid to go on.
The strange silent horsemen that galloped so swiftly
through the long glades without making any noise, seemed
to him like those terrible phantoms of whom he had
heard the charcoal-burners speaking—the
Comprachos, who hunt only at night, and if they meet
a man, turn him into a hind, and chase him. But
he thought of the pretty Infanta, and took courage.
He wanted to find her alone, and to tell her that
he too loved her. Perhaps she was in the room
beyond.
He ran across the soft Moorish carpets,
and opened the door. No! She was not here
either. The room was quite empty.
It was a throne-room, used for the
reception of foreign ambassadors, when the King, which
of late had not been often, consented to give them
a personal audience; the same room in which, many
years before, envoys had appeared from England to make
arrangements for the marriage of their Queen, then
one of the Catholic sovereigns of Europe, with the
Emperor’s eldest son. The hangings were
of gilt Cordovan leather, and a heavy gilt chandelier
with branches for three hundred wax lights hung down
from the black and white ceiling. Underneath
a great canopy of gold cloth, on which the lions and
towers of Castile were broidered in seed pearls, stood
the throne itself, covered with a rich pall of black
velvet studded with silver tulips and elaborately fringed
with silver and pearls. On the second step of
the throne was placed the kneeling-stool of the Infanta,
with its cushion of cloth of silver tissue, and below
that again, and beyond the limit of the canopy, stood
the chair for the Papal Nuncio, who alone had the right
to be seated in the King’s presence on the occasion
of any public ceremonial, and whose Cardinal’s
hat, with its tangled scarlet tassels, lay on a purple
tabouret in front. On the wall, facing the throne,
hung a life-sized portrait of Charles V. in hunting
dress, with a great mastiff by his side, and a picture
of Philip II. receiving the homage of the Netherlands
occupied the centre of the other wall. Between
the windows stood a black ebony cabinet, inlaid with
plates of ivory, on which the figures from Holbein’s
Dance of Death had been graved—by the hand,
some said, of that famous master himself.
But the little Dwarf cared nothing
for all this magnificence. He would not have
given his rose for all the pearls on the canopy, nor
one white petal of his rose for the throne itself.
What he wanted was to see the Infanta before she
went down to the pavilion, and to ask her to come
away with him when he had finished his dance.
Here, in the Palace, the air was close and heavy, but
in the forest the wind blew free, and the sunlight
with wandering hands of gold moved the tremulous leaves
aside. There were flowers, too, in the forest,
not so splendid, perhaps, as the flowers in the garden,
but more sweetly scented for all that; hyacinths in
early spring that flooded with waving purple the cool
glens, and grassy knolls; yellow primroses that nestled
in little clumps round the gnarled roots of the oak-trees;
bright celandine, and blue speedwell, and irises lilac
and gold. There were grey catkins on the hazels,
and the foxgloves drooped with the weight of their
dappled bee-haunted cells. The chestnut had
its spires of white stars, and the hawthorn its pallid
moons of beauty. Yes: surely she would
come if he could only find her! She would come
with him to the fair forest, and all day long he would
dance for her delight. A smile lit up his eyes
at the thought, and he passed into the next room.
Of all the rooms this was the brightest
and the most beautiful. The walls were covered
with a pink-flowered Lucca damask, patterned with
birds and dotted with dainty blossoms of silver; the
furniture was of massive silver, festooned with florid
wreaths, and swinging Cupids; in front of the two
large fire-places stood great screens broidered with
parrots and peacocks, and the floor, which was of
sea-green onyx, seemed to stretch far away into the
distance. Nor was he alone. Standing under
the shadow of the doorway, at the extreme end of the
room, he saw a little figure watching him. His
heart trembled, a cry of joy broke from his lips, and
he moved out into the sunlight. As he did so,
the figure moved out also, and he saw it plainly.
The Infanta! It was a monster,
the most grotesque monster he had ever beheld.
Not properly shaped, as all other people were, but
hunchbacked, and crooked-limbed, with huge lolling
head and mane of black hair. The little Dwarf
frowned, and the monster frowned also. He laughed,
and it laughed with him, and held its hands to its
sides, just as he himself was doing. He made
it a mocking bow, and it returned him a low reverence.
He went towards it, and it came to meet him, copying
each step that he made, and stopping when he stopped
himself. He shouted with amusement, and ran forward,
and reached out his hand, and the hand of the monster
touched his, and it was as cold as ice. He grew
afraid, and moved his hand across, and the monster’s
hand followed it quickly. He tried to press
on, but something smooth and hard stopped him.
The face of the monster was now close to his own,
and seemed full of terror. He brushed his hair
off his eyes. It imitated him. He struck
at it, and it returned blow for blow. He loathed
it, and it made hideous faces at him. He drew
back, and it retreated.
What is it? He thought for a
moment, and looked round at the rest of the room.
It was strange, but everything seemed to have its
double in this invisible wall of clear water.
Yes, picture for picture was repeated, and couch
for couch. The sleeping Faun that lay in the
alcove by the doorway had its twin brother that slumbered,
and the silver Venus that stood in the sunlight held
out her arms to a Venus as lovely as herself.
Was it Echo? He had called to
her once in the valley, and she had answered him word
for word. Could she mock the eye, as she mocked
the voice? Could she make a mimic world just
like the real world? Could the shadows of things
have colour and life and movement? Could it be
that—?
He started, and taking from his breast
the beautiful white rose, he turned round, and kissed
it. The monster had a rose of its own, petal
for petal the same! It kissed it with like kisses,
and pressed it to its heart with horrible gestures.
When the truth dawned upon him, he
gave a wild cry of despair, and fell sobbing to the
ground. So it was he who was misshapen and hunchbacked,
foul to look at and grotesque. He himself was
the monster, and it was at him that all the children
had been laughing, and the little Princess who he
had thought loved him—she too had been
merely mocking at his ugliness, and making merry over
his twisted limbs. Why had they not left him
in the forest, where there was no mirror to tell him
how loathsome he was? Why had his father not
killed him, rather than sell him to his shame?
The hot tears poured down his cheeks, and he tore
the white rose to pieces. The sprawling monster
did the same, and scattered the faint petals in the
air. It grovelled on the ground, and, when he
looked at it, it watched him with a face drawn with
pain. He crept away, lest he should see it,
and covered his eyes with his hands. He crawled,
like some wounded thing, into the shadow, and lay there
moaning.
And at that moment the Infanta herself
came in with her companions through the open window,
and when they saw the ugly little dwarf lying on the
ground and beating the floor with his clenched hands,
in the most fantastic and exaggerated manner, they
went off into shouts of happy laughter, and stood
all round him and watched him.
‘His dancing was funny,’
said the Infanta; ’but his acting is funnier
still. Indeed he is almost as good as the puppets,
only of course not quite so natural.’
And she fluttered her big fan, and applauded.
But the little Dwarf never looked
up, and his sobs grew fainter and fainter, and suddenly
he gave a curious gasp, and clutched his side.
And then he fell back again, and lay quite still.
‘That is capital,’ said
the Infanta, after a pause; ’but now you must
dance for me.’
‘Yes,’ cried all the children,
’you must get up and dance, for you are as clever
as the Barbary apes, and much more ridiculous.’
But the little Dwarf made no answer.
And the Infanta stamped her foot,
and called out to her uncle, who was walking on the
terrace with the Chamberlain, reading some despatches
that had just arrived from Mexico, where the Holy Office
had recently been established. ‘My funny
little dwarf is sulking,’ she cried, ‘you
must wake him up, and tell him to dance for me.’
They smiled at each other, and sauntered
in, and Don Pedro stooped down, and slapped the Dwarf
on the cheek with his embroidered glove. ‘You
must dance,’ he said, ’petit monsire.
You must dance. The Infanta of Spain and the
Indies wishes to be amused.’
But the little Dwarf never moved.
‘A whipping master should be
sent for,’ said Don Pedro wearily, and he went
back to the terrace. But the Chamberlain looked
grave, and he knelt beside the little dwarf, and put
his hand upon his heart. And after a few moments
he shrugged his shoulders, and rose up, and having
made a low bow to the Infanta, he said —
’Mi bella Princesa, your funny
little dwarf will never dance again. It is a
pity, for he is so ugly that he might have made the
King smile.’
‘But why will he not dance again?’
asked the Infanta, laughing.
‘Because his heart is broken,’
answered the Chamberlain.
And the Infanta frowned, and her dainty
rose-leaf lips curled in pretty disdain. ’For
the future let those who come to play with me have
no hearts,’ she cried, and she ran out into the
garden.