FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202   203  
204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216   217   >>  
room for an edifice that begins on earth, not in the sky. All the scaffolding of law is merely there to save time, to prevent the temple, as it mounts, from losing its way, and straying out of form." "No," said Miltoun, "no! The scaffolding, as you call it, is the material projection of the architect's conception, without which the temple does not and cannot rise; and the architect is God, working through the minds and spirits most akin to Himself." "We are now at the bed-rock," cried Courtier, "your God is outside this world. Mine within it." "And never the twain shall meet!" In the silence that followed Miltoun saw that they were in Leicester Square, all quiet as yet before the theatres had disgorged; quiet yet waiting, with the lights, like yellow stars low-driven from the dark heavens, clinging to the white shapes of music-halls and cafes, and a sort of flying glamour blanching the still foliage of the plane trees. "A 'whitely wanton'--this Square!" said Courtier: "Alive as a face; no end to its queer beauty! And, by Jove, if you went deep enough, you'd find goodness even here." "And you'd ignore the vice," Miltoun answered. He felt weary all of a sudden, anxious to get to his rooms, unwilling to continue this battle of words, that brought him no nearer to relief. It was with strange lassitude that he heard the voice still speaking: "We must make a night of it, since to-morrow we die.... You would curb licence from without--I from within. When I get up and when I go to bed, when I draw a breath, see a face, or a flower, or a tree--if I didn't feel that I was looking on the Deity, I believe I should quit this palace of varieties, from sheer boredom. You, I understand, can't look on your God, unless you withdraw into some high place. Isn't it a bit lonely there?" "There are worse things than loneliness." And they walked on, in silence; till suddenly Miltoun broke out: "You talk of tyranny! What tyranny could equal this tyranny of your freedom? What tyranny in the world like that of this 'free' vulgar, narrow street, with its hundred journals teeming like ants' nests, to produce-what? In the entrails of that creature of your freedom, Courtier, there is room neither for exaltation, discipline, nor sacrifice; there is room only for commerce, and licence." There was no answer for a moment; and from those tall houses, whose lighted windows he had apostrophized, Miltoun turned away towards the rive
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188   189   190   191   192   193   194   195   196   197   198   199   200   201   202   203  
204   205   206   207   208   209   210   211   212   213   214   215   216   217   >>  



Top keywords:

Miltoun

 

tyranny

 
Courtier
 

freedom

 
Square
 

silence

 

architect

 
scaffolding
 

licence

 

temple


lassitude

 

strange

 

relief

 
understand
 

boredom

 

palace

 
speaking
 

varieties

 

flower

 

breath


morrow
 

suddenly

 
discipline
 
sacrifice
 

commerce

 
exaltation
 

produce

 

entrails

 

creature

 

answer


moment

 

turned

 

apostrophized

 
windows
 

lighted

 

houses

 

teeming

 

lonely

 

things

 

loneliness


walked

 

narrow

 
vulgar
 

street

 

hundred

 

journals

 

nearer

 

withdraw

 

Himself

 
working