Sylvia,
Queen of the Woods, in her woodland palace, held court, and made a
mockery of her suitors. She would sing to them, she said, she would give
them banquets, she would tell them tales of legendary days, her
jugglers should caper before them, her armies salute them, her fools
crack jests with them and make whimsical quips, only she could not love
them.
This was not the way, they said, to treat princes in their
splendour and mysterious troubadours concealing kingly names; it was not
in accordance with fable; myth had no precedent for it. She should have
thrown her glove, they said, into some lion’s den, she should have
asked for a score of venomous heads of the serpents of Licantara, or
demanded the death of any notable dragon, or sent them all upon some
deadly quest, but that she could not love them—! It was unheard
of—it had no parallel in the annals of romance.
And then she said that if they must needs have a quest she would
offer her hand to him who first should move her to tears: and the quest
should be called, for reference in histories or song, the Quest of the
Queen’s Tears, and he that achieved them she would wed, be he only a
petty duke of lands unknown to romance.
And many were moved to anger, for they hoped for some bloody
quest; but the old lords chamberlain said, as they muttered among
themselves in a far, dark end of the chamber, that the quest was hard
and wise, for that if she could ever weep she might also love. They had
known her all her childhood; she had never sighed. Many men had she
seen, suitors and courtiers, and had never turned her head after one
went by. Her beauty was as still sunsets of bitter evenings when all
the world is frore, a wonder and a chill. She was as a sun-stricken
mountain uplifted alone, all beautiful with ice, a desolate and lonely
radiance late at evening far up beyond the comfortable world, not quite
to be companioned by the stars, the doom of the mountaineer.
If she could weep, they said, she could love, they said. And she
smiled pleasantly on those ardent princes, and troubadours concealing
kingly names.
Then one by one they told, each suitor prince the story of his
love, with outstretched hands and kneeling on the knee; and very sorry
and pitiful were the tales, so that often up in the galleries some maid
of the palace wept. And very graciously she nodded her head like a
listless magnolia in the deeps of the night moving idly to all the
breezes its glorious bloom.
And when the princes had told their desperate loves and had
departed away with no other spoil than of their own tears only, even
then there came the unknown troubadours and told their tales in song,
concealing their gracious names.
And one there was, Ackronnion, clothed with rags, on which was
the dust of roads, and underneath the rags was war-scarred armour
whereon were the dints of blows; and when be stroked his harp and sang
his song, in gallery above gallery maidens wept, and even the old lords
chamberlain whimpered among themselves and thereafter 1aughed through
their tears and said: “It is easy to make old people weep and to bring
idle tears from lazy girls; but he will not set a-weeping the Queen of
the Woods.”
And graciously she nodded, and he was the last. And disconsolate
went away those dukes and princes, and troubadours in disguise. Yet
Ackronnion pondered as he went away.
King was he of Afarmah, Lool and Haf, over-lord of Zeroora and
hilly Chang, and duke of the dukedoms of Molóng and Mlash, none of them
unfamiliar with romance or unknown or overlooked in the making of
myth. He pondered as he went in his thin disguise.
Now by those that do not remember their childhood, having other
things to do, be it understood that underneath fairyland, which is, as
all men know, at the edge of the world, there dwelleth the Gladsome
Beast. A synonym he for joy.
It is known how the lark in its zenith, children at play
out-of-doors, good witches and jolly old parents have all been
compared—and how aptly!—with this very same Gladsome Beast. Only one
“crab” he has (if I may use slang for a moment to make myself
perfectly clear), only one drawback, and that is that in the gladness of
his heart he spoils the cabbages of the Old Man Who Looks After
Fairyland,—and of course he eats men.
It must further be understood that whoever may obtain the tears
of the Gladsome Beast in a bowl, and become drunken upon them, may
move all persons to shed tears of joy so long as he remains inspired by
the potion to sing or to make music.
Now Ackronnion pondered in this wise: that if he could obtain the
tears of the Gladsome Beast by means of his art, withholding him from
violence by the spell of music, and if a friend should slay the Gladsome
Beast before his weeping ceased—for an end must come to weeping
even with men—that so he might get safe away with the tears, and drink
them before the Queen of the Woods and move her to tears of joy. He
sought out therefore a bumble knightly man who cared not for the beauty
of Sylvia, Queen of the Woods, but had found a woodland maiden of his
own once long ago in summer. And the man’s name was Arrath, a subject
of Ackronnion, a knight-at-arms of the spear-guard: and together they
set out through the fields of fable until they came to Fairyland, a
kingdom sunning itself (as all men know) for leagues along the edges of
the world. And by a strange old pathway they came to the land they
sought, through a wind blowing up the pathway sheer from space with a
kind of metallic taste from the roving stars. Even so they came to the
windy house of thatch where dwells the Old Man Who Looks After Fairyland
sitting by parlour windows that look away from the world. He made them
welcome in his star-ward parlour, telling them tales of Space, and when
they named to him their perilous quest he said it would be a charity to
kill the Gladsome Beast; for he was clearly one of those that liked not
its happy ways. And then he took them out through his back door, for the
front door had no pathway nor even a step—from it the old man used to
empty his slops sheer on to the Southern Cross—and so they came to the
garden wherein his cabbages were, and those flowers that only blow in
Fairyland, turning their faces always towards the comet, andhe pointed
them out the way to the place he called Underneath, where the Gladsome
Beast had his lair. Then they manœuvred. Ackronnion was to go by the
way of the steps with his harp and an agate bowl, while Arrath went
round by a crag on the other side. Then the Old Man Who Looks After
Fairyland went back to his windy house, muttering angrily as he passed
his cabbages, for he did not love the ways of the Gladsome Beast; and
the two friends parted on their separate ways.
Nothing perceived them but that ominous crow glutted overlong
already upon the flesh of man.
The wind blew bleak from the stars.
At first there was dangerous climbing, and then Ackronnion
gained the smooth, broad steps that led from the edge to the lair; and
at that moment heard at the top of the steps the continuous chuckles of
the Gladsome Beast.
He feared then that its mirth might be insuperable, not to be
saddened by the most grievous song; nevertheless he did not turn back
then, but softly climbed the stairs and, placing the agate bowl upon a
step, struck up the chaunt called Dolorous. It told of desolate,
regretted things befallen happy cities long since in the prime of the
world. It told of how the gods and beasts and men had long ago loved
beautiful companions, and long ago in vain. It told of the golden host
of happy hopes, but not of their achieving. It told how Love scorned
Death, but told of Death’s laughter. The contented chuckles of the
Gladsome Beast suddenly ceased in his lair. He rose and shook himself.
He was still unhappy. Ackronnion still sang on the chaunt called
Dolorous. The Gladsome Beast came mournfully up to him. Ackronnion
ceased not for the sake of his panic, but still sang on. He sang of the
malignity of time. Two tears welled large in the eyes of the Gladsome
Beast. Ackronnion moved the agate bowl to a suitable spot with his foot.
He sang of autumn and of passing away. Then the beast wept as the frore
hills weep in the thaw, and the tears splashed big into the agate bowl.
Ackronnion desperately chaunted on; he told of the glad unnoticed things
men see and do not see again, of sunlight beheld unheeded on faces now
withered away. The bowl was full. Ackronnion was desperate: the Beast
was so close. Once he thought that its mouth was watering!—but it was
only the tears that had run on the lips of the Beast. He felt as a
morsel! The Beast was ceasing to weep! He sang of worlds that had
disappointed the gods. And all of a sudden, crash! and the staunch spear
of Arrath went home behind the shoulder, and the tears and the joyful
ways of the Gladsome Beast were ended and over for ever.
And carefully they carried the bowl of tears away, leaving the
body of the Gladsome Beast as a change of diet for the ominous crow; and
going by the windy house of thatch they said farewell to the Old Man Who
Looks After Fairyland, who when he heard of the deed rubbed his large
hands together and mumbled again and again, “And a very good thing,
too. My cabbages! My cabbages!”
And not long after Ackronnion sang again in the sylvan palace of
the Queen of the Woods, having first drunk all the tears in his agate
bowl. And it was a gala night, and all the court were there and
ambassadors from the lands of legend and myth, and even some from Terra
Cognita.
And Ackronnion sang as he never sang before, and will not sing
again. O, but dolorous, dolorous, are all the ways of man, few and
fierce are his days, and the end trouble, and vain, vain his endeavour:
and woman—who shall tell of it?—her doom is written with man’s by
listless, careless gods with their faces to other spheres.
Somewhat thus he began, and then inspiration seized him and all
the trouble in the beauty of his song may not be set down by me: there
was much gladness in it, and all mingled with grief: it was like the way
of man: it was like our destiny.
Sobs arose at his song, sighs came back along echoes: seneschals,
soldiers, sobbed, and a clear cry made the maidens; like rain the tears
came down from gallery to gallery.
All round the Queen of the Woods was a storm of sobbing and
sorrow.
But no, she would not weep.