Beatrice eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 415 pages of information about Beatrice.

Beatrice eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 415 pages of information about Beatrice.

     Meet, if thou require it,
        Both demands,
     Laying flesh and spirit
        In thy hands.

     That shall be to-morrow
        Not to-night: 
     I must bury sorrow
        Out of sight.

     Must a little weep, Love,
        (Foolish me!)
     And so fall asleep, Love,
        Loved by thee.”

Geoffrey heard them in his heart.  Then they were gone, the vision of Beatrice was gone, and suddenly he awoke.

Oh, what was this flood of inarticulate, passion-laden thought that beat upon his brain telling of Beatrice?  Wave after wave it came, utterly overwhelming him, like the heavy breath of flowers stirred by a night wind—­like a message from another world.  It was real; it was no dream, no fancy; she was present with him though she was not there; her thought mingled with his thought, her being beat upon his own.  His heart throbbed, his limbs trembled, he strove to understand and could not.  But in the mystery of that dread communion, the passion he had trodden down and refused acknowledgment took life and form within him; it grew like the Indian’s magic tree, from seed to blade, from blade to bud, and from bud to bloom.  In that moment it became clear to him:  he knew he loved her, and knowing what such a love must mean, for him if not for her, Geoffrey sank back and groaned.

And Beatrice?  Of a sudden she ceased speaking to herself; she felt her thought flung back to her weighted with another’s thought.  She had broken through the barriers of earth; the quick electric message of her heart had found a path to him she loved and come back answered.  But in what tongue was that answer writ?  Alas! she could not read it, any more than he could read the message.  At first she doubted; surely it was imagination.  Then she remembered it was absolutely proved that people dying could send a vision of themselves to others far away; and if that could be, why not this?  No, it was truth, a solemn truth; she knew he felt her thought, she knew that his life beat upon her life.  Oh, here was mystery, and here was hope, for if this could be, and it was, what might not be?  If her blind strength of human love could so overstep the boundaries of human power, and, by the sheer might of its volition, mock the physical barriers that hemmed her in, what had she to fear from distance, from separation, ay, from death itself?  She had grasped a clue which might one day, before the seeming end or after—­what did it matter?—­lay strange secrets open to her gaze.  She had heard a whisper in an unknown tongue that could still be learned, answering Life’s agonizing cry with a song of glory.  If only he loved her, some day all would be well.  Some day the barriers would fall.  Crumbling with the flesh, they would fall and set her naked spirit free to seek its other self.  And then, having found her love, what more was there to seek?  What other answer did she desire to all the problems of her life than this of Unity attained at last—­Unity attained in Death!

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Project Gutenberg
Beatrice from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.