"Magic of Pan's Flute" by John Reinhard Weguelin, 1905 |
Editor’s note: This short story is
in the public domain. It was posted
originally by www.world-english.org.
A SHORT STORY--Sylvia Seltoun ate her breakfast in the morning-room at Yessney with a pleasant sense of ultimate victory, such as a fervent Ironside might have permitted himself on the morrow of Worcester fight. She was scarcely pugnacious by temperament, but belonged to that more successful class of fighters who are pugnacious by circumstance.
A SHORT STORY--Sylvia Seltoun ate her breakfast in the morning-room at Yessney with a pleasant sense of ultimate victory, such as a fervent Ironside might have permitted himself on the morrow of Worcester fight. She was scarcely pugnacious by temperament, but belonged to that more successful class of fighters who are pugnacious by circumstance.
Yessney Manor, perhaps. |
Fate had willed that her life should be occupied with a
series of small struggles, usually with the odds slightly against her, and
usually she had just managed to come through winning. And now she felt that she
had brought her hardest and certainly her most important struggle to a
successful issue.
To have married Mortimer Seltoun, "Dead
Mortimer" as his more intimate enemies called him, in the teeth of the
cold hostility of his family, and in spite of his unaffected indifference to
women, was indeed an achievement that had needed some determination and
adroitness to carry through; yesterday she had brought her victory to its
concluding stage by wrenching her husband away from Town and its group of
satellite watering-places and "settling him down," in the vocabulary
of her kind, in this remote wood-girt manor farm which was his country house.
"You will
never get Mortimer to go," his mother had said carpingly, "but if he
once goes he'll stay; Yessney throws almost as much a spell over him as Town
does. One can understand what holds him to Town, but Yessney--" and the
dowager had shrugged her shoulders.
Hector
Hugh Munro (Dec. 18, 1870 – Nov. 13, 1916), better known by the pen name Saki,
and also frequently as H. H. Munro, was a British writer whose witty,
mischievous and sometimes macabre stories satirize Edwardian society and culture.
He is considered a master of the short story, and often compared to O. Henry
and Dorothy Parker. Influenced by Oscar Wilde, Lewis Carroll and Rudyard
Kipling, he himself influenced A. A. Milne, Noël Coward and P. G. Wodehouse.
There was a sombre almost savage
wildness about Yessney that was certainly not likely to appeal to town-bred
tastes, and Sylvia, notwithstanding her name, was accustomed to nothing much
more sylvan than "leafy Kensington." She looked on the country as
something excellent and wholesome in its way, which was apt to become
troublesome if you encouraged it overmuch.
Distrust of townlife had been a new thing with her, born
of her marriage with Mortimer, and she had watched with satisfaction the
gradual fading of what she called "the Jermyn-Street-look" in his
eyes as the woods and heather of Yessney had closed in on them yesternight. Her
will-power and strategy had prevailed; Mortimer would stay.
Outside the morning-room windows was a triangular slope
of turf, which the indulgent might call a lawn, and beyond its low hedge of
neglected fuschia bushes a steeper slope of heather and bracken dropped down
into cavernous combes overgrown with oak and yew. In its wild open savagery
there seemed a stealthy linking of the joy of life with the terror of unseen
things. Sylvia smiled complacently as she gazed with a School-of-Art
appreciation at the landscape, and then of a sudden she almost shuddered.
"It is very wild," she
said to Mortimer, who had joined her; "one could almost think that in such
a place the worship of Pan had never quite died out."
"The worship of Pan never has
died out," said Mortimer. "Other newer gods have drawn aside his
votaries from time to time, but he is the Nature-God to whom all must come back
at last. He has been called the Father of all the Gods, but most of his
children have been stillborn."
Sylvia was
religious in an honest, vaguely devotional kind of way, and did not like to
hear her beliefs spoken of as mere aftergrowths, but it was at least something
new and hopeful to hear Dead Mortimer speak with such energy and conviction on
any subject.
"You don't really believe in
Pan?" she asked incredulously.
"I've been a fool in most
things," said Mortimer quietly, "but I'm not such a fool as not to
believe in Pan when I'm down here. And if you're wise you won't disbelieve in
him too boastfully while you're in his country."
It was not till a week later, when
Sylvia had exhausted the attractions of the woodland walks round Yessney, that
she ventured on a tour of inspection of the farm buildings. A farmyard
suggested in her mind a scene of cheerful bustle, with churns and flails and
smiling dairymaids, and teams of horses drinking knee-deep in duck-crowded
ponds.
As she wandered among the gaunt
grey buildings of Yessney manor farm her first impression was one of crushing
stillness and desolation, as though she had happened on some lone deserted
homestead long given over to owls and cobwebs; then came a sense of furtive
watchful hostility, the same shadow of unseen things that seemed to lurk in the
wooded combes and coppices. From behind heavy doors and shuttered windows came
the restless stamp of hoof or rasp of chain halter, and at times a muffled
bellow from some stalled beast.
From a distant comer a shaggy dog
watched her with intent unfriendly eyes; as she drew near it slipped quietly
into its kennel, and slipped out again as noiselessly when she had passed by. A
few hens, questing for food under a rick, stole away under a gate at her
approach. Sylvia felt that if she had come across any human beings in this
wilderness of barn and byre they would have fled wraith-like from her gaze. At
last, turning a corner quickly, she came upon a living thing that did not fly
from her.
Astretch in a pool of mud was an
enormous sow, gigantic beyond the town-woman's wildest computation of
swine-flesh, and speedily alert to resent and if necessary repel the unwonted
intrusion. It was Sylvia's turn to make an unobtrusive retreat. As she threaded
her way past rickyards and cowsheds and long blank walls, she started suddenly
at a strange sound - the echo of a boy's laughter, golden and equivocal. Jan,
the only boy employed on the farm, a tow-headed, wizen-faced yokel, was visibly
at work on a potato clearing half-way up the nearest hill-side, and Mortimer,
when questioned, knew of no other probable or possible begetter of the hidden
mockery that had ambushed Sylvia's retreat. The memory of that untraceable echo
was added to her other impressions of a furtive sinister "something"
that hung around Yessney.
Of Mortimer she saw very little;
farm and woods and trout- streams seemed to swallow him up from dawn till dusk.
Once, following the direction she had seen him take in the morning, she came to
an open space in a nut copse, further shut in by huge yew trees, in the centre
of which stood a stone pedestal surmounted by a small bronze figure of a
youthful Pan.
It was a beautiful piece of workmanship, but her
attention was chiefly held by the fact that a newly cut bunch of grapes had
been placed as an offering at its feet. Grapes were none too plentiful at the
manor house, and Sylvia snatched the bunch angrily from the pedestal.
Contemptuous annoyance dominated her thoughts as she strolled slowly homeward,
and then gave way to a sharp feeling of something that was very near fright;
across a thick tangle of undergrowth a boy's face was scowling at her, brown
and beautiful, with unutterably evil eyes.
It was a lonely pathway, all pathways round Yessney were
lonely for the matter of that, and she sped forward without waiting to give a
closer scrutiny to this sudden apparition. It was not till she had reached the
house that she discovered that she had dropped the bunch of grapes in her
flight.
"I saw a youth in the wood today," she told
Mortimer that evening, "brown-faced and rather handsome, but a scoundrel
to look at. A gipsy lad, I suppose."
"A reasonable theory," said Mortimer,
"only there aren't any gipsies in these parts at present."
"Then who was he?" asked Sylvia, and as
Mortimer appeared to have no theory of his own she passed on to recount her
finding of the votive offering.
"I suppose it was your doing," she observed;
"it's a harmless piece of lunacy, but people would think you dreadfully
silly if they knew of it."
"Did you meddle with it in any way?" asked
Mortimer.
"I - I threw the grapes away. It seemed so
silly," said Sylvia, watching Mortimer's impassive face for a sign of
annoyance.
"I don't think you were wise to do that," he
said reflectively. "I've heard it said that the Wood Gods are rather
horrible to those who molest them."
"Horrible perhaps to those that believe in them,
but you see I don't," retorted Sylvia.
"All the same," said Mortimer in his even,
dispassionate tone, "I should avoid the woods and orchards if I were you,
and give a wide berth to the horned beasts on the farm."
It was all nonsense, of course, but
in that lonely wood-girt spot nonsense seemed able to rear a bastard brood of
uneasiness.
"Mortimer," said Sylvia suddenly, "I
think we will go back to Town some time soon."
Her victory had not been so complete as she had
supposed; it had carried her on to ground that she was already anxious to quit.
"I don't think you will ever go back to Town,"
said Mortimer. He seemed to be paraphrasing his mother's prediction as to
himself.
Sylvia noted with dissatisfaction and some self-contempt
that the course of her next afternoon's ramble took her instinctively clear of
the network of woods. As to the horned cattle, Mortimer's warning was scarcely
needed, for she had always regarded them as of doubtful neutrality at the best:
her imagination unsexed the most matronly dairy cows and turned them into bulls
liable to "see red" at any moment.
The ram who fed in the narrow paddock below the orchards
she had adjudged, after ample and cautious probation, to be of docile temper;
today, however, she decided to leave his docility untested, for the usually
tranquil beast was roaming with every sign of restlessness from corner to
corner of his meadow.
A low, fitful piping, as of some reedy flute, was coming
from the depth of a neighbouring copse, and there seemed to be some subtle
connection between the animal's restless pacing and the wild music from the
wood. Sylvia turned her steps in an upward direction and climbed the
heather-clad slopes that stretched in rolling shoulders high above Yessney. She
had left the piping notes behind her, but across the wooded combes at her feet
the wind brought her another kind of music, the straining bay of hounds in full
chase.
Yessney was just on the outskirts of
the Devon-and-Somerset country, and the hunted deer sometimes came that way.
Sylvia could presently see a dark body, breasting hill after hill, and sinking
again and again out of sight as he crossed the combes, while behind him
steadily swelled that relentless chorus, and she grew tense with the excited
sympathy that one feels for any hunted thing in whose capture one is not
directly interested. And at last he broke through the outermost line of oak
scrub and fern and stood panting in the open, a fat September stag carrying a
well-furnished head.
His obvious course was to drop down to the brown pools
of Undercombe, and thence make his way towards the red deer's favoured
sanctuary, the sea. To Sylvia's surprise, however, he turned his head to the
upland slope and came lumbering resolutely onward over the heather. "It
will be dreadful," she thought, "the hounds will pull him down under
my very eyes."
But the music of the pack seemed to have died away for a
moment, and in its place she heard again that wild piping, which rose now on
this side, now on that, as though urging the failing stag to a final effort.
Sylvia stood well aside from his path, half hidden in a
thick growth of whortle bushes, and watched him swing stiffly upward, his
flanks dark with sweat, the coarse hair on his neck showing light by contrast.
The pipe music shrilled suddenly around her, seeming to come from the bushes at
her very feet, and at the same moment the great beast slewed round and bore
directly down upon her.
In an instant her pity for the hunted animal was changed
to wild terror at her own danger; the thick heather roots mocked her scrambling
efforts at flight, and she looked frantically downward for a glimpse of
oncoming hounds. The huge antler spikes were within a few yards of her, and in
a flash of numbing fear she remembered Mortimer's warning, to beware of horned
beasts on the farm. And then with a quick throb of joy she saw that she was not
alone; a human figure stood a few paces aside, knee-deep in the whortle bushes.
"Drive it off!" she shrieked.
But the figure made no answering movement.
The antlers drove straight at her breast, the acrid
smell of the hunted animal was in her nostrils, but her eyes were filled with
the horror of something she saw other than her oncoming death. And in her ears
rang the echo of a boy's laughter, golden and equivocal.
Source: www.world-english.org
FACTOID:
Wales farmer dies after being gored by antlers
of deer at venison farm
Kenneth Price, 75, suffered “multiple serious injuries”
when he was gored by the deer’s antlers.
Lifelong sheep farmer Mr Price had diversified into
breeding deer for venison on his farm Mountain Hall at Saron, near Llandysul,
mid Wales.
An air ambulance flew to the scene where on-the-spot
surgery was carried out on his injuries by paramedics.
Doctors then carried out more surgery and he was treated
in intensive care.
But Mr Price died yesterday at Morriston Hospital in
Swansea - five days after the attack.
Mr Price was attacked by the stag in the middle of the
rutting season for deer on his farm.
An investigation into Mr Price’s death will be formally
opened by the Swansea coroner.
The Health and Safety Executive said it was aware of the
incident and was making initial inquiries.
His widow Doreen, 73, is being comforted by friends and
relatives.
David Pittendreigh, the regional chairman of the
National Sheep Association, said Mr Price was a “very keen showgoer”.
Mr Price was a leading sheep judge who was a regular at
the Royal Welsh Show.
It is believed he had moved into breeding deer more than
five years ago.
A spokesman for Welsh Air Ambulance said: “The patient
sustained multiple serious injuries, he was anaesthetised and surgery was
performed on the scene by the helicopter crew.
“On arriving at hospital he was critical but stable.”
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