Night visions
The sun had gone down, and the clouds lay low on the valley of the Rhone.
The wind blew from the south across the mountains; it was an African wind,
a wind which scattered the clouds for a moment, and then suddenly fell.
The broken clouds hung in fantastic forms upon the wood-covered hills by
the rapid Rhone. They assumed the shapes of antediluvian animals, of eagles
hovering in the air, of frogs leaping over a marsh, and then sunk down
upon the rushing stream and appeared to sail upon it, although floating
in the air. An uprooted fir-tree was being carried away by the current,
and marking out its path by eddying circles on the water. Vertigo and his
sisters were dancing upon it, and raising these circles on the foaming
river. The moon lighted up the snow on the mountain-tops, shone on the
dark woods, and on the drifting clouds those fantastic forms which at night
might be taken for spirits of the powers of nature. The mountain-dweller
saw them through the panes of his little window. They sailed in hosts before
the Ice Maiden as she came out of her palace of ice. Then she seated herself
on the trunk of the fir-tree as on a broken skiff, and the water from the
glaciers carried her down the river to the open lake. "The wedding guests
are coming," sounded from air and sea. These were the sights and sounds
without; within there were visions, for Babette had a wonderful dream.
She dreamt that she had been married to Rudy for many years, and that,
one day when he was out chamois hunting, and she alone in their dwelling
at home, the young Englishman with the golden whiskers sat with her. His
eyes were quite eloquent, and his words possessed a magic power; he offered
her his hand, and she was obliged to follow him. They went out of the house
and stepped downwards, always downwards, and it seemed to Babette as if
she had a weight on her heart which continually grew heavier. She felt
she was committing a sin against Rudy, a sin against God. Suddenly she
found herself forsaken, her clothes torn by the thorns, and her hair gray;
she looked upwards in her agony, and there, on the edge of the rock, she
espied Rudy. She stretched out her arms to him, but she did not venture
to call him or to pray; and had she called him, it would have been useless,
for it was not Rudy, only his hunting coat and hat hanging on an alpenstock,
as the hunters sometimes arrange them to deceive the chamois. "Oh!" she
exclaimed in her agony; "oh, that I had died on the happiest day of my
life, my wedding-day. O my God, it would have been a mercy and a blessing
had Rudy travelled far away from me, and I had never known him. None know
what will happen in the future." And then, in ungodly despair, she cast
herself down into the deep rocky gulf. The spell was broken; a cry of terror
escaped her, and she awoke. The dream was over; it had vanished. But she
knew she had dreamt something frightful about the young Englishman, yet
months had passed since she had seen him or even thought of him. Was he
still at Montreux, and should she meet him there on her wedding day? A
slight shadow passed over her pretty mouth as she thought of this, and
she knit her brows; but the smile soon returned to her lip, and joy sparkled
in her eyes, for this was the morning of the day on which she and Rudy
were to be married, and the sun was shining brightly. Rudy was already
in the parlor when she entered it, and they very soon started for Villeneuve.
Both of them were overflowing with happiness, and the miller was in the
best of tempers, laughing and merry; he was a good, honest soul, and a
kind father. "Now we are masters of the house," said the parlor-cat.