登陆注册
5452800000080

第80章

Of the Desert-House and the Chamber of Love in the Wilderness Then in a while they grew sober and went on their ways, and the sun was westering behind them, and casting long shadows.

And in a little while they were come out of the thick woods and were in a country of steep little valleys, grassy, besprinkled with trees and bushes, with hills of sandstone going up from them, which were often broken into cliffs rising sheer from the tree-beset bottoms: and they saw plenteous deer both great and small, and the wild things seemed to fear them but little.

To Ralph it seemed an exceeding fair land, and he was as joyous as it was fair; but the Lady was pensive, and at last she said:

"Thou deemest it fair, and so it is; yet is it the lonesomest of deserts. I deem indeed that it was once one of the fairest of lands, with castles and cots and homesteads all about, and fair people no few, busy with many matters amongst them.

But now it is all passed away, and there is no token of a dwelling of man, save it might be that those mounds we see, as yonder, and yonder again, are tofts of house-walls long ago sunken into the earth of the valley. And now few even are the hunters or way-farers that wend through it."

Quoth Ralph: "Thou speakest as if there had been once histories and tales of this pleasant wilderness: tell me, has it anything to do with that land about the wide river which we went through, Roger and I, as we rode to the Castle of Abundance the other day?

For he spoke of tales of deeds and mishaps concerning it."

"Yea," she said, "so it is, and the little stream that runs yonder beneath those cliffs, is making its way towards that big river aforesaid, which is called the Swelling Flood.

Now true it is also that there are many tales about of the wars and miseries that turned this land into a desert, and these may be true enough, and belike are true. But these said tales have become blended with the story of those aforesaid wars of the Land of the Tower; of which indeed this desert is verily a part, but was desert still in the days when I was Queen of the Land; so thou mayst well think that they who hold me to be the cause of all this loneliness (and belike Roger thought it was so) have scarce got hold of the very sooth of the matter."

"Even so I deemed," said Ralph: "and to-morrow we shall cross the big river, thou and I. Is there a ferry or a ford there whereas we shall come, or how shall we win over it?"

She was growing merrier again now, and laughed at this and said:

"O fair boy! the crossing will be to-morrow and not to-day; let to-morrow cross its own rivers; for surely to-day is fair enough, and fairer shall it be when thou hast been fed and art sitting by me in rest and peace till to-morrow morning.

So now hasten yet a little more; and we will keep the said little stream in sight as well as we may for the bushes."

So they sped on, till Ralph said: "Will thy feet never tire, beloved?"

"O child," she said, "thou hast heard my story, and mayst well deem that they have wrought many a harder day's work than this day's. And moreover they shall soon rest; for look! yonder is our house for this even, and till to-morrow's sun is high: the house for me and thee and none else with us." And therewith she pointed to a place where the stream ran in a chain of pools and stickles, and a sheer cliff rose up some fifty paces beyond it, but betwixt the stream and the cliff was a smooth table of greensward, with three fair thorn bushes thereon, and it went down at each end to the level of the river's lip by a green slope, but amidmost, the little green plain was some ten feet above the stream, and was broken by a little undercliff, which went down sheer into the water.

And Ralph saw in the face of the high cliff the mouth of a cave, however deep it might be.

"Come," said the Lady, "tarry not, for I know that hunger hath hold of thee, and look, how low the sun is growing!"

Then she caught him by the hand, and fell to running with him to the edge of the stream, where at the end of the further slope it ran wide and shallow before it entered into a deep pool overhung with boughs of alder and thorn. She stepped daintily over a row of big stones laid in the rippling shallow; and staying herself in mid-stream on the biggest of them, and gathering up her gown, looked up stream with a happy face, and then looked over her shoulder to Ralph and said:

"The year has been good to me these seasons, so that when I stayed here on my way to the Castle of Abundance, I found but few stones washed away, and crossed wellnigh dry-shod, but this stone my feet are standing on now, I brought down from under the cliff, and set it amid-most, and I said that when I brought thee hither I would stay thereon and talk with thee while I stood above the freshness of the water, as I am doing now."

Ralph looked on her and strove to answer her, but no words would come to his lips, because of the greatness of his longing; she looked on him fondly, and then stooped to look at the ripples that bubbled up about her shoes, and touched them at whiles; then she said:

"See how they long for the water, these feet that have worn the waste so long, and know how kind it will run over them and lap about them: but ye must abide a little, waste-wearers, till we have done a thing or two. Come, love!" And she reached her hand out behind her to Ralph, not looking back, but when she felt his hand touch it, she stepped lightly over the other stones, and on to the grass with him, and led him quietly up the slope that went up to the table of greensward before the cave. But when they came on to the level grass she kissed him, and then turned toward the valley and spake solemnly:

"May all blessings light on this House of the wilderness and this Hall of the Summer-tide, and the Chamber of Love that here is!"

Then was she silent a while, and Ralph brake not the silence.

Then she turned to him with a face grown merry and smiling, and said:

"Lo! how the poor lad yearneth for meat, as well he may, so long as the day hath been. Ah, beloved, thou must be patient a little.

For belike our servants have not yet heard of the wedding of us.

同类推荐
  • 山权数

    山权数

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 季冬纪

    季冬纪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编人事典游部

    明伦汇编人事典游部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上元夜忆长安

    上元夜忆长安

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 瑜伽集要焰口施食起教阿难陀缘由

    瑜伽集要焰口施食起教阿难陀缘由

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 全球超怼

    全球超怼

    超能主角一朝归来,风云际会,笑傲都市。守护女神脚踩邪恶,要问为什么?因为我叫陈晋!
  • 海棠梦0a

    海棠梦0a

    风华绝代,仙姿玉质……乱世成殇,琴音荼糜……情已为烟,泪已迷衫……她在等,等一个永远不会归来的归人……
  • 我在蜀山当神仙

    我在蜀山当神仙

    他是异世界的救世主。他是九天十地的无上仙王。他是电竞盛典的隐藏王者。他是食神的一生宿敌。他是秋名山的头号车神。他是万千少女的梦想。是闪耀动人的国民偶像。茫茫仙途,精彩人生。
  • 爱后余生

    爱后余生

    "十九岁,她成了他的女人。他对她说:“我爱你。”二十四岁,她怀了他的孩子,却眼睁睁的看着他跟别的女人结婚。他说:“除了名分,我什么都可以给你。”可是展正希,名分和爱情我都不想要了,我只要自由,以及你这辈子都得不到我的痛苦……"--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 再见,大黄狗1:飞奔天庭

    再见,大黄狗1:飞奔天庭

    作品以中国古代神话传说为素材,塑造了大黄狗哮天犬等十二生肖形象。主人二郞神为了营救因违反天规而身陷囹圄的母亲,打着“自由”的旗号,对抗天庭,最终成功推翻了玉帝的统治,并将所有《天规》条文付之一炬,立了相对宽松的《自由新规》。多年以后,二郞神用“自由理念”用心培养出的外甥沉香,却重蹈其覆辙,枉法自负,劈山救母,并因此打开了阻挡天河的门户,给人间带来了水灾洪祸。因此,二郞神追悔莫及,终于认识到了自由与戒律相辅相成的关系,重新拥立出关的玉帝执掌天庭,并亲自为《天规》守法护道。
  • 快穿荣耀之英雄你站住

    快穿荣耀之英雄你站住

    顾沅,本是王者荣耀的超级爱好者,同时也是一方最强王者,可是一天,她穿进了王者大陆,同时莫名其妙绑定一个王者攻略系统。【简介无能,后期会改】
  • 快穿拯救病娇反派

    快穿拯救病娇反派

    你所到之处是我不得不思念的海角天涯。【1V1甜宠】我想逃开,却不识的,你就是我的命中注定。
  • 佛说大乘八大曼拏罗经

    佛说大乘八大曼拏罗经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 我的修仙系统有属性

    我的修仙系统有属性

    充值99,立即送雷灵之体。鬼使神差之下,叶白点了一下,电脑爆炸了。一觉醒来,来到了仙人的世界,而且成为一名已故的金丹之子。“叮~~~~充值的雷灵之体请接收~”
  • 7个24小时

    7个24小时

    不同身份阶层、互不相识的三个人突然出现在一栋房子内,他们脑中有一个声音在说:“世界就要毁灭,你们还剩168小时。”在生命余下的最后时间里,他们做出了许多疯狂的事情,探寻生命的意义。