[Flames by Robert Smythe Hichens]@TWC D-Link bookFlames CHAPTER IV 4/25
And Julian had noticed that the player's eyes perpetually sought this picture, and rested on it, while his soul, through the touch of the fingers, called to the soul of music that slept in the piano, stirred it from sleep, carried it through strange and flashing scenes, taught it to strive and to agonize, then hushed it again to sleep and peace.
And as Julian looked from the picture to the player, who seemed drawing inspiration from it, he often mutely compared the imagined beauty of the soul of the Christ with the known beauty of the soul of his friend.
And the two lovelinesses seemed to meet, and to mingle as easily as two streams one with the other.
Yet the beauty of the Christ soul sprang from a strange parentage, was a sublime inheritance, had been tried in the fiercest fires of pity and of pain. The beauty of Valentine's soul seemed curiously innate, and mingled with a dazzling snow of almost inhuman purity.
His was not a great soul that had striven successfully, and must always strive.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|