The
child that played about the terraces and gardens in sight of the Surrey
hills never knew that it was he that should come to the Ultimate City,
never knew that he should see the Under Pits, the barbicans and the holy
minarets of the mightiest city known. I think of him now as a child with
a little red watering-can going about the gardens on a summer’s day
that lit the warm south country, his imagination delighted with all
tales of quite little adventures, and all the while there was reserved
for him that feat at which men wonder.
Looking in other directions, away from the Surrey hills, through
all his infancy he saw that precipice that, wall above wail and mountain
above mountain, stands at the edge of the World, and in perpetual
twilight alone with the Moon and the Sun holds up the inconceivable City
of Never. To tread its streets he was destined; prophecy knew it, He had
the magic halter, and a worn old rope it was; an old wayfaring woman had
given it to him: it had the power to hold any animal whose race had
never known captivity, such as the unicorn, the hippogriff Pegasus,
dragons and wyverns; but with a lion, giraffe, camel or horse it was
useless.
How often we have seen that City of Never, that marvel of the
Nations! Not when it is night in the World, and we can see no further
than the stars; not when the sun is shining where we dwell, dazzling our
eyes; but when the sun has set on some stormy days, all at once repentant
at evening, and those glittering cliffs reveal themselves which we
almost take to be clouds, and it is twilight with us as it is for ever
with them, then on their gleaming summits we see those golden domes that
overpeer the edges of the World and seem to dance with dignity and calm
in that gentle light of evening that is Wonder’s native haunt. Then
does ‘the City of Never, unvisited and afar, look long at her sister
the World.
It had been prophecied that he should come there. They knew it
when the pebbles were being made and before the isles of coral were
given unto the sea. And thus the prophecy came unto fulfilment and
passed into history, and so at length to Oblivion, out of which I drag
it as it goes floating by, into which I shall one day tumble. The
hippogriffs dance before dawn in the upper air; long before sunrise
flashes upon our lawns they go to glitter in light that has not yet come
to the World, and as the dawn works up from the ragged hills and the
stars feel it they go slanting earthwards, till sunlight touches the
tops of the tallest trees, and the hippogriffs alight with a rattle of
quills and fold their wings and gallop and gambol away till they come
to some prosperous, wealthy, detestable town, and they leap at once
from the fields and soar away from the sight of it, pursued by the
horrible smoke of it until they come again to the pure blue air.
He whom prophecy had named from of old to come to the City of
Never, went down one midnight with his magic halter to a lake-side where
the hippogriffs alighted at dawn, for the turf was soft there and they
could gallop far before they came to a town, and there he waited hidden
near their hoofmarks. And the stars paled a little and grew indistinct;
but there was no other sign as yet of the dawn, when there appeared far
up in the deeps of night two little saffron specks, then four and five:
it was the hippogriffs dancing and twirling around in the sun. Another
flock joined them, there were twelve of them now; they danced there,
flashing their colours back to the sun, they descended in wide curves
slowly; trees down on earth revealed against the sky, jet-black each
delicate twig; a star disappeared from a cluster, now another; and dawn
came on like music, like a new song. Ducks shot by to the lake from
still dark fields of corn, far voices uttered, a colour grew upon water,
and still the hippogriffs gloried in the light, revelling up in the sky;
but when pigeons stirred on the branches and the first small bird was
abroad, and little coots from the rushes ventured to peer about, then
there came down on a sudden with a thunder of feathers the
hippogriffs, and, as they landed from their .celestial heights all
bathed with the day’s first sunlight, the man whose destiny it was
from of old to come to the City of Never, sprang up and caught the last
with the magic halter. It plunged, but could not escape it, for the
hippogriffs are of the uncaptured races, and magic has power over the
magical, so the man mounted it, and it soared again for the heights
whence it had come, as a wounded beast goes home. But when they came to
the heights that venturous rider saw huge and fair to the left of him
the destined City of Never, and he beheld the towers of Lel and Lek,
Neerib and Akathooma, and the cliffs of Toldenarba a-glistening in the
twilight like an alabaster statue of the Evening. Towards them he
wrenched the halter, towards Toldenarba and the Under Pits; the wings of
the hippogriff roared as the halter turned him. Of the Under Pits who
shall tell? Their mystery is secret. It is held by some that they are
the sources of night, and that darkness pours from them at evening upon
the world; while others hint that knowledge of these might undo cur
civilization.
There watched him ceaselessly from the Under Pits those eyes
whose duty it is; from further within and deeper, the bats that dwell
there arose when they saw the surprise in the eyes; the sentinels on the
bulwarks beheld that stream of bats and lifted up their spears as it
were for war. Nevertheless when they perceived that that war for which
they watched was not now come upon them, they lowered their spears and
suffered him to enter, and he passed whirring through the earthward
gateway. Even so he came, as foretold, to the City of Never perched upon
Toldenarba, and saw late twilight on those pinnacles that know no other
light. All the domes were of copper, but the spires on their summits
were gold. Little steps of onyx ran all this way and that. With cobbled
agates were its streets a glory. Through small square panes of
rose-quartz the citizens looked from their houses. To them as they
looked abroad the World far-off seemed happy. Clad though that city was
in one robe always, in twilight, yet was its beauty worthy of even so
lovely a wonder: city and twilight both were peerless but for each
other. Built of a stone unknown in the world we tread were its bastions,
quarried we know not where, but called by the gnomes abyx,
it so flashed back to the twilight its glories, colour for colour,
that none can say of them where their boundary is, and which the eternal
twilight, and which the City of Never; they are the twin-born children,
the fairest daughters of Wonder. Time had been there, but not to work
destruction; he had turned to a fair, pale green the domes that were
made of copper, the rest he had left untouched, even he, the destroyer
of cities, by what bribe I know not averted. Nevertheless they often
wept in Never for change and passing away, mourning catastrophes in
other worlds, and they built temples sometimes to ruined stars that had
fallen flaming down from the Milky Way, giving them worship still when
by us long since forgotten. Other temples they have—who knows to what
divinities?
And he that was destined alone of men to come to the City of
Never was well content to behold it as he trotted down its agate street,
with the wings of his hippogriff furled, seeing at either side of him
marvel on marvel of which even China is ignorant. Then as he neared the
city’s further rampart by which no inhabitant stirred, and looked in a
direction to which no houses faced with any rose-pink windows, he
suddenly saw far-off, dwarfing the mountains, an even greater city.
Whether that city was built upon the twilight or whether it rose from
the coasts of some other world he did not know. He saw it dominate the
City of Never, and strove to reach it; but at this unmeasured home of
unknown colossi the hippogriff shied frantically, and neither the magic
halter nor anything that he did could make the monster face it. At last,
from the City of Never’s lonely outskirts where no inhabitants walked,
the rider turned slowly earthward. He knew now why all the windows faced
this way—the denizens of the twilight gazed at the world and not at a
greater than them. Then from the last step of the earthward stairway,
like lead past the Under Pits and down the glittering face of
Toldenarba, down from the overshadowed glories of the gold-tipped City
of Never and out of perpetual twilight, swooped the man on his winged
monster: the wind that slept at the time leaped up like a dog at their
onrush, it uttered a cry and ran past them. Down on the World it was
morning; night was roaming away with his cloak trailed behind him, white
mists turned over and over as he went, the orb was grey but it
glittered, lights blinked surprisingly in early windows, forth over wet,
dim fields went cows from their houses: even in this hour touched the
fields again the feet of the hippogriff. And the moment that the man
dismounted and took off his magic halter the hippogriff flew slanting
away with a whirr, going back to some airy dancing-place of his people.
And he that surmounted glittering Toldenarba and came alone of
men to the City of Never has his name and his fame among nations; but he
and the people of that twilit city well know two things unguessed by
other men, they that there is a city fairer than theirs, and he—a deed
unaccomplished.