CHAPTER VI.
URSUS AS TUTOR, AND URSUS AS GUARDIAN.
URSUS said to himself, "Some of these days I will play them a mean trick,—I will marry them."
Ursus taught Gwynplaine the theory of love. He said to him: "Do you know how the Almighty lights the fire called love? He places the woman underneath, the devil between, and the man at the top. A match—that is to say, a look—and behold, it is all on fire."
"A look is unnecessary, " answered Gwynplaine, thinking of Dea.
And Ursus replied, "Idiot! do souls require mortal eyes to see each other?"
Ursus was a good fellow at times. Gwynplaine, madly in love with Dea, sometimes became melancholy, and made use of the presence of Ursus as a guard on himself. One day Ursus said to him: "Bah! do not put yourself out. When in love, the cock shows himself."
"But the eagle conceals himself, " replied Gwynplaine.
At other times Ursus would say to himself apart: "It is well to put some spokes in the wheels of the Cytherean car occasionally. They love each other too much. This may have its disadvantages. Let us avoid too much of a conflagration; let us moderate these raptures."
So Ursus had recourse to warnings of this nature,—speaking to Gwynplaine while Dea slept, and to Dea when Gwynplaine was out of hearing:—