With his black violin-case he hurried down the street, then halted to

pity the flowers massed pallid under the gaslight of the market-hall.

For himself, the sea and the sunlight opened great spaces tomorrow. The

moon was full above the river. He looked at it as a man in abstraction

watches some clear thing; then he came to a standstill. It was useless

to hurry to his train. The traffic swung past the lamplight shone warm

on all the golden faces; but Siegmund had already left the city. His

face was silver and shadows to the moon; the river, in its soft grey,

shaking golden sequins among the folds of its shadows, fell open like a

garment before him, to reveal the white moon-glitter brilliant as living

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flesh. Mechanically, overcast with the reality of the moonlight, he took

his seat in the train, and watched the moving of things. He was in a

kind of trance, his consciousness seeming suspended. The train slid out

amongst lights and dark places. Siegmund watched the endless movement,

fascinated.

This was one of the crises of his life. For years he had suppressed his

soul, in a kind of mechanical despair doing his duty and enduring the

rest. Then his soul had been softly enticed from its bondage. Now he was

going to break free altogether, to have at least a few days purely for

his own joy. This, to a man of his integrity, meant a breaking of bonds,

a severing of blood-ties, a sort of new birth. In the excitement of this

last night his life passed out of his control, and he sat at the

carriage-window, motionless, watching things move.

He felt busy within him a strong activity which he could not help.

Slowly the body of his past, the womb which had nourished him in one

fashion for so many years, was casting him forth. He was trembling in

all his being, though he knew not with what. All he could do now was to

watch the lights go by, and to let the translation of himself continue.

When at last the train ran out into the full, luminous night, and

Siegmund saw the meadows deep in moonlight, he quivered with a low

anticipation. The elms, great grey shadows, seemed to loiter in their

cloaks across the pale fields. He had not seen them so before. The world

was changing.

The train stopped, and with a little effort he rose to go home. The

night air was cool and sweet. He drank it thirstily. In the road again

he lifted his face to the moon. It seemed to help him; in its brilliance

amid the blonde heavens it seemed to transcend fretfulness. It would

front the waves with silver as they slid to the shore, and Helena,

looking along the coast, waiting, would lift her white hands with sudden

joy. He laughed, and the moon hurried laughing alongside, through the

black masses of the trees.




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