The Lost Word, Christmas stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 34 pages of information about The Lost Word, Christmas stories.

The Lost Word, Christmas stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 34 pages of information about The Lost Word, Christmas stories.

RICHES WITHOUT REST

No outward change came to the House of the Golden Pillars.  Everything moved as smoothly, as delicately, as prosperously, as before.  But inwardly there was a subtle, inexplicable transformation.  A vague discontent—­a final and inevitable sense of incompleteness, overshadowed existence from that night when Hermas realized that his joy could never go beyond itself.

The next morning the old man whom he had seen in the Grove of Daphne, but never since, appeared mysteriously at the door of the house, as if he had been sent for, and entered, to dwell there like an invited guest.

Hermas could not but make him welcome, and at first he tried to regard him with reverence and affection as the one through whom fortune had come.  But it was impossible.  There was a chill in the inscrutable smile of Marcion, as he called himself, that seemed to mock at reverence.  He was in the house as one watching a strange experiment—­tranquil, interested, ready to supply anything that might be needed for its completion, but thoroughly indifferent to the feelings of the subject; an anatomist of life, looking curiously to see how long it would continue, and how it would behave, after the heart had been removed.

In his presence Hermas was conscious of a certain irritation, a resentful anger against the calm, frigid scrutiny of the eyes that followed him everywhere, like a pair of spies, peering out over the smiling mouth and the long white beard.

“Why do you look at me so curiously?” asked Hermas, one morning, as they sat together in the library.  “Do you see anything strange in me?”

“No,” answered Marcion; “something familiar.”

“And what is that?”

“A singular likeness to a discontented young man that I met some years ago in the Grove of Daphne.”

“But why should that interest you?  Surely it was to be expected.”

“A thing that we expect often surprises us when we see it.  Besides, my curiosity is piqued.  I suspect you of keeping a secret from me.”

“You are jesting with me.  There is nothing in my life that you do not know.  What is the secret?”

“Nothing more than the wish to have one.  You are growing tired of your bargain.  The game wearies you.  That is foolish.  Do you want to try a new part?”

The question was like a mirror upon which one comes suddenly in a half-lighted. room, A quick illumination falls on it, and the passer-by is startled by the look of his own face.

“You are right,” said Hermas.  “I am tired.  We have been going on stupidly in this house, as if nothing were possible but what my father had done before me.  There is nothing original in being rich, and well fed, and well dressed.  Thousands of men have tried it, and have not been very well satisfied.  Let us do something new.  Let us make a mark in the world.”

“It is well said,” nodded the old man; “you are speaking again like a man after my own heart.  There is no folly but the loss of an opportunity to enjoy a new sensation.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Lost Word, Christmas stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.