The Grey Cloak eBook

Harold MacGrath
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Grey Cloak.

The Grey Cloak eBook

Harold MacGrath
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about The Grey Cloak.

For more than half an hour the marquis barred from his sight the scene surrounding, and wandered in familiar green fields where a certain mill-stream ran laughing to the sobbing sea; closed his ears to the shouts of laughter and snatches of ribald song, to hear again the nightingale, the stir of grasses under foot, the thrilling sweetness of the voice he loved.  When he recovered from his dream he was surprised to find that he had caught the angle of his wife’s eyes, those expressive and following eyes which Rubens left to posterity; and he saw in them something which was new-born:  reproach.

“Yes,” said the marquis, as if replying to this spirit of reproach; “yes, if there be souls, yours must hover about me in reproach; reproach not without its irony and gladness; for you see me all alone, Madame, unloved, unrespected, declining and forgotten.  But I offer no complaint; only fools and hypocrites make lamentation.  And I am less to this son of yours than the steward who reckons his accounts.  Where place the blame?  Upon these shoulders, Madame, stooped as you in life never saw them.  I knew not, conceited gallant that I was, that beauty and strength were passing gifts.  What nature gives she likewise takes away.  Who would have dreamed that I should need an arm to lean on?  Not I, Madame!  What vanity we possess when we lack nothing! . . .”

From the dining-hall there came distinctly the Chevalier’s voice lifted in song.  He was singing one of Victor’s triolets which the poet had joined to music: 

  “When Ma’m’selle drinks from her satin shoe,
    I drink the wine from her radiant eyes;
  And we sit in a casement made for two
  When Ma’m’selle drinks from her satin shoe
  With a Bacchante’s love for a Bacchic brew! 
    Then kiss the grape, for the midnight flies
  When Ma’m’selle drinks from her satin shoe,
    And I the wine from her radiant eyes!

“Madame, he sings well,” said the marquis, whimsically.  “What was it the Jesuits said? . . . corrupt and degenerate?  Yes, those were the words.  ’Tis true; and this disease of idleness is as infectious as the plague.  And this son of mine, he is following the game path through which I passed . . . to this, palsy and senility!  Oh, the subtile poisons, the intoxicating Hippocrenes I taught him how to drink!  And now he turns and casts the dregs into my face.  But as I said, I make no plaint; I do not lack courage.  A pleasant pastime it was, this worldly lessoning; but I forgot that he was partly a reproduction of his Catholic mother; that where I stood rugged he would fall; that he did not possess ardor that is without fire, love that is without sentiment. . . .”

A maudlin voice took up the Chevalier’s song . . .

  “When Ma’m’selle drinks from her satin shoe
  With a Bacchante’s love for a Bacchic brew!

“Reparation, Madame?” went on the marquis.  “Such things are beyond reparation.  And yet it is possible to save him.  But how?  Behold! you inspire me.  I will save him.  I will pardon his insolence, his contempt, his indifference, which, having my bone, was bred in him.  Still, the question rises:  for what shall I save him?  Shall he love a good woman some day?  Mayhap.  So I will save him, not for the Church, but for the possible but unknown quantity.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Grey Cloak from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.