THE PLATTNER STORY AND OTHERS
BY H. G. WELLS
METHUEN
& CO, 36 ESSEX STREET, W.C. LONDON 1897
contents:
1.The Plattner Story 2.The Argonauts of
the Air 3.The Story of the late Mr
Elvesham 4.In the Abyss 5.The
Apple 6.Under the Knife 7.The
Sea-Raiders 8.Pollock and the Porroh Man
9.The Red Room 10.The Cone 11.The Purple Pileus 12.The
Jilting of Jane 13.In the Modern
Vein 14.A Catastrophe 15.The Lost
Inheritance 16.The Sad Story of a Dramatic Critic 17.The Slip Under the Microscope
THE PLATTNER STORY
WHETHER the story of Gottfried Plattner is to be credited or not, is
a pretty question in the value of evidence. On the one hand, we have seven
witnesses—to be perfectly exact, we have six and a half pairs of eyes, and one
undeniable fact; and on the other we have—what is it?—prejudice, common sense,
the inertia of opinion. Never were there seven more honest-seeming witnesses;
never was there a more undeniable fact than the inversion of Gottfried
Plattner’s anatomical structure, and—never was there a more preposterous story
than the one they have to tell! The most preposterous part of the story is the
worthy Gottfried’s contribution (for I count him as one of the seven). Heaven
forbid that I should be led into giving countenance to superstition by a passion
for impartiality, and so come to share the fate of Eusapia’s patrons! Frankly,
I believe there is something crooked about this business of Gottfried Plattner;
but what that crooked factor is, I will 2admit as frankly, I do not know. I
have been surprised at the credit accorded to the story in the most
unexpected and authoritative quarters. The fairest way to the reader, however,
will be for me to tell it without further comment.
Gottfried Plattner is, in
spite of his name, a free-born Englishman. His father was an Alsatian who came
to England in the Sixties, married a respectable English girl of
unexceptionable antecedents, and died, after a wholesome and uneventful life
(devoted, I understand, chiefly to the laying of parquet flooring), in 1887.
Gottfried’s age is seven-and-twenty. He is, by virtue of his heritage of three
languages, Modern Languages Master in a small private school in the South of
England. To the casual observer he is singularly like any other Modern
Languages Master in any other small private school. His costume is neither very
costly nor very fashionable, but, on the other hand, it is not markedly cheap
or shabby; his complexion, like his height and his bearing, is inconspicuous.
You would notice, perhaps, that, like the majority of people, his face was not
absolutely symmetrical, his right eye a little larger than the left, and his
jaw a trifle heavier on the right side. If you, as an ordinary careless person,
were to bare his chest and feel his heart beating, you would probably find it
quite like the heart of anyone else. But here you and the trained observer
would part company. If you found his heart quite ordinary, the trained observer
would find it quite otherwise. And once the thing was pointed out to you, you
too would perceive the peculiarity easily enough. It is that Gottfried’s heart
beats on the right side of his body.
Now, that is not the only
singularity of Gottfried’s structure, although it is the only one that
would appeal to the untrained mind. Careful sounding of Gottfried’s internal
arrangements, by a well-known surgeon, seems to point to the fact that all the
other unsymmetrical parts of his body are similarly misplaced. The right lobe
of his liver is on the left side, the left on his right; while his lungs, too,
are similarly contraposed. What is still more singular, unless Gottfried is a
consummate actor, we must believe that his right hand has recently become his
left. Since the occurrences we are about to consider (as impartially as
possible), he has found the utmost difficulty in writing, except from right to
left across the paper with his left hand. He cannot throw with his right hand,
he is perplexed at meal times between knife and fork, and his ideas of the rule
of the road—he is a cyclist—are still a dangerous confusion. And there is not a
scrap of evidence to show that before these occurrences Gottfried was at all
left-handed.
There is yet another
wonderful fact in this preposterous business. Gottfried produces three
photographs of himself. You have him at the age of five or six, thrusting fat
legs at you from under a plaid frock, and scowling. In that photograph his left
eye is a little larger than his right, and his jaw is a trifle heavier on the
left side. This is the reverse of his present living conditions. The photograph
of Gottfried at fourteen seems to contradict these facts, but that is because
it is one of those cheap “Gem” photographs that were then in vogue, taken
direct upon metal, and therefore reversing things just as a looking-glass
would. The third photograph represents him at one-and-twenty, and confirms
the record of the others. There seems here evidence of the strongest
confirmatory character that Gottfried has exchanged his left side for his
right. Yet how a human being can be so changed, short of a fantastic and
pointless miracle, it is exceedingly hard to suggest.
In one way, of course, these
facts might be explicable on the supposition that Plattner has undertaken an
elaborate mystification, on the strength of his heart’s displacement. Photographs
may be fudged, and left-handedness imitated. But the character of the man does
not lend itself to any such theory. He is quiet, practical, unobtrusive, and
thoroughly sane, from the Nordau standpoint. He likes beer, and smokes
moderately, takes walking exercise daily, and has a healthily high estimate of
the value of his teaching. He has a good but untrained tenor voice, and takes a
pleasure in singing airs of a popular and cheerful character. He is fond, but
not morbidly fond, of reading,—chiefly fiction pervaded with a vaguely pious
optimism,—sleeps well, and rarely dreams. He is, in fact, the very last person
to evolve a fantastic fable. Indeed, so far from forcing this story upon the
world, he has been singularly reticent on the matter. He meets inquirers with a
certain engaging—bashfulness is almost the word, that disarms the most
suspicious. He seems genuinely ashamed that anything so unusual has occurred to
him.
It is to be regretted that
Plattner’s aversion to the idea of post-mortem dissection may postpone, perhaps
for ever, the positive proof that his entire body has had its left and
right sides transposed. Upon that fact mainly the credibility of his story
hangs. There is no way of taking a man and moving him about in space, as ordinary people
understand space, that will result in our changing his sides. Whatever you do,
his right is still his right, his left his left. You can do that with a
perfectly thin and flat thing, of course. If you were to cut a figure out of
paper, any figure with a right and left side, you could change its sides simply
by lifting it up and turning it over. But with a solid it is different.
Mathematical theorists tell us that the only way in which the right and left
sides of a solid body can be changed is by taking that body clean out of space
as we know it,—taking it out of ordinary existence, that is, and turning it
somewhere outside space. This is a little abstruse, no doubt, but anyone with
any knowledge of mathematical theory will assure the reader of its truth. To put
the thing in technical language, the curious inversion of Plattner’s right and
left sides is proof that he has moved out of our space into what is called the
Fourth Dimension, and that he has returned again to our world. Unless we choose
to consider ourselves the victims of an elaborate and motiveless fabrication,
we are almost bound to believe that this has occurred.
So much for the tangible
facts. We come now to the account of the phenomena that attended his temporary
disappearance from the world. It appears that in the Sussexville Proprietary
School, Plattner not only discharged the duties of Modern Languages Master, but
also taught chemistry, commercial geography, book-keeping, shorthand, drawing,
and any other additional subject to which the changing fancies of the
boys’ parents might direct attention. He knew little or nothing of these
various subjects, but in secondary as distinguished from Board or elementary
schools, knowledge in the teacher is, very properly, by no means so necessary
as high moral character and gentlemanly tone. In chemistry he was particularly
deficient, knowing, he says, nothing beyond the Three Gases (whatever the three
gases may be). As, however, his pupils began by knowing nothing, and derived
all their information from him, this caused him (or anyone) but little
inconvenience for several terms. Then a little boy named Whibble joined the
school, who had been educated (it seems) by some mischievous relative into an
inquiring habit of mind. This little boy followed Plattner’s lessons with
marked and sustained interest, and in order to exhibit his zeal on the subject,
brought, at various times, substances for Plattner to analyse. Plattner,
flattered by this evidence of his power of awakening interest, and trusting to
the boy’s ignorance, analysed these, and even made general statements as to
their composition. Indeed, he was so far stimulated by his pupil as to obtain a
work upon analytical chemistry, and study it during his supervision of the
evening’s preparation. He was surprised to find chemistry quite an interesting
subject.
So far the story is
absolutely commonplace. But now the greenish powder comes upon the scene. The
source of that greenish powder seems, unfortunately, lost. Master Whibble tells
a tortuous story of finding it done up in a packet in a disused limekiln near
the Downs. It would have bee an excellent thing for Plattner, and possibly
for Master Whibble’s family, if a match could have been applied to that powder
there and then. The young gentleman certainly did not bring it to school in a
packet, but in a common eight-ounce graduated medicine bottle, plugged with
masticated newspaper. He gave it to Plattner at the end of the afternoon
school. Four boys had been detained after school prayers in order to complete some
neglected tasks, and Plattner was supervising these in the small classroom in
which the chemical teaching was conducted. The appliances for the practical
teaching of chemistry in the Sussexville Proprietary School, as in most small
schools in this country, are characterised by a severe simplicity. They are
kept in a small cupboard standing in a recess, and having about the same
capacity as a common travelling trunk. Plattner, being bored with his passive
superintendence, seems to have welcomed the intervention of Whibble with his
green powder as an agreeable diversion, and, unlocking this cupboard, proceeded
at once with his analytical experiments. Whibble sat, luckily for himself, at a
safe distance, regarding him. The four malefactors, feigning a profound
absorption in their work, watched him furtively with the keenest interest. For
even within the limits of the Three Gases, Plattner’s practical chemistry was,
I understand, temerarious.
They are practically
unanimous in their account of Plattner’s proceedings. He poured a little of the
green powder into a test-tube, and tried the substance with water, hydrochloric
acid, nitric acid, and sulphuric acid in succession. Getting no result,
he emptied out a little heap—nearly half the bottleful, in fact—upon a slate
and tried a match. He held the medicine bottle in his left hand. The stuff
began to smoke and melt, and then—exploded with deafening violence and a
blinding flash.
The five boys, seeing the
flash and being prepared for catastrophes, ducked below their desks, and were
none of them seriously hurt. The window was blown out into the playground, and
the blackboard on its easel was upset. The slate was smashed to atoms. Some
plaster fell from the ceiling. No other damage was done to the school edifice
or appliances, and the boys at first, seeing nothing of Plattner, fancied he
was knocked down and lying out of their sight below the desks. They jumped out
of their places to go to his assistance, and were amazed to find the space
empty. Being still confused by the sudden violence of the report, they hurried
to the open door, under the impression that he must have been hurt, and have
rushed out of the room. But Carson, the foremost, nearly collided in the
doorway with the principal, Mr. Lidgett.
Mr. Lidgett is a corpulent,
excitable man with one eye. The boys describe him as stumbling into the room
mouthing some of those tempered expletives irritable schoolmasters accustom
themselves to use—lest worse befall. “Wretched mumchancer!” he said. “Where’s
Mr. Plattner?” The boys are agreed on the very words. (“Wobbler,” “snivelling
puppy,” and “mumchancer” are, it seems, among the ordinary small change of Mr.
Lidgett’s scholastic commerce.)
Where’s Mr. Plattner? That
was a question that was to be repeated many times in the next few days. It
really seemed as though that frantic hyperbole, “blown to atoms,” had for once
realised itself. There was not a visible particle of Plattner to be seen; not a
drop of blood nor a stitch of clothing to be found. Apparently he had been blown
clean out of existence and left not a wrack behind. Not so much as would cover
a sixpenny piece, to quote a proverbial expression! The evidence of his
absolute disappearance, as a consequence of that explosion, is indubitable.
It is not necessary to enlarge
here upon the commotion excited in the Sussexville Proprietary School, and in
Sussexville and elsewhere, by this event. It is quite possible, indeed, that
some of the readers of these pages may recall the hearing of some remote and
dying version of that excitement during the last summer holidays. Lidgett, it
would seem, did everything in his power to suppress and minimise the story. He
instituted a penalty of twenty-five lines for any mention of Plattner’s name
among the boys, and stated in the schoolroom that he was clearly aware of his
assistant’s whereabouts. He was afraid, he explains, that the possibility of an
explosion happening, in spite of the elaborate precautions taken to minimise
the practical teaching of chemistry, might injure the reputation of the school;
and so might any mysterious quality in Plattner’s departure. Indeed, he did
everything in his power to make the occurrence seem as ordinary as possible. In
particular, he cross-examined the five eye-witnesses of the occurrence so searchingly
that they began to doubt the plain evidence of their senses. But, in spite of
these efforts, the tale, in a magnified and distorted state, made a nine
days’ wonder in the district, and several parents withdrew their sons on
colourable pretexts. Not the least remarkable point in the matter is the fact
that a large number of people in the neighbourhood dreamed singularly vivid
dreams of Plattner during the period of excitement before his return, and that
these dreams had a curious uniformity. In almost all of them Plattner was seen,
sometimes singly, sometimes in company, wandering about through a coruscating
iridescence. In all cases his face was pale and distressed, and in some he
gesticulated towards the dreamer. One or two of the boys, evidently under the
influence of nightmare, fancied that Plattner approached them with remarkable
swiftness, and seemed to look closely into their very eyes. Others fled with
Plattner from the pursuit of vague and extraordinary creatures of a globular
shape. But all these fancies were forgotten in inquiries and speculations when,
on the Wednesday next but one after the Monday of the explosion, Plattner
returned.
The circumstances of his
return were as singular as those of his departure. So far as Mr. Lidgett’s
somewhat choleric outline can be filled in from Plattner’s hesitating
statements, it would appear that on Wednesday evening, towards the hour of
sunset, the former gentleman, having dismissed evening preparation, was engaged
in his garden, picking and eating strawberries, a fruit of which he is
inordinately fond. It is a large old-fashioned garden, secured from
observation, fortunately, by a high and ivy-covered red-brick wall. Just as he
was stooping over a particularly prolific plant, there was a flash in the
air and a heavy thud, and before he could look round, some heavy body struck
him violently from behind. He was pitched forward, crushing the strawberries he
held in his hand, and that so roughly, that his silk hat—Mr. Lidgett adheres to
the older ideas of scholastic costume—was driven violently down upon his
forehead, and almost over one eye. This heavy missile, which slid over him
sideways and collapsed into a sitting posture among the strawberry plants,
proved to be our long-lost Mr. Gottfried Plattner, in an extremely dishevelled
condition. He was collarless and hatless, his linen was dirty, and there was
blood upon his hands. Mr. Lidgett was so indignant and surprised that he
remained on all-fours, and with his hat jammed down on his eye, while he
expostulated vehemently with Plattner for his disrespectful and unaccountable
conduct.
This scarcely idyllic scene
completes what I may call the exterior version of the Plattner story—its
exoteric aspect. It is quite unnecessary to enter here into all the details of
his dismissal by Mr. Lidgett. Such details, with the full names and dates and
references, will be found in the larger report of these occurrences that was
laid before the Society for the Investigation of Abnormal Phenomena. The
singular transposition of Plattner’s right and left sides was scarcely observed
for the first day or so, and then first in connection with his disposition to
write from right to left across the blackboard. He concealed rather than
ostended this curious confirmatory circumstance, as he considered it would
unfavourably affect his prospects in a new situation. The displacement of his
heart was discovered some months after, when he was having a tooth extracted
under anæsthetics. He then, very unwillingly, allowed a cursory surgical examination
to be made of himself, with a view to a brief account in the Journal of Anatomy. That
exhausts the statement of the material facts; and we may now go on to consider
Plattner’s account of the matter.
But first let us clearly
differentiate between the preceding portion of this story and what is to
follow. All I have told thus far is established by such evidence as even a
criminal lawyer would approve. Every one of the witnesses is still alive; the
reader, if he have the leisure, may hunt the lads out tomorrow, or even brave
the terrors of the redoubtable Lidgett, and cross-examine and trap and test to
his heart’s content; Gottfried Plattner, himself, and his twisted heart and his
three photographs are producible. It may be taken as proved that he did disappear
for nine days as the consequence of an explosion; that he returned almost as
violently, under circumstances in their nature annoying to Mr. Lidgett,
whatever the details of those circumstances may be; and that he returned
inverted, just as a reflection returns from a mirror. From the last fact, as I
have already stated, it follows almost inevitably that Plattner, during those
nine days, must have been in some state of existence altogether out of space.
The evidence to these statements is, indeed, far stronger than that upon which
most murderers are hanged. But for his own particular account of where he
had been, with its confused explanations and well-nigh self-contradictory
details, we have only Mr. Gottfried Plattner’s word. I do not wish to discredit
that, but I must point out—what so many writers upon obscure psychic phenomena
fail to do—that we are passing here from the practically undeniable to that
kind of matter which any reasonable man is entitled to believe or reject as he
thinks proper. The previous statements render it plausible; its discordance
with common experience tilts it towards the incredible. I would prefer not to
sway the beam of the reader’s judgment either way, but simply to tell the story
as Plattner told it me.
He gave me his narrative, I
may state, at my house at Chislehurst, and so soon as he had left me that
evening, I went into my study and wrote down everything as I remembered it.
Subsequently he was good enough to read over a type-written copy, so that its
substantial correctness is undeniable.
He states that at the moment
of the explosion he distinctly thought he was killed. He felt lifted off his
feet and driven forcibly backward. It is a curious fact for psychologists that
he thought clearly during his backward flight, and wondered whether he should
hit the chemistry cupboard or the blackboard easel. His heels struck ground,
and he staggered and fell heavily into a sitting position on something soft and
firm. For a moment the concussion stunned him. He became aware at once of a
vivid scent of singed hair, and he seemed to hear the voice of Lidgett asking
for him. You will understand that for a time his mind was greatly
confused.
At first he was distinctly
under the impression that he was still in the classroom. He perceived quite
distinctly the surprise of the boys and the entry of Mr. Lidgett. He is quite
positive upon that score. He did not hear their remarks; but that he ascribed
to the deafening effect of the experiment. Things about him seemed curiously
dark and faint, but his mind explained that on the obvious but mistaken idea
that the explosion had engendered a huge volume of dark smoke. Through the
dimness the figures of Lidgett and the boys moved, as faint and silent as
ghosts. Plattner’s face still tingled with the stinging heat of the flash. He
was, he says, “all muddled.” His first definite thoughts seem to have been of
his personal safety. He thought he was perhaps blinded and deafened. He felt
his limbs and face in a gingerly manner. Then his perceptions grew clearer, and
he was astonished to miss the old familiar desks and other schoolroom furniture
about him. Only dim, uncertain, grey shapes stood in the place of these. Then
came a thing that made him shout aloud, and awoke his stunned faculties to
instant activity. Two of
the boys, gesticulating, walked one after the other clean through him! Neither
manifested the slightest consciousness of his presence. It is difficult to
imagine the sensation he felt. They came against him, he says, with no more
force than a wisp of mist.
Plattner’s first thought
after that was that he was dead. Having been brought up with thoroughly sound
views in these matters, however, he was a little surprised to find his
body still about him. His second conclusion was that he was not dead, but that
the others were: that the explosion had destroyed the Sussexville Proprietary
School and every soul in it except himself. But that, too, was scarcely
satisfactory. He was thrown back upon astonished observation.
Everything about him was
extraordinarily dark: at first it seemed to have an altogether ebony blackness.
Overhead was a black firmament. The only touch of light in the scene was a
faint greenish glow at the edge of the sky in one direction, which threw into
prominence a horizon of undulating black hills. This, I say, was his impression
at first. As his eye grew accustomed to the darkness, he began to distinguish a
faint quality of differentiating greenish colour in the circumambient night.
Against this background the furniture and occupants of the classroom, it seems,
stood out like phosphorescent spectres, faint and impalpable. He extended his
hand, and thrust it without an effort through the wall of the room by the
fireplace.
He describes himself as
making a strenuous effort to attract attention. He shouted to Lidgett, and
tried to seize the boys as they went to and fro. He only desisted from these
attempts when Mrs. Lidgett, whom he (as an Assistant Master) naturally
disliked, entered the room. He says the sensation of being in the world, and
yet not a part of it, was an extraordinarily disagreeable one. He compared his
feelings, not inaptly, to those of a cat watching a mouse through a window.
Whenever he made a motion to communicate with the dim,[16] familiar world about him, he found an invisible,
incomprehensible barrier preventing intercourse.
He then turned his attention
to his solid environment. He found the medicine bottle still unbroken in his
hand, with the remainder of the green powder therein. He put this in his
pocket, and began to feel about him. Apparently, he was sitting on a boulder of
rock covered with a velvety moss. The dark country about him he was unable to
see, the faint, misty picture of the schoolroom blotting it out, but he had a
feeling (due perhaps to a cold wind) that he was near the crest of a hill, and
that a steep valley fell away beneath his feet. The green glow along the edge
of the sky seemed to be growing in extent and intensity. He stood up, rubbing
his eyes.
It would seem that he made a
few steps, going steeply down hill, and then stumbled, nearly fell, and sat
down again upon a jagged mass of rock to watch the dawn. He became aware that
the world about him was absolutely silent. It was as still as it was dark, and
though there was a cold wind blowing up the hill-face, the rustle of grass, the
soughing of the boughs that should have accompanied it, were absent. He could
hear, therefore, if he could not see, that the hillside upon which he stood was
rocky and desolate. The green grew brighter every moment, and as it did so a
faint, transparent blood-red mingled with, but did not mitigate, the blackness
of the sky overhead and the rocky desolations about him. Having regard to what
follows, I am inclined to think that that redness may have been an optical effect
due to contrast. Something black fluttered momentarily against the livid
yellow-green of the lower sky, and then the thin and penetrating voice of a
bell rose out of the black gulf below him. An oppressive expectation grew with
the growing light.
It is probable that an hour
or more elapsed while he sat there, the strange green light growing brighter
every moment, and spreading slowly, in flamboyant fingers, upward towards the
zenith. As it grew, the spectral vision of our world became relatively or absolutely
fainter. Probably both, for the time must have been about that of our earthly
sunset. So far as his vision of our world went, Plattner, by his few steps
downhill, had passed through the floor of the classroom, and was now, it
seemed, sitting in mid-air in the larger schoolroom downstairs. He saw the
boarders distinctly, but much more faintly than he had seen Lidgett. They were
preparing their evening tasks, and he noticed with interest that several were
cheating with their Euclid riders by means of a crib, a compilation whose
existence he had hitherto never suspected. As the time passed, they faded
steadily, as steadily as the light of the green dawn increased.
Looking down into the
valley, he saw that the light had crept far down its rocky sides, and that the
profound blackness of the abyss was now broken by a minute green glow, like the
light of a glow-worm. And almost immediately the limb of a huge heavenly body
of blazing green rose over the basaltic undulations of the distant hills, and
the monstrous hill-masses about him came out gaunt and desolate, in green light
and deep, ruddy black shadows. He became aware of a vast number of ball-shaped
objects drifting as thistledown drifts over the high ground. There were
none of these nearer to him than the opposite side of the gorge. The bell below
twanged quicker and quicker, with something like impatient insistence, and
several lights moved hither and thither. The boys at work at their desks were
now almost imperceptibly faint.
This extinction of our world,
when the green sun of this other universe rose, is a curious point upon which
Plattner insists. During the Other-World night it is difficult to move about,
on account of the vividness with which the things of this world are visible. It
becomes a riddle to explain why, if this is the case, we in this world catch no
glimpse of the Other-World. It is due, perhaps, to the comparatively vivid
illumination of this world of ours. Plattner describes the midday of the
Other-World, at its brightest, as not being nearly so bright as this world at
full moon, while its night is profoundly black. Consequently, the amount of
light, even in an ordinary dark room, is sufficient to render the things of the
Other-World invisible, on the same principle that faint phosphorescence is only
visible in the profoundest darkness. I have tried, since he told me his story,
to see something of the Other-World by sitting for a long space in a
photographer’s dark room at night. I have certainly seen indistinctly the form
of greenish slopes and rocks, but only, I must admit, very indistinctly indeed.
The reader may possibly be more successful. Plattner tells me that since his
return he has dreamt and seen and recognised places in the Other-World, but
this is probably due to his memory of these scenes. It seems quite
possible that people with unusually keen eyesight may occasionally catch a
glimpse of this strange Other-World about us.
However, this is a
digression. As the green sun rose, a long street of black buildings became
perceptible, though only darkly and indistinctly, in the gorge, and, after some
hesitation, Plattner began to clamber down the precipitous descent towards
them. The descent was long and exceedingly tedious, being so not only by the
extraordinary steepness, but also by reason of the looseness of the boulders
with which the whole face of the hill was strewn. The noise of his descent—now
and then his heels struck fire from the rocks—seemed now the only sound in the
universe, for the beating of the bell had ceased. As he drew nearer, he
perceived that the various edifices had a singular resemblance to tombs and
mausoleums and monuments, saving only that they were all uniformly black
instead of being white, as most sepulchres are. And then he saw, crowding out
of the largest building, very much as people disperse from church, a number of
pallid, rounded, pale-green figures. These dispersed in several directions
about the broad street of the place, some going through side alleys and
reappearing upon the steepness of the hill, others entering some of the small
black buildings which lined the way.
At the sight of these things
drifting up towards him, Plattner stopped, staring. They were not walking, they
were indeed limbless, and they had the appearance of human heads, beneath which
a tadpole-like body swung. He was too astonished at their strangeness, too
full, indeed, of strangeness, to be seriously alarmed by them. They drove
towards him, in front of the chill wind that was blowing uphill, much as
soap-bubbles drive before a draught. And as he looked at the nearest of those
approaching, he saw it was indeed a human head, albeit with singularly large
eyes, and wearing such an expression of distress and anguish as he had never
seen before upon mortal countenance. He was surprised to find that it did not
turn to regard him, but seemed to be watching and following some unseen moving
thing. For a moment he was puzzled, and then it occurred to him that this
creature was watching with its enormous eyes something that was happening in the
world he had just left. Nearer it came, and nearer, and he was too astonished
to cry out. It made a very faint fretting sound as it came close to him. Then
it struck his face with a gentle pat—its touch was very cold—and drove past
him, and upward towards the crest of the hill.
An extraordinary conviction
flashed across Plattner’s mind that this head had a strong likeness to Lidgett.
Then he turned his attention to the other heads that were now swarming thickly
up the hillside. None made the slightest sign of recognition. One or two,
indeed, came close to his head and almost followed the example of the first,
but he dodged convulsively out of the way. Upon most of them he saw the same
expression of unavailing regret he had seen upon the first, and heard the same
faint sounds of wretchedness from them. One or two wept, and one rolling
swiftly uphill wore an expression of diabolical rage. But others were cold, and
several had a look of gratified interest in their eyes. One, at least, was
almost in an ecstasy of happiness. Plattner does not remember that he
recognised any more likenesses in those he saw at this time.
For several hours, perhaps,
Plattner watched these strange things dispersing themselves over the hills, and
not till long after they had ceased to issue from the clustering black
buildings in the gorge, did he resume his downward climb. The darkness about
him increased so much that he had a difficulty in stepping true. Overhead the
sky was now a bright, pale green. He felt neither hunger nor thirst. Later,
when he did, he found a chilly stream running down the centre of the gorge, and
the rare moss upon the boulders, when he tried it at last in desperation, was
good to eat.
He groped about among the
tombs that ran down the gorge, seeking vaguely for some clue to these
inexplicable things. After a long time he came to the entrance of the big
mausoleum-like building from which the heads had issued. In this he found a
group of green lights burning upon a kind of basaltic altar, and a bell-rope
from a belfry overhead hanging down into the centre of the place. Round the
wall ran a lettering of fire in a character unknown to him. While he was still
wondering at the purport of these things, he heard the receding tramp of heavy
feet echoing far down the street. He ran out into the darkness again, but he
could see nothing. He had a mind to pull the bell-rope, and finally decided to
follow the footsteps. But, although he ran far, he never overtook them; and his
shouting was of no avail. The gorge seemed to extend an interminable
distance. It was as dark as earthly starlight throughout its length, while the
ghastly green day lay along the upper edge of its precipices. There were none
of the heads, now, below. They were all, it seemed, busily occupied along the
upper slopes. Looking up, he saw them drifting hither and thither, some
hovering stationary, some flying swiftly through the air. It reminded him, he
said, of “big snowflakes”; only these were black and pale green.
In pursuing the firm,
undeviating footsteps that he never overtook, in groping into new regions of
this endless devil’s dyke, in clambering up and down the pitiless heights, in
wandering about the summits, and in watching the drifting faces, Plattner
states that he spent the better part of seven or eight days. He did not keep
count, he says. Though once or twice he found eyes watching him, he had word
with no living soul. He slept among the rocks on the hillside. In the gorge
things earthly were invisible, because, from the earthly standpoint, it was far
underground. On the altitudes, so soon as the earthly day began, the world
became visible to him. He found himself sometimes stumbling over the dark green
rocks, or arresting himself on a precipitous brink, while all about him the
green branches of the Sussexville lanes were swaying; or, again, he seemed to
be walking through the Sussexville streets, or watching unseen the private
business of some household. And then it was he discovered, that to almost every
human being in our world there pertained some of these drifting heads: that
everyone in the world is watched intermittently by these helpless
disembodiments.
What are they—these Watchers
of the Living? Plattner never learned. But two, that presently found and
followed him, were like his childhood’s memory of his father and mother. Now
and then other faces turned their eyes upon him: eyes like those of dead people
who had swayed him, or injured him, or helped him in his youth and manhood.
Whenever they looked at him, Plattner was overcome with a strange sense of
responsibility. To his mother he ventured to speak; but she made no answer. She
looked sadly, steadfastly, and tenderly—a little reproachfully, too, it
seemed—into his eyes.
He simply tells this story:
he does not endeavour to explain. We are left to surmise who these Watchers of
the Living may be, or if they are indeed the Dead, why they should so closely
and passionately watch a world they have left for ever. It may be—indeed to my
mind it seems just—that, when our life has closed, when evil or good is no
longer a choice for us, we may still have to witness the working out of the
train of consequences we have laid. If human souls continue after death, then
surely human interests continue after death. But that is merely my own guess at
the meaning of the things seen. Plattner offers no interpretation, for none was
given him. It is well the reader should understand this clearly. Day after day,
with his head reeling, he wandered about this strange-lit world outside the
world, weary and, towards the end, weak and hungry. By day—by our earthly day,
that is—the ghostly vision of the old familiar scenery of Sussexville, all
about him, irked and worried him. He could not see where to put his feet,
and ever and again with a chilly touch one of these Watching Souls would come
against his face. And after dark the multitude of these Watchers about him, and
their intent distress, confused his mind beyond describing. A great longing to
return to the earthly life that was so near and yet so remote consumed him. The
unearthliness of things about him produced a positively painful mental
distress. He was worried beyond describing by his own particular followers. He
would shout at them to desist from staring at him, scold at them, hurry away
from them. They were always mute and intent. Run as he might over the uneven
ground, they followed his destinies.
On the ninth day, towards
evening, Plattner heard the invisible footsteps approaching, far away down the
gorge. He was then wandering over the broad crest of the same hill upon which
he had fallen in his entry into this strange Other-World of his. He turned to
hurry down into the gorge, feeling his way hastily, and was arrested by the
sight of the thing that was happening in a room in a back street near the
school. Both of the people in the room he knew by sight. The windows were open,
the blinds up, and the setting sun shone clearly into it, so that it came out
quite brightly at first, a vivid oblong of room, lying like a magic-lantern
picture upon the black landscape and the livid green dawn. In addition to the
sunlight, a candle had just been lit in the room.
On the bed lay a lank man,
his ghastly white face terrible upon the tumbled pillow. His clenched
hands were raised above his head. A little table beside the bed carried a few
medicine bottles, some toast and water, and an empty glass. Every now and then
the lank man’s lips fell apart, to indicate a word he could not articulate. But
the woman did not notice that he wanted anything, because she was busy turning
out papers from an old-fashioned bureau in the opposite corner of the room. At
first the picture was very vivid indeed, but as the green dawn behind it grew
brighter and brighter, so it became fainter and more and more transparent.
As the echoing footsteps
paced nearer and nearer, those footsteps that sound so loud in that Other-World
and come so silently in this, Plattner perceived about him a great multitude of
dim faces gathering together out of the darkness and watching the two people in
the room. Never before had he seen so many of the Watchers of the Living. A
multitude had eyes only for the sufferer in the room, another multitude, in
infinite anguish, watched the woman as she hunted with greedy eyes for
something she could not find. They crowded about Plattner, they came across his
sight and buffeted his face, the noise of their unavailing regrets was all
about him. He saw clearly only now and then. At other times the picture
quivered dimly, through the veil of green reflections upon their movements. In
the room it must have been very still, and Plattner says the candle flame
streamed up into a perfectly vertical line of smoke, but in his ears each
footfall and its echoes beat like a clap of thunder. And the faces! Two, more
particularly near the woman’s: one a woman’s also, white
and clear-featured, a face which might have once been cold and hard, but
which was now softened by the touch of a wisdom strange to earth. The other
might have been the woman’s father. Both were evidently absorbed in the contemplation
of some act of hateful meanness, so it seemed, which they could no longer guard
against and prevent. Behind were others, teachers, it may be, who had taught
ill, friends whose influence had failed. And over the man, too—a multitude, but
none that seemed to be parents or teachers! Faces that might once have been
coarse, now purged to strength by sorrow! And in the forefront one face, a
girlish one, neither angry nor remorseful, but merely patient and weary, and,
as it seemed to Plattner, waiting for relief. His powers of description fail
him at the memory of this multitude of ghastly countenances. They gathered on
the stroke of the bell. He saw them all in the space of a second. It would seem
that he was so worked on by his excitement that, quite involuntarily, his
restless fingers took the bottle of green powder out of his pocket and held it
before him. But he does not remember that.
Abruptly the footsteps
ceased. He waited for the next, and there was silence, and then suddenly,
cutting through the unexpected stillness like a keen, thin blade, came the
first stroke of the bell. At that the multitudinous faces swayed to and fro,
and a louder crying began all about him. The woman did not hear; she was
burning something now in the candle flame. At the second stroke everything grew
dim, and a breath of wind, icy cold, blew through the host of watchers.
They swirled about him like an eddy of dead leaves in the spring, and at the
third stroke something was extended through them to the bed. You have heard of a
beam of light. This was like a beam of darkness, and looking again at it,
Plattner saw that it was a shadowy arm and hand.
The green sun was now
topping the black desolations of the horizon, and the vision of the room was
very faint. Plattner could see that the white of the bed struggled, and was
convulsed; and that the woman looked round over her shoulder at it, startled.
The cloud of watchers lifted
high like a puff of green dust before the wind, and swept swiftly downward
towards the temple in the gorge. Then suddenly Plattner understood the meaning
of the shadowy black arm that stretched across his shoulder and clutched its
prey. He did not dare turn his head to see the Shadow behind the arm. With a
violent effort, and covering his eyes, he set himself to run, made, perhaps,
twenty strides, then slipped on a boulder, and fell. He fell forward on his
hands; and the bottle smashed and exploded as he touched the ground.
In another moment he found
himself, stunned and bleeding, sitting face to face with Lidgett in the old
walled garden behind the school.
000
There the story of
Plattner’s experiences ends. I have resisted, I believe successfully, the
natural disposition of a writer of fiction to dress up incidents of this sort.
I have told the thing as far as possible in the order in which Plattner told it
to me. I have carefully avoided any attempt at style, effect, or construction.
It would have been easy, for instance, to have worked the scene of the
death-bed into a kind of plot in which Plattner might have been involved.
But, quite apart from the objectionableness of falsifying a most extraordinary
true story, any such trite devices would spoil, to my mind, the peculiar effect
of this dark world, with its livid green illumination and its drifting Watchers
of the Living, which, unseen and unapproachable to us, is yet lying all about
us.
It remains to add, that a
death did actually occur in Vincent Terrace, just beyond the school garden,
and, so far as can be proved, at the moment of Plattner’s return. Deceased was a
rate-collector and insurance agent. His widow, who was much younger than
himself, married last month a Mr. Whymper, a veterinary surgeon of Allbeeding.
As the portion of this story given here has in various forms circulated orally
in Sussexville, she has consented to my use of her name, on condition that I
make it distinctly known that she emphatically contradicts every detail of
Plattner’s account of her husband’s last moments. She burnt no will, she says,
although Plattner never accused her of doing so: her husband made but one will,
and that just after their marriage. Certainly, from a man who had never seen
it, Plattner’s account of the furniture of the room was curiously accurate.
One other thing, even at the
risk of an irksome repetition, I must insist upon, lest I seem to favour the
credulous superstitious view. Plattner’s absence from the world for nine days
is, I think, proved. But that does not prove his story. It is quite conceivable
that even outside space hallucinations may be possible. That, at least, the
reader must bear distinctly in mind.
THE ARGONAUTS OF THE AIR
ONE saw Monson’s Flying Machine from the windows of the trains
passing either along the South-Western main line or along the line between
Wimbledon and Worcester Park,—to be more exact, one saw the huge scaffoldings
which limited the flight of the apparatus. They rose over the tree-tops, a
massive alley of interlacing iron and timber, and an enormous web of ropes and
tackle, extending the best part of two miles. From the Leatherhead branch this
alley was foreshortened and in part hidden by a hill with villas; but from the
main line one had it in profile, a complex tangle of girders and curving bars,
very impressive to the excursionists from Portsmouth and Southampton and the
West. Monson had taken up the work where Maxim had left it, had gone on at
first with an utter contempt for the journalistic wit and ignorance that had
irritated and hampered his predecessor, and had spent (it was said) rather more
than half his immense fortune upon his experiments. The results, to an
impatient generation, seemed inconsiderable. When some five years had passed
after the growth of the colossal iron groves at Worcester Park, and Monson
still failed to put in a fluttering appearance over Trafalgar Square, even
the Isle of Wight trippers felt their liberty to smile. And such intelligent
people as did not consider Monson a fool stricken with the mania for invention,
denounced him as being (for no particular reason) a self-advertising quack.
Yet now and again a morning
trainload of season-ticket holders would see a white monster rush headlong
through the airy tracery of guides and bars, and hear the further stays,
nettings, and buffers snap, creak, and groan with the impact of the blow. Then
there would be an efflorescence of black-set white-rimmed faces along the sides
of the train, and the morning papers would be neglected for a vigorous
discussion of the possibility of flying (in which nothing new was ever said by
any chance), until the train reached Waterloo, and its cargo of season-ticket
holders dispersed themselves over London. Or the fathers and mothers in some
multitudinous train of weary excursionists returning exhausted from a day of
rest by the sea, would find the dark fabric, standing out against the evening
sky, useful in diverting some bilious child from its introspection, and be
suddenly startled by the swift transit of a huge black flapping shape that
strained upward against the guides. It was a great and forcible thing beyond
dispute, and excellent for conversation; yet, all the same, it was but flying
in leading-strings, and most of those who witnessed it scarcely counted its
flight as flying. More of a switchback it seemed to the run of the folk.
Monson, I say, did not
trouble himself very keenly about the opinions of the press at first. But
possibly he, even, had formed but a poor idea of the time it would take before
the tactics of flying were mastered, the swift assured adjustment of the big
soaring shape to every gust and chance movement of the air; nor had he clearly
reckoned the money this prolonged struggle against gravitation would cost him.
And he was not so pachydermatous as he seemed. Secretly he had his periodical
bundles of cuttings sent him by Romeike, he had his periodical reminders from
his banker; and if he did not mind the initial ridicule and scepticism, he felt
the growing neglect as the months went by and the money dribbled away. Time was
when Monson had sent the enterprising journalist, keen after readable matter,
empty from his gates. But when the enterprising journalist ceased from
troubling, Monson was anything but satisfied in his heart of hearts. Still day
by day the work went on, and the multitudinous subtle difficulties of the
steering diminished in number. Day by day, too, the money trickled away, until
his balance was no longer a matter of hundreds of thousands, but of tens. And
at last came an anniversary.
Monson, sitting in the
little drawing-shed, suddenly noticed the date on Woodhouse’s calendar.
“It was five years ago
to-day that we began,” he said to Woodhouse suddenly.
“Is it?” said Woodhouse.
“It’s the alterations play
the devil with us,” said Monson, biting a paper-fastener.
The drawings for the new
vans to the hinder screw lay on the table before him as he spoke. He pitched
the mutilated brass paper-fastener into the waste-paper basket and drummed
with his fingers. “These alterations! Will the mathematicians ever be clever
enough to save us all this patching and experimenting? Five years—learning by rule
of thumb, when one might think that it was possible to calculate the whole
thing out beforehand. The cost of it! I might have hired three senior wranglers
for life. But they’d only have developed some beautifully useless theorems in
pneumatics. What a time it has been, Woodhouse!”
“These mouldings will take
three weeks,” said Woodhouse. “At special prices.”
“Three weeks!” said Monson,
and sat drumming.
“Three weeks certain,” said
Woodhouse, an excellent engineer, but no good as a comforter. He drew the
sheets towards him and began shading a bar.
Monson stopped drumming, and
began to bite his finger-nails, staring the while at Woodhouse’s head.
“How long have they been
calling this Monson’s Folly?” he said suddenly.
“Oh! Year or so,” said Woodhouse
carelessly, without looking up.
Monson sucked the air in
between his teeth, and went to the window. The stout iron columns carrying the
elevated rails upon which the start of the machine was made rose up close by,
and the machine was hidden by the upper edge of the window. Through the grove
of iron pillars, red painted and ornate with rows of bolts, one had a glimpse
of the pretty scenery towards Esher. A train went gliding noiselessly across
the middle distance, its rattle drowned by the hammering of the workmen
overhead. Monson could imagine the grinning faces at the windows of the
carriages. He swore savagely under his breath, and dabbed viciously at a
blowfly that suddenly became noisy on the window-pane.
“What’s up?” said Woodhouse,
staring in surprise at his employer.
“I’m about sick of this.”
Woodhouse scratched his
cheek. “Oh!” he said, after an assimilating pause. He pushed the drawing away
from him.
“Here these fools ... I’m
trying to conquer a new element—trying to do a thing that will revolutionise
life. And instead of taking an intelligent interest, they grin and make their
stupid jokes, and call me and my appliances names.”
“Asses!” said Woodhouse,
letting his eye fall again on the drawing.
The epithet, curiously
enough, made Monson wince. “I’m about sick of it, Woodhouse, anyhow,” he said,
after a pause.
Woodhouse shrugged his
shoulders.
“There’s nothing for it but
patience, I suppose,” said Monson, sticking his hands in his pockets. “I’ve
started. I’ve made my bed, and I’ve got to lie on it. I can’t go back. I’ll see
it through, and spend every penny I have and every penny I can borrow. But I
tell you, Woodhouse, I’m infernally sick of it, all the same. If I’d paid a
tenth part of the money towards some political greaser’s expenses—I’d have been
a baronet before this.”
Monson paused. Woodhouse
stared in front of him with a blank expression he always employed to
indicate sympathy, and tapped his pencil-case on the table. Monson stared at
him for a minute.
“Oh, damn!” said Monson suddenly,
and abruptly rushed out of the room.
Woodhouse continued his
sympathetic rigour for perhaps half a minute. Then he sighed and resumed the
shading of the drawings. Something had evidently upset Monson. Nice chap, and
generous, but difficult to get on with. It was the way with every amateur who
had anything to do with engineering—wanted everything finished at once. But
Monson had usually the patience of the expert. Odd he was so irritable. Nice
and round that aluminium rod did look now! Woodhouse threw back his head, and
put it, first this side and then that, to appreciate his bit of shading better.
“Mr. Woodhouse,” said
Hooper, the foreman of the labourers, putting his head in at the door.
“Hullo!” said Woodhouse,
without turning round.
“Nothing happened, sir?”
said Hooper.
“Happened?” said Woodhouse.
“The governor just been up
the rails swearing like a tornader.”
“Oh!” said Woodhouse.
“It ain’t like him, sir.”
“No?”
“And I was thinking
perhaps”—
“Don’t think,” said
Woodhouse, still admiring the drawings.
Hooper knew Woodhouse, and
he shut the door suddenly with a vicious slam. Woodhouse stared stonily before
him for some further minutes, and then made an ineffectual effort to pick
his teeth with his pencil. Abruptly he desisted, pitched that old, tried, and
stumpy servitor across the room, got up, stretched himself, and followed
Hooper.
He looked ruffled—it was
visible to every workman he met. When a millionaire who has been spending
thousands on experiments that employ quite a little army of people suddenly
indicates that he is sick of the undertaking, there is almost invariably a
certain amount of mental friction in the ranks of the little army he employs.
And even before he indicates his intentions there are speculations and murmurs,
a watching of faces and a study of straws. Hundreds of people knew before the
day was out that Monson was ruffled, Woodhouse ruffled, Hooper ruffled. A
workman’s wife, for instance (whom Monson had never seen), decided to keep her
money in the savings-bank instead of buying a velveteen dress. So far-reaching
are even the casual curses of a millionaire.
Monson found a certain
satisfaction in going on the works and behaving disagreeably to as many people
as possible. After a time even that palled upon him, and he rode off the
grounds, to every one’s relief there, and through the lanes south-eastward, to
the infinite tribulation of his house steward at Cheam.
And the immediate cause of
it all, the little grain of annoyance that had suddenly precipitated all this
discontent with his life-work was—these trivial things that direct all our
great decisions!—half a dozen ill-considered remarks made by a pretty girl,
prettily dressed, with a beautiful voice and something more than
prettiness in her soft grey eyes. And of these half-dozen remarks, two words especially—“Monson’s
Folly.” She had felt she was behaving charmingly to Monson; she reflected the
next day how exceptionally effective she had been, and no one would have been
more amazed than she, had she learned the effect she had left on Monson’s mind.
I hope, considering everything, that she never knew.
“How are you getting on with
your flying-machine?” she asked. (“I wonder if I shall ever meet any one with
the sense not to ask that,” thought Monson.) “It will be very dangerous at
first, will it not?” (“Thinks I’m afraid.”) “Jorgon is going to play presently;
have you heard him before?” (“My mania being attended to, we turn to rational
conversation.”) Gush about Jorgon; gradual decline of conversation, ending
with—“You must let me know when your flying-machine is finished, Mr. Monson,
and then I will consider the advisability of taking a ticket.” (“One would
think I was still playing inventions in the nursery.”) But the bitterest thing
she said was not meant for Monson’s ears. To Phlox, the novelist, she was always
conscientiously brilliant. “I have been talking to Mr. Monson, and he can think
of nothing, positively nothing, but that flying-machine of his. Do you know,
all his workmen call that place of his ‘Monson’s Folly’? He is quite
impossible. It is really very, very sad. I always regard him myself in the
light of sunken treasure—the Lost Millionaire, you know.”
She was pretty and well
educated,—indeed, she had written an epigrammatic novelette; but
the bitterness was that she was typical. She summarised what the world
thought of the man who was working sanely, steadily, and surely towards a more
tremendous revolution in the appliances of civilisation, a more far-reaching
alteration in the ways of humanity than has ever been effected since history
began. They did not even take him seriously. In a little while he would be
proverbial. “I must fly
now,” he said on his way home, smarting with a sense of absolute social
failure. “I must fly soon. If it doesn’t come off soon, by God! I shall run
amuck.”
He said that before he had
gone through his pass-book and his litter of papers. Inadequate as the cause
seems, it was that girl’s voice and the expression of her eyes that
precipitated his discontent. But certainly the discovery that he had no longer
even one hundred thousand pounds’ worth of realisable property behind him was
the poison that made the wound deadly.
It was the next day after
this that he exploded upon Woodhouse and his workmen, and thereafter his
bearing was consistently grim for three weeks, and anxiety dwelt in Cheam and
Ewell, Malden, Morden, and Worcester Park, places that had thriven mightily on
his experiments.
Four weeks after that first
swearing of his, he stood with Woodhouse by the reconstructed machine as it lay
across the elevated railway, by means of which it gained its initial impetus.
The new propeller glittered a brighter white than the rest of the machine, and
a gilder, obedient to a whim of Monson’s, was picking out the aluminium bars
with gold. And looking down the long avenue between the ropes (gilded now
with the sunset), one saw red signals, and two miles away an ant-hill of
workmen busy altering the last falls of the run into a rising slope.
“I’ll come,” said Woodhouse. “I’ll
come right enough. But I tell you it’s infernally foolhardy. If only you would
give another year”—
“I tell you I won’t. I tell
you the thing works. I’ve given years enough”—
“It’s not that,” said
Woodhouse. “We’re all right with the machine. But it’s the steering”—
“Haven’t I been rushing,
night and morning, backwards and forwards, through this squirrel’s cage? If the
thing steers true here, it will steer true all across England. It’s just funk,
I tell you, Woodhouse. We could have gone a year ago. And besides”—
“Well?” said Woodhouse.
“The money!” snapped Monson over
his shoulder.
“Hang it! I never thought of
the money,” said Woodhouse, and then, speaking now in a very different tone to
that with which he had said the words before, he repeated, “I’ll come. Trust
me.”
Monson turned suddenly, and
saw all that Woodhouse had not the dexterity to say, shining on his sunset-lit
face. He looked for a moment, then impulsively extended his hand. “Thanks,” he
said.
“All right,” said Woodhouse,
gripping the hand, and with a queer softening of his features. “Trust me.”
Then both men turned to the
big apparatus that lay with its flat wings extended upon the carrier, and
stared at it meditatively. Monson, guided perhaps by a photographic study of
the flight of birds, and by Lilienthal’s methods, had gradually drifted from Maxim’s
shapes towards the bird form again. The thing, however, was driven by a huge
screw behind in the place of the tail; and so hovering, which needs an almost
vertical adjustment of a flat tail, was rendered impossible. The body of the
machine was small, almost cylindrical, and pointed. Forward and aft on the
pointed ends were two small petroleum engines for the screw, and the navigators
sat deep in a canoe-like recess, the foremost one steering, and being protected
by a low screen, with two plate-glass windows, from the blinding rush of air.
On either side a monstrous flat framework with a curved front border could be
adjusted so as either to lie horizontally, or to be tilted upward or down.
These wings worked rigidly together, or, by releasing a pin, one could be
tilted through a small angle independently of its fellow. The front edge of
either wing could also be shifted back so as to diminish the wing-area about
one-sixth. The machine was not only not designed to hover, but it was also
incapable of fluttering. Monson’s idea was to get into the air with the initial
rush of the apparatus, and then to skim, much as a playing-card may be skimmed,
keeping up the rush by means of the screw at the stern. Rooks and gulls fly
enormous distances in that way with scarcely a perceptible movement of the
wings. The bird really drives along on an aërial switchback. It glides slanting
downward for a space, until it has gained considerable momentum, and then
altering the inclination of its wings, glides up again almost to its original
altitude. Even a Londoner who has watched the birds in the aviary in Regent’s
Park knows that.
But the bird is practising
this art from the moment it leaves its nest. It has not only the perfect
apparatus, but the perfect instinct to use it. A man off his feet has the
poorest skill in balancing. Even the simple trick of the bicycle costs him some
hours of labour. The instantaneous adjustments of the wings, the quick response
to a passing breeze, the swift recovery of equilibrium, the giddy, eddying movements
that require such absolute precision—all that he must learn, learn with
infinite labour and infinite danger, if ever he is to conquer flying. The
flying-machine that will start off some fine day, driven by neat “little
levers,” with a nice open deck like a liner, and all loaded up with bombshells
and guns, is the easy dreaming of a literary man. In lives and in treasure the
cost of the conquest of the empire of the air may even exceed all that has been
spent in man’s great conquest of the sea. Certainly it will be costlier than
the greatest war that has ever devastated the world.
No one knew these things
better than these two practical men. And they knew they were in the front rank
of the coming army. Yet there is hope even in a forlorn hope. Men are killed
outright in the reserves sometimes, while others who have been left for dead in
the thickest corner crawl out and survive.
“If we miss these
meadows”—said Woodhouse presently in his slow way.
“My dear chap,” said Monson,
whose spirits had been rising fitfully during the last few days, “we
mustn’t miss these meadows. There’s a quarter of a square mile for us to hit,
fences removed, ditches levelled. We shall come down all right—rest assured.
And if we don’t”—
“Ah!” said Woodhouse. “If we
don’t!”
Before the day of the start,
the newspaper people got wind of the alterations at the northward end of the
framework, and Monson was cheered by a decided change in the comments Romeike
forwarded him. “He will be off some day,” said the papers. “He will be off some
day,” said the South-Western season-ticket holders one to another; the seaside
excursionists, the Saturday-to-Monday trippers from Sussex and Hampshire and
Dorset and Devon, the eminent literary people from Hazlemere, all remarked
eagerly one to another, “He will be off some day,” as the familiar scaffolding
came in sight. And actually, one bright morning, in full view of the
ten-past-ten train from Basingstoke, Monson’s flying-machine started on its
journey.
They saw the carrier running
swiftly along its rail, and the white and gold screw spinning in the air. They
heard the rapid rumble of wheels, and a thud as the carrier reached the buffers
at the end of its run. Then a whirr as the Flying-Machine was shot forward into
the networks. All that the majority of them had seen and heard before. The
thing went with a drooping flight through the framework and rose again, and
then every beholder shouted, or screamed, or yelled, or shrieked after his
kind. For instead of the customary concussion and stoppage, the Flying Machine
flew out of its five years’ cage like a bolt from a crossbow, and drove
slantingly upward into the air, curved round a little, so as to cross the line,
and soared in the direction of Wimbledon Common.
It seemed to hang
momentarily in the air and grow smaller, then it ducked and vanished over the
clustering blue tree-tops to the east of Coombe Hill, and no one stopped
staring and gasping until long after it had disappeared.
That was what the people in
the train from Basingstoke saw. If you had drawn a line down the middle of that
train, from engine to guard’s van, you would not have found a living soul on
the opposite side to the flying-machine. It was a mad rush from window to
window as the thing crossed the line. And the engine-driver and stoker never
took their eyes off the low hills about Wimbledon, and never noticed that they
had run clean through Coombe and Maiden and Raynes Park, until, with returning
animation, they found themselves pelting, at the most indecent pace, into
Wimbledon station.
From the moment when Monson
had started the carrier with a “Now!”
neither he nor Woodhouse said a word. Both men sat with clenched teeth. Monson
had crossed the line with a curve that was too sharp, and Woodhouse had opened
and shut his white lips; but neither spoke. Woodhouse simply gripped his seat,
and breathed sharply through his teeth, watching the blue country to the west
rushing past, and down, and away from him. Monson knelt at his post forward,
and his hands trembled on the spoked wheel that moved the wings. He could
see nothing before him but a mass of white clouds in the sky.
The machine went slanting
upward, travelling with an enormous speed still, but losing momentum every
moment. The land ran away underneath with diminishing speed.
“Now!” said Woodhouse at last, and with a
violent effort Monson wrenched over the wheel and altered the angle of the
wings. The machine seemed to hang for half a minute motionless in mid-air, and
then he saw the hazy blue house-covered hills of Kilburn and Hampstead jump up
before his eyes and rise steadily, until the little sunlit dome of the Albert
Hall appeared through his windows. For a moment he scarcely understood the
meaning of this upward rush of the horizon, but as the nearer and nearer houses
came into view, he realised what he had done. He had turned the wings over too
far, and they were swooping steeply downward towards the Thames.
The thought, the question,
the realisation were all the business of a second of time. “Too much!” gasped
Woodhouse. Monson brought the wheel half-way back with a jerk, and forthwith
the Kilburn and Hampstead ridge dropped again to the lower edge of his windows.
They had been a thousand feet above Coombe and Maiden station; fifty seconds
after they whizzed, at a frightful pace, not eighty feet above the East Putney
station, on the Metropolitan District line, to the screaming astonishment of a
platformful of people. Monson flung up the vans against the air, and over
Fulham they rushed up their atmospheric switchback again, steeply—too steeply.
The ’buses went floundering across the Fulham Road, the people yelled.
Then down again, too steeply
still, and the distant trees and houses about Primrose Hill leapt up across
Monson’s window, and then suddenly he saw straight before him the greenery of
Kensington Gardens and the towers of the Imperial Institute. They were driving
straight down upon South Kensington. The pinnacles of the Natural History
Museum rushed up into view. There came one fatal second of swift thought, a
moment of hesitation. Should he try and clear the towers, or swerve eastward?
He made a hesitating attempt
to release the right wing, left the catch half released, and gave a frantic
clutch at the wheel.
The nose of the machine
seemed to leap up before him. The wheel pressed his hand with irresistible
force, and jerked itself out of his control.
Woodhouse, sitting crouched
together, gave a hoarse cry, and sprang up towards Monson. “Too far!” he cried,
and then he was clinging to the gunwale for dear life, and Monson had been
jerked clean overhead, and was falling backwards upon him.
So swiftly had the thing
happened that barely a quarter of the people going to and fro in Hyde Park, and
Brompton Road, and the Exhibition Road saw anything of the aërial catastrophe.
A distant winged shape had appeared above the clustering houses to the south,
had fallen and risen, growing larger as it did so; had swooped swiftly down
towards the Imperial Institute, a broad spread of flying wings, had swept round
in a quarter circle, dashed eastward, and then suddenly sprang vertically
into the air. A black object shot out of it, and came spinning downward. A man!
Two men clutching each other! They came whirling down, separated as they struck
the roof of the Students’ Club, and bounded off into the green bushes on its
southward side.
For perhaps half a minute,
the pointed stem of the big machine still pierced vertically upward, the screw
spinning desperately. For one brief instant, that yet seemed an age to all who
watched, it had hung motionless in mid-air. Then a spout of yellow flame licked
up its length from the stern engine, and swift, swifter, swifter, and flaring
like a rocket, it rushed down upon the solid mass of masonry which was formerly
the Royal College of Science. The big screw of white and gold touched the
parapet, and crumpled up like wet linen. Then the blazing spindle-shaped body
smashed and splintered, smashing and splintering in its fall, upon the
north-westward angle of the building.
But the crash, the flame of
blazing paraffin that shot heavenward from the shattered engines of the
machine, the crushed horrors that were found in the garden beyond the Students’
Club, the masses of yellow parapet and red brick that fell headlong into the
roadway, the running to and fro of people like ants in a broken ant-hill, the
galloping of fire-engines, the gathering of crowds—all these things do not
belong to this story, which was written only to tell how the first of all
successful flying-machines was launched and flew. Though he failed, and failed
disastrously, the record of Monson’s work remains—a sufficient monument—to
guide the next of that band of gallant experimentalists who will sooner or
later master this great problem of flying. And between Worcester Park and
Malden there still stands that portentous avenue of iron-work, rusting now, and
dangerous here and there, to witness to the first desperate struggle for man’s
right of way through the air.
THE STORY OF THE
LATE MR. ELVESHAM
I SET this story down, not expecting it will be believed, but, if
possible, to prepare a way of escape for the next victim. He, perhaps, may
profit by my misfortune. My own case, I know, is hopeless, and I am now in some
measure prepared to meet my fate.
My name is Edward George
Eden. I was born at Trentham, in Staffordshire, my father being employed in the
gardens there. I lost my mother when I was three years old, and my father when
I was five, my uncle, George Eden, then adopting me as his own son. He was a
single man, self-educated, and well-known in Birmingham as an enterprising
journalist; he educated me generously, fired my ambition to succeed in the
world, and at his death, which happened four years ago, left me his entire
fortune, a matter of about five hundred pounds after all outgoing charges were paid.
I was then eighteen. He advised me in his will to expend the money in
completing my education. I had already chosen the profession of medicine, and
through his posthumous generosity, and my good fortune in a scholarship
competition, I became a medical student at University College, London. At the
time of the beginning of my story I lodged at 11A University
Street, in a little upper room, very shabbily furnished, and draughty,
overlooking the back of Shoolbred’s premises. I used this little room both to
live in and sleep in, because I was anxious to eke out my means to the very
last shillingsworth.
I was taking a pair of shoes
to be mended at a shop in the Tottenham Court Road when I first encountered the
little old man with the yellow face, with whom my life has now become so
inextricably entangled. He was standing on the kerb, and staring at the number
on the door in a doubtful way, as I opened it. His eyes—they were dull grey
eyes, and reddish under the rims—fell to my face, and his countenance immediately
assumed an expression of corrugated amiability.
“You come,” he said, “apt to
the moment. I had forgotten the number of your house. How do you do, Mr. Eden?”
I was a little astonished at
his familiar address, for I had never set eyes on the man before. I was a
little annoyed, too, at his catching me with my boots under my arm. He noticed
my lack of cordiality.
“Wonder who the deuce I am,
eh? A friend, let me assure you. I have seen you before, though you haven’t
seen me. Is there anywhere where I can talk to you?”
I hesitated. The shabbiness
of my room upstairs was not a matter for every stranger. “Perhaps,” said I, “we
might walk down the street. I’m unfortunately prevented”—My gesture
explained the sentence before I had spoken it.
“The very thing,” he said,
and faced this way and then that. “The street? Which way shall we go?” I
slipped my boots down in the passage. “Look here!” he said abruptly; “this
business of mine is a rigmarole. Come and lunch with me, Mr. Eden. I’m an old
man, a very old man, and not good at explanations, and what with my piping
voice and the clatter of the traffic”—
He laid a persuasive skinny
hand that trembled a little upon my arm.
I was not so old that an old
man might not treat me to a lunch. Yet at the same time I was not altogether
pleased by this abrupt invitation. “I had rather”—I began. “But I had rather,” he said,
catching me up, “and a certain civility is surely due to my grey hairs.” And so
I consented, and went with him.
He took me to Blavitski’s; I
had to walk slowly to accommodate myself to his paces; and over such a lunch as
I had never tasted before, he fended off my leading questions, and I took a
better note of his appearance. His clean-shaven face was lean and wrinkled, his
shrivelled lips fell over a set of false teeth, and his white hair was thin and
rather long; he seemed small to me,—though, indeed, most people seemed small to
me,—and his shoulders were rounded and bent. And watching him, I could not help
but observe that he too was taking note of me, running his eyes, with a curious
touch of greed in them, over me, from my broad shoulders to my sun-tanned
hands, and up to my freckled face again. “And now,” said he, as we lit our
cigarettes, “I must tell you of the business in hand.
“I must tell you, then, that
I am an old man, a very old man.” He paused momentarily. “And it happens that I
have money that I must presently be leaving, and never a child have I to leave
it to.” I thought of the confidence trick, and resolved I would be on the alert
for the vestiges of my five hundred pounds. He proceeded to enlarge on his
loneliness, and the trouble he had to find a proper disposition of his money.
“I have weighed this plan and that plan, charities, institutions, and
scholarships, and libraries, and I have come to this conclusion at last,”—he
fixed his eyes on my face,—“that I will find some young fellow, ambitious,
pure-minded, and poor, healthy in body and healthy in mind, and, in short, make
him my heir, give him all that I have.” He repeated, “Give him all that I have.
So that he will suddenly be lifted out of all the trouble and struggle in which
his sympathies have been educated, to freedom and influence.”
I tried to seem
disinterested. With a transparent hypocrisy, I said, “And you want my help, my
professional services, maybe, to find that person.”
He smiled, and looked at me
over his cigarette, and I laughed at his quiet exposure of my modest pretence.
“What a career such a man
might have!” he said. “It fills me with envy to think how I have accumulated
that another man may spend—
“But there are conditions,
of course, burdens to be imposed. He must, for instance, take my name. You
cannot expect everything without some return. And I must go into all the
circumstances of his life before I can accept him. He must be sound. I must
know his heredity, how his parents and grandparents died, have the strictest
inquiries made into his private morals”—
This modified my secret
congratulations a little. “And do I understand,” said I, “that I—?”
“Yes,” he said, almost fiercely.
“You. You.”
I answered never a word. My
imagination was dancing wildly, my innate scepticism was useless to modify its
transports. There was not a particle of gratitude in my mind—I did not know
what to say nor how to say it. “But why me in particular?” I said at last.
He had chanced to hear of me
from Professor Haslar, he said, as a typically sound and sane young man, and he
wished, as far as possible, to leave his money where health and integrity were
assured.
That was my first meeting
with the little old man. He was mysterious about himself; he would not give his
name yet, he said, and after I had answered some questions of his, he left me
at the Blavitski portal. I noticed that he drew a handful of gold coins from
his pocket when it came to paying for the lunch. His insistence upon bodily
health was curious. In accordance with an arrangement we had made I applied
that day for a life policy in the Loyal Insurance Company for a large sum, and
I was exhaustively overhauled by the medical advisers of that company in the
subsequent week. Even that did not satisfy him, and he insisted I must be
re-examined by the great Doctor Henderson. It was Friday in Whitsun week before
he came to a decision. He called me down, quite late in the
evening,—nearly nine it was,—from cramming chemical equations for my
Preliminary Scientific examination. He was standing in the passage under the
feeble gas-lamp, and his face was a grotesque interplay of shadows. He seemed
more bowed than when I had first seen him, and his cheeks had sunk in a little.
His voice shook with
emotion. “Everything is satisfactory, Mr. Eden,” he said. “Everything is quite,
quite satisfactory. And this night of all nights, you must dine with me and
celebrate your—accession.” He was interrupted by a cough. “You won’t have long
to wait, either,” he said, wiping his handkerchief across his lips, and
gripping my hand with his long bony claw that was disengaged. “Certainly not
very long to wait.”
We went into the street and
called a cab. I remember every incident of that drive vividly, the swift, easy
motion, the vivid contrast of gas and oil and electric light, the crowds of
people in the streets, the place in Regent Street to which we went, and the
sumptuous dinner we were served with there. I was disconcerted at first by the
well-dressed waiter’s glances at my rough clothes, bothered by the stones of
the olives, but as the champagne warmed my blood, my confidence revived. At
first the old man talked of himself. He had already told me his name in the
cab; he was Egbert Elvesham, the great philosopher, whose name I had known
since I was a lad at school. It seemed incredible to me that this man, whose
intelligence had so early dominated mine, this great abstraction, should
suddenly realise itself as this decrepit, familiar figure. I daresay every
young fellow who has suddenly fallen among celebrities has felt something of my
disappointment. He told me now of the future that the feeble streams of his
life would presently leave dry for me, houses, copyrights, investments; I had
never suspected that philosophers were so rich. He watched me drink and eat
with a touch of envy. “What a capacity for living you have!” he said; and then,
with a sigh, a sigh of relief I could have thought it, “It will not be long.”
“Ay,” said I, my head
swimming now with champagne; “I have a future perhaps—of a passing agreeable
sort, thanks to you. I shall now have the honour of your name. But you have a
past. Such a past as is worth all my future.”
He shook his head and
smiled, as I thought, with half-sad appreciation of my flattering admiration.
“That future,” he said, “would you in truth change it?” The waiter came with
liqueurs. “You will not perhaps mind taking my name, taking my position, but
would you indeed—willingly—take my years?”
“With your achievements,”
said I gallantly.
He smiled again.
“Kummel—both,” he said to the waiter, and turned his attention to a little
paper packet he had taken from his pocket. “This hour,” said he, “this
after-dinner hour is the hour of small things. Here is a scrap of my
unpublished wisdom.” He opened the packet with his shaking yellow fingers, and
showed a little pinkish powder on the paper. “This,” said he—“well, you must
guess what it is. But Kummel—put but a dash of this[54] powder in it—is Himmel.” His large greyish eyes watched mine
with an inscrutable expression.
It was a bit of a shock to
me to find this great teacher gave his mind to the flavour of liqueurs.
However, I feigned a great interest in his weakness, for I was drunk enough for
such small sycophancy.
He parted the powder between
the little glasses, and, rising suddenly, with a strange unexpected dignity,
held out his hand towards me. I imitated his action, and the glasses rang. “To
a quick succession,” said he, and raised his glass towards his lips.
“Not that,” I said hastily.
“Not that.”
He paused, with the liqueur
at the level of his chin, and his eyes blazing into mine.
“To a long life,” said I.
He hesitated. “To a long
life,” said he, with a sudden bark of laughter, and with eyes fixed on one
another we tilted the little glasses. His eyes looked straight into mine, and
as I drained the stuff off, I felt a curiously intense sensation. The first
touch of it set my brain in a furious tumult; I seemed to feel an actual
physical stirring in my skull, and a seething humming filled my ears. I did not
notice the flavour in my mouth, the aroma that filled my throat; I saw only the
grey intensity of his gaze that burnt into mine. The draught, the mental
confusion, the noise and stirring in my head, seemed to last an interminable
time. Curious vague impressions of half-forgotten things danced and vanished on
the edge of my consciousness. At last he broke the spell. With a sudden
explosive sigh he put down his glass.
“Well?” he said.
“It’s glorious,” said I,
though I had not tasted the stuff.
My head was spinning. I sat
down. My brain was chaos. Then my perception grew clear and minute as though I
saw things in a concave mirror. His manner seemed to have changed into
something nervous and hasty. He pulled out his watch and grimaced at it.
“Eleven-seven! And to-night I must—Seven—twenty-five. Waterloo! I must go at
once.” He called for the bill, and struggled with his coat. Officious waiters
came to our assistance. In another moment I was wishing him good-bye, over the
apron of a cab, and still with an absurd feeling of minute distinctness, as
though—how can I express it?—I not only saw but felt through an
inverted opera-glass.
“That stuff,” he said. He
put his hand to his forehead. “I ought not to have given it to you. It will
make your head split to-morrow. Wait a minute. Here.” He handed me out a little
flat thing like a seidlitz-powder. “Take that in water as you are going to bed.
The other thing was a drug. Not till you’re ready to go to bed, mind. It will
clear your head. That’s all. One more shake—Futurus!”
I gripped his shrivelled
claw. “Good-bye,” he said, and by the droop of his eyelids I judged he too was
a little under the influence of that brain-twisting cordial.
He recollected something
else with a start, felt in his breast-pocket, and produced another packet, this
time a cylinder the size and shape of a shaving-stick. “Here,” said he.
“I’d almost forgotten. Don’t open this until I come to-morrow—but take it now.”
It was so heavy that I well-nigh
dropped it. “All ri’!” said I, and he grinned at me through the cab window as
the cabman flicked his horse into wakefulness. It was a white packet he had
given me, with red seals at either end and along its edge. “If this isn’t
money,” said I, “it’s platinum or lead.”
I stuck it with elaborate
care into my pocket, and with a whirling brain walked home through the Regent
Street loiterers and the dark back streets beyond Portland Road. I remember the
sensations of that walk very vividly, strange as they were. I was still so far
myself that I could notice my strange mental state, and wonder whether this
stuff I had had was opium—a drug beyond my experience. It is hard now to
describe the peculiarity of my mental strangeness—mental doubling vaguely
expresses it. As I was walking up Regent Street I found in my mind a queer
persuasion that it was Waterloo station, and had an odd impulse to get into the
Polytechnic as a man might get into a train. I put a knuckle in my eye, and it
was Regent Street. How can I express it? You see a skilful actor looking
quietly at you, he pulls a grimace, and lo!—another person. Is it too
extravagant if I tell you that it seemed to me as if Regent Street had, for the
moment, done that? Then, being persuaded it was Regent Street again, I was
oddly muddled about some fantastic reminiscences that cropped up. “Thirty years
ago,” thought I, “it was here that I quarrelled with my brother.” Then I burst
out laughing, to the astonishment and encouragement of a group of night
prowlers. Thirty years ago I did not exist, and never in my life had I
boasted a brother. The stuff was surely liquid folly, for the poignant regret
for that lost brother still clung to me. Along Portland Road the madness took
another turn. I began to recall vanished shops, and to compare the street with
what it used to be. Confused, troubled thinking is comprehensible enough after
the drink I had taken, but what puzzled me were these curiously vivid phantasm
memories that had crept into my mind, and not only the memories that had crept
in, but also the memories that had slipped out. I stopped opposite Stevens’,
the natural history dealer’s, and cudgelled my brains to think what he had to
do with me. A ’bus went by, and sounded exactly like the rumbling of a train. I
seemed to be dipped into some dark, remote pit for the recollection. “Of
course,” said I, at last, “he has promised me three frogs to-morrow. Odd I
should have forgotten.”
Do they still show children
dissolving views? In those I remember one view would begin like a faint ghost,
and grow and oust another. In just that way it seemed to me that a ghostly set
of new sensations was struggling with those of my ordinary self.
I went on through Euston
Road to Tottenham Court Road, puzzled, and a little frightened, and scarcely
noticed the unusual way I was taking, for commonly I used to cut through the
intervening network of back streets. I turned into University Street, to
discover that I had forgotten my number. Only by a strong effort did I recall
11A, and even then it seemed to me that it was a thing
some forgotten person had told me. I tried to steady my mind by recalling
the incidents of the dinner, and for the life of me I could conjure up no
picture of my host’s face; I saw him only as a shadowy outline, as one might
see oneself reflected in a window through which one was looking. In his place,
however, I had a curious exterior vision of myself sitting at a table, flushed,
bright-eyed, and talkative.
“I must take this other
powder,” said I. “This is getting impossible.”
I tried the wrong side of
the hall for my candle and the matches, and had a doubt of which landing my
room might be on. “I’m drunk,” I said, “that’s certain,” and blundered
needlessly on the staircase to sustain the proposition.
At the first glance my room
seemed unfamiliar. “What rot!” I said, and stared about me. I seemed to bring
myself back by the effort, and the odd phantasmal quality passed into the
concrete familiar. There was the old glass still, with my notes on the albumens
stuck in the corner of the frame, my old everyday suit of clothes pitched about
the floor. And yet it was not so real after all. I felt an idiotic persuasion
trying to creep into my mind, as it were, that I was in a railway carriage in a
train just stopping, that I was peering out of the window at some unknown
station. I gripped the bed-rail firmly to reassure myself. “It’s clairvoyance,
perhaps,” I said. “I must write to the Psychical Research Society.”
I put the rouleau on my
dressing-table, sat on my bed and began to take off my boots. It was as if the
picture of my present sensations was painted over some other picture that was
trying to show through. “Curse it!” said I; “my wits are going, or am I in
two places at once?” Half-undressed, I tossed the powder into a glass and drank
it off. It effervesced, and became a fluorescent amber colour. Before I was in
bed my mind was already tranquillised. I felt the pillow at my cheek, and
thereupon I must have fallen asleep.
000
I awoke abruptly out of a
dream of strange beasts, and found myself lying on my back. Probably everyone
knows that dismal, emotional dream from which one escapes, awake indeed, but
strangely cowed. There was a curious taste in my mouth, a tired feeling in my
limbs, a sense of cutaneous discomfort. I lay with my head motionless on my
pillow, expecting that my feeling of strangeness and terror would probably pass
away, and that I should then doze off again to sleep. But instead of that, my
uncanny sensations increased. At first I could perceive nothing wrong about me.
There was a faint light in the room, so faint that it was the very next thing
to darkness, and the furniture stood out in it as vague blots of absolute
darkness. I stared with my eyes just over the bedclothes.
It came into my mind that
someone had entered the room to rob me of my rouleau of money, but after lying
for some moments, breathing regularly to simulate sleep, I realised this was
mere fancy. Nevertheless, the uneasy assurance of something wrong kept fast
hold of me. With an effort I raised my head from the pillow, and peered about
me at the dark. What it was I could not conceive. I looked at the dim shapes
around me, the greater and lesser darknesses that indicated curtains,
table, fireplace, bookshelves, and so forth. Then I began to perceive something
unfamiliar in the forms of the darkness. Had the bed turned round? Yonder
should be the bookshelves, and something shrouded and pallid rose there,
something that would not answer to the bookshelves, however I looked at it. It
was far too big to be my shirt thrown on a chair.
Overcoming a childish
terror, I threw back the bedclothes and thrust my leg out of bed. Instead of
coming out of my truckle-bed upon the floor, I found my foot scarcely reached
the edge of the mattress. I made another step, as it were, and sat up on the
edge of the bed. By the side of my bed should be the candle, and the matches
upon the broken chair. I put out my hand and touched—nothing. I waved my hand
in the darkness, and it came against some heavy hanging, soft and thick in
texture, which gave a rustling noise at my touch. I grasped this and pulled it;
it appeared to be a curtain suspended over the head of my bed.
I was now thoroughly awake,
and beginning to realise that I was in a strange room. I was puzzled. I tried
to recall the overnight circumstances, and I found them now, curiously enough,
vivid in my memory: the supper, my reception of the little packages, my wonder
whether I was intoxicated, my slow undressing, the coolness to my flushed face
of my pillow. I felt a sudden distrust. Was that last night, or the night
before? At anyrate, this room was strange to me, and I could not imagine how I
had got into it. The dim, pallid outline was growing paler, and I
perceived it was a window, with the dark shape of an oval toilet-glass against
the weak intimation of the dawn that filtered through the blind. I stood up,
and was surprised by a curious feeling of weakness and unsteadiness. With
trembling hands outstretched, I walked slowly towards the window, getting, nevertheless,
a bruise on the knee from a chair by the way. I fumbled round the glass, which
was large, with handsome brass sconces, to find the blind-cord. I could not
find any. By chance I took hold of the tassel, and with the click of a spring
the blind ran up.
I found myself looking out
upon a scene that was altogether strange to me. The night was overcast, and
through the flocculent grey of the heaped clouds there filtered a faint
half-light of dawn. Just at the edge of the sky, the cloud-canopy had a blood-red
rim. Below, everything was dark and indistinct, dim hills in the distance, a
vague mass of buildings running up into pinnacles, trees like spilt ink, and
below the window a tracery of black bushes and pale grey paths. It was so
unfamiliar that for the moment I thought myself still dreaming. I felt the
toilet-table; it appeared to be made of some polished wood, and was rather
elaborately furnished—there were little cut-glass bottles and a brush upon it.
There was also a queer little object, horse-shoe-shaped it felt, with smooth,
hard projections, lying in a saucer. I could find no matches nor candlestick.
I turned my eyes to the room
again. Now the blind was up, faint spectres of its furnishing came out of
the darkness. There was a huge curtained bed, and the fireplace at its foot had
a large white mantel with something of the shimmer of marble.
I leant against the
toilet-table, shut my eyes and opened them again, and tried to think. The whole
thing was far too real for dreaming. I was inclined to imagine there was still
some hiatus in my memory, as a consequence of my draught of that strange
liqueur; that I had come into my inheritance perhaps, and suddenly lost my
recollection of everything since my good fortune had been announced. Perhaps if
I waited a little, things would be clearer to me again. Yet my dinner with old
Elvesham was now singularly vivid and recent. The champagne, the observant
waiters, the powder, and the liqueurs—I could have staked my soul it all
happened a few hours ago.
And then occurred a thing so
trivial and yet so terrible to me that I shiver now to think of that moment. I
spoke aloud. I said, “How the devil did I get here?” ... And the voice was not my own.
It was not my own, it was
thin, the articulation was slurred, the resonance of my facial bones was
different. Then, to reassure myself I ran one hand over the other, and felt
loose folds of skin, the bony laxity of age. “Surely,” I said, in that horrible
voice that had somehow established itself in my throat, “surely this thing is a
dream!” Almost as quickly as if I did it involuntarily, I thrust my fingers
into my mouth. My teeth had gone. My finger-tips ran on the flaccid surface of
an even row of shrivelled gums. I was sick with dismay and disgust.
I felt then a passionate
desire to see myself, to realise at once in its full horror the ghastly change
that had come upon me. I tottered to the mantel, and felt along it for matches.
As I did so, a barking cough sprang up in my throat, and I clutched the thick
flannel nightdress I found about me. There were no matches there, and I
suddenly realised that my extremities were cold. Sniffing and coughing,
whimpering a little, perhaps, I fumbled back to bed. “It is surely a dream,” I
whimpered to myself as I clambered back, “surely a dream.” It was a senile
repetition. I pulled the bedclothes over my shoulders, over my ears, I thrust
my withered hand under the pillow, and determined to compose myself to sleep.
Of course it was a dream. In the morning the dream would be over, and I should wake
up strong and vigorous again to my youth and studies. I shut my eyes, breathed
regularly, and, finding myself wakeful, began to count slowly through the
powers of three.
But the thing I desired
would not come. I could not get to sleep. And the persuasion of the inexorable
reality of the change that had happened to me grew steadily. Presently I found
myself with my eyes wide open, the powers of three forgotten, and my skinny
fingers upon my shrivelled gums. I was, indeed, suddenly and abruptly, an old man.
I had in some unaccountable manner fallen through my life and come to old age,
in some way I had been cheated of all the best of my life, of love, of
struggle, of strength, and hope. I grovelled into the pillow and tried to
persuade myself that such hallucination was possible. Imperceptibly, steadily,
the dawn grew clearer.
At last, despairing of
further sleep, I sat up in bed and looked about me. A chill twilight rendered
the whole chamber visible. It was spacious and well-furnished, better furnished
than any room I had ever slept in before. A candle and matches became dimly
visible upon a little pedestal in a recess. I threw back the bedclothes, and,
shivering with the rawness of the early morning, albeit it was summer-time, I
got out and lit the candle. Then, trembling horribly, so that the extinguisher
rattled on its spike, I tottered to the glass and saw—Elvesham’s face! It was
none the less horrible because I had already dimly feared as much. He had
already seemed physically weak and pitiful to me, but seen now, dressed only in
a coarse flannel nightdress that fell apart and showed the stringy neck, seen
now as my own body, I cannot describe its desolate decrepitude. The hollow
cheeks, the straggling tail of dirty grey hair, the rheumy bleared eyes, the
quivering, shrivelled lips, the lower displaying a gleam of the pink interior
lining, and those horrible dark gums showing. You who are mind and body
together, at your natural years, cannot imagine what this fiendish imprisonment
meant to me. To be young and full of the desire and energy of youth, and to be
caught, and presently to be crushed in this tottering ruin of a body....
But I wander from the course
of my story. For some time I must have been stunned at this change that had
come upon me. It was daylight when I did so far gather myself together as to
think. In some inexplicable way I had been changed, though how, short of
magic, the thing had been done, I could not say. And as I thought, the
diabolical ingenuity of Elvesham came home to me. It seemed plain to me that as
I found myself in his, so he must be in possession of my body, of my
strength, that is, and my future. But how to prove it? Then, as I thought, the
thing became so incredible, even to me, that my mind reeled, and I had to pinch
myself, to feel my toothless gums, to see myself in the glass, and touch the
things about me, before I could steady myself to face the facts again. Was all
life hallucination? Was I indeed Elvesham, and he me? Had I been dreaming of
Eden overnight? Was there any Eden? But if I was Elvesham, I should remember
where I was on the previous morning, the name of the town in which I lived,
what happened before the dream began. I struggled with my thoughts. I recalled
the queer doubleness of my memories overnight. But now my mind was clear. Not
the ghost of any memories but those proper to Eden could I raise.
“This way lies insanity!” I
cried in my piping voice. I staggered to my feet, dragged my feeble, heavy
limbs to the washhand-stand, and plunged my grey head into a basin of cold
water. Then, towelling myself, I tried again. It was no good. I felt beyond all
question that I was indeed Eden, not Elvesham. But Eden in Elvesham’s body!
Had I been a man of any
other age, I might have given myself up to my fate as one enchanted. But in
these sceptical days miracles do not pass current. Here was some trick of
psychology. What a drug and a steady stare could do, a drug and a
steady stare, or some similar treatment, could surely undo. Men have lost
their memories before. But to exchange memories as one does umbrellas! I
laughed. Alas! not a healthy laugh, but a wheezing, senile titter. I could have
fancied old Elvesham laughing at my plight, and a gust of petulant anger,
unusual to me, swept across my feelings. I began dressing eagerly in the
clothes I found lying about on the floor, and only realised when I was dressed
that it was an evening suit I had assumed. I opened the wardrobe and found some
more ordinary clothes, a pair of plaid trousers, and an old-fashioned
dressing-gown. I put a venerable smoking-cap on my venerable head, and,
coughing a little from my exertions, tottered out upon the landing.
It was then, perhaps, a
quarter to six, and the blinds were closely drawn and the house quite silent.
The landing was a spacious one, a broad, richly-carpeted staircase went down
into the darkness of the hall below, and before me a door ajar showed me a
writing-desk, a revolving bookcase, the back of a study chair, and a fine array
of bound books, shelf upon shelf.
“My study,” I mumbled, and
walked across the landing. Then at the sound of my voice a thought struck me,
and I went back to the bedroom and put in the set of false teeth. They slipped
in with the ease of old habit. “That’s better,” said I, gnashing them, and so
returned to the study.
The drawers of the
writing-desk were locked. Its revolving top was also locked. I could see no
indications of the keys, and there were none in the pockets of my
trousers. I shuffled back at once to the bedroom, and went through the dress
suit, and afterwards the pockets of all the garments I could find. I was very
eager, and one might have imagined that burglars had been at work, to see my
room when I had done. Not only were there no keys to be found, but not a coin,
nor a scrap of paper—save only the receipted bill of the overnight dinner.
A curious weariness asserted
itself. I sat down and stared at the garments flung here and there, their
pockets turned inside out. My first frenzy had already flickered out. Every
moment I was beginning to realise the immense intelligence of the plans of my
enemy, to see more and more clearly the hopelessness of my position. With an
effort I rose and hurried hobbling into the study again. On the staircase was a
housemaid pulling up the blinds. She stared, I think, at the expression of my
face. I shut the door of the study behind me, and, seizing a poker, began an
attack upon the desk. That is how they found me. The cover of the desk was
split, the lock smashed, the letters torn out of the pigeon-holes and tossed
about the room. In my senile rage I had flung about the pens and other such
light stationery, and overturned the ink. Moreover, a large vase upon the
mantel had got broken—I do not know how. I could find no cheque-book, no money,
no indications of the slightest use for the recovery of my body. I was
battering madly at the drawers, when the butler, backed by two women-servants,
intruded upon me.
000
That simply is the story of
my change. No one will believe my frantic assertions. I am treated as one
demented, and even at this moment I am under restraint. But I am sane,
absolutely sane, and to prove it I have sat down to write this story minutely
as the things happened to me. I appeal to the reader, whether there is any
trace of insanity in the style or method of the story he has been reading. I am
a young man locked away in an old man’s body. But the clear fact is incredible
to everyone. Naturally I appear demented to those who will not believe this,
naturally I do not know the names of my secretaries, of the doctors who come to
see me, of my servants and neighbours, of this town (wherever it is) where I
find myself. Naturally I lose myself in my own house, and suffer inconveniences
of every sort. Naturally I ask the oddest questions. Naturally I weep and cry out,
and have paroxysms of despair. I have no money and no cheque-book. The bank
will not recognise my signature, for I suppose that, allowing for the feeble
muscles I now have, my handwriting is still Eden’s. These people about me will
not let me go to the bank personally. It seems, indeed, that there is no bank
in this town, and that I have an account in some part of London. It seems that
Elvesham kept the name of his solicitor secret from all his household—I can
ascertain nothing. Elvesham was, of course, a profound student of mental
science, and all my declarations of the facts of the case merely confirm the
theory that my insanity is the outcome of overmuch brooding upon psychology.
Dreams of the personal identity indeed! Two days ago I was a healthy youngster,
with all life before me; now I am a furious old man, unkempt, and
desperate, and miserable, prowling about a great luxurious strange house,
watched, feared, and avoided as a lunatic by everyone about me. And in London
is Elvesham beginning life again in a vigorous body, and with all the
accumulated knowledge and wisdom of threescore and ten. He has stolen my life.
What has happened I do not
clearly know. In the study are volumes of manuscript notes referring chiefly to
the psychology of memory, and parts of what may be either calculations or
ciphers in symbols absolutely strange to me. In some passages there are
indications that he was also occupied with the philosophy of mathematics. I
take it he has transferred the whole of his memories, the accumulation that
makes up his personality, from this old withered brain of his to mine, and,
similarly, that he has transferred mine to his discarded tenement. Practically,
that is, he has changed bodies. But how such a change may be possible is
without the range of my philosophy. I have been a materialist for all my
thinking life, but here, suddenly, is a clear case of man’s detachability from
matter.
One desperate experiment I
am about to try. I sit writing here before putting the matter to issue. This
morning, with the help of a table-knife that I had secreted at breakfast, I
succeeded in breaking open a fairly obvious secret drawer in this wrecked
writing-desk. I discovered nothing save a little green glass phial containing a
white powder. Round the neck of the phial was a label, and thereon was written
this one word, “Release.”
This may be—is most probably, poison. I can understand Elvesham placing
poison in my way, and I should be sure that it was his intention so to get rid
of the only living witness against him, were it not for this careful
concealment. The man has practically solved the problem of immortality. Save
for the spite of chance, he will live in my body until it has aged, and then,
again, throwing that aside, he will assume some other victim’s youth and
strength. When one remembers his heartlessness, it is terrible to think of the
ever-growing experience, that.... How long has he been leaping from body to
body?... But I tire of writing. The powder appears to be soluble in water. The
taste is not unpleasant.
000
There the narrative found
upon Mr. Elvesham’s desk ends. His dead body lay between the desk and the
chair. The latter had been pushed back, probably by his last convulsions. The
story was written in pencil, and in a crazy hand, quite unlike his usual minute
characters. There remain only two curious facts to record. Indisputably there
was some connection between Eden and Elvesham, since the whole of Elvesham’s
property was bequeathed to the young man. But he never inherited. When Elvesham
committed suicide, Eden was, strangely enough, already dead. Twenty-four hours
before, he had been knocked down by a cab and killed instantly, at the crowded
crossing at the intersection of Gower Street and Euston Road. So that the only
human being who could have thrown light upon this fantastic narrative is beyond
the reach of questions. Without further comment I leave this extraordinary
matter to the reader’s individual judgment.
IN THE ABYSS
THE lieutenant stood in front of the steel sphere and gnawed a
piece of pine splinter. “What do you think of it, Steevens?” he asked.
“It’s an idea,” said
Steevens, in the tone of one who keeps an open mind.
“I believe it will
smash—flat,” said the lieutenant.
“He seems to have calculated
it all out pretty well,” said Steevens, still impartial.
“But think of the pressure,”
said the lieutenant. “At the surface of the water it’s fourteen pounds to the
inch, thirty feet down it’s double that; sixty, treble; ninety, four times;
nine hundred, forty times; five thousand, three hundred—that’s a mile—it’s two
hundred and forty times fourteen pounds; that’s—let’s see—thirty
hundredweight—a ton and a half, Steevens; a ton and a half to the square inch. And
the ocean where he’s going is five miles deep. That’s seven and a half”—
“Sounds a lot,” said
Steevens, “but it’s jolly thick steel.”
The lieutenant made no
answer, but resumed his pine splinter. The object of their conversation was a
huge ball of steel, having an exterior diameter of perhaps nine feet. It
looked like the shot for some Titanic piece of artillery. It was elaborately
nested in a monstrous scaffolding built into the framework of the vessel, and
the gigantic spars that were presently to sling it overboard gave the stern of
the ship an appearance that had raised the curiosity of every decent sailor who
had sighted it, from the Pool of London to the Tropic of Capricorn. In two
places, one above the other, the steel gave place to a couple of circular
windows of enormously thick glass, and one of these, set in a steel frame of
great solidity, was now partially unscrewed. Both the men had seen the interior
of this globe for the first time that morning. It was elaborately padded with
air cushions, with little studs sunk between bulging pillows to work the simple
mechanism of the affair. Everything was elaborately padded, even the Myers
apparatus which was to absorb carbonic acid and replace the oxygen inspired by
its tenant, when he had crept in by the glass manhole, and had been screwed in.
It was so elaborately padded that a man might have been fired from a gun in it
with perfect safety. And it had need to be, for presently a man was to crawl in
through that glass manhole, to be screwed up tightly, and to be flung
overboard, and to sink down—down—down, for five miles, even as the lieutenant
said. It had taken the strongest hold of his imagination; it made him a bore at
mess; and he found Steevens, the new arrival aboard, a godsend to talk to about
it, over and over again.
“It’s my opinion,” said the
lieutenant, “that that glass will simply bend in and bulge and
smash, under a pressure of that sort. Daubrée has made rocks run like
water under big pressures—and, you mark my words”—
“If the glass did break in,”
said Steevens, “what then?”
“The water would shoot in
like a jet of iron. Have you ever felt a straight jet of high pressure water?
It would hit as hard as a bullet. It would simply smash him and flatten him. It
would tear down his throat, and into his lungs; it would blow in his ears”—
“What a detailed imagination
you have!” protested Steevens, who saw things vividly.
“It’s a simple statement of
the inevitable,” said the lieutenant.
“And the globe?”
“Would just give out a few
little bubbles, and it would settle down comfortably against the day of
judgment, among the oozes and the bottom clay—with poor Elstead spread over his
own smashed cushions like butter over bread.”
He repeated this sentence as
though he liked it very much. “Like butter over bread,” he said.
“Having a look at the
jigger?” said a voice, and Elstead stood behind them, spick and span in white,
with a cigarette between his teeth, and his eyes smiling out of the shadow of
his ample hat-brim. “What’s that about bread and butter, Weybridge? Grumbling
as usual about the insufficient pay of naval officers? It won’t be more than a
day now before I start. We are to get the slings ready to-day. This clean sky
and gentle swell is just the kind of thing for swinging off a dozen tons
of lead and iron; isn’t it?”
“It won’t affect you much,”
said Weybridge.
“No. Seventy or eighty feet
down, and I shall be there in a dozen seconds, there’s not a particle moving,
though the wind shriek itself hoarse up above, and the water lifts halfway to
the clouds. No. Down there”— He moved to the side of the ship and the other two
followed him. All three leant forward on their elbows and stared down into the
yellow-green water.
“Peace,” said Elstead, finishing his thought
aloud.
“Are you dead certain that
clockwork will act?” asked Weybridge presently.
“It has worked thirty-five
times,” said Elstead. “It’s bound to work.”
“But if it doesn’t?”
“Why shouldn’t it?”
“I wouldn’t go down in that
confounded thing,” said Weybridge, “for twenty thousand pounds.”
“Cheerful chap you are,”
said Elstead, and spat sociably at a bubble below.
“I don’t understand yet how
you mean to work the thing,” said Steevens.
“In the first place, I’m
screwed into the sphere,” said Elstead, “and when I’ve turned the electric
light off and on three times to show I’m cheerful, I’m swung out over the stern
by that crane, with all those big lead sinkers slung below me. The top lead
weight has a roller carrying a hundred fathoms of strong cord rolled up, and
that’s all that joins the sinkers to the sphere, except the slings that will be
cut when the affair is dropped. We use cord rather than wire rope because
it’s easier to cut and more buoyant—necessary points, as you will see.
“Through each of these lead
weights you notice there is a hole, and an iron rod will be run through that
and will project six feet on the lower side. If that rod is rammed up from
below, it knocks up a lever and sets the clockwork in motion at the side of the
cylinder on which the cord winds.
“Very well. The whole affair
is lowered gently into the water, and the slings are cut. The sphere
floats,—with the air in it, it’s lighter than water,—but the lead weights go
down straight and the cord runs out. When the cord is all paid out, the sphere
will go down too, pulled down by the cord.”
“But why the cord?” asked
Steevens. “Why not fasten the weights directly to the sphere?”
“Because of the smash down
below. The whole affair will go rushing down, mile after mile, at a headlong
pace at last. It would be knocked to pieces on the bottom if it wasn’t for that
cord. But the weights will hit the bottom, and directly they do, the buoyancy
of the sphere will come into play. It will go on sinking slower and slower;
come to a stop at last, and then begin to float upward again.
“That’s where the clockwork
comes in. Directly the weights smash against the sea bottom, the rod will be
knocked through and will kick up the clockwork, and the cord will be rewound on
the reel. I shall be lugged down to the sea bottom. There I shall stay for half
an hour, with the electric light on, looking about me. Then the clockwork will
release a spring knife, the cord will be cut, and up I shall rush again,
like a soda-water bubble. The cord itself will help the flotation.”
“And if you should chance to
hit a ship?” said Weybridge.
“I should come up at such a
pace, I should go clean through it,” said Elstead, “like a cannon ball. You
needn’t worry about that.”
“And suppose some nimble
crustacean should wriggle into your clockwork”—
“It would be a pressing sort
of invitation for me to stop,” said Elstead, turning his back on the water and
staring at the sphere.
They had swung Elstead
overboard by eleven o’clock. The day was serenely bright and calm, with the
horizon lost in haze. The electric glare in the little upper compartment beamed
cheerfully three times. Then they let him down slowly to the surface of the
water, and a sailor in the stern chains hung ready to cut the tackle that held
the lead weights and the sphere together. The globe, which had looked so large
on deck, looked the smallest thing conceivable under the stern of the ship. It
rolled a little, and its two dark windows, which floated uppermost, seemed like
eyes turned up in round wonderment at the people who crowded the rail. A voice
wondered how Elstead liked the rolling. “Are you ready?” sang out the
commander. “Ay, ay, sir!” “Then let her go!”
The rope of the tackle
tightened against the blade and was cut, and an eddy rolled over the globe in a
grotesquely helpless fashion. Someone waved a handkerchief, someone else tried
an ineffectual cheer, a middy was counting slowly, “Eight, nine, ten!”
Another roll, then with a jerk and a splash the thing righted itself.
It seemed to be stationary
for a moment, to grow rapidly smaller, and then the water closed over it, and
it became visible, enlarged by refraction and dimmer, below the surface. Before
one could count three it had disappeared. There was a flicker of white light
far down in the water, that diminished to a speck and vanished. Then there was
nothing but a depth of water going down into blackness, through which a shark
was swimming.
Then suddenly the screw of
the cruiser began to rotate, the water was crickled, the shark disappeared in a
wrinkled confusion, and a torrent of foam rushed across the crystalline
clearness that had swallowed up Elstead. “What’s the idee?” said one A.B. to another.
“We’re going to lay off
about a couple of miles, ’fear he should hit us when he comes up,” said his
mate.
The ship steamed slowly to
her new position. Aboard her almost everyone who was unoccupied remained
watching the breathing swell into which the sphere had sunk. For the next
half-hour it is doubtful if a word was spoken that did not bear directly or
indirectly on Elstead. The December sun was now high in the sky, and the heat
very considerable.
“He’ll be cold enough down
there,” said Weybridge. “They say that below a certain depth sea water’s always
just about freezing.”
“Where’ll he come up?” asked
Steevens. “I’ve lost my bearings.”
“That’s the spot,” said the
commander, who prided himself on his omniscience. He extended a precise finger
south-eastward. “And this, I reckon, is pretty nearly the moment,” he said.
“He’s been thirty-five minutes.”
“How long does it take to
reach the bottom of the ocean?” asked Steevens.
“For a depth of five miles,
and reckoning—as we did—an acceleration of two feet per second, both ways, is
just about three-quarters of a minute.”
“Then he’s overdue,” said
Weybridge.
“Pretty nearly,” said the
commander. “I suppose it takes a few minutes for that cord of his to wind in.”
“I forgot that,” said
Weybridge, evidently relieved.
And then began the suspense.
A minute slowly dragged itself out, and no sphere shot out of the water.
Another followed, and nothing broke the low oily swell. The sailors explained
to one another that little point about the winding-in of the cord. The rigging
was dotted with expectant faces. “Come up, Elstead!” called one hairy-chested
salt impatiently, and the others caught it up, and shouted as though they were
waiting for the curtain of a theatre to rise.
The commander glanced
irritably at them.
“Of course, if the
acceleration’s less than two,” he said, “he’ll be all the longer. We aren’t
absolutely certain that was the proper figure. I’m no slavish believer in
calculations.”
Steevens agreed concisely.
No one on the quarter-deck spoke for a couple of minutes. Then Steevens’
watchcase clicked.
When, twenty-one minutes
after, the sun reached the zenith, they were still waiting for the globe to
reappear, and not a man aboard had dared to whisper that hope was dead. It was
Weybridge who first gave expression to that realisation. He spoke while the
sound of eight bells still hung in the air. “I always distrusted that window,”
he said quite suddenly to Steevens.
“Good God!” said Steevens;
“you don’t think—?”
“Well!” said Weybridge, and
left the rest to his imagination.
“I’m no great believer in
calculations myself,” said the commander dubiously, “so that I’m not altogether
hopeless yet.” And at midnight the gunboat was steaming slowly in a spiral
round the spot where the globe had sunk, and the white beam of the electric
light fled and halted and swept discontentedly onward again over the waste of
phosphorescent waters under the little stars.
“If his window hasn’t burst
and smashed him,” said Weybridge, “then it’s a cursed sight worse, for his
clockwork has gone wrong, and he’s alive now, five miles under our feet, down
there in the cold and dark, anchored in that little bubble of his, where never
a ray of light has shone or a human being lived, since the waters were gathered
together. He’s there without food, feeling hungry and thirsty and scared,
wondering whether he’ll starve or stifle. Which will it be? The Myers apparatus
is running out, I suppose. How long do they last?”
“Good heavens!” he
exclaimed; “what little things we are! What daring little devils! Down there,
miles and miles of water—all water, and all this empty water about us and this
sky. Gulfs!” He threw his hands out, and as he did so, a little white streak
swept noiselessly up the sky, travelled more slowly, stopped, became a
motionless dot, as though a new star had fallen up into the sky. Then it went
sliding back again and lost itself amidst the reflections of the stars and the
white haze of the sea’s phosphorescence.
At the sight he stopped, arm
extended and mouth open. He shut his mouth, opened it again, and waved his arms
with an impatient gesture. Then he turned, shouted “El-stead ahoy!” to the
first watch, and went at a run to Lindley and the search-light. “I saw him,” he
said. “Starboard there! His light’s on, and he’s just shot out of the water.
Bring the light round. We ought to see him drifting, when he lifts on the
swell.”
But they never picked up the
explorer until dawn. Then they almost ran him down. The crane was swung out and
a boat’s crew hooked the chain to the sphere. When they had shipped the sphere,
they unscrewed the manhole and peered into the darkness of the interior (for
the electric light chamber was intended to illuminate the water about the
sphere, and was shut off entirely from its general cavity).
The air was very hot within
the cavity, and the indiarubber at the lip of the manhole was soft. There was
no answer to their eager questions and no sound of movement within. Elstead
seemed to be lying motionless, crumpled up in the bottom of the globe. The
ship’s doctor crawled in and lifted him out to the men outside. For a moment or
so they did not know whether Elstead was alive or dead. His face, in the
yellow light of the ship’s lamps, glistened with perspiration. They carried him
down to his own cabin.
He was not dead, they found,
but in a state of absolute nervous collapse, and besides cruelly bruised. For
some days he had to lie perfectly still. It was a week before he could tell his
experiences.
Almost his first words were
that he was going down again. The sphere would have to be altered, he said, in
order to allow him to throw off the cord if need be, and that was all. He had
had the most marvellous experience. “You thought I should find nothing but
ooze,” he said. “You laughed at my explorations, and I’ve discovered a new
world!” He told his story in disconnected fragments, and chiefly from the wrong
end, so that it is impossible to re-tell it in his words. But what follows is
the narrative of his experience.
It began atrociously, he
said. Before the cord ran out, the thing kept rolling over. He felt like a frog
in a football. He could see nothing but the crane and the sky overhead, with an
occasional glimpse of the people on the ship’s rail. He couldn’t tell a bit
which way the thing would roll next. Suddenly he would find his feet going up,
and try to step, and over he went rolling, head over heels, and just anyhow, on
the padding. Any other shape would have been more comfortable, but no other
shape was to be relied upon under the huge pressure of the nethermost abyss.
Suddenly the swaying ceased;
the globe righted, and when he had picked himself up, he saw the water all
about him greeny-blue, with an attenuated light filtering down from above, and
a shoal of little floating things went rushing up past him, as it seemed to
him, towards the light. And even as he looked, it grew darker and darker, until
the water above was as dark as the midnight sky, albeit of a greener shade, and
the water below black. And little transparent things in the water developed a
faint glint of luminosity, and shot past him in faint greenish streaks.
And the feeling of falling!
It was just like the start of a lift, he said, only it kept on. One has to
imagine what that means, that keeping on. It was then of all times that Elstead
repented of his adventure. He saw the chances against him in an altogether new
light. He thought of the big cuttlefish people knew to exist in the middle
waters, the kind of things they find half digested in whales at times, or
floating dead and rotten and half eaten by fish. Suppose one caught hold and
wouldn’t let go. And had the clockwork really been sufficiently tested? But
whether he wanted to go on or to go back mattered not the slightest now.
In fifty seconds everything
was as black as night outside, except where the beam from his light struck
through the waters, and picked out every now and then some fish or scrap of
sinking matter. They flashed by too fast for him to see what they were. Once he
thinks he passed a shark. And then the sphere began to get hot by friction
against the water. They had underestimated this, it seems.
The first thing he noticed
was that he was perspiring, and then he heard a hissing growing
louder under his feet, and saw a lot of little bubbles—very little bubbles
they were—rushing upward like a fan through the water outside. Steam! He felt
the window, and it was hot. He turned on the minute glow-lamp that lit his own
cavity, looked at the padded watch by the studs, and saw he had been travelling
now for two minutes. It came into his head that the window would crack through
the conflict of temperatures, for he knew the bottom water is very near
freezing.
Then suddenly the floor of
the sphere seemed to press against his feet, the rush of bubbles outside grew
slower and slower, and the hissing diminished. The sphere rolled a little. The
window had not cracked, nothing had given, and he knew that the dangers of
sinking, at anyrate, were over.
In another minute or so he
would be on the floor of the abyss. He thought, he said, of Steevens and Weybridge
and the rest of them five miles overhead, higher to him than the very highest
clouds that ever floated over land are to us, steaming slowly and staring down
and wondering what had happened to him.
He peered out of the window.
There were no more bubbles now, and the hissing had stopped. Outside there was
a heavy blackness—as black as black velvet—except where the electric light
pierced the empty water and showed the colour of it—a yellow-green. Then three
things like shapes of fire swam into sight, following each other through the
water. Whether they were little and near or big and far off he could not tell.
Each was outlined in a
bluish light almost as bright as the lights of a fishing smack, a light
which seemed to be smoking greatly, and all along the sides of them were specks
of this, like the lighter portholes of a ship. Their phosphorescence seemed to
go out as they came into the radiance of his lamp, and he saw then that they
were little fish of some strange sort, with huge heads, vast eyes, and
dwindling bodies and tails. Their eyes were turned towards him, and he judged
they were following him down. He supposed they were attracted by his glare.
Presently others of the same
sort joined them. As he went on down, he noticed that the water became of a
pallid colour, and that little specks twinkled in his ray like motes in a
sunbeam. This was probably due to the clouds of ooze and mud that the impact of
his leaden sinkers had disturbed.
By the time he was drawn
down to the lead weights he was in a dense fog of white that his electric light
failed altogether to pierce for more than a few yards, and many minutes elapsed
before the hanging sheets of sediment subsided to any extent. Then, lit by his
light and by the transient phosphorescence of a distant shoal of fishes, he was
able to see under the huge blackness of the super-incumbent water an undulating
expanse of greyish-white ooze, broken here and there by tangled thickets of a
growth of sea lilies, waving hungry tentacles in the air.
Farther away were the
graceful, translucent outlines of a group of gigantic sponges. About this floor
there were scattered a number of bristling flattish tufts of rich purple and
black, which he decided must be some sort of sea-urchin, and
small, large-eyed or blind things having a curious resemblance, some to
woodlice, and others to lobsters, crawled sluggishly across the track of the
light and vanished into the obscurity again, leaving furrowed trails behind
them.
Then suddenly the hovering
swarm of little fishes veered about and came towards him as a flight of
starlings might do. They passed over him like a phosphorescent snow, and then
he saw behind them some larger creature advancing towards the sphere.
At first he could see it
only dimly, a faintly moving figure remotely suggestive of a walking man, and
then it came into the spray of light that the lamp shot out. As the glare
struck it, it shut its eyes, dazzled. He stared in rigid astonishment.
It was a strange vertebrated
animal. Its dark purple head was dimly suggestive of a chameleon, but it had
such a high forehead and such a braincase as no reptile ever displayed before;
the vertical pitch of its face gave it a most extraordinary resemblance to a
human being.
Two large and protruding
eyes projected from sockets in chameleon fashion, and it had a broad reptilian
mouth with horny lips beneath its little nostrils. In the position of the ears
were two huge gill-covers, and out of these floated a branching tree of
coralline filaments, almost like the tree-like gills that very young rays and
sharks possess.
But the humanity of the face
was not the most extraordinary thing about the creature. It was a biped; its
almost globular body was poised on a tripod of two frog-like legs and a long
thick tail, and its fore limbs, which grotesquely caricatured the human
hand, much as a frog’s do, carried a long shaft of bone, tipped with copper.
The colour of the creature was variegated; its head, hands, and legs were
purple; but its skin, which hung loosely upon it, even as clothes might do, was
a phosphorescent grey. And it stood there blinded by the light.
At last this unknown
creature of the abyss blinked its eyes open, and, shading them with its
disengaged hand, opened its mouth and gave vent to a shouting noise, articulate
almost as speech might be, that penetrated even the steel case and padded
jacket of the sphere. How a shouting may be accomplished without lungs Elstead
does not profess to explain. It then moved sideways out of the glare into the
mystery of shadow that bordered it on either side, and Elstead felt rather than
saw that it was coming towards him. Fancying the light had attracted it, he
turned the switch that cut off the current. In another moment something soft
dabbed upon the steel, and the globe swayed.
Then the shouting was
repeated, and it seemed to him that a distant echo answered it. The dabbing
recurred, and the globe swayed and ground against the spindle over which the
wire was rolled. He stood in the blackness and peered out into the everlasting
night of the abyss. And presently he saw, very faint and remote, other
phosphorescent quasi-human forms hurrying towards him.
Hardly knowing what he did,
he felt about in his swaying prison for the stud of the exterior electric
light, and came by accident against his own small glow-lamp in its padded
recess. The sphere twisted, and then threw him down; he heard shouts like
shouts of surprise, and when he rose to his feet, he saw two pairs of stalked
eyes peering into the lower window and reflecting his light.
In another moment hands were
dabbing vigorously at his steel casing, and there was a sound, horrible enough
in his position, of the metal protection of the clockwork being vigorously
hammered. That, indeed, sent his heart into his mouth, for if these strange
creatures succeeded in stopping that, his release would never occur. Scarcely
had he thought as much when he felt the sphere sway violently, and the floor of
it press hard against his feet. He turned off the small glow-lamp that lit the
interior, and sent the ray of the large light in the separate compartment out
into the water. The sea-floor and the man-like creatures had disappeared, and a
couple of fish chasing each other dropped suddenly by the window.
He thought at once that
these strange denizens of the deep sea had broken the rope, and that he had
escaped. He drove up faster and faster, and then stopped with a jerk that sent
him flying against the padded roof of his prison. For half a minute, perhaps,
he was too astonished to think.
Then he felt that the sphere
was spinning slowly, and rocking, and it seemed to him that it was also being
drawn through the water. By crouching close to the window, he managed to make
his weight effective and roll that part of the sphere downward, but he could
see nothing save the pale ray of his light striking down ineffectively into the
darkness. It occurred to him that he would see more if he turned the lamp
off, and allowed his eyes to grow accustomed to the profound obscurity.
In this he was wise. After
some minutes the velvety blackness became a translucent blackness, and then,
far away, and as faint as the zodiacal light of an English summer evening, he
saw shapes moving below. He judged these creatures had detached his cable, and
were towing him along the sea bottom.
And then he saw something
faint and remote across the undulations of the submarine plain, a broad horizon
of pale luminosity that extended this way and that way as far as the range of
his little window permitted him to see. To this he was being towed, as a balloon
might be towed by men out of the open country into a town. He approached it
very slowly, and very slowly the dim irradiation was gathered together into
more definite shapes.
It was nearly five o’clock
before he came over this luminous area, and by that time he could make out an
arrangement suggestive of streets and houses grouped about a vast roofless
erection that was grotesquely suggestive of a ruined abbey. It was spread out
like a map below him. The houses were all roofless enclosures of walls, and their
substance being, as he afterwards saw, of phosphorescent bones, gave the place
an appearance as if it were built of drowned moonshine.
Among the inner caves of the
place waving trees of crinoid stretched their tentacles, and tall, slender,
glassy sponges shot like shining minarets and lilies of filmy light out of
the general glow of the city. In the open spaces of the place he could see a
stirring movement as of crowds of people, but he was too many fathoms above
them to distinguish the individuals in those crowds.
Then slowly they pulled him
down, and as they did so, the details of the place crept slowly upon his
apprehension. He saw that the courses of the cloudy buildings were marked out
with beaded lines of round objects, and then he perceived that at several
points below him, in broad open spaces, were forms like the encrusted shapes of
ships.
Slowly and surely he was
drawn down, and the forms below him became brighter, clearer, more distinct. He
was being pulled down, he perceived, towards the large building in the centre
of the town, and he could catch a glimpse ever and again of the multitudinous
forms that were lugging at his cord. He was astonished to see that the rigging
of one of the ships, which formed such a prominent feature of the place, was
crowded with a host of gesticulating figures regarding him, and then the walls
of the great building rose about him silently, and hid the city from his eyes.
And such walls they were, of
water-logged wood, and twisted wire-rope, and iron spars, and copper, and the
bones and skulls of dead men. The skulls ran in zigzag lines and spirals and
fantastic curves over the building; and in and out of their eye-sockets, and
over the whole surface of the place, lurked and played a multitude of silvery
little fishes.
Suddenly his ears were
filled with a low shouting and a noise like the violent blowing of horns,
and this gave place to a fantastic chant. Down the sphere sank, past the
huge pointed windows, through which he saw vaguely a great number of these strange,
ghostlike people regarding him, and at last he came to rest, as it seemed, on a
kind of altar that stood in the centre of the place.
And now he was at such a
level that he could see these strange people of the abyss plainly once more. To
his astonishment, he perceived that they were prostrating themselves before
him, all save one, dressed as it seemed in a robe of placoid scales, and
crowned with a luminous diadem, who stood with his reptilian mouth opening and
shutting, as though he led the chanting of the worshippers.
A curious impulse made
Elstead turn on his small glow-lamp again, so that he became visible to these
creatures of the abyss, albeit the glare made them disappear forthwith into
night. At this sudden sight of him, the chanting gave place to a tumult of
exultant shouts; and Elstead, being anxious to watch them, turned his light off
again, and vanished from before their eyes. But for a time he was too blind to
make out what they were doing, and when at last he could distinguish them, they
were kneeling again. And thus they continued worshipping him, without rest or
intermission, for the space of three hours.
Most circumstantial was
Elstead’s account of this astounding city and its people, these people of
perpetual night, who have never seen sun or moon or stars, green vegetation,
nor any living, air-breathing creatures, who know nothing of fire, nor any
light but the phosphorescent light of living things.
Startling as is his story,
it is yet more startling to find that scientific men, of such eminence as Adams
and Jenkins, find nothing incredible in it. They tell me they see no reason why
intelligent, water-breathing, vertebrated creatures, inured to a low
temperature and enormous pressure, and of such a heavy structure, that neither
alive nor dead would they float, might not live upon the bottom of the deep
sea, and quite unsuspected by us, descendants like ourselves of the great
Theriomorpha of the New Red Sandstone age.
We should be known to them,
however, as strange, meteoric creatures, wont to fall catastrophically dead out
of the mysterious blackness of their watery sky. And not only we ourselves, but
our ships, our metals, our appliances, would come raining down out of the
night. Sometimes sinking things would smite down and crush them, as if it were
the judgment of some unseen power above, and sometimes would come things of the
utmost rarity or utility, or shapes of inspiring suggestion. One can
understand, perhaps, something of their behaviour at the descent of a living
man, if one thinks what a barbaric people might do, to whom an enhaloed,
shining creature came suddenly out of the sky.
At one time or another
Elstead probably told the officers of the Ptarmigan every
detail of his strange twelve hours in the abyss. That he also intended to write
them down is certain, but he never did, and so unhappily we have to piece
together the discrepant fragments of his story from the reminiscences of
Commander Simmons, Weybridge, Steevens, Lindley, and the others.
We see the thing darkly in
fragmentary glimpses—the huge ghostly building, the bowing, chanting people,
with their dark chameleon-like heads and faintly luminous clothing, and
Elstead, with his light turned on again, vainly trying to convey to their minds
that the cord by which the sphere was held was to be severed. Minute after
minute slipped away, and Elstead, looking at his watch, was horrified to find
that he had oxygen only for four hours more. But the chant in his honour kept
on as remorselessly as if it was the marching song of his approaching death.
The manner of his release he
does not understand, but to judge by the end of cord that hung from the sphere,
it had been cut through by rubbing against the edge of the altar. Abruptly the
sphere rolled over, and he swept up, out of their world, as an ethereal
creature clothed in a vacuum would sweep through our own atmosphere back to its
native ether again. He must have torn out of their sight as a hydrogen bubble
hastens upward from our air. A strange ascension it must have seemed to them.
The sphere rushed up with
even greater velocity than, when weighted with the lead sinkers, it had rushed
down. It became exceedingly hot. It drove up with the windows uppermost, and he
remembers the torrent of bubbles frothing against the glass. Every moment he
expected this to fly. Then suddenly something like a huge wheel seemed to be
released in his head, the padded compartment began spinning about him, and he
fainted. His next recollection was of his cabin, and of the doctor’s voice.
But that is the substance of
the extraordinary story that Elstead related in fragments to the officers
of the Ptarmigan. He promised to write it all down at a later date.
His mind was chiefly occupied with the improvement of his apparatus, which was
effected at Rio.
It remains only to tell that
on February 2, 1896, he made his second descent into the ocean abyss, with the
improvements his first experience suggested. What happened we shall probably
never know. He never returned. The Ptarmigan beat about over
the point of his submersion, seeking him in vain for thirteen days. Then she
returned to Rio, and the news was telegraphed to his friends. So the matter
remains for the present. But it is hardly probable that no further attempt will
be made to verify his strange story of these hitherto unsuspected cities of the
deep sea.
THE APPLE
“IMUST get rid of it,” said the man in the corner of the carriage,
abruptly breaking the silence.
Mr. Hinchcliff looked up,
hearing imperfectly. He had been lost in the rapt contemplation of the college
cap tied by a string to his portmanteau handles—the outward and visible sign of
his newly-gained pedagogic position—in the rapt appreciation of the college cap
and the pleasant anticipations it excited. For Mr. Hinchcliff had just
matriculated at London University, and was going to be junior assistant at the
Holmwood Grammar School—a very enviable position. He stared across the carriage
at his fellow-traveller.
“Why not give it away?” said
this person. “Give it away! Why not?”
He was a tall, dark, sunburnt
man with a pale face. His arms were folded tightly, and his feet were on the
seat in front of him. He was pulling at a lank black moustache. He stared hard
at his toes.
“Why not?” he said.
Mr. Hinchcliff coughed.
The stranger lifted his
eyes—they were curious, dark-grey eyes—and stared blankly at Mr.
Hinchcliff for the best part of a minute, perhaps. His expression grew to
interest.
“Yes,” he said slowly. “Why
not? And end it.”
“I don’t quite follow you,
I’m afraid,” said Mr. Hinchcliff, with another cough.
“You don’t quite follow me?”
said the stranger quite mechanically, his singular eyes wandering from Mr.
Hinchcliff to the bag with its ostentatiously displayed cap, and back to Mr.
Hinchcliff’s downy face.
“You’re so abrupt, you
know,” apologised Mr Hinchcliff.
“Why shouldn’t I?” said the
stranger, following his thoughts. “You are a student?” he said, addressing Mr.
Hinchcliff.
“I am—by Correspondence—of
the London University,” said Mr. Hinchcliff, with irrepressible pride, and
feeling nervously at his tie.
“In pursuit of knowledge,”
said the stranger, and suddenly took his feet off the seat, put his fist on his
knees, and stared at Mr. Hinchcliff as though he had never seen a student
before. “Yes,” he said, and flung out an index finger. Then he rose, took a bag
from the hat-rack, and unlocked it. Quite silently he drew out something round
and wrapped in a quantity of silver-paper, and unfolded this carefully. He held
it out towards Mr. Hinchcliff—a small, very smooth, golden-yellow fruit.
Mr. Hinchcliff’s eyes and
mouth were open. He did not offer to take this object—if he was intended to
take it.
“That,” said this fantastic
stranger, speaking very slowly, “is the Apple of the Tree of Knowledge. Look at
it—small, and bright, and wonderful—Knowledge—and I am going to give it to
you.”
Mr. Hinchcliff’s mind worked
painfully for a minute, and then the sufficient explanation, “Mad!” flashed
across his brain, and illuminated the whole situation. One humoured madmen. He
put his head a little on one side.
“The Apple of the Tree of
Knowledge, eigh!” said Mr. Hinchcliff, regarding it with a finely assumed air
of interest, and then looking at the interlocutor. “But don’t you want to eat
it yourself? And besides—how did you come by it?”
“It never fades. I have had
it now three months. And it is ever bright and smooth and ripe and desirable,
as you see it.” He laid his hand on his knee and regarded the fruit musingly.
Then he began to wrap it again in the papers, as though he had abandoned his
intention of giving it away.
“But how did you come by
it?” said Mr. Hinchcliff, who had his argumentative side. “And how do you know
that it is the
Fruit of the Tree?”
“I bought this fruit,” said
the stranger, “three months ago—for a drink of water and a crust of bread. The
man who gave it to me—because I kept the life in him—was an Armenian. Armenia!
that wonderful country, the first of all countries, where the ark of the Flood
remains to this day, buried in the glaciers of Mount Ararat. This man, I say,
fleeing with others from the Kurds who had come upon them, went up into
desolate places among the mountains—places beyond the common knowledge of
men. And fleeing from imminent pursuit, they came to a slope high among the
mountain-peaks, green with a grass like knife-blades, that cut and slashed most
pitilessly at anyone who went into it. The Kurds were close behind, and there
was nothing for it but to plunge in, and the worst of it was that the paths
they made through it at the price of their blood served for the Kurds to
follow. Every one of the fugitives was killed save this Armenian and another.
He heard the screams and cries of his friends, and the swish of the grass about
those who were pursuing them—it was tall grass rising overhead. And then a
shouting and answers, and when presently he paused, everything was still. He
pushed out again, not understanding, cut and bleeding, until he came out on a
steep slope of rocks below a precipice, and then he saw the grass was all on
fire, and the smoke of it rose like a veil between him and his enemies.”
The stranger paused. “Yes?”
said Mr. Hinchcliff. “Yes?”
“There he was, all torn and
bloody from the knife-blades of the grass, the rocks blazing under the
afternoon sun—the sky molten brass—and the smoke of the fire driving towards
him. He dared not stay there. Death he did not mind, but torture! Far away
beyond the smoke he heard shouts and cries. Women screaming. So he went
clambering up a gorge in the rocks—everywhere were bushes with dry branches
that stuck out like thorns among the leaves—until he clambered over the brow of
a ridge that hid him. And then he met his companion, a shepherd, who had also
escaped. And, counting cold and famine and thirst as nothing against the
Kurds, they went on into the heights, and among the snow and ice. They wandered
three whole days.
“The third day came the
vision. I suppose hungry men often do see visions, but then there is this
fruit.” He lifted the wrapped globe in his hand. “And I have heard it, too,
from other mountaineers who have known something of the legend. It was in the
evening time, when the stars were increasing, that they came down a slope of
polished rock into a huge dark valley all set about with strange, contorted
trees, and in these trees hung little globes like glow-worm spheres, strange
round yellow lights.
“Suddenly this valley was
lit far away, many miles away, far down it, with a golden flame marching slowly
athwart it, that made the stunted trees against it black as night, and turned
the slopes all about them and their figures to the likeness of fiery gold. And
at the vision they, knowing the legends of the mountains, instantly knew that
it was Eden they saw, or the sentinel of Eden, and they fell upon their faces
like men struck dead.
“When they dared to look
again the valley was dark for a space, and then the light came again—returning,
a burning amber.
“At that the shepherd sprang
to his feet, and with a shout began to run down towards the light, but the
other man was too fearful to follow him. He stood stunned, amazed, and terrified,
watching his companion recede towards the marching glare. And hardly had the
shepherd set out when there came a noise like thunder, the beating of
invisible wings hurrying up the valley, and a great and terrible fear; and at
that the man who gave me the fruit turned—if he might still escape. And
hurrying headlong up the slope again, with that tumult sweeping after him, he
stumbled against one of these stunted bushes, and a ripe fruit came off it into
his hand. This fruit. Forthwith, the wings and the thunder rolled all about
him. He fell and fainted, and when he came to his senses, he was back among the
blackened ruins of his own village, and I and the others were attending to the
wounded. A vision? But the golden fruit of the tree was still clutched in his
hand. There were others there who knew the legend, knew what that strange fruit
might be.” He paused. “And this is it,” he said.
It was a most extraordinary
story to be told in a third-class carriage on a Sussex railway. It was as if
the real was a mere veil to the fantastic, and here was the fantastic poking
through. “Is it?” was all Mr. Hinchcliff could say.
“The legend,” said the
stranger, “tells that those thickets of dwarfed trees growing about the garden
sprang from the apple that Adam carried in his hand when he and Eve were driven
forth. He felt something in his hand, saw the half-eaten apple, and flung it
petulantly aside. And there they grow, in that desolate valley, girdled round
with the everlasting snows, and there the fiery swords keep ward against the
Judgment Day.”
“But I thought these things
were”—Mr. Hinchcliff paused—“fables—parables rather. Do you mean to tell me
that there in Armenia”—
The stranger answered the
unfinished question with the fruit in his open hand.
“But you don’t know,” said
Mr. Hinchcliff, “that that is the
fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. The man may have had—a sort of mirage, say.
Suppose”—
“Look at it,” said the
stranger.
It was certainly a
strange-looking globe, not really an apple, Mr. Hinchcliff saw, and a curious glowing
golden colour, almost as though light itself was wrought into its substance. As
he looked at it, he began to see more vividly the desolate valley among the
mountains, the guarding swords of fire, the strange antiquities of the story he
had just heard. He rubbed a knuckle into his eye. “But”—said he.
“It has kept like that,
smooth and full, three months. Longer than that it is now by some days. No
drying, no withering, no decay.”
“And you yourself,” said Mr.
Hinchcliff, “really believe that”—
“Is the Forbidden Fruit.”
There was no mistaking the
earnestness of the man’s manner and his perfect sanity. “The Fruit of
Knowledge,” he said.
“Suppose it was?” said Mr.
Hinchcliff, after a pause, still staring at it. “But after all,” said Mr.
Hinchcliff, “it’s not my kind of knowledge—not the sort of knowledge. I mean,
Adam and Eve have eaten it already.”
“We inherit their sins—not
their knowledge,” said the stranger. “That would make it all clear and bright
again. We should see into everything, through everything, into the deepest
meaning of everything”—
“Why don’t you eat it,
then?” said Mr. Hinchcliff, with an inspiration.
“I took it intending to eat
it,” said the stranger. “Man has fallen. Merely to eat again could scarcely”—
“Knowledge is power,” said Mr.
Hinchcliff.
“But is it happiness? I am
older than you—more than twice as old. Time after time I have held this in my
hand, and my heart has failed me at the thought of all that one might know,
that terrible lucidity— Suppose suddenly all the world became pitilessly
clear?”
“That, I think, would be a
great advantage,” said Mr. Hinchcliff, “on the whole.”
“Suppose you saw into the
hearts and minds of everyone about you, into their most secret recesses—people
you loved, whose love you valued?”
“You’d soon find out the
humbugs,” said Mr. Hinchcliff, greatly struck by the idea.
“And worse—to know yourself,
bare of your most intimate illusions. To see yourself in your place. All that
your lusts and weaknesses prevented your doing. No merciful perspective.”
“That might be an excellent
thing too. ‘Know thyself,’ you know.”
“You are young,” said the
stranger.
“If you don’t care to eat
it, and it bothers you, why don’t you throw it away?”
“There again, perhaps, you
will not understand me. To me, how could one throw away a thing like that,
glowing, wonderful? Once one has it, one is bound. But, on the other hand,
to give it
away! To give it away to someone who thirsted after knowledge, who found
no terror in the thought of that clear perception”—
“Of course,” said Mr.
Hinchcliff thoughtfully, “it might be some sort of poisonous fruit.”
And then his eye caught
something motionless, the end of a white board black-lettered outside the
carriage window. “—MWOOD,” he saw. He started
convulsively. “Gracious!” said Mr. Hinchcliff. “Holmwood!”—and the practical
present blotted out the mystic realisations that had been stealing upon him.
In another moment he was
opening the carriage-door, portmanteau in hand. The guard was already
fluttering his green flag. Mr. Hinchcliff jumped out. “Here!” said a voice
behind him, and he saw the dark eyes of the stranger shining and the golden
fruit, bright and bare, held out of the open carriage-door. He took it
instinctively, the train was already moving.
“No!” shouted the stranger, and made a snatch at
it as if to take it back.
“Stand away,” cried a
country porter, thrusting forward to close the door. The stranger shouted
something Mr. Hinchcliff did not catch, head and arm thrust excitedly out of
the window, and then the shadow of the bridge fell on him, and in a trice he
was hidden. Mr. Hinchcliff stood astonished, staring at the end of the last
waggon receding round the bend, and with the wonderful fruit in his hand. For
the fraction of a minute his mind was confused, and then he became aware that
two or three people on the platform were regarding him with interest. Was he
not the new Grammar School master making his début? It occurred to him
that, so far as they could tell, the fruit might very well be the naïve
refreshment of an orange. He flushed at the thought, and thrust the fruit into
his side pocket, where it bulged undesirably. But there was no help for it, so
he went towards them, awkwardly concealing his sense of awkwardness, to ask the
way to the Grammar School, and the means of getting his portmanteau and the two
tin boxes which lay up the platform thither. Of all the odd and fantastic yarns
to tell a fellow!
His luggage could be taken
on a truck for sixpence, he found, and he could precede it on foot. He fancied
an ironical note in the voices. He was painfully aware of his contour.
The curious earnestness of
the man in the train, and the glamour of the story he told, had, for a time,
diverted the current of Mr. Hinchcliff’s thoughts. It drove like a mist before
his immediate concerns. Fires that went to and fro! But the preoccupation of
his new position, and the impression he was to produce upon Holmwood generally,
and the school people in particular, returned upon him with reinvigorating
power before he left the station and cleared his mental atmosphere. But it is
extraordinary what an inconvenient thing the addition of a soft and rather
brightly-golden fruit, not three inches in diameter, may prove to a sensitive
youth on his best appearance. In the pocket of his black jacket it bulged
dreadfully, spoilt the lines altogether. He passed a little old lady in black,
and he felt her eye drop upon the excrescence at once. He was wearing one glove
and carrying the other, together with his stick, so that to bear the fruit
openly was impossible. In one place, where the road into the town seemed
suitably secluded, he took his encumbrance out of his pocket and tried it in
his hat. It was just too large, the hat wobbled ludicrously, and just as he was
taking it out again, a butcher’s boy came driving round the corner.
“Confound it!” said Mr.
Hinchcliff.
He would have eaten the
thing, and attained omniscience there and then, but it would seem so silly to
go into the town sucking a juicy fruit—and it certainly felt juicy. If one of the
boys should come by, it might do him a serious injury with his discipline so to
be seen. And the juice might make his face sticky and get upon his cuffs—or it
might be an acid juice as potent as lemon, and take all the colour out of his
clothes.
Then round a bend in the
lane came two pleasant sunlit girlish figures. They were walking slowly towards
the town and chattering—at any moment they might look round and see a hot-faced
young man behind them carrying a kind of phosphorescent yellow tomato! They would
be sure to laugh.
“Hang!” said Mr. Hinchcliff, and with a swift
jerk sent the encumbrance flying over the stone wall of an orchard that there
abutted on the road. As it vanished, he felt a faint twinge of loss that lasted
scarcely a moment. He adjusted the stick and glove in his hand, and walked on,
erect and self-conscious, to pass the girls.
000
But in the darkness of the
night Mr. Hinchcliff had a dream, and saw the valley, and the flaming swords,
and the contorted trees, and knew that it really was the Apple of the Tree of
Knowledge that he had thrown regardlessly away. And he awoke very unhappy.
In the morning his regret
had passed, but afterwards it returned and troubled him; never, however, when
he was happy or busily occupied. At last, one moonlight night about eleven,
when all Holmwood was quiet, his regrets returned with redoubled force, and
therewith an impulse to adventure. He slipped out of the house and over the
playground wall, went through the silent town to Station Lane, and climbed into
the orchard where he had thrown the fruit. But nothing was to be found of it
there among the dewy grass and the faint intangible globes of dandelion down.
UNDER THE KNIFE
“WHAT if I die under it?” The thought recurred again and again, as
I walked home from Haddon’s. It was a purely personal question. I was spared
the deep anxieties of a married man, and I knew there were few of my intimate
friends but would find my death troublesome chiefly on account of their duty of
regret. I was surprised indeed, and perhaps a little humiliated, as I turned
the matter over, to think how few could possibly exceed the conventional
requirement. Things came before me stripped of glamour, in a clear dry light,
during that walk from Haddon’s house over Primrose Hill. There were the friends
of my youth: I perceived now that our affection was a tradition, which we
foregathered rather laboriously to maintain. There were the rivals and helpers
of my later career: I suppose I had been cold-blooded or undemonstrative—one perhaps
implies the other. It may be that even the capacity for friendship is a
question of physique. There had been a time in my own life when I had grieved
bitterly enough at the loss of a friend; but as I walked home that afternoon
the emotional side of my imagination was dormant. I could not pity myself,
nor feel sorry for my friends, nor conceive of them as grieving for me.
I was interested in this
deadness of my emotional nature—no doubt a concomitant of my stagnating
physiology; and my thoughts wandered off along the line it suggested. Once
before, in my hot youth, I had suffered a sudden loss of blood, and had been
within an ace of death. I remembered now that my affections as well as my
passions had drained out of me, leaving scarce anything but a tranquil
resignation, a dreg of self-pity. It had been weeks before the old ambitions,
and tendernesses, and all the complex moral interplay of a man, had reasserted
themselves. It occurred to me that the real meaning of this numbness might be a
gradual slipping away from the pleasure-pain guidance of the animal man. It has
been proven, I take it, as thoroughly as anything can be proven in this world,
that the higher emotions, the moral feelings, even the subtle tendernesses of
love, are evolved from the elemental desires and fears of the simple animal:
they are the harness in which man’s mental freedom goes. And it may be that, as
death overshadows us, as our possibility of acting diminishes, this complex
growth of balanced impulse, propensity, and aversion, whose interplay inspires
our acts, goes with it. Leaving what?
I was suddenly brought back
to reality by an imminent collision with a butcher-boy’s tray. I found that I
was crossing the bridge over the Regent’s Park Canal, which runs parallel with
that in the Zoological Gardens. The boy in blue had been looking over his
shoulder at a black barge advancing slowly, towed by a gaunt white horse.
In the Gardens a nurse was leading three happy little children over the bridge.
The trees were bright green; the spring hopefulness was still unstained by the
dusts of summer; the sky in the water was bright and clear, but broken by long
waves, by quivering bands of black, as the barge drove through. The breeze was
stirring; but it did not stir me as the spring breeze used to do.
Was this dulness of feeling
in itself an anticipation? It was curious that I could reason and follow out a
network of suggestion as clearly as ever: so, at least, it seemed to me. It was
calmness rather than dulness that was coming upon me. Was there any ground for
the belief in the presentiment of death? Did a man near to death begin
instinctively to withdraw himself from the meshes of matter and sense, even
before the cold hand was laid upon his? I felt strangely isolated—isolated without
regret—from the life and existence about me. The children playing in the sun
and gathering strength and experience for the business of life, the park-keeper
gossiping with a nursemaid, the nursing mother, the young couple intent upon
each other as they passed me, the trees by the wayside spreading new pleading
leaves to the sunlight, the stir in their branches—I had been part of it all,
but I had nearly done with it now.
Some way down the Broad Walk
I perceived that I was tired, and that my feet were heavy. It was hot that
afternoon, and I turned aside and sat down on one of the green chairs that line
the way. In a minute I had dozed into a dream, and the tide of my thoughts
washed up a vision of the resurrection. I was still sitting in the chair, but I
thought myself actually dead, withered, tattered, dried, one eye (I saw) pecked
out by birds. “Awake!” cried a voice; and incontinently the dust of the path
and the mould under the grass became insurgent. I had never before thought of
Regent’s Park as a cemetery, but now, through the trees, stretching as far as
eye could see, I beheld a flat plain of writhing graves and heeling tombstones.
There seemed to be some trouble: the rising dead appeared to stifle as they
struggled upward, they bled in their struggles, the red flesh was tattered away
from the white bones. “Awake!” cried a voice; but I determined I would not rise
to such horrors. “Awake!” They would not let me alone. “Wike up!” said an angry
voice. A cockney angel! The man who sells the tickets was shaking me, demanding
my penny.
I paid my penny, pocketed my
ticket, yawned, stretched my legs, and, feeling now rather less torpid, got up
and walked on towards Langham Place. I speedily lost myself again in a shifting
maze of thoughts about death. Going across Marylebone Road into that crescent
at the end of Langham Place, I had the narrowest escape from the shaft of a
cab, and went on my way with a palpitating heart and a bruised shoulder. It
struck me that it would have been curious if my meditations on my death on the
morrow had led to my death that day.
But I will not weary you
with more of my experiences that day and the next. I knew more and more
certainly that I should die under the operation; at times I think I was
inclined to pose to myself. The doctors were coming at eleven, and I did not
get up. It seemed scarce worth while to trouble about washing and dressing, and
though I read my newspapers and the letters that came by the first post, I did
not find them very interesting. There was a friendly note from Addison, my old
school friend, calling my attention to two discrepancies and a printer’s error
in my new book, with one from Langridge venting some vexation over Minton. The
rest were business communications. I breakfasted in bed. The glow of pain at my
side seemed more massive. I knew it was pain, and yet, if you can understand, I
did not find it very painful. I had been awake and hot and thirsty in the
night, but in the morning bed felt comfortable. In the night-time I had lain
thinking of things that were past; in the morning I dozed over the question of
immortality. Haddon came, punctual to the minute, with a neat black bag; and
Mowbray soon followed. Their arrival stirred me up a little. I began to take a
more personal interest in the proceedings. Haddon moved the little octagonal
table close to the bedside, and, with his broad black back to me, began taking
things out of his bag. I heard the light click of steel upon steel. My
imagination, I found, was not altogether stagnant. “Will you hurt me much?” I
said in an off-hand tone.
“Not a bit,” Haddon answered
over his shoulder. “We shall chloroform you. Your heart’s as sound as a bell.”
And as he spoke, I had a whiff of the pungent sweetness of the anæsthetic.
They stretched me out, with
a convenient exposure of my side, and, almost before I realised what was
happening, the chloroform was being administered. It stings the nostrils, and
there is a suffocating sensation, at first. I knew I should die—that this was
the end of consciousness for me. And suddenly I felt that I was not prepared
for death: I had a vague sense of a duty overlooked—I knew not what. What was
it I had not done? I could think of nothing more to do, nothing desirable left
in life; and yet I had the strangest disinclination to death. And the physical
sensation was painfully oppressive. Of course the doctors did not know they
were going to kill me. Possibly I struggled. Then I fell motionless, and a
great silence, a monstrous silence, and an impenetrable blackness came upon me.
There must have been an
interval of absolute unconsciousness, seconds or minutes. Then, with a chilly,
unemotional clearness, I perceived that I was not yet dead. I was still in my
body; but all the multitudinous sensations that come sweeping from it to make
up the background of consciousness had gone, leaving me free of it all. No, not
free of it all; for as yet something still held me to the poor stark flesh upon
the bed—held me, yet not so closely that I did not feel myself external to it,
independent of it, straining away from it. I do not think I saw, I do not think
I heard; but I perceived all that was going on, and it was as if I both heard
and saw. Haddon was bending over me, Mowbray behind me; the scalpel—it was a
large scalpel—was cutting my flesh at the side under the flying ribs. It was
interesting to see myself cut like cheese, without a pang, without even a
qualm. The interest was much of a quality with that one might feel in a game of
chess between strangers. Haddon’s face was firm and his hand steady; but I was
surprised to perceive (how I
know not) that he was feeling the gravest doubt as to his own wisdom in the
conduct of the operation.
Mowbray’s thoughts, too, I
could see. He was thinking that Haddon’s manner showed too much of the
specialist. New suggestions came up like bubbles through a stream of frothing
meditation, and burst one after another in the little bright spot of his
consciousness. He could not help noticing and admiring Haddon’s swift
dexterity, in spite of his envious quality and his disposition to detract. I
saw my liver exposed. I was puzzled at my own condition. I did not feel that I
was dead, but I was different in some way from my living self. The grey
depression, that had weighed on me for a year or more and coloured all my
thoughts, was gone. I perceived and thought without any emotional tint at all.
I wondered if everyone perceived things in this way under chloroform, and
forgot it again when he came out of it. It would be inconvenient to look into
some heads, and not forget.
Although I did not think
that I was dead, I still perceived quite clearly that I was soon to die. This
brought me back to the consideration of Haddon’s proceedings. I looked into his
mind, and saw that he was afraid of cutting a branch of the portal vein. My
attention was distracted from details by the curious changes going on in his
mind. His consciousness was like the quivering little spot of light which
is thrown by the mirror of a galvanometer. His thoughts ran under it like a
stream, some through the focus bright and distinct, some shadowy in the
half-light of the edge. Just now the little glow was steady; but the least
movement on Mowbray’s part, the slightest sound from outside, even a faint
difference in the slow movement of the living flesh he was cutting, set the
light-spot shivering and spinning. A new sense-impression came rushing up
through the flow of thoughts; and lo! the light-spot jerked away towards it,
swifter than a frightened fish. It was wonderful to think that upon that
unstable, fitful thing depended all the complex motions of the man; that for
the next five minutes, therefore, my life hung upon its movements. And he was
growing more and more nervous in his work. It was as if a little picture of a
cut vein grew brighter, and struggled to oust from his brain another picture of
a cut falling short of the mark. He was afraid: his dread of cutting too little
was battling with his dread of cutting too far.
Then, suddenly, like an
escape of water from under a lock-gate, a great uprush of horrible realisation
set all his thoughts swirling, and simultaneously I perceived that the vein was
cut. He started back with a hoarse exclamation, and I saw the brown-purple
blood gather in a swift bead, and run trickling. He was horrified. He pitched
the red-stained scalpel on to the octagonal table; and instantly both doctors
flung themselves upon me, making hasty and ill-conceived efforts to remedy the
disaster. “Ice!” said Mowbray, gasping. But I knew that I was killed, though my
body still clung to me.
I will not describe their
belated endeavours to save me, though I perceived every detail. My perceptions
were sharper and swifter than they had ever been in life; my thoughts rushed
through my mind with incredible swiftness, but with perfect definition. I can
only compare their crowded clarity to the effects of a reasonable dose of
opium. In a moment it would all be over, and I should be free. I knew I was
immortal, but what would happen I did not know. Should I drift off presently,
like a puff of smoke from a gun, in some kind of half-material body, an
attenuated version of my material self? Should I find myself suddenly among the
innumerable hosts of the dead, and know the world about me for the
phantasmagoria it had always seemed? Should I drift to some
spiritualistic séance, and there make foolish, incomprehensible
attempts to affect a purblind medium? It was a state of unemotional curiosity,
of colourless expectation. And then I realised a growing stress upon me, a
feeling as though some huge human magnet was drawing me upward out of my body.
The stress grew and grew. I seemed an atom for which monstrous forces were
fighting. For one brief, terrible moment sensation came back to me. That
feeling of falling headlong which comes in nightmares, that feeling a thousand
times intensified, that and a black horror swept across my thoughts in a
torrent. Then the two doctors, the naked body with its cut side, the little
room, swept away from under me and vanished, as a speck of foam vanishes down
an eddy.
I was in mid-air. Far below
was the West End of London, receding rapidly,—for I seemed to be flying
swiftly upward,—and, as it receded, passing westward, like a panorama. I could
see, through the faint haze of smoke, the innumerable roofs chimney-set, the
narrow roadways, stippled with people and conveyances, the little specks of
squares, and the church steeples like thorns sticking out of the fabric. But it
spun away as the earth rotated on its axis, and in a few seconds (as it seemed)
I was over the scattered clumps of town about Ealing, the little Thames a
thread of blue to the south, and the Chiltern Hills and the North Downs coming
up like the rim of a basin, far away and faint with haze. Up I rushed. And at
first I had not the faintest conception what this headlong rush upward could
mean.
Every moment the circle of
scenery beneath me grew wider and wider, and the details of town and field, of
hill and valley, got more and more hazy and pale and indistinct, a luminous
grey was mingled more and more with the blue of the hills and the green of the
open meadows; and a little patch of cloud, low and far to the west, shone ever
more dazzlingly white. Above, as the veil of atmosphere between myself and
outer space grew thinner, the sky, which had been a fair springtime blue at
first, grew deeper and richer in colour, passing steadily through the
intervening shades, until presently it was as dark as the blue sky of midnight,
and presently as black as the blackness of a frosty starlight, and at last as
black as no blackness I had ever beheld. And first one star, and then many, and
at last an innumerable host broke out upon the sky: more stars than anyone has
ever seen from the face of the earth. For the blueness of the sky is the
light of the sun and stars sifted and spread abroad blindingly: there is
diffused light even in the darkest skies of winter, and we do not see the stars
by day only because of the dazzling irradiation of the sun. But now I saw
things—I know not how; assuredly with no mortal eyes—and that defect of
bedazzlement blinded me no longer. The sun was incredibly strange and
wonderful. The body of it was a disc of blinding white light: not yellowish, as
it seems to those who live upon the earth, but livid white, all streaked with
scarlet streaks and rimmed about with a fringe of writhing tongues of red fire.
And, shooting half-way across the heavens from either side of it, and brighter
than the Milky Way, were two pinions of silver-white, making it look more like
those winged globes I have seen in Egyptian sculpture, than anything else I can
remember upon earth. These I knew for the solar corona, though I had never seen
anything of it but a picture during the days of my earthly life.
When my attention came back
to the earth again, I saw that it had fallen very far away from me. Field and
town were long since indistinguishable, and all the varied hues of the country
were merging into a uniform bright grey, broken only by the brilliant white of
the clouds that lay scattered in flocculent masses over Ireland and the west of
England. For now I could see the outlines of the north of France and Ireland,
and all this island of Britain, save where Scotland passed over the horizon to
the north, or where the coast was blurred or obliterated by cloud. The sea was
a dull grey, and darker than the land; and the whole panorama was rotating
slowly towards the east.
All this had happened so
swiftly that, until I was some thousand miles or so from the earth, I had no
thought for myself. But now I perceived I had neither hands nor feet, neither
parts nor organs, and that I felt neither alarm nor pain. All about me I
perceived that the vacancy (for I had already left the air behind) was cold
beyond the imagination of man; but it troubled me not. The sun’s rays shot
through the void, powerless to light or heat until they should strike on matter
in their course. I saw things with a serene self-forgetfulness, even as if I
were God. And down below there, rushing away from me,—countless miles in a
second,—where a little dark spot on the grey marked the position of London, two
doctors were struggling to restore life to the poor hacked and outworn shell I
had abandoned. I felt then such release, such serenity as I can compare to no
mortal delight I have ever known.
It was only after I had
perceived all these things that the meaning of that headlong rush of the earth
grew into comprehension. Yet it was so simple, so obvious, that I was amazed at
my never anticipating the thing that was happening to me. I had suddenly been
cut adrift from matter: all that was material of me was there upon earth,
whirling away through space, held to the earth by gravitation, partaking of the
earth-inertia, moving in its wreath of epicycles round the sun, and with the sun
and the planets on their vast march through space. But the immaterial has no
inertia, feels nothing of the pull of matter for matter: where it parts
from its garment of flesh, there it remains (so far as space concerns it any
longer) immovable in space. I was not leaving the earth: the earth was
leaving me,
and not only the earth, but the whole solar system was streaming past. And
about me in space, invisible to me, scattered in the wake of the earth upon its
journey, there must be an innumerable multitude of souls, stripped like myself
of the material, stripped like myself of the passions of the individual and the
generous emotions of the gregarious brute, naked intelligences, things of
newborn wonder and thought, marvelling at the strange release that had suddenly
come on them!
As I receded faster and
faster from the strange white sun in the black heavens, and from the broad and
shining earth upon which my being had begun, I seemed to grow, in some
incredible manner, vast: vast as regards this world I had left, vast as regards
the moments and periods of a human life. Very soon I saw the full circle of the
earth, slightly gibbous, like the moon when she nears her full, but very large;
and the silvery shape of America was now in the noonday blaze wherein (as it
seemed) little England had been basking but a few minutes ago. At first the
earth was large, and shone in the heavens, filling a great part of them; but
every moment she grew smaller and more distant. As she shrunk, the broad moon
in its third quarter crept into view over the rim of her disc. I looked for the
constellations. Only that part of Aries directly behind the sun and the Lion,
which the earth covered, were hidden. I recognised the tortuous, tattered
band of the Milky Way, with Vega very bright between sun and earth; and Sirius
and Orion shone splendid against the unfathomable blackness in the opposite
quarter of the heavens. The Pole Star was overhead, and the Great Bear hung
over the circle of the earth. And away beneath and beyond the shining corona of
the sun were strange groupings of stars I had never seen in my life—notably, a
dagger-shaped group that I knew for the Southern Cross. All these were no
larger than when they had shone on earth; but the little stars that one scarce
sees shone now against the setting of black vacancy as brightly as the
first-magnitudes had done, while the larger worlds were points of indescribable
glory and colour. Aldebaran was a spot of blood-red fire, and Sirius condensed
to one point the light of a world of sapphires. And they shone steadily: they
did not scintillate, they were calmly glorious. My impressions had an
adamantine hardness and brightness: there was no blurring softness, no
atmosphere, nothing but infinite darkness set with the myriads of these acute
and brilliant points and specks of light. Presently, when I looked again, the
little earth seemed no bigger than the sun, and it dwindled and turned as I
looked, until, in a second’s space (as it seemed to me), it was halved; and so
it went on swiftly dwindling. Far away in the opposite direction, a little
pinkish pin’s head of light, shining steadily, was the planet Mars. I swam
motionless in vacancy, and, without a trace of terror or astonishment, watched
the speck of cosmic dust we call the world fall away from me.
Presently it dawned upon me
that my sense of duration had changed: that my mind was moving not faster but
infinitely slower, that between each separate impression there was a period of
many days. The moon spun once round the earth as I noted this; and I perceived
clearly the motion of Mars in his orbit. Moreover, it appeared as if the time
between thought and thought grew steadily greater, until at last a thousand
years was but a moment in my perception.
At first the constellations
had shone motionless against the black background of infinite space; but
presently it seemed as though the group of stars about Hercules and the
Scorpion was contracting, while Orion and Aldebaran and their neighbours were
scattering apart. Flashing suddenly out of the darkness there came a flying
multitude of particles of rock, glittering like dust-specks in a sunbeam, and
encompassed in a faintly luminous haze. They swirled all about me, and vanished
again in a twinkling far behind. And then I saw that a bright spot of light,
that shone a little to one side of my path, was growing very rapidly larger,
and perceived that it was the planet Saturn rushing towards me. Larger and
larger it grew, swallowing up the heavens behind it, and hiding every moment a
fresh multitude of stars. I perceived its flattened, whirling body, its
disc-like belt, and seven of its little satellites. It grew and grew, till it
towered enormous; and then I plunged amid a streaming multitude of clashing
stones and dancing dust-particles and gas-eddies, and saw for a moment the
mighty triple belt like three concentric arches of moonlight above me, its shadow black
on the boiling tumult below. These things happened in one-tenth of the time it
takes to tell of them. The planet went by like a flash of lightning; for a few
seconds it blotted out the sun, and there and then became a mere black,
dwindling, winged patch against the light. The earth, the mother mote of my
being, I could no longer see.
So, with a stately
swiftness, in the profoundest silence, the solar system fell from me, as it had
been a garment, until the sun was a mere star amid the multitude of stars, with
its eddy of planet-specks, lost in the confused glittering of the remoter
light. I was no longer a denizen of the solar system: I had come to the Outer
Universe, I seemed to grasp and comprehend the whole world of matter. Ever more
swiftly the stars closed in about the spot where Antares and Vega had vanished
in a luminous haze, until that part of the sky had the semblance of a whirling
mass of nebulæ, and ever before me yawned vaster gaps of vacant blackness, and
the stars shone fewer and fewer. It seemed as if I moved towards a point
between Orion’s belt and sword; and the void about that region opened vaster
and vaster every second, an incredible gulf of nothingness, into which I was
falling. Faster and ever faster the universe rushed by, a hurry of whirling
motes at last, speeding silently into the void. Stars glowing brighter and
brighter, with their circling planets catching the light in a ghostly fashion
as I neared them, shone out and vanished again into inexistence; faint comets,
clusters of meteorites, winking specks of matter, eddying light points, whizzed
past, some perhaps a hundred millions of miles or so from me at most, few
nearer, travelling with unimaginable rapidity, shooting constellations,
momentary darts of fire, through that black, enormous night. More than anything
else it was like a dusty draught, sunbeam-lit. Broader, and wider, and deeper grew
the starless space, the vacant Beyond, into which I was being drawn. At last a
quarter of the heavens was black and blank, and the whole headlong rush of
stellar universe closed in behind me like a veil of light that is gathered
together. It drove away from me like a monstrous jack-o’-lantern driven by the
wind. I had come out into the wilderness of space. Ever the vacant blackness
grew broader, until the hosts of the stars seemed only like a swarm of fiery
specks hurrying away from me, inconceivably remote, and the darkness, the
nothingness and emptiness, was about me on every side. Soon the little universe
of matter, the cage of points in which I had begun to be, was dwindling, now to
a whirling disc of luminous glittering, and now to one minute disc of hazy
light. In a little while it would shrink to a point, and at last would vanish
altogether.
Suddenly feeling came back
to me—feeling in the shape of overwhelming terror: such a dread of those dark
vastitudes as no words can describe, a passionate resurgence of sympathy and
social desire. Were there other souls, invisible to me as I to them, about me
in the blackness? or was I indeed, even as I felt, alone? Had I passed out of
being into something that was neither being nor not-being? The covering of the
body, the covering of matter, had been torn from me, and the hallucinations of companionship
and security. Everything was black and silent. I had ceased to be. I was
nothing. There was nothing, save only that infinitesimal dot of light that
dwindled in the gulf. I strained myself to hear and see, and for a while there
was naught but infinite silence, intolerable darkness, horror, and despair.
Then I saw that about the
spot of light into which the whole world of matter had shrunk there was a faint
glow. And in a band on either side of that the darkness was not absolute. I
watched it for ages, as it seemed to me, and through the long waiting the haze
grew imperceptibly more distinct. And then about the band appeared an irregular
cloud of the faintest, palest brown. I felt a passionate impatience; but the
things grew brighter so slowly that they scarce seemed to change. What was
unfolding itself? What was this strange reddish dawn in the interminable night
of space?
The cloud’s shape was
grotesque. It seemed to be looped along its lower side into four projecting
masses, and, above, it ended in a straight line. What phantom was it? I felt
assured I had seen that figure before; but I could not think what, nor where,
nor when it was. Then the realisation rushed upon me. It was a clenched Hand. I
was alone in space, alone with this huge, shadowy Hand, upon which the whole
Universe of Matter lay like an unconsidered speck of dust. It seemed as though
I watched it through vast periods of time. On the forefinger glittered a ring;
and the universe from which I had come was but a spot of light upon the ring’s
curvature. And the thing that the hand gripped had the likeness of a black rod.
Through a long eternity I watched this Hand, with the ring and the rod, marvelling
and fearing and waiting helplessly on what might follow. It seemed as though
nothing could follow: that I should watch for ever, seeing only the Hand and
the thing it held, and understanding nothing of its import. Was the whole
universe but a refracting speck upon some greater Being? Were our worlds but
the atoms of another universe, and those again of another, and so on through an
endless progression? And what was I? Was I indeed immaterial? A vague
persuasion of a body gathering about me came into my suspense. The abysmal
darkness about the Hand filled with impalpable suggestions, with uncertain,
fluctuating shapes.
Then, suddenly, came a
sound, like the sound of a tolling bell: faint, as if infinitely far; muffled,
as though heard through thick swathings of darkness: a deep, vibrating
resonance, with vast gulfs of silence between each stroke. And the Hand
appeared to tighten on the rod. And I saw far above the Hand, towards the apex
of the darkness, a circle of dim phosphorescence, a ghostly sphere whence these
sounds came throbbing; and at the last stroke the Hand vanished, for the hour
had come, and I heard a noise of many waters. But the black rod remained as a
great band across the sky. And then a voice, which seemed to run to the
uttermost parts of space, spoke, saying, “There will be no more pain.”
At that an almost
intolerable gladness and radiance rushed in upon me, and I saw the circle
shining white and bright, and the rod black and shining, and many things else
distinct and clear. And the circle was the face of the clock, and the rod
the rail of my bed. Haddon was standing at the foot, against the rail, with a
small pair of scissors on his fingers; and the hands of my clock on the mantel
over his shoulder were clasped together over the hour of twelve. Mowbray was
washing something in a basin at the octagonal table, and at my side I felt a
subdued feeling that could scarce be spoken of as pain.
The operation had not killed
me. And I perceived, suddenly, that the dull melancholy of half a year was
lifted from my mind.
THE SEA RAIDERS
I
UNTIL the extraordinary affair at Sidmouth, the peculiar
species Haploteuthis ferox was known to science
only generically, on the strength of a half-digested tentacle obtained near the
Azores, and a decaying body pecked by birds and nibbled by fish, found early in
1896 by Mr. Jennings, near Land’s End.
In no department of
zoological science, indeed, are we quite so much in the dark as with regard to
the deep-sea cephalopods. A mere accident, for instance, it was that led to the
Prince of Monaco’s discovery of nearly a dozen new forms in the summer of 1895,
a discovery in which the before-mentioned tentacle was included. It chanced
that a cachalot was killed off Terceira by some sperm whalers, and in its last
struggles charged almost to the Prince’s yacht, missed it, rolled under, and
died within twenty yards of his rudder. And in its agony it threw up a number
of large objects, which the Prince, dimly perceiving they were strange and
important, was, by a happy expedient, able to secure before they sank. He set his
screws in motion, and kept them circling in the vortices thus created until a
boat could be lowered. And these specimens were whole cephalopods and fragments
of cephalopods, some of gigantic proportions, and almost all of them unknown to
science!
It would seem, indeed, that
these large and agile creatures, living in the middle depths of the sea, must,
to a large extent, for ever remain unknown to us, since under water they are
too nimble for nets, and it is only by such rare unlooked-for accidents that
specimens can be obtained. In the case of Haploteuthis
ferox, for
instance, we are still altogether ignorant of its habitat, as ignorant as we
are of the breeding-ground of the herring or the sea-ways of the salmon. And
zoologists are altogether at a loss to account for its sudden appearance on our
coast. Possibly it was the stress of a hunger migration that drove it hither
out of the deep. But it will be, perhaps, better to avoid necessarily inconclusive
discussion, and to proceed at once with our narrative.
The first human being to set
eyes upon a living Haploteuthis—the first human being to
survive, that is, for there can be little doubt now that the wave of bathing
fatalities and boating accidents that travelled along the coast of Cornwall and
Devon in early May was due to this cause—was a retired tea-dealer of the name
of Fison, who was stopping at a Sidmouth boarding-house. It was in the
afternoon, and he was walking along the cliff path between Sidmouth and Ladram
Bay. The cliffs in this direction are very high, but down the red face of them
in one place a kind of ladder staircase has been made. He was near this
when his attention was attracted by what at first he thought to be a cluster of
birds struggling over a fragment of food that caught the sunlight, and
glistened pinkish-white. The tide was right out, and this object was not only
far below him, but remote across a broad waste of rock reefs covered with dark
seaweed and interspersed with silvery shining tidal pools. And he was,
moreover, dazzled by the brightness of the further water.
In a minute, regarding this
again, he perceived that his judgment was in fault, for over this struggle
circled a number of birds, jackdaws and gulls for the most part, the latter
gleaming blindingly when the sunlight smote their wings, and they seemed minute
in comparison with it. And his curiosity was, perhaps, aroused all the more
strongly because of his first insufficient explanations.
As he had nothing better to
do than amuse himself, he decided to make this object, whatever it was, the
goal of his afternoon walk, instead of Ladram Bay, conceiving it might perhaps
be a great fish of some sort, stranded by some chance, and flapping about in
its distress. And so he hurried down the long steep ladder, stopping at
intervals of thirty feet or so to take breath and scan the mysterious movement.
At the foot of the cliff he
was, of course, nearer his object than he had been; but, on the other hand, it
now came up against the incandescent sky, beneath the sun, so as to seem dark
and indistinct. Whatever was pinkish of it was now hidden by a skerry of weedy
boulders. But he perceived that it was made up of seven rounded bodies,
distinct or connected, and that the birds kept up a constant croaking and
screaming, but seemed afraid to approach it too closely.
Mr. Fison, torn by
curiosity, began picking his way across the wave-worn rocks, and, finding the
wet seaweed that covered them thickly rendered them extremely slippery, he
stopped, removed his shoes and socks, and coiled his trousers above his knees.
His object was, of course, merely to avoid stumbling into the rocky pools about
him, and perhaps he was rather glad, as all men are, of an excuse to resume, even
for a moment, the sensations of his boyhood. At anyrate, it is to this, no
doubt, that he owes his life.
He approached his mark with
all the assurance which the absolute security of this country against all forms
of animal life gives its inhabitants. The round bodies moved to and fro, but it
was only when he surmounted the skerry of boulders I have mentioned that he
realised the horrible nature of the discovery. It came upon him with some
suddenness.
The rounded bodies fell
apart as he came into sight over the ridge, and displayed the pinkish object to
be the partially devoured body of a human being, but whether of a man or woman
he was unable to say. And the rounded bodies were new and ghastly-looking
creatures, in shape somewhat resembling an octopus, and with huge and very long
and flexible tentacles, coiled copiously on the ground. The skin had a
glistening texture, unpleasant to see, like shiny leather. The downward bend of
the tentacle-surrounded mouth, the curious excrescence at the bend, the tentacles,
and the large intelligent eyes, gave the creatures a grotesque suggestion of a
face. They were the size of a fair-sized swine about the body, and the
tentacles seemed to him to be many feet in length. There were, he thinks, seven
or eight at least of the creatures. Twenty yards beyond them, amid the surf of
the now returning tide, two others were emerging from the sea.
Their bodies lay flatly on
the rocks, and their eyes regarded him with evil interest; but it does not
appear that Mr. Fison was afraid, or that he realised that he was in any
danger. Possibly his confidence is to be ascribed to the limpness of their
attitudes. But he was horrified, of course, and intensely excited and indignant
at such revolting creatures preying upon human flesh. He thought they had
chanced upon a drowned body. He shouted to them, with the idea of driving them
off, and, finding they did not budge, cast about him, picked up a big rounded
lump of rock, and flung it at one.
And then, slowly uncoiling
their tentacles, they all began moving towards him—creeping at first
deliberately, and making a soft purring sound to each other.
In a moment Mr. Fison
realised that he was in danger. He shouted again, threw both his boots, and
started off, with a leap, forthwith. Twenty yards off he stopped and faced
about, judging them slow, and behold! the tentacles of their leader were already
pouring over the rocky ridge on which he had just been standing!
At that he shouted again,
but this time not threatening, but a cry of dismay, and began jumping,
striding, slipping, wading across the uneven expanse between him and the beach.
The tall red cliffs seemed suddenly at a vast distance, and he saw, as though
they were creatures in another world, two minute workmen engaged in the repair
of the ladder-way, and little suspecting the race for life that was beginning
below them. At one time he could hear the creatures splashing in the pools not
a dozen feet behind him, and once he slipped and almost fell.
They chased him to the very
foot of the cliffs, and desisted only when he had been joined by the workmen at
the foot of the ladder-way up the cliff. All three of the men pelted them with
stones for a time, and then hurried to the cliff top and along the path towards
Sidmouth, to secure assistance and a boat, and to rescue the desecrated body
from the clutches of these abominable creatures.
II
And, as if he had not
already been in sufficient peril that day, Mr. Fison went with the boat to
point out the exact spot of his adventure.
As the tide was down, it
required a considerable detour to reach the spot, and when at last they came
off the ladder-way, the mangled body had disappeared. The water was now
running in, submerging first one slab of slimy rock and then another, and the
four men in the boat—the workmen, that is, the boatman, and Mr. Fison—now
turned their attention from the bearings off shore to the water beneath the
keel.
At first they could see
little below them, save a dark jungle of laminaria, with an occasional darting
fish. Their minds were set on adventure, and they expressed their
disappointment freely. But presently they saw one of the monsters swimming
through the water seaward, with a curious rolling motion that suggested to Mr.
Fison the spinning roll of a captive balloon. Almost immediately after, the
waving streamers of laminaria were extraordinarily perturbed, parted for a
moment, and three of these beasts became darkly visible, struggling for what
was probably some fragment of the drowned man. In a moment the copious olive-green
ribbons had poured again over this writhing group.
At that all four men,
greatly excited, began beating the water with oars and shouting, and
immediately they saw a tumultuous movement among the weeds. They desisted to
see more clearly, and as soon as the water was smooth, they saw, as it seemed
to them, the whole sea bottom among the weeds set with eyes.
“Ugly swine!” cried one of
the men. “Why, there’s dozens!”
And forthwith the things
began to rise through the water about them. Mr. Fison has since described to
the writer this startling eruption out of the waving laminaria meadows. To
him it seemed to occupy a considerable time, but it is probable that really it
was an affair of a few seconds only. For a time nothing but eyes, and then he speaks
of tentacles streaming out and parting the weed fronds this way and that. Then
these things, growing larger, until at last the bottom was hidden by their
intercoiling forms, and the tips of tentacles rose darkly here and there into
the air above the swell of the waters.
One came up boldly to the
side of the boat, and, clinging to this with three of its sucker-set tentacles,
threw four others over the gunwale, as if with an intention either of
oversetting the boat or of clambering into it. Mr. Fison at once caught up the
boathook, and, jabbing furiously at the soft tentacles, forced it to desist. He
was struck in the back and almost pitched overboard by the boatman, who was
using his oar to resist a similar attack on the other side of the boat. But the
tentacles on either side at once relaxed their hold at this, slid out of sight,
and splashed into the water.
“We’d better get out of
this,” said Mr. Fison, who was trembling violently. He went to the tiller,
while the boatman and one of the workmen seated themselves and began rowing.
The other workman stood up in the fore part of the boat, with the boathook,
ready to strike any more tentacles that might appear. Nothing else seems to
have been said. Mr. Fison had expressed the common feeling beyond amendment. In
a hushed, scared mood, with faces white and drawn, they set about escaping from the
position into which they had so recklessly blundered.
But the oars had scarcely
dropped into the water before dark, tapering, serpentine ropes had bound them,
and were about the rudder; and creeping up the sides of the boat with a looping
motion came the suckers again. The men gripped their oars and pulled, but it
was like trying to move a boat in a floating raft of weeds. “Help here!” cried
the boatman, and Mr. Fison and the second workman rushed to help lug at the
oar.
Then the man with the
boathook—his name was Ewan, or Ewen—sprang up with a curse, and began striking
downward over the side, as far as he could reach, at the bank of tentacles that
now clustered along the boat’s bottom. And, at the same time, the two rowers
stood up to get a better purchase for the recovery of their oars. The boatman
handed his to Mr. Fison, who lugged desperately, and, meanwhile, the boatman
opened a big clasp-knife, and, leaning over the side of the boat, began hacking
at the spiring arms upon the oar shaft.
Mr. Fison, staggering with
the quivering rocking of the boat, his teeth set, his breath coming short, and
the veins starting on his hands as he pulled at his oar, suddenly cast his eyes
seaward. And there, not fifty yards off, across the long rollers of the
incoming tide, was a large boat standing in towards them, with three women and
a little child in it. A boatman was rowing, and a little man in a pink-ribboned
straw hat and whites stood in the stern, hailing them. For a moment, of course,
Mr. Fison thought of help, and then he thought of the child. He abandoned
his oar forthwith, threw up his arms in a frantic gesture, and screamed to the
party in the boat to keep away “for God’s sake!” It says much for the modesty
and courage of Mr. Fison that he does not seem to be aware that there was any
quality of heroism in his action at this juncture. The oar he had abandoned was
at once drawn under, and presently reappeared floating about twenty yards away.
At the same moment Mr. Fison
felt the boat under him lurch violently, and a hoarse scream, a prolonged cry
of terror from Hill, the boatman, caused him to forget the party of
excursionists altogether. He turned, and saw Hill crouching by the forward
rowlock, his face convulsed with terror, and his right arm over the side and
drawn tightly down. He gave now a succession of short, sharp cries, “Oh! oh!
oh!—oh!” Mr. Fison believes that he must have been hacking at the tentacles below
the water-line, and have been grasped by them, but, of course, it is quite
impossible to say now certainly what had happened. The boat was heeling over,
so that the gunwale was within ten inches of the water, and both Ewan and the
other labourer were striking down into the water, with oar and boathook, on
either side of Hill’s arm. Mr. Fison instinctively placed himself to
counterpoise them.
Then Hill, who was a burly,
powerful man, made a strenuous effort, and rose almost to a standing position.
He lifted his arm, indeed, clean out of the water. Hanging to it was a
complicated tangle of brown ropes; and the eyes of one of the brutes that
had hold of him, glaring straight and resolute, showed momentarily above the
surface. The boat heeled more and more, and the green-brown water came pouring
in a cascade over the side. Then Hill slipped and fell with his ribs across the
side, and his arm and the mass of tentacles about it splashed back into the
water. He rolled over; his boot kicked Mr. Fison’s knee as that gentleman
rushed forward to seize him, and in another moment fresh tentacles had whipped
about his waist and neck, and after a brief, convulsive struggle, in which the
boat was nearly capsized, Hill was lugged overboard. The boat righted with a
violent jerk that all but sent Mr. Fison over the other side, and hid the
struggle in the water from his eyes.
He stood staggering to
recover his balance for a moment, and as he did so, he became aware that the
struggle and the inflowing tide had carried them close upon the weedy rocks
again. Not four yards off a table of rock still rose in rhythmic movements
above the in-wash of the tide. In a moment Mr. Fison seized the oar from Ewan,
gave one vigorous stroke, then, dropping it, ran to the bows and leapt. He felt
his feet slide over the rock, and, by a frantic effort, leapt again towards a
further mass. He stumbled over this, came to his knees, and rose again.
“Look out!” cried someone,
and a large drab body struck him. He was knocked flat into a tidal pool by one
of the workmen, and as he went down he heard smothered, choking cries, that he
believed at the time came from Hill. Then he found himself marvelling at
the shrillness and variety of Hill’s voice. Someone jumped over him, and a
curving rush of foamy water poured over him, and passed. He scrambled to his
feet dripping, and, without looking seaward, ran as fast as his terror would
let him shoreward. Before him, over the flat space of scattered rocks, stumbled
the two workmen—one a dozen yards in front of the other.
He looked over his shoulder
at last, and, seeing that he was not pursued, faced about. He was astonished.
From the moment of the rising of the cephalopods out of the water, he had been
acting too swiftly to fully comprehend his actions. Now it seemed to him as if
he had suddenly jumped out of an evil dream.
For there were the sky,
cloudless and blazing with the afternoon sun, the sea weltering under its
pitiless brightness, the soft creamy foam of the breaking water, and the low,
long, dark ridges of rock. The righted boat floated, rising and falling gently
on the swell about a dozen yards from shore. Hill and the monsters, all the
stress and tumult of that fierce fight for life, had vanished as though they
had never been.
Mr. Fison’s heart was
beating violently; he was throbbing to the finger-tips, and his breath came
deep.
There was something missing.
For some seconds he could not think clearly enough what this might be. Sun,
sky, sea, rocks—what was it? Then he remembered the boatload of excursionists.
It had vanished. He wondered whether he had imagined it. He turned, and
saw the two workmen standing side by side under the projecting masses of the
tall pink cliffs. He hesitated whether he should make one last attempt to save
the man Hill. His physical excitement seemed to desert him suddenly, and leave
him aimless and helpless. He turned shoreward, stumbling and wading towards his
two companions.
He looked back again, and
there were now two boats floating, and the one farthest out at sea pitched
clumsily, bottom upward.
III
So it was Haploteuthis ferox made its appearance upon the Devonshire coast. So far, this
has been its most serious aggression. Mr. Fison’s account, taken together with
the wave of boating and bathing casualties to which I have already alluded, and
the absence of fish from the Cornish coasts that year, points clearly to a
shoal of these voracious deep-sea monsters prowling slowly along the sub-tidal
coastline. Hunger migration has, I know, been suggested as the force that drove
them hither; but, for my own part, I prefer to believe the alternative theory
of Hemsley. Hemsley holds that a pack or shoal of these creatures may have
become enamoured of human flesh by the accident of a foundered ship sinking
among them, and have wandered in search of it out of their accustomed zone;
first waylaying and following ships, and so coming to our shores in the wake of
the Atlantic traffic. But to discuss Hemsley’s cogent and admirably-stated
arguments would be out of place here.
It would seem that the
appetites of the shoal were satisfied by the catch of eleven people—for so far
as can be ascertained, there were ten people in the second boat, and certainly
these creatures gave no further signs of their presence off Sidmouth that day.
The coast between Seaton and Budleigh Salterton was patrolled all that evening
and night by four Preventive Service boats, the men in which were armed with
harpoons and cutlasses, and as the evening advanced, a number of more or less
similarly equipped expeditions, organised by private individuals, joined them.
Mr. Fison took no part in any of these expeditions.
About midnight excited hails
were heard from a boat about a couple of miles out at sea to the south-east of
Sidmouth, and a lantern was seen waving in a strange manner to and fro and up
and down. The nearer boats at once hurried towards the alarm. The venturesome
occupants of the boat, a seaman, a curate, and two schoolboys, had actually
seen the monsters passing under their boat. The creatures, it seems, like most
deep-sea organisms, were phosphorescent, and they had been floating, five
fathoms deep or so, like creatures of moonshine through the blackness of the
water, their tentacles retracted and as if asleep, rolling over and over, and
moving slowly in a wedge-like formation towards the south-east.
These people told their
story in gesticulated fragments, as first one boat drew alongside and then
another. At last there was a little fleet of eight or nine boats collected
together, and from them a tumult, like the chatter of a marketplace, rose into
the stillness of the night. There was little or no disposition to pursue the
shoal, the people had neither weapons nor experience for such a dubious chase,
and presently—even with a certain relief, it may be—the boats turned shoreward.
And now to tell what is
perhaps the most astonishing fact in this whole astonishing raid. We have not
the slightest knowledge of the subsequent movements of the shoal, although the
whole south-west coast was now alert for it. But it may, perhaps, be
significant that a cachalot was stranded off Sark on June 3. Two weeks and
three days after this Sidmouth affair, a living Haploteuthis came ashore on Calais
sands. It was alive, because several witnesses saw its tentacles moving in a
convulsive way. But it is probable that it was dying. A gentleman named Pouchet
obtained a rifle and shot it.
That was the last appearance
of a living Haploteuthis. No others were seen on the
French coast. On the 15th of June a dead body, almost complete, was washed
ashore near Torquay, and a few days later a boat from the Marine Biological
station, engaged in dredging off Plymouth, picked up a rotting specimen,
slashed deeply with a cutlass wound. How the former specimen had come by its
death it is impossible to say. And on the last day of June, Mr. Egbert Caine,
an artist, bathing near Newlyn, threw up his arms, shrieked, and was drawn
under. A friend bathing with him made no attempt to save him, but swam at once
for the shore. This is the last fact to tell of this extraordinary raid
from the deeper sea. Whether it is really the last of these horrible creatures
it is, as yet, premature to say. But it is believed, and certainly it is to be
hoped, that they have returned now, and returned for good, to the sunless
depths of the middle seas, out of which they have so strangely and so
mysteriously arisen.
POLLOCK AND THE PORROH MAN
IT was in a swampy village on the lagoon river behind the
Turner Peninsula that Pollock’s first encounter with the Porroh man occurred.
The women of that country are famous for their good looks—they are Gallinas
with a dash of European blood that dates from the days of Vasco de Gama and the
English slave-traders, and the Porroh man, too, was possibly inspired by a
faint Caucasian taint in his composition. (It’s a curious thing to think that
some of us may have distant cousins eating men on Sherboro Island or raiding
with the Sofas.) At anyrate, the Porroh man stabbed the woman to the heart as
though he had been a mere low-class Italian, and very narrowly missed Pollock.
But Pollock, using his revolver to parry the lightning stab which was aimed at
his deltoid muscle, sent the iron dagger flying, and, firing, hit the man in
the hand.
He fired again and missed,
knocking a sudden window out of the wall of the hut. The Porroh man stooped in
the doorway, glancing under his arm at Pollock. Pollock caught a glimpse of his
inverted face in the sunlight, and then the Englishman was alone, sick and
trembling with the excitement of the affair, in the twilight of the place. It
had all happened in less time than it takes to read about it.
The woman was quite dead,
and having ascertained this, Pollock went to the entrance of the hut and looked
out. Things outside were dazzling bright. Half a dozen of the porters of the
expedition were standing up in a group near the green huts they occupied, and
staring towards him, wondering what the shots might signify. Behind the little
group of men was the broad stretch of black fetid mud by the river, a green
carpet of rafts of papyrus and water-grass, and then the leaden water. The
mangroves beyond the stream loomed indistinctly through the blue haze. There
were no signs of excitement in the squat village, whose fence was just visible
above the cane-grass.
Pollock came out of the hut
cautiously and walked towards the river, looking over his shoulder at
intervals. But the Porroh man had vanished. Pollock clutched his revolver
nervously in his hand.
One of his men came to meet
him, and as he came, pointed to the bushes behind the hut in which the Porroh
man had disappeared. Pollock had an irritating persuasion of having made an
absolute fool of himself; he felt bitter, savage, at the turn things had taken.
At the same time, he would have to tell Waterhouse—the moral, exemplary,
cautious Waterhouse—who would inevitably take the matter seriously. Pollock
cursed bitterly at his luck, at Waterhouse, and especially at the West Coast of Africa.
He felt consummately sick of the expedition. And in the back of his mind all
the time was a speculative doubt where precisely within the visible horizon the
Porroh man might be.
It is perhaps rather
shocking, but he was not at all upset by the murder that had just happened. He
had seen so much brutality during the last three months, so many dead women,
burnt huts, drying skeletons, up the Kittam River in the wake of the Sofa
cavalry, that his senses were blunted. What disturbed him was the persuasion
that this business was only beginning.
He swore savagely at the
black, who ventured to ask a question, and went on into the tent under the
orange-trees where Waterhouse was lying, feeling exasperatingly like a boy
going into the headmaster’s study.
Waterhouse was still
sleeping off the effects of his last dose of chlorodyne, and Pollock sat down
on a packing-case beside him, and, lighting his pipe, waited for him to awake.
About him were scattered the pots and weapons Waterhouse had collected from the
Mendi people, and which he had been repacking for the canoe voyage to Sulyma.
Presently Waterhouse woke
up, and after judicial stretching, decided he was all right again. Pollock got
him some tea. Over the tea the incidents of the afternoon were described by
Pollock, after some preliminary beating about the bush. Waterhouse took the
matter even more seriously than Pollock had anticipated. He did not simply
disapprove, he scolded, he insulted.
“You’re one of those
infernal fools who think a black man isn’t a human being,” he said. “I can’t be
ill a day without you must get into some dirty scrape or other. This is the
third time in a month that you have come crossways-on with a native, and this
time you’re in for it with a vengeance. Porroh, too! They’re down upon you
enough as it is, about that idol you wrote your silly name on. And they’re the
most vindictive devils on earth! You make a man ashamed of civilisation. To
think you come of a decent family! If ever I cumber myself up with a vicious,
stupid young lout like you again”—
“Steady on, now,” snarled
Pollock, in the tone that always exasperated Waterhouse; “steady on.”
At that Waterhouse became
speechless. He jumped to his feet.
“Look here, Pollock,” he
said, after a struggle to control his breath. “You must go home. I won’t have
you any longer. I’m ill enough as it is through you”—
“Keep your hair on,” said
Pollock, staring in front of him. “I’m ready enough to go.”
Waterhouse became calmer
again. He sat down on the camp-stool. “Very well,” he said. “I don’t want a
row, Pollock, you know, but it’s confoundedly annoying to have one’s plans put
out by this kind of thing. I’ll come to Sulyma with you, and see you safe
aboard”—
“You needn’t,” said Pollock.
“I can go alone. From here.”
“Not far,” said Waterhouse.
“You don’t understand this Porroh business.”
“How should I know she belonged to
a Porroh man?” said Pollock bitterly.
“Well, she did,” said
Waterhouse; “and you can’t undo the thing. Go alone, indeed! I wonder what
they’d do to you. You don’t seem to understand that this Porroh hokey-pokey
rules this country, is its law, religion, constitution, medicine, magic....
They appoint the chiefs. The Inquisition, at its best, couldn’t hold a candle
to these chaps. He will probably set Awajale, the chief here, on to us. It’s
lucky our porters are Mendis. We shall have to shift this little settlement of
ours.... Confound you, Pollock! And, of course, you must go and miss him.”
He thought, and his thoughts
seemed disagreeable. Presently he stood up and took his rifle. “I’d keep close
for a bit, if I were you,” he said, over his shoulder, as he went out. “I’m
going out to see what I can find out about it.”
Pollock remained sitting in
the tent, meditating. “I was meant for a civilised life,” he said to himself,
regretfully, as he filled his pipe. “The sooner I get back to London or Paris
the better for me.”
His eye fell on the sealed
case in which Waterhouse had put the featherless poisoned arrows they had
bought in the Mendi country. “I wish I had hit the beggar somewhere vital,”
said Pollock viciously.
Waterhouse came back after a
long interval. He was not communicative, though Pollock asked him questions
enough. The Porroh man, it seems, was a prominent member of that mystical
society. The village was interested, but not threatening. No doubt the
witch-doctor had gone into the bush. He was a great witch-doctor. “Of course,
he’s up to something,” said Waterhouse, and became silent.
“But what can he do?” asked
Pollock, unheeded.
“I must get you out of this.
There’s something brewing, or things would not be so quiet,” said Waterhouse,
after a gap of silence. Pollock wanted to know what the brew might be. “Dancing
in a circle of skulls,” said Waterhouse; “brewing a stink in a copper pot.”
Pollock wanted particulars. Waterhouse was vague, Pollock pressing. At last Waterhouse
lost his temper. “How the devil should I know?”
he said to Pollock’s twentieth inquiry what the Porroh man would do. “He tried
to kill you off-hand in the hut. Now,
I fancy he will try something more elaborate. But you’ll see fast enough. I
don’t want to help unnerve you. It’s probably all nonsense.”
That night, as they were
sitting at their fire, Pollock again tried to draw Waterhouse out on the
subject of Porroh methods. “Better get to sleep,” said Waterhouse, when
Pollock’s bent became apparent; “we start early to-morrow. You may want all
your nerve about you.”
“But what line will he
take?”
“Can’t say. They’re
versatile people. They know a lot of rum dodges. You’d better get that
copper-devil, Shakespear, to talk.”
There was a flash and a
heavy bang out of the darkness behind the huts, and a clay bullet came
whistling close to Pollock’s head. This, at least, was crude enough. The
blacks and half-breeds sitting and yarning round their own fire jumped up, and
someone fired into the dark.
“Better go into one of the
huts,” said Waterhouse quietly, still sitting unmoved.
Pollock stood up by the fire
and drew his revolver. Fighting, at least, he was not afraid of. But a man in
the dark is in the best of armour. Realising the wisdom of Waterhouse’s advice,
Pollock went into the tent and lay down there.
What little sleep he had was
disturbed by dreams, variegated dreams, but chiefly of the Porroh man’s face,
upside down, as he went out of the hut, and looked up under his arm. It was odd
that this transitory impression should have stuck so firmly in Pollock’s
memory. Moreover, he was troubled by queer pains in his limbs.
In the white haze of the
early morning, as they were loading the canoes, a barbed arrow suddenly
appeared quivering in the ground close to Pollock’s foot. The boys made a
perfunctory effort to clear out the thicket, but it led to no capture.
After these two occurrences,
there was a disposition on the part of the expedition to leave Pollock to
himself, and Pollock became, for the first time in his life, anxious to mingle
with blacks. Waterhouse took one canoe, and Pollock, in spite of a friendly
desire to chat with Waterhouse, had to take the other. He was left all alone in
the front part of the canoe, and he had the greatest trouble to make the
men—who did not love him—keep to the middle of the river, a clear hundred yards
or more from either shore. However, he made Shakespear, the Freetown
half-breed, come up to his own end of the canoe and tell him about Porroh,
which Shakespear, failing in his attempts to leave Pollock alone, presently did
with considerable freedom and gusto.
The day passed. The canoe
glided swiftly along the ribbon of lagoon water, between the drift of
water-figs, fallen trees, papyrus, and palm-wine palms, and with the dark
mangrove swamp to the left, through which one could hear now and then the roar
of the Atlantic surf. Shakespear told in his soft, blurred English of how the
Porroh could cast spells; how men withered up under their malice; how they
could send dreams and devils; how they tormented and killed the sons of Ijibu;
how they kidnapped a white trader from Sulyma who had maltreated one of the
sect, and how his body looked when it was found. And Pollock after each
narrative cursed under his breath at the want of missionary enterprise that
allowed such things to be, and at the inert British Government that ruled over
this dark heathendom of Sierra Leone. In the evening they came to the Kasi
Lake, and sent a score of crocodiles lumbering off the island on which the
expedition camped for the night.
The next day they reached
Sulyma, and smelt the sea breeze, but Pollock had to put up there for five days
before he could get on to Freetown. Waterhouse, considering him to be
comparatively safe here, and within the pale of Freetown influence, left him
and went back with the expedition to Gbemma, and Pollock became very friendly
with Perera, the only resident white trader at Sulyma—so friendly, indeed,
that he went about with him everywhere. Perera was a little Portuguese Jew, who
had lived in England, and he appreciated the Englishman’s friendliness as a
great compliment.
For two days nothing
happened out of the ordinary; for the most part Pollock and Perera played
Nap—the only game they had in common—and Pollock got into debt. Then, on the
second evening, Pollock had a disagreeable intimation of the arrival of the
Porroh man in Sulyma by getting a flesh-wound in the shoulder from a lump of
filed iron. It was a long shot, and the missile had nearly spent its force when
it hit him. Still it conveyed its message plainly enough. Pollock sat up in his
hammock, revolver in hand, all that night, and next morning confided, to some
extent, in the Anglo-Portuguese.
Perera took the matter
seriously. He knew the local customs pretty thoroughly. “It is a personal
question, you must know. It is revenge. And of course he is hurried by your
leaving de country. None of de natives or half-breeds will interfere wid him
very much—unless you make it wort deir while. If you come upon him suddenly,
you might shoot him. But den he might shoot you.
“Den dere’s dis—infernal
magic,” said Perera. “Of course, I don’t believe in it—superstition—but still
it’s not nice to tink dat wherever you are, dere is a black man, who spends a
moonlight night now and den a-dancing about a fire to send you bad dreams....
Had any bad dreams?”
“Rather,” said Pollock. “I
keep on seeing the beggar’s head upside down grinning at me and showing all his
teeth as he did in the hut, and coming close up to me, and then going ever so
far off, and coming back. It’s nothing to be afraid of, but somehow it simply
paralyses me with terror in my sleep. Queer things—dreams. I know it’s a dream
all the time, and I can’t wake up from it.”
“It’s probably only fancy,”
said Perera. “Den my niggers say Porroh men can send snakes. Seen any snakes
lately?”
“Only one. I killed him this
morning, on the floor near my hammock. Almost trod on him as I got up.”
“Ah!” said Perera, and then, reassuringly, “Of
course it is a—coincidence. Still I would keep my eyes open. Den dere’s pains
in de bones.”
“I thought they were due to
miasma,” said Pollock.
“Probably dey are. When did
dey begin?”
Then Pollock remembered that
he first noticed them the night after the fight in the hut. “It’s my opinion he
don’t want to kill you,” said Perera—“at least not yet. I’ve heard deir idea is
to scare and worry a man wid deir spells, and narrow misses, and rheumatic
pains, and bad dreams, and all dat, until he’s sick of life. Of course, it’s
all talk, you know. You mustn’t worry about it.... But I wonder what he’ll be
up to next.”
“I shall have to be up to something first,”
said Pollock, staring gloomily at the greasy cards that Perera was putting on
the table. “It don’t suit my dignity to be followed about, and shot at,
and blighted in this way. I wonder if Porroh hokey-pokey upsets your luck at
cards.”
He looked at Perera
suspiciously.
“Very likely it does,” said
Perera warmly, shuffling. “Dey are wonderful people.”
That afternoon Pollock
killed two snakes in his hammock, and there was also an extraordinary increase
in the number of red ants that swarmed over the place; and these annoyances put
him in a fit temper to talk over business with a certain Mendi rough he had
interviewed before. The Mendi rough showed Pollock a little iron dagger, and
demonstrated where one struck in the neck, in a way that made Pollock shiver,
and in return for certain considerations Pollock promised him a
double-barrelled gun with an ornamental lock.
In the evening, as Pollock
and Perera were playing cards, the Mendi rough came in through the doorway,
carrying something in a blood-soaked piece of native cloth.
“Not here!” said Pollock
very hurriedly. “Not here!”
But he was not quick enough
to prevent the man, who was anxious to get to Pollock’s side of the bargain,
from opening the cloth and throwing the head of the Porroh man upon the table.
It bounded from there on to the floor, leaving a red trail on the cards, and
rolled into a corner, where it came to rest upside down, but glaring hard at
Pollock.
Perera jumped up as the
thing fell among the cards, and began in his excitement to gabble in Portuguese.
The Mendi was bowing, with the red cloth in his hand. “De gun!” he said.
Pollock stared back at the head in the corner. It bore exactly the expression
it had in his dreams. Something seemed to snap in his own brain as he looked at
it.
Then Perera found his
English again.
“You got him killed?” he
said. “You did not kill him yourself?”
“Why should I?” said
Pollock.
“But he will not be able to
take it off now!”
“Take what off?” said
Pollock.
“And all dese cards are
spoiled!”
“What do you mean by taking off?” said
Pollock.
“You must send me a new pack
from Freetown. You can buy dem dere.”
“But—‘take it off’?”
“It is only superstition. I
forgot. De niggers say dat if de witches—he was a witch— But it is rubbish....
You must make de Porroh man take it off, or kill him yourself.... It is very
silly.”
Pollock swore under his
breath, still staring hard at the head in the corner.
“I can’t stand that glare,”
he said. Then suddenly he rushed at the thing and kicked it. It rolled some
yards or so, and came to rest in the same position as before, upside down, and
looking at him.
“He is ugly,” said the
Anglo-Portuguese. “Very ugly. Dey do it on deir faces with little knives.”
Pollock would have kicked
the head again, but the Mendi man touched him on the arm. “De gun?” he
said, looking nervously at the head.
“Two—if you will take that
beastly thing away,” said Pollock.
The Mendi shook his head,
and intimated that he only wanted one gun now due to him, and for which he
would be obliged. Pollock found neither cajolery nor bullying any good with
him. Perera had a gun to sell (at a profit of three hundred per cent.), and
with that the man presently departed. Then Pollock’s eyes, against his will,
were recalled to the thing on the floor.
“It is funny dat his head
keeps upside down,” said Perera, with an uneasy laugh. “His brains must be
heavy, like de weight in de little images one sees dat keep always upright wid
lead in dem. You will take him wiv you when you go presently. You might take
him now. De cards are all spoilt. Dere is a man sell dem in Freetown. De room
is in a filty mess as it is. You should have killed him yourself.”
Pollock pulled himself
together, and went and picked up the head. He would hang it up by the lamp-hook
in the middle of the ceiling of his room, and dig a grave for it at once. He
was under the impression that he hung it up by the hair, but that must have
been wrong, for when he returned for it, it was hanging by the neck upside
down.
He buried it before sunset
on the north side of the shed he occupied, so that he should not have to pass
the grave after dark when he was returning from Perera’s. He killed two snakes
before he went to sleep. In the darkest part of the night he awoke with a
start, and heard a pattering sound and something scraping on the floor. He sat
up noiselessly, and felt under his pillow for his revolver. A mumbling growl
followed, and Pollock fired at the sound. There was a yelp, and something dark
passed for a moment across the hazy blue of the doorway. “A dog!” said Pollock,
lying down again.
In the early dawn he awoke
again with a peculiar sense of unrest. The vague pain in his bones had
returned. For some time he lay watching the red ants that were swarming over
the ceiling, and then, as the light grew brighter, he looked over the edge of
his hammock and saw something dark on the floor. He gave such a violent start
that the hammock overset and flung him out.
He found himself lying,
perhaps, a yard away from the head of the Porroh man. It had been disinterred
by the dog, and the nose was grievously battered. Ants and flies swarmed over
it. By an odd coincidence, it was still upside down, and with the same
diabolical expression in the inverted eyes.
Pollock sat paralysed, and
stared at the horror for some time. Then he got up and walked round it—giving
it a wide berth—and out of the shed. The clear light of the sunrise, the living
stir of vegetation before the breath of the dying land-breeze, and the empty
grave with the marks of the dog’s paws, lightened the weight upon his mind a
little.
He told Perera of the
business as though it was a jest—a jest to be told with white lips. “You should not
have frighten de dog,” said Perera, with poorly simulated hilarity.
The next two days, until the
steamer came, were spent by Pollock in making a more effectual disposition of
his possession. Overcoming his aversion to handling the thing, he went down to
the river mouth and threw it into the sea-water, but by some miracle it escaped
the crocodiles, and was cast up by the tide on the mud a little way up the
river, to be found by an intelligent Arab half-breed, and offered for sale to
Pollock and Perera as a curiosity, just on the edge of night. The native hung
about in the brief twilight, making lower and lower offers, and at last,
getting scared in some way by the evident dread these wise white men had for
the thing, went off, and, passing Pollock’s shed, threw his burden in there for
Pollock to discover in the morning.
At this Pollock got into a
kind of frenzy. He would burn the thing. He went out straightway into the dawn,
and had constructed a big pyre of brushwood before the heat of the day. He was
interrupted by the hooter of the little paddle steamer from Monrovia to
Bathurst, which was coming through the gap in the bar. “Thank Heaven!” said
Pollock, with infinite piety, when the meaning of the sound dawned upon him.
With trembling hands he lit his pile of wood hastily, threw the head upon it,
and went away to pack his portmanteau and make his adieux to Perera.
That afternoon, with a sense
of infinite relief, Pollock watched the flat swampy foreshore of Sulyma grow
small in the distance. The gap in the long line of white surge became narrower
and narrower. It seemed to be closing in and cutting him off from his trouble.
The feeling of dread and worry began to slip from him bit by bit. At Sulyma
belief in Porroh malignity and Porroh magic had been in the air, his sense of
Porroh had been vast, pervading, threatening, dreadful. Now manifestly the
domain of Porroh was only a little place, a little black band between the sea
and the blue cloudy Mendi uplands.
“Good-bye, Porroh!” said
Pollock. “Good-bye—certainly not au revoir.”
The captain of the steamer
came and leant over the rail beside him, and wished him good-evening, and spat
at the froth of the wake in token of friendly ease.
“I picked up a rummy curio
on the beach this go,” said the captain. “It’s a thing I never saw done this
side of Indy before.”
“What might that be?” said
Pollock.
“Pickled ’ed,” said the
captain.
“What?” said Pollock.
“’Ed—smoked. ’Ed of one of
these Porroh chaps, all ornamented with knife-cuts. Why! What’s up? Nothing? I
shouldn’t have took you for a nervous chap. Green in the face. By gosh! you’re
a bad sailor. All right, eh? Lord, how funny you went!... Well, this ’ed I was
telling you of is a bit rum in a way. I’ve got it, along with some snakes, in a
jar of spirit in my cabin what I keeps for such curios, and I’m hanged if it
don’t float upsy down. Hullo!”
Pollock had given an
incoherent cry, and had his hands in his hair. He ran towards the
paddle-boxes with a half-formed idea of jumping into the sea, and then he
realised his position and turned back towards the captain.
“Here!” said the captain.
“Jack Philips, just keep him off me! Stand off! No nearer, mister! What’s the
matter with you? Are you mad?”
Pollock put his hand to his
head. It was no good explaining. “I believe I am pretty nearly mad at times,”
he said. “It’s a pain I have here. Comes suddenly. You’ll excuse me, I hope.”
He was white and in a
perspiration. He saw suddenly very clearly all the danger he ran of having his
sanity doubted. He forced himself to restore the captain’s confidence, by
answering his sympathetic inquiries, noting his suggestions, even trying a
spoonful of neat brandy in his cheek, and, that matter settled, asking a number
of questions about the captain’s private trade in curiosities. The captain described
the head in detail. All the while Pollock was struggling to keep under a
preposterous persuasion that the ship was as transparent as glass, and that he
could distinctly see the inverted face looking at him from the cabin beneath
his feet.
Pollock had a worse time
almost on the steamer than he had at Sulyma. All day he had to control himself
in spite of his intense perception of the imminent presence of that horrible
head that was overshadowing his mind. At night his old nightmare returned,
until, with a violent effort, he would force himself awake, rigid with the
horror of it, and with the ghost of a hoarse scream in his throat.
He left the actual head
behind at Bathurst, where he changed ship for Teneriffe, but not his dreams nor
the dull ache in his bones. At Teneriffe Pollock transferred to a Cape liner,
but the head followed him. He gambled, he tried chess, he even read books, but
he knew the danger of drink. Yet whenever a round black shadow, a round black
object came into his range, there he looked for the head, and—saw it. He knew
clearly enough that his imagination was growing traitor to him, and yet at
times it seemed the ship he sailed in, his fellow-passengers, the sailors, the
wide sea, was all part of a filmy phantasmagoria that hung, scarcely veiling
it, between him and a horrible real world. Then the Porroh man, thrusting his
diabolical face through that curtain, was the one real and undeniable thing. At
that he would get up and touch things, taste something, gnaw something, burn his
hand with a match, or run a needle into himself.
So, struggling grimly and
silently with his excited imagination, Pollock reached England. He landed at
Southampton, and went on straight from Waterloo to his banker’s in Cornhill in
a cab. There he transacted some business with the manager in a private room,
and all the while the head hung like an ornament under the black marble mantel
and dripped upon the fender. He could hear the drops fall, and see the red on
the fender.
“A pretty fern,” said the
manager, following his eyes. “But it makes the fender rusty.”
“Very,” said Pollock;
“a very pretty
fern. And that reminds me. Can you recommend me a physician for mind
troubles? I’ve got a little—what is it?—hallucination.”
The head laughed savagely,
wildly. Pollock was surprised the manager did not notice it. But the manager
only stared at his face.
With the address of a
doctor, Pollock presently emerged in Cornhill. There was no cab in sight, and
so he went on down to the western end of the street, and essayed the crossing
opposite the Mansion House. The crossing is hardly easy even for the expert
Londoner; cabs, vans, carriages, mail-carts, omnibuses go by in one incessant
stream; to anyone fresh from the malarious solitudes of Sierra Leone it is a
boiling, maddening confusion. But when an inverted head suddenly comes
bouncing, like an indiarubber ball, between your legs, leaving distinct smears
of blood every time it touches the ground, you can scarcely hope to avoid an
accident. Pollock lifted his feet convulsively to avoid it, and then kicked at
the thing furiously. Then something hit him violently in the back, and a hot
pain ran up his arm.
He had been hit by the pole
of an omnibus, and three of the fingers of his left hand smashed by the hoof of
one of the horses—the very fingers, as it happened, that he shot from the
Porroh man. They pulled him out from between the horses’ legs, and found the
address of the physician in his crushed hand.
For a couple of days
Pollock’s sensations were full of the sweet, pungent smell of chloroform, of
painful operations that caused him no pain, of lying still and being given
food and drink. Then he had a slight fever, and was very thirsty, and his old
nightmare came back. It was only when it returned that he noticed it had left
him for a day.
“If my skull had been
smashed instead of my fingers, it might have gone altogether,” said Pollock,
staring thoughtfully at the dark cushion that had taken on for the time the
shape of the head.
Pollock at the first
opportunity told the physician of his mind trouble. He knew clearly that he
must go mad unless something should intervene to save him. He explained that he
had witnessed a decapitation in Dahomey, and was haunted by one of the heads.
Naturally, he did not care to state the actual facts. The physician looked
grave.
Presently he spoke
hesitatingly. “As a child, did you get very much religious training?”
“Very little,” said Pollock.
A shade passed over the
physician’s face. “I don’t know if you have heard of the miraculous cures—it
may be, of course, they are not miraculous—at Lourdes.”
“Faith-healing will hardly
suit me, I am afraid,” said Pollock, with his eye on the dark cushion.
The head distorted its
scarred features in an abominable grimace. The physician went upon a new track.
“It’s all imagination,” he said, speaking with sudden briskness. “A fair case
for faith-healing, anyhow. Your nervous system has run down, you’re in that
twilight state of health when the bogles come easiest. The strong impression
was too much for you. I must make you up a little mixture that will
strengthen your nervous system—especially your brain. And you must take
exercise.”
“I’m no good for
faith-healing,” said Pollock.
“And therefore we must
restore tone. Go in search of stimulating air—Scotland, Norway, the Alps”—
“Jericho, if you like,” said
Pollock—“where Naaman went.”
However, so soon as his
fingers would let him, Pollock made a gallant attempt to follow out the
doctor’s suggestion. It was now November. He tried football, but to Pollock the
game consisted in kicking a furious inverted head about a field. He was no good
at the game. He kicked blindly, with a kind of horror, and when they put him
back into goal, and the ball came swooping down upon him, he suddenly yelled
and got out of its way. The discreditable stories that had driven him from
England to wander in the tropics shut him off from any but men’s society, and
now his increasingly strange behaviour made even his man friends avoid him. The
thing was no longer a thing of the eye merely; it gibbered at him, spoke to
him. A horrible fear came upon him that presently, when he took hold of the
apparition, it would no longer become some mere article of furniture, but
would feel like
a real dissevered head. Alone, he would curse at the thing, defy it, entreat
it; once or twice, in spite of his grim self-control, he addressed it in the
presence of others. He felt the growing suspicion in the eyes of the people
that watched him—his landlady, the servant, his man.
One day early in December
his cousin Arnold—his next of kin—came to see him and draw him out, and watch
his sunken yellow face with narrow eager eyes. And it seemed to Pollock that
the hat his cousin carried in his hand was no hat at all, but a Gorgon head
that glared at him upside down, and fought with its eyes against his reason.
However, he was still resolute to see the matter out. He got a bicycle, and,
riding over the frosty road from Wandsworth to Kingston, found the thing
rolling along at his side, and leaving a dark trail behind it. He set his teeth
and rode faster. Then suddenly, as he came down the hill towards Richmond Park,
the apparition rolled in front of him and under his wheel, so quickly that he
had no time for thought, and, turning quickly to avoid it, was flung violently
against a heap of stones and broke his left wrist.
The end came on Christmas
morning. All night he had been in a fever, the bandages encircling his wrist
like a band of fire, his dreams more vivid and terrible than ever. In the cold,
colourless, uncertain light that came before the sunrise, he sat up in his bed,
and saw the head upon the bracket in the place of the bronze jar that had stood
there overnight.
“I know that is a bronze
jar,” he said, with a chill doubt at his heart. Presently the doubt was
irresistible. He got out of bed slowly, shivering, and advanced to the jar with
his hand raised. Surely he would see now his imagination had deceived him,
recognise the distinctive sheen of bronze. At last, after an age of
hesitation, his fingers came down on the patterned cheek of the head. He
withdrew them spasmodically. The last stage was reached. His sense of touch had
betrayed him.
Trembling, stumbling against
the bed, kicking against his shoes with his bare feet, a dark confusion eddying
round him, he groped his way to the dressing-table, took his razor from the
drawer, and sat down on the bed with this in his hand. In the looking-glass he
saw his own face, colourless, haggard, full of the ultimate bitterness of
despair.
He beheld in swift
succession the incidents in the brief tale of his experience. His wretched
home, his still more wretched schooldays, the years of vicious life he had led
since then, one act of selfish dishonour leading to another; it was all clear
and pitiless now, all its squalid folly, in the cold light of the dawn. He came
to the hut, to the fight with the Porroh man, to the retreat down the river to
Sulyma, to the Mendi assassin and his red parcel, to his frantic endeavours to
destroy the head, to the growth of his hallucination. It was a hallucination!
He knew it
was. A hallucination merely. For a moment he snatched at hope. He looked away
from the glass, and on the bracket, the inverted head grinned and grimaced at
him.... With the stiff fingers of his bandaged hand he felt at his neck for the
throb of his arteries. The morning was very cold, the steel blade felt like
ice.
THE RED ROOM
“I CAN assure you,” said I, “that it will take a very tangible
ghost to frighten me.” And I stood up before the fire with my glass in my hand.
“It is your own choosing,”
said the man with the withered arm, and glanced at me askance.
“Eight-and-twenty years,”
said I, “I have lived, and never a ghost have I seen as yet.”
The old woman sat staring
hard into the fire, her pale eyes wide open. “Ay,” she broke in; “and
eight-and-twenty years you have lived and never seen the likes of this house, I
reckon. There’s a many things to see, when one’s still but eight-and-twenty.”
She swayed her head slowly from side to side. “A many things to see and sorrow
for.”
I half suspected the old
people were trying to enhance the spiritual terrors of their house by their
droning insistence. I put down my empty glass on the table and looked about the
room, and caught a glimpse of myself, abbreviated and broadened to an
impossible sturdiness, in the queer old mirror at the end of the room. “Well,”
I said, “if I see anything to-night, I shall be so much the wiser. For I come
to the business with an open mind.”
“It’s your own choosing,”
said the man with the withered arm once more.
I heard the sound of a stick
and a shambling step on the flags in the passage outside, and the door creaked
on its hinges as a second old man entered, more bent, more wrinkled, more aged
even than the first. He supported himself by a single crutch, his eyes were
covered by a shade, and his lower lip, half-averted, hung pale and pink from
his decaying yellow teeth. He made straight for an arm-chair on the opposite
side of the table, sat down clumsily, and began to cough. The man with the
withered arm gave this new-comer a short glance of positive dislike; the old
woman took no notice of his arrival, but remained with her eyes fixed steadily
on the fire.
“I said—it’s your own
choosing,” said the man with the withered arm, when the coughing had ceased for
a while.
“It’s my own choosing,” I
answered.
The man with the shade
became aware of my presence for the first time, and threw his head back for a
moment and sideways, to see me. I caught a momentary glimpse of his eyes, small
and bright and inflamed. Then he began to cough and splutter again.
“Why don’t you drink?” said
the man with the withered arm, pushing the beer towards him. The man with the
shade poured out a glassful with a shaky arm that splashed half as much again
on the deal table. A monstrous shadow of him crouched upon the wall and mocked
his action as he poured and drank. I must confess I had scarce expected
these grotesque custodians. There is to my mind something inhuman in senility,
something crouching and atavistic; the human qualities seem to drop from old
people insensibly day by day. The three of them made me feel uncomfortable,
with their gaunt silences, their bent carriage, their evident unfriendliness to
me and to one another.
“If,” said I, “you will show
me to this haunted room of yours, I will make myself comfortable there.”
The old man with the cough
jerked his head back so suddenly that it startled me, and shot another glance
of his red eyes at me from under the shade; but no one answered me. I waited a
minute, glancing from one to the other.
“If,” I said a little
louder, “if you will show me to this haunted room of yours, I will relieve you
from the task of entertaining me.”
“There’s a candle on the
slab outside the door,” said the man with the withered arm, looking at my feet
as he addressed me. “But if you go to the red room to-night”—
(“This night of all nights!”
said the old woman.)
“You go alone.”
“Very well,” I answered.
“And which way do I go?”
“You go along the passage
for a bit,” said he, “until you come to a door, and through that is a spiral
staircase, and half-way up that is a landing and another door covered with
baize. Go through that and down the long corridor to the end, and the red room
is on your left up the steps.”
“Have I got that right?” I
said, and repeated his directions. He corrected me in one particular.
“And are you really going?”
said the man with the shade, looking at me again for the third time, with that
queer, unnatural tilting of the face.
(“This night of all nights!”
said the old woman.)
“It is what I came for,” I
said, and moved towards the door. As I did so, the old man with the shade rose
and staggered round the table, so as to be closer to the others and to the
fire. At the door I turned and looked at them, and saw they were all close
together, dark against the firelight, staring at me over their shoulders, with
an intent expression on their ancient faces.
“Good-night,” I said,
setting the door open.
“It’s your own choosing,”
said the man with the withered arm.
I left the door wide open
until the candle was well alight, and then I shut them in and walked down the
chilly, echoing passage.
I must confess that the
oddness of these three old pensioners in whose charge her ladyship had left the
castle, and the deep-toned, old-fashioned furniture of the housekeeper’s room
in which they foregathered, affected me in spite of my efforts to keep myself
at a matter-of-fact phase. They seemed to belong to another age, an older age,
an age when things spiritual were different from this of ours, less certain; an
age when omens and witches were credible, and ghosts beyond denying. Their very
existence was spectral; the cut of their clothing, fashions born in dead
brains. The ornaments and conveniences of the room about them were ghostly—the
thoughts of vanished men, which still haunted rather than participated in the
world of to-day. But with an effort I sent such thoughts to the right-about.
The long, draughty subterranean passage was chilly and dusty, and my candle
flared and made the shadows cower and quiver. The echoes rang up and down the
spiral staircase, and a shadow came sweeping up after me, and one fled before
me into the darkness overhead. I came to the landing and stopped there for a
moment, listening to a rustling that I fancied I heard; then, satisfied of the
absolute silence, I pushed open the baize-covered door and stood in the
corridor.
The effect was scarcely what
I expected, for the moonlight, coming in by the great window on the grand
staircase, picked out everything in vivid black shadow or silvery illumination.
Everything was in its place: the house might have been deserted on the
yesterday instead of eighteen months ago. There were candles in the sockets of
the sconces, and whatever dust had gathered on the carpets or upon the polished
flooring was distributed so evenly as to be invisible in the moonlight. I was
about to advance, and stopped abruptly. A bronze group stood upon the landing,
hidden from me by the corner of the wall, but its shadow fell with marvellous
distinctness upon the white panelling, and gave me the impression of someone
crouching to waylay me. I stood rigid for half a minute perhaps. Then, with my
hand in the pocket that held my revolver, I advanced, only to discover a
Ganymede and Eagle glistening in the moonlight. That incident for a time
restored my nerve, and a porcelain Chinaman on a buhl table, whose head rocked
silently as I passed him, scarcely startled me.
The door to the red room and
the steps up to it were in a shadowy corner. I moved my candle from side to
side, in order to see clearly the nature of the recess in which I stood before
opening the door. Here it was, thought I, that my predecessor was found, and
the memory of that story gave me a sudden twinge of apprehension. I glanced
over my shoulder at the Ganymede in the moonlight, and opened the door of the
red room rather hastily, with my face half turned to the pallid silence of the
landing.
I entered, closed the door
behind me at once, turned the key I found in the lock within, and stood with
the candle held aloft, surveying the scene of my vigil, the great red room of
Lorraine Castle, in which the young duke had died. Or, rather, in which he had
begun his dying, for he had opened the door and fallen headlong down the steps
I had just ascended. That had been the end of his vigil, of his gallant attempt
to conquer the ghostly tradition of the place, and never, I thought, had
apoplexy better served the ends of superstition. And there were other and older
stories that clung to the room, back to the half-credible beginning of it all,
the tale of a timid wife and the tragic end that came to her husband’s jest of
frightening her. And looking around that large shadowy room, with its shadowy window
bays, its recesses and alcoves, one could well understand the legends that had
sprouted in its black corners, its germinating darkness. My candle was a little
tongue of light in its vastness, that failed to pierce the opposite end of the
room, and left an ocean of mystery and suggestion beyond its island of light.
I resolved to make a
systematic examination of the place at once, and dispel the fanciful
suggestions of its obscurity before they obtained a hold upon me. After
satisfying myself of the fastening of the door, I began to walk about the room,
peering round each article of furniture, tucking up the valances of the bed,
and opening its curtains wide. I pulled up the blinds and examined the
fastenings of the several windows before closing the shutters, leant forward
and looked up the blackness of the wide chimney, and tapped the dark oak
panelling for any secret opening. There were two big mirrors in the room, each
with a pair of sconces bearing candles, and on the mantelshelf, too, were more
candles in china candlesticks. All these I lit one after the other. The fire
was laid,—an unexpected consideration from the old housekeeper,—and I lit it,
to keep down any disposition to shiver, and when it was burning well, I stood
round with my back to it and regarded the room again. I had pulled up a
chintz-covered arm-chair and a table, to form a kind of barricade before me,
and on this lay my revolver ready to hand. My precise examination had done me
good, but I still found the remoter darkness of the place, and its perfect
stillness, too stimulating for the imagination. The echoing of the stir
and crackling of the fire was no sort of comfort to me. The shadow in the
alcove, at the end in particular, had that undefinable quality of a presence,
that odd suggestion of a lurking living thing, that comes so easily in silence
and solitude. At last, to reassure myself, I walked with a candle into it, and
satisfied myself that there was nothing tangible there. I stood that candle
upon the floor of the alcove, and left it in that position.
By this time I was in a
state of considerable nervous tension, although to my reason there was no
adequate cause for the condition. My mind, however, was perfectly clear. I
postulated quite unreservedly that nothing supernatural could happen, and to
pass the time I began to string some rhymes together, Ingoldsby fashion, of the
original legend of the place. A few I spoke aloud, but the echoes were not
pleasant. For the same reason I also abandoned, after a time, a conversation
with myself upon the impossibility of ghosts and haunting. My mind reverted to
the three old and distorted people downstairs, and I tried to keep it upon that
topic. The sombre reds and blacks of the room troubled me; even with seven
candles the place was merely dim. The one in the alcove flared in a draught,
and the fire-flickering kept the shadows and penumbra perpetually shifting and
stirring. Casting about for a remedy, I recalled the candles I had seen in the
passage, and, with a slight effort, walked out into the moonlight, carrying a
candle and leaving the door open, and presently returned with as many as ten.
These I put in various knick-knacks of china with which the room was
sparsely adorned, lit and placed where the shadows had lain deepest, some on
the floor, some in the window recesses, until at last my seventeen candles were
so arranged that not an inch of the room but had the direct light of at least
one of them. It occurred to me that when the ghost came, I could warn him not
to trip over them. The room was now quite brightly illuminated. There was
something very cheery and reassuring in these little streaming flames, and
snuffing them gave me an occupation, and afforded a reassuring sense of the
passage of time.
Even with that, however, the
brooding expectation of the vigil weighed heavily upon me. It was after
midnight that the candle in the alcove suddenly went out, and the black shadow
sprang back to its place there. I did not see the candle go out; I simply
turned and saw that the darkness was there, as one might start and see the
unexpected presence of a stranger. “By Jove!” said I aloud; “that draught’s a
strong one!” and, taking the matches from the table, I walked across the room
in a leisurely manner to relight the corner again. My first match would not
strike, and as I succeeded with the second, something seemed to blink on the
wall before me. I turned my head involuntarily, and saw that the two candles on
the little table by the fireplace were extinguished. I rose at once to my feet.
“Odd!” I said. “Did I do that
myself in a flash of absent-mindedness?”
I walked back, relit one,
and as I did so, I saw the candle in the right sconce of one of the
mirrors wink and go right out, and almost immediately its companion followed
it. There was no mistake about it. The flame vanished, as if the wicks had been
suddenly nipped between a finger and a thumb, leaving the wick neither glowing
nor smoking, but black. While I stood gaping, the candle at the foot of the bed
went out, and the shadows seemed to take another step towards me.
“This won’t do!” said I, and
first one and then another candle on the mantelshelf followed.
“What’s up?” I cried, with a
queer high note getting into my voice somehow. At that the candle on the
wardrobe went out, and the one I had relit in the alcove followed.
“Steady on!” I said. “These
candles are wanted,” speaking with a half-hysterical facetiousness, and
scratching away at a match the while for the mantel candlesticks. My hands
trembled so much that twice I missed the rough paper of the matchbox. As the
mantel emerged from darkness again, two candles in the remoter end of the
window were eclipsed. But with the same match I also relit the larger mirror
candles, and those on the floor near the doorway, so that for the moment I
seemed to gain on the extinctions. But then in a volley there vanished four
lights at once in different corners of the room, and I struck another match in
quivering haste, and stood hesitating whither to take it.
As I stood undecided, an
invisible hand seemed to sweep out the two candles on the table. With a cry of
terror, I dashed at the alcove, then into the corner, and then into the
window, relighting three, as two more vanished by the fireplace; then,
perceiving a better way, I dropped the matches on the iron-bound deed-box in
the corner, and caught up the bedroom candlestick. With this I avoided the
delay of striking matches; but for all that the steady process of extinction
went on, and the shadows I feared and fought against returned, and crept in
upon me, first a step gained on this side of me and then on that. It was like a
ragged storm-cloud sweeping out the stars. Now and then one returned for a
minute, and was lost again. I was now almost frantic with the horror of the
coming darkness, and my self-possession deserted me. I leaped panting and
dishevelled from candle to candle, in a vain struggle against that remorseless
advance.
I bruised myself on the
thigh against the table, I sent a chair headlong, I stumbled and fell and
whisked the cloth from the table in my fall. My candle rolled away from me, and
I snatched another as I rose. Abruptly this was blown out, as I swung it off
the table, by the wind of my sudden movement, and immediately the two remaining
candles followed. But there was light still in the room, a red light that
staved off the shadows from me. The fire! Of course, I could still thrust my
candle between the bars and relight it!
I turned to where the flames
were still dancing between the glowing coals, and splashing red reflections
upon the furniture, made two steps towards the grate, and incontinently the
flames dwindled and vanished, the glow vanished, the reflections rushed together
and vanished, and as I thrust the candle between the bars, darkness closed upon
me like the shutting of an eye, wrapped about me in a stifling embrace, sealed
my vision, and crushed the last vestiges of reason from my brain. The candle
fell from my hand. I flung out my arms in a vain effort to thrust that
ponderous blackness away from me, and, lifting up my voice, screamed with all
my might—once, twice, thrice. Then I think I must have staggered to my feet. I
know I thought suddenly of the moonlit corridor, and, with my head bowed and my
arms over my face, made a run for the door.
But I had forgotten the
exact position of the door, and struck myself heavily against the corner of the
bed. I staggered back, turned, and was either struck or struck myself against
some other bulky furniture. I have a vague memory of battering myself thus, to
and fro in the darkness, of a cramped struggle, and of my own wild crying as I
darted to and fro, of a heavy blow at last upon my forehead, a horrible
sensation of falling that lasted an age, of my last frantic effort to keep my
footing, and then I remember no more.
000
I opened my eyes in
daylight. My head was roughly bandaged, and the man with the withered arm was
watching my face. I looked about me, trying to remember what had happened, and
for a space I could not recollect. I rolled my eyes into the corner, and saw
the old woman, no longer abstracted, pouring out some drops of medicine from
a little blue phial into a glass. “Where am I?” I asked. “I seem to remember
you, and yet I cannot remember who you are.”
They told me then, and I
heard of the haunted Red Room as one who hears a tale. “We found you at dawn,”
said he, “and there was blood on your forehead and lips.”
It was very slowly I
recovered my memory of my experience. “You believe now,” said the old man,
“that the room is haunted?” He spoke no longer as one who greets an intruder,
but as one who grieves for a broken friend.
“Yes,” said I; “the room is
haunted.”
“And you have seen it. And
we, who have lived here all our lives, have never set eyes upon it. Because we
have never dared.... Tell us, is it truly the old earl who”—
“No,” said I; “it is not.”
“I told you so,” said the
old lady, with the glass in her hand. “It is his poor young countess who was
frightened”—
“It is not,” I said. “There
is neither ghost of earl nor ghost of countess in that room, there is no ghost
there at all; but worse, far worse”—
“Well?” they said.
“The worst of all the things
that haunt poor mortal man,” said I; “and that is, in all its nakedness—Fear! Fear that will
not have light nor sound, that will not bear with reason, that deafens and
darkens and overwhelms. It followed me through the corridor, it fought against
me in the room”—
I stopped abruptly. There
was an interval of silence. My hand went up to my bandages.
Then the man with the shade
sighed and spoke. “That is it,” said he. “I knew that was it. A Power of
Darkness. To put such a curse upon a woman! It lurks there always. You can feel
it even in the daytime, even of a bright summer’s day, in the hangings, in the
curtains, keeping behind you however you face about. In the dusk it creeps
along the corridor and follows you, so that you dare not turn. There is Fear in
that room of hers—black Fear, and there will be—so long as this house of sin
endures.”
THE CONE
THE night was hot and overcast, the sky red-rimmed with the
lingering sunset of midsummer. They sat at the open window, trying to fancy the
air was fresher there. The trees and shrubs of the garden stood stiff and dark;
beyond in the roadway a gas-lamp burnt, bright orange against the hazy blue of
the evening. Farther were the three lights of the railway signal against the
lowering sky. The man and woman spoke to one another in low tones.
“He does not suspect?” said
the man, a little nervously.
“Not he,” she said
peevishly, as though that too irritated her. “He thinks of nothing but the
works and the prices of fuel. He has no imagination, no poetry.”
“None of these men of iron
have,” he said sententiously. “They have no hearts.”
“He has not,” she said. She turned her
discontented face towards the window. The distant sound of a roaring and
rushing drew nearer and grew in volume; the house quivered; one heard the
metallic rattle of the tender. As the train passed, there was a glare of
light above the cutting and a driving tumult of smoke; one, two, three, four,
five, six, seven, eight black oblongs—eight trucks—passed across the dim grey
of the embankment, and were suddenly extinguished one by one in the throat of
the tunnel, which, with the last, seemed to swallow down train, smoke, and
sound in one abrupt gulp.
“This country was all fresh
and beautiful once,” he said; “and now—it is Gehenna. Down that way—nothing but
pot-banks and chimneys belching fire and dust into the face of heaven.... But
what does it matter? An end comes, an end to all this cruelty.... To-morrow.” He spoke the
last word in a whisper.
“To-morrow,” she said, speaking in a whisper
too, and still staring out of the window.
“Dear!” he said, putting his
hand on hers.
She turned with a start, and
their eyes searched one another’s. Hers softened to his gaze. “My dear one!”
she said, and then: “It seems so strange—that you should have come into my life
like this—to open”— She paused.
“To open?” he said.
“All this wonderful
world”—she hesitated, and spoke still more softly—“this world of love to me.”
Then suddenly the door
clicked and closed. They turned their heads, and he started violently back. In
the shadow of the room stood a great shadowy figure—silent. They saw the face
dimly in the half-light, with unexpressive dark patches under the penthouse
brows. Every muscle in Raut’s body suddenly became tense. When could the
door have opened? What had he heard? Had he heard all? What had he seen? A
tumult of questions.
The new-comer’s voice came
at last, after a pause that seemed interminable. “Well?” he said.
“I was afraid I had missed
you, Horrocks,” said the man at the window, gripping the window-ledge with his
hand. His voice was unsteady.
The clumsy figure of
Horrocks came forward out of the shadow. He made no answer to Raut’s remark.
For a moment he stood above them.
The woman’s heart was cold
within her. “I told Mr. Raut it was just possible you might come back,” she
said, in a voice that never quivered.
Horrocks, still silent, sat
down abruptly in the chair by her little work-table. His big hands were clenched;
one saw now the fire of his eyes under the shadow of his brows. He was trying
to get his breath. His eyes went from the woman he had trusted to the friend he
had trusted, and then back to the woman.
By this time and for the
moment all three half understood one another. Yet none dared say a word to ease
the pent-up things that choked them.
It was the husband’s voice
that broke the silence at last.
“You wanted to see me?” he
said to Raut.
Raut started as he spoke. “I
came to see you,” he said, resolved to lie to the last.
“Yes,” said Horrocks.
“You promised,” said Raut,
“to show me some fine effects of moonlight and smoke.”
“I promised to show you some
fine effects of moonlight and smoke,” repeated Horrocks in a colourless voice.
“And I thought I might catch
you to-night before you went down to the works,” proceeded Raut, “and come with
you.”
There was another pause. Did
the man mean to take the thing coolly? Did he after all know? How long had he
been in the room? Yet even at the moment when they heard the door, their
attitudes.... Horrocks glanced at the profile of the woman, shadowy pallid in
the half-light. Then he glanced at Raut, and seemed to recover himself
suddenly. “Of course,” he said, “I promised to show you the works under their
proper dramatic conditions. It’s odd how I could have forgotten.”
“If I am troubling
you”—began Raut.
Horrocks started again. A
new light had suddenly come into the sultry gloom of his eyes. “Not in the
least,” he said.
“Have you been telling Mr.
Raut of all these contrasts of flame and shadow you think so splendid?” said
the woman, turning now to her husband for the first time, her confidence
creeping back again, her voice just one half-note too high. “That dreadful
theory of yours that machinery is beautiful, and everything else in the world
ugly. I thought he would not spare you, Mr. Raut. It’s his great theory, his
one discovery in art.”
“I am slow to make
discoveries,” said Horrocks grimly, damping her suddenly. “But what I
discover....” He stopped.
“Well?” she said.
“Nothing;” and suddenly he
rose to his feet.
“I promised to show you the
works,” he said to Raut, and put his big, clumsy hand on his friend’s shoulder.
“And you are ready to go?”
“Quite,” said Raut, and
stood up also.
There was another pause.
Each of them peered through the indistinctness of the dusk at the other two.
Horrock’s hand still rested on Raut’s shoulder. Raut half fancied still that
the incident was trivial after all. But Mrs. Horrocks knew her husband better,
knew that grim quiet in his voice, and the confusion in her mind took a vague
shape of physical evil. “Very well,” said Horrocks, and, dropping his hand,
turned towards the door.
“My hat?” Raut looked round
in the half-light.
“That’s my work-basket,”
said Mrs. Horrocks, with a gust of hysterical laughter. Their hands came
together on the back of the chair. “Here it is!” he said. She had an impulse to
warn him in an undertone, but she could not frame a word. “Don’t go!” and
“Beware of him!” struggled in her mind, and the swift moment passed.
“Got it?” said Horrocks,
standing with the door half open.
Raut stepped towards him.
“Better say good-bye to Mrs. Horrocks,” said the ironmaster, even more grimly
quiet in his tone than before.
Raut started and turned.
“Good-evening, Mrs. Horrocks,” he said, and their hands touched.
Horrocks held the door open
with a ceremonial politeness unusual in him towards men. Raut went out, and
then, after a wordless look at her, her husband followed. She stood motionless
while Raut’s light footfall and her husband’s heavy tread, like bass and
treble, passed down the passage together. The front door slammed heavily. She
went to the window, moving slowly, and stood watching—leaning forward. The two
men appeared for a moment at the gateway in the road, passed under the street
lamp, and were hidden by the black masses of the shrubbery. The lamplight fell
for a moment on their faces, showing only unmeaning pale patches, telling
nothing of what she still feared, and doubted, and craved vainly to know. Then
she sank down into a crouching attitude in the big arm-chair, her eyes wide
open and staring out at the red lights from the furnaces that flickered in the
sky. An hour after she was still there, her attitude scarcely changed.
The oppressive stillness of
the evening weighed heavily upon Raut. They went side by side down the road in
silence, and in silence turned into the cinder-made by-way that presently
opened out the prospect of the valley.
A blue haze, half dust, half
mist, touched the long valley with mystery. Beyond were Hanley and Etruria,
grey and dark masses, outlined thinly by the rare golden dots of the street
lamps, and here and there a gaslit window, or the yellow glare of some
late-working factory or crowded public-house. Out of the masses, clear and
slender against the evening sky, rose a multitude of tall chimneys, many
of them reeking, a few smokeless during a season of “play.” Here and there a
pallid patch and ghostly stunted beehive shapes showed the position of a
pot-bank, or a wheel, black and sharp against the hot lower sky, marked some
colliery where they raise the iridescent coal of the place. Nearer at hand was
the broad stretch of railway, and half invisible trains shunted—a steady
puffing and rumbling, with every run a ringing concussion and a rhythmic series
of impacts, and a passage of intermittent puffs of white steam across the
further view. And to the left, between the railway and the dark mass of the low
hill beyond, dominating the whole view, colossal, inky-black, and crowned with
smoke and fitful flames, stood the great cylinders of the Jeddah Company Blast
Furnaces, the central edifices of the big ironworks of which Horrocks was the
manager. They stood heavy and threatening, full of an incessant turmoil of
flames and seething molten iron, and about the feet of them rattled the
rolling-mills, and the steam-hammer beat heavily and splashed the white iron
sparks hither and thither. Even as they looked, a truckful of fuel was shot
into one of the giants, and the red flames gleamed out, and a confusion of
smoke and black dust came boiling upwards towards the sky.
“Certainly you get some fine
effects of colour with your furnaces,” said Raut, breaking a silence that had
become apprehensive.
Horrocks grunted. He stood
with his hands in his pockets, frowning down at the dim steaming railway
and the busy ironworks beyond, frowning as if he were thinking out some knotty
problem.
Raut glanced at him and away
again. “At present your moonlight effect is hardly ripe,” he continued, looking
upward; “the moon is still smothered by the vestiges of daylight.”
Horrocks stared at him with
the expression of a man who has suddenly awakened. “Vestiges of daylight?... Of
course, of course.” He too looked up at the moon, pale still in the midsummer
sky. “Come along,” he said suddenly, and, gripping Raut’s arm in his hand, made
a move towards the path that dropped from them to the railway.
Raut hung back. Their eyes
met and saw a thousand things in a moment that their lips came near to say.
Horrocks’s hand tightened and then relaxed. He let go, and before Raut was
aware of it, they were arm in arm, and walking, one unwillingly enough, down
the path.
“You see the fine effect of
the railway signals towards Burslem,” said Horrocks, suddenly breaking into
loquacity, striding fast and tightening the grip of his elbow the while.
“Little green lights and red and white lights, all against the haze. You have
an eye for effect, Raut. It’s a fine effect. And look at those furnaces of
mine, how they rise upon us as we come down the hill. That to the right is my
pet—seventy feet of him. I packed him myself, and he’s boiled away cheerfully
with iron in his guts for five long years. I’ve a particular fancy for him. That line of red
there—a lovely bit of warm orange you’d call it, Raut—that’s the puddlers’
furnaces, and there, in the hot light, three black figures—did you see the
white splash of the steam-hammer then?—that’s the rolling-mills. Come along!
Clang, clatter, how it goes rattling across the floor! Sheet tin, Raut,—amazing
stuff. Glass mirrors are not in it when that stuff comes from the mill. And,
squelch!—there goes the hammer again. Come along!”
He had to stop talking to
catch at his breath. His arm twisted into Raut’s with benumbing tightness. He had
come striding down the black path towards the railway as though he was
possessed. Raut had not spoken a word, had simply hung back against Horrocks’s
pull with all his strength.
“I say,” he said now,
laughing nervously, but with an undernote of snarl in his voice, “why on earth
are you nipping my arm off, Horrocks, and dragging me along like this?”
At length Horrocks released
him. His manner changed again. “Nipping your arm off?” he said. “Sorry. But
it’s you taught me the trick of walking in that friendly way.”
“You haven’t learnt the
refinements of it yet then,” said Raut, laughing artificially again. “By Jove!
I’m black and blue.” Horrocks offered no apology. They stood now near the
bottom of the hill, close to the fence that bordered the railway. The ironworks
had grown larger and spread out with their approach. They looked up to the
blast furnaces now instead of down; the further view of Etruria and Hanley had
dropped out of sight with their descent. Before them, by the stile, rose a notice-board,
bearing, still dimly visible, the words, “Beware of the trains,” half
hidden by splashes of coaly mud.
“Fine effects,” said
Horrocks, waving his arm. “Here comes a train. The puffs of smoke, the orange
glare, the round eye of light in front of it, the melodious rattle. Fine
effects! But these furnaces of mine used to be finer, before we shoved cones in
their throats, and saved the gas.”
“How?” said Raut. “Cones?”
“Cones, my man, cones. I’ll
show you one nearer. The flames used to flare out of the open throats,
great—what is it?—pillars of cloud by day, red and black smoke, and pillars of
fire by night. Now we run it off in pipes, and burn it to heat the blast, and
the top is shut by a cone. You’ll be interested in that cone.”
“But every now and then,”
said Raut, “you get a burst of fire and smoke up there.”
“The cone’s not fixed, it’s
hung by a chain from a lever, and balanced by an equipoise. You shall see it
nearer. Else, of course, there’d be no way of getting fuel into the thing.
Every now and then the cone dips, and out comes the flare.”
“I see,” said Raut. He
looked over his shoulder. “The moon gets brighter,” he said.
“Come along,” said Horrocks
abruptly, gripping his shoulder again, and moving him suddenly towards the
railway crossing. And then came one of those swift incidents, vivid, but so
rapid that they leave one doubtful and reeling. Halfway across, Horrocks’s hand
suddenly clenched upon him like a vice and swung him backward and through
a half-turn, so that he looked up the line. And there a chain of lamp-lit
carriage-windows telescoped swiftly as it came towards them, and the red and
yellow lights of an engine grew larger and larger, rushing down upon them. As
he grasped what this meant, he turned his face to Horrocks, and pushed with all
his strength against the arm that held him back between the rails. The struggle
did not last a moment. Just as certain as it was that Horrocks held him there,
so certain was it that he had been violently lugged out of danger.
“Out of the way,” said
Horrocks, with a gasp, as the train came rattling by, and they stood panting by
the gate into the ironworks.
“I did not see it coming,”
said Raut, still, even in spite of his own apprehensions, trying to keep up an
appearance of ordinary intercourse.
Horrocks answered with a
grunt. “The cone,” he said, and then, as one who recovers himself, “I thought
you did not hear.”
“I didn’t,” said Raut.
“I wouldn’t have had you run
over then for the world,” said Horrocks.
“For a moment I lost my
nerve,” said Raut.
Horrocks stood for half a
minute, then turned abruptly towards the ironworks again. “See how fine these
great mounds of mine, these clinker-heaps, look in the night! That truck
yonder, up above there! Up it goes, and out-tilts the slag. See the palpitating
red stuff go sliding down the slope. As we get nearer, the heap rises up and
cuts the blast furnaces. See the quiver up above the big one. Not that
way! This way, between the heaps. That goes to the puddling furnaces, but I
want to show you the canal first.” He came and took Raut by the elbow, and so
they went along side by side. Raut answered Horrocks vaguely. What, he asked
himself, had really happened on the line? Was he deluding himself with his own
fancies, or had Horrocks actually held him back in the way of the train? Had he
just been within an ace of being murdered?
Suppose this slouching,
scowling monster did know
anything? For a minute or two then Raut was really afraid for his life, but the
mood passed as he reasoned with himself. After all, Horrocks might have heard
nothing. At anyrate, he had pulled him out of the way in time. His odd manner
might be due to the mere vague jealousy he had shown once before. He was
talking now of the ash-heaps and the canal. “Eigh?” said Horrocks.
“What?” said Raut. “Rather!
The haze in the moonlight. Fine!”
“Our canal,” said Horrocks,
stopping suddenly. “Our canal by moonlight and firelight is an immense effect.
You’ve never seen it? Fancy that! You’ve spent too many of your evenings
philandering up in Newcastle there. I tell you, for real florid effects— But
you shall see. Boiling water....”
As they came out of the
labyrinth of clinker-heaps and mounds of coal and ore, the noises of the
rolling-mill sprang upon them suddenly, loud, near, and distinct. Three shadowy
workmen went by and touched their caps to Horrocks. Their faces were vague
in the darkness. Raut felt a futile impulse to address them, and before he
could frame his words, they passed into the shadows. Horrocks pointed to the
canal close before them now: a weird-looking place it seemed, in the blood-red
reflections of the furnaces. The hot water that cooled the tuyères came into
it, some fifty yards up—a tumultuous, almost boiling affluent, and the steam
rose up from the water in silent white wisps and streaks, wrapping damply about
them, an incessant succession of ghosts coming up from the black and red
eddies, a white uprising that made the head swim. The shining black tower of
the larger blast-furnace rose overhead out of the mist, and its tumultuous riot
filled their ears. Raut kept away from the edge of the water, and watched
Horrocks.
“Here it is red,” said
Horrocks, “blood-red vapour as red and hot as sin; but yonder there, where the
moonlight falls on it, and it drives across the clinker-heaps, it is as white
as death.”
Raut turned his head for a
moment, and then came back hastily to his watch on Horrocks. “Come along to the
rolling-mills,” said Horrocks. The threatening hold was not so evident that
time, and Raut felt a little reassured. But all the same, what on earth did
Horrocks mean about “white as death” and “red as sin”? Coincidence, perhaps?
They went and stood behind
the puddlers for a little while, and then through the rolling-mills, where
amidst an incessant din the deliberate steam-hammer beat the juice out of the
succulent iron, and black, half-naked Titans rushed the plastic bars, like hot sealing-wax,
between the wheels. “Come on,” said Horrocks in Raut’s ear, and they went and
peeped through the little glass hole behind the tuyères, and saw the tumbled
fire writhing in the pit of the blast-furnace. It left one eye blinded for a
while. Then, with green and blue patches dancing across the dark, they went to
the lift by which the trucks of ore and fuel and lime were raised to the top of
the big cylinder.
And out upon the narrow rail
that overhung the furnace, Raut’s doubts came upon him again. Was it wise to be
here? If Horrocks did know—everything! Do what he would, he could not resist a
violent trembling. Right under foot was a sheer depth of seventy feet. It was a
dangerous place. They pushed by a truck of fuel to get to the railing that
crowned the place. The reek of the furnace, a sulphurous vapour streaked with
pungent bitterness, seemed to make the distant hillside of Hanley quiver. The
moon was riding out now from among a drift of clouds, half-way up the sky above
the undulating wooded outlines of Newcastle. The steaming canal ran away from
below them under an indistinct bridge, and vanished into the dim haze of the
flat fields towards Burslem.
“That’s the cone I’ve been
telling you of,” shouted Horrocks; “and, below that, sixty feet of fire and
molten metal, with the air of the blast frothing through it like gas in
soda-water.”
Raut gripped the hand-rail
tightly, and stared down at the cone. The heat was intense. The boiling of the
iron and the tumult of the blast made a thunderous accompaniment to
Horrocks’s voice. But the thing had to be gone through now. Perhaps, after
all....
“In the middle,” bawled
Horrocks, “temperature near a thousand degrees. If you were dropped into
it ... flash into flame like a pinch of gunpowder in a candle. Put your hand
out and feel the heat of his breath. Why, even up here I’ve seen the rain-water
boiling off the trucks. And that cone there. It’s a damned sight too hot for
roasting cakes. The top side of it’s three hundred degrees.”
“Three hundred degrees!”
said Raut.
“Three hundred centigrade,
mind!” said Horrocks. “It will boil the blood out of you in no time.”
“Eigh?” said Raut, and
turned.
“Boil the blood out of you
in.... No, you don’t!”
“Let me go!” screamed Raut.
“Let go my arm!”
With one hand he clutched at
the hand-rail, then with both. For a moment the two men stood swaying. Then
suddenly, with a violent jerk, Horrocks had twisted him from his hold. He
clutched at Horrocks and missed, his foot went back into empty air; in mid-air
he twisted himself, and then cheek and shoulder and knee struck the hot cone
together.
He clutched the chain by
which the cone hung, and the thing sank an infinitesimal amount as he struck
it. A circle of glowing red appeared about him, and a tongue of flame, released
from the chaos within, flickered up towards him. An intense pain assailed him
at the knees, and he could smell the singeing of his hands. He raised
himself to his feet, and tried to climb up the chain, and then something struck
his head. Black and shining with the moonlight, the throat of the furnace rose
about him.
Horrocks, he saw, stood
above him by one of the trucks of fuel on the rail. The gesticulating figure
was bright and white in the moonlight, and shouting, “Fizzle, you fool! Fizzle,
you hunter of women! You hot-blooded hound! Boil! boil! boil!”
Suddenly he caught up a
handful of coal out of the truck, and flung it deliberately, lump after lump,
at Raut.
“Horrocks!” cried Raut.
“Horrocks!”
He clung crying to the
chain, pulling himself up from the burning of the cone. Each missile Horrocks
flung hit him. His clothes charred and glowed, and as he struggled the cone
dropped, and a rush of hot suffocating gas whooped out and burned round him in
a swift breath of flame.
His human likeness departed
from him. When the momentary red had passed, Horrocks saw a charred, blackened
figure, its head streaked with blood, still clutching and fumbling with the
chain, and writhing in agony—a cindery animal, an inhuman, monstrous creature
that began a sobbing intermittent shriek.
Abruptly, at the sight, the
ironmaster’s anger passed. A deadly sickness came upon him. The heavy odour of
burning flesh came drifting up to his nostrils. His sanity returned to him.
“God have mercy upon me!” he
cried. “O God! what have I done?”
He knew the thing below him,
save that it still moved and felt, was already a dead man—that the blood of the
poor wretch must be boiling in his veins. An intense realisation of that agony
came to his mind, and overcame every other feeling. For a moment he stood
irresolute, and then, turning to the truck, he hastily tilted its contents upon
the struggling thing that had once been a man. The mass fell with a thud, and
went radiating over the cone. With the thud the shriek ended, and a boiling
confusion of smoke, dust, and flame came rushing up towards him. As it passed,
he saw the cone clear again.
Then he staggered back, and
stood trembling, clinging to the rail with both hands. His lips moved, but no
words came to them.
Down below was the sound of
voices and running steps. The clangour of rolling in the shed ceased abruptly.
THE PURPLE PILEUS
MR. COOMBES was sick of life. He walked away from his unhappy home, and,
sick not only of his own existence, but of everybody else’s, turned aside down
Gaswork Lane to avoid the town, and, crossing the wooden bridge that goes over
the canal to Starling’s Cottages, was presently alone in the damp pinewoods and
out of sight and sound of human habitation. He would stand it no longer. He
repeated aloud with blasphemies unusual to him that he would stand it no
longer.
He was a pale-faced little
man, with dark eyes and a fine and very black moustache. He had a very stiff,
upright collar slightly frayed, that gave him an illusory double chin, and his
overcoat (albeit shabby) was trimmed with astrachan. His gloves were a bright
brown with black stripes over the knuckles, and split at the finger ends. His
appearance, his wife had said once in the dear, dead days beyond recall,—before
he married her, that is,—was military. But now she called him— It seems a
dreadful thing to tell of between husband and wife, but she called him “a
little grub.” It wasn’t the only thing she had called him, either.
The row had arisen about
that beastly Jennie again. Jennie was his wife’s friend, and, by no invitation
of Mr. Coombes, she came in every blessed Sunday to dinner, and made a shindy
all the afternoon. She was a big, noisy girl, with a taste for loud colours and
a strident laugh; and this Sunday she had outdone all her previous intrusions
by bringing in a fellow with her, a chap as showy as herself. And Mr. Coombes,
in a starchy, clean collar and his Sunday frock-coat, had sat dumb and wrathful
at his own table, while his wife and her guests talked foolishly and
undesirably, and laughed aloud. Well, he stood that, and after dinner (which,
“as usual,” was late), what must Miss Jennie do but go to the piano and play
banjo tunes, for all the world as if it were a week-day! Flesh and blood could
not endure such goings on. They would hear next door, they would hear in the
road, it was a public announcement of their disrepute. He had to speak.
He had felt himself go pale,
and a kind of rigour had affected his respiration as he delivered himself. He
had been sitting on one of the chairs by the window—the new guest had taken
possession of the arm-chair. He turned his head. “Sun Day!” he said over the
collar, in the voice of one who warns. “Sun Day!” What people call a “nasty”
tone it was.
Jennie had kept on playing,
but his wife, who was looking through some music that was piled on the top of
the piano, had stared at him. “What’s wrong now?” she said; “can’t people enjoy
themselves?”
“I don’t mind rational
’njoyment, at all,” said little Coombes, “but I ain’t a-going to have
week-day tunes playing on a Sunday in this house.”
“What’s wrong with my
playing now?” said Jennie, stopping and twirling round on the music-stool with
a monstrous rustle of flounces.
Coombes saw it was going to
be a row, and opened too vigorously, as is common with your timid, nervous men
all the world over. “Steady on with that music-stool!” said he; “it ain’t made
for ’eavy weights.”
“Never you mind about
weights,” said Jennie, incensed. “What was you saying behind my back about my
playing?”
“Surely you don’t ’old with
not having a bit of music on a Sunday, Mr. Coombes?” said the new guest,
leaning back in the arm-chair, blowing a cloud of cigarette smoke and smiling
in a kind of pitying way. And simultaneously his wife said something to Jennie
about “Never mind ’im. You go on, Jinny.”
“I do,” said Mr. Coombes,
addressing the new guest.
“May I arst why?” said the
new guest, evidently enjoying both his cigarette and the prospect of an
argument. He was, by the bye, a lank young man, very stylishly dressed in
bright drab, with a white cravat and a pearl and silver pin. It had been better
taste to come in a black coat, Mr. Coombes thought.
“Because,” began Mr.
Coombes, “it don’t suit me. I’m a business man. I ’ave to study my connection.
Rational ’njoyment”—
“His connection!” said Mrs.
Coombes scornfully. “That’s what he’s always a-saying. We got to do this, and
we got to do that”—
“If you don’t mean to study
my connection,” said Mr. Coombes, “what did you marry me for?”
“I wonder,” said Jennie, and
turned back to the piano.
“I never saw such a man as
you,” said Mrs. Coombes. “You’ve altered all round since we were married.
Before”—
Then Jennie began at the
tum, tum, tum again.
“Look here!” said Mr.
Coombes, driven at last to revolt, standing up and raising his voice. “I tell
you I won’t have that.” The frock-coat heaved with his indignation.
“No vi’lence, now,” said the
long young man in drab, sitting up.
“Who the juice are you?”
said Mr. Coombes fiercely.
Whereupon they all began
talking at once. The new guest said he was Jennie’s “intended,” and meant to
protect her, and Mr. Coombes said he was welcome to do so anywhere but in his
(Mr. Coombes’) house; and Mrs. Coombes said he ought to be ashamed of insulting
his guests, and (as I have already mentioned) that he was getting a regular
little grub; and the end was, that Mr. Coombes ordered his visitors out of the
house, and they wouldn’t go, and so he said he would go himself. With his face
burning and tears of excitement in his eyes, he went into the passage, and as
he struggled with his overcoat—his frock-coat sleeves got concertinaed up his
arm—and gave a brush at his silk hat, Jennie began again at the piano, and
strummed him insultingly out of the house. Tum, tum, tum. He slammed the
shop door so that the house quivered. That, briefly, was the immediate making
of his mood. You will perhaps begin to understand his disgust with existence.
As he walked along the muddy
path under the firs,—it was late October, and the ditches and heaps of fir
needles were gorgeous with clumps of fungi,—he recapitulated the melancholy
history of his marriage. It was brief and commonplace enough. He now perceived
with sufficient clearness that his wife had married him out of a natural
curiosity and in order to escape from her worrying, laborious, and uncertain
life in the workroom; and, like the majority of her class, she was far too
stupid to realise that it was her duty to co-operate with him in his business.
She was greedy of enjoyment, loquacious, and socially-minded, and evidently
disappointed to find the restraints of poverty still hanging about her. His
worries exasperated her, and the slightest attempt to control her proceedings
resulted in a charge of “grumbling.” Why couldn’t he be nice—as he used to be?
And Coombes was such a harmless little man, too, nourished mentally on Self-Help, and with a meagre
ambition of self-denial and competition, that was to end in a “sufficiency.”
Then Jennie came in as a female Mephistopheles, a gabbling chronicle of
“fellers,” and was always wanting his wife to go to theatres, and “all that.”
And in addition were aunts of his wife, and cousins (male and female), to eat
up capital, insult him personally, upset business arrangements, annoy good
customers, and generally blight his life. It was not the first occasion by many
that Mr. Coombes had fled his home in wrath and indignation, and something
like fear, vowing furiously and even aloud that he wouldn’t stand it, and so
frothing away his energy along the line of least resistance. But never before
had he been quite so sick of life as on this particular Sunday afternoon. The
Sunday dinner may have had its share in his despair—and the greyness of the
sky. Perhaps, too, he was beginning to realise his unendurable frustration as a
business man as the consequence of his marriage. Presently bankruptcy, and
after that— Perhaps she might have reason to repent when it was too late. And destiny,
as I have already intimated, had planted the path through the wood with
evil-smelling fungi, thickly and variously planted it, not only on the right
side, but on the left.
A small shopman is in such a
melancholy position, if his wife turns out a disloyal partner. His capital is
all tied up in his business, and to leave her, means to join the unemployed in
some strange part of the earth. The luxuries of divorce are beyond him
altogether. So that the good old tradition of marriage for better or worse holds
inexorably for him, and things work up to tragic culminations. Bricklayers kick
their wives to death, and dukes betray theirs; but it is among the small clerks
and shopkeepers nowadays that it comes most often to a cutting of throats.
Under the circumstances it is not so very remarkable—and you must take it as
charitably as you can—that the mind of Mr. Coombes ran for a while on some such
glorious close to his disappointed hopes, and that he thought of razors,
pistols, bread-knives, and touching letters to the coroner denouncing his
enemies by name, and praying piously for forgiveness. After a time his
fierceness gave way to melancholia. He had been married in this very overcoat,
in his first and only frock-coat that was buttoned up beneath it. He began to
recall their courting along this very walk, his years of penurious saving to
get capital, and the bright hopefulness of his marrying days. For it all to
work out like this! Was there no sympathetic ruler anywhere in the world? He
reverted to death as a topic.
He thought of the canal he
had just crossed, and doubted whether he shouldn’t stand with his head out,
even in the middle, and it was while drowning was in his mind that the purple
pileus caught his eye. He looked at it mechanically for a moment, and stopped
and stooped towards it to pick it up, under the impression that it was some
such small leather object as a purse. Then he saw that it was the purple top of
a fungus, a peculiarly poisonous-looking purple: slimy, shiny, and emitting a
sour odour. He hesitated with his hand an inch or so from it, and the thought
of poison crossed his mind. With that he picked the thing, and stood up again
with it in his hand.
The odour was certainly
strong—acrid, but by no means disgusting. He broke off a piece, and the fresh
surface was a creamy white, that changed like magic in the space of ten seconds
to a yellowish-green colour. It was even an inviting-looking change. He broke
off two other pieces to see it repeated. They were wonderful things these
fungi, thought Mr. Coombes, and all of them the deadliest poisons, as his
father had often told him. Deadly poisons!
There is no time like the
present for a rash resolve. Why not here and now? thought Mr. Coombes. He
tasted a little piece, a very little piece indeed—a mere crumb. It was so
pungent that he almost spat it out again, then merely hot and full-flavoured. A
kind of German mustard with a touch of horse-radish and—well, mushroom. He
swallowed it in the excitement of the moment. Did he like it or did he not? His
mind was curiously careless. He would try another bit. It really wasn’t bad—it
was good. He forgot his troubles in the interest of the immediate moment.
Playing with death it was. He took another bite, and then deliberately finished
a mouthful. A curious tingling sensation began in his finger-tips and toes. His
pulse began to move faster. The blood in his ears sounded like a mill-race.
“Try bi’ more,” said Mr. Coombes. He turned and looked about him, and found his
feet unsteady. He saw and struggled towards a little patch of purple a dozen
yards away. “Jol’ goo’ stuff,” said Mr. Coombes. “E—lomore ye’.” He pitched
forward and fell on his face, his hands outstretched towards the cluster of
pilei. But he did not eat any more of them. He forgot forthwith.
He rolled over and sat up
with a look of astonishment on his face. His carefully brushed silk hat had
rolled away towards the ditch. He pressed his hand to his brow. Something had
happened, but he could not rightly determine what it was. Anyhow, he was no
longer dull—he felt bright, cheerful. And his throat was afire. He laughed in
the sudden gaiety of his heart. Had he been dull? He did not know; but at
anyrate he would be dull no longer. He got up and stood unsteadily, regarding
the universe with an agreeable smile. He began to remember. He could not
remember very well, because of a steam roundabout that was beginning in his
head. And he knew he had been disagreeable at home, just because they wanted to
be happy. They were quite right; life should be as gay as possible. He would go
home and make it up, and reassure them. And why not take some of this
delightful toadstool with him, for them to eat? A hatful, no less. Some of
those red ones with white spots as well, and a few yellow. He had been a dull
dog, an enemy to merriment; he would make up for it. It would be gay to turn
his coat-sleeves inside out, and stick some yellow gorse into his waistcoat
pockets. Then home—singing—for a jolly evening.
000
After the departure of Mr.
Coombes, Jennie discontinued playing, and turned round on the music-stool
again. “What a fuss about nothing,” said Jennie.
“You see, Mr. Clarence, what
I’ve got to put up with,” said Mrs. Coombes.
“He is a bit hasty,” said
Mr. Clarence judicially.
“He ain’t got the slightest
sense of our position,” said Mrs. Coombes; “that’s what I complain of. He cares
for nothing but his old shop; and if I have a bit of company, or buy anything
to keep myself decent, or get any little thing I want out of the
housekeeping money, there’s disagreeables. ‘Economy,’ he says; ‘struggle for
life,’ and all that. He lies awake of nights about it, worrying how he can
screw me out of a shilling. He wanted us to eat Dorset butter once. If once I
was to give in to him—there!”
“Of course,” said Jennie.
“If a man values a woman,”
said Mr. Clarence lounging back in the arm-chair, “he must be prepared to make
sacrifices for her. For my own part,” said Mr. Clarence, with his eye on
Jennie, “I shouldn’t think of marrying till I was in a position to do the thing
in style. It’s downright selfishness. A man ought to go through the
rough-and-tumble by himself, and not drag her”—
“I don’t agree altogether
with that,” said Jennie. “I don’t see why a man shouldn’t have a woman’s help,
provided he doesn’t treat her meanly, you know. It’s meanness”—
“You wouldn’t believe,” said
Mrs. Coombes. “But I was a fool to ’ave ’im. I might ’ave known. If it ’adn’t
been for my father, we shouldn’t have had not a carriage to our wedding.”
“Lord! he didn’t stick out
at that?” said Mr. Clarence, quite shocked.
“Said he wanted the money
for his stock, or some such rubbish. Why, he wouldn’t have a woman in to help
me once a week if it wasn’t for my standing out plucky. And the fusses he makes
about money—comes to me, well, pretty near crying, with sheets of paper and
figgers. ‘If only we can tide over this year,’ he says, ‘the business is bound
to go.’ ‘If only we can tide over this year,’ I says; ‘then it’ll be, if
only we can tide over next year. I know you,’ I says. ‘And you don’t catch me
screwing myself lean and ugly. Why didn’t you marry a slavey?’ I says, ‘if you
wanted one—instead of a respectable girl,’ I says.”
So Mrs. Coombes. But we will
not follow this unedifying conversation further. Suffice it that Mr. Coombes
was very satisfactorily disposed of, and they had a snug little time round the
fire. Then Mrs. Coombes went to get the tea, and Jennie sat coquettishly on the
arm of Mr. Clarence’s chair until the tea-things clattered outside. “What was
that I heard?” asked Mrs. Coombes playfully, as she entered, and there was
badinage about kissing. They were just sitting down to the little circular
table when the first intimation of Mr. Coombes’ return was heard.
This was a fumbling at the
latch of the front door.
“’Ere’s my lord,” said Mrs.
Coombes. “Went out like a lion and comes back like a lamb, I’ll lay.”
Something fell over in the
shop: a chair, it sounded like. Then there was a sound as of some complicated
step exercise in the passage. Then the door opened and Coombes appeared. But it
was Coombes transfigured. The immaculate collar had been torn carelessly from
his throat. His carefully-brushed silk hat, half-full of a crush of fungi, was
under one arm; his coat was inside out, and his waistcoat adorned with bunches
of yellow-blossomed furze. These little eccentricities of Sunday costume,
however, were quite overshadowed by the change in his face; it was livid white,
his eyes were unnaturally large and bright, and his pale blue lips were drawn
back in a cheerless grin. “Merry!” he said. He had stopped dancing to open the
door. “Rational ’njoyment. Dance.” He made three fantastic steps into the room,
and stood bowing.
“Jim!” shrieked Mrs.
Coombes, and Mr. Clarence sat petrified, with a dropping lower jaw.
“Tea,” said Mr. Coombes.
“Jol’ thing, tea. Tose-stools, too. Brosher.”
“He’s drunk,” said Jennie in
a weak voice. Never before had she seen this intense pallor in a drunken man,
or such shining, dilated eyes.
Mr. Coombes held out a
handful of scarlet agaric to Mr. Clarence. “Jo’ stuff,” said he; “ta’ some.”
At that moment he was
genial. Then at the sight of their startled faces he changed, with the swift
transition of insanity, into overbearing fury. And it seemed as if he had
suddenly recalled the quarrel of his departure. In such a huge voice as Mrs.
Coombes had never heard before, he shouted, “My house. I’m master ’ere. Eat
what I give yer!” He bawled this, as it seemed, without an effort, without a
violent gesture, standing there as motionless as one who whispers, holding out
a handful of fungus.
Clarence approved himself a
coward. He could not meet the mad fury in Coombes’ eyes; he rose to his feet,
pushing back his chair, and turned, stooping. At that Coombes rushed at him.
Jennie saw her opportunity, and, with the ghost of a shriek, made for the door.
Mrs. Coombes followed her. Clarence tried to dodge. Over went the tea-table
with a smash as Coombes clutched him by the collar and tried to thrust the
fungus into his mouth. Clarence was content to leave his collar behind him, and
shot out into the passage with red patches of fly agaric still adherent to his
face. “Shut ’im in!” cried Mrs. Coombes, and would have closed the door, but
her supports deserted her; Jennie saw the shop door open, and vanished thereby,
locking it behind her, while Clarence went on hastily into the kitchen. Mr.
Coombes came heavily against the door, and Mrs. Coombes, finding the key was
inside, fled upstairs and locked herself in the spare bedroom.
So the new convert to joie de vivre emerged upon the passage, his decorations a little
scattered, but that respectable hatful of fungi still under his arm. He
hesitated at the three ways, and decided on the kitchen. Whereupon Clarence,
who was fumbling with the key, gave up the attempt to imprison his host, and
fled into the scullery, only to be captured before he could open the door into
the yard. Mr. Clarence is singularly reticent of the details of what occurred.
It seems that Mr. Coombes’ transitory irritation had vanished again, and he was
once more a genial playfellow. And as there were knives and meat choppers
about, Clarence very generously resolved to humour him and so avoid anything
tragic. It is beyond dispute that Mr. Coombes played with Mr. Clarence to his
heart’s content; they could not have been more playful and familiar if they had
known each other for years. He insisted gaily on Clarence trying the fungi, and
after a friendly tussle, was smitten with remorse at the mess he was making of
his guest’s face. It also appears that Clarence was dragged under the sink and
his face scrubbed with the blacking brush,—he being still resolved to humour
the lunatic at any cost,—and that finally, in a somewhat dishevelled, chipped,
and discoloured condition, he was assisted to his coat and shown out by the
back door, the shopway being barred by Jennie. Mr. Coombes’ wandering thoughts
then turned to Jennie. Jennie had been unable to unfasten the shop door, but
she shot the bolts against Mr. Coombes’ latch-key, and remained in possession
of the shop for the rest of the evening.
It would appear that Mr.
Coombes then returned to the kitchen, still in pursuit of gaiety, and, albeit a
strict Good Templar, drank (or spilt down the front of the first and only
frock-coat) no less than five bottles of the stout Mrs. Coombes insisted upon
having for her health’s sake. He made cheerful noises by breaking off the necks
of the bottles with several of his wife’s wedding-present dinner-plates, and
during the earlier part of this great drunk he sang divers merry ballads. He
cut his finger rather badly with one of the bottles,—the only bloodshed in this
story,—and what with that, and the systematic convulsion of his inexperienced
physiology by the liquorish brand of Mrs. Coombes’ stout, it may be the evil of
the fungus poison was somehow allayed. But we prefer to draw a veil over the
concluding incidents of this Sunday afternoon. They ended in the coal cellar,
in a deep and healing sleep.
000
An interval of five years
elapsed. Again it was a Sunday afternoon in October, and again Mr. Coombes
walked through the pinewood beyond the canal. He was still the same dark-eyed,
black-moustached little man that he was at the outset of the story, but his
double chin was now scarcely so illusory as it had been. His overcoat was new,
with a velvet lapel, and a stylish collar with turn-down corners, free of any
coarse starchiness, had replaced the original all-round article. His hat was
glossy, his gloves newish—though one finger had split and been carefully
mended. And a casual observer would have noticed about him a certain rectitude
of bearing, a certain erectness of head that marks the man who thinks well of
himself. He was a master now, with three assistants. Beside him walked a larger
sunburnt parody of himself, his brother Tom, just back from Australia. They
were recapitulating their early struggles, and Mr. Coombes had just been making
a financial statement.
“It’s a very nice little
business, Jim,” said brother Tom. “In these days of competition you’re jolly
lucky to have worked it up so. And you’re jolly lucky, too, to have a wife
who’s willing to help like yours does.”
“Between ourselves,” said
Mr. Coombes, “it wasn’t always so. It wasn’t always like this. To begin with,
the missus was a bit giddy. Girls are funny creatures.”
“Dear me!”
“Yes. You’d hardly think it,
but she was downright extravagant, and always having slaps at me. I was a bit
too easy and loving, and all that, and she thought the whole blessed show
was run for her. Turned the ’ouse into a regular caravansery, always having her
relations and girls from business in, and their chaps. Comic songs a’ Sunday,
it was getting to, and driving trade away. And she was making eyes at the
chaps, too! I tell you, Tom, the place wasn’t my own.”
“Shouldn’t ’a’ thought it.”
“It was so. Well—I reasoned
with her. I said, ‘I ain’t a duke, to keep a wife like a pet animal. I married
you for ’elp and company.’ I said, ‘You got to ’elp and pull the business
through.’ She wouldn’t ’ear of it. ‘Very well,’ I says; ‘I’m a mild man till
I’m roused,’ I says, ‘and it’s getting to that.’ But she wouldn’t ’ear of no
warnings.”
“Well?”
“It’s the way with women.
She didn’t think I ’ad it in me to be roused. Women of her sort (between
ourselves, Tom) don’t respect a man until they’re a bit afraid of him. So I
just broke out to show her. In comes a girl named Jennie, that used to work
with her, and her chap. We ’ad a bit of a row, and I came out ’ere—it was just
such another day as this—and I thought it all out. Then I went back and pitched
into them.”
“You did?”
“I did. I was mad, I can
tell you. I wasn’t going to ’it ’er, if I could ’elp it, so I went back and
licked into this chap, just to show ’er what I could do. ’E was a big chap,
too. Well, I chucked him, and smashed things about, and gave ’er a scaring, and
she ran up and locked ’erself into the spare room.”
“Well?”
“That’s all. I says to ’er
the next morning, ‘Now you know,’ I says, ‘what I’m like when I’m roused.’ And
I didn’t ’ave to say anything more.”
“And you’ve been happy ever
after, eh?”
“So to speak. There’s
nothing like putting your foot down with them. If it ’adn’t been for that
afternoon I should ’a’ been tramping the roads now, and she’d ’a’ been
grumbling at me, and all her family grumbling for bringing her to poverty—I
know their little ways. But we’re all right now. And it’s a very decent little
business, as you say.”
They proceed on their way
meditatively. “Women are funny creatures,” said brother Tom.
“They want a firm hand,”
says Coombes.
“What a lot of these funguses
there are about here!” remarked brother Tom presently. “I can’t see what use
they are in the world.”
Mr. Coombes looked. “I
dessay they’re sent for some wise purpose,” said Mr. Coombes.
And that was as much thanks
as the purple pileus ever got for maddening this absurd little man to the pitch
of decisive action, and so altering the whole course of his life.
THE JILTING OF JANE
AS I sit writing in my study, I can hear our Jane bumping her
way downstairs with a brush and dustpan. She used in the old days to sing hymn
tunes, or the British national song for the time being, to these instruments,
but latterly she has been silent and even careful over her work. Time was when
I prayed with fervour for such silence, and my wife with sighs for such care,
but now they have come we are not so glad as we might have anticipated we
should be. Indeed, I would rejoice secretly, though it may be unmanly weakness
to admit it, even to hear Jane sing “Daisy,” or by the fracture of any plate
but one of Euphemia’s best green ones, to learn that the period of brooding has
come to an end.
Yet how we longed to hear
the last of Jane’s young man before we heard the last of him! Jane was always
very free with her conversation to my wife, and discoursed admirably in the
kitchen on a variety of topics—so well, indeed, that I sometimes left my study
door open—our house is a small one—to partake of it. But after William came, it
was always William, nothing but William; William this and William that; and
when we thought William was worked out and exhausted altogether, then
William all over again. The engagement lasted altogether three years; yet how
she got introduced to William, and so became thus saturated with him, was
always a secret. For my part, I believe it was at the street corner where the
Rev. Barnabas Baux used to hold an open-air service after evensong on Sundays.
Young Cupids were wont to flit like moths round the paraffin flare of that
centre of High Church hymn-singing. I fancy she stood singing hymns there, out of
memory and her imagination, instead of coming home to get supper, and William
came up beside her and said, “Hello!” “Hello yourself!” she said; and,
etiquette being satisfied, they proceeded to talk together.
As Euphemia has a
reprehensible way of letting her servants talk to her, she soon heard of him.
“He is such a
respectable young man, ma’am,” said Jane, “you don’t know.” Ignoring the slur
cast on her acquaintance, my wife inquired further about this William.
“He is second porter at
Maynard’s, the draper’s,” said Jane, “and gets eighteen shillings—nearly a
pound—a week, m’m; and when the head porter leaves he will be head porter. His
relatives are quite superior people, m’m. Not labouring people at all. His
father was a greengrosher, m’m, and had a chumor, and he was bankrup’ twice.
And one of his sisters is in a Home for the Dying. It will be a very good match
for me, m’m,” said Jane, “me being an orphan girl.”
“Then you are engaged to
him?” asked my wife.
“Not engaged, ma’am; but he
is saving money to buy a ring—hammyfist.”
“Well, Jane, when you are
properly engaged to him you may ask him round here on Sunday afternoons, and
have tea with him in the kitchen.” For my Euphemia has a motherly conception of
her duty towards her maid-servants. And presently the amethystine ring was
being worn about the house, even with ostentation, and Jane developed a new way
of bringing in the joint, so that this gage was evident. The elder Miss
Maitland was aggrieved by it, and told my wife that servants ought not to wear
rings. But my wife looked it up in Enquire
Within and Mrs.
Motherly’s Book of Household Management, and found no
prohibition. So Jane remained with this happiness added to her love.
The treasure of Jane’s heart
appeared to me to be what respectable people call a very deserving young man.
“William, ma’am,” said Jane one day suddenly, with ill-concealed complacency,
as she counted out the beer bottles, “William, ma’am, is a teetotaller. Yes,
m’m; and he don’t smoke. Smoking, ma’am,” said Jane, as one who reads the
heart, “do make
such a dust about. Beside the waste of money. And the smell. However, I suppose it’s
necessary to some.”
Possibly it dawned on Jane
that she was reflecting a little severely upon Euphemia’s comparative
ill-fortune, and she added kindly, “I’m sure the master is a hangel when his
pipe’s alight. Compared to other times.”
William was at first a
rather shabby young man of the ready-made black coat school of costume. He had
watery grey eyes, and a complexion appropriate to the brother of one in a Home
for the Dying. Euphemia did not fancy him very much, even at the beginning. His
eminent respectability was vouched for by an alpaca umbrella, from which he
never allowed himself to be parted.
“He goes to chapel,” said
Jane. “His papa, ma’am”—
“His what, Jane?”
“His papa, ma’am, was
Church; but Mr. Maynard is a Plymouth Brother, and William thinks it Policy,
ma’am, to go there too. Mr. Maynard comes and talks to him quite friendly, when
they ain’t busy, about using up all the ends of string, and about his soul. He
takes a lot of notice, do Mr. Maynard, of William, and the way he saves string
and his soul, ma’am.”
Presently we heard that the
head porter at Maynard’s had left, and that William was head porter at
twenty-three shillings a week. “He is really kind of over the man who drives
the van,” said Jane, “and him married with three children.” And she promised in
the pride of her heart to make interest for us with William to favour us so
that we might get our parcels of drapery from Maynard’s with exceptional
promptitude.
After this promotion a
rapidly increasing prosperity came upon Jane’s young man. One day, we learned
that Mr. Maynard had given William a book. “Smiles’ Elp Yourself, it’s called,”
said Jane; “but it ain’t comic. It tells you how to get on in the world, and
some what William read to me was lovely,
ma’am.”
Euphemia told me of this
laughing, and then she became suddenly grave. “Do you know, dear,” she said,
“Jane said one thing I did not like. She had been quiet for a minute, and then
she suddenly remarked, ‘William is a lot above me, ma’am, ain’t he?’”
“I don’t see anything in
that,” I said, though later my eyes were to be opened.
One Sunday afternoon about
that time I was sitting at my writing-desk—possibly I was reading a good
book—when a something went by the window. I heard a startled exclamation behind
me, and saw Euphemia with her hands clasped together and her eyes dilated.
“George,” she said in an awestricken whisper, “did you see?”
Then we both spoke to one another
at the same moment, slowly and solemnly: “A
silk hat! Yellow gloves! A new umbrella!”
“It may be my fancy, dear,”
said Euphemia; “but his tie was very like yours. I believe Jane keeps him in
ties. She told me a little while ago in a way that implied volumes about the
rest of your costume, ‘The master do wear
pretty ties, ma’am.’ And he echoes all your novelties.”
The young couple passed our
window again on their way to their customary walk. They were arm in arm. Jane
looked exquisitely proud, happy, and uncomfortable, with new white cotton
gloves, and William, in the silk hat, singularly genteel!
That was the culmination of
Jane’s happiness. When she returned, “Mr. Maynard has been talking to William,
ma’am,” she said, “and he is to serve customers, just like the young shop
gentlemen, during the next sale. And if he gets on, he is to be made an
assistant, ma’am, at the first opportunity. He has got to be as gentlemanly as
he can, ma’am; and if he ain’t, ma’am, he says it won’t be for want of trying.
Mr. Maynard has took a great fancy to him.”
“He is getting on, Jane,”
said my wife.
“Yes, ma’am,” said Jane
thoughtfully, “he is getting
on.”
And she sighed.
That next Sunday, as I drank
my tea, I interrogated my wife. “How is this Sunday different from all other
Sundays, little woman? What has happened? Have you altered the curtains, or
rearranged the furniture, or where is the indefinable difference of it? Are you
wearing your hair in a new way without warning me? I clearly perceive a change
in my environment, and I cannot for the life of me say what it is.”
Then my wife answered in her
most tragic voice: “George,” she said, “that—that William has not come near the
place to-day! And Jane is crying her heart out upstairs.”
There followed a period of
silence. Jane, as I have said, stopped singing about the house, and began to
care for our brittle possessions, which struck my wife as being a very sad sign
indeed. The next Sunday, and the next, Jane asked to go out, “to walk with
William,” and my wife, who never attempts to extort confidences, gave her
permission, and asked no questions. On each occasion Jane came back looking flushed
and very determined. At last one day she became communicative.
“William is being led away,”
she remarked abruptly, with a catching of the breath, apropos of tablecloths.
“Yes, m’m. She is a milliner, and she can play on the piano.”
“I thought,” said my wife,
“that you went out with him on Sunday.”
“Not out with him, m’m—after
him. I walked along by the side of them, and told her he was engaged to me.”
“Dear me, Jane, did you?
What did they do?”
“Took no more notice of me
than if I was dirt. So I told her she should suffer for it.”
“It could not have been a
very agreeable walk, Jane.”
“Not for no parties, ma’am.
“I wish,” said Jane, “I
could play the piano, ma’am. But anyhow, I don’t mean to let her get him away from
me. She’s older than him, and her hair ain’t gold to the roots, ma’am.”
It was on the August Bank
Holiday that the crisis came. We do not clearly know the details of the fray,
but only such fragments as poor Jane let fall. She came home dusty, excited,
and with her heart hot within her.
The milliner’s mother, the
milliner, and William had made a party to the Art Museum at South Kensington, I
think. Anyhow, Jane had calmly but firmly accosted them somewhere in the
streets, and asserted her right to what, in spite of the consensus of
literature, she held to be her inalienable property. She did, I think, go
so far as to lay hands on him. They dealt with her in a crushingly superior
way. They “called a cab.” There was a “scene,” William being pulled away into
the four-wheeler by his future wife and mother-in-law from the reluctant hands
of our discarded Jane. There were threats of giving her “in charge.”
“My poor Jane!” said my
wife, mincing veal as though she was mincing William. “It’s a shame of them. I
would think no more of him. He is not worthy of you.”
“No, m’m,” said Jane.
“He is weak.”
“But it’s that woman has
done it,” said Jane. She was never known to bring herself to pronounce “that
woman’s” name or to admit her girlishness. “I can’t think what minds some women
must have—to try and get a girl’s young man away from her. But there, it only
hurts to talk about it,” said Jane.
Thereafter our house rested
from William. But there was something in the manner of Jane’s scrubbing the
front doorstep or sweeping out the rooms, a certain viciousness, that persuaded
me that the story had not yet ended.
“Please, m’m, may I go and
see a wedding to-morrow?” said Jane one day.
My wife knew by instinct
whose wedding. “Do you think it is wise, Jane?” she said.
“I would like to see the
last of him,” said Jane.
“My dear,” said my wife,
fluttering into my room about twenty minutes after Jane had started, “Jane has
been to the boot-hole and taken all the left-off boots and shoes, and gone
off to the wedding with them in a bag. Surely she cannot mean”—
“Jane,” I said, “is
developing character. Let us hope for the best.”
Jane came back with a pale,
hard face. All the boots seemed to be still in her bag, at which my wife heaved
a premature sigh of relief. We heard her go upstairs and replace the boots with
considerable emphasis.
“Quite a crowd at the
wedding, ma’am,” she said presently, in a purely conversational style, sitting
in our little kitchen, and scrubbing the potatoes; “and such a lovely day for
them.” She proceeded to numerous other details, clearly avoiding some cardinal
incident.
“It was all extremely
respectable and nice, ma’am; but her father
didn’t wear a black coat, and looked quite out of place, ma’am. Mr.
Piddingquirk”—
“Who?”
“Mr. Piddingquirk—William
that was,
ma’am—had white gloves, and a coat like a clergyman, and a lovely
chrysanthemum. He looked so nice, ma’am. And there was red carpet down, just
like for gentlefolks. And they say he gave the clerk four shillings, ma’am. It
was a real kerridge they had—not a fly. When they came out of church there was
rice-throwing, and her two little sisters dropping dead flowers. And someone
threw a slipper, and then I threw a boot”—
“Threw a boot, Jane!”
“Yes, ma’am. Aimed at her. But it hit him. Yes, ma’am, hard. Gev
him a black eye, I should think. I only threw that one. I hadn’t the heart
to try again. All the little boys cheered when it hit him.”
After an interval—“I am
sorry the boot hit him.”
Another pause. The potatoes
were being scrubbed violently. “He always was a bit above me, you know, ma’am. And
he was led away.”
The potatoes were more than
finished. Jane rose sharply, with a sigh, and rapped the basin down on the
table.
“I don’t care,” she said. “I
don’t care a rap. He will find out his mistake yet. It serves me right. I was
stuck up about him. I ought not to have looked so high. And I am glad things
are as things are.”
My wife was in the kitchen,
seeing to the higher cookery. After the confession of the boot-throwing, she
must have watched poor Jane fuming with a certain dismay in those brown eyes of
hers. But I imagine they softened again very quickly, and then Jane’s must have
met them.
“Oh, ma’am,” said Jane, with
an astonishing change of note, “think of all that might have been! Oh,
ma’am, I could have
been so happy! I ought to have known, but I didn’t know.... You’re very kind to
let me talk to you, ma’am ... for it’s hard on me, ma’am ... it’s har-r-r-r-d”—
And I gather that Euphemia
so far forgot herself as to let Jane sob out some of the fulness of her heart
on a sympathetic shoulder. My Euphemia, thank Heaven, has never properly
grasped the importance of “keeping up her position.” And since that fit of weeping,
much of the accent of bitterness has gone out of Jane’s scrubbing and brush
work.
Indeed, something passed the
other day with the butcher-boy—but that scarcely belongs to this story.
However, Jane is young still, and time and change are at work with her. We all
have our sorrows, but I do not believe very much in the existence of sorrows
that never heal.
IN THE MODERN VEIN
AN UNSYMPATHETIC LOVE STORY
OF course the cultivated reader has heard of Aubrey Vair. He
has published on three several occasions volumes of delicate verses,—some,
indeed, border on indelicacy,—and his column “Of Things Literary” in the Climax is well known.
His Byronic visage and an interview have appeared in the Perfect Lady. It was
Aubrey Vair, I believe, who demonstrated that the humour of Dickens was worse
than his sentiment, and who detected “a subtle bourgeois flavour” in
Shakespeare. However, it is not generally known that Aubrey Vair has had erotic
experiences as well as erotic inspirations. He adopted Goethe some little time
since as his literary prototype, and that may have had something to do with his
temporary lapse from sexual integrity.
For it is one of the
commonest things that undermine literary men, giving us landslips and
picturesque effects along the otherwise even cliff of their respectable life,
ranking next to avarice, and certainly above drink, this instability called
genius, or, more fully, the consciousness of genius, such as Aubrey Vair possessed.
Since Shelley set the fashion, your man of gifts has been assured that his duty
to himself and his duty to his wife are incompatible, and his renunciation of
the Philistine has been marked by such infidelity as his means and courage
warranted. Most virtue is lack of imagination. At anyrate, a minor genius
without his affections twisted into an inextricable muddle, and who did not
occasionally shed sonnets over his troubles, I have never met.
Even Aubrey Vair did this,
weeping the sonnets overnight into his blotting-book, and pretending to write
literary causerie when his wife came down in her bath
slippers to see what kept him up. She did not understand him, of course. He did
this even before the other woman appeared, so ingrained is conjugal treachery
in the talented mind. Indeed, he wrote more sonnets before the other woman came
than after that event, because thereafter he spent much of his leisure in
cutting down the old productions, retrimming them, and generally altering this
readymade clothing of his passion to suit her particular height and complexion.
Aubrey Vair lived in a
little red villa with a lawn at the back and a view of the Downs behind
Reigate. He lived upon discreet investment eked out by literary work. His wife
was handsome, sweet, and gentle, and—such is the tender humility of good married
women—she found her life’s happiness in seeing that little Aubrey Vair had
well-cooked variety for dinner, and that their house was the neatest and
brightest of all the houses they entered. Aubrey Vair enjoyed the dinners,
and was proud of the house, yet nevertheless he mourned because his genius
dwindled. Moreover, he grew plump, and corpulence threatened him.
We learn in suffering what
we teach in song, and Aubrey Vair knew certainly that his soul could give no
creditable crops unless his affections were harrowed. And how to harrow them
was the trouble, for Reigate is a moral neighbourhood.
So Aubrey Vair’s romantic
longings blew loose for a time, much as a seedling creeper might, planted in
the midst of a flower-bed. But at last, in the fulness of time, the other woman
came to the embrace of Aubrey Vair’s yearning heart-tendrils, and his romantic
episode proceeded as is here faithfully written down.
The other woman was really a
girl, and Aubrey Vair met her first at a tennis party at Redhill. Aubrey Vair
did not play tennis after the accident to Miss Morton’s eye, and because
latterly it made him pant and get warmer and moister than even a poet should
be; and this young lady had only recently arrived in England, and could not
play. So they gravitated into the two vacant basket chairs beside Mrs. Bayne’s
deaf aunt, in front of the hollyhocks, and were presently talking at their ease
together.
The other woman’s name was
unpropitious,—Miss Smith,—but you would never have suspected it from her face and
costume. Her parentage was promising, she was an orphan, her mother was a
Hindoo, and her father an Indian civil servant; and Aubrey Vair—himself a
happy mixture of Kelt and Teuton, as, indeed, all literary men have to be
nowadays—naturally believed in the literary consequences of a mixture of races.
She was dressed in white. She had finely moulded pale features, great depth of
expression, and a cloud of delicately frisé black hair over her
dark eyes, and she looked at Aubrey Vair with a look half curious and half shy,
that contrasted admirably with the stereotyped frankness of your common Reigate
girl.
“This is a splendid lawn—the
best in Redhill,” said Aubrey Vair in the course of the conversation; “and I
like it all the better because the daisies are spared.” He indicated the
daisies with a graceful sweep of his rather elegant hand.
“They are sweet little
flowers,” said the lady in white, “and I have always associated them with
England, chiefly, perhaps, through a picture I saw ‘over there’ when I was very
little, of children making daisy chains. I promised myself that pleasure when I
came home. But, alas! I feel now rather too large for such delights.”
“I do not see why we should
not be able to enjoy these simple pleasures as we grow older—why our growth
should have in it so much forgetting. For my own part”—
“Has your wife got Jane’s
recipe for stuffing trout?” asked Mrs. Bayne’s deaf aunt abruptly.
“I really don’t know,” said
Aubrey Vair.
“That’s all right,” said
Mrs. Bayne’s deaf aunt. “It ought to please even you.”
“Anything will please me,”
said Aubrey Vair; “I care very little”—
“Oh, it’s a lovely dish,”
said Mrs. Bayne’s deaf aunt, and relapsed into contemplation.
“I was saying,” said Aubrey
Vair, “that I think I still find my keenest pleasures in childish pastimes. I
have a little nephew that I see a great deal of, and when we fly kites
together, I am sure it would be hard to tell which of us is the happier. By the
bye, you should get at your daisy chains in that way. Beguile some little
girl.”
“But I did. I took that
Morton mite for a walk in the meadows, and timidly broached the subject. And
she reproached me for suggesting ‘frivolous pursuits.’ It was a horrible
disappointment.”
“The governess here,” said
Aubrey Vair, “is robbing that child of its youth in a terrible way. What will a
life be that has no childhood at the beginning?”
“Some human beings are never
young,” he continued, “and they never grow up. They lead absolutely colourless
lives. They are—they are etiolated. They never love, and never feel the loss of
it. They are—for the moment I can think of no better image—they are human
flower-pots, in which no soul has been planted. But a human soul properly
growing must begin in a fresh childishness.”
“Yes,” said the dark lady
thoughtfully, “a careless childhood, running wild almost. That should be the
beginning.”
“Then we pass through the
wonder and diffidence of youth.”
“To strength and action,” said the dark lady.
Her dreamy eyes were fixed on the Downs, and her fingers tightened on her knees
as she spoke. “Ah, it is a grand thing to live—as a man does—self-reliant and
free.”
“And so at last,” said
Aubrey Vair, “come to the culmination and crown of life.” He paused and glanced
hastily at her. Then he dropped his voice almost to a whisper—“And the
culmination of life is love.”
Their eyes met for a moment,
but she looked away at once. Aubrey Vair felt a peculiar thrill and a catching
in his breath, but his emotions were too complex for analysis. He had a certain
sense of surprise, also, at the way his conversation had developed.
Mrs. Bayne’s deaf aunt
suddenly dug him in the chest with her ear-trumpet, and someone at tennis
bawled, “Love all!”
“Did I tell you Jane’s girls
have had scarlet fever?” asked Mrs. Bayne’s deaf aunt.
“No,” said Aubrey Vair.
“Yes; and they are peeling
now,” said Mrs. Bayne’s deaf aunt, shutting her lips tightly, and nodding in a
slow, significant manner at both of them.
There was a pause. All three
seemed lost in thought, too deep for words.
“Love,” began Aubrey Vair
presently, in a severely philosophical tone, leaning back in his chair, holding
his hands like a praying saint’s in front of him, and staring at the toe of his
shoe,—“love is, I believe, the one true and real thing in life. It rises
above reason, interest, or explanation. Yet I never read of an age when it was
so much forgotten as it is now. Never was love expected to run so much in
appointed channels, never was it so despised, checked, ordered, and obstructed.
Policemen say, ‘This way, Eros!’ As a result, we relieve our emotional
possibilities in the hunt for gold and notoriety. And after all, with the best
fortune in these, we only hold up the gilded images of our success, and are
weary slaves, with unsatisfied hearts, in the pageant of life.”
Aubrey Vair sighed, and
there was a pause. The girl looked at him out of the mysterious darkness of her
eyes. She had read many books, but Aubrey Vair was her first literary man, and
she took this kind of thing for genius—as girls have done before.
“We are,” continued Aubrey
Vair, conscious of a favourable impression,—“we are like fireworks, mere dead,
inert things until the appointed spark comes; and then—if it is not damp—the
dormant soul blazes forth in all its warmth and beauty. That is living. I sometimes
think, do you know, that we should be happier if we could die soon after that
golden time, like the Ephemerides. There is a decay sets in.”
“Eigh?” said Mrs. Bayne’s
deaf aunt startlingly. “I didn’t hear you.”
“I was on the point of
remarking,” shouted Aubrey Vair, wheeling the array of his thoughts,—“I was on
the point of remarking that few people in Redhill could match Mrs. Morton’s
fine broad green.”
“Others have noticed it,”
Mrs. Bayne’s deaf aunt shouted back. “It is since she has had in her new false
teeth.”
This interruption dislocated
the conversation a little. However—
“I must thank you, Mr.
Vair,” said the dark girl, when they parted that afternoon, “for having given
me very much to think about.”
And from her manner, Aubrey
Vair perceived clearly he had not wasted his time.
000
It would require a subtler
pen than mine to tell how from that day a passion for Miss Smith grew like
Jonah’s gourd in the heart of Aubrey Vair. He became pensive, and in the
prolonged absence of Miss Smith, irritable. Mrs. Aubrey Vair felt the change in
him, and put it down to a vitriolic Saturday Reviewer. Indisputably the Saturday does at
times go a little far. He re-read Elective
Affinities; and lent it to Miss Smith. Incredible as it may
appear to members of the Areopagus Club, where we know Aubrey Vair, he did also
beyond all question inspire a sort of passion in that sombre-eyed, rather
clever, and really very beautiful girl.
He talked to her a lot about
love and destiny, and all that bric-à-brac of the minor poet. And they talked
together about his genius. He elaborately, though discreetly, sought her
society, and presented and read to her the milder of his unpublished sonnets.
We consider his Byronic features pasty, but the feminine mind has its own laws.
I suppose, also, where a girl is not a fool, a literary man has an enormous
advantage over anyone but a preacher, in the show he can make of his heart’s
wares.
At last a day in that summer
came when he met her alone, possibly by chance, in a quiet lane towards Horley.
There were ample hedges on either side, rich with honeysuckle, vetch, and
mullein.
They conversed intimately of
his poetic ambitions, and then he read her those verses of his subsequently
published in Hobson’s
Magazine: “Tenderly ever, since I have met thee.” He had written
these the day before; and though I think the sentiment is uncommonly trite,
there is a redeeming note of sincerity about the lines not conspicuous in all
Aubrey Vair’s poetry.
He read rather well, and a
swell of genuine emotion crept into his voice as he read, with one white hand
thrown out to point the rhythm of the lines. “Ever, my sweet, for thee,” he
concluded, looking up into her face.
Before he looked up, he had
been thinking chiefly of his poem and its effect. Straightway he forgot it. Her
arms hung limply before her, and her hands were clasped together. Her eyes were
very tender.
“Your verses go to the
heart,” she said softly.
Her mobile features were
capable of wonderful shades of expression. He suddenly forgot his wife and his
position as a minor poet as he looked at her. It is possible that his classical
features may themselves have undergone a certain transfiguration. For one brief
moment—and it was always to linger in his memory—destiny lifted him out of his vain
little self to a nobler level of simplicity. The copy of “Tenderly ever”
fluttered from his hand. Considerations vanished. Only one thing seemed of
importance.
“I love you,” he said
abruptly.
An expression of fear came
into her eyes. The grip of her hands upon one another tightened convulsively.
She became very pale.
Then she moved her lips as
if to speak, bringing her face slightly nearer to his. There was nothing in the
world at that moment for either of them but one another. They were both trembling
exceedingly. In a whisper she said, “You love me?”
Aubrey Vair stood quivering
and speechless, looking into her eyes. He had never seen such a light as he saw
there before. He was in a wild tumult of emotion. He was dreadfully scared at
what he had done. He could not say another word. He nodded.
“And this has come to me?”
she said presently, in the same awe-stricken whisper, and then, “Oh, my love,
my love!”
And thereupon Aubrey Vair
had her clasped to himself, her cheek upon his shoulder and his lips to hers.
Thus it was that Aubrey Vair
came by the cardinal memory of his life. To this day it recurs in his works.
A little boy clambering in
the hedge some way down the lane saw this group with surprise, and then with
scorn and contempt. Recking nothing of his destiny, he turned away, feeling
that he at least could never come to the unspeakable unmanliness of
hugging girls. Unhappily for Reigate scandal, his shame for his sex was
altogether too deep for words.
000
An hour after, Aubrey Vair
returned home in a hushed mood. There were muffins after his own heart for his
tea—Mrs. Aubrey Vair had had hers. And there were chrysanthemums, chiefly white
ones,—flowers he loved,—set out in the china bowl he was wont to praise. And
his wife came behind him to kiss him as he sat eating.
“De lill Jummuns,” she
remarked, kissing him under the ear.
Then it came into the mind
of Aubrey Vair with startling clearness, while his ear was being kissed, and
with his mouth full of muffin, that life is a singularly complex thing.
000
The summer passed at last
into the harvest-time, and the leaves began falling. It was evening, the warm
sunset light still touched the Downs, but up the valley a blue haze was
creeping. One or two lamps in Reigate were already alight.
About half-way up the
slanting road that scales the Downs, there is a wooden seat where one may
obtain a fine view of the red villas scattered below, and of the succession of
blue hills beyond. Here the girl with the shadowy face was sitting.
She had a book on her knees,
but it lay neglected. She was leaning forward, her chin resting upon her hand.
She was looking across the valley into the darkening sky, with troubled eyes.
Aubrey Vair appeared through
the hazel-bushes, and sat down beside her. He held half a dozen dead leaves in
his hand.
She did not alter her
attitude. “Well?” she said.
“Is it to be flight?” he
asked.
Aubrey Vair was rather pale.
He had been having bad nights latterly, with dreams of the Continental Express,
Mrs. Aubrey Vair possibly even in pursuit,—he always fancied her making the
tragedy ridiculous by tearfully bringing additional pairs of socks, and any
such trifles he had forgotten, with her,—all Reigate and Redhill in commotion.
He had never eloped before, and he had visions of difficulties with hotel
proprietors. Mrs. Aubrey Vair might telegraph ahead. Even he had had a
prophetic vision of a headline in a halfpenny evening newspaper: “Young Lady
abducts a Minor Poet.” So there was a quaver in his voice as he asked, “Is it
to be flight?”
“As you will,” she answered,
still not looking at him.
“I want you to consider
particularly how this will affect you. A man,” said Aubrey Vair, slowly, and
staring hard at the leaves in his hand, “even gains a certain éclat in these
affairs. But to a woman it is ruin—social, moral.”
“This is not love,” said the
girl in white.
“Ah, my dearest! Think of
yourself.”
“Stupid!” she said, under
her breath.
“You spoke?”
“Nothing.”
“But cannot we go on,
meeting one another, loving one another, without any great scandal or
misery? Could we not”—
“That,” interrupted Miss
Smith, “would be unspeakably horrible.”
“This is a dreadful
conversation to me. Life is so intricate, such a web of subtle strands binds us
this way and that. I cannot tell what is right. You must consider”—
“A man would break such
strands.”
“There is no manliness,”
said Aubrey Vair, with a sudden glow of moral exaltation, “in doing wrong. My
love”—
“We could at least die
together, dearest,” she said.
“Good Lord!” said Aubrey
Vair. “I mean—consider my wife.”
“You have not considered her
hitherto.”
“There is a flavour—of
cowardice, of desertion, about suicide,” said Aubrey Vair. “Frankly, I have the
English prejudice, and do not like any kind of running away.”
Miss Smith smiled very
faintly. “I see clearly now what I did not see. My love and yours are very
different things.”
“Possibly it is a sexual
difference,” said Aubrey Vair; and then, feeling the remark inadequate, he
relapsed into silence.
They sat for some time
without a word. The two lights in Reigate below multiplied to a score of bright
points, and, above, one star had become visible. She began laughing, an almost
noiseless, hysterical laugh that jarred unaccountably upon Aubrey Vair.
Presently she stood up.
“They will wonder where I am,” she said. “I think I must be going.”
He followed her to the road.
“Then this is the end?” he said, with a curious mixture of relief and poignant
regret.
“Yes, this is the end,” she
answered, and turned away.
There straightway dropped
into the soul of Aubrey Vair a sense of infinite loss. It was an altogether new
sensation. She was perhaps twenty yards away, when he groaned aloud with the
weight of it, and suddenly began running after her with his arms extended.
“Annie,” he cried,—“Annie! I
have been talking rot.
Annie, now I know I love you! I cannot spare you. This must not be. I did not
understand.”
The weight was horrible.
“Oh, stop, Annie!” he cried,
with a breaking voice, and there were tears on his face.
She turned upon him
suddenly, and his arms fell by his side. His expression changed at the sight of
her pale face.
“You do not understand,” she
said. “I have said good-bye.”
She looked at him; he was
evidently greatly distressed, a little out of breath, and he had just stopped
blubbering. His contemptible quality reached the pathetic. She came up close to
him, and, taking his damp Byronic visage between her hands, she kissed him
again and again. “Good-bye, little man that I loved,” she said; “and good-bye
to this folly of love.”
Then, with something that
may have been a laugh or a sob,—she herself, when she came to write it all in
her novel, did not know which,—she turned and hurried away again, and went out
of the path that Aubrey Vair must pursue, at the cross-roads.
Aubrey Vair stood, where she
had kissed him, with a mind as inactive as his body, until her white dress had
disappeared. Then he gave an involuntary sigh, a large exhaustive expiration,
and so awoke himself, and began walking, pensively dragging his feet through
the dead leaves, home. Emotions are terrible things.
000
“Do
you like the potatoes, dear?” asked Mrs. Aubrey Vair at dinner. “I cooked them
myself.”
Aubrey Vair descended slowly
from cloudy, impalpable meditations to the level of fried potatoes. “These
potatoes”—he remarked, after a pause during which he was struggling with
recollection. “Yes. These potatoes have exactly the tints of the dead leaves of
the hazel.”
“What a fanciful poet it
is!” said Mrs. Aubrey Vair. “Taste them. They are very nice potatoes indeed.”
A CATASTROPHE
THE little shop was not paying. The realisation came insensibly.
Winslow was not the man for definite addition and subtraction and sudden
discovery. He became aware of the truth in his mind gradually, as though it had
always been there. A lot of facts had converged and led him there. There was
that line of cretonnes—four half-pieces—untouched, save for half a yard sold to
cover a stool. There were those shirtings at 4¾d.—Bandersnatch, in the
Broadway, was selling them at 2¾d.—under cost, in fact. (Surely Bandersnatch
might let a man live!) Those servants’ caps, a selling line, needed
replenishing, and that brought back the memory of Winslow’s sole wholesale
dealers, Helter, Skelter, & Grab. Why! how about their account?
Winslow stood with a big
green box open on the counter before him when he thought of it. His pale grey
eyes grew a little rounder; his pale, straggling moustache twitched. He had
been drifting along, day after day. He went round to the ramshackle cash-desk
in the corner—it was Winslow’s weakness to sell his goods over the counter,
give his customers a duplicate bill, and then dodge into the desk to receive
the money, as though he doubted his own honesty. His lank forefinger, with the
prominent joints, ran down the bright little calendar (“Clack’s Cottons last
for All Time”). “One—two—three; three weeks an’ a day!” said Winslow, staring.
“March! Only three weeks and a day. It can’t be.”
“Tea, dear,” said Mrs.
Winslow, opening the door with the glass window and the white blind that
communicated with the parlour.
“One minute,” said Winslow,
and began unlocking the desk.
An irritable old gentleman,
very hot and red about the face, and in a heavy fur-lined cloak, came in
noisily. Mrs. Winslow vanished.
“Ugh!” said the old
gentleman. “Pocket-handkerchief.”
“Yes, sir,” said Winslow.
“About what price”—
“Ugh!” said the old
gentleman. “Poggit-handkerchief, quig!”
Winslow began to feel
flustered. He produced two boxes.
“These, sir”—began Winslow.
“Sheed tin!” said the old
gentleman, clutching the stiffness of the linen. “Wad to blow my nose—not
haggit about.”
“A cotton one, p’raps, sir?”
said Winslow.
“How much?” said the old
gentleman over the handkerchief.
“Sevenpence, sir. There’s
nothing more I can show you? No ties, braces—?”
“Damn!” said the old
gentleman, fumbling in his ticket-pocket, and finally producing half a crown. Winslow
looked round for his little metallic duplicate-book which he kept in various
fixtures, according to circumstances, and then he caught the old gentleman’s
eye. He went straight to the desk at once and got the change, with an entire
disregard of the routine of the shop.
Winslow was always more or
less excited by a customer. But the open desk reminded him of his trouble. It
did not come back to him all at once. He heard a finger-nail softly tapping on
the glass, and, looking up, saw Minnie’s eyes over the blind. It seemed like
retreat opening. He shut and locked the desk, and went into the little room to
tea.
But he was preoccupied.
Three weeks and a day! He took unusually large bites of his bread and butter,
and stared hard at the little pot of jam. He answered Minnie’s conversational
advances distractedly. The shadow of Helter, Skelter, & Grab lay upon the
tea-table. He was struggling with this new idea of failure, the tangible
realisation, that was taking shape and substance, condensing, as it were, out
of the misty uneasiness of many days. At present it was simply one concrete
fact; there were thirty-nine pounds left in the bank, and that day three weeks
Messrs. Helter, Skelter, & Grab, those enterprising outfitters of young
men, would demand their eighty pounds.
After tea there was a
customer or so—little purchases: some muslin and buckram, dress-protectors,
tape, and a pair of Lisle hose. Then, knowing that Black Care was lurking in
the dusky corners of the shop, he lit the three lamps early and set to,
refolding his cotton prints, the most vigorous and least meditative
proceeding of which he could think. He could see Minnie’s shadow in the other
room as she moved about the table. She was busy turning an old dress. He had a
walk after supper, looked in at the Y.M.C.A., but found no one to talk to, and
finally went to bed. Minnie was already there. And there, too, waiting for him,
nudging him gently, until about midnight he was hopelessly awake, sat Black
Care.
He had had one or two nights
lately in that company, but this was much worse. First came Messrs. Helter,
Skelter, & Grab, and their demand for eighty pounds—an enormous sum when
your original capital was only a hundred and seventy. They camped, as it were,
before him, sat down and beleaguered him. He clutched feebly at the
circumambient darkness for expedients. Suppose he had a sale, sold things for
almost anything? He tried to imagine a sale miraculously successful in some
unexpected manner, and mildly profitable, in spite of reductions below cost.
Then Bandersnatch Limited, 101, 102, 103, 105, 106, 107 Broadway, joined the
siege, a long caterpillar of frontage, a battery of shop fronts, wherein things
were sold at a farthing above cost. How could he fight such an establishment?
Besides, what had he to sell? He began to review his resources. What taking
line was there to bait the sale? Then straightway came those pieces of
cretonne, yellow and black, with a bluish-green flower; those discredited
skirtings, prints without buoyancy, skirmishing haberdashery, some despairful
four-button gloves by an inferior maker—a hopeless crew. And that was his
force against Bandersnatch, Helter, Skelter, & Grab, and the pitiless world
behind them. Whatever had made him think a mortal would buy such things? Why
had he bought this and neglected that? He suddenly realised the intensity of
his hatred for Helter, Skelter, & Grab’s salesman. Then he drove towards an
agony of self-reproach. He had spent too much on that cash-desk. What real need
was there of a desk? He saw his vanity of that desk in a lurid glow of
self-discovery. And the lamps? Five pounds! Then suddenly, with what was almost
physical pain, he remembered the rent.
He groaned and turned over.
And there, dim in the darkness, was the hummock of Mrs. Winslow’s shoulders.
That set him off in another direction. He became acutely sensible of Minnie’s
want of feeling. Here he was, worried to death about business, and she sleeping
like a little child. He regretted having married, with that infinite bitterness
that only comes to the human heart in the small hours of the morning. That
hummock of white seemed absolutely without helpfulness, a burden, a
responsibility. What fools men were to marry! Minnie’s inert repose irritated
him so much that he was almost provoked to wake her up and tell her that they
were “Ruined.” She would have to go back to her uncle; her uncle had always
been against him: and as for his own future, Winslow was exceedingly uncertain.
A shop assistant who has once set up for himself finds the utmost difficulty in
getting into a situation again. He began to figure himself “crib-hunting”
again, going from this wholesale house to that, writing innumerable
letters. How he hated writing letters! “Sir,—Referring to your advertisement in
the Christian World.”
He beheld an infinite vista of discomfort and disappointment, ending—in a gulf.
He dressed, yawning, and
went down to open the shop. He felt tired before the day began. As he carried
the shutters in, he kept asking himself what good he was doing. The end was
inevitable, whether he bothered or not. The clear daylight smote into the
place, and showed how old and rough and splintered was the floor, how shabby
the second-hand counter, how hopeless the whole enterprise. He had been
dreaming these past six months of a bright little shop, of a happy couple, of a
modest but comely profit flowing in. He had suddenly awakened from his dream.
The braid that bound his decent black coat—it was a little loose—caught against
the catch of the shop door, and was torn loose. This suddenly turned his
wretchedness to wrath. He stood quivering for a moment, then, with a spiteful
clutch, tore the braid looser, and went in to Minnie.
“Here,” he said, with
infinite reproach; “look here! You might look after a chap a bit.”
“I didn’t see it was torn,”
said Minnie.
“You never do,” said
Winslow, with gross injustice, “until things are too late.”
Minnie looked suddenly at
his face. “I’ll sew it now, Sid, if you like.”
“Let’s have breakfast
first,” said Winslow, “and do things at their proper time.”
He was preoccupied at
breakfast, and Minnie watched him anxiously. His only remark was to
declare his egg a bad one. It wasn’t; it was a little flavoury,—being one of
those at fifteen a shilling,—but quite nice. He pushed it away from him, and
then, having eaten a slice of bread and butter, admitted himself in the wrong
by resuming the egg.
“Sid,” said Minnie, as he
stood up to go into the shop again, “you’re not well.”
“I’m well enough.” He looked
at her as though he hated her.
“Then there’s something else
the matter. You aren’t angry with me, Sid, are you, about that braid? Do tell me what’s the
matter. You were just like this at tea yesterday, and at supper-time. It wasn’t
the braid then.”
“And I’m likely to be.”
She looked interrogation.
“Oh, what is the
matter?” she said.
It was too good a chance to
miss, and he brought the evil news out with dramatic force. “Matter?” he said.
“I done my best, and here we are. That’s the matter! If I can’t pay Helter,
Skelter & Grab eighty pounds, this day three week”—Pause. “We shall be sold
up! Sold up! That’s the matter, Min! Sold up!”
“Oh, Sid!” began Minnie.
He slammed the door. For the
moment he felt relieved of at least half his misery. He began dusting boxes
that did not require dusting, and then reblocked a cretonne already faultlessly
blocked. He was in a state of grim wretchedness; a martyr under the harrow of
fate. At anyrate, it should not be said he failed for want of industry.
And how he had planned and contrived and worked! All to this end! He felt
horrible doubts. Providence and Bandersnatch—surely they were incompatible!
Perhaps he was being “tried”? That sent him off upon a new tack, a very
comforting one. That martyr pose, the gold-in-the-furnace attitude, lasted all
the morning.
At dinner—“potato pie”—he
looked up suddenly, and saw Minnie’s face regarding him. Pale she looked, and a
little red about the eyes. Something caught him suddenly with a queer effect
upon his throat. All his thoughts seemed to wheel round into quite a new
direction.
He pushed back his plate and
stared at her blankly. Then he got up, went round the table to her—she staring
at him. He dropped on his knees beside her without a word. “Oh, Minnie!” he
said, and suddenly she knew it was peace, and put her arms about him, as he
began to sob and weep.
He cried like a little boy,
slobbering on her shoulder that he was a knave to have married her and brought
her to this, that he hadn’t the wits to be trusted with a penny, that it was
all his fault, that he “had hoped so”—ending in a howl. And
she, crying gently herself, patting his shoulders, said “Ssh!” softly to his noisy
weeping, and so soothed the outbreak. Then suddenly the crazy little bell upon
the shop door began, and Winslow had to jump to his feet, and be a man again.
After that scene they
“talked it over” at tea, at supper, in bed, at every possible interval in
between, solemnly—quite inconclusively—with set faces and eyes for the
most part staring in front of them—and yet with a certain mutual comfort. “What
to do I don’t know,” was Winslow’s main proposition. Minnie tried to take a
cheerful view of service—with a probable baby. But she found she needed all her
courage. And her uncle would help her again, perhaps, just at the critical
time. It didn’t do for folks to be too proud. Besides, “something might
happen,” a favourite formula with her.
One hopeful line was to
anticipate a sudden afflux of customers. “Perhaps,” said Minnie, “you might get
together fifty. They know you well enough to trust you a bit.” They debated
that point. Once the possibility of Helter, Skelter and Grab giving credit was
admitted, it was pleasant to begin sweating the acceptable minimum. For some
half-hour over tea the second day after Winslow’s discoveries they were quite
cheerful again, laughing even at their terrific fears. Even twenty pounds to go
on with might be considered enough. Then in some mysterious way the pleasant
prospect of Messrs. Helter, Skelter, & Grab tempering the wind to the shorn
retailer vanished—vanished absolutely, and Winslow found himself again in the
pit of despair.
He began looking about at
the furniture, and wondering idly what it would fetch. The chiffonier was good,
anyhow, and there were Minnie’s old plates that her mother used to have. Then
he began to think of desperate expedients for putting off the evil day. He had
heard somewhere of Bills of Sale—there was to his ears something
comfortingly substantial in the phrase. Then, why not “Go to the
Money-Lenders”?
One cheering thing happened
on Thursday afternoon; a little girl came in with a pattern of “print,” and he
was able to match it. He had not been able to match anything out of his meagre
stock before. He went in and told Minnie. The incident is mentioned lest the
reader should imagine it was uniform despair with him.
The next morning, and the
next, after the discovery, Winslow opened shop late. When one has been awake
most of the night, and has no hope, what is the good of getting up punctually? But
as he went into the dark shop on Friday he saw something lying on the floor,
something lit by the bright light that came under the ill-fitting door—a black
oblong. He stooped and picked up an envelope with a deep mourning edge. It was
addressed to his wife. Clearly a death in her family—perhaps her uncle. He knew
the man too well to have expectations. And they would have to get mourning and
go to the funeral. The brutal cruelty of people dying! He saw it all in a
flash—he always visualised his thoughts. Black trousers to get, black crape,
black gloves—none in stock—the railway fares, the shop closed for the day.
“I’m afraid there’s bad
news, Minnie,” he said.
She was kneeling before the
fireplace, blowing the fire. She had her housemaid’s gloves on and the old
country sun-bonnet she wore of a morning, to keep the dust out of her hair. She
turned, saw the envelope, gave a gasp, and pressed two bloodless lips
together.
“I’m afraid it’s uncle,” she
said, holding the letter and staring with eyes wide open into Winslow’s face. “It’s a strange hand!”
“The postmark’s Hull,” said
Winslow.
“The postmark’s Hull.”
Minnie opened the letter
slowly, drew it out, hesitated, turned it over, saw the signature. “It’s Mr.
Speight!”
“What does he say?” said
Winslow.
Minnie began to read. “Oh!” she screamed. She
dropped the letter, collapsed into a crouching heap, her hands covering her
eyes. Winslow snatched at it. “A most terrible accident has occurred,” he read;
“Melchior’s chimney fell down yesterday evening right on the top of your
uncle’s house, and every living soul was killed—your uncle, your cousin Mary,
Will and Ned, and the girl—every one of them, and smashed—you would hardly know
them. I’m writing to you to break the news before you see it in the papers”—The
letter fluttered from Winslow’s fingers. He put out his hand against the mantel
to steady himself.
All of them dead! Then he
saw, as in a vision, a row of seven cottages, each let at seven shillings a week,
a timber yard, two villas, and the ruins—still marketable—of the avuncular
residence. He tried to feel a sense of loss and could not. They were sure to
have been left to Minnie’s aunt. All dead! 7×7×52÷20 began insensibly to work
itself out in his mind, but discipline was ever weak in his mental arithmetic;
figures kept moving from one line to another, like children playing at Widdy,
Widdy Way. Was it two hundred pounds about—or one hundred pounds? Presently he
picked up the letter again, and finishing reading it. “You being the next of
kin,” said Mr. Speight.
“How awful!” said Minnie in a
horror-struck whisper, and looking up at last. Winslow stared back at her,
shaking his head solemnly. There were a thousand things running through his
mind, but none that, even to his dull sense, seemed appropriate as a remark.
“It was the Lord’s will,” he said at last.
“It seems so very, very
terrible,” said Minnie; “auntie, dear auntie—Ted—poor, dear uncle”—
“It was the Lord’s will,
Minnie,” said Winslow, with infinite feeling. A long silence.
“Yes,” said Minnie, very
slowly, staring thoughtfully at the crackling black paper in the grate. The
fire had gone out. “Yes, perhaps it was the Lord’s will.”
They looked gravely at one
another. Each would have been terribly shocked at any mention of the property
by the other. She turned to the dark fireplace and began tearing up an old
newspaper slowly. Whatever our losses may be, the world’s work still waits for
us. Winslow gave a deep sigh and walked in a hushed manner towards the front
door. As he opened it, a flood of sunlight came streaming into the dark shadows
of the closed shop. Bandersnatch, Helter, Skelter, & Grab, had vanished out
of his mind like the mists before the rising sun.
Presently he was carrying in
the shutters, and in the briskest way, the fire in the kitchen was crackling
exhilaratingly, with a little saucepan walloping above it, for Minnie was
boiling two eggs,—one for herself this morning, as well as one for him,—and
Minnie herself was audible, laying breakfast with the greatest éclat.
The blow was a sudden and terrible one—but it behoves us to face such things
bravely in this sad, unaccountable world. It was quite midday before either of
them mentioned the cottages.
THE LOST INHERITANCE
“MY uncle,” said the man with the glass eye, “was what you might
call a hemi-semi-demi millionaire. He was worth about a hundred and twenty
thousand. Quite. And he left me all his money.”
I glanced at the shiny
sleeve of his coat, and my eye travelled up to the frayed collar.
“Every penny,” said the man
with the glass eye, and I caught the active pupil looking at me with a touch of
offence.
“I’ve never had any
windfalls like that,” I said, trying to speak enviously and propitiate him.
“Even a legacy isn’t always
a blessing,” he remarked with a sigh, and with an air of philosophical
resignation he put the red nose and the wiry moustache into his tankard for a
space.
“Perhaps not,” I said.
“He was an author, you see,
and he wrote a lot of books.”
“Indeed!”
“That was the trouble of it
all.” He stared at me with the available eye to see if I grasped his
statement, then averted his face a little and produced a toothpick.
“You see,” he said, smacking
his lips after a pause, “it was like this. He was my uncle—my maternal uncle.
And he had—what shall I call it?—a weakness for writing edifying literature.
Weakness is hardly the word—downright mania is nearer the mark. He’d been
librarian in a Polytechnic, and as soon as the money came to him he began to
indulge his ambition. It’s a simply extraordinary and incomprehensible thing to
me. Here was a man of thirty-seven suddenly dropped into a perfect pile of
gold, and he didn’t go—not a day’s bust on it. One would think a chap would go
and get himself dressed a bit decent—say a couple of dozen pairs of trousers at
a West End tailor’s; but he never did. You’d hardly believe it, but when he
died he hadn’t even a gold watch. It seems wrong for people like that to have
money. All he did was just to take a house, and order in pretty nearly five
tons of books and ink and paper, and set to writing edifying literature as hard
as ever he could write. I can’t understand
it! But he did. The money came to him, curiously enough, through a maternal
uncle of his,
unexpected like, when he was seven-and-thirty. My mother, it happened, was his
only relation in the wide, wide world, except some second cousins of his. And I
was her only son. You follow all that? The second cousins had one only son,
too, but they brought him to see the old man too soon. He was rather a spoilt
youngster, was this son of theirs, and directly he set eyes on my uncle,
he began bawling out as hard as he could. ‘Take ’im away—er,’ he says, ‘take
’im away,’ and so did for himself entirely. It was pretty straight sailing,
you’d think, for me, eh? And my mother, being a sensible, careful woman,
settled the business in her own mind long before he did.
“He was a curious little
chap, was my uncle, as I remember him. I don’t wonder at the kid being scared.
Hair, just like these Japanese dolls they sell, black and straight and stiff
all round the brim and none in the middle, and below, a whitish kind of face
and rather large dark grey eyes moving about behind his spectacles. He used to
attach a great deal of importance to dress, and always wore a flapping overcoat
and a big-brimmed felt hat of a most extraordinary size. He looked a rummy
little beggar, I can tell you. Indoors it was, as a rule, a dirty red flannel
dressing-gown and a black skull-cap he had. That black skull-cap made him look
like the portraits of all kinds of celebrated people. He was always moving
about from house to house, was my uncle, with his chair which had belonged to
Savage Landor, and his two writing-tables, one of Carlyle’s and the other of
Shelley’s, so the dealer told him, and the completest portable reference
library in England, he said he had—and he lugged the whole caravan, now to a
house at Down, near Darwin’s old place, then to Reigate, near Meredith, then
off to Haslemere, then back to Chelsea for a bit, and then up to Hampstead. He
knew there was something wrong with his stuff, but he never knew there was
anything wrong with his brains. It was always the air, or the water, or the
altitude, or some tommy-rot like that. ‘So much depends on environment,’ he
used to say, and stare at you hard, as if he half suspected you were hiding a
grin at him somewhere under your face. ‘So much depends on environment to a
sensitive mind like mine.’
“What was his name? You
wouldn’t know it if I told you. He wrote nothing that anyone has ever
read—nothing. No one could read
it. He wanted to be a great teacher, he said, and he didn’t know what he wanted
to teach any more than a child. So he just blethered at large about Truth and
Righteousness, and the Spirit of History, and all that. Book after book he
wrote and published at his own expense. He wasn’t quite right in his head, you
know, really; and to hear him go on at the critics—not because they slated him,
mind you—he liked that—but because they didn’t take any notice of him at all.
‘What do the nations want?’ he would ask, holding out his brown old claw. ‘Why,
teaching—guidance! They are scattered upon the hills like sheep without a
shepherd. There is War and Rumours of War, the unlaid Spirit of Discord abroad
in the land, Nihilism, Vivisection, Vaccination, Drunkenness, Penury, Want,
Socialistic Error, Selfish Capital! Do you see the clouds, Ted?’—My name, you
know—‘Do you see the clouds lowering over the land? and behind it all—the
Mongol waits!’ He was always very great on Mongols and the Spectre of
Socialism, and such-like things.
“Then out would come his
finger at me, and with his eyes all afire and his skull-cap askew, he would
whisper: ‘And here am I. What do I want? Nations to teach. Nations! I say it
with all modesty, Ted, I could.
I would guide them; nay! but I will guide
them to a safe haven, to the land of Righteousness, flowing with milk and
honey.’
“That’s how he used to go
on. Ramble, rave about the nations, and righteousness, and that kind of thing.
Kind of mincemeat of Bible and blethers. From fourteen up to three-and-twenty,
when I might have been improving my mind, my mother used to wash me and brush
my hair (at least in the earlier years of it), with a nice parting down the
middle, and take me, once or twice a week, to hear this old lunatic jabber
about things he had read of in the morning papers, trying to do it as much like
Carlyle as he could, and I used to sit according to instructions, and look
intelligent and nice, and pretend to be taking it all in. Afterwards I used to
go of my own free will, out of a regard for the legacy. I was the only person
that used to go and see him. He wrote, I believe, to every man who made the
slightest stir in the world, sending him a copy or so of his books, and
inviting him to come and talk about the nations to him; but half of them didn’t
answer, and none ever came. And when the girl let you in—she was an artful bit
of goods, that girl—there were heaps of letters on the hall-seat waiting to go
off, addressed to Prince Bismark, the President of the United States, and
such-like people. And one went up the staircase and along the cobwebby
passage,—the housekeeper drank like fury, and his passages were always
cobwebby,—and found him at last, with books turned down all over the room, and
heaps of torn paper on the floor, and telegrams and newspapers littered about,
and empty coffee-cups and half-eaten bits of toast on the desk and the mantel.
You’d see his back humped up, and his hair would be sticking out quite straight
between the collar of that dressing-gown thing and the edge of the skull-cap.
“‘A moment!’ he would say.
‘A moment!’ over his shoulder. ‘The mot
juste, you
know, Ted, le mot juste. Righteous thought
righteously expressed—Aah!—concatenation. And now, Ted,’ he’d say, spinning
round in his study chair, ‘how’s Young England?’ That was his silly name for
me.
“Well, that was my uncle,
and that was how he talked—to me, at anyrate. With others about he seemed a bit
shy. And he not only talked to me, but he gave me his books, books of six
hundred pages or so, with cock-eyed headings, ‘The Shrieking Sisterhood,’ ‘The
Behemoth of Bigotry,’ ‘Crucibles and Cullenders,’ and so on. All very strong,
and none of them original. The very last time but one that I saw him he gave me
a book. He was feeling ill even then, and his hand shook and he was despondent.
I noticed it because I was naturally on the look-out for those little symptoms.
‘My last book, Ted,’ he said. ‘My last book, my boy; my last word to the deaf
and hardened nations;’ and I’m hanged if a tear didn’t go rolling down his
yellow old cheek. He was regular crying because it was so nearly over, and he
hadn’t only written about fifty-three books of rubbish. ‘I’ve sometimes
thought, Ted’—he said, and stopped.
“‘Perhaps I’ve been a bit
hasty and angry with this stiff-necked generation. A little more sweetness,
perhaps, and a little less blinding light. I’ve sometimes thought—I might have
swayed them. But I’ve done my best, Ted.’
“And then, with a burst, for
the first and last time in his life he owned himself a failure. It showed he
was really ill. He seemed to think for a minute, and then he spoke quietly and
low, as sane and sober as I am now. ‘I’ve been a fool, Ted,’ he said. ‘I’ve
been flapping nonsense all my life. Only He who readeth the heart knows whether
this is anything more than vanity. Ted, I don’t. But He knows, He knows, and if
I have done foolishly and vainly, in my heart—in my heart’—
“Just like that he spoke,
repeating himself, and he stopped quite short and handed the book to me,
trembling. Then the old shine came back into his eye. I remember it all fairly
well, because I repeated it and acted it to my old mother when I got home, to
cheer her up a bit. ‘Take this book and read it,’ he said. ‘It’s my last word,
my very last word. I’ve left all my property to you, Ted, and may you use it
better than I have done.’ And then he fell a-coughing.
“I remember that quite well
even now, and how I went home cock-a-hoop, and how he was in bed the next
time I called. The housekeeper was downstairs drunk, and I fooled about—as a
young man will—with the girl in the passage before I went to him. He was
sinking fast. But even then his vanity clung to him.
“‘Have you read it?’ he
whispered.
“‘Sat up all night reading
it,’ I said in his ear to cheer him. ‘It’s the last,’ said I, and then, with a
memory of some poetry or other in my head, ‘but it’s the bravest and best.’
“He smiled a little and
tried to squeeze my hand as a woman might do, and left off squeezing in the
middle, and lay still. ‘The bravest and the best,’ said I again, seeing it
pleased him. But he didn’t answer. I heard the girl giggle outside the door,
for occasionally we’d had just a bit of innocent laughter, you know, at his ways.
I looked at his face, and his eyes were closed, and it was just as if somebody
had punched in his nose on either side. But he was still smiling. It’s queer to
think of—he lay dead, lay dead there, an utter failure, with the smile of
success on his face.
“That was the end of my
uncle. You can imagine me and my mother saw that he had a decent funeral. Then,
of course, came the hunt for the will. We began decent and respectful at first,
and before the day was out we were ripping chairs, and smashing bureau panels,
and sounding walls. Every hour we expected those others to come in. We asked
the housekeeper, and found she’d actually witnessed a will—on an ordinary
half-sheet of notepaper it was written, and very short, she said—not a month
ago. The other witness was the gardener, and he bore her out word for
word. But I’m hanged if there was that or any other will to be found. The way
my mother talked must have made him turn in his grave. At last a lawyer at
Reigate sprang one on us that had been made years ago during some temporary
quarrel with my mother. I’m blest if that wasn’t the only will to be discovered
anywhere, and it left every penny he possessed to that ‘Take ’im away’
youngster of his second cousin’s—a chap who’d never had to stand his talking not
for one afternoon of his life.”
The man with the glass eye
stopped.
“I thought you said”—I
began.
“Half a minute,” said the
man with the glass eye. “I had
to wait for the end of the story till this very morning, and I was a blessed
sight more interested than you are. You just wait a bit too. They executed the
will, and the other chap inherited, and directly he was one-and-twenty he began
to blew it. How he did blew it, to be sure! He bet, he drank, he got in the
papers for this and that. I tell you, it makes me wriggle to think of the times
he had. He blewed every ha’penny of it before he was thirty, and the last I
heard of him was—Holloway! Three years ago.
“Well, I naturally fell on
hard times, because, as you see, the only trade I knew was legacy-cadging. All
my plans were waiting over to begin, so to speak, when the old chap died. I’ve
had my ups and downs since then. Just now it’s a period of depression. I tell
you frankly, I’m on the look-out for help. I was hunting round my room to
find something to raise a bit on for immediate necessities, and the sight of
all those presentation volumes—no one will buy them, not to wrap butter in,
even—well, they annoyed me. I’d promised him not to part with them, and I never
kept a promise easier. I let out at them with my boot, and sent them shooting
across the room. One lifted at the kick, and spun through the air. And out of
it flapped—You guess?
“It was the will. He’d given
it me himself in that very last volume of all.”
He folded his arms on the
table, and looked sadly with the active eye at his empty tankard. He shook his
head slowly, and said softly, “I’d never opened the book, much more cut a page!”
Then he looked up, with a bitter laugh, for my sympathy. “Fancy hiding it
there! Eigh? Of all places.”
He began to fish absently
for a dead fly with his finger. “It just shows you the vanity of authors,” he
said, looking up at me. “It wasn’t no trick of his. He’d meant perfectly fair.
He’d really thought I was really going home to read that blessed book of his
through. But it shows you, don’t it?”—his eye went down to the tankard
again,—“It shows you, too, how we poor human beings fail to understand one
another.”
But there was no
misunderstanding the eloquent thirst of his eye. He accepted with ill-feigned
surprise. He said, in the usual subtle formula, that he didn’t mind if he did.
THE SAD STORY OF
A DRAMATIC CRITIC
IWAS—you shall hear immediately why I am not now—Egbert Craddock
Cummins. The name remains. I am still (Heaven help me!) Dramatic Critic to
the Fiery Cross.
What I shall be in a little while I do not know. I write in great trouble and
confusion of mind. I will do what I can to make myself clear in the face of
terrible difficulties. You must bear with me a little. When a man is rapidly
losing his own identity, he naturally finds a difficulty in expressing himself.
I will make it perfectly plain in a minute, when once I get my grip upon the
story. Let me see—where am I?
I wish I knew. Ah, I have it! Dead self! Egbert Craddock Cummins!
In the past I should have
disliked writing anything quite so full of “I” as this story must be. It is
full of “I’s” before and behind, like the beast in Revelation—the one with a
head like a calf, I am afraid. But my tastes have changed since I became a
Dramatic Critic and studied the masters—G.R.S., G.B.S., G.A.S., and the others.
Everything has changed since then. At least the story is about myself—so that
there is some excuse for me. And it is really not egotism, because, as I
say, since those days my identity has undergone an entire alteration.
That past!... I was—in those
days—rather a nice fellow, rather shy—taste for grey in my clothes, weedy
little moustache, face “interesting,” slight stutter which I had caught in
early life from a schoolfellow. Engaged to a very nice girl, named Delia.
Fairly new, she was—cigarettes—liked me because I was human and original.
Considered I was like Lamb—on the strength of the stutter, I believe. Father,
an eminent authority on postage stamps. She read a great deal in the British
Museum. (A perfect pairing ground for literary people, that British Museum—you
should read George Egerton and Justin Huntly M’Carthy and Gissing and the rest
of them.) We loved in our intellectual way, and shared the brightest hopes.
(All gone now.) And her father liked me because I seemed honestly eager to hear
about stamps. She had no mother. Indeed, I had the happiest prospects a young
man could have. I never went to theatres in those days. My Aunt Charlotte
before she died had told me not to.
Then Barnaby, the editor of
the Fiery Cross,
made me—in spite of my spasmodic efforts to escape—Dramatic Critic. He is a
fine, healthy man, Barnaby, with an enormous head of frizzy black hair and a
convincing manner, and he caught me on the staircase going to see Wembly. He
had been dining, and was more than usually buoyant. “Hullo, Cummins!” he said.
“The very man I want!” He caught me by the shoulder or the collar or something, ran
me up the little passage, and flung me over the waste-paper basket into the
arm-chair in his office. “Pray be seated,” he said, as he did so. Then he ran
across the room and came back with some pink and yellow tickets and pushed them
into my hand. “Opera Comique,” he said, “Thursday; Friday, the Surrey;
Saturday, the Frivolity. That’s all, I think.”
“But”—I began.
“Glad you’re free,” he said,
snatching some proofs off the desk and beginning to read.
“I don’t quite understand,”
I said.
“Eigh?” he said, at the top of his voice, as
though he thought I had gone, and was startled at my remark.
“Do you want me to criticise
these plays?”
“Do something with ’em....
Did you think it was a treat?”
“But I can’t.”
“Did you call me a fool?”
“Well, I’ve never been to a
theatre in my life.”
“Virgin soil.”
“But I don’t know anything
about it, you know.”
“That’s just it. New view.
No habits. No clichés in stock. Ours is a live paper, not a bag
of tricks. None of your clockwork professional journalism in this office. And I
can rely on your integrity”—
“But I’ve conscientious
scruples”—
He caught me up suddenly and
put me outside his door. “Go and talk to Wembly about that,” he said. “He’ll
explain.”
As I stood perplexed, he
opened the door again, said, “I forgot this,” thrust a fourth ticket into
my hand (it was for that night—in twenty minutes’ time), and slammed the door
upon me. His expression was quite calm, but I caught his eye.
I hate arguments. I decided
that I would take his hint and become (to my own destruction) a Dramatic
Critic. I walked slowly down the passage to Wembly. That Barnaby has a
remarkably persuasive way. He has made few suggestions during our very pleasant
intercourse of four years that he has not ultimately won me round to adopting.
It may be, of course, that I am of a yielding disposition; certainly I am too
apt to take my colour from my circumstances. It is, indeed, to my unfortunate
susceptibility to vivid impressions that all my misfortunes are due. I have
already alluded to the slight stammer I had acquired from a schoolfellow in my
youth. However, this is a digression.... I went home in a cab to dress.
I will not trouble the
reader with my thoughts about the first-night audience, strange assembly as it
is,—those I reserve for my Memoirs,—nor the humiliating story of how I got lost
during the entr’acte in a lot of red plush passages, and saw
the third act from the gallery. The only point upon which I wish to lay stress
was the remarkable effect of the acting upon me. You must remember I had lived
a quiet and retired life, and had never been to the theatre before, and that I
am extremely sensitive to vivid impressions. At the risk of repetition I must
insist upon these points.
The first effect was a
profound amazement, not untinctured by alarm. The phenomenal unnaturalness of
acting is a thing discounted in the minds of most people by early visits to the
theatre. They get used to the fantastic gestures, the flamboyant emotions, the
weird mouthings, melodious snortings, agonising yelps, lip-gnawings, glaring
horrors, and other emotional symbolism of the stage. It becomes at last a mere
deaf-and-dumb language to them, which they read intelligently pari passu with the hearing of the dialogue. But all this was new to
me. The thing was called a modern comedy, the people were supposed to be
English and were dressed like fashionable Americans of the current epoch, and I
fell into the natural error of supposing that the actors were trying to
represent human beings. I looked round on my first-night audience with a kind
of wonder, discovered—as all new Dramatic Critics do—that it rested with me to
reform the Drama, and, after a supper choked with emotion, went off to the
office to write a column, piebald with “new paragraphs” (as all my stuff is—it
fills out so) and purple with indignation. Barnaby was delighted.
But I could not sleep that
night. I dreamt of actors—actors glaring, actors smiting their chests, actors
flinging out a handful of extended fingers, actors smiling bitterly, laughing
despairingly, falling hopelessly, dying idiotically. I got up at eleven with a
slight headache, read my notice in the Fiery Cross, breakfasted, and went back to my
room to shave. (It’s my habit to do so.) Then an odd thing happened. I could
not find my razor. Suddenly it occurred to me that I had not unpacked it the
day before.
“Ah!” said I, in front of
the looking-glass. Then “Hullo!”
Quite involuntarily, when I
had thought of my portmanteau, I had flung up the left arm (fingers fully
extended) and clutched at my diaphragm with my right hand. I am an acutely
self-conscious man at all times. The gesture struck me as absolutely novel for
me. I repeated it, for my own satisfaction. “Odd!” Then (rather puzzled) I
turned to my portmanteau.
After shaving, my mind
reverted to the acting I had seen, and I entertained myself before the cheval
glass with some imitations of Jafferay’s more exaggerated gestures. “Really,
one might think it a disease,” I said—“Stage-Walkitis!” (There’s many a truth
spoken in jest.) Then, if I remember rightly, I went off to see Wembly, and
afterwards lunched at the British Museum with Delia. We actually spoke about
our prospects, in the light of my new appointment.
But that appointment was the
beginning of my downfall. From that day I necessarily became a persistent
theatre-goer, and almost insensibly I began to change. The next thing I noticed
after the gesture about the razor, was to catch myself bowing ineffably when I
met Delia, and stooping in an old-fashioned, courtly way over her hand.
Directly I caught myself, I straightened myself up and became very uncomfortable.
I remember she looked at me curiously. Then, in the office, I found myself
doing “nervous business,” fingers on teeth, when Barnaby asked me a question I
could not very well answer. Then, in some trifling difference with Delia,
I clasped my hand to my brow. And I pranced through my social transactions at
times singularly like an actor! I tried not to—no one could be more keenly
alive to the arrant absurdity of the histrionic bearing. And I did!
It began to dawn on me what
it all meant. The acting, I saw, was too much for my delicately-strung nervous
system. I have always, I know, been too amenable to the suggestions of my
circumstances. Night after night of concentrated attention to the conventional
attitudes and intonation of the English stage was gradually affecting my speech
and carriage. I was giving way to the infection of sympathetic imitation. Night
after night my plastic nervous system took the print of some new amazing
gesture, some new emotional exaggeration—and retained it. A kind of theatrical
veneer threatened to plate over and obliterate my private individuality
altogether. I saw myself in a kind of vision. Sitting by myself one night, my
new self seemed to me to glide, posing and gesticulating, across the room. He
clutched his throat, he opened his fingers, he opened his legs in walking like
a high-class marionette. He went from attitude to attitude. He might have been
clockwork. Directly after this I made an ineffectual attempt to resign my
theatrical work. But Barnaby persisted in talking about the Polywhiddle Divorce
all the time I was with him, and I could get no opportunity of saying what I
wished.
And then Delia’s manner
began to change towards me. The ease of our intercourse vanished. I felt she
was learning to dislike me. I grinned, and capered, and scowled, and posed at
her in a thousand ways, and knew—with what a voiceless agony!—that I did it all
the time. I tried to resign again, and Barnaby talked about “X” and “Z” and “Y”
in the New Review,
and gave me a strong cigar to smoke, and so routed me. And then I walked up the
Assyrian Gallery in the manner of Irving to meet Delia, and so precipitated the
crisis.
“Ah!—Dear!” I said, with more
sprightliness and emotion in my voice than had ever been in all my life before
I became (to my own undoing) a Dramatic Critic.
She held out her hand rather
coldly, scrutinising my face as she did so. I prepared, with a new-won grace,
to walk by her side.
“Egbert,” she said, standing
still, and thought. Then she looked at me.
I said nothing. I felt what
was coming. I tried to be the old Egbert Craddock Cummins of shambling gait and
stammering sincerity, whom she loved, but I felt even as I did so that I was a
new thing, a thing of surging emotions and mysterious fixity—like no human
being that ever lived, except upon the stage. “Egbert,” she said, “you are not
yourself.”
“Ah!” Involuntarily I
clutched my diaphragm and averted my head (as is the way with them).
“There!” she said.
“What do you mean?” I said, whispering in vocal
italics—you know how they do it—turning on her, perplexity on face, right hand
down, left on brow. I knew quite well what she meant. I knew quite well
the dramatic unreality of my behaviour. But I struggled against it in vain.
“What do you mean?” I said, and, in a kind of hoarse whisper, “I don’t
understand!”
She really looked as though
she disliked me. “What do you keep on posing for?” she said. “I don’t like it.
You didn’t use to.”
“Didn’t use to!” I said
slowly, repeating this twice. I glared up and down the gallery, with short,
sharp glances. “We are alone,” I said swiftly. “Listen!” I poked my forefinger towards her, and
glared at her. “I am under a curse.”
I saw her hand tighten upon
her sunshade. “You are under some bad influence or other,” said Delia. “You
should give it up. I never knew anyone change as you have done.”
“Delia!” I said, lapsing
into the pathetic. “Pity me. Augh! Delia! Pit—y me!”
She eyed me critically. “Why you keep playing
the fool like this I don’t know,” she said. “Anyhow, I really cannot go about
with a man who behaves as you do. You made us both ridiculous on Wednesday.
Frankly, I dislike you, as you are now. I met you here to tell you so—as it’s
about the only place where we can be sure of being alone together”—
“Delia!” said I, with
intensity, knuckles of clenched hands white. “You don’t mean”—
“I do,” said Delia. “A
woman’s lot is sad enough at the best of times. But with you”—
I clapped my hand on my
brow.
“So, good-bye,” said Delia,
without emotion.
“Oh, Delia!” I said.
“Not this?”
“Good-bye, Mr. Cummins,” she
said.
By a violent effort I
controlled myself and touched her hand. I tried to say some word of explanation
to her. She looked into my working face and winced. “I must do it,” she said
hopelessly. Then she turned from me and began walking rapidly down the gallery.
Heavens! How the human agony
cried within me! I loved Delia. But nothing found expression—I was already too
deeply crusted with my acquired self.
“Good-baye!” I said at last,
watching her retreating figure. How I hated myself for doing it! After she had
vanished, I repeated in a dreamy way, “Good-baye!” looking hopelessly round me.
Then, with a kind of heart-broken cry, I shook my clenched fists in the air,
staggered to the pedestal of a winged figure, buried my face in my arms, and
made my shoulders heave. Something within me said “Ass!” as I did so. (I had
the greatest difficulty in persuading the Museum policeman, who was attracted
by my cry of agony, that I was not intoxicated, but merely suffering from a
transient indisposition.)
But even this great sorrow
has not availed to save me from my fate. I see it, everyone sees it; I grow
more “theatrical” every day. And no one could be more painfully aware of the
pungent silliness of theatrical ways. The quiet, nervous, but pleasing
E. C. Cummins vanishes. I cannot save him. I am driven like a dead leaf
before the winds of March. My tailor even enters into the spirit of my
disorder. He has a peculiar sense of what is fitting. I tried to get a
dull grey suit from him this spring, and he foisted a brilliant blue upon me,
and I see he has put braid down the sides of my new dress trousers. My
hairdresser insists upon giving me a “wave.”
I am beginning to associate
with actors. I detest them, but it is only in their company that I can feel I
am not glaringly conspicuous. Their talk infects me. I notice a growing
tendency to dramatic brevity, to dashes and pauses in my style, to a
punctuation of bows and attitudes. Barnaby has remarked it too. I offended
Wembly by calling him “Dear Boy” yesterday. I dread the end, but I cannot
escape from it.
The fact is, I am being
obliterated. Living a grey, retired life all my youth, I came to the theatre a
delicate sketch of a man, a thing of tints and faint lines. Their gorgeous
colouring has effaced me altogether. People forget how much mode of expression,
method of movement, are a matter of contagion. I have heard of stage-struck
people before, and thought it a figure of speech. I spoke of it jestingly, as a
disease. It is no jest. It is a
disease. And I have got it bad! Deep down within me I protest against the wrong
done to my personality—unavailingly. For three hours or more a week I have to
go and concentrate my attention on some fresh play, and the suggestions of the
drama strengthen their awful hold upon me. My manners grow so flamboyant, my
passions so professional, that I doubt, as I said at the outset, whether it is
really myself that behaves in such a manner. I feel merely the core to
this dramatic casing, that grows thicker and presses upon me—me and mine. I
feel like King John’s abbot in his cope of lead.
I doubt, indeed, whether I
should not abandon the struggle altogether—leave this sad world of ordinary
life for which I am so ill-fitted, abandon the name of Cummins for some
professional pseudonym, complete my self-effacement, and—a thing of tricks and
tatters, of posing and pretence—go upon the stage. It seems my only resort—“to
hold the mirror up to Nature.” For in the ordinary life, I will confess, no one
now seems to regard me as both sane and sober. Only upon the stage, I feel
convinced, will people take me seriously. That will be the end of it. I know that will be the
end of it. And yet ... I will frankly confess ... all that marks off your actor
from your common man ... I detest.
I am still largely of my Aunt Charlotte’s opinion, that playacting is unworthy
of a pure-minded man’s attention, much more participation. Even now I would
resign my dramatic criticism and try a rest. Only I can’t get hold of Barnaby.
Letters of resignation he never notices. He says it is against the etiquette of
journalism to write to your Editor. And when I go to see him, he gives me
another big cigar and some strong whisky and soda, and then something always
turns up to prevent my explanation.
A SLIP UNDER THE MICROSCOPE
OUTSIDE the laboratory windows was a watery-grey fog, and within a
close warmth and the yellow light of the green-shaded gas lamps that stood two
to each table down its narrow length. On each table stood a couple of glass
jars containing the mangled vestiges of the crayfish, mussels, frogs, and
guineapigs, upon which the students had been working, and down the side of the
room, facing the windows, were shelves bearing bleached dissections in spirits,
surmounted by a row of beautifully executed anatomical drawings in whitewood
frames and overhanging a row of cubical lockers. All the doors of the
laboratory were panelled with blackboard, and on these were the half-erased
diagrams of the previous day’s work. The laboratory was empty, save for the
demonstrator, who sat near the preparation-room door, and silent, save for a
low, continuous murmur, and the clicking of the rocker microtome at which he
was working. But scattered about the room were traces of numerous students: hand-bags,
polished boxes of instruments, in one place a large drawing covered by
newspaper, and in another a prettily bound copy of News from Nowhere, a book
oddly at variance with its surroundings. These things had been put down
hastily as the students had arrived and hurried at once to secure their seats
in the adjacent lecture theatre. Deadened by the closed door, the measured
accents of the professor sounded as a featureless muttering.
Presently, faint through the
closed windows came the sound of the Oratory clock striking the hour of eleven.
The clicking of the microtome ceased, and the demonstrator looked at his watch,
rose, thrust his hands into his pockets, and walked slowly down the laboratory
towards the lecture theatre door. He stood listening for a moment, and then his
eye fell on the little volume by William Morris. He picked it up, glanced at
the title, smiled, opened it, looked at the name on the fly-leaf, ran the
leaves through with his hand, and put it down. Almost immediately the even murmur
of the lecturer ceased, there was a sudden burst of pencils rattling on the
desks in the lecture theatre, a stirring, a scraping of feet, and a number of
voices speaking together. Then a firm footfall approached the door, which began
to open, and stood ajar, as some indistinctly heard question arrested the
new-comer.
The demonstrator turned,
walked slowly back past the microtome, and left the laboratory by the
preparation-room door. As he did so, first one, and then several students
carrying notebooks entered the laboratory from the lecture theatre, and
distributed themselves among the little tables, or stood in a group about the
doorway. They were an exceptionally heterogeneous assembly, for while Oxford
and Cambridge still recoil from the blushing prospect of mixed classes,
the College of Science anticipated America in the matter years ago—mixed
socially, too, for the prestige of the College is high, and its scholarships,
free of any age limit, dredge deeper even than do those of the Scotch universities.
The class numbered one-and-twenty, but some remained in the theatre questioning
the professor, copying the blackboard diagrams before they were washed off, or
examining the special specimens he had produced to illustrate the day’s
teaching. Of the nine who had come into the laboratory three were girls, one of
whom, a little fair woman, wearing spectacles and dressed in greyish-green, was
peering out of the window at the fog, while the other two, both
wholesome-looking, plain-faced schoolgirls, unrolled and put on the brown
holland aprons they wore while dissecting. Of the men, two went down the
laboratory to their places, one a pallid, dark-bearded man, who had once been a
tailor; the other a pleasant-featured, ruddy young man of twenty, dressed in a well-fitting
brown suit; young Wedderburn, the son of Wedderburn the eye specialist. The
others formed a little knot near the theatre door. One of these, a dwarfed,
spectacled figure, with a hunch back, sat on a bent wood stool; two others, one
a short, dark youngster, and the other a flaxen-haired, reddish-complexioned
young man, stood leaning side by side against the slate sink, while the fourth
stood facing them, and maintained the larger share of the conversation.
This last person was named
Hill. He was a sturdily built young fellow, of the same age as Wedderburn;
he had a white face, dark grey eyes, hair of an indeterminate colour, and
prominent, irregular features. He talked rather louder than was needful, and
thrust his hands deeply into his pockets. His collar was frayed and blue with
the starch of a careless laundress, his clothes were evidently readymade, and
there was a patch on the side of his boot near the toe. And as he talked or
listened to the others, he glanced now and again towards the lecture theatre
door. They were discussing the depressing peroration of the lecture they had
just heard, the last lecture it was in the introductory course in zoology.
“From ovum to ovum is the goal of the higher vertebrata,” the lecturer had said
in his melancholy tones, and so had neatly rounded off the sketch of
comparative anatomy he had been developing. The spectacled hunchback had
repeated it, with noisy appreciation, had tossed it towards the fair-haired
student with an evident provocation, and had started one of those vague,
rambling discussions on generalities, so unaccountably dear to the student mind
all the world over.
“That is our goal, perhaps—I
admit it—as far as science goes,” said the fair-haired student, rising to the
challenge. “But there are things above science.”
“Science,” said Hill
confidently, “is systematic knowledge. Ideas that don’t come into the
system—must anyhow—be loose ideas.” He was not quite sure whether that was a
clever saying or a fatuity until his hearers took it seriously.
“The thing I cannot
understand,” said the hunchback, at large, “is whether Hill is a
materialist or not.”
“There is one thing above
matter,” said Hill promptly, feeling he had a better thing this time, aware,
too, of someone in the doorway behind him, and raising his voice a trifle for
her benefit, “and that is, the delusion that there is something above matter.”
“So we have your gospel at
last,” said the fair student. “It’s all a delusion, is it? All our aspirations
to lead something more than dogs’ lives, all our work for anything beyond
ourselves. But see how inconsistent you are. Your socialism, for instance. Why
do you trouble about the interests of the race? Why do you concern yourself
about the beggar in the gutter? Why are you bothering yourself to lend that
book”—he indicated William Morris by a movement of the head—“to everyone in the
lab.?”
“Girl,” said the hunchback
indistinctly, and glanced guiltily over his shoulder.
The girl in brown, with the
brown eyes, had come into the laboratory, and stood on the other side of the
table behind him, with her rolled-up apron in one hand, looking over her
shoulder, listening to the discussion. She did not notice the hunchback,
because she was glancing from Hill to his interlocutor. Hill’s consciousness of
her presence betrayed itself to her only in his studious ignorance of the fact;
but she understood that, and it pleased her. “I see no reason,” said he, “why a
man should live like a brute because he knows of nothing beyond matter, and
does not expect to exist a hundred years hence.”
“Why shouldn’t he?” said the
fair-haired student.
“Why should he?” said Hill.
“What inducement has he?”
“That’s the way with all you
religious people. It’s all a business of inducements. Cannot a man seek after
righteousness for righteousness’ sake?”
There was a pause. The fair
man answered, with a kind of vocal padding, “But—you see—inducement—when I said
inducement,” to gain time. And then the hunchback came to his rescue and
inserted a question. He was a terrible person in the debating society with his
questions, and they invariably took one form—a demand for a definition. “What’s
your definition of righteousness?” said the hunchback at this stage.
Hill experienced a sudden
loss of complacency at this question, but even as it was asked, relief came in
the person of Brooks, the laboratory attendant, who entered by the
preparation-room door, carrying a number of freshly killed guineapigs by their
hind legs. “This is the last batch of material this session,” said the youngster,
who had not previously spoken. Brooks advanced up the laboratory, smacking down
a couple of guineapigs at each table. The rest of the class, scenting the prey
from afar, came crowding in by the lecture theatre door, and the discussion
perished abruptly as the students who were not already in their places hurried
to them to secure the choice of a specimen. There was a noise of keys rattling
on split rings as lockers were opened and dissecting instruments taken out.
Hill was already standing by his table, and his box of scalpels was sticking
out of his pocket. The girl in brown came a step towards him, and, leaning over
his table, said softly, “Did you see that I returned your book, Mr. Hill?”
During the whole scene she
and the book had been vividly present in his consciousness; but he made a
clumsy pretence of looking at the book and seeing it for the first time. “Oh
yes,” he said, taking it up. “I see. Did you like it?”
“I want to ask you some
questions about it—some time.”
“Certainly,” said Hill. “I
shall be glad.” He stopped awkwardly. “You liked it?” he said.
“It’s a wonderful book. Only
some things I don’t understand.”
Then suddenly the laboratory
was hushed by a curious braying noise. It was the demonstrator. He was at the
blackboard ready to begin the day’s instruction, and it was his custom to
demand silence by a sound midway between the “Er” of common intercourse and the
blast of a trumpet. The girl in brown slipped back to her place: it was
immediately in front of Hill’s, and Hill, forgetting her forthwith, took a
notebook out of the drawer of his table, turned over its leaves hastily, drew a
stumpy pencil from his pocket, and prepared to make a copious note of the
coming demonstration. For demonstrations and lectures are the sacred text of the
College students. Books, saving only the Professor’s own, you may—it is
even expedient to—ignore.
000
Hill was the son of a
Landport cobbler, and had been hooked by a chance blue paper the authorities
had thrown out to the Landport Technical College. He kept himself in London on
his allowance of a guinea a week, and found that, with proper care, this also
covered his clothing allowance, an occasional waterproof collar, that is; and
ink and needles and cotton, and such-like necessaries for a man about town.
This was his first year and his first session, but the brown old man in
Landport had already got himself detested in many public-houses by boasting of
his son, “the Professor.” Hill was a vigorous youngster, with a serene contempt
for the clergy of all denominations, and a fine ambition to reconstruct the
world. He regarded his scholarship as a brilliant opportunity. He had begun to
read at seven, and had read steadily whatever came in his way, good or bad,
since then. His worldly experience had been limited to the island of Portsea,
and acquired chiefly in the wholesale boot factory in which he had worked by
day, after passing the seventh standard of the Board school. He had a
considerable gift of speech, as the College Debating Society, which met amidst
the crushing machines and mine models in the metallurgical theatre downstairs,
already recognised—recognised by a violent battering of desks whenever he rose.
And he was just at that fine emotional age when life opens at the end of a
narrow pass like a broad valley at one’s feet, full of the promise of wonderful
discoveries and tremendous achievements. And his own limitations, save that he
knew that he knew neither Latin nor French, were all unknown to him.
At first his interest had
been divided pretty equally between his biological work at the College and
social and theological theorising, an employment which he took in deadly
earnest. Of a night, when the big museum library was not open, he would sit on
the bed of his room in Chelsea with his coat and a muffler on, and write out
the lecture notes and revise his dissection memoranda, until Thorpe called him
out by a whistle,—the landlady objected to open the door to attic visitors,—and
then the two would go prowling about the shadowy, shiny, gas-lit streets,
talking, very much in the fashion of the sample just given, of the God Idea,
and Righteousness, and Carlyle, and the Reorganisation of Society. And, in the
midst of it all, Hill, arguing not only for Thorpe, but for the casual
passer-by, would lose the thread of his argument glancing at some pretty
painted face that looked meaningly at him as he passed. Science and
Righteousness! But once or twice lately there had been signs that a third
interest was creeping into his life, and he had found his attention wandering
from the fate of the mesoblastic somites or the probable meaning of the
blastopore, to the thought of the girl with the brown eyes who sat at the table
before him.
She was a paying student;
she descended inconceivable social altitudes to speak to him. At the thought of
the education she must have had, and the accomplishments she must possess, the
soul of Hill became abject within him. She had spoken to him first over a
difficulty about the alisphenoid of a rabbit’s skull, and he had found that, in
biology at least, he had no reason for self-abasement. And from that, after the
manner of young people starting from any starting-point, they got to
generalities, and while Hill attacked her upon the question of socialism,—some
instinct told him to spare her a direct assault upon her religion,—she was
gathering resolution to undertake what she told herself was his æsthetic
education. She was a year or two older than he, though the thought never
occurred to him. The loan of News
from Nowhere was the beginning of a series of cross loans.
Upon some absurd first principle of his, Hill had never “wasted time” upon
poetry, and it seemed an appalling deficiency to her. One day in the lunch
hour, when she chanced upon him alone in the little museum where the skeletons
were arranged, shamefully eating the bun that constituted his midday meal, she
retreated, and returned to lend him, with a slightly furtive air, a volume of
Browning. He stood sideways towards her and took the book rather clumsily, because
he was holding the bun in the other hand. And in the retrospect his voice
lacked the cheerful clearness he could have wished.
That occurred after the
examination in comparative anatomy, on the day before the College turned out
its students, and was carefully locked up by the officials, for the Christmas
holidays. The excitement of cramming for the first trial of strength had for a
little while dominated Hill, to the exclusion of his other interests. In the
forecasts of the result in which everyone indulged, he was surprised to
find that no one regarded him as a possible competitor for the Harvey
Commemoration Medal, of which this and the two subsequent examinations
disposed. It was about this time that Wedderburn, who so far had lived
inconspicuously on the uttermost margin of Hill’s perceptions, began to take on
the appearance of an obstacle. By a mutual agreement, the nocturnal prowlings
with Thorpe ceased for the three weeks before the examination, and his landlady
pointed out that she really could not supply so much lamp oil at the price. He
walked to and fro from the College with little slips of mnemonics in his hand,
lists of crayfish appendages, rabbits’ skull-bones, and vertebrate nerves, for
example, and became a positive nuisance to foot passengers in the opposite
direction.
But, by a natural reaction,
Poetry and the girl with the brown eyes ruled the Christmas holiday. The
pending results of the examination became such a secondary consideration that
Hill marvelled at his father’s excitement. Even had he wished it, there was no
comparative anatomy to read in Landport, and he was too poor to buy books, but
the stock of poets in the library was extensive, and Hill’s attack was
magnificently sustained. He saturated himself with the fluent numbers of
Longfellow and Tennyson, and fortified himself with Shakespeare; found a
kindred soul in Pope, and a master in Shelley, and heard and fled the siren
voices of Eliza Cook and Mrs. Hemans. But he read no more Browning, because he
hoped for the loan of other volumes from Miss Haysman when he returned to
London.
He walked from his lodgings
to the College with that volume of Browning in his shiny black bag, and his
mind teeming with the finest general propositions about poetry. Indeed, he
framed first this little speech and then that with which to grace the return.
The morning was an exceptionally pleasant one for London; there was a clear,
hard frost and undeniable blue in the sky, a thin haze softened every outline,
and warm shafts of sunlight struck between the house blocks and turned the
sunny side of the street to amber and gold. In the hall of the College he
pulled off his glove and signed his name with fingers so stiff with cold that
the characteristic dash under the signature he cultivated became a quivering
line. He imagined Miss Haysman about him everywhere. He turned at the
staircase, and there, below, he saw a crowd struggling at the foot of the
notice-board. This, possibly, was the biology list. He forgot Browning and Miss
Haysman for the moment, and joined the scrimmage. And at last, with his cheek
flattened against the sleeve of the man on the step above him, he read the
list—
CLASS I
H. J.
Somers Wedderburn
William
Hill
and thereafter followed a
second class that is outside our present sympathies. It was characteristic that
he did not trouble to look for Thorpe on the physics list, but backed out of
the struggle at once, and in a curious emotional state between pride over
common second-class humanity and acute disappointment at Wedderburn’s success,
went on his way upstairs. At the top, as he was hanging up his coat in the
passage, the zoological demonstrator, a young man from Oxford, who secretly
regarded him as a blatant “mugger” of the very worst type, offered his
heartiest congratulations.
At the laboratory door Hill
stopped for a second to get his breath, and then entered. He looked straight up
the laboratory and saw all five girl students grouped in their places, and
Wedderburn, the once retiring Wedderburn, leaning rather gracefully against the
window, playing with the blind tassel and talking, apparently, to the five of
them. Now, Hill could talk bravely enough and even overbearingly to one girl,
and he could have made a speech to a roomful of girls, but this business of
standing at ease and appreciating, fencing, and returning quick remarks round a
group was, he knew, altogether beyond him. Coming up the staircase his feelings
for Wedderburn had been generous, a certain admiration perhaps, a willingness
to shake his hand conspicuously and heartily as one who had fought but the
first round. But before Christmas Wedderburn had never gone up to that end of
the room to talk. In a flash Hill’s mist of vague excitement condensed abruptly
to a vivid dislike of Wedderburn. Possibly his expression changed. As he came
up to his place, Wedderburn nodded carelessly to him, and the others glanced
round. Miss Haysman looked at him and away again, the faintest touch of her eyes.
“I can’t agree with you, Mr. Wedderburn,” she said.
“I must congratulate you on
your first class, Mr. Hill,” said the spectacled girl in green, turning round
and beaming at him.
“It’s nothing,” said Hill,
staring at Wedderburn and Miss Haysman talking together, and eager to hear what
they talked about.
“We poor folks in the second
class don’t think so,” said the girl in spectacles.
What was it Wedderburn was
saying? Something about William Morris! Hill did not answer the girl in
spectacles, and the smile died out of his face. He could not hear, and failed
to see how he could “cut in.” Confound Wedderburn! He sat down, opened his bag,
hesitated whether to return the volume of Browning forthwith, in the sight of
all, and instead drew out his new notebooks for the short course in elementary
botany that was now beginning, and which would terminate in February. As he did
so, a fat, heavy man, with a white face and pale grey eyes, Bindon, the
professor of botany, who came up from Kew for January and February, came in by
the lecture theatre door, and passed, rubbing his hands together and smiling,
in silent affability down the laboratory.
000
In the subsequent six weeks
Hill experienced some very rapid and curiously complex emotional developments.
For the most part he had Wedderburn in focus—a fact that Miss Haysman never
suspected. She told Hill (for in the comparative privacy of the museum she
talked a good deal to him of socialism and Browning and general propositions)
that she had met Wedderburn at the house of some people she knew, and “he’s
inherited his cleverness; for his father, you know, is the great eye
specialist.”
“My father is a cobbler,” said Hill, quite
irrelevantly, and perceived the want of dignity even as he said it. But the
gleam of jealousy did not offend her. She conceived herself the fundamental
source of it. He suffered bitterly from a sense of Wedderburn’s unfairness, and
a realisation of his own handicap. Here was this Wedderburn had picked up a
prominent man for a father, and instead of his losing so many marks on the
score of that advantage, it was counted to him for righteousness! And while
Hill had to introduce himself and talk to Miss Haysman clumsily over mangled
guineapigs in the laboratory, this Wedderburn, in some backstairs way, had
access to her social altitudes, and could converse in a polished argot that
Hill understood perhaps, but felt incapable of speaking. Not, of course, that
he wanted to. Then it seemed to Hill that for Wedderburn to come there day
after day with cuffs unfrayed, neatly tailored, precisely barbered, quietly
perfect, was in itself an ill-bred, sneering sort of proceeding. Moreover, it
was a stealthy thing for Wedderburn to behave insignificantly for a space, to
mock modesty, to lead Hill to fancy that he himself was beyond dispute the man
of the year, and then suddenly to dart in front of him, and incontinently to
swell up in this fashion. In addition to these things, Wedderburn displayed an
increasing disposition to join in any conversational grouping that
included Miss Haysman, and would venture, and indeed seek occasion, to pass
opinions derogatory to socialism and atheism. He goaded Hill to incivilities by
neat, shallow, and exceedingly effective personalities about the socialist
leaders, until Hill hated Bernard Shaw’s graceful egotisms, William Morris’s
limited editions and luxurious wall-papers, and Walter Crane’s charmingly
absurd ideal working men, about as much as he hated Wedderburn. The
dissertations in the laboratory, that had been his glory in the previous term,
became a danger, degenerated into inglorious tussles with Wedderburn, and Hill
kept to them only out of an obscure perception that his honour was involved. In
the debating society Hill knew quite clearly that, to a thunderous
accompaniment of banged desks, he could have pulverised Wedderburn. Only Wedderburn
never attended the debating society to be pulverised, because—nauseous
affectation!—he “dined late.”
You must not imagine that
these things presented themselves in quite such a crude form to Hill’s
perception. Hill was a born generaliser. Wedderburn to him was not so much an
individual obstacle as a type, the salient angle of a class. The economic
theories that, after infinite ferment, had shaped themselves in Hill’s mind,
became abruptly concrete at the contact. The world became full of easy-mannered,
graceful, gracefully-dressed, conversationally dexterous, finally shallow
Wedderburns, Bishops Wedderburn, Wedderburn M.P.’s, Professors Wedderburn,
Wedderburn landlords, all with finger-bowl shibboleths and epigrammatic cities
of refuge from a sturdy debater. And everyone ill-clothed or ill-dressed, from
the cobbler to the cab-runner, was a man and a brother, a fellow-sufferer, to
Hill’s imagination. So that he became, as it were, a champion of the fallen and
oppressed, albeit to outward seeming only a self-assertive, ill-mannered young
man, and an unsuccessful champion at that. Again and again a skirmish over the
afternoon tea that the girl students had inaugurated, left Hill with flushed
cheeks and a tattered temper, and the debating society noticed a new quality of
sarcastic bitterness in his speeches.
You will understand now how
it was necessary, if only in the interests of humanity, that Hill should
demolish Wedderburn in the forthcoming examination and outshine him in the eyes
of Miss Haysman; and you will perceive, too, how Miss Haysman fell into some
common feminine misconceptions. The Hill-Wedderburn quarrel, for in his
unostentatious way Wedderburn reciprocated Hill’s ill-veiled rivalry, became a
tribute to her indefinable charm; she was the Queen of Beauty in a tournament
of scalpels and stumpy pencils. To her confidential friend’s secret annoyance,
it even troubled her conscience, for she was a good girl, and painfully aware,
from Ruskin and contemporary fiction, how entirely men’s activities are
determined by women’s attitudes. And if Hill never by any chance mentioned the
topic of love to her, she only credited him with the finer modesty for that
omission.
So the time came on for the
second examination, and Hill’s increasing pallor confirmed the general
rumour that he was working hard. In the aërated bread shop near South
Kensington Station you would see him, breaking his bun and sipping his milk,
with his eyes intent upon a paper of closely written notes. In his bedroom
there were propositions about buds and stems round his looking-glass, a diagram
to catch his eye, if soap should chance to spare it, above his washing basin.
He missed several meetings of the debating society, but he found the chance
encounters with Miss Haysman in the spacious ways of the adjacent art museum,
or in the little museum at the top of the College, or in the College corridors,
more frequent and very restful. In particular, they used to meet in a little
gallery full of wrought-iron chests and gates, near the art library, and there
Hill used to talk, under the gentle stimulus of her flattering attention, of
Browning and his personal ambitions. A characteristic she found remarkable in
him was his freedom from avarice. He contemplated quite calmly the prospect of living
all his life on an income below a hundred pounds a year. But he was determined
to be famous, to make, recognisably in his own proper person, the world a
better place to live in. He took Bradlaugh and John Burns for his leaders and
models, poor, even impecunious, great men. But Miss Haysman thought that such
lives were deficient on the æsthetic side, by which, though she did not know
it, she meant good wall-paper and upholstery, pretty books, tasteful clothes,
concerts, and meals nicely cooked and respectfully served.
At last came the day of the
second examination, and the professor of botany, a fussy, conscientious man,
rearranged all the tables in a long narrow laboratory to prevent copying, and
put his demonstrator on a chair on a table (where he felt, he said, like a
Hindoo god), to see all the cheating, and stuck a notice outside the door,
“Door closed,” for no earthly reason that any human being could discover. And
all the morning from ten till one the quill of Wedderburn shrieked defiance at Hill’s,
and the quills of the others chased their leaders in a tireless pack, and so
also it was in the afternoon. Wedderburn was a little quieter than usual, and
Hill’s face was hot all day, and his overcoat bulged with textbooks and
notebooks against the last moment’s revision. And the next day, in the morning
and in the afternoon, was the practical examination, when sections had to be
cut and slides identified. In the morning Hill was depressed because he knew he
had cut a thick section, and in the afternoon came the mysterious slip.
It was just the kind of
thing that the botanical professor was always doing. Like the income tax, it
offered a premium to the cheat. It was a preparation under the microscope, a
little glass slip, held in its place on the stage of the instrument by light
steel clips, and the inscription set forth that the slip was not to be moved.
Each student was to go in turn to it, sketch it, write in his book of answers
what he considered it to be, and return to his place. Now, to move such a slip
is a thing one can do by a chance movement of the finger, and in a fraction of
a second. The professor’s reason for decreeing that the slip should not be
moved depended on the fact that the object he wanted identified was
characteristic of a certain tree stem. In the position in which it was placed
it was a difficult thing to recognise, but once the slip was moved so as to
bring other parts of the preparation into view, its nature was obvious enough.
Hill came to this, flushed
from a contest with staining re-agents, sat down on the little stool before the
microscope, turned the mirror to get the best light, and then, out of sheer
habit, shifted the slip. At once he remembered the prohibition, and, with an
almost continuous motion of his hands, moved it back, and sat paralysed with
astonishment at his action.
Then, slowly, he turned his
head. The professor was out of the room; the demonstrator sat aloft on his
impromptu rostrum, reading the Q.
Jour. Mi. Sci.; the rest of the examinees were busy, and with
their backs to him. Should he own up to the accident now? He knew quite clearly
what the thing was. It was a lenticel, a characteristic preparation from the
elder-tree. His eyes roved over his intent fellow-students, and Wedderburn
suddenly glanced over his shoulder at him with a queer expression in his eyes.
The mental excitement that had kept Hill at an abnormal pitch of vigour these
two days gave way to a curious nervous tension. His book of answers was beside
him. He did not write down what the thing was, but with one eye at the
microscope he began making a hasty sketch of it. His mind was full of this
grotesque puzzle in ethics that had suddenly been sprung upon him. Should he
identify it? or should he leave this question unanswered? In that case
Wedderburn would probably come out first in the second result. How could he
tell now whether he might not have identified the thing without shifting it? It
was possible that Wedderburn had failed to recognise it, of course. Suppose
Wedderburn too had shifted the slide? He looked up at the clock. There were
fifteen minutes in which to make up his mind. He gathered up his book of
answers and the coloured pencils he used in illustrating his replies, and
walked back to his seat.
He read through his manuscript,
and then sat thinking and gnawing his knuckle. It would look queer now if he
owned up. He must beat
Wedderburn. He forgot the examples of those starry gentlemen, John Burns and
Bradlaugh. Besides, he reflected, the glimpse of the rest of the slip he had
had was, after all, quite accidental, forced upon him by chance, a kind of
providential revelation rather than an unfair advantage. It was not nearly so
dishonest to avail himself of that as it was of Broome, who believed in the
efficacy of prayer, to pray daily for a first-class. “Five minutes more,” said
the demonstrator, folding up his paper and becoming observant. Hill watched the
clock hands until two minutes remained; then he opened the book of answers,
and, with hot ears and an affectation of ease, gave his drawing of the lenticel
its name.
When the second pass list
appeared, the previous positions of Wedderburn and Hill were reversed, and the
spectacled girl in green, who knew the demonstrator in private life (where he
was practically human), said that in the result of the two examinations taken
together Hill had the advantage of a mark—167 to 166 out of a possible 200.
Everyone admired Hill in a way, though the suspicion of “mugging” clung to him.
But Hill was to find congratulations and Miss Haysman’s enhanced opinion of
him, and even the decided decline in the crest of Wedderburn, tainted by an
unhappy memory. He felt a remarkable access of energy at first, and the note of
a democracy marching to triumph returned to his debating society speeches; he
worked at his comparative anatomy with tremendous zeal and effect, and he went
on with his æsthetic education. But through it all, a vivid little picture was
continually coming before his mind’s eye—of a sneakish person manipulating a
slide.
No human being had witnessed
the act, and he was cocksure that no higher power existed to see it; but for
all that it worried him. Memories are not dead things, but alive; they dwindle
in disuse, but they harden and develop in all sorts of queer ways if they are
being continually fretted. Curiously enough, though at the time he perceived
clearly that the shifting was accidental, as the days wore on, his memory
became confused about it, until at last he was not sure—although he assured
himself that he was sure—whether
the movement had been absolutely involuntary. Then it is possible that Hill’s
dietary was conducive to morbid conscientiousness; a breakfast frequently
eaten in a hurry, a midday bun, and, at such hours after five as chanced to be
convenient, such meat as his means determined, usually in a chophouse in a back
street off the Brompton Road. Occasionally he treated himself to threepenny or
ninepenny classics, and they usually represented a suppression of potatoes or
chops. It is indisputable that outbreaks of self-abasement and emotional
revival have a distinct relation to periods of scarcity. But apart from this
influence on the feelings, there was in Hill a distinct aversion to falsity
that the blasphemous Landport cobbler had inculcated by strap and tongue from
his earliest years. Of one fact about professed atheists I am convinced; they
may be—they usually are—fools, void of subtlety, revilers of holy institutions,
brutal speakers, and mischievous knaves, but they lie with difficulty. If it were
not so, if they had the faintest grasp of the idea of compromise, they would
simply be liberal churchmen. And, moreover, this memory poisoned his regard for
Miss Haysman. For she now so evidently preferred him to Wedderburn that he felt
sure he cared for her, and began reciprocating her attentions by timid marks of
personal regard; at one time he even bought a bunch of violets, carried it
about in his pocket, and produced it, with a stumbling explanation, withered
and dead, in the gallery of old iron. It poisoned, too, the denunciation of
capitalist dishonesty that had been one of his life’s pleasures. And, lastly,
it poisoned his triumph in Wedderburn. Previously he had been Wedderburn’s
superior in his own eyes, and had raged simply at a want of recognition.
Now he began to fret at the darker suspicion of positive inferiority. He
fancied he found justifications for his position in Browning, but they vanished
on analysis. At last—moved, curiously enough, by exactly the same motive forces
that had resulted in his dishonesty—he went to Professor Bindon, and made a
clean breast of the whole affair. As Hill was a paid student, Professor Bindon
did not ask him to sit down, and he stood before the professor’s desk as he
made his confession.
“It’s a curious story,” said
Professor Bindon, slowly realising how the thing reflected on himself, and then
letting his anger rise,—“A most remarkable story. I can’t understand your doing
it, and I can’t understand this avowal. You’re a type of student—Cambridge men
would never dream—I suppose I ought to have thought—Why did you cheat?”
“I didn’t—cheat,” said Hill.
“But you have just been
telling me you did.”
“I thought I explained”—
“Either you cheated or you
did not cheat.”
“I said my motion was
involuntary.”
“I am not a metaphysician, I
am a servant of science—of fact. You were told not to move the slip. You did
move the slip. If that is not cheating”—
“If I was a cheat,” said
Hill, with the note of hysterics in his voice, “should I come here and tell
you?”
“Your repentance, of course,
does you credit,” said Professor Bindon, “but it does not alter the
original facts.”
“No, sir,” said Hill, giving
in in utter self-abasement.
“Even now you cause an
enormous amount of trouble. The examination list will have to be revised.”
“I suppose so, sir.”
“Suppose so? Of course it
must be revised. And I don’t see how I can conscientiously pass you.”
“Not pass me?” said Hill.
“Fail me?”
“It’s the rule in all
examinations. Or where should we be? What else did you expect? You don’t want
to shirk the consequences of your own acts?”
“I thought, perhaps”—said
Hill. And then, “Fail me? I thought, as I told you, you would simply deduct the
marks given for that slip.”
“Impossible!” said Bindon.
“Besides, it would still leave you above Wedderburn. Deduct only the
marks—Preposterous! The Departmental Regulations distinctly say”—
“But it’s my own admission,
sir.”
“The Regulations say nothing
whatever of the manner in which the matter comes to light. They simply
provide”—
“It will ruin me. If I fail
this examination, they won’t renew my scholarship.”
“You should have thought of
that before.”
“But, sir, consider all my
circumstances”—
“I cannot consider anything.
Professors in this College are machines. The Regulations will not even let us
recommend our students for appointments. I am a machine, and you have
worked me. I have to do”—
“It’s very hard, sir.”
“Possibly it is.”
“If I am to be failed this
examination, I might as well go home at once.”
“That is as you think
proper.” Bindon’s voice softened a little; he perceived he had been unjust,
and, provided he did not contradict himself, he was disposed to amelioration,
“As a private person,” he said, “I think this confession of yours goes far to
mitigate your offence. But you have set the machinery in motion, and now it
must take its course. I—I am really sorry you gave way.”
A wave of emotion prevented
Hill from answering. Suddenly, very vividly, he saw the heavily-lined face of
the old Landport cobbler, his father. “Good God! What a fool I have been!” he
said hotly and abruptly.
“I hope,” said Bindon, “that
it will be a lesson to you.”
But, curiously enough, they
were not thinking of quite the same indiscretion.
There was a pause.
“I would like a day to
think, sir, and then I will let you know—about going home, I mean,” said Hill,
moving towards the door.
000
The next day Hill’s place
was vacant. The spectacled girl in green was, as usual, first with the news.
Wedderburn and Miss Haysman were talking of a performance of The Meistersingers when she came up to them.
“Have you heard?” she said.
“Heard what?”
“There was cheating in the
examination.”
“Cheating!” said Wedderburn,
with his face suddenly hot. “How?”
“That slide”—
“Moved? Never!”
“It was. That slide that we
weren’t to move”—
“Nonsense!” said Wedderburn.
“Why! How could they find out? Who do they say—?”
“It was Mr. Hill.”
“Hill!”
“Mr. Hill!”
“Not—surely not the
immaculate Hill?” said Wedderburn, recovering.
“I don’t believe it,” said
Miss Haysman. “How do you know?”
“I didn’t,” said the girl in
spectacles. “But I know it now for a fact. Mr. Hill went and confessed to
Professor Bindon himself.”
“By Jove!” said Wedderburn.
“Hill of all people. But I am always inclined to distrust these
philanthropists-on-principle”—
“Are you quite sure?” said
Miss Haysman, with a catch in her breath.
“Quite. It’s dreadful, isn’t
it? But, you know, what can you expect? His father is a cobbler.”
Then Miss Haysman astonished
the girl in spectacles.
“I don’t care. I will not
believe it,” she said, flushing darkly under her warm-tinted skin. “I will not
believe it until he has told me so himself—face to face. I would scarcely
believe it then,” and abruptly she turned her back on the girl in spectacles,
and walked to her own place.
“It’s true, all the same,” said
the girl in spectacles, peering and smiling at Wedderburn.
But Wedderburn did not
answer her. She was indeed one of those people who seem destined to make
unanswered remarks.
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