It was dead of night and midwinter. A frightful wind was
bringing sleet from the East. The long sere grasses were
wailing. Two specks of light appeared on the desolate
plain; a man in a hansom cab was driving alone in North
China.
Alone with the driver and the dejected horse. The driver
wore a good waterproof cape, and of course an oiled silk
hat, but the man in the cab wore nothing but evening dress.
He did not have the glass door down because the horse fell
so frequently, the sleet had put his cigar out and it was
too cold to sleep; the two lamps flared in the wind. By the
uncertain light of a candle lamp that flickered inside the
cab, a Manchu shepherd that saw the vehicle pass, where he
watched his sheep on the plain in fear of the wolves, for
the first time saw evening dress. And though he saw it
dimly, and what he saw was wet, it was like a backward
glance of a thousand years, for as his civilization is so
much older than ours they have presumably passed through all
that kind of thing.
He watched it stoically, not wondering at a new thing, if
indeed it be new to China, meditated on it awhile in a
manner strange to us, and when he had added to his
philosophy what little could be derived from the sight of
this hansom cab, returned to the contemplation of that
night's chances of wolves and to such occasional thoughts as
he drew at times for his comfort out of the legends of
China, that have been preserved for such uses. And on such
a night their comfort was greatly needed. He thought of the
legend of a dragon-lady, more fair than the flowers are,
without an equal among the daughters of men, humanly lovely
to look on although her sire was a dragon, yet one who
traced his descent from gods of the elder days, and so it
was that she went in all her ways divine, like the earliest
ones of her race, who were holier than the emperor.
She had come down one day out of her little land, a
grassy valley hidden amongst the mountains; by the way of
the mountain passes she came down, and the rocks of the
rugged pass rang like little bells about her, as her bare
feet went by, like silver bells to please her; and the sound
was like the sound of the dromedaries of a prince when they
come home at evening -- their silver bells are ringing and
the village-folk are glad. She had come down to pick the
enchanted poppy that grew, and grows to this day -- if only
men might find it -- in a field at the feet of the
mountains; if one should pick it happiness would come to all
yellow men, victory without fighting, good wages, and
ceaseless ease. She came down all fair from the mountains;
and as the legend pleasantly passed through his mind in the
bitterest hour of the night, which comes before dawn, two
lights appeared and another hansom went by.
The man in the second cab was dressed the same as the
first, he was wetter than the first, for the sleet had
fallen all night, but evening dress is evening dress all the
world over. The driver wore the same oiled hat, the same
waterproof cape as the other. And when the cab had passed
the darkness swirled back where the two small lamps had
been, and the slush poured into the wheel-tracks and nothing
remained but the speculations of the shepherd to tell that a
hansom cab had been in that part of China; presently even
these ceased, and he was back with the early legends again
in contemplation of serener things.
And the storm and the cold and the darkness made one last
effort, and shook the bones of that shepherd, and rattled
the teeth in the head that mused on the flowery fables, and
suddenly it was morning. You saw the outlines of the sheep
all of a sudden, the shepherd counted them, no wolf had
come, you could see them all quite clearly. And in the pale
light of the earliest morning the third hansom appeared,
with its lamps still burning, looking ridiculous in the
daylight. They came out of the East with the sleet and were
all going due westwards, and the occupant of the third cab
also wore evening dress.
Calmly that Manchu shepherd, without curiosity, still
less with wonder, but as one who would see whatever life has
to show him, stood for four hours to see if another would
come. The sleet and the East wind continued. And at the
end of four hours another came. The driver was urging it on
as fast as he could, as though he were trying to make the
most of the daylight, his cabby's cape was flapping wildly
about him; inside the cab a man in evening dress was being
jolted up and down by the unevenness of the plain.
This was of course that famous race from Pittsburg to
Piccadilly, going round by the long way, that started one
night after dinner from Mr. Flagdrop's house, and was won by
Mr. Kagg, driving the Honourable Alfred Fortescue, whose
father it will be remembered was Hagar Dermstein, and became
(by Letters Patent) Sir Edgar Fortescue, and finally Lord
St. George.
The Manchu shepherd stood them there till evening, and
when he saw that no more cabs would come, turned homeward in
search of food.
And the rice prepared for him was hot and good, all the
more after the bitter coldness of that sleet. And when he
had consumed it he perused his experience, turning over
again in his mind each detail of the cabs he had seen; and
from that his thoughts slipped calmly to the glorious
history of China, going back to the indecorous times before
calmness came, and beyond those times to the happy days of
the earth when the gods and dragons were here and China was
young; and lighting his opium pipe and casting his thoughts
easily forward he looked to the time when the dragons shall
come again.
And for a long while then his mind reposed itself in such
a dignified calm that no thought stirred there at all, from
which when he was aroused he cast off his lethargy as a man
emerges from the baths, refreshed, cleansed and contented,
and put away from his musings the things he had seen on the
plain as being evil and of the nature of dreams, or futile
illusion, the results of activity which troubleth calm. And
then he turned his mind towards the shape of God, the One,
the Ineffable, who sits by the lotus lily, whose shape is
the shape of peace, and denieth activity, and sent out his
thanks to him that he had cast all bad customs westward out
of China as a woman throws household dirt out of her basket
far out into neighbouring gardens.
From thankfulness he turned to calm again, and out of
calm to sleep.