Prev | Current Page 296 | Next

Du Maurier, George, 1834-1896

"Peter Ibbetson"

It is dream snow, and yet we feel it crunch beneath
our feet; but if we turn to look, the tracks of our footsteps have
disappeared--and we cast no shadows, though the moon is full!
M. le Major goes by, and Yverdon the postman, and Pere Francois, with
his big sabots, and others, and their footprints remain--and their
shadows are strong and sharp!
They wish each other the compliments of the season as they meet and
pass; they wish us nothing! We give them _la bonne annee_ at the tops of
our voices; they do not heed us in the least, though our voices are as
resonant as theirs. We are wishing them a "Happy New Year," that dawned
for good or evil nearly twenty years ago.
Out comes Gogo from the Seraskiers', with Mimsey. He makes a snowball
and throws it. It flies straight through me, and splashes itself on Pere
Francois's broad back. "Ah, ce polisson de Monsieur Gogo ... attendez un
peu!" and Pere Francois returns the compliment--straight through me
again, as it seems; and I do not even feel it! Mary and I are as solid
to each other as flesh and blood can make us. We cannot even touch these
dream people without their melting away into thin air; we can only hear
and see them, but that in perfection!
There goes that little Andre Corbin, the poulterer's son, running along
the slippery top of Madame Pele's garden wall, which is nearly ten
feet high.


Pages:
284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308