IX
THE DRAGON OF ALCA
(Continuation)
Orberosia loved her husband, but she did not love him alone. At the hour when
Venus lightens in the pale sky, whilst Kraken scattered terror through the
villages, she used to visit in his moving hut, a young shepherd of Dalles called
Marcel, whose pleasing form was invested with inexhaustible vigour. The fair
Orberosia shared the shepherd's aromatic couch with delight, but far from making
herself known to him, she took the name of Bridget, and said that she was the
daughter of a gardener in the Bay of Divers. When regretfully she left his arms
she walked across the smoking fields towards the Coast of Shadows, and if she
happened to meet some belated peasant she immediately spread out her garments
like great wings and cried:
"Passer by, lower your eyes, that you may not have to say, 'Alas! alas! woe
is me, for I have seen the angel of the Lord.'"
The villagers tremblingly knelt with their faces to the round. And several of
them used to say that angels, whom it would be death to see, passed along the
roads of the island in the night time.
Kraken did not know of the loves of Orberosia and Marcel, for he was a hero,
and heroes never discover the secrets of their wives. But though he did not know
of these loves, he reaped the benefit of them. Every night he found his
companion more good-humoured and more beautiful, exhaling pleasure and perfuming
the nuptial bed with a delicious odour of fennel and vervain. She loved Kraken
with a love that never became importunate or anxious, because she did not rest
its whole weight on him alone.
This lucky infidelity of Orberosia was destined soon to save the hero from a
great peril and to assure his fortune and his glory for ever. For it happened
that she saw passing in the twilight a neatherd from Belmont, who was goading on
his oxen, and she fell more deeply in love with him than she had ever been with
the shepherd Marcel. He was hunch-backed; his shoulders were higher than his
ears; his body was supported by legs of different lengths; his rolling eyes
flashed, from beneath his matted hair. From his throat issued a hoarse voice and
strident laughter; he smelt of the cow-shed. However, to her he was beautiful.
"A plant," as Gnatho says, "has been loved by one, a stream by another, a beast
by a third."
Now, one day, as she was sighing within the neatherd's arms in a village
barn, suddenly the blasts of a trumpet, with sounds and footsteps, fell upon her
ears; she looked through the window and saw the inhabitants collected in the
marketplace round a young monk, who, standing upon a rock, uttered these words
in a distinct voice:
"Inhabitants of Belmont, Abbot Mael, our venerable father, informs you
through my mouth that neither by strength nor skill in arms shall you prevail
against the dragon; but the beast shall be overcome by a virgin. If, then, there
be among you a perfectly pure virgin, let her arise and go towards the monster;
and when she meets him let her tie her girdle round his neck and she shall lead
him as easily as if he were a little dog."
And the young monk, replacing his hood upon his head, departed to carry the
proclamation of the blessed Mael to other villages.
Orberosia sat in the amorous straw, resting her head in her hand and
supporting her elbow upon her knee, meditating on what she had just heard.
Although, so far as Kraken was concerned, she feared the power of a virgin
much less than the strength of armed men, she did not feel reassured by the
proclamation of the blessed Mael. A vague but sure instinct ruled her mind and
warned her that Kraken could not henceforth be a dragon with safety.
She said to the neatherd:
"My own heart, what do you think about the dragon?"
The rustic shook his head.
"It is certain that dragons laid waste the earth in ancient times and some
have been seen as large as mountains. But they come no longer, and I believe
that what has been taken for a dragon is not one at all, but pirates or
merchants who have carried off the fair Orberosia and the best of the children
of Alca in their ships. But if one of those brigands attempts to rob me of my
oxen, I will either by force or craft find a way to prevent him from doing me
any harm."
This remark of the neatherd increased Orberosia's apprehensions and added to
her solicitude for the husband whom she loved.
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