Page:A Gentleman's Gentleman.djvu/60

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

meaning of the other fable; and I began to laugh at the warning as the wine exhilarated me, and to lose inclination to leave the garden of delights and the draught which was life. Indeed, for some while I lay upon the couch of silk and skins, listening to the hours as they were chimed upon a great, sphinx-like clock above me; and as each hour was numbered, it seemed to me that a new man with but one hand stood by me, and cried:

"Son, three days are numbered and three nights are numbered. Rise, and go hence, or be for all time as I am."

And each laid upon the table a casket and a gem, until five were added unto the number which I had— a turquoise, a pink pearl, a black pearl, a diamond, and an emerald; and the five scrolls had these five warnings:

"Look not to reap in the season of the sower."

"When the end cometh seek not to begin."

"Behind thee is thy future; before thee is thy past."

"Mind not matter, if matter be less than mind."

"There is time for all things save for death."

Now, when the Seven Men with the Seven Hands had left me, I thought at length to go forth from the tent, and rose up to dress myself again, and to take away the jewels of price which had come to me so curiously. But as I rose, Lelia, whom I had not seen that day, came of a sudden to the spot, and I drew her to me, wondering at her beauty, which was