CHAPTER
IV
THE
PALACE OF NIGHT
SOME time after, the Children and their friends met at the first dawn
to go to
the Palace of Night, where they hoped to find the Blue Bird. Several of
the
party failed to answer to their names when the roll was called. Milk,
for whom
any sort of excitement was bad, was keeping her room. Water sent an
excuse: she
was accustomed always to travel in a bed of moss, was already half-dead
with
fatigue and was afraid of falling ill. As for Light, she had been on
bad terms
with Night since the world began; and Fire, as a relation, shared her
dislike.
Light kissed the Children and told Tylô the way, for it was
his business to
lead the expedition; and the little band set out upon its road.
You can imagine dear
Tylô trotting ahead, on his hind-legs, like a
little man, with his nose in the air, his tongue dangling down his
chin, his
front paws folded across his chest. He fidgets, sniffs about, runs up
and down,
covering twice the ground without minding how tired it makes him. He is
so full
of his own importance that he disdains the temptations on his path: he
neglects
the rubbish-heaps, pays no attention to anything he sees and cuts all
his old
friends.
Poor Tylô! He was
so delighted to become a man; and yet he was no
happier than before! Of course, life was the same to him, because his
nature had
remained unchanged. What was the use of his being a man, if he
continued to feel
and think like a dog? In fact, his troubles were increased a
hundred-fold by the
sense of responsibility that now weighed upon him.
"Ah!" he said, with a sigh,
for he was joining blindly in his
little gods' search, without for a moment reflecting that the end of
the journey
would mean the end of his life. "Ah," he said, "if I got hold of
that rascal of a Blue Bird, trust me, I wouldn't touch him even with
the tip of
my tongue, not if he were as plump and sweet as a quail!"
Bread followed solemnly,
carrying the cage; the two Children came next;
and Sugar brought up the rear.
But where was the Cat? To
discover the reason of her absence, we must go
a little way back and read her thoughts. At the time when Tylette
called a
meeting of the Animals and Things in the Fairy's hall, she was
contemplating a
great plot which would aim at prolonging the journey; but she had
reckoned
without the stupidity of her hearers:
The
road to the Palace of Night was rather long and rather dangerous
"The idiots," she thought,
"have very nearly spoilt the
whole thing by foolishly throwing themselves at the Fairy's feet, as
though they
were guilty of a crime. It is better to rely upon one's self alone. In
my
cat-life, all our training is founded on suspicion; I can see that it
is just
the same in the life of men. Those who confide in others are only
betrayed; it
is better to keep silent and to be treacherous one's self."
As you see, my dear little
readers, the Cat was in the same position as
the Dog: she had not changed her soul and was simply continuing her
former
existence; but, of course, she was very wicked, whereas our dear
Tylô was, if
anything, too good. Tylette, therefore, resolved to act on her own
account and
went, before daybreak, to call on Night, who was an old friend of hers.
The road to the Palace of
Night was rather long and rather dangerous. It
had precipices on either side of it; you had to climb up and climb down
and then
climb up again among high rocks that always seemed waiting to crush the
passers-by. At last, you came to the edge of a dark circus; and there
you had to
go down thousands of steps to reach the black-marble underground palace
in which
Night lived.
The Cat, who had often been
there before, raced along the road, light as
a feather. Her cloak, borne on the wind, streamed like a banner behind
her; the
plume in her hat fluttered gracefully; and her little grey kid boots
hardly
touched the ground. She soon reached her destination and, in a few
bounds, came
to the great hall where Night was.
It was really a wonderful
sight. Night, stately and grand as a Queen,
reclined upon her throne; she slept; and not a glimmer, not a star
twinkled
around her. But we know that the night has no secrets for cats and that
their
eyes have the power of piercing the darkness. So Tylette saw Night as
though it
were broad daylight.
Before waking her, she cast a
loving glance at that motherly and familiar
face. It was white and silvery as the moon; and its unbending features
inspired
both fear and admiration. Night's figure, which was half visible
through her
long black veils, was as beautiful as that of a Greek statue. She had
no arms;
but a pair of enormous wings, now furled in sleep, came from her
shoulders to
her feet and gave her a look of majesty beyond compare. Still, in spite
of her
affection for her best of friends, Tylette did not waste too much time
in gazing
at her: it was a critical moment; and time was short. Tired and jaded
and
overcome with anguish, she sank upon the steps of the throne and mewed,
plaintively:
"It is I, Mother Night!... I
am worn out!"
Night is of an anxious nature
and easily alarmed. Her beauty, built up of
peace and repose, possesses the secret of Silence, which life is
constantly
disturbing: a star shooting through the sky, a leaf falling to the
ground, the
hoot of an owl, a mere nothing is enough to tear the black velvet pall
which she
spreads over the earth each evening. The Cat, therefore, had not
finished
speaking, when Night sat up, all quivering. Her immense wings beat
around her;
and she questioned Tylette in a trembling voice. As soon as she had
learnt the
danger that threatened her, she began to lament her fate. What! A man's
son
coming to her palace! And, perhaps, with the help of the magic diamond,
discovering her secrets! What should she do? What would become of her?
How could
she defend herself? And, forgetting that she was sinning against
Silence, her
own particular god, Night began to utter piercing screams. It was true
that
falling into such a commotion was hardly likely to help her find a cure
for her
troubles. Luckily for her, Tylette, who was accustomed to the
annoyances and
worries of human life, was better armed. She had worked out her plan
when going
ahead of the children; and she was hoping to persuade Night to adopt
it. She
explained this plan to her in a few words:
"I see only one thing for it,
Mother Night: as they are children, we
must give them such a fright that they will not dare to insist on
opening the
great door at the back of the hall, behind which the Birds of the Moon
live and
generally the Blue Bird too. The secrets of the other caverns will be
sure to
scare them. The hope of our safety lies in the terror which you will
make them
feel."
There was clearly no other
course to take. But Night had not time to
reply, for she heard a sound. Then her beautiful features contracted;
her wings
spread out angrily; and everything in her attitude told Tylette that
Night
approved of her plan.
"Here they are!" cried the
Cat.
The little band came marching
down the steps of Night's gloomy staircase.
Tylô pranced bravely in front, whereas Tyltyl looked around
him with an anxious
glance. He certainly found nothing to comfort him. It was all very
magnificent,
but very terrifying. Picture a huge and wonderful black marble hall, of
a stern
and tomb-like splendour. There is no ceiling visible; and the ebony
pillars that
surround the amphitheatre shoot up to the sky. It is only when you lift
your
eyes up there that you catch the faint light falling from the stars.
Everywhere,
the thickest darkness reigns. Two restless flames –
no more – flicker
on
either side of Night's throne, before a monumental door of brass.
Bronze doors
show through the pillars to the right and left.
The Cat rushed up to the
Children:
"This way, little master,
this way!... I have told Night; and she is
delighted to see you."
Tylette's soft voice and
smile made Tyltyl feel himself again; and he
walked up to the throne with a bold and confident step, saying:
"Good-day, Mrs. Night!"
Night was offended by the
word, "Good-day," which reminded her
of her eternal enemy Light, and answered drily:
"Good-day?.... I am not used
to that!... You might say, Good-night,
or, at least, Good-evening!"
Our hero was not prepared to
quarrel. He felt very small in the presence
of that stately lady. He quickly begged her pardon, as nicely as he
could; and
very gently asked her leave to look for the Blue Bird in her palace.
"I have never seen him, he is
not here!" exclaimed Night,
flapping her great wings to frighten the boy.
But, when he insisted and
gave no sign of fear, she herself began to
dread the diamond, which, by lighting up her darkness, would completely
destroy
her power; and she thought it better to pretend to yield to an impulse
of
generosity and at once to point to the big key that lay on the steps of
the
throne.
Without a moment's
hesitation, Tyltyl seized hold of it and ran to the
first door of the hall.
Everybody shook with fright.
Bread's teeth chattered in his head; Sugar,
who was standing some way off, moaned with mortal anguish; Mytyl
howled:
"Where
is Sugar?... I want to go home!" Meanwhile,
Tyltyl, pale and resolute, was trying to open the door, while Night's
grave
voice, rising above the din, proclaimed the first danger. "It's the
Ghosts!"
"Oh, dear!" thought Tyltyl.
"I have never seen a ghost: it
must be awful!"
The faithful Tylô,
by his side, was panting with all his might, for dogs
hate anything uncanny.
At last, the key grated in
the lock. Silence reigned as dense and heavy
as the darkness. No one dared draw a breath. Then the door opened; and,
in a
moment, the gloom was filled with white figures running in every
direction. Some
lengthened out right up to the sky; others twined themselves round the
pillars;
others wriggled ever so fast along the ground. They were something like
men, but
it was impossible to distinguish their features; the eye could not
catch them.
The moment you looked at them, they turned into a white mist. Tyltyl
did his
best to chase them; for Mrs. Night kept to the plan contrived by the
Cat and
pretended to be frightened. She had been the Ghosts' friend for
hundreds and
hundreds of years and had only to say a word to drive them in again;
but she was
careful to do nothing of the sort and, flapping her wings like mad, she
called
upon all her gods and screamed:
"Drive them away! Drive them
away! Help! Help!" But the poor
Ghosts, who hardly ever come out now that Man no longer believes in
them, were
much too happy at taking a breath of air; and, had it not been that
they were
afraid of Tylô, who tried to bite their legs, they would
never have been got
indoors.
"Oof!" gasped the Dog, when
the door was shut at last. "I
have strong teeth, goodness knows; but chaps like those I never saw
before! When
you bite them, you'd think their legs were made of cotton!"
By this time, Tyltyl was
making for the second door and asking:
"What's behind this one?'
Night made a gesture as
though to put him off. Did the obstinate little
fellow really want to see everything?
"Must I be careful when I
open it?" asked Tyltyl.
"No," said Night, "it is not
worth while. It's the
Sicknesses. They are very quiet, the poor little things! Man, for some
time, has
been waging such war upon them! . . Open and see for yourself .... "
Tyltyl threw the door wide
open and stood speechless with astonishment:
there was nothing to be seen...
He was just about to close
the door again, when he was hustled aside by a
little body in a dressing-gown and a cotton night-cap, who began to
frisk about
the hall, wagging her head and stopping every minute to cough, sneeze
and blow
her nose ... and to pull on her slippers, which were too big for her
and kept
dropping off her feet. Sugar, Bread and Tyltyl were no longer
frightened and
began to laugh like anything. But they had no sooner come near the
little person
in the cotton night-cap than they themselves began to cough and sneeze.
"It's the least important of
the Sicknesses," said Night.
"It's Cold-in-the-Head."
"Oh, dear, oh, dear!" thought
Sugar. "If my nose keeps on
running like this, I'm done for! I shall melt!"
Night
sat up, all quivering. Her immense wings beat around her; and she
questioned
Tylette in a trembling voice
Poor
Sugar! He did not know
where to hide himself. He had become very
much attached to life since the journey began, for he had fallen over
head and
ears in love with Water! And yet this love caused him the greatest
worry.
Miss Water was a tremendous
flirt, expected a lot of attention and was
not particular whom she mixed with; but mixing too much with Water was
an
expensive luxury, as poor Sugar found to his cost; for, at every kiss
he gave
her, he left a bit of himself behind, until he began to tremble for his
life.
When he suddenly found
himself attacked by Cold-in-the-Head, he would
have had to fly from the palace, but for the timely aid of our dear
Tylô, who
ran after the little minx and drove her back to her cavern, amidst the
laughter
of Tyltyl and Mytyl, who thought gleefully that, so far, the trial had
not been
very terrible.
The boy, therefore, ran to
the next door with still greater courage.
"Take care!" cried Night, in
a dreadful voice. "It's the
Wars! They are more powerful than ever! I daren't think what would
happen, if
one of them broke loose! Stand ready, all of you, to push back the
door!"
Night had not finished
uttering her warnings, when the plucky little
fellow repented his rashness. He tried in vain to shut the door which
he had
opened: an invincible force was pushing it from the other side, streams
of blood
flowed through the cracks; flames shot forth; shouts, oaths and groans
mingled
with the roar of cannon and the rattle of musketry. Everybody in the
Palace of
Night was running about in wild confusion. Bread and Sugar tried to
take to
flight, but could not find the way out; and they now came back to
Tyltyl and put
their shoulders to the door with despairing force.
The Cat pretended to be
anxious, while secretly rejoicing:
"This may be the end of it,"
she said, curling her whiskers.
"They won't dare to go on after this."
Dear Tylô made
superhuman efforts to help his little master, while Mytyl
stood crying in a corner.
At last, our hero gave a
shout of triumph:
"Hurrah! They're giving way!
Victory! Victory! The door is
shut!"
At the same time, he dropped
on the steps, utterly exhausted, dabbing his
forehead with his poor little hands which shook with terror.
"Well?" asked Night, harshly.
"Have you had enough? Did
you see them?"
"Yes, yes!" replied the
little fellow, sobbing. "They are
hideous and awful… I don't think they have the Blue
Bird…"
"You may be sure they
haven't," answered Night, angrily.
"If they had, they would eat him at once. . . You see there is nothing
to
be done..."
Tyltyl drew himself up
proudly:
"I must see everything," he
declared. "Light said
so...."
"It's an easy thing to say,"
retorted Night, "when one's
afraid and stays at home!"
"Let us go to the next door,"
said Tyltyl, resolutely.
"What's in here?"
"This is where I keep the
Shades and the Terrors!"
Tyltyl reflected for a minute:
"As far as Shades go," he
thought, "Mrs. Night is poking
fun at me. It's more than an hour since I've seen anything but shade in
this
house of hers; and I shall be very glad to see daylight again. As for
the
Terrors, if they are anything like the Ghosts, we shall have another
good
joke."
Our friend went to the door
and opened it, before his companions had time
to protest. For that matter, they were all sitting on the floor,
exhausted with
the last fright; and they looked at one another in astonishment, glad
to find
themselves alive after such a scare. Meanwhile, Tyltyl threw back the
door and
nothing came out:
"There's no one there!" he
said.
"Yes, there is! Yes, there
is! Look out!" said Night, who was
still shamming fright.
She was simply furious. She
had hoped to make a great impression with her
Terrors; and, lo and behold, the wretches, who had so long been snubbed
by Man,
were afraid of him! She encouraged them with kind words and succeeded
in coaxing
out a few tall figures covered with grey veils. They began to run all
around the
hall until, hearing the Children laugh, they were seized with fear and
rushed
indoors again. The attempt had failed, as far as Night was concerned,
and the
dread hour was about to strike. Already, Tyltyl was moving towards the
big door
at the end of the hall. A few last words took place between them:
"Do not open that one!" said
Night, in awe-struck tones.
"Why not?"
"Because it's not allowed!"
"Then it's here that the Blue
Bird is hidden!"
"Go no farther, do not tempt
fate, do not open that door!"
"But why?" again asked
Tyltyl, obstinately.
Thereupon, Night, irritated
by his persistency, flew into a rage, hurled
the most terrible threats at him, and ended by saying:
"Not one of those who have
opened it, were it but by a hair's
breadth, has ever returned alive to the light of day! It means certain
death;
and all the horrors, all the terrors, all the fears of which men speak
on earth
are as nothing compared with those which await you if you insist on
touching
that door!"
"Don't do it, master dear!"
said Bread, with chattering teeth.
"Don't do it! Take pity on us! I implore you on my knees!"
"You are sacrificing the
lives of all of us," mewed the Cat.
"I won't! I sha'n't!" sobbed
Mytyl.
"Pity! Pity!" whined Sugar,
wringing his fingers.
All of them were weeping and
crying, all of them crowded round Tyltyl.
Dear Tylô alone, who respected his little master's wishes,
dared not speak a
word, though he fully believed that his last hour had come. Two big
tears rolled
down his cheeks; and he licked Tyltyl's hands in despair. It was really
a most
touching scene; and for a moment, our hero hesitated. His heart beat
wildly, his
throat was parched with anguish, he tried to speak and could not get
out a
sound: besides, he did not wish to show weakness in the presence of his
hapless
companions!
"If I have not the strength
to fulfil my task," he said to
himself, "who will fulfil it? If my friends behold my distress, it is
all
up with me: they will not let me go through with my mission and I shall
never
find the Blue Bird!"
At this thought, the boy's
heart leapt within his breast and all his
generous nature rose in rebellion. It would never do to be, perhaps,
within
arm's length of happiness and not to try for it, at the risk of dying
in the
attempt, to try for it and hand it over at last to all mankind!
That settled it! Tyltyl
resolved to sacrifice himself. Like a true hero,
he brandished the heavy golden key and cried:
"I must open the door!"
He ran up to the great door,
with Tylô panting by his side. The poor Dog
was half-dead with fright, but his pride and his devotion to Tyltyl
obliged him
to smother his fears:
"I shall stay," he said to
his master, "I'm not afraid! I
shall stay with my little god!"
In the meantime, all the
others had fled. Bread was crumbling to bits
behind a pillar; Sugar was melting in a corner with Mytyl in his arms;
Night and
the Cat, both shaking with fury, kept to the far end of the hall.
Then Tyltyl gave
Tylô a last kiss, pressed him to his heart and, with
never a tremble, put the key in the lock. Yells of terror came from all
the
corners of the hall, where the runaways had taken shelter, while the
two leaves
of the great door opened by magic in front of our little friend, who
was struck
dumb with admiration and delight. What an exquisite surprise! A
wonderful garden
lay before him, a dream-garden filled with flowers that shone like
stars,
waterfalls that came rushing from the sky and trees which the moon had
clothed
in silver. And then there was something whirling like a blue cloud
among the
clusters of roses. Tyltyl rubbed his eyes, could not believe his
senses. He
waited, looked again and then dashed into the garden, shouting like
mad:
"Come quickly!... Come
quickly!... They are here! . . We have them
at last!... Millions of blue birds! . . Thousands of millions! . .
Come,
Mytyl!... Come, Tylô!... Come, all! ... Help me!... You can
catch them by
handfuls! . ."
Reassured at last, his
friends came running up and all darted in among
the birds, seeing who could catch the most:
"I've caught seven already!"
cried Mytyl. "I can't hold
them!"
"Nor can I!" said Tyltyl. "I
have too many of them! ...
They're escaping from my arms! ... Tylô has some too!... Let
us go out, let us
go!... Light is waiting for us!... How pleased she will be!... This
way, this
way ...."
And they all danced and
scampered away in their glee, singing songs of
triumph as they went.
Night and the Cat, who had
not shared in the general rejoicing, crept
back anxiously to the great door; and Night whimpered:
"Haven't they got him...."
"No," said the Cat, who saw
the real Blue Bird perched high up
on a moon-beam... "They could not reach him, he kept too high. . ."
Our friends in all haste ran
up the numberless stairs between them and
the daylight. Each of them hugged the birds which he had captured,
never
dreaming that every step which brought them nearer to the light was
fatal to the
poor things, so that, by the time they came to the top of the
staircase, they
were carrying nothing but dead birds. Light was waiting for them
anxiously:
"Well, have you caught him?" she asked.
"Yes, yes?" said Tyltyl.
"Lots of them! There are
thousands! Look!"
As he spoke, he held out the
dear birds to her and saw, to his dismay,
that they were nothing more than lifeless corpses' their poor little
wings were
broken and their heads drooped sadly from their necks! The boy, in his
despair,
turned to his companions. Alas, they too were hugging nothing but dead
birds!
Wagging
her head and stopping every minute to cough, sneeze and blow her nose
Then Tyltyl threw himself
sobbing into Light's arms. Once more, all his
hopes were dashed to the ground.
"Do not cry, my child," said
Light. "You did not catch the
one that is able to live in broad daylight ....we shall find him
yet..."
"Of course, we shall find
him," said Bread and Sugar, with one
voice.
They were great boobies, both
of them; but they wanted to console the
boy. As for friend Tylô, he was so much put out that he
forgot his dignity for
a moment and, looking at the dead birds, exclaimed:
"Are they good to eat, I
wonder?"
The party set out to walk
back and sleep in the Temple of Light. It was a
melancholy journey; all regretted the peace of home and felt inclined
to blame
Tyltyl for his want of caution. Sugar edged up to Bread and whispered
in his
ear:
"Don't you think, Mr.
Chairman, that all this excitement is very
useless?"
And Bread, who felt flattered
at receiving so much attention, answered,
pompously:
"Never you fear, my dear
fellow, I shall put all this right. Life
would be unbearable if we had to listen to all the whimsies of that
little
madcap! . . To-morrow, we shall stay in bed!..."
They forgot that, but for the
boy at whom they were sneering, they would
never have been alive at all; and that, if he had suddenly told Bread
that he
must go back to his pan to be eaten and Sugar that he was to be cut
into small
lumps to sweeten Daddy Tyl's coffee and Mummy Tyl's syrups, they would
have
thrown themselves at their benefactor's feet and begged for mercy. In
fact, they
were incapable of appreciating their good luck until they were brought
face to
face with bad.
Poor things! The Fairy
Bérylune, when making them a present of their
human life, ought to have thrown in a little wisdom. They were not so
much to
blame. Of course, they were only following Man's example. Given the
power of
speaking, they jabbered; knowing how to judge, they condemned; able to
feel,
they complained. They had hearts which increased their sense of fear,
without
adding to their happiness. As to their brains, which could easily have
arranged
all the rest, they made so little of them that they had already grown
quite
rusty; and, if you could have opened their heads and looked at the
works of
their life inside, you would have seen the poor brains, which were
their most
precious possession, jumping about at every movement they made and
rattling in
their empty skulls like dry peas in a pod.
Fortunately, Light, thanks to
her wonderful insight, knew all about their
state of mind. She determined, therefore, to employ the Elements and
Things no
more than she was obliged to:
"They are useful," she
thought, "to feed the children and
amuse them on the way; but they must have no further share in the
trials,
because they have neither courage nor conviction."
Meanwhile, the party walked
on, the road widened out and became
resplendent; and, at the end, the Temple of Light stood on a crystal
height,
shedding its beams around. The tired Children made the Dog carry them
pick-a-back by turns; and they were almost asleep when they reached the
shining
steps.
|