Masterpieces of Mystery
In Four Volumes
MYSTIC-HUMOROUS
STORIES
edited by Joseph Lewis French
Garden City, New York
Doubleday, Page & Company 1922
CONTENTS: 1.May-Day Eve 2.The
Diamond Lens 3.The Mummy’s Foot 4.Mr.
Bloke’s Item 5.A Ghost
6.The Man Who Went Too Far 7.Chan Tow The Highrob 8.The
Inmost Light 9.The Secret of
Goresthorpe Grange 10.The Man With Pale Eyes
11.The Rival Ghosts
1.MAY DAY EVE
Algernon
Blackwood
I
It was in the spring when I at last found time from the hospital
work to visit my friend, the old folk-lorist, in his country isolation, and I
rather chuckled to myself, because in my bag I was taking down a book that
utterly refuted all his tiresome pet theories of magic and the powers of the
soul.
These theories were many and various, and had often troubled me.
In the first place, I scorned them for professional reasons, and, in the
second, because I had never been able to argue quite well enough to convince or
to shake his faith, in even the smallest details, and any scientific knowledge
I brought to bear only fed him with confirmatory data. To find such a book,
therefore, and to know that it was safely in my bag, wrapped up in brown paper
and addressed to him, was a deep and satisfactory joy, and I speculated a good
deal during the journey how he would deal with the overwhelming arguments it
contained against the existence of any important region outside the world of
sensory perceptions.
Speculative, too, I was whether his visionary habits and absorbing
experiments would permit him to remember my arrival at all, and I was
accordingly relieved to hear from the solitary porter that the
"professor" had sent a "veeckle" to meet me, and that I was
thus free to send my bag and walk the four miles to the house across the hills.
It was a calm, windless evening, just after sunset, the air warm
and scented, and delightfully still. The train, already sinking into distance,
carried away with it the noise of crowds and cities and the last suggestions of
the stressful life behind me, and from the little station on the moorland I
stepped at once into the world of silent, growing things, tinkling sheep-bells,
shepherds, and wild, desolate spaces.
My path lay diagonally across the turfy hills. It slanted a mile
or so to the summit, wandered vaguely another two miles among gorse-bushes
along the crest, passed Tom Bassett's cottage by the pines, and then dropped
sharply down on the other side through rather thin woods to the ancient house
where the old folk-lorist lived and dreamed himself into his impossible world
of theory and fantasy. I fell to thinking busily about him during the first
part of the ascent, and convinced myself, as usual, that, but for his
generosity to the poor, and his benign aspect, the peasantry must undoubtedly
have regarded him as a wizard who speculated in souls and had dark dealings
with the world of faery.
The path I knew tolerably well. I had already walked it once
before—a winter's day some years ago—and from the cottage onward felt sure of
my way; but for the first mile or so there were so many cross cattle-tracks,
and the light had become so dim that I felt it wise to inquire more
particularly. And this I was fortunately able to do of a man who with
astonishing suddenness rose from the grass where he had been lying behind a clump
of bushes, and passed a few yards in front of me at a high pace downhill toward
the darkening valley.
He was in such a state of hurry that I called out loudly to him,
fearing to be too late, but on hearing my voice he turned sharply, and seemed
to arrive almost at once beside me. In a single instant he was standing there,
quite close, looking, with a smile and a certain expression of curiosity, I
thought, into my face. I remember thinking that his features, pale and wholly
untanned, were rather wonderful for a countryman, and that the eyes were those
of a foreigner; his great swiftness, too, gave me a distinct
sensation—something almost of a start—though I knew my vision was at fault at
the best of times, and of course especially so in the deceptive twilight of the
open hillside.
Moreover—as the way often is with such instructions—the words did
not stay in my mind very clearly after he had uttered them, and the rapid,
panther-like movements of the man as he quickly vanished down the hill again
left me with little more than a sweeping gesture indicating the line I was to
follow. No doubt his sudden rising from behind the gorse-bush, his curious
swiftness, and the way he peered into my face, and even touched me on the
shoulder, all combined to distract my attention somewhat from the actual words
he used; and the fact that I was travelling at a wrong angle, and should have
come out a mile too far to the right, helped to complete my feeling that his
gesture, pointing the way, was sufficient.
On the crest of the ridge, panting a little with the unwonted
exertion, I lay down to rest a moment on the grass beside a flaming yellow
gorse-bush. There was still a good hour before I should be looked for at the
house; the grass was very soft, the peace and silence soothing. I lingered, and
lit a cigarette. And it was just then, I think, that my subconscious memory
gave back the words, the actual words, the man had spoken, and the heavy
significance of the personal pronoun, as he had emphasised it in his odd
foreign voice, touched me with a sense of vague amusement: "The safest
way for you now," he had said, as though I was so
obviously a townsman and might be in danger on the lonely hills after dark. And
the quick way he had reached my side, and then slipped off again like a shadow
down the steep slope, completed a definite little picture in my mind. Then
other thoughts and memories rose up and formed a series of pictures, following
each other in rapid succession, and forming a chain of reflections undirected
by the will and without purpose or meaning. I fell, that is, into a pleasant
reverie.
Below me, and infinitely far away, it seemed, the valley lay
silent under a veil of blue evening haze, the lower end losing itself among
darkening hills whose peaks rose here and there like giant plumes that would
surely nod their great heads and call to one another once the final shadows
were down. The village lay, a misty patch, in which lights already twinkled. A
sound of rooks faintly cawing, of sea-gulls crying far up in the sky, and of
dogs barking at a great distance rose up out of the general murmur of evening
voices. Odours of farm and field and open spaces stole to my nostrils, and
everything contributed to the feeling that I lay on the top of the world,
nothing between me and the stars, and that all the huge, free things of the
earth—hills, valleys, woods, and sloping fields—lay breathing deeply about me.
A few sea-gulls—in daytime hereabouts they fill the air—still
circled and wheeled within range of sight, uttering from time to time sharp,
petulant cries; and far in the distance there was just visible a shadowy line
that showed where the sea lay.
Then, as I lay gazing dreamily into this still pool of shadows at
my feet, something rose up, something sheet-like, vast, imponderable, off the
whole surface of the mapped-out country, moved with incredible swiftness down
the valley, and in a single instant climbed the hill where I lay and swept by
me, yet without hurry, and in a sense without speed. Veils in this way rose one
after another, filling the cups between the hills, shrouding alike fields,
village, and hillside as they passed, and settled down somewhere into the gloom
behind me over the ridge, or slipped off like vapour into the sky.
Whether it was actually mist rising from the surface of the
fast-cooling ground, or merely the earth giving up her heat to the night, I
could not determine. The coming of the darkness is ever a series of mysteries.
I only know that this indescribable vast stirring of the landscape seemed to me
as though the earth were unfolding immense sable wings from her sides, and
lifting them for silent, gigantic strokes so that she might fly more swiftly
from the sun into the night. The darkness, at any rate, did drop down over
everything very soon afterward, and I rose up hastily to follow my pathway,
realising with a degree of wonder strangely new to me the magic of twilight,
the blue open depths into the valley below, and the pale yellow heights of the
watery sky above.
I walked rapidly, a sense of chilliness about me, and soon lost
sight of the valley altogether as I got upon the ridge proper of these lonely
and desolate hills.
It could not have been more than fifteen minutes that I lay there
in reverie, yet the weather, I at once noticed, had changed very abruptly, for
mist was seething here and there about me, rising somewhere from smaller
valleys in the hills beyond, and obscuring the path, while overhead there was
plainly a sound of wind tearing past, far up, with a sound of high shouting. A
moment before it had been the stillness of a warm spring night, yet now
everything had changed; wet mist coated me, raindrops smartly stung my face,
and a gusty wind, descending out of cool heights, began to strike and buffet
me, so that I buttoned my coat and pressed my hat more firmly upon my head.
The change was really this—and it came to me for the first time in
my life with the power of a real conviction—that everything about me seemed to
have become suddenly alive.
It came oddly upon me—prosaic, matter-of-fact, materialistic
doctor that I was—this realisation that the world about me had somehow stirred
into life; oddly, I say, because Nature to me had always been merely a more or
less definite arrangement of measurement, weight, and colour, and this new
presentation of it was utterly foreign to my temperament. A valley to me was
always a valley; a hill, merely a hill; a field, so many acres of flat surface,
grass or ploughed, drained well or drained ill; whereas now, with startling
vividness, came the strange, haunting idea that after all they could be
something more than valley, hill, and field; that what I had hitherto perceived
by these names were only the veils of something that lay concealed within,
something alive. In a word, that the poetic sense I had always rather sneered
at, in others, or explained away with some shallow physiological label, had
apparently suddenly opened up in myself without any obvious cause.
And, the more I puzzled over it, the more I began to realise that
its genesis dated from those few minutes of reverie lying under the gorse-bush
(reverie, a thing I had never before in all my life indulged in!), or, now that
I came to reflect more accurately, from my brief interview with that wild-eyed,
swift-moving, shadowy man of whom I had first inquired the way.
I recalled my singular fancy that veils were lifting off the
surface of the hills and fields, and a tremor of excitement accompanied the
memory. Such a thing had never before been possible to my practical
intelligence, and it made me feel suspicious—suspicious about myself. I stood
still a moment—I looked about me into the gathering mist, above me to the
vanishing stars, below me to the hidden valley, and then sent an urgent summons
to my individuality, as I had always known it, to arrest and chase these
undesirable fancies.
But I called in vain. No answer came. Anxiously, hurriedly,
confusedly, too, I searched for my normal self, but could not find it; and this
failure to respond induced in me a sense of uneasiness that touched very nearly
upon the borders of alarm.
I pushed on faster and faster along the turfy track among the
gorse-bushes with a dread that I might lose the way altogether, and a sudden
desire to reach home as soon as might be. Then, without warning, I emerged
unexpectedly into clear air again, and the vapour swept past me in a rushing
wall and rose into the sky. Anew I saw the lights of the village behind me in
the depths, here and there a line of smoke rising against the pale yellow sky,
and stars overhead peering down through thin wispy clouds that stretched their
wind-signs across the night.
After all, it had been nothing but a stray bit of sea-fog driving
up from the coast, for the other side of the hills, I remembered, dipped their
chalk cliffs straight into the sea, and strange lost winds must often come
a-wandering this way with the sharp changes of temperature about sunset. None
the less, it was disconcerting to know that mist and storm lay hiding within
possible reach, and I walked on smartly for a sight of Tom Bassett's cottage
and the lights of the Manor House in the valley a short mile beyond.
The clearing of the air, however, lasted but a very brief while,
and vapour was soon rising about me as before, hiding the path and making
bushes and stone walls look like running shadows. It came, driven apparently,
by little independent winds up the many side gullies, and it was very cold,
touching my skin like a wet sheet. Curious great shapes, too, it assumed as the
wind worked to and fro through it: forms of men and animals; grotesque, giant
outlines; ever shifting and running along the ground with silent feet, or
leaping into the air with sharp cries as the gusts twisted them inwardly and
lent them voice. More and more I pushed my pace, and more and more darkness and
vapour obliterated the landscape. The going was not otherwise difficult, and
here and there cowslips glimmered in patches of dancing yellow, while the
springy turf made it easy to keep up speed; yet in the gloom I frequently
tripped and plunged into prickly gorse near the ground, so that from shin to
knee was soon a-tingle with sharp pain. Odd puffs and spits of rain stung my
face, and the periods of utter stillness were always followed by little
shouting gusts of wind, each time from a new direction. Troubled is perhaps too
strong a word, but flustered I certainly was; and though I recognised that it
was due to my being in an environment so remote from the town life I was
accustomed to, I found it impossible to stifle altogether the feeling of
malaise that had crept into my heart, and I looked about with increasing
eagerness for the lighted windows of Bassett's cottage.
More and more, little pin-pricks of distress and confusion
accumulated, adding to my realisation of being away from streets and
shop-windows, and things I could classify and deal with. The mist, too,
distorted as well as concealed, played tricks with sounds as well as with
sights. And, once or twice, when I stumbled upon some crouching sheep, they got
up without the customary alarm and hurry of sheep, and moved off slowly into
the darkness, but in such a singular way that I could almost have sworn they
were not sheep at all, but human beings crawling on all-fours, looking back and
grimacing at me over their shoulders as they went. On these occasions—for there
were more than one—I never could get close enough to feel their woolly wet
backs, as I should have liked to do; and the sound of their tinkling bells came
faintly through the mist, sometimes from one direction, sometimes from another,
sometimes all round me as though a whole flock surrounded me; and I found it
impossible to analyse or explain the idea I received that they were not sheep-bells
at all, but something quite different.
But mist and darkness, and a certain confusion of the senses
caused by the excitement of an utterly strange environment, can account for a
great deal. I pushed on quickly. The conviction that I had strayed from the
route grew, nevertheless, for occasionally there was a great commotion of
seagulls about me, as though I had disturbed them in their sleeping-places. The
air filled with their plaintive cries, and I heard the rushing of multitudinous
wings, sometimes very close to my head, but always invisible owing to the mist.
And once, above the swishing of the wet wind through the gorse-bushes, I was
sure I caught the faint thunder of the sea and the distant crashing of waves
rolling up some steep-throated gully in the cliffs. I went cautiously after
this, and altered my course a little away from the direction of the sound.
Yet, increasingly all the time, it came to me how the cries of the
sea-birds sounded like laughter, and how the everlasting wind blew and drove
about me with a purpose, and how the low bushes persistently took the shape of
stooping people, moving stealthily past me, and how the mist more and more
resembled huge protean figures escorting me across the desolate hills,
silently, with immense footsteps. For the inanimate world now touched my
awakened poetic sense in a manner hitherto unguided, and became fraught with
the pregnant messages of a dimly concealed life. I readily understood, for the
first time, how easily a superstitious peasantry might people their world, and
how even an educated mind might favour an atmosphere of legend. I stumbled
along, looking anxiously for the lights of the cottage.
Suddenly, as a shape of writhing mist whirled past, I received so
direct a stroke of wind that it was palpably a blow in the face. Something
swept by with a shrill cry into the darkness. It was impossible to prevent jumping
to one side and raising an arm by way of protection, and I was only just quick
enough to catch a glimpse of the sea-gull as it raced past, with suddenly
altered flight, beating its powerful wings over my head. Its white body looked
enormous as the mist swallowed it. At the same moment a gust tore my hat from
my head and flung the flap of my coat across my eyes. But I was well-trained by
this time, and made a quick dash after the retreating black object, only to
find on overtaking it that I held a prickly branch of gorse. The wind combed my
hair viciously. Then, out of a corner of my eye, I saw my hat still rolling,
and grabbed swiftly at it; but just as I closed on it, the real hat passed in
front of me, turning over in the wind like a ball, and I instantly released my
first capture to chase it. Before it was within reach, another one shot between
my feet so that I stepped on it. The grass seemed covered with moving hats, yet
each one, when I seized it, turned into a piece of wood, or a tiny gorse-bush,
or a black rabbit hole, till my hands were scored with prickles and running
blood. In the darkness, I reflected, all objects looked alike, as though by
general conspiracy. I straightened up and took a long breath, mopping the blood
with my handkerchief. Then something tapped at my feet, and on looking down,
there was the hat within easy reach, and I stooped down and put it on my head
again. Of course, there were a dozen ways of explaining my confusion and
stupidity, and I walked along wondering which to select. My eyesight, for one
thing—and under such conditions why seek further? It was nothing, after all,
and the dizziness was a momentary effect caused by the effort and stooping.
But for all that, I shouted aloud, on the chance that a wandering
shepherd might hear me; and of course no answer came, for it was like calling
in a padded room, and the mist suffocated my voice and killed its resonance.
It was really very discouraging: I was cold and wet and hungry; my
legs and clothes torn by the gorse, my hands scratched and bleeding; the wind
brought water to my eyes by its constant buffeting, and my skin was numb from
contact with the chill mist. Fortunately I had matches, and after some
difficulty, by crouching under a wall, I caught a swift glimpse of my watch,
and saw that it was but little after eight o'clock. Supper I knew was at nine,
and I was surely over half-way by this time. But here again was another
instance of the way everything seemed in a conspiracy against me to appear
otherwise than ordinary, for in the gleam of the match my watch-glass showed as
the face of a little old gray man, uncommonly like the folk-lorist himself,
peering up at me with an expression of whimsical laughter. My own reflection it
could not possibly have been, for I am clean-shaven, and this face looked up at
me through a running tangle of gray hair. Yet a second and third match revealed
only the white surface with the thin black hands moving across it.
II
And it was at this point, I well remember, that I reached what was
for me the true heart of the adventure, the little fragment of real experience
I learned from it and took back with me to my doctor's life in London, and that
has remained with me ever since, and helped me to a new sympathetic insight
into the intricacies of certain curious mental cases I had never before really
understood.
For it was sufficiently obvious by now that a curious change had
been going forward in me for some time, dating, so far as I could focus my
thoughts sufficiently to analyse, from the moment of my speech with that
hurrying man of shadow on the hillside. And the first deliberate manifestation
of the change, now that I looked back, was surely the awakening in my prosaic
being of the "poetic thrill"; my sudden amazing appreciation of the
world around me as something alive. From that moment the change in me had
worked ahead subtly, swiftly. Yet, so natural had been the beginning of it,
that although it was a radically new departure for my temperament, I was hardly
aware at first of what had actually come about; and it was only now, after so
many encounters, that I was forced at length to acknowledge it.
It came the more forcibly too, because my very commonplace ideas
of beauty had hitherto always been associated with sunshine and crude effects;
yet here this new revelation leaped to me out of wind and mist and desolation
on a lonely hillside, out of night, darkness, and discomfort. New values rushed
upon me from all sides. Everything had changed, and the very simplicity with
which the new values presented themselves proved to me how profound the change,
the readjustment, had been. In such trivial things the evidence had come that I
was not aware of it until repetition forced my attention: the veils rising from
valley and hill; the mountain tops as personalities that shout or murmur in the
darkness; the crying of the sea birds and of the living, purposeful wind; above
all, the feeling that Nature about me was instinct with a life differing from
my own in degree rather than in kind; everything, from the conspiracy of the
gorse-bushes to the disappearing hat, showed that a fundamental attitude of
mind in me had changed—and changed, too, without my knowledge or consent.
Moreover, at the same time the deep sadness of beauty had entered
my heart like a stroke; for all this mystery and loveliness, I realized
poignantly was utterly independent and careless of me, as me; and
that while I must pass, decay, grow old, these manifestations would remain for
ever young and unalterably potent. And thus gradually had I become permeated
with the recognition of a region hitherto unknown to me, and that I had always
depreciated in others and especially, it now occurred to me, in my friend the
old folk-lorist.
Here surely, I thought, was the beginning of conditions which,
carried a little further, must become pathogenic. That the change was real and
pregnant I had no doubt whatever. My consciousness was expanding and I had
caught it in the very act. I had of course read much concerning the changes of
personality, swift, kaleidoscopic—had come across something of it in my
practice—and had listened to the folk-lorist holding forth like a man inspired
upon ways and means of reaching concealed regions of the human consciousness,
and opening it to the knowledge of things called magical, so that one became
free of a larger universe. But it was only now for the first time, on these
bare hills, in touch with the wind and the rain, that I realized in how simple
a fashion the frontiers of consciousness could shift this way and that, or with
what touch of genuine awe the certainty might come that one stood on the
borderland of new, untried, perhaps dangerous, experiences.
At any rate, it did now come to me that my consciousness had
shifted its frontiers very considerably, and that whatever might happen must
seem not abnormal, but quite simple and inevitable, and of course utterly true.
This very simplicity, however, doing no violence to my being, brought with it
none the less a sense of dread and discomfort; and my dim awareness that unknown
possibilities were about me in the night puzzled and distressed me perhaps more
than I cared to admit.
III
All this that takes so long to describe became apparent to me in a
few seconds. What I had always despised ascended the throne.
But with the finding of Bassett's cottage, as a sign-post close to
home, my former sang-froid, my stupidity, would doubtless return,
and my relief was therefore considerable when at length a faint gleam of light
appeared through the mist, against which the square dark shadow of the
chimney-line pointed upwards. After all, I had not strayed so very far out of
the way. Now I could definitely ascertain where I was wrong.
Quickening my pace, I scrambled over a broken stone wall, and
almost ran across the open bit of grass to the door. One moment the black
outline of the cottage was there in front of me, and the next, when I stood
actually against it—there was nothing! I laughed to think how utterly I had
been deceived. Yet not utterly, for as I groped back again over the wall, the
cottage loomed up a little to the left, with its windows lighted and friendly,
and I had only been mistaken in my angle of approach after all. Yet again, as I
hurried to the door, the mist drove past and thickened a second time—and the
cottage was not where I had seen it!
My confusion increased a lot after that. I scrambled about in all
directions, rather foolishly hurried, and over countless stone walls it seemed,
and completely dazed as to the true points of the compass. Then suddenly, just
when a kind of despair came over me, the cottage stood there solidly before my
eyes, and I found myself not two feet from the door. Was ever mist before so
deceptive? And there, just behind it, I made out the row of pines like a dark
wave breaking through the night. I sniffed the wet resinous odour with joy, and
a genuine thrill ran through me as I saw the unmistakable yellow light of the
windows. At last I was near home and my troubles would soon be over.
A cloud of birds rose with shrill cries off the roof and whirled
into the darkness when I knocked with my stick on the door, and human voices, I
was almost certain, mingled somewhere with them, though it was impossible to
tell whether they were within the cottage or outside. It all sounded confusedly
with a rush of air like a little whirlwind, and I stood there rather alarmed at
the clamour of my knocking. By way, too, of further proof that my imagination
had awakened, the significance of that knocking at the door set something
vibrating within me that most surely had never vibrated before, so that I
suddenly realized with what atmosphere of mystical suggestion is the mere act
of knocking surrounded—knocking at a door—both for him who knocks,
wondering what shall be revealed on opening, and for him who stands within, waiting
for the summons of the knocker. I only know that I hesitated a lot before
making up my mind to knock a second time.
And, anyhow, what happened subsequently came in a sort of haze.
Words and memory both failed me when I try to record it truthfully, so that
even the faces are difficult to visualise again, the words almost impossible to
hear.
Before I knew it the door was open and before I could frame the
words of my first brief question, I was within the threshold, and the door was
shut behind me.
I had expected the little dark and narrow hallway of a cottage,
oppressive of air and odour, but instead I came straight into a room that was
full of light and full of—people. And the air tasted like the air about a
mountain-top.
To the end I never saw what produced the light, nor understood how
so many men and women found space to move comfortably to and fro, and pass each
other as they did, within the confines of those four walls. An uncomfortable
sense of having intruded upon some private gathering was, I think, my first
emotion; though how the poverty-stricken country-side could have produced such
an assemblage puzzled me beyond belief. And my second emotion—if there was any
division at all in the wave of wonder that fairly drenched me—was feeling a
sort of glory in the presence of such an atmosphere of splendid and vital youth.
Everything vibrated, quivered, shook about me, and I almost felt myself as an
aged and decrepit man by comparison.
I know my heart gave a great fiery leap as I saw them, for the
faces that met me were fine, vigourous, and comely, while burning everywhere
through their ripe maturity shone the ardours of youth and a kind of deathless
enthusiasm. Old, yet eternally young they were, as rivers and mountains count
their years by thousands, yet remain ever youthful; and the first effect of all
those pairs of eyes lifted to meet my own was to send a whirlwind of unknown
thrills about my heart and make me catch my breath with mingled terror and
delight. A fear of death, and at the same time a sensation of touching
something vast and eternal that could never die, surged through me.
A deep hush followed my entrance as all turned to look at me. They
stood, men and women, grouped about a table, and something about them—not their
size alone—conveyed the impression of being gigantic, giving me
strangely novel realisations of freedom, power, and immense existence more or
less than human.
I can only record my thoughts and impressions as they came to me
and as I dimly now remember them. I had expected to see old Tom Bassett
crouching half asleep over a peat fire, a dim lamp on the table beside him, and
instead this assembly of tall and splendid men and women stood there to greet
me, and stood in silence. It was little wonder that at first the ready question
died upon my lips, and I almost forgot the words of my own language.
"I thought this was Tom Bassett's cottage!" I managed to
ask at length, and looked straight at the man nearest me across the table. He
had wild hair falling about his shoulders and a face of clear beauty. His eyes,
too, like all the rest, seemed shrouded by something veil-like that reminded me
of the shadowy man of whom I had first inquired the way. They were shaded—and
for some reason I was glad they were.
At the sound of my voice, unreal and thin, there was a general
movement throughout the room, as though everyone changed places, passing each
other like those shapes of fluid sort I had seen outside in the mist. But no
answer came. It seemed to me that the mist even penetrated into the room about
me and spread inwardly over my thoughts.
"Is this the way to the Manor House?" I asked again,
louder, fighting my inward confusion and weakness. "Can no
one tell me?"
Then apparently everyone began to answer at once, or rather, not
to answer directly, but to speak to each other in such a way that I could
easily overhear. The voices of the men were deep, and of the women wonderfully
musical, with a slow rhythm like that of the sea, or of the wind through the
pine-trees outside. But the unsatisfactory nature of what they said only helped
to increase my sense of confusion and dismay.
"Yes," said one; "Tom Bassett was here
for a while with the sheep, but his home was not here."
"He asks the way to a house when he does not even know the
way to his own mind!" another voice said, sounding overhead it seemed.
"And could he recognise the signs if we told him?" came
in the singing tones of a woman's voice close behind me.
And then, with a noise more like running water, or wind in the
wings of birds, than anything else I could liken it to, came several voices
together:
"And what sort of way does he seek? The splendid way, or
merely the easy?"
"Or the short way of fools!"
"But he must have some credentials, or he
never could have got as far as this," came from another.
A laugh ran round the room at this, though what there was to laugh
at I could not imagine. It sounded like wind rushing about the hills. I got the
impression too that the roof was somehow open to the sky, for their laughter
had such a spacious quality in it, and the air was so cool and fresh, and
moving about in currents and waves.
"It was I who showed him the way," cried a voice
belonging to someone who was looking straight into my face over the table.
"It was the safest way for him once he had got so far——"
I looked up and met his eye, and the sentence remained unfinished.
It was the hurrying, shadowy man of the hillside. He had the same shifting
outline as the others now, and the same veiled and shaded eyes, and as I looked
the sense of terror stirred and grew in me. I had come in to ask for help, but
now I was only anxious to be free of them all and out again in the rain and
darkness on the moor. Thoughts of escape filled my brain, and I searched
quickly for the door through which I had entered. But nowhere could I discover
it again. The walls were bare; not even the windows were visible. And the room
seemed to fill and empty of these figures as the waves of the sea fill and
empty a cavern, crowding one upon another, yet never occupying more space, or
less. So the coming and going of these men and women always evaded me.
And my terror became simply a terror that the veils of their eyes
might lift, and that they would look at me with their clear, naked sight. I
became horribly aware of their eyes. It was not that I felt them evil, but that
I feared the new depths in me their merciless and terrible insight would stir
into life. My consciousness had expanded quite enough for one night! I must
escape at all costs and claim my own self again, however limited. I must have
sanity, even if with limitations, but sanity at any price.
But meanwhile, though I tried hard to find my voice again, there
came nothing but a thin piping sound that was like reeds whistling where winds
meet about a corner. My throat was contracted, and I could only produce the
smallest and most ridiculous of noises. The power of movement, too, was far
less than when I first came in, and every moment it became more difficult to
use my muscles, so that I stood there, stiff and awkward, face to face with
this assemblage of shifting, wonderful people.
"And now," continued the voice of the man who had last
spoken, "and now the safest way for him will be through the other door,
where he shall see that which he may more easily understand."
With a great effort I regained the power of movement, while at the
same time a burst of anger and a determination to be done with it all and to
overcome my dreadful confusion drove me forward.
He saw me coming, of course, and the others indeed opened up and
made a way for me, shifting to one side or the other whenever I came too near
them, and never allowing me to touch them. But at last, when I was close in
front of the man, ready both to speak and act, he was no longer there. I never
saw the actual change—but instead of a man it was a woman! And when I turned
with amazement, I saw that the other occupants walking like figures in some
ancient ceremony, were moving slowly toward the far end of the room. One by
one, as they filed past, they raised their calm, passionless faces to mine,
immensely vital, proud, austere, and then, without further word or gesture,
they opened the door I had lost and disappeared through it one by one into the
darkness of the night beyond. And as they went it seemed that the mist
swallowed them up and a gust of wind caught them away, and the light also went
with them, leaving me alone with the figure who had last spoken.
Moreover it was just here that a most disquieting thought flashed
through my brain with unreasoning conviction, shaking my personality, as it
were, to the foundations: viz., that I had hitherto been spending my life in
the pursuit of false knowledge, in the mere classifying and labelling of
effects, the analysis of results, scientific so called; whereas it was the
folk-lorist, and such like, who with their dreams and prayers were all the time
on the path of real knowledge, the trail of causes; that the one was merely
adding to the mechanical comfort and safety of the body, ultimately degrading
the highest part of man, and never advancing the type, while the other—but then
I had never yet believed in a soul—and now was no time to begin, terror or no
terror. Clearly, my thoughts were wandering.
IV
It was at this moment the sound of the purring first reached
me—deep, guttural purring—that made me think at once of some large concealed
animal. It was precisely what I had heard many a time at the Zoological
Gardens, and I had visions of cows chewing the cud, or horses munching hay in a
stall outside the cottage. It was certainly an animal sound, and one of
pleasure and contentment.
Semi-darkness filled the room. Only a very faint moonlight,
struggling through the mist, came through the window, and I moved back
instinctively toward the support of the wall against my back. Somewhere, through
openings, came the sound of the night driving over the roof, and far above I
had visions of those everlasting winds streaming by with clouds as large as
continents on their wings. Something in me wanted to sing and shout, but
something else in me at the same time was in a very vivid state of unreasoning
terror. I felt immense, yet tiny, confident, yet timid; a part of huge,
universal forces, yet an utterly small, personal, and very limited being.
In the corner of the room on my right stood the woman. Her face
was hid by a mass of tumbling hair, that made me think of living grasses on a
field in June. Thus her head was partially turned from me, and the moonlight,
catching her outline, just revealed it against the wall like an impressionist
picture. Strange hidden memories stirred in the depths of me, and for a moment
I felt that I knew all about her. I stared about me quickly, nervously, trying
to take in everything at once. Then the purring sound grew much louder and
closer, and I forgot my notion that this woman was no stranger to me and that I
knew her as well as I knew myself. That purring thing was in the room close
beside me. Between us two, indeed, it was, for I now saw that her arm nearest
to me was raised, and that she was pointing to the wall in front of us.
Following the direction of her hand, I saw that the wall was
transparent, and that I could see through a portion of it into a small square
space beyond, as though I was looking through gauze instead of bricks. This
small inner space was lighted, and on stooping down I saw that it was a sort of
cupboard or cell-like cage let into the wall. The thing that purred was there
in the centre of it.
I looked closer. It was a being, apparently a human being,
crouched down in its narrow cage, feeding. I saw the body stooping over a
quantity of coarse-looking, piled-up substance that was evidently food. It was
like a man huddled up. There it squatted, happy and contented, with the minimum
of air, light, and space, dully satisfied with its prisoned cage behind the
bars, utterly unconscious of the vast world about it, grunting with pleasure,
purring like a great cat, scornfully ignorant of what might lie beyond. The
cell, moreover, I saw was a perfect masterpiece of mechanical contrivance and
inventive ingenuity—the very last word in comfort, safety and scientific skill.
I was in the act of trying to fit in my memory some of the details of its
construction and arrangement, when I made a chance noise, and at once became
too agitated to note carefully what I saw. For at the noise the creature
turned, and I saw that it was a human being—a man. I was aware
of a face close against my own as it pressed forward, but a face with embryonic
features impossible to describe and utterly loathsome, with eyes, ears, nose
and skin, only just sufficiently alive and developed to transfer the minimum of
gross sensation to the brain. The mouth, however, was large and thick-lipped,
and the jaws were still moving in the act of slow mastication.
I shrank back, shuddering with mingled pity and disgust, and at
the same moment the woman beside me called me softly by my own name.
She had moved forward a little so that she stood quite close to me, full in the
thin stream of moonlight that fell across the floor, and I was conscious of a
swift transition from hell to heaven as my gaze passed from that embryonic
visage to a countenance so refined, so majestic, so divinely sensitive in its
strength, that it was like turning from the face of a devil to look upon the
features of a goddess.
At the same instant I was aware that both beings—the creature and
the woman—were moving rapidly toward me.
A pain like a sharp sword dived deep down into me and twisted
horribly through my heart, for as I saw them coming I realized in one swift
moment of terrible intuition that they had their life in me, that they were
born of my own being, and were indeed projections of myself. They
were portions of my consciousness projected outwardly into objectivity, and
their degree of reality was just as great as that of any other part of me.
With a dreadful swiftness they rushed toward me, and in a single
second had merged themselves into my own being; and I understood in some
marvellous manner beyond the possibility of doubt that they were symbolic of my
own soul: the dull animal part of me that had hitherto acknowledged nothing
beyond its cage of minute sensations, and the higher part, almost out of reach,
and in touch with the stars, that for the first time had feebly awakened into
life during my journey over the hill.
V
I forget altogether how it was that I escaped, whether by the
window or the door. I only know I found myself a moment later making great
speed over the moor, followed by screaming birds and shouting winds, straight
on the track downhill toward the Manor House. Something must have guided me,
for I went with the instinct of an animal, having no uncertainties as to
turnings, and saw the welcome lights of windows before I had covered another
mile. And all the way I felt as though a great sluice gate had been opened to
let a flood of new perceptions rush like a sea over my inner being, so that I
was half ashamed and half delighted, partly angry, yet partly happy.
Servants met me at the door, several of them, and I was aware at
once of an atmosphere of commotion in the house. I arrived breathless and
hatless, wet to the skin, my hands scratched and my boots caked with mud.
"We made sure you were lost, sir," I heard the old
butler say, and I heard my own reply, faintly, like the voice of someone else:
"I thought so too."
A minute later I found myself in the study, with the old
folk-lorist standing opposite. In his hands he held the book I had brought down
for him in my bag, ready addressed. There was a curious smile on his face.
"It never occurred to me that you would dare to walk—to-night
of all nights," he was saying.
I stared without a word. I was bursting with the desire to tell
him something of what had happened and try to be patient with his explanations,
but when I sought for words and sentences my story seemed suddenly flat and
pointless, and the details of my adventure began to evaporate and melt away,
and seemed hard to remember.
"I had an exciting walk," I stammered, still a little
breathless from running. "The weather was all right when I started from
the station."
"The weather is all right still," he said, "though
you may have found some evening mist on the top of the hills. But it's not that
I meant."
"What then?"
"I meant," he said, still laughing quizzically,
"that you were a very brave man to walk to-night over the enchanted hills,
because this is May Day eve, and on May Day eve, you know, They have
power over the minds of men, and can put glamour upon the imagination——"
"Who—'they?' What do you mean?"
He put my book down on the table beside him and looked quietly for
a moment into my eyes, and as he did so the memory of my adventure began to
revive in detail, and I thought quickly of the shadowy man who had shown me the
way first. What could it have been in the face of the old folk-lorist that made
me think of this man? A dozen things ran like flashes through my excited mind,
and while I attempted to seize them I heard the old man's voice continue. He
seemed to be talking to himself as much as to me.
"The elemental beings you have always scoffed at, of course;
they who operate ceaselessly behind the screen of appearances, and who fashion
and mould the moods of the mind. And an extremist like you—for extremes are
always dangerously weak—is their legitimate prey."
"Pshaw!" I interrupted him, knowing that my manner
betrayed me hopelessly, and that he had guessed much. "Any man may have
subjective experiences, I suppose——"
Then I broke off suddenly. The change in his face made me start;
it had taken on for the moment so exactly the look of the man on the hillside.
The eyes gazing so steadily into mine had shadows in them, I thought.
"Glamour!" he was saying, "all glamour! One
of them must have come very close to you, or perhaps touched you." Then he
asked sharply, "Did you meet anyone? Did you speak with anyone?"
"I came by Tom Bassett's cottage," I said. "I
didn't feel quite sure of my way and I went in and asked."
"All glamour," he repeated to himself, and then aloud to
me, "and as for Bassett's cottage, it was burnt down three years ago, and
nothing stands there now but broken, roofless walls——"
He stopped because I had seized him by the arm. In the shadows of
the lamp-lit room behind him I thought I caught sight of dim forms moving past
the book-shelves. But when my eye tried to focus them they faded and slipped
away again into ceiling and walls. The details of the hill-top cottage,
however, started into life again at the sight, and I seized my friend's arm to
tell him. But instantly, when I tried, it all faded away again as though it had
been a dream, and I could recall nothing intelligible to repeat to him.
He looked at me and laughed.
"They always obliterate the memory afterward," he said
gently, "so that little remains beyond a mood, or an emotion, to show how
profoundly deep their touch has been. Though sometimes part of the change
remains and becomes permanent—as I hope in your case it may."
Then, before I had time to answer, to swear, or to remonstrate, he
stepped briskly past me and closed the door into the hall, and then drew me
aside farther into the room. The change that I could not understand was still
working in his face and eyes.
"If you have courage enough left to come with me," he
said, speaking very seriously, "we will go out again and see more. Up till
midnight, you know, there is still the opportunity, and with me perhaps you
won't feel so—so——"
It was impossible somehow to refuse; everything combined to make
me go. We had a little food and then went out into the hall, and he clapped a
wide-awake on his gray hairs. I took a cloak and seized a walking-stick from
the stand. I really hardly knew what I was doing. The new world I had awakened
to seemed still a-quiver about me.
As we passed out on to the gravel drive the light from the hall
windows fell upon his face, and I saw that the change I had been so long
observing was nearing its completeness, for there breathed about him that keen,
wonderful atmosphere of eternal youth I had felt upon the inmates of the
cottage. He seemed to have gone back forty years; a veil was gathering over his
eyes; and I could have sworn that somehow his stature had increased, and that
he moved beside me with a vigour and power I had never seen in him before.
And as we began to climb the hill together in silence I saw that
the stars were clear overhead and there was no mist, that the trees stood
motionless without wind, and that beyond us on the summit of the hills there
were lights dancing to and fro, appearing and disappearing like the inflection
of stars in water.
II.THE DIAMOND LENS
Fitz-James
O'Brien
I.THE BENDING OF THE TWIG
From a very early period of my life the entire bent of my
inclinations had been towards microscopic investigations. When I was not more
than ten years old, a distant relative of our family, hoping to astonish my
inexperience, constructed a simple microscope for me, by drilling in a disk of
copper a small hole, in which a drop of pure water was sustained by capillary
attraction. This very primitive apparatus, magnifying some fifty diameters,
presented, it is true, only indistinct and imperfect forms, but still
sufficiently wonderful to work up my imagination to a preternatural state of
excitement.
Seeing me so interested in this rude instrument, my cousin
explained to me all that he knew about the principles of the microscope,
related to me a few of the wonders which had been accomplished through its
agency, and ended by promising to send me one regularly constructed,
immediately on his return to the city. I counted the days, the hours, the
minutes, that intervened between that promise and his departure.
Meantime I was not idle. Every transparent substance that bore the
remotest resemblance to a lens I eagerly seized upon, and employed in vain
attempts to realize that instrument, the theory of whose construction I as yet
only vaguely comprehended. All panes of glass containing those oblate
spheroidal knots familiarly known as "bull's-eyes" were ruthlessly
destroyed, in the hope of obtaining lenses of marvelous power. I even went so
far as to extract the crystalline humour from the eyes of fishes and animals,
and endeavored to press it into the microscopic service. I plead guilty to
having stolen the glasses from my Aunt Agatha's spectacles, with a dim idea of
grinding them into lenses of wondrous magnifying properties,—in which attempt
it is scarcely necessary to say that I totally failed.
At last the promised instrument came. It was of that order known
as Field's simple microscope, and had cost perhaps about fifteen dollars. As
far as educational purposes went, a better apparatus could not have been selected.
Accompanying it was a small treatise on the microscope,—its history, uses, and
discoveries. I comprehended then for the first time the "Arabian Nights'
Entertainments." The dull veil of ordinary existence that hung across the
world seemed suddenly to roll away, and to lay bare a land of enchantments. I
felt towards my companions as the seer might feel towards the ordinary masses
of men. I held conversations with nature in a tongue which they could not
understand. I was in daily communication with living wonders, such as they
never imagined in their wildest visions. I penetrated beyond the external
portal of things, and roamed through the sanctuaries. Where they beheld only a
drop of rain slowly rolling down the window-glass, I saw a universe of beings
animated with all the passions common to physical life, and convulsing their
minute sphere with struggles as fierce and protracted as those of men. In the
common spots of mould, which my mother, good housekeeper that she was, fiercely
scooped away from her jam pots, there abode for me, under the name of mildew,
enchanted gardens, filled with dells and avenues of the densest foliage and
most astonishing verdure, while from the fantastic boughs of these microscopic
forests, hung strange fruits glittering with green, and silver, and gold.
It was no scientific thirst that at this time filled my mind. It
was the pure enjoyment of a poet to whom a world of wonders has been disclosed.
I talked of my solitary pleasures to none. Alone with my microscope, I dimmed my
sight, day after day and night after night, poring over the marvels which it
unfolded to me. I was like one who, having discovered the ancient Eden still
existing in all its primitive glory, should resolve to enjoy it in solitude,
and never betray to mortal the secret of its locality. The rod of my life was
bent at this moment. I destined myself to be a microscopist.
Of course, like every novice, I fancied myself a discoverer. I was
ignorant at the time of the thousands of acute intellects engaged in the same
pursuit as myself, and with the advantage of instruments a thousand times more
powerful than mine. The names of Leeuwenhoek, Williamson, Spencer, Ehrenberg,
Schmaltz, Dujardin, Staccato, and Schlseiden were then entirely unknown to me,
or if known, I was ignorant of their patient and wonderful researches. In every
fresh specimen of cryptogamic which I placed beneath my instrument I believed
that I discovered wonders of which the world was as yet ignorant. I remember
well the thrill of delight and admiration that shot through me the first time
that I discovered the common wheel animalcule (Rotifera vulgaris)
expanding and contracting its flexible spokes, and seemingly rotating through
the water. Alas! as I grew older, and obtained some works treating of my
favorite study, I found that I was only on the threshold of a science to the
investigation of which some of the greatest men of the age were devoting their
lives and intellects.
As I grew up, my parents, who saw but little likelihood of
anything practical resulting from the examination of bits of moss and drops of
water through a brass tube and a piece of glass, were anxious that I should
choose a profession. It was their desire that I should enter the counting-house
of my uncle, Ethan Blake, a prosperous merchant, who carried on business in New
York. This suggestion I decisively combated. I had no taste for trade; I should
only make a failure; in short, I refused to become a merchant.
But it was necessary for me to select some pursuit. My parents
were staid New England people, who insisted on the necessity of labour; and
therefore, although, thanks to the bequest of my poor Aunt Agatha, I should, on
coming of age, inherit a small fortune sufficient to place me above want, it
was decided that, instead of waiting for this, I should act the nobler part,
and employ the intervening years in rendering myself independent.
After much cogitation I complied with the wishes of my family, and
selected a profession. I determined to study medicine at the New York Academy.
This disposition of my future suited me. A removal from my relatives would
enable me to dispose of my time as I pleased without fear of detection. As long
as I paid my Academy fees, I might shirk attending the lectures if I chose;
and, as I never had the remotest intention of standing an examination, there
was no danger of my being "plucked." Besides, a metropolis was the
place for me. There I could obtain excellent instruments, the newest
publications, intimacy with men of pursuits kindred with my own,—in short, all
things necessary to insure a profitable devotion of my life to my beloved
science. I had an abundance of money, few desires that were not bounded by my
illuminating mirror on one side and my object-glass on the other; what,
therefore, was to prevent my becoming an illustrious investigator of the veiled
worlds? It was with the most buoyant hope that I left my New England home and
established myself in New York.
II.THE LONGING OF A MAN OF
SCIENCE
My first step, of course, was to find suitable apartments. These I
obtained, after a couple of days' search, in Fourth Avenue; a very pretty
second-floor unfurnished, containing sitting-room, bedroom, and a smaller
apartment which I intended to fit up as a laboratory. I furnished my lodgings
simply, but rather elegantly, and then devoted all my energies to the adornment
of the temple of my worship. I visited Pike, the celebrated optician, and
passed in review his splendid collection of microscopes,—Field's Compound,
Hingham's, Spencer's, Nachet's Binocular (that founded on the principles of the
stereoscope), and at length fixed upon that form known as Spencer's Trunnion
Microscope, as combining the greatest number of improvements with an almost
perfect freedom from tremor. Along with this I purchased every possible
accessory,—draw-tubes, micrometers, a camera-lucida, lever-stage,
acromatic condensers, white cloud illuminators, prisms, parabolic condensers,
polarizing apparatus, forceps, aquatic boxes, fishing-tubes, with a host of
other articles, all of which would have been useful in the hands of an
experienced microscopist, but, as I afterwards discovered, were not of the
slightest present value to me. It takes years of practice to know how to use a
complicated microscope. The optician looked suspiciously at me as I made these
wholesale purchases. He evidently was uncertain whether to set me down as some
scientific celebrity or a madman. I think he inclined to the latter belief. I
suppose I was mad. Every great genius is mad upon the subject in which he is
greatest. The unsuccessful madman is disgraced and called a lunatic.
Mad or not, I set myself to work with a zeal which few scientific
students have ever equalled. I had everything to learn relative to the delicate
study upon which I had embarked,—a study involving the most earnest patience,
the most rigid analytic powers, the steadiest hand, the most untiring eyes, the
most refined and subtile manipulation.
For a long time half my apparatus lay inactively on the shelves of
my laboratory, which was now most amply furnished with every possible
contrivance for facilitating my investigations. The fact was that I did not
know how to use some of my scientific implements,—never having been taught
microscopic,—and those whose use I understood theoretically were of little
avail, until by practice I could attain the necessary delicacy of handling.
Still, such was the fury of my ambition, such the untiring perseverance of my
experiments, that, difficult of credit as it may be, in the course of one year
I became theoretically and practically an accomplished microscopist.
During this period of my labours, in which I submitted specimens
of every substance that came under my observation to the action of my lenses, I
became a discoverer—in a small way, it is true, for I was very young, but still
a discoverer. It was I who destroyed Ehrenberg's theory that the Volvox
globator was an animal, and proved that his "nomads" with
stomachs and eyes were merely phases of the formation of a vegetable cell, and
were, when they reached their mature state, incapable of the act of
conjugation, or any true generative act, without which no organism rising to
any stage of life higher than vegetable can be said to be complete. It was I
who resolved the singular problem of rotation in the cells and hairs of plants
into ciliary attraction, in spite of the assertions of Mr. Wenham and others,
that my explanation was the result of an optical illusion.
But notwithstanding these discoveries, laboriously and painfully
made as they were, I felt horribly dissatisfied. At every step I found myself
stopped by the imperfections of my instruments. Like all active microscopists,
I gave my imagination full play. Indeed, it is a common complaint against many
such, that they supply the defects of their instruments with the creations of
their brains. I imagined depths beyond depths in nature which the limited power
of my lenses prohibited me from exploring. I lay awake at night constructing
imaginary microscopes of immeasurable power, with which I seemed to pierce
through the envelopes of matter down to its original atom. How I cursed those
imperfect mediums which necessity through ignorance compelled me to use! How I
longed to discover the secret of some perfect lens, whose magnifying power
should be limited only by the resolvability of the object, and which at the
same time should be free from spherical and chromatic aberrations, in short
from all the obstacles over which the poor microscopist finds himself
continually stumbling! I felt convinced that the simple microscope, composed of
a single lens of such vast yet perfect power was possible of construction. To
attempt to bring the compound microscope up to such a pitch would have been
commencing at the wrong end; this latter being simply a partially successful endeavor
to remedy those very defects of the simple instrument which, if conquered,
would leave nothing to be desired.
It was in this mood of mind that I became a constructive
microscopist. After another year passed in this new pursuit, experimenting on
every imaginable substance,—glass, gems, flints, crystals, artificial crystals
formed of the alloy of various vitreous materials,—in short, having constructed
as many varieties of lenses as Argus had eyes, I found myself precisely where I
started, with nothing gained save an extensive knowledge of glass-making. I was
almost dead with despair. My parents were surprised at my apparent want of
progress in my medical studies (I had not attended one lecture since my arrival
in the city), and the expenses of my mad pursuit had been so great as to
embarrass me very seriously.
I was in this frame of mind one day, experimenting in my
laboratory on a small diamond,—that stone, from its great refracting power,
having always occupied my attention more than any other,—when a young
Frenchman, who lived on the floor above me, and who was in the habit of
occasionally visiting me, entered the room.
I think that Jules Simon was a Jew. He had many traits of the
Hebrew character: a love of jewelry, of dress, and of good living. There was
something mysterious about him. He always had something to sell, and yet went
into excellent society. When I say sell, I should perhaps have said peddle; for
his operations were generally confined to the disposal of single articles,—a
picture, for instance, or a rare carving in ivory, or a pair of
duelling-pistols, or the dress of a Mexican caballero. When I was
first furnishing my rooms, he paid me a visit, which ended in my purchasing an
antique silver lamp, which he assured me was a Cellini,—it was handsome enough
even for that, and some other knickknacks for my sitting-room. Why Simon should
pursue this petty trade I never could imagine. He apparently had plenty of
money, and had the entrée of the best houses in the
city,—taking care, however, I suppose, to drive no bargains within the
enchanted circle of the Upper Ten. I came at length to the conclusion that this
peddling was but a mask to cover some greater object, and even went so far as
to believe my young acquaintance to be implicated in the slave-trade. That,
however, was none of my affair.
On the present occasion, Simon entered my room in a state of
considerable excitement.
"Ah! mon ami!" he cried, before I could even
offer him the ordinary salutation, "it has occurred to me to be the
witness of the most astonishing things in the world. I promenade myself to the
house of Madame ——. How does the little animal—le renard—name himself in
the Latin?"
"Vulvas," I answered.
"Ah! yes,—Vulvas. I promenade myself to the house of Madame
Vulvas."
"The spirit medium?"
"Yes, the great medium. Great heavens! what a woman! I write
on a slip of paper many of questions concerning affairs the most
secret,—affairs that conceal themselves in the abysses of my heart the most
profound; and behold! by example! what occurs? This devil of a woman makes me
replies the most truthful to all of them. She talks to me of things that I do
not love to talk of to myself. What am I to think? I am fixed to the
earth!"
"Am I to understand you, M. Simon, that this Mrs. Vulvas
replied to questions secretly written by you, which questions related to events
known only to yourself?"
"Ah! more than that, more than that," he answered, with
an air of some alarm. "She related to me things—But," he added, after
a pause, and suddenly changing his manner, "why occupy ourselves with
these follies? It was all the biology, without doubt. It goes without saying
that it has not my credence.—But why are we here, mon ami? It has
occurred to me to discover the most beautiful thing as you can imagine,—a vase
with green lizards on it, composed by the great Bernard Palissy. It is in my
apartment; let us mount. I go to show it to you."
I followed Simon mechanically; but my thoughts were far from
Palissy and his enamelled ware, although I, like him, was seeking in the dark a
great discovery. This casual mention of the spiritualist, Madame Vulpes, set me
on a new track. What if this spiritualism should be really a great fact? What
if, through communication with more subtile organisms than my own, I could
reach at a single bound the goal, which perhaps a life of agonizing mental toil
would never enable me to attain?
While purchasing the Palissy vase from my friend Simon, I was
mentally arranging a visit to Madame Vulpes.
III.THE SPIRIT OF
LEEUWENHOEK
Two evenings after this, thanks to an arrangement by letter and
the promise of an ample fee, I found Madame Vulpes awaiting me at her residence
alone. She was a coarse-featured woman, with keen and rather cruel dark eyes,
and an exceedingly sensual expression about her mouth and under jaw. She
received me in perfect silence, in an apartment on the ground floor, very
sparely furnished. In the centre of the room, close to where Mrs. Vulpes sat,
there was a common round mahogany table. If I had come for the purpose of sweeping
her chimney, the woman could not have looked more indifferent to my appearance.
There was no attempt to inspire the visitor with awe. Everything bore a simple
and practical aspect. This intercourse with the spiritual world was evidently
as familiar an occupation with Mrs. Vulpes as eating her dinner or riding in an
omnibus.
"You come for a communication, Mr. Linley?" said the
medium, in a dry, business-like tone of voice.
"By appointment,—yes."
"What sort of communication do you want—a written one?"
"Yes—I wish for a written one."
"From any particular spirit?"
"Yes."
"Have you ever known this spirit on this earth?"
"Never. He died long before I was born. I wish merely to
obtain from him some information which he ought to be able to give better than
any other."
"Will you seat yourself at the table, Mr. Linley," said
the medium, "and place your hands upon it?"
I obeyed,—Mrs. Vulpes being seated opposite to me, with her hands
also on the table. We remained thus for about a minute and a half, when a
violent succession of raps came on the table, on the back of my chair, on the
floor immediately under my feet, and even on the window-panes. Mrs. Vulpes
smiled composedly.
"They are very strong to-night," she remarked. "You
are fortunate." She then continued, "Will the spirits communicate
with this gentleman?"
Vigorous affirmative.
"Will the particular spirit he desires to speak with
communicate?"
A very confused rapping followed this question.
"I know what they mean," said Mrs. Vulpes, addressing
herself to me; "they wish you to write down the name of the particular
spirit that you desire to converse with. Is that so?" she added, speaking
to her invisible guests.
That it was so was evident from the numerous affirmatory
responses. While this was going on, I tore a slip from my pocket-book, and
scribbled a name, under the table.
"Will this spirit communicate in writing with this
gentleman?" asked the medium once more.
After a moment's pause, her hand seemed to be seized with a
violent tremour, shaking so forcibly that the table vibrated. She said that a
spirit had seized her hand and would write. I handed her some sheets of paper
that were on the table, and a pencil. The latter she held loosely in her hand,
which presently began to move over the paper with a singular and seemingly
involuntary motion. After a few moments had elapsed, she handed me the paper,
on which I found written, in a large, uncultivated hand, the words, "He is
not here, but has been sent for." A pause of a minute or so now ensued,
during which Mrs. Vulpes remained perfectly silent, but the raps continued at
regular intervals. When the short period I mention had elapsed, the hand of the
medium was again seized with its convulsive tremour, and she wrote, under this
strange influence, a few words on the paper, which she handed to me. They were
as follows:—
"I am here. Question me. Leeuwenhoek."
I was astounded. The name was identical with that I had written
beneath the table, and carefully kept concealed. Neither was it at all probable
that an uncultivated woman like Mrs. Vulpes should know even the name of the
great father of microscopics. It may have been biology; but this theory was
soon doomed to be destroyed. I wrote on my slip—still concealing it from Mrs.
Vulpes—a series of questions, which, to avoid tediousness, I shall place with
the responses, in the order in which they occurred:—
I.—Can the microscope be brought to perfection?
Spirit.—Yes.
I.—Am I destined to accomplish this great task?
Spirit.—You are.
I.—I wish to know how to proceed to attain this end. For the love
which you bear to science, help me!
Spirit.—A diamond of one hundred and forty carats, submitted to
electro-magnetic currents for a long period, will experience a rearrangement of
its atoms inter se, and from that stone you will form the universal
lens.
I.—Will great discoveries result from the use of such a lens?
Spirit.—So great that all that has gone before is as nothing.
I.—But the refractive power of the diamond is so immense, that the
image will be formed within the lens. How is that difficulty to be surmounted?
Spirit.—Pierce the lens through its axis, and the difficulty is
obviated. The image will be formed in the pierced space, which will itself
serve as a tube to look through. Now I am called. Good-night.
I cannot at all describe the effect that these extraordinary
communications had upon me. I felt completely bewildered. No biological theory
could account for the discovery of the lens. The medium might,
by means of biological rapport with my mind, have gone so far
as to read my questions, and reply to them coherently. But biology could not
enable her to discover that magnetic currents would so alter the crystals of
the diamond as to remedy its previous defects, and admit of its being polished
into a perfect lens. Some such theory may have passed through my head, it is
true; but if so, I had forgotten it. In my excited condition of mind there was
no course left but to become a convert, and it was in a state of the most
painful nervous exaltation that I left the medium's house that evening. She
accompanied me to the door, hoping that I was satisfied. The raps followed us
as we went through the hall, sounding on the balusters, the flooring, and even
the lintels of the door. I hastily expressed my satisfaction, and escaped hurriedly
into the cool night air. I walked home with but one thought possessing me,—how
to obtain a diamond of the immense size required. My entire means multiplied a
hundred times over would have been inadequate to its purchase. Besides, such
stones are rare, and become historical. I could find such only in the regalia
of Eastern or European monarchs.
IV.THE EYE OF MORNING
There was a light in Simon's room as I entered my house. A vague
impulse urged me to visit him. As I opened the door of his sitting-room unannounced,
he was bending, with his back toward me, over a carcel lamp, apparently engaged
in minutely examining some object which he held in his hands. As I entered, he
started suddenly, thrust his hand into his breast pocket, and turned to me with
a face crimson with confusion.
"What!" I cried, "poring over the miniature of some
fair lady? Well, don't blush so much; I won't ask to see it."
Simon laughed awkwardly enough, but made none of the negative
protestations usual on such occasions. He asked me to take a seat.
"Simon," said I, "I have just come from Madame
Vulpes."
This time Simon turned as white as a sheet, and seemed stupefied,
as if a sudden electric shock had smitten him. He babbled some incoherent
words, and went hastily to a small closet where he usually kept his liquors.
Although astonished at his emotion, I was too preoccupied with my own idea to
pay much attention to anything else.
"You say truly when you call Madame Vulpes a devil of a
woman," I continued. "Simon, she told me wonderful things to-night,
or rather was the means of telling me wonderful things. Ah! if I could only get
a diamond that weighed one hundred and forty carats!"
Scarcely had the sigh with which I uttered this desire died upon
my lips, when Simon, with the aspect of a wild beast, glared at me savagely,
and, rushing to the mantelpiece, where some foreign weapons hung on the wall,
caught up a Malay creese, and brandished it furiously before him.
"No!" he cried in French, into which he always broke
when excited. "No! you shall not have it! You are perfidious! You have
consulted with that demon, and desire my treasure! But I will die first! Me! I
am brave! You cannot make me fear!"
All this, uttered in a loud voice trembling with excitement,
astounded me. I saw at a glance that I had accidentally trodden upon the edges
of Simon's secret, whatever it was. It was necessary to reassure him.
"My dear Simon," I said, "I am entirely at a loss
to know what you mean. I went to Madame Vulpes to consult with her on a
scientific problem, to the solution of which I discovered that a diamond of the
size I just mentioned was necessary. You were never alluded to during the
evening, nor, so far as I was concerned, even thought of. What can be the
meaning of this outburst? If you happen to have a set of valuable diamonds in
your possession, you need fear nothing from me. The diamond which I require you
could not possess; or, if you did possess it, you would not be living
here."
Something in my tone must have completely reassured him; for his
expression immediately changed to a sort of constrained merriment, combined,
however, with a certain suspicious attention to my movements. He laughed, and
said that I must bear with him; that he was at certain moments subject to a
species of vertigo, which betrayed itself in incoherent speeches, and that the
attacks passed off as rapidly as they came. He put his weapon aside while
making this explanation, and endeavoured, with some success, to assume a more
cheerful air.
All this did not impose on me in the least. I was too much
accustomed to analytical labours to be baffled by so flimsy a veil. I
determined to probe the mystery to the bottom.
"Simon," I said, gayly, "let us forget all this
over a bottle of Burgundy. I have a case of Lausseure's Clos
Vougeot downstairs, fragrant with the odours and ruddy with the
sunlight of the Côte d'Or. Let us have up a couple of bottles. What say
you?"
"With all my heart," answered Simon, smilingly.
I produced the wine and we seated ourselves to drink. It was of a
famous vintage, that of 1848, a year when war and wine throve together,—and its
pure but powerful juice seemed to impart renewed vitality to the system. By the
time we had half finished the second bottle, Simon's head, which I knew was a
weak one, had begun to yield, while I remained calm as ever, only that every
draught seemed to send a flush of vigour through my limbs. Simon's utterance
became more and more indistinct. He took to singing French chansons of
a not very moral tendency. I rose suddenly from the table just at the
conclusion of one of those incoherent verses, and, fixing my eyes on him with a
quiet smile, said: "Simon, I have deceived you. I learned your secret this
evening. You may as well be frank with me. Mrs. Vulpes, or rather one of her
spirits, told me all."
He started with horror. His intoxication seemed for the moment to
fade away, and he made a movement towards the weapon that he had a short time
before laid down. I stopped him with my hand.
"Monster!" he cried, passionately, "I am ruined!
What shall I do? You shall never have it! I swear by my mother!"
"I don't want it," I said; "rest secure, but be
frank with me. Tell me all about it."
The drunkenness began to return. He protested with maudlin
earnestness that I was entirely mistaken,—that I was intoxicated; then asked me
to swear eternal secrecy, and promised to disclose the mystery to me. I pledged
myself, of course, to all. With an uneasy look in his eyes, and hands unsteady
with drink and nervousness, he drew a small case from his breast and opened it.
Heavens! How the mild lamplight was shivered into a thousand prismatic arrows,
as it fell upon a vast rose-diamond that glittered in the case! I was no judge
of diamonds, but I saw at a glance that this was a gem of rare size and purity.
I looked at Simon with wonder, and—must I confess it?—with envy. How could he
have obtained this treasure? In reply to my questions, I could just gather from
his drunken statements (of which, I fancy, half the incoherence was affected)
that he had been superintending a gang of slaves engaged in diamond-washing in
Brazil; that he had seen one of them secrete a diamond, but, instead of
informing his employers, had quietly watched the negro until he saw him bury
his treasure; that he had dug it up and fled with it, but that as yet he was
afraid to attempt to dispose of it publicly,—so valuable a gem being almost
certain to attract too much attention to its owner's antecedents,—and he had
not been able to discover any of those obscure channels by which such matters
are conveyed away safely. He added, that, in accordance with oriental practice,
he had named his diamond with the fanciful title of "The Eye of
Morning."
While Simon was relating this to me, I regarded the great diamond
attentively. Never had I beheld anything so beautiful. All the glories of
light, ever imagined or described, seemed to pulsate in its crystalline
chambers. Its weight, as I learned from Simon, was exactly one hundred and
forty carats. Here was an amazing coincidence. The hand of destiny seemed in
it. On the very evening when the spirit of Leeuwenhoek communicates to me the
great secret of the microscope, the priceless means which he directs me to
employ start up within my easy reach! I determined, with the most perfect
deliberation, to possess myself of Simon's diamond.
I sat opposite to him while he nodded over his glass, and calmly
revolved the whole affair. I did not for an instant contemplate so foolish an
act as a common theft, which would of course be discovered or at least
necessitate flight and concealment, all of which must interfere with my
scientific plans. There was but one step to be taken,—to kill Simon. After all,
what was the life of a little peddling Jew, in comparison with the interests of
science? Human beings are taken every day from the condemned prisons to be
experimented on by surgeons. This man, Simon, was by his own confession a
criminal, a robber, and I believed on my soul a murderer. He deserved death
quite as much as any felon condemned by the laws: why should I not, like government,
contrive that his punishment should contribute to the progress of human
knowledge?
The means for accomplishing everything I desired lay within my
reach. There stood upon the mantelpiece a bottle half full of French laudanum.
Simon was so occupied with his diamond, which I had just restored to him, that
it was an affair of no difficulty to drug his glass. In a quarter of an hour he
was in a profound sleep.
I now opened his waistcoat, took the diamond from the inner pocket
in which he had placed it, and removed him to the bed, on which I laid him so
that his feet hung down over the edge. I had possessed myself of the Malay
creese, which I held in my right hand, while with the other I discovered as
accurately as I could by pulsation the exact locality of the heart. It was
essential that all the aspects of his death should lead to the surmise of
self-murder. I calculated the exact angle at which it was probable that the
weapon, if levelled by Simon's own hand, would enter his breast; then with one
powerful blow I thrust it up to the hilt in the very spot which I desired to
penetrate. A convulsive thrill ran through Simon's limbs. I heard a smothered
sound issue from his throat, precisely like the bursting of a large air-bubble,
sent up by a diver, when it reaches the surface of the water; he turned half
round on his side, and, as if to assist my plans more effectually, his right
hand, moved by some mere spasmodic impulse, clasped the handle of the creese,
which it remained holding with extraordinary muscular tenacity. Beyond this
there was no apparent struggle. The laudanum, I presume, paralyzed the usual
nervous action. He must have died instantly.
There was yet something to be done. To make it certain that all
suspicion of the act should be diverted from any inhabitant of the house to
Simon himself, it was necessary that the door should be in the morning locked
on the inside. How to do this, and afterwards escape myself? Not by the
window; that was a physical impossibility. Besides, I was determined that the
windows also should be found bolted. The solution was simple
enough. I descended softly to my own room for a peculiar instrument which I had
used for holding small slippery substances, such as minute spheres of glass,
etc. This instrument was nothing more than a long slender hand-vise, with a
very powerful grip, and a considerable leverage, which last was accidentally
owing to the shape of the handle. Nothing was simpler than, when the key was in
the lock, to seize the end of its stem in this vise, through the keyhole, from
the outside, and lock the door. Previously, however, to doing this, I burned a
number of papers on Simon's hearth. Suicides almost always burn papers before
they destroy themselves. I also emptied some more laudanum into Simon's glass,—having
first removed from it all traces of wine,—cleaned the other wine-glass, and
brought the bottles away with me. If traces of two persons drinking had been
found in the room, the question naturally would have arisen, Who was the
second? Besides, the wine-bottles might have been identified as belonging to
me. The laudanum I poured out to account for its presence in his stomach, in
case of a post-mortem examination. The theory naturally would
be, that he first intended to poison himself, but, after swallowing a little of
the drug, was either disgusted with its taste, or changed his mind from other
motives, and chose the dagger. These arrangements made, I walked out, leaving
the gas burning, locked the door with my vise, and went to bed.
Simon's death was not discovered until nearly three in the
afternoon. The servant, astonished at seeing the gas burning,—the light
streaming on the dark landing from under the door,—peeped through the keyhole
and saw Simon on the bed. She gave the alarm. The door was burst open, and the
neighbourhood was in a fever of excitement.
Everyone in the house was arrested, myself included. There was an
inquest; but no clew to his death beyond that of suicide could be obtained.
Curiously enough, he had made several speeches to his friends the preceding
week, that seemed to point to self-destruction. One gentleman swore that Simon
had said in his presence that "he was tired of life." His landlord
affirmed that Simon, when paying him his last month's rent, remarked that "he
should not pay him rent much longer." All the other evidence
corresponded,—the door locked inside, the position of the corpse, the burnt
papers. As I anticipated, no one knew of the possession of the diamond by
Simon, so that no motive was suggested for his murder. The jury, after a
prolonged examination, brought in the usual verdict, and the neighbourhood once
more settled down into its accustomed quiet.
V.ANIMULA
The three months succeeding Simon's catastrophe I devoted night
and day to my diamond lens. I had constructed a vast galvanic battery, composed
of nearly two thousand pairs of plates,—a higher power I dared not use, lest
the diamond should be calcined. By means of this enormous engine I was enabled
to send a powerful current of electricity continually through my great diamond,
which it seemed to me gained in lustre every day. At the expiration of a month
I commenced the grinding and polishing of the lens, a work of intense toil and
exquisite delicacy. The great density of the stone, and the care required to be
taken with the curvatures of the surfaces of the lens, rendered the labour the
severest and most harassing that I had yet undergone.
At last the eventful moment came; the lens was completed. I stood
trembling on the threshold of new worlds. I had the realization of Alexander's
famous wish before me. The lens lay on the table, ready to be placed upon its
platform. My hand fairly shook as I enveloped a drop of water with a thin
coating of oil of turpentine, preparatory to its examination,—a process necessary
in order to prevent the rapid evaporation of the water. I now placed the drop
on a thin slip of glass under the lens, and throwing upon it, by the combined
aid of a prism and a mirror, a powerful stream of light, I approached my eye to
the minute hole drilled through the axis of the lens. For an instant I saw
nothing save what seemed to be an illuminated chaos, a vast luminous abyss. A
pure white light, cloudless and serene, and seemingly as limitless as space
itself, was my first impression. Gently, and with the greatest care, I
depressed the lens a few hair's-breadths. The wondrous illumination still
continued, but as the lens approached the object a scene of indescribable
beauty was unfolded to my view.
I seemed to gaze upon a vast space, the limits of which extended
far beyond my vision. An atmosphere of magical luminousness permeated the
entire field of view. I was amazed to see no trace of animalculous life. Not a
living thing, apparently, inhabited that dazzling expanse. I comprehended
instantly that, by the wondrous power of my lens, I had penetrated beyond the
grosser particles of aqueous matter, beyond the realms of infusoria and
protozoa, down to the original gaseous globule, into whose luminous interior I
was gazing, as into an almost boundless dome filled with a supernatural
radiance.
It was, however, no brilliant void into which I looked. On every
side I beheld beautiful inorganic forms, of unknown texture, and coloured with
the most enchanting hues. These forms presented the appearance of what might be
called, for want of a more specific definition, foliated clouds of the highest
rarity; that is, they undulated and broke into vegetable formations, and were
tinged with splendours compared with which the gilding of our autumn woodlands
is as dross compared with gold. Far away into the illimitable distance
stretched long avenues of these gaseous forests, dimly transparent, and painted
with prismatic hues of unimaginable brilliancy. The pendent branches waved
along the fluid glades until every vista seemed to break through half-lucent
ranks of many-coloured drooping silken pennons. What seemed to be either fruits
or flowers, pied with a thousand hues lustrous and ever varying, bubbled from
the crowns of this fairy foliage. No hills, no lakes, no rivers, no forms
animate or inanimate, were to be seen, save those vast auroral copses that
floated serenely in the luminous stillness, with leaves and fruits and flowers
gleaming with unknown fires, unrealizable by mere imagination.
How strange, I thought, that this sphere should be thus condemned
to solitude! I had hoped, at least, to discover some new form of animal
life—perhaps of a lower class than any with which we are at present acquainted,
but still, some living organism. I found my newly discovered world, if I may so
speak, a beautiful chromatic desert.
While I was speculating on the singular arrangements of the
internal economy of Nature, with which she so frequently splinters into atoms
our most compact theories, I thought I beheld a form moving slowly through the
glades of one of the prismatic forests. I looked more attentively, and found
that I was not mistaken. Words cannot depict the anxiety with which I awaited
the nearer approach of this mysterious object. Was it merely some inanimate
substance, held in suspense in the attenuated atmosphere of the globule, or was
it an animal endowed with vitality and motion? It approached, flitting behind
the gauzy, coloured veils of cloud-foliage, for seconds dimly revealed, then
vanishing. At last the violet pennons that trailed nearest to me vibrated; they
were gently pushed aside, and the form floated out into the broad light.
It was a female human shape. When I say human, I mean it possessed
the outlines of humanity,—but there the analogy ends. Its adorable beauty
lifted it illimitable heights beyond the loveliest daughter of Adam.
I cannot, I dare not, attempt to inventory the charms of this
divine revelation of perfect beauty. Those eyes of mystic violet, dewy and
serene, evade my words. Her long, lustrous hair following her glorious head in
a golden wake, like the track sown in heaven by a falling star, seems to quench
my most burning phrases with its splendours. If all the bees of Hybla nestled
upon my lips, they would still sing but hoarsely the wondrous harmonies of
outline that enclosed her form.
She swept out from between the rainbow-curtains of the cloud-trees
into the broad sea of light that lay beyond. Her motions were those of some
graceful naiad, cleaving, by a mere effort of her will, the clear, unruffled
waters that fill the chambers of the sea. She floated forth with the serene
grace of a frail bubble ascending through the still atmosphere of a June day.
The perfect roundness of her limbs formed suave and enchanting curves. It was
like listening to the most spiritual symphony of Beethoven the divine, to watch
the harmonious flow of lines. This, indeed, was a pleasure cheaply purchased at
any price. What cared I if I had waded to the portal of this wonder through
another's blood? I would have given my own to enjoy one such moment of
intoxication and delight.
Breathless with gazing on this lovely wonder, and forgetful for an
instant of everything save her presence, I withdrew my eye from the microscope
eagerly,—alas! As my gaze fell on the thin slide that lay beneath my
instrument, the bright light from mirror and from prism sparkled on a
colourless drop of water! There, in that tiny bead of dew, this beautiful being
was forever imprisoned. The planet Neptune was not more distant from me than
she. I hastened once more to apply my eye to the microscope.
Animula (let me now call her by that dear name which I
subsequently bestowed on her) had changed her position. She had again
approached the wondrous forest, and was gazing earnestly upwards. Presently one
of the trees—as I must call them—unfolded a long ciliary process, with which it
seized one of the gleaming fruits that glittered on its summit, and, sweeping
slowly down, held it within reach of Animula. The sylph took it in her delicate
hand and began to eat. My attention was so entirely absorbed by her, that I
could not apply myself to the task of determining whether this singular plant
was or was not instinct with volition.
I watched her, as she made her repast, with the most profound
attention. The suppleness of her motions sent a thrill of delight through my
frame; my heart beat madly as she turned her beautiful eyes in the direction of
the spot in which I stood. What would I not have given to have had the power to
precipitate myself into that luminous ocean, and float with her through those
groves of purple and gold! While I was thus breathlessly following her every
movement, she suddenly started, seemed to listen for a moment, and then
cleaving the brilliant ether in which she was floating, like a flash of light,
pierced through the opaline forest, and disappeared.
Instantly a series of the most singular sensations attacked me. It
seemed as if I had suddenly gone blind. The luminous sphere was still before
me, but my daylight had vanished. What caused this sudden disappearance? Had
she a lover or a husband? Yes, that was the solution! Some signal from a happy
fellow-being had vibrated through the avenues of the forest, and she had obeyed
the summons.
The agony of my sensations, as I arrived at this conclusion,
startled me. I tried to reject the conviction that my reason forced upon me. I
battled against the fatal conclusion,—but in vain. It was so. I had no escape
from it. I loved an animalcule!
It is true that, thanks to the marvellous power of my microscope,
she appeared of human proportions. Instead of presenting the revolting aspect
of the coarser creatures, that live and struggle and die, in the more easily
resolvable portions of the water-drop, she was fair and delicate and of
surpassing beauty. But of what account was all that? Every time that my eye was
withdrawn from the instrument, it fell on a miserable drop of water, within
which, I must be content to know, dwelt all that could make my life lovely.
Could she but see me once! Could I for one moment pierce the
mystical walls that so inexorably rose to separate us, and whisper all that
filled my soul, I might consent to be satisfied for the rest of my life with
the knowledge of her remote sympathy. It would be something to have established
even the faintest personal link to bind us together,—to know that at times,
when roaming through those enchanted glades, she might think of the wonderful
stranger, who had broken the monotony of her life with his presence, and left a
gentle memory in her heart!
But it could not be. No invention of which human intellect was
capable could break down the barriers that nature had erected. I might feast my
soul upon the wondrous beauty, yet she must always remain ignorant of the
adoring eyes that day and night gazed upon her, and, even when closed, beheld
her in dreams. With a bitter cry of anguish I fled from the room, and, flinging
myself on my bed, sobbed myself to sleep like a child.
VI.THE SPILLING OF THE CUP
I arose the next morning almost at daybreak, and rushed to my
microscope. I trembled as I sought the luminous world in miniature that
contained my all. Animula was there. I had left the gas-lamp, surrounded by its
moderators, burning when I went to bed the night before. I found the sylph
bathing, as it were, with an expression of pleasure animating her features, in
the brilliant light which surrounded her. She tossed her lustrous golden hair
over her shoulders with innocent coquetry. She lay at full length in the
transparent medium, in which she supported herself with ease, and gambolled
with the enchanting grace that the nymph Salmacis might have exhibited when she
sought to conquer the modest Hermaphroditus. I tried an experiment to satisfy
myself if her powers of reflection were developed. I lessened the lamplight
considerably. By the dim light that remained, I could see an expression of pain
flit across her face. She looked upward suddenly, and her brows contracted. I
flooded the stage of the microscope again with a full stream of light, and her
whole expression changed. She sprang forward like some substance deprived of
all weight. Her eyes sparkled and her lips moved. Ah! if science had only the
means of conducting and reduplicating sounds, as it does the rays of light,
what carols of happiness would then have entranced my ears! what jubilant hymns
to Adonais would have thrilled the illumined air!
I now comprehended how it was that the Count de Gabalis peopled
his mystic world with sylphs,—beautiful beings whose breath of life was lambent
fire, and who sported forever in regions of purest ether and purest light. The
Rosicrucian had anticipated the wonder that I had practically realized.
How long this worship of my strange divinity went on thus I
scarcely know. I lost all note of time. All day from early dawn, and far into
the night, I was to be found peering through that wonderful lens. I saw no one,
went nowhere, and scarce allowed myself sufficient time for my meals. My whole
life was absorbed in contemplation as rapt as that of any of the Romish saints.
Every hour that I gazed upon the divine form strengthened my passion,—a passion
that was always overshadowed by the maddening conviction that, although I could
gaze on her at will, she never, never could behold me!
At length I grew so pale and emaciated from want of rest and
continual brooding over my insane love and its cruel conditions that I
determined to make some effort to wean myself from it. "Come," I
said, "this is at best but a fantasy. Your imagination has bestowed on
Animula charms which in reality she does not possess. Seclusion from female
society has produced this morbid condition of mind. Compare her with the
beautiful women of your own world, and this false enchantment will
vanish."
I looked over the newspapers by chance. There I beheld the advertisement
of a celebrated danseuse who appeared nightly at Niblo's. The
Signorina Caradolce had the reputation of being the most beautiful as well as
the most graceful woman in the world. I instantly dressed and went to the
theatre.
The curtain drew up. The usual semicircle of fairies in white
muslin were standing on the right toe around the enamelled flower-bank, of
green canvas, on which the belated prince was sleeping. Suddenly a flute is
heard. The fairies start. The trees open, the fairies all stand on the left
toe, and the queen enters. It was the Signorina. She bounded forward amid
thunders of applause, and, lighting on one foot, remained poised in air.
Heavens! was this the great enchantress that had drawn monarchs at her
chariot-wheels? Those heavy muscular limbs, those thick ankles, those cavernous
eyes, that stereotyped smile, those crudely painted cheeks! Where were the
vermeil blooms, the liquid expressive eyes, the harmonious limbs of Animula?
The Signorina danced. What gross, discordant movements! The play
of her limbs was all false and artificial. Her bounds were painful athletic
efforts; her poses were angular and distressed the eye. I could bear it no
longer; with an exclamation of disgust that drew every eye upon me, I rose from
my seat in the very middle of the Signorina's pas-de-fascination,
and abruptly quitted the house.
I hastened home to feast my eyes once more on the lovely form of
my sylph. I felt that henceforth to combat this passion would be impossible. I
applied my eye to the lens. Animula was there,—but what could have happened?
Some terrible change seemed to have taken place during my absence. Some secret
grief seemed to cloud the lovely features of her I gazed upon. Her face had
grown thin and haggard; her limbs trailed heavily; the wondrous lustre of her
golden hair had faded. She was ill!—ill, and I could not assist her! I believe
at that moment I would have gladly forfeited all claims to my human birthright,
if I could only have been dwarfed to the size of an animalcule, and permitted
to console her from whom fate had forever divided me.
I racked my brain for the solution of this mystery. What was it
that afflicted the sylph? She seemed to suffer intense pain. Her features
contracted, and she even writhed, as if with some internal agony. The wondrous
forests appeared also to have lost half their beauty. Their hues were dim and
in some places faded away altogether. I watched Animula for hours with a
breaking heart, and she seemed absolutely to wither away under my very eye. Suddenly
I remembered that I had not looked at the water-drop for several days. In fact,
I hated to see it; for it reminded me of the natural barrier between Animula
and myself. I hurriedly looked down on the stage of the microscope. The slide
was still there,—but, great heavens! the water-drop had vanished! The awful
truth burst upon me; it had evaporated; until it had become so minute as to be
invisible to the naked eye; I had been gazing on its last atom, the one that
contained Animula,—and she was dying!
I rushed again to the front of the lens, and looked through. Alas!
the last agony had seized her. The rainbow-hued forests had all melted away,
and Animula lay struggling feebly in what seemed to be a spot of dim light. Ah!
the sight was horrible; the limbs once so round and lovely shrivelling up into
nothings; the eyes,—those eyes that shone like heaven—being quenched into black
dust; the lustrous golden hair now lank and discoloured. The last throe came. I
beheld that final struggle of the blackening form—and I fainted.
When I awoke out of a trance of many hours, I found myself lying
amid the wreck of my instrument, myself as shattered in mind and body as it. I
crawled feebly to my bed, from which I did not rise for months.
They say now that I am mad; but they are mistaken. I am poor, for
I have neither the heart nor the will to work; all my money is spent, and I
live on charity. Young men's associations that love a joke invite me to lecture
on Optics before them, for which they pay me and laugh at me while I lecture.
"Linley, the mad microscopist," is the name I go by. I suppose that I
talk incoherently while I lecture. Who could talk sense when his brain is
haunted by such ghastly memories, while ever and anon among the shapes of death
I behold the radiant form of my lost Animula!
III.THE MUMMY'S FOOT
Théophile
Gautier
I had entered, in an idle mood, the shop of one of those curiosity
venders who are called marchands de bric-à-brac in that
Parisian argot which is so perfectly unintelligible elsewhere
in France.
You have doubtless glanced occasionally through the windows of
some of these shops, which have become so numerous now that it is fashionable
to buy antiquated furniture, and that every petty stock broker thinks he must
have his chambre au moyen âge.
There is one thing there which clings alike to the shop of the
dealer in old iron, the ware-room of the tapestry maker, the laboratory of the
chemist, and the studio of the painter: in all those gloomy dens where a
furtive daylight filters in through the window-shutters the most manifestly
ancient thing is dust. The cobwebs are more authentic than the guimp laces, and
the old pear-tree furniture on exhibition is actually younger than the mahogany
which arrived but yesterday from America.
The warehouse of my bric-à-brac dealer was a veritable Capharnaum.
All ages and all nations seemed to have made their rendezvous there. An
Etruscan lamp of red clay stood upon a Boule cabinet, with ebony panels,
brightly striped by lines of inlaid brass; a duchess of the court of Louis XV.
nonchalantly extended her fawn-like feet under a massive table of the time of
Louis XIII., with heavy spiral supports of oak, and carven designs of chimeras
and foliage intermingled.
Upon the denticulated shelves of several sideboards glittered
immense Japanese dishes with red and blue designs relieved by gilded hatching,
side by side with enamelled works by Bernard Palissy, representing serpents,
frogs, and lizards in relief.
From disembowelled cabinets escaped cascades of silver-lustrous Chinese
silks and waves of tinsels which an oblique sunbeam shot through with luminous
beads; while portraits of every era, in frames more or less tarnished, smiled
through their yellow varnish.
The striped breastplate of a damascened suit of Milanese armour
glittered in one corner; loves and nymphs of porcelain, Chinese grotesques,
vases of céladon and crackle-ware, Saxon and old Sèvres cups
encumbered the shelves and nooks of the apartment.
The dealer followed me closely through the tortuous way contrived between
the piles of furniture, warding off with his hand the hazardous sweep of my
coat-skirts, watching my elbows with the uneasy attention of an antiquarian and
a usurer.
It was a singular face, that of the merchant; an immense skull,
polished like a knee, and surrounded by a thin aureole of white hair, which
brought out the clear salmon tint of his complexion all the more strikingly,
lent him a false aspect of patriarchal bonhomie, counteracted,
however, by the scintillation of two little yellow eyes which trembled in their
orbits like two louis d'or upon quicksilver. The curve of his nose presented an
aquiline silhouette, which suggested the Oriental or Jewish type. His
hands—thin, slender, full of nerves which projected like strings upon the
finger-board of a violin, and armed with claws like those on the terminations
of bats' wings—shook with senile trembling; but those convulsively agitated
hands became firmer than steel pincers or lobsters' claws when they lifted any
precious article—an onyx cup, a Venetian glass, or a dish of Bohemian crystal.
This strange old man had an aspect so thoroughly rabbinical and cabalistic that
he would have been burnt on the mere testimony of his face three centuries ago.
"Will you not buy something from me to-day, sir? Here is a
Malay kreese with a blade undulating like flame. Look at those grooves
contrived for the blood to run along, those teeth set backward so as to tear
out the entrails in withdrawing the weapon. It is a fine character of ferocious
arm, and will look well in your collection. This two-handed sword is very
beautiful. It is the work of Josepe de la Hera; and this colichemarde,
with its fenestrated guard—what a superb specimen of handicraft!"
"No; I have quite enough weapons and instruments of carnage.
I want a small figure, something which will suit me as a paper-weight, for I
cannot endure those trumpery bronzes which the stationers sell, and which may
be found on everybody's desk."
The old gnome foraged among his ancient wares, and finally
arranged before me some antique bronzes, so-called at least; fragments of
malachite, little Hindoo or Chinese idols, a kind of poussah-toys in
jade-stone, representing the incarnations of Brahma or Vishnoo, and wonderfully
appropriate to the very undivine office of holding papers and letters in place.
I was hesitating between a porcelain dragon, all constellated with
warts, its mouth formidable with bristling tusks and ranges of teeth, and an
abominable little Mexican fetich, representing the god Vitziliputzili au
naturel, when I caught sight of a charming foot, which I at first took for
a fragment of some antique Venus.
It had those beautiful ruddy and tawny tints that lend to
Florentine bronze that warm living look so much preferable to the gray-green
aspect of common bronzes, which might easily be mistaken for statues in a state
of putrefaction. Satiny gleams played over its rounded forms, doubtless
polished by the amorous kisses of twenty centuries, for it seemed a Corinthian
bronze, a work of the best era of art, perhaps moulded by Lysippus himself.
"That foot will be my choice," I said to the merchant,
who regarded me with an ironical and saturnine air, and held out the object
desired that I might examine it more fully.
I was surprised at its lightness. It was not a foot of metal, but
in sooth a foot of flesh, an embalmed foot, a mummy's foot. On examining it
still more closely the very grain of the skin, and the almost imperceptible
lines impressed upon it by the texture of the bandages, became perceptible. The
toes were slender and delicate, and terminated by perfectly formed nails, pure
and transparent as agates. The great toe, slightly separated from the rest,
afforded a happy contrast, in the antique style, to the position of the other
toes, and lent it an aërial lightness—the grace of a bird's foot. The sole,
scarcely streaked by a few almost imperceptible cross lines, afforded evidence
that it had never touched the bare ground, and had only come in contact with
the finest matting of Nile rushes and the softest carpets of panther skin.
"Ha, ha, you want the foot of the Princess Hermonthis!"
exclaimed the merchant, with a strange giggle, fixing his owlish eyes upon me.
"Ha, ha, ha! For a paper-weight! An original idea!—an artistic idea! Old
Pharaoh would certainly have been surprised had some one told him that the foot
of his adored daughter would be used for a paper-weight after he had had a
mountain of granite hollowed out as a receptacle for the triple coffin, painted
and gilded, covered with hieroglyphics and beautiful paintings of the Judgment
of Souls," continued the queer little merchant, half audibly, as though
talking to himself.
"How much will you charge me for this mummy fragment?"
"Ah, the highest price I can get, for it is a superb piece.
If I had the match of it you could not have it for less than five hundred
francs. The daughter of a Pharaoh! Nothing is more rare."
"Assuredly that is not a common article, but still, how much
do you want? In the first place let me warn you that all my wealth consists of
just five louis. I can buy anything that costs five louis, but nothing dearer.
You might search my vest pockets and most secret drawers without even finding
one poor five-franc piece more."
"Five louis for the foot of the Princess Hermonthis! That is
very little, very little indeed. 'Tis an authentic foot," muttered the
merchant, shaking his head, and imparting a peculiar rotary motion to his eyes.
"Well, take it, and I will give you the bandages into the bargain,"
he added, wrapping the foot in an ancient damask rag. "Very fine! Real
damask—Indian damask which has never been redyed. It is strong, and yet it is
soft," he mumbled, stroking the frayed tissue with his fingers, through
the trade-acquired habit which moved him to praise even an object of such little
value that he himself deemed it only worth the giving away.
He poured the gold coins into a sort of medieval alms-purse
hanging at his belt, repeating:
"The foot of the Princess Hermonthis to be used for a
paper-weight!"
Then turning his phosphorescent eyes upon me, he exclaimed in a
voice strident as the crying of a cat which has swallowed a fish-bone:
"Old Pharaoh will not be well pleased. He loved his daughter,
the dear man!"
"You speak as if you were a contemporary of his. You are old
enough, goodness knows! but you do not date back to the Pyramids of
Egypt," I answered, laughingly, from the threshold.
I went home, delighted with my acquisition.
With the idea of putting it to profitable use as soon as possible,
I placed the foot of the divine Princess Hermonthis upon a heap of papers
scribbled over with verses, in themselves an undecipherable mosaic work of
erasures; articles freshly begun; letters forgotten, and posted in the table
drawer in stead of the letter-box, an error to which absent-minded people are
peculiarly liable. The effect was charming, bizarre, and romantic.
Well satisfied with this embellishment, I went out with the
gravity and pride becoming one who feels that he has the ineffable advantage
over all the passers-by whom he elbows, of possessing a piece of the Princess
Hermonthis, daughter of Pharaoh.
I looked upon all who did not possess, like myself, a paper-weight
so authentically Egyptian as very ridiculous people, and it seemed to me that
the proper occupation of every sensible man should consist in the mere fact of
having a mummy's foot upon his desk.
Happily I met some friends, whose presence distracted me in my
infatuation with this new acquisition. I went to dinner with them, for I could
not very well have dined with myself.
When I came back that evening, with my brain slightly confused by
a few glasses of wine, a vague whiff of Oriental perfume delicately titillated
my olfactory nerves. The heat of the room had warmed the natron, bitumen, and
myrrh in which the paraschistes, who cut open the bodies of the
dead, had bathed the corpse of the princess. It was a perfume at once sweet and
penetrating, a perfume that four thousand years had not been able to dissipate.
The Dream of Egypt was Eternity. Her odours have the solidity of
granite and endure as long.
I soon drank deeply from the black cup of sleep. For a few hours
all remained opaque to me. Oblivion and nothingness inundated me with their
sombre waves.
Yet light gradually dawned upon the darkness of my mind. Dreams
commenced to touch me softly in their silent flight.
The eyes of my soul were opened, and I beheld my chamber as it
actually was. I might have believed myself awake but for a vague consciousness
which assured me that I slept, and that something fantastic was about to take
place.
The odour of the myrrh had augmented in intensity, and I felt a
slight headache, which I very naturally attributed to several glasses of
champagne that we had drunk to the unknown gods and our future fortunes.
I peered through my room with a feeling of expectation which I saw
nothing to justify. Every article of furniture was in its proper place. The
lamp, softly shaded by its globe of ground crystal, burned upon its bracket;
the water-colour sketches shone under their Bohemian glass; the curtains hung
down languidly; everything wore an aspect of tranquil slumber.
After a few moments, however, all this calm interior appeared to
become disturbed. The woodwork cracked stealthily, the ash-covered log suddenly
emitted a jet of blue flame, and the disks of the pateras seemed like great
metallic eyes, watching, like myself, for the things which were about to
happen.
My eyes accidentally fell upon the desk where I had placed the
foot of the Princess Hermonthis.
Instead of remaining quiet, as behooved a foot which had been
embalmed for four thousand years, it commenced to act in a nervous manner,
contracted itself, and leaped over the papers like a startled frog. One would
have imagined that it had suddenly been brought into contact with a galvanic
battery. I could distinctly hear the dry sound made by its little heel, hard as
the hoof of a gazelle.
I became rather discontented with my acquisition, inasmuch as I
wished my paper-weights to be of a sedentary disposition, and thought it very
unnatural that feet should walk about without legs, then I commenced to
experience a feeling closely akin to fear.
Suddenly I saw the folds of my bed-curtain stir, and heard a
bumping sound, like that caused by some person hopping on one foot across the
floor. I must confess I became alternately hot and cold, that I felt a strange
wind chill my back, and that my suddenly rising hair caused my night-cap to
execute a leap of several yards.
The bed-curtains opened and I beheld the strangest figure
imaginable before me.
It was a young girl of a very deep coffee-brown complexion, like
the bayadere Amani, and possessing the purest Egyptian type of perfect beauty.
Her eyes were almond-shaped and oblique, with eyebrows so black that they
seemed blue; her nose was exquisitely chiselled, almost Greek in its delicacy
of outline; and she might indeed have been taken for a Corinthian statue of
bronze but for the prominence of her cheek-bones and the slightly African
fulness of her lips, which compelled one to recognize her as belonging beyond
all doubt to the hieroglyphic race which dwelt upon the banks of the Nile.
Her arms, slender and spindle-shaped like those of very young
girls, were encircled by a peculiar kind of metal bands and bracelets of glass
beads; her hair was all twisted into little cords, and she wore upon her bosom
a little idol-figure of green paste, bearing a whip with seven lashes, which
proved it to be an image of Isis; her brow was adorned with a shining plate of
gold, and a few traces of paint relieved the coppery tint of her cheeks.
As for her costume, it was very odd indeed.
Fancy a pagne, or skirt, all formed of little strips
of material bedizened with red and black hieroglyphics, stiffened with bitumen,
and apparently belonging to a freshly unbandaged mummy.
In one of those sudden flights of thought so common in dreams I
heard the hoarse falsetto of the bric-à-brac dealer, repeating like a
monotonous refrain the phrase he had uttered in his shop with so enigmatical an
intonation:
"Old Pharaoh will not be well pleased. He loved his daughter,
the dear man!"
One strange circumstance, which was not at all calculated to
restore my equanimity, was that the apparition had but one foot; the other was
broken off at the ankle!
She approached the table where the foot was starting and
fidgetting about more than ever, and there supported herself upon the edge of
the desk. I saw her eyes fill with pearly gleaming tears.
Although she had not as yet spoken, I fully comprehended the
thoughts which agitated her. She looked at her foot—for it was indeed her
own—with an exquisitely graceful expression of coquettish sadness, but the foot
leaped and ran hither and thither, as though impelled on steel springs.
Twice or thrice she extended her hand to seize it, but could not
succeed.
Then commenced between the Princess Hermonthis and her foot—which
appeared to be endowed with a special life of its own—a very fantastic dialogue
in a most ancient Coptic tongue, such as might have been spoken thirty
centuries ago in the syrinxes of the land of Ser. Luckily I understood Coptic
perfectly well that night.
The Princess Hermonthis cried, in a voice sweet and vibrant as the
tones of a crystal bell:
"Well, my dear little foot, you always flee from me, yet I
always took good care of you. I bathed you with perfumed water in a bowl of
alabaster; I smoothed your heel with pumice-stone mixed with palm oil; your
nails were cut with golden scissors and polished with a hippopotamus tooth; I
was careful to select tatbebs for you, painted and embroidered
and turned up at the toes, which were the envy of all the young girls in Egypt.
You wore on your great toe rings bearing the device of the sacred Scarabæus,
and you supported one of the lightest bodies that a lazy foot could
sustain."
The foot replied in a pouting and chagrined tone:
"You know well that I do not belong to myself any longer. I
have been bought and paid for. The old merchant knew what he was about. He bore
you a grudge for having refused to espouse him. This is an ill turn which he
has done you. The Arab who violated your royal coffin in the subterranean pits
of the necropolis of Thebes was sent thither by him. He desired to prevent you
from being present at the reunion of the shadowy nations in the cities below.
Have you five pieces of gold for my ransom?"
"Alas, no! My jewels, my rings, my purses of gold and silver
were all stolen from me," answered the Princess Hermonthis, with a sob.
"Princess," I then exclaimed, "I never retained
anybody's foot unjustly. Even though you have not got the five louis which it
cost me, I present it to you gladly. I should feel unutterably wretched to
think that I were the cause of so amiable a person as the Princess Hermonthis
being lame."
I delivered this discourse in a royally gallant, troubadour tone
which must have astonished the beautiful Egyptian girl.
She turned a look of deepest gratitude upon me, and her eyes shone
with bluish gleams of light.
She took her foot, which surrendered itself willingly this time,
like a woman about to put on her little shoe, and adjusted it to her leg with
much skill.
This operation over, she took a few steps about the room, as
though to assure herself that she was really no longer lame.
"Ah, how pleased my father will be! He who was so unhappy
because of my mutilation, and who from the moment of my birth set a whole
nation at work to hollow me out a tomb so deep that he might preserve me intact
until that last day, when souls must be weighed in the balance of Amenthi! Come
with me to my father. He will receive you kindly, for you have given me back my
foot."
I thought this proposition natural enough. I arrayed myself in a
dressing-gown of large-flowered pattern, which lent me a very Pharaonic aspect,
hurriedly put on a pair of Turkish slippers, and informed the Princess
Hermonthis that I was ready to follow her.
Before starting, Hermonthis took from her neck the little idol of
green paste, and laid it on the scattered sheets of paper which covered the
table.
"It is only fair," she observed, smilingly, "that I
should replace your paper-weight."
She gave me her hand, which felt soft and cold, like the skin of a
serpent, and we departed.
We passed for some time with the velocity of an arrow through a
fluid and grayish expanse, in which half-formed silhouettes flitted swiftly by
us, to right and left.
For an instant we saw only sky and sea.
A few moments later obelisks commenced to tower in the distance;
pylons and vast flights of steps guarded by sphinxes became clearly outlined
against the horizon.
We had reached our destination.
The princess conducted me to a mountain of rose-coloured granite,
in the face of which appeared an opening so narrow and low that it would have
been difficult to distinguish it from the fissures in the rock, had not its
location been marked by two stelæ wrought with sculptures.
Hermonthis kindled a torch and led the way before me.
We traversed corridors hewn through the living rock. These walls
covered with hieroglyphics and paintings of allegorical processions, might well
have occupied thousands of arms for thousands of years in their formation.
These corridors of interminable length opened into square chambers, in the
midst of which pits had been contrived, through which we descended by
cramp-irons or spiral stairways. These pits again conducted us into other
chambers, opening into other corridors, likewise decorated with painted
sparrow-hawks, serpents coiled in circles, the symbols of the tau and pedum—prodigious
works of art which no living eye can ever examine—interminable legends of
granite which only the dead have time to read through all eternity.
At last we found ourselves in a hall so vast, so enormous, so
immeasurable, that the eye could not reach its limits. Files of monstrous
columns stretched far out of sight on every side, between which twinkled livid
stars of yellowish flame; points of light which revealed further depths
incalculable in the darkness beyond.
The Princess Hermonthis still held my hand, and graciously saluted
the mummies of her acquaintance.
My eyes became accustomed to the dim twilight, and objects became
discernible.
I beheld the kings of the subterranean races seated upon
thrones—grand old men, though dry, withered, wrinkled like parchment, and
blackened with naphtha and bitumen—all wearing pshents of
gold, and breast-plates and gorgets glittering with precious stones, their eyes
immovably fixed like the eyes of sphinxes, and their long beards whitened by
the snow of centuries. Behind them stood their peoples, in the stiff and
constrained posture enjoined by Egyptian art, all eternally preserving the
attitude prescribed by the hieratic code. Behind these nations, the cats,
ibixes, and crocodiles contemporary with them—rendered monstrous of aspect by
their swathing bands—mewed, flapped their wings, or extended their jaws in a
saurian giggle.
All the Pharaohs were there—Cheops, Chephrenes, Psammetichus,
Sesostris, Amenotaph—all the dark rulers of the pyramids and syrinxes. On yet
higher thrones sat Chronos and Xixouthros, who was contemporary with the
deluge, and Tubal Cain, who reigned before it.
The beard of King Xixouthros had grown seven times around the
granite table, upon which he leaned, lost in deep reverie, and buried in
dreams.
Farther back, through a dusty cloud, I beheld dimly the
seventy-two preadamite kings, with their seventy-two peoples, forever passed
away.
After permitting me to gaze upon this bewildering spectacle a few
moments, the Princess Hermonthis presented me to her father Pharaoh, who
favoured me with a most gracious nod.
"I have found my foot again! I have found my foot!" cried
the princess, clapping her little hands together with every sign of frantic
joy. "It was this gentleman who restored it to me."
The races of Kemi, the races of Nahasi—all the black, bronzed, and
copper-coloured nations repeated in chorus:
"The Princess Hermonthis has found her foot again!"
Even Xixouthros himself was visibly affected.
He raised his heavy eyelids, stroked his moustache with his
fingers, and turned upon me a glance weighty with centuries.
"By Oms, the dog of Hell, and Tmei, daughter of the Sun and
of Truth, this is a brave and worthy lad!" exclaimed Pharaoh, pointing to
me with his sceptre, which was terminated with a lotus-flower.
"What recompense do you desire?"
Filled with that daring inspired by dreams in which nothing seems
impossible, I asked him for the hand of the Princess Hermonthis. The hand
seemed to me a very proper antithetic recompense for the foot.
Pharaoh opened wide his great eyes of glass in astonishment at my
witty request.
"What country do you come from, what is your age?"
"I am a Frenchman, and I am twenty-seven years old, venerable
Pharaoh."
"Twenty-seven years old, and he wishes to espouse the
Princess Hermonthis who is thirty centuries old!" cried out at once all
the Thrones and all the Circles of Nations.
Only Hermonthis herself did not seem to think my request
unreasonable.
"If you were even only two thousand years old," replied
the ancient king, "I would willingly give you the princess, but the
disproportion is too great; and, besides, we must give our daughters husbands
who will last well. You do not know how to preserve yourselves any longer. Even
those who died only fifteen centuries ago are already no more than a handful of
dust. Behold, my flesh is solid as basalt, my bones are bones of steel!
"I will be present on the last day of the world with the same
body and the same features which I had during my lifetime. My daughter
Hermonthis will last longer than a statue of bronze.
"Then the last particles of your dust will have been
scattered abroad by the winds, and even Isis herself, who was able to find the
atoms of Osiris, would scarce be able to recompense your being.
"See how vigorous I yet remain, and how mighty is my
grasp," he added, shaking my hand in the English fashion with a strength
that buried my rings in the flesh of my fingers.
He squeezed me so hard that I awoke, and found my friend Alfred
shaking me by the arm to make me get up.
"Oh, you everlasting sleeper! Must I have you carried out
into the middle of the street, and fireworks exploded in your ears? It is
afternoon. Don't you recollect your promise to take me with you to see M.
Aguado's Spanish pictures?"
"God! I forgot all, all about it," I answered, dressing
myself hurriedly. "We will go there at once. I have the permit lying there
on my desk."
I started to find it, but fancy my astonishment when I beheld,
instead of the mummy's foot I had purchased the evening before, the little
green paste idol left in its place by the Princess Hermonthis!
IV.MR. BLOKE'S ITEM
[written about 1865]
Mark
Twain
Our esteemed friend, Mr. John William Bloke, of Virginia City,
walked into the office where we are sub-editor at a late hour last night, with
an expression of profound and heartfelt suffering upon his countenance, and,
sighing heavily, laid the following item reverently upon the desk, and walked
slowly out again. He paused a moment at the door, and seemed struggling to
command his feelings sufficiently to enable him to speak, and then, nodding his
head toward his manuscript, ejaculated in a broken voice, "Friend of
mine—oh! how sad!" and burst into tears. We were so moved at his distress
that we did not think to call him back and endeavour to comfort him until he
was gone, and it was too late. The paper had already gone to press, but knowing
that our friend would consider the publication of this item important, and
cherishing the hope that to print it would afford a melancholy satisfaction to
his sorrowing heart, we stopped the press at once and inserted it in our
columns:
Distressing
Accident.—Last
evening, about six o'clock, as Mr. William Schuyler, an old and respectable
citizen of South Park, was leaving his residence to go downtown, as has been
his usual custom for many years with the exception only of a short interval in
the spring of 1850, during which he was confined to his bed by injuries
received in attempting to stop a runaway horse by thoughtlessly placing himself
directly in its wake and throwing up his hands and shouting, which if he had
done so even a single moment sooner, must inevitably have frightened the animal
still more instead of checking its speed, although disastrous enough to himself
as it was, and rendered more melancholy and distressing by reason of the
presence of his wife's mother, who was there and saw the sad occurrence
notwithstanding it is at least likely, though not necessarily so, that she
should be reconnoitering in another direction when incidents occur, not being
vivacious and on the lookout, as a general thing, but even the reverse, as her
own mother is said to have stated, who is no more, but died in the full hope of
a glorious resurrection, upwards of three years ago, aged eighty-six, being a
Christian woman and without guile, as it were, or property, in consequence of
the fire of 1849, which destroyed every single thing she had in the world. But
such is life. Let us all take warning by this solemn occurrence, and let us
endeavour so to conduct ourselves that when we come to die we can do it. Let us
place our hands upon our heart, and say with earnestness and sincerity that
from this day forth, we will beware of the intoxicating bowl.—First Edition
of the Californian.
The head editor has been in here raising the mischief, and tearing
his hair and kicking the furniture about, and abusing me like a pickpocket. He
says that every time he leaves me in charge of the paper for half an hour I get
imposed upon by the first infant or the first idiot that comes along. And he
says that that distressing item of Mr. Bloke's is nothing but a lot of
distressing bosh, and has no point to it, and no sense in it, and no
information in it, and that there was no sort of necessity for stopping the
press to publish it.
Now all this comes of being good-hearted. If I had been as unaccommodating
and unsympathetic as some people, I would have told Mr. Bloke that I wouldn't
receive his communication at such a late hour; but no, his snuffling distress
touched my heart, and I jumped at the chance of doing something to modify his
misery. I never read his item to see whether there was anything wrong about it,
but hastily wrote the few lines which preceded it, and sent it to the printers.
And what has my kindness done for me? It has done nothing but bring down upon
me a storm of abuse and ornamental blasphemy.
Now I will read that item myself, and see if there is any
foundation for all this fuss. And if there is, the author of it shall hear from
me.
I have read it, and I am bound to admit that it seems a little
mixed at a first glance. However, I will peruse it once more.
I have read it again, and it does really seem a good deal more
mixed than ever.
I have read it over five times, but if I can get at the meaning of
it I wish I may get my just deserts. It won't bear analysis. There are things about
it which I cannot understand at all. It don't say whatever became of William
Schuyler. It just says enough about him to get one interested in his career,
and then drops him. Who is William Schuyler, anyhow, and what part of South
Park did he live in, and if he started down-town at six o'clock, did he ever
get there, and if he did, did anything happen to him? Is he the
individual that met with the "distressing accident?" Considering the
elaborate circumstantiality of detail observable in the item, it seems to me
that it ought to contain more information than it does. On the contrary, it is
obscure—and not only obscure, but utterly incomprehensible. Was the breaking of
Mr. Schuyler's leg, fifteen years ago, the "distressing accident"
that plunged Mr. Bloke into unspeakable grief, and caused him to come up here
at dead of night and stop our press to acquaint the world with the
circumstance? Or did the "distressing accident" consist in the
destruction of Schuyler's mother-in-law's property in early times? Or did it
consist in the death of that person herself three years ago (albeit it does not
appear that she died by accident)? In a word, what did that
"distressing accident" consist in? What did that driveling ass of a
Schuyler stand in the wake of a runaway horse for, with his
shouting and gesticulating, if he wanted to stop him? And how the mischief
could he get run over by a horse that had already passed beyond him? And what
are we to take "warning" by? And how is this extraordinary chapter of
incomprehensibilities going to be a "lesson" to us? And, above all,
what has the intoxicating "bowl" got to do with it, anyhow? It is not
stated that Schuyler drank, or that his wife drank, or that his mother-in-law
drank, or that the horse drank—wherefore, then, the reference to the intoxing
bowl? It does seem to me that if Mr. Bloke had let the intoxicating bowl alone
himself, he never would get into so much trouble about this exasperating
imaginary accident. I have read this absurd item over and over again, with all its
insinuating plausibility, until my head swims; but I can make neither head nor
tail of it. There certainly seems to have been an accident of some kind or
other, but it is impossible to determine what the nature of it was, or who was
the sufferer by it. I do not like to do it, but I feel compelled to request
that the next time anything happens to one of Mr. Bloke's friends, he will
append such explanatory notes to his account of it as will enable me to find
out what sort of an accident it was and to whom it happened. I had rather all
his friends should die than that I should be driven to the verge of lunacy
again in trying to cipher out the meaning of another such production as the
above.
V.A GHOST
Lafcadio
Hearn
I
Perhaps the man who never wanders away from the place of his birth
may pass all his life without knowing ghosts; but the nomad is more than likely
to make their acquaintance. I refer to the civilized nomad, whose wanderings
are not prompted by hope of gain, nor determined by pleasure, but simply
compelled by certain necessities of his being,—the man whose inner secret
nature is totally at variance with the stable conditions of a society to which
he belongs only by accident. However intellectually trained, he must always
remain the slave of singular impulses which have no rational source, and which
will often amaze him no less by their mastering power than by their continuous
savage opposition to his every material interest.... These may, perhaps, be
traced back to some ancestral habit,—be explained by self-evident hereditary
tendencies. Or perhaps they may not,—in which event the victim can only surmise
himself the Imago of some pre-existent larval aspiration—the
full development of desires long dormant in a chain of more limited lives....
Assuredly the nomadic impulses differ in every member of the
class,—take infinite variety from individual sensitiveness to environment: the
line of least resistance for one being that of greatest resistance for
another;—no two courses of true nomadism can ever be wholly the same.
Diversified of necessity both impulse and direction, even as human nature is
diversified. Never since consciousness of time began were two beings born who
possessed exactly the same quality of voice, the same precise degree of nervous
impressibility, or,—in brief, the same combination of those viewless
force-storing molecules which shape and poise themselves in sentient substance.
Vain, therefore, all striving to particularize the curious psychology of such
existences: at the very utmost it is possible only to describe such impulses
and perceptions of nomadism as lie within the very small range of one's own
observation. And whatever in these be strictly personal can have little
interest or value except in so far as it holds something in common with the
great general experience of restless lives. To such experience may belong, I
think, one ultimate result of all those irrational
partings,—self-wreckings,—sudden isolations,—abrupt severances from all
attachment, which form the history of the nomad ... the knowledge that a
strange silence is ever deepening and expanding about one's life, and that in
that silence there are ghosts.
II
... Oh! the first vague charm, the first sunny illusion of some
fair city,—when vistas of unknown streets all seem leading to the realization
of a hope you dare not even whisper; when even the shadows look beautiful, and
strange façades appear to smile good omen through light of gold! And those
first winning relations with men, while you are still a stranger, and only the
better and the brighter side of their nature is turned to you!... All is yet a
delightful, luminous indefiniteness—sensation of streets and of men,—like some
beautifully tinted photograph slightly out of focus....
Then the slow solid sharpening of details all about you,—thrusting
through illusion and dispelling it—growing keener and harder day by day,
through long dull seasons, while your feet learn to remember all asperities of
pavements, and your eyes all physiognomy of buildings and of persons,—failures
of masonry,—furrowed lines of pain. Thereafter only the aching of monotony
intolerable,—and the hatred of sameness grown dismal,—and dread of the
merciless, inevitable, daily and hourly repetition of things;—while those
impulses of unrest, which are Nature's urgings through that ancestral experience
which lives in each one of us,—outcries of sea and peak and sky to man,—ever
make wilder appeal.... Strong friendships may have been formed; but there
finally comes a day when even these can give no consolation for the pain of
monotony,—and you feel that in order to live you must decide,—regardless of
result,—to shake forever from your feet the familiar dust of that place....
And, nevertheless, in the hour of departure you feel a pang. As
train or steamer bears you away from the city and its myriad associations, the
old illusive impression will quiver back about you for a moment,—not as if to
mock the expectation of the past, but softly, touchingly, as if pleading to you
to stay; and such a sadness, such a tenderness may come to you, as one knows
after reconciliation with a friend misapprehended and unjustly judged.... But
you will never more see those streets,—except in dreams.
Through sleep only they will open again before you,—steeped in the
illusive vagueness of the first long-past day,—peopled only by friends
outreaching to you. Soundlessly you will tread those shadowy pavements many
times,—to knock in thought, perhaps, at doors which the dead will open to
you.... But with the passing of years all becomes dim—so dim that even asleep
you know 'tis only a ghost-city, with streets going to nowhere. And finally
whatever is left of it becomes confused and blended with cloudy memories of
other cities,—one endless bewilderment of filmy architecture in which nothing
is distinctly recognizable, though the whole gives the sensation of having been
seen before ... ever so long ago.
Meantime, in the course of wanderings more or less aimless, there
has slowly grown upon you a suspicion of being haunted,—so frequently does a
certain hazy presence intrude itself upon the visual memory. This, however,
appears to gain rather than to lose in definiteness: with each return its
visibility seems to increase.... And the suspicion that you may be haunted
gradually develops into a certainty.
III
You are haunted,—whether your way lie through the brown gloom of
London winter, or the azure splendour of an equatorial day,—whether your steps
be tracked in snows, or in the burning black sand of a tropic beach,—whether
you rest beneath the swart shade of Northern pines, or under spidery umbrages
of palm:—you are haunted ever and everywhere by a certain gentle presence.
There is nothing fearsome in this haunting ... the gentlest face ... the
kindliest voice—oddly familiar and distinct, though feeble as the hum of a
bee....
But it tantalizes,—this haunting,—like those sudden surprises of
sensation within us, though seemingly not of us,
which some dreamers have sought to interpret as inherited
remembrances,—recollections of pre-existence.... Vainly you ask
yourself:—"Whose voice?—whose face?" It is neither young nor old, the
Face: it has a vapoury indefinableness that leaves it a riddle;—its diaphaneity
reveals no particular tint;—perhaps you may not even be quite sure whether it
has a beard. But its expression is always gracious, passionless, smiling—like
the smiling of unknown friends in dreams, with infinite indulgence for any
folly, even a dream-folly.... Except in that you cannot permanently banish it,
the presence offers no positive resistance to your will: it accepts each
caprice with obedience; it meets your every whim with angelic patience. It is
never critical,—never makes plaint even by a look,—never proves irksome: yet
you cannot ignore it, because of a certain queer power it possesses to make
something stir and quiver in your heart,—like an old vague sweet
regret,—something buried alive which will not die.... And so often does this
happen that desire to solve the riddle becomes a pain,—that you finally find
yourself making supplication to the Presence,—addressing to it questions which
it will never answer directly, but only by a smile or by words having no
relation to the asking,—words enigmatic, which make mysterious agitation in old
forsaken fields of memory ... even as a wind betimes, over wide wastes of
marsh, sets all the grasses whispering about nothing. But you will question on,
untiringly, through the nights and days of years:—
—"Who are you?—what are you?—what is this weird relation that
you bear to me? All you say to me I feel that I have heard before—but
where?—but when? By what name am I to call you,—since you will answer to none
that I remember? Surely you do not live: yet I know the sleeping-places of all
my dead,—and yours, I do not know! Neither are you any dream;—for dreams
distort and change; and you, you are ever the same. Nor are you any
hallucination; for all my senses are still vivid and strong.... This only I
know beyond doubt,—that you are of the Past: you belong to memory—but to the
memory of what dead suns?..."
Then, some day or night, unexpectedly, there comes to you at
least,—with a soft swift tingling shock as of fingers invisible,—the knowledge
that the Face is not the memory of any one face, but a multiple image formed of
the traits of many dear faces,—superimposed by remembrance, and interblended by
affection into one ghostly personality,—infinitely sympathetic, phantasmally
beautiful: a Composite of recollections! And the Voice is the echo of no one
voice, but the echoing of many voices, molten into a single utterance,—a single
impossible tone,—thin through remoteness of time, but inexpressibly caressing.
IV
Thou most gentle Composite!—thou nameless and exquisite Unreality,
thrilled into semblance of being from out the sum of all lost sympathies!—thou
Ghost of all dear vanished things ... with thy vain appeal of eyes that looked
for my coming,—and vague faint pleading of voices against oblivion,—and thin
electric touch of buried hands, ... must thou pass away forever with my
passing,—even as the Shadow that I cast, O thou Shadowing of Souls?...
I am not sure.... For there comes to me this dream,—that if aught
in human life hold power to pass—like a swerved sunray through interstellar
spaces,—into the infinite mystery ... to send one sweet strong vibration
through immemorial Time ... might not some luminous future be peopled with such
as thou?... And in so far as that which makes for us the subtlest charm of
being can lend one choral note to the Symphony of the Unknowable Purpose,—in so
much might there not endure also to greet thee, another Composite One,—embodying
indeed, the comeliness of many lives, yet keeping likewise some visible memory
of all that may have been gracious in this thy friend...?
VI.THE MAN WHO WENT TOO FAR
E.
F. Benson
The little village of St. Faith's nestles in a hollow of wooded
hill up on the north bank of the river Fawn in the county of Hampshire huddling
close round its gray Norman church as if for spiritual protection against the
fays and fairies, the trolls and "little people," who might be
supposed still to linger in the vast empty spaces of the New Forest, and to
come after dusk and do their doubtful businesses. Once outside the hamlet you
may walk in any direction (so long as you avoid the high road which leads to
Brockenhurst) for the length of a summer afternoon without seeing sign of human
habitation, or possibly even catching sight of another human being. Shaggy wild
ponies may stop their feeding for a moment as you pass, the white scuts of
rabbits will vanish into their burrows, a brown viper perhaps will glide from
your path into a clump of heather, and unseen birds will chuckle in the bushes,
but it may easily happen that for a long day you will see nothing human. But
you will not feel in the least lonely; in summer, at any rate, the sunlight
will be gay with butterflies, and the air thick with all those woodland sounds
which like instruments in an orchestra combine to play the great symphony of
the yearly festival of June. Winds whisper in the birches and sigh among the
firs; bees are busy with their irredolent labor among the heather, a myriad
birds chirp in the green temples of the forest trees, and the voice of the
river prattling over stony places, bubbling into pools, chuckling and gulping
round corners, gives you the sense that many presences and companions are near
at hand.
Yet, oddly enough, though one would have thought that these benign
and cheerful influences of wholesome air and spaciousness of forest were very
healthful comrades for a man, in so far as nature can really influence this
wonderful human genus which has in these centuries learned to defy her most
violent storms in its well-established houses, to bridle her torrents and make
them light its streets, to tunnel her mountains and plough her seas, the
inhabitants of St. Faith's will not willingly venture into the forest after
dark. For in spite of the silence and loneliness of the hooded night it seems
that a man is not sure in what company he may suddenly find himself, and though
it is difficult to get from these villagers any very clear story of occult
appearances, the feeling is widespread. One story indeed I have heard with some
definiteness, the tale of a monstrous goat that has been seen to skip with
hellish glee about the woods and shady places, and this perhaps is connected
with the story which I have here attempted to piece together. It too is
well-known to them; for all remember the young artist who died here not long
ago, a young man, or so he struck the beholder, of great personal beauty, with
something about him that made men's faces to smile and brighten when they
looked on him. His ghost they will tell you "walks" constantly by the
stream and through the woods which he loved so, and in especial it haunts a
certain house, the last of the village, where he lived, and its garden in which
he was done to death. For my part I am inclined to think that the terror of the
Forest dates chiefly from that day. So, such as the story is, I have set it
forth in connected form. It is based partly on the accounts of the villagers,
but mainly on that of Darcy, a friend of mine and a friend of the man with whom
these events were chiefly concerned.
The day had been one of untarnished midsummer splendour, and as
the sun drew near to its setting, the glory of the evening grew every moment
more crystalline, more miraculous. Westward from St. Faith's the beechwood
which stretched for some miles toward the heathery upland beyond already cast
its veil of clear shadow over the red roofs of the village, but the spire of
the gray church, overtopping all, still pointed a flaming orange finger into
the sky. The river Fawn, which runs below, lay in sheets of sky-reflected blue,
and wound its dreamy devious course round the edge of this wood, where a rough
two-planked bridge crossed from the bottom of the garden of the last house in
the village, and communicated by means of a little wicker gate with the wood
itself. Then once out of the shadow of the wood the stream lay in flaming pools
of the molten crimson of the sunset, and lost itself in the haze of woodland
distances.
This house at the end of the village stood outside the shadow, and
the lawn which sloped down to the river was still flecked with sunlight.
Garden-beds of dazzling colour lined its gravel walks, and down the middle of
it ran a brick pergola, half-hidden in clusters of rambler-rose and purple with
starry clematis. At the bottom end of it, between two of its pillars, was slung
a hammock containing a shirt sleeved figure.
The house itself lay somewhat remote from the rest of the village,
and a footpath leading across two fields, now tall and fragrant with hay, was
its only communication with the high road. It was low-built, only two stories
in height, and like the garden, its walls were a mass of flowering roses. A
narrow stone terrace ran along the garden front, over which was stretched an
awning, and on the terrace a young silent-footed man-servant was busied with
the laying of the table for dinner. He was neat-handed and quick with his job,
and having finished it he went back into the house, and reappeared again with a
large rough bath-towel on his arm. With this he went to the hammock in the
pergola.
"Nearly eight, sir," he said.
"Has Mr. Darcy come yet?" asked a voice from the
hammock.
"No, sir."
"If I'm not back when he comes, tell him that I'm just having
a bathe before dinner."
The servant went back to the house, and after a moment or two
Frank Halton struggled to a sitting posture, and slipped out on to the grass.
He was of medium height and rather slender in build, but the supple ease and
grace of his movements gave the impression of great physical strength: even his
descent from the hammock was not an awkward performance. His face and hands
were of very dark complexion, either from constant exposure to wind and sun,
or, as his black hair and dark eyes tended to show, from some strain of
southern blood. His head was small, his face of an exquisite beauty of
modelling, while the smoothness of its contour would have led you to believe
that he was a beardless lad still in his teens. But something, some look which
living and experience alone can give, seemed to contradict that, and finding
yourself completely puzzled as to his age, you would next moment probably cease
to think about that, and only look at this glorious specimen of young manhood
with wondering satisfaction.
He was dressed as became the season and the heat, and wore only a
shirt open at the neck, and a pair of flannel trousers. His head, covered very
thickly with a somewhat rebellious crop of short curly hair, was bare as he
strolled across the lawn to the bathing-place that lay below. Then for a moment
there was silence, then the sound of splashed and divided waters, and presently
after, a great shout of ecstatic joy, as he swam up-stream with the foamed
water standing in a frill round his neck. Then after some five minutes of
limb-stretching struggle with the flood, he turned over on his back, and with
arms thrown wide, floated down-stream, ripple-cradled and inert. His eyes were
shut, and between half-parted lips he talked gently to himself.
"I am one with it," he said to himself, "the river
and I, I and the river. The coolness and splash of it is I, and the water-herbs
that wave in it are I also. And my strength and my limbs are not mine but the
river's. It is all one, all one, dear Fawn."
A quarter of an hour later he appeared again at the bottom of the
lawn, dressed as before, his wet hair already drying into its crisp short curls
again. Then he paused a moment, looking back at the stream with the smile with
which men look on the face of a friend, then turned toward the house.
Simultaneously his servant came to the door leading on to the terrace, followed
by a man who appeared to be some half-way through the fourth decade of his
years. Frank and he saw each other across the bushes and garden-beds, and each
quickening his step, they met suddenly face to face round an angle of the
garden walk, in the fragrance of syringa.
"My dear Darcy," cried Frank, "I am charmed to see
you."
But the other stared at him in amazement.
"Frank!" he exclaimed.
"Yes, that is my name," he said laughing, "what is
the matter?"
Darcy took his hand.
"What have you done to yourself?" he asked. "You
are a boy again."
"Ah, I have a lot to tell you," said Frank. "Lots
that you will hardly believe, but I shall convince you——"
He broke off suddenly, and held up his hand.
"Hush, there is my nightingale," he said.
The smile of recognition and welcome with which he had greeted his
friend faded from his face, and a look of rapt wonder took its place, as of a
lover listening to the voice of his beloved. His mouth parted slightly, showing
the white line of teeth, and his eyes looked out and out till they seemed to
Darcy to be focused on things beyond the vision of man. Then something perhaps
startled the bird, for the song ceased.
"Yes, lots to tell you," he said. "Really I am
delighted to see you. But you look rather white and pulled down; no wonder after
that fever. And there is to be no nonsense about this visit. It is June now,
you stop here till you are fit to begin work again. Two months at least."
"Ah, I can't trespass quite to that extent."
Frank took his arm and walked him down the grass.
"Trespass? Who talks of trespass? I shall tell you quite
openly when I am tired of you, but you know when we had the studio together, we
used not to bore each other. However, it is ill talking of going away on the
moment of your arrival. Just a stroll to the river, and then it will be
dinner-time."
Darcy took out his cigarette case, and offered it to the other.
Frank laughed.
"No, not for me. Dear me, I suppose I used to smoke once. How
very odd!"
"Given it up?"
"I don't know. I suppose I must have. Anyhow I don't do it
now. I would as soon think of eating meat."
"Another victim on the smoking altar of vegetarianism?"
"Victim?" asked Frank. "Do I strike you as
such?"
He paused on the margin of the stream and whistled softly. Next
moment a moor-hen made its splashing flight across the river, and ran up the
bank. Frank took it very gently in his hands and stroked its head, as the
creature lay against his shirt.
"And is the house among the reeds still secure?" he
half-crooned to it. "And is the missus quite well, and are the neighbours
flourishing? There, dear, home with you," and he flung it into the air.
"That bird's very tame," said Darcy, slightly
bewildered.
"It is rather," said Frank, following its flight.
During dinner Frank chiefly occupied himself in bringing himself
up-to-date in the movements and achievements of this old friend whom he had not
seen for six years. Those six years, it now appeared, had been full of incident
and success for Darcy; he had made a name for himself as a portrait painter
which bade fair to outlast the vogue of a couple of seasons, and his leisure
time had been brief. Then some four months previously he had been through a
severe attack of typhoid, the result of which as concerns this story was that
he had come down to this sequestrated place to recruit.
"Yes, you've got on," said Frank at the end. "I
always knew you would. A.R.A. with more in prospect. Money? You roll in it, I
suppose, and, O Darcy, how much happiness have you had all these years? That is
the only imperishable possession. And how much have you learned? Oh, I don't
mean in Art. Even I could have done well in that."
Darcy laughed.
"Done well? My dear fellow, all I have learned in these six
years you knew, so to speak, in your cradle. Your old pictures fetch huge
prices. Do you never paint now?"
Frank shook his head.
"No, I'm too busy," he said.
"Doing what? Please tell me. That is what every one is for
ever asking me."
"Doing? I suppose you would say I do nothing."
Darcy glanced up at the brilliant young face opposite him.
"It seems to suit you, that way of being busy," he said.
"Now, it's your turn. Do you read? Do you study? I remember you saying
that it would do us all—all us artists, I mean—a great deal of good if we would
study any one human face carefully for a year, without recording a line. Have
you been doing that?"
Frank shook his head again.
"I mean exactly what I say," he said, "I have
been doing nothing. And I have never been so occupied. Look at
me, have I not done something to myself to begin with?"
"You are two years younger than I," said Darcy, "at
least you used to be. You therefore are thirty-five. But had I never seen you
before I should say you were just twenty. But was it worth while to spend six
years of greatly occupied life in order to look twenty? Seems rather like a
woman of fashion."
Frank laughed boisterously.
"First time I've ever been compared to that particular bird
of prey," he said. "No, that has not been my occupation—in fact I am
only very rarely conscious that one effect of my occupation has been that. Of
course, it must have been if one comes to think of it. It is not very
important. Quite true my body has become young. But that is very little; I have
become young."
Darcy pushed back his chair and sat sideways to the table looking
at the other.
"Has that been your occupation then?" he asked.
"Yes, that anyhow is one aspect of it. Think what youth means! It is the
capacity for growth, mind, body, spirit, all grow, all get stronger, all have a
fuller, firmer life every day. That is something, considering that every day
that passed after the ordinary man reaches the full-blown flower of his
strength, weakens his hold on life. A man reaches his prime, and remains, we
say, in his prime, for ten years, or perhaps twenty. But after his primest prime
is reached, he slowly, insensibly weakens. These are the signs of age in you,
in your body, in your art probably, in your mind. You are less electric than
you were. But I, when I reach my prime—I am nearing it—ah, you shall see."
The stars had begun to appear in the blue velvet of the sky, and
to the east the horizon seen above the black silhouette of the village was
growing dove-coloured with the approach of moon-rise. White moths hovered dimly
over the garden-beds, and the footsteps of night tip-toed through the bushes.
Suddenly Frank rose.
"Ah, it is the supreme moment," he said softly.
"Now more than at any other time the current of life, the eternal
imperishable current runs so close to me that I am almost enveloped in it. Be
silent a minute."
He advanced to the edge of the terrace and looked out standing
stretched with arms outspread. Darcy heard him draw a long breath into his
lungs, and after many seconds expel it again. Six or eight times he did this,
then turned back into the lamplight.
"It will sound to you quite mad, I expect," he said,
"but if you want to hear the soberest truth I have ever spoken and shall
ever speak, I will tell you about myself. But come into the garden if it is not
too damp for you. I have never told anyone yet, but I shall like to tell you.
It is long, in fact, since I have even tried to classify what I have
learned."
They wandered into the fragrant dimness of the pergola, and sat
down. Then Frank began:
"Years ago, do you remember," he said, "we used
often to talk about the decay of joy in the world. Many impulses, we settled,
had contributed to this decay, some of which were good in themselves, others
that were quite completely bad. Among the good things, I put what we may call
certain Christian virtues, renunciation, resignation, sympathy with suffering,
and the desire to relieve sufferers. But out of those things spring very bad
ones, useless renunciations, asceticism for its own sake, mortification of the
flesh with nothing to follow, no corresponding gain that is, and that awful and
terrible disease which devastated England some centuries ago, and from which by
heredity of spirit we suffer now, Puritanism. That was a dreadful plague, the
brutes held and taught that joy and laughter and merriment were evil: it was a
doctrine the most profane and wicked. Why, what is the commonest crime one
sees? A sullen face. That is the truth of the matter.
"Now all my life I have believed that we are intended to be
happy, that joy is of all gifts the most divine. And when I left London, abandoned
my career, such as it was, I did so because I intended to devote my life to the
cultivation of joy, and, by continuous and unsparing effort, to be happy. Among
people, and in constant intercourse with others, I did not find it possible;
there were too many distractions in towns and work-rooms, and also too much
suffering. So I took one step backward or forward, as you may choose to put it,
and went straight to Nature, to trees, birds, animals, to all those things
which quite clearly pursue one aim only, which blindly follow the great native
instinct to be happy without any care at all for morality, or human law or
divine law. I wanted, you understand, to get all joy first-hand and
unadulterated, and I think it scarcely exists among men; it is obsolete."
Darcy turned in his chair.
"Ah, but what makes birds and animals happy?" he asked.
"Food, food and mating."
Frank laughed gently in the stillness.
"Do not think I became a sensualist," he said. "I
did not make that mistake. For the sensualist carries his miseries pick-a-back,
and round his feet is wound the shroud that shall soon enwrap him. I may be
mad, it is true, but I am not so stupid anyhow as to have tried that. No, what
is it that makes puppies play with their own tails, that sends cats on their
prowling ecstatic errands at night?"
He paused a moment.
"So I went to Nature," he said. "I sat down here in
this New Forest, sat down fair and square, and looked. That was my first
difficulty, to sit here quiet without being bored, to wait without being
impatient, to be receptive and very alert, though for a long time nothing
particular happened. The change in fact was slow in those early stages."
"Nothing happened?" asked Darcy rather impatiently, with
the sturdy revolt against any new idea which to the English mind is synonymous
with nonsense. "Why, what in the world should happen?"
Now Frank as he had known him was the most generous, most
quick-tempered of mortal men; in other words his anger would flare to a
prodigious beacon, under almost no provocation, only to be quenched again under
a gust of no less impulsive kindliness. Thus the moment Darcy had spoken, an
apology for his hasty question was half-way up his tongue. But there was no
need for it to have travelled even so far, for Frank laughed again with kindly,
genuine mirth.
"Oh, how I should have resented that a few years ago,"
he said. "Thank goodness that resentment is one of the things I have got
rid of. I certainly wish that you should believe my story—in fact, you are
going to—but that you at this moment should imply that you do not, does not
concern me."
"Ah, your solitary sojournings have made you inhuman,"
said Darcy, still very English.
"No, human," said Frank. "Rather more human, at
least rather less of an ape."
"Well, that was my first quest," he continued, after a
moment, "the deliberate and unswerving pursuit of joy, and my method, the
eager contemplation of Nature. As far as motive went, I dare say it was purely
selfish, but as far as effect goes, it seems to me about the best thing one can
do for one's fellow-creatures, for happiness is more infectious than small-pox.
So, as I said, I sat down and waited; I looked at happy things, zealously
avoided the sight of anything unhappy, and by degrees a little trickle of the
happiness of this blissful world began to filter into me. The trickle grew more
abundant, and now, my dear fellow, if I could for a moment divert from me into
you one half of the torrent of joy that pours through me day and night, you
would throw the world, art, everything aside, and just live, exist. When a
man's body dies, it passes into trees and flowers. Well, that is what I have
been trying to do with my soul before death."
The servant had brought into the pergola a table with syphons and
spirits, and had set a lamp upon it. As Frank spoke he leaned forward toward
the other, and Darcy for all his matter-of-fact common-sense could have sworn
that his companion's face shone, was luminous in itself. His dark brown eyes
glowed from within, the unconscious smile of a child irradiated and transformed
his face. Darcy felt suddenly excited, exhilarated.
"Go on," he said. "Go on. I can feel you are
somehow telling me sober truth. I dare say you are mad; but I don't see that
matters."
Frank laughed again.
"Mad?" he said. "Yes, certainly, if you wish. But I
prefer to call it sane. However, nothing matters less than what anybody chooses
to call things. God never labels his gifts; He just puts them into our hands;
just as he put animals in the garden of Eden, for Adam to name if he felt
disposed."
"So by the continual observance and study of things that were
happy," continued he, "I got happiness, I got joy. But seeking it, as
I did, from Nature, I got much more which I did not seek, but stumbled upon
originally by accident. It is difficult to explain, but I will try.
"About three years ago I was sitting one morning in a place I
will show you to-morrow. It is down by the river brink, very green, dappled
with shade and sun, and the river passes there through some little clumps of
reeds. Well, as I sat there, doing nothing, but just looking and listening, I
heard the sound quite distinctly of some flute-like instrument playing a
strange unending melody. I thought at first it was some musical yokel on the
highway and did not pay much attention. But before long the strangeness and
indescribable beauty of the tune struck me. It never repeated itself, but it
never came to an end, phrase after phrase ran its sweet course, it worked
gradually and inevitably up to a climax, and having attained it, it went on;
another climax was reached and another and another. Then with a sudden gasp of
wonder I localized where it came from. It came from the reeds and from the sky
and from the trees. It was everywhere, it was the sound of life. It was, my
dear Darcy, as the Greeks would have said, it was Pan playing on his pipes, the
voice of Nature. It was the life-melody, the world-melody."
Darcy was far too interested to interrupt, though there was a
question he would have liked to ask, and Frank went on:
"Well, for the moment I was terrified, terrified with the
impotent horror of nightmare, and I stopped my ears and just ran from the place
and got back to the house panting, trembling, literally in a panic.
Unknowingly, for at that time I only pursued joy, I had begun, since I drew my
joy from Nature, to get in touch with Nature. Nature, force, God, call it what
you will, had drawn across my face a little gossamer web of essential life. I
saw that when I emerged from my terror, and I went very humbly back to where I
had heard the Pan-pipes. But it was nearly six months before I heard them
again."
"Why was that?" asked Darcy.
"Surely because I had revolted, rebelled, and worst of all
been frightened. For I believe that just as there is nothing in the world which
so injures one's body as fear, so there is nothing that so much shuts up the
soul. I was afraid, you see, of the one thing in the world which has real
existence. No wonder its manifestation was withdrawn."
"And after six months?"
"After six months one blessed morning I heard the piping
again. I wasn't afraid that time. And since then it has grown louder, it has
become more constant. I now hear it often, and I can put myself into such an
attitude toward Nature that the pipes will almost certainly sound. And never
yet have they played the same tune, it is always something new, something
fuller, richer, more complete than before."
"What do you mean by 'such an attitude toward nature'?"
asked Darcy.
"I can't explain that; but by translating it into a bodily
attitude it is this."
Frank sat up for a moment quite straight in his chair, then slowly
sank back with arms outspread and head drooped.
"That," he said, "an effortless attitude, but open,
resting, receptive. It is just that which you must do with your soul."
Then he sat up again.
"One word more," he said, "and I will bore you no
further. Nor unless you ask me questions shall I talk about it again. You will
find me, in fact, quite sane in my mode of life. Birds and beasts you will see
behaving somewhat intimately to me, like that moor-hen, but that is all. I will
walk with you, ride with you, play golf with you, and talk with you on any
subject you like. But I wanted you on the threshold to know what has happened
to me. And one thing more will happen."
He paused again, and a slight look of fear crossed his eyes.
"There will be a final revelation," he said, "a
complete and blinding stroke which will throw open to me, once and for all, the
full knowledge, the full realization and comprehension that I am one, just as
you are, with life. In reality there is no 'me,' no 'you,' no 'it.' Everything
is part of the one and only thing which is life. I know that that is so, but
the realization of it is not yet mine. But it will be, and on that day, so I
take it, I shall see Pan. It may mean death, the death of my body, that is, but
I don't care. It may mean immortal, eternal life lived here and now and for
ever. Then having gained that, ah, my dear Darcy, I shall preach such a gospel
of joy, showing myself as the living proof of the truth, that Puritanism, the
dismal religion of sour faces, shall vanish like a breath of smoke, and be
dispersed and disappear in the sunlit air. But first the full knowledge must be
mine."
Darcy watched his face narrowly.
"You are afraid of that moment," he said.
Frank smiled at him.
"Quite true; you are quick to have seen that. But when it
comes I hope I shall not be afraid."
For some little time there was silence; then Darcy rose.
"You have bewitched me, you extraordinary boy," he said.
"You have been telling me a fairy-story, and I find myself saying,
'Promise me it is true.'"
"I promise you that," said the other.
"And I know I sha'n't sleep," added Darcy.
Frank looked at him with a sort of mild wonder as if he scarcely
understood.
"Well, what does that matter?" he said.
"I assure you it does. I am wretched unless I sleep."
"Of course I can make you sleep if I want," said Frank
in a rather bored voice.
"Well, do."
"Very good: go to bed. I'll come upstairs in ten
minutes."
Frank busied himself for a little after the other had gone, moving
the table back under the awning of the veranda and quenching the lamp. Then he
went with his quick silent tread upstairs and into Darcy's room. The latter was
already in bed, but very wide-eyed and wakeful, and Frank with an amused smile
of indulgence, as for a fretful child, sat down on the edge of the bed.
"Look at me," he said, and Darcy looked.
"The birds are sleeping in the brake," said Frank
softly, "and the winds are asleep. The sea sleeps, and the tides are but the
heaving of its breast. The stars swing slow, rocked in the great cradle of the
Heavens, and——"
He stopped suddenly, gently blew out Darcy's candle, and left him
sleeping.
Morning brought to Darcy a flood of hard commonsense, as clear and
crisp as the sunshine that filled his room. Slowly as he woke he gathered
together the broken threads of the memories of the evening which had ended, so
he told himself, in a trick of common hypnotism. That accounted for it all; the
whole strange talk he had had was under a spell of suggestion from the
extraordinary vivid boy who had once been a man; all his own excitement, his
acceptance of the incredible had been merely the effect of a stronger, more
potent will imposed on his own. How strong that will was he guessed from his
own instantaneous obedience to Frank's suggestion of sleep. And armed with
impenetrable commonsense he came down to breakfast. Frank had already begun,
and was consuming a large plateful of porridge and milk with the most prosaic
and healthy appetite.
"Slept well?" he asked.
"Yes, of course. Where did you learn hypnotism?"
"By the side of the river."
"You talked an amazing quantity of nonsense last night,"
remarked Darcy, in a voice prickly with reason.
"Rather. I felt quite giddy. Look, I remembered to order a
dreadful daily paper for you. You can read about money markets or politics or
cricket matches."
Darcy looked at him closely. In the morning light Frank looked
even fresher, younger, more vital than he had done the night before, and the
sight of him somehow dinted Darcy's armour of commonsense.
"You are the most extraordinary fellow I ever saw," he
said. "I want to ask you some more questions."
"Ask away," said Frank.
For the next day or two Darcy plied his friend with many
questions, objections and criticisms on the theory of life and gradually got
out of him a coherent and complete account of his experience. In brief then,
Frank believed that "by lying naked," as he put it, to the force
which controls the passage of the stars, the breaking of a wave, the budding of
a tree, the love of a youth and maiden, he had succeeded in a way hitherto
undreamed of in possessing himself of the essential principle of life. Day by
day, so he thought, he was getting nearer to, and in closer union with the great
power itself which caused all life to be, the spirit of nature, of force, or
the spirit of God. For himself, he confessed to what others would call
paganism; it was sufficient for him that there existed a principle of life. He
did not worship it, he did not pray to it, he did not praise it. Some of it
existed in all human beings, just as it existed in trees and animals; to
realize and make living to himself the fact that it was all one, was his sole
aim and object.
Here perhaps Darcy would put in a word of warning.
"Take care," he said. "To see Pan meant death, did
it not?"
Frank's eyebrows would rise at this.
"What does that matter?" he said. "True the Greeks
were always right, and they said so, but there is another possibility. For the
nearer I get to it, the more living, the more vital and young I become."
"What then do you expect the final revelation will do for
you?"
"I have told you," said he. "It will make me
immortal."
But it was not so much from speech and argument that Darcy grew to
grasp his friend's conception as from the ordinary conduct of his life. They
were passing, for instance, one morning down the village street, when an old
woman, very bent and decrepit but with an extraordinary cheerfulness of face,
hobbled out from her cottage. Frank instantly stopped when he saw her.
"You old darling! How goes it all?" he said.
But she did not answer, her dim old eyes were riveted on his face;
she seemed to drink in like a thirsty creature the beautiful radiance which
shone there. Suddenly she put her two withered old hands on his shoulders.
"You're just the sunshine itself," she said, and he
kissed her and passed on.
But scarcely a hundred yards further a strange contradiction of
such tenderness occurred. A child running along the path toward them fell on
its face, and set up a dismal cry of fright and pain. A look of horror came
into Frank's eyes, and, putting his fingers in his ears, he fled at full speed
down the street and did not pause till he was out of hearing. Darcy, having
ascertained that the child was not really hurt, followed him in bewilderment.
"Are you without pity then?" he asked.
Frank shook his head impatiently.
"Can't you see?" he asked. "Can't you understand
that that sort of thing, pain, anger, anything unlovely throws me back, retards
the coming of the great hour! Perhaps when it comes I shall be able to piece
that side of life on to the other, on to the true religion of joy. At present I
can't."
"But the old woman. Was she not ugly?"
Frank's radiance gradually returned.
"Ah, no. She was like me. She longed for joy, and knew it
when she saw it, the old darling."
Another question suggested itself.
"Then what about Christianity?" asked Darcy.
"I can't accept it. I can't believe in any creed of which the
central doctrine is that God who is Joy should have had to suffer. Perhaps it
was so; in some inscrutable way I believe it may have been so, but I don't
understand how it was possible. So I leave it alone; my affair is joy."
They had come to the weir above the village, and the thunder of riotous
cool water was heavy in the air. Trees dipped into the translucent stream with
slender trailing branches, and the meadow where they stood was starred with
midsummer blossomings. Larks shot up caroling into the crystal dome of blue,
and a thousand voices of June sang round them. Frank, bare-headed as was his
wont, with his coat slung over his arm and his shirt sleeves rolled up above
the elbow, stood there like some beautiful wild animal with eyes half-shut and
mouth half-open, drinking in the scented warmth of the air. Then suddenly he
flung himself face downward on the grass at the edge of the stream, burying his
face in the daisies and cowslips, and lay stretched there in wide-armed
ecstasy, with his long fingers pressing and stroking the dewy herbs of the
field. Never before had Darcy seen him thus fully possessed by his idea; his
caressing fingers, his half-buried face pressed close to the grass, even the
clothed lines of his figure were instinct with a vitality that somehow was
different from that of other men. And some faint glow from it reached Darcy,
some thrill, some vibration from that charged recumbent body passed to him, and
for a moment he understood as he had not understood before, despite his
persistent questions and the candid answers they received, how real, and how
realized by Frank, his idea was.
Then suddenly the muscles in Frank's neck became stiff and alert,
and he half-raised his head, whispering, "The Pan-pipes, the Pan-pipes.
Close, oh, so close."
Very slowly, as if a sudden movement might interrupt the melody,
he raised himself and leaned on the elbow of his bent arm. His eyes opened
wider, the lower lids drooped as if he focused his eyes on something very far
away, and the smile on his face broadened and quivered like sunlight on still
water till the exultance of its happiness was scarcely human. So he remained,
motionless and rapt for some minutes, then the look of listening died from his
face, and he bowed his head satisfied.
"Ah, that was good," he said. "How is it possible
you did not hear? Oh, you poor fellow! Did you really hear nothing?"
A week of this outdoor and stimulating life did wonders in
restoring to Darcy the vigour and health which his weeks of fever had filched
from him, and as his normal activity and higher pressure of vitality returned,
he seemed to himself to fall even more under the spell which the miracle of
Frank's youth cast over him. Twenty times a day he found himself saying to
himself suddenly at the end of some ten minutes' silent resistance to the absurdity
of Frank's idea: "But it isn't possible; it can't be possible," and
from the fact of his having to assure himself so frequently of this, he knew
that he was struggling and arguing with a conclusion which already had taken
root in his mind. For in any case a visible living miracle confronted him,
since it was equally impossible that this youth, this boy, trembling on the
verge of manhood, was thirty-five. Yet such was the fact.
July was ushered in by a couple of days of blustering and fretful
rain, and Darcy, unwilling to risk a chill, kept to the house. But to Frank
this weeping change of weather seemed to have no bearing on the behaviour of
man, and he spent his days exactly as he did under the suns of June, lying in
his hammock, stretched on the dripping grass, or making huge rambling
excursions into the forest, the birds hopping from tree to tree after him, to
return in the evening, drenched and soaked, but with the same unquenchable
flame of joy burning within him.
"Catch cold?" he would ask, "I've forgotten how to
do it, I think. I suppose it makes one's body more sensible always to sleep
out-of-doors. People who live indoors always remind me of something peeled and
skinless."
"Do you mean to say you slept out-of-doors last night in that
deluge?" asked Darcy. "And where, may I ask?"
Frank thought a moment.
"I slept in the hammock till nearly dawn," he said.
"For I remember the light blinked in the east when I awoke. Then I
went—where did I go?—oh, yes, to the meadow where the Pan-pipes sounded so close
a week ago. You were with me, do you remember? But I always have a rug if it is
wet."
And he went whistling upstairs.
Somehow that little touch, his obvious effort to recall where he
had slept, brought strangely home to Darcy the wonderful romance of which he
was the still half-incredulous beholder. Sleep till close on dawn in a hammock,
then the tramp—or probably scamper—underneath the windy and weeping heavens to
the remote and lonely meadow by the weir! The picture of other such nights rose
before him; Frank sleeping perhaps by the bathing-place under the filtered
twilight of the stars, or the white blaze of moonshine, a stir and awakening at
some dead hour, perhaps a space of silent wide-eyed thought, and then a
wandering through the hushed woods to some other dormitory, alone with his
happiness, alone with the joy and the life that suffused and enveloped him,
without other thought or desire or aim except the hourly and never-ceasing
communion with the joy of nature.
They were in the middle of dinner that night, talking on
indifferent subjects, when Darcy suddenly broke off in the middle of a
sentence.
"I've got it," he said. "At last I've got it."
"Congratulate you," said Frank. "But what?"
"The radical unsoundness of your idea. It is this: All nature
from highest to lowest is full, crammed full of suffering; every living
organism in nature preys on another, yet in your aim to get close to, to be one
with nature, you leave suffering altogether out; you run away from it, you
refuse to recognize it. And you are waiting, you say, for the final
revelation."
Frank's brow clouded slightly.
"Well," he asked, rather wearily.
"Cannot you guess then when the final revelation will be? In
joy you are supreme, I grant you that; I did not know a man could be so master
of it. You have learned perhaps practically all that nature can teach. And if,
as you think, the final revelation is coming to you, it will be the revelation
of horror, suffering, death, pain in all its hideous forms. Suffering does
exist: you hate it and fear it."
Frank held up his hand.
"Stop; let me think," he said.
There was silence for a long minute.
"That never struck me," he said at length. "It is
possible that what you suggest is true. Does the sight of Pan mean that, do you
think? Is it that nature, take it altogether, suffers horribly, suffers to a
hideous inconceivable extent? Shall I be shown all the suffering?"
He got up and came round to where Darcy sat.
"If it is so, so be it," he said. "Because, my dear
fellow, I am near, so splendidly near to the final revelation. To-day the pipes
have sounded almost without pause. I have even heard the rustle in the bushes,
I believe, of Pan's coming. I have seen, yes, I saw to-day, the bushes pushed
aside as if by a hand, and piece of a face, not human, peered through. But I
was not frightened, at least I did not run away this time."
He took a turn up to the window and back again.
"Yes, there is suffering all through," he said,
"and I have left it all out of my search. Perhaps, as you say, the
revelation will be that. And in that case, it will be good-bye. I have gone on
one line. I shall have gone too far along one road, without having explored the
other. But I can't go back now. I wouldn't if I could; not a step would I
retrace! In any case, whatever the revelation is, it will be God. I'm sure of
that."
The rainy weather soon passed, and with the return of the sun
Darcy again joined Frank in long rambling days. It grew extraordinarily hotter,
and with the fresh bursting of life, after the rain, Frank's vitality seemed to
blaze higher and higher. Then, as is the habit of the English weather, one
evening clouds began to bank themselves up in the west, the sun went down in a
glare of coppery thunder-rack, and the whole earth broiling under an
unspeakable oppression and sultriness paused and panted for the storm. After
sunset the remote fires of lightning began to wink and flicker on the horizon,
but when bed-time came the storm seemed to have moved no nearer, though a very
low unceasing noise of thunder was audible. Weary and oppressed by the stress
of the day, Darcy fell at once into a heavy uncomforting sleep.
He woke suddenly into full consciousness, with the din of some
appalling explosion of thunder in his ears, and sat up in bed with racing
heart. Then for a moment, as he recovered himself from the panic-land which
lies between sleeping and waking, there was silence, except for the steady
hissing of rain on the shrubs outside his window. But suddenly that silence was
shattered and shredded into fragments by a scream from somewhere close at hand
outside in the black garden, a scream of supreme and despairing terror. Again
and once again it shrilled up, and then a babble of awful words was
interjected. A quivering sobbing voice that he knew, said:
"My God, oh, my God; oh, Christ!"
And then followed a little mocking, bleating laugh. Then was
silence again; only the rain hissed on the shrubs.
All this was but the affair of a moment, and without pause either
to put on clothes or light a candle, Darcy was already fumbling at his
door-handle. Even as he opened it he met a terror-stricken face outside, that
of the man-servant who carried a light.
"Did you hear?" he asked.
The man's face was bleached to a dull shining whiteness.
"Yes, sir," he said. "It was the master's
voice."
Together they hurried down the stairs, and through the dining-room
where an orderly table for breakfast had already been laid, and out on to the
terrace. The rain for the moment had been utterly stayed, as if the tap of the
heavens had been turned off, and under the lowering black sky, not quite dark,
since the moon rode somewhere serene behind the conglomerated thunder-clouds,
Darcy stumbled into the garden, followed by the servant with the candle. The
monstrous leaping shadow of himself was cast before him on the lawn; lost and
wandering odours of rose and lily and damp earth were thick about him, but more
pungent was some sharp and acrid smell that suddenly reminded him of a certain
châlet in which he had once taken refuge in the Alps. In the blackness of the
hazy light from the sky, and the vague tossing of the candle behind him, he saw
that the hammock in which Frank so often lay was tenanted. A gleam of white
shirt was there, as if a man sitting up in it, but across that there was an
obscure dark shadow, and as he approached the acrid odour grew more intense.
He was now only some few yards away, when suddenly the black
shadow seemed to jump into the air, then came down with tappings of hard hoofs
on the brick path that ran down the pergola, and with frolicsome skippings
galloped off into the bushes. When that was gone Darcy could see quite clearly
that a shirted figure sat up in the hammock. For one moment, from sheer terror
of the unseen, he hung on his step, and the servant joining him they walked
together to the hammock.
It was Frank. He was in shirt and trousers only, and he sat up
with braced arms. For one half second he stared at them, his face a mask of
horrible contorted terror. His upper lip was drawn back so that the gums of the
teeth appeared, and his eyes were focused not on the two who approached him but
on something quite close to him; his nostrils were widely expanded, as if he
panted for breath, and terror incarnate and repulsion and deathly anguish ruled
dreadful lines on his smooth cheeks and forehead. Then even as they looked the
body sank backward, and the ropes of the hammock wheezed and strained.
Darcy lifted him out and carried him indoors. Once he thought
there was a faint convulsive stir of the limbs that lay with so dead a weight
in his arms, but when they got inside there was no trace of life. But the look
of supreme terror and agony of fear had gone from his face, a boy tired with
play but still smiling in his sleep was the burden he laid on the floor. His
eyes closed, and the beautiful mouth lay in smiling curves, even as when a few
mornings ago, in the meadow by the weir, it had quivered to the music of the
unheard melody of Pan's pipes. Then they looked further.
Frank had come back from his bath before dinner that night in his
usual costume of shirt and trousers only. He had not dressed, and during
dinner, so Darcy remembered, he had rolled up the sleeves of his shirt to above
the elbow. Later, as they sat and talked after dinner on the close sultriness
of the evening, he had unbuttoned the front of his shirt to let what little
breath of wind there was play on his skin. The sleeves were rolled up now, the
front of the shirt was unbuttoned, and on his arms and on the brown skin of his
chest were strange discolorations which grew momently more clear and defined,
till they saw that the marks were pointed prints, as if caused by the hoofs of
some monstrous goat that had leaped and stamped upon him.
VII.CHAN TOW THE HIGHROB
Chester
Bailey Fernald
Before me sits the Chinese—my friend who, when the hurlyburly's
done, spins me out the hours with narratives of ancient Yellowland. His name is
Fuey Fong, and he speaks to me thus:
"Missa Gordon, whatta is Chrisinjin Indevil Shoshiety?"
I explain to him as best a journalist may the purpose of the
Society for Christian Endeavour.
"We', dissa morning I go down to lailload station. Shee vay
many peoples getta on tlain. Assa conductor, 'Whatta is?' Conductor tole me:
'You can't go. You a heeffen. Dissa Chrisinjin Indevil
Shoshiety.'
"Dissa mek me vay tire. 'Me'ican peoples fink ole China
heeffen. Fink doan' know about Gaw of heffen. Dissa 'Me'icans doan' know whatta
is. China peoples benieve Olemighty Gaw semma lika you."
Fuey endures in meditation several moments. Then he says:
"Missa Gordon, I tay you how about Gaw convert China
clilimal?"
"How God converted a Chinese criminal?"
"Yeh. I tay you. Dissa case somma lika dis:
"One tem was China highrob. His nem was Chan Tow. Live by rob
on pubnic highway evely one he can. Dissa highrob live in place call Kan Suh.
We', one tem was merchan', nem Jan Han Sun, getta lich in Kan Suh; say hisse'f:
'I getta lich; now mus' go home Tsan Ran Foo, shee my de-ah
fadder-mudder-in-'aw an' my de-ah wife.' So med determine to go home nex' day.
"Kan Suh to Tsan Ran Foo about dousands miles distant, and
dissa parts China no lailload, no canal. So dissa trivveler declude to ride in
horse-carry-chair."
"What is a horse-carry-chair?"
"We', I tay you. Somma lika dis: Two horse—one befront, one
inhine. Two long stick, and carry-chair in minnle. Usa roop somma lika harness.
Dissa way trivvle long distance ole ove' China.
"We', nex' day Missa Jan start out faw Tsan Ran Foo in
horse-carry-chair. Hed big backage of go' an' sivver. Bye-bye—trivvle long
tem—was pass high tree. Up high tree was Chan Tow—dissa highrob—was vay bad
man! Chan Tow up tree to watch to stea' whatta he can, semma lika
vutture."
"Like a vulture."
"Like a vutture—big bird—eat dead beas' ole he can.
"Chan Tow look down on load, and shee horse-carry-chair wif
Missa Jan feet stick out. Nen dissa highrob say hisse'f: 'Vay nice feet; lich
man. I go fonnow him. Maybe can stea' from him.' So fonnow 'long Missa Jan by
day, by night, severow day—doan' lose sight ole dissa tem. Bye-bye Missa Jan
was trivvle ole night, and leach hotel early morning. He tole hotel-kipper:
'You giva me loom. I slip ole day.' Nen tek his backage go' an' sivver, an' tek
to bed wif him. Chan Tow come 'long; say: 'Giva me loom nex' my de-ah frien'
jussa come in horse-carry-chair.' Hotelkipper look him, an' say, 'Whatta your
nem is?' Chan Tow say, 'My nem Chow Ying Hoo.' Dissa nem, transnate Ingernish,
mean Brev Tiger."
"And what does Chan Tow mean?"
"Oh, Chan Tow mean ole semma bad faminy.
"We', dissa highrob slip nex' loom Missa Jan; but no can fine
how to rob him ole dissa tem. Getta vay much disgussion; but nex' day he fonnow
long inhine dissa lich man jussa semma befaw. Somma tem eat at semma tabuh wif
Jan; but Jan getta begin to suspicious, an' ole tem getta his go' an' sivver
unnerneaf him when he shet down to tabuh. Chan Tow say hisse'f: 'You fink I
doan' know how to shucshess to stea' yo' money. Maybe I big foo' you.'
"We', bye-bye was mont' go by. Dissa merchan' reach his
netive sheety. Firs' he go immedinity to respec' his fadder-mudder-in-'aw,
becose his fadder-mudder dead. Dey vay gnad to shee him—vay denight. Dey assa
him vay many quishuns; but he tole dem: 'I mus' go to my de-ah wife. I not
sheen her so long tem.' Nen he smi' hisse'f, an' tole horse-carry-chair-man run
wif him quick to fine his de-ah wife. When he allive ne' his house, say to man:
'Goo'-by! I go ressa way on footstep.' Nen go vay quier on his tiptoe, and lock
vay soft at his daw."
Here pauses the Chinese, and looks at me. Shortly he says:
"We'?"
"Well?" I echo.
"We', dissa last tem dissa merchan' Jan Han Sun was sheen
annibe!"
"Does the highrob follow him and kill him?"
"No one shee any highrob. No one shee any
horse-carry-chair-man. No one shee any Jan. No maw!
"Nex' morning come fadder-mudder-in-'aw to congratchnate
dissa daughter. Said, 'We vay denight, vay gnad, yo' husban' come home. Where
he is dissa morning? Daughter look vay supp'ise.' Said, 'When you shee my
husban' come home?' Parents said: 'Why, my de-ah daughter, yo' husban' pass by
my daw las' night. We hev vay short convisition beggedder, an' he say bling
home glate many go' an' sivver—mek you habby. Nen left us come shee you.'
"Nen, vay suddenity, dissa daughter say: 'I fink you ki' my
husban', so you can rob! I hev you arres'.'
"An' she go to magistrate an' mek petition. Say her
fadder-mudder to ki' her husban'. Her fadder-mudder bofe vay indignant; but was
putta in jai'.
"Magistrate examine case, assa many quishuns, search bofe
dissa house—but can't fine who mudder dissa merchan'. Fadder-mudder-in'-aw say,
'We innocent.' Daughter say, 'You liars!' Her parents med declaration, 'I doan'
hed mudder to any person.' Two mont's go by. Can't fine who mudder. Nen
daughter petition to supere court; say dissa magistrate doan' know how fine who
mudder. Supere court send word, 'You doan' fine who mudder in six
mont's—deglade yo' lank.' Dissa China way to mek law.
"We', dissa magistrate, whatta he do? Doan' like getta
deglade; dissa spoi' his whole life. Say hisse'f: 'I vay detest to get deglade.
Mus' go mek detectif—fine who mudder.' Nex' day left his court, and go mek long
trivvle—ole dress up like a fortune-tayer."
"Like a fortune-teller?"
"Yeh; fortune-tayer. Vay low common in China. Go roun' wif
ole kine bad peoples.
"Magistrate look jussa somma poh fortune-taye. Nen go on load
an' trivvle—trivvle vay far. Eve'y tem shee a man look lika somma bad man, try
mek frien's wif him. But no can fine who mudder. Long tem trivvle—'way intehuh
China; but no can fine anyone knows about dissa case. Say hisse'f: 'Pitty soon
I getta discoulagement. Two mont's maw getta deglade, getta disglace! I doan'
know I ki' hisse'f!'
"One day was stag' 'long load; getta 'mos' exhaus'. Bofe
sides load was high heels, no house. Kep' on, on; semma heels; semma no house;
mus' lie down in load wifout any subber, wifout any dlink. Dissa magistrate
begin getta desplate. Nen he finks, 'I play to Gaw an' my ancestors.' So begin
play lika diss: 'O Gaw, O my ancestors, givva me res'; givva me foo'; givva me
wadder! Nen I kip on fawever fine who ki' Jan Han Sun.' Nen magistrate stag'
'long few steps, an' dlop down on big lock. No can any fudder.
"Pitty soon look roun'; shee litty light shine from winnidow.
Dissa was littyoshantyhouse—vay poh look——"
"Littyoshantyhouse?"
"Litty—ole—shanty—house!
"We', magistrate to lock at daw. Come to daw
littyoneddy——"
"Little old what?"
"Litty—ole—neddy!
"Dissa oneddy she was vay ole, vay feeble. He tole her:
'Please, oneddy, you givva me kunderness let me go slip in yo' house to-night!
I 'mos' died. No subber, no wadder—'mos' exhaus'!' Oneddy tole him: 'Walks in;
walks in! But you mus' kip vay quier, my de-ah sir; as quier as can be! My son
is dreffel differcut man. His profussion was highrob. He getta home
minnernight; an' you doan' kip quier, I fred he to strike you!' But magistrate
say: 'I too tire' to getta scare'. You nedda me stay wif you.'
"So oneddy giva him to eat, an' show him to go slip unner
tabuh in katchen. Nen he lie down, an' play once more his ancestors an' Gaw:
'You he'p me oleleddy; I kip plomise. Nou he'p me somma maw—I fine who mudder.'
Nen go slip.
"Bye-bye was dleam 'bout gleen moudens, gleen wadder. Hear'
spi'its say, 'I wi' assist you.' Ole dissa vay good sign. Suddinity was wek up
from his slip, and shaw oneddy stand befaw him—ole in dark. She say: 'My son
come home in vay good humours. Say lak mek yo' acquaintenance.' Dissa tem was
minnernight. Magistrate craw' out from unner tabuh, an' fonnow oneddy in nex'
loom. Heah was Chan Tow, dissa highrob. Was fee' in vay good tempiniment
to-night—hedda jus' rob litty gir' her earlings."
"It made him very happy to have stolen earrings from a little
girl?"
"Oh, yeh. Earlings med jay-stone.
"We', Chan Tow he vay denight to shee dissa fortune-tayer.
Mek put hisse'f down to tabuh, eat subbah wif him, an' mek oneddy hop 'long
getta ole bes' was in oshantyhouse. Chan Tow say: 'My de-ah sir, I am exceediny
denight to shee you. We bofe about sem profussions: you fortune-tayer; I was
highrob.' Nen bofe eat, dlink long tem, an' Chan Tow tay ole about his shucshess
in binniziz."
"You mean business?"
"Yeh; binniziz.
"Tay ole about his binniziz. Tay how stea' watch from
'Me'ican missiolary man. Tay how——"
"How did he steal the watch from the American
missionary?"
"We', somma lika dis: Chan Tow was vay stlong man, but vay
litty meat on his boles. One day shee missiolary man come 'long load. Hedda
watch-chain hang out. Chan Tow lie down in load, an' begin kick an' scleam ole
semma sick white woman. Missiolary man was vay sympafy, an' tole him, 'Whatta
is?' Chan Tow say: 'Much vay sick! Much vay sick! You no he'p me home I getta
died! You tekka me home I mek good Chrisinjin boy!' Missiolary man vay good
man; say hisse'f: 'Gaw sen' me dissa man mek convict to Chrisinjanity. I he'p
him!' So tek up Chan Tow in his arm to tek home. Chan Tow kep' gloan,
gloan,—an' ole dissa tem was put his han' in missiolary his pocket an' stea'
dissa watch! Nen Chan Tow kep' hang on missiolary his neck an' say hisse'f: 'I
lika dissa to ride better I lika to walk. I letta dissa missiolary man ca'y me
jusso far he can.' So missiolary man stag' long tem 'long load, an' kep' sweat,
sweat—semma lika glass ice-wadder; an' Chan Tow kep' gloan semma like ole barn
daw."
"Chan Tow kept groaning like an old barn door, and the
missionary man kept perspiring like a glass of ice-water?"
"Oh, no! Missiolary man sweat. Bye-bye, hedda ca'y dissa
highrob two miles—'way down vanney, 'way up heel. Nen missiolary man lose ole
his breffs, an' begin to gaps. He say, 'Mus' res'; mus' putta you down!' Chan
Tow kep' gloan, an' say: 'You putta me down I doan' know I die. Mus' getta
home!' Missiolary man say: 'Can't he'p—I 'mos' exhaus'.' Nen dissa highrob jump
down vay well, an' say: 'We', I mus' getta home. I walk ressa way—leave you to
res'. Goo'-by!' Nen run fas' he can down dissa heel.
"Missiolary man stay look him run, an' kep' fink ole tem. Nen
say hisse'f: 'I fink dissa man inshinsherity. I lose ole dissa tem wif him!
Whatta tem it is?' Nen he search his watch. 'Oh, my! No watch; no convict!
Dissa vay bad day!"
The Chinese grins with the greatest pleasure.
"We', magistrate an' highrob kep' tay ole 'bout expelunces in
binniziz."
"Business!"
"Yeh; binniziz.
"Kep' tay ole about binniziz. Bye-bye pea-oil light go out.
Oneddy craw' up on bed an' go slip. Nen two men stay an' smoke pipe—ole dark.
Magistrate closs his legs an' say, ole lika he doan' care: 'Missa Highrob,
dissa light go out mek me remin' whatta habben Tsan Ran Foo. You heard about
dissa case? Man nem Jan Han Sun go home his wife—no can fine who mudder.' Chan
Tow smi' vay plou',[1] an'
say: 'Oh, my de-ah brudder, I know ole 'bout dissa case. I was to shee dissa
man getta ki' in his own houses.'
"Magistrate dlaw glate big breff frough his pipe. Swallow
smoke clea' down his stomach! Mek big cough—nearny cough his top head off!—an'
wek oneddy! Nen he say: 'We', we'! You good dea' maw wise dissa magistrate Tsan
Ran Foo. I hea' he was deglade his rank. Cannot fine who mudder!'
"Chan Tow say: 'Dissa magistrate mus' come fine me. No one
ess can tay him. I tay you ole about dissa mudder. You lika hea'?' Magistrate
say: 'We', I vay tire'. But lika hea' you talk better I lika go slip, my de-ah
sir!' Dissa mek highrob vay plou', an' he begin lika dis:
"'One day shaw horse-carry-chair trivvle 'long load. Shaw
feet stick out—vay nice feet; mus' be lich man. So fonnow him. He hev big
backage go' an' sivver, but eve'y tem go subbah mus' oleways shet hisse'f on
top dissa backage. Fonnow him long tem—severow weeks. But cannot stea' from
him. Bye-bye he reach his home Tsan Ran Foo, an' go to respec' his
mudder-fadder-in-'aw; nen go fine his wife. Dissa tem was minnernight—vay dark.
Fink was good tem to stea' from him, an' getta his go' an' sivver. So kep'
fonnow 'long load. When he getta his house he lock long tem at his daw, but was
no answer. Nen say, vay loud: "De-ah wife, letta me in! I am yo' de-ah
husban' come home." So bye-bye was daw open, an' his wife come say:
"O my de-ah husban'! so denight to shee you!" Nen ole dark.
"'Nen I go roun' back his house. Getta long bamboo po', an'
putta dissa po' up 'gainst house to shin up dissa loof. Nen cut with knife a
litty roun' ho' frough loof, an' look down into dissa house. Can look down into
loom, an' shee ole whatta was habben.
"'Vay soon Jan examine tabuh; say: "O my de-ah wife,
whatta faw you setta dissa tabuh for two peoples? You have compaly?" Wife
say: "O my de-ah husban', eve'y tem since you go 'way I setta dissa tabuh
faw two peoples—you and me—jussa semma you heah!" Jan smi' vay plou,' an'
say, "You are shinsherny[2] my
de-ah wife!"—was mak fee' vay good.
"'Nen his wife tole him: "Now we hev jubinee; eat, dlink—mek
me'y tem!" So I lie on top dissa loof, vay dly, vay hunger; an' ole tem
shee her husban' eat subbah an' kip dlink, dlink, an' kiss his wife, an' dlink,
an' getta maw an' maw intoshcate. Bye-bye was so intoshcate mus' go slip. Nen
his wife he'p him go bed, an' he begin snow.'"
"How's that?"
"Begin snow—snowul—snole! Begin snole!"
"It began to snow?"
"On, no; I tay you. Dissa merchan' begin mekka lika
dis." Fuey makes a sound that is unmistakable.
"'We', nen look shee whatta dissa woman go do. She go to
hooks on wa', an' tek down lot her dresses. Nen I shee man step out. Dissa
woman whisper to him: "Shee my husban' slip. He bling back glate many go'
and sivver! You love me, you tekka dissa sharp knife and ki' him. Nen we getta
marry begedder to-morrow, an' mek habby tem."
"'Her beau say: "Oh, no. I fred ki' him. Fred I get
behead." An' nen dissa woman getta vay mad wif him, an' say: "You
doan' ki' him, I tekka dissa knife an' chot op yo' head op, instamentty!"
Nen he begin tek off his mine——'"
"Took off his mind?"
"Yeh," says Fuey; "I do' know dissa word—semma you
tek off yo' clo's."
"Changed his mind?"
"Yeh."
"'Begin to tek off—chenge his mine—an' say: "How I ki'
him?" Woman say: "You tekka dissa sharp knife."
"'Nen he clep up to dissa bed, his eye ole stick from his
head. When he getta where dissa mer-out chan' slip, an' snow, snow, ole semma
hev good dleam, dissa beau mek like was to chenge his mine 'gain; but dissa
woman whisper: "Quick! Quick!"—an' nen ole sudden dissa beau stlike.
Nen Jan Han Sun was died—instamentty!
"'Dissa woman begin rip up flaw. Her beau he'p her ole he
can, an' work vay hard, fas'—fred somebody come. Kep' look roun'. An' eve'y tem
pea-oil light flicker, look roun' to shee who was. Ole tem stop to hol' his ear
on flaw—shee who come. Flaw rip up; nen go getta shover an' dig long ho' in
earf, unnerneaf dissa bed. Nen vay quick shover back ole dissa earf, fix flaw,
an' blow out light.
"'Ole tem I stay up dissa loof. Vay hunger—no wadder; an'
cannot rob dissa merchan' becose he dead! Getta vay disgussion. Light go out, I
hang foot over' side dissa loof, an' begin fink. Maw I fink, maw getta
disgussion. Bye-bye getta vay, vay disgussion. Nen tek dissa
bamboo po' to shove frough dissa ho' in loof—vay quier. When he shove frough,
nen I ole suddenity begin push, jab, shove—quick—ole semma churn budder. Down
below woman an' her beau begin squea', squea', ole semma rat! 'Most scare' to
def! Nen I shin down loof—run 'way.'"
Fuey draws a long breath, and smiles at me his calm, celestial
smile.
"We', Chan Tow finis' his sto'y. Magistrate was ole tem smoke
big clou's smoke, an' mek loom look lika was on fire. Mek oneddy wek up an'
open daw. When Chan Tow finis', magistrate say: 'My de-ah brudder de highrob,
yo' sto'y vay intinesse, vay intinesse! I fink I go slip.' So ole thlee was lie
down to go slip, an' Chan Tow was tek his op' pipe an' begin smoke opi'. Whatta
you say—hurt de pipe?"
"Hit the pipe."
"Oh, yeh; hit pipe. I doan' spe'k Ingernish vay we'.
"Magistrate wet long tem. Bye-bye oneddy begin to snow, an'
nen bye-bye Chan Tow getta doan' know."
"Chan Tow got don't know?"
"Getta ole semma was died. Doan' know."
"Unconscious?"
"Yeh; uh-uh-coshious!" sneezes Fuey.
"Nen magistrate begin craw' 'long on his
stoamch—inchy—inchy—cross flaw—out daw. Nen run fas' he can towards Tsan Ran
Foo.
"One mont' go by, an' magistrate sit up in his high chair in
his court. Befron him dissa woman an' her beau,—ole cover wif mark dissa bamboo
po',—an' dissa fadder-mudder-in-'aw, an' dissa highrob. Magistrate say, vay
slow—ole semma idol talk: 'Dissa—woman—her lover—are convert—to behead—by
hev dey heads cut off—till dey dead! What you fink, woman?' Woman say:
'Yo' Excennency, I vay gnad to be behead wif my de-ah lover. I vay satisfaction
we behead begedder. Our spi'its begedder habby fo'ever.' Nen she turn kiss her
beau; but he too scare to spe'k. An' bofe was tek out to behead—dissa woman ole
tem to mek to kiss her beau.
"Magistrate say to highrob: 'You know me? Who eata subbah wif
you sucha-sucha night?' Chan Tow say, 'O yo' Excennency, I doan' know who was!'
Magistrate say: 'I was dissa man. I glate t'anks faw you. Awso dissa
fadder-mudder-in-'aw dissa dead man. Gaw sen' me to yo' house to mek you
instlument to convert dissa mudderers. I give you good position; awso
money."
"And that was how these criminals were converted?"
I say, remembering the promise of the story.
"Yeh; convert to behead. Dissa case," concluded Fuey,
"show how Gaw can convert cliliman when he wish; show how Gaw is glate. I
tay you China peoples not heeffen. China 'ligion teach to try to affection one
anudder; respec' yo' parents; an' charity an' pure moral. If people do right I
fink he shall be saved."
VIII.THE
INMOST LIGHT
Arthur
Machen
I
One evening in autumn, when the deformities of London were veiled
in faint, blue mist and its vistas and far-reaching streets seemed splendid,
Mr. Charles Salisbury was slowly pacing down Rupert Street, drawing nearer to
his favourite restaurant by slow degrees. His eyes were downcast in study of
the pavement, and thus it was that as he passed in at the narrow door a man who
had come up from the lower end of the street jostled against him.
"I beg your pardon—wasn't looking where I was going. Why,
it's Dyson!"
"Yes, quite so. How are you, Salisbury?"
"Quite well. But where have you been, Dyson? I don't think I
can have seen you for the last five years."
"No; I dare say not. You remember I was getting rather hard
up when you came to my place at Charlotte Street?"
"Perfectly. I think I remember your telling me that you owed
five weeks' rent, and that you had parted with your watch for a comparatively
small sum."
"My dear Salisbury, your memory is admirable. Yes, I was hard
up. But the curious thing is that soon after you saw me I became harder up. My
financial state was described by a friend as 'stone broke.' I don't approve of
slang, mind you, but such was my condition. But suppose we go in; there might
be other people who would like to dine—it's a human weakness, Salisbury."
"Certainly; come along. I was wondering as I walked down
whether the corner table were taken. It has a velvet back, you know."
"I know the spot; it's vacant. Yes, as I was saying, I became
even harder up."
"What did you do then?" asked Salisbury, disposing of
his hat, and settling down in the corner of the seat, with a glance of fond
anticipation at the menu.
"What did I do? Why, I sat down and reflected. I had a good
classical education, and a positive distaste for business of any kind; that was
the capital with which I faced the world. Do you know, I have heard people
describe olives as nasty! What lamentable philistinism! I have often thought,
Salisbury, that I could write genuine poetry under the influence of olives and
red wine. Let us have Chianti; it may not be very good, but the flasks are
simply charming."
"It is pretty good here. We may as well have a big
flask."
"Very good. I reflected, then, on my want of prospects, and I
determined to embark in literature."
"Really, that was strange. You seem in pretty comfortable
circumstances, though."
"Though! What a satire upon a noble profession. I am afraid,
Salisbury, you haven't a proper idea of the dignity of an artist. You see me
sitting at my desk,—or at least you can see me if you care to call,—with pen
and ink, and simple nothingness before me, and if you come again in a few hours
you will (in all probability) find a creation!"
"Yes, quite so. I had an idea that literature was not
remunerative."
"You are mistaken; its rewards are great. I may mention, by
the way, that shortly after you saw me I succeeded to a small income. An uncle
died, and proved unexpectedly generous."
"Ah, I see. That must have been convenient."
"It was pleasant,—undeniably pleasant. I have always
considered it in the light of an endowment of my researches. I told you I was a
man of letters; it would, perhaps, be more correct to describe myself as a man
of science."
"Dear me, Dyson, you have really changed very much in the
last few years. I had a notion, don't you know, that you were a sort of idler
about town, the kind of man one might meet on the north side of Piccadilly
every day from May to July."
"Exactly. I was even then forming myself, though all
unconsciously. You know my poor father could not afford to send me to the
university. I used to grumble in my ignorance at not having completed my
education. That was the folly of youth, Salisbury; my university was
Piccadilly. There I began to study the great science which still occupies
me."
"What science do you mean?"
"The science of the great city; the physiology of London;
literally and metaphysically the greatest subject that the mind of man can
conceive. What an admirable salmi this is; undoubtedly the
final end of the pheasant. Yes, I feel sometimes positively overwhelmed with
the thought of the vastness and complexity of London. Paris a man may get to
understand thoroughly with a reasonable amount of study; but London is always a
mystery. In Paris you may say, 'Here live the actresses, here the Bohemians,
and the Ratés;' but it is different in London. You may point out a
street, correctly enough, as the abode of washerwomen; but, in that second
floor, a man may be studying Chaldee roots, and in the garret over the way a
forgotten artist is dying by inches."
"I see you are Dyson, unchanged and unchangeable," said
Salisbury, slowly sipping his Chianti. "I think you are misled by a too
fervid imagination; the mystery of London exists only in your fancy. It seems
to me a dull place enough. We seldom hear of a really artistic crime in London,
whereas I believe Paris abounds in that sort of thing."
"Give me some more wine. Thanks. You are mistaken, my dear
fellow, you are really mistaken. London has nothing to be ashamed of in the way
of crime. Where we fail is for want of Homers, not Agamemnons. Carent
quia vale sacro, you know."
"I recall the quotation. But I don't think I quite follow
you."
"Well, in plain language, we have no good writers in London
who make a specialty of that kind of thing. Our common reporter is a dull dog;
every story that he has to tell is spoilt in the telling. His idea of horror
and of what excites horror is so lamentably deficient. Nothing will content the
fellow but blood, vulgar red blood, and when he can get it he lays it on thick,
and considers that he has produced a telling story. It's a poor notion. And, by
some curious fatality, it is the most commonplace and brutal murders which
always attract the most attention and get written up the most. For instance, I
dare say that you never heard of the Harlesden case?"
"No, no; I don't remember anything about it."
"Of course not. And yet the story is a curious one. I will
tell it you over our coffee. Harlesden, you know, or I expect you don't know,
is quite on the out-quarters of London; something curiously different from your
fine old crusted suburb like Norwood or Hampstead, different as each of these
is from the other. Hampstead, I mean, is where you look for the head of your
great China house with his three acres of land and pine houses, though of late
there is the artistic substratum; while Norwood is the home of the prosperous
middle-class family who took the house 'because it was near the Palace,' and
sickened of the Palace six months afterwards; but Harlesden is a place of no
character. It's too new to have any character as yet. There are the rows of red
houses and the rows of white houses and the bright green venetians, and the
blistering doorways, and the little back-yards they call gardens, and a few
feeble shops, and then, just as you think you're going to grasp the physiognomy
of the settlement it all melts away."
"How the dickens is that? The houses don't tumble down before
one's eyes I suppose."
"Well, no, not exactly that. But Harlesden as an entity
disappears. Your street turns into a quiet lane, and your staring houses into
elm trees, and the back gardens into green meadows. You pass instantly from
town to country; there is no transition as in a small country town, no soft
gradations of wider lawns and orchards, with houses gradually becoming less
dense, but a dead stop. I believe the people who live there mostly go into the
city. I have seen once or twice a laden 'bus bound thitherwards. But however
that may be, I can't conceive a greater loneliness in a desert at midnight than
there is there at midday. It is like a city of the dead; the streets are
glaring and desolate, and as you pass it suddenly strikes you that this, too,
is part of London. Well, a year or two ago there was a doctor living there; he
had set up his brass plate and his red lamp at the very end of one of those
shining streets, and from the back of the house the fields stretched away to
the north. I don't know what his reason was in settling down in such an
out-of-the-way place, perhaps Dr. Black, as we will call him, was a far-seeing
man and looked ahead. His relations, so it appeared afterwards, had lost sight
of him for many years and didn't even know he was a doctor, much less where he
lived. However, there he was, settled in Harlesden, with some fragments of a
practice, and an uncommonly pretty wife. People used to see them walking out
together in the summer evenings soon after they came to Harlesden, and, so far
as could be observed, they seemed a very affectionate couple. These walks went
on through the autumn, and then ceased; but, of course, as the days grew dark
and the weather cold, the lanes near Harlesden might be expected to lose many
of their attractions. All through the winter nobody saw anything of Mrs. Black;
the doctor used to reply to his patients' inquiries that she was a 'little out
of sorts, would be better, no doubt, in the spring.' But the spring came, and
the summer, and no Mrs. Black appeared, and at last people began to rumor and
talk amongst themselves, and all sorts of queer things were said at 'high
teas,' which you may possibly have heard are the only form of entertainment
known in such suburbs. Dr. Black began to surprise some very odd looks cast in
his direction, and the practice, such as it was, fell off before his eyes. In
short, when the neighbours whispered about the matter, they whispered that Mrs.
Black was dead, and that the doctor had made away with her. But this wasn't the
case; Mrs. Black was seen alive in June. It was a Sunday afternoon, one of
those few exquisite days that an English climate offers, and half London had
strayed out into the fields North, South, East, and West, to smell the scent of
the white May, and to see if the wild roses were yet in blossom in the hedges.
I had gone out myself early in the morning, and had had a long ramble, and
somehow or other, as I was steering homeward, I found myself in this very
Harlesden we have been talking about. To be exact, I had a glass of beer in the
'General Gordon,' the most flourishing house in the neighbourhood, and as I was
wandering rather aimlessly about I saw an uncommonly tempting gap in a
hedgerow, and resolved to explore the meadow beyond. Soft grass is very
grateful to the feet after the infernal grit strewn on suburban sidewalks, and
after walking about for some time, I thought I should like to sit down on a
bank and have a smoke. While I was getting out my pouch, I looked up in the
direction of the houses, and as I looked I felt my breath caught back, and my
teeth began to chatter, and the stick I had in one hand snapped in two with the
grip I gave it. It was as if I had had an electric current down my spine, and
yet for some moment of time which seemed long, but which must have been very
short, I caught myself wondering what on earth was the matter. Then I knew what
had made my very heart shudder and my bones grind together in an agony. As I
glanced up I had looked straight towards the last house in the row before me,
and in an upper window of that house I had seen for some short fraction of a
second a face. It was the face of a woman, and yet it was not human. You and I,
Salisbury, have heard in our time, as we sat in our seats in church in sober
English fashion, of a lust that cannot be satiated, and of a fire that is
unquenchable, but few of us have any notion what these words mean. I hope you
never may, for as I saw that face at the window, with the blue sky above me and
the warm air playing in gusts about me, I knew I had looked into another
world—looked through the window of a commonplace, brand-new house, and seen
hell open before me. When the first shock was over, I thought once or twice
that I should have fainted; my face streamed with a cold sweat, and my breath
came and went in sobs, as if I had been half drowned. I managed to get up at
last, and walked round to the street, and there I saw the name Dr. Black on the
post by the front gate. As fate or my luck would have it, the door opened and a
man came down the steps as I passed by. I had no doubt it was the doctor
himself. He was of a type rather common in London,—long and thin with a pasty
face and a dull black moustache. He gave me a look as we passed each other on
the pavement, and though it was merely the casual glance which one
foot-passenger bestows on another, I felt convinced in my mind that here was an
ugly customer to deal with. As you may imagine I went my way a good deal
puzzled and horrified, too, by what I had seen; for I had paid another visit to
the 'General Gordon,' and had got together a good deal of the common gossip of
the place about the Blacks. I didn't mention the fact that I had seen a woman's
face in the window; but I heard that Mrs. Black had been much admired for her
beautiful golden hair, and round what had struck me with such a nameless terror
there was a mist of flowing yellow hair, as it were an aureole of glory round
the visage of a satyr. The whole thing bothered me in an indescribable manner;
and when I got home I tried my best to think of the impression I had received
as an illusion, but it was no use. I knew very well I had seen what I have
tried to describe to you, and I was morally certain that I had seen Mrs. Black.
And then there was the gossip of the place, the suspicion of foul play, which I
knew to be false, and my own conviction that there was some deadly mischief or
other going on in that bright red house at the corner of the Devon Road,—how to
construct a theory of a reasonable kind out of these two elements. In short, I
found myself in a world of mystery; I puzzled my head over it and filled up my
leisure moments by gathering together odd threads of speculation, but I never
moved a step toward any real solution, and as the summer days went on the
matter seemed to grown misty and indistinct, shadowing some vague terror, like
a nightmare of last month. I suppose it would before long have faded into the
background of my brain—I should not have forgotten it, for such a thing could never
be forgotten—but one morning as I was looking over the paper my eye was caught
by a heading over some two dozen lines of small type. The words I had seen were
simply, 'The Harlesden Case,' and I knew what I was going to read. Mrs. Black
was dead. Black had called in another medical man to certify as to cause of
death, and something or other had aroused the strange doctor's suspicions, and
there had been an inquest and post-mortem. And the result? That, I
will confess, did astonish me considerably; it was the triumph of the
unexpected. The two doctors who made the autopsy were obliged to confess that
they could not discover the faintest trace of any kind of foul play; their most
exquisite tests and reagents failed to detect the presence of poison in the
most infinitesimal quantity. Death, they found, had been caused by a somewhat
obscure and scientifically interesting form of brain disease. The tissue of the
brain and the molecules of the gray matter had undergone a most extraordinary
series of changes; and the younger of the two doctors, who has some reputation,
I believe, as a specialist in brain trouble, made some remarks in giving his
evidence, which struck me deeply at the time, though I did not then grasp their
full significance. He said: 'At the commencement of the examination I was
astonished to find appearances of a character entirely new to me,
notwithstanding my somewhat large experience. I need not specify these
appearances at present; it will be sufficient for me to state that as I
proceeded in my task I could scarcely believe that the brain before me was that
of a human being at all.' There was some surprise at this statement, as you may
imagine, and the coroner asked the doctor if he meant to say that the brain
resembled that of an animal. 'No,' he replied, 'I should not put it in that
way. Some of the appearances I noticed seemed to point in that direction, but
others, and these were the more surprising, indicated a nervous organization of
a wholly different character to that either of man or of the lower animals.' It
was a curious thing to say, but of course the jury brought in a verdict of
death from natural causes, and, so far as the public was concerned, the case
came to an end. But after I had read what the doctor said, I made up my mind that
I should like to know a good deal more, and I set to work on what seemed likely
to prove an interesting investigation. I had really a good deal of trouble, but
I was successful in a measure. Though—why, my dear fellow, I had no notion of
the time. Are you aware that we have been here nearly four hours? The waiters
are staring at us. Let's have the bill and be gone."
The two men went out in silence, and stood a moment in the cool
air, watching the hurrying traffic of Coventry Street pass before them to the
accompaniment of ringing bells of hansoms and the cries of the newsboys, the
deep far murmur of London surging up ever and again from beneath these louder
noises.
"It is a strange case, isn't it?" said Dyson, at length.
"What do you think of it?"
"My dear fellow, I haven't heard the end, so I will reserve
my opinion. When will you give me the sequel?"
"Come to my rooms some evening; say next Thursday. Here's the
address. Good-night; I want to get down to the Strand."
Dyson hailed a passing hansom, and Salisbury turned northward to
walk home to his lodgings.
II
Mr. Salisbury, as may have been gathered from the few remarks
which he had found it possible to introduce in the course of the evening, was a
young gentleman of a peculiarly solid form of intellect, coy and retiring
before the mysterious and the uncommon, with a constitutional dislike of
paradox. During the restaurant dinner he had been forced to listen in almost
absolute silence to a strange tissue of improbabilities strung together with
the ingenuity of a born meddler in plots and mysteries, and it was with a
feeling of weariness that he crossed Shaftesbury Avenue, and dived into the
recesses of Soho, for his lodgings were in a modest neighbourhood to the north
of Oxford Street. As he walked he speculated on the probable fate of Dyson,
relying on literature unbefriended by a thoughtful relative; and could not help
concluding that so much subtlety united to a too vivid imagination would in all
likelihood have been rewarded with a pair of Sandwich-boards or a super's
banner. Absorbed in this train of thought, and admiring the perverse dexterity
which could transmute the face of a sickly woman and a case of brain disease
into the crude elements of romance, Salisbury strayed on through the dimly lighted
streets, not noticing the gusty wind which drove sharply round corners and
whirled the stray rubbish of the pavement into the air in eddies, while black
clouds gathered over the sickly yellow moon. Even a stray drop or two of rain
blown into his face did not rouse him from his meditations, and it was only
when with a sudden rush the storm tore down upon the street that he began to
consider the expediency of finding some shelter. The rain, driven by the wind,
pelted down with the violence of a thunder-storm, dashing up from the stones
and hissing through the air, and soon a perfect torrent of water coursed along
the kennels and accumulated in pools over the choked-up drains. The few stray
passengers who had been loafing rather than walking about the street, had
scuttered away like frightened rabbits to some invisible places of refuge, and
though Salisbury whistled loud and long for a hansom, no hansom appeared. He
looked about him, as if to discover how far he might be from the haven of
Oxford Street; but strolling carelessly along he had turned out of his way, and
found himself in an unknown region, and one to all appearance devoid even of a
public-house where shelter could be bought for the modest sum of twopence. The
street lamps were few and at long intervals, and burned behind grimy glasses
with the sickly light of oil lamps, and by this wavering light Salisbury could
make out the shadowy and vast old houses of which the street was composed. As
he passed along, hurrying, and shrinking from the full sweep of the rain, he
noticed the innumerable bell-handles, with names that seemed about to vanish of
old age graven on brass plates beneath them, and here and there a richly carved
pent-house overhung the door, blackening with the grime of fifty years. The storm
seemed to grow more and more furious; he was wet through, and a new hat had
become a ruin, and still Oxford Street seemed as far off as ever. It was with
deep relief that the dripping man caught sight of a dark archway which seemed
to promise shelter from the rain if not from the wind. Salisbury took up his
position in the dryest corner and looked about him; he was standing in a kind
of passage contrived under part of a house, and behind him stretched a narrow
footway leading between blank walls to regions unknown. He had stood there for
some time, vainly endeavouring to rid himself of some of his superfluous
moisture, and listening for the passing wheel of a hansom, when his attention
was aroused by a loud noise coming from the direction of the passage behind,
and growing louder as it drew nearer. In a couple of minutes he could make out
the shrill, raucous voice of a woman, threatening and denouncing and making the
very stones echo with her accents, while now and then a man grumbled and
expostulated. Though to all appearance devoid of romance, Salisbury had some
relish for street rows, and was, indeed, somewhat of an amateur in the more
amusing phases of drunkenness; he therefore composed himself to listen and
observe with something of the air of a subscriber to grand opera. To his
annoyance, however, the tempest seemed suddenly to be composed, and he could
hear nothing but the impatient steps of the woman and the slow lurch of the man
as they came toward him. Keeping back in the shadow of the wall, he could see
the two drawing nearer; the man was evidently drunk, and had much ado to avoid
frequent collision with the wall as he tacked across from one side to the
other, like some bark beating up against a wind. The woman was looking straight
in front of her, with tears streaming from her eyes, but suddenly as they went
by, the flame blazed up again, and she burst forth into a torrent of abuse,
facing round upon her companion.
"You low rascal! You mean, contemptible cur!" she went
on, after an incoherent storm of curses: "You think I'm to work and slave
for you always, I suppose, while you're after that Green Street girl and
drinking every penny you've got. But you're mistaken, Sam,—indeed, I'll bear it
no longer. Damn you, you dirty thief, I've done with you and your master too,
so you can go your own errands, and I only hope they'll get you into
trouble."
The woman tore at the bosom of her dress, and taking something out
that looked like paper, crumpled it up and flung it away. It fell at
Salisbury's feet. She ran out and disappeared in the darkness, while the man
lurched slowly into the street, grumbling indistinctly to himself in a
perplexed tone of voice. Salisbury looked out after him, and saw him maundering
along the pavement, halting now and then and swaying indecisively, and then
starting off at some fresh tangent. The sky had cleared, and white fleecy
clouds were fleeting across the moon, high in the heaven. The light came and
went by turns as the clouds passed by, and, turning round as the clear white rays
shone into the passage, Salisbury saw the little ball of crumpled paper which
the woman had cast down. Oddly curious to know what it might contain, he picked
it up and put it in his pocket, and set out afresh on his journey.
III
Salisbury was a man of habit. When he got home, drenched to the
skin, his clothes hanging lank about him, and a ghastly dew besmearing his hat,
his only thought was of his health, of which he took studious care. So, after
changing his clothes and encasing himself in a warm dressing-gown he proceeded
to prepare a sudorific in the shape of hot gin and water, warming the latter
over one of those spirit lamps which mitigate the austerities of the modern
hermit's life. By the time this preparation had been imbibed, and Salisbury's disturbed
feelings had been soothed by a pipe of tobacco, he was able to get into bed in
a happy state of vacuity, without a thought of his adventure in the dark
archway, or of the weird fancies with which Dyson had seasoned his dinner. It
was the same at breakfast the next morning, for Salisbury made a point of not
thinking of anything until that meal was over; but when the cup and saucer were
cleared away, and the morning pipe was lit, he remembered the little ball of
paper, and began fumbling in the pockets of his wet coat. He did not remember
into which pocket he had put it, and as he dived now into one, and now into
another, he experienced a strange feeling of apprehension lest it should not be
there at all, though he could not for the life of him have explained the
importance he attached to what was in all probability mere rubbish. But he
sighed with relief when his fingers touched the crumpled surface in an inside
pocket, and he drew it out gently and laid it on the little desk by his easy
chair with as much care as if it had been some rare jewel. Salisbury sat
smoking and staring at his find for a few minutes, an odd temptation to throw
the thing in the fire and have done with it struggling with as odd a
speculation as to its possible contents and as to the reason why the infuriated
woman should have flung a bit of paper from her with such vehemence. As might
be expected, it was the latter feeling that conquered in the end, and yet it
was with something like repugnance that he at last took the paper and unrolled
it, and laid it out before him. It was a piece of common dirty paper, to all
appearance torn out of a cheap exercise book, and in the middle were a few
lines written in a queer cramped hand. Salisbury bent his head and stared
eagerly at it for a moment, drawing a long breath, and then fell back in his
chair gazing blankly before him, till at last with a sudden revulsion he burst
into a peal of laughter, so long and loud and uproarious that the landlady's
baby in the floor below awoke from sleep and echoed his mirth with hideous
yells. But he laughed again and again, and took up the paper to read a second
time what seemed such meaningless nonsense.
"Q. has had to go and see his friends in Paris," it
began. "Traverse Handel S. 'Once around the grass, and twice around the
lass, and thrice around the maple tree.'"
Salisbury took up the paper and crumpled it as the angry woman had
done, and aimed it at the fire. He did not throw it there, however, but tossed
it carelessly into the well of the desk, and laughed again. The sheer folly of
the thing offended him, and he was ashamed of his own eager speculation, as one
who pores over the high-sounding announcements in the agony column of the daily
paper, and finds nothing but advertisement and triviality. He walked to the
window, and stared out at the languid morning life of his quarter; the maids in
slatternly print-dresses washing door-steps, the fishmonger and the butcher on
their rounds, and the tradesmen standing at the doors of their small shops,
drooping for lack of trade and excitement. In the distance a blue haze gave
some grandeur to the prospect, but the view as a whole was depressing, and
would have only interested a student of the life of London, who finds something
rare and choice in its every aspect. Salisbury turned away in disgust, and
settled himself in the easy chair, upholstered in a bright shade of green, and
decked with yellow gimp, which was the pride and attraction of the apartments.
Here he composed himself to his morning's occupation, the perusal of a novel
that dealt with sport and love in a manner that suggested the collaboration of
a stud-groom and a ladies' college. In an ordinary way, however, Salisbury
would have been carried on by the interest of the story up to lunch time, but
this morning he fidgeted in and out of his chair, took the book up and laid it
down again, and swore at last to himself and at himself in mere irritation. In
point of fact the jingle of the paper found in the archway had "got into
his head," and do what he would he could not help muttering over and over,
"Once around the grass, and twice around the lass, and thrice around the
maple tree." It became a positive pain, like the foolish burden of a
music-hall song, everlastingly quoted, and sung at all hours of the day and
night, and treasured by the street boys as an unfailing resource for six months
together. He went out into the streets, and tried to forget his enemy in the
jostling of the crowds, and the roar and clatter of the traffic; but presently
he would find himself stealing quietly aside and pacing some deserted byway,
vainly puzzling his brains, and trying to fix some meaning to phrases that were
meaningless. It was a positive relief when Thursday came, and he remembered
that he had made an appointment to go and see Dyson; the flimsy reveries of the
self-styled man of letters appeared entertaining when compared with this
ceaseless iteration, this maze of thought from which there seemed no
possibility of escape. Dyson's abode was in one of the quietest of the quiet
streets that lead down from the Strand to the river, and when Salisbury passed
from the narrow stairway into his friend's room, he saw that the uncle had been
beneficent indeed. The floor glowed and flamed with all the colours of the
east; it was, as Dyson pompously remarked, "a sunset in a dream," and
the lamplight, the twilight of London streets, was shut out with strangely
worked curtains, glittering here and there with threads of gold. In the shelves
of an oak armoire stood jars and plates of old French china,
and the black and white of etchings not to be found in the Haymarket or in Bond
Street, stood out against the splendour of a Japanese paper. Salisbury sat down
on the settle by the hearth, and sniffed the mingled fumes of incense and tobacco,
wondering and dumb before all this splendour after the green rep and the
oleographs, the gilt-framed mirror and the lustres of his own apartment.
"I am glad you have come," said Dyson. "Comfortable
little room, isn't it? But you don't look very well, Salisbury. Nothing
disagreed with you, has it?"
"No; but I have been a good deal bothered for the last few
days. The fact is I had an odd kind of—of—adventure, I suppose I may call it,
that night I saw you, and it has worried me a good deal. And the provoking part
of it is that it's the merest nonsense—but, however, I will tell you all about
it, by and by. You were going to let me have the rest of that odd story you
began at the restaurant."
"Yes. But I am afraid, Salisbury, you are incorrigible. You
are a slave to what you call matter of fact. You know perfectly well that in
your heart you think the oddness in that case is of my making, and that it is
all really as plain as the police reports. However, as I have begun, I will go
on. But first we will have something to drink, and you may as well light your
pipe."
Dyson went up to the oak cupboard, and drew from its depths a
rotund bottle and two little glasses quaintly gilded.
"It's Benedictin," he said. "You'll have some,
won't you?"
Salisbury assented, and the two men sat sipping and smoking
reflectively for some minutes before Dyson began.
"Let me see," he said at last; "we were at the
inquest, weren't we? No, we had done with that. Ah, I remember. I was telling
you that on the whole I had been successful in my inquiries, investigation, or
what ever you like to call it, into the matter. Wasn't that where I left
off?"
"Yes, that was it. To be precise, I think 'though' was the
last word you said on the matter."
"Exactly. I have been thinking it all over since the other
night, and I have come to the conclusion that that 'though' is a very big
'though' indeed. Not to put too fine a point on it, I have had to confess that
what I found out, or thought I found out, amounts in reality to nothing. I am
as far away from the heart of the case as ever. However, I may as well tell you
what I do know. You may remember my saying that I was impressed a good deal by
some remarks of one of the doctors who gave evidence at the inquest. Well, I
determined that my first step must be to try if I could get something more
definite and intelligible out of that doctor. Somehow or other I managed to get
an introduction to the man, and he gave me an appointment to come and see him.
He turned out to be a pleasant, genial fellow; rather young and not in the
least like the typical medical man, and he began the conference by offering me
whiskey and cigars. I didn't think it worth while to beat about the bush, so I
began by saying that part of his evidence at the Harlesden Inquest struck me as
very peculiar, and I gave him the printed report, with the sentences in
question underlined. He just glanced at the slip, and gave me a queer look. 'It
struck you as peculiar, did it?' said he. 'Well, you must remember the
Harlesden case was very peculiar. In fact, I think I may safely say that in
some features it was unique—quite unique.' 'Quite so,' I replied, 'and that's
exactly why it interests me, and why I want to know more about it. And I
thought that if anybody could give me any information it would be you. What is
your opinion of the matter?'
"It was a pretty downright sort of question, and my doctor
looked rather taken aback.
"'Well,' he said, 'as I fancy your motive in inquiring into
the question must be mere curiosity, I think I may tell you my opinion with
tolerable freedom. So, Mr.—Mr. Dyson, if you want to know my theory, it is
this: I believe that Dr. Black killed his wife.'
"'But the verdict,' I answered, 'the verdict was given from
your own evidence.'
"'Quite so, the verdict was given in accordance with the
evidence of my colleague and myself, and, under the circumstances, I think the
jury acted very sensibly. In fact I don't see what else they could have done.
But I stick to my opinion, mind you, and I say this also: I don't wonder at
Black's doing what I firmly believe he did. I think he was justified.'
"'Justified! How could that be?' I asked. I was astonished,
as you may imagine, at the answer I had got. The doctor wheeled round his
chair, and looked steadily at me for a moment before he answered.
"'I suppose you are not a man of science yourself? No; then
it would be of no use my going into detail. I have always been firmly opposed
myself to any partnership between physiology and psychology. I believe that
both are bound to suffer. No one recognizes more decidedly than I do the
impassable gulf, the fathomless abyss that separates the world of consciousness
from the sphere of matter. We know that every change of consciousness is
accompanied by a rearrangement of the molecules in the gray matter; and that is
all. What the link between them is, or why they occur together, we do not know,
and most authorities believe that we never can know. Yet, I will tell you that
as I did my work, the knife in my hand, I felt convinced, in spite of all
theories, that what lay before me was not the brain of a dead woman; not the
brain of a human being at all. Of course I saw the face; but it was quite
placid, devoid of all expression. It must have been a beautiful face, no doubt;
but I can honestly say that I would not have looked in that face when there was
life behind it for a thousand guineas, no, nor for twice that sum.'
"'My dear sir,' I said, 'you surprise me extremely. You say
that it was not the brain of a human being. What was it then?'
"'The brain of a devil.' He spoke quite coolly, and never
moved a muscle. 'The brain of a devil,' he repeated, 'and I have no doubt that
Black put a pillow over her mouth and kept it there for a few minutes. I don't
blame him if he did. Whatever Mrs. Black was, she was not fit to stay in this
world. Will you have anything more? No? Good-night, good-night.'
"It was a queer sort of opinion to get from a man of science,
wasn't it? When he was saying that he would not have looked on that face when
alive for a thousand guineas or two thousand guineas, I was thinking of the
face I had seen, but I said nothing. I went again to Harlesden, and passed from
one shop to another, making small purchases, and trying to find out whether
there was anything about the Blacks which was not already common property; but
there was very little to hear. One of the tradesmen to whom I spoke said he had
known the dead woman well—she used to buy of him such quantities of grocery as
were required for their small household, for they never kept a servant, but had
a charwoman in occasionally, and she had not seen Mrs. Black for months before
she died. According to this man, Mrs. Black was 'a nice lady,' always kind and
considerate, so fond of her husband, and he of her, as everyone thought. And
yet, to put the doctor's opinion on one side, I knew what I had seen. And then,
after thinking it all over and putting one thing with another, it seemed to me
that the only person likely to give me much assistance would be Black himself,
and I made up my mind to find him. Of course he wasn't to be found in
Harlesden; he had left, I was told, directly after the funeral. Everything in
the house had been sold, and one fine day Black got into the train with a small
portmanteau, and went nobody knew where. It was a chance if he were ever heard
of again, and it was by a mere chance that I came across him at last. I was
walking one day along Gray's Inn Road, not bound for anywhere in particular,
but looking about me, as usual, and holding on to my hat, for it was a gusty
day in early March, and the wind was making the tree-tops in the Inn rock and
quiver. I had come up from the Holborn end, and I had almost got to Theobald's
Road, when I noticed a man walking in front of me, leaning on a stick and to
all appearance very feeble. There was something about his look that made me
curious, I don't know why; and I began to walk briskly, with the idea of
overtaking him, when of a sudden his hat blew off, and came bounding along the
pavement to my feet. Of course I rescued the hat, and gave it a glance as I
went towards its owner. It was a biography in itself; a Piccadilly maker's name
in the inside, but I don't think a beggar would have picked it out of the
gutter. Then I looked up, and saw Dr. Black of Harlesden waiting for me. A
queer thing, wasn't it? But, Salisbury, what a change! When I saw Dr. Black
come down the steps of his house at Harlesden, he was an upright man, walking
firmly with well-built limbs; a man, I should say, in the prime of his life.
And now before me there crouched this wretched creature, bent and feeble, with
shrunken cheeks, and hair that was whitening fast, and limbs that trembled and
shook together, and misery in his eyes. He thanked me for bringing him his hat,
saying, 'I don't think I should ever have got it, I can't run much now. A gusty
day, sir, isn't it?' and with this he was turning away; but by little and
little I contrived to draw him into the current of conversation, and we walked
together eastward. I think the man would have been glad to get rid of me, but I
didn't intend to let him go, and he stopped at last in front of a miserable
house in a miserable street. It was, I verily believe, one of the most wretched
quarters I have ever seen,—houses that must have been sordid and hideous enough
when new, that had gathered foulness with every year, and now seemed to lean
and totter to their fall. 'I live up there,' said Black, pointing to the tiles,
'not in the front,—in the back. I am very quiet there. I won't ask you to come
in now, but perhaps some other day——'
"I caught him up at that, and told him I should be only too
glad to come and see him. He gave me an odd sort of glance, as if he was
wondering what on earth I or anybody else could care about him, and I left him
fumbling with his latch-key. I think you will say I did pretty well, when I
tell you that within a few weeks I had made myself an intimate friend of
Black's. I shall never forget the first time I went to this room; I hope I
shall never see such abject, squalid misery again. The foul paper, from which
all pattern or trace of a pattern had long vanished, subdued and penetrated
with the grime of the evil street, was hanging in mouldering pennons from the
wall. Only at the end of the room was it possible to stand upright; and the
sight of the wretched bed and the odour of corruption that pervaded the place
made me turn faint and sick. Here I found him munching a piece of bread; he
seemed surprised to find that I had kept my promise, but he gave me his chair,
and sat on the bed while we talked. I used to go and see him often, and we had
long conversations together, but he never mentioned Harlesden or his wife. I
fancy that he supposed me ignorant of the matter, or thought that if I had
heard of it, I should never connect the respectable Dr. Black of Harlesden with
a poor garreteer in the backwoods of London. He was a strange man, and as we
sat together smoking, I often wondered whether he were mad or sane, for I think
the wildest dreams of Paracelsus and the Rosicrucians would appear plain and
sober fact, compared with the theories I have heard him earnestly advance in
that grimy den of his. I once ventured to hint something of the sort to him; I
suggested that something he had said was in flat contradiction to all science
and all experience. 'No, Dyson,' he answered, 'not all experience, for mine
counts for something. I am no dealer in unproved theories; what I say I have
proved for myself, and at a terrible cost. There is a region of knowledge of
which you will never know, which wise men, seeing from afar off, shun like the
plague, as well they may; but into that region I have gone. If you knew, if you
could even dream of what may be done, of what one or two men have done, in this
quiet world of ours, your very soul would shudder and faint within you. What
you have heard from me has been but the merest husk and outer covering of true
science,—that science which means death and that which is more awful than death
to those who gain it. No, Dyson, when men say that there are strange things in
the world, they little know the awe and the terror that dwell always within
them and about them.'"
There was a sort of fascination about the man that drew me to him,
and I was quite sorry to have to leave London for a month or two; I missed his
odd talk. A few days after I came back to town I thought I would go and look
him up; but when I gave the two rings at the bell that used to summon him,
there was no answer. I rang and rang again, and was just turning to go away,
when the door opened and a dirty woman asked me what I wanted. From her look I
fancy she took me for a plain-clothes officer after one of her lodgers; but
when I inquired if Mr. Black was in, she gave me a stare of another kind.
'There's no Mr. Black lives here,' she said. 'He's gone. He's dead this six
weeks. I always thought he was a bit queer in his head, or else had been and
got into some trouble or other. He used to go out every morning from ten till
one, and one Monday morning we heard him come in and go into his room and shut
the door, and a few minutes after, just as we was a-sitting down to our dinner,
there was such a scream that I thought I should have gone right off. And then
we heard a stamping, and down he came raging and cursing most dreadful,
swearing he had been robbed of something that was worth millions. And then he
just dropped down in the passage, and we thought he was dead. We got him up to
his room, and put him on his bed, and I just sat there and waited, while my
'usband he went for the doctor. And there was the winder wide open, and a little
tin box he had lying on the floor open and empty; but of course nobody could
possible have got in at the winder, and as for him having anything that was
worth anything, it's nonsense, for he was often weeks and weeks behind with his
rent, and my 'usband he threatened often and often to turn him into the street,
for, as he said, we've got a living to myke like other people, and of course
that's true; but somehow I didn't like to do it, though he was an odd kind of a
man, and I fancy had been better off. And then the doctor came and looked at
him, and said as he couldn't do nothing, and that night he died as I was
a-sitting by his bed; and I can tell you that, with one thing and another, we
lost money by him, for the few bits of clothes as he had were worth next to
nothing when they came to be sold.'
"I gave the woman half a sovereign for her trouble, and went
home thinking of Dr. Black and the epitaph she had made him, and wondering at
his strange fancy that he had been robbed. I take it that he had very little to
fear on that score, poor fellow; but I suppose that he was really mad, and died
in a sudden access of his mania. His landlady said that once or twice when she
had had occasion to go into his room (to dun the poor wretch for his rent, most
likely), he would keep her at the door for about a minute, and that when she
came in she would find him putting away his tin box in the corner by the
window. I suppose he had become possessed with the idea of some great treasure,
and fancied himself a wealthy man in the midst of all his misery.
"Explicit, my tale is ended; and you see that though I
knew Black I know nothing of his wife or of the history of her death. That's
the Harlesden case, Salisbury, and I think it interests me all the more deeply
because there does not seem the shadow of a possibility that I or anyone else
will ever know more about it. What do you think of it?"
"Well, Dyson, I must say that I think you have contrived to
surround the whole thing with a mystery of your own making. I go for the doctor's
solution,—Black murdered his wife, being himself, in all probability, an
undeveloped lunatic."
"What? Do you believe, then, that this woman was something
too awful, too terrible, to be allowed to remain on the earth? You will
remember that the doctor said it was the brain of a devil?"
"Yes, yes; but he was speaking, of course, metaphorically.
It's really quite a simple matter, Dyson, if you only look at it like
that."
"Ah, well, you may be right; but yet I am sure you are not.
Well, well, it's no good discussing it anymore. A little more Benedictine?
That's right; try some of this tobacco. Didn't you say that you had been
bothered by something,—something which happened that night we dined
together?"
"Yes, I have been worried, Dyson,—worried a great deal. I—But
it's such a trivial matter, indeed, such an absurdity, that I feel ashamed to
trouble you with it."
"Never mind; let's have it, absurd or not."
With many hesitations, and with much inward resentment of the
folly of the thing, Salisbury told his tale, and repeated reluctantly the
absurd intelligence and the absurder doggerel of the scrap of paper, expecting
to hear Dyson burst out into a roar of laughter.
"Isn't it too bad that I should let myself be bothered by
such stuff as that?" he asked, when he had stuttered out the jingle of
once and twice and thrice.
Dyson had listened to it all gravely, even to the end, and
meditated for a few minutes in silence.
"Yes," he said at length, "it was a curious chance,
your taking shelter in that archway just as those two went by. But I don't know
that I should call what was written on the paper nonsense; it is bizarre
certainly, but I expect it has a meaning for somebody. Just repeat it again,
will you? and I will write it down. Perhaps we might find a cipher of some
sort, though I hardly think we shall."
Again had the reluctant lips of Salisbury to slowly stammer out
the rubbish he abhorred, while Dyson jotted it down on a slip of paper.
"Look over it, will you?" he said, when it was done;
"it may be important that I should have every word in its place. Is that
all right?"
"Yes, that is an accurate copy. But I don't think you will
get much out of it. Depend upon it, it is mere nonsense, a wanton scribble. I
must be going now, Dyson. No, no more; that stuff of yours is pretty strong.
Good-night."
"I suppose you would like to hear from me, if I did find out
anything?"
"No, not I; I don't want to hear about the thing again. You
may regard the discovery, if it is one as your own."
"Very well. Good-night."
IV
A good many hours after Salisbury had returned to the company of
the green rep chairs, Dyson still sat at his desk, itself a Japanese romance,
smoking many pipes, and meditating over his friend's story. The bizarre quality
of the inscription which had annoyed Salisbury was to him an attraction; and
now and again he took it up and scanned thoughtfully what he had written,
especially the quaint jingle at the end. It was a token, a symbol, he decided,
and not a cipher; and the woman who had flung it away was, in all probability,
entirely ignorant of its meaning. She was but the agent of the "Sam"
she had abused and discarded, and he, too, was again the agent of some one
unknown,—possibly of the individual styled Q., who had been forced to visit his
French friends. But what to make of "Traverse Handel S.?" Here was
the root and source of the enigma, and not all the tobacco of Virginia seemed
likely to suggest any clew here. It seemed almost hopeless; but Dyson regarded
himself as the Wellington of mysteries, and went to bed feeling assured that
sooner or later he would hit upon the right track. For the next few days he was
deeply engaged in his literary labours,—labours which were a profound mystery
even to the most intimate of his friends, who searched the railway bookstalls
in vain for the result of so many hours spent at the Japanese bureau in company
with strong tobacco and black tea. On this occasion Dyson confined himself to
his room for four days, and it was with genuine relief that he laid down his
pen and went out into the streets in quest of relaxation and fresh air. The gas
lamps were being lighted, and the fifth edition of the evening papers was being
howled through the streets; and Dyson, feeling that he wanted quiet, turned
away from the clamorous Strand, and began to trend away to the northwest. Soon
he found himself in streets that echoed to his foot-steps; and crossing a broad
new throughfare, and verging still to the west, Dyson discovered that he had
penetrated to the depths of Soho. Here again was life; rare vintages of France
and Italy, at prices which seemed contemptibly small, allured the passer-by;
here were cheeses, vast and rich; here olive oil, and here a grove of
Rabelaisian sausages; while in a neighbouring shop the whole press of Paris
appeared to be on sale. In the middle of the roadway a strange miscellany of
nations sauntered to and fro; for there cab and hansom rarely ventured, and
from window over window the inhabitants looked forth in pleased contemplation
of the scene. Dyson made his way slowly along, mingling with the crowd on the
cobblestones, listening to the queer babel of French and German and Italian and
English, glancing now and again at the shop windows with their levelled
batteries of bottles, and had almost gained the end of the street, when his
attention was arrested by a small shop at the corner, a vivid contrast to its
neighbours. It was the typical shop of the poor quarter, a shop entirely
English. Here were vended tobacco and sweets, cheap pipes of clay and cherry
wood; penny exercise-books and penholders jostled for precedence with comic
songs, and story papers with appalling cuts showed that romance claimed its
place beside the actualities of the evening paper, the bills of which fluttered
at the doorway. Dyson glanced up at the name above the door, and stood by the
kennel trembling; for a sharp pang, the pang of one who has made a discovery,
had for a moment left him incapable of motion. The name over the little shop
was Travers. Dyson looked up again, this time at the corner of the wall above
the lamp-post, and read, in white letters on a blue ground, the words
"Handel Street, W.C.," and the legend was repeated in fainter letters
just below. He gave a little sigh of satisfaction, and without more ado walked
boldly into the shop, and stared the fat man who was sitting behind the counter
full in the face. The fellow rose to his feet and returned the stare a little
curiously, and then began in stereotyped phrase,—
"What can I do for you, sir?"
Dyson enjoyed the situation, and a dawning perplexity on the man's
face. He propped his stick carefully against the counter, and leaning over it,
said slowly and impressively:
"Once around the grass, and twice around the lass, and thrice
around the maple-tree."
Dyson had calculated on his words producing an effect, and he was
not disappointed. The vendor of miscellanies gasped, open-mouthed, like a fish,
and steadied himself against the counter. When he spoke, after a short
interval, it was in a hoarse mutter, tremulous and unsteady.
"Would you mind saying that again, sir? I didn't quite catch
it."
"My good man, I shall most certainly do nothing of the kind.
You heard what I said perfectly well. You have got a clock in your shop, I see;
an admirable timekeeper I have no doubt. Well, I give you a minute by your own
clock."
The man looked about him in perplexed indecision, and Dyson felt
that it was time to be bold.
"Look here, Travers, the time is nearly up. You have heard of
Q., I think. Remember, I hold your life in my hands. Now!"
Dyson was shocked at the result of his own audacity. The man
shrunk and shrivelled in terror, the sweat poured down a face of ashy white,
and he held up his hands before him.
"Mr. Davies, Mr. Davies, don't say that, don't for Heaven's
sake. I didn't know you at first, I didn't indeed. Good God! Mr. Davies, you
wouldn't ruin me? I'll get it in a moment."
"You had better not lose any more time."
The man slunk piteously out of his shop, and went into a back
parlour. Dyson heard his trembling fingers fumbling with a bunch of keys, and
the creak of an opening box. He came back presently with a small package neatly
tied up in brown paper in his hands, and, still full of terror, handed it to
Dyson.
"I'm glad to be rid of it," he said. "I'll take no
more jobs of this sort."
Dyson took the parcel and his stick, and walked out of the shop
with a nod, turning round as he passed the door. Travers had sunk into his
seat, his face still white with terror, with one hand over his eyes, and Dyson
speculated a good deal as he walked rapidly away as to what queer chords those
could be on which he had played so roughly. He hailed the first hansom he could
see, and drove home, and when he had lit his hanging lamp, and laid his parcel
on the table, he paused for a moment, wondering on what strange thing the
lamplight would soon shine. He locked his door, and cut the strings, and
unfolded the paper layer after layer, and came at last to a small wooden box,
simply but solidly made. There was no lock, and Dyson had simply to raise the
lid, and as he did so he drew a long breath and started back. The lamp seemed
to glimmer feebly like a single candle, but the whole room blazed with
light—and not with light alone but with a thousand colours, with all the
glories of some painted window; and upon the walls of his room and on the
familiar furniture, the glow flamed back and seemed to flow again to its
source, the little wooden box. For there upon a bed of soft wool lay the most
splendid jewel,—a jewel such as Dyson had never dreamed of, and within it shone
the blue of far skies, and the green of the sea by the shore, and the red of
the ruby, and deep violet rays, and in the middle of all it seemed aflame as if
a fountain of fire rose up, and fell, and rose again with sparks like stars for
drops. Dyson gave a long deep sigh, and dropped into his chair, and put his
hands over his eyes to think. The jewel was like an opal, but from a long
experience of the shop windows he knew there was no such thing as an opal one
quarter or one eighth of its size. He looked at the stone again, with a feeling
that was almost awe, and placed it gently on the table under the lamp, and
watched the wonderful flame that shone and sparkled in its centre, and then
turned to the box, curious to know whether it might contain other marvels. He
lifted the bed of wool on which the opal had reclined, and saw beneath, no more
jewels, but a little old pocket-book, worn and shabby with use. Dyson opened it
at the first leaf, and dropped the book again appalled. He had read the name of
the owner, neatly written in blue ink:—
STEVEN BLACK, M.D.,
Oranmore,
Devon Road,
Harlesden.
It was several minutes before Dyson could bring himself to open
the book a second time; he remembered the wretched exile in his garret and his
strange talk, and the memory too of the face he had seen at the window, and of
what the specialist had said surged up in his mind, and as he held his finger
on the cover he shivered, dreading what might be written within. When at last
he held it in his hand, and turned the pages, he found that the first two
leaves were blank, but the third was covered with clear minute writing, and
Dyson began to read with the light of the opal flaming in his eyes.
V
"Ever since I was a young man," the record began,
"I devoted all my leisure and a good deal of time that ought to have been
given to other studies to the investigation of curious and obscure branches of
knowledge. What are commonly called the pleasures of life had never any
attractions for me, and I lived alone in London, avoiding my fellow-students,
and in my turn avoided by them as a man self-absorbed and unsympathetic. So
long as I could gratify my desire of knowledge of a peculiar kind, knowledge of
which the very existence is a profound secret to most men, I was intensely
happy, and I have often spent whole nights sitting in the darkness of my room,
and thinking of the strange world on the brink of which I trod. My professional
studies, however, and the necessity of obtaining a degree, for some time forced
my more obscure employment into the background, and soon after I had qualified
I met Agnes, who became my wife. We took a new house in this remote suburb, and
I began the regular routine of a sober practice, and for some months lived
happily enough, sharing in the life about me, and only thinking at odd
intervals of that occult science which had once fascinated my whole being. I
had learnt enough of the paths I had begun to tread to know that they were
beyond all expression difficult and dangerous, that to persevere meant in all probability
the wreck of a life, and that they lead to regions so terrible that the mind of
man shrinks appalled at the very thought. Moreover, the quiet and the peace I
had enjoyed since my marriage had wiled me away to a great extent from places
where I knew no peace could dwell. But suddenly,—I think, indeed, it was the
work of a single night, as I lay awake on my bed gazing into the
darkness,—suddenly, I say, the old desire, the former longing returned, and
returned with a force that had been intensified ten times by its absence; and
when the day dawned and I looked out of the window and saw with haggard eyes
the sun rise in the East, I knew that my doom had been pronounced; that as I
had gone far, so now I must go farther with steps that know no faltering. I
turned to the bed where my wife was sleeping peacefully, and lay down again
weeping bitter tears, for the sun had set on our happy life and had risen with
a dawn of terror to us both. I will not set down here in minute detail what
followed; outwardly I went about the day's labour as before, saying nothing to
my wife. But she soon saw that I had changed. I spent my spare time in a room
which I had fitted up as a laboratory, and often I crept upstairs in the gray
dawn of the morning, when the light of many lamps still glowed over London; and
each night I had stolen a step nearer to that great abyss which I was to bridge
over, the gulf between the world of consciousness and the world of matter. My
experiments were many and complicated in their nature, and it was some months
before I realized whither they all pointed, and when this was borne in upon me
in a moment's time, I felt my face whiten and my heart still within me. But the
power to draw back, the power to stand before the doors that now opened wide before
me and not to enter in, had long ago been absent; the way was closed, and I
could only pass onward. My position was as utterly hopeless as that of the
prisoner in an utter dungeon, whose only light is that of the dungeon above
him; the doors were shut and escape was impossible. Experiment after experiment
gave the same result, and I knew, and shrank even as the thought passed through
my mind, that in the work I had to do there must be elements which no
laboratory could furnish, which no scales could ever measure. In that work,
from which even I doubted to escape with life, life itself must enter; from
some human being there must be drawn that essence which men call the soul, and
in its place (for in the scheme of the world there is no vacant chamber), in
its place would enter in what the lips can hardly utter, what the mind cannot
conceive without a horror more awful than the horror of death itself. And when
I knew this, I knew also on whom this fate would fall; I looked into my wife's
eyes. Even at that hour, if I had gone out and taken a rope and hanged myself I
might have escaped, and she also, but in no other way. At last I told her all.
She shuddered, and wept, and called on her dead mother for help, and asked me
if I had no mercy, and I could only sigh. I concealed nothing from her; I told
her what she would become, and what would enter in where her life had been; I
told her of all the shame and of all the horror. You who will read this when I
am dead,—if indeed I allow this record to survive—you who have opened the box
and have seen what lies there, if you could understand what lies hidden in that
opal! For one night my wife consented to what I asked of her, consented with
the tears running down her beautiful face, and hot shame flushing red over her neck
and breast, consented to undergo this for me. I threw open the window, and we
looked together at the sky and the dark earth for the last time; it was a fine
starlight night, and there was a pleasant breeze blowing, and I kissed her on
her lips, and her tears ran down upon my face. That night she came down to my
laboratory, and there, with shutters bolted and barred down, with curtains
drawn thick and close so that the very stars might be shut out from the sight
of that room, while the crucible hissed and boiled over the lamp, I did what
had to be done, and led out what was no longer a woman. But on the table the
opal flamed and sparkled with such light as no eyes of man have ever gazed on,
and the rays of the flame that was within it flashed and glittered, and shone
even to my heart. My wife had only asked one thing of me; that when there came
at last what I had told her, I would kill her. I have kept that promise."
There was nothing more. Dyson let the little pocket-book fall, and
turned and looked again at the opal with its flaming inmost light, and then,
with unutterable irresistible horror surging up in his heart, grasped the
jewel, and flung it on the ground, and trampled it beneath his heel. His face
was white with terror as he turned away, and for a moment stood sick and
trembling, and then with a start he leapt across the room and steadied himself
against the door. There was an angry hiss, as of steam escaping under great
pressure, and as he gazed, motionless, a volume of heavy yellow smoke was slowly
issuing from the very centre of the jewel, and wreathing itself in snake-like
coils above it. And then a thin white flame burst forth from the smoke, and
shot up into the air and vanished; and on the ground there lay a thing like a
cinder, black, and crumbling to the touch.
IX.THE SECRET OF GORESTHORPE
GRANGE
A.
Conan Doyle
I am sure that Nature never intended me to be a self-made man.
There are times when I can hardly bring myself to realize that twenty years of
my life were spent behind the counter of a grocer's shop in the East End of
London, and that it was through such an avenue that I reached a wealthy
independence and the possession of Goresthorpe Grange. My habits are
Conservative, and my tastes refined and aristocratic. I have a soul which spurns
the vulgar herd. Our family, the D'Odds, date back to a prehistoric era, as is
to be inferred from the fact that their advent into British history is not
commented on by any trustworthy historian. Some instinct tells me that the
blood of a Crusader runs in my veins. Even now, after the lapse of so many
years, such exclamations as "By'r Lady!" rise naturally to my lips,
and I feel that, should circumstances require it, I am capable of rising in my
stirrups and dealing an infidel a blow—say with a mace—which would considerably
astonish him.
Goresthorpe Grange is a feudal mansion—or so it was termed in the
advertisement which originally brought it under my notice. Its right to this
adjective had a most remarkable effect upon its price, and the advantages gained
may possibly be more sentimental than real. Still, it is soothing to me to know
that I have slits in my staircase through which I can discharge arrows: and
there is a sense of power in the fact of possessing a complicated apparatus by
means of which I am enabled to pour molten lead upon the head of the casual
visitor. These things chime in with my peculiar humour, and I do not grudge to
pay for them. I am proud of my battlements and of the circular uncovered sewer
which girds me round. I am proud of my portcullis and donjon and keep. There is
but one thing wanting to round off the mediævalism of my abode, and to render
it symmetrically and completely antique. Goresthorpe Grange is not provided
with a ghost.
Any man with old-fashioned tastes and ideas as to how such
establishments should be conducted would have been disappointed at the
omission. In my case it was particularly unfortunate. From my childhood I had
been an earnest student of the supernatural, and a firm believer in it. I have
revelled in ghostly literature until there is hardly a tale bearing upon the
subject which I have not perused. I learned the German language for the sole
purpose of mastering a book upon demonology. When an infant I have secreted
myself in dark rooms in the hope of seeing some of those bogies with which my
nurse used to threaten me; and the same feeling is as strong in me now as then.
It was a proud moment when I felt that a ghost was one of the luxuries which my
money might command.
It is true that there was no mention of an apparition in the
advertisement. On reviewing the mildewed walls, however, and the shadowy
corridors, I had taken it for granted that there was such a thing on the
premises. As the presence of a kennel pre-supposes that of a dog, so I imagined
that it was impossible that such desirable quarters should be untenanted by one
or more restless shades. Good heavens, what can the noble family from whom I
purchased it have been doing during these hundreds of years! Was there no
member of it spirited enough to make away with his sweetheart, or take some
other steps calculated to establish a hereditary spectre? Even now I can hardly
write with patience upon the subject.
For a long time I hoped against hope. Never did a rat squeak
behind the wainscot, or rain drip upon the attic-floor, without a wild thrill
shooting through me as I thought that at last I had come upon traces of some
unquiet soul. I felt no touch of fear upon these occasions. If it occurred in
the night-time, I would send Mrs. D'Odd—who is a strong-minded woman—to
investigate the matter while I covered up my head with the bed-clothes and
indulged in an ecstasy of expectation. Alas, the result was always the same!
The suspicious sound would be traced to some cause so absurdly natural and
commonplace that the most fervid imagination could not clothe it with any of
the glamour of romance.
I might have reconciled myself to this state of things had it not
been for Jorrocks of Havistock Farm. Jorrocks is a coarse, burly,
matter-of-fact fellow whom I only happen to know through the accidental
circumstance of his fields adjoining my demesne. Yet this man, though utterly
devoid of all appreciation of archæological unities, is in possession of a well
authenticated and undeniable spectre. Its existence only dates back, I believe,
to the reign of the Second George, when a young lady cut her throat upon
hearing of the death of her lover at the battle of Dettingen. Still, even that
gives the house an air of respectability, especially when coupled with
bloodstains upon the floor. Jorrocks is densely unconscious of his good
fortune; and his language when he reverts to the apparition is painful to
listen to. He little dreams how I covet every one of those moans and nocturnal
wails which he describes with unnecessary objurgation. Things are indeed coming
to a pretty pass when democratic spectres are allowed to desert the landed
proprietors and annul every social distinction by taking refuge in the houses
of the great unrecognized.
I have a large amount of perseverance. Nothing else could have
raised me into my rightful sphere, considering the uncongenial atmosphere in
which I spent the earlier part of my life. I felt now that a ghost must be
secured, but how to set about securing one was more than either Mrs. D'Odd or myself
was able to determine. My reading taught me that such phenomena are usually the
outcome of crime. What crime was to be done, then, and who was to do it? A wild
idea entered my mind that Watkins, the house-steward, might be prevailed
upon—for a consideration—to immolate himself or someone else in the interests
of the establishment. I put the matter to him in a half jesting manner; but it
did not seem to strike him in a favourable light. The other servants
sympathized with him in his opinion—at least, I cannot account in any other way
for their having left the house in a body the same afternoon.
"My dear," Mrs. D'Odd remarked to me one day after
dinner as I sat moodily sipping a cup of sack—I love the good old
names—"my dear, that odious ghost of Jorrocks' has been gibbering
again."
"Let it gibber!" I answered recklessly.
Mrs. D'Odd struck a few chords on her virginal and looked
thoughtfully into the fire.
"I'll tell you what it is, Argentine," she said at last,
using the pet name which we usually substituted for Silas, "we must have a
ghost sent down from London."
"How can you be so idiotic, Matilda?" I remarked
severely. "Who could get us such a thing?"
"My cousin, Jack Brocket, could," she answered
confidently.
Now, this cousin of Matilda's was rather a sore subject between
us. He was a rakish clever young fellow, who had tried his hand at many things,
but wanted perseverance to succeed at any. He was, at that time, in chambers in
London, professing to be a general agent, and really living, to a great extent,
upon his wits. Matilda managed so that most of our business should pass through
his hands, which certainly saved me a great deal of trouble, but I found that
Jack's commission was generally considerably larger than all the other items of
the bill put together. It was this fact which made me feel inclined to rebel
against any further negotiations with the young gentleman.
"O yes, he could," insisted Mrs. D., seeing the look of
disapprobation upon my face. "You remember how well he managed that
business about the crest?"
"It was only a resuscitation of the old family coat-of-arms,
my dear," I protested.
Matilda smiled in an irritating manner. "There was a
resuscitation of the family portraits, too, dear," she remarked. "You
must allow that Jack selected them very judiciously."
I thought of the long line of faces which adorned the walls of my
banqueting-hall, from the burly Norman robber, through every gradation of
casque, plume, and ruff, to the sombre Chesterfieldian individual who appears
to have staggered against a pillar in his agony at the return of a maiden MS.
which he grips convulsively in his right hand. I was fain to confess that in
that instance he had done his work well, and that it was only fair to give him
an order—with the usual commission—for a family spectre, should such a thing be
attainable.
It is one of my maxims to act promptly when once my mind is made
up. Noon of the next day found me ascending the spiral stone staircase which
leads to Mr. Brocket's chambers, and admiring the succession of arrows and
fingers upon the whitewashed wall, all indicating the direction of that
gentleman's sanctum. As it happened, artificial aids of the sort were entirely
unnecessary, as an animated flap-dance overhead could proceed from no other
quarter, though it was replaced by a deathly silence as I groped my way up the
stair. The door was opened by a youth evidently astounded at the appearance of
a client, and I was ushered into the presence of my young friend, who was
writing furiously in a large ledger—upside down, as I afterwards discovered.
After the first greetings, I plunged into business at once.
"Look here, Jack," I said, "I want you to get me a
spirit, if you can."
"Spirits you mean!" shouted my wife's cousin, plunging
his hand into the waste-paper basket and producing a bottle with the celerity
of a conjuring trick. "Let's have a drink!"
I held up my hand as a mute appeal against such a proceeding so
early in the day; but on lowering it again I found that I had almost
involuntarily closed my fingers round the tumbler which my adviser had pressed
upon me. I drank the contents hastily off, lest anyone should come in upon us
and set me down as a toper. After all there was something very amusing about
the young fellow's eccentricities.
"Not spirits," I explained smilingly; "an
apparition—a ghost. If such a thing is to be had, I should be very willing to
negotiate."
"A ghost for Goresthorpe Grange?" inquired Mr. Brocket,
with as much coolness as if I had asked for a drawing-room suite.
"Quite so," I answered.
"Easiest thing in the world," said my companion, filling
up my glass again in spite of my remonstrance. "Let us see!" Here he
took down a large red notebook, with all the letters of the alphabet in a
fringe down the edge. "A ghost you said, didn't you? That's G.
G—gems—gimlets—gaspipes—gauntlets—guns—galleys. Ah, here we are. Ghosts. Volume
nine, section six, page forty-one. Excuse me!" And Jack ran up a ladder
and began rummaging among a pile of ledgers on a high shelf. I felt half
inclined to empty my glass into the spittoon when his back was turned; but on
second thoughts I disposed of it in a legitimate way.
"Here it is!" cried my London agent, jumping off the
ladder with a crash, and depositing an enormous volume of manuscript upon the
table. "I have all these things tabulated, so that I may lay my hands upon
them in a moment. It's all right—it's quite weak" (here he filled our
glasses again). "What were we looking up, again?"
"Ghosts," I suggested.
"Of course; page 41. Here we are. 'J. H. Fowler & Son,
Dunkel Street, suppliers of mediums to the nobility and gentry; charms
sold—love-philtres—mummies—horoscopes cast.' Nothing in your line there, I
suppose?"
I shook my head despondingly.
"Frederick Tabb," continued my wife's cousin, "solo
channel of communication between the living and dead. Proprietor of the spirits
of Byron, Kirke White, Grimaldi, Tom Cribb, and Inigo Jones. That's about the
figure!"
"Nothing romantic enough there," I objected. "Good
heavens! Fancy a ghost with a black eye and a handkerchief tied round its
waist, or turning summersaults, and saying, 'How are you to-morrow?'" The
very idea made me so warm that I emptied my glass and filled it again.
"Here is another," said my companion, "Christopher
McCarthy; bi-weekly seances—attended by all the eminent spirits of ancient and
modern times. Nativities—charms—abracadabras, messages from the dead. He might
be able to help us. However, I shall have a hunt round myself to-morrow, and
see some of these fellows. I know their haunts, and it's odd if I can't pick up
something cheap. So there's an end of business," he concluded, hurling the
ledger into the corner, "and now we'll have something to drink."
We had several things to drink—so many that my inventive faculties
were dulled next morning, and I had some little difficulty in explaining to
Mrs. D'Odd why it was that I hung my boots and spectacles upon a peg along with
my other garments before retiring to rest. The new hopes excited by the
confident manner in which my agent had undertaken the commission caused me to
rise superior to alcoholic reaction, and I paced about the rambling corridors
and old-fashoned rooms, picturing to myself the appearance of my expected
acquisition, and deciding what part of the building would harmonize best with
its presence. After much consideration, I pitched upon the banqueting-hall as
being, on the whole, most suitable for its reception. It was a long low room,
hung round with valuable tapestry and interesting relics of the old family to
whom it had belonged. Coats of mail and implements of war glimmered fitfully as
the light of the fire played over them, and the wind crept under the door,
moving the hangings to and fro with a ghastly rustling. At one end there was
the raised dais, on which in ancient times the host and his guests used to
spread their table, while a descent of a couple of steps led to the lower part
of the hall, where the vassals and retainers held wassail. The floor was
uncovered by any sort of carpet, but a layer of rushes had been scattered over it
by my direction. In the whole room there was nothing to remind one of the
nineteenth century; except, indeed, my own solid silver plate, stamped with the
resuscitated family arms, which was laid out upon an oak table in the centre.
This, I determined, should be the haunted room, supposing my wife's cousin to
succeed in his negotiation with the spirit mongers. There was nothing for it
now but to wait patiently until I heard some news of the result of his
inquiries.
A letter came in the course of a few days, which, if it was short,
was at least encouraging. It was scribbled in pencil on the back of a playbill,
and sealed apparently with a tobacco-stopper. "Am on the track," it
said. "Nothing of the sort to be had from any professional spiritualist,
but picked up a fellow in a pub yesterday who says he can manage it for you.
Will send him down unless you wire to the contrary. Abrahams is his name, and
he has done one or two of these jobs before." The letter wound up with
some incoherent allusions to a cheque, and was signed by my affectionate
cousin, John Brocket.
I need hardly say that I did not wire, but awaited the arrival of
Mr. Abrahams with all impatience. In spite of my belief in the supernatural, I
could scarcely credit the fact that any mortal could have such a command over
the spirit-world as to deal in them and barter them against mere earthly gold.
Still, I had Jack's word for it that such a trade existed; and here was a
gentleman with a Judaical name ready to demonstrate it by proof positive. How vulgar
and commonplace Jorrock's eighteenth-century ghost would appear should I
succeed in securing a real mediæval apparition! I almost thought that one had
been sent down in advance, for, as I walked down the moat that night before
retiring to rest, I came upon a dark figure engaged in surveying the machinery
of my portcullis and drawbridge. His start of surprise, however, and the manner
in which he hurried off into the darkness, speedily convinced me of his earthly
origin, and I put him down as some admirer of one of my female retainers
mourning over the muddy Hellespont which divided him from his love. Whoever he
may have been, he disappeared and did not return, though I loitered about for
some time in the hope of catching a glimpse of him and exercising my feudal
rights upon his person.
Jack Brocket was as good as his word. The shades of another
evening were beginning to darken round Goresthorpe Grange, when a peal at the
outer bell, and the sound of a fly pulling up, announced the arrival of Mr.
Abrahams. I hurried down to meet him, half expecting to see a choice assortment
of ghosts crowding in at his rear. Instead, however, of being the sallow-faced,
melancholy-eyed man that I had pictured to myself, the ghost-dealer was a
sturdy little podgy fellow, with a pair of wonderfully keen sparkling eyes and
a mouth which was constantly stretched in a good-humoured, if somewhat
artificial, grin. His sole stock-in-trade seemed to consist of a small leather
bag jealously locked and strapped, which emitted a metallic chink upon being
placed on the stone flags of the hall.
"And 'ow are you, sir?" he asked, wringing my hand with
the utmost effusion. "And the missis, 'ow is she? And all the others—'ow's
all their 'ealth?"
I intimated that we were all as well as could reasonably be
expected; but Mr. Abrahams happened to catch a glimpse of Mrs. D'Odd in the
distance, and at once plunged at her with another string of inquiries as to her
health, delivered so volubly and with such an intense earnestness that I half
expected to see him terminate his cross-examination by feeling her pulse and
demanding a sight of her tongue. All this time his little eyes rolled round and
round, shifting perpetually from the floor to the ceiling, and from the ceiling
to the walls, taking in apparently every article of furniture in a single
comprehensive glance.
Having satisfied himself that neither of us was in a pathological
condition, Mr. Abrahams suffered me to lead him upstairs, where a repast had
been laid out for him to which he did ample justice. The mysterious little bag
he carried along with him, and deposited it under his chair during the meal. It
was not until the table had been cleared and we were left together that he
broached the matter on which he had come down.
"I hunderstand," he remarked, puffing at a trichinopoly,
"that you want my 'elp in fitting up this 'ere 'ouse with a
happarition."
I acknowledged the correctness of his surmise, while mentally
wondering at those restless eyes of his, which still danced about the room as
if he were making an inventory of the contents.
"And you won't find a better man for the job, though I says
it as shouldn't," continued my companion. "Wot did I say to the young
gent wot spoke to me in the bar of the Lame Dog? 'Can you do it?' says he. 'Try
me,' says I, 'me and my bag. Just try me.' I couldn't say fairer than
that."
My respect for Jack Brocket's business capacities began to go up
very considerably. He certainly seemed to have managed the matter wonderfully
well. "You don't mean to say that you carry ghosts about in bags?" I
remarked, with diffidence.
Mr. Abrahams smiled a smile of superior knowledge. "You
wait," he said; "give me the right place and the right hour, with a
little of the essence of Lucoptolycus"—here he produced a small bottle
from his waistcoat-pocket—"and you won't find no ghost that I ain't up to.
You'll see them yourself, and pick your own, and I can't say fairer than
that."
As all Mr. Abraham's protestations of fairness were accompanied by
a cunning leer and a wink from one or other of his wicked little eyes, the
impression of candour was somewhat weakened.
"When are you going to do it?" I asked reverentially.
"Ten minutes to one in the morning," said Mr. Abrahams,
with decision. "Some says midnight, but I says ten to one, when there
ain't such a crowd, and you can pick your own ghost. And now," he
continued, rising to his feet, "suppose you trot me round the premises,
and let me see where you wants it; for there's some places as attracts 'em, and
some as they won't hear of—not if there was no other place in the world."
Mr. Abrahams inspected our corridors and chambers with a most
critical and observant eye, fingering the old tapestry with the air of a
connoisseur, and remarking in an undertone that it would "match uncommon
nice." It was not until he reached the banqueting-hall, however, which I
had myself picked out, that his admiration reached the pitch of enthusiasm.
"'Ere's the place!" he shouted, dancing, bag in hand, round the table
on which my plate was lying, and looking not unlike some quaint little goblin
himself. "'Ere's the place; we won't get nothin' to beat this! A fine
room—noble, solid, none of your electro-plate trash! That's the way as things
ought to be done, sir. Plenty of room for 'em to glide here. Send up some
brandy and the box of weeds; I'll sit here by the fire and do the
preliminaries, which is more trouble than you think; for them ghosts carries on
hawful at times, before they finds out who they've got to deal with. If you was
in the room they'd tear you to pieces as like as not. You leave me alone to
tackle them, and at half-past twelve come in, and I'll lay they'll be quiet
enough by then."
Mr. Abraham's request struck me as a reasonable one, so I left him
with his feet upon the mantelpiece, and his chair in front of the fire,
fortifying himself with stimulants against his refractory visitors. From the
room beneath, in which I sat with Mrs. D'Odd, I could hear that after sitting
for some time he rose up, and paced about the hall with quick impatient steps.
We then heard him try the lock of the door, and afterwards drag some heavy
article of furniture in the direction of the window, on which, apparently, he
mounted, for I heard the creaking of the rusty hinges as the diamond-paned
casement folded backwards, and I knew it to be situated several feet above the
little man's reach. Mrs. D'Odd says that she could distinguish his voice
speaking in low and rapid whispers after this, but that may have been her
imagination. I confess that I began to feel more impressed than I had deemed it
possible to be. There was something awesome in the thought of the solitary
mortal standing by the open window and summoning in from the gloom outside the
spirits of the nether world. It was with a trepidation which I could hardly disguise
from Matilda that I observed that the clock was pointing to half-past twelve,
and that the time had come for me to share the vigil of my visitor.
He was sitting in his old position when I entered, and there were
no signs of the mysterious movements which I had overheard, though his chubby
face was flushed as with recent exertion.
"Are you succeeding all right?" I asked as I came in,
putting on as careless an air as possible, but glancing involuntarily round the
room to see if we were alone.
"Only your help is needed to complete the matter," said
Mr. Abrahams, in a solemn voice. "You shall sit by me and partake of the
essence of Lucoptolycus, which removes the scales from our earthly eyes.
Whatever you may chance to see, speak not and make no movement, lest you break
the spell." His manner was subdued, and his usual cockney vulgarity had
entirely disappeared. I took the chair which he indicated, and awaited the
result.
My companion cleared the rushes from the floor in our
neighbourhood, and going down upon his hands and knees, described a half circle
with chalk, which enclosed the fireplace and ourselves. Round the edge of this
half circle he drew several hieroglyphics, not unlike the signs of the zodiac.
He then stood up and uttered a long invocation, delivered so rapidly that it
sounded like a single gigantic word in some uncouth guttural language. Having
finished this prayer, if prayer it was, he pulled out the small bottle which he
had produced before, and poured a couple of teaspoonfuls of clear transparent
fluid into a phial, which he handed to me with an intimation that I should
drink it.
The liquid had a faintly sweet odour, not unlike the aroma of
certain sorts of apples. I hesitated a moment before applying it to my lips,
but an impatient gesture from my companion overcame my scruples, and I tossed
it off. The taste was not unpleasant; and, as it gave rise to no immediate
effects, I leaned back in my chair and composed myself for what was to come.
Mr. Abrahams seated himself beside me, and I felt that he was watching my face
from time to time while repeating some more of the invocations in which he had
indulged before.
A sense of delicious warmth and languor began gradually to steal
over me, partly, perhaps, from the heat of the fire, and partly from some
unexplained cause. An uncontrollable impulse to sleep weighed down my eyelids,
while, at the same time, my brain worked actively, and a hundred beautiful and
pleasing ideas flitted through it. So utterly lethargic did I feel that, though
I was aware that my companion put his hand over the region of my heart, as if
to feel how it were beating, I did not attempt to prevent him, nor did I even
ask him for the reason of his action. Everything in the room appeared to be
reeling slowly round in a drowsy dance, of which I was the centre. The great
elk's head at the far end wagged solemnly backward and forward, while the
massive salvers on the tables performed cotillons with the claret cooler and
the epergne. My head fell upon my breast from sheer heaviness, and I should
have become unconscious had I not been recalled to myself by the opening of the
door at the other end of the hall.
This door led on to the raised dais, which, as I have mentioned,
the heads of the house used to reserve for their own use. As it swung slowly
back upon its hinges, I sat up in my chair, clutching at the arms, and staring
with a horrified glare at the dark passage outside. Something was coming down
it—something unformed and intangible, but still a something. Dim
and shadowy, I saw it flit across the threshold, while a blast of ice-cold air
swept down the room, which seemed to blow through me, chilling my very heart. I
was aware of the mysterious presence, and then I heard it speak in a voice like
the sighing of an east wind among pine-trees on the banks of a desolate sea.
It said: "I am the invisible nonentity. I have affinities and
am subtle. I am electric, magnetic, and spiritualistic. I am the great ethereal
sigh-heaver. I kill dogs. Mortal, wilt thou choose me?"
I was about to speak, but the words seemed to be choked in my
throat; and, before I could get them out, the shadow flitted across the hall
and vanished in the darkness at the other side, while a long-drawn melancholy
sigh quivered through the apartment.
I turned my eyes toward the door once more, and beheld, to my
astonishment, a very small old woman, who hobbled along the corridor and into
the hall. She passed backward and forward several times, and then, crouching
down at the very edge of the circle upon the floor, she disclosed a face the
horrible malignity of which shall never be banished from my recollection. Every
foul passion appeared to have left its mark upon that hideous countenance.
"Ha! ha!" she screamed, holding out her wizened hands
like the talons of an unclean bird. "You see what I am. I am the fiendish
old woman. I wear snuff-coloured silks. My curse descends on people. Sir Walter
was partial to me. Shall I be thine, mortal?"
I endeavoured to shake my head in horror; on which she aimed a
blow at me with her crutch, and vanished with an eldritch scream.
By this time my eyes turned naturally toward the open door, and I
was hardly surprised to see a man walk in of tall and noble stature. His face
was deadly pale, but was surmounted by a fringe of dark hair which fell in
ringlets down his back. A short pointed beard covered his chin. He was dressed
in loose-fitting clothes, made apparently of yellow satin, and a large white
ruff surrounded his neck. He paced across the room with slow and majestic
strides. Then turning, he addressed me in a sweet, exquisitely-modulated voice.
"I am the cavalier," he remarked. "I pierce and am
pierced. Here is my rapier. I clink steel. This is a blood-stain over my heart.
I can emit hollow groans. I am patronized by many old Conservative families. I
am the original manor-house apparition. I work alone, or in company with
shrieking damsels."
He bent his head courteously, as though awaiting my reply, but the
same choking sensation prevented me from speaking; and, with a deep bow, he
disappeared.
He had hardly gone before a feeling of intense horror stole over
me, and I was aware of the presence of a ghastly creature in the room of dim
outlines and uncertain proportions. One moment it seemed to pervade the entire
apartment, while at another it would become invisible, but always leaving
behind it a distinct consciousness of its presence. Its voice, when it spoke,
was quavering and gusty. It said, "I am the leaver of footsteps and the
spiller of gouts of blood. I tramp upon corridors. Charles Dickens has alluded
to me. I make strange and disagreeable noises. I snatch letters and place
invisible hands on people's wrists. I am cheerful. I burst into peals of
hideous laughter. Shall I do one now?" I raised my hand in a deprecating
way, but too late to prevent one discordant outbreak which echoed through the
room. Before I could lower it the apparition was gone.
I turned my head toward the door in time to see a man come hastily
and stealthily into the chamber. He was a sunburned powerfully-built fellow,
with earrings in his ears and a Barcelona handkerchief tied loosely round his
neck. His head was bent upon his chest, and his whole aspect was that of one
afflicted by intolerable remorse. He paced rapidly backward and forward like a
caged tiger, and I observed that a drawn knife glittered in one of his hands,
while he grasped what appeared to be a piece of parchment in the other. His
voice, when he spoke, was deep and sonorous. He said, "I am a murderer. I
am a ruffian. I crouch when I walk. I step noiselessly. I know something of the
Spanish Main. I can do the lost treasure business. I have charts. Am
able-bodied and a good walker. Capable of haunting a large park." He
looked toward me beseechingly, but before I could make a sign I was paralyzed
by the horrible sight which appeared at the door.
It was a very tall man, if, indeed, it might be called a man, for
the gaunt bones were protruding through the corroding flesh, and the features
of a leaden hue. A winding sheet was wrapped round the figure, and formed a
hood over the head, from under the shadow of which two fiendish eyes, deep-set
in their grisly sockets, blazed and sparkled like red-hot coals. The lower jaw
had fallen upon the breast, disclosing a withered, shrivelled tongue and two
lines of black and jagged fangs. I shuddered and drew back as this fearful
apparition advanced to the edge of the circle.
"I am the American blood-curdler," it said, in a voice
which seemed to come in a hollow murmur from the earth beneath it. "None
other is genuine. I am the embodiment of Edgar Allan Poe. I am circumstantial
and horrible. I am a low-caste spirit-subduing spectre. Observe my blood and my
bones. I am grisly and nauseous. No depending on artificial aid. Work with
grave-clothes, a coffin-lid, and a galvanic battery. Turn hair white in a
night." The creature stretched out its fleshless arms to me as if in
entreaty, but I shook my head; and it vanished, leaving a low sickening
repulsive odour behind it. I sank back in my chair, so overcome by terror and
disgust that I would have very willingly resigned myself to dispensing with a
ghost altogether, could I have been sure that this was the last of the hideous
procession.
A faint sound of trailing garments warned me that it was not so. I
looked up, and beheld a white figure emerging from the corridor into the right.
As it stepped across the threshold I saw that it was that of a young and
beautiful woman dressed in the fashion of a bygone day. Her hands were clasped
in front of her, and her pale proud face bore traces of passion and of
suffering. She crossed the hall with a gentle sound, like the rustling of
autumn leaves, and then, turning her lovely and unutterably sad eyes upon me,
she said,
"I am the plaintive and sentimental, the beautiful and
ill-used. I have been forsaken and betrayed. I shriek in the night-time and
glide down passages. My antecedents are highly respectable and generally
aristocratic. My tastes are æsthetic. Old oak furniture like this would do,
with a few more coats of mail and plenty of tapestry. Will you not take
me?"
Her voice died away in a beautiful cadence as she concluded, and
she held out her hands as in supplication. I am always sensitive to female
influences. Besides, what would Jorrocks' ghost be to this? Could anything be
in better taste? Would I not be exposing myself to the chance of injuring my
nervous system by interviews with such creatures as my last visitor, unless I
decided at once? She gave me a seraphic smile, as if she knew what was passing
in my mind. That smile settled the matter. "She will do!" I cried;
"I choose this one;" and as, in my enthusiasm, I took a step toward
her, I passed over the magic circle which had girdled me round.
"Argentine, we have been robbed!"
I had an indistinct consciousness of these words being spoken, or
rather screamed, in my ear a great number of times without my being able to
grasp their meaning. A violent throbbing in my head seemed to adapt itself to
their rhythm, and I closed my eyes to the lullaby of "Robbed, robbed,
robbed." A vigorous shake caused me to open them again, however, and the
sight of Mrs. D'Odd in the scantiest of costumes and most furious of tempers
was sufficiently impressive to recall all my scattered thoughts, and make me
realize that I was lying on my back on the floor, with my head among the ashes
which had fallen from last night's fire, and a small glass phial in my hand.
I staggered to my feet, but felt so weak and giddy that I was
compelled to fall back into a chair. As my brain became clearer, stimulated by
the exclamations of Matilda, I began gradually to recollect the events of the
night. There was the door through which my supernatural visitors had filed.
There was the circle of chalk with the hieroglyphics round the edge. There was
the cigar-box and brandy bottle which had been honoured by the attentions of
Mr. Abrahams. But the seer himself—where was he? and what was this open window
with a rope running out of it? And where, O where, was the pride of Goresthorpe
Grange, the glorious plate which was to have been the delectation of
generations of D'Odds? And why was Mrs. D. standing in the gray light of dawn,
wringing her hands and repeating her monotonous refrain? It was only very
gradually that my misty brain took these things in, and grasped the connection
between them.
Reader, I have never seen Mr. Abrahams since; I have never seen
the plate stamped with the resuscitated family crest; hardest of all, I have
never caught a glimpse of the melancholy spectre with the trailing garments,
nor do I expect that I ever shall. In fact my night's experiences have cured me
of my mania for the supernatural, and quite reconciled me to inhabiting the
humdrum nineteenth century edifice on the outskirts of London which Mrs. D. has
long had in her mind's eye.
As to the explanation of all that occurred—that is a matter which
is open to several surmises. That Mr. Abrahams, the ghost-hunter, was identical
with Jemmy Wilson, alias the Nottingham crackster, is
considered more than probable at Scotland Yard, and certainly the description
of that remarkable burglar tallied very well with the appearance of my visitor.
The small bag which I have described was picked up in a neighbouring field next
day, and found to contain a choice assortment of jimmies and centrebits.
Footmarks deeply imprinted in the mud on either side of the moat showed that an
accomplice from below had received the sack of precious metals which had been
let down through the open window. No doubt the pair of scoundrels, while
looking round for a job, had overheard Jack Brocket's indiscreet inquiries, and
had promptly availed themselves of the tempting opening.
And now as to my less substantial visitors, and the curious
grotesque vision which I had enjoyed—am I to lay it down to any real power over
occult matters possessed by my Nottingham friend? For a long time I was
doubtful upon the point, and eventually endeavoured to solve it by consulting a
well-known analyst and medical man, sending him the few drops of the so-called
essence of Lucoptolycus which remained in my phial. I append the letter which I
received from him, only too happy to have the opportunity of winding up my
little narrative by the weighty words of a man of learning.
"Arundel Street.
"Dear Sir,—Your very singular case has interested me
extremely. The bottle which you sent contained a strong solution of chloral,
and the quantity which you describe yourself as having swallowed must have
amounted to at least eighty grains of the pure hydrate. This would of course
have reduced you to a partial state of insensibility, gradually going on to
complete coma. In this semi-unconscious state of chloralism it is not unusual
for circumstantial and bizarre visions to present
themselves—more especially to individuals unaccustomed to the use of the drug.
You tell me in your note that your mind was saturated with ghostly literature,
and that you had long taken a morbid interest in classifying and recalling the
various forms in which apparitions have been said to appear. You must also
remember that you were expecting to see something of that very nature, and that
your nervous system was worked up to an unnatural state of tension. Under the
circumstances, I think that, far from the sequel being an astonishing one, it
would have been very surprising indeed to anyone versed in narcotics had you
not experienced some such effects.—I remain, dear sir, sincerely yours,
"T. E.
Stube, M.D.
"Argentine D'Odd, Esq.,
The Elms, Brixton."
X.THE MAN WITH THE PALE EYES
Guy
de Maupassant
Monsieur Pierre Agénor de Vargnes, the Examining Magistrate, was
the exact opposite of a practical joker. He was dignity, staidness, correctness
personified. As a sedate man, he was quite incapable of being guilty, even in
his dreams, of anything resembling a practical joke, however remotely. I know
nobody to whom he could be compared, unless it be the present president of the
French Republic. I think it is useless to carry the analogy any further, and
having said thus much, it will be easily understood that a cold shiver passed
through me when Monsieur Pierre Agénor de Vargnes did me the honour of sending
a lady to await on me.
At about eight o'clock, one morning last winter, as he was leaving
the house to go to the Palais de Justice, his footman handed him a
card, on which was printed:
Doctor
James Ferdinand,
Member of the Academy of Medicine,
Port-au-Prince,
Chevalier of the Legion of Honour.
At the bottom of the card there was written in pencil: From
Lady Frogère.
Monsieur de Vargnes knew the lady very well, who was a very
agreeable Creole from Hayti, and whom he had met in many drawing-rooms, and, on
the other hand, though the doctor's name did not awaken any recollections in
him, his quality and titles alone required that he should grant him an
interview, however short it might be. Therefore, although he was in a hurry to
get out, Monsieur de Vargnes told the footman to show in his early visitor, but
to tell him beforehand that his master was much pressed for time, as he had to
go to the Law Courts.
When the doctor came in, in spite of his usual imperturbability,
he could not restrain a movement of surprise, for the doctor presented that
strange anomaly of being a negro of the purest, blackest type, with the eyes of
a white man, of a man from the North, pale, cold, clear blue eyes, and his
surprise increased, when, after a few words of excuse for his untimely visit,
he added, with an enigmatical smile:
"My eyes surprise you, do they not? I was sure that they
would, and, to tell you the truth, I came here in order that you might look at
them well, and never forget them."
His smile, and his words, even more than his smile, seemed to be
those of a madman. He spoke very softly, with that childish, lisping voice,
which is peculiar to negroes, and his mysterious, almost menacing words,
consequently, sounded all the more as if they were uttered at random by a man
bereft of his reason. But his looks, the looks of those pale, cold, clear blue
eyes, were certainly not those of a madman. They clearly expressed menace, yes,
menace, as well as irony, and, above all, implacable ferocity, and their glance
was like a flash of lightning, which one could never forget.
"I have seen," Monsieur de Vargnes used to say, when
speaking about it, "the looks of many murderers, but in none of them have
I ever observed such a depth of crime, and of impudent security in crime."
And this impression was so strong, that Monsieur de Vargnes
thought that he was the sport of some hallucination, especially as when he
spoke about his eyes, the doctor continued with a smile, and in his most
childish accents: "Of course, Monsieur, you cannot understand what I am
saying to you, and I must beg your pardon for it. To-morrow you will receive a
letter which will explain it all to you, but, first of all, it was necessary
that I should let you have a good, a careful look at my eyes, my eyes, which
are myself, my only and true self, as you will see."
With these words, and with a polite bow, the doctor went out,
leaving Monsieur de Vargnes extremely surprised, and a prey to this doubt, as
he said to himself:
"Is he merely a madman? The fierce expression, and the
criminal depths of his looks are perhaps caused merely by the extraordinary
contrast between his fierce looks and his pale eyes."
And absorbed by these thoughts, Monsieur de Vargnes unfortunately
allowed several minutes to elapse, and then he thought to himself suddenly:
"No, I am not the sport of any hallucination, and this is no
case of an optical phenomenon. This man is evidently some terrible criminal,
and I have altogether failed in my duty in not arresting him myself at once,
illegally, even at the risk of my life."
The judge ran downstairs in pursuit of the doctor but it was too
late; he had disappeared. In the afternoon, he called on Madame Frogère, to ask
her whether she could tell him anything about the matter. She, however, did not
know the negro doctor in the least, and was even able to assure him that he was
a fictitious personage, for, as she was well acquainted with the upper classes
in Hayti, she knew that the Academy of Medicine at Port-au-Prince had no doctor
of that name among its members. As Monsieur de Vargnes persisted, and gave
descriptions of the doctor, especially mentioning his extraordinary eyes,
Madame Frogère began to laugh and said:
"You have certainly had to do with a hoaxer, my dear
monsieur. The eyes which you have described are certainly those of a white man,
and the individual must have been painted."
On thinking it over, Monsieur de Vargnes remembered that the
doctor had nothing of the negro about him, but his black skin, his woolly hair
and beard, and his way of speaking, which was easily imitated, but nothing of
the negro, not even the characteristic, undulating walk. Perhaps, after all, he
was only a practical joker, and during the whole day, Monsieur de Vargnes took
refuge in that view, which rather wounded his dignity as a man of consequence,
but which appeased his scruples as a magistrate.
The next day, he received the promised letter, which was written,
as well as addressed, in letters cut out of the newspapers. It was as follows:
"Monsieur: Doctor
James Ferdinand does not exist, but the man whose eyes you saw does, and you
will certainly recognize his eyes. This man has committed two crimes, for which
he does not feel any remorse, but, as he is a psychologist, he is afraid of
some day yielding to the irresistible temptation of confessing his crimes. You
know better than anyone (and that is your most powerful aid), with what
imperious force criminals, especially intellectual ones, feel this temptation.
That great poet, Edgar Poe, has written masterpieces on this subject, which
express the truth exactly, but he has omitted to mention the last phenomenon,
which I will tell you. Yes, I, a criminal, feel a terrible wish for somebody to
know of my crimes, and when this requirement is satisfied, my secret has been
revealed to a confidant, I shall be tranquil for the future, and be freed from
this demon of perversity, which only tempts us once. Well! Now that is
accomplished. You shall have my secret; from the day that you recognize me by
my eyes, you will try and find out what I am guilty of, and how I was guilty,
and you will discover it, being a master of your profession, which, by the by,
has procured you the honour of having been chosen by me to bear the weight of
this secret, which now is shared by us, and by us two alone. I say,
advisedly, by us two alone. You could not, as a matter of fact,
prove the reality of this secret to anyone, unless I were to confess it, and I
defy you to obtain my public confession, as I have confessed it to you, and
without danger to myself."
Three months later, Monsieur de Vargnes met Monsieur X—— at an
evening party, and at first sight, and without the slightest hesitation, he
recognized in him those very pale, very cold, and very clear blue eyes, eyes
which it was impossible to forget.
The man himself remained perfectly impassive, so that Monsieur de
Vargnes was forced to say to himself:
"Probably I am the sport of an hallucination at this moment,
or else there are two pairs of eyes that are perfectly similar in the world.
And what eyes! Can it be possible?"
The magistrate instituted inquiries into his life, and he
discovered this, which removed all his doubts.
Five years previously, Monsieur X—— had been a very poor, but very
brilliant medical student, who, although he never took his doctor's degree, had
already made himself remarkable by his microbiological researches.
A young and very rich widow had fallen in love with him and
married him. She had one child by her first marriage, and in the space of six
months, first the child and then the mother died of typhoid fever, and thus
Monsieur X—— had inherited a large fortune, in due form, and without any
possible dispute. Everybody said that he had attended to the two patients with
the utmost devotion. Now, were these two deaths the two crimes mentioned in his
letter?
But then, Monsieur X—— must have poisoned his two victims with the
microbes of typhoid fever, which he had skilfully cultivated in them, so as to
make the disease incurable, even by the most devoted care and attention. Why
not?
"Do you believe it?" I asked Monsieur de Vargnes.
"Absolutely," he replied. "And the most terrible
thing about it is, that the villain is right when he defies me to force him to
confess his crime publicly, for I see no means of obtaining a confession, none
whatever. For a moment, I thought of magnetism, but who could magnetize that
man with those pale, cold, bright eyes? With such eyes, he would force the
magnetizer to denounce himself as the culprit."
And then he said, with a deep sigh:
"Ah! Formerly there was something good about justice!"
And when he saw my inquiring looks, he added in a firm and
perfectly convinced voice:
"Formerly, justice had torture at its command."
"Upon my word," I replied, with all an author's
unconscious and simple egotism, "it is quite certain that without the
torture, this strange tale will have no conclusion, and that is very
unfortunate, as far as regards the story I intended to make out of it."
XI.THE RIVAL GHOSTS
Brander
Matthews
The good ship sped on her way across the calm Atlantic. It was an
outward passage, according to the little charts which the company had charily
distributed, but most of the passengers were homeward bound, after a summer of
rest and recreation, and they were counting the days before they might hope to
see Fire Island Light. On the lee side of the boat, comfortably sheltered from
the wind, and just by the door of the captain's room (which was theirs during
the day), sat a little group of returning Americans. The Duchess (she was on
the purser's list as Mrs. Martin, but her friends and familiars called her the
Duchess of Washington Square) and Baby Van Rensselaer (she was quite old enough
to vote, had her sex been entitled to that duty, but as the younger of two
sisters she was still the baby of the family)—the Duchess and Baby Van
Rensselaer were discussing the pleasant English voice and the not unpleasant
English accent of a manly young lordling who was going to America for sport.
Uncle Larry and Dear Jones were enticing each other into a bet on the ship's
run of the morrow.
"I'll give you two to one she don't make 420," said Dear
Jones.
"I'll take it," answered Uncle Larry. "We made 427
the fifth day last year." It was Uncle Larry's seventeenth visit to
Europe, and this was therefore his thirty-fourth voyage.
"And when did you get in?" asked Baby Van Rensselaer.
"I don't care a bit about the run, so long as we get in soon."
"We crossed the bar Sunday night, just seven days after we
left Queenstown, and we dropped anchor off Quarantine at three o'clock on
Monday morning."
"I hope we shan't do that this time. I can't seem to sleep
any when the boat stops."
"I can; but I didn't," continued Uncle Larry;
"because my state-room was the most for'ard in the boat, and the
donkey-engine that let down the anchor was right over my head."
"So you got up and saw the sunrise over the bay," said
Dear Jones, "with the electric lights of the city twinkling in the
distance, and the first faint flush of the dawn in the east just over Fort
Lafayette, and the rosy tinge which spread softly upward, and——"
"Did you both come back together?" asked the Duchess.
"Because he has crossed thirty-four times you must not
suppose that he has a monopoly in sunrises," retorted Dear Jones.
"No, this was my own sunrise; and a mighty pretty one it was, too."
"I'm not matching sunrises with you," remarked Uncle
Larry, calmly; "but I'm willing to back a merry jest called forth by my
sunrise against any two merry jests called forth by yours."
"I confess reluctantly that my sunrise evoked no merry jest
at all." Dear Jones was an honest man, and would scorn to invent a merry
jest on the spur of the moment.
"That's where my sunrise has the call," said Uncle
Larry, complacently.
"What was the merry jest?" was Baby Van Rensselaer's
inquiry, the natural result of a feminine curiosity thus artistically excited.
"Well, here it is. I was standing aft, near a patriotic
American and a wandering Irishman, and the patriotic American rashly declared
that you couldn't see a sunrise like that anywhere in Europe, and this gave the
Irishman his chance, and he said, 'Sure ye don't have 'em here till we're
through with 'em over there.'"
"It is true," said Dear Jones, thoughtfully, "that
they have some things over there better than we do; for instance,
umbrellas."
"And gowns," added the Duchess.
"And antiquities,"—this was Uncle Larry's contribution.
"And we do have some things so much better in America!"
protested Baby Van Rensselaer, as yet uncorrupted by any worship of the effete
monarchies of despotic Europe. "We make lots of things a great deal nicer
than you can get them in Europe—especially ice-cream."
"And pretty girls," added Dear Jones; but he did not
look at her.
"And spooks," remarked Uncle Larry casually.
"Spooks?" queried the Duchess.
"Spooks. I maintain the word. Ghosts, if you like that
better, or spectres. We turn out the best quality of spook——"
"You forget the lovely ghost stories about the Rhine, and the
Black Forest," interrupted Miss Van Rensselaer, with feminine
inconsistency.
"I remember the Rhine and the Black Forest and all the other
haunts of elves and fairies and hobgoblins; but for good honest spooks there is
no place like home. And what differentiates our spook—Spiritus Americanus—from
the ordinary ghost of literature is that it responds to the American sense of
humour. Take Irving's stories for example. The Headless Horseman,
that's a comic ghost story. And Rip Van Winkle—consider what humour, and what
good-humour, there is in the telling of his meeting with the goblin crew of
Kendrick Hudson's men! A still better example of this American way of dealing
with legend and mystery is the marvelous tale of the rival ghosts."
"The rival ghosts?" queried the Duchess and Baby Van
Rensselaer together. "Who were they?"
"Didn't I ever tell you about them?" answered Uncle
Larry, a gleam of approaching joy flashing from his eye.
"Since he is bound to tell us sooner or later, we'd better be
resigned and hear it now," said Dear Jones.
"If you are not more eager, I won't tell it at all."
"Oh, do, Uncle Larry; you know I just dote on ghost
stories," pleaded Baby Van Rensselaer.
"Once upon a time," began Uncle Larry—"in fact, a
very few years ago—there lived in the thriving town of New York a young
American called Duncan—Eliphalet Duncan. Like his name, he was half Yankee and
half Scotch, and naturally he was a lawyer, and had come to New York to make
his way. His father was a Scotchman, who had come over and settled in Boston,
and married a Salem girl. When Eliphalet Duncan was about twenty he lost both
of his parents. His father left him with enough money to give him a start, and
a strong feeling of pride in his Scotch birth; you see there was a title in the
family in Scotland, and although Eliphalet's father was the younger son of a
younger son, yet he always remembered, and always bade his only son to
remember, that his ancestry was noble. His mother left him her full share of
Yankee grit, and a little house in Salem which has belonged to her family for
more than two hundred years. She was a Hitchcock, and the Hitchcocks had been
settled in Salem since the year 1. It was a great-great-grandfather of Mr.
Eliphalet Hitchcock who was foremost in the time of the Salem witchcraft craze.
And this little old house which she left to my friend Eliphalet Duncan was
haunted."
"By the ghost of one of the witches, of course,"
interrupted Dear Jones.
"Now how could it be the ghost of a witch, since the witches
were all burned at the stake? You never heard of anybody who was burned having
a ghost, did you?"
"That's an argument in favour of cremation, at any
rate," replied Jones, evading the direct question.
"It is, if you don't like ghosts; I do," said Baby Van
Rensselaer.
"And so do I," added Uncle Larry. "I love a ghost
as dearly as an Englishman loves a lord."
"Go on with your story," said the Duchess, majestically
overruling all extraneous discussion.
"This little old house at Salem was haunted," resumed
Uncle Larry. "And by a very distinguished ghost—or at least by a ghost
with very remarkable attributes."
"What was he like?" asked Baby Van Rensselaer, with a
premonitory shiver of anticipatory delight.
"It had a lot of peculiarities. In the first place, it never
appeared to the master of the house. Mostly it confined its visitations to
unwelcome guests. In the course of the last hundred years it had frightened
away four successive mothers-in-law, while never intruding on the head of the
household."
"I guess that ghost had been one of the boys when he was
alive and in the flesh." This was Dear Jones's contribution to the telling
of the tale.
"In the second place," continued Uncle Larry, "it
never frightened anybody the first time it appeared. Only on the second visit
were the ghost-seers scared; but then they were scared enough for twice, and
they rarely mustered up courage enough to risk a third interview. One of the
most curious characteristics of this well-meaning spook was that it had no
face—or at least that nobody ever saw its face."
"Perhaps he kept his countenance veiled?" queried the
Duchess, who was beginning to remember that she never did like ghost stories.
"That was what I was never able to find out. I have asked
several people who saw the ghost, and none of them could tell me anything about
its face, and yet while in its presence they never noticed its features, and
never remarked on their absence or concealment. It was only afterward when they
tried to recall calmly all the circumstances of meeting with the mysterious
stranger, that they became aware that they had not seen its face. And they
could not say whether the features were covered, or whether they were wanting,
or what the trouble was. They knew only that the face was never seen. And no
matter how often they might see it, they never fathomed this mystery. To this
day nobody knows whether the ghost which used to haunt the little old house in
Salem had a face, or what manner of face it had."
"How awfully weird!" said Baby Van Rensselaer. "And
why did the ghost go away?"
"I haven't said it went away," answered Uncle Larry,
with much dignity.
"But you said it used to haunt the little
old house at Salem, so I supposed it had moved. Didn't it?"
"You shall be told in due time. Eliphalet Duncan used to
spend most of his summer vacations at Salem, and the ghost never bothered him
at all, for he was the master of the house—much to his disgust, because he
wanted to see for himself the mysterious tenant at will of his property. But he
never saw it, never. He arranged with friends to call him whenever it might
appear, and he slept in the next room with the door open; and yet when their
frightened cries waked him the ghost was gone, and his only reward was to hear
reproachful sighs as soon as he went back to bed. You see, the ghost thought it
was not fair of Eliphalet to seek an introduction which was plainly
unwelcome."
Dear Jones interrupted the story-teller by getting up and tucking
a heavy rug snugly around Baby Van Rensselaer's feet, for the sky was now
overcast and gray and the air was damp and penetrating.
"One fine spring morning," pursued Uncle Larry,
"Eliphalet Duncan received great news. I told you that there was a title
in the family in Scotland, and that Eliphalet's father was the younger son of a
younger son. Well, it happened that all Eliphalet's father's brothers and
uncles had died off without male issue except the eldest son of the eldest, and
he, of course, bore the title, and was Baron Duncan of Duncan. Now the great
news that Eliphalet Duncan received in New York one fine spring morning was
that Baron Duncan and his only son had been yachting in the Hebrides, and they
had been caught in a black squall, and they were both dead. So my friend
Eliphalet Duncan inherited the title and the estates."
"How romantic!" said the Duchess. "So he was a
baron!"
"Well," answered Uncle Larry, "he was a baron if he
chose. But he didn't choose."
"More fool he," said Dear Jones sententiously.
"Well," answered Uncle Larry, "I'm not so sure of
that. You see, Eliphalet Duncan was half Scotch and half Yankee, and he had two
eyes to the main chance. He held his tongue about his windfall of luck until he
could find out whether the Scotch estates were enough to keep up the Scotch
title. He soon discovered that they were not, and that the late Lord Duncan,
having married money, kept up such state as he could out of the revenues of the
dowry of Lady Duncan. And Eliphalet, he decided that he would rather be a
well-fed lawyer in New York, living comfortably on his practice, than a
starving lord in Scotland, living scantily on his title."
"But he kept his title?" asked the Duchess.
"Well," answered Uncle Larry, "he kept it quiet. I
knew it, and a friend or two more. But Eliphalet was a sight too smart to put
Baron Duncan of Duncan, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, on his shingle."
"What has all this got to do with your ghost?" asked
Dear Jones pertinently.
"Nothing with that ghost, but a good deal with another ghost.
Eliphalet was very learned in spirit lore—perhaps because he owned the haunted
house at Salem, perhaps because he was a Scotchman by descent. At all events,
he had made a special study of the wraiths and white ladies and banshees and
bogies of all kinds whose sayings and doings and warnings are recorded in the annals
of the Scottish nobility. In fact, he was acquainted with the habits of every
reputable spook in the Scotch peerage. And he knew that there was a Duncan
ghost attached to the person of the holder of the title of Baron Duncan of
Duncan."
"So, besides being the owner of a haunted house in Salem, he
was also a haunted man in Scotland?" asked Baby Van Rensselaer.
"Just so. But the Scotch ghost was not unpleasant, like the
Salem ghost, although it had one peculiarity in common with its trans-Atlantic
fellow-spook. It never appeared to the holder of the title, just as the other
never was visible to the owner of the house. In fact, the Duncan ghost was
never seen at all. It was a guardian angel only. Its sole duty was to be in
personal attendance on Baron Duncan of Duncan, and warn him of impending evil.
The traditions of the house told that the Barons of Duncan had again and again
felt a premonition of ill fortune. Some of them had yielded and withdrawn from
the venture they had undertaken, and it had failed dismally. Some had been
obstinate, and had hardened their hearts, and had gone on reckless of defeat
and to death. In no case had a Lord Duncan been exposed to peril without fair
warning."
"Then how came it that the father and son were lost in the
yacht off the Hebrides?" asked Dear Jones.
"Because they were too enlightened to yield to superstition.
There is extant now a letter of Lord Duncan, written to his wife a few minutes
before he and his son set sail, in which he tells her how hard he had to
struggle with an almost overmastering desire to give up the trip. Had he obeyed
the friendly warning of the family ghost, the latter would have been spared a
journey across the Atlantic."
"Did the ghost leave Scotland for America as soon as the old
baron died?" asked Baby Van Rensselaer, with much interest.
"How did he come over," queried Dear Jones—"in the
steerage, or as a cabin passenger?"
"I don't know," answered Uncle Larry calmly, "and
Eliphalet, he didn't know. For as he was in danger, and stood in no need of
warning, he couldn't tell whether the ghost was on duty or not. Of course he
was on the watch for it all the time. But he never got any proof of its
presence until he went down to the little old house of Salem, just before the
Fourth of July. He took a friend down with him—a young fellow who had been in
the regular army since the day Fort Sumter was fired on, and who thought that
after four years of the little unpleasantness down South, including six months
in Libby, and after ten years of fighting the bad Indians on the plains, he
wasn't likely to be much frightened by a ghost. Well, Eliphalet and the officer
sat out on the porch all the evening smoking and talking over points in
military law. A little after twelve o'clock, just as they began to think it was
about time to turn in, they heard the most ghastly noise in the house. It
wasn't a shriek, or a howl, or a yell, or anything they could put a name to. It
was an indeterminate, inexplicable shiver and shudder of sound, which went
wailing out of the window. The officer had been at Cold Harbor, but he felt
himself getting colder this time. Eliphalet knew it was the ghost who haunted
the house. As this weird sound died away, it was followed by another, sharp,
short, blood-curdling in its intensity. Something in this cry seemed familiar
to Eliphalet, and he felt sure that it proceeded from the family ghost, the
warning wraith of the Duncans."
"Do I understand you to intimate that both ghosts were there
together?" inquired the Duchess anxiously.
"Both of them were there," answered Uncle Larry.
"You see, one of them belonged to the house and had to be there all the
time, and the other was attached to the person of Baron Duncan, and had to
follow him there; wherever he was there was the ghost also. But Eliphalet, he
had scarcely time to think this out when he heard both sounds again, not one
after another, but both together, and something told him—some sort of an
instinct he had—that those two ghosts didn't agree, didn't get on together,
didn't exactly hit it off; in fact, that they were quarreling."
"Quarreling ghosts! Well, I never!" was Baby Van
Rensselaer's remark.
"It is a blessed thing to see ghosts dwell together in
unity," said Dear Jones.
And the Duchess added, "It would certainly be setting a
better example."
"You know," resumed Uncle Larry, "that two waves of
light or of sound may interfere and produce darkness or silence. So it was with
these rival spooks. They interfered, but they did not produce silence or
darkness. On the contrary, as soon as Eliphalet and the officer went into the
house, there began at once a series of spiritualistic manifestations, a regular
dark séance. A tambourine was played upon, a bell was rung, and a flaming banjo
went singing around the room."
"Where did they get the banjo?" asked Dear Jones
sceptically.
"I don't know. Materialized it, maybe, just as they did the
tambourine. You don't suppose a quiet New York lawyer kept a stock of musical
instruments large enough to fit out a strolling minstrel troupe just on the
chance of a pair of ghosts coming to give him a surprise party, do you? Every
spook has its own instrument of torture. Angels play on harps, I'm informed,
and spirits delight in banjos and tambourines. These spooks of Eliphalet
Duncan's were ghosts with all the modern improvements, and I guess they were
capable of providing their own musical weapons. At all events, they had them
there in the little old house at Salem the night Eliphalet and his friend came
down. And they played on them and they rang the bell, and they rapped here,
there, and everywhere. And they kept it up all night."
"All night?" asked the awe-stricken Duchess.
"All night long," said Uncle Larry solemnly; "and
the next night, too. Eliphalet did not get a wink of sleep, neither did his
friend. On the second night the house ghost was seen by the officer; on the
third night it showed itself again; and the next morning the officer packed his
grip-sack and took the first train to Boston. He was a New Yorker, but he said
he'd sooner go to Boston than see that ghost again. Eliphalet, he wasn't scared
at all, partly because he never saw either the domiciliary or the titular
spook, and partly because he felt himself on friendly terms with the spirit
world, and didn't scare easily. But after losing three nights' sleep and the
society of his friend, he began to be a little impatient, and to think that the
thing had gone far enough. You see, while in a way he was fond of ghosts, yet
he liked them best one at a time. Two ghosts were one too many. He wasn't bent
on making a collection of spooks. He and one ghost were company, but he and two
ghosts were a crowd."
"What did he do?" asked Baby Van Rensselaer.
"Well, he couldn't do anything. He waited awhile, hoping they
would get tired; but he got tired out first. You see, it comes natural to a
spook to sleep in the daytime, but a man wants to sleep nights, and they
wouldn't let him sleep nights. They kept on wrangling and quarreling
incessantly; they manifested and they dark-séanced as regularly as the old
clock on the stairs struck twelve; they rapped and they rang bells and they
banged the tambourine and they threw the flaming banjo about the house, and
worse than all, they swore."
"I did not know that spirits were addicted to bad
language," said the Duchess.
"How did he know they were swearing? Could he hear
them?" asked Dear Jones.
"That was just it," responded Uncle Larry; "he
could not hear them—at least not distinctly. There were inarticulate murmurs
and stifled rumblings. But the impression produced on him was that they were
swearing. If they had only sworn right out, he would not have minded it so
much, because he would have known the worst. But the feeling that the air was
full of suppressed profanity was very wearing and after standing it for a week,
he gave up in disgust and went to the White Mountains."
"Leaving them to fight it out, I suppose," interjected
Baby Van Rensselaer.
"Not at all," explained Uncle Larry. "They could
not quarrel unless he was present. You see, he could not leave the titular
ghost behind him, and the domiciliary ghost could not leave the house. When he
went away he took the family ghost with him leaving the house ghost behind. Now
spooks can't quarrel when they are a hundred miles apart any more than men
can."
"And what happened afterward?" asked Baby Van
Rensselaer, with a pretty impatience.
"A most marvelous thing happened. Eliphalet Duncan went to
the White Mountains, and in the car of the railroad that runs to the top of
Mount Washington he met a classmate whom he had not seen for years, and this
classmate introduced Duncan to his sister, and this sister was a remarkably
pretty girl, and Duncan fell in love with her at first sight, and by the time
he got to the top of Mount Washington he was so deep in love that he began to
consider his own unworthiness, and to wonder whether she might ever be induced
to care for him a little—ever so little."
"I don't think that is so marvelous a thing," said Dear
Jones glancing at Baby Van Rensselaer.
"Who was she?" asked the Duchess, who had once lived in
Philadelphia.
"She was Miss Kitty Sutton, of San Francisco, and she was a
daughter of old Judge Sutton, of the firm of Pixley and Sutton."
"A very respectable family," assented the Duchess.
"I hope she wasn't a daughter of that loud and vulgar old
Mrs. Sutton whom I met at Saratoga, one summer, four or five years ago?"
said Dear Jones.
"Probably she was."
"She was a horrid old woman. The boys used to call her Mother
Gorgon."
"The pretty Kitty Sutton with whom Eliphalet Duncan had
fallen in love was the daughter of Mother Gorgon. But he never saw the mother,
who was in 'Frisco, or Los Angeles, or Santa Fe, or somewhere out West, and he
saw a great deal of the daughter, who was up in the White Mountains. She was
traveling with her brother and his wife, and as they journeyed from hotel to
hotel, Duncan went with them, and filled out the quartette. Before the end of
the summer he began to think about proposing. Of course he had lots of chances,
going on excursions as they were every day. He made up his mind to seize the
first opportunity, and that very evening he took her out for a moonlight row on
Lake Winnipiseogee. As he handed her into the boat he resolved to do it, and he
had a glimmer of a suspicion that she knew he was going to do it, too."
"Girls," said Dear Jones, "never go out in a
row-boat at night with a young man unless you mean to accept him."
"Sometimes it's best to refuse him, and get it over once for
all," said Baby Van Rensselaer.
"As Eliphalet took the oars he felt a sudden chill. He tried
to shake it off, but in vain. He began to have a growing consciousness of
impending evil. Before he had taken ten strokes—and he was a swift oarsman—he
was aware of a mysterious presence between him and Miss Sutton."
"Was it the guardian-angel ghost warning him off the
match?" interrupted Dear Jones.
"That's just what it was," said Uncle Larry. "And
he yielded to it, and kept his peace, and rowed Miss Sutton back to the hotel
with his proposal unspoken."
"More fool he," said Dear Jones. "It will take more
than one ghost to keep me from proposing when my mind is made up." And he
looked at Baby Van Rensselaer.
"The next morning," continued Uncle Larry,
"Eliphalet overslept himself, and when he went down to a late breakfast he
found that the Suttons had gone to New York by the morning train. He wanted to
follow them at once, and again he felt the mysterious presence overpowering his
will. He struggled two days, and at last he roused himself to do what he wanted
in spite of the spook. When he arrived in New York it was late in the evening.
He dressed himself hastily and went to the hotel where the Suttons put up, in
the hope of seeing at least her brother. The guardian angel fought every inch
of the walk with him, until he began to wonder whether, if Miss Sutton were to
take him, the spook would forbid the banns. At the hotel he saw no one that
night, and he went home determined to call as early as he could the next
afternoon, and make an end of it. When he left his office about two o'clock the
next day to learn his fate, he had not walked five blocks before he discovered
that the wraith of the Duncans had withdrawn his opposition to the suit. There
was no feeling of impending evil, no resistance, no struggle, no consciousness
of an opposing presence. Eliphalet was greatly encouraged. He walked briskly to
the hotel; he found Miss Sutton alone. He asked her the question, and got his
answer."
"She accepted him, of course," said Baby Van Rensselaer.
"Of course," said Uncle Larry. "And while they were
in the first flush of joy, swapping confidences and confessions, her brother
came into the parlour with an expression of pain on his face and a telegram in
his Frisco hand. The former was caused by the latter, which was from 'Frisco,
and which announced the sudden death of Mrs. Sutton, their mother."
"And that was why the ghost no longer opposed the
match?" questioned Dear Jones.
"Exactly. You see, the family ghost knew that Mother Gorgon
was an awful obstacle to Duncan's happiness, so it warned him. But the moment
the obstacle was removed, it gave its consent at once."
The fog was lowering its thick damp curtain, and it was beginning
to be difficult to see from one end of the boat to the other. Dear Jones
tightened the rug which enwrapped Baby Van Rensselaer, and then withdrew again
into his own substantial coverings.
Uncle Larry paused in his story long enough to light another of
the tiny cigars he always smoked.
"I infer that Lord Duncan"—the Duchess was scrupulous in
the bestowal of titles—"saw no more of the ghosts after he was
married."
"He never saw them at all, at any time, either before or
since. But they came very near breaking off the match, and thus breaking two
young hearts."
"You don't mean to say that they knew any just cause or
impediment why they should not forever after hold their peace?" asked Dear
Jones.
"How could a ghost, or even two ghosts, keep a girl from
marrying the man she loved?" This was Baby Van Rensselaer's question.
"It seems curious, doesn't it?" and Uncle Larry tried to
warm himself by two or three sharp pulls at his fiery little cigar. "And
the circumstances are quite as curious as the fact itself. You see, Miss Sutton
wouldn't be married for a year after her mother's death, so she and Duncan had
lots of time to tell each other all they knew. Eliphalet, he got to know a good
deal about the girls she went to school with, and Kitty, she learned all about
his family. He didn't tell her about the title for a long time, as he wasn't
one to brag. But he described to her the little old house at Salem. And one
evening toward the end of the summer, the wedding-day having been appointed for
early in September, she told him that she didn't want to bridal tour at all;
she just wanted to go down to the little old house at Salem to spend her
honeymoon in peace and quiet, with nothing to do and nobody to bother them.
Well, Eliphalet jumped at the suggestion. It suited him down to the ground. All
of a sudden he remembered the spooks, and it knocked him all of a heap. He had
told her about the Duncan Banshee, and the idea of having an ancestral ghost in
personal attendance on her husband tickled her immensely. But he had never said
anything about the ghost which haunted the little old house at Salem. He knew
she would be frightened out of her wits if the house ghost revealed itself to
her, and he saw at once that it would be impossible to go to Salem on their
wedding trip. So he told her all about it, and how whenever he went to Salem
the two ghosts interfered, and gave dark séances and manifested and
materialised and made the place absolutely impossible. Kitty, she listened in
silence, and Eliphalet, he thought she had changed her mind. But she hadn't
done anything of the kind."
"Just like a man—to think she was going to," remarked
Baby Van Rensselaer.
"She just told him she could not bear ghosts herself, but she
would not marry a man who was afraid of them."
"Just like a girl—to be so inconsistent," remarked Dear
Jones.
Uncle Larry's tiny cigar had long been extinct. He lighted a new
one, and continued: "Eliphalet protested in vain. Kitty said her mind was
made up. She was determined to pass her honeymoon in the little old house at
Salem, and she was equally determined not to go there as long as there were any
ghosts there. Until he could assure her that the spectral tenants had received
notice to quit, and that there was no danger of manifestations and
materialising, she refused to be married at all. She did not intend to have her
honeymoon interrupted by two wrangling ghosts, and the wedding could be
postponed until he had made ready the house for her."
"She was an unreasonable young woman," said the Duchess.
"Well, that's what Eliphalet thought, much as he was in love
with her. And he believed he could talk her out of her determination. But he
couldn't. She was set. And when a girl is set, there's nothing to do but yield
to the inevitable. And that's just what Eliphalet did. He saw he would either
have to give her up or to get the ghosts out; and as he loved her and did not
care for the ghosts, he resolved to tackle the ghosts. He had clear grit,
Eliphalet had—he was half Scotch and half Yankee, and neither breed turns tail
in a hurry. So he made his plans and he went down to Salem. As he said good-bye
to Kitty he had an impression that she was sorry she had made him go, but she
kept up bravely, and put a bold face on it, and saw him off, and went home and
cried for an hour, and was perfectly miserable until he came back the next
day."
"Did he succeed in driving the ghosts away?" asked Baby
Van Rensselaer, with great interest.
"That's just what I'm coming to," said Uncle Larry,
pausing at the critical moment, in the manner of the trained story teller.
"You see, Eliphalet had got a rather tough job, and he would gladly have
had an extension of time on the contract, but he had to choose between the girl
and the ghosts, and he wanted the girl. He tried to invent or remember some
short and easy way with ghosts, but he couldn't. He wished that somebody had
invented a specific for spooks—something that would make the ghosts come out of
the house and die in the yard."
"What did he do?" interrupted Dear Jones. "The
learned counsel will please speak to the point."
"You will regret this unseemly haste," said Uncle Larry,
gravely, "when you know what really happened."
"What was it, Uncle Larry?" asked Baby Van Rensselaer.
"I'm all impatience."
And Uncle Larry proceeded:
"Eliphalet went down to the little old house at Salem, and as
soon as the clock struck twelve the rival ghosts began wrangling as before.
Raps here, there, and everywhere, ringing bells, banging tambourines, strumming
banjos sailing about the room, and all the other manifestations and
materializations followed one another just as they had the summer before. The
only difference Eliphalet could detect was a stronger flavour in the spectral
profanity; and this, of course, was only a vague impression, for he did not
actually hear a single word. He waited awhile in patience, listening and
watching. Of course he never saw either of the ghosts, because neither of them
could appear to him. At last he got his dander up, and he thought it was about
time to interfere, so he rapped on the table, and asked for silence. As soon as
he felt that the spooks were listening to him he explained the situation to
them. He told them he was in love, and that he could not marry unless they
vacated the house. He appealed to them as old friends, and he laid claim to
their gratitude. The titular ghost had been sheltered by the Duncan family for
hundreds of years, and the domiciliary ghost had had free lodging in the little
old house at Salem for nearly two centuries. He implored them to settle their
differences, and to get him out of his difficulty at once. He suggested they'd
better fight it out then and there, and see who was master. He had brought down
with him the needful weapons. And he pulled out his valise, and spread on the
table a pair of navy revolvers, a pair of shot-guns, a pair of duelling swords,
and a couple of bowie-knives. He offered to serve as second for both parties,
and to give the word when to begin. He also took out of his valise a pack of
cards and a bottle of poison, telling them that if they wished to avoid carnage
they might cut the cards to see which one should take the poison. Then he
waited anxiously for their reply. For a little space there was silence. Then he
became conscious of a tremulous shivering in one corner of the room, and he
remembered that he had heard from that direction what sounded like a frightened
sigh when he made the first suggestion of the duel. Something told him that
this was the domiciliary ghost, and that it was badly scared. Then he was
impressed by a certain movement in the opposite corner of the room, as though
the titular ghost were drawing himself up with offended dignity. Eliphalet
couldn't exactly see these things, because he never saw the ghosts, but he felt
them. After a silence of nearly a minute a voice came from the corner where the
family ghost stood—a voice strong and full, but trembling slightly with
suppressed passion. And this voice told Eliphalet it was plain enough that he
had not long been the head of the Duncans, and that he had never properly
considered the characteristics of his race if now he supposed that one of his
blood could draw his sword against a woman. Eliphalet said he had never
suggested that the Duncan ghost should raise his hand against a woman and all
he wanted was that the Duncan ghost should fight the other ghost. And then the
voice told Eliphalet that the other ghost was a woman."
"What?" said Dear Jones, sitting up suddenly. "You
don't mean to tell me that the ghost which haunted the house was a woman?"
"Those were the very words Eliphalet Duncan used," said
Uncle Larry; "but he did not need to wait for the answer. All at once he
recalled the traditions about the domiciliary ghost, and he knew that what the
titular ghost said was the fact. He had never thought of the sex of a spook,
but there was no doubt whatever that the house ghost was a woman. No sooner was
this firmly fixed in Eliphalet's mind than he saw his way out of the
difficulty. The ghosts must be married!—for then there would be no more
interference, no more quarrelling, no more manifestations and materializations,
no more dark séances, with their raps and bells and tambourines and banjos. At
first the ghosts would not hear of it. The voice in the corner declared that
the Duncan wraith had never thought of matrimony. But Eliphalet argued with
them, and pleaded and persuaded and coaxed, and dwelt on the advantages of
matrimony. He had to confess, of course, that he did not know how to get a
clergyman to marry them; but the voice from the corner gravely told him that
there need be no difficulty in regard to that, as there was no lack of
spiritual chaplains. Then, for the first time, the house ghost spoke, in a low,
clear gentle voice, and with a quaint, old-fashioned New England accent, which
contrasted sharply with the broad Scotch speech of the family ghost. She said
that Eliphalet Duncan seemed to have forgotten that she was married. But this
did not upset Eliphalet at all; he remembered the whole case clearly and he
told her she was not a married ghost, but a widow, since her husband had been
hung for murdering her. Then the Duncan ghost drew attention to the great
disparity of their ages, saying that he was nearly four hundred and fifty years
old, while she was barely two hundred. But Eliphalet had not talked to juries
for nothing; he just buckled to, and coaxed those ghosts into matrimony.
Afterward he came to the conclusion that they were willing to be coaxed, but at
the time he thought he had pretty hard work to convince them of the advantages
of the plan."
"Did he succeed?" asked Baby Van Rensselaer, with a
young lady's interest in matrimony.
"He did," said Uncle Larry. "He talked the wraith
of the Duncans and the spectre of the little old house at Salem into a
matrimonial engagement. And from the time they were engaged he had no more
trouble with them. They were rival ghosts no longer. They were married by their
spiritual chaplain the very same day that Eliphalet Duncan met Kitty Sutton in
front of the railing of Grace Church. The ghostly bride and bridegroom went
away at once on their bridal tour, and Lord and Lady Duncan went down to the
little old house at Salem to pass their honeymoon."
Uncle Larry stopped. His tiny cigar was out again. The tale of the
rival ghosts was told. A solemn silence fell on the little party on the deck of
the ocean steamer, broken harshly by the hoarse roar of the fog-horn.
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