The Eye of Zeitoon eBook

Talbot Mundy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Eye of Zeitoon.

The Eye of Zeitoon eBook

Talbot Mundy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Eye of Zeitoon.

Then Fred began the tune again from the beginning, and he had it at his finger-ends by then.  He made the rafters ring.  And without a word Maga kicked the shoes and stockings into a corner, flung her outer, woolen upper-garment after them, and began to dance.

There is a time when any of us does his best.  Money—­marriage—­praise —­applause (which is totally another thing than praise, and more like whisky in its workings)—­ambition—­prayer—­there is a key to the heart of each of us that can unlock the flood-tides of emotion and carry us nolens volens to the peaks of possibility.  Either Will, or else Fred’s music, or the setting, or all three unlocked her gifts that night.  She danced like a moth in a flame—­a wandering woman in the fire unquenchable that burns convention out of gipsy hearts, and makes the patteran—­the trail—­the only way worth while.

Opposite, the gipsies sprawled in silence on their platform, breathing a little deeper when deepest approval stirred them, a little more quickly when her Muse took hold of Maga and thrilled her to expression of the thoughts unknown to people of the dinning walls and streets.

We four leaned back against our wall in a sort of silent revelry, Fred alone moving, making his beloved instrument charm wisely, calling to her just enough to keep a link, as it were, through which her imagery might appeal to ours.  Some sort of mental bridge between her tameless paganism and our twentieth-century twilight there had to be, or we never could have sensed her meaning.  The concertina’s wailings, mid-way between her intelligence and ours, served well enough.

My own chief feeling was of exultation, crowing over the hooded city-folk, who think that drama and the tricks of colored light and shade have led them to a glimpse of the hem of the garment of Unrest —­a cheap mean feeling, of which I was afterward ashamed.

Maga was not crowing over anybody.  Neither did she only dance of things her senses knew.  The history of a people seized her for a reed, and wrote itself in figures past imagining between the crimson firelight; and the shadows of the cattle stalls.

Her dance that night could never have been done with leather between bare foot and earth.  It told of measureless winds and waters—­of the distances, the stars, the day, the night-rain sweeping down—­dew dropping gently—­the hundred kinds of birds-the thousand animals and creeping things—­and of man, who is lord of all of them, and woman, who is lord of man—­man setting naked foot on naked earth and glorying with the thrill of life, new, good, and wonderful.

One of the Turk’s seven sons produced a saz toward the end—­a little Turkish drum, and accompanied with swift, staccato stabs of sound that spurred her like the goads of overtaking time toward the peak of full expression—­faster and faster—­wilder and wilder—­freer and freer of all limits, until suddenly she left the thing unfinished, and the drum-taps died away alone.

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Project Gutenberg
The Eye of Zeitoon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.