Life and hope were ash in her mouth. She shuddered with discord. Despair

grated between her teeth. This dreariness was worse than any her dreary,

lonely life had known. She felt she could bear it no longer.

Siegmund was there. Surely he could help? He would rekindle her. But he

was straying ahead, carelessly whistling the Spring Song from _Die

Walküre_. She looked at him, and again shuddered with horror. Was that

really Siegmund, that stooping, thick-shouldered, indifferent man? Was

that the Siegmund who had seemed to radiate joy into his surroundings,

the Siegmund whose coming had always changed the whole weather of her

soul? Was that the Siegmund whose touch was keen with bliss for her,

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whose face was a panorama of passing God? She looked at him again. His

radiance was gone, his aura had ceased. She saw him a stooping man, past

the buoyancy of youth, walking and whistling rather stupidly--in short,

something of the 'clothed animal on end', like the rest of men.

She suffered an agony of disillusion. Was this the real Siegmund, and

her own only a projection of her soul? She took her breath sharply. Was

he the real clay, and that other, her beloved, only the breathing of her

soul upon this. There was an awful blank before her.

'Siegmund!' she said in despair.

He turned sharply at the sound of her voice. Seeing her face pale and

distorted in the twilight, he was filled with dismay. She mutely lifted

her arms to him, watching him in despair. Swiftly he took her in his

arms, and asked in a troubled voice: 'What is it, dear? Is something wrong?' His voice was nothing to her--it was stupid. She felt his arms round

her, felt her face pressed against the cloth of his coat, against the

beating of his heart. What was all this? This was not comfort or love.

He was not understanding or helping, only chaining her, hurting. She did

not want his brute embrace--she was most utterly alone, gripped so in

his arms. If he could not save her from herself, he must leave her free

to pant her heart out in free air. The secret thud, thud of his heart,

the very self of that animal in him she feared and hated, repulsed her.

She struggled to escape.

'What is it? Won't you tell me what is the matter?' he pleaded.

She began to sob, dry wild sobs, feeling as if she would go mad. He

tried to look at her face, for which she hated him. And all the time he

held her fast, all the time she was imprisoned in the embrace of this

brute, blind creature, whose heart confessed itself in thud, thud, thud.




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