The Secret Power by Marie Corelli (dark academia books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Marie Corelli
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âI saw the air-ship flying over the monastery,ââhe explained, greeting herââAnd I was anxious to know whether la Signora had gone away into the skies or was still on earth! She has gone, I suppose?â
âYes, she has gone!â sighed Lady Kingswoodââand the Marchese with her, and one assistant. Her ânerveâ is simply astonishing!â
âYou did not think of venturing on a trip with her yourself?ââand the priest smiled kindly, as he assisted her to ascend the last flight of steps to the loggia.
âNo indeed! I really could not! I feel I ought to be braverâbut I cannot summon up sufficient courage to leave terra firma. It seems altogether unnatural.â
âThen what will you do when you are an angel, dear lady?â queried Aloysius, playfullyââYou will have to leave terra firma then! Have you ever thought of that?â
She smiled.
âIâm afraid I donât think!â she saidââI take my life on trust. I always believe that God who brought me HERE will take care of me THERE!âwherever âthereâ is. You understand me, donât you? You speak English so well that Iâm sure you do.â
âYesâI understand you perfectlyââhe repliedââThat I speak English is quite natural, for I was educated at Stonyhurst, in England. I was then for a time at Fort Augustus in Scotland, and studied a great many of the strange traditions of the Highland Celts, to which mystic people Miss Royal by birth belongs. Her ancestry has a good deal to do with her courage and character.â
While he spoke Lady Kingswood gazed anxiously into the sky, searching it north, south, east, west, for the first glimpse of the returning âWhite Eagle,â but there was no sign of it.
âYou must not worry yourself,ââwent on the priest, putting a chair for her in the loggia, and taking one himselfââIf we sit here we shall see the air-ship returning, I fancy, by the western line,â certainly near the sunset. In any case let me assure you there is no danger!â âNo danger?â
âAbsolutely none!â
Lady Kingswood looked at him in bewildered amazement.
âSurely there MUST be danger?â she saidââThe terrible accidents that happen every day to these flying machinesââ
âYesâbut you speak of ordinary flying machines,â said Aloysius,â âThis âWhite Eagleâ is not an ordinary thing. It is the only one of its kind in the worldâthe only one scientifically devised to work with the laws of Nature. You saw it ascend?â
âI did.â
âIt made no sound?â
âNone.â
âThen how did its engines move, if it HAD engines?â pursued AloysiusââHad you no curiosity about it?â
âIâm afraid I hadnâtâI was really too nervous! Morgana begged me to go inside, but I could not!â
Don Aloysius was silent for a minute or two, out of gentle tolerance. He recognised that Lady Kingswood belonged to the ordinary class of good, kindly women not overburdened with brains, to whom thought, particularly of a scientific or reflective nature, would be a kind of physical suffering. And how fortunate it is that there are, and always will be such women! Many of them are gifted with the supreme talent of making happiness around themselves,âand in this way they benefit humanity more than the often too self- absorbed student of things which are frequently âpast finding out.â
âI understand your feelingâ;âhe said, at lastââAnd I hardly wonder at your very natural fears. I must admit that I think human daring is going too fast and too farâthe science of to-day is not tending to make men and women happierâand after all, happiness is the great goal.â
A slight sigh escaped him, and Lady Kingswood looked at his fine, composed features with deep interest.
âDo you think God meant us to be happy?â she asked, gently.
âIt is a dubious question!â he answeredââWhen we view the majesty and loveliness of natureâwe cannot but believe we were intended to enjoy the splendid treasures of beauty freely spread out before us,- then again, if we look back thousands of years and consider the great civilisations of the past that have withered into dust and are now forgotten, we cannot help wondering why there should be such a waste of life for apparently no purpose. I speak in a secular sense,-of course my Church has but one reply to doubt, or what we call âdespair of Godâs mercyââthat it is sin. We are not permitted to criticise or to question the Divine.â
âAnd surely that is best!â said Lady Kingswood, âand surely you have found happiness, or what is nearest to happiness, in your beautiful Faith?â
His eyes were shadowed by deep gravity.
âMiladi, I have never sought happiness,â he replied; âFrom my earliest boyhood I felt it was not for me. Among the comrades of my youth many started the race of life with meâhappiness was the winning post they had in viewâand they tried many ways to reach it- some through ambition, some through wealth, some through love-but I have never chanced to meet one of them who was either happy or satisfied. MY mind was set on nothing for myselfâexcept thisâto grope through the darkness for the Great Mind behind the Universeâ to drop my own âegoâ into it, as a drop of rain into the seaâand soâto be content! And in this way I have learned much,âmore than I consider myself worthy to know. Modern science of the surface kindâ (not the true deep discoveries)âhas done its best to detach the rain-drop from the sea!âbut it has failed. I stay where I have plunged my soul!â
He spoke as it were to himself with the air of one inspired; he had almost forgotten the presence of Lady Kingswood, who was gazing at him in a rapture of attention.
âOh, if I could only think as you do!â she said, in a low toneââIs it truly the Catholic Church that teaches these things?â
âThe Catholic Church is the sign and watchword of all these things!â he answeredââNot only that, but its sacred symbols, though ancient enough to have been adopted from Babylonia and Chaldea, are actually the symbols of our most modern science. Catholicism itself does not as yet recognise this. Like a blind child stumbling towards the light it has FELT the discoveries of science long before discovery. In our sacraments there are the hints of the transmutation of elements,âthe âSanctusâ bell suggests wireless telegraphy or telepathy, that is to say, communication between ourselves and the divine Unseen,âand if we are permitted to go deeper, we shall unravel the mystery of that ârising from the deadâ which means renewed life. I am a âprejudicedâ priest, of course,ââand he smiled, gravelyââbut with all its mistakes, errors, crimes (if you will) that it is answerable for since its institution, through the sins of unworthy servants, Catholicism is the only creed with the true seed of spiritual life within itâthe only creed left standing on a firm foundation in this shaking world!â
He uttered these words with passionate eloquence and addedâ
âThere are only three things that can make a nation great,âthe love of God, the truth of man, the purity of woman. Without these three the greatest civilisation existing must perish,âno matter how wide its power or how vast its wealth. Ignorant or vulgar persons may sneer at this as âthe obviousââbut it is the âobviousâ sun alone that rules the day.â
Lady Kingswoodâs lips trembled; there were tears in her eyes.
âHow truly you speak!â she murmuredââAnd yet we live in a time when such truths appear to have no influence with people at all. Every one is bent on pleasureâon selfââ
âAs every one was in the âCities of the Plain,âââhe said, âand we may well expect another rain of fire!â
Here, lifting his eyes, he saw in the soft blush rose of the approaching sunset a small object like a white bird flying homeward across the sea.
âHere it comes!â he exclaimedââNot the rain of fire, but something more agreeable! I told you, did I not, miladi, that there was no danger? See!â
Lady Kingswood looked where he pointed.
âSurely that is not the air-ship?â she saidââIt is too small!â
âAt this distance it is smallââanswered AloysiusââBut wait! Watch,âand you will soon perceive Its great wings! What a marvellous thing it is! Marvellous!âand a womanâs work!â
They stood together, gazing into the reddening west, thrilled with expectancy,âwhile with a steady swiftness and accuracy of movement the bird-like object which at the first glimpse had seemed so small gradually loomed larger with nearer vision, its enormous wings spreading wide and beating the air rhythmically as though the true pulsation of life impelled their action. Neither Lady Kingswood nor Don Aloysius exchanged a word, so absorbed were they in watching the âWhite Eagleâ arrive, and not till it began to descend towards the shore did they relax their attention and turn to each other with looks of admiration and amazement.
âHow long have they been gone?â asked Aloysius then.
Lady Kingswood glanced at her watch.
âBarely two hours.â
At that moment the âWhite Eagleâ swooped suddenly over the gardens, noiselessly and with an enormous spread of wing that was like a white cloud in the skyâthen gracefully swerved aside towards its âshedâ or aerodrome, folding its huge pinions as of its own will and sliding into its quarters as easily as a hand may slide into a loose-fitting glove. The two interested watchers of its descent and swift ârun homeâ had no time to exchange more than a few words of comment before Morgana ran lightly up the terrace, calling to them with all the gaiety of a child returning on a holiday.
âIt was glorious!â she exclaimedââJust glorious! Weâve been to Naples,âcrowds gathered in the street to stare at us,âwe were ever so high above them and they couldnât make us out, as we moved so silently! Then we hovered for a bit over Capri,âthe island looked like a lovely jewel shining with sun and sea,âand now here we are!- home in plenty of time to dress for dinner! You see, dear âDuchessâ-you need not have been nervous,âthe âWhite Eagleâ is safer than any railway train, and ever so much pleasanter!â
âWell, Iâm glad youâve come back all rightââsaid Lady Kingswoodâ âItâs a great relief! I certainly was afraid---â
âOh, you must never be afraid of anything!â laughed MorganaââIt does no good. We are all too much afraid of everything and everybody,âand often when thereâs nothing to be afraid of! Am I not right, most reverend Father Aloysius?â and she turned with a radiant smile to the priest whose serious dark eyes rested upon her with an expression of mingled admiration and wonderââIâm so glad to find you here with Lady KingswoodâIâm sure you told her there was no danger for me, didnât you? Yes? I thought so! Now do stay and dine with us, please!âI want you to talk to the Marchese Rivardiâheâs rather cross! He cannot bear me to have my own
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