Prose Fancies (Second Series) by Richard Le Gallienne
page 32 of 122 (26%)
page 32 of 122 (26%)
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see her dead!' for indeed life has no beauty so wonderful as the beauty
of death. And, as in all places and times, there was a base remnant that gaped and worshipped not, and in their hearts resented all this distinction paid to a nobility they could not recognise, as the like had grumbled when Cimabue's Madonna had been carried through the streets in glory. But of these there is no need that we should take account, any more than of the beasts that moved head down amid the pastures outside the town, knowing not of the wonder that was passing within. For the ass will munch his thistles though the Son of Man be his rider, nor will the sheep look aside from his grazing though Apollo be the herdsman. * * * * * At length the sacred pageant was ended, gone like the passing of an aerial music, and the people went to their homes silent, with haunted eyes; while the Earth, which had given this beauty, took it back to herself, and one more Persephone of human loveliness was shut within the gates of the forgetful grave. VARIATIONS UPON WHITEBAIT A very Pre-Raphaelite friend of mine came to me one day and said _à propos_ of his having designed a very Early English chair: 'After all, if one has anything to say one might as well put it into a chair!' |
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