XXXIII.
THE BEAUTIFUL SUIT.
There was once a little man whose
mother made him a beautiful suit of clothes.
It was green and gold, and woven so that I cannot describe
how delicate and fine it was, and there was a tie
of orange fluffiness that tied up under his chin.
And the buttons in their newness shone like stars.
He was proud and pleased by his suit beyond measure,
and stood before the long looking-glass when first
he put it on, so astonished and delighted with it
that he could hardly turn himself away. He wanted
to wear it everywhere, and show it to all sorts of
people. He thought over all the places he had
ever visited, and all the scenes he had ever heard
described, and tried to imagine what the feel of it
would be if he were to go now to those scenes and
places wearing his shining suit, and he wanted to
go out forthwith into the long grass and the hot sunshine
of the meadow wearing it. Just to wear it!
But his mother told him “No.” She
told him he must take great care of his suit, for
never would he have another nearly so fine; he must
save it and save it, and only wear it on rare and great
occasions. It was his wedding-suit, she said.
And she took the buttons and twisted them up with
tissue paper for fear their bright newness should be
tarnished, and she tacked little guards over the cuffs
and elbows, and wherever the suit was most likely
to come to harm. He hated and resisted these
things, but what could he do? And at last her
warnings and persuasions had effect, and he consented
to take off his beautiful suit and fold it into its
proper creases, and put it away. It was almost
as though he gave it up again. But he was always
thinking of wearing it, and of the supreme occasions
when some day it might be worn without the guards,
without the tissue paper on the buttons, utterly and
delightfully, never caring, beautiful beyond measure.
One night, when he was dreaming of
it after his habit, he dreamt he took the tissue paper
from one of the buttons, and found its brightness a
little faded, and that distressed him mightily in his
dream. He polished the poor faded button and
polished it, and, if anything, it grew duller.
He woke up and lay awake, thinking of the brightness
a little dulled, and wondering how he would feel if
perhaps when the great occasion (whatever it might
be) should arrive, one button should chance to be ever
so little short of its first glittering freshness,
and for days and days that thought remained with him
distressingly. And when next his mother let him
wear his suit, he was tempted and nearly gave way to
the temptation just to fumble off one little bit of
tissue paper and see if indeed the buttons were keeping
as bright as ever.
He went trimly along on his way to
church, full of this wild desire. For you must
know his mother did, with repeated and careful warnings,
let him wear his suit at times, on Sundays, for example,
to and fro from church, when there was no threatening
of rain, no dust blowing, nor anything to injure it,
with its buttons covered and its protections tacked
upon it, and a sun-shade in his hand to shadow it
if there seemed too strong a sunlight for its colours.
And always, after such occasions, he brushed it over
and folded it exquisitely as she had taught him, and
put it away again.
Now all these restrictions his mother
set to the wearing of his suit he obeyed, always he
obeyed them, until one strange night he woke up and
saw the moonlight shining outside his window.
It seemed to him the moonlight was not common moonlight,
nor the night a common night, and for awhile he lay
quite drowsily, with this odd persuasion in his mind.
Thought joined on to thought like things that whisper
warmly in the shadows. Then he sat up in his
little bed suddenly very alert, with his heart beating
very fast, and a quiver in his body from top to toe.
He had made up his mind. He knew that now he
was going to wear his suit as it should be worn.
He had no doubt in the matter. He was afraid,
terribly afraid, but glad, glad.
He got out of his bed and stood for
a moment by the window looking at the moonshine-flooded
garden, and trembling at the thing he meant to do.
The air was full of a minute clamour of crickets and
murmurings, of the infinitesimal shoutings of little
living things. He went very gently across the
creaking boards, for fear that he might wake the sleeping
house, to the big dark clothes-press wherein his beautiful
suit lay folded, and he took it out garment by garment,
and softly and very eagerly tore off its tissue-paper
covering and its tacked protections until there it
was, perfect and delightful as he had seen it when
first his mother had given it to him—a
long time it seemed ago. Not a button had tarnished,
not a thread had faded on this dear suit of his; he
was glad enough for weeping as in a noiseless hurry
he put it on. And then back he went, soft and
quick, to the window that looked out upon the garden,
and stood there for a minute, shining in the moonlight,
with his buttons twinkling like stars, before he got
out on the sill, and, making as little of a rustling
as he could, clambered down to the garden path below.
He stood before his mother’s house, and it was
white and nearly as plain as by day, with every window-blind
but his own shut like an eye that sleeps. The
trees cast still shadows like intricate black lace
upon the wall.
The garden in the moonlight was very
different from the garden by day; moonshine was tangled
in the hedges and stretched in phantom cobwebs from
spray to spray. Every flower was gleaming white
or crimson black, and the air was a-quiver with the
thridding of small crickets and nightingales singing
unseen in the depths of the trees.
There was no darkness in the world,
but only warm, mysterious shadows, and all the leaves
and spikes were edged and lined with iridescent jewels
of dew. The night was warmer than any night had
ever been, the heavens by some miracle at once vaster
and nearer, and, spite of the great ivory-tinted moon
that ruled the world, the sky was full of stars.
The little man did not shout nor sing
for all his infinite gladness. He stood for a
time like one awestricken, and then, with a queer small
cry and holding out his arms, he ran out as if he
would embrace at once the whole round immensity of
the world. He did not follow the neat set paths
that cut the garden squarely, but thrust across the
beds and through the wet, tall, scented herbs, through
the night-stock and the nicotine and the clusters
of phantom white mallow flowers and through the thickets
of southernwood and lavender, and knee-deep across
a wide space of mignonette. He came to the great
hedge, and he thrust his way through it; and though
the thorns of the brambles scored him deeply and tore
threads from his wonderful suit, and though burrs
and goose-grass and havers caught and clung to him,
he did not care. He did not care, for he knew
it was all part of the wearing for which he had longed.
“I am glad I put on my suit,” he said;
“I am glad I wore my suit.”
Beyond the hedge he came to the duck-pond,
or at least to what was the duck-pond by day.
But by night it was a great bowl of silver moonshine
all noisy with singing frogs, of wonderful silver
moonshine twisted and clotted with strange patternings,
and the little man ran down into its waters between
the thin black rushes, knee-deep and waist-deep and
to his shoulders, smiting the water to black and shining
wavelets with either hand, swaying and shivering wavelets,
amidst which the stars were netted in the tangled
reflections of the brooding trees upon the bank.
He waded until he swam, and so he crossed the pond
and came out upon the other side, trailing, as it
seemed to him, not duckweed, but very silver in long,
clinging, dripping masses. And up he went through
the transfigured tangles of the willow-herb and the
uncut seeding grasses of the farther bank. He
came glad and breathless into the high-road. “I
am glad,” he said, “beyond measure, that
I had clothes that fitted this occasion.”
The high-road ran straight as an arrow
flies, straight into the deep-blue pit of sky beneath
the moon, a white and shining road between the singing
nightingales, and along it he went, running now and
leaping, and now walking and rejoicing, in the clothes
his mother had made for him with tireless, loving
hands. The road was deep in dust, but that for
him was only soft whiteness; and as he went a great
dim moth came fluttering round his wet and shimmering
and hastening figure. At first he did not heed
the moth, and then he waved his hands at it, and made
a sort of dance with it as it circled round his head.
“Soft moth!” he cried, “dear moth!
And wonderful night, wonderful night of the world!
Do you think my clothes are beautiful, dear moth?
As beautiful as your scales and all this silver vesture
of the earth and sky?”
And the moth circled closer and closer
until at last its velvet wings just brushed his lips…
* * * *
*
And next morning they found him dead,
with his neck broken, in the bottom of the stone pit,
with his beautiful clothes a little bloody, and foul
and stained with the duckweed from the pond.
But his face was a face of such happiness that, had
you seen it, you would have understood indeed how that
he had died happy, never knowing that cool and streaming
silver for the duckweed in the pond.