'Surely that cloud is for us,' said she, as she watched it anxiously.

Dark trees brushed between it and her, while she waited in suspense. It

came, unswerving, from behind the trees.

'I am sure it is for us,' she repeated. A gladness came into her eyes.

Still the cloud followed the train. She leaned forward to Siegmund and

pointed out the cloud to him. She was very eager to give him a little of

her faith.

'It has come with us quite a long way. Doesn't it seem to you to be

travelling with us? It is the golden hand; it is the good omen.' She then proceeded to tell him the legend from 'Aylwin'.

Siegmund listened, and smiled. The sunset was handsome on his face.

Helena was almost happy.

'I am right,' said he to himself. I am right in my conclusions, and

Helena will manage by herself afterwards. I am right; there is the hand

to confirm it.' The heavy train settled down to an easy, unbroken stroke, swinging like

a greyhound over the level northwards. All the time Siegmund was

mechanically thinking the well-known movement from the Valkyrie Ride,

his whole self beating to the rhythm. It seemed to him there was a

certain grandeur in this flight, but it hurt him with its heavy

insistence of catastrophe. He was afraid; he had to summon his courage

to sit quiet. For a time he was reassured; he believed he was going on

towards the right end. He hunted through the country and the sky, asking

of everything, 'Am I right? Am I right?' He did not mind what happened

to him, so long as he felt it was right. What he meant by 'right' he did

not trouble to think, but the question remained. For a time he had been

reassured; then a dullness came over him, when his thoughts were stupid,

and he merely submitted to the rhythm of the train, which stamped him

deeper and deeper with a brand of catastrophe.

The sun had gone down. Over the west was a gush of brightness as the

fountain of light bubbled lower. The stars, like specks of froth from

the foaming of the day, clung to the blue ceiling. Like spiders they

hung overhead, while the hosts of the gold atmosphere poured out of the

hive by the western low door. Soon the hive was empty, a hollow dome of

purple, with here and there on the floor a bright brushing of wings--a

village; then, overhead, the luminous star-spider began to run.

'Ah, well!' thought Siegmund--he was tired--'if one bee dies in a swarm,

what is it, so long as the hive is all right? Apart from the gold light,

and the hum and the colour of day, what was I? Nothing! Apart from these

rushings out of the hive, along with swarm, into the dark meadows of

night, gathering God knows what, I was a pebble. Well, the day will

swarm in golden again, with colour on the wings of every bee, and

humming in each activity. The gold and the colour and sweet smell and

the sound of life, they exist, even if there is no bee; it only happens

we see the iridescence on the wings of a bee. It exists whether or not,

bee or no bee. Since the iridescence and the humming of life _are_

always, and since it was they who made me, then I am not lost. At least,

I do not care. If the spark goes out, the essence of the fire is there

in the darkness. What does it matter? Besides, I _have_ burned bright; I

have laid up a fine cell of honey somewhere--I wonder where? We can

never point to it; but it _is_ so--what does it matter, then!' They had entered the north downs, and were running through Dorking

towards Leatherhead. Box Hill stood dark in the dusky sweetness of the

night. Helena remembered that here she and Siegmund had come for their

first walk together. She would like to come again. Presently she saw the

quick stilettos of stars on the small, baffled river; they ran between

high embankments. Siegmund recollected that these were covered with

roses of Sharon--the large golden St John's wort of finest silk. He

looked, and could just distinguish the full-blown, delicate flowers,

ignored by the stars. At last he had something to say to Helena: 'Do you remember,' he asked, 'the roses of Sharon all along here?' 'I do,' replied Helena, glad he spoke so brightly. 'Weren't they

pretty?' After a few moments of watching the bank, she said: 'Do you know, I have never gathered one? I think I should like to; I

should like to feel them, and they should have an orangy smell.' He smiled, without answering.




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