Rubywings
CHAPTER I. the journey.
Come with me for an hour, out of the hard, stony by-ways and hot, dusty
thoroughfares of this work-a-day city.
Mount behind me on the broad wings of this carrier-bird, which most men
have, yet which no mortal hath ever seen! Sit close and fear not, for
our pillion is soft and easy, the steed safe. Now mount and away!
“Where silvery songs of bird and bee,
Of leaf and lake and stream,
Round us hum and flit and flee
While we linger silently
In our noon-tide dream.”
Nothing but ice! Walls of it, peaks, spires, towers, grottoes, floors.
Ice everywhere! It is of all manner of delicate hues—pale green and
blue; and where the edges catch the sun it shines even brighter than
the glitter of a thousand clustering diamonds. This is Silverhaze, the
border of Fairyland. The King of Silverhaze stood at the ice-bound
portal of his kingdom, when he observed the approach of a very old man.
The gait of the mortal wayfarer was slow and feeble, and he often
paused to rest ere he reached the gates where stood the monarch.
“Who lives here, Spirit?” he asked of the Frost King.
“I,” responded the tall, bearded form, in a sweet voice which sounded
like a song heard a long way off.
“Where is Fairyland, and how am I to get there?” inquired the old
gentleman in a faint tone.
“You are standing on the boundary line of the region you seek,”
answered the King; “this is the wall encircling the land of the
Australian Elves, O mortal!”
“What a thick rampart of ice!” exclaimed the old man, curiously
inspecting the great white barrier.
“True,” answered the Frost King. “This wall is made from the dew and
rain of Earth that are not delicate enough to moisten the tender grass
of Elfland. I catch the mists as they wreathe themselves upward, and
divide them; that which has touched and been tainted with the under
world I build up into these icy walls; that which is pure as the
morning cloud floats on into the country where you are going.”
“Thank you; may I wander onward?”
“Ay! Few come here to break my repose. I live here alone. Continue your
journey onwards towards Moonrise, and you will see all you want.”
“Shall I see everything, O King Frost?”
“Nay, that will depend on yourself. If you can fling away from you
every thought that is not fit for the pure mind of an innocent child,
then shall you behold wonders.”
“Alas! great King, I am afraid I cannot do that. Who can, who can? In
my youth I never heard of this glorious Fairyland. Childhood, young
manhood, mature age, were all spent by me in getting and hoarding
money; and now the time is drawing near when I must depart; but ere I
go I want to view the silver mosses and green slopes of these regions.”
The old man bent low before the Ice Monarch, whose cold blue eyes
changed to flashing steel.
“I can help you,” he answered. “Come here, and let me touch your
forehead. If you wish it in your heart, I will draw from you your
memories and thoughts, and send you a child into Fairyland. Your past
will lie here for you in my ice cave, a burden or a blessing, for you
to resume as you go out.”
“How, a burden or a blessing?” asked the mortal.
“That again will depend on yourself; according to what you see in your
travels will your past seem to you on your return.”
“But you said I should see all.”
“You will have the power of seeing all, yet you will only see that
which you care to look upon.” As the Frost King spoke, he advanced and
touched the mortal’s brow with his finger. While he did so there glided
beneath the old man’s feet a silver cloud-car, which instantly
enveloped him and carried him away from the ice-clad border with the
swiftness of a sea-gull. Amazement grew upon him as he felt himself
borne away and no visible thing in view. Then remembering what the
Spirit had said, he exclaimed aloud, “Can I not see what is about me?”
The words were hardly uttered when he perceived that he was the
occupant of a gorgeous conveyance drawn by a team of butterflies, with
a lovely child seated therein driving them. Wonderful indeed the
delicate tints and shades which the moonbeams had woven in her robes.
Still more wondrous the blended purity and beauty of her face.
Exquisitely, deliciously soft and musical the voice that addressed him
in accents like the soft south wind, wooing the trees at summer’s
eventide.
“Welcome, Sir Mortal. Welcome to Elfland.”
“Dear child, art thou a fairy?” he cried in surprise.
“Yes! My name is Rubywings,” she answered, with a beaming smile.
“Rubywings,” he repeated. “It is a delightful name, my child; but why
do they call thee Rubywings?”
“Because I am Queen of the Butterflies,” she replied; “and because I am
also the messenger of Peace and Charity to the good of the Earth.
Invisible to all else of mortal birth am I. Peace! Let us onward.”
Brilliantly flashed the wings of the butterflies as they wafted the
cloud-car, light and joyous as the golden orioles that flew before
them. Here they fluttered among curious rocks of veined and marbled
stone, here and there soft mosses, which grew in little clumps, some in
scales, like trays on which stood silver cups for the fays to drink out
of. Then ferns peeped out with their long tresses that blew backwards
and forwards in the wind. A trickle of water began to flow from a deep
cranny, and tall plants blossomed along its course. Suddenly they came
upon a wide, beautiful plain, robed with such lovely, silk-like grass,
only to be found in these regions. Here tall palms tossed their
feathery heads, while creepers, bearing flowers, streaked with gold and
brown, climbed about their trunks.
Still onward, with but a passing glimpse at the emerald carpet beneath,
until they reached a fine lagoon, in the midst of which an island
appeared to view, so fair and beautiful that the rest of the landscape
turned bleak and barren by comparison. Over this wondrous place
Rubywings guided the cloud-car. Landing where a mossy bank sloped
gently to the water, the fairy led her companion into such a charming
garden that a burst of rapture broke from his lips at sight of it. The
most refined imagination of mortal man never conceived such a world of
rare beauty. No seasons came and went here, the flowers bloomed
eternally. Like a jewelled crown encircling the brows of a queen, so a
vast ring of pale blossoms surrounded this bower of loveliness—primrose,
with her beseeching face, shy snowdrop, loving violet, with her whisper
of summer, glad hyacinth, ringing a peal of bells, whose faint tinkle
came upon the mortal’s ears, like subdued melody.
Rubywings pointed out a soft couch of ferns, bordered with lilies, and
said,—
“Rest thee here awhile, O mortal. Sleep, dream, bewilder thyself. When
thou wakest, thine eyes shall open upon the ministering spirits of
Nature, which I go to bring around thee.
“‘Bi baby bunting,
I am going hunting
For the shadows as they fly,
For the winds to waft them by;
Bi baby bunting!’”
Ere her childish song had ended Rubywings vanished, and the mortal fell
asleep.
CHAPTER II. shadows.
The old mortal, whom the fays had christened Ready Money, slept soundly
in that island garden into which he had been guided by Rubywings. And
as he slumbered, behold the Fairy Queen approached with a golden wand
in her hand. She stood over him and gently waved the wand to and fro,
when lo! the flowers around and about instantly assumed the shape of
frolicsome sprites who formed themselves into a vast ring about him.
Again Rubywings lifted her enchanted staff, and the trees receded
backwards in the distance as so many drifting clouds athwart the
horizon. And waving her wand for the third time, a sudden darkness
shrouded the island save where the man reposed.
Round that clear, circular space, bordered by the crowded ranks of the
elves, there shone a brilliant, steady, silvery light, brighter than
the sun and softer than a moonbeam.
Rubywings stooped and whispered in the sleeper’s ear. And as she did
so, the magic ring widened and widened out, until at length it appeared
to encompass the whole landscape. The beautiful light increased
simultaneously with the wonderful expansion of the garden, thereby
adding a tenfold beauty to every object upon which it rested.
“Behold, mortal, this is the valley of the shadows. First lift thine
eyes,” cried the fairy.
Ready Money obeyed, and saw much clearer than with his waking sight.
Into the shimmering ring there glided the Monarch of the Shadows. He
was not at all black or gloomy. Not in the least—his manners were soft
and engaging, and his robe was decorated with all kinds of delicate
tints, brown and silver-grey, and violet shaded with faint blue and
azure. All the fays bowed down reverently before him, because they knew
he was the greatest Shadow in the land. Painters loved him and made
charming pictures of him, and poets sang of him and wrote songs in his
praise, and yet neither painter nor poet could tell how great, how
magnificent and glorious he was.
Troop by troop, rank and column, the Shadows came out of the ravines,
valleys and dells, and from the clefts in the hill sides, and from
amongst the rocks, and approached the King in due order and gave an
account of their several missions.
Some told how they had spent their time in sick rooms, where people lay
tossing in pain, and how they had rested the eyes of many a weary
sufferer, and shielded them from the glaring light, and how sometimes
they had gathered thickly round them and lulled them into health-giving
sleep. Others spoke of travellers far from home, who, longing to see
their wives and children or friends once more, had been comforted by
the Shadows, who took upon themselves the dear home figures and the
scenes of home.
The mortal listened eagerly to every word uttered by these ministers of
Nature. Hitherto he had believed that Beam and Shadow alike had no
life, any more than the particles of dust beneath his feet, and were
just as useless. What sick couch had he visited? What heart comforted?
What good accomplished for the benefit of his kindred? Why, the very
Shadows, dim and soulless as they were, had done more good than he had
done, and Ready Money trembled as the thought came home to him. One
grand fellow bent his tall form before the Shadow King and said that
when the summer sun waxed hot and fierce over the Australian Continent
he cast himself across the fiery pathway of the burning rays, thereby
refreshing many a broiling citizen, and making cool and restful shade
beneath tree and hill, and giving beauty to field and stream, by
throwing lovely, translucent shadows over them, and so bringing out to
full perfection the form and colour of all created things.
Then there advanced Shadows of a gloomier, darker hue. Drooping,
careworn, and sorrow-laden, they had come from the houses of the very
poor, from courts of justice, from prison cells where criminals sat in
silence and despair. Many had come from homes where there was no love
of parents; where wives and husbands were at strife; where fierce
words, and cruel blows, and hard usage were the rule of daily death in
life. Others had just left places of business, where men, who ought to
know better, toiled year after year to increase their wealth, striving
after gold, lying and cheating for it, holding it tightly when they had
it, and shuddering as the time drew near when they must go hence and
leave it all to others.
If these Shadows, fresh from counting-houses and cobweb-covered
chambers, wherein sat men faded and wan, as the colourless walls around
them, if they had been the Shadow only of this listening mortal, they
could hardly have presented a more realistic picture of his life in the
past than they did in their report of others.
Lying there powerless, there came upon him a strong desire to get back
amongst his fellow-men if it were only for one short month—nay, but
only the length of a brief day; for in it what good might be done and
what atonement made! Alas! for our resolution. Ready Money was fast
held beneath the influence of the wand of Rubywings, and therefore
could not budge.
When the grim Shadows rested, there came an altogether merrier group
upon the scene. These related how they had given their attention to
schoolrooms, alarming idle boys and girls by bringing the Shadow of
their teachers upon them just in the middle of a game of romps. Others
again had had rare fun with naughty little folks who were going to help
themselves to sugar and jam, by looking over their shoulders and making
believe that some one was coming.
Next the house Shadows took their turn, and showed how they engaged
themselves, by making pleasant figures on the floor and walls, dancing
in the firelight, and playing bo-peep in the curtains on winter
evenings. When all the reports were finished, the King called to the
Wind to dismiss the Shadows.
Then the Wind came, and the Shadows, ere they took their departure,
amused themselves as they liked best. In the most surprising manner
some played leap-frog, hide-and-seek, and blind-man’s-buff. Others
raced along the sward and up the side of the hills, like so many
will-o’-the-wisps; many changing into all kinds of strange and
fantastic shapes, until the silver light dimmed and died out, and the
beautiful garden resumed its grandeur as before.
And a change came o’er the slumbering mortal. Slowly he opened his
eyes, but the fairy with her enchanting wand was not there, nor the
flowers and trees. Nothing, save the high boundary wall of ice and the
white-bearded Frost King standing near.
“Resume thy earth-woven memories, O mortal!” he said in a grave, solemn
tone. “Stand upright that I may touch thee. So! Go thy way for a brief
season. In thy daily wanderings here and there thy former friends shall
not recognise thee! From henceforth, Greed, Selfishness, Envy, and all
of that nature that were dear to thee, shall become thy bitter foes.
Remember what the Shadows said. Farewell!”
Down, earthward, with tottering and uncertain step went the mortal;
downward, along the broad, sunny pathway, where innumerable birds sang,
and trees waved, and where the low, hoarse murmur of bread-winning
millions ascended to the Creator.