"Goudge, Elizabeth - Eliots of Damerosehay 01 - The Bird in the Tree 1.0" - читать интересную книгу автора (Goudge Elizabeth)

"No time!" they yelled to Ellen, who called out something about thick shoes from the front door. "No time! No time!"

Yet even as he went leaping down the drive, going first because he was the eldest, with Tommy and Caroline coming after and the dogs flying on ahead, Ben was conscious as always of the beauty of the oak wood, and of the garden that he could see through the iron gateway in the old high red brick wall that was skirted by the drive as it wound from the east side of the house, where the porch and the front door faced across the marshes to the silver line of the Estuary, down through the wood to the gate. But that one glimpse was enough for Ben. In his mind's eye, as he ran on, he could see the green grass paths between the lavender hedges, the purple masses of the michaelmas daisies with the butterflies sunning their wings upon them, the glowing spires of the goldenrod and the flames of the dahlias and peonies and petunias, the frail late autumn roses and the ilex tree by the house, where the blackbird sang. He could see the color of it, and smell the damp sweet scent of it, and feel how it lived and breathed within its old brick walls just to give sanctuary to those who needed it.

2.

And Ben was one of these. Though he was only nine years old he had come already to feel the need for sanctuary. He had been born in Egypt, and then gone on to India; and foreign countries had most violently disagreed with him. The first seven years of his life were now just a confused and painful memory of heat and flies, bands playing, riots when people got shot, a burning fever in his body, a pain in his head, a choking feeling in his chest that they told him was asthma, and his father and mother quarreling. The asthma, the grown-ups had told him, was an illness, but Ben had known quite well that he choked because his father and mother quarreled. He admired them so; his father so tall and splendid and his mother so lovely; and when they had quarreled, his love and sorrow had swelled inside his chest like a balloon, and so of course he had choked. He had understood it all quite well in his own mind, but he hadn't been able to explain it; so he had had to go on choking.

And then they had come home to England, and the children had come to Damerosehay, where Grandmother and Aunt Margaret lived. That had been two years ago, but Ben could remember the day they arrived as though it were yesterday. Aunt Margaret had met the children in London and brought them to Grandmother, because their mother was going up north to stay with a friend and their father was staying in London to arrange something mysterious called a divorce. The children and Aunt Margaret had driven out from the station in the village taxi one spring evening just as the sun was setting, and the moment they had turned in through the broken gate into the drive that led through the oak wood he had felt better. And when ten minutes later he had sat on Grandmother's lap in the drawing room, rubbing his bare legs contentedly against her silk skirts, eating a sugared almond and looking out into that lovely cloistered garden, he had suddenly felt well. After tea he had gone out into the garden quite by himself and had seen how the old red walls were built all round him to keep him safe. It had been cool in the garden and the daffodils had made pools of gold beside the grass paths. There had been no sound except the far off murmur of the sea and the blackbird singing in the ilex tree. He had known for certain that no one would ever quarrel here; there would be no bands or shooting to hurt his head and he would never feel too hot. Nor would he choke here. He had run up and down the grass paths and he had been happy.

But the difficulty was that now he could never go away from Damerosehay. He had to live here always and do lessons with Uncle Inlary at the Vicarage instead of going to school. When his father had gone back to India and his mother had made a home for herself in London, and was working so hard that she couldn't have her children with her except sometimes on visits, he had been sent to a preparatory school. But he had choked there so badly that they had had to write and tell Grandmother. She had come down at once, driven by David in his beautiful silver-gray car, dressed in her black silk and with a little silver box of sugared almonds in her black velvet bag; and while she had sat on his bed and hugged him he had whispered to her that it was because it was all so noisy, and the other boys quarreled, and he wanted to go back to Damerosehay. She had listened, nodding her head, and paying not the slightest attention to the headmaster's remarks about the wholesome discipline of school life, and the matron's assertion that nervous disorders must not be treated with too much leniency; she had wrapped him up in a rug and carried him straight off downstairs to David in his wailing car. That had been the first time he had seen David. Sitting on Grandmother's lap, leaning back against her shoulder and eating a sugared almond, he had looked at his cousin's clear-cut features against the background of sky and trees and hedgerows that streamed by as the car raced them to Damerosehay, and thought him a god among men. Even so did the gods behave, dropping from the sky in silver chariots and carrying one away from pain and desolation to the place where one would be.

"This child is very like what you were at his age, David," Grandmother had announced over his head. "He has the Eliot coloring, of course, while you have mine, but I notice the same sensitivity. "

"The same dramatic ability, you mean," had said David. "Nothing like turning on a bit of pathos to get what you want. " But he had spoken quite nicely and had winked his eye at Ben, so that Ben's feelings had not been in any way hurt. Indeed Ben had chuckled, remembering how he had coughed a lot harder when he had overheard the headmaster saying to the matron in the passage that they had better write Grandmother. "I used," David had continued, "to make myself sick at school by hammering on my front and then heaving. It was a useful accomplishment. I'll teach you, Ben, if you like. "

"My dear!" Grandmother had exclaimed, shocked, and David had said no more but had tilted his head back and looked up at the flying clouds over his head, with upon his face that expression of ethereal beauty that was his to command at will. And Ben had chuckled again, and swelled a little with pride, because he as well as David had dramatic ability. And David's dramatic ability was such that sometimes he had his name up in electric lights in Shaftesbury Avenue, the first Eliot to achieve this particular brand of fame.

And Ben, as well as David, had grace. As he went leaping down the drive his flying figure seemed less that of a boy than of the spirit of a boy. His lithe brown beauty was more of the essence of things than of their form. It was the loveliest of all types of beauty, his Grandmother thought; more enduring than perfection of shape or color; more attractive because more elusive. In repose Ben was not a beautiful child; he was bony, with a sallow skin and straight lusterless dark hair, his only good points his shy brown fawn's eyes and exquisitely cut lips that lifted at the corners when he smiled with a swift movement that was the very epitome of delight. But any sort of movement, whether mental or physical, transformed him. When something touched his mind or spirit into awareness or delight, waves of light seemed to pass over his face, like the reflection of sun upon water; and when he moved, the suppleness of the body that in stillness could be so angular had in it almost the grace of wind-blown rushes, or weeds that sway with the current beneath the water. So unselfconsciously could he abandon himself to some thought or emotion greater than his body, as the rushes to the wind and the weeds to the water, that he himself became a part of the beauty of it. So, while his mind remained unsullied and his body capable of movement, would he always be beautiful, thought his Grandmother, for the loveliness that can be mirrored in mind and body is inexhaustible as long as the world endures. Tommy was quite different. He was eight years old, and fat. He had fat dark curls, fat red cheeks and round bright dark eyes. He looked like one of Raphael's cherubs but unfortunately his character was most distressingly at variance with his outward appearance. "What have I done," his Grandmother would cry, "that I should have such a child thrust upon me in my old age?" At winch cry of despair he would chuckle, his fat chuckle, bump his incredibly hard head against her shoulder in what was meant to be a contact of affection but was in effect as that of the onslaught of a young goat, and go off to think out further devilry in the bathroom. He had twice been sent to school and twice been returned with thanks; so now he stayed at Damerosehay and in company with Ben did lessons with Uncle Inlary. He was, it seemed, better behaved at Damerosehay than anywhere else. He said it was the blackbird who sang in the ilex tree who helped him to be good.

Caroline was five and three quarters, and sucked her thumb. Nothing cured her of it; not spanking, nor bitter aloes put on the nail, nor coaxing nor expostulation. She just sucked, removing her thumb only when she wished to eat or smile. She seldom spoke, and it was impossible to say at her age whether her silence was due to the presence of great thoughts in her mind or to the absence of any thoughts at all. Time alone would show, and meanwhile she sucked, to the great distress of Ellen. "She must be cured of it, milady," Ellen would say to Grandmother. "It's her left thumb and it's swollen something terrible already. What'll her bridegroom say when she holds out her hand for the ring and he sees the thumb she has on her?"

"We can only do our best, Ellen," Grandmother would say soothingly. "Put on the aloes and trust in Providence. "

Caroline had neither the dark good looks of most of the Eliots nor the golden beauty that had once been her Grandmother's and was now David's. She was thin and freckled, with straight fair hair cut in a fringe across her forehead. Yet she had an elfin attraction of her own. Her eyes were the green eyes of a fairy's child, she had the delicacy and precision of an exquisite old lady, and lovely little teeth that showed like pearls between her lips on the rare occasions when she condescended to remove her thumb from her mouth. She learned to read and write with her Grandmother, and Ellen had taught her to make cross-stitch kettle holders for her mother and aunts every Christmas. Ben was a child who could have lived in any age, tuned like a violin to respond with clear beauty to whatever moods and events might strike upon him, and Tommy was modem to the depth of his restless truthful little soul, but Caroline had stepped straight out of the age of Victoria the Good. She could not be dressed in shorts and jerseys, like the boys, she looked simply silly in them; she had to wear frocks of pastel shades, beautifully smocked by Ellen, worn in summer with sunbonnets that tied beneath the chin and in whiter with bonnet-shaped hats and little peh'ssed coats trimmed with fur. Muffs became her, and coral necklaces, and little red shoes with pom-poms on them. She was inclined to be finicky over her food and already showed an old-maid tendency to like a place for Everything and Everything in its place. She kept a cat, and always said her prayers without being' reminded, and, strangest of all traits in an Eliot, she was frightened of strange dogs. Ellen was very much afraid that, the thumb-sucking apart, she would never get a husband.

Caroline was not frightened of their own dogs, of course, not even of Pooh-Bah, a chow possessed of the most mighty ancestry and a peculiarly crushing arrogance. Pooh-Bah's nose was permanently wrinkled, as though every smell that he smelt was beneath his notice, and he wore upon his forehead a frown that had been known to cause the most loquacious visitors to fall uneasily silent when he turned the light of his countenance disdainfully upon them. He was superbly beautiful. His ears, stiffly erect upon his noble cranium, were as delicately pointed as flower petals, his eyes were like dark amber and his tongue was a royal purple. His coat was the color of a ripe cornfield with the sun upon it, and his tail, of a slightly paler shade of tawny gold, was erected over his back in a strong curve that was never untwisted and never lowered. Agitated back and forth it might be in moments of pleasure and excitement, but lowered, never. While life was in Pooh-Bah that tail would stay erect above the proud curve of his furred, protuberant stern.

But with the tail of the Bastard it was not so. The Bastard's tail was tremblingly responsive to his every mood, and his moods were many. Pooh-Bah was so proud that he never permitted himself even to feel a weakness, let alone to show it, but the Bastard, un-upheld by the arrogance of race and beauty, felt many weaknesses and showed them all. He was frightened, he was unhappy, he was penitent, he was anxious, he was passionately loving, he was shy, he was coy; and his tail, like a dirty uncurled ostrich feather that had seen better days, trembled, drooped, rose, fell, waved, rotated, or disappeared between his hind legs altogether, according as these emotions ravaged his faithful breast. For faithful the Bastard undoubtedly was. In spite of the extreme nervousness of his highly-strung temperament he would have died in defense of the Eliots because he loved them, while Pooh-Bah would have died for them only because they were his sacred property. The Bastard's loving faithfulness was very visible in his appearance, sinning in the liquid depths of the dark eyes that gazed so appealingly out of the curious mat of whitish-gray hair that was his face, and dripping in streams of saliva from the end of the long pink tongue that he lowered out of the side of his mouth in moments of emotion. He always dribbled when he loved people; he couldn't help it, but it made him a little unpopular in the drawing room. For the rest, he was a large dog with flapping uncontrolled ears, sprawling legs that didn't seem to belong to him and a lanky body enveloped in tangled whitish-gray fur that had a slightly motheaten appearance. He had come to Damerosehay ten years ago as a puppy, having been deposited upon the back doorstep by persons unknown but thought to be of gypsy origin. Some thought he was of sheepdog ancestry. Others suggested elkhound crossed with pomeranian. Some few detected a flavor of collie with a dash of skye terrier. The vet made no suggestions; the problem, he said, was beyond him; but the dog was a sweet-tempered dog, and faithful, and let them thank God for that.

Winch they did. The Bastard was a part of Damerosehay as no dog had ever been, or ever would be. Exiled Eliots could never think of the marshes that stretched between the oak wood and the sea without picturing the Bastard's busy body rabbiting through the rushes and the gorse. They could never dream of the ilex tree in the garden where the blackbird sang without seeing him sitting beneath it, pursuing insects upon his person, the sunlight striking down through the ilex leaves and patterning his white fur with a delicate diaper of light and shade. When they thought of Grandmother sitting in her black silk beside the drawing-room fire, the Bastard was always lying at her feet, his chin propped upon her shoe and his lustrous eyes rolled upwards in expectation of a sugared almond. And when they thought of the rutted lane that led down from the main road to the marshes, and the cornfield at the corner that was as the first sight of home, it was the Bastard whom they saw flying to meet them, his uncontrolled ears napping with ecstasy and his feathery tail streaming on the wind.

3.

It was streaming now as he led the van of the party that was racing to welcome David. They were through the oak wood in a flash, and out of the broken gate that divided the demesne of Damerosehay from the village. That gate had not been mended for years. It stood open always, propped back with a stone, and would stay like that till it fell to pieces altogether. For why should Damerosehay shut itself off from the village and the marshes, the harbor and the sea? It didn't want to. It loved them. It lay encircled by them as a jewel in its setting. And it was a strange fact that only those who went to Damerosehay upon their lawful occasions ever passed through the open gate into the oak wood. Trespassers and sightseers had never been found within it. They stood at the gate and looked in, often, but their feet did not carry them from the hard surface of the village road on to the thick green moss of the drive. There was something about those oak trees that gave them a queer feeling. They felt warned off.

Perhaps it was because the oaks looked like people, and not normal people either, but gnarled, misshapen gnomes. Their trunks were covered with gray lichen, winch made them look as old as time, and their branches were so twisted by whiter storms that they looked like deformed arms with long clutching fingers stretched out in incantation. And the trees were blown all one way, as though they bowed towards the house of Damerosehay. Beneath them the grass grew thick and rough and tawny, jeweled in the spring with gold and purple crocuses that were the brightest that any one had ever seen, and the moss on the drive was so thick that it hushed every footfall to silence. There was seldom any sound in the oak wood except the talking of the trees themselves, for the birds preferred the sheltered garden to build and sing in, and passers-by in the wood never talked. But the trees said a good deal. In the spring, when their old branches were jeweled with flamelike coral-tipped leaves, they whispered together of the secrets that they knew, secrets that if communicated to the passers-by in the wood would have taken all sorrow from their hearts for ever. And in summer, when the warm rain pattered on the polished dark green surface of their full-grown leaves and their branches swayed rhythmically in the soft wind from the sea, they would sing beneath their breath a song about a far country that they knew of. The raindrops on their leaves were the words and the wind in the branches was the tune, and it ought to have been easy to overhear; yet not even Grandmother had succeeded in catching more than the echo of it. In whiter they prayed and they meditated, or they cried out in anguish for the sorrow of the world. On windless days their gray heads were bowed and their knotted fingers, held up to the sky in supplication, were utterly still; but when the storms rushed in from the sea they wrung their hands in anguish and when night fell they screamed and moaned so loudly that sleepers in the house of Damerosehay woke up in sudden terror, conscious of the powers of evil abroad in the world and of great wings that passed in the night. And then in the morning there would be a great quiet and the trees would stand exhausted, sodden with the rain, maimed and torn, with gashes showing white upon their branches and broken twigs strewn about their feet, yet at peace and triumphant because they had been for their people a bulwark against evil, and those wings that had passed in the night had done no harm. Undoubtedly they had two faces, these trees. No Eliot, and no friend of an Eliot, could pass beneath them and not feel arms protectingly about them, and friendly hands leading them on to the inner sanctuary of the house and garden. But strangers were warned off and came no further than the broken open gate; for the trees could not feel certain about them, they could not know if they would bring to Damerosehay good or evil.

Outside the gate was Little Village, containing the Shop and Coastguard Station, the Eel and Lobster, a few cottages and some houses belonging to rich folk who came in summer for the yachting. Big Village, where abode Uncle Inlary and the Church, was some little way inland and was reached by a narrow winding lane where sloes grew and hips and haws were scarlet in the autumn sunshine. Both villages were really the same place, Fairhaven, but they were as different as chalk from cheese, and very jealous of their own particular attractions. Big Village, lying in a small valley and sheltered from the wind, had whitewashed thatched cottages ringed about with pasture lands, haystacks and prosperous farms. It had several shops, a petrol pump and a graveyard, and thought a lot of itself in consequence. It had a parish room, too, and a hoarding with advertisements on it, and its gardens were packed full of all the flowers that grow.

Little Village was quite different. Its houses, like the house of Damerosehay, were built of solid gray stone that knew how to withstand the onslaught of the whiter gales, and were roofed with gray slate patched with yellow lichen. Its gardens, unprotected by high walls like the garden of Damerosehay, had little in them except the feathered tamarisk trees with their foam of pale pink blossom, and fuchsia bushes strung over with swaying lanterns of red and purple. But what did Little Village want with gardens? It looked out upon the harbor, and to right and left of it, stretching away to the far silver curve of the sea, were the rainbow-colored marshes.

Little Village considered that if you saw the harbor you saw Life. There were no less than two seats upon the harbor wall, and here the old salts would congregate in their off moments, smoking their pipes and blinking their old eyes at the sun: John Clutterbuck and Charles Beere, the coastguardsmen, William Urry from the Eel and Lobster and Obadiah Watson, who lived right out in the marsh and who helped Aunt Margaret and his grandson Alf, the Damerosehay gardener, with the weeding and the pruning. Any one who liked could sit with them discussing the bloody government, spitting accurately and with vigor into the bright waters of the harbor, and doing nothing else at all (beyond adjournments to the Eel and Lobster for refreshment) from the tune the sun got up till the time it went to bed again. Nothing at all but listen to the sound of the incoming tide slapping against the harbor wall, and watch the broken fragments of light caught and cradled within each curve of the wind-rippled water. "[NON ENGLISH TEXT]" the Greeks had called those fragments of light, so David had told the children. "The many-twinkling smile of ocean. " Precious they were, and beloved of seafaring folk since the dawn of the world.

In summer the harbor was always gay with color. The tamarisk trees grew right up to the wall and clumps of sea asters grew between the seats. The harbor itself and the creek that wound away through the marshes to the sea were dotted with fishing boats and yachts rocking at anchor, their hulls painted blue and green and their sails, tightly folded to the slender masts, looking like white lily buds folded about a flower stem. Yet it was only in repose that the sails reminded one of flowers; when they blossomed from the masts and the yachts sped down the creek to the sea they were no longer flowers but wings, their every movement a gesture of utter joy. Busy they were, and important, as they sped about their business. Man had made them and they shared a little in the self-consciousness of their creator.

It was because it was so full of white wings that Fairhaven was such a happy place: wings of the yachts, of the seagulls, and of the swans who divided their tune between the Abbey River, several miles to the eastward, and the blue lake in the marsh where the sea lavender grew. White wings are for ever happy, symbols of escape and ascent, of peace and of joy, and a spot of earth about winch they beat is secure of its happiness.

The passing and repassing of the swans was one of the events of Fairhaven, something so lovely that no one ever got used to it and no one ever failed to look up when they heard the rhythmical powerful beat of those great wings approaching from the eastward. The swans would fly one behind the other in perfect formation, their long necks stretched out as though they yearned for the place where they could be, then: flight, so different from that of the yachts, as unselfconscious and as unhurried as the wheeling of the sun and moon upon thek courses. When they saw then- blue lake the head of the foremost swan would point downwards like the head of an arrow that turns again earthwards, and, with a slow sinuous movement that was difficult to follow even though it enchanted the watcher, the whole long line of them would sink towards the water with tense necks relaxed into grace and white wings folded. Then, immobile, they would become, like the furled sails, no longer wings, but flowers.