Short Fiction Herman Melville (best books to read fiction .TXT) đ
- Author: Herman Melville
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âThis house? The sun is a good sun, but it never gilds this house. Why should it? This old house is rotting. That makes it so mossy. In the morning, the sun comes in at this old window, to be sureâ âboarded up, when first we came; a window I canât keep clean, do what I mayâ âand half burns, and nearly blinds me at my sewing, besides setting the flies and wasps astirâ âsuch flies and wasps as only lone mountain houses know. See, here is the curtainâ âthis apronâ âI try to shut it out with then. It fades it, you see. Sun gild this house? not that ever Marianna saw.â
âBecause when this roof is gilded most, then you stay here within.â
âThe hottest, weariest hour of day, you mean? Sir, the sun gilds not this roof. It leaked so, brother newly shingled all one side. Did you not see it? The north side, where the sun strikes most on what the rain has wetted. The sun is a good sun; but this roof, in first scorches, and then rots. An old house. They went West, and are long dead, they say, who built it. A mountain house. In winter no fox could den in it. That chimney-place has been blocked up with snow, just like a hollow stump.â
âYours are strange fancies, Marianna.â
âThey but reflect the things.â
âThen I should have said, âThese are strange things,â rather than, âYours are strange fancies.âââ
âAs you will;â and took up her sewing.
Something in those quiet words, or in that quiet act, it made me mute again; while, noting, through the fairy window, a broad shadow stealing on, as cast by some gigantic condor, floating at brooding poise on outstretched wings, I marked how, by its deeper and inclusive dusk, it wiped away into itself all lesser shades of rock or fern.
âYou watch the cloud,â said Marianna.
âNo, a shadow; a cloudâs, no doubtâ âthough that I cannot see. How did you know it? Your eyes are on your work.â
âIt dusked my work. There, now the cloud is gone, Tray comes back.â
âHow?â
âThe dog, the shaggy dog. At noon, he steals off, of himself, to change his shapeâ âreturns, and lies down awhile, nigh the door. Donât you see him? His head is turned round at you; though, when you came, he looked before him.â
âYour eyes rest but on your work; what do you speak of?â
âBy the window, crossing.â
âYou mean this shaggy shadowâ âthe nigh one? And, yes, now that I mark it, it is not unlike a large, black Newfoundland dog. The invading shadow gone, the invaded one returns. But I do not see what casts it.â
âFor that, you must go without.â
âOne of those grassy rocks, no doubt.â
âYou see his head, his face?â
âThe shadowâs? You speak as if you saw it, and all the time your eyes are on your work.â
âTray looks at you,â still without glancing up; âthis is his hour; I see him.â
âHave you then, so long sat at this mountain-window, where but clouds and, vapors pass, that, to you, shadows are as things, though you speak of them as of phantoms; that, by familiar knowledge, working like a second sight, you can, without looking for them, tell just where they are, though, as having mice-like feet, they creep about, and come and go; that, to you, these lifeless shadows are as living friends, who, though out of sight, are not out of mind, even in their facesâ âis it so?â
âThat way I never thought of it. But the friendliest one, that used to soothe my weariness so much, coolly quivering on the ferns, it was taken from me, never to return, as Tray did just now. The shadow of a birch. The tree was struck by lightning, and brother cut it up. You saw the cross-pile outdoorsâ âthe buried root lies under it; but not the shadow. That is flown, and never will come back, nor ever anywhere stir again.â
Another cloud here stole along, once more blotting out the dog, and blackening all the mountain; while the stillness was so still, deafness might have forgot itself, or else believed that noiseless shadow spoke.
âBirds, Marianna, singing-birds, I hear none; I hear nothing. Boys and bob-o-links, do they never come a-berrying up here?â
âBirds, I seldom hear; boys, never. The berries mostly ripe and fallâ âfew, but me, the wiser.â
âBut yellowbirds showed me the wayâ âpart way, at least.â
âAnd then flew back. I guess they play about the mountainside, but donât make the top their home. And no doubt you think that, living so lonesome here, knowing nothing, hearing nothingâ âlittle, at least, but sound of thunder and the fall of treesâ ânever reading, seldom speaking, yet ever wakeful, this is what gives me my strange thoughtsâ âfor so you call themâ âthis weariness and wakefulness together Brother, who stands and works in open air, would I could rest like him; but mine is mostly but dull womanâs workâ âsitting, sitting, restless sitting.â
âBut, do you not go walk at times? These woods are wide.â
âAnd lonesome; lonesome, because so wide. Sometimes, âtis true, of afternoons, I go a little way; but soon come back again. Better feel lone by hearth, than rock. The shadows hereabouts I knowâ âthose in the woods are strangers.â
âBut the night?â
âJust like the day. Thinking, thinkingâ âa wheel I cannot stop; pure want of sleep it is that turns it.â
âI have heard that, for this wakeful weariness, to say oneâs prayers, and then lay oneâs head upon a fresh hop pillowâ ââ
âLook!â
Through the fairy window, she pointed down the steep to a small garden patch near byâ âmere pot of rifled loam, half rounded in by sheltering rocksâ âwhere, side by side, some feet apart, nipped and puny, two hop-vines climbed two poles, and, gaining their tip-ends, would have then joined over in an upward clasp, but the baffled shoots, groping awhile in empty air, trailed back whence they sprung.
âYou have tried the pillow, then?â
âYes.â
âAnd prayer?â
âPrayer and pillow.â
âIs there no other cure, or charm?â
âOh, if I could but once
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