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There Was A Little City
by
One day at last, in the full tide of summer, a man, haggard and troubled, came to Felion’s house, and knocked, and, getting no reply, waited; and whenever he looked down at the little city he wrung his hands, and more than once he put them up to his face and shuddered, and again looked for Felion. Just when the dusk was rolling down, Felion came back, and, seeing the man, would have passed him without a word, but that the man stopped with an eager, sorrowful gesture and said: “The plague has come upon us again, and the people, remembering how you healed them long ago, beg you to come.”
At that Felion leaned his fishing-rod against the door and answered:
“What people?”
The other then replied: “The people of the little city below, Felion.”
“I do not know your name,” was the reply; “I know naught of you or of your city.”
“Are you mad?” cried the man. “Do you forget the little city down there? Have you no heart?”
A strange smile passed over Felion’s face, and he answered: “When one forgets, why should the other remember?”
He turned and went into the house and shut the door, and though the man knocked, the door was no opened, and he went back angry and miserable; and the people could not believe that Felion would no come to help them, as he had done all his life. A dawn three others came, and they found Felion looking out towards the east, his lips moving as though he prayed. Yet it was no prayer, only a call, that was on his lips. They felt a sort of awe in his presence, for now he seemed as if he had lived more than a century, so wise and old was the look of his face, so white his hair, so set and distant his dignity. They begged him to come, and, bringing his medicines, save the people, for death was galloping through the town, knocking at many doors.
“One came to heal you,” he answered–“the young man of the schools, who wrote mystic letters after his name; it swings on a brass by his door-where is he?”
“He is dead of the plague,” they replied, “and the other also that came with him, who fled before the sickness, fell dead of it on the roadside, going to the sea.”
“Why should I go?” he replied, and he turned threateningly to his weapon, as if in menace of their presence.
“You have no one to leave behind,” they answered eagerly, “and you are old.”
“Liars,” he rejoined, “let the little city save itself!” and he wheeled and went into his house, and they saw that they had erred in not remembering his daughter, whose presence they had once prized. They saw that they had angered him beyond soothing; and they went back in grief, for two of them had lost dear relatives by the fell sickness. When they told what had happened, the people said: “We will send the women; he will listen to them–he had a daughter.”
That afternoon, when all the hills lay still and dead, and nowhere did bird or breeze stir, the women came, and they found him seated with his back turned to the town. He was looking into the deep woods, into the hot shadows of the trees.
“We have come to bring you to the little city,” they said to him; “the sick grow in numbers every hour.”
“It is safe in the hills,” he answered, not looking at them. “Why do the people stay in the valley?”
“Every man has a friend, or a wife, or a child, ill or dying, and every woman has a husband, or a child, or a friend, or a brother. Cowards have fled, and many of them have fallen by the way.”
“Last summer I lay sick here many weeks and none came near me–why should I go to the little city?” he demanded austerely. “Four times I saved it, and of all that I saved none came to give me water to drink, or food to eat, and I lay burning with fever, and thirsty and hungry–God of heaven, how thirsty!”