The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

The Pretty Lady eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 303 pages of information about The Pretty Lady.

G.J. was afraid, and he did not immediately know why he was afraid.  The procession came nearer.  It was upon him....  He knew why he was afraid, and he averted sharply his gaze from the coffin.  He was afraid for his composure.  If he had continued to watch the coffin he would have burst into loud sobs.  Only by an extraordinary effort did he master himself.  Many other people lowered their faces in self-defence.  The searchers after new and violent sensations were having the time of their lives.

The Dead March with its intolerable genius had ceased.  The coffin, guarded by flickering candles, lay on the lofty catafalque; the eight sergeants were pretending that their strength had not been in the least degree taxed.  Princes, the illustrious, the champions of Allied might, dark Indians, adventurers, even Germans, surrounded the catafalque in the gloom.  G.J. sympathised with the man in the coffin, the simple little man whose non-political mission had in spite of him grown political.  He regretted horribly that once he, G.J., who protested that he belonged to no party, had said of the dead man:  “Roberts!  Well-meaning of course, but senile!” ...  Yet a trifle!  What did it matter?  And how he loathed to think that the name of the dead man was now befouled by the calculating and impure praise of schemers.  Another trifle!

As the service proceeded G.J. was overwhelmed and lost in the grandeur and terror of existence.  There he sat, grizzled, dignified, with the great world, looking as though he belonged to the great world; and he felt like a boy, like a child, like a helpless infant before the enormities of destiny.  He wanted help, because of his futility.  He could do nothing, or so little.  It was as if he had been training himself for twenty years in order to be futile at a crisis requiring crude action.  And he could not undo twenty years.  The war loomed about him, co-extensive with existence itself.  He thought of the sergeant who, as recounted that morning in the papers, had led a victorious storming party, been decorated—­and died of wounds.  And similar deeds were being done at that moment.  And the simple little man in the coffin was being tilted downwards from the catafalque into the grave close by.  G.J. wanted surcease, were it but for an hour.  He longed acutely, unbearably, to be for an hour with Christine in her warm, stuffy, exciting, languorous, enervating room hermetically sealed against the war.  Then he remembered the tones of her voice as she had told her Belgian adventures....  Was it love?  Was it tenderness?  Was it sensuality?  The difference was indiscernible; it had no importance.  Against the stark background of infinite existence all human beings were alike and all their passions were alike.

The gaunt, ruthless autocrat of the War Office and the frail crowned descendant of kings fronted each other across the open grave, and the coffin sank between them and was gone.  From the choir there came the chanted and soothing words: 

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Project Gutenberg
The Pretty Lady from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.