The Duke did not try to break the
stony silence in which Zuleika walked. Her displeasure
was a luxury to him, for it was so soon to be dispelled.
A little while, and she would be hating herself for
her pettiness. Here was he, going to die for
her; and here was she, blaming him for a breach of
manners. Decidedly, the slave had the whip-hand.
He stole a sidelong look at her, and could not repress
a smile. His features quickly composed themselves.
The Triumph of Death must not be handled as a cheap
score. He wanted to die because he would thereby
so poignantly consummate his love, express it so completely,
once and for all . . . And she—who
could say that she, knowing what he had done, might
not, illogically, come to love him? Perhaps she
would devote her life to mourning him. He saw
her bending over his tomb, in beautiful humble curves,
under a starless sky, watering the violets with her
tears.
Shades of Novalis and Friedrich Schlegel
and other despicable maunderers! He brushed them
aside. He would be practical. The point
was, when and how to die? Time: the sooner
the better. Manner: . . less easy to determine.
He must not die horribly, nor without dignity.
The manner of the Roman philosophers? But the
only kind of bath which an undergraduate can command
is a hip-bath. Stay! there was the river.
Drowning (he had often heard) was a rather pleasant
sensation. And to the river he was even now on
his way.
It troubled him that he could swim.
Twice, indeed, from his yacht, he had swum the Hellespont.
And how about the animal instinct of self-preservation,
strong even in despair? No matter! His soul’s
set purpose would subdue that. The law of gravitation
that brings one to the surface? There his very
skill in swimming would help him. He would swim
under water, along the river-bed, swim till he found
weeds to cling to, weird strong weeds that he would
coil round him, exulting faintly . . .
As they turned into Radcliffe Square,
the Duke’s ear caught the sound of a far-distant
gun. He started, and looked up at the clock of
St. Mary’s. Half-past four! The boats
had started.
He had heard that whenever a woman
was to blame for a disappointment, the best way to
avoid a scene was to inculpate oneself. He did
not wish Zuleika to store up yet more material for
penitence. And so “I am sorry,” he
said. “That gun—did you hear
it? It was the signal for the race. I shall
never forgive myself.”
“Then we shan’t see the race at all?”
cried Zuleika.
“It will be over, alas, before
we are near the river. All the people will be
coming back through the meadows.”
“Let us meet them.”
“Meet a torrent? Let us
have tea in my rooms and go down quietly for the other
Division.”
“Let us go straight on.”
Through the square, across the High,
down Grove Street, they passed. The Duke looked
up at the tower of Merton, “os oupot authis alla
nyn paunstaton.” Strange that to-night
it would still be standing here, in all its sober
and solid beauty—still be gazing, over the
roofs and chimneys, at the tower of Magdalen, its
rightful bride. Through untold centuries of the
future it would stand thus, gaze thus. He winced.
Oxford walls have a way of belittling us; and the Duke
was loth to regard his doom as trivial.
Aye, by all minerals we are mocked.
Vegetables, yearly deciduous, are far more sympathetic.
The lilac and laburnum, making lovely now the railed
pathway to Christ Church meadow, were all a-swaying
and a-nodding to the Duke as he passed by. “Adieu,
adieu, your Grace,” they were whispering.
“We are very sorry for you—very sorry
indeed. We never dared suppose you would predecease
us. We think your death a very great tragedy.
Adieu! Perhaps we shall meet in another world—
that is, if the members of the animal kingdom have
immortal souls, as we have.”
The Duke was little versed in their
language; yet, as he passed between these gently garrulous
blooms, he caught at least the drift of their salutation,
and smiled a vague but courteous acknowledgment, to
the right and the left alternately, creating a very
favourable impression.
No doubt, the young elms lining the
straight way to the barges had seen him coming; but
any whispers of their leaves were lost in the murmur
of the crowd returning from the race. Here, at
length, came the torrent of which the Duke had spoken;
and Zuleika’s heart rose at it. Here was
Oxford! From side to side the avenue was filled
with a dense procession of youths—youths
interspersed with maidens whose parasols were as flotsam
and jetsam on a seething current of straw hats.
Zuleika neither quickened nor slackened her advance.
But brightlier and brightlier shone her eyes.
The vanguard of the procession was
pausing now, swaying, breaking at sight of her.
She passed, imperial, through the way cloven for her.
All a-down the avenue, the throng parted as though
some great invisible comb were being drawn through
it. The few youths who had already seen Zuleika,
and by whom her beauty had been bruited throughout
the University, were lost in a new wonder, so incomparably
fairer was she than the remembered vision. And
the rest hardly recognised her from the descriptions,
so incomparably fairer was the reality than the hope.
She passed among them. None questioned
the worthiness of her escort. Could I give you
better proof the awe in which our Duke was held?
Any man is glad to be seen escorting a very pretty
woman. He thinks it adds to his prestige.
Whereas, in point of fact, his fellow-men are saying
merely “Who’s that appalling fellow with
her?” or “Why does she go about with that
ass So-and-So?” Such cavil may in part be envy.
But it is a fact that no man, howsoever graced, can
shine in juxtaposition to a very pretty woman.
The Duke himself cut a poor figure beside Zuleika.
Yet not one of all the undergraduates felt she could
have made a wiser choice.
She swept among them. Her own
intrinsic radiance was not all that flashed from her.
She was a moving reflector and refractor of all the
rays of all the eyes that mankind had turned on her.
Her mien told the story of her days. Bright eyes,
light feet—she trod erect from a vista
whose glare was dazzling to all beholders. She
swept among them, a miracle, overwhelming, breath-bereaving.
Nothing at all like her had ever been seen in Oxford.
Mainly architectural, the beauties
of Oxford. True, the place is no longer one-sexed.
There are the virguncules of Somerville and Lady Margaret’s
Hall; but beauty and the lust for learning have yet
to be allied. There are the innumerable wives
and daughters around the Parks, running in and out
of their little red-brick villas; but the indignant
shade of celibacy seems to have called down on the
dons a Nemesis which precludes them from either marrying
beauty or begetting it. (From the Warden’s son,
that unhappy curate, Zuleika inherited no tittle of
her charm. Some of it, there is no doubt, she
did inherit from the circus-rider who was her mother.)
But the casual feminine visitors?
Well, the sisters and cousins of an undergraduate
seldom seem more passable to his comrades than to
himself. Altogether, the instinct of sex is not
pandered to in Oxford. It is not, however, as
it may once have been, dormant. The modern importation
of samples of femininity serves to keep it alert, though
not to gratify it. A like result is achieved by
another modern development—photography.
The undergraduate may, and usually does, surround
himself with photographs of pretty ladies known to
the public. A phantom harem! Yet the houris
have an effect on their sultan. Surrounded both
by plain women of flesh and blood and by beauteous
women on pasteboard, the undergraduate is the easiest
victim of living loveliness—is as a fire
ever well and truly laid, amenable to a spark.
And if the spark be such a flaring torch as Zuleika?—
marvel not, reader, at the conflagration.
Not only was the whole throng of youths
drawing asunder before her: much of it, as she
passed, was forming up in her wake. Thus, with
the confluence of two masses—one coming
away from the river, the other returning to it—chaos
seethed around her and the Duke before they were half-way
along the avenue. Behind them, and on either side
of them, the people were crushed inextricably together,
swaying and surging this way and that. “Help!”
cried many a shrill feminine voice. “Don’t
push!” “Let me out!” “You brute!”
“Save me, save me!” Many ladies fainted,
whilst their escorts, supporting them and protecting
them as best they could, peered over the heads of their
fellows for one glimpse of the divine Miss Dobson.
Yet for her and the Duke, in the midst of the terrific
compress, there was space enough. In front of
them, as by a miracle of deference, a way still cleared
itself. They reached the end of the avenue without
a pause in their measured progress. Nor even
when they turned to the left, along the rather narrow
path beside the barges, was there any obstacle to their
advance. Passing evenly forward, they alone were
cool, unhustled, undishevelled.
The Duke was so rapt in his private
thoughts that he was hardly conscious of the strange
scene. And as for Zuleika, she, as well she might
be, was in the very best of good humours.
“What a lot of house-boats!”
she exclaimed. “Are you going to take me
on to one of them?”
The Duke started. Already they
were alongside the Judas barge. “Here,”
he said, “is our goal.”
He stepped through the gate of the
railings, out upon the plank, and offered her his
hand.
She looked back. The young men
in the vanguard were crushing their shoulders against
the row behind them, to stay the oncoming host.
She had half a mind to go back through the midst of
them; but she really did want her tea, and she followed
the Duke on to the barge, and under his auspices climbed
the steps to the roof.
It looked very cool and gay, this
roof, under its awning of red and white stripes.
Nests of red and white flowers depended along either
side of it. Zuleika moved to the side which commanded
a view of the bank. She leaned her arms on the
balustrade, and gazed down.
The crowd stretched as far as she
could see—a vista of faces upturned to
her. Suddenly it hove forward. Its vanguard
was swept irresistibly past the barge—swept
by the desire of the rest to see her at closer quarters.
Such was the impetus that the vision for each man was
but a lightning-flash: he was whirled past, struggling,
almost before his brain took the message of his eyes.
Those who were Judas men made frantic
efforts to board the barge, trying to hurl themselves
through the gate in the railings; but they were swept
vainly on.
Presently the torrent began to slacken,
became a mere river, a mere procession of youths staring
up rather shyly.
Before the last stragglers had marched
by, Zuleika moved away to the other side of the roof,
and, after a glance at the sunlit river, sank into
one of the wicker chairs, and asked the Duke to look
less disagreeable and to give her some tea.
Among others hovering near the little
buffet were the two youths whose parley with the Duke
I have recorded.
Zuleika was aware of the special persistence
of their gaze. When the Duke came back with her
cup, she asked him who they were. He replied,
truthfully enough, that their names were unknown to
him.
“Then,” she said, “ask
them their names, and introduce them to me.”
“No,” said the Duke, sinking
into the chair beside her. “That I shall
not do. I am your victim: not your pander.
Those two men stand on the threshold of a possibly
useful and agreeable career. I am not going to
trip them up for you.”
“I am not sure,” said
Zuleika, “that you are very polite. Certainly
you are foolish. It is natural for boys to fall
in love. If these two are in love with me, why
not let them talk to me? It were an experience
on which they would always look back with romantic
pleasure. They may never see me again. Why
grudge them this little thing?” She sipped her
tea. “As for tripping them up on a threshold—
that is all nonsense. What harm has unrequited
love ever done to anybody?” She laughed.
“Look at me! When I came to your rooms
this morning, thinking I loved in vain, did I seem
one jot the worse for it? Did I look different?”
“You looked, I am bound to say, nobler, more
spiritual.”
“More spiritual?” she exclaimed.
“Do you mean I looked tired or ill?”
“No, you seemed quite fresh.
But then, you are singular. You are no criterion.”
“You mean you can’t judge
those two young men by me? Well, I am only a
woman, of course. I have heard of women, no longer
young, wasting away because no man loved them.
I have often heard of a young woman fretting because
some particular young man didn’t love her.
But I never heard of her wasting away. Certainly
a young man doesn’t waste away for love of some
particular young woman. He very soon makes love
to some other one. If his be an ardent nature,
the quicker his transition. All the most ardent
of my past adorers have married. Will you put
my cup down, please?”
“Past?” echoed the Duke,
as he placed her cup on the floor. “Have
any of your lovers ceased to love you?”
“Ah no, no; not in retrospect.
I remain their ideal, and all that, of course.
They cherish the thought of me. They see the world
in terms of me. But I am an inspiration, not
an obsession; a glow, not a blight.”
“You don’t believe in
the love that corrodes, the love that ruins?”
“No,” laughed Zuleika.
“You have never dipped into
the Greek pastoral poets, nor sampled the Elizabethan
sonneteers?”
“No, never. You will think
me lamentably crude: my experience of life has
been drawn from life itself.”
“Yet often you talk as though
you had read rather much. Your way of speech
has what is called ’the literary flavour’.”
“Ah, that is an unfortunate
trick which I caught from a writer, a Mr. Beerbohm,
who once sat next to me at dinner somewhere. I
can’t break myself of it. I assure you
I hardly ever open a book. Of life, though, my
experience has been very wide. Brief? But
I suppose the soul of man during the past two or three
years has been much as it was in the reign of Queen
Elizabeth and of—whoever it was that reigned
over the Greek pastures. And I daresay the modern
poets are making the same old silly distortions.
But forgive me,” she added gently, “perhaps
you yourself are a poet?”
“Only since yesterday,”
answered the Duke (not less unfairly to himself than
to Roger Newdigate and Thomas Gaisford). And he
felt he was especially a dramatic poet. All the
while that she had been sitting by him here, talking
so glibly, looking so straight into his eyes, flashing
at him so many pretty gestures, it was the sense of
tragic irony that prevailed in him—that
sense which had stirred in him, and been repressed,
on the way from Judas. He knew that she was making
her effect consciously for the other young men by whom
the roof of the barge was now thronged. Him alone
she seemed to observe. By her manner, she might
have seemed to be making love to him. He envied
the men she was so deliberately making envious—the
men whom, in her undertone to him, she was really
addressing. But he did take comfort in the irony.
Though she used him as a stalking-horse, he, after
all, was playing with her as a cat plays with a mouse.
While she chattered on, without an inkling that he
was no ordinary lover, and coaxing him to present
two quite ordinary young men to her, he held over her
the revelation that he for love of her was about to
die.
And, while he drank in the radiance
of her beauty, he heard her chattering on. “So
you see,” she was saying, “it couldn’t
do those young men any harm. Suppose unrequited
love is anguish: isn’t the discipline
wholesome? Suppose I am a sort of furnace:
shan’t I purge, refine, temper? Those two
boys are but scorched from here. That is horrid;
and what good will it do them?” She laid a hand
on his arm. “Cast them into the furnace
for their own sake, dear Duke! Or cast one of
them, or,” she added, glancing round at the throng,
“any one of these others!”
“For their own sake?”
he echoed, withdrawing his arm. “If you
were not, as the whole world knows you to be, perfectly
respectable, there might be something in what you
say. But as it is, you can but be an engine for
mischief; and your sophistries leave me unmoved.
I shall certainly keep you to myself.”
“I hate you,” said Zuleika,
with an ugly petulance that crowned the irony.
“So long as I live,” uttered
the Duke, in a level voice, “you will address
no man but me.”
“If your prophecy is to be fulfilled,”
laughed Zuleika, rising from her chair, “your
last moment is at hand.”
“It is,” he answered, rising too.
“What do you mean?” she asked, awed by
something in his tone.
“I mean what I say: that
my last moment is at hand.” He withdrew
his eyes from hers, and, leaning his elbows on the
balustrade, gazed thoughtfully at the river.
“When I am dead,” he added, over his shoulder,
“you will find these fellows rather coy of your
advances.”
For the first time since his avowal
of his love for her, Zuleika found herself genuinely
interested in him. A suspicion of his meaning
had flashed through her soul. —But no!
surely he could not mean that! It must have
been a metaphor merely. And yet, something in
his eyes . . . She leaned beside him. Her
shoulder touched his. She gazed questioningly
at him. He did not turn his face to her.
He gazed at the sunlit river.
The Judas Eight had just embarked
for their voyage to the starting-point. Standing
on the edge of the raft that makes a floating platform
for the barge, William, the hoary bargee, was pushing
them off with his boat-hook, wishing them luck with
deferential familiarity. The raft was thronged
with Old Judasians—mostly clergymen—who
were shouting hearty hortations, and evidently trying
not to appear so old as they felt—or rather,
not to appear so startlingly old as their contemporaries
looked to them. It occurred to the Duke as a strange
thing, and a thing to be glad of, that he, in this
world, would never be an Old Judasian. Zuleika’s
shoulder pressed his. He thrilled not at all.
To all intents, he was dead already.
The enormous eight young men in the
thread-like skiff—the skiff that would
scarce have seemed an adequate vehicle for the tiny
“cox” who sat facing them—were
staring up at Zuleika with that uniformity of impulse
which, in another direction, had enabled them to bump
a boat on two of the previous “nights.”
If to-night they bumped the next boat, Univ., then
would Judas be three places “up” on the
river; and to-morrow Judas would have a Bump Supper.
Furthermore, if Univ. were bumped to-night, Magdalen
might be bumped to-morrow. Then would Judas,
for the first time in history, be head of the river.
Oh tremulous hope! Yet, for the moment, these
eight young men seemed to have forgotten the awful
responsibility that rested on their over-developed
shoulders. Their hearts, already strained by rowing,
had been transfixed this afternoon by Eros’
darts. All of them had seen Zuleika as she came
down to the river; and now they sat gaping up at her,
fumbling with their oars. The tiny cox gaped too;
but he it was who first recalled duty. With piping
adjurations he brought the giants back to their senses.
The boat moved away down stream, with a fairly steady
stroke.
Not in a day can the traditions of
Oxford be sent spinning. From all the barges
the usual punt-loads of young men were being ferried
across to the towing-path—young men naked
of knee, armed with rattles, post-horns, motor-hooters,
gongs, and other instruments of clangour. Though
Zuleika filled their thoughts, they hurried along the
towing-path, as by custom, to the starting-point.
She, meanwhile, had not taken her
eyes off the Duke’s profile. Nor had she
dared, for fear of disappointment, to ask him just
what he had meant.
“All these men,” he repeated
dreamily, “will be coy of your advances.”
It seemed to him a good thing that his death, his awful
example, would disinfatuate his fellow alumni.
He had never been conscious of public spirit.
He had lived for himself alone. Love had come
to him yesternight, and to-day had waked in him a
sympathy with mankind. It was a fine thing to
be a saviour. It was splendid to be human.
He looked quickly round to her who had wrought this
change in him.
But the loveliest face in all the
world will not please you if you see it suddenly,
eye to eye, at a distance of half an inch from your
own. It was thus that the Duke saw Zuleika’s:
a monstrous deliquium a-glare. Only for the fraction
of an instant, though. Recoiling, he beheld the
loveliness that he knew—more adorably vivid
now in its look of eager questioning. And in
his every fibre he thrilled to her. Even so had
she gazed at him last night, this morning. Aye,
now as then, her soul was full of him. He had
recaptured, not her love, but his power to please
her. It was enough. He bowed his head; and
“Moriturus te saluto” were the words formed
silently by his lips. He was glad that his death
would be a public service to the University.
But the salutary lesson of what the newspapers would
call his “rash act” was, after all, only
a side-issue. The great thing, the prospect that
flushed his cheek, was the consummation of his own
love, for its own sake, by his own death. And,
as he met her gaze, the question that had already
flitted through his brain found a faltering utterance;
and “Shall you mourn me?” he asked her.
But she would have no ellipses.
“What are you going to do?” she whispered.
“Do you not know?”
“Tell me.”
“Once and for all: you cannot love me?”
Slowly she shook her head. The
black pearl and the pink, quivering, gave stress to
her ultimatum. But the violet of her eyes was
all but hidden by the dilation of her pupils.
“Then,” whispered the
Duke, “when I shall have died, deeming life a
vain thing without you, will the gods give you tears
for me? Miss Dobson, will your soul awaken?
When I shall have sunk for ever beneath these waters
whose supposed purpose here this afternoon is but that
they be ploughed by the blades of these young oarsmen,
will there be struck from that flint, your heart,
some late and momentary spark of pity for me?”
“Why of course, of course!”
babbled Zuleika, with clasped hands and dazzling eyes.
“But,” she curbed herself, “it is—it
would—oh, you mustn’t think
of it! I couldn’t allow it! I—I
should never forgive myself!”
“In fact, you would mourn me always?”
“Why yes! . . Y-es-always.”
What else could she say? But would his answer
be that he dared not condemn her to lifelong torment?
“Then,” his answer was,
“my joy in dying for you is made perfect.”
Her muscles relaxed. Her breath
escaped between her teeth. “You are utterly
resolved?” she asked. “Are you?”
“Utterly.”
“Nothing I might say could change your purpose?”
“Nothing.”
“No entreaty, howsoever piteous, could move
you?”
“None.”
Forthwith she urged, entreated, cajoled,
commanded, with infinite prettiness of ingenuity and
of eloquence. Never was such a cascade of dissuasion
as hers. She only didn’t say she could love
him. She never hinted that. Indeed, throughout
her pleading rang this recurrent motif: that
he must live to take to himself as mate some good,
serious, clever woman who would be a not unworthy mother
of his children.
She laid stress on his youth, his
great position, his brilliant attainments, the much
he had already achieved, the splendid possibilities
of his future. Though of course she spoke in undertones,
not to be overheard by the throng on the barge, it
was almost as though his health were being floridly
proposed at some public banquet —say, at
a Tenants’ Dinner. Insomuch that, when she
ceased, the Duke half expected Jellings, his steward,
to bob up uttering, with lifted hands, a stentorian
“For-or,” and all the company to take up
the chant: “he’s—a jolly
good fellow.” His brief reply, on those
occasions, seemed always to indicate that, whatever
else he might be, a jolly good fellow he was not.
But by Zuleika’s eulogy he really was touched.
“Thank you—thank you,” he gasped;
and there were tears in his eyes. Dear the thought
that she so revered him, so wished him not to die.
But this was no more than a rush-light in the austere
radiance of his joy in dying for her.
And the time was come. Now for
the sacrament of his immersion in infinity.
“Good-bye,” he said simply,
and was about to swing himself on to the ledge of
the balustrade. Zuleika, divining his intention,
made way for him. Her bosom heaved quickly, quickly.
All colour had left her face; but her eyes shone as
never before.
Already his foot was on the ledge,
when hark! the sound of a distant gun. To Zuleika,
with all the chords of her soul strung to the utmost
tensity, the effect was as if she herself had been
shot; and she clutched at the Duke’s arm, like
a frightened child. He laughed. “It
was the signal for the race,” he said, and laughed
again, rather bitterly, at the crude and trivial interruption
of high matters.
“The race?” She laughed hysterically.
“Yes. ’They’re
off’.” He mingled his laughter with
hers, gently seeking to disengage his arm. “And
perhaps,” he said, “I, clinging to the
weeds of the river’s bed, shall see dimly the
boats and the oars pass over me, and shall be able
to gurgle a cheer for Judas.”
“Don’t!” she shuddered,
with a woman’s notion that a jest means levity.
A tumult of thoughts surged in her, all confused.
She only knew that he must not die—not
yet! A moment ago, his death would have been
beautiful. Not now! Her grip of his arm tightened.
Only by breaking her wrist could he have freed himself.
A moment ago, she had been in the seventh-heaven .
. . Men were supposed to have died for love of
her. It had never been proved. There had
always been something—card-debts, ill-health,
what not—to account for the tragedy.
No man, to the best of her recollection, had ever hinted
that he was going to die for her. Never, assuredly,
had she seen the deed done. And then came he,
the first man she had loved, going to die here, before
her eyes, because she no longer loved him. But
she knew now that he must not die—not yet!
All around her was the hush that falls
on Oxford when the signal for the race has sounded.
In the distance could be heard faintly the noise of
cheering—a little sing-song sound, drawing
nearer.
Ah, how could she have thought of
letting him die so soon? She gazed into his face—the
face she might never have seen again. Even now,
but for that gun-shot, the waters would have closed
over him, and his soul, maybe, have passed away.
She had saved him, thank heaven! She had him
still with her.
Gently, vainly, he still sought to
unclasp her fingers from his arm.
“Not now!” she whispered. “Not
yet!”
And the noise of the cheering, and
of the trumpeting and rattling, as it drew near, was
an accompaniment to her joy in having saved her lover.
She would keep him with her—for a while!
Let all be done in order. She would savour the
full sweetness of his sacrifice. Tomorrow—to-morrow,
yes, let him have his heart’s desire of death.
Not now! Not yet!
“To-morrow,” she whispered,
“to-morrow, if you will. Not yet!”
The first boat came jerking past in
mid-stream; and the towing-path, with its serried
throng of runners, was like a live thing, keeping
pace. As in a dream, Zuleika saw it. And
the din was in her ears. No heroine of Wagner
had ever a louder accompaniment than had ours to the
surging soul within her bosom.
And the Duke, tightly held by her,
vibrated as to a powerful electric current. He
let her cling to him, and her magnetism range through
him. Ah, it was good not to have died! Fool,
he had meant to drain off-hand, at one coarse draught,
the delicate wine of death. He would let his
lips caress the brim of the august goblet. He
would dally with the aroma that was there.
“So be it!” he cried into
Zuleika’s ear—cried loudly, for it
seemed as though all the Wagnerian orchestras of Europe,
with the Straussian ones thrown in, were here to clash
in unison the full volume of right music for the glory
of the reprieve.
The fact was that the Judas boat had
just bumped Univ., exactly opposite the Judas barge.
The oarsmen in either boat sat humped, panting, some
of them rocking and writhing, after their wholesome
exercise. But there was not one of them whose
eyes were not upcast at Zuleika. And the vocalisation
and instrumentation of the dancers and stampers on
the towing-path had by this time ceased to mean aught
of joy in the victors or of comfort for the vanquished,
and had resolved itself into a wild wordless hymn
to the glory of Miss Dobson. Behind her and all
around her on the roof of the barge, young Judasians
were venting in like manner their hearts through their
lungs. She paid no heed. It was as if she
stood alone with her lover on some silent pinnacle
of the world. It was as if she were a little girl
with a brand-new and very expensive doll which had
banished all the little other old toys from her mind.
She simply could not, in her naive
rapture, take her eyes off her companion. To
the dancers and stampers of the towing-path, many of
whom were now being ferried back across the river,
and to the other youths on the roof of the barge,
Zuleika’s air of absorption must have seemed
a little strange. For already the news that the
Duke loved Zuleika, and that she loved him not, and
would stoop to no man who loved her, had spread like
wild-fire among the undergraduates. The two youths
in whom the Duke had deigned to confide had not held
their peace. And the effect that Zuleika had
made as she came down to the river was intensified
by the knowledge that not the great paragon himself
did she deem worthy of her. The mere sight of
her had captured young Oxford. The news of her
supernal haughtiness had riveted the chains.
“Come!” said the Duke
at length, staring around him with the eyes of one
awakened from a dream. “Come! I must
take you back to Judas.”
“But you won’t leave me
there?” pleaded Zuleika. “You will
stay to dinner? I am sure my grandfather would
be delighted.”
“I am sure he would,”
said the Duke, as he piloted her down the steps of
the barge. “But alas, I have to dine at
the Junta to-night.”
“The Junta? What is that?”
“A little dining-club. It meets every Tuesday.”
“But—you don’t mean you are
going to refuse me for that?”
“To do so is misery. But I have no choice.
I have asked a guest.”
“Then ask another: ask
me!” Zuleika’s notions of Oxford life were
rather hazy. It was with difficulty that the Duke
made her realise that he could not—not
even if, as she suggested, she dressed herself up
as a man—invite her to the Junta. She
then fell back on the impossibility that he would
not dine with her to-night, his last night in this
world. She could not understand that admirable
fidelity to social engagements which is one of the
virtues implanted in the members of our aristocracy.
Bohemian by training and by career, she construed
the Duke’s refusal as either a cruel slight to
herself or an act of imbecility. The thought
of being parted from her for one moment was torture
to him; but “noblesse oblige,” and it was
quite impossible for him to break an engagement merely
because a more charming one offered itself: he
would as soon have cheated at cards.
And so, as they went side by side
up the avenue, in the mellow light of the westering
sun, preceded in their course, and pursued, and surrounded,
by the mob of hoarse infatuate youths, Zuleika’s
face was as that of a little girl sulking. Vainly
the Duke reasoned with her. She could not
see the point of view.
With that sudden softening that comes
to the face of an angry woman who has hit on a good
argument, she turned to him and asked “How if
I hadn’t saved your life just now? Much
you thought about your guest when you were going to
dive and die!”
“I did not forget him,”
answered the Duke, smiling at her casuistry.
“Nor had I any scruple in disappointing him.
Death cancels all engagements.”
And Zuleika, worsted, resumed her
sulking. But presently, as they neared Judas,
she relented. It was paltry to be cross with him
who had resolved to die for her and was going to die
so on the morrow. And after all, she would see
him at the concert to-night. They would sit together.
And all to-morrow they would be together, till the
time came for parting. Hers was a naturally sunny
disposition. And the evening was such a lovely
one, all bathed in gold. She was ashamed of her
ill-humour.
“Forgive me,” she said,
touching his arm. “Forgive me for being
horrid.” And forgiven she promptly was.
“And promise you will spend all to-morrow with
me.” And of course he promised.
As they stood together on the steps
of the Warden’s front-door, exalted above the
level of the flushed and swaying crowd that filled
the whole length and breadth of Judas Street, she implored
him not to be late for the concert.
“I am never late,” he smiled.
“Ah, you’re so beautifully brought up!”
The door was opened.
“And—oh, you’re
beautiful besides!” she whispered; and waved
her hand to him as she vanished into the hall.