STORIES
OF INTELLECT
EDITED BY ROSSITER JOHNSON
The Riverside Press
Cambridge 1914
COPYRIGHT 1874 BY JAMES R. OSGOOD & CO.
Contents: 1.The House and the Brain – E. Bulwer Lytton 2.D’Outre Mort – Harriet Prescot Spofford 3.The Fall of the House of Usher – Edgar Allan Poe 4.Chops the Dwarf – Charles Dickens 5.Wakefield – Nathaniel Hawthorne 6.Murder, Considered as one of the Fine Arts – Thomas De Quincey 7.The Captain’s Story – Rebecca Harding Davis
1.THE HOUSE AND THE BRAIN
FRIEND of mine, who is a man of letters and a philosopher, said to me one
day, as if between jest and earnest, “Fancy! since we last met I have
discovered a haunted house in the midst of London.”
“Really haunted? and by
what,—ghosts?”
“Well, I can’t answer
these questions; all I know is this: six weeks ago I and my wife were in search
of a furnished apartment. Passing a quiet street, we saw on the window of one
of the houses a bill, ‘Apartments Furnished.’ The situation suited us; we
entered the house, liked the rooms, engaged them by the week, and left them the
third day. No power on earth could have reconciled my wife to stay longer; and
I don’t wonder at it.”
“What did you see?”
“Excuse me; I have no
desire to be ridiculed as a superstitious dreamer, nor, on the other hand,
could I ask you to accept on my affirmation what you would hold to be
incredible, without the evidence of your own senses. Let me only say this: it
was not so much what we saw or heard (in which you might fairly suppose that we
were the dupes of our own excited fancy, or the victims of imposture in others)
that drove us away, as it was an undefinable terror which seized both of us
whenever we passed by the door of a certain unfurnished room, in which we
neither saw nor heard anything; and the strangest marvel of all was, that for
once in my life I agreed with my wife, silly woman though she be, and allowed
after the third night that it was impossible to stay a fourth in that house.
Accordingly, on the fourth morning I summoned the woman who kept the house and
attended on us, and told her that the rooms did not quite suit us, and we would
not stay out our week. She said dryly, ‘I know why; you have stayed longer than
any other lodger. Few ever stayed a second night; none before you a third. But
I take it they have been very kind to you.’
“‘They,—who?’ I asked,
affecting a smile.
“‘Why, they who haunt
the house, whoever they are; I don’t mind them; I remember them many years ago,
when I lived in this house not as a servant; but I know they will be the death
of me some day. I don’t care,—I’m old and must die soon anyhow; and then I
shall be with them, and in this house still.’ The woman spoke with so dreary a
calmness, that really it was a sort of awe that prevented my conversing with
her further. I paid for my week, and too happy were I and my wife to get off so
cheaply.”
“You excite my
curiosity,” said I; “nothing I should like better than to sleep in a
haunted house. Pray give me the address of the one which you left so
ignominiously.”
My friend gave me the
address; and when we parted I walked straight toward the house thus indicated.
It is situated on the
north side of Oxford Street, in a dull but respectable thoroughfare. I found
the house shut up; no bill at the window, and no response to my knock. As I was
turning away, a beer-boy, collecting pewter pots at the neighboring areas, said
to me, “Do you want any one at that house, sir?”
“Yes, I heard it was to
be let.”
“Let! Why, the woman who
kept it is dead; has been dead these three weeks; and no one can be found to
stay there, though Mr. J—— offered ever so much. He offered mother, who chars
for him, £1 a week just to open and shut the windows, and she would not.”
“Would not! and why?”
“The house is haunted;
and the old woman who kept it was found dead in her bed with her eyes wide
open. They say the Devil strangled her.”
“Pooh! You speak of Mr.
J——. Is he the owner of the house?”
“Yes.”
“Where does he live?”
“In G—— Street, No.—.”
“What is he?—in any
business?”
“No, sir; nothing
particular; a single gentleman.”
I gave the pot-boy the
gratuity earned by his liberal information, and proceeded to Mr. J—— in G——
Street, which was close by the street that boasted the haunted house. I
was lucky enough to find Mr. J—— at home; an elderly man with intelligent
countenance and prepossessing manners.
I communicated my name
and my business frankly. I said I heard the house was considered to be haunted;
that I had a strong desire to examine a house with so equivocal a reputation;
that I should be greatly obliged if he would allow me to hire it, though only
for a night. I was willing to pay for that privilege whatever he might be
inclined to ask. “Sir,” said Mr. J—— with great courtesy, “the house is at your
service for as short or as long a time as you please. Rent is out of the
question; the obligation will be on my side, should you be able to discover the
cause of the strange phenomena which at present deprive it of all value. I
cannot let it, for I cannot even get a servant to keep it in order or answer
the door. Unluckily, the house is haunted, if I may use that expression, not
only by night but by day; though at night the disturbances are of a more
unpleasant and sometimes of a more alarming character. The poor old woman who
died in it three weeks ago was a pauper whom I took out of a workhouse; for in
her childhood she had been known to some of my family, and had once been in
such good circumstances that she had rented that house of my uncle. She was a
woman of superior education and strong mind, and was the only person I could
ever induce to remain in the house. Indeed, since her death, which was sudden,
and the coroner’s inquest, which gave it a notoriety in the neighborhood, I
have so despaired of finding any person to take charge of it, much more a tenant,
that I would willingly let it rent free for a year to any one who would pay its
rates and taxes.”
“How long ago did the
house acquire this character?”
“That I can scarcely
tell you, but many years since; the old woman I spoke of said it was haunted
when she rented it, between thirty and forty years ago. The fact is, that my
life has been spent in the East Indies, and in the civil service of the
company. I returned to England last year, on inheriting the fortune of an
uncle, amongst whose possessions was the house in question. I found it shut up
and uninhabited. I was told that it was haunted, and no one would inhabit it. I
smiled at what seemed to me so idle a story. I spent some money in repainting
and roofing it, added to its old-fashioned furniture a few modern articles,
advertised it, and obtained a lodger for a year. He was a colonel retired on
half pay. He came in with his family, a son and a daughter, and four or five
servants; they all left the house the next day; and although they deponed that
they had all seen something different, that something was equally terrible to
all. I really could not in conscience sue, or even blame, the colonel for
breach of agreement. Then I put in the old woman I have spoken of, and she was
empowered to let the house in apartments. I never had one lodger who stayed
more than three days. I do not tell you their stories; to no two lodgers have
exactly the same phenomena been repeated. It is better that you should judge
for yourself, than enter the house with an imagination influenced by previous
narratives; only be prepared to see and to hear something or other, and take
whatever precautions you yourself please.”
“Have you never had a
curiosity yourself to pass a night in that house?”
“Yes; I passed, not a night,
but three hours in broad daylight alone in that house. My curiosity is not
satisfied, but it is quenched. I have no desire to renew the experiment. You
cannot complain, you see, sir, that I am not sufficiently candid; and unless
your interest be exceedingly eager and your nerves unusually strong, I honestly
add that I advise you not to pass a night in that house.”
“My interest is exceedingly
keen,” said I; “and though only a coward will boast of his nerves in situations
wholly unfamiliar to him, yet my nerves have been seasoned in such variety of
danger that I have the right to rely on them, even in a haunted house.”
Mr. J—— said very little
more; he took the keys of the house out of his bureau, and gave them to me;
and, thanking him cordially for his frankness and his urbane concession to my
wish, I carried off my prize.
Impatient for the
experiment, as soon as I reached home I summoned my confidential servant,—a
young man of gay spirits, fearless temper, and as free from superstitious
prejudice as any one I could think of.
“F——,” said I, “you
remember in Germany how disappointed we were at not finding a ghost in that old
castle, which was said to be haunted by a headless apparition? Well, I have
heard of a house in London which, I have reason to hope, is decidedly haunted.
I mean to sleep there to-night. From what I hear, there is no doubt that
something will allow itself to be seen or to be heard,—something perhaps
excessively horrible. Do you think, if I take you with me, I may rely on
your presence of mind, whatever may happen?”
“O sir! pray trust me!”
said he, grinning with delight.
“Very well, then, here
are the keys of the house; this is the address. Go now, select for me any
bedroom you please; and since the house has not been inhabited for weeks, make
up a good fire, air the bed well, see, of course, that there are candles as
well as fuel. Take with you my revolver and my dagger,—so much for my
weapons,—arm yourself equally well; and if we are not a match for a dozen
ghosts, we shall be but a sorry couple of Englishmen.”
I was engaged for the
rest of the day on business so urgent that I had not leisure to think much on
the nocturnal adventure to which I had plighted my honor. I dined alone and
very late, and while dining read, as is my habit. The volume I selected was one
of Macaulay’s essays. I thought to myself that I would take the book with me;
there was so much of healthfulness in the style, and practical life in the
subjects, that it would serve as an antidote against the influences of superstitious
fancy.
Accordingly, about half
past nine, I put the book into my pocket, and strolled leisurely towards the
haunted house. I took with me a favorite dog; an exceedingly sharp, bold, and
vigilant bull-terrier, a dog fond of prowling about strange ghostly corners and
passages at night in search of rats, a dog of dogs for a ghost.
It was a summer night,
but chilly, the sky somewhat gloomy and overcast; still there was a moon,—faint
and sickly, but still a moon; and if the clouds permitted, after midnight it
would be brighter.
I reached the house,
knocked, and my servant opened with a cheerful smile.
“All right, sir, and
very comfortable.”
“Oh!” said I, rather
disappointed; “have you not seen nor heard anything remarkable?”
“Well, sir, I must own I
have heard something queer.”
“What?—what?”
“The sound of feet
pattering behind me; and once or twice small noises like whispers close at my
ear; nothing more.”
“You are not at all
frightened?”
“I! not a bit of it,
sir!” And the man’s bold look reassured me on one point, namely, that, happen
what might, he would not desert me.
We were in the hall, the
street door closed, and my attention was now drawn to my dog. He had at first
run in eagerly enough, but had sneaked back to the door, and was scratching and
whining to get out. After I had patted him on the head and encouraged him
gently, the dog seemed to reconcile himself to the situation, and followed me
and F—— through the house, but keeping close at my heels, instead of hurrying
inquisitively in advance, which was his usual and normal habit in all strange
places. We first visited the subterranean apartments, the kitchen and other
offices, and especially the cellars, in which last were two or three bottles of
wine still left in a bin, covered with cobwebs, and evidently, by their
appearance, undisturbed for many years. It was clear that the ghosts were not
winebibbers. For the rest, we discovered nothing of interest. There was a
gloomy little back yard, with very high walls. The stones of this yard were
very damp; and what with the damp, and what with the dust and smoke-grime on
the pavement, our feet left a slight impression where we passed. And now
appeared the first strange phenomenon witnessed by myself in this strange
abode. I saw, just before me, the print of a foot suddenly form itself, as it
were. I stopped, caught hold of my servant, and pointed to it. In advance of
that footprint as suddenly dropped another. We both saw it. I advanced quickly
to the place; the footprint kept advancing before me; a small footprint,—the
foot of a child; the impression was too faint thoroughly to distinguish the
shape, but it seemed to us both that it was the print of a naked foot. This
phenomenon ceased when we arrived at the opposite wall, nor did it repeat itself
when we returned. We remounted the stairs, and entered the rooms on the
ground-floor,—a dining-parlor, a small back parlor, and a still smaller third
room, that had probably been appropriated to a footman,—all still as death. We
then visited the drawing-rooms, which seemed fresh and new. In the front room I
seated myself in an arm-chair. F—— placed on the table the candlestick with
which he had lighted us. I told him to shut the door. As he turned to do so, a
chair opposite to me moved from the wall quickly and noiselessly, and dropped
itself about a yard from my own chair, immediately fronting it.
“Why, this is better
than the turning tables,” said I, with a half-laugh; and as I laughed, my dog
put back his head and howled.
F——, coming back, had
not observed the movement of the chair. He employed himself now in stilling the
dog. I continued to gaze on the chair, and fancied I saw on it a pale, blue,
misty outline of a human figure; but an outline so indistinct that I could only
distrust my own vision. The dog was now quiet.
“Put back the chair
opposite to me,” said I to F——, “put it back to the wall.”
F—— obeyed. “Was that
you, sir?” said he, turning abruptly.
“I,—what?”
“Why, something struck
me. I felt it sharply on the shoulder, just here.”
“No,” said I; “but we
have jugglers present; and though we may not discover their tricks, we shall
catch them before they frighten us.”
We did not stay long in
the drawing-rooms; in fact, they felt so damp and so chilly that I was glad to
get to the fire up stairs. We locked the doors of the drawing-rooms,—a
precaution which, I should observe, we had taken with all the rooms we had
searched below. The bedroom my servant had selected for me was the best on the
floor; a large one, with two windows fronting the street. The four-posted bed,
which took up no inconsiderable space, was opposite to the fire, which burned
clear and bright; a door in the wall to the left, between the bed and the
window, communicated with the room which my servant appropriated to himself. This
last was a small room with a sofa-bed, and had no communication with the
landing-place; no other door but that which conducted to the bedroom I was to
occupy. On either side of my fireplace was a cupboard, without locks,
flush with the wall, and covered with the same dull-brown paper. We examined
these cupboards; only hooks to suspend female dresses,—nothing else. We sounded
the walls; evidently solid,—the outer walls of the building. Having finished
the survey of these apartments, warmed myself a few moments, and lighted my
cigar, I then, still accompanied by F——, went forth to complete my reconnoitre.
In the landing-place there was another door; it was closed firmly. “Sir,” said
my servant in surprise, “I unlocked this door with all the others when I first
came; it cannot have got locked from the inside, for it is a—”
Before he had finished
his sentence, the door, which neither of us then was touching, opened quietly
of itself. We looked at each other a single instant. The same thought seized
both; some human agency might be detected here. I rushed in first, my servant
followed. A small, blank, dreary room without furniture, a few empty boxes and
hampers in a corner, a small window, the shutters closed,—not even a
fireplace,—no other door but that by which we had entered, no carpet on the
floor, and the floor seemed very old, uneven, worm-eaten, mended here and
there, as was shown by the whiter patches on the wood; but no living being, and
no visible place in which a living being could have hidden. As we stood gazing
round, the door by which we had entered closed as quietly as it had before
opened; we were imprisoned.
For the first time I
felt a creep of undefinable horror. Not so my servant. “Why, they don’t think
to trap us, sir; I could break that trumpery door with a kick of my foot.”
“Try first if it will
open to your hand,” said I, shaking off the vague apprehension that had seized
me, “while I open the shutters and see what is without.”
I unbarred the shutters:
the window looked on the little back yard I have before described; there was no
ledge without, nothing but sheer descent. No man getting out of that window
would have found any footing till he had fallen on the stones below.
F—— meanwhile was vainly
attempting to open the door. He now turned round to me and asked my permission
to use force. And I should here state, in justice to the servant, that, far
from evincing any superstitious terror, his nerve, composure, and even gayety
amidst circumstances so extraordinary, compelled my admiration, and made me
congratulate myself on having secured a companion in every way fitted to the
occasion. I willingly gave him the permission he required. But, though he was a
remarkably strong man, his force was as idle as his milder efforts; the door
did not even shake to his stoutest kick. Breathless and panting, he desisted. I
then tried the door myself, equally in vain. As I ceased from the effort, again
that creep of horror came over me; but this time it was more cold and stubborn.
I felt as if some strange and ghastly exhalation were rising from the chinks of
that rugged floor and filling the atmosphere with a venomous influence hostile
to human life. The door now very slowly and quietly opened as of its own
accord. We precipitated ourselves into the landing-place. We both saw a large,
pale light—as large as the human figure, but shapeless and unsubstantial—move
before us and ascend the stairs that led from the landing into the attics.
I followed the light, and my servant followed me. It entered, to the right of
the landing, a small garret, of which the door stood open. I entered in the
same instant. The light then collapsed into a small globule, exceedingly
brilliant and vivid; rested a moment on a bed in the corner, quivered, and
vanished. We approached the bed and examined it,—a half-tester, such as is
commonly found in attics devoted to servants. On the drawers that stood near it
we perceived an old faded silk kerchief, with the needle still left in the rent
half repaired. The kerchief was covered with dust; probably it had belonged to
the old woman who had last died in that house, and this might have been her
sleeping-room. I had sufficient curiosity to open the drawers; there were a few
odds and ends of female dress, and two letters tied round with a narrow ribbon
of faded yellow. I took the liberty to possess myself of the letters. We found
nothing else in the room worth noticing, nor did the light reappear; but we
distinctly heard, as we turned to go, a pattering footfall on the floor just
before us. We went through the other attics (in all four), the footfall still
preceding us. Nothing to be seen, nothing but the footfall heard. I had the
letters in my hand; just as I was descending the stairs I distinctly felt my
wrist seized, and a faint, soft effort made to draw the letters from my clasp.
I only held them the more tightly, and the effort ceased.
We regained the
bedchamber appropriated to myself, and I then remarked that my dog had not
followed us when we had left it. He was thrusting himself close to the
fire and trembling. I was impatient to examine the letters; and while I read
them my servant opened a little box in which he had deposited the weapons I had
ordered him to bring, took them out, placed them on a table close at my
bed-head, and then occupied himself in soothing the dog, who, however, seemed
to heed him very little.
The letters were short;
they were dated,—the dates exactly thirty-five years ago. They were evidently
from a lover to his mistress, or a husband to some young wife. Not only the
terms of expression, but a distinct reference to a former voyage indicated the
writer to have been a seafarer. The spelling and handwriting were those of a
man imperfectly educated; but still the language itself was forcible. In the
expressions of endearment there was a kind of rough, wild love; but here and
there were dark unintelligible hints at some secret not of love,—some secret
that seemed of crime. “We ought to love each other,” was one of the sentences I
remember, “for how every one else would execrate us if all was known.” Again:
“Don’t let any one be in the same room with you at night,—you talk in your
sleep.” And again: “What’s done can’t be undone: and I tell you there’s nothing
against us, unless the dead could come to life.” Here was interlined, in a
better handwriting (a female’s), “They do!” At the end of the letter latest in
date the same female hand had written these words: “Lost at sea the 4th of
June, the same day as—”
I put down the letters,
and began to muse over their contents.
Fearing, however, that
the train of thought into which I fell might unsteady my nerves, I fully
determined to keep my mind in a fit state to cope with whatever of marvellous
the advancing night might bring forth. I roused myself, laid the letters on the
table, stirred up the fire, which was still bright and cheering, and opened my
volume of Macaulay. I read quietly enough, till about half past eleven. I then
threw myself dressed upon the bed, and told my servant he might retire to his
own room, but must keep himself awake. I bade him leave open the doors between
the two rooms. Thus, alone, I kept two candles burning on the table by my
bed-head. I placed my watch beside the weapons, and calmly resumed my Macaulay.
Opposite to me the fire burned clear; and on the hearth-rug, seemingly asleep,
lay the dog. In about twenty minutes I felt an exceedingly cold air pass by my
cheek, like a sudden draught. I fancied the door to my right, communicating
with the landing-place, must have got open; but no, it was closed. I then
turned my glance to the left, and saw the flame of the candles violently swayed
as by a wind. At the same moment the watch beside the revolver softly slid from
the table,—softly, softly,—no visible hand,—it was gone. I sprang up, seizing
the revolver with the one hand, the dagger with the other: I was not willing
that my weapons should share the fate of the watch. Thus armed, I looked round
the floor: no sign of the watch. Three slow, loud, distinct knocks were now
heard at the bed-head; my servant called out, “Is that you, sir?”
“No; be on your guard.”
The dog now roused
himself and sat on his haunches, his ears moving quickly backward and forward.
He kept his eye fixed on me with a look so strange that he concentred all my
attention on himself. Slowly he rose, all his hair bristling, and stood
perfectly rigid, and with the same wild stare. I had no time, however, to
examine the dog. Presently my servant emerged from his room; and if I ever saw
horror in the human face, it was then. I should not have recognized him had we
met in the streets, so altered was every lineament. He passed by me quickly,
saying in a whisper that seemed scarcely to come from his lips, “Run! run! it
is after me!” He gained the door to the landing, pulled it open, and rushed
forth. I followed him into the landing involuntarily, calling him to stop; but,
without heeding me, he bounded down the stairs, clinging to the balusters and
taking several steps at a time. I heard, where I stood, the street door open,
heard it again clap to. I was left alone in the haunted house.
It was but for a moment
that I remained undecided whether or not to follow my servant; pride and
curiosity alike forbade so dastardly a flight. I re-entered my room, closing
the door after me, and proceeded cautiously into the interior chamber. I
encountered nothing to justify my servant’s terror. I again carefully examined
the walls, to see if there were any concealed door. I could find no trace of
one,—not even a seam in the dull-brown paper with which the room was hung. How
then had the THING, whatever it was, which had so scared him, obtained
ingress, except through my own chamber?
I returned to my room,
shut and locked the door that opened upon the interior one, and stood on
the hearth, expectant and prepared. I now perceived that the dog had slunk into
an angle of the wall, and was pressing close against it, as if literally
striving to force his way into it. I approached the animal and spoke to it; the
poor brute was evidently beside itself with terror. It showed all its teeth,
the slaver dropping from its jaws, and would certainly have bitten me if I had
touched it. It did not seem to recognize me. Whoever has seen at the Zoölogical
Gardens a rabbit fascinated by a serpent, cowering in a corner, may form some
idea of the anguish which the dog exhibited. Finding all efforts to soothe the
animal in vain, and fearing that his bite might be as venomous in that state as
if in the madness of hydrophobia, I left him alone, placed my weapons on the
table beside the fire, seated myself, and recommenced my Macaulay.
Perhaps, in order not to
appear seeking credit for a courage, or rather a coolness, which the reader may
conceive I exaggerate, I may be pardoned if I pause to indulge in one or two
egotistical remarks.
As I hold presence of
mind, or what is called courage, to be precisely proportioned to familiarity
with the circumstances that lead to it, so I should say that I had been long
sufficiently familiar with all experiments that appertain to the marvellous. I
had witnessed many very extraordinary phenomena in various parts of the
world,—phenomena that would be either totally disbelieved if I stated them, or
ascribed to supernatural agencies. Now, my theory is, that the supernatural is
the impossible, and that what is called supernatural is only a something
in the laws of nature of which we have been hitherto ignorant. Therefore, if a
ghost rise before me, I have not the right to say, “So, then, the supernatural
is possible,” but rather, “So, then, the apparition of a ghost is, contrary to
received opinion, within the laws of nature, namely, not supernatural.”
Now, in all that I had
hitherto witnessed, and indeed in all the wonders which the amateurs of mystery
in our age record as facts, a material living agency is always required. On the
Continent you will find still magicians who assert that they can raise spirits.
Assume for the moment that they assert truly, still the living material form of
the magician is present; and he is the material agency by which, from some
constitutional peculiarities, certain strange phenomena are represented to your
natural senses.
Accept, again, as
truthful the tales of spirit manifestation in America,—musical or other sounds,
writings on paper, produced by no discernible hand, articles of furniture moved
without apparent human agency, or the actual sight and touch of hands, to which
no bodies seem to belong,—still there must be found the medium, or living
being, with constitutional peculiarities capable of obtaining these signs. In
fine, in all such marvels, supposing even that there is no imposture, there
must be a human being like ourselves, by whom or through whom the effects
presented to human beings are produced. It is so with the now familiar
phenomena of mesmerism or electro-biology; the mind of the person operated on
is affected through a material living agent. Nor, supposing it true that a
mesmerized patient can respond to the will or passes of a mesmerizer a hundred miles
distant, is the response less occasioned by a material being. It may be through
a material fluid, call it Electric, call it Odic, call it what you will, which
has the power of traversing space and passing obstacles, that the material
effect is communicated from one to the other. Hence, all that I had hitherto
witnessed, or expected to witness, in this strange house, I believed to be
occasioned through some agency or medium as mortal as myself; and this idea
necessarily prevented the awe with which those who regard as supernatural
things that are not within the ordinary operations of nature might have been
impressed by the adventures of that memorable night.
As, then, it was my
conjecture that all that was presented, or would be presented, to my senses,
must originate in some human being gifted by constitution with the power so to
present them, and having some motive so to do, I felt an interest in my theory
which, in its way, was rather philosophical than superstitious. And I can
sincerely say that I was in as tranquil a temper for observation as any
practical experimentalist could be in awaiting the effects of some rare, though
perhaps perilous, chemical combination. Of course, the more I kept my mind
detached from fancy, the more the temper fitted for observation would be
obtained; and I therefore riveted eye and thought on the strong daylight sense
in the page of my Macaulay.
I now became aware that
something interposed between the page and the light: the page was overshadowed.
I looked up and I saw what I shall find it very difficult, perhaps impossible,
to describe.
It was a darkness
shaping itself out of the air in very undefined outline. I cannot say it was of
a human form, and yet it had more of a resemblance to a human form, or rather
shadow, than anything else. As it stood, wholly apart and distinct from the air
and the light around it, its dimensions seemed gigantic; the summit nearly
touched the ceiling. While I gazed, a feeling of intense cold seized me. An
iceberg before me could not more have chilled me; nor could the cold of an iceberg
have been more purely physical. I feel convinced that it was not the cold
caused by fear. As I continued to gaze, I thought—but this I cannot say with
precision—that I distinguished two eyes looking down on me from the height. One
moment I seemed to distinguish them clearly, the next they seemed gone; but two
rays of a pale blue light frequently shot through the darkness, as from the
height on which I half believed, half doubted, that I had encountered the eyes.
I strove to speak; my
voice utterly failed me. I could only think to myself, “Is this fear? it
is not fear!” I strove to rise, in vain; I felt as if weighed
down by an irresistible force. Indeed, my impression was that of an immense and
overwhelming power opposed to my volition; that sense of utter inadequacy to
cope with a force beyond men’s, which one may feel physically in
a storm at sea, in a conflagration, or when confronting some terrible wild
beast, or rather, perhaps, the shark of the ocean, I felt morally.
Opposed to my will was another will, as far superior to its strength as storm,
fire, and shark are superior in material force to the force of men.
And now, as this
impression grew on me, now came, at last, horror,—horror to a degree that
no words can convey. Still I retained pride, if not courage; and in my own mind
I said, “This is horror, but it is not fear; unless I fear, I cannot be harmed;
my reason rejects this thing; it is an illusion, I do not fear.” With a violent
effort I succeeded at last in stretching out my hand towards the weapon on the
table; as I did so, on the arm and shoulder I received a strange shock, and my
arm fell to my side powerless. And now, to add to my horror, the light began
slowly to wane from the candles; they were not, as it were, extinguished, but
their flame seemed very gradually withdrawn; it was the same with the fire, the
light was extracted from the fuel; in a few minutes the room was in utter
darkness. The dread that came over me to be thus in the dark with that dark
thing, whose power was so intensely felt, brought a reaction of nerve. In fact,
terror had reached that climax, that either my senses must have deserted me, or
I must have burst through the spell. I did burst through it. I found voice,
though the voice was a shriek. I remember that I broke forth with words like
these, “I do not fear, my soul does not fear”; and at the same time I found
strength to rise. Still in that profound gloom I rushed to one of the windows,
tore aside the curtain, flung open the shutters; my first thought was, LIGHT.
And when I saw the moon, high, clear, and calm, I felt a joy that almost
compensated for the previous terror. There was the moon, there was also the
light from the gas-lamps in the deserted, slumberous street. I turned to look
back into the room; the moon penetrated its shadow very palely and partially, but
still there was light. The dark thing, whatever it might be, was gone; except
that I could yet see a dim shadow, which seemed the shadow of that shade,
against the opposite wall.
My eye now rested on the
table, and from under the table (which was without cloth or cover, an old
mahogany round table) rose a hand, visible as far as the wrist. It was a hand,
seemingly, as much of flesh and blood as my own, but the hand of an aged
person, lean, wrinkled, small too, a woman’s hand. That hand very softly closed
on the two letters that lay on the table; hand and letters both vanished. Then
came the same three loud measured knocks I had heard at the bed-head before
this extraordinary drama had commenced.
As these sounds slowly
ceased, I felt the whole room vibrate sensibly; and at the far end rose, as
from the floor, sparks or globules like bubbles of light, many-colored,—green,
yellow, fire-red, azure,—up and down, to and fro, hither, thither, as tiny
will-o’-the-wisps the sparks moved, slow or swift, each at its own caprice. A
chair (as in the drawing-room below) was now advanced from the wall without
apparent agency, and placed at the opposite side of the table. Suddenly, as
forth from the chair, grew a shape, a woman’s shape. It was distinct as a shape
of life, ghastly as a shape of death. The face was that of youth, with a
strange, mournful beauty; the throat and shoulders were bare, the rest of the
form in a loose robe of cloudy white. It began sleeking its long yellow hair,
which fell over its shoulders; its eyes were not turned toward me, but to the
door; it seemed listening, watching, waiting. The shadow of the shade in
the background grew darker; and again I thought I beheld the eyes gleaming out
from the summit of the shadow, eyes fixed upon that shape.
As if from the door,
though it did not open, grew out another shape, equally distinct, equally
ghastly,—a man’s shape, a young man’s. It was in the dress of the last century,
or rather in a likeness of such dress; for both the male shape and the female,
though defined, were evidently unsubstantial, impalpable,—simulacra, phantasms;
and there was something incongruous, grotesque, yet fearful, in the contrast
between the elaborate finery, the courtly precision of that old-fashioned garb,
with its ruffles and lace and buckles, and the corpse-like aspect and
ghost-like stillness of the flitting wearer. Just as the male shape approached
the female, the dark shadow darted from the wall, all three for a moment
wrapped in darkness. When the pale light returned, the two phantoms were as if
in the grasp of the shadow that towered between them, and there was a
blood-stain on the breast of the female; and the phantom male was leaning on
its phantom sword, and blood seemed trickling fast from the ruffles, from the
lace; and the darkness of the intermediate shadow swallowed them up, they were
gone. And again the bubbles of light shot, and sailed, and undulated, growing
thicker and thicker and more wildly confused in their movements.
The closet door to the
right of the fireplace now opened, and from the aperture came the form of a
woman, aged. In her hand she held letters,—the very letters over which I had
seen the hand close; and behind her I heard a footstep. She
turned round as if to listen, and then she opened the letters and seemed
to read: and over her shoulder I saw a livid face, the face as of a man long
drowned,—bloated, bleached, seaweed tangled in its dripping hair; and at her
feet lay a form as of a corpse, and beside the corpse cowered a child, a
miserable, squalid child, with famine in its cheeks and fear in its eyes. And
as I looked in the old woman’s face, the wrinkles and lines vanished, and it
became a face of youth,—hard-eyed, stony, but still youth; and the shadow
darted forth and darkened over these phantoms, as it had darkened over the
last.
Nothing now was left but
the shadow, and on that my eyes were intently fixed, till again eyes grew out
of the shadow,—malignant, serpent eyes. And the bubbles of light again rose and
fell, and in their disordered, irregular, turbulent maze mingled with the wan
moonlight. And now from these globules themselves, as from the shell of an egg,
monstrous things burst out; the air grew filled with them; larvæ so bloodless
and so hideous that I can in no way describe them, except to remind the reader
of the swarming life which the solar microscope brings before his eyes in a
drop of water,—things transparent, supple, agile, chasing each other, devouring
each other,—forms like naught ever beheld by the naked eye. As the shapes were
without symmetry, so their movements were without order. In their very
vagrancies there was no sport; they came round me and round, thicker and faster
and swifter, swarming over my head, crawling over my right arm, which was
outstretched in involuntary command against all evil beings. Sometimes I felt
myself touched, but not by them; invisible hands touched me. Once I felt
the clutch as of cold, soft fingers at my throat. I was still equally conscious
that if I gave way to fear I should be in bodily peril, and I concentred all my
faculties in the single focus of resisting, stubborn will. And I turned my
sight from the shadow, above all from those strange serpent eyes,—eyes that had
now become distinctly visible. For there, though in naught else around me, I
was aware that there was a will, and a will of intense, creative, working evil,
which might crush down my own.
The pale atmosphere in
the room began now to redden as if in the air of some near conflagration. The
larvæ grew lurid as things that live in fire. Again the room vibrated; again
were heard the three measured knocks; and again all things were swallowed up in
the darkness of the dark shadow, as if out of that darkness all had come, into
that darkness all returned.
As the gloom receded,
the shadow was wholly gone. Slowly as it had been withdrawn, the flame grew
again into the candles on the table, again into the fuel in the grate. The
whole room came once more calmly, healthfully into sight.
The two doors were still
closed, the door communicating with the servant’s room still locked. In the
corner of the wall, into which he had convulsively niched himself, lay the dog.
I called to him,—no movement; I approached,—the animal was dead; his eyes
protruded, his tongue out of his mouth, the froth gathered round his jaws. I
took him in my arms; I brought him to the fire; I felt acute grief for the loss
of my poor favorite, acute self-reproach; I accused myself of his death; I imagined
he had died of fright. But what was my surprise on finding that his neck was
actually broken,—actually twisted out of the vertebræ. Had this been done in
the dark? Must it not have been done by a hand human as mine? Must there not
have been a human agency all the while in that room? Good cause to suspect it.
I cannot tell. I cannot do more than state the fact fairly; the reader may draw
his own inference.
Another surprising
circumstance,—my watch was restored to the table from which it had been so
mysteriously withdrawn; but it had stopped at the very moment it was so
withdrawn; nor, despite all the skill of the watchmaker, has it ever gone
since: that is, it will go in a strange, erratic way for a few hours, and then
comes to a dead stop; it is worthless.
Nothing more chanced for
the rest of the night; nor, indeed, had I long to wait before the dawn broke.
Not till it was broad daylight did I quit the haunted house. Before I did so, I
revisited the little blind room in which my servant and I had been for a time imprisoned.
I had a strong impression, for which I could not account, that from that room
had originated the mechanism of the phenomena, if I may use the term, which had
been experienced in my chamber; and though I entered it now in the clear day,
with the sun peering through the filmy window, I still felt, as I stood on its
floor, the creep of the horror which I had first experienced there the night
before, and which had been so aggravated by what had passed in my own chamber.
I could not, indeed, bear to stay more than half a minute within those walls. I descended
the stairs, and again I heard the footfall before me; and when I opened the
street door I thought I could distinguish a very low laugh. I gained my own
home, expecting to find my runaway servant there. But he had not presented
himself; nor did I hear more of him for three days, when I received a letter
from him, dated from Liverpool, to this effect:—
“Honored Sir,—I humbly entreat your pardon, though I can
scarcely hope that you will think I deserve it, unless—which Heaven forbid!—you
saw what I did. I feel that it will be years before I can recover myself; and
as to being fit for service, it is out of the question. I am therefore going to
my brother-in-law at Melbourne. The ship sails to-morrow. Perhaps the long
voyage may set me up. I do nothing now but start and tremble, and fancy it is
behind me. I humbly beg you, honored sir, to order my clothes, and whatever
wages are due to me, to be sent to my mother’s at Walworth: John knows her
address.”
The letter ended with
additional apologies, somewhat incoherent, and explanatory details as to
effects that had been under the writer’s charge.
This flight may perhaps
warrant a suspicion that the man wished to go to Australia, and had been
somehow or other fraudulently mixed up with the events of the night. I say
nothing in refutation of that conjecture; rather, I suggest it as one that
would seem to many persons the most probable solution of improbable
occurrences. My own theory remained unshaken. I returned in the evening to the
house, to bring away in a hack cab the things I had left there, with my
poor dog’s body. In this task I was not disturbed, nor did any incident worth
note befall me, except that still, on ascending and descending the stairs, I
heard the same footfall in advance. On leaving the house, I went to Mr. J——’s.
He was at home. I returned him the keys, told him that my curiosity was
sufficiently gratified, and was about to relate quickly what had passed, when
he stopped me and said, though with much politeness, that he had no longer any
interest in a mystery which none had ever solved.
I determined at least to
tell him of the two letters I had read, as well as of the extraordinary manner
in which they had disappeared; and I then inquired if he thought they had been
addressed to the woman who had died in the house, and if there were anything in
her early history which could possibly confirm the dark suspicions to which the
letters gave rise. Mr. J—— seemed startled, and, after musing a few moments,
answered: “I know but little of the woman’s earlier history, except, as I
before told you, that her family were known to mine. But you revive some vague
reminiscences to her prejudice. I will make inquiries, and inform you of their
result. Still, even if we could admit the popular superstition that a person
who had been either the perpetrator or the victim of dark crimes in life could
revisit, as a restless spirit, the scene in which those crimes had been
committed, I should observe that the house was infested by strange sights and
sounds before the old woman died. You smile; what would you say?”
“I would say this: that
I am convinced, if we could get to the bottom of these mysteries, we should
find a living, human agency.”
“What! you believe it is
all an imposture? For what object?”
“Not an imposture, in
the ordinary sense of the word. If suddenly I were to sink into a deep sleep,
from which you could not awake me, but in that deep sleep could answer
questions with an accuracy which I could not pretend to when awake,—tell you
what money you had in your pocket, nay, describe your very thoughts,—it is not
necessarily an imposture, any more than it is necessarily supernatural. I
should be, unconsciously to myself, under a mesmeric influence, conveyed to me
from a distance by a human being who had acquired power over me by
previous rapport.”
“Granting mesmerism, so
far carried, to be a fact, you are right. And you would infer from this that a
mesmerizer might produce the extraordinary effects you and others have
witnessed over inanimate objects,—fill the air with sights and sounds?”
“Or impress our senses
with the belief in them, we never having been en rapport with
the person acting on us? No. What is commonly called mesmerism could not do
this; but there may be a power akin to mesmerism, and superior to it,—the power
that in the old days was called Magic. That such a power may extend to all
inanimate objects of matter, I do not say; but if so, it would not be against
nature, only a rare power in nature, which might be given to constitutions with
certain peculiarities, and cultivated by practice to an extraordinary
degree. That such a power might extend over the dead,—that is, over certain
thoughts and memories that the dead may still retain,—and compel, not that
which ought properly to be called the soul, and which is far beyond human
reach, but rather a phantom of what has been most earth-stained on earth, to
make itself apparent to our senses,—is a very ancient though obsolete theory,
upon which I will hazard no opinion. But I do not conceive the power would be
supernatural. Let me illustrate what I mean, from an experiment which
Paracelsus describes as not difficult, and which the author of the ‘Curiosities
of Literature’ cites as credible: A flower perishes; you burn it. Whatever were
the elements of that flower while it lived are gone, dispersed, you know not
whither; you can never discover nor re-collect them. But you can, by chemistry,
out of the burnt dust of that flower, raise a spectrum of the flower, just as
it seemed in life. It may be the same with a human being. The soul has as much
escaped you as the essence or elements of the flower. Still you may make a
spectrum of it. And this phantom, though in the popular superstition it is held
to be the soul of the departed, must not be confounded with the true soul; it
is but the eidolon of the dead form. Hence, like the best-attested stories of
ghosts or spirits, the thing that most strikes us is the absence of what we
hold to be soul,—that is, of superior, emancipated intelligence. They come for
little or no object; they seldom speak, if they do come; they utter no ideas
above those of an ordinary person on earth. These American spiritseers have
published volumes of communications in prose and verse, which they assert
to be given in the names of the most illustrious dead,—Shakespeare, Bacon,
Heaven knows whom. Those communications, taking the best, are certainly of not
a whit higher order than would be communications from living persons of fair
talent and education; they are wondrously inferior to what Bacon, Shakespeare,
and Plato said and wrote when on earth. Nor, what is more notable, do they ever
contain an idea that was not on the earth before. Wonderful, therefore, as such
phenomena may be (granting them to be truthful), I see much that philosophy may
question, nothing that it is incumbent on philosophy to deny, namely, nothing
supernatural. They are but ideas conveyed somehow or other (we have not yet
discovered the means) from one mortal brain to another. Whether in so doing
tables walk of their own accord, or fiend-like shapes appear in a magic circle,
or bodiless hands rise and remove material objects, or a thing of darkness,
such as presented itself to me, freeze our blood,—still am I persuaded that
these are but agencies conveyed, as by electric wires, to my own brain from the
brain of another. In some constitutions there is a natural chemistry, and those
may produce chemic wonders; in others a natural fluid, call it electricity, and
these produce electric wonders. But they differ in this from normal science:
they are alike objectless, purposeless, puerile, frivolous. They lead on to no
grand results, and therefore the world does not heed, and true sages have not
cultivated them. But sure I am, that of all I saw or heard, a man, human as
myself, was the remote originator; and, I believe, unconsciously to himself as
to the exact effects produced, for this reason: no two persons, you say,
have ever told you that they experienced exactly the same thing; well, observe,
no two persons ever experience exactly the same dream. If this were an ordinary
imposture, the machinery would be arranged for results that would but little
vary; if it were a supernatural agency permitted by the Almighty, it would
surely be for some definite end. These phenomena belong to neither class. My
persuasion is, that they originate in some brain now far distant; that that
brain had no distinct volition in anything that occurred; that what does occur
reflects but its devious, motley, ever-shifting, half-formed thoughts; in
short, that it has been but the dreams of such a brain put into action and
invested with a semi-substance. That this brain is of immense power, that it
can set matter into movement, that it is malignant and destructive, I believe.
Some material force must have killed my dog; it might, for aught I know, have
sufficed to kill myself, had I been as subjugated by terror as the dog,—had my
intellect or my spirit given me no countervailing resistance in my will.”
“It killed your dog!
that is fearful! Indeed, it is strange that no animal can be induced to stay in
that house; not even a cat. Rats and mice are never found in it.”
“The instincts of the
brute creation detect influences deadly to their existence. Man’s reason has a
sense less subtle, because it has a resisting power more supreme. But enough;
do you comprehend my theory?”
“Yes, though
imperfectly; and I accept any crotchet (pardon the word), however odd, rather
than embrace at once the notion of ghosts and hobgoblins we imbibed in our
nurseries. Still, to my unfortunate house the evil is the same. What on earth
can I do with the house?”
“I will tell you what I
would do. I am convinced from my own internal feelings that the small
unfurnished room, at right angles to the door of the bedroom which I occupied,
forms a starting-point or receptacle for the influences which haunt the house;
and I strongly advise you to have the walls opened, the floor removed, nay, the
whole room pulled down. I observe that it is detached from the body of the
house, built over the small back yard, and could be removed without injury to
the rest of the building.”
“And you think if I did
that—”
“You would cut off the
telegraph-wires. Try it. I am so persuaded that I am right, that I will pay
half the expense, if you will allow me to direct the operations.”
“Nay, I am well able to
afford the cost; for the rest, allow me to write to you.”
About ten days
afterwards I received a letter from Mr. J——, telling me that he had visited the
house since I had seen him; that he had found the two letters I had described
replaced in the drawer from which I had taken them; that he had read them with
misgivings like my own; that he had instituted a cautious inquiry about the
woman to whom I rightly conjectured they had been written. It seemed that
thirty-six years ago (a year before the date of the letters) she had married,
against the wish of her relatives, an American of very suspicious character; in
fact, he was generally believed to have been a pirate. She herself was the
daughter of very respectable tradespeople, and had served in the capacity
of nursery governess before her marriage. She had a brother, a widower, who was
considered wealthy, and who had one child about six years old. A month after
the marriage, the body of this brother was found in the Thames, near London
Bridge; there seemed some marks of violence about his throat, but they were not
deemed sufficient to warrant the inquest in any other verdict than that of
“found drowned.”
The American and his
wife took charge of the little boy, the deceased brother having by his will
left his sister the guardian of his only child, and in event of the child’s
death the sister inherited. The child died about six months afterward; it was
supposed to have been neglected and ill-treated. The neighbors deposed to have
heard it shriek at night. The surgeon who had examined it after death said that
it was emaciated as if from want of nourishment, and the body was covered with
livid bruises. It seemed that one winter night the child had sought to escape;
had crept out into the back yard, tried to scale the wall, fallen back
exhausted, and had been found at morning on the stones in a dying state. But
though there was some evidence of cruelty, there was none of murder; and the
aunt and her husband had sought to palliate cruelty by alleging the exceeding
stubbornness and perversity of the child, who was declared to be half-witted.
Be that as it may, at the orphan’s death the aunt inherited her brother’s
fortune. Before the first wedded year was out, the American quitted England
abruptly, and never returned to it. He obtained a cruising vessel, which was
lost in the Atlantic two years afterwards.The widow was left in affluence; but
reverses of various kinds had befallen her; a bank broke, an investment failed,
she went into a small business and became insolvent, then she entered into
service, sinking lower and lower, from housekeeper down to maid-of-all-work,
never long retaining a place, though nothing peculiar against her character was
ever alleged. She was considered sober, honest, and peculiarly quiet in her
ways; still nothing prospered with her. And so she had dropped into the
workhouse, from which Mr. J—— had taken her, to be placed in charge of the very
house which she had rented as mistress in the first year of her wedded life.
Mr. J—— added, that he
had passed an hour alone in the unfurnished room which I had urged him to
destroy, and that his impressions of dread while there were so great, though he
had neither heard nor seen anything, that he was eager to have the walls bared
and the floors removed, as I had suggested. He had engaged persons for the
work, and would commence any day I would name.
The day was accordingly
fixed. I repaired to the haunted house; we went into the blind, dreary room,
took up the skirting, and then the floors. Under the rafters, covered with
rubbish, was found a trap-door, quite large enough to admit a man. It was
closely nailed down with clamps and rivets of iron. On removing these we
descended into a room below, the existence of which had never been suspected.
In this room there had been a window and a flue, but they had been bricked
over, evidently for many years. By the help of candles we examined this place;
it still retained some mouldering furniture,—three chairs, an oak settee, a
table,—all of the fashion of about eighty years ago. There was a chest of
drawers against the wall, in which we found, half rotted away, old-fashioned
articles of a man’s dress, such as might have been worn eighty or a hundred
years ago, by a gentleman of some rank; costly steel buckles and buttons, like
those yet worn in court-dresses, a handsome court-sword; in a waistcoat which
had once been rich with gold-lace, but which was now blackened and foul with
damp, we found five guineas, a few silver coins, and an ivory ticket, probably
for some place of entertainment long since passed away. But our main discovery
was in a kind of iron safe fixed to the wall, the lock of which it cost us much
trouble to get picked.
In this safe were three
shelves and two small drawers. Ranged on the shelves were several small bottles
of crystal, hermetically stopped. They contained colorless volatile essences,
of what nature I shall say no more than that they were not poisons; phosphor
and ammonia entered into some of them. There were also some very curious glass
tubes, and a small pointed rod of iron, with a large lump of rock-crystal, and
another of amber, also a loadstone of great power.
In one of the drawers we
found a miniature portrait set in gold, and retaining the freshness of its
colors most remarkably, considering the length of time it had probably been
there. The portrait was that of a man who might be somewhat advanced in middle
life, perhaps forty-seven or forty-eight.
It was a most peculiar
face, a most impressive face. If you could fancy some mighty serpent
transformed into man, preserving in the human lineaments the old serpent type,
you would have a better idea of that countenance than long descriptions can
convey; the width and flatness of frontal, the tapering elegance of contour,
disguising the strength of the deadly jaw; the long, large, terrible eye,
glittering and green as the emerald, and withal a certain ruthless calm, as if
from the consciousness of an immense power. The strange thing was this: the
instant I saw the miniature I recognized a startling likeness to one of the
rarest portraits in the world; the portrait of a man of rank only below that of
royalty, who in his own day had made a considerable noise. History says little
or nothing of him; but search the correspondence of his contemporaries, and you
find reference to his wild daring, his bold profligacy, his restless spirit,
his taste for the occult sciences. While still in the meridian of life he died
and was buried, so say the chronicles, in a foreign land. He died in time to
escape the grasp of the law; for he was accused of crimes which would have
given him to the headsman. After his death, the portraits of him, which had
been numerous, for he had been a munificent encourager of art, were bought up
and destroyed, it was supposed by his heirs, who might have been glad could
they have razed his very name from their splendid line. He had enjoyed vast
wealth; a large portion of this was believed to have been embezzled by a
favorite astrologer or soothsayer; at all events, it had unaccountably vanished
at the time of his death. One portrait alone of him was supposed to have
escaped the general destruction; I had seen it in the house of a collector some
months before. It had made on me a wonderful impression, as it does on all who
behold it; a face never to be forgotten; and there was that face in the
miniature that lay within my hand. True, that in the miniature the man was a
few years older than in the portrait I had seen, or than the original was even
at the time of his death. But a few years!—why, between the date in which
flourished that direful noble, and the date in which the miniature was
evidently painted, there was an interval of more than two centuries. While I
was thus gazing, silent and wondering, Mr. J—— said,—
“But is it possible? I
have known this man.”
“How? where?” cried I.
“In India. He was high
in the confidence of the Rajah of——, and wellnigh drew him into a revolt which
would have lost the Rajah his dominions. The man was a Frenchman, his name De
V——; clever, bold, lawless. We insisted on his dismissal and banishment; it
must be the same man, no two faces like his, yet this miniature seems nearly a hundred
years old.”
Mechanically I turned
round the miniature to examine the back of it, and on the back was engraved a
pentacle; in the middle of the pentacle a ladder, and the third step of the
ladder was formed by the date 1765. Examining still more minutely, I detected a
spring; this, on being pressed, opened the back of the miniature as a lid.
Within-side the lid were engraved, “Mariana, to thee. Be faithful in life and
in death to——.” Here follows a name that I will not mention, but it was not
unfamiliar to me. I had heard it spoken of by old men in my childhood as the
name borne by a dazzling charlatan, who had made a great sensation in
London for a year or so, and had fled the country on the charge of a double
murder within his own house,—that of his mistress and his rival. I said nothing
of this to Mr. J——, to whom reluctantly I resigned the miniature.
We had found no
difficulty in opening the first drawer within the iron safe; we found great
difficulty in opening the second: it was not locked, but it resisted all
efforts, till we inserted in the chinks the edge of a chisel. When we had thus
drawn it forth, we found a very singular apparatus, in the nicest order. Upon a
small, thin book, or rather tablet, was placed a saucer of crystal; this saucer
was filled with a clear liquid; on that liquid floated a kind of compass, with
a needle shifting rapidly round; but instead of the usual points of a compass,
were seven strange characters, not very unlike those used by astrologers to
denote the planets. A very peculiar, but not strong nor displeasing odor came
from this drawer, which was lined with a wood that we afterward discovered to
be hazel. Whatever the cause of this odor, it produced a material effect on the
nerves. We all felt it, even the two workmen who were in the room; a creeping,
tingling sensation, from the tips of the fingers to the roots of the hair.
Impatient to examine the tablet, I removed the saucer. As I did so, the needle
of the compass went round and round with exceeding swiftness, and I felt a
shock that ran through my whole frame, so that I dropped the saucer on the
floor. The liquid was spilt, the saucer was broken, the compass rolled to the
end of the room, and at that instant the walls shook to and fro as if a giant
had swayed and rocked them.
The two workmen were so
frightened that they ran up the ladder by which we had descended from the
trap-door; but, seeing that nothing more happened, they were easily induced to
return.
Meanwhile, I had opened
the tablet; it was bound in plain red leather, with a silver clasp; it
contained but one sheet of thick vellum, and on that sheet were inscribed,
within a double pentacle, words in old monkish Latin, which are literally to be
translated thus: “On all that it can reach within these walls, sentient or
inanimate, living or dead, as moves the needle, so works my will! Accursed be
the house, and restless the dwellers therein.”
We found no more. Mr.
J—— burnt the tablet and its anathema. He razed to the foundation the part of
the building containing the secret room, with the chamber over it. He had then
the courage to inhabit the house himself for a month, and a quieter, better
conditioned house could not be found in all London. Subsequently he let it to
advantage, and his tenant has made no complaints.
But my story is not yet
done. A few days after Mr. J—— had removed into the house, I paid him a visit.
We were standing by the open window and conversing. A van containing some
articles of furniture which he was moving from his former house was at the
door. I had just urged on him my theory, that all those phenomena regarded as
supermundane had emanated from a human brain; adducing the charm, or rather
curse, we had found and destroyed, in support of my theory. Mr. J—— was
observing in reply, “that even if mesmerism, or whatever analogous power it
might be called, could really thus work in the absence of the operator, and
produce effects so extraordinary, still could those effects continue when the
operator himself was dead? and if the spell had been wrought, and, indeed, the
room walled up, more than seventy years ago, the probability was, that the
operator had long since departed this life,”—Mr. J——, I say, was thus
answering, when I caught hold of his arm and pointed to the street below.
A well-dressed man had
crossed from the opposite side, and was accosting the carrier in charge of the
van. His face, as he stood, was exactly fronting our window. It was the face of
the miniature we had discovered; it was the face of the portrait of the noble
three centuries ago.
“Good heavens!” cried
Mr. J——, “that is the face of De V——, and scarcely a day older than when I saw
it in the Rajah’s court in my youth!”
Seized by the same
thought, we both hastened down stairs; I was first in the street, but the man
had already gone. I caught sight of him, however, not many yards in advance,
and in another moment I was by his side.
I had resolved to speak
to him; but when I looked into his face, I felt as if it were impossible to do
so. That eye—the eye of the serpent—fixed and held me spellbound. And withal,
about the man’s whole person there was a dignity, an air of pride and station
and superiority, that would have made any one, habituated to the usages of the
world, hesitate long before venturing upon a liberty or impertinence. And what
could I say? What was it I could ask? Thus ashamed of my first impulse, I fell
a few paces back, still, however, following the stranger, undecided what
else to do. Meanwhile, he turned the corner of the street; a plain carriage was
in waiting with a servant out of livery, dressed like a valet de place,
at the carriage door. In another moment he had stepped into the carriage, and
it drove off. I returned to the house. Mr. J—— was still at the street door. He
had asked the carrier what the stranger had said to him.
“Merely asked whom that
house now belonged to.”
The same evening I
happened to go with a friend to a place in town called the Cosmopolitan Club, a
place open to men of all countries, all opinions, all degrees. One orders one’s
coffee, smokes one’s cigar. One is always sure to meet agreeable, sometimes
remarkable persons.
I had not been two
minutes in the room before I beheld at table, conversing with an acquaintance
of mine, whom I will designate by the initial G——, the man, the original of the
miniature. He was now without his hat, and the likeness was yet more startling,
only I observed that while he was conversing, there was less severity in the
countenance; there was even a smile, though a very quiet and very cold one. The
dignity of mien I had acknowledged in the street was also more striking; a
dignity akin to that which invests some prince of the East, conveying the idea
of supreme indifference and habitual, indisputable, indolent, but resistless
power.
G—— soon after left the
stranger, who then took up a scientific journal, which seemed to absorb his
attention.
I drew G—— aside. “Who
and what is that gentleman?”
“That? Oh, a very
remarkable man indeed! I met him last year amidst the caves of Petra, the
Scriptural Edom. He is the best Oriental scholar I know. We joined company, had
an adventure with robbers, in which he showed a coolness that saved our lives;
afterward he invited me to spend a day with him in a house he had bought at
Damascus, a house buried amongst almond-blossoms and roses; the most beautiful
thing! He had lived there for some years, quite as an Oriental, in grand style.
I half suspect he is a renegade, immensely rich, very odd; by the by, a great
mesmerizer. I have seen him with my own eyes produce an effect on inanimate
things. If you take a letter from your pocket and throw it to the other end of
the room, he will order it to come to his feet, and you will see the letter
wriggle itself along the floor till it has obeyed his command. ’Pon my honor
’tis true; I have seen him affect even the weather; disperse or collect clouds,
by means of a glass tube or wand. But he does not like talking of these matters
to strangers. He has only just arrived in England; says he has not been here
for a great many years; let me introduce him to you.”
“Certainly! He is
English, then? What is his name?”
“Oh! a very homely
one,—Richards.”
“And what is his
birth,—his family?”
“How do I know? What
does it signify? No doubt some parvenu; but rich, so infernally
rich!”
G—— drew me up to the
stranger, and the introduction was effected. The manners of Mr. Richards were
not those of an adventurous traveller. Travellers are in general gifted with
high animal spirits; they are talkative, eager, imperious. Mr. Richards was
calm and subdued in tone, with manners which were made distant by the loftiness
of punctilious courtesy, the manners of a former age. I observed that the
English he spoke was not exactly of our day. I should even have said that the
accent was slightly foreign. But then Mr. Richards remarked that he had been
little in the habit for many years of speaking in his native tongue. The
conversation fell upon the changes in the aspect of London since he had last
visited our metropolis. G—— then glanced off to the moral changes,—literary,
social, political,—the great men who were removed from the stage within the
last twenty years; the new great men who were coming on. In all this Mr.
Richards evinced no interest. He had evidently read none of our living authors,
and seemed scarcely acquainted by name with our younger statesmen. Once, and
only once, he laughed; it was when G—— asked him whether he had any thoughts of
getting into Parliament. And the laugh was inward, sarcastic, sinister; a sneer
raised into a laugh. After a few minutes, G—— left us to talk to some other
acquaintances who had just lounged into the room, and I then said, quietly,—
“I have seen a miniature
of you, Mr. Richards, in the house you once inhabited, and perhaps built,—if
not wholly, at least in part,—in Oxford Street. You passed by that house this
morning.”
Not till I had finished
did I raise my eyes to his, and then his fixed my gaze so steadfastly that I
could not withdraw it,—those fascinating serpent-eyes. But involuntarily, and
as if the words that translated my thought were dragged from me, I added in a
low whisper, “I have been a student in the mysteries of life and nature; of
those mysteries I have known the occult professors. I have the right to speak
to you thus.” And I uttered a certain password.
“Well, I concede the
right. What would you ask?”
“To what extent human
will in certain temperaments can extend?”
“To what extent can
thought extend? Think, and before you draw breath you are in China!”
“True; but my thought
has no power in China!”
“Give it expression, and
it may have. You may write down a thought which, sooner or later, may alter the
whole condition of China. What is a law but a thought? Therefore thought is
infinite. Therefore thought has power; not in proportion to its value,—a bad
thought may make a bad law as potent as a good thought can make a good one.”
“Yes; what you say
confirms my own theory. Through invisible currents one human brain may transmit
its ideas to other human brains, with the same rapidity as a thought promulgated
by visible means. And as thought is imperishable, as it leaves its stamp behind
it in the natural world, even when the thinker has passed out of this world, so
the thought of the living may have power to rouse up and revive the thoughts of
the dead, such as those thoughts were in life, though the thought
of the living cannot reach the thoughts which the dead now may
entertain. Is it not so?”
“I decline to answer, if
in my judgment thought has the limit you would fix to it. But proceed; you have
a special question you wish to put.”
“Intense malignity in an
intense will, engendered in a peculiar temperament, and aided by natural means
within the reach of science, may produce effects like those ascribed of old to
evil magic. It might thus haunt the walls of a human habitation with spectral
revivals of all guilty thoughts and guilty deeds once conceived and done within
those walls; all, in short, with which the evil will claims rapport and
affinity,—imperfect, incoherent, fragmentary snatches at the old dramas acted
therein years ago. Thoughts thus crossing each other haphazard, as in the
nightmare of a vision, growing up into phantom sights and sounds, and all
serving to create horror; not because those sights and sounds are really
visitations from a world without, but that they are ghastly, monstrous renewals
of what have been in this world itself, set into malignant play by a malignant
mortal. And it is through the material agency of that human brain that these
things would acquire even a human power; would strike as with the shock of
electricity, and might kill, if the thought of the person assailed did not rise
superior to the dignity of the original assailer; might kill the most powerful
animal, if unnerved by fear, but not injure the feeblest man, if, while his
flesh crept, his mind stood out fearless. Thus when in old stories we read of a
magician rent to pieces by the fiends he had invoked, or still more, in Eastern
legends, that one magician succeeds by arts in destroying another, there may be
so far truth, that a material being has clothed, from his own evil
propensities, certain elements and fluids, usually quiescent or harmless, with
awful shapes and terrific force; just as the lightning, that had lain
hidden and innocent in the cloud, becomes by natural law suddenly risible,
takes a distinct shape to the eye, and can strike destruction on the object to
which it is attracted.”
“You are not without
glimpses of a mighty secret,” said Mr. Richards, composedly. “According to your
view, could a mortal obtain the power you speak of, he would necessarily be a
malignant and evil being.”
“If the power were
exercised, as I have said, most malignant and most evil; though I believe in
the ancient traditions, that he could not injure the good. His will could only
injure those with whom it has established an affinity, or over whom it forces
unresisted sway. I will now imagine an example that may be within the laws of
nature, yet seem wild as the fables of a bewildered monk.
“You will remember that
Albertus Magnus, after describing minutely the process by which spirits may be
invoked and commanded, adds emphatically, that the process will instruct and
avail only to the few; that a man must be born a magician! that
is, born with a peculiar physical temperament, as a man is born a poet. Rarely
are men in whose constitution lurks this occult power of the highest order of
intellect; usually in the intellect there is some twist, perversity, or
disease. But, on the other hand, they must possess, to an astonishing degree,
the faculty to concentrate thought on a single object,—the energic faculty that
we call WILL. Therefore, though their intellect be not sound, it is
exceedingly forcible for the attainment of what it desires. I will imagine such
a person, pre-eminently gifted with this constitution and its concomitant
forces. I will place him in the loftier grades of society. I will suppose his
desires emphatically those of the sensualist; he has, therefore, a strong love
of life. He is an absolute egotist; his will is concentred in himself; he has
fierce passions; he knows no enduring, no holy affections, but he can covet
eagerly what for the moment he desires; he can hate implacably what opposes
itself to his objects; he can commit fearful crimes, yet feel small remorse; he
resorts rather to curses upon others, than to penitence for his misdeeds.
Circumstances, to which his constitution guides him, lead him to a rare
knowledge of the natural secrets which may serve his egotism. He is a close
observer where his passions encourage observation; he is a minute calculator,
not from love of truth, but where love of self sharpens his faculties;
therefore he can be a man of science. I suppose such a being, having by
experience learned the power of his arts over others, trying what may be the
power of will over his own frame, and studying all that in natural philosophy
may increase that power. He loves life, he dreads death; he wills to
live on. He cannot restore himself to youth, he cannot entirely stay the
progress of death, he cannot make himself immortal in the flesh and blood; but
he may arrest, for a time so long as to appear incredible if I said it, that
hardening of the parts which constitutes old age. A year may age him no more
than an hour ages another. His intense will, scientifically trained into
system, operates, in short, over the wear and tear of his own frame. He lives
on. That he may not seem a portent and a miracle, he dies, from
time to time, seemingly, to certain persons. Having schemed the transfer of a
wealth that suffices to his wants, he disappears from one corner of the world,
and contrives that his obsequies shall be celebrated. He reappears at another
corner of the world, where he resides undetected, and does not visit the scenes
of his former career till all who could remember his features are no more. He
would be profoundly miserable if he had affections; he has none but for
himself. No good man would accept his longevity; and to no man, good or bad,
would he or could he communicate its true secret. Such a man might exist; such
a man as I have described I see now before me,—Duke of——, in the court of——,
dividing time between lust and brawl, alchemists and wizards; again, in the
last century, charlatan and criminal, with name less noble, domiciled in the
house at which you gazed to-day, and flying from the law you had outraged, none
knew whither; traveller once more revisiting London, with the same earthly
passions which filled your heart when races now no more walked through yonder
streets; outlaw from the school of all the nobler and diviner mysteries.
Execrable image of life in death and death in life, I warn you back from the
cities and homes of healthful men! back to the ruins of departed empires! back
to the deserts of nature unredeemed!”
There answered me a
whisper so musical, so potently musical, that it seemed to enter into my whole
being, and subdue me despite myself. Thus it said:—
“I have sought one like
you for the last hundred years. Now I have found you, we part not till I know
what I desire. The vision that sees through the past and cleaves through the
veil of the future is in you at this hour,—never before, never to come
again. The vision of no puling, fantastic girl, of no sick-bed somnambule, but
of a strong man with a vigorous brain. Soar, and look forth!”
As he spoke, I felt as
if I rose out of myself upon eagle wings. All the weight seemed gone from air,
roofless the room, roofless the dome of space. I was not in the body,—where, I
knew not; but aloft over time, over earth.
Again I heard the
melodious whisper: “You say right. I have mastered great secrets by the power
of will. True, by will and by science I can retard the process of years; but
death comes not by age alone. Can I frustrate the accidents which bring death
upon the young?”
“No; every accident is a
providence. Before a providence, snaps every human will.”
“Shall I die at last,
ages and ages hence, by the slow, though inevitable, growth of time, or by the
cause that I call accident?”
“By a cause you call
accident.”
“Is not the end still
remote?” asked the whisper, with a slight tremor.
“Regarded as my life
regards time, it is still remote.”
“And shall I, before
then, mix with the world of men as I did ere I learned these secrets; resume
eager interest in their strife and their trouble; battle with ambition, and use
the power of the sage to win the power that belongs to kings?”
“You will yet play a
part on the earth that will fill earth with commotion and amaze. For wondrous
designs have you, a wonder yourself, been permitted to live on through the
centuries. All the secrets you have stored will then have their uses; all that
now makes you a stranger amidst the generations will contribute then to make
you their lord. As the trees and the straws are drawn into a whirlpool, as they
spin round, are sucked to the deep, and again tossed aloft by the eddies, so
shall races and thrones be drawn into your vortex. Awful destroyer! but in
destroying, made, against your own will, a constructor.”
“And that date, too, is
far off?”
“Far off; when it comes,
think your end in this world is at hand!”
“How and what is the
end? Look east, west, south, and north.”
“In the north, where you
never yet trod, toward the point whence your instincts have warned you, there a
spectre will seize you. ’Tis Death! I see a ship! it is haunted; ’tis chased!
it sails on. Baffled navies sail after that ship. It enters the region of ice.
It passes a sky red with meteors. Two moons stand on high, over ice-reefs. I
see the ship locked between white defiles; they are ice-rocks. I see the dead
strew the decks, stark and livid, green mould on their limbs. All are dead but
one man,—it is you! But years, though so slowly they come, have then scathed
you. There is the coming of age on your brow, and the will is relaxed in the
cells of the brain. Still that will, though enfeebled, exceeds all that man
knew before you; through the will you live on, gnawed with famine. And nature
no longer obeys you in that death-spreading region; the sky is a sky of iron,
and the air has iron clamps, and the ice-rocks wedge in the ship. Hark how it
cracks and groans! Ice will imbed it as amber imbeds a straw. And a man has
gone forth, living yet, from the ship and its dead; and he has clambered up the
spikes of an iceberg, and the two moons gaze down on his form. That man is
yourself, and terror is on you,—terror; and terror has swallowed up your will.
And I see, swarming up the steep ice-rock, gray, grizzly things. The bears of
the North have scented their quarry; they come near you and nearer, shambling,
and rolling their bulk. And in that day every moment shall seem to you longer
than the centuries through which you have passed. And heed this: after life,
moments continued make the bliss or the hell of eternity.”
“Hush,” said the
whisper. “But the day, you assure me, is far off, very far! I go back to the
almond and rose of Damascus! Sleep!”
The room swam before my
eyes. I became insensible. When I recovered, I found G—— holding my hand and
smiling. He said, “You, who have always declared yourself proof against
mesmerism, have succumbed at last to my friend Richards.”
“Where is Mr. Richards?”
“Gone, when you passed
into a trance, saying quietly to me, ‘Your friend will not wake for an hour.’”
I asked, as collectedly
as I could, where Mr. Richards lodged.
“At the Trafalgar
Hotel.”
“Give me your arm,” said
I to G——. “Let us call on him; I have something to say.”
When we arrived at the
hotel, we were told that Mr. Richards had returned twenty minutes before,
paid his bill, left directions with his servant (a Greek) to pack his effects,
and proceed to Malta by the steamer that should leave Southampton the next day.
Mr. Richards had merely said of his own movements, that he had visits to pay in
the neighborhood of London, and it was uncertain whether he should be able to
reach Southampton in time for that steamer; if not, he should follow in the
next one.
The waiter asked me my
name. On my informing him, he gave me a note that Mr. Richards had left for me,
in case I called.
The note was as
follows:—
“I wished you to utter
what was in your mind. You obeyed. I have therefore established power over you.
For three months from this day you can communicate to no living man what has
passed between us. You cannot even show this note to the friend by your side.
During three months, silence complete as to me and mine. Do you doubt my power
to lay on you this command? try to disobey me. At the end of the third month
the spell is raised. For the rest, I spare you. I shall visit your grave a year
and a day after it has received you.”
So ends this strange
story, which I ask no one to believe. I write it down exactly three months
after I received the above note. I could not write it before, nor could I show
to G——, in spite of his urgent request, the note which I read under the
gas-lamp by his side.
2.D’OUTRE MORT.
MOUNTAIN intervale all velveted in green, and half the verdure overlaid
with gold by broad rays of sunset falling level through the pass,—the hills,
behind, a gray and gloomy encampment softened with wreaths of vapor and dim
recesses of deepest purple, and here and there above the gaps a pale star
trembling on the paler blue. In spite of the approaching night, there was a gay
glad strength about the scene, so that all who saw it might have felt light at
heart, as if the rocky rampart shut out the sorrows of the world and made the
charmed valley an enchanted place.
They had been mowing in
the intervale; half-formed haycocks, picturesquely piled along the meadows,
loaded the air with heavy sweetness; in one, partly overthrown, a lounger
lolled luxuriously, singing idly to himself that little Venetian song of
Browning’s, to some tune delightful as the words:—
“O, which were best, to
roam or rest?
The land’s lap or the water’s breast?
To sleep on yellow millet-sheaves,
Or swim in lucid shallows, just
Eluding water-lily leaves,
An inch from Death’s black fingers thrust
To lock you, whom release he must;
Which life were best on summer eves?”
The perfumed wind blew
softly over the singer, like a placid breath; the sense of gathering evening
hung above him; he lay upon the billowy hay as if it were a cloud; he was a
voluptuary in his pleasures; well for him if they were always as innocent.
A young girl approached
the singer, swinging her hat as she came, and radiant in the low sunshine.
She was named
Orient,—either because she seemed, with her golden locks, her fresh fair tints,
like an impersonation of morning and the East, or because when she was born
hope’s day-star rose again in her mother’s forlorn heart. Such a lovely yet
half-fantastic creature was she, that you hardly believed in her existence when
away from her.
“What are you looking
for, Orient?” said the lounger.
“The fountain of youth,”
answered her silvery tones. “It should be somewhere in this happy valley.”
“You do not need it,” he
replied after a lingering glance.
She stooped and
extricated a long sweetbrier bough from the hay with which it had been bent but
not cut down, and twisted it, still blossoming, round and round her head till
it made a fragrant diadem of rosy stars.
“Do not,” said Reymund.
“Take it off; or I shall have to do as Voltaire did: erect my long, thin body
and stand before you like a point of admiration!”
Orient did not reply;
and, fulfilling his threat, he went on by her side to the old farm-house that
had been turned into a summer hostelry for guests. More stars were beginning to
steal forth in the tender firmament; the breeze blew down more freshly from the
hills and brought the big dews and scattered starbeams with it; music was
hushed, and all the world was still. It was summer evening, yet an unreal kind
of summer, as summer might be in a distant dream, blown over by cool, awakening
winds. Now and then Orient stopped to pick up a great butterfly that had fallen
benumbed from its perch and lay it gently to rest among the leaves, without
brushing a speck of dust from its freckled wings; after that her fingers worked
in a vine by the way, and she pulled aside a tendril that kept a sleepy flower
from shutting up its petals. As she did so, a little mother-bird upon her eggs
stirred and briefly twittered out her secret to Orient’s ear. Reymund, who
loitered in waiting for her, thought she seemed, as much as any of them, like a
flower, a moth, a bird herself, a beautiful and almost dumb existence of
nature.
He was not a man easily
intimidated, or of unvaried experience; but the thin atmosphere of awe about
this girl was something he had never penetrated; the ease with which he met
another, toward her became impertinence; gay and careless with many, he felt
that she was something apart, sacred as a passion-flower; he scarcely dared
approach her lightly; when he spoke to her he crossed himself in his heart.
They had never met until
a month ago, yet their address had been familiar almost from the first; on her side,
through a large-eyed, childlike fearlessness; on his—he could not have answered
why. He watched her as one watches a clear planet glow steadily from the soft,
golden sky, but he seemed nevertheless to know all her characteristics without
studying them,—he imagined that to one weary of trifle and artifice and the
hollow way of the world, here was the rest divine. Yet beyond a point, he found
this cool, remote being inaccessible,—as though there had been a gulf between
them. He knew not how to call the blush to her cheek, the sparkle to her eye;
if she had been some alien creature she might have been nearer,—to enrich her
with human love was as fruitless an effort as scattering the pollen of a rose
into the heart of a cold white lily. And yet, Reymund knew—as if through the
same natural operations as those by which his pulse was made to beat, his
breath to draw—that Orient’s soul needed his for its entireness; that his soul
required hers, all as much as a star needed its atmosphere, a flower its
fragrance, the earth itself its spheral roundness. It was not so much that he
already loved her passionately, as that he felt himself lost without her; he
had been in Orient’s presence, it seemed, all the time that he had ever lived;
how could he then depart from it? If that which was a clod suddenly found
itself a bed of blossom, how could it ever return again to dreary earthiness?
He watched her now
approaching. Had any one said that she trailed lustre behind her as she walked,
he would have answered that he had seen it. But to speak to her of any grace or
charm or perfection that she possessed,—why, these things were herself, her
identity,sacred and secret; as easily to some skyey messenger of solemn heaven
commend his airy flight!
“In what wonderful ways
these mountains change their expression!” said Reymund, as she joined him again
at last.
“Yes,” she replied,
“they are different beings every hour.”
“A little while ago,” he
continued, “they seemed like an army of giants sitting down to besiege the
valley; now they are a wall between us and mankind; death cannot break through
it, sickness cannot cross it.”
“They are more alive
than that,” said Orient. “This old sombre one moved aside just now to make room
for the little alp laughing over his shoulder, with the rosy vapor streaming
high on her face.”
“Perhaps you hear what
they are saying to one another, then?” he asked, half jestingly.
“I often do.”
“And you will
translate?”
“No. In the first place
you would laugh; in the last place disbelieve.”
“On my soul—no!”
“I am not certain that
you have a soul.”
“Indeed? Is it so?” half
sadly.
“They say what the
torrents rushing down by Chamouni say!”
“Ah! And at other
times?”
“They talk of the beginning
of the earth, and conjecture concerning the end of things.”
“And do they take any
notice of you? Nature always seems to me careless and indifferent.”
“They invite me to come
up and lie down on their great sides where the sun has lain all day before me.
Yes, they always smile upon me.”
“Do not go,—at least
until the mamma and I go with you.”
“I should not be afraid
alone.”
No,—fear had never found
the depths of those liquid, lucent eyes, he thought. “The mountains might be
civil enough,” he rejoined, “and give you their purple berries to eat, their
wild white brooks to drink; but I could not answer for the black bears and
snakes.”
“I think I could.”
“And this, of course, is
only what you interpret the hills to mean, sitting there in their grim conclave
and affording us such a narrow coronal of sky?” asked Reymund, smiling.
“I do not know,” she
answered doubtfully. “I said things were real to me.”
“There must have been
those like you, who first saw and believed in fairies and all the goblin
people,” he said, still smiling.
“My father died before I
was born,” said Orient. “Perhaps that gave me some lien upon the spiritual
world.”
“Then you see bogles as
well as other things,—as well as the personalities of bud and bird and granite
pile? Uncanny creature! What pleasure shall I take in meeting your glance when
it rests also on a dead man behind me, and on the fetch of one about to join
the innumerable caravan beside me? I must take my revenge normally and in
kind,—if I die before you, you shall surely have a visitation from me. How
should you like that?”
“You would be just as
welcome then as now,” she answered gravely.
“An equivocal
compliment. Nevertheless, I accept it as a challenge. Will you promise its
counterpart?”
“When I die,” said
Orient, “I shall have other things to do.”
“But I would like to see
a ghost, just to be assured that there are such things.”
“As if there could be
any doubt!”
“You understand, then,”
he said, as she went in under the low woodbine-curtained door, “that at some
time—when time shall be no more—I will cast my shadow at your feet!”
It was an hour later
that, while he still strolled in the short, wet grass and enjoyed the rich,
half-dusky atmosphere, he heard Orient singing gently from her window, as she
leaned out upon the cool, star-sown air, and the song seemed to belong to her,
like a natural expression, as to the night the night-wind, or to the dark the
dew:—
“In the evening over me
leaning,
Often I fancy a waving wing,
And with the warning of blushing morning
Softly glimmers the same fair thing.
“O bright being, beyond
the seeing
Of aught but the spirit that feels you near,
Your white star leaving, and earthward cleaving,
You break the murk of this mortal sphere.
“Still, sweet stranger,
in peace or danger,
Out of the air above me bloom,
And heaven’s own sweetness in such completeness
Drop on my head from your shining plume!”
Even while he heard her singing,
the sense of her remoteness gave Reymund a slight shudder. If she had been one
shade more human; if he had ever seen her moved by any sparkle of wit, any
drollery of humor, into a frolicking outburst of laughter, by any mischievous
vexation into a flash of anger, a season of pettishness,—but no, such little
incidents affected her no more than thistle-down affects the wind; and,
recognizing it, Reymund knew that he loved her, yet felt somehow as he felt who
had pledged a bridal ring upon the finger of a ghost; as that youth felt,
perchance, whose beautiful mistress was after all a ghoul. He need not have
concerned himself; Orient had no especial care for him; he passed before her,
busy in her world of dreams, like a shadow; if she smiled upon him, it was as
she smiled on everything else about her, as she smiled on the pink-wreathed
peach-bough, on the urchin tumbling in grass, on the sunbeam overlaying both,
on blue sky or on rainy weather; though, indeed, for the latter, Orient had
superfluous smiles; she was always sunny herself upon a stormy day; she used to
say that it seemed as if Nature had grown so familiar with her that she could
afford to receive her and show herself to her in undress. Perhaps, had Reymund
been more free himself from the soil and stain of earth, Orient would not have
been so intangible.
They were going one day
up the mountain, Orient, her mother, the guide, and Reymund, the first two
riding, Reymund and the guide on foot. The air was so clear that it seemed like
living in the inside of a crystal; everything stood with sharp outlines, as if
drawn with a burin upon the deep substance of the blue: far away tender
gauzes took up the distance, but that was merely on the outside edges of the
world. After they had exhausted the view from the wide-reaching summit, where
the eye seemed to wrest from the Creator more than had ever been given to it, they
went below into the shelter of the great rocks and lunched. It was late in the
afternoon ere they remounted and sought their way down the long descent. The
path which had been slight with difficulties in climbing was now full of
downward terrors. Orient bent far back in her seat, unable to see where her
horse would plant his feet. It seemed to her that he was stepping over sheer
abysses, and just as she herself went sliding and slipping forward over his
head and down, a strong arm from an unseen form behind the cliff, round which
she had just wound, would grasp her, and Reymund would hold her firm till the
beast stood four-square again. It was to her a thing like the arm of Providence
made visible to faith. Suddenly the girth broke, and but for that strong arm on
the instant outstretched, Providence itself alone knows what would have become
of her. Reymund caught her then as she reeled from the saddle, and placed her
on the ground. The horse, startled by the unexpectedness of the affair, fled
forward; the guide left the bridle he had held behind and pursued him. Catching
the rein with a jerk and oath, he dealt such a blow with his boot that the
animal lost his balance and fell, and would have rolled over the precipice but
for a prostrate tree. In a moment what Reymund had wanted to see was granted
him. Orient sprang forward, her face aflame, her eyes like balefires. The
guide, amazed, as one might be at the sight of an avenger in his path, obeyed
her single word, her vehement gesture, and plunged down the way and left them.
“Orient! what have you
done?” cried her mother.
“Well, well, mamma,”
answered the suddenly convicted and penitent one, “we can follow his red cap.”
But the guide, twice too
cunning, hid himself in underhung paths that he knew, and they had not a sign
or signal for aid.
Nevertheless, Reymund
gladly accepted this fate because of the thing that brought it, and at which
another man would have looked askance. This thing, this little temper, had
proved to him that Orient was human,—and, therefore, to be won. He raised the
pony, remounted Orient, and did his best in place of their faithless leader,
trusting more to the instincts of the animals themselves than to any
mountain-craft of his own.
The sharp outlines of
distant peaks began to burn and blacken, those of the nearer rock and stunted
shrub to grow diffuse; the air was keen and chill, a reddening sunset
smouldered in clouds below them and shut out the world, a cold, wet mist below
threatened to come creeping up around them. The horses neighed to each other,
grew jaded and uncertain, stopped. Masses of impassable rock closed them in on
every side, save the narrow defile through which they came and the precipice
below; the atmosphere was purple with shade and clung to them in dew; already
one star hung out its blue lamp.
“We can go no farther,”
said Reymund. “This spot is more sheltered than any we are likely to find. Let us
do what we can for comfort, and wait for the morning.”
The mother bewailed
herself; but Orient made cheer, and while Reymund corralled the horses, she was
busy collecting twigs and splinters and bits of wood and dry moss in a pile.
“Light them with your matches, Reymund,” she said. “A cigar will keep you warm,
but we need a bit of blaze, perhaps.”
“When it is darker,” he
replied; “you will need it more a little nearer to the witching time.”
“Do you imagine we shall
see witches?”
“Take care, or you will
see stars.”
“He rode alone through
the silent night,
She swam like a star to his left and right,”
sang Orient. “After all,
it is not the Walpurgis Night.”
“If we could only have a
cup of tea!” sighed the mamma, at a loss for her luxuries in the wilderness.
“It will be so much more
refreshing to-morrow,” said Orient. “And seasoned with romance,—a dash of
danger,—your first adventure, little mother!”
But the little mother
had no fancy for adventures; and while her daughter lost all her serenity and
was crazy with delight at the wild beauty of the thing, she grew more and more
lachrymose, and afforded at last a good background of shower for all Orient’s
rainbows. Thereon Orient, sitting down, put her arms round her and comforted
her, till the mother became herself somewhat alive to the circumstance that one
seldom saw such a scene twice in a lifetime.
They had remained on the
rocky platform where they paused, a shelf that after a few yards ended in
an abrupt fall that led away by a course of stark precipices into the great
valley beneath. This valley, filled with rolling vapor, whose volumes, smitten
by sunset, were fused in splendid color, made a pavilion of cloud beneath them
where billows of fleecy crimson and shining scarlet curdled together into
creamy crests, here seeming to lash in feather-white foam against the base of
some crag, and there letting a late sunbeam plough through spaces of a
violet-dark drift till they were all inwrought with gold. Above them the cold
and mighty heaven was already faintly but thickly strewn with stars.
“Into what awful and
glorious region are we translated!” cried Orient. “We are above the world and
the people of the world. Are we flesh and blood?”
“The free spirits of the
air ‘have no such liberty’ as this of ours,” said Reymund.
“It is just as if we
were dead!” shivered the mamma. “And I’m sure it’s cold enough for that!”
Orient wrapped the
shawls about the doleful little woman, while Reymund opened his knapsack for
any remnants of lunch that might afford them consolation. He kindled the fire,
too, for the colors were fading away beneath, and the sky was getting gloomy
overhead; and, warmed and enlivened in the genial light of the briefly
crackling blaze, they forgot that they were lost upon the mountain, and all the
possible horrors of their fate. But to Reymund there were few horrors in it,
for if he died of exposure and starvation there on the bald, pitiless mountain,
it would be with Orient in his arms at last.
While the fire crackled,
Reymund found in his breast-pocket a tiny flask of cordial which he divided
into three portions. “Drink it,” he said to them, “and make it take the place
of the tea. It is Chartreuse—oily sunshine—distilled from the cones of some old
fir-tree. First cousin to the cedars of Lebanon, for all I know. Mark how you
taste hemlock in it. Socrates poisoned with hemlock? No, no; he drank himself
to death on Chartreuse.”
Orient heard him
indignantly. “I do not like it,” said she, when her turn came, and left hers in
the horn. Reymund laughed; he hesitated a moment, then tossed it off himself.
The fire did not last
them long, for all the twigs they could collect were scanty; the blaze had
heated the rock a little; they drew closer to it, and the mother, curling up
against it in her shawls, composed herself as she could for slumber; the voices
of Orient and Reymund, from where they still sat and talked together, lulled
her as the murmur of the waterfall lulled Sleep himself. Orient was repeating
Jean Ingelow’s dream of her lover fallen and dead among the hills, with its
vague and awesome imagery. “I do not understand,” she said, as she ceased,
“this solicitude that my mother and so many others feel concerning their
burial-place. I love life, delicious life; but if we die and lie unburied here
forever among the lonely precipices, it will not matter any more to us than it
did to the youth.” And she repeated again:—
“The first hath no
advantage,—it shall not soothe his slumber
That a lock of his brown hair his father aye shall keep;
For the last, he nothing grudgeth, it shall naught his quiet cumber
That in a golden mesh of his, callow eaglets sleep.”
Reymund quaked at the moment, as he
thought of any lustrous lock of Orient’s curling out of the fierce beak that
should tear it away from the white brow. Then he said: “Too philosophic by
half. As for me, with the first peep of day in this high meridian, I shall be
up and doing, and find a way to our level again or—perish in the attempt.”
“Resolved to perish, any
way. Give you liberty or give you death. I do not feel in such
a hurry to be gone. How silent and solemn it is,—what a clear darkness,—listen
a moment and catch the sough of that pine forest far beneath, like the wings of
some great spirit sifting the air. I have never been so near heaven. I
understand now why in the Bible they so often withdrew into a high mountain.”
Reymund did not answer
her. “Say your prayers, innocent one,” was what he thought. “Wherever you are,
there heaven is near.”
By and by Orient crept
closer to her mother for mutual comfort, wound her own cloak round her like a
chrysalis, and drowsed and dreamed.
Reymund sat beside her,
his knees drawn up, his hands clasped round them. It was very cool; the air was
so still that he wondered at the absence of a stinging frost, and he hugged
himself thus for warmth. Orient stirred in her half-recumbent sleep, and her
head fell on his shoulder. After that the solid mountain was less immovable
than he. He let the beautiful head remain, watching it with downcast, sidelong
gaze; if he had longed with all his heart to smooth one tress, to put his arm
over her in a sheltering embrace, he dared not touch her. Something said
to him that she was of a grade above, as the disembodied is beyond the clay;
said, too, that whatever lovely or fine there might be in himself, the
thickness of the outer wrapping rendered it invisible to her; that for Orient
to read him right he must wait for another life. In spite of all that, he
hoped,—hoped madly and wildly, there in the chill night, with the beautiful
head fallen on his shoulder and the sweet, warm breath stealing gently across
his bending brow. He had a strange fancy now and then that out of the
encircling shadow a great face came and looked,—whether that of some uncreated
thing, some phantasm of his brain, or that of some celestial being, some
resident of vast spaces, or only a wild beast, a big, brown bear, roving on their
tracks and coming to peer about their unprotected bivouac. Whatever it was, it
retired as often as it came, awed in its turn, he thought, by the sweet
innocence of that golden head. A late moon rose down over the low side of the
earth as he still sat there; he knew it by the strange coppery light that began
to glow through the vapors that yet filled the gulfs beneath, and boil them to
a scum of dark, dun gold; then at last a broad beam parted the tumbling and
sulphurous fogs, and the bright, thin crescent of the waning moon cut itself
out on a clear air behind the horn of the hill, and, as if swinging from its
sharp cusp, hung the watery diamond of the morning star. Still Reymund did not
lift the head from his shoulder; he chose rather that the fair apparition of
daybreak at this height above the earth might happen to him, as if through the
imposition of that dear and tender touch. By and by she stirred restlessly,—the
spell of her slumber was breaking; he moved away gently and left her the rock
for a pillow. When the heavens were paling and retreating in a mist of
star-breath, and when all the world was whitening about her and the great floor
of cloud beneath was inwrought by dawn with sparks of fire, so that they seemed
wrapped in an atmosphere of flame and snow, Orient awoke.
No hero in his
self-restraint, in one wild, forgetful moment of that morning, Reymund told
Orient that he loved her.
She repulsed him so
gently that it gave him reason to hope, yet so firmly that he could do nothing
but despair.
He urged that she was
unconscious of herself, that she did not know her own heart, nor what it
wanted; that he had approached her inner life more nearly than another might
ever do; that, give him time and chance, he could not fail to win her.
She only answered that
she was not won.
Before, in their
windings and wanderings, they had reached the foot of the mountain that day,
they met their recusant and repentant guide coming up with others in search of
them, and all their toil and trouble were over.
Reymund’s holiday was
over too. He was to return next day to his home, to engagements previously
formed and not to be disregarded.
“At least,” he said to
Orient, not sadly, but with a certain vigor of intention in his tone, “you will
allow me to visit you at your mother’s house?”
“You could not do a
kinder thing,” answered Orient, feeling now the gap that he would leave, and
which nothing could quite fill, and willing to grant him anything but what
he most desired.
“Then you will see me on
Saturdays.”
“Every Saturday!” she
exclaimed, with a bright face that made his heart bound. “That is too much to
ask.”
“Of you, perhaps; not of
me. Sunday is a spare day; if I use it for God’s worship, it shall be at what
shrine I please,—St. Orient’s or another’s.”
“And it is such a long
ride,” demurred she, remembering the miles on miles of low sea-coast country
threaded with rivers and inlaid with marshes, that he must cross, all day
flying along through their damp breath and salt winds. “Nine hours; I am afraid
I ought not to allow it. And yet,—and yet, nine or nineteen, it shall make no
difference.”
Orient had hesitated in
her last sentence, wondering how she could deny herself the sympathy in her
little pursuits that through this time she had received from Reymund. She had not
encountered it before; it was delightful to her; perhaps it only had not taught
her love because she did not know what love was. She had but little knowledge
of human nature, almost none at all of her own nature: she preferred natural
religion before theology, natural history, with its grandiose revolutions,
before the petty struggles of warriors and diplomatists which her view was not
broad enough to throw into epochs and revolutions more grandiose yet: it was
Reymund who had taught her to look with kindly curiosity upon the lives of
those about her, in hopes, it may be, of teaching her at last to look in upon
her own. Of that she was unaware; but the interest in the flower never
found before to-day, the discovery of the bird whose note had ravished the ear
last sunset, the hunt up brookside and hill for a fragment of quartz that
should have a mountain range and outlying spurs of amethyst crystals, or one
full of imbedded beryls, the shining hexagons like drops of light filtered
through seawater, or any heap of blooded garnets, a blaze of concrete color;
the search into the age of the old pine-tree on the precipice; into the
mountain strata, and the wonderment concerning that day of the earth’s date on
which they were upheaved; the tracing out the path of some glacier with all its
ancient and icy terrors overgrown by the verdant moss and turf of the moraine;
the perpetual looking for the Maker’s fingers in his work,—all this, and such
as this, she would miss and must resign if she forbade those recurring
Saturdays. And then, on the other hand, a friend to meet with the results of
work, the choice book, the week’s research, its thought, its fancy: she who had
had no intimates, few friends—
Reymund did not wait for
her to balance her ideas.
“The train arrives,”
said he, “by five o’clock,—a little before. Every Saturday, therefore, at five
o’clock, I shall be in your drawing-room.”
The thing was settled,
then, without her. She began all at once to fear that, after all, it would not
happen so; he would let other things creep between; when he was fairly at a
distance from her he would be angry with her for having quite failed to feel
that entire satisfaction in him, to give him that love which, in a high ideal,
she believed to be due from every woman to her husband; a thousand things would
hinder.
“I can hardly believe
it,” she said.
“I am too happy when you
doubt it,” he replied, half reading her thoughts. “It gives me hope; for we can
easily believe that to which we are indifferent. How can I be hindered when I
will it,—and when you wish it?” The blush that streamed up her temples doubly
pleased him. “Do not doubt it!” he exclaimed, with more vivacity than so small
a thing appeared to demand. “For, see, I swear it! I will be with you on each
Saturday at five o’clock, with your permission, until the day I die!”
So, dropping her hand,
he went down the lane to the coach. But, looking back, he saw her still
standing in the doorway, hung with such drooping drapery of woodbine round her
head, the sunlight lying in a glory on her golden hair, the downy bloom upon
her cheek as though it were a peach, a smile upon her lip, and heaven’s own
blue within her eye,—she seemed the incarnation of a summer sunrise. He saw the
riotous wind lift one curl and twine it with the next, drop the petal of a rose
upon her mouth, kiss and kiss again her ivory forehead, free and welcome where
he dared not venture,—and the love in his heart made the blood boil hotly up
his veins to cheek and brow,—and for all testimony to his thrilling passion, he
only cried, “Every Saturday, at five o’clock!” and was away.
But before Reymund
plunged afresh into the exterior world, which, for these weeks, had been shut
from his sight, he turned aside for one last outlook upon pleasure. Thus it
happened that he left the train at an earlier station than the one near
Orient’s home, partly to avoid recognition in the future, partly for the sake
of mounting and subduing a spirited horse which had been brought up to tear
himself into a foam at sight of the engine. Reymund meant to gratify himself
that day with a stroll through Orient’s garden and among the haunts of her
bright youth. No one would have taken him for anything but an apparition, who
saw him galloping down the long country roads in a cloud of dust. When he had
conquered the angry temper of the beast he abated his gait and paced slowly
along the margin of the twice-mown meadows, splendid in noon sunshine, over the
shaven surfaces of rusty reds and browns, into which they shaded all their
gilded verdure. Now and then a bittern cried from the bank of a tiny thread of
the tide, other notes were hushed, there was only to be heard through the wide
midday air the unbroken treble of the crickets, across which the rich horns of
the locusts shrilled like the elfin trumpets of a summer’s state. Reymund
hitched his horse, found a penetrable portion of the garden paling, and
entered.
It was a large, old
garden, laid out, fifty years ago, perhaps, in a kind of pleasance; for in one
place a slight hill rose above the rest, while paths wandered round it into new
and unsuspected regions; in another a brook meandered and sang silverly over
shining pebbles, and among arrow-heads and lily-pods, and, dallying, went its
way at last to empty into some tide-streak and find the sounding sea that
called to it all night. Weeds, of course, had overgrown the beds, the untrained
grapes hung heavily from wall and trellis, wasps and blackbirds made merry
together with the nectar of ripening pears, plum and peach dropped ungathered
from the bough; vine and tendril, leaf and spray, and branch and blossom, all
wrought themselves to a delicious tangle of perfume and rustle and color. Here,
through the beautiful and envious weeds, a gladiolus reared his flames, a
larkspur absorbed the very blue, a carnation scattered spice; here honeysuckles
still blew out a perfect fragrance, while mourning-brides and gillyflowers and
spiked lavender and pansies sowed the air with their old-fashioned sweetness.
The soft, lonely sky stretched away over the garden and the meadows to haze
itself round low and distant woods, and all the empty air seemed sad and
desolate between,—the fulness and richness of life at its high noon touching
close upon the anti-climax of desert solitude. Through the place a light
east-wind was blowing that had in it a tonic for the lungs like the sparkle of
champagne. And, somehow, through all the spaces of the neglected garden the
spell of Orient seemed complete. There Orient must have stood to twine that
white rose upon the porch; there her fingers must have twinkled among the young
vine-leaves; there, on that bank of turf, she must many an afternoon have sat
at work; there, in the shallow crystal of the brook, she had waded with white
feet to set the water-plants. These lichen-covered apple-trees had shed, how
many a springtime, the rosy snow of their petals around her head; these gnarled
old bergamots had dropped their pulpy globes into her hands; this nut-tree put
out its leaves on the day when she was born; her little feet had worn
these paths. The garden was the shadow of Orient herself, reduced to dumb and
to material things. He wondered what it would be by the magic of moonlight,—the
whole place silvered over with tranquil sheen, and raised from every day’s dull
sight into the dreamy and ideal,—full of cool dew, and silence, and holy hush,
as if it waited on her white sleep. Just under his feet, where the seed had
been thrown in handfuls, he traced, written out with blue forget-me-nots, the
name of Orient.
It would not do for him
to stay much longer here; he should grow wild with hopes and fancies, for all
he knew, tread out that lovely name with his heel. She must, she should be won!
He clutched a cluster of the forget-me-nots, quickly escaped the labyrinth,
galloped back to the station at a rate that streaked his chafing steed,—and so
away from dreams to life and real work.
Thus Reymund returned to
his routine; bills and lawsuits and politics, routes and rides; they were not
calculated to lift him to any higher level than the old one.
And Orient and her
mother came home; the mother having made quite as close acquaintance with the
mountains as she cared to do.
Saturdays, now, surely
as they came, brought Reymund under the same roof with Orient. Perhaps in their
brief indulgence he found pardon for all the sins of the week,—for the week had
its sins, its little trivial condoning of misdemeanors as unimportant, matters
which lower one as steadily and certainly over the great pit, as block and
tackle might do over another. On Sunday nights, when he glided away in the
outward train, he felt as if it were an easy thing to maintain the height
which, by Orient’s side, he gained; but after a Monday morning on the exchange,
after a Tuesday night in the salon, after his evening gallop on the horse
possessed with the spirit of Satan, he said to himself, “It is of no use.
Nature is too crude in me, too gross a strain, too deep a dye. I should be like
Shelley’s rock in the black abyss, that
‘Has from unimaginable
years
Sustained itself with terror and with toil
Over a gulf, and, with the agony
With which it clings, seems slowly coming down.’
The thing is to
abandon.” Yet Saturday’s sunset shone for him again always over Orient’s
garden.
He had come one evening
and found Orient among the grape-vines, playing with a parcel of little
children, as pretty, bright, and fresh as a bunch of flowers. After the hubbub
of business, the dust of travel, this garden, in a far outlying city suburb
stretching towards the sea, seemed as pure and innocent as Eden. On Sunday
morning, when the air soared illumined with a stiller lustre, when the azure
deepened as if fresh-washed by sacred rains and dews, when the winds bore no
murmur but that of ripening leaf and floating petal, when the birds themselves
seemed to sing in the Sabbath, and all the wide world to be gladly and
tranquilly conscious of the day,—they went to church together. If Orient was
rapt in the worship, Reymund was at an exaltation as high for him,—rapt in his
worship of her. By times this very thing lifted him into the upper region, his
soul rose buoyant on the prayer and praise, and floated forward like a
waif on the full tide of the organ’s music. When, afterward, he found himself
and his sentience again, he said the thing was in him,—could he but keep the
pitch,—were Orient forever by him to give him that key-note. But alone we come
into this world, alone we go out of it. Neither Orient nor another could, for
all eternity, give the tone to any soul; that discord or that harmony which one
shall make must be the result of one’s own being.
He sat with Orient, in
the afternoon, on the bank of turf that sloped down to the clear, brown brook,
in whose bed many a diving and dipping sunbeam wrought mosaics of light and
shade with the shining pebbles. The brook rustled and lilted on its way, a bird
above it turned its burden into melody, now and then a waft of wind rippled all
its course till the lily leaves shivered and turned up their crimson linings,
soft clouds chased one another across the sky,—everything around wore the bloom
of peace and pleasure.
“I often fear,” said
Reymund, “that I must come here no more. The place grows too dear for one that
must some day leave it.”
Orient turned and looked
at him. He saw her tremble. “Not come here any more!” she said.
“Ah, Orient!” he cried,
“once I declared to you the purpose of my life. Sometimes—now—sometimes—it
seems to me as if you were almost won.”
He bent above her,
glowing and passionate and daring. She trembled again, neither drew away, nor surrendered
herself to the waiting grasp.
“I do not know,” she
answered him, the globy tears suffusing her eyes till each one shone like the
great star that hung its blue lamp in the zenith that night when they were lost
upon the mountain. “Perhaps I cannot read my heart; but does a woman really
love that which is less strong than herself? I must lean upon my husband, not
he on me.”
“Am I so weak?” asked
Reymund, with some bitterness, and a quiver on his lip. “Consider. If your own
nature had been invested with a coarser flesh, left out thereby to coarser
temptations,—since passions are things of the flesh,—what would have come of
it? Then, if thrown in the midst of the revel, loving the flash of merriment,
the excitement of chance, and wine and dice were going round—But, no! such
speech is profanity. Yet, Orient, under all habit, under all action, I think
there is that in my soul akin to yours, made to rule it and absorb it, hidden
by the body; but there,—made to be loved by you, as you, all of you, flaws and
beauties, are loved by me!”
“If I could only see your
soul,” said Orient, half yielding, contrite, yet uncertain.
“One day perhaps you
will,” answered Reymund, his repeater giving the hour to his finger-pressure.
“Now I must go.”
He rose, stooped again
and touched her smooth, cold forehead with his mouth. The touch sent the blood
back to his heart. “With time,” he murmured. “O, with time! she shall yet—she
shall! Good by,—till Saturday again at five o’clock!” and then was gone.
All that week Reymund walked
through his work with an absent mind, as if his spirit had half left his
body, disengaging itself from the automaton of bone and muscle, as one might
say; abstracted and lost in his thoughts, his wishes, his absolute resolutions.
Old haunts had no attraction for him, old faces brought him no satisfaction, he
sought no pleasure but such as was to be found on the back of that horse
possessed by the spirit of Satan. And so he existed till the sunrise of
Saturday, when, before it should be quite time for the train, he had the horse
brought round for a gallop, as if he would ride the wind and tame the
whirlwind.
In the mean time Orient
pursued her way in what, for her, was perturbation. There seemed to be a riddle
in these days beyond her reading. Penitent over her pride in presuming herself
to be stronger than her lover, conscious that she could not dispense with him,
yet full as sure that she felt no perfect passion for him, there was nothing to
do but marvel what it meant. “I am drawn to him,” she said to herself. “Ah, I
know that well enough! But have I any right to be? If there were something to
confirm me! If I thought the good and beautiful part were any abiding
principle, were anything but love of me! If I could only see his soul!”
She was walking that
Saturday afternoon in the woods that could be seen from her garden across the
meadows. It was a clear October afternoon, the red leaves were dropping round
her and leaving the bright blue sky more bare with every gentle gust that
brought them to her feet; a bracing day of early autumn, when the wind fainted
with the sweet freight of balsam from the pines, and all things only prophesied
hope and lightsomeness. In spite of this, Orient could not tell why she had a
constant sensation of gray and misty horizons, of marshy air and cold sea-wind
all day; as she walked now, the fitful breeze in the tree-tops seemed the
muffled murmur of waves on the distant beach, and once in a while she shivered
as if a cold foam-wreath were flying by her face. She thought at first that all
this damp and drear sensation was some sympathy with Reymund, now travelling
along the sea-coast on his way to her. “But what absurdity!” she said. “Where
the track lies, the sky is as blue as this one; the wind is scarcely more chilly
there than here. Reymund is rolling along, comfortable among his cushions and
books; and not a naked spirit all abroad in the sea-scented air!”
She went home on the
causeway that was laid along the meadows,—hurrying a little, for she judged by
the sinking sun that it must be nearly time for the arrival of the train. As
she went, she heard her name called.
She turned, for the
voice seemed to come from the woods. But seeing no one, she fancied the note of
some bird had followed her.
Again the sound. Her
name; and Reymund’s voice. “He has come,” thought Orient, with a thrill of
unsuspected pleasure, “and he is calling me from the garden.” And she made all
haste to answer the summons in person. Going along, then, with her boughs of
bright leaves, she wished she had not delayed so long in the woods,—her dress
so soiled, and her hands, her hair so disordered; she resolved to steal in at
the side door and freshen her toilet before greeting him. As the door was
opened to her, “Mr. Reymund has come,” said the maid, gleefully. “I have
just let him in. He is waiting in the drawing-room.”
“Very well,” answered
Orient. “Tell him I will be there directly.”
She hastened towards the
staircase, boughs in hand.
“You haven’t seen your
friend?” asked her aunt, passing her on the landing as she sped up.
“No,” replied Orient
again; “have you?”
“I just met him in the
hall as he was entering the drawing-room,” said the good woman, calling over
the balusters and going her way.
Orient hurried at her
bath, clad herself with all despatch, and put on a garment whose airy frills
and ruffles made her look like a white rose. As she went by her mother’s room,
the mother looked out and said, lightly, “Reymund has come. Did you know it?”
“Yes, mamma,” she
answered. “Why didn’t you go and make him welcome?”
“O, my hair was all
down!” said the other. “I just caught a glimpse of him, passing the foot of the
stairs as he went into the drawing-room.”
So Orient stepped slowly
down, adjusting her bracelets as she went. She saw Reymund a second, as the
winding way of the stairs for that space allowed her, standing in the
bay-window and looking out. She did not know what made her so hesitate to
enter. She paused a moment longer in the doorway, gazing in.
The room was very gay
with bunches of deep-blue and scarlet salvia, and drooping clusters of barberry
boughs stringing their splendid pendants all along most graceful curves; but
there was another brightness than that in the room. It was where Reymund
stood in the embrasure of the window, with the late sunlight falling all over
him. She wondered that he did not advance to meet her; but, as she wondered,
went up the room toward him.
“Something must have
happened to make him very happy,” thought Orient. “I never saw such a smile!”
Perhaps it was this smile
that so transfigured him; a plain man commonly, the sunshine now seemed to
bring out rich, dark tints on the countenance, the eyes overflowed with light,
and whether it were grace of posture, overlying sunshine, or beaming smile,
features and face and figure expressed a subtle harmony, and the man was
beautiful,—beautiful as a strong angel pictured in some instant of stooping
flight.
“He does not mean to
speak till I do,” thought Orient again.
But as she drew near,
the smile changed to a look of utter melancholy, as a shining cloud melts into
rain,—a melancholy gaze that pierced her through and through. She put out her
hand, nevertheless, to take his extended grasp.
And there was nothing
there!
In the same instant,
with a loud and terrible voice, crying, “Orient!”—a voice as if it were the
voice of death, the tomb, and all corruption,—the thing had vanished; the place
was empty!
That cry rang through
the house, that loud and terrible voice. Maid and mother rushed into the room;
and they found no one there but Orient, fallen unconscious to the floor.
It did not take long to
revive the child. “Something has happened to Reymund,” she said, upon lifting
her head. “We must go to him at once!”
“My love!” cried her
mother. “The idea of the thing. The—”
But expostulations were
wasted breath; while they were being made, Orient was calmly getting on her
travelling-gown, and, seeing herself powerless, the mother—with her heart
palpitating in the ends of her fingers through awe and through alarm, and
interweaving with the ejaculations that escaped her chattering teeth a thousand
instructions to her quaking maid and sister—hastened to do likewise and be off
with her.
Thus it happened that
the telegram from Reymund’s brother crossed the travellers on their way; and they
reached his brother’s house in the gray of the shivering morning.
It was just as Orient’s
heart had told her. Reymund had been thrown from his horse on the previous
morning, striking his head on a curbstone’s edge; he had been taken up
senseless, and had lain since then in a stupor only broken by his twice calling
her name in the afternoon. At a little after five o’clock he had risen on the
pillow, and in a loud and terrible voice had called Orient again, and then had
fallen back; and whether he were dead or alive there was no one able to say.
Orient threw off her hat
and shawl and stole into the apartment where Reymund had been placed. The white
face that fastened her eye was still as a mask of clay, and there was stamped
upon it that look of unutterable melancholy into which she had seen the smile
fade yesterday,—the linen where it lay was less white, a marble image had
been less still. As Orient bent there her breath stirred the dark lock of hair
on the brow, and the slight and airy motion of itself brought into forceful
being all the awful immobility and silence of death.
“He does not breathe!
His heart does not beat! Will he never open his eyes again?” she said. “O
Reymund, Reymund, I love you!”
She bent nearer as she
sighed the words, and her lips were sealed to his.
A quiver ran through all
the frozen frame reposing there beside her, a pulse of warmth, perhaps, played
in the hand hers clasped; the eyelids shook and lifted and unveiled the dark
and woful eyes.
“You have seen my soul,
Orient,” said Reymund. “Good by.”
The dark and woful eyes
were veiled again. And this time Reymund’s soul was gone beyond recall.
3.THE FALL OF THE HOUSE
OF USHER
Son cœur est un luth
suspendu;
Sitôt qu’on le touche il rèsonne.
De Beranger.
URING the whole of a
dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung
oppressively low in the heavens, I had been passing alone, on horseback,
through a singularly dreary tract of country; and at length found myself, as
the shades of the evening drew on, within view of the melancholy House of
Usher. I know not how it was, but, with the first glimpse of the building, a
sense of insufferable gloom pervaded my spirit. I say insufferable; for the
feeling was unrelieved by any of that half-pleasurable, because poetic,
sentiment, with which the mind usually receives even the sternest natural
images of the desolate or terrible. I looked upon the scene before me,—upon the
mere house and the simple landscape features of the domain,—upon the bleak
walls,—upon the vacant, eye-like windows,—upon a few rank sedges,—and upon a
few white trunks of decayed trees,—with an utter depression of soul which
I can compare to no earthly sensation more properly than to the after-dream of
the reveller upon opium,—the bitter lapse into every-day life,—the hideous
dropping off of the veil. There was an iciness, a sinking, a sickening of the
heart,—an unredeemed dreariness of thought which no goading of the imagination
could torture into aught of the sublime. What was it,—I paused to think,—what
was it that so unnerved me in the contemplation of the House of Usher? It was a
mystery all insoluble; nor could I grapple with the shadowy fancies that
crowded upon me as I pondered. I was forced to fall back upon the
unsatisfactory conclusion that, while, beyond doubt, there are combinations
of very simple natural objects which have the power of thus affecting us, still
the analysis of this power lies among considerations beyond our depth. It was
possible, I reflected, that a mere different arrangement of the particulars of
the scene, of the details of the picture, would be sufficient to modify, or
perhaps to annihilate, its capacity for sorrowful impression; and, acting upon
this idea, I reined my horse to the precipitous brink of a black and lurid tarn
that lay in unruffled lustre by the dwelling, and gazed down—but with a shudder
even more thrilling than before—upon the remodelled and inverted images of the
gray sedge and the ghastly tree-stems and the vacant and eye-like windows.
Nevertheless, in this
mansion of gloom I now proposed to myself a sojourn of some weeks. Its
proprietor, Roderick Usher, had been one of my boon companions in boyhood; but
many years had elapsed since our last meeting. A letter, however, had lately
reached me in a distant part of the country,—a letter from him,—which, in
its wildly importunate nature, had admitted of no other than a personal reply.
The manuscript gave evidence of nervous agitation. The writer spoke of acute
bodily illness,—of a mental disorder which oppressed him,—and of an earnest
desire to see me, as his best, and indeed his only personal friend, with a view
of attempting, by the cheerfulness of my society, some alleviation of his
malady. It was the manner in which all this, and much more, was said,—it was
the apparent heart that went with his request,—which allowed
me no room for hesitation; and I accordingly obeyed forthwith what I still
considered a very singular summons.
Although as boys we had
been even intimate associates, yet I really knew little of my friend. His
reserve had been always excessive and habitual. I was aware, however, that his
very ancient family had been noted, time out of mind, for a peculiar
sensibility of temperament, displaying itself, through long ages, in many works
of exalted art, and manifested, of late, in repeated deeds of munificent yet
unobtrusive charity, as well as in a passionate devotion to the intricacies,
perhaps even more than to the orthodox and easily recognizable beauties, of musical
science. I had learned, too, the very remarkable fact that the stem of the
Usher race, all time-honored as it was, had put forth, at no period, any
enduring branch; in other words, that the entire family lay in the direct line
of descent, and had always, with very trifling and very temporary variation, so
lain. It was this deficiency, I considered, while running over in thought the
perfect keeping of the character of the premises with the accredited character
of the people, and while speculating upon the possible influence which the one,
in the long lapse of centuries, might have exercised upon the other,—it was
this deficiency, perhaps, of collateral issue, and the consequent undeviating
transmission, from sire to son, of the patrimony with the name, which had, at
length, so identified the two as to merge the original title of the estate in
the quaint and equivocal appellation of the “House of Usher,”—an appellation
which seemed to include, in the minds of the peasantry who used it, both the family
and the family mansion.
I have said that the
sole effect of my somewhat childish experiment—that of looking down within the
tarn—had been to deepen the first singular impression. There can be no doubt
that the consciousness of the rapid increase of my superstition—for why should
I not so term it?—served mainly to accelerate the increase itself. Such, I have
long known, is the paradoxical law of all sentiments having terror as a basis.
And it might have been for this reason only that, when I again uplifted my eyes
to the house itself, from its image in the pool, there grew in my mind a
strange fancy,—a fancy so ridiculous, indeed, that I but mention it to show the
vivid force of the sensations which oppressed me. I had so worked upon my
imagination as really to believe that about the whole mansion and domain hung
an atmosphere peculiar to themselves and their immediate vicinity,—an
atmosphere which had no affinity with the air of heaven, but which had reeked
up from the decayed trees and the gray wall and the silent tarn,—a pestilent
and mystic vapor, dull, sluggish, faintly discernible, and leaden-hued.
Shaking off from my
spirit what must have been a dream, I scanned more narrowly
the real aspect of the building. Its principal feature seemed to be that of an
excessive antiquity. The discoloration of ages had been great. Minute fungi
overspread the whole exterior, hanging in a fine, tangled web-work from the
eaves. Yet all this was apart from any extraordinary dilapidation. No portion
of the masonry had fallen; and there appeared to be a wild inconsistency
between its still perfect adaptation of parts and the crumbling condition of
the individual stones. In this there was much that reminded me of the specious
totality of old woodwork which has rotted for long years in some neglected
vault, with no disturbance from the breath of the external air. Beyond this
indication of extensive decay, however, the fabric gave little token of
instability. Perhaps the eye of a scrutinizing observer might have discovered a
barely perceptible fissure, which, extending from the roof of the building in
front, made its way down the wall in a zigzag direction, until it became lost
in the sullen waters of the tarn.
Noticing these things, I
rode over a short causeway to the house. A servant in waiting took my horse,
and I entered the Gothic archway of the hall. A valet, of stealthy step, thence
conducted me, in silence, through many dark and intricate passages in my
progress to the studio of his master. Much that I encountered on the way
contributed, I know not how, to heighten the vague sentiments of which I have
already spoken. While the objects around me,—while the carvings of the
ceilings, the sombre tapestries of the walls, the ebon blackness of the
floors, and the phantasmagoric armorial trophies which rattled as I strode,
were but matters to which, or to such as which, I had been accustomed from my
infancy,—while I hesitated not to acknowledge how familiar was all this, I
still wondered to find how unfamiliar were the fancies which ordinary images
were stirring up. On one of the staircases, I met the physician of the family.
His countenance, I thought, wore a mingled expression of low cunning and
perplexity. He accosted me with trepidation, and passed on. The valet now threw
open a door and ushered me into the presence of his master.
The room in which I
found myself was very large and lofty. The windows were long, narrow, and
pointed, and at so vast a distance from the black oaken floor as to be
altogether inaccessible from within. Feeble gleams of encrimsoned light made
their way through the trellised panes, and served to render sufficiently
distinct the more prominent objects around; the eye, however, struggled in vain
to reach the remoter angles of the chamber, or the recesses of the vaulted and
fretted ceiling. Dark draperies hung upon the walls. The general furniture was
profuse, comfortless, antique, and tattered. Many books and musical instruments
lay scattered about, but failed to give any vitality to the scene. I felt that
I breathed an atmosphere of sorrow. An air of stern, deep, and irredeemable
gloom hung over and pervaded all.
Upon my entrance, Usher
arose from a sofa on which he had been lying at full length, and greeted me
with a vivacious warmth which had much in it, I at first thought, of an
overdone cordiality,—of the constrained effort of the ennuyé man
of the world. A glance, however, at his countenance, convinced me of his
perfect sincerity. We sat down; and for some moments, while he spoke not, I
gazed upon him with a feeling half of pity, half of awe. Surely, man had never
before so terribly altered, in so brief a period, as had Roderick Usher! It was
with difficulty that I could bring myself to admit the identity of the wan
being before me with the companion of my early boyhood. Yet the character of
his face had been at all times remarkable. A cadaverousness of complexion; an
eye large, liquid, and luminous beyond comparison; lips somewhat thin and very
pallid, but of a surpassingly beautiful curve; a nose of a delicate Hebrew
model, but with a breadth of nostril unusual in similar formations; a finely
moulded chin, speaking, in its want of prominence, of a want of moral energy;
hair of a more than web-like softness and tenuity;—these features, with an inordinate
expansion above the regions of the temple, made up altogether a countenance not
easily to be forgotten. And now in the mere exaggeration of the prevailing
character of these features, and of the expression they were wont to convey,
lay so much of change that I doubted to whom I spoke. The now ghastly pallor of
the skin, and the now miraculous lustre of the eye, above all things startled
and even awed me. The silken hair, too, had been suffered to grow all unheeded,
and as, in its wild gossamer texture, it floated rather than fell about the
face, I could not, even with effort, connect its Arabesque expression with any
idea of simple humanity.
In the manner of my
friend I was at once struck with an incoherence,—an inconsistency; and I soon
found this to arise from a series of feeble and futile struggles to
overcome an habitual trepidancy,—an excessive nervous agitation. For something
of this nature I had indeed been prepared, no less by his letter than by
reminiscences of certain boyish traits, and by conclusions deduced from his
peculiar physical conformation and temperament. His action was alternately
vivacious and sullen. His voice varied rapidly from a tremulous indecision
(when the animal spirits seemed utterly in abeyance) to that species of energetic
concision,—that abrupt, weighty, unhurried, and hollow-sounding
enunciation,—that leaden, self-balanced, and perfectly modulated guttural
utterance, which may be observed in the lost drunkard, or the irreclaimable
eater of opium, during the periods of his most intense excitement.
It was thus that he
spoke of the object of my visit, of his earnest desire to see me, and of the
solace he expected me to afford him. He entered, at some length, into what he
conceived to be the nature of his malady. It was, he said, a constitutional and
a family evil, and one for which he despaired to find a remedy,—a mere nervous
affection, he immediately added, which would undoubtedly soon pass off. It
displayed itself in a host of unnatural sensations. Some of these, as he
detailed them, interested and bewildered me; although, perhaps, the terms, and
the general manner of the narration had their weight. He suffered much from a
morbid acuteness of the senses; the most insipid food was alone endurable; he
could wear only garments of certain texture; the odors of all flowers were
oppressive; his eyes were tortured by even a faint light; and there were but
peculiar sounds, and these from stringed instruments, which did not
inspire him with horror.
To an anomalous species
of terror I found him a bounden slave. “I shall perish,” said he, “I must perish
in this deplorable folly. Thus, thus, and not otherwise, shall I be lost. I
dread the events of the future, not in themselves, but in their results. I
shudder at the thought of any, even the most trivial, incident, which may
operate upon this intolerable agitation of soul. I have, indeed, no abhorrence
of danger, except in its absolute effect,—in terror. In this unnerved, in this
pitiable condition, I feel that the period will sooner or later arrive when I
must abandon life and reason together, in some struggle with the grim
phantasm, Fear.”
I learned, moreover, at
intervals, and through broken and equivocal hints, another singular feature of
his mental condition. He was enchained by certain superstitious impressions in
regard to the dwelling which he tenanted, and whence, for many years, he had
never ventured forth,—in regard to an influence whose suposititious force was
conveyed in terms too shadowy here to be restated,—an influence which some
peculiarities in the mere form and substance of his family mansion had, by dint
of long sufferance, he said, obtained over his spirit,—an effect which
the physique of the gray walls and turrets, and of the dim
tarn into which they all looked down, had at length brought about upon
the morale of his existence.
He admitted, however,
although with hesitation, that much of the peculiar gloom which thus afflicted
him could be traced to a more natural and far more palpable origin,—to the
severe and long-continued illness—indeed to the evidently approaching
dissolution—of a tenderly beloved sister,—his sole companion for long
years,—his last and only relative on earth. “Her decease,” he said with a
bitterness which I can never forget, “would leave him (him the hopeless and the
frail) the last of the ancient race of the Ushers.” While he spoke, the lady
Madeline (for so was she called) passed slowly through a remote portion of the
apartment, and, without having noticed my presence, disappeared. I regarded her
with an utter astonishment, not unmingled with dread,—and yet I found it
impossible to account for such feelings. A sensation of stupor oppressed me, as
my eyes followed her retreating steps. When a door, at length, closed upon her,
my glance sought instinctively and eagerly the countenance of the brother; but
he had buried his face in his hands, and I could only perceive that a far more
than ordinary wanness had overspread the emaciated fingers through which
trickled many passionate tears.
The disease of the lady
Madeline had long baffled the skill of her physicians. A settled apathy, a
gradual wasting away of the person, and frequent although transient affections
of a partially cataleptical character, were the unusual diagnosis. Hitherto she
had steadily borne up against the pressure of her malady, and had not betaken
herself finally to bed; but, on the closing in of the evening of my arrival at
the house, she succumbed (as her brother told me at night with inexpressible
agitation) to the prostrating power of the destroyer; and I learned that the
glimpse I had obtained of her person would thus probably be the last I should
obtain,—that the lady, at least while living, would be seen by me no more.
For several days
ensuing, her name was unmentioned by either Usher or myself; and during this
period I was busied in earnest endeavors to alleviate the melancholy of my
friend. We painted and read together; or I listened, as if in a dream, to the
wild improvisations of his speaking guitar. And thus, as a closer and still
closer intimacy admitted me more unreservedly into the recesses of his spirit,
the more bitterly did I perceive the futility of all attempt at cheering a mind
from which darkness, as if an inherent, positive quality, poured forth upon all
objects of the moral and physical universe, in one unceasing radiation of
gloom.
I shall ever bear about
me a memory of the many solemn hours I thus spent alone with the master of the
House of Usher. Yet I should fail in any attempt to convey an idea of the exact
character of the studies, or of the occupations, in which he involved me, or
led me the way. An excited and highly distempered ideality threw a sulphureous
lustre over all. His long, improvised dirges will ring forever in my ears.
Among other things, I hold painfully in mind a certain singular perversion and
amplification of the wild air of the last waltz of Von Weber. From the
paintings over which his elaborate fancy brooded, and which grew, touch by
touch, into vaguenesses at which I shuddered the more thrillingly, because I
shuddered knowing not why,—from these paintings (vivid as their images now are
before me) I would in vain endeavor to educe more than a small portion which
should lie within the compass of merely written words. By the utter
simplicity, by the nakedness of his designs, he arrested and overawed
attention. If ever mortal painted an idea, that mortal was Roderick Usher. For
me at least—in the circumstances then surrounding me—arose, out of the pure
abstractions which the hypochondriac contrived to throw upon his canvas, an
intensity of intolerable awe, no shadow of which felt I ever yet in the
contemplation of the certainly glowing yet too concrete reveries of Fuseli.
One of the
phantasmagoric conceptions of my friend, partaking not so rigidly of the spirit
of abstraction, may be shadowed forth, although feebly, in words. A small
picture presented the interior of an immensely long and rectangular vault or
tunnel, with low walls, smooth, white, and without interruption or device.
Certain accessory points of the design served well to convey the idea that this
excavation lay at an exceeding depth below the surface of the earth. No outlet
was observed in any portion of its vast extent, and no torch, or other
artificial source of light was discernible; yet a flood of intense rays rolled
throughout, and bathed the whole in a ghastly and inappropriate splendor.
I have just spoken of
that morbid condition of the auditory nerve which rendered all music
intolerable to the sufferer, with the exception of certain effects of stringed
instruments. It was, perhaps, the narrow limits to which he thus confined
himself upon the guitar, which gave birth, in great measure, to the fantastic
character of his performances. But the fervid facility of his impromptus could
not be so accounted for. They must have been, and were, in the notes, as well
as in the words of his wild fantasias (for he not unfrequently accompanied
himself with rhymed verbal improvisations), the result of that intense mental
collectedness and concentration to which I have previously alluded as
observable only in particular moments of the highest artificial excitement. The
words of one of these rhapsodies I have easily remembered. I was, perhaps, the
more forcibly impressed with it as he gave it, because, in the under or mystic
current of its meaning, I fancied that I perceived, and for the first time, a
full consciousness, on the part of Usher, of the tottering of his lofty reason
upon her throne. The verses, which were entitled “The Haunted Palace,” ran very
nearly, if not accurately, thus:—
In the greenest of our
valleys,
By good angels tenanted,
Once a fair and stately palace palace—
Radiant palace—reared its head.
In the monarch Thought’s dominion,—
It stood there!
Never seraph spread a pinion
Over fabric half so fair.
Banners yellow,
glorious, golden,
On its roof did float and flow
(This—all this—was in the olden
Time long ago);
And every gentle air that dallied,
In that sweet day,
Along the ramparts plumed and pallid,
A winged odor went away.
Wanderers in that happy
valley
Through two luminous windows saw
Spirits moving musically
To a lute’s well-tunéd law,
Round about a throne, where sitting
(Porphyrogene!)
In state his glory well befitting,
The ruler of the realm was seen.
And all with pearl and
ruby glowing
Was the fair palace door,
Through which came flowing, flowing, flowing
And sparkling evermore,
A troop of Echoes whose sweet duty
Was but to sing,
In voices of surpassing beauty,
The wit and wisdom of their king.
But evil things, in
robes of sorrow,
Assailed the monarch’s high estate;
(Ah, let us mourn, for never morrow
Shall dawn upon him, desolate!)
And, round about his home, the glory
That blushed and bloomed
Is but a dim-remembered story
Of the old time entombed.
And travellers now
within that valley,
Through the red-litten windows, see
Vast forms that move fantastically
To a discordant melody;
While, like a rapid, ghastly river,
Through the pale door,
A hideous throng rush out forever,
And laugh,—but smile no more.
I well remember that suggestions
arising from this ballad led us into a train of thought wherein became manifest
an opinion of Usher’s which I mention not so much on account of its novelty
(for other men have thought thus) as on account of the pertinacity with which
he maintained it. This opinion, in its general form, was that of the sentience
of all vegetable things. But, in his disordered fancy, the idea had assumed a
more daring character, and trespassed, under certain conditions, upon the kingdom
of inorganization. I lack words to express the full extent or the earnest abandon of
his persuasion. The belief, however, was connected (as I have previously
hinted) with the gray stones of the home of his forefathers. The conditions of
the sentience had been here, he imagined, fulfilled in the method of
collocation of these stones,—in the order of their arrangement, as well as in
that of the many fungi which overspread them, and of the
decayed trees which stood around,—above all, in the long undisturbed endurance
of this arrangement, and in its reduplication in the still waters of the tarn.
Its evidence—the evidence of the sentience—was to be seen, he said (and I here
started as he spoke) in the gradual yet certain condensation of an atmosphere
of their own about the waters and the walls. The result was discoverable, he
added, in that silent, yet importunate and terrible influence which for
centuries had moulded the destinies of his family, and which made him what
I now saw him,—what he was. Such opinions need no comment, and I will make
none.
Our books—the books
which, for years, had formed no small portion of the mental existence of
the invalid—were, as might be supposed, in strict keeping with this character
of phantasm. We pored together over such works as the Ververt et Chartreuse of
Gresset; the Belphegor of Machiavelli; the Heaven and Hell of Swedenborg; the
Subterranean Voyage of Nicholas Klimm by Holberg; the Chiromancy of Robert
Flud, of Jean d’Indaginé, and of De la Chambre; the Journey into the Blue
Distance of Tieck; and the City of the Sun of Campanella. One favorite volume
was a small octavo edition of the Directorium Inquisitorium, by the
Dominican Eymeric de Gironne; and there were passages in Pomponius Mela, about
the old African Satyrs and Œgipans, over which Usher would sit dreaming for
hours. His chief delight, however, was found in the perusal of an exceedingly
rare and curious book in quarto Gothic,—the manual of a forgotten
church,—the Vigiliæ Mortuorum secundum Chorum Ecclesiæ Maguntinæ.
I could not help
thinking of the wild ritual of this work, and of its probable influence upon
the hypochondriac, when, one evening, having informed me abruptly that the lady
Madeline was no more, he stated his intention of preserving her corpse for a
fortnight (previously to its final interment) in one of the numerous vaults
within the main walls of the building. The worldly reason, however, assigned
for this singular proceeding, was one which I did not feel at liberty to
dispute. The brother had been led to his resolution (so he told me) by
consideration of the unusual character of the malady of the deceased, of
certain obtrusive and eager inquiries on the part of her medical men, and
of the remote and exposed situation of the burial-ground of the family. I will
not deny that when I called to mind the sinister countenance of the person whom
I met upon the staircase, on the day of my arrival at the house, I had no
desire to oppose what I regarded as at best but a harmless, and by no means an
unnatural precaution.
At the request of Usher,
I personally aided him in the arrangements for the temporary entombment. The
body having been encoffined, we two alone bore it to its rest. The vault in
which we placed it (and which had been so long unopened that our torches, half
smothered in its oppressive atmosphere, gave us little opportunity for
investigation) was small, damp, and entirely without means of admission for
light; lying, at great depth, immediately beneath that portion of the building
in which was my own sleeping-apartment. It had been used, apparently, in remote
feudal times, for the worst purposes of a donjon-keep, and, in later days, as a
place of deposit for powder, or some other highly combustible substance, as a
portion of its floor, and the whole interior of a long archway through which we
reached it, were carefully sheathed with copper. The door of massive iron had
been, also, similarly protected. Its immense weight caused an unusually sharp,
grating sound, as it moved upon its hinges.
Having deposited our
mournful burden upon tressels within this region of horror, we partially turned
aside the yet unscrewed lid of the coffin, and looked upon the face of the
tenant. A striking similitude between the brother and sister now first arrested
my attention; and Usher, divining, perhaps, my thoughts, murmured out some
few words from which I learned that the deceased and himself had been twins,
and that sympathies of a scarcely intelligible nature had always existed
between them. Our glances, however, rested not long upon the dead,—for we could
not regard her unawed. The disease which had thus entombed the lady in the
maturity of youth, had left, as usual in all maladies of a strictly
cataleptical character, the mockery of a faint blush upon the bosom and the
face, and that suspiciously lingering smile upon the lip which is so terrible
in death. We replaced and screwed down the lid, and, having secured the door of
iron, made our way, with toil, into the scarcely less gloomy apartments of the upper
portion of the house.
And now, some days of
bitter grief having elapsed, an observable change came over the features of the
mental disorder of my friend. His ordinary manner had vanished. His ordinary
occupations were neglected or forgotten. He roamed from chamber to chamber with
hurried, unequal, and objectless step. The pallor of his countenance had
assumed, if possible, a more ghastly hue,—but the luminousness of his eye had
utterly gone out. The once occasional huskiness of his tone was heard no more;
and a tremulous quaver, as if of extreme terror, habitually characterized his
utterance. There were times, indeed, when I thought his unceasingly agitated
mind was laboring with some oppressive secret, to divulge which he struggled
for the necessary courage. At times, again, I was obliged to resolve all into
the mere inexplicable vagaries of madness, for I beheld him gazing upon
vacancy for long hours, in an attitude of the profoundest attention, as if
listening to some imaginary sound. It was no wonder that his condition
terrified, that it infected me. I felt creeping upon me, by slow yet certain
degrees, the wild influences of his own fantastic yet impressive superstitions.
It was, especially, upon
retiring to bed late in the night of the seventh or eighth day after the
placing of the lady Madeline within the donjon, that I experienced the full
power of such feelings. Sleep came not near my couch,—while the hours waned and
waned away. I struggled to reason off the nervousness which had dominion over
me. I endeavored to believe that much, if not all, of what I felt was due to
the bewildering influence of the gloomy furniture of the room,—of the dark and
tattered draperies, which, tortured into motion by the breath of a rising
tempest, swayed fitfully to and fro upon the walls, and rustled uneasily about
the decorations of the bed. But my efforts were fruitless. An irrepressible
tremor gradually pervaded my frame; and, at length, upon my very heart sat an
incubus of utterly causeless alarm. Shaking this off with a gasp and a
struggle, I uplifted myself on the pillows, and, peering earnestly within the
intense darkness of the chamber, hearkened—I know not why, except that an
instinctive spirit prompted me—to certain low and indefinite sounds which came,
through the pauses of the storm, at long intervals, I knew not whence.
Overpowered by an intense sentiment of horror, unaccountable yet unendurable, I
threw on my clothes with haste (for I felt that I should sleep no more during
the night), and endeavored to arouse myself from the pitiable condition
into which I had fallen, by pacing rapidly to and fro through the apartment.
I had taken but few
turns in this manner, when a light step on an adjoining staircase arrested my
attention. I presently recognized it as that of Usher. In an instant afterward
he rapped, with a gentle touch, at my door, and entered, bearing a lamp. His
countenance was, as usual, cadaverously wan; but, moreover, there was a species
of mad hilarity in his eyes,—an evidently restrained hysteria in
his whole demeanor. His air appalled me; but anything was preferable to the
solitude which I had so long endured, and I even welcomed his presence as a
relief.
“And you have not seen
it?” he said abruptly, after having stared about him for some moments in
silence,—“you have not then seen it?—but, stay! you shall.” Thus speaking, and
having carefully shaded his lamp, he hurried to one of the casements, and threw
it freely open to the storm.
The impetuous fury of
the entering gust nearly lifted us from our feet. It was, indeed, a tempestuous
yet sternly beautiful night, and one wildly singular in its terror and its
beauty. A whirlwind had apparently collected its force in our vicinity; for
there were frequent and violent alterations in the direction of the wind; and
the exceeding density of the clouds (which hung so low as to press upon the
turrets of the house) did not prevent our perceiving the life-like velocity
with which they flew careering from all points against each other, without
passing away into the distance. I say that even their exceeding density
did not prevent our perceiving this; yet we had no glimpse of the moon or
stars, nor was there any flashing forth of the lightning. But the under
surfaces of the huge masses of agitated vapor, as well as all terrestrial
objects immediately around us, were glowing in the unnatural light of a faintly
luminous and distinctly visible gaseous exhalation which hung about and
enshrouded the mansion.
“You must not, you shall
not behold this!” said I, shudderingly, to Usher, as I led him, with a gentle
violence, from the window to a seat. “These appearances, which bewilder you,
are merely electrical phenomena not uncommon; or it may be that they have their
ghastly origin in the rank miasma of the tarn. Let us close this casement; the
air is chilling and dangerous to your frame. Here is one of your favorite
romances. I will read, and you shall listen; and so we will pass away this
terrible night together.”
The antique volume which
I had taken up was the Mad Trist of Sir Launcelot Canning; but I had called it
a favorite of Usher’s more in sad jest than in earnest; for, in truth, there is
little in its uncouth and unimaginative prolixity which could have had interest
for the lofty and spiritual ideality of my friend. It was, however, the only
book immediately at hand; and I indulged a vague hope that the excitement which
now agitated the hypochondriac might find relief (for the history of mental
disorder is full of similar anomalies) even in the extremeness of the folly
which I should read. Could I have judged, indeed, by the wild, overstrained air
of vivacity with which he hearkened, or apparently hearkened, to the words
of the tale, I might well have congratulated myself upon the success of my design.
I had arrived at that
well-known portion of the story where Ethelred, the hero of the Trist, having
sought in vain for peaceable admission into the dwelling of the hermit,
proceeds to make good an entrance by force. Here, it will be remembered, the
words of the narrative run thus:—
“And Ethelred, who was
by nature of a doughty heart, and who was now mighty withal, on account of the
powerfulness of the wine which he had drunken, waited no longer to hold parley
with the hermit, who, in sooth, was of an obstinate and maliceful turn, but,
feeling the rain upon his shoulders, and fearing the rising of the tempest,
uplifted his mace outright, and, with blows, made quickly room in the plankings
of the door for his gauntleted hand; and now pulling therewith sturdily, he so
cracked, and ripped, and tore all asunder, that the noise of the dry and
hollow-sounding wood alarumed and reverberated throughout the forest.”
At the termination of
this sentence I started, and for a moment paused; for it appeared to me (although
I at once concluded that my excited fancy had deceived me),—it appeared to me
that, from some very remote portion of the mansion, came indistinctly to my
ears what might have been, in its exact similarity of character, the echo (but
a stifled and dull one certainly) of the very cracking and ripping sound which
Sir Launcelot had so particularly described. It was, beyond doubt, the
coincidence alone which had arrested my attention; for, amid the rattling of
the sashes of the casements, and the ordinary commingled noises of the still
increasing storm, the sound, in itself, had nothing, surely, which should have
interested or disturbed me. I continued the story.
“But the good champion
Ethelred, now entering within the door, was sore enraged and amazed to perceive
no signal of the maliceful hermit; but, in the stead thereof, a dragon of a
scaly and prodigious demeanor, and of a fiery tongue, which sate in guard
before a palace of gold, with a floor of silver; and upon the wall there hung a
shield of shining brass with this legend enwritten:—
‘Who entereth herein, a
conqueror hath bin;
Who slayeth the dragon, the shield he shall win.’
And Ethelred uplifted
his mace, and struck upon the head of the dragon, which fell before him, and
gave up his pesty breath, with a shriek so horrid and harsh, and withal so
piercing, that Ethelred had fain to close his ears with his hands against the
dreadful noise of it, the like whereof was never before heard.”
Here again I paused
abruptly, and now with a feeling of wild amazement; for there could be no doubt
whatever that, in this instance, I did actually hear (although from what
direction it proceeded I found it impossible to say) a low and apparently
distant, but harsh, protracted, and most unusual screaming or grating sound,—the
exact counterpart of what my fancy had already conjured up for the dragon’s
unnatural shriek as described by the romancer.
Oppressed, as I
certainly was, upon the occurrence of this second and most extraordinary
coincidence, by a thousand conflicting sensations, in which wonder and
extreme terror were predominant, I still retained sufficient presence of mind
to avoid exciting, by any observation, the sensitive nervousness of my
companion. I was by no means certain that he had noticed the sounds in
question; although, assuredly, a strange alteration had, during the last few
minutes, taken place in his demeanor. From a position fronting my own, he had
gradually brought round his chair, so as to sit with his face to the door of
the chamber; and thus I could but partially perceive his features, although I
saw that his lips trembled as if he were murmuring inaudibly. His head had
dropped upon his breast; yet I knew that he was not asleep, from the wide and
rigid opening of the eye as I caught a glance of it in profile. The motion of
his body, too, was at variance with this idea; for he rocked from side to side
with a gentle yet constant and uniform sway. Having rapidly taken notice of all
this, I resumed the narrative of Sir Launcelot, which thus proceeded:—
“And now the champion,
having escaped from the terrible fury of the dragon, bethinking himself of the
brazen shield, and of the breaking up of the enchantment which was upon it,
removed the carcass from out of the way before him, and approached valorously
over the silver pavement of the castle to where the shield was upon the wall;
which in sooth tarried not for his full coming, but fell down at his feet upon
the silver floor, with a mighty great and terrible ringing sound.”
No sooner had these
syllables passed my lips, than—as if a shield of brass had indeed, at the
moment, fallen heavily upon a floor of silver—I became aware of a distinct,
hollow, metallic, and clangorous, yet apparently muffled reverberation.
Completely unnerved, I leaped to my feet; but the measured rocking movement of
Usher was undisturbed. I rushed to the chair in which he sat. His eyes were
bent fixedly before him, and throughout his whole countenance reigned a stony
rigidity. But, as I placed my hand upon his shoulder, there came a strong
shudder over his whole person; a sickly smile quivered about his lips; and I
saw that he spoke in a low, hurried, and gibbering murmur, as if unconscious of
my presence. Bending closely over him, I at length drank in the hideous import
of his words.
“Not hear it?—yes, I
hear it, and have heard it. Long—long—long—many minutes, many
hours, many days, have I heard it—yet I dared not—O, pity me, miserable wretch
that I am!—I dared not—I dared not speak! We have put
her living in the tomb! Said I not that my senses were acute? I now tell
you that I heard her first feeble movements in the hollow coffin. I heard
them—many, many days ago—yet I dared not—I dared not speak! And
now—to-night—Ethelred—ha! ha!—the breaking of the hermit’s door, and the death-cry
of the dragon, and the clangor of the shield!—say, rather, the rending of her
coffin, and the grating of the iron hinges of her prison, and her struggles
within the coppered archway of the vault! O, whither shall I fly? Will she not
be here anon? Is she not hurrying to upbraid me for my haste? Have I not heard
her footstep on the stair? Do I not distinguish that heavy and horrible beating
of her heart? Madman!”—here he sprang furiously to his feet, and shrieked out
his syllables, as if in the effort he were giving up his soul,—“Madman! I
tell you that she now stands without the door!”
As if in the superhuman
energy of his utterance had been found the potency of a spell, the huge antique
panels to which the speaker pointed threw slowly back, upon the instant, their
ponderous and ebony jaws. It was the work of the rushing gust; but then without
those doors did stand the lofty and enshrouded figure of the
lady Madeline of Usher. There was blood upon her white robes, and the evidence
of some bitter struggle upon every portion of her emaciated frame. For a moment
she remained trembling and reeling to and fro upon the threshold, then, with a
low moaning cry, fell heavily inward upon the person of her brother, and in her
violent and now final death-agonies bore him to the floor a corpse, and a
victim to the terrors he had anticipated.
From that chamber, and
from that mansion, I fled aghast. The storm was still abroad in all its wrath
as I found myself crossing the old causeway. Suddenly there shot along the path
a wild light, and I turned to see whence a gleam so unusual could have issued;
for the vast house and its shadows were alone behind me. The radiance was that
of the full, setting, and blood-red moon, which now shone vividly through that
once barely discernible fissure, of which I have before spoken as extending
from the roof of the building, in a zigzag direction, to the base. While I
gazed, this fissure rapidly widened,—there came a fierce breath of the
whirlwind,—the entire orb of the satellite burst at once upon my sight,—my
brain reeled as I saw the mighty walls rushing asunder,—there was a long,
tumultuous, shouting sound like the voice of a thousand waters,—and the deep
and dank tarn at my feet closed sullenly and silently over the fragments of the
House of Usher.
4.CHOPS THE DWARF
One period of its
reverses, the House to Let fell into the hands of a showman. He was found
registered as its occupier, on the parish books of the time when he rented the
House, and there was therefore no need of any clew to his name. But he himself
was less easy to be found; for he had led a wandering life, and settled people
had lost sight of him, and people who plumed themselves on being respectable
were shy of admitting that they had ever known anything of him. At last among
the marsh lands near the river’s level, that lie about Deptford and the
neighboring market-gardens, a grizzled personage in velveteen, with a face so
cut up by varieties of weather that he looked as if he had been tattooed, was
found smoking a pipe at the door of a wooden house on wheels. The wooden house
was laid up in ordinary for the winter near the mouth of a muddy creek; and
everything near it—the foggy river, the misty marshes, and the steaming market-gardens—smoked
in company with the grizzled man. In the midst of the smoking party, the
funnel-chimney of the wooden house on wheels was not remiss, but took its
pipe with the rest in a companionable manner.
On being asked if it
were he who had once rented the House to Let, Grizzled Velveteen looked
surprised, and said yes. Then his name was Magsman. That was it, Toby
Magsman,—which was lawfully christened Robert; but called in the line, from an
infant, Toby. There was nothing agin Toby Magsman, he believed? If there was
suspicion of such, mention it!
There was no suspicion
of such, he might rest assured. But some inquiries were making about that
house, and would he object to say why he left it?
Not at all; why should
he? He left it along of a dwarf.
Along of a dwarf?
Mr. Magsman repeated,
deliberately and emphatically, “Along of a dwarf.”
Might it be compatible
with Mr. Magsman’s inclination and convenience to enter, as a favor, into a few
particulars?
Mr. Magsman entered into
the following particulars:—
It was a long time ago
to begin with,—afore lotteries and a deal more was done away with. Mr. Magsman
was looking around for a good pitch, and he see that house, and he says to
himself, “I’ll have you if you are to be had. If money’ll get you, I’ll have you.”
The neighbors cut up
rough, and made complaints; but Mr. Magsman don’t know what they all would have
had. It was a lovely thing. First of all, there was the canvas representin the
pictur of the Giant in Spanish trunks and a ruff, who was half the height of
the house, and was run up with a line and pulley to a pole of the roof, so
that his Ed was coeval with the parapet. Then there was the canvas representin
the pictur of the Albina lady, showin her white ’air to the Army and Navy in
correct uniform. Then there was the canvas representin the pictur of the Wild
Indian scalpin a member of some foreign nation. Then there was the canvas
representin the pictur of a child of a British planter seized by two
Boa-Constrictors,—not that we never had no child, nor no Constrictors neither.
Similarly, there was the canvas representin the pictur of the Wild Ass of the
Prairies,—not that we never had no wild asses, nor wouldn’t have had ’em as a
gift. Last there was the canvas representin the pictur of the Dwarf, and like
him too (considerin), with George the Fourth in such a state of astonishment at
him as his Majesty couldn’t with his utmost politeness and stoutness express.
The front of the House was so covered with canvases that there wasn’t a spark
of daylight ever visible on that side. “Magsman’s
Amusements,” fifteen foot long by two foot high, ran over the front door
and parlor winders. The passage was a arbor of green baize and garden stuff. A
barrel-organ performed there unceasing. And as to respectability,—if threepence
ain’t respectable, what is?
But the Dwarf is the
principal article at present, and he was worth money. He was wrote up as “Major
Tpschoffki, of the Imperial Bulgraderian Brigade.” Nobody couldn’t pronounce
the name, and it never was intended anybody should. The public always turned
it, as a regular rule, into Chopski. In the line he was called Chops;
partly on that account, and partly because his real name, if he ever had any
real name (which was very dubious), was Stakes.
He was an uncommon small
man, he really was. Certainly not so small as he was made out to be, but
where’s your dwarf as is? He was a most uncommon small man, with a most
uncommon large Ed; and what he had inside that Ed nobody never knowed but
himself; even supposin himself to have ever took stock of it, which it would
have been a stiff job for him to do. The kindest little man as never
growed!—spirited, but not proud. When he travelled with the Spotted Baby,
though he knowed himself to be a nat’ral Dwarf, and knowed the Baby’s spots to
be put onto him artificial, he nursed that Baby like a mother. You never heard
him give a ill name to a giant. He did allow himself to break out into strong
language respectin the Fat Lady from Norfolk; but that was an affair of the
’art; and when a man’s ’art has been trifled with by a lady, and the preference
giv to a Indian, he ain’t master of his actions.
He was always in love,
of course; every human nat’ral phenomenon is. And he was always in love with a
large woman; I never knowed the dwarf as could be got to love a small one.
Which helps to keep ’em the curiosities they are.
One sing’lar idea he had
in that Ed of his, which must have meant something, or it wouldn’t have been
there. It was always his opinion that he was entitled to property. He never put
his name to anything. He had been taught to write by a young man without any
arms, who got his living with his toes (quite a writing-master he was,
and taught scores in the line), but Chops would have starved to death afore
he’d gained a bit of bread by putting his hand to a paper. This is the more
curious to bear in mind, because HE had
no property, except his house and a sarser. When I say his house, I mean the
box, painted and got up outside like a reg’ler six-roomer, that he used to
creep into, with a diamond ring (or quite as good to look at) on his
forefinger, and ring a little bell out of what the public believed to be the
drawing-room winder. And when I say a sarser, I mean a Cheney sarser in which
he made a collection for himself at the end of every entertainment. His cue for
that he took from me: “Ladies and gentlemen, the little man will now walk three
times round the Cairawan, and retire behind the curtain.” When he said anything
important, in private life, he mostly wound it up with this form of words, and
they was generally the last thing he said to me afore he went to bed.
He had what I consider a
fine mind,—a poetic mind. His ideas respectin his property never come upon him
so strong as when he sat upon a barrel-organ and had the handle turned. Arter
the wibration had run through him a little time, he would screech out: “Toby, I
feel my property coming,—grind away! I’m counting my guineas by thousands,
Toby,—grind away! Toby, I shall be a man of fortun! I feel the mint a jingling
in me, Toby, and I’m swelling out into the Bank of England!” Such is the
influence of music on the poetic mind. Not that he was partial to any other
music but a barrel-organ; on the contrairy, he hated it.
He had a kind of
everlasting grudge agin the public; which is a thing you may notice in many
phenomenons that get their living out of it. What riled him most in the nater
of his occupation was that it kep him out of society. He was continiwally
sayin: “Toby, my ambition is to go into society. The curse of my position
towards the public is that it keeps me hout of society. This don’t signify to a
low beast of a Indian; he ain’t formed for society. This don’t signify to a
Spotted Baby; he ain’t formed for society,—I am.”
Nobody never could make out
what Chops done with his money. He had a good salary, down on the drum every
Saturday as the day came round, besides having the run of his teeth,—and he was
a woodpecker to eat,—but all dwarfs are. The sarser was a little income,
bringing him in so many half-pence that he’d carry ’em, for a week together,
tied up in a pocket-handkercher. And yet he never had money. And it couldn’t be
the Fat Lady from Norfolk, as was once supposed; because it stands to reason
that when you have a animosity towards a Indian which makes you grind your
teeth at him to his face, and which can hardly hold you from goosing him
audible when he’s going through his war-dance,—it stands to reason you wouldn’t
under them circumstances deprive yourself to support that Indian in the lap of
luxury.
Most unexpected, the
mystery came out one day at Egham races. The public was shy of bein pulled in,
and Chops was ringin his little bell out of his drawin-room winder, and was
snarlin to me over his shoulder as he kneeled down with his legs out at the
back door,—for he couldn’t be shoved into his house without kneeling down, and
the premises wouldn’t accommodate his legs,—was snarlin: “Here’s a precious
public for you; why the devil don’t they tumble up?” when a man in the crowd
holds up a carrier-pigeon and cries out: “If there’s any person here as has got
a ticket, the Lottery’s just drawd, and the number as has come up for the great
prize is three, seven, forty-two! Three, seven, forty-two!” I was givin the man
to the furies myself, for calling of the public’s attention,—for the public
will turn away, at any time, to look at anything in preference to the thing
showed ’em; and if you doubt it, get ’em together for any individual purpose on
the face of the earth, and send only two people in late and see if the whole
company ain’t far more interested in taking particular notice of them two than
you,—I say I wasn’t best pleased with the man for callin out, wasn’t blessin
him in my own mind, when I see Chops’s little bell fly out of the winder at a
old lady, and he gets up and kicks his box over, exposin the whole secret, and
he catches hold of the calves of my legs and he says to me: “Carry me into the
wan, Toby, and throw a pail of water over me, or I’m a dead man, for I’m come
into my property!”
Twelve thousand odd
hundred pounds was Chops’s winnins. He had bought a half-ticket for the
twenty-five thousand prize, and it had come up. The first use he made of his
property was to offer to fight the Wild Indian for five hundred pound a side,
him with a poisoned darnin-needle and the Indian with a club; but the Indian
being in want of backers to that amount, it went no further.
Arter he had been mad
for a week—in a state of mind, in short, in which, if I had let him sit on the
organ for only two minutes, I believe he would have bust—but we kept the organ
from him—Mr. Chops come round and behaved liberal and beautiful to all. He then
sent for a young man he knowed, as had a wery genteel appearance and was a
Bonnet at a gaming-booth (most respectable brought up, father havin been
imminent in the livery-stable line, but unfort’nate in a commercial crisis
through paintin a old gray, ginger-bay, and sellin him with a pedigree), and
Mr. Chops said this to Bonnet, who said his name was Normandy, which it
wasn’t:—
“Normandy, I’m going
into society. Will you go with me?”
Says Normandy: “Do I
understand you, Mr. Chops, to hintimate that the ’ole of the expenses of that
move will be borne by yourself?”
“Correct,” says Mr.
Chops. “And you shall have a princely allowance too.”
The Bonnet lifted Mr.
Chops upon a chair to shake hands with him, and replied in poetry, his eyes
seemingly full of tears:—
“My boat is on the
shore,
And my bark is on the sea,
And I do not ask for more,
But I’ll go—along with thee.”
They went into society,
in a chaise and four grays, with silk jackets. They took lodgings in Pall Mall,
London, and they blazed away.
In consequence of a note
that was brought to Bartlemy Fair in the autumn of next year by a servant, most
wonderful got up in milk-white cords and tops, I cleaned myself and went to
Pall Mall, one evening appinted. The gentlemen was at their wine arter dinner,
and Mr. Chops’s eyes was more fixed in that Ed of his than I thought good for
him. There was three of ’em (in company, I mean), and I knowed the third well.
When last met, he had on a white Roman shirt, and a bishop’s mitre covered with
leopard-skin, and played the clarionet all wrong, in a band, at a wild-beast
show.
This gent took on not to
know me, and Mr. Chops said: “Gentlemen, this is an old friend of former days”;
and Normandy looked at me through a eyeglass, and said, “Magsman, glad to see
ye!” which I’ll take my oath he wasn’t. Mr. Chops, to get him convenient to the
table, had his chair on a throne, much of the form of George Fourth’s in the
canvas, but he hardly appeared to me to be King there in any other pint of
view, for his two gentlemen ordered about like emperors. They was all dressed
like May-day—gorgeous!—and as to wine, they swam in all sorts.
I made the round of the
bottles, first separate (to say I had done it), and then tried two of ’em as
half-and-half, then t’other two. Altogether, I passed a pleasant evenin, but
with a tendency to feel muddled, until I considered it good manners to get up
and say: “Mr. Chops, the best of friends must part. I thank you for the wariety
of foreign drains you have stood so ’ansome. I looks towards you in red wine,
and I takes my leave.” Mr. Chops replied: “If you’ll just hitch me out of this
over your right arm, Magsman, and carry me down stairs, I’ll see you out.”
I said I couldn’t think of such a thing, but he would have it, so I lifted him
off his throne. He smelt strong of Madeary, and I couldn’t help thinking, as I
carried him down, that it was like carrying a large bottle full of wine, with a
rayther ugly stopper, a good deal out of proportion.
When I set him on the
door-mat in the hall, he kept me close to him by holding on to my coat-collar,
and he whispers:—
“I ain’t ’appy,
Magsman.”
“What’s on your mind, Mr.
Chops?”
“They don’t use me well.
They ain’t graceful to me. They puts me on the mantel-piece when I won’t have
in more Champagne-wine, and they locks me in the sideboard when I won’t give up
my property.”
“Git rid of ’em, Mr.
Chops.”
“I can’t. We’re in
society together, and what would society say?”
“Come out of society,”
says I.
“I can’t. You don’t know
what you’re talking about. When you have once got into society, you mustn’t
come out of it.”
“Then, if you’ll excuse
the freedom, Mr. Chops,” was my remark, shaking my ed grave, “I think it’s a
pity you ever went in.”
Mr. Chops shook that
deep Ed of his to a surprisin extent, and slapped it half a dozen times with
his hand, and with more wice than I thought were in him. Then he says: “You’re
a good feller, but you don’t understand. Good night, go long. Magsman, the
little man will now walk three times around the Cairawan, and retire behind the
curtain.” The last I see of him on that occasion was his tryin, on the
extremest werge of insensibility, to climb up the stairs, one by one, with his
hands and knees. They’d have been much too steep for him if he had been sober;
but he wouldn’t be helped.
It warn’t long after
that, that I read in the newspaper of Mr. Chops’s being presented at court. It
was printed: “It will be recollected”—and I’ve noticed in my life that it is
sure to be printed that it will be recollected whenever it
won’t—“that Mr. Chops is the individual of small stature whose brilliant
success in the last State Lottery attracted so much attention.” “Well,” I said
to myself, “such is life! He has been and done it in earnest at last! He has
astonished George the Fourth!”
On account of which I
had that canvas new painted, him with a bag of money in his hand, a presentin
it to George the Fourth, and a lady in ostrich feathers fallin in love with him
in a bagwig, sword, and buckles correct.
I took the house as is
the subject of present inquiries—though not the honor of being acquainted—and I
run Magsman’s Amusements in it thirteen months—sometimes one thing, sometimes
another, sometimes nothin particular, but always all the canvases outside. One
night, when we had played the last company out, which was a shy company through
its raining heavens hard, I was takin a pipe in the one pair back, along with
the young man with the toes, which I had taken on for a month (though he never
drawed—except on paper), and I heard a kickin at the street door. “Halloa!” I
says to the young man, “what’s up?” He rubs his eyebrows with his toes, and he
says, “I cant imagine, Mr. Magsman,”—which he never could imagine nothin,
and was monotonous company.
The noise not leavin
off, I laid down my pipe, and I took up a candle, and I went down and opened
the door. I looked out into the street; but nothin could I see, and nothin was
I aware of, until I turned round quick, because some creeter run between my
legs into the passage. There was Mr. Chops!
“Magsman,” he says,
“take me on the hold terms, and you’ve got me; if it’s done, say done!”
I was all of a maze, but
I said, “Done, sir.”
“Done to your done, and
double done!” says he. “Have you got a bit of supper in the house?”
Bearin in mind them
sparklin warieties of foreign drains as we’d guzzled away at in Pall Mall, I
was ashamed to offer him cold sassages and gin-and-water; but he took ’em both
and took ’em free; havin a chair for his table, and sittin down at it on a
stool, like hold times,—I all of a maze all the while.
It was arter he had made
a clean sweep of the sassages (beef, and to the best of my calculations two pounds
and a quarter), that the wisdom as was in that little man began to come out of
him like perspiration.
“Magsman,” he says,
“look upon me?—You see afore you one as has both gone into society, and come
out.”
“O, you are out
of it, Mr. Chops? How did you get out, sir?”
“Sold out!” says he. You never saw the like of the wisdom as
his Ed expressed, when he made use of them two words.
“My friend Magsman, I’ll
impart to you a discovery I’ve made. It’s wallable; it’s cost twelve thousand
five hundred pound; it may do you good in life. The secret of this matter is,
that it ain’t so much that a person goes into society, as that society goes
into a person.”
Not exactly keeping up
with his meanin, I shook my ed, put on a deep look, and said, “You’re right
there, Mr. Chops.”
“Magsman,” he says,
twitchin me by the leg, “society has gone into me to the tune of every penny of
my property.”
I felt that I went pale,
and though not naturally a bold speaker, I couldn’t hardly say, “Where’s
Normandy?”
“Bolted,—with the plate,”
said Mr. Chops.
“And t’other
one?”—meaning him as formerly wore the bishop’s mitre.
“Bolted,—with the
jewels,” said Mr. Chops.
I sat down and looked at
him, and he stood up and looked at me.
“Magsman,” he says, and
he seemed to myself to get wiser as he got hoarser, “society, taken in the
lump, is all dwarfs. At the court of Saint James they was all a doin my
bisness—all a goin three times round the Cairawan, in the hold Court suits and
properties. Elsewhere, they was most of ’em ringing their little bells out of
makebelieves. Everywheres, the sarser was a goin round—Magsman, the sarser is
the universal institution!”
I perceived, you
understand, that he was soured by his misfortuns, and I felt for Mr. Chops.
“As to Fat Ladies,” says
he, giving his Ed a tremendious one agin the wall, “there’s lots of them in
society, and worse than the original. Hers was a outrage upon
taste—simply a outrage upon taste—awakin contempt—carryin its own punishment in
the form of a Indian!” Here he giv himself another tremendious one. “But theirs,
Magsman, theirs is mercenary outrages. Lay in Cashmere shawls,
buy bracelets, strew ’em and a lot of ’andsome fans and things about your
rooms, let it be known that you give away like water to all as come to admire,
and the Fat Ladies that don’t exhibit for so much down upon the drum will come
from all the pints of the compass to flock about you, whatever you are. They’ll
drill holes in your ’art, Magsman, like a cullender. And when you’ve no more
left to give, they’ll laugh at you to your face, and leave you to have your
bones picked dry by wulturs, like the dead Wild Ass of the Prayries that you
deserve to be!” Here he giv himself the most tremendious one of all, and
dropped.
I thought he was gone.
His Ed was so heavy, and he knocked it so hard, and he fell so stony, and the
sassagereal disturbance in him must have been so immense, that I thought he was
gone. But he soon come round with care, and he sat up on the floor, and he said
to me, with wisdom comin out of his eyes, if ever it come,—
“Magsman! The most
material difference between the two states of existence through which your
unappy friend has passed,”—he reached out his poor little hand, and his tears
dropped down on the mustache which it was a credit to him to have done his best
to grow, but it is not in mortals to command success,—“the difference is this:
When I was out of society, I was paid light for being seen. When I went into
society, I paid heavy for being seen. I prefer the former, even if I wasn’t
forced upon it. Give me out through the trumpet, in the hold way, to-morrow.”
After that, he slid into
the line again as easy as if he had been iled all over. But the organ was kep
from him, and no allusions was ever made, when a company was in, to his
property. He got wiser every day; his views of society and the public was
luminous, bewilderin, awful; and his Ed got bigger and bigger as his wisdom
expanded it.
He took well, and pulled
’em in most excellent for nine weeks. At the expiration of that period, when his
Ed was a sight, he expressed one evening, the last company havin been turned
out, and the doors shut, a wish to have a little music.
“Mr. Chops,” I said (I
never dropped the “Mr.” with him; the world might do it, but not me),—“Mr.
Chops, are you sure as you are in a state of mind and body to sit upon the
organ?”
His answer was this:
“Toby, when next met with on the tramp, I forgive her and the Indian. And I
am.”
It was with fear and
tremblin that I began to turn the handle; but he sat like a lamb. It will be my
belief to my dying day, that I see his Ed expand as he sat; you may therefore
judge how great his thoughts was. He sat out all the changes, and then he come
off.
“Toby,” he says with a
quiet smile, “the little man will now walk three times round the Cairawan, and
then retire behind the curtain.”
When we called him in
the mornin we found he had gone into much better society than mine or Pall
Mall’s. I give Mr. Chops as comfortable a funeral as lay in my power, followed
myself as chief, and had the George the Fourth canvas carried first, in the
form of a banner. But the house was so dismal afterwards, that I give it up,
and took to the wan again.
5.WAKEFIELD
N some old magazine or
newspaper, I recollect a story, told as truth, of a man—let us call him
Wakefield—who absented himself for a long time from his wife. The fact, thus
abstractedly stated, is not very uncommon, nor—without a proper distinction of
circumstances—to be condemned either as naughty or nonsensical. Howbeit, this,
though far from the most aggravated, is perhaps the strangest instance, on
record, of marital delinquency; and, moreover, as remarkable a freak as may be
found in the whole list of human oddities. The wedded couple lived in London.
The man, under pretence of going a journey, took lodgings in the next street to
his own house, and there, unheard of by his wife or friends, and without the
shadow of a reason for such self-banishment, dwelt upward of twenty years.
During that period he beheld his home every day, and frequently the forlorn
Mrs. Wakefield. And after so great a gap in his matrimonial felicity,—when his
death was reckoned certain, his estate settled, his name dismissed from memory,
and his wife, long, long ago, resigned to her autumnal widowhood,—he
entered the door one evening, quietly, as from a day’s absence, and became a
loving spouse till death.
This outline is all that
I remember. But the incident, though of the purest originality, unexampled, and
probably never to be repeated, is one, I think, which appeals to the generous
sympathies of mankind. We know, each for himself, that none of us would
perpetrate such a folly, yet feel as if some other might. To my own
contemplations, at least, it has often recurred, always exciting wonder, but
with a sense that the story must be true, and a conception of its hero’s
character. Whenever any subject so forcibly affects the mind, time is well
spent in thinking of it. If the reader choose, let him do his own meditation;
or if he prefer to ramble with me through the twenty years of Wakefield’s
vagary, I bid him welcome; trusting that there will be a pervading spirit and a
moral, even should we fail to find them, done up neatly, and condensed into the
final sentence. Thought has always its efficacy, and every striking incident
its moral.
What sort of man was
Wakefield? We are free to shape out our own idea, and call it by his name. He
was now in the meridian of life; his matrimonial affections, never violent,
were sobered into a calm, habitual sentiment; of all husbands, he was likely to
be the most constant, because a certain sluggishness would keep his heart at
rest, wherever it might be placed. He was intellectual, but not actively so;
his mind occupied itself in long and lazy musings, that tended to no purpose,
or had not vigor to attain it; his thoughts were seldom so energetic as to
seize hold of words. Imagination, in the proper meaning of the term, made
no part of Wakefield’s gifts. With a cold but not depraved nor wandering heart,
and a mind never feverish with riotous thoughts, nor perplexed with
originality, who could have anticipated that our friend would entitle himself
to a foremost place among the doers of eccentric deeds? Had his acquaintances
been asked who was the man in London the surest to perform nothing to-day which
should be remembered on the morrow, they would have thought of Wakefield. Only
the wife of his bosom might have hesitated. She, without having analyzed his
character, was partly aware of a quiet selfishness, that had rusted into his
inactive mind,—of a peculiar sort of vanity, the most uneasy attribute about
him,—of a disposition to craft, which had seldom produced more positive effects
than the keeping of petty secrets, hardly worth revealing,—and, lastly, of what
she called a little strangeness, sometimes, in the good man. This latter
quality is indefinable, and perhaps non-existent.
Let us now imagine
Wakefield bidding adieu to his wife. It is the dusk of an October evening. His
equipment is a drab great-coat, a hat covered with an oil-cloth, top boots, an
umbrella in one hand and a small portmanteau in the other. He has informed Mrs.
Wakefield that he is to take the night coach into the country. She would fain
inquire the length of his journey, its object, and the probable time of his
return; but, indulgent to his harmless love of mystery, interrogates him only
by a look. He tells her not to expect him positively by the return coach, nor
to be alarmed should he tarry three or four days; but, at all events, to look
for him at supper on Friday evening. Wakefield himself, be it considered,
has no suspicion of what is before him. He holds out his hand; she gives her
own, and meets his parting kiss, in the matter-of-course way of a ten years’
matrimony; and forth goes the middle-aged Mr. Wakefield, almost resolved to
perplex his good lady by a whole week’s absence. After the door has closed
behind him, she perceives it thrust partly open, and a vision of her husband’s
face, through the aperture, smiling on her, and gone in a moment. For the time,
this little incident is dismissed without a thought. But, long afterward, when
she has been more years a widow than a wife, that smile recurs, and flickers
across all her reminiscences of Wakefield’s visage. In her many musings, she
surrounds the original smile with a multitude of fantasies, which make it
strange and awful; as, for instance, if she imagines him in a coffin, that
parting look is frozen on his pale features; or, if she dreams of him in
heaven, still his blessed spirit wears a quiet and crafty smile. Yet, for its
sake, when all others have given him up for dead, she sometimes doubts whether
she is a widow.
But our business is with
the husband. We must hurry after him, along the street, ere he lose his individuality,
and melt into the great mass of London life. It would be vain searching for him
there. Let us follow close at his heels, therefore, until, after several
superfluous turns and doublings, we find him comfortably established by the
fireside of a small apartment, previously bespoken. He is in the next street to
his own, and at his journey’s end. He can scarcely trust his good fortune, in
having got thither unperceived,—recollecting that, at one time, he was
delayed by the throng, in the very focus of a lighted lantern; and, again,
there were footsteps, that seemed to tread behind his own, distinct from the
multitudinous tramp around him; and, anon, he heard a voice shouting afar, and
fancied that it called his name. Doubtless a dozen busybodies had been watching
him, and told his wife the whole affair. Poor Wakefield! Little knowest thou
thine own insignificance in this great world! No mortal eye but mine has traced
thee. Go quietly to thy bed, foolish man; and, on the morrow, if thou wilt be wise,
get thee home to good Mrs. Wakefield, and tell her the truth. Remove not
thyself, even for a little week, from thy place in her chaste bosom. Were she,
for a single moment, to deem thee dead, or lost, or lastingly divided from her,
thou wouldst be woefully conscious of a change in thy true wife, forever after.
It is perilous to make a chasm in human affections; not that they gape so long
and wide, but so quickly close again!
Almost repenting of his
frolic, or whatever it may be termed, Wakefield lies down betimes, and,
starting from his first nap, spreads forth his arms into the wide and solitary
waste of the unaccustomed bed. “No,” thinks he, gathering the bedclothes about
him, “I will not sleep alone another night.”
In the morning, he rises
earlier than usual, and sets himself to consider what he really means to do.
Such are his loose and rambling modes of thought, that he has taken this very
singular step, with the consciousness of a purpose, indeed, but without being
able to define it sufficiently for his own contemplation. The vagueness of
the project, and the convulsive effort with which he plunges into the execution
of it, are equally characteristic of a feeble-minded man. Wakefield sifts his
ideas, however, as minutely as he may, and finds himself curious to know the
progress of matters at home,—how his exemplary wife will endure her widowhood
of a week; and, briefly, how the little sphere of creatures and circumstances,
in which he was a central object, will be affected by his removal. A morbid
vanity, therefore, lies nearest the bottom of the affair. But how is he to
attain his ends? Not, certainly, by keeping close in this comfortable lodging,
where, though he slept and awoke in the next street to his home, he is as
effectually abroad as if the stage-coach had been whirling him away all night.
Yet, should he reappear, the whole project is knocked in the head. His poor
brains being hopelessly puzzled with this dilemma, he at length ventures out,
partly resolving to cross the head of the street, and send one hasty glance
toward his forsaken domicile. Habit—for he is a man of habits—takes him by the
hand, and guides him, wholly unaware, to his own door, where, just at the
critical moment, he is aroused by the scraping of his foot upon the step. Wakefield!
whither are you going?
At that instant, his
fate was turning on the pivot. Little dreaming of the doom to which his first
backward step devotes him, he hurries away, breathless with agitation hitherto
unfelt, and hardly dares turn his head at the distant corner. Can it be that
nobody caught sight of him? Will not the whole household—the decent Mrs.
Wakefield, the smart maid-servant, and the dirty little footboy—raise a
hue and cry, through London streets, in pursuit of their fugitive lord and master?
Wonderful escape! He gathers courage to pause and look homeward, but is
perplexed with a sense of change about the familiar edifice, such as affects us
all when, after a separation of months or years, we again see some hill or
lake, or work of art, with which we were friends of old. In ordinary cases,
this indescribable impression is caused by the comparison and contrast between
our imperfect reminiscences and the reality. In Wakefield, the magic of a
single night has wrought a similar transformation, because, in that brief
period, a great moral change has been effected. But this is a secret from
himself. Before leaving the spot, he catches a far and momentary glimpse of his
wife, passing athwart the front window, with her face turned toward the head of
the street. The crafty nincompoop takes to his heels, scared with the idea
that, among a thousand such atoms of mortality, her eye must have detected him.
Right glad is his heart, though his brain be somewhat dizzy, when he finds
himself by the coal fire of his lodgings.
So much for the
commencement of this long whim-wham. After the initial conception, and the
stirring up of the man’s sluggish temperament to put it in practice, the whole
matter evolves itself in a natural train. We may suppose him, as the result of
deep deliberation, buying a new wig, of reddish hair, and selecting sundry
garments, in a fashion unlike his customary suit of brown, from a Jew’s
old-clothes bag. It is accomplished. Wakefield is another man. The new system
being now established, a retrograde movement to the old would be almost as
difficult as the step that placed him in his unparalleled position.
Furthermore, he is rendered obstinate by a sulkiness, occasionally incident to
his temper, and brought on, at present, by the inadequate sensation which he
conceives to have been produced in the bosom of Mrs. Wakefield. He will not go
back until she be frightened half to death. Well; twice or thrice has she
passed before his sight, each time with a heavier step, a paler cheek, and a
more anxious brow; and in the third week of his non-appearance, he detects a
portent of evil entering the house, in the guise of an apothecary. Next day,
the knocker is muffled. Toward nightfall comes the chariot of a physician, and
deposits its big-wigged and solemn burden at Wakefield’s door, whence, after a
quarter of an hour’s visit, he emerges, perchance the herald of a funeral. Dear
woman! Will she die? By this time, Wakefield is excited to something like
energy of feeling, but still lingers away from his wife’s bedside, pleading
with his conscience, that she must not be disturbed at such a juncture. If
aught else restrains him, he does not know it. In the course of a few weeks,
she gradually recovers; the crisis is over; her heart is sad, perhaps, but
quiet; and, let him return soon or late, it will never be feverish for him
again. Such ideas glimmer through the mist of Wakefield’s mind, and render him
indistinctly conscious that an almost impassable gulf divides his hired
apartment from his former home. “It is but in the next street!” he sometimes
says. Fool! it is in another world. Hitherto, he has put off his return from
one particular day to another; henceforward, he leaves the precise time
undetermined. Not to-morrow,—probably next week,—pretty soon. Poor man! The
dead have nearly as much chance of revisiting their earthly homes, as the
self-banished Wakefield.
Would that I had a folio
to write, instead of an article of a dozen pages! Then might I exemplify how an
influence, beyond our control, lays its strong hand on every deed which we do,
and weaves its consequences into an iron tissue of necessity. Wakefield is
spellbound. We must leave him, for ten years or so, to haunt around his house,
without once crossing the threshold, and to be faithful to his wife, with all
the affection of which his heart is capable, while he is slowly fading out of
hers. Long since, it must be remarked, he has lost the perception of
singularity in his conduct.
Now for a scene! Amid
the throng of a London street, we distinguish a man, now waxing elderly, with
few characteristics to attract careless observers, yet bearing, in his whole
aspect, the handwriting of no common fate, for such as have the skill to read
it. He is meagre; his low and narrow forehead is deeply wrinkled; his eyes,
small and lustreless, sometimes wander apprehensively about him, but oftener
seem to look inward. He bends his head, and moves with an indescribable
obliquity of gait, as if unwilling to display his full front to the world.
Watch him long enough to see what we have described, and you will allow that
circumstances, which often produce remarkable men from nature’s ordinary
handiwork, have produced one such here. Next, leaving him to sidle along the
footwalk, cast your eyes in the opposite direction, where a portly female,
considerably in the wane of life, with a prayer-book in her hand, is proceeding
to yonder church. She has the placid mien of settled widowhood. Her regrets
have either died away, or have become so essential to her heart that they would
be poorly exchanged for joy. Just as the lean man and the well-conditioned
woman are passing, a slight obstruction occurs, and brings these two figures
directly in contact. Their hands touch; the pressure of the crowd forces her
bosom against his shoulder; they stand face to face, staring into each other’s
eyes. After a ten years’ separation, thus Wakefield meets his wife!
The throng eddies away,
and carries them asunder. The sober widow, resuming her former pace, proceeds
to church, but pauses in the portal, and throws a perplexed glance along the
street. She passes in, however, opening her prayer-book as she goes. And the
man! with so wild a face that busy and selfish London stands to gaze after him,
he hurries to his lodgings, bolts the door, and throws himself upon the bed.
The latent feelings of years break out; his feeble mind acquires a brief energy
from their strength; all the miserable strangeness of his life is revealed to
him at a glance: and he cries out passionately, “Wakefield! Wakefield! you are
mad!”
Perhaps he was so. The
singularity of his situation must have so moulded him to himself, that,
considered in regard to his fellow-creatures and the business of life, he could
not be said to possess his right mind. He had contrived, or rather he had
happened, to dissever himself from the world,—to vanish,—to give up his place
and privileges with living men, without being admitted among the dead. The life
of a hermit is nowise parallel to his. He was in the bustle of the city, as of
old; but the crowd swept by, and saw him not; he was, we may figuratively
say, always beside his wife, and at his hearth, yet must never feel the warmth
of the one, nor the affection of the other. It was Wakefield’s unprecedented
fate to retain his original share of human sympathies, and to be still involved
in human interests, while he had lost his reciprocal influence on them. It
would be a most curious speculation to trace out the effect of such
circumstances on his heart and intellect, separately, and in unison. Yet,
changed as he was, he would seldom be conscious of it, but deem himself the
same man as ever; glimpses of the truth, indeed, would come, but only for the
moment; and still he would keep saying, “I shall soon go back!”—nor reflect that
he had been saying so for twenty years.
I conceive, also, that
these twenty years would appear, in the retrospect, scarcely longer than the
week to which Wakefield had at first limited his absence. He would look on the
affair as no more than an interlude in the main business of his life. When,
after a little while more, he should deem it time to re-enter his parlor, his
wife would clap her hands for joy, on beholding the middle-aged Mr. Wakefield.
Alas, what a mistake! Would Time but await the close of our favorite follies,
we should be young men, all of us, and till Doomsday.
One evening, in the
twentieth year since he vanished, Wakefield is taking his customary walk toward
the dwelling which he still calls his own. It is a gusty night of autumn, with
frequent showers, that patter down upon the pavement, and are gone, before a
man can put up his umbrella. Pausing near the house, Wakefield discerns, through
the parlor windows of the second floor, the red glow, and the glimmer and
fitful flash, of a comfortable fire. On the ceiling appears a grotesque shadow
of good Mrs. Wakefield. The cap, the nose and chin, and the broad waist form an
admirable caricature, which dances, moreover, with the up-flickering and
down-sinking blaze, almost too merrily for the shade of an elderly widow. At
this instant, a shower chances to fall, and is driven, by the unmannerly gust,
full into Wakefield’s face and bosom. He is quite penetrated with its autumnal
chill. Shall he stand, wet and shivering here, when his own hearth has a good
fire to warm him, and his own wife will run to fetch the gray coat and
small-clothes, which, doubtless, she has kept carefully in the closet of their
bedchamber? No! Wakefield is no such fool. He ascends the steps,—heavily!—for
twenty years have stiffened his legs, since he came down,—but he knows it not.
Stay, Wakefield! Would you go to the sole home that is left you? Then step into
your grave! The door opens. As he passes in, we have a parting glimpse of his
visage, and recognize the crafty smile which was the precursor of the little
joke that he has ever since been playing off at his wife’s expense. How
unmercifully has he quizzed the poor woman! Well, a good night’s rest to
Wakefield!
This happy
event—supposing it to be such—could only have occurred at an unpremeditated
moment. We will not follow our friend across the threshold. He has left us much
food for thought, a portion of which shall lend its wisdom to a moral, and be
shaped into a figure. Amid the seeming confusion of our mysterious world, individuals
are so nicely adjusted to a system, and systems to one another and to a whole,
that, by stepping aside for a moment, a man exposes himself to a fearful risk
of losing his place forever. Like Wakefield, he may become, as it were, the Outcast
of the Universe.
6.MURDER, CONSIDERED AS ONE OF THE FINE ARTS.
E have all heard of a
Society for the Promotion of Vice, of the Hell-Fire Club, etc. At Brighton, I
think it was, that a Society was formed for the Suppression of Virtue. That
Society was itself suppressed; but I am sorry to say that another exists in
London, of a character still more atrocious. In tendency, it may be denominated
a Society for the Encouragement of Murder; but, according to their own delicate
εἰφημισμός, it is styled, The Society of Connoisseurs in Murder. They profess
to be curious in homicide; amateurs and dilettanti in the various modes of
bloodshed; and, in short, murder-fanciers. Every fresh atrocity of that class,
which the police annals of Europe bring up, they meet and criticise as they
would a picture, statue, or other work of art. But I need not trouble myself
with any attempt to describe the spirit of their proceedings, as you will
collect that much better from one of the monthly lectures read
before the society last year. This has fallen into my hands, accidentally, in
spite of all the vigilance exercised to keep their transactions from the
public eye. The publication of it will alarm them; and my purpose is that it
should. For I would much rather put them down quietly, by an appeal to public
opinion, than by such an exposure of names as would follow an appeal to Bow
Street; which last appeal, however, if this should fail, I must positively
resort to.
LECTURE.
Gentlemen,—I have had the honor to be appointed by your
committee to the trying task of reading the Williams Lecture on Murder,
considered as one of the Fine Arts; a task which might be easy enough three or
four centuries ago, when the art was little understood, and few great models
had been exhibited; but in this age, when masterpieces of excellence have been
executed by professional men, it must be evident that, in the style of
criticism applied to them, the public will look for something of a
corresponding improvement. Practice and theory must advance pari passu.
People begin to see that something more goes to the composition of a fine
murder than two blockheads to kill and be killed,—a knife,—a purse,—and a dark
lane. Design, gentlemen, grouping, light and shade, poetry, sentiment, are now
deemed indispensable to attempts of this nature. Mr. Williams has exalted the
ideal of murder to all of us; and to me, therefore, in particular, has deepened
the arduousness of my task. Like Æschylus or Milton in poetry, like Michael Angelo
in painting, he has carried his art to a point of colossal sublimity; and, as
Mr. Wordsworth observes, has in amanner “created the taste by which he is to be
enjoyed.” To sketch the history of the art, and to examine its principles
critically, now remains as a duty for the connoisseur, and for judges of quite
another stamp from his Majesty’s Judges of Assize.
Before I begin, let me
say a word or two to certain prigs, who affect to speak of our society as if it
were in some degree immoral in its tendency. Immoral! God bless my soul,
gentlemen, what is it that people mean? I am for morality, and always shall be,
and for virtue and all that; and I do affirm, and always shall (let what will
come of it), that murder is an improper line of conduct, highly improper; and I
do not stick to assert that any man who deals in murder must have very
incorrect ways of thinking, and truly inaccurate principles; and so far from
aiding and abetting him by pointing out his victim’s hiding-place, as a great
moralist[A] of Germany declared it
to be every good man’s duty to do, I would subscribe one shilling and sixpence
to have him apprehended, which is more by eighteen-pence than the most eminent
moralists have subscribed for that purpose. But what then? Everything in this
world has two handles. Murder, for instance, may be laid hold of by its
moral handle (as it generally is in the pulpit, and at the Old Bailey);
and that, I confess, is its weak side; or it may also be
treated æsthetically, as the Germans call it, that is, in relation
to good taste.
To illustrate this, I
will urge the authority of three eminent persons, namely, S. T. Coleridge,
Aristotle, and Mr. Howship the surgeon. To begin with S. T. C. One night, many
years ago, I was drinking tea with him in Berners Street (which, by the way,
for a short street, has been uncommonly fruitful in men of genius). Others were
there besides myself; and amidst some carnal considerations of tea and toast,
we were all imbibing a dissertation on Plotinus from the attic lips of S. T. C.
Suddenly a cry arose of “Fire,—fire!” upon which all of us, master and
disciples, Plato and ὁι περί τον Πλάτωνα, rushed out, eager for the spectacle. The
fire was in Oxford Street, at a piano-forte maker’s; and, as it promised to be
a conflagration of merit, I was sorry that my engagements forced me away from
Mr. Coleridge’s party before matters were come to a crisis. Some days after,
meeting with my Platonic host, I reminded him of the case, and begged to know
how that very promising exhibition had terminated. “O sir,” said he, “it turned
out so ill, that we damned it unanimously!” Now, does any man suppose that Mr.
Coleridge,—who, for all he is too fat to be a person of active virtue, is
undoubtedly a worthy Christian,—that this good S. T. C., I say, was an
incendiary, or capable of wishing any ill to the poor man and his piano-fortes
(many of them, doubtless, with the additional keys)? On the contrary, I know
him to be that sort of man, that I durst stake my life upon it he would
have worked an engine in a case of necessity, although rather of the fattest
for such fiery trials of his virtue. But how stood the case? Virtue was in no
request. On the arrival of the fire-engines, morality had devolved wholly on
the insurance office. This being the case, he had a right to gratify his taste.
He had left his tea. Was he to have nothing in return?
I contend that the most
virtuous man, under the premises stated, was entitled to make a luxury of the
fire, and to hiss it, as he would any other performance that raised
expectations in the public mind, which afterwards it disappointed. Again, to
cite another great authority, what says the Stagyrite? He (in the Fifth Book, I
think it is, of his Metaphysics) describes what he calls κλεπτὴν τέλειον,
i.e. a perfect thief; and, as to Mr. Howship, in a work of his on
Indigestion, he makes no scruple to talk with admiration of a certain ulcer
which he had seen, and which he styles “a beautiful ulcer.” Now will any man
pretend that, abstractly considered, a thief could appear to Aristotle a
perfect character, or that Mr. Howship could be enamored of an ulcer?
Aristotle, it is well known, was himself so very moral a character that, not
content with writing his Nichomachéan Ethics, in one volume octavo, he also
wrote another system, called Magna Moralia, or Big Ethics. Now, it
is impossible that a man who composes any ethics at all, big or little, should
admire a thief per se; and, as to Mr. Howship, it is well known
that he makes war upon all ulcers, and, without suffering himself to be seduced
by their charms, endeavors to banish them from the county of Middlesex.
But the truth is, that, however objectionable per se, yet,
relatively to others of their class, both a thief and an ulcer may have
infinite degrees of merit. They are both imperfections, it is true; but to be
imperfect being their essence, the very greatness of their imperfection becomes
their perfection. Spartam nactus es, hanc exorna. A thief like
Autolycus or Mr. Barrington, and a grim phagedænic ulcer, superbly defined, and
running regularly through all its natural stages, may no less justly be
regarded as ideals after their kind, than the most faultless
moss-rose amongst flowers, in its progress from bud to “bright consummate
flower”; or, amongst human flowers, the most magnificent young female,
apparelled in the pomp of womanhood. And thus not only the ideal of an inkstand
may be imagined (as Mr. Coleridge demonstrated in his celebrated correspondence
with Mr. Blackwood), in which, by the way, there is not so much, because an
inkstand is a laudable sort of thing, and a valuable member of society; but
even imperfection itself may have its ideal or perfect state.
Really, gentlemen, I beg
pardon for so much philosophy at one time, and now let me apply it. When a
murder is in the paulo-post-futurum tense, and a rumor of it comes to our ears,
by all means let us treat it morally. But suppose it over and done, and that
you can say of it, Τετέλεςαι, or (in that adamantine molossus of Medea)
είρξαςαι; suppose the poor murdered man to be out of his pain, and the rascal
that did it off like a shot, nobody knows whither; suppose, lastly, that we
have done our best, by putting out our legs to trip up the fellow in his
flight, but all to no purpose,—“abiit, evasit,” etc.,—why, then, I say, what’s
the use of any more virtue? Enough has been given to morality; now comes the
turn of Taste and the Fine Arts. A sad thing it was, no doubt, very sad;
but we can’t mend it. Therefore let us make the best of a bad
matter; and as it is impossible to hammer anything out of it for moral
purposes, let us treat it æsthetically, and see if it will turn to account in
that way. Such is the logic of a sensible man, and what follows? We dry up our
tears, and have the satisfaction, perhaps, to discover that a transaction
which, morally considered, was shocking, and without a leg to stand upon, when
tried by principles of Taste, turns out to be a very meritorious performance.
Thus all the world is pleased; the old proverb is justified, that it is an ill
wind which blows nobody good; the amateur, from looking bilious and sulky, by
too close an attention to virtue, begins to pick up his crumbs, and general
hilarity prevails. Virtue has had her day; and henceforward, Vertu and
Connoisseurship have leave to provide for themselves. Upon this principle,
gentlemen, I propose to guide your studies, from Cain to Mr. Thurtell. Through
this great gallery of murder, therefore, together let us wander hand in hand,
in delighted admiration, while I endeavor to point your attention to the
objects of profitable criticism.
000
The first murder is
familiar to you all. As the inventor of murder, and the father of the art, Cain
must have been a man of first-rate genius. All the Cains were men of
genius. Tubal Cain invented tubes, I think, or some such thing. But, whatever
were the originality and genius of the artist, every art was then in its
infancy, and the works must be criticised with a recollection of that fact.
Even Tubal’s work would probably be little approved at this day in Sheffield;
and therefore of Cain (Cain senior, I mean) it is no disparagement to say, that
his performance was but so so. Milton, however, is supposed to have thought
differently. By his way of relating the case, it should seem to have been
rather a pet murder with him, for he retouches it with an apparent anxiety for
its picturesque effect:—
“Whereat he inly raged;
and, as they talk’d,
Smote him into the midriff with a stone
That beat out life: he fell; and, deadly pale,
Groan’d out his soul with gushing blood effus’d.”
Par. Lost, B. XI.
Upon this, Richardson,
the painter, who had an eye for effect, remarks as follows, in his Notes on Paradise
Lost, p. 497: “It has been thought,” says he, “that Cain beat (as the common
saying is) the breath out of his brother’s body with a great stone; Milton
gives in to this, with the addition, however, of a large wound.” In this place
it was a judicious addition; for the rudeness of the weapon, unless raised and
enriched by a warm, sanguinary coloring, has too much of the naked air of the
savage school; as if the deed were perpetrated by a Polypheme without science,
premeditation, or anything but a mutton bone. However, I am chiefly pleased
with the improvement, as it implies that Milton was an amateur. As to
Shakespeare, there never was a better; as his description of the murdered Duke
of Gloucester, in Henry VI., of Duncan’s, Banquo’s, etc., sufficiently proves.
The foundation of the
art having been once laid, it is pitiable to see how it slumbered without
improvement for ages. In fact, I shall now be obliged to leap over all murders,
sacred and profane, as utterly unworthy of notice, until long after the
Christian era. Greece, even in the age of Pericles, produced no murder of the
slightest merit; and Rome had too little originality of genius in any of the
arts to succeed, where her model failed her. In fact, the Latin language sinks
under the very idea of murder. “The man was murdered”;—how will this sound in
Latin? Interfectus est, interemptus est,—which simply
expresses a homicide; and hence the Christian Latinity of the Middle Ages was
obliged to introduce a new word, such as the feebleness of classic conceptions
never ascended to. Murdratus est, says the sublimer dialect of
Gothic ages. Meantime, the Jewish school of murder kept alive whatever was yet
known in the art, and gradually transferred it to the Western World. Indeed the
Jewish school was always respectable, even in the dark ages, as the case of
Hugh of Lincoln shows, which was honored with the approbation of Chaucer, on
occasion of another performance from the same school which he puts into the
mouth of the Lady Abbess.
Recurring, however, for
one moment to classical antiquity, I cannot but think that Catiline,
Clodius, and some of that coterie would have made first-rate artists; and it is
on all accounts to be regretted, that the priggism of Cicero robbed his country
of the only chance she had for distinction in this line. As the subject of
a murder, no person could have answered better than himself. Lord! how he would
have howled with panic, if he had heard Cethegus under his bed. It would have
been truly diverting to have listened to him; and satisfied I am, gentlemen,
that he would have preferred the utile of creeping into a
closet, or even into a cloaca, to the honestum of
facing the bold artist.
To come now to the dark
ages (by which we, that speak with precision, mean, par excellence,
the tenth century, and the times immediately before and after), these ages
ought naturally to be favorable to the art of murder, as they were to church
architecture, to stained glass, etc.; and, accordingly, about the latter end of
this period, there arose a great character in our art, I mean the Old Man of
the Mountains. He was a shining light, indeed, and I need not tell you that the
very word “assassin” is deduced from him. So keen an amateur was he, that on
one occasion, when his own life was attempted by a favorite assassin, he was so
much pleased with the talent shown, that, notwithstanding the failure of the
artist, he created him a Duke upon the spot, with remainder to the female line,
and settled a pension on him for three lives. Assassination is a branch of the
art which demands a separate notice; and I shall devote an entire lecture to
it. Meantime, I shall only observe how odd it is that this branch of the art
has flourished by fits. It never rains, but it pours. Our own age can
boast of some fine specimens; and about two centuries ago there was a most
brilliant constellation of murders in this class. I need hardly say that I
allude especially to those five splendid works,—the assassinations of William
I., of Orange, of Henry IV., of France, of the Duke of Buckingham (which you
will find excellently described in the letters published by Mr. Ellis, of the
British Museum), of Gustavus Adolphus, and of Wallenstein. The King of Sweden’s
assassination, by the by, is doubted by many writers, Harte amongst others; but
they are wrong. He was murdered; and I consider his murder unique in its
excellence; for he was murdered at noonday, and on the field of battle,—a
feature of original conception, which occurs in no other work of art that I
remember. Indeed, all of these assassinations may be studied with profit by the
advanced connoisseur. They are all of them exemplaria, of which one
may say,—
“Nocturna versata manu,
versate diurne”;
especially nocturna.
In these assassinations
of princes and statesmen, there is nothing to excite our wonder; important
changes often depend on their deaths; and, from the eminence on which they
stand, they are peculiarly exposed to the aim of every artist who happens to be
possessed by the craving for scenical effect. But there is another class of
assassinations, which has prevailed from an early period of the seventeenth
century, that really does surprise me; I mean the
assassination of philosophers. For, gentlemen, it is a fact that every
philosopher of eminence for the two last centuries has either been
murdered, or, at the least, been very near it; insomuch, that if a man calls
himself a philosopher, and never had his life attempted, rest assured there is
nothing in him; and against Locke’s philosophy in particular, I think it an
unanswerable objection (if we needed any) that, although he carried his throat
about with him in this world for seventy-two years, no man ever condescended to
cut it. As these cases of philosophers are not much known, and are generally good
and well composed in their circumstances, I shall here read an excursus on that
subject, chiefly by way of showing my own learning.
The first great
philosopher of the seventeenth century (if we except Galileo) was Des Cartes;
and if ever one could say of a man that he was all but murdered,—murdered
within an inch,—one must say it of him. The case was this, as reported by
Baillet in his Vie De M. Des Cartes, Tom. I. pp. 102-3. In the year
1621, when Des Cartes might be about twenty-six years old, he was touring about
as usual (for he was as restless as a hyena), and, coming to the Elbe, either
at Gluckstadt or at Hamburg, he took shipping for East Friezland: what he could
want in East Friezland, no man has ever discovered; and perhaps he took this
into consideration himself; for, on reaching Embden, he resolved to sail
instantly for West Friezland; and, being very impatient of
delay, he hired a bark, with a few mariners to navigate it. No sooner had he
got out to sea, than he made a pleasing discovery, namely, that he had shut
himself up in a den of murderers. His crew, says M. Baillet, he soon found out
to be “des scélérats,”—not amateurs, gentlemen, as we are, but
professional men,—the height of whose ambition at that moment was to cut his
throat. But the story is too pleasing to be abridged; I shall give it,
therefore, accurately, from the French of his biographer: “M. Des Cartes had no
company but that of his servant, with whom he was conversing in French. The
sailors, who took him for a foreign merchant, rather than a cavalier, concluded
that he must have money about him. Accordingly they came to a resolution by no
means advantageous to his purse. There is this difference, however, between
sea-robbers and the robbers in forests, that the latter may, without hazard,
spare the lives of their victims; whereas the other cannot put a passenger on
shore in such a case without running the risk of being apprehended. The crew of
M. Des Cartes arranged their measures with a view to evade any danger of that sort.
They observed that he was a stranger from a distance, without acquaintance in
the country, and that nobody would take any trouble to inquire about him, in
case he should never come to hand, quand il viendroit à manquer.”
Think, gentlemen, of these Friezland dogs discussing a philosopher as if he
were a puncheon of rum. “His temper, they remarked, was very mild and patient;
and, judging from the gentleness of his deportment, and the courtesy with which
he treated themselves, that he could be nothing more than some green young man,
they concluded that they should have all the easier task in disposing of his
life. They made no scruple to discuss the whole matter in his presence, as not
supposing that he understood any other language than that in which he conversed
with his servant; and the amount of their deliberation was—to murder him, then
to throw him into the sea, and to divide his spoils.”
Excuse my laughing,
gentlemen, but the fact is, I always do laugh when I think of
this case,—two things about it seem so droll. One is, the horrid panic or
“funk” (as the men of Eton call it) in which Des Cartes must have found himself
upon hearing this regular drama sketched for his own death,—funeral,—succession
and administration to his effects. But another thing which seems to me still
more funny about this affair is, that if these Friezland hounds had been
“game,” we should have no Cartesian philosophy; and how we could have done
without that, considering the world of books it has produced, I
leave to any respectable trunk-maker to declare.
However, to go on; spite
of his enormous funk, Des Cartes showed fight, and by that means awed these
Anti-Cartesian rascals. “Finding,” says M. Baillet, “that the matter was no
joke, M. Des Cartes leaped upon his feet in a trice, assumed a stern
countenance that these cravens had never looked for, and, addressing them in
their own language, threatened to run them through on the spot if they dared to
offer him any insult.” Certainly, gentlemen, this would have been an honor far
above the merits of such inconsiderable rascals,—to be spitted like larks upon
a Cartesian sword; and therefore I am glad M. Des Cartes did not rob the
gallows by executing his threat, especially as he could not possibly have
brought his vessel to port, after he had murdered his crew; so that he must
have continued to cruise forever in the Zuyder Zee, and would probably have
been mistaken by sailors for the Flying Dutchman, homeward bound.
“The spirit which M. Des Cartes manifested,” says his biographer, “had the
effect of magic on these wretches. The suddenness of their consternation struck
their minds with a confusion which blinded them to their advantage, and they
conveyed him to his destination as peaceably as he could desire.”
Possibly, gentlemen, you
may fancy that, on the model of Cæsar’s address to his poor ferryman,—“Cæsarem
vehis et fortunas ejus,”—M. Des Cartes needed only to have said, “Dogs, you
cannot cut my throat, for you carry Des Cartes and his philosophy,” and might
safely have defied them to do their worst. A German emperor had the same
notion, when, being cautioned to keep out of the way of a cannonading, he
replied, “Tut! man. Did you ever hear of a cannon-ball that killed an emperor?”
As to an emperor I cannot say, but a less thing has sufficed to smash a
philosopher; and the next great philosopher of Europe undoubtedly was murdered.
This was Spinosa.
I know very well the
common opinion about him is, that he died in his bed. Perhaps he did, but he
was murdered, for all that; and this I shall prove by a book published at
Brussels, in the year 1731, entitled La Vie de Spinosa; Par M. Jean
Colerus, with many additions, from a manuscript life, by one of his
friends. Spinosa died on the 21st February, 1677, being then little more than
forty-four years old. This, of itself, looks suspicious; and M. Jean admits,
that a certain expression in the manuscript life of him would warrant the
conclusion, “que sa mort n’a pas été tout-à-fait naturelle.” Living in a
damp country, and a sailor’s country, like Holland, he may be thought to have
indulged a good deal in grog, especially in punch,[B] which was then newly
discovered. Undoubtedly he might have done so; but the fact is, that he did
not. M. Jean calls him, “extrêmement sobre en son boire et en son manger.” And
though some wild stories were afloat about his using the juice of mandragora
(p. 140), and opium (p. 144), yet neither of these articles appeared in his
druggist’s bill. Living, therefore, with such sobriety, how was it possible
that he should die a natural death at forty-four? Hear his biographer’s
account: “Sunday morning, the 21st of February, before it was church time,
Spinosa came down stairs and conversed with the master and mistress of the
house.” At this time, therefore, perhaps ten o’clock on Sunday morning, you see
that Spinosa was alive and pretty well. But it seems “he had summoned from
Amsterdam a certain physician, whom,” says the biographer, “I shall not
otherwise point out to notice than by these two letters, L. M. This L. M. had
directed the people of the house to purchase an ancient cock, and to have him
boiled forthwith, in order that Spinosa might take some broth about noon,
which in fact he did, and ate some of the old cock with a good
appetite, after the landlord and his wife had returned from church.
“In the afternoon L. M.
stayed alone with Spinosa, the people of the house having returned to church;
on coming out from which they learnt, with much surprise, that Spinosa had died
about three o’clock, in the presence of L. M., who took his departure for
Amsterdam the same evening, by the night boat, without paying the least
attention to the deceased. No doubt he was the readier to dispense with these
duties, as he had possessed himself of a ducatoon and a small quantity of
silver, together with a silver-hafted knife, and had absconded with his
pillage.” Here you see, gentlemen, the murder is plain, and the manner of it.
It was L. M. who murdered Spinosa for his money. Poor S. was an invalid, meagre
and weak: as no blood was observed, L. M. no doubt threw him down and smothered
him with pillows,—the poor man being already half suffocated by his infernal
dinner. But who was L. M.? It surely never could be Lindley Murray; for I saw
him at York in 1825; and besides, I do not think he would do such a thing; at
least, not to a brother grammarian: for you know, gentlemen, that Spinosa wrote
a very respectable Hebrew grammar.
Hobbes, but why, or on
what principle, I never could understand, was not murdered. This was a capital
oversight of the professional men in the seventeenth century; because in every
light he was a fine subject for murder, except, indeed, that he was lean and
skinny; for I can prove that he had money, and (what is very funny) he had
no right to make the least resistance; for, according to himself, irresistible
power creates the very highest species of right, so that it is rebellion of the
blackest dye to refuse to be murdered, when a competent force appears to murder
you. However, gentlemen, though he was not murdered, I am happy to assure you
that (by his own account) he was three times very near being murdered. The
first time was in the spring of 1640, when he pretends to have circulated a
little manuscript on the king’s behalf, against the Parliament; he never could
produce this manuscript, by the by: but he says that, “Had not his Majesty
dissolved the Parliament” (in May), “it had brought him into danger of his
life.” Dissolving the Parliament, however, was of no use; for, in November of
the same year, the Long Parliament assembled, and Hobbes, a second time,
fearing he should be murdered, ran away to France. This looks like the madness
of John Dennis, who thought that Louis XIV. would never make peace with Queen
Anne, unless he were given up to his vengeance; and actually ran away from the
sea-coast in that belief. In France, Hobbes managed to take care of his throat
pretty well for ten years; but at the end of that time, by way of paying court
to Cromwell, he published his Leviathan. The old coward now began to “funk”
horribly for the third time; he fancied the swords of the cavaliers were
constantly at his throat, recollecting how they had served the Parliament
ambassadors at the Hague and Madrid. “Tum,” says he, in his dog-Latin life of
himself,—
“Tum venit in mentem
mihi Dorislaus et Ascham;
Tanquam proscripto terror ubique aderat.”
And accordingly he ran home to
England. Now, certainly, it is very true that a man deserved a cudgelling for
writing Leviathan; and two or three cudgellings for writing a pentameter ending
so villanously as, “terror ubique aderat”! But no man ever thought him worthy
of anything beyond cudgelling. And, in fact, the whole story is a bounce of his
own. For, in a most abusive letter which he wrote “to a learned person”
(meaning Wallis the mathematician), he gives quite another account of the
matter, and says (p. 8), he ran home “because he would not trust his safety
with the French clergy”; insinuating that he was likely to be murdered for his
religion, which would have been a high joke indeed,—Tom’s being brought to the
stake for religion.
Bounce or not bounce,
however, certain it is, that Hobbes, to the end of his life, feared that
somebody would murder him. This is proved by the story I am going to tell you:
it is not from a manuscript, but (as Mr. Coleridge says) it is as good as
manuscript; for it comes from a book now entirely forgotten, namely, “The Creed
of Mr. Hobbes Examined; in a Conference between him and a Student in Divinity”
(published about ten years before Hobbes’s death). The book is anonymous, but
it was written by Tennison, the same who, about thirty years after, succeeded
Tillotson as Archbishop of Canterbury. The introductory anecdote is as follows:
“A certain divine, it seems (no doubt Tennison himself), took an annual tour of
one month to different parts of the island. In one of these excursions (1670)
he visited the Peak in Derbyshire, partly in consequence of Hobbes’s
description of it. Being in that neighborhood, he could not but pay a visit to
Buxton; and at the very moment of his arrival, he was fortunate enough to find
a party of gentlemen dismounting at the inn door, amongst whom was a long, thin
fellow, who turned out to be no less a person than Mr. Hobbes, who probably had
ridden over from Chatsworth. Meeting so great a lion, a tourist, in search of
the picturesque, could do no less than present himself in the character of
bore. And luckily for this scheme, two of Mr. Hobbes’s companions were suddenly
summoned away by express; so that, for the rest of his stay at Buxton, he had
Leviathan entirely to himself, and had the honor of bowsing with him in the
evening. Hobbes, it seems, at first showed a good deal of stiffness, for he was
shy of divines; but this wore off, and he became very sociable and funny, and
they agreed to go into the bath together. How Tennison could venture to gambol
in the same water with Leviathan, I cannot explain; but so it was: they
frolicked about like two dolphins, though Hobbes must have been as old as the
hills; and in those intervals wherein they abstained from swimming and plunging
themselves” (i. e. diving) “they discoursed of many things relating to the
Baths of the Ancients, and the Origine of Springs. When they had in this manner
passed away an hour, they stepped out of the bath; and, having dried and
cloathed themselves, they sate down in expectation of such a supper as the
place afforded; designing to refresh themselves like the Deipnosophilæ,
and rather to reason than to drink profoundly. But in this innocent intention
they were interrupted by the disturbance arising from a little quarrel, in
which some of the ruder people in the house were for a short time engaged.
At this Mr. Hobbes seemed much concerned, though he was at some distance from
the persons.” And why was he concerned, gentlemen? No doubt you fancy, from
some benign and disinterested love of peace and harmony, worthy of an old man
and a philosopher. But listen,—“For a while he was not composed, but related it
once or twice as to himself, with a low and careful tone, how Sextus Roscius
was murthered after supper by the Balneæ Palatinæ. Of such general extent is
that remark of Cicero, in relation to Epicurus the Atheist, of whom he observed
that he of all men dreaded most those things which he contemned,—Death and the
Gods.” Merely because it was supper-time, and in the neighborhood of a bath,
Mr. Hobbes must have the fate of Sextus Roscius. What logic was there in this,
unless to a man who was always dreaming of murder? Here was Leviathan, no
longer afraid of the daggers of English cavaliers or French clergy, but
“frightened from his propriety” by a row in an alehouse between some honest
clodhoppers of Derbyshire, whom his own gaunt scarecrow of a person, that
belonged to quite another century, would have frightened out of their wits.
Malebranche, it will
give you pleasure to hear, was murdered. The man who murdered him is well
known; it was Bishop Berkeley. The story is familiar, though hitherto not put
in a proper light. Berkeley, when a young man, went to Paris and called on Père
Malebranche. He found him in his cell cooking. Cooks have ever been a genus
irritabile; authors still more so; Malebranche was both; a dispute arose;
the old father, warm already, became warmer; culinary and metaphysical
irritations united to derange his liver: he took to his bed, and died. Such is
the common version of the story: “So the whole ear of Denmark is abused.” The
fact is, that the matter was hushed up, out of consideration for Berkeley, who
(as Pope remarked) had “every virtue under heaven”: else it was well known that
Berkeley, feeling himself nettled by the waspishness of the old Frenchman,
squared at him; a turn-up was the consequence; Malebranche was
floored in the first round; the conceit was wholly taken out of him; and he
would perhaps have given in; but Berkeley’s blood was now up, and he insisted
on the old Frenchman’s retracting his doctrine of Occasional Causes. The vanity
of the man was too great for this; and he fell a sacrifice to the impetuosity
of Irish youth, combined with his own absurd obstinacy.
Leibnitz being every way
superior to Malebranche, one might, a fortiori, have counted
on his being murdered; which, however, was not the case. I
believe he was nettled at this neglect, and felt himself insulted by the
security in which he passed his days. In no other way can I explain his conduct
at the latter end of his life, when he chose to grow very avaricious, and to
hoard up large sums of gold, which he kept in his own house. This was at
Vienna, where he died; and letters are still in existence, describing the
immeasurable anxiety which he entertained for his throat. Still his ambition,
for being attempted at least, was so great, that he would not
forego the danger. A late English pedagogue, of Birmingham manufacture, namely,
Dr. Parr, took a more selfish course, under the same circumstances. He had
amassed a considerable quantity of gold and silver plate, which was for some
time deposited in his bedroom at his parsonage house, Hatton. But growing every
day more afraid of being murdered, which he knew that he could not stand, and
to which, indeed, he never had the slightest pretension, he transferred the
whole to the Hatton blacksmith; conceiving, no doubt, that the murder of a
blacksmith would fall more lightly on the salus reipublicæ than
that of a pedagogue. But I have heard this greatly disputed; and it seems now
generally agreed that one good horseshoe is worth about two and one fourth
Spital sermons.
As Leibnitz, though not
murdered, may be said to have died, partly of the fear that he should be
murdered, and partly of vexation that he was not,—Kant, on the other hand, who
had no ambition in that way, had a narrower escape from a murderer than any man
we read of, except Des Cartes. So absurdly does Fortune throw about her favors!
The case is told, I think, in an anonymous life of this very great man. For
health’s sake, Kant imposed upon himself, at one time, a walk of six miles
every day along a high-road. This fact becoming known to a man who had his
private reasons for committing murder, at the third milestone from Konigsberg,
he waited for his “intended,” who came up to time as duly as a mail-coach.
But for an accident,
Kant was a dead man. However, on considerations of “morality,” it happened that
the murderer preferred a little child, whom he saw playing in the road, to the
old transcendentalist: this child he murdered; and thus it happened that Kant
escaped. Such is the German account of the matter; but my opinion is, that the
murderer was an amateur, who felt how little would be gained to the cause of
good taste by murdering an old, arid, and adust metaphysician; there was no
room for display, as the man could not possibly look more like a mummy when
dead than he had done alive.
000
Thus, gentlemen, I have
traced the connection between philosophy and our art, until insensibly I find
that I have wandered into our own era. This I shall not take any pains to
characterize apart from that which preceded it, for, in fact, they have no
distinct character. The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, together with so
much of the nineteenth as we have yet seen, jointly compose the Augustan age of
murder. The finest work of the seventeenth century is, unquestionably, the
murder of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey, which has my entire approbation. At the same
time, it must be observed that the quantity of murder was not great in this
century, at least amongst our own artists; which, perhaps, is attributable to
the want of enlightened patronage. Sint Mæcenates, non deerunt, Flacce,
Marones. Consulting Grant’s “Observations on the Bills of Mortality”
(4th edition, Oxford, 1665), I find that, out of 229,250, who died in London
during one period of twenty years, in the seventeenth century, not more than
eighty-six were murdered; that is, about four and three tenths per annum. A
small number this, gentlemen, to found an academy upon; and certainly,
where the quantity is so small, we have a right to expect that the quality
should be first-rate. Perhaps it was; yet still I am of opinion that the best
artist in this century was not equal to the best in that which followed. For
instance, however praiseworthy the case of Sir Edmondbury Godfrey may be (and
nobody can be more sensible of its merits than I am), still, I cannot consent
to place it on a level with that of Mrs. Ruscombe of Bristol, either as to
originality of design, or boldness and breadth of style. This good lady’s
murder took place early in the reign of George III., a reign which was
notoriously favorable to the arts generally. She lived in College Green, with a
single maid-servant, neither of them having any pretension to the notice of
history but what they derived from the great artist whose workmanship I am
recording. One fine morning, when all Bristol was alive and in motion, some
suspicion arising, the neighbors forced an entrance into the house, and found
Mrs. Ruscombe murdered in her bedroom, and the servant murdered on the stairs:
this was at noon; and, not more than two hours before, both mistress and
servant had been seen alive. To the best of my remembrance, this was in 1764;
upwards of sixty years, therefore, have now elapsed, and yet the artist is still
undiscovered. The suspicions of posterity have settled upon two pretenders,—a
baker and a chimney-sweeper. But posterity is wrong; no unpractised artist
could have conceived so bold an idea as that of a noonday murder in the heart
of a great city. It was no obscure baker, gentlemen, or anonymous
chimney-sweeper, be assured, that executed this work. I know who it was. (Here
there was a general buzz, which at length broke out into open applause;
upon which the lecturer blushed, and went on with much earnestness.) For
Heaven’s sake, gentlemen, do not mistake me; it was not I that did it. I have
not the vanity to think myself equal to any such achievement; be assured that
you greatly overrate my poor talents; Mrs. Ruscombe’s affair was far beyond my
slender abilities. But I came to know who the artist was, from a celebrated
surgeon, who assisted at his dissection. This gentleman had a private museum in
the way of his profession, one corner of which was occupied by a cast from a
man of remarkably fine proportions.
“That,” said the
surgeon, “is a cast from the celebrated Lancashire highwayman, who concealed
his profession for some time from his neighbors, by drawing woollen stockings
over his horse’s legs, and in that way muffling the clatter which he must else
have made in riding up a flagged alley that led to his stable. At the time of
his execution for highway robbery, I was studying under Cruickshank; and the
man’s figure was so uncommonly fine, that no money or exertion was spared to
get into possession of him with the least possible delay. By the connivance of
the under-sheriff, he was cut down within the legal time, and instantly put
into a chaise and four; so that, when he reached Cruickshank’s he was
positively not dead. Mr.——, a young student at that time, had the honor of
giving him the coup de grace, and finishing the sentence of the
law.” This remarkable anecdote, which seemed to imply that all the gentlemen in
the dissecting-room were amateurs of our class, struck me a good deal; and I
was repeating it one day to a Lancashire lady, who thereupon informed me that
she had herself lived in the neighborhood of that highwayman, and well
remembered two circumstances, which combined, in the opinion of all his
neighbors, to fix upon him the credit of Mrs. Ruscombe’s affair. One was, the
fact of his absence for a whole fortnight at the period of that murder; the
other that, within a very little time after, the neighborhood of this
highwayman was deluged with dollars: now Mrs. Ruscombe was known to have
hoarded about two thousand of that coin. Be the artist, however, who he might,
the affair remains a durable monument of his genius; for such was the
impression of awe, and the sense of power left behind, by the strength of
conception manifested in this murder, that no tenant (as I was told in 1810)
had been found up to that time for Mrs. Ruscombe’s house.
But, whilst I thus
eulogize the Ruscombian case, let me not be supposed to overlook the many other
specimens of extraordinary merit spread over the face of this century. Such
cases, indeed, as that of Miss Bland, or of Captain Donnellan, and Sir
Theophilus Boughton, shall never have any countenance from me. Fie on these
dealers in poison, say I; can they not keep to the old honest way of cutting
throats, without introducing such abominable innovations from Italy? I consider
all these poisoning cases, compared with the legitimate style, as no better
than waxwork by the side of sculpture, or a lithographic print by the side of a
fine Volpato. But, dismissing these, there remain many excellent works of art
in a pure style, such as nobody need be ashamed to own, as every candid
connoisseur will admit. Candid, observe, I say; for great
allowances must be made in these cases; no artist can ever be sure of carrying
through his own fine preconception. Awkward disturbances will arise: people
will not submit to have their throats cut quietly; they will run, they will
kick, they will bite; and whilst the portrait-painter often has to complain of
too much torpor in his subject, the artist in our line is generally embarrassed
by too much animation. At the same time, however disagreeable to the artist,
this tendency in murder to excite and irritate the subject is certainly one of
its advantages to the world in general, which we ought not to overlook, since
it favors the development of latent talent. Jeremy Taylor notices, with
admiration, the extraordinary leaps which people will take under the influence
of fear. There was a striking instance of this in the recent case of the
M‘Keands; the boy cleared a height such as he will never clear again to his
dying day. Talents also of the most brilliant description for thumping, and
indeed for all the gymnastic exercises, have sometimes been developed by the
panic which accompanies our artists; talents else buried and hid under a bushel
to the possessors, as much as to their friends. I remember an interesting
illustration of this fact, in a case which I learned in Germany.
Riding one day in the
neighborhood of Munich, I overtook a distinguished amateur of our society,
whose name I shall conceal. This gentleman informed me that, finding himself
wearied with the frigid pleasures (so he called them) of mere amateurship, he
had quitted England for the continent,—meaning to practise a little
professionally. For this purpose he resorted to Germany, conceiving the police
in that part of Europe to be more heavy and drowsy than elsewhere. His début,
as a practitioner, took place at Mannheim; and, knowing me to be a brother
amateur, he freely communicated the whole of his maiden adventure. “Opposite to
my lodging,” said he, “lived a baker: he was somewhat of a miser, and lived
quite alone. Whether it were his great expanse of chalky face, or what else, I
know not, but the fact was, I ‘fancied’ him, and resolved to commence business
upon his throat, which, by the way, he always carried bare,—a fashion which is
very irritating to my desires. Precisely at eight o’clock in the evening, I
observed that he regularly shut up his windows. One night I watched him when
thus engaged,—bolted in after him,—locked the door,—and, addressing him with
great suavity, acquainted him with the nature of my errand; at the same time
advising him to make no resistance, which would be mutually unpleasant. So saying,
I drew out my tools, and was proceeding to operate. But at this spectacle, the
baker, who seemed to have been struck by catalepsy at my first announce, awoke
into tremendous agitation. ‘I will not be murdered!’ he
shrieked aloud; ‘what for will I lose my precious throat?’ ‘What for?’ said I;
‘if for no other reason, for this,—that you put alum into your bread. But no
matter, alum or no alum (for I was resolved to forestall any argument on that
point), know that I am a virtuoso in the art of murder, am desirous of
improving myself in its details, and am enamored of your vast surface of
throat, to which I am determined to be a customer.’ ‘Is it so?’ said he, ‘but
I’ll find you a customer in another line.’ And so saying, he threw himself
into a boxing attitude. The very idea of his boxing struck me as ludicrous. It
is true, a London baker had distinguished himself in the ring, and became known
to fame under the title of the Master of the Rolls; but he was young and
unspoiled; whereas, this man was a monstrous feather-bed in person, fifty years
old, and totally out of condition. Spite of all this, however, and contending
against me, who am a master in the art, he made so desperate a defence that
many times I feared he might turn the tables upon me; and that I, an amateur,
might be murdered by a rascally baker. What a situation! Minds of sensibility
will sympathize with my anxiety. How severe it was, you may understand by this
that for the first thirteen rounds the baker had the advantage. Round the
fourteenth, I received a blow on the right eye, which closed it up; in the end,
I believe, this was my salvation; for the anger it roused in me was so great
that, in this and every one of the three following rounds, I floored the baker.
“Round 18th. The baker
came up piping, and manifestly the worse for wear. His geometrical exploits in
the four last rounds had done him no good. However, he showed some skill in
stopping a message which I was sending to his cadaverous mug: in delivering
which, my foot slipped, and I went down.
“Round 19th. Surveying
the baker, I became ashamed of having been so much bothered by a shapeless mass
of dough; and I went in fiercely, and administered some severe punishment. A
rally took place,—both went down,—baker undermost,—ten to three on amateur.
“Round 20th. The baker
jumped up with surprising agility: indeed, he managed his pins capitally, and
fought wonderfully, considering that he was drenched in perspiration; but the
shine was now taken out of him, and his game was the mere effect of panic. It
was now clear that he could not last much longer. In the course of this round
we tried the weaving system, in which I had greatly the advantage, and hit him
repeatedly on the conk. My reason for this was, that his conk was covered with carbuncles;
and I thought I should vex him by taking such liberties with his conk, which in
fact I did.
“The three next rounds,
the master of the rolls staggered about like a cow on the ice. Seeing how
matters stood, in round twenty-fourth I whispered something into his ear, which
sent him down like a shot. It was nothing more than my private opinion of the
value of his throat at an annuity office. This little confidential whisker
affected him greatly; the very perspiration was frozen on his face, and for the
next two rounds I had it all my own way. And when I called time for
the twenty-seventh round, he lay like a log on the floor.”
“After which,” said I to
the amateur, “it may be presumed that you accomplished your purpose.” “You are
right,” said he, mildly, “I did; and a great satisfaction, you know, it was to
my mind, for by this means I killed two birds with one stone”; meaning that he
had both thumped the baker and murdered him. Now, for the life of me, I could
not see that; for, on the contrary, to my mind it appeared that he
had taken two stones to kill one bird, having been obliged to take the conceit
out of him first with his fist, and then with his tools. But no matter for
his logic. The moral of his story was good, for it showed what an astonishing
stimulus to latent talent is contained in any reasonable prospect of being
murdered. A pursy, unwieldy, half-cataleptic baker of Mannheim had absolutely
fought six-and-twenty rounds with an accomplished English boxer merely upon
this inspiration; so greatly was natural genius exalted and sublimed by the
genial presence of his murderer.
Really, gentlemen, when
one hears of such things as these, it becomes a duty, perhaps, a little to
soften that extreme asperity with which most men speak of murder. To hear
people talk, you would suppose that all the disadvantages and inconveniences
were on the side of being murdered, and that there were none at all in not being
murdered. But considerate men think otherwise. “Certainly,” says Jeremy Taylor,
“it is a less temporal evil to fall by the rudeness of a sword than the
violence of a fever; and the axe” (to which he might have added the
ship-carpenter’s mallet and the crow-bar) “is a much less affliction than a
strangury.” Very true; the bishop talks like a wise man and an amateur, as he
is; and another great philosopher, Marcus Aurelius, was equally above the
vulgar prejudices on this subject. He declares it to be one of “the noblest
functions of reason to know whether it is time to walk out of the world or
not.” (Book III., Collers’s Translation.) No sort of knowledge being rarer than
this, surely that man must be a most philanthropic character,
who undertakes to instruct people in this branch of knowledge gratis, and at no
little hazard to himself. All this, however, I throw out only in the way
of speculation to future moralists; declaring in the mean time my own private
conviction, that very few men commit murder upon philanthropic or patriotic
principles, and repeating what I have already said once at least,—that, as to
the majority of murderers, they are very incorrect characters.
With respect to
Williams’s murders, the sublimest and most entire in their excellence that ever
were committed, I shall not allow myself to speak incidentally. Nothing less
than an entire lecture, or even an entire course of lectures, would suffice to
expound their merits. But one curious fact, connected with his case, I shall
mention, because it seems to imply that the blaze of his genius absolutely
dazzled the eye of criminal justice. You all remember, I doubt not, that the
instruments with which he executed his first great work (the murder of the
Marrs) were a ship-carpenter’s mallet and a knife. Now, the mallet belonged to
an old Swede, one John Peterson, and bore his initials. This instrument
Williams left behind him, in Marr’s house, and it fell into the hands of the
magistrates. Now, gentlemen, it is a fact that the publication of this
circumstance of the initials led immediately to the apprehension of Williams,
and, if made earlier, would have prevented his second great work, the murder of
the Williamsons, which took place precisely twelve days after. But the
magistrates kept back this fact from the public for the entire twelve days, and
until that second work was accomplished. That finished, they published it,
apparently feeling that Williams had now done enough for his fame, and that his
glory was at length placed beyond the reach of accident.
As to Mr. Thurtell’s
case, I know not what to say. Naturally, I have every disposition to think
highly of my predecessor in the chair of this society; and I acknowledge that
his lectures were unexceptionable. But, speaking ingenuously, I do really think
that his principal performance, as an artist, has been much overrated. I admit
that at first I was myself carried away by the general enthusiasm. On the
morning when the murder was made known in London, there was the fullest meeting
of amateurs that I have ever known since the days of Williams; old bedridden
connoisseurs, who had got into a peevish way of sneering and complaining “that
there was nothing doing,” now hobbled down to our clubroom: such hilarity, such
benign expression of general satisfaction, I have rarely witnessed. On every
side you saw people shaking hands, congratulating each other, and forming
dinner-parties for the evening; and nothing was to be heard but triumphant
challenges of, “Well! will this do?” “Is this the
right thing?” “Are you satisfied at last?” But, in the midst of this, I
remember we all grew silent on hearing the old cynical amateur, L. S——,
that laudator temporis acti, stumping along with his wooden leg; he
entered the room with his usual scowl, and, as he advanced, he continued to
growl and stutter the whole way. “Not an original idea in the whole piece,—mere
plagiarism,—base plagiarism from hints that I threw out! Besides, his style is
as hard as Albert Durer, and as coarse as Fuseli.” Many thought that this was
mere jealousy and general waspishness; but I confess that when the first
glow of enthusiasm had subsided, I have found most judicious critics to agree
that there was something falsetto in the style of Thurtell.
The fact is, he was a member of our society, which naturally gave a friendly
bias to our judgments; and his person was universally familiar to the cockneys,
which gave him, with the whole London public, a temporary popularity, that his
pretensions are not capable of supporting; for opinionum commenta delet
dies, naturæ judicia confirmat. There was, however, an unfinished design of
Thurtell’s for the murder of a man with a pair of dumbbells, which I admired
greatly; it was a mere outline, that he never completed; but to my mind it
seemed every way superior to his chief work. I remember that there was great
regret expressed by some amateurs that this sketch should have been left in an
unfinished state: but there I cannot agree with them; for the fragments and
first bold outlines of original artists have often a felicity about them which
is apt to vanish in the management of the details.
The case of the M‘Keands
I consider far beyond the vaunted performance of Thurtell,—indeed, above all
praise; and bearing that relation, in fact, to the immortal works of Williams
which the Æneid bears to the Iliad.
But it is now time that
I should say a few words about the principles of murder, not with a view to
regulate your practice, but your judgment: as to old women, and the mob of
newspaper readers, they are pleased with anything, provided it is bloody
enough. But the mind of sensibility requires something more. First,
then, let us speak of the kind of person who is adapted to the purpose of
the murderer; secondly, of the place where; thirdly, of
the time when, and other little circumstances.
As to the person, I
suppose it is evident that he ought to be a good man; because, if he were not,
he might himself, by possibility, be contemplating murder at the very time; and
such “diamond-cut-diamond” tussles, though pleasant enough where nothing better
is stirring, are really not what a critic can allow himself to call murders. I
could mention some people (I name no names) who have been murdered by other
people in a dark lane; and so far all seemed correct enough; but, on looking
further into the matter, the public have become aware that the murdered party
was himself, at the moment, planning to rob his murderer, at the least, and
possibly to murder him, if he had been strong enough. Whenever that is the
case, or may be thought to be the case, farewell to all the genuine effects of
the art. For the final purpose of murder, considered as a fine art, is
precisely the same as that of tragedy, in Aristotle’s account of it, namely,
“to cleanse the heart by means of pity and terror.” Now, terror there may be,
but how can there be any pity for one tiger destroyed by another tiger?
It is also evident that
the person selected ought not to be a public character. For instance, no
judicious artist would have attempted to murder Abraham Newland. For the case
was this: everybody read so much about Abraham Newland, and so few people ever
saw him, that there was a fixed belief that he was an abstract idea. And I
remember that once, when I happened to mention that I had dined at a
coffee-house in company with Abraham Newland, everybody looked scornfully at
me, as though I had pretended to have played at billiards with Prester John, or
to have had an affair of honor with the Pope. And, by the way, the Pope would
be a very improper person to murder: for he has such a virtual ubiquity as the
father of Christendom, and, like the cuckoo, is so often heard but never seen,
that I suspect most people regard him also as an abstract
idea. Where, indeed, a public character is in the habit of giving dinners,
“with every delicacy of the season,” the case is very different: every person is
satisfied that he is no abstract idea; and, therefore, there
can be no impropriety in murdering him; only that his murder will fall into the
class of assassinations, which I have not yet treated.
Thirdly. The subject chosen ought to be in good
health; for it is absolutely barbarous to murder a sick person, who is usually
quite unable to bear it. On this principle, no cockney ought to be chosen who
is above twenty-five, for after that age he is sure to be dyspeptic. Or at
least, if a man will hunt in that warren, he ought to murder a couple at one
time; if the cockneys chosen should be tailors, he will of course think it his
duty, on the old-established equation, to murder eighteen. And, here, in this
attention to the comfort of sick people, you will observe the usual effect of a
fine art to soften and refine the feelings. The world in general, gentlemen,
are very bloody-minded; and all they want in a murder is a copious effusion of
blood; gaudy display in this point is enough for them. But the
enlightened connoisseur is more refined in his taste; and from our art, as
from all the other liberal arts when thoroughly cultivated, the result is, to
improve and to humanize the heart; so true is it, that
“Ingenuas didicisse
fideliter artes,
Emollit mores, nec sinit esse feros.”
A philosophic friend,
well known for his philanthropy and general benignity, suggests that the
subject chosen ought also to have a family of young children wholly dependent
on his exertions, by way of deepening the pathos. And, undoubtedly, this is a
judicious caution. Yet I would not insist too keenly on this condition. Severe
good taste unquestionably demands it; but still, where the man was otherwise
unobjectionable in point of morals and health, I would not look with too
curious a jealousy to a restriction which might have the effect of narrowing
the artist’s sphere.
So much for the person.
As to the time, the place, and the tools, I have many things to say, which at
present I have no room for. The good sense of the practitioner has usually
directed him to night and privacy. Yet there have not been wanting cases where
this rule was departed from with excellent effect. In respect to time, Mrs.
Ruscombe’s case is a beautiful exception, which I have already noticed; and in
respect both to time and place, there is a fine exception in the annals of
Edinburgh (year 1805), familiar to every child in Edinburgh, but which has
unaccountably been defrauded of its due portion of fame amongst English
amateurs. The case I mean is that of a porter to one of the banks, who was
murdered whilst carrying a bag of money, in broad daylight, on turning out
of the High Street, one of the most public streets in Europe, and the murderer
is to this hour undiscovered.
“Sed fugit interea,
fugit irreparabile tempus,
Singula dum capti circumvectamur amore.”
And now, gentlemen, in
conclusion, let me again solemnly disclaim all pretensions on my own part to
the character of a professional man. I never attempted any murder in my life,
except in the year 1801, upon the body of a tom-cat; and that turned
out differently from my intention. My purpose, I own, was downright murder.
“Semper ego auditor tantum?” said I, “nunquamne reponam?” And I went down
stairs in search of Tom at one o’clock on a dark night, with the “animus” and
no doubt with the fiendish looks of a murderer. But when I found him, he was in
the act of plundering the pantry of bread and other things. Now this gave a new
turn to the affair; for the time being one of general scarcity, when even
Christians were reduced to the use of potato-bread, rice-bread, and all sorts
of things, it was downright treason in a tom-cat to be wasting good
wheaten-bread in the way he was doing. It instantly became a patriotic duty to
put him to death; and as I raised aloft and shook the glittering steel, I
fancied myself rising like Brutus, effulgent from a crowd of patriots, and, as
I stabbed him, I
“Called aloud on Tully’s
name,
And bade the father of his country hail!”
Since then, what
wandering thoughts I may have had of attempting the life of an ancient ewe, of
a superannuated hen, and such “small deer,” are locked up in the secrets of my
own breast; but for the higher departments of the art, I confess myself to be
utterly unfit. My ambition does not rise so high. No, gentlemen, in the words
of Horace,—
“Fungar vice cotis,
acutum
Reddere quæ ferrum valet, exsors ipsa secandi.”
7.THE CAPTAIN’S STORY.
HAVE been asked to tell
what I know of the case of Joseph C. Wylie, whose mysterious disappearance
caused so much excitement in Cincinnati when it occurred. That was in ’58,
however, before the war; and I had supposed all trace of the affair had been
swept from the public mind by the events which followed. Indeed, I see no
reason for reviving it now, except that it bears more fully than any evidence I
have ever heard upon the curious matter called spiritualism, and I have thought
(though I am only a plain man, not used to dealing in such whimseys) it offers
a key to unlock the riddle.
Wylie was a river-hand;
ran the Ohio and Lower Mississippi as clerk and captain on several
stern-wheelers, so came to be known pretty generally along shore. He was with
me as second clerk when the thing happened. I was running the Jacob Strader,
one of the largest steamboats on the Mississippi. I took little account of the
fellow; he was a small, red-headed, weak-eyed man, shambling lazily about,
whose legs and arms seemed scarcely to have gristle enough in them to hold
them firmly together.
The only noteworthy
trait about him was that he never touched liquor or a card, but found his
amusement, instead, in sitting with some of the deck hands below, telling long
pointless yarns. I had to stop it at last. That runs contrary to my notions of
discipline.
It was in April that he
disappeared, like a flea, under my very eyes. The Strader lay at the wharf, at
Cincinnati; it was Sunday, about noon; she was to get up steam at seven o’clock
next morning. I walked up the levee, and just off the cobble-stones met Wylie. He
had a drum of figs in his hand which he had just bought from some pedler on the
David Swan, and was going to take home to his little Joe, in Cairo, he said, as
he walked alongside of me.
I met John Fordyce, and
stopped to get a light of him; Wylie went into a shanty fitted up as a shop for
the sale of cigars, newspapers, and the like; he wanted a “Despatch,” he said.
The shop was but a single room, opening, front and back, on the wide (and at
that hour on Sunday morning), empty wharf; a square, plank-built affair, made
to hold the two counters and a stove in the middle. Wylie went into it, as I
said, but out of it he was never seen to come alive. I stood talking with
Fordyce for some minutes, then called the clerk, and when he did not answer,
went in search of him, but found only the boy who tended the shop, asleep under
the counter. Wylie was not there, nor on the boat, nor on the wharf. He was
nowhere, so far as the sharpest eyes of the Cincinnati police could discover.
The thing staggered me
when I had time to take it home and realize that the man was actually gone;
spirited away in broad daylight, before my face. It was absurd, impossible; yet
it struck me with a sort of horror that did not belong to midnight murder.
They called it murder in
the papers; there was a great outcry; but where was the foul play? The boy (a
child of ten) had heard or seen nothing; it was impossible that Wylie could
have been foully dealt with, and no sound or cry reach Fordyce or me, half a
dozen feet off. It was just as impossible that he could have left the shop,
unseen by us on the wide, open levee. That he could have gone voluntarily,
nobody hinted. The poor fellow had but few ideas beyond his wife and boy, Joe.
His trunk on board was found filled with cheap summer clothes for them both,
some tinware, a japanned tea-tray, a china mug; trifles which he had gathered
up at auctions, and was taking to Cairo to make their little home comfortable.
He had made an engagement to go out with the first clerk that afternoon; his clean
shirt, collar, and shaving apparatus were all laid out in his state-room.
But that was the last of
him. It only remained to gather up these things and carry them with the news to
his wife.
I shirked that. I cannot
face a woman in trouble. I ordered Stein, who had been a sort of crony of his,
to do it. Stein was the steward, and was leaving the boat. He had a good berth
offered to him in St. Louis, he said; so that I knew he had time to see Wylie’s
widow, and break it gently to her.
If widow she was. If Wylie
had died naturally I would have dismissed him from my mind; but the matter
rankled there, as I might say, from its very doubt and mystery.
About two years
afterward, therefore, when Warrick brought a little boy on board, as the boat
lay at Cairo, and told me it was Wylie’s son, I found myself going, again and
again, to the part of the deck where the child was playing, feeling pained to
notice how coarsely dressed it was, and how pinched, even hunger-bitten, the
little honest face.
“Is it going so badly
with her?” I asked.
Warrick nodded, saying
aloud, “Joe’s shaken with the whooping-cough, Captain. He’s the deuce of a boy
for sniffing up all the ailments that are going up and down the river.”
Joe looked up and
laughed.
“He had better shake
them down into the river again, then,” I said. “Let him and his mother come
aboard for a trip or two. Nothing like air off of water for that whoop, the old
women say.”
I sent Warrick to urge
the plan on Mrs. Wylie. I knew it was not the air that was needed so much as
good, wholesome food. Warrick set apart the best state-room for her, and I
dropped in myself to see that it was all in order.
In the evening, before
we started, Warrick brought her aboard and into the cabin where I was. I found
that she had some exaggerated notions about one or two good turns I had done
her husband, and a trifle which I had sent to her when he was lost; so, after
that, I held aloof from her. I hate philandering. I kept an eye, though,
to see how she fared,—on the little body in her rusty black gown, shying round
with Joe in the corners, out of the way of the ladies who went sweeping their
long dresses up and down.
I soon found, however,
that all the men on board who had known Wylie, from Warrick down, vied with
each other in treating her with a sort of patronizing respect; even Jake, the
black cook, was continually sending up little messes for her and Joe. She was
but a poor mouse of a woman, who had made a god of that stupid little weak-eyed
fellow, and of his boy after he was gone; take her on politics, or even gossip,
anything outside of Wylie and her child, and there was nothing in her. Warrick
told me that she had never been outside of Cairo before, and the near village
of Blandville, where she had been a sempstress before her marriage; this
journey was like a glimpse of a new world to her. I used to see her sitting in
a dark corner on deck until late in the night, her eyes strained over the long
stretch of shore as we floated by; and I could understand how the heavy, wooded
hills, crouching like sullen beasts along the water’s edge, or the miles and
miles of yellow cane-brake lying flat and barren in the desolate, homesick
twilight of a winter’s day, might have a different meaning to the lonely woman,
and to us, who counted them only as “a run” of so many hours.
She was sitting this way
one evening on our back trip, when the boat stopped to wood at a place called
by the boatmen Dead Man’s Riffle. Warrick was near me, watching her.
“She wears black,” he
said, at last. “Now for me,” cutting off a quid of tobacco, “I never believed
Joe Wylie was dead. No, it was a bad bit of work, dead or alive,—bad.”
“It is work I would give
much to see cleared up, before I die,” I said. Warrick and I were walking up
and down the hurricane-deck.
“Would you?” he said,
slowly, chewing and glancing up at me,—“would you? There’s a way. But no
matter—” stopping short and looking ashamed.
I said nothing. I never
urge a man to speak, if he has ever so little mind to hold his tongue quiet.
But Warrick had some notion that troubled him. He walked nearer at each turn to
the place where a stout, short young woman was sitting, dressed in brown
linsey. There was nothing remarkable about her face, which was heavy and dull,
if we except a pair of thick, dead, fishy gray eyes.
“Do you see that girl?”
he jerked out. “Many of the men aboard would say that she could tell you
anything you want to know; the dead are about her all the time, they say. I don’t
say it, Captain, mind; I’m not such a fool.”
“I should hope not,
Warrick,” I said, gravely, and began to talk of something else. But somehow the
matter stuck in my mind. The next day we stopped for freight at Natchez. I went
up into the city with one of the passengers. Old Jimmy A. it was,—anybody on
the Western waters will know who I mean; for strangers I will only say that A.
was one of the most thorough misers I ever knew. He was an extensive
stock-broker and speculator in Western lands. When his wife lived he had
always consulted her, and abode by her advice in his business. I believe he
mourned for the old woman sincerely, though when she died he had taken the
ribbon away with which the women had bound her chin and put twine instead, to
save a penny.
A. was my companion, as
I said. Coming down into the old town a sudden idea struck me.
“These lots are cheap,
Mr. A.,” I said. “Buy them and put up good dwellings on them, and your fortune
is made. Real estate is going up here daily.”
The old man seized on
the plan eagerly, and held me by the coat while he went about the lots,
calculating, muttering, chuckling to himself.
“It’s a good notion,
very good. This swamp could be drained,—it would bring in eleven per cent,
eleven and a half—and a half; I wish I knew what Ann would think of it, poor
Ann! I’ve a great mind to go into it; I have indeed.”
It was with difficulty I
got the old fellow away and on board in time before the boat put off. It was
growing dusk as we stepped off the plank on deck. A. still clung to me,
following me up and down, charging me to say nothing of the plan until he had
well considered it. As we went up to the outer cabin we met the woman to whom
Warrick had directed my notice the day before. She was pacing up and down with
heavy, masculine steps; she stood still as we came up; her dead gray eyes fell
on A. and rested there with a curious absorbing look; which, perhaps, I should
not have seen but for Warrick’s warning.
She remained quite quiet
until we had passed and returned; then stooping suddenly to a table before
her, wrote on a scrap of paper, and handed it to the old man, walking away
after she had done so; every motion lifeless, mechanical, like a clumsy machine
of wood set in action.
A. had not seen her, I
think, until she thrust the paper into his hand; he stared, pulled at his
ragged gray beard, and then peered at it through his spectacles. There was a
queer, scared little noise in his throat, like the crow of a chicken.
“Why, Captain, look
here! this is—is—” holding out the dirty scrap of paper.
It was a message from
his wife. “Do not touch real estate, except to mortgage,” she said. “The
drainage of the swamp would eat up four years’ profits.”
(“I thought of that,” he
interrupted, quickly.) “Do not withdraw your money from P. C.”
“That is all,” I said.
“Who is this woman, Mr. A.?”
“God knows. But no human
being alive knew of that P. C. money. Ann did.” His face was
colorless and his teeth chattered. We went to the woman. She was apparently
stolid, and but half educated; I saw no sign of cunning, even shrewdness, about
her.
“The message had been
given to her,” she said. “How, she did not know.”
“From a spirit?”
“She could not say that.
She supposed so. They called her a writing medium.”
Afterward she said,
“This thing would ruin her,” crying in a feeble, stupid way. She had been an
operative in some mill in Cincinnati, we were told, and was discharged in
consequence of it. The “manifestations” were followed by attacks of something
resembling paralysis, which would soon leave her helpless. I left the old man
talking to her.
Warrick came to me that
evening. He had heard of the affair. “Captain,” he said, “I’m going to try if
no tidings can be had from Joe Wylie. Have I your permission?” I nodded,
shortly. Warrick’s broad face was pale and anxious. I sat for a while looking
at the closed door of the little office into which they had gone. Then I got up
and followed them. The woman (Lusk was her name) was there, Warrick, and the
wife of the carpenter,—a shrewd, sensible woman,—who had been a friend of
Wylie’s, as most women were.
She and the girl sat
facing each other at a table on which flared a dirty oil lamp. Warrick leaned
on the back of a chair with both hands, watching the girl’s face.
“She knows what she’s
got to do, Captain,” vigorously chewing and spitting, but not lifting his eyes.
“I told her to consult her familiar spirit, or whatever it is. Let’s have him
up! Let’s know what’s become of Joe, good or bad.”
I had seen Warrick cool
and grave when a burning boat was drifting with all aboard right into the
rapids; but now he was a coward in every bone of his body; his very voice grew
piping and boisterous as the woman turned her square, heavy face toward him,
and the gray eyes, which they said saw the dead, fell on his.
For the girl, I observed
that she had the appearance of extreme nervous dejection; her breath was
uncertain and feeble; her lips blue. I touched her and found that the blood had
almost ceased to circulate. Her temples were hot; hands icy cold; the pupils of
the eyes contracted. The look was fastened into Warrick. I can
describe it in no other way. I shook her, but could not loosen the hold of it.
It was as if she drew the life out of his burly big body with her dull eyes.
“Bring up the spirit of
Wylie, my woman,” he said, with a loud, uneasy laugh that suddenly died into
profound silence.
She shook her head;
raised her forefinger slowly, pointing into the shadow behind him.
“What do you see?”
“I see a
ship—three-masted—a bark.” (Warrick started, nodding his head with a muttered
oath.) “The sea is frozen; the ship is wedged between masses of ice; the sky is
like a bronze plane above; there is neither sun nor wind.”
“On a whaler!” burst in
Warrick. “I always knew it! I was in just such a scrape, off—Go on, go on.”
“There are two men on
deck. One is heavily built, gray-headed; the other is spare, short, with red
hair. There is a blood-mark on his chin.”
“Wylie! Alive!”
“Alive. His clothes are
gray—”
“He wore gray the day he
left,” said Warrick. “But, come to think of it now, he wouldn’t—”
“I was wrong. He wears a
sailor’s dress.”
She got up hastily,
putting her hand to her forehead. Her face was covered with a cold sweat. “Nothing—nothing!
I am sick. Stop—no more,” she gasped.
Mrs. Pallet, the
carpenter’s wife, put her arm about her. “I’ll take her to her room, Captain?”
looking at me. “There’s no cheating in her, at any rate,” as she led her out.
“It’s my belief it’s the Devil’s work.”
Warrick straightened
himself and drew a long breath. “Do you think it is the Devil’s work, sir?”
“God knows.”
“It is the truth, whether
or no. Wylie always had a hankering for a sea life. He used to listen to my old
whaling yarns twenty times over. And I’ve heard lately, Captain, that poor Joe
was deep in debt when he disappeared. Some old matters, before he came aboard
the Strader. He had a reason for going. But Ellen thinks him dead,—thinks him
dead,” stroking his whiskers. “Would you tell her of this now, eh, Captain?”
looking up.
“Yes, I would,” after a
pause. “It can do no harm. But gently, Warrick, gently.”
It did do harm, however
gently it was told. The next day Wylie’s wife came to me where I stood alone,
near the texas. Her nose was red from crying, and her eyes angry, which made
the rest of her face more hunger-nipped and pale. She touched my sleeve, and
then drew off, holding her little boy by the hand.
“Captain Roberts,” she
said, in a low, steady voice, “there is a woman on the boat who pretends to
have seen my husband alive. If he is alive, he has deserted me. He is dead.”
“Be calm, madam.”
“He is dead. You shall
not think ill of Joe.” She was silent a moment, holding her throat with one
hand. “If he is alive, he has deserted me, and—I’ll tell you, Captain Roberts,
but I never meant to tell any living man. When you brought me and Joe on the
boat, I hadn’t touched meat for four months. It took all I could make to keep
life in the boy, and barely that. I went out scrubbing when sewing failed me. I
scrubbed and whitewashed. I didn’t beg. Do you think Joe would have left me to
that? and him alive? He’s dead. There’s some days I’ve went through—if Joe had
been on the face of the earth he’d have come to me them days. He’s dead; he’s
waiting, somewheres—”
She held little Joe
tighter by the hand, looking beyond me—God knows where—into the place where old
Joe waited for her, I suppose; the somewheres where the poor starved soul hoped
to find the comfort and love of her married life again. I hesitated. “Would you
like to see this woman? I will not say that I credit her assertions, but there
is a curious—”
She drew herself up,
growing pale. “I, sir? No; I only wished that you should do my husband justice.
For the woman—no matter. I will not detain you, Captain Roberts.” And so,
scarcely waiting for me to speak to the boy, she drew him away with her.
“That cut Ellen hard,”
Warrick said,—“hard. These women would rather a man should die any day than
cease to care for them. But it’s true. Joe Wylie went on a whaler, sir.”
The girl Lusk went
ashore at New Albany, and I saw her no more. She became afterward a noted
medium, I believe; and old A., by the way, used to consult her in all of
his undertakings, or rather his wife, through her.
The matter puzzled me. I
did not believe the spirits of the dead had anything to do
with it; though the woman, before she went off the boat, brought me a message
from one who has been gone from me this many a year. I will say no more of
this. Since she died I have not named her name. I did not believe the words
came from her. I did not believe the girl Lusk was an impostor. I thought, as
every impartial, cool observer must, that there was a something—not
charlatanism—in this matter, and I think, in the end, I got the key to it; but
of that you must judge.
The matter puzzled and
troubled me so much that I determined to try an experiment, which, perhaps, was
cruel. I took Ellen to a medium, without warning her of my intention. Warrick
told me of her,—“She has never showed herself in public.” He said, “She takes
no pay. That makes me trust her. She’s miserably poor, too; a huckster in the
Cincinnati market.”
It was early dawn when I
took Ellen to her. She occupied a corner of the market as a fruit and vegetable
stall, and as we came near was hanging nets of apples and oranges in front of
it, I remember. A skinny, sour-visaged, middle-aged woman, dressed in a sluttish
gown and calico sun-bonnet. I noticed the same peculiarity in the eye as in the
girl Lusk: they were opaque, gray, dead. The market-house was nearly empty; a
few butchers were arranging their meat at some distance inside, or swallowing
their coffee at the eating-stalls by the light of a few candles. This
woman’s stall was out on the solitary street, however, and the pleasant morning
light shone about it.
I made a pretence of
buying some fruit. “This is the business for which I brought you ashore,” I
said to Ellen.
It was impossible that
the woman could have heard me, yet she turned sharply, eying Ellen as she came
forward.
“It was for no oranges
you come. Why didn’t ye say what you come for? If there’s any dead belonging to
ye, I’ll bring ye word from them. There’s spirits all about me; there’s spirits
at yer back, there’s spirits fillin’ the street. What’ll you have, my young
man?” to a boy who stopped. “Eight and ten cents them is.”
Ellen drew back. “Let us
go, let us go,” she said.
At that moment a series
of soft double-knocks, as if made by two knuckles of a gloved hand, sounded all
about us,—under the pavement, on the roof, on the stall.
“There’s yer
change.—I’ve a message for you,” suddenly facing Ellen; “there’s a
spirit here to speak to you.”
“He is dead, then?”
catching both hands together as if to support herself.
The woman took down a
greasy card, on which the alphabet was printed, from a nail where it hung, and
ran her pencil lightly along it, as the raps continued in swift, soft
succession. She spelled out this message:—
“I think of you here. Of
you and Joe. You will come to me.”
“Where—how was it done?”
I cried.
The woman glanced at
Ellen, who leaned against the edge of the block.
“I was murdered; drugged
and murdered,” was the answer.
“He is dead. There is no
chance any more.” That was all she said, with a strange inconsistency,
forgetting her anger of the other day. “There is no chance, no chance,” I heard
her mutter, as we went back to the boat; “he’s gone now.”
The blow was as hard as
if it had struck her for the first time. I told Warrick the story without
comment.
“It goes dead against
the other,” he exclaimed. “And yet where did either woman get their knowledge
of the business we wanted cleared. The blood-mark on the chin, the possibility
that the dead man had been drugged and murdered? There’s truth in it, in all
the muddle.”
I said nothing. But the
matter had taken a hold on me which I could not shake off. I determined to look
through the absurdity and mystery of this so-called spiritualism until I had
discovered the truth which Warrick believed lay in it. I could not divest
myself, either, of an unaccountable impression that at last we were upon the
track of the missing man.
I induced Mrs. Wylie to
remain on the boat during its next run, for the boy’s sake, who grew stronger
and more rugged every day. There was the making of a man in the little fellow;
he had a hearty, straightforward look in his puny face, that made a friend of
everybody. For the woman, from the day when the message came to her from
her husband, dead, she gave way in mind or body as if some sinew had been
snapped which had held her up. I fancied that unconsciously she had been
keeping some vague hope alive which was gone now, forever. She crept out now to
the hurricane-deck, and sat all day; where her look settled, or her hands fell
on her lap, there they rested, immovable. As I knew her better, I discovered
why the men held her in such a pitying aspect. She was a simple-hearted,
credulous creature, such as everybody feels bound and anxious to take care of
when they are left drifting about the world.
So we made our way up to
the headwaters of the Ohio. It was late in October, I remember,—warm, yellow
sunshine by day, and cold nights. The fields nipped brown and red in the early
frosts. I used to think if anything could take the poor woman’s thoughts off
the dead, the cheerful sights and sounds along shore ought to do it. The water
was unusually clear, and curdled and bubbled back from the edge of the boat all
day, filled with a frothed, green light; the hills on both sides kept rising
back and back to the sky beyond, mottled with purple and crimson and blackish
greens; we passed thousands of little islands shying out of the current, which
were mere beds of feathery moss and golden-rod. Then there were pretty, new
little villages, and the busy larger towns, and farms, at long intervals; and
when these were passed we floated into the deep solitude again. I noticed it
the more because we were out of our usual run; the Strader plied then between
Louisville and New Orleans. But the woman saw nothing of it, I think.
When we reached
Pittsburg, and had discharged cargo, I determined, with Warrick, to make a
final test of the matter. F. was then in the city, just back from England, the
most successful medium, next to Home, who ever left the States. He was willing,
“for a consideration,” to hold a private séance and bring us
in contact with any of the dead.
He was hardly the person
to whom one would think St. Peter would have lent his keys for ever so short a
time; an oily, bloated sensualist, with thick lips, and thicker eyelids half
closed over a dull, sleepy eye. He was dressed like an Orleans blackleg, gaudy
with purple velvet waistcoat and flash jewelry. But if there was any truth in
spiritualism, here was its interpreter. I engaged him to come on board on
Saturday evening; no one was to be present but Warrick, Ellen, and myself; the
boat was empty at the time, with the exception of its regular crew, below.
There was but little persuasion needed to induce Ellen to consent.
“He may bring me another
message,” with a light flickering into her eyes. “Joe will be glad to find the
way.” It is people like Ellen who are always sure converts of spiritualism; it
seems so natural to them that their dead should come back, that they are blind
to any absurd discrepancies in the manner. On Saturday morning, on the wharf, I
met Stein, who had left the boat some two years before, and remembering his old
liking for Joe, told him what we were about to do. Stein was a hard-headed,
shrewd little Yankee; I was surprised, therefore, to see how discomposed and
startled he appeared at the first mention of the affair; he denounced F. as a
humbug with a great deal of heat, and tried to persuade and chaff me out
of it; but finding he could not, asked leave to come himself to the séance.
“You’re bitten,
Captain,” he said. “It will be easy to persuade you that you see ghosts
yourself. You had better let me bring a little daylight with me.”
I told Warrick of my
meeting with Stein, and he, having nothing else to do, sauntered off in the
afternoon to bring him down. I told Ellen also, who, to my surprise, reddened
and grew pale, when I named him.
“He is a man whom I have
no reason to like,” she said. “But it does not matter.”
In the evening F. came
on board, stopping in the outer cabin, where we were soon joined by Stein. We
waited an hour for Warrick, who did not return, and then entered the saloon
where Ellen was seated. I noticed that Stein drew back, muttering, “You did not
tell me that woman was here,” and that no greeting passed between them.
The séance proceeded
according to the usual formula. We sat around a bare table, on which were
placed by Stein and myself the names of those whom we wished to appear written
on scraps of paper rolled up in pellets, and laid in a small heap. Ellen wrote
none. “He will come,” she said, simply.
But few raps were heard.
F. delivered the messages by writing, his fat, lumpy hand moving spasmodically
over the sheets of paper. From several of the names written on the pellets came
communications, vague and meaningless, any one of which might have been
exchanged for the other without loss of force.
F. glanced shrewdly
around from time to time, fixing his strange, introverted gaze oftenest on
Ellen and little Joe, who had crept in and stood looking him boldly in the
face. He turned to me.
“One whom you desire to
appear has not yet come? So far the séance has failed—for
you?” he said.
I nodded. His face
heightened in color as if the blood slowly rose to his head; the veins swelled;
drops of sweat oozed out on his neck and forehead; he peered sharply about the
room, as if out of the dark shadows he expected visible spirits to rise.
“He is coming!” said
Ellen, with a gasp. Stein became ghastly pale at the words, and looked,
terrified, over his shoulder, recovering himself with a feeble laugh.
The table where we sat
was under the chandelier, two of the lamps of which barely sufficed to light
that end of the cabin. The remainder stretched, long and narrow and black, to
the far upper deck. The medium, looking at Stein as if he saw through him into
this outer darkness, sat motionless. There was a long silence. Then he raised
his hand, made a slow beckoning movement into the shadow. Ellen and Stein
turned their pale faces, breathlessly.
“They are coming! They
are here!” he said. “They tell me all you would know. The man you seek is not
dead. He was cheated, deceived, carried off to Caraccas that another man might
marry his wife.”
As his voice rose, Stein
rose with it, stood facing him with a look of terror and ferocity, like a wild
animal whose lair has suddenly been uncovered. Sudden light flashed on me. I
sprang up; Ellen cowered with a cry, but above all sounded F.’s sharp,
monotonous sentences.
“He is not dead; he has
returned! He is—here!” as Stein, with an oath, pointed into the shadow
where Warrick appeared, and leaped back as though the ghost of his victim
confronted him.
It was no ghost. A
little, red-headed, weak-eyed fellow had his arms about Ellen’s neck, holding
her to his breast as if he had the strength of a lion. Warrick, the medium, and
I exclaimed and swore, choking for words; but he was silent. He only held her
as close as if he had indeed come back from the grave to find her, putting back
her head, now and then, and looking at her with a wonderful love in his puny,
insignificant face.
“Ellen! Ellen!” he said
at last; “they told me you were dead,—you and the boy. This my Joe!—little
Joe?” picking up the boy, handling his legs and arms and looking into his face,
his own contorted and wet with tears. We men moved off down into the lower
cabin, leaving them alone; but I saw Joe a long time after, still sitting there
with his wife clinging to him, and the boy on his knees, and I could not help
it, I went in and held out my hand. “I congratulate you, old fellow! God has
been good to you!”
But he only looked up
with a bewildered smile. “Yes, God has been good. This is Ellen, Captain. And
my little son. My little son.”
Wylie’s story is soon
told. Stein had persuaded him to give his creditors the slip and make for
California, promising to join him shortly, and that they would speedily make
their fortunes. Wylie was a man easily led, and consented. He was
concealed under a trap-door in the cigar-shop, and escaped while Fordyce and I
sought the police.
Stein had intercepted
his letters to his wife until such time as he could send him word of her death.
In his own plans upon her he was disappointed.
I am glad to say that
Joe brought back enough yellow dust to keep the wolf from the door for many a
day. He and his wife are living somewhere in Indiana. Joe, their son, was a
drummer-boy in the Thirty-sixth Ohio, under Captain Saunders, and I’ll venture
to say no braver heart kept time to his “Rat-tat-too” than that which beat
under his own little jacket.
I consented to write
down these facts, as I said, because of their bearing upon the matter of
spiritualism. In this case, as in every other of which I have become cognizant,
the mediums have only put into shape the thoughts of those who question them.
To admit that certain persons can at will become possessed of the secret
movements in the mind of another, will solve the whole mystery. In this case of
Wylie, the mediums, Lusk, the woman at Cincinnati, and finally F., simply
reproduced the surmises or knowledge of Warrick, Ellen, and Stein. It is not
agreeable to think that an animal so gross as F. should have power to decipher
our inmost thoughts. Better that, however, than to believe that those we have
lost should hold out their hands to us through such a messenger.
FOOTNOTES:
[A] Kant,
who carried his demands of unconditional veracity to so extravagant a length as
to affirm, that, if a man were to see an innocent person escape from a
murderer, it would be his duty, on being questioned by the murderer, to tell
the truth, and to point out the retreat of the innocent person, under any
certainty of causing murder. Lest this doctrine should be supposed to have
escaped him in any heat of dispute, on being taxed with it by a celebrated
French writer, he solemnly reaffirmed it, with his reasons.
[B] “June 1, 1675.—Drinke part of 3 boules of punch (a liquor very strainge to me),” says the Rev. Mr. Henry Teonge, in his Diary lately published. In a note on this passage, a reference is made to Fryer’s Travels to the East Indies, 1672, who speaks of “that enervating liquor called Paunch (which is Indostan for five), from five ingredients.” Made thus, it seems the medical men called it Diapente; if with four only, Diatessaron. No doubt, it was its evangelical name that recommended it to the Rev. Mr. Teonge.
Comments
Post a Comment