On the dark unstirring trees innumerable flowers and
buds all soft and blurred were being bewitched to
life by the creeping moonlight. He had the oddest
feeling of actual companionship, as if a million white
moths or spirits had floated in and settled between
dark sky and darker ground, and were opening and shutting
their wings on a level with his eyes. In the
bewildering, still, scentless beauty of that moment
he almost lost memory of why he had come to the orchard.
The flying glamour which had clothed the earth all
day had not gone now that night had fallen, but only
changed into this new form. He moved on through
the thicket of stems and boughs covered with that
live powdering whiteness, till he reached the big
apple tree. No mistaking that, even in the dark,
nearly twice the height and size of any other, and
leaning out towards the open meadows and the stream.
Under the thick branches he stood still again, to
listen. The same sounds exactly, and a faint
grunting from the sleepy pigs. He put his hands
on the dry, almost warm tree trunk, whose rough mossy
surface gave forth a peaty scent at his touch.
Would she come—would she? And among
these quivering, haunted, moon-witched trees he was
seized with doubts of everything! All was unearthly
here, fit for no earthly lovers; fit only for god
and goddess, faun and nymph not for him and this little
country girl. Would it not be almost a relief
if she did not come? But all the time he was
listening. And still that unknown bird went
“Pip-pip,” “Pip-pip,” and there
rose the busy chatter of the little trout stream,
whereon the moon was flinging glances through the
bars of her tree-prison. The blossom on a level
with his eyes seemed to grow more living every moment,
seemed with its mysterious white beauty more and more
a part of his suspense. He plucked a fragment
and held it close—three blossoms.
Sacrilege to pluck fruit-tree blossom—soft,
sacred, young blossom—and throw it away!
Then suddenly he heard the gate close, the pigs stirring
again and grunting; and leaning against the trunk,
he pressed his hands to its mossy sides behind him,
and held his breath. She might have been a spirit
threading the trees, for all the noise she made!
Then he saw her quite close—her dark form
part of a little tree, her white face part of its
blossom; so still, and peering towards him. He
whispered: “Megan!” and held out his
hands. She ran forward, straight to his breast.
When he felt her heart beating against him, Ashurst
knew to the full the sensations of chivalry and passion.
Because she was not of his world, because she was so
simple and young and headlong, adoring and defenceless,
how could he be other than her protector, in the dark!
Because she was all simple Nature and beauty, as
much a part of this spring night as was the living
blossom, how should he not take all that she would
give him how not fulfil the spring in her heart and
his! And torn between these two emotions he clasped