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The
Perdu.
TO the passing
stranger there was nothing mysterious about it except
the eternal mystery of beauty. To the scattered folk,
however, who lived their even lives within its neighborhood,
it was an object of dim significance and dread.
At
first sight it seemed to be but a narrow, tideless, windless
bit of backwater; and the first impulse of the passing
stranger was to ask how it came to be called the “Perdu.”
On this point he would get little information from the
folk of the neighborhood, who knew not French. But if
he were to translate the term for their better information,
they would show themselves impressed [Page 124]
by a sense of its occult appropriateness.
The
whole neighborhood was one wherein the strange and the
not-to-be-understood might feel at home. It was a place
where the unusual was not felt to be impossible. Its peace
was the peace of one entranced. To its expectancy a god
might come, or a monster, or nothing more than the realization
of eventless weariness.
Only
four or five miles away, across the silent, bright meadows
and beyond a softly swelling range of pastured hills,
swept the great river, a busy artery of trade.
On
the river were all the modern noises, and with its current
flowed the stream of modern ideas. Within sight of the
river a mystery, or anything uninvestigated, or aught
unamenable to the spirit of the age, would have seemed
an anachronism. But back here, among the tall wild-parsnip
tops and the never-stirring [Page 125] clumps
of orange lilies, life was different, and dreams seemed
likely to come true.
The Perdu lay perpetually asleep,
along beside a steep bank clothed with white birches and
balsam poplars. Amid the trunks of the trees grew elder
shrubs, and snake-berries, and the elvish trifoliate plants
of the purple and the painted trillium. The steep bank,
and the grove, and the Perdu with them, ran along together
for perhaps a quarter of a mile, and then faded out of
existence, absorbed into the bosom of the meadows.
The
Perdu was but a stone’s throw broad, throughout
its entire length. The steep with its trunks and leafage
formed the northern bound of it; while its southern shore
was the green verge of the meadows. Along this low rim
its whitish opalescent waters mixed smoothly with the
roots and over-hanging blades of [Page 126] the
long grasses, with the cloistral arched frondage of the
ferns, and with here and there a strayed spray of purple
wild-pea. Here and there, too, a clump of Indian willow
streaked the green with the vivid crimson of its stems.
Everything
watched and waited. The meadow was a sea of sun mysteriously
imprisoned in the green meshes of the grass-tops. At wide
intervals arose some lonely alder bushes, thick banked
with clematis. Far off, on the slope of a low, bordering
hill, the red doors of a barn glowed ruby-like in the
transfiguring sun. At times, though seldom, a blue heron
winged over the level. At times a huge black-and-yellow
bee hummed past, leaving a trail of faint sound that seemed
to linger like a perfume. At times the landscape, that
was so changeless, would seem to waver a little, to shift
confusedly like things seen through running [Page
127] water. And all the while the meadow scents
and the many-colored butterflies rose straight up on the
moveless air, and brooded or dropped back into their dwellings.
Yet
in all this stillness there was no invitation to sleep.
It was a stillness rather that summoned the senses to
keep watch, half apprehensively, at the doorways of perception.
The wide eye noted everything, and considered it,—even
to the hairy red fly alit on the fern frond, or the skirring
progress of the black water-beetle across the pale surface
of the Perdu. The ear was very attentive—even to
the fluttering down of the blighted leaf, or the thin
squeak of the bee in the straitened calyx, or the faint
impish conferrings of the moisture exuding suddenly from
somewhere under the bank. If a common sound, like the
shriek of a steamboat’s whistle, now and again soared
over across the hills [Page 128] and
fields, it was changed in that refracting atmosphere,
and became a defiance at the gates of waking dream.
The
lives, thoughts, manners, even the open, credulous eyes
of the quiet folk dwelling about the Perdu, wore in greater
or less degree the complexion of the neighborhood. How
this came to be is one of those nice questions for which
we need hardly expect definitive settlement. Whether the
people, in the course of generations, had gradually keyed
themselves to the dominant note of their surroundings,
or whether the neighborhood had been little by little
wrought up to its pitch of supersensibility by the continuous
impact of superstitions, and expectations, and apprehensions,
and wonders, and visions, rained upon it from the personalities
of an imaginative and secluded people,—this might
be discussed with more argument than conclusiveness [Page
129].
Of
the dwellers about the Perdu none was more saturated with
the magic of the place than Reuben Waugh, a boy of thirteen.
Reuben lived in a small, yellow-ochre-colored cottage,
on the hill behind the barn with the red doors. Whenever
Reuben descended to the level, and turned to look back
at the yellow dot of the house set in the vast expanse
of pale blue sky, he associated the picture with a vague
but haunting conception of some infinite forget-me-not
flower. The boy had all the chores to do about the little
homestead; but even then there was always time to dream.
Besides, it was not a pushing neighborhood; and whenever
he would he took for himself a half-holiday. At such times
he was more than likely to stray over to the banks of
the Perdu.
It
would have been hard for Reuben to say just why he found
the Perdu so attractive. He might [Page 130] have
said it was the fishing; for sometimes, though not often,
he would cast a timorous hook into its depths and tremble
lest he should lure from the pallid waters some portentous
and dreadful prey. He never captured, however, anything
more terrifying than catfish; but these were clad in no
small measure of mystery, for the white waters of the
Perdu had bleached their scales to a ghastly pallor, and
the opalescence of their eyes was apt to haunt their captor’s
reveries. He might have said, also, that it was his playmate,
little Celia Hansen,—whose hook he would bait whenever
she wished to fish, and whose careless hands, stained
with berries, he would fill persistently with bunches
of the hot-hued orange lily.
But
Reuben knew there was more to say than this. In a boyish
way, and all unrealizing, he loved the child with a sort
of love that would [Page 131] one day
flower out as an absorbing passion. For the present however,
important as she was to him, she was nevertheless distinctly
secondary to the Perdu itself with its nameless spell.
If Celia was not there, and if he did not care to fish,
the boy still longed for the Perdu, and was more than
content to lie and watch for he knew not what, amid the
rapt herbage, and the brooding insects, and the gnome-like
conspiracies of the moisture exuding far under the bank.
Celia
was two years younger than Reuben, and by nature somewhat
less imaginative. For a long time she loved the Perdu
primarily for its associations with the boy who was her
playmate, her protector, and her hero. When she was about
seven years old Reuben had rescued her from an angry turkey-cock,
and had displayed a confident firmness which seemed to
her wonderfully [Page 132] fine. Hence
had arisen an unformulated but enduring faith that Reuben
could be depended upon in any emergency. From that day
forward she had refused to be content with other playmates.
Against this uncompromising preference Mrs. Hansen was
wont to protest rather plaintively; for there were social
grades even here, and Mrs. Hansen, whose husband’s
acres were broad (including the Perdu itself), knew well
that “that Waugh boy” was not her Celia’s
equal.
The
profound distinction, however, was not one which the children
could appreciate; and on Mrs. Hansen lay the spell of
the neighborhood, impelling her to wait for whatever might
see fit to come to pass.
For these two children the years
that slipped so smoothly over the Perdu were full of interest.
They met often. In the spring, when the [Page
133] Perdu was sullen and unresponsive, and when
the soggy meadows showed but a tinge of green through
the brown ruin of the winter’s frosts, there was
yet the grove to visit. Here Reuben would make deep incisions
in the bark of the white birches, and gather tiny cupfuls
of the faint-flavored sap, which, to the children’s
palates, had all the relish of nectar. A little later
on there were the blossoms of the trillium to be plucked,—blossoms
whose beauty was the more alluring in that they were supposed
to be poisonous.
But
it was with the deepening of the summer that the spell
of the Perdu deepened to its most enthralling potency.
And as the little girl grew in years and came more and
more under her playmate’s influence, her imagination
deepened as the summer deepens, her perception quickened
and grew subtle. Then in a quiet fashion, a strange thing
came [Page 134] about. Under the influence
of the children’s sympathetic expectancy, the Perdu
began to find fuller expression. Every mysterious element
in the neighborhood—whether emanating from the Perdu
itself or from the spirits of the people about it—appeared
to find a focus in the personalities of the two children.
All the weird, formless stories,—rather suggestions
or impressions than stories,—that in the course
of time had gathered about the places, were revived with
added vividness and awe. New ones, too, sprang into existence
all over the country-side, and were certain to be connected,
soon after their origin, with the name of Reuben Waugh.
To be sure, when all was said and sifted, there remained
little that one could grasp or set down in black and white
for question. Every experience, every manifestation, when
investigated, seemed to resolve itself into something
of an epidemic [Page 135] sense of unseen
but thrilling influences.
The
only effect of all this, however, was to invest Reuben
with an interest and importance that consorted curiously
with his youth. With a certain consciousness of superiority,
born of his taste for out-of-the-way reading, and dreaming,
and introspection, the boy accepted the subtle tribute
easily, and was little affected by it. He had the rare
fortune not to differ in essentials from his neighbors,
but only to intensify and give visible expression to the
characteristics latent in them all.
Thus
year followed year noiselessly, till Reuben was seventeen
and Celia fifteen. For all the expectancy, the sense of
eventfulness even, of these years, little had really happened
save the common inexplicable happenings of life and growth.
The little that might be counted an exception may be told
in a few words [Page 136].
The
customs of angling for catfish and tapping the birch trees
for sap, had been suffered to fall into disuse. Rather,
it seemed interesting to wander vaguely together, or in
the long grass to read together from the books which Reuben
would borrow from the cobwebby library of the old schoolmaster.
As
the girl reached up mentally, or perhaps, rather, emotionally,
toward the imaginative stature of her companion, her hold
upon him strengthened. Of old, his perceptions had been
keenest when alone, but now they were in every way quickened
by her presence. And now it happened that the great blue
heron came more frequently to visit the Perdu. While the
children were sitting amid the birches, they heard the
hush! hush! of the bird’s wings fanning
the pallid water. The bird, did I say? But it seemed to
them a spirit in the guise of a bird. It [Page
137] had gradually forgotten its seclusiveness,
and now dropped its long legs at a point right over the
middle of the Perdu, alighted apparently on the liquid
surface, and stood suddenly transformed into a moveless
statue of a bird, gazing upon the playmates with bright,
significant eyes. The look made Celia tremble.
The
Perdu, as might have been expected when so many mysteries
were credited to it, was commonly held to be bottomless.
It is a very poor neighborhood indeed, that cannot show
a pool with this distinction. Reuben, of course, knew
the interpretation of the myth. He knew the Perdu was
very deep. Except at either end, or close to the banks,
no bottom could be found with such fathom-lines as he
could command. To him, and hence to Celia, this idea of
vast depths was thrillingly suggestive, and yet entirely
believable. The palpably impossible had small [Page
138] appeal for them. But when first they saw
the great blue bird alight where they knew the water was
fathoms deep, they came near being surprised. At least,
they felt the pleasurable sensation of wonder. How was
the heron supported on the water? From their green nest
the children gazed and gazed; and the great blue bird
held them with the gem-like radiance of its unwinking
eye. At length to Reuben came a vision of the top of an
ancient tree-trunk just beneath the bird’s feet,
just beneath the water’s surface. Down, slanting
far down through the opaline opaqueness, he saw the huge
trunk extend itself, to an immemorial root-hold in the
clayey, perpendicular walls of the Perdu. He unfolded
the vision to Celia, who understood. “And it’s
just as wonderful,” said the girl, “for how
did the trunk get there?”
“That’s so,”
answered Reuben [Page 139], with his
eyes fixed on the bird,— “but then it’s
quite possible!”
And at the low sound of their
voices the bird winnowed softly away.
At another time, when the children
were dreaming by the Perdu, a far-off dinner-horn sounded,
hoarsely but sweetly, its summons to the workers in the
fields. It was the voice of noon. As the children, rising
to go, glanced together across the Perdu, they clasped
each other with a start of mild surprise. “Did you
see that?” whispered Celia.
“What did you see?”
asked the boy.
“It looked like a pale green
hand, that waved for a moment over the water and then
sank,” said Celia.
“Yes,” said Reuben,
“that’s just what it looked like. But I don’t
believe it really was a hand! You see those thin lily-leaves
all about the spot? Their stems are long [Page
140], wonderfully long and slender. If one of
those queer, whitish catfish like we used to catch, were
to take hold of a lily-stem and pull hard, the edges of
the leaf might rise up and wave just the way that
did! You can’t tell what the catfish won’t
do down there!”
“Perhaps that’s all
it was,” said Celia.
“Though we can’t be
sure,” added Reuben.
And thereafter, whensoever that
green hand seemed to wave to them across the pale water,
they were content to leave the vision but half explained.
It also came to pass, as unexpectedly
as anything could come to pass by the banks of the Perdu,
that one dusky evening, as the boy and girl came slowly
over the meadows, they saw a radiant point of light that
wavered fitfully above the water. They watched it in silence.
As it came to [Page 141] a pause, the
girl said in her quiet voice,—
“It has stopped right over
the place where the heron stands!”
“Yes,” replied Reuben,
“it is evidently a will-o’-the-wisp. The queer
gas, which makes it, comes perhaps from the end of that
dead tree-trunk, just under the surface.”
But the fact that the point of
light was thus explicable, made it no less interesting
and little less mysterious to the dwellers about the Perdu.
As it came to be an almost nightly feature of the place,
the people supplemented its local habitation with a name,
calling it “Reube Waugh’s Lantern.”
Celia’s father, treating the Perdu and all that
pertained to it with a reverent familiarity befitting
his right of proprietorship, was wont to say to Reuben,—
“Who gave you leave, Reuben,
to hoist your lantern on my property? If you don’t
take it away [Page 142] pretty soon,
I’ll be having the thing put in pound.”
It may be permitted me to cite
yet one more incident to illustrate more completely the
kind of events which seemed of grave importance in the
neighborhood of the Perdu. It was an accepted belief,
that even in the severest frosts, the Perdu could not
be securely frozen over. Winter after winter, to be sure,
it lay concealed beneath such a covering of snow as only
firm ice could be expected to support. Yet this fact was
not admitted in evidence. Folks said the ice and snow
were but a film, waiting to yield upon the slightest pressure.
Furthermore, it was held that neither bird nor beast was
ever known to tread the deceptive expanse. No squirrel
track, no slim, sharp foot-mark of partridge, traversed
the immaculate level. One winter, after a light snowfall
in the night, as Reuben strayed into the [Page
143] low-ceilinged kitchen of the Hansen farm-house,
Mr. Hansen remarked in his quaint, dreamy drawl,—
“What
for have you been walking on the Perdu, Reuben? This morning,
on the new snow, I saw foot-marks of a human running right
across it. It must have been you, Reuben. There’s
nobody else round here’d do it!”
“No,”
said Reuben, “I haven’t been nigh the Perdu
these three days past. And then I didn’t try walking
on it, any way.”
“Well,”
continued Celia’s father, “I suppose folks
would call it queer! Those foot-marks just began at one
side of the Perdu, and ended right up sharp at the other.
There wasn’t another sign of a foot, on the meadow
or in the grove!”
“Yes,” assented Reuben,
“it looks queer in a way. But then, it’s easy
for the snow to drift over [Page 144] the
other tracks; while the Perdu lies low out of the wind.”
The
latter days of Reuben’s stay beside the banks of
the Perdu were filled up by a few events like these, by
the dreams which these evoked, and above all by the growing
realization of his love for Celia. At length the boy and
girl slipped unawares into mutual self-revelations; and
for a day or two life seemed so materially and tangibly
joyous that vision and dream eluded them. Then came the
girl’s naïve account of how her confidences
had been received at home. She told of her mother’s
objections, soon overruled by her father’s obstinate
plea that “Reuben Waugh, when he got to be a man
grown, would be good enough for any girl alive.”
Celia had dwelt with pride on
her father’s championship of their cause. Her mother’s
opposition she had been familiar with for as long as [Page
145] she could remember. But it was the mother’s
opposition that loomed large in Reuben’s eyes.
First
it startled him with a vague sense of disquiet. Then it
filled his soul with humiliation as its full significance
grew upon him. Then he formed a sudden resolve; and neither
the mother’s relenting cordiality, nor the father’s
practical persuasions, nor Celia’s tears could turn
him from his purpose. He said that he would go away, after
the time-honored fashion, and seek his fortune in the
world. He vowed that in three or four years, when they
would be of a fit age to marry, he would come back with
a full purse and claim Celia on even terms. This did not
suit the unworldly old farmer, who had inherited, not
in vain, the spiritualities and finer influences of his
possession, the Perdu. He desired, first of all, his girl’s
happiness. He rebuked Reuben’s [Page 146]
pride with a sternness unusual for him. But Reuben
went.
He went down the great river.
Not many miles from the quiet region of the Perdu there
was a little riverside landing, where Reuben took the
steamer and passed at once into another atmosphere, another
world. The change was a spiritual shock to him, making
him gasp as if he had fallen into a tumultuous sea. There
was the same chill, there was a like difficulty in getting
his balance. But this was not for long. His innate self-reliance
steadied him rapidly. His long-established habit of superiority
helped him to avoid betraying his first sense of ignorance
and unfitness. His receptiveness led him to assimilate
swiftly the innumerable and novel facts of life with which
he came all at once in contact; and he soon realized that
the stirring, capable crowd, whose ready handling of affairs
had at first [Page 147] overawed him,
was really inferior in true insight to the peculiar people
whom he had left about the Perdu. He found that presently
he himself could handle the facts of life with the light
dexterity which had so amazed him; but through it all
he preserved (as he could see that those about him did
not) his sense of the relativity of things. He perceived,
always, the dependence of the facts of life upon the ideas
underlying them, and thrusting them forward as manifestations
or utterances. With his undissipated energy, his curious
frugality in the matter of self-revelation, and his instinctive
knowledge of men, he made his way from the first, and
the roaring port at the mouth of the great river yielded
him of its treasures for the asking. This was in a quiet
enough way, indeed, but a way that more than fulfilled
his expectations; and in the height of the blossoming
time of his fifth [Page 148] summer in
the world he found himself rich enough to go back to the
Perdu and claim Celia. He resolved that he would buy property
near the Perdu and settle there. He had no wish to live
in the world; but to the world he would return often,
for the sake of the beneficence of its friction,—
as a needle, he thought, is the keener for being thrust
often amid the grinding particles of the emery-bag. He
resigned his situation and went aboard an up-river boat,—
a small boat that would stop at every petty landing, if
only to put ashore an old woman or a bag of meal, if only
to take in a barrel of potatoes or an Indian with baskets
and bead-work.
About
mid-morning of the second day, at a landing not a score
of miles below the one whereat Reuben would disembark,
an Indian did come aboard with baskets and bead-work.
At sight of him the old atmosphere [Page 149]
of expectant mystery came over Reuben as subtly
as comes the desire of sleep. He had seen this same Indian—he
recognized the unchanging face—on the banks of the
Perdu one morning years before, brooding motionless over
the motionless water. Reuben began unconsciously to divest
himself of his lately gathered worldliness; his mouth
softened, his eyes grew wider and more passive, his figure
fell into looser and freer lines, his dress seemed to
forget its civil trimness. When at length he had disembarked
at the old wharf under the willows, had struck across
through the hilly sheep-pastures, and had reached a slope
overlooking the amber-bright country of the Perdu, he
was once more the silently eager boy, the quaintly reasoning
visionary, his spirit waiting alert at his eyes and at
his ears.
Reuben had little concern for
the [Page 150] highways. Therefore he
struck straight across the meadows, through the pale green
vetch-tangle, between the intense orange lilies, amid
the wavering blue butterflies and the warm, indolent perfumes
of the wild-parsnip. As he drew near the Perdu there appeared
the giant blue heron, dropping to his perch in mid-water.
In almost breathless expectancy Reuben stepped past a
clump of red willows, banked thick with clematis. His
heart was beating quickly, and he could hear the whisper
of the blood in his veins, as he came once more in view
of the still, white water.
His gaze swept the expanse once
and again, then paused, arrested by the unwavering, significant
eye of the blue heron. The next moment he was vaguely
conscious of a hand, that seemed to wave once above the
water, far over among the lilies. He smiled as he said
to himself [Page 151] that nothing had
changed. But at this moment the blue heron, as if disturbed,
rose and winnowed reluctantly away; and Reuben’s
eyes, thus liberated, turned at once to the spot where
he had felt, rather than seen, the vision. As he looked
the vision came again,—a hand, and part of an arm,
thrown out sharply as if striving to grasp support, then
dropping back and bearing down the lily leaves. For an
instant Reuben’s form seemed to shrink and cower
with horror,—and the next he was cleaving with mighty
strokes the startled surface of the Perdu. That hand—it
was not pale green, like the waving hand of the old, childish
vision. It was white and the arm was white, and white
the drenched lawn sleeve clinging to it. He had recognized
it, he knew not how, for Celia’s.
Reaching
the edge of the lily patch, Reuben dived again and [Page
152] again, groping desperately among the long,
serpent-like stems. The Perdu at this point—and
even in his horror he noted it with surprise—was
comparatively shallow. He easily got the bottom and searched
it minutely. The edge of the dark abyss, into which he
strove in vain to penetrate, was many feet distant from
the spot where the vision had appeared. Suddenly, as he
rested, breathless and trembling, on the grassy brink
of the Perdu, he realized that this, too, was but a vision.
It was but one of the old mysteries of the Perdu; and
it had taken for him that poignant form, because his heart
and brain were so full of Celia. With a sigh of exquisite
relief he thought how amused she would be at his plight,
but how tender when she learned the cause of it. He laughed
softly; and just then the blue heron came back to the
Perdu [Page 153].
Reuben
shook himself, pressed some of the water from his dripping
clothes, and climbed the steep upper bank of the Perdu.
As he reached the top he paused among the birch trees
to look back upon the water. How like a floor of opal
it lay in the sun; then his heart leaped into his throat
suffocatingly, for again rose the hand and arm, and waved,
and dropped back among the lilies! He grasped the nearest
tree, that he might not, in spite of himself, plunge back
into the pale mystery of the Perdu. He rubbed his eyes
sharply, drew a few long breaths to steady his heart,
turned his back doggedly on the shining terror, and set
forward swiftly for the farm-house, now in full view not
three hundred yards away.
For
all the windless, down-streaming summer sunshine, there
was that in Reuben’s drenched clothes which chilled
him to the heart. As he [Page 154] reached
the wide-eaved cluster of the farmstead, a horn in the
distance blew musically for noon. It was answered by another
and another. But no such summons came from the kitchen
door to which his feet now turned. The quiet of the Seventh
day seemed to possess the wide, bright farm-yard. A flock
of white ducks lay drowsing on a grassy spot. A few hens
dusted themselves with silent diligence in the ash-heap
in front of the shed; and they stopped to watch with bright
eyes the stranger’s approach. From under the apple-trees
the horses whinnied to him lonesomely. It was very peaceful;
but the peacefulness of it bore down upon Reuben’s
soul like lead. It seemed as if the end of things had
come. He feared to lift the latch of the well-known door.
As he hesitated, trembling, he
observed that the white blinds were [Page 155]
down at the sitting-room windows. The window
nearest him was open, and the blind stirred almost imperceptibly.
Behind it, now, his intent ear caught a sound of weary
sobbing. At once he seemed to see all that was in the
shadowed room. The moveless, shrouded figure, the unresponding
lips, the bowed heads of the mourners, all came before
him as clearly as if he were standing in their midst.
He leaned against the door-post, and at this moment the
door opened. Celia’s father stood before him.
The
old man’s face was drawn with his grief. Something
of bitterness came into his eyes as he looked on Reuben.
“You’ve
heard, then!” he said harshly.
“I know!” shaped itself
inaudibly on Reuben’s lips.
At the sight of his anguish the
old man’s bitterness broke [Page 156].
“You’ve come in time
for the funeral,” he exclaimed piteously. “Oh,
Reube, if you’d stayed it might have been different
[Page 157]!”
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