Then a bell began to boom, a deep-toned bell, whose tolling was

inexpressibly solemn, and poured into his heart a sadness too deep for

sorrow. As though there dwelt an enchantment in the very sound itself,

the dark prairies shifted like a scene, and in their stead he saw, in a

cold gray twilight, a high doorway built of a cold gray stone,

rough-hewed and heavy. Through its arch passed then a file of

gray-cowled monks, their faces concealed. Each carried a torch, whose

flickering, wavering light cast weird cowled figures on the gray stone,

and in their midst was borne a bier, covered with white. And as the

deep bell boomed on through all the vision, like a subtle thrilling

presence, Bennington seemed to himself to stand, finger on lip, the

eternal custodian of the Secret of it all--the secret that each of

these cowled figures was a Man--a divine soul and a body, with ears,

and eyes, and a brain; that he had thoughts, and his life that is and

is to come was of these thoughts; that there beat hearts beneath that

gray, and that their voices must not be heeded; that in the morning

these wearied eyes awaited but the eve, and that the evening brought no

hope for a new day; that these silent, awesome beings lived within the

heavy stones alone with monotony, until the bell tolled, as now, and

they were carried through the arched doorway into the night; and, above

all, that to each there were sixty minutes in the hour, and twenty-four

hours in the day, and years and years of these days. This was the

Secret, and he was its custodian. None of the others knew of it; but

its awfulness made him sad and stern. He checked the days, he numbered

the hours, he counted the minutes rigorously lest one escape. One did

escape, and he turned back to catch it, and pursued it far away from

the stone doorway and the dull twilight, and even the sound of the

bell, off into a land where there were many hills and valleys, among

which the fugitive Minute hid elusively. And he pursued the Minute,

calling upon it to come to him, and the name by which he called it was

Mary. Then he saw that the square of the window had become yellow with

the sun, and that through it he could hear plainly the voices of the

Leslies talking in high tones.

His brain was very clear, more so than usual, and he not only received

many impressions, and ordered them with ease and despatch, but his very

senses seemed more than ordinarily acute. He could distinguish even by

day, when the night stillness had withdrawn its favouring conditions,

the borings of the sawdust insects in the logs of the cabin. Only he

was very tired. His hands seemed a long distance away, as though it

would require an extraordinary effort of the will to lift them. So he

lay quiet and listened.




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