Delphi collected works o.., p.794

Delphi Collected Works of Marie Corelli, page 794

 part  #22 of  Delphi Series Series

 

Delphi Collected Works of Marie Corelli
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  The first edition’s title page

  CONTENTS

  BOOK ONE: HER FANCY

  CHAPTER I

  CHAPTER II

  CHAPTER III

  CHAPTER IV

  CHAPTER V

  CHAPTER VI

  CHAPTER VII

  CHAPTER VIII

  CHAPTER IX

  CHAPTER X

  CHAPTER XI

  CHAPTER XII

  BOOK TWO: HIS FACT

  CHAPTER I

  CHAPTER II

  CHAPTER III

  CHAPTER IV

  CHAPTER V

  CHAPTER VI

  CHAPTER VII

  CHAPTER VIII

  CHAPTER IX

  CHAPTER X

  CHAPTER XI

  CHAPTER XII

  L’ENVOI

  An early dust jacket for the novel

  A scene from the 1921 film adaptation, with Madge Stuart as Innocence and Basil Rathbone as Amadis de Jocelyn

  BOOK ONE: HER FANCY

  CHAPTER I

  The old by-road went rambling down into a dell of deep green shadow. It was a reprobate of a road, — a vagrant of the land, — having long ago wandered out of straight and even courses and taken to meandering aimlessly into many ruts and furrows under arching trees, which in wet weather poured their weight of dripping rain upon it and made it little more than a mud pool. Between straggling bushes of elder and hazel, blackberry and thorn, it made its solitary shambling way, so sunken into itself with long disuse that neither to the right nor to the left of it could anything be seen of the surrounding country. Hidden behind the intervening foliage on either hand were rich pastures and ploughed fields, but with these the old road had nothing in common. There were many things better suited to its nature, such as the melodious notes of the birds which made their homes year after year amid its bordering thickets, or the gathering together in springtime of thousands of primroses, whose pale, small, elfin faces peeped out from every mossy corner, — or the scent of secret violets in the grass, filling the air with the delicate sweetness of a breathing made warm by the April sun. Or when the thrill of summer drew the wild roses running quickly from the earth skyward, twining their stems together in fantastic arches and tufts of deep pink and flush-white blossom, and the briony wreaths with their small bright green stars swung pendent from over-shadowing boughs like garlands for a sylvan festival. Or the thousands of tiny unassuming herbs which grew up with the growing speargrass, bringing with them pungent odours from the soil as from some deep-laid storehouse of precious spices. These choice delights were the old by-road’s peculiar possession, and through a wild maze of beauty and fragrance it strayed on with a careless awkwardness, getting more and more involved in tangles of green, — till at last, recoiling abruptly as it were upon its own steps, it stopped short at the entrance to a cleared space in front of a farmyard. With this the old by-road had evidently no sort of business whatever, and ended altogether, as it were, with a rough shock of surprise at finding itself in such open quarters. No arching trees or twining brambles were here, — it was a wide, clean brick-paved place chiefly possessed by a goodly company of promising fowls, and a huge cart-horse. The horse was tied to his manger in an open shed, and munched and munched with all the steadiness and goodwill of the sailor’s wife who offended Macbeth’s first witch. Beyond the farmyard was the farmhouse itself, — a long, low, timbered building with a broad tiled roof supported by huge oaken rafters and crowned with many gables, — a building proudly declaring itself as of the days of Elizabeth’s yeomen, and bearing about it the honourable marks of age and long stress of weather. No such farmhouses are built nowadays, for life has become with us less than a temporary thing, — a coin to be spent rapidly as soon as gained, too valueless for any interest upon it to be sought or desired. In olden times it was apparently not considered such cheap currency. Men built their homes to last not only for their own lifetime, but for the lifetime of their children and their children’s children; and the idea that their children’s children might possibly fail to appreciate the strenuousness and worth of their labours never entered their simple brains.

  The farmyard was terminated at its other end by a broad stone archway, which showed as in a semi-circular frame the glint of scarlet geraniums in the distance, and in the shadow cast by this embrasure was the small unobtrusive figure of a girl. She stood idly watching the hens pecking at their food and driving away their offspring from every chance of sharing bit or sup with them, — and as she noted the greedy triumph of the strong over the weak, the great over the small, her brows drew together in a slight frown of something like scorn. Yet hers was not a face that naturally expressed any of the unkind or harsh emotions. It was soft and delicately featured, and its rose-white tints were illumined by grave, deeply-set grey eyes that were full of wistful and questioning pathos. In stature she was below the middle height and slight of build, so that she seemed a mere child at first sight, with nothing particularly attractive about her except, perhaps, her hands. These were daintily shaped and characteristic of inbred refinement, and as they hung listlessly at her sides looked scarcely less white than the white cotton frock she wore. She turned presently with a movement of impatience away from the sight of the fussy and quarrelsome fowls, and looking up at the quaint gables of the farmhouse uttered a low, caressing call. A white dove flew down to her instantly, followed by another and yet another. She smiled and extended her arms, and a whole flock of the birds came fluttering about her in a whirl of wings, perching on her shoulders and alighting at her feet. One that seemed to enjoy a position of special favouritism, flew straight against her breast, — she caught it and held it there. It remained with her quite contentedly, while she stroked its velvety neck.

  “Poor Cupid!” she murmured. “You love me, don’t you? Oh yes, ever so much! Only you can’t tell me so! I’m glad! You wouldn’t be half so sweet if you could!”

  She kissed the bird’s soft head, and still stroking it scattered all the others around her by a slight gesture, and went, followed by a snowy cloud of them, through the archway into the garden beyond. Here there were flower-beds formally cut and arranged in the old-fashioned Dutch manner, full of sweet-smelling old-fashioned things, such as stocks and lupins, verbena and mignonette, — there were box-borders and clumps of saxifrage, fuchsias, and geraniums, — and roses that grew in every possible way that roses have ever grown, or can ever grow. The farmhouse fronted fully on this garden, and a magnificent “Glory” rose covered it from its deep black oaken porch to its highest gable, wreathing it with hundreds of pale golden balls of perfume. A real “old” rose it was, without any doubt of its own intrinsic worth and sweetness, — a rose before which the most highly trained hybrids might hang their heads for shame or wither away with envy, for the air around it was wholly perfumed with its honey-scented nectar, distilled from peaceful years upon years of sunbeams and stainless dew. The girl, still carrying her pet dove, walked slowly along the narrow gravelled paths that encircled the flower-beds and box-borders, till, reaching a low green door at the further end of the garden, she opened it and passed through into a newly mown field, where several lads and men were about busily employed in raking together the last swaths of a full crop of hay and adding them to the last waggon which stood in the centre of the ground, horseless, and piled to an almost toppling height. One young fellow, with a crimson silk tie knotted about his open shirt-collar, stood on top of the lofty fragrant load, fork in hand, tossing the additional heaps together as they were thrown up to him. The afternoon sun blazed burningly down on his uncovered head and bare brown arms, and as he shook and turned the hay with untiring energy, his movements were full of the easy grace and picturesqueness which are often the unconscious endowment of those whose labour keeps them daily in the fresh air. Occasional bursts of laughter and scraps of rough song came from the others at work, and there was only one absolutely quiet figure among them, that of an old man sitting on an upturned barrel which had been but recently emptied of its home-brewed beer, meditatively smoking a long clay pipe. He wore a smock frock and straw hat, and under the brim of the straw hat, which was well pulled down over his forehead, his filmy eyes gleamed with an alert watchfulness. He seemed to be counting every morsel of hay that was being added to the load and pricing it in his mind, but there was no actual expression of either pleasure or interest on his features. As the girl entered the field, and her gown made a gleam of white on the grass, he turned his head and looked at her, puffing hard at his pipe and watching her approach only a little less narrowly than he watched the piling up of the hay. When she drew sufficiently near him he spoke.

  “Coming to ride home on last load?”

  She hesitated.

  “I don’t know. I’m not sure,” she answered.

  “It’ll please Robin if you do,” he said.

  A little smile trembled on her lips. She bent her head over the dove she held against her bosom.

  “Why should I please Robin?” she asked.

  His dull eyes sparkled with a gleam of anger.

  “Please Robin, please ME,” he said, sharply— “Please yourself, please nobody.”

  “I do my best to please YOU, Dad!” she said, gently, yet with emphasis.

  He was silent, sucking at his pipe-stem. Just then a whistle struck the air like the near note of a thrush. It came from the man on top of the haywaggon. He had paused in his labour, and his face was turned towards the old man and the girl. It was a handsome face, lighted by a smile which seemed to have caught a reflex of the sun.

  “All ready, Uncle!” he shouted— “Ready and waiting!”

  The old man drew his pipe from his mouth.

  “There you are!” he said, addressing the girl in a softer tone,— “He’s wanting you.”

  She moved away at once. As she went, the men who were raking in the last sweepings of the hay stood aside for her to pass. One of them put a ladder against the wheel of the waggon.

  “Going up, miss?” he asked, with a cheerful grin.

  She smiled a response, but said nothing.

  The young fellow on top of the load looked down. His blue eyes sparkled merrily as he saw her.

  “Are you coming?” he called.

  She glanced up.

  “If you like,” she answered.

  “If I like!” he echoed, half-mockingly, half-tenderly; “You know I like! Why, you’ve got that wretched bird with you!”

  “He’s not a wretched bird,” she said,— “He’s a darling!”

  “Well, you can’t climb up here hugging him like that! Let him go, — and then I’ll help you.”

  For all answer she ascended the ladder lightly without assistance, still holding the dove, and in another minute was seated beside him.

  “There!” she said, as she settled herself comfortably down in the soft, sweet-smelling hay. “Now you’ve got your wish, and I hope Dad is happy.”

  “Did he tell you to come, or did you come of your own accord?” asked the young man, with a touch of curiosity.

  “He told me, of course,” she answered; “I should never have come of my own accord.”

  He bit his lip vexedly. Turning away from her he called to the haymakers:

  “That’ll do, boys! Fetch Roger, and haul in!”

  The sun was nearing the western horizon and a deep apricot glow warmed the mown field and the undulating foliage in the far distance. The men began to scatter here and there, putting aside their long wooden rakes, and two of them went off to bring Roger, the cart-horse, from his shed.

  “Uncle Hugo!”

  The old man, who still sat impassively on the beer-barrel, looked up.

  “Ay! What is it?”

  “Are you coming along with us?”

  Uncle Hugo shook his head despondently.

  “Why not? It’s the last load this year!”

  “Ay!” He lifted his straw hat and waved it in a kind of farewell salute towards the waggon, repeating mechanically: “The last load! The very last!”

  Then there came a cessation of movement everywhere for the moment. It was a kind of breathing pause in Nature’s everlasting chorus, — a sudden rest, as it seemed, in the very spaces of the air. The young man threw himself down on the hay-load so that he faced the girl, who sat quiet, caressing the dove she held. He was undeniably good-looking, with an open nobility of feature which is uncommon enough among well-born and carefully-nurtured specimens of the human race, and is perhaps still more rarely to be found among those whose lot in life is one of continuous hard manual labour. Just now he looked singularly attractive, the more so, perhaps, because he was unconscious of it. He stretched out one hand towards the girl and touched the hem of her white frock.

  “Are you feeling kind?”

  Her eyes lightened with a gleam of merriment.

  “I am always kind.”

  “Not to me! Not as kind as you are to that bird.”

  “Oh, poor Cupid! You’re jealous of him!”

  He moved a little nearer to her.

  “Perhaps I am!” And he spoke in a lower tone. “Perhaps I am, Innocent! I grudge him the privilege of lying there on your dear little white breast! I am envious when you kiss him! I want you to kiss ME!”

  His voice was tremulous, — he turned up his face audaciously.

  She looked at him with a smile.

  “I will if you like!” she said. “I should think no more of kissing you than of kissing Cupid!”

  He drew back with a gesture of annoyance.

  “I wouldn’t be kissed at all that way,” he said, hotly.

  “Why not?”

  “Because it’s not the right way. A bird is not a man!”

  She laughed merrily.

  “Nor a man a bird, though he may have a bird’s name!” she said. “Oh,

  Robin, how clever you are!”

  He leaned closer.

  “Let Cupid go!” he pleaded,— “I want to ride home on the last load with you alone.”

  Another little peal of laughter escaped her.

  “I declare you think Cupid an actual person!” she said. “If he’ll go, he shall. But I think he’ll stay.”

  She loosened her hold of the dove, which, released, gravely hopped up to her shoulder and sat there pruning its wing. She glanced round at it.

  “I told you so!” she said,— “He’s a fixture.”

  “I don’t mind him so much up there,” said Robin, and he ventured to take one of her hands in his own,— “but he always has so much of you; he nestles under your chin and is caressed by your sweet lips, — he has all, and I have, — nothing!”

  “You have one hand,” said Innocent, with demure gravity.

  “But no heart with it!” he said, wistfully. “Innocent, can you never love me?”

  She was silent, looking at him critically, — then she gave a little sigh.

  “I’m afraid not! But I have often thought about it.”

  “You have?” — and his eyes grew very tender.

  “Oh yes, often! You see, it isn’t your fault at all. You are — well!” — here she surveyed him with a whimsical air of admiration,— “you are quite a beautiful man! You have a splendid figure and a good face, and kind eyes and well-shaped feet and hands, — and I like the look of you just now with that open collar and that gleam of sunlight in your curly hair — and your throat is almost white, except for a touch of sunburn, which is RATHER becoming! — especially with that crimson silk tie! I suppose you put that tie on for effect, didn’t you?”

  He flushed, and laughed lightly.

  “Naturally! To please YOU!”

  “Really? How thoughtful of you! Well, you are charming, — and I shouldn’t mind kissing you at all. But it wouldn’t be for love.”

  “Wouldn’t it? What would it be for, then?”

  Her face lightened up with the illumination of an inward mirth and mischief.

  “Only because you look pretty!” she answered.

  He threw aside her hand with an angry gesture of impatience.

  “You want to make a fool of me!” he said, petulantly.

  “I’m sure I don’t! You are just lovely, and I tell you so. That is not making a fool of you!”

  “Yes, it is! A man is never lovely. A woman may be.”

  “Well, I’m not,” said Innocent, placidly. “That’s why I admire the loveliness of others.”

  “You are lovely to me,” he declared, passionately.

  She smiled. There was a touch of compassion in the smile.

  “Poor Robin!” she said.

  At that moment the hidden goddess in her soul arose and asserted her claim to beauty. A rare indefinable charm of exquisite tenderness and fascination seemed to environ her small and delicate personality with an atmosphere of resistless attraction. The man beside her felt it, and his heart beat quickly with a thrilling hope of conquest.

  “So you pity me!” he said,— “Pity is akin to love.”

  “But kinsfolk seldom agree,” she replied. “I only pity you because you are foolish. No one but a very foolish fellow would think ME lovely.”

  He raised himself a little and peered over the edge of the hay-load to see if there was any sign of the men returning with Roger, but there was no one in the field now except the venerable personage he called Uncle Hugo, who was still smoking away his thoughts, as it were, in a dream of tobacco. And he once more caught the hand he had just let go and covered it with kisses.

  “There!” he said, lifting his head and showing an eager face lit by amorous eyes. “Now you know how lovely you are to me! I should like to kiss your mouth like that, — for you have the sweetest mouth in the world! And you have the prettiest hair, — not raw gold which I hate, — but soft brown, with delicious little sunbeams lost in it, — and such a lot of it! I’ve seen it all down, remember! And your eyes would draw the heart out of any man and send him anywhere, — yes, Innocent! — anywhere, — to Heaven or to Hell!”

 

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