Three John Silence Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 242 pages of information about Three John Silence Stories.

Three John Silence Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 242 pages of information about Three John Silence Stories.

Vezin heard, and yet did not hear; understood, yet did not understand.  He had passed into a condition of exaltation.  The world was beneath his feet, made of music and flowers, and he was flying somewhere far above it through the sunshine of pure delight.  He was breathless and giddy with the wonder of her words.  They intoxicated him.  And, still, the terror of it all, the dreadful thought of death, pressed ever behind her sentences.  For flames shot through her voice out of black smoke and licked at his soul.

And they communicated with one another, it seemed to him, by a process of swift telepathy, for his French could never have compassed all he said to her.  Yet she understood perfectly, and what she said to him was like the recital of verses long since known.  And the mingled pain and sweetness of it as he listened were almost more than his little soul could hold.

“Yet I came here wholly by chance—­” he heard himself saying.

“No,” she cried with passion, “you came here because I called to you.  I have called to you for years, and you came with the whole force of the past behind you.  You had to come, for I own you, and I claim you.”

She rose again and moved closer, looking at him with a certain insolence in the face—­the insolence of power.

The sun had set behind the towers of the old cathedral and the darkness rose up from the plain and enveloped them.  The music of the band had ceased.  The leaves of the plane trees hung motionless, but the chill of the autumn evening rose about them and made Vezin shiver.  There was no sound but the sound of their voices and the occasional soft rustle of the girl’s dress.  He could hear the blood rushing in his ears.  He scarcely realised where he was or what he was doing.  Some terrible magic of the imagination drew him deeply down into the tombs of his own being, telling him in no unfaltering voice that her words shadowed forth the truth.  And this simple little French maid, speaking beside him with so strange authority, he saw curiously alter into quite another being.  As he stared into her eyes, the picture in his mind grew and lived, dressing itself vividly to his inner vision with a degree of reality he was compelled to acknowledge.  As once before, he saw her tall and stately, moving through wild and broken scenery of forests and mountain caverns, the glare of flames behind her head and clouds of shifting smoke about her feet.  Dark leaves encircled her hair, flying loosely in the wind, and her limbs shone through the merest rags of clothing.  Others were about her, too, and ardent eyes on all sides cast delirious glances upon her, but her own eyes were always for One only, one whom she held by the hand.  For she was leading the dance in some tempestuous orgy to the music of chanting voices, and the dance she led circled about a great and awful Figure on a throne, brooding over the scene through lurid vapours, while innumerable other wild faces and forms crowded furiously about her in the dance.  But the one she held by the hand he knew to be himself, and the monstrous shape upon the throne he knew to be her mother.

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Project Gutenberg
Three John Silence Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.