And as I thought and thought, an evening of spring arose before my soul--an evening out of a far and perished time.... I had wandered along the bank of a steaming river. The sunset which shone through the jagged young leaves spread a purple carpet over the quiet waters upon which only a swift insect would here and there create circular eddies.
At every step I took the dew sprang up before me in gleaming pearls, and a fragrance of wild thyme and roses floated through the air....
There it must have been that I heard this music for the first time.
And now it was all clear: The nightingale was singing ... the nightingale.
And so spring has come to the upper world.
Perhaps it is an evening of May even as that which my spirit recalls.
Blue flowers stand upon the meadows.... Goldenrod and lilac mix their blossoms into gold and violet wreaths.... Like torn veils the delicate flakings of the b.u.t.tercups fly through the twilight....
Surely from the village sounds the stork"s rattle ... and surely the distant strains of an accordion are heard....
But the nightingale up there cares little what other music may be made. It sobs and jubilates louder and louder, as if it knew that in the poor dead man"s bosom down here the heart beats once more stormily against his side.
And at every throb of that heart a hot stream glides through my veins.
It penetrates farther and farther until it will have filled my whole body. It seems to me as though I must cry out with yearning and remorse. But my dull stubbornness arises once more: "You have what you desired. So lie here and be still, even though you should be condemned to hear the nightingale"s song until the end of the world."
The song has grown much softer.
Obviously the human steps that now encircle my grave with their sullen resonance have driven the bird to a more distant bush.
"Who may it be," I ask myself, "that thinks of wandering to my place of rest on an evening of May when the nightingales are singing."
And I listen anew. It sounds almost as though some one up there were weeping.
Did I not go my earthly road lonely and unloved? Did I not die in the house of a stranger? Was I not huddled away in the earth by strangers?
Who is it that comes to weep at my grave?
And each one of the tears that is shed above there falls glowing upon my breast....
And my breast rises in a convulsive struggle but the coffin lid pushes it back. I strain my head against the wood to burst it, but it lies upon me like a mountain. My body seems to burn. To protect it I burrow in the saw-dust which fills mouth and eyes with its biting chaff.
I try to cry out but my throat is paralysed.
I want to pray but instead of thoughts the lightnings of madness shoot through my brain.
I feel only one thing that threatens to dissolve all my body into a stream of flame and that penetrates my whole being with immeasurable might: "I must live ... live...!"
There, in my sorest need, I think of the faery who upon my desire brought me by magic to my grave.
"Thea, I beseech you. I have sinned against the world and myself. It was cowardly and slothful to doubt of life so long as a spark of life and power glowed in my veins. Let me arise, I beseech you, from the torments of h.e.l.l--let me arise!"
And behold: the boards of the coffin fall from me like a wornout garment. The earth rolls down on both sides of me and unites beneath me in order to raise my body.
I open my eyes and perceive myself to be lying in dark gra.s.s. Through the bent limbs of trees the grave stars look down upon me. The black crosses stand in the evening glow, and past the railings of grave-plots my eyes blink out into the blossoming world.
The crickets chirp about me in the gra.s.s, and the nightingale begins to sing anew.
Half dazed I pull myself together.
Waves of fragrance and melting shadows extend into the distance.
Suddenly I see next to me on the grave mound a crouching gray figure.
Between a veil tossed back I see a countenance, pallid and lovely, with smooth dark hair and a madonna-like face. About the softly smiling mouth is an expression of gentle loftiness such as is seen in those martyrs who joyfully bleed to death from the mightiness of their love.
Her eyes look down upon me in smiling peace, clear and soulful, the measure of all goodness, the mirror of all beauty.
I know the dark gleam of those eyes, I know that gray, soft veil, I know that poor sick hand, white as a blossom, that leans upon a crutch.
It is she, my faery, whose tears have awakened me from the dead.
All my defiance vanishes.
I lie upon the earth before her and kiss the hem of her garment.
And she inclines her head and stretches her hand out to me.
With the help of that hand I arise.
Holding this poor, sick hand, I stride joyfully back into life.
Chapter VI.
I sought my faery and I found her not.
I sought her upon the flowery fields of the South and on the ragged moors of the Northland; in the eternal snow of Alpine ridges and in the black folds of the nether earth; in the iridescent glitter of the boulevard and in the sounding desolation of the sea.... And I found her not.
I sought her amid the tobacco smoke and the cheap applause of popular a.s.semblies and on the vanity fair of the professional social patron; in the brilliance of glittering feasts I sought her and in the twilit silence of domestic comfort.... And I found her not.
My eye thirsted for the sight of her but in my memory there was no mark by which I could have recognised her. Each image of her was confused and obliterated by the screaming colours of a new epoch.
Good and evil in a thousand shapes had come between me and my faery.
And the evil had grown into good for me, the good into evil.
But the sum of evil was greater than the sum of good. I bent low under the burden, and for a long s.p.a.ce my eyes saw nothing but the ground to which I clung.
And therefore did I need my faery.
I needed her as a slave needs liberation, as the master needs a higher master, as the man of faith needs heaven.
In her I sought my resurrection, my strength to live, my defiant illusion.
And therefore was I famished for her.