Studies and Essays: Quality and Others eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 66 pages of information about Studies and Essays.

Studies and Essays: Quality and Others eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 66 pages of information about Studies and Essays.

No stone stands over where he lies.  It is on our hearts that his life is engraved. 1912.

FELICITY

When God is so good to the fields, of what use are words—­those poor husks of sentiment!  There is no painting Felicity on the wing!  No way of bringing on to the canvas the flying glory of things!  A single buttercup of the twenty million in one field is worth all these dry symbols—­that can never body forth the very spirit of that froth of May breaking over the hedges, the choir of birds and bees, the lost-travelling down of the wind flowers, the white-throated swallows in their Odysseys.  Just here there are no skylarks, but what joy of song and leaf; of lanes lighted with bright trees, the few oaks still golden brown, and the ashes still spiritual!  Only the blackbirds and thrushes can sing-up this day, and cuckoos over the hill.  The year has flown so fast that the apple-trees have dropped nearly all their bloom, and in “long meadow” the “daggers” are out early, beside the narrow bright streams.  Orpheus sits there on a stone, when nobody is by, and pipes to the ponies; and Pan can often be seen dancing with his nymphs in the raised beech-grove where it is always twilight, if you lie still enough against the far bank.

Who can believe in growing old, so long as we are wrapped in this cloak of colour and wings and song; so long as this unimaginable vision is here for us to gaze at—­the soft-faced sheep about us, and the wool-bags drying out along the fence, and great numbers of tiny ducks, so trustful that the crows have taken several.

Blue is the colour of youth, and all the blue flowers have a “fey” look.  Everything seems young too young to work.  There is but one thing busy, a starling, fetching grubs for its little family, above my head—­it must take that flight at least two hundred times a day.  The children should be very fat.

When the sky is so happy, and the flowers so luminous, it does not seem possible that the bright angels of this day shall pass into dark night, that slowly these wings shall close, and the cuckoo praise himself to sleep, mad midges dance-in the evening; the grass shiver with dew, wind die, and no bird sing . . . .

Yet so it is.  Day has gone—­the song and glamour and swoop of wings.  Slowly, has passed the daily miracle.  It is night.  But Felicity has not withdrawn; she has but changed her robe for silence, velvet, and the pearl fan of the moon.  Everything is sleeping, save only a single star, and the pansies.  Why they should be more wakeful than the other flowers, I do not know.  The expressions of their faces, if one bends down into the dusk, are sweeter and more cunning than ever.  They have some compact, no doubt, in hand.

What a number of voices have given up the ghost to this night of but one voice—­the murmur of the stream out there in darkness!

With what religion all has been done!  Not one buttercup open; the yew-trees already with shadows flung down!  No moths are abroad yet; it is too early in the year for nightjars; and the owls are quiet.  But who shall say that in this silence, in this hovering wan light, in this air bereft of wings, and of all scent save freshness, there is less of the ineffable, less of that before which words are dumb?

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Studies and Essays: Quality and Others from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.