The East to Columbia
Sister Columbia, wonderful sister, Weariless wings on aerial way!
Tell us the lore of thy loftiness, sister, We of the dark are astir for the day!
Give us the gift of thy marvelous wings, Spell us the charm that Columbia sings!
Oversea sister, affluent sister, Queen inexclusive, though out of our reach!
How is thy genius ever unruffled?
What is the talisman alt.i.tudes teach?
Measureless meed of ability thine, What is the goal of thy heart"s design?
How shall we learn of it? How shall we follow?
Heavy the burden of earth where we lie!
Only a glimpse of thy miracle stirs us, Stay in our wallow and teach us to fly!
How shall we spring to Columbia"s call?
Oh, that thy wings could unweary us all!
"I am as simple as the sunlight!"
Tess was in something very near to paradise, if paradise is constant a.s.suaging of the curiosity amid surroundings that conduce to idleness.
There were men on that country-side in plenty who would not have dared admit a Western woman into their homes; but even those could hardly prevent wives and daughters from visiting Yasmini in the perfectly correct establishment she kept. And there were other men, more fearless of convention, who were willing that Tess, if veiled, should cross their private thresholds.
So there followed a round of visits and return calls, of other marvelous rides by elephant at night, because the daytime was too hot for comfort, and oftener, long drives in latticed carriages, with footmen up behind and an escort to ride before and swear at the lethargic bullock-men--carriages that b.u.mped along the country roads on strange, old-fashioned springs.
Yasmini was welcome everywhere, and, in the cautious, tenfold guarded Eastern way, kept open house. The women reveled in her free ideas and in the wit with which she heaped scorn on the priest-made fashions that have kept all India in chains for centuries, mocking the priests, as some thought, at the risk of blasphemy.
Almost as much as in Yasmini"s daring they took ingenuous delight in Tess, persuading Yasmini to interpret questions and reply or, very rarely, bringing with them some duenna who had a smattering of English.
All imprisoned folk, and especially women in the shuttered zenanas of the East, develop a news-sense of their own that pa.s.ses the comprehension of free-ranging mortals. They were astonishingly well informed about the outer world--even the far-flung outer world, yet asked the most childish questions; and only a few of them could have written their own names,--they who were t.i.tled ladies of a land of ancient chivalry.
"Wait until I am maharanee!" Yasmini said. "The women have always ruled India. Women rule the English, though the English hate the thought of it and make believe otherwise. With the aid of women I will change the face of India,--the women and the G.o.ds!"
But she was careful of her promises, holding out no prospects that would stir premature activity among the ranks she counted on.
"Promise the G.o.ds too much," she said, "and the G.o.ds overwhelm you.
They like to serve, which is their business, not to have you squandering on them. Tell the women they are rulers, and they will start to destroy their empire by making public what is secret! If you tell the men that the women rule them, what will the men do?"
"Shut them up all the closer, I suppose," suggested Tess.
"Is that what they ever did? No. They will choose for them certain offices they can not fill because of inexperience, and put the noisiest women in them, and make mock of them, and laugh! Not for a long time yet must India know who rules her!"
"Child, where did you learn all your philosophy?" Tess asked her, one night when they were watching the stars from the bedroom window-seat.
"Oh, men taught me this and that thing, and I have always reversed it and believed the opposite. Why do men teach? To make you free, or to bind you to their own wheel? The English teach that English ways are good for the world. I answer that the world has been good to England and the English would like to keep it so! The pundits say we should study the philosophies. They made me study, hours and hours when I was little. Why? To bind me to the wheel of their philosophy, and keep me subject to them! I say philosophy is good for pundits, as a pond is good for frogs; but shall I be a frog, too, and croak about the beauties of the mud? The priests say we should obey them, and pray, and make offerings, and keep the religious law. I say, that religion is good for priests, which is why they cherish it, and add to it, and persuade foolish women to believe it! As for the G.o.ds, if they are anything they are our servants!"
"Your husband is going to have an interesting time," laughed Tess.
Yasmini"s blue eyes suddenly turned soft and serious.
"Do you think I can not be a wife "" she asked. "Do you suppose there is no mother-love in me? Do you think I do not understand how a man needs cherishing? Do you think I will preach to my husband, or oppose his plans? No! I will do as the G.o.ds do when the priests are asleep!
I will let him go his own way, and will go with him, never holding back; and little by little he will learn that I have understanding. Little by little he will grow into knowledge of the things I know--and he will be a very great man!"
There were no visits whatever from Utirupa, for the country-side would have been scandalized. Only, flowers came every day in enormous quant.i.ties; and there was a wealth of horses, carriages, jewels and armed men at his bride"s disposal that proved he had not forgotten her existence or her needs. She had claimed marriage to him by Gandharva rite, and he had tacitly consented, but she was not ready yet to try conclusions with the secret, octopus influence of the priests; and there was another reason.
"If it should get to Samson"s cars that he and I are married, that would be the end of his chance of the throne of Sialpore. Samson is English of the English. He would oppose to the end the nomination of a maha-rajah, whose wife has notions of her own--as I am known to have! They like him-- my husband--because he plays good polo, and will bet with them, and can play cricket; and because he seems to follow no special line of politics.
But if it were known he had a clever wife--me for wife--they would have none of him! I shall be a surprise for them when the die is cast!"
Tess was in almost daily communication with d.i.c.k, for, what with Tom Tripe and Sita Ram and about a dozen other sworn accomplices, Yasmini had messages coming and going all the time. Camels used to arrive long after dark, and letters were brought in, smelly with the sweat of loyal riders who had hidden them from too inquisitive police. Most of them carried back a scribbled word for d.i.c.k. But he said nothing about the treasure in his curt, anonymous, unsigned replies, being nervous about sending messages at all.
Only, when in one letter he mentioned digging in another place, and Tess read the sentence aloud, Yasmini squealed with delight. The next day her own advices confirmed the hint, Sita Ram sending a long account of new developments and adding that "Samson sahib is much exercised in mind about it."
"All goes well!" Yasmini belled in her golden voice. "Samson has seen the hidden meaning of my letter! If I had told him bluntly where the treasure is, he would have laughed and forgotten it! But because he thinks he reads the secret of my mind, he flatters himself and falls into the trap! Now we have Samson caught, and all is well!"
"It would be a very canny person who could read the secret of your mind, I should say!" laughed Tess.
"I am as simple as the sunlight!" Yasmini answered honestly. "It is Samson who is dark, not I."
Yasmini began making ready for departure, giving a thousand orders to dependents she could trust.
"At the polo game," she asked Tess, "when the English ask questions as to where you have been, and what you saw, what will you tell them?"
"Why not the truth? Samson expressly asked me to cultivate your acquaintance."
"Splendid! Tell them you traveled on camel-back by night across the desert with me! By the time they have believed that we will think of more to add to it! We return by elephant to Sialpore together, timing our arrival for the polo game. There we separate. You watch the game together with your husband. I shall be in a closed carriage--part of the time. I shall be there all the time, but I don"t think you will see me."
"But you say they have rifled your palace. Where will you sleep?" Tess asked.
"At your house on the hill!"
"But that is in Gungadhura"s territory. Aren"t you afraid of him?"
"Of Gungadhura? I? I never was! But now whoever fears him would run from a broken snake. I have word that the fool has murdered Mukhum Da.s.s the money-lender. You may trust the English to draw his teeth nicely for him after that! Gungadhura is like a tiger in a net he can not break!"
"He might send men to break into the house," Tess argued.
"There will be sharper eyes than any of his watching!"
But Tess was alarmed at the prospect. She did not mind in the least what the English might have to say about it afterward; but to have her little house the center of nocturnal feuds, with her husband using his six-shooters, and heaven only knew what bloodshed resulting, was more of a prospect than she looked forward to.
"Sister," said Yasmini, taking her by both hands. "I must use your house.
There is no other place."
No one could refuse her when her deep blue eyes grew soft and pleading, let alone Tess, who had lived with her and loved her for a week.
"Very well," she answered; and Yasmini"s eyes softened and brightened even more.
"I shall not forget!"