. . . Now over wood and river the evening drew in fast. And first
the swallows, that had looked as if they would never stay their
hunting, ceased; and the light, that had seemed fastened above the
world, for all its last brightenings, slowly fell wingless and
dusky.
The moon would not rise till ten! And all things waited. The
creatures of night were slow to come forth after that long bright
summer's day, watching for the shades of the trees to sink deeper
and deeper into the now chalk-white water; watching for the chalk-
white face of the sky to be masked with velvet. The very black-
plumed trees themselves seemed to wait in suspense for the grape-
bloom of night. All things stared, wan in that hour of passing
day--all things had eyes wistful and unblessed. In those moments
glamour was so dead that it was as if meaning had abandoned the
earth. But not for long. Winged with darkness, it stole back; not
the soul of meaning that had gone, but a witch-like and brooding
spirit harbouring in the black trees, in the high dark spears of
the rushes, and on the grim-snouted snags that lurked along the
river bank. Then the owls came out, and night-flying things. And
in the wood there began a cruel bird-tragedy--some dark pursuit in
the twilight above the bracken; the piercing shrieks of a creature
into whom talons have again and again gone home; and mingled with
them, hoarse raging cries of triumph. Many minutes they lasted,
those noises of the night, sound-emblems of all the cruelty in the
heart of Nature; till at last death appeased that savagery. And
any soul abroad, that pitied fugitives, might once more listen, and
not weep. . . .
Then a nightingale began to give forth its long liquid gurgling;
and a corn-crake churred in the young wheat. Again the night
brooded, in the silent tops of the trees, in the more silent depths
of the water. It sent out at long intervals a sigh or murmur, a
tiny scuttling splash, an owl's hunting cry. And its breath was
still hot and charged with heavy odour, for no dew was falling. . . .