The Old Helmet - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Solomon is my fast friend and very faithful servant," he said returning to Eleanor. "You saw him at dinner--but it is time he should know you."
In came Solomon; a very black specimen of the islanders, in a dress something like that which Eleanor had noticed on the man in the canoe.
Solomon's features were undeniably good, if somewhat heavy; they had sense and manliness; and his eye was mildly quiet and genial in its expression. It brightened, Eleanor saw, as he listened to Mr. Rhys's words; to which she also listened without being able to understand them, and wondering at the warm feeling of her cheeks. Solomon's gratulations were mainly given with his face, for all the English words he could get out were, "glad--see--Misi Risi"--Mr. Rhys laughed and dismissed him, and went off himself.
Eleanor was half glad to be left alone for a time. She fastened the door, not for fear, but that her solitude might not be intruded upon; then walked up and down over the soft mats of the centre room and tried to bring her spirits to some quiet of realization. But she could not.
The change had been so sudden, from her wandering state of uncertainty and expectation to absolute content and rest, of body and mind at once, that her mental like her actual footing seemed to sway and heave yet with the upheavings that were past. She could not settle down to anything like a composed state of mind. She could not get accustomed yet to Mr. Rhys in his new character. As the children say, it was "too good to be true."
A little unready to be still, she went off again into the room specially prepared for her, where the green jalousies shaded the windows. One window here was at the end; a direction in which Eleanor had not looked. She softly raised the jalousies a little, expecting to see just the waving bananas and other plants of the tropical garden that surrounded the house; or perhaps servants' offices, about which she had a good deal of curiosity.
Instead of that, the window revealed a landscape of such beauty that Eleanor involuntarily pulled up the blind and sat entranced before it.
No such thing as servants or servants' offices. A wide receding stretch of broken country, rising in the distance to the dignity of blue precipitous hills; a gorge of which opened far away, to delight and draw the eye into its misty depth; a middle distance of lordly forest, with patches of clearing; bits of tropical vegetation at hand, and over them and over it all a tropical sky. In one direction the view was very open. Eleanor could discern a bit of a pathway winding through it, and once or twice a dark figure moving along its course. This was Vuliva!
this was her foreign home! the region where darkness and light were struggling foot by foot for the mastery; where heathen temples were falling and heathen misery giving place to the joy of the gospel, but where the gospel had to fight them yet. Eleanor looked till her heart was too full to look any longer; and then turned aside to get the only possible relief in prayer.
The hour was near gone when she went to her window again. The day was cooling towards the evening. Well she guessed that this window had been specially arranged for her. In everything that had been done in the house she had seen that same watchful care for her pleasure and comfort. There never was a house that seemed to be so love's work; Mr.
Rhys's own hand had most manifestly been everywhere; and the furniture that Mrs. Caxton had sent he had placed. But Mrs. Caxton had not sent all. Eleanor's eye rested on a dressing-table that certainly never came from England. It was pretty enough; it was very pretty, even to her notions; yet it had cost nothing, and was as nearly as possible made of nothing. Yes, for she looked; the frame was only some native reeds or canes and a bit of board; the rest was white muslin drapery, which would pack away in a very few square inches of room, but now hung in pretty folds around the gla.s.s and covered the frame. Eleanor just looked and wondered; no more; for the hour was up, and she went to her window and raised the jalousies again. She was more quiet now, she thought; but her heart throbbed with the thought of Mr. Rhys and his return.
She looked over the beautiful wild country, watching for him. The light was fair on the blue hills; the sea-breeze fluttered the leaves of the cocoanut trees and waved the long thick leaves of the banana. She heard no other sound near or far, till the quick swift tread she was listening for came to her ear. n.o.body was to be seen; but the step was not to be mistaken. Eleanor got to the front door and had it open just in time to see him come.
They stood then together in the doorway, for the view was fair on the river side too. The opposite sh.o.r.e was beautiful, and the houses of the heathen village had a great interest for Eleanor, aside from their effect as part of the landscape; but her shyness was upon her again, and she had a thorough consciousness that Mr. Rhys did not see how the light fell on either sh.o.r.e. At last he put his arm round her and drew her up to his side, saying,
"And so you did not get my letters in Sydney.--Poor little dove!"
It struck Eleanor with a curious pleasure, these words. They would have been true, she knew, in the lips of no other mortal, as also certainly to no other mortal would it have occurred to use them. She was not the sort of person by any means to whom such an appellation would generally be given. To be sure her temper was of the finest, but then also it had a body to it. Yet here she knew it was true; and he knew; it was spoken not by any arrogance, but by a purely frank and natural understanding of their mutual natures and relations. She answered by a smile, exceeding sweet and sparkling, as well as conscious, to the face that was looking down at her with a little bit of provoking archness upon its gravity; and their lips met in a long sealing kiss. Husband and wife understood each other.
Perhaps Mr. Rhys knew it, for it seemed as if his lips could hardly leave hers; and Eleanor's face was all manner of lights.
"What has become of Alfred?" he asked, in an irrelevant kind of manner, by way of parenthesis.
"I have not seen him--hardly--since you left England. He is not under mamma's care now."
"And my friend Julia? You have told me but a mite yet about everybody."
"Julia is your friend still. But Julia--I have not seen her in a long, long time."
"How is that?"
"Mamma would not let me. O Mr. Rhys!--we have been kept apart. I could not even see her when I came away."
"Why?"
"Mamma--she was afraid of my influence over her."
"Is it possible!"
"Julia was going on well--setting her face to do right. Now--I do not know how it will be. Even our letters are overlooked."
"I need not ask how your mother is. I suppose she is trying to save one of her daughters for the world."
Eleanor's thoughts swept a wide course in a few minutes; remembered whose hand instrumentality had saved her from such a fate and had striven for Julia. With a sigh that was part sorrow and part grat.i.tude, Eleanor laid her head softly on Mr. Rhys's shoulder. With such tenderness as one gives to a child, and yet rarer, because deeper and graver, she was made at home there.
"Don't you want to take a walk to the chapel?"
"O yes!"--But she was held fast still.
"And shall we give sister Balliol the pleasure of our company to tea, as we come back?"
"If you please--if you like."
"I do not like it at all," said Mr. Rhys frankly--"but I suppose we must."
"Think of finding the restraints of society even in Fiji!" said Eleanor trying to laugh, as she brought her bonnet and they set out.
"You must find them everywhere--unless you live to please yourself;"
said Mr. Rhys, with his sweet grave look; and Eleanor was consoled.
The walk to the church was not very long, and she could have desired it longer. The river sh.o.r.e, and the view on the other side, and the village by which they pa.s.sed, the trees and the vegetable gardens and the odd thatched roofs--everything was pretty and new to Eleanor's eyes. They pa.s.sed all they had seen in coming from the landing that morning, taking this time a path outside the mission premises. Past the house with the row of pillars in front, which Eleanor learned was a building for the use of the various schools. A little further on stood the chapel. It was neat and tasteful enough to please even an English eye; and indeed looked more English than foreign on a distant view; and standing there in the wilderness, with its little bell-tower rising like a witness for all that was good in the midst of a heathen land, the feelings of those who looked upon it had need be very tender and very deep.
"This chapel is dear to our eyes," said Mr. Rhys. "Everything is, that costs such pains. This poor people have made it; and it is one of the best pieces of work in Fiji. It was all done by the labour of their hearts and hands."
"That seems to be the style of carpentry in this country," said Eleanor.
"The chief made up his mind on a good principle--that for a house of the true G.o.d, neither time nor material could be too precious. On that principle they went to work. The timber used in the building is what we call green-heart--the best there is in Fiji. To find it, they had to travel over many a mile of the country; and remember, there are no oxen here, no horses; they had no teams to help them. All must be done by the labour of the hands. I think there were about eighty beams of green-heart timber needed for the house--some of them twelve and some of them fifty feet long. In about three months these were collected; found and brought in from the woods and hills, sometimes from ten miles away. While the young men were doing this, the old men at home were all day beating cocoanut husk, to separate the fibre for making sinnet. All day long I used to hear their beaters going; it was good music; and when at the end of every few days the woodcutters came home with their timber--so soon as they were heard shouting the news of their coming--there was a general burst and cry and every creature in the village set off to meet them and help drag the logs home. Women and children and all went; and you never saw people so happy.
"Then the building was done in the same spirit. Many a time when I was busy with them, overlooking their work, I have heard them chanting to each other words from the Bible--band against band. One side would sing--'But will G.o.d indeed dwell on the earth? Behold, the heaven of heavens cannot contain thee; how much less this house that I have builded.'--Then the other side would answer, 'The Lord hath chosen Zion; he hath desired it for his habitation.' I cannot tell you how sweet it was. There was another chant they were very fond of. A few would begin with Solomon's pet.i.tion--'Have thou respect unto the prayer of thy servant, and to his supplication, O Lord my G.o.d, to hearken unto the cry and to the prayer, which thy servant prayeth before thee to-day: that thine eyes may be open toward this house night and day, even toward the place of which thou hast said, My name shall be there: that thou mayest hearken unto the prayer which thy servant shall make toward this place,'--and here a number of the other builders would join in with their cry--'Hearken unto the prayer which thy servant shall make!' And so in the next verse, when it came near the end the others would join in--'And when thou hearest, forgive!'--"
"I should think you would love it!" said Eleanor, with her eyes full of tears. "And I should think the Lord would love it."
"Come in, and see how it looks on the inside."
The inside was both simple and elegant, after a quaint fas.h.i.+on; for it was Fijian elegance and Fijian simplicity. A double row of columns led down the centre of the building; they looked like mahogany, but it was only native wood; and the ornamental work at top which served for their capitals, was done in sinnet. Over the doors and windows triangular pediments were elaborately wrought in black with the same sinnet. The roof was both quaint and elegant. It was done in alternate open and close reed-work, with broad black lines dividing it; and ornamental las.h.i.+ngs and bandings of sinnet were used about the fastenings and groinings of spars and beams. Then the wings of the communion rail were made of reed-work, ornamented; the rail was a beautiful piece of nut timber, and the bal.u.s.ters of sweet sandal wood. The whole effect exceeding pretty and graceful, though produced with such simple means.
"Mr. Ruskin ought to have had this as an ill.u.s.tration of his 'Lamp of Sacrifice,'" said Eleanor. "How beautiful!--"
"The 'Lamp of Truth,' too," said Mr. Rhys. "It is all honest work. That side was done by our heathen neighbours. The heathen chief sent us his compliments, said he heard we were engaged in a great work, and if we pleased he would come and help us. So he did. They built that side of the wall and the roof."
"Did they do it well?"
"Heartily."
"Do they come to attend wors.h.i.+p in it?"
"The chapel is a great attraction. Strangers come to see--if not to wors.h.i.+p,--and then we get a chance to tell the truth to them."
"And Mr. Rhys, how is the truth prospering generally?"
"Eleanor, we want men!--and that seems to be all we want. My heart feels ready to break sometimes, for the want of helpers. I am glad of brother Amos coming--very glad!--but we want a hundred where we have one. It is but a few weeks since a young man came over from one of the islands, a large and important island, bringing tidings that a number of towns there had given up heathenism--all wanting teachers--and there were no teachers for them. In one place the people had built a chapel; they had gone so far as that; it was at Koroivonu--and they gathered together the next Sunday after it was finished, great numbers of the people, filled the chapel and stood under some bread-fruit trees in front of it, and stood there waiting to have some one come and tell them the truth--and there was no one. My heart is ready to weep blood when I think of these things! The Tongan who came with the news came with his eyes full of tears. And this is no strange nor solitary case of Koroivonu."
Mr. Rhys walked the floor of the little chapel, his features working, his breast heaving. Eleanor sat thinking how little she could do--how much she would!