Dreamthorp eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 272 pages of information about Dreamthorp.

Dreamthorp eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 272 pages of information about Dreamthorp.
bearing knights’ escutcheons, which time has sadly defaced.  The dust you stand upon is noble.  Earls have been brought here in dinted mail from battle, and earls’ wives from the pangs of child-bearing.  The last trumpet will break the slumber of a right honourable company.  One of the tombs—­the most perfect of all in point of preservation—­I look at often, and try to conjecture what it commemorates.  With all my fancies, I can get no further than the old story of love and death.  There, on the slab, the white figures sleep; marble hands, folded in prayer, on marble breasts.  And I like to think that he was brave, she beautiful; that although the monument is worn by time, and sullied by the stains of the weather, the qualities which it commemorates—­husbandly and wifely affection, courtesy, courage, knightly scorn of wrong and falsehood, meekness, penitence, charity—­are existing yet somewhere, recognisable by each other.  The man who in this world can keep the whiteness of his soul, is not likely to lose it in any other.

In summer I spend a good deal of time floating about the lake.  The landing-place to which my boat is tethered is ruinous, like the chapel and palace, and my embarkation causes quite a stir in the sleepy little village.  Small boys leave their games and mud-pies, and gather round in silence; they have seen me get off a hundred times, but their interest in the matter seems always new.  Not unfrequently an idle cobbler, in red night-cap and leathern apron, leans on a broken stile, and honours my proceedings with his attention.  I shoot off, and the human knot dissolves.  The lake contains three islands, each with a solitary tree, and on these islands the swans breed.  I feed the birds daily with bits of bread.  See, one comes gliding towards me, with superbly arched neck, to receive its customary alms!  How wildly beautiful its motions!  How haughtily it begs!  The green pasture lands run down to the edge of the water, and into it in the afternoons the red kine wade and stand knee-deep in their shadows, surrounded by troops of flies.  Patiently the honest creatures abide the attacks of their tormentors.  Now one swishes itself with its tail,—­now its neighbour flaps a huge ear.  I draw my oars alongside, and let my boat float at its own will.  The soft blue heavenly abysses, the wandering streams of vapour, the long beaches of rippled clouds, are glassed and repeated in the lake.  Dreamthorp is silent as a picture, the voices of the children are mute; and the smoke from the houses, the blue pillars all sloping in one angle, float upward as if in sleep.  Grave and stern the old castle rises from its emerald banks, which long ago came down to the lake in terrace on terrace, gay with fruits and flowers, and with stone nymph and satyrs hid in every nook.  Silent and empty enough to-day!  A flock of daws suddenly bursts out from a turret, and round and round they wheel, as if in panic.  Has some great scandal

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Dreamthorp from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.