FAREWELL
There is in man an almost hopeless
phenomenon for thoughtful minds who seek a meaning
in the march of civilization, and who endeavor to give
laws of progression to the movement of intelligence.
However portentous a fact may be, or even supernatural,—if
such facts exist, —however solemnly a miracle
may be done in sight of all, the lightning of that
fact, the thunderbolt of that miracle is quickly swallowed
up in the ocean of life, whose surface, scarcely stirred
by the brief convulsion, returns to the level of its
habitual flow.
A Voice is heard from the jaws of
an Animal; a Hand writes on the wall before a feasting
Court; an Eye gleams in the slumber of a king, and
a Prophet explains the dream; Death, evoked, rises
on the confines of the luminous sphere were faculties
revive; Spirit annihilates Matter at the foot of that
mystic ladder of the Seven Spiritual Worlds, one resting
upon another in space and revealing themselves in shining
waves that break in light upon the steps of the celestial
Tabernacle. But however solemn the inward Revelation,
however clear the visible outward Sign, be sure that
on the morrow Balaam doubts both himself and his ass,
Belshazzar and Pharoah call Moses and Daniel to qualify
the Word. The Spirit, descending, bears man above
this earth, opens the seas and lets him see their
depths, shows him lost species, wakens dry bones whose
dust is the soil of valleys; the Apostle writes the
Apocalypse, and twenty centuries later human science
ratifies his words and turns his visions into maxims.
And what comes of it all? Why this,—that
the peoples live as they have ever lived, as they lived
in the first Olympiad, as they lived on the morrow
of Creation, and on the eve of the great cataclysm.
The waves of Doubt have covered all things. The
same floods surge with the same measured motion on
the human granite which serves as a boundary to the
ocean of intelligence. When man has inquired
of himself whether he has seen that which he has seen,
whether he has heard the words that entered his ears,
whether the facts were facts and the idea is indeed
an idea, then he resumes his wonted bearing, thinks
of his worldly interests, obeys some envoy of death
and of oblivion whose dusky mantle covers like a pall
an ancient Humanity of which the moderns retain no
memory. Man never pauses; he goes his round,
he vegetates until the appointed day when his Axe
falls. If this wave force, this pressure of bitter
waters prevents all progress, no doubt it also warns
of death. Spirits prepared by faith among the
higher souls of earth can alone perceive the mystic
ladder of Jacob.
After listening to Seraphita’s
answer in which (being earnestly questioned) she unrolled
before their eyes a Divine Perspective,—as
an organ fills a church with sonorous sound and reveals
a musical universe, its solemn tones rising to the
loftiest arches and playing, like light, upon their
foliated capitals,—Wilfrid returned to his
own room, awed by the sight of a world in ruins, and
on those ruins the brilliance of mysterious lights
poured forth in torrents by the hand of a young girl.
On the morrow he still thought of these things, but
his awe was gone; he felt he was neither destroyed
nor changed; his passions, his ideas awoke in full
force, fresh and vigorous. He went to breakfast
with Monsieur Becker and found the old man absorbed
in the “Treatise on Incantations,” which
he had searched since early morning to convince his
guest that there was nothing unprecedented in all
that they had seen and heard at the Swedish castle.
With the childlike trustfulness of a true scholar
he had folded down the pages in which Jean Wier related
authentic facts which proved the possibility of the
events that had happened the night before,—for
to learned men an idea is a event, just as the greatest
events often present no idea at all to them.
By the time they had swallowed their fifth cup of
tea, these philosophers had come to think the mysterious
scene of the preceding evening wholly natural.
The celestial truths to which they had listened were
arguments susceptible of examination; Seraphita was
a girl, more or less eloquent; allowance must be made
for the charms of her voice, her seductive beauty,
her fascinating motions, in short, for all those oratorical
arts by which an actor puts a world of sentiment and
thought into phrases which are often commonplace.
“Bah!” said the worthy
pastor, making a philosophical grimace as he spread
a layer of salt butter on his slice of bread, “the
final word of all these fine enigmas is six feet under
ground.”
“But,” said Wilfrid, sugaring
his tea, “I cannot image how a young girl of
seventeen can know so much; what she said was certainly
a compact argument.”
“Read the account of that Italian
woman,” said Monsieur Becker, “who at
the age of twelve spoke forty-two languages, ancient
and modern; also the history of that monk who could
guess thought by smell. I can give you a thousand
such cases from Jean Wier and other writers.”
“I admit all that, dear pastor;
but to my thinking, Seraphita would make a perfect
wife.”
“She is all mind,” said Monsieur Becker,
dubiously.
Several days went by, during which
the snow in the valleys melted gradually away; the
green of the forests and of the grass began to show;
Norwegian Nature made ready her wedding garments for
her brief bridal of a day. During this period,
when the softened air invited every one to leave the
house, Seraphita remained at home in solitude.
When at last she admitted Minna the latter saw at once
the ravages of inward fever; Seraphita’s voice
was hollow, her skin pallid; hitherto a poet might
have compared her lustre to that of diamonds,—now
it was that of a topaz.
“Have you seen her?” asked
Wilfrid, who had wandered around the Swedish dwelling
waiting for Minna’s return.
“Yes,” answered the young
girl, weeping; “We must lose him!”
“Mademoiselle,” cried
Wilfrid, endeavoring to repress the loud tones of
his angry voice, “do not jest with me. You
can love Seraphita only as one young girl can love
another, and not with the love which she inspires
in me. You do not know your danger if my jealousy
were really aroused. Why can I not go to her?
Is it you who stand in my way?”
“I do not know by what right
you probe my heart,” said Minna, calm in appearance,
but inwardly terrified. “Yes, I love him,”
she said, recovering the courage of her convictions,
that she might, for once, confess the religion of
her heart. “But my jealousy, natural as
it is in love, fears no one here below. Alas!
I am jealous of a secret feeling that absorbs him.
Between him and me there is a great gulf fixed which
I cannot cross. Would that I knew who loves him
best, the stars or I! which of us would sacrifice
our being most eagerly for his happiness! Why
should I not be free to avow my love? In the presence
of death we may declare our feelings,—and
Seraphitus is about to die.”
“Minna, you are mistaken; the
siren I so love and long for, she, whom I have seen,
feeble and languid, on her couch of furs, is not a
young man.”
“Monsieur,” answered Minna,
distressfully, “the being whose powerful hand
guided me on the Falberg, who led me to the saeter
sheltered beneath the Ice-Cap, there—”
she said, pointing to the peak, “is not a feeble
girl. Ah, had you but heard him prophesying!
His poem was the music of thought. A young girl
never uttered those solemn tones of a voice which
stirred my soul.”
“What certainty have you?” said Wilfrid.
“None but that of the heart,” answered
Minna.
“And I,” cried Wilfrid,
casting on his companion the terrible glance of the
earthly desire that kills, “I, too, know how
powerful is her empire over me, and I will undeceive
you.”
At this moment, while the words were
rushing from Wilfrid’s lips as rapidly as the
thoughts surged in his brain, they saw Seraphita coming
towards them from the house, followed by David.
The apparition calmed the man’s excitement.
“Look,” he said, “could
any but a woman move with that grace and langor?”
“He suffers; he comes forth
for the last time,” said Minna.
David went back at a sign from his
mistress, who advanced towards Wilfrid and Minna.
“Let us go to the falls of the
Sieg,” she said, expressing one of those desires
which suddenly possess the sick and which the well
hasten to obey.
A thin white mist covered the valleys
around the fiord and the sides of the mountains, whose
icy summits, sparkling like stars, pierced the vapor
and gave it the appearance of a moving milky way.
The sun was visible through the haze like a globe
of red fire. Though winter still lingered, puffs
of warm air laden with the scent of the birch-trees,
already adorned with their rosy efflorescence, and
of the larches, whose silken tassels were beginning
to appear,—breezes tempered by the incense
and the sighs of earth,—gave token of the
glorious Northern spring, the rapid, fleeting joy
of that most melancholy of Natures. The wind
was beginning to lift the veil of mist which half-obscured
the gulf. The birds sang. The bark of the
trees where the sun had not yet dried the clinging
hoar-frost shone gayly to the eye in its fantastic
wreathings which trickled away in murmuring rivulets
as the warmth reached them. The three friends
walked in silence along the shore. Wilfrid and
Minna alone noticed the magic transformation that
was taking place in the monotonous picture of the winter
landscape. Their companion walked in thought,
as though a voice were sounding to her ears in this
concert of Nature.
Presently they reached the ledge of
rocks through which the Sieg had forced its way, after
escaping from the long avenue cut by its waters in
an undulating line through the forest,—a
fluvial pathway flanked by aged firs and roofed with
strong-ribbed arches like those of a cathedral.
Looking back from that vantage-ground, the whole extent
of the fiord could be seen at a glance, with the open
sea sparkling on the horizon beyond it like a burnished
blade.
At this moment the mist, rolling away,
left the sky blue and clear. Among the valleys
and around the trees flitted the shining fragments,
—a diamond dust swept by the freshening
breeze. The torrent rolled on toward them; along
its length a vapor rose, tinted by the sun with every
color of his light; the decomposing rays flashing prismatic
fires along the many-tinted scarf of waters. The
rugged ledge on which they stood was carpeted by several
kinds of lichen, forming a noble mat variegated by
moisture and lustrous like the sheen of a silken fabric.
Shrubs, already in bloom, crowned the rocks with garlands.
Their waving foliage, eager for the freshness of the
water, drooped its tresses above the stream; the larches
shook their light fringes and played with the pines,
stiff and motionless as aged men. This luxuriant
beauty was foiled by the solemn colonnades of the
forest-trees, rising in terraces upon the mountains,
and by the calm sheet of the fiord, lying below, where
the torrent buried its fury and was still. Beyond,
the sea hemmed in this page of Nature, written by
the greatest of poets, Chance; to whom the wild luxuriance
of creation when apparently abandoned to itself is
owing.
The village of Jarvis was a lost point
in the landscape, in this immensity of Nature, sublime
at this moment like all things else of ephemeral life
which present a fleeting image of perfection; for,
by a law fatal to no eyes but our own, creations which
appear complete—the love of our heart and
the desire of our eyes—have but one spring-tide
here below. Standing on this breast-work of rock
these three persons might well suppose themselves
alone in the universe.
“What beauty!” cried Wilfrid.
“Nature sings hymns,”
said Seraphita. “Is not her music exquisite?
Tell me, Wilfrid, could any of the women you once knew
create such a glorious retreat for herself as this?
I am conscious here of a feeling seldom inspired by
the sight of cities, a longing to lie down amid this
quickening verdure. Here, with eyes to heaven
and an open heart, lost in the bosom of immensity,
I could hear the sighings of the flower, scarce budded,
which longs for wings, or the cry of the eider grieving
that it can only fly, and remember the desires of man
who, issuing from all, is none the less ever longing.
But that, Wilfrid, is only a woman’s thought.
You find seductive fancies in the wreathing mists,
the light embroidered veils which Nature dons like
a coy maiden, in this atmosphere where she perfumes
for her spousals the greenery of her tresses.
You seek the naiad’s form amid the gauzy vapors,
and to your thinking my ears should listen only to
the virile voice of the Torrent.”
“But Love is there, like the
bee in the calyx of the flower,” replied Wilfrid,
perceiving for the first time a trace of earthly sentiment
in her words, and fancying the moment favorable for
an expression of his passionate tenderness.
“Always there?” said Seraphita,
smiling. Minna had left them for a moment to
gather the blue saxifrages growing on a rock above.
“Always,” repeated Wilfrid.
“Hear me,” he said, with a masterful glance
which was foiled as by a diamond breast-plate.
“You know not what I am, nor what I can be,
nor what I will. Do not reject my last entreaty.
Be mine for the good of that world whose happiness
you bear upon your heart. Be mine that my conscience
may be pure; that a voice divine may sound in my ears
and infuse Good into the great enterprise I have undertaken
prompted by my hatred to the nations, but which I
swear to accomplish for their benefit if you will walk
beside me. What higher mission can you ask for
love? what nobler part can woman aspire to? I
came to Norway to meditate a grand design.”
“And you will sacrifice its
grandeur,” she said, “to an innocent girl
who loves you, and who will lead you in the paths of
peace.”
“What matters sacrifice,”
he cried, “if I have you? Hear my secret.
I have gone from end to end of the North,—that
great smithy from whose anvils new races have spread
over the earth, like human tides appointed to refresh
the wornout civilizations. I wished to begin my
work at some Northern point, to win the empire which
force and intellect must ever give over a primitive
people; to form that people for battle, to drive them
to wars which should ravage Europe like a conflagration,
crying liberty to some, pillage to others, glory here,
pleasure there!—I, myself, remaining an
image of Destiny, cruel, implacable, advancing like
the whirlwind, which sucks from the atmosphere the
particles that make the thunderbolt, and falls like
a devouring scourge upon the nations. Europe
is at an epoch when she awaits the new Messiah who
shall destroy society and remake it. She can
no longer believe except in him who crushes her under
foot. The day is at hand when poets and historians
will justify me, exalt me, and borrow my ideas, mine!
And all the while my triumph will be a jest, written
in blood, the jest of my vengeance! But not here,
Seraphita; what I see in the North disgusts me.
Hers is a mere blind force; I thirst for the Indies!
I would rather fight a selfish, cowardly, mercantile
government. Besides, it is easier to stir the
imagination of the peoples at the feet of the Caucasus
than to argue with the intellect of the icy lands
which here surround me. Therefore am I tempted
to cross the Russian steps and pour my triumphant human
tide through Asia to the Ganges, and overthrow the
British rule. Seven men have done this thing
before me in other epochs of the world. I will
emulate them. I will spread Art like the Saracens,
hurled by Mohammed upon Europe. Mine shall be
no paltry sovereignty like those that govern to-day
the ancient provinces of the Roman empire, disputing
with their subjects about a customs right! No,
nothing can bar my way! Like Genghis Khan, my
feet shall tread a third of the globe, my hand shall
grasp the throat of Asia like Aurung-Zeb. Be my
companion! Let me seat thee, beautiful and noble
being, on a throne! I do not doubt success, but
live within my heart and I am sure of it.”
“I have already reigned,” said Seraphita,
coldly.
The words fell as the axe of a skilful
woodman falls at the root of a young tree and brings
it down at a single blow. Men alone can comprehend
the rage that a woman excites in the soul of a man
when, after showing her his strength, his power, his
wisdom, his superiority, the capricious creature bends
her head and says, “All that is nothing”;
when, unmoved, she smiles and says, “Such things
are known to me,” as though his power were nought.
“What!” cried Wilfrid,
in despair, “can the riches of art, the riches
of worlds, the splendors of a court—”
She stopped him by a single inflexion
of her lips, and said, “Beings more powerful
than you have offered me far more.”
“Thou hast no soul,” he
cried,—“no soul, if thou art not persuaded
by the thought of comforting a great man, who is willing
now to sacrifice all things to live beside thee in
a little house on the shores of a lake.”
“But,” she said, “I am loved with
a boundless love.”
“By whom?” cried Wilfrid,
approaching Seraphita with a frenzied movement, as
if to fling her into the foaming basin of the Sieg.
She looked at him and slowly extended
her arm, pointing to Minna, who now sprang towards
her, fair and glowing and lovely as the flowers she
held in her hand.
“Child!” said Seraphitus, advancing to
meet her.
Wilfrid remained where she left him,
motionless as the rock on which he stood, lost in
thought, longing to let himself go into the torrent
of the Sieg, like the fallen trees which hurried past
his eyes and disappeared in the bosom of the gulf.
“I gathered them for you,”
said Minna, offering the bunch of saxifrages to the
being she adored. “One of them, see, this
one,” she added, selecting a flower, “is
like that you found on the Falberg.”
Seraphitus looked alternately at the
flower and at Minna.
“Why question me? Dost thou doubt me?”
“No,” said the young girl,
“my trust in you is infinite. You are more
beautiful to look upon than this glorious nature, but
your mind surpasses in intellect that of all humanity.
When I have been with you I seem to have prayed to
God. I long—”
“For what?” said Seraphitus,
with a glance that revealed to the young girl the
vast distance which separated them.
“To suffer in your stead.”
“Ah, dangerous being!”
cried Seraphitus in his heart. “Is it wrong,
oh my God! to desire to offer her to Thee? Dost
thou remember, Minna, what I said to thee up there?”
he added, pointing to the summit of the Ice-Cap.
“He is terrible again,”
thought Minna, trembling with fear.
The voice of the Sieg accompanied
the thoughts of the three beings united on this platform
of projecting rock, but separated in soul by the abysses
of the Spiritual World.
“Seraphitus! teach me,”
said Minna in a silvery voice, soft as the motion
of a sensitive plant, “teach me how to cease
to love you. Who could fail to admire you; love
is an admiration that never wearies.”
“Poor child!” said Seraphitus,
turning pale; “there is but one whom thou canst
love in that way.”
“Who?” asked Minna.
“Thou shalt know hereafter,”
he said, in the feeble voice of a man who lies down
to die.
“Help, help! he is dying!” cried Minna.
Wilfrid ran towards them. Seeing
Seraphita as she lay on a fragment of gneiss, where
time had cast its velvet mantle of lustrous lichen
and tawny mosses now burnished in the sunlight, he
whispered softly, “How beautiful she is!”
“One other look! the last that
I shall ever cast upon this nature in travail,”
said Seraphitus, rallying her strength and rising to
her feet.
She advanced to the edge of the rocky
platform, whence her eyes took in the scenery of that
grand and glorious landscape, so verdant, flowery,
and animated, yet so lately buried in its winding-sheet
of snow.
“Farewell,” she said,
“farewell, home of Earth, warmed by the fires
of Love; where all things press with ardent force
from the centre to the extremities; where the extremities
are gathered up, like a woman’s hair, to weave
the mysterious braid which binds us in that invisible
ether to the Thought Divine!
“Behold the man bending above
that furrow moistened with his tears, who lifts his
head for an instant to question Heaven; behold the
woman gathering her children that she may feed them
with her milk; see him who lashes the ropes in the
height of the gale; see her who sits in the hollow
of the rocks, awaiting the father! Behold all
they who stretch their hands in want after a lifetime
spent in thankless toil. To all peace and courage,
and to all farewell!
“Hear you the cry of the soldier,
dying nameless and unknown? the wail of the man deceived
who weeps in the desert? To them peace and courage;
to all farewell!
“Farewell, you who die for the
kings of the earth! Farewell, ye people without
a country and ye countries without a people, each,
with a mutual want. Above all, farewell to Thee
who knew not where to lay Thy head, Exile divine!
Farewell, mothers beside your dying sons! Farewell,
ye Little Ones, ye Feeble, ye Suffering, you whose
sorrows I have so often borne! Farewell, all
ye who have descended into the sphere of Instinct
that you may suffer there for others!
“Farewell, ye mariners who seek
the Orient through the thick darkness of your abstractions,
vast as principles! Farewell, martyrs of thought,
led by thought into the presence of the True Light.
Farewell, regions of study where mine ears can hear
the plaint of genius neglected and insulted, the sigh
of the patient scholar to whom enlightenment comes
too late!
“I see the angelic choir, the
wafting of perfumes, the incense of the heart of those
who go their way consoling, praying, imparting celestial
balm and living light to suffering souls! Courage,
ye choir of Love! you to whom the peoples cry, ’Comfort
us, comfort us, defend us!’ To you courage!
and farewell!
“Farewell, ye granite rocks
that shall bloom a flower; farewell, flower that becomes
a dove; farewell, dove that shalt be woman; farewell,
woman, who art Suffering, man, who art Belief!
Farewell, you who shall be all love, all prayer!”
Broken with fatigue, this inexplicable
being leaned for the first time on Wilfrid and on
Minna to be taken home. Wilfrid and Minna felt
the shock of a mysterious contact in and through the
being who thus connected them. They had scarcely
advanced a few steps when David met them, weeping.
“She will die,” he said, “why have
you brought her hither?”
The old man raised her in his arms
with the vigor of youth and bore her to the gate of
the Swedish castle like an eagle bearing a white lamb
to his mountain eyrie.