Ardath eBook

Marie Corelli
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 793 pages of information about Ardath.

Ardath eBook

Marie Corelli
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 793 pages of information about Ardath.

He raised himself a little, and looked at her more intently:—­she smiled,—­and that smile, so marvellous in its pensive peace and lofty devotion, was as though all the light of an unguessed paradise had suddenly flashed upon his soul!

“Edris!” he said again, trembling in the excess of mingled hope and fear ...  “Hast thou then returned again from heaven, to lift me out of darkness? ...  Tell me, fair Angel, do I wake or sleep? ...  Are my senses deceived?  Is this land a dream? ...  Am I myself a dream, and thou the only manifest sweet Truth in a world of drifting shadows! ...  Speak to me, gentle Saint! ...  In what vast mystery have I been engulfed? ... in what timeless trance of soul-bewilderment? ... in what blind uncertainty and pain? ...  O Sweet! ... resolve my wordless wonder!  Where have I strayed? ... what have I seen? ...  Ah, let not my rough speech fright thee back to Paradise! ...  Stay with me! ... comfort me! ...  I have lost thee so long! let me not lose thee now!”

Smiling still, she bent over him, and pressed her warm, delicate ringers lightly on his brow and lips.  Then softly she rose and stood erect.

“Fear nothing, my beloved!” she answered, her silvery accents sending a throb of holy triumph through the air..  “Let no trouble disquiet thee, and no shadow of misgiving dim the brightness of thy waking moments!  Thou hast slept one night on the Field of Ardath, in the Valley of Vision!—­but lo! the Night is past!".. and she pointed toward the eastern horizon now breaking into waves of rosy gold, “Rise! and behold the dawning of thy new Day!”

Roused by her touch, and fired by her tone and the grand, unworldly dignity of her look and bearing, he sprang up, . . but as he met the full, pure splendor of her divine eyes, and saw, wavering round her hair, a shining aureole of amber radiance like a wreath of woven sunbeams, his spirit quailed within him, . . he remembered all his doubts of her,—­his disbelief, . . and falling at her feet, he hid his face in a shame that was better than all glory,—­a humiliation that was sweeter than all pride.

“Edris!  Immortal Edris!".. he passionately prayed, “As thou art a crowned saint in Heaven, shed light on the chaos of my soul!  From the depths of a penitence past thought and speech I plead with thee!  Hear me, my Edris, thou who art so maiden-meek, so tender-patient! ... hear me, help me, guide me...I am all thine!  Say, didst thou not summon me to meet thee here upon this wondrous Field of Ardath?—­did I not come hither according to thy words?—­ and have I not seen things that I am not able to express or understand?  Teach me, wise and beloved one! ...  I doubt no more!  I know Myself and Thee:—­thou art an angel,—­but I! ... alas, what am I?  A grain of sand in thy sight and in God’s, . . a mere Nothing, comprehending nothing,—­unable even to realize the extent of my own nothingness!  Edris, O Edris! ...  Thou canst not love me! ... thou mayst pity me perchance, and pardon, and bless me gently in Christ’s dear Name! ... but love! ...  Thy love! ...  Oh let me not aspire to such heights of joy, where I have no place, no right, no worthiness!”

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Project Gutenberg
Ardath from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.