Volume I Part 51 (1/2)
When the other spirits beheld them coming, a great tremor of joy ran among them; trees and plants moved and shook, and the earth opened up in cracks to drink.
And the spirits of the sap poured out the wine: and all things incontinently budded, were green, flourished; the sward was full of whispering insects, and the sky of birds and b.u.t.terflies; the spirits poured on and on, and those below received the wine as best they might: the flower-maids, opening their mouths or leaping up upon their red cupbearers, and kissing them to have more; some, clasping their hands in sign of entreaty; others who, in ecstasy, let it rain over them; but all greedy or parched, flying, standing, running or motionless, seeking to have the wine, and more intensely alive with every drop they attained to receiving. And there were no oldsters there, but ugly or goodly, all were full of prime strength and keenest youth.
And they laughed, shouted, sang, pursuing one another upon the trees like squirrels, in the air like birds, every male seeking his female and under the skies of G.o.d falling to the holy deed of kind.
And the spirits of the sap brought to the king and the queen the great cup full of their wine. And the king and the queen drank and embraced one another.
Then the king, holding the queen in his arm, cast upon the trees, the flowers and the spirits, the dregs of his cup and cried aloud:
”Glory to Life! Glory to the free Air! Glory to Force!”
And all shouted:
”Glory to Nature! Glory to Force!”
And Ulenspiegel took Nele into his arms. Thus enlaced, a dance began: a round circling dance like a dance of leaves that a whirlwind swings together, where all was in motion, trees, plants, insects, b.u.t.terflies, heaven and earth, king and queen, flower-maidens, emperors of mines, princes of stones, spirits of the waters, hunchback dwarfs, men of the woods, lantern bearers, guardian spirits of the stars, and the hundred thousand horrific insects mingling their spears, their saw-edged scythes, their seven-p.r.o.nged forks; a giddy dance, swaying about in s.p.a.ce and filling it, a dance in which the sun, the moon, the planets, the stars, the wind, the clouds, all took part.
And the oak to which Nele and Ulenspiegel were clinging rolled with the whirl, and Ulenspiegel said to Nele:
”Dear one, we are about to die.”
A spirit heard them and saw that they were mortals:
”Mankind,” he bawled, ”mankind in this place!”
And he wrenched them from the tree and flung them in the crowd.
And Ulenspiegel and Nele fell soft and limp on the backs of the spirits, which bandied them about from one to another, saying:
”Hail to mankind! Welcome be the earth worms! Who would have the lad and la.s.s? They come to visit us, the puny things.”
And Ulenspiegel and Nele flew from one to another, crying:
”Mercy!”
But the spirits paid no heed, and both went fluttering, legs in air, head down, turning and circling like feathers in the winter winds, while the spirits said:
”Glory to the manlings male and female, let them dance like us!”
The flower-maidens, wis.h.i.+ng to sever Nele from Ulenspiegel, smote her and would have killed her, had not King Springtide, staying the dance with a gesture, cried out:
”Let these two lice be brought before me!”
And they were separated one from the other; and each flower-maiden said, endeavouring to take Ulenspiegel from her rivals:
”Thyl, wouldst thou not die for me?”
”I will do so in a moment,” said Ulenspiegel.
And the dwarf wood sprites that were carrying Nele said: