Stories
by American Authors V
1884
1.A Light Man by Henry James
2.YATIL by F.D. Millet
3.The End of New York by
Park Benjamin
4.Why Thomas Was Discharged by George Arnold.
5.The Tachypomp by E.P. Mitchell
1.A LIGHT MAN
BY Henry James [1]
"And I—what I seem to my friend, you see—
What I soon shall seem to his love, you guess.
What I seem to myself, do you ask of me?
No hero, I confess."
A Light Woman.—Browning's Men and Women.
April 4, 1857.—I have
changed my sky without changing my mind. I resume these old notes in a new
world. I hardly know of what use they are; but it's easier to stick to the
habit than to drop it. I have been at home now a week—at home, forsooth! And
yet, after all, it is home. I am dejected, I am bored, I am blue. How can a man
be more at home than that? Nevertheless, I am the citizen of a great country,
and for that matter, of a great city. I walked to-day some ten miles or so
along Broadway, and on the whole I don't blush for my native land. We are a
capable race and a good-looking withal; and I don't see why we shouldn't
prosper as well as another. This, by the way, ought to be a very encouraging
reflection. A capable fellow and a good-looking withal; I don't see why he
shouldn't die a millionaire. At all events he must do something. When a man
has, at thirty-two, a net income of considerably less than nothing, he can
scarcely hope to overtake a fortune before he himself is overtaken by age and
philosophy—two deplorable obstructions. I am afraid that one of them has already
planted itself in my path. What am I? What do I wish? Whither do I tend? What
do I believe? I am constantly beset by these impertinent whisperings. Formerly
it was enough that I was Maximus Austin; that I was endowed with a cheerful
mind and a good digestion; that one day or another, when I had come to the end,
I should return to America and begin at the beginning; that, meanwhile,
existence was sweet in—in the Rue Tronchet. But now! Has the sweetness really
passed out of life? Have I eaten the plums and left nothing but the bread and
milk and corn-starch, or whatever the horrible concoction is?—I had it to-day
for dinner. Pleasure, at least, I imagine—pleasure pure and simple, pleasure
crude, brutal and vulgar—this poor flimsy delusion has lost all its charm. I
shall never again care for certain things—and indeed for certain persons. Of
such things, of such persons, I firmly maintain, however, that I was never an
enthusiastic votary. It would be more to my credit, I suppose, if I had been.
More would be forgiven me if I had loved a little more, if into all my folly
and egotism I had put a little more naïveté and sincerity.
Well, I did the best I could, I was at once too bad and too good for it all. At
present, it's far enough off; I have put the sea between us; I am stranded. I
sit high and dry, scanning the horizon for a friendly sail, or waiting for a
high tide to set me afloat. The wave of pleasure has deposited me here in the
sand. Shall I owe my rescue to the wave of pain? At moments I feel a kind of
longing to expiate my stupid little sins. I see, as through a glass, darkly,
the beauty of labor and love. Decidedly, I am willing to work. It's written.
7th.—My sail is in
sight; it's at hand; I have all but boarded the vessel. I received this morning
a letter from the best man in the world. Here it is:
DEAR MAX: I see this
very moment, in an old newspaper which had already passed through my hands
without yielding up its most precious item, the announcement of your arrival in
New York. To think of your having perhaps missed the welcome you had a right to
expect from me! Here it is, dear Max—as cordial as you please. When I say I
have just read of your arrival, I mean that twenty minutes have elapsed by the
clock. These have been spent in conversation with my excellent friend Mr.
Sloane—we having taken the liberty of making you the topic. I haven't time to
say more about Frederick Sloane than that he is very anxious to make your
acquaintance, and that, if your time is not otherwise engaged, he would like you
very much to spend a month with him. He is an excellent host, or I shouldn't be
here myself. It appears that he knew your mother very intimately, and he has a
taste for visiting the amenities of the parents upon the children; the original
ground of my own connection with him was that he had been a particular friend
of my father. You may have heard your mother speak of him. He is a very strange
old fellow, but you will like him. Whether or no you come for his sake, come
for mine.
Yours always, THEODORE
LISLE.
Theodore's letter is of
course very kind, but it's remarkably obscure. My mother may have had the
highest regard for Mr. Sloane, but she never mentioned his name in my hearing.
Who is he, what is he, and what is the nature of his relations with Theodore? I
shall learn betimes. I have written to Theodore that I gladly accept (I believe
I suppressed the "gladly" though) his friend's invitation, and that I
shall immediately present myself. What can I do that is better? Speaking
sordidly, I shall obtain food and lodging while I look about me. I shall have a
base of operations. D., it appears, is a long day's journey, but enchanting
when you reach it. I am curious to see an enchanting American town. And to stay
a month! Mr. Frederick Sloane, whoever you are, vous faites bien les
choses, and the little that I know of you is very much to your credit. You
enjoyed the friendship of my dear mother, you possess the esteem of the
virtuous Theodore, you commend yourself to my own affection. At this rate, I
shall not grudge it.
D—, 14th.—I have been
here since Thursday evening—three days. As we rattled up to the tavern in the
village, I perceived from the top of the coach, in the twilight, Theodore
beneath the porch, scanning the vehicle, with all his amiable disposition in
his eyes. He has grown older, of course, in these five years, but less so than
I had expected. His is one of those smooth, unwrinkled souls that keep their
bodies fair and fresh. As tall as ever, moreover, and as lean and clean. How
short and fat and dark and debauched he makes one feel! By nothing he says or
means, of course, but merely by his old unconscious purity and simplicity—that
slender straightness which makes him remind you of the spire of an English
abbey. He greeted me with smiles, and stares, and alarming blushes. He assures
me that he never would have known me, and that five years have altered me—sehr!
I asked him if it were for the better? He looked at me hard for a moment, with
his eyes of blue, and then, for an answer, he blushed again.
On my arrival we agreed
to walk over from the village. He dismissed his wagon with my luggage, and we
went arm-in-arm through the dusk. The town is seated at the foot of certain
mountains, whose names I have yet to learn, and at the head of a big sheet of
water, which, as yet, too, I know only as "the Lake." The road
hitherward soon leaves the village and wanders in rural loveliness by the
margin of this expanse. Sometimes the water is hidden by clumps of trees,
behind which we heard it lapping and gurgling in the darkness: sometimes it
stretches out from your feet in shining vagueness, as if it were tired of
making, all day, a million little eyes at the great stupid hills. The walk from
the tavern takes some half an hour, and in this interval Theodore made his
position a little more clear. Mr. Sloane is a rich old widower; his age is
seventy-two, and as his health is thoroughly broken, is practically even
greater; and his fortune—Theodore, characteristically, doesn't know anything
definite about that. It's probably about a million. He has lived much in
Europe, and in the "great world;" he has had adventures and passions
and all that sort of thing; and now, in the evening of his days, like an old
French diplomatist, he takes it into his head to write his memoirs. To this end
he has lured poor Theodore to his gruesome side, to mend his pens for him. He
has been a great scribbler, says Theodore, all his days, and he proposes to
incorporate a large amount of promiscuous literary matter into these souvenirs
intimes. Theodore's principal function seems to be to get him to leave
things out. In fact, the poor youth seems troubled in conscience. His patron's
lucubrations have taken the turn of many other memoirs, and have ceased to
address themselves virginibus puerisque. On the whole, he declares
they are a very odd mixture—a medley of gold and tinsel, of bad taste and good
sense. I can readily understand it. The old man bores me, puzzles me, and
amuses me.
He was in waiting to
receive me. We found him in his library—which, by the way, is simply the most
delightful apartment that I ever smoked a cigar in—a room arranged for a
lifetime. At one end stands a great fireplace, with a florid, fantastic
mantelpiece in carved white marble—an importation, of course, and, as one may
say, an interpolation; the groundwork of the house, the "fixtures,"
being throughout plain, solid and domestic. Over the mantel-shelf is a large
landscape, a fine Gainsborough, full of the complicated harmonies of an English
summer. Beneath it stands a row of bronzes of the Renaissance and potteries of
the Orient. Facing the door, as you enter, is an immense window set in a
recess, with cushioned seats and large clear panes, stationed as it were at the
very apex of the lake (which forms an almost perfect oval) and commanding a
view of its whole extent. At the other end, opposite the fireplace, the wall is
studded, from floor to ceiling, with choice foreign paintings, placed in relief
against the orthodox crimson screen. Elsewhere the walls are covered with
books, arranged neither in formal regularity nor quite helter-skelter, but in a
sort of genial incongruity, which tells that sooner or later each volume feels
sure of leaving the ranks and returning into different company. Mr. Sloane
makes use of his books. His two passions, according to Theodore, are reading
and talking; but to talk he must have a book in his hand. The charm of the room
lies in the absence of certain pedantic tones—the browns, blacks and
grays—which distinguish most libraries. The apartment is of the feminine
gender. There are half a dozen light colors scattered about—pink in the carpet,
tender blue in the curtains, yellow in the chairs. The result is a general look
of brightness and lightness; it expresses even a certain cynicism. You perceive
the place to be the home, not of a man of learning, but of a man of fancy.
He rose from his
chair—the man of fancy, to greet me—the man of fact. As I looked at him, in the
lamplight, it seemed to me, for the first five minutes, that I had seldom seen
an uglier little person. It took me five minutes to get the point of view; then
I began to admire. He is diminutive, or at best of my own moderate stature, and
bent and contracted with his seventy years; lean and delicate, moreover, and
very highly finished. He is curiously pale, with a kind of opaque yellow
pallor. Literally, it's a magnificent yellow. His skin is of just the hue and
apparent texture of some old crumpled Oriental scroll. I know a dozen painters
who would give more than they have to arrive at the exact "tone" of
his thick-veined, bloodless hands, his polished ivory knuckles. His eyes are
circled with red, but in the battered little setting of their orbits they have
the lustre of old sapphires. His nose, owing to the falling away of other portions
of his face, has assumed a grotesque, unnatural prominence; it describes an
immense arch, gleaming like a piece of parchment stretched on ivory. He has,
apparently, all his teeth, but has muffled his cranium in a dead black wig; of
course he's clean shaven. In his dress he has a muffled, wadded look and an
apparent aversion to linen, inasmuch as none is visible on his person. He seems
neat enough, but not fastidious. At first, as I say, I fancied him monstrously
ugly; but on further acquaintance I perceived that what I had taken for
ugliness is nothing but the incomplete remains of remarkable good looks. The
line of his features is pure; his nose, caeteris paribus, would be
extremely handsome; his eyes are the oldest eyes I ever saw, and yet they are
wonderfully living. He has something remarkably insinuating.
He offered his two
hands, as Theodore introduced me; I gave him my own, and he stood smiling at me
like some quaint old image in ivory and ebony, scanning my face with a
curiosity which he took no pains to conceal. "God bless me," he said,
at last, "how much you look like your father!" I sat down, and for
half an hour we talked of many things—of my journey, of my impressions of
America, of my reminiscences of Europe, and, by implication, of my prospects.
His voice is weak and cracked, but he makes it express everything. Mr. Sloane
is not yet in his dotage—oh no! He nevertheless makes himself out a poor
creature. In reply to an inquiry of mine about his health, he favored me with a
long list of his infirmities (some of which are very trying, certainly) and
assured me that he was quite finished.
"I live out of mere
curiosity," he said.
"I have heard of
people dying from the same motive."
He looked at me a
moment, as if to ascertain whether I were laughing at him. And then, after a
pause, "Perhaps you don't know that I disbelieve in a future life,"
he remarked, blandly.
At these words Theodore
got up and walked to the fire.
"Well, we shan't
quarrel about that," said I. Theodore turned round, staring.
"Do you mean that
you agree with me?" the old man asked.
"I certainly
haven't come here to talk theology! Don't ask me to disbelieve, and I'll never
ask you to believe."
"Come," cried
Mr. Sloane, rubbing his hands, "you'll not persuade me you are a Christian—like
your friend Theodore there."
"Like
Theodore—assuredly not." And then, somehow, I don't know why, at the
thought of Theodore's Christianity I burst into a laugh. "Excuse me, my
dear fellow," I said, "you know, for the last ten years I have lived
in pagan lands."
"What do you call
pagan?" asked Theodore, smiling.
I saw the old man, with
his hands locked, eying me shrewdly, and waiting for my answer. I hesitated a
moment, and then I said, "Everything that makes life tolerable!"
Hereupon Mr. Sloane began
to laugh till he coughed. Verily, I thought, if he lives for curiosity, he's
easily satisfied.
We went into dinner, and
this repast showed me that some of his curiosity is culinary. I observed, by
the way, that for a victim of neuralgia, dyspepsia, and a thousand other ills,
Mr. Sloane plies a most inconsequential knife and fork. Sauces and spices and
condiments seem to be the chief of his diet. After dinner he dismissed us, in
consideration of my natural desire to see my friend in private. Theodore has capital
quarters—a downy bedroom and a snug little salon. We talked till
near midnight—of ourselves, of each other, and of the author of the memoirs,
down stairs. That is, I spoke of myself, and Theodore listened; and then
Theodore descanted upon Mr. Sloane, and I listened. His commerce with the old
man has sharpened his wits. Sloane has taught him to observe and judge, and
Theodore turns round, observes, judges—him! He has become quite the critic and
analyst. There is something very pleasant in the discriminations of a
conscientious mind, in which criticism is tempered by an angelic charity. Only,
it may easily end by acting on one's nerves. At midnight we repaired to the
library, to take leave of our host till the morrow—an attention which, under
all circumstances, he rigidly exacts. As I gave him my hand he held it again
and looked at me as he had done on my arrival. "Bless my soul," he
said, at last, "how much you look like your mother!"
To-night, at the end of
my third day, I begin to feel decidedly at home. The fact is, I am remarkably
comfortable. The house is pervaded by an indefinable, irresistible love of
luxury and privacy. Mr. Frederick Sloane is a horribly corrupt old mortal.
Already in his relaxing presence I have become heartily reconciled to doing
nothing. But with Theodore on one side—standing there like a tall
interrogation-point—I honestly believe I can defy Mr. Sloane on the other. The
former asked me this morning, with visible solicitude, in allusion to the bit
of dialogue I have quoted above on matters of faith, whether I am really a
materialist—whether I don't believe something? I told him I would believe
anything he liked. He looked at me a while, in friendly sadness. "I hardly
know whether you are not worse than Mr. Sloane," he said.
But Theodore is, after
all, in duty bound to give a man a long rope in these matters. His own rope is
one of the longest. He reads Voltaire with Mr. Sloane, and Emerson in his own
room. He is the stronger man of the two; he has the larger stomach. Mr. Sloane
delights, of course, in Voltaire, but he can't read a line of Emerson. Theodore
delights in Emerson, and enjoys Voltaire, though he thinks him superficial. It
appears that since we parted in Paris, five years ago, his conscience has dwelt
in many lands. C'est tout une histoire—which he tells very
prettily. He left college determined to enter the church, and came abroad with
his mind full of theology and Tübingen. He appears to have studied, not wisely
but too well. Instead of faith full-armed and serene, there sprang from the
labor of his brain a myriad sickly questions, piping for answers. He went for a
winter to Italy, where, I take it, he was not quite so much afflicted as he
ought to have been at the sight of the beautiful spiritual repose that he had missed.
It was after this that we spent those three months together in Brittany—the
best-spent months of my long residence in Europe. Theodore inoculated me, I
think, with some of his seriousness, and I just touched him with my profanity;
and we agreed together that there were a few good things left—health,
friendship, a summer sky, and the lovely byways of an old French province. He
came home, searched the Scriptures once more, accepted a "call," and
made an attempt to respond to it. But the inner voice failed him. His outlook
was cheerless enough. During his absence his married sister, the elder one, had
taken the other to live with her, relieving Theodore of the charge of
contribution to her support. But suddenly, behold the husband, the
brother-in-law, dies, leaving a mere figment of property; and the two ladies,
with their two little girls, are afloat in the wide world. Theodore finds
himself at twenty-six without an income, without a profession, and with a
family of four females to support. Well, in his quiet way he draws on his
courage. The history of the two years that passed before he came to Mr. Sloane
is really absolutely edifying. He rescued his sisters and nieces from the deep
waters, placed them high and dry, established them somewhere in decent gentility—and
then found at last that his strength had left him—had dropped dead like an
over-ridden horse. In short, he had worked himself to the bone. It was now his
sisters' turn. They nursed him with all the added tenderness of gratitude for
the past and terror of the future, and brought him safely through a grievous
malady. Meanwhile Mr. Sloane, having decided to treat himself to a private
secretary and suffered dreadful mischance in three successive experiments, had
heard of Theodore's situation and his merits; had furthermore recognized in him
the son of an early and intimate friend, and had finally offered him the very
comfortable position he now occupies. There is a decided incongruity between
Theodore as a man—as Theodore, in fine—and the dear fellow as the intellectual
agent, confidant, complaisant, purveyor, pander—what you will—of a battered old
cynic and dilettante—a worldling if there ever was one. There seems at first
sight a perfect want of agreement between his character and his function. One is
gold and the other brass, or something very like it. But on reflection I can
enter into it—his having, under the circumstances, accepted Mr. Sloane's offer
and been content to do his duties. Ce que c'est de nous! Theodore's
contentment in such a case is a theme for the moralist—a better moralist than
I. The best and purest mortals are an odd mixture, and in none of us does
honesty exist on its own terms. Ideally, Theodore hasn't the smallest
business dans cette galère. It offends my sense of propriety to find
him here. I feel that I ought to notify him as a friend that he has knocked at
the wrong door, and that he had better retreat before he is brought to the
blush. However, I suppose he might as well be here as reading Emerson
"evenings" in the back parlor, to those two very plain
sisters—judging from their photographs. Practically it hurts no one not to be
too much of a prig. Poor Theodore was weak, depressed, out of work. Mr. Sloane
offers him a lodging and a salary in return for—after all, merely a little
tact. All he has to do is to read to the old man, lay down the book a while,
with his finger in the place, and let him talk; take it up again, read another
dozen pages and submit to another commentary. Then to write a dozen pages under
his dictation—to suggest a word, polish off a period, or help him out with a
complicated idea or a half-remembered fact. This is all, I say; and yet this is
much. Theodore's apparent success proves it to be much, as well as the old
man's satisfaction. It is a part; he has to simulate. He has to "make
believe" a little—a good deal; he has to put his pride in his pocket and
send his conscience to the wash. He has to be accommodating—to listen and
pretend and flatter; and he does it as well as many a worse man—does it far better
than I. I might bully the old man, but I don't think I could humor him. After
all, however, it is not a matter of comparative merit. In every son of woman
there are two men—the practical man and the dreamer. We live for our
dreams—but, meanwhile, we live by our wits. When the dreamer is a poet, the
other fellow is an artist. Theodore, at bottom, is only a man of taste. If he
were not destined to become a high priest among moralists, he might be a prince
among connoisseurs. He plays his part, therefore, artistically, with spirit,
with originality, with all his native refinement. How can Mr. Sloane fail to
believe that he possesses a paragon? He is no such fool as not to appreciate
a nature distinguée when it comes in his way. He
confidentially assured me this morning that Theodore has the most charming mind
in the world, but that it's a pity he's so simple as not to suspect it. If he
only doesn't ruin him with his flattery!
19th.—I am certainly
fortunate among men. This morning when, tentatively, I spoke of going away, Mr.
Sloane rose from his seat in horror and declared that for the present I must
regard his house as my home. "Come, come," he said, "when you
leave this place where do you intend to go?" Where, indeed? I graciously
allowed Mr. Sloane to have the best of the argument. Theodore assures me that
he appreciates these and other affabilities, and that I have made what he calls
a "conquest" of his venerable heart. Poor, battered, bamboozled old
organ! he would have one believe that it has a most tragical record of capture
and recapture. At all events, it appears that I am master of the citadel. For
the present I have no wish to evacuate. I feel, nevertheless, in some far-off
corner of my soul, that I ought to shoulder my victorious banner and advance to
more fruitful triumphs.
I blush for my beastly
laziness. It isn't that I am willing to stay here a month, but that I am
willing to stay here six. Such is the charming, disgusting truth. Have I really
outlived the age of energy? Have I survived my ambition, my integrity, my
self-respect? Verily, I ought to have survived the habit of asking myself silly
questions. I made up my mind long ago to go in for nothing but present success;
and I don't care for that sufficiently to secure it at the cost of temporary
suffering. I have a passion for nothing—not even for life. I know very well the
appearance I make in the world. I pass for a clever, accomplished, capable,
good-natured fellow, who can do anything if he would only try. I am supposed to
be rather cultivated, to have latent talents. When I was younger I used to find
a certain entertainment in the spectacle of human affairs. I liked to see men
and women hurrying on each other's heels across the stage. But I am sick and
tired of them now; not that I am a misanthrope, God forbid! They are not worth
hating. I never knew but one creature who was, and her I went and loved. To be
consistent, I ought to have hated my mother, and now I ought to detest
Theodore. But I don't—truly, on the whole, I don't—any more than I dote on him.
I firmly believe that it makes a difference to him, his idea that I am fond
of him. He believes in that, as he believes in all the rest of it—in my
culture, my latent talents, my underlying "earnestness," my sense of
beauty and love of truth. Oh, for a man among them all—a
fellow with eyes in his head—eyes that would know me for what I am and let me
see they had guessed it. Possibly such a fellow as that might get a
"rise" out of me.
In the name of bread and
butter, what am I to do? (I was obliged this morning to borrow fifty dollars
from Theodore, who remembered gleefully that he has been owing me a trifling
sum for the past four years, and in fact has preserved a note to this effect.)
Within the last week I have hatched a desperate plan: I have made up my mind to
take a wife—a rich one, bien entendu. Why not accept the goods of
the gods? It is not my fault, after all, if I pass for a good fellow. Why not
admit that practically, mechanically—as I may say—maritally, I may be
a good fellow? I warrant myself kind. I should never beat my wife; I don't
think I should even contradict her. Assume that her fortune has the proper
number of zeros and that she herself is one of them, and I can even imagine her
adoring me. I really think this is my only way. Curiously, as I look back upon
my brief career, it all seems to tend to this consummation. It has its graceful
curves and crooks, indeed, and here and there a passionate tangent; but on the
whole, if I were to unfold it here à la Hogarth, what better
legend could I scrawl beneath the series of pictures than So-and-So's Progress
to a Mercenary Marriage?
Coming events do what we
all know with their shadows. My noble fate is, perhaps, not far off. I already
feel throughout my person a magnificent languor—as from the possession of many
dollars. Or is it simply my sense of well-being in this perfectly appointed
house? Is it simply the contact of the highest civilization I have known? At
all events, the place is of velvet, and my only complaint of Mr. Sloane is that,
instead of an old widower, he's not an old widow (or a young maid), so that I
might marry him, survive him, and dwell forever in this rich and mellow home.
As I write here, at my bedroom table, I have only to stretch out an arm and
raise the window-curtain to see the thick-planted garden budding and breathing
and growing in the silvery silence. Far above in the liquid darkness rolls the
brilliant ball of the moon; beneath, in its light, lies the lake, in murmuring,
troubled sleep; round about, the mountains, looking strange and blanched, seem
to bare their heads and undrape their shoulders. So much for midnight.
To-morrow the scene will be lovely with the beauty of day. Under one aspect or
another I have it always before me. At the end of the garden is moored a boat,
in which Theodore and I have indulged in an immense deal of irregular
navigation. What lovely landward coves and bays—what alder-smothered
creeks—what lily-sheeted pools—what sheer steep hillsides, making the water
dark and quiet where they hang. I confess that in these excursions Theodore
looks after the boat and I after the scenery. Mr. Sloane avoids the water—on
account of the dampness, he says; because he's afraid of drowning, I suspect.
22d.—Theodore is right.
The bonhomme has taken me into his favor. I protest I don't
see how he was to escape it. Je l'ai bien soigné, as they say in
Paris. I don't blush for it. In one coin or another I must repay his
hospitality—which is certainly very liberal. Theodore dots his i's,
crosses his t's, verifies his quotations; while I set traps for
that famous "curiosity." This speaks vastly well for my powers. He
pretends to be surprised at nothing, and to possess in perfection—poor,
pitiable old fop—the art of keeping his countenance; but repeatedly, I know, I
have made him stare. As for his corruption, which I spoke of above, it's a very
pretty piece of wickedness, but it strikes me as a purely intellectual matter.
I imagine him never to have had any real senses. He may have been unclean;
morally, he's not very tidy now; but he never can have been what the French
call a viveur. He's too delicate, he's of a feminine turn; and what
woman was ever a viveur? He likes to sit in his chair and read
scandal, talk scandal, make scandal, so far as he may without catching a cold
or bringing on a headache. I already feel as if I had known him a lifetime. I
read him as clearly as if I had. I know the type to which he belongs; I have
encountered, first and last, a good many specimens of it. He's neither more nor
less than a gossip—a gossip flanked by a coxcomb and an egotist. He's shallow,
vain, cold, superstitious, timid, pretentious, capricious: a pretty list of
foibles! And yet, for all this, he has his good points. His caprices are
sometimes generous, and his rebellion against the ugliness of life frequently
makes him do kind things. His memory (for trifles) is remarkable, and (where
his own performances are not involved) his taste is excellent. He has no
courage for evil more than for good. He is the victim, however, of more
illusions with regard to himself than I ever knew a single brain to shelter. At
the age of twenty, poor, ignorant and remarkably handsome, he married a woman
of immense wealth, many years his senior. At the end of three years she very
considerately took herself off and left him to the enjoyment of his freedom and
riches. If he had remained poor he might from time to time have rubbed at
random against the truth, and would be able to recognize the touch of it. But
he wraps himself in his money as in a wadded dressing-gown, and goes trundling
through life on his little gold wheels. The greater part of his career, from
the time of his marriage till about ten years ago, was spent in Europe, which,
superficially, he knows very well. He has lived in fifty places, known
thousands of people, and spent a very large fortune. At one time, I believe, he
spent considerably too much, trembled for an instant on the verge of a
pecuniary crash, but recovered himself, and found himself more frightened than
hurt, yet audibly recommended to lower his pitch. He passed five years in a
species of penitent seclusion on the lake of—I forget what (his genius seems to
be partial to lakes), and laid the basis of his present magnificent taste for
literature. I can't call him anything but magnificent in this respect, so long
as he must have his punctuation done by a nature distinguée. At the
close of this period, by economy, he had made up his losses. His turning the
screw during those relatively impecunious years represents, I am pretty sure,
the only act of resolution of his life. It was rendered possible by his morbid,
his actually pusillanimous dread of poverty; he doesn't feel safe without half
a million between him and starvation. Meanwhile he had turned from a young man
into an old man; his health was broken, his spirit was jaded, and I imagine, to
do him justice, that he began to feel certain natural, filial longings for this
dear American mother of us all. They say the most hopeless truants and triflers
have come to it. He came to it, at all events; he packed up his books and
pictures and gimcracks, and bade farewell to Europe. This house which he now
occupies belonged to his wife's estate. She had, for sentimental reasons of her
own, commended it to his particular care. On his return he came to see it,
liked it, turned a parcel of carpenters and upholsterers into it, and by
inhabiting it for nine years transformed it into the perfect dwelling which I
find it. Here he has spent all his time, with the exception of a usual winter's
visit to New York—a practice recently discontinued, owing to the increase of
his ailments and the projection of these famous memoirs. His life has finally
come to be passed in comparative solitude. He tells of various distant
relatives, as well as intimate friends of both sexes, who used formerly to be
entertained at his cost; but with each of them, in the course of time, he seems
to have succeeded in quarrelling. Throughout life, evidently, he has had
capital fingers for plucking off parasites. Rich, lonely, and vain, he must
have been fair game for the race of social sycophants and cormorants; and it's
much to the credit of his sharpness and that instinct of self-defence which
nature bestows even on the weak, that he has not been despoiled and exploité.
Apparently they have all been bunglers. I maintain that something is to be done
with him still. But one must work in obedience to certain definite laws. Doctor
Jones, his physician, tells me that in point of fact he has had for the past
ten years an unbroken series of favorites, protégés, heirs
presumptive; but that each, in turn, by some fatally false movement, has
spilled his pottage. The doctor declares, moreover, that they were mostly very
common people. Gradually the old man seems to have developed a preference for
two or three strictly exquisite intimates, over a throng of your vulgar
pensioners. His tardy literary schemes, too—fruit of his all but sapless
senility—have absorbed more and more of his time and attention. The end of it
all is, therefore, that Theodore and I have him quite to ourselves, and that it
behooves us to hold our porringers straight.
Poor, pretentious old
simpleton! It's not his fault, after all, that he fancies himself a great
little man. How are you to judge of the stature of mankind when men have
forever addressed you on their knees? Peace and joy to his innocent fatuity! He
believes himself the most rational of men; in fact, he's the most
superstitious. He fancies himself a philosopher, an inquirer, a discoverer. He
has not yet discovered that he is a humbug, that Theodore is a prig, and that I
am an adventurer. He prides himself on his good manners, his urbanity, his
knowing a rule of conduct for every occasion in life. My private impression is
that his skinny old bosom contains unsuspected treasures of impertinence. He
takes his stand on his speculative audacity—his direct, undaunted gaze at the
universe; in truth, his mind is haunted by a hundred dingy old-world spectres
and theological phantasms. He imagines himself one of the most solid of men; he
is essentially one of the hollowest. He thinks himself ardent, impulsive,
passionate, magnanimous—capable of boundless enthusiasm for an idea or a
sentiment. It is clear to me that on no occasion of disinterested action can he
ever have done anything in time. He believes, finally, that he has drained the
cup of life to the dregs; that he has known, in its bitterest intensity, every
emotion of which the human spirit is capable; that he has loved, struggled,
suffered. Mere vanity, all of it. He has never loved any one but himself; he
has never suffered from anything but an undigested supper or an exploded
pretension; he has never touched with the end of his lips the vulgar bowl from
which the mass of mankind quaffs its floods of joy and sorrow. Well, the long
and short of it all is, that I honestly pity him. He may have given sly knocks
in his life, but he can't hurt any one now. I pity his ignorance, his weakness,
his pusillanimity. He has tasted the real sweetness of life no more than its
bitterness; he has never dreamed, nor experimented, nor dared; he has never
known any but mercenary affection; neither men nor women have risked aught
for him—for his good spirits, his good looks, his empty pockets.
How I should like to give him, for once, a real sensation!
26th.—I took a row this
morning with Theodore a couple of miles along the lake, to a point where we
went ashore and lounged away an hour in the sunshine, which is still very
comfortable. Poor Theodore seems troubled about many things. For one, he is
troubled about me: he is actually more anxious about my future than I myself;
he thinks better of me than I do of myself; he is so deucedly conscientious, so
scrupulous, so averse to giving offence or to brusquer any
situation before it has played itself out, that he shrinks from betraying his
apprehensions or asking direct questions. But I know that he would like very
much to extract from me some intimation that there is something under the sun I
should like to do. I catch myself in the act of taking—heaven forgive me!—a
half-malignant joy in confounding his expectations—leading his generous
sympathies off the scent by giving him momentary glimpses of my latent
wickedness. But in Theodore I have so firm a friend that I shall have a considerable
job if I ever find it needful to make him change his mind about me. He admires
me—that's absolute; he takes my low moral tone for an eccentricity of genius,
and it only imparts an extra flavor—a haut goût—to the charm of my
intercourse. Nevertheless, I can see that he is disappointed. I have even less
to show, after all these years, than he had hoped. Heaven help us! little
enough it must strike him as being. What a contradiction there is in our being
friends at all! I believe we shall end with hating each other. It's all very
well now—our agreeing to differ, for we haven't opposed interests. But if we
should really clash, the situation would be warm! I wonder, as
it is, that Theodore keeps his patience with me. His education since we parted
should tend logically to make him despise me. He has studied, thought,
suffered, loved—loved those very plain sisters and nieces. Poor me! how should
I be virtuous? I have no sisters, plain or pretty!—nothing to love, work for,
live for. My dear Theodore, if you are going one of these days to despise me
and drop me—in the name of comfort, come to the point at once, and make an end
of our state of tension.
He is troubled, too,
about Mr. Sloane. His attitude toward the bonhomme quite
passes my comprehension. It's the queerest jumble of contraries. He penetrates
him, disapproves of him—yet respects and admires him. It all comes of the poor
boy's shrinking New England conscience. He's afraid to give his perceptions a
fair chance, lest, forsooth, they should look over his neighbor's wall. He'll
not understand that he may as well sacrifice the old reprobate for a lamb as
for a sheep. His view of the gentleman, therefore, is a perfect tissue of
cobwebs—a jumble of half-way sorrows, and wire-drawn charities, and
hair-breadth 'scapes from utter damnation, and sudden platitudes of
generosity—fit, all of it, to make an angel curse!
"The man's a
perfect egotist and fool," say I, "but I like him." Now Theodore
likes him—or rather wants to like him; but he can't reconcile it to his self-respect—fastidious
deity!—to like a fool. Why the deuce can't he leave it alone altogether? It's a
purely practical matter. He ought to do the duties of his place all the better
for having his head clear of officious sentiment. I don't believe in disinterested
service; and Theodore is too desperately bent on preserving his
disinterestedness. With me it's different. I am perfectly free to love
the bonhomme—for a fool. I'm neither a scribe nor a Pharisee; I am
simply a student of the art of life.
And then, Theodore is
troubled about his sisters. He's afraid he's not doing his duty by them. He
thinks he ought to be with them—to be getting a larger salary—to be teaching
his nieces. I am not versed in such questions. Perhaps he ought.
May 3d.—This morning
Theodore sent me word that he was ill and unable to get up; upon which I
immediately went in to see him. He had caught cold, was sick and a little
feverish. I urged him to make no attempt to leave his room, and assured him
that I would do what I could to reconcile Mr. Sloane to his absence. This I
found an easy matter. I read to him for a couple of hours, wrote four
letters—one in French—and then talked for a while—a good while. I have done
more talking, by the way, in the last fortnight, than in any previous twelve
months—much of it, too, none of the wisest, nor, I may add, of the most
superstitiously veracious. In a little discussion, two or three days ago, with
Theodore, I came to the point and let him know that in gossiping with Mr.
Sloane I made no scruple, for our common satisfaction, of "coloring"
more or less. My confession gave him "that turn," as Mrs. Gamp would
say, that his present illness may be the result of it. Nevertheless, poor dear
fellow, I trust he will be on his legs to-morrow. This afternoon, somehow, I
found myself really in the humor of talking. There was something propitious in
the circumstances; a hard, cold rain without, a wood-fire in the library,
the bonhomme puffing cigarettes in his arm-chair, beside him a
portfolio of newly imported prints and photographs, and—Theodore tucked safely
away in bed. Finally, when I brought our tête-à-tête to a
close (taking good care not to overstay my welcome) Mr. Sloane seized me by
both hands and honored me with one of his venerable grins. "Max," he
said—"you must let me call you Max—you are the most delightful man I ever
knew."
Verily, there's some
virtue left in me yet. I believe I almost blushed.
"Why didn't I know
you ten years ago?" the old man went on. "There are ten years
lost."
"Ten years ago I was
not worth your knowing," Max remarked.
"But I did know
you!" cried the bonhomme. "I knew you in knowing your
mother."
Ah! my mother again.
When the old man begins that chapter I feel like telling him to blow out his
candle and go to bed.
"At all events,"
he continued, "we must make the most of the years that remain. I am a
rotten old carcass, but I have no intention of dying. You won't get tired of me
and want to go away?"
"I am devoted to
you, sir," I said. "But I must be looking for some occupation, you
know."
"Occupation?
bother! I'll give you occupation. I'll give you wages."
"I am afraid that
you will want to give me the wages without the work."
And then I declared that I must go up and look at poor Theodore.
The bonhomme still
kept my hands. "I wish very much that I could get you to be as fond of me
as you are of poor Theodore."
"Ah, don't talk
about fondness, Mr. Sloane. I don't deal much in that article."
"Don't you like my
secretary?"
"Not as he
deserves."
"Nor as he likes
you, perhaps?"
"He likes me more
than I deserve."
"Well, Max,"
my host pursued, "we can be good friends all the same. We don't need a
hocus-pocus of false sentiment. We are men, aren't we?—men of
sublime good sense." And just here, as the old man looked at me, the
pressure of his hands deepened to a convulsive grasp, and the bloodless mask of
his countenance was suddenly distorted with a nameless fear. "Ah, my dear
young man!" he cried, "come and be a son to me—the son of my age and
desolation! For God's sake, don't leave me to pine and die alone!"
I was greatly
surprised—and I may add I was moved. Is it true, then, that this dilapidated
organism contains such measureless depths of horror and longing? He has
evidently a mortal fear of death. I assured him on my honor that he may henceforth
call upon me for any service.
8th.—Theodore's little
turn proved more serious than I expected. He has been confined to his room till
to-day. This evening he came down to the library in his dressing-gown.
Decidedly, Mr. Sloane is an eccentric, but hardly, as Theodore thinks, a
"charming" one. There is something extremely curious in his humors
and fancies—the incongruous fits and starts, as it were, of his taste. For some
reason, best known to himself, he took it into his head to regard it as a want
of delicacy, of respect, of savoir-vivre—of heaven knows what—that
poor Theodore, who is still weak and languid, should enter the sacred precinct
of his study in the vulgar drapery of a dressing-gown. The sovereign trouble
with the bonhomme is an absolute lack of the instinct of
justice. He's of the real feminine turn—I believe I have written it
before—without the redeeming fidelity of the sex. I honestly believe that I
might come into his study in my night-shirt and he would smile at it as a
picturesque déshabillé. But for poor Theodore to-night there was
nothing but scowls and frowns, and barely a civil inquiry about his health. But
poor Theodore is not such a fool, either; he will not die of a snubbing; I
never said he was a weakling. Once he fairly saw from what quarter the wind
blew, he bore the master's brutality with the utmost coolness and gallantry.
Can it be that Mr. Sloane really wishes to drop him? The delicious old brute!
He understands favor and friendship only as a selfish rapture—a reaction, an
infatuation, an act of aggressive, exclusive patronage. It's not a bestowal,
with him, but a transfer, and half his pleasure in causing his sun to shine is
that—being wofully near its setting—it will produce certain long fantastic
shadows. He wants to cast my shadow, I suppose, over Theodore; but fortunately
I am not altogether an opaque body. Since Theodore was taken ill he has been
into his room but once, and has sent him none but a dry little message or two.
I, too, have been much less attentive than I should have wished to be; but my
time has not been my own. It has been, every moment of it, at the disposal of
my host. He actually runs after me; he devours me; he makes a fool of himself,
and is trying hard to make one of me. I find that he will bear—that, in fact,
he actually enjoys—a sort of unexpected contradiction. He likes anything that
will tickle his fancy, give an unusual tone to our relations, remind him of
certain historical characters whom he thinks he resembles. I have stepped into
Theodore's shoes, and done—with what I feel in my bones to be very inferior
skill and taste—all the reading, writing, condensing, transcribing and advising
that he has been accustomed to do. I have driven with the bonhomme;
played chess and cribbage with him; beaten him, bullied him, contradicted him;
forced him into going out on the water under my charge. Who shall say, after
this, that I haven't done my best to discourage his advances, put myself in a
bad light? As yet, my efforts are vain; in fact they quite turn to my own
confusion. Mr. Sloane is so thankful at having escaped from the lake with his
life that he looks upon me as a preserver and protector. Confound it all; it's
a bore! But one thing is certain, it can't last forever. Admit that he has cast
Theodore out and taken me in. He will speedily discover that he has made a
pretty mess of it, and that he had much better have left well enough alone. He
likes my reading and writing now, but in a month he will begin to hate them. He
will miss Theodore's better temper and better knowledge—his healthy impersonal
judgment. What an advantage that well-regulated youth has over me, after all! I
am for days, he is for years; he for the long run, I for the short. I, perhaps,
am intended for success, but he is adapted for happiness. He has in his heart a
tiny sacred particle which leavens his whole being and keeps it pure and
sound—a faculty of admiration and respect. For him human nature is still a
wonder and a mystery; it bears a divine stamp—Mr. Sloane's tawdry composition
as well as the rest.
13th.—I have refused, of
course, to supplant Theodore further, in the exercise of his functions, and he
has resumed his morning labors with Mr. Sloane. I, on my side, have spent these
morning hours in scouring the country on that capital black mare, the use of
which is one of the perquisites of Theodore's place. The days have been
magnificent—the heat of the sun tempered by a murmuring, wandering wind, the
whole north a mighty ecstasy of sound and verdure, the sky a far-away vault of
bended blue. Not far from the mill at M., the other end of the lake, I met, for
the third time, that very pretty young girl who reminds me so forcibly of A.L.
She makes so lavish a use of her eyes that I ventured to stop and bid her
good-morning. She seems nothing loath to an acquaintance. She's a pure
barbarian in speech, but her eyes are quite articulate. These rides do me good;
I was growing too pensive.
There is something the
matter with Theodore; his illness seems to have left him strangely affected. He
has fits of silent stiffness, alternating with spasms of extravagant gayety. He
avoids me at times for hours together, and then he comes and looks at me with
an inscrutable smile, as if he were on the verge of a burst of confidence—which
again is swallowed up in the immensity of his dumbness. Is he hatching some
astounding benefit to his species? Is he working to bring about my removal to a
higher sphere of action? Nous verrons bien.
18th.—Theodore threatens
departure. He received this morning a letter from one of his sisters—the young
widow—announcing her engagement to a clergyman whose acquaintance she has
recently made, and intimating her expectation of an immediate union with the
gentleman—a ceremony which would require Theodore's attendance. Theodore, in
high good humor, read the letter aloud at breakfast—and, to tell the truth, it
was a charming epistle. He then spoke of his having to go on to the wedding, a
proposition to which Mr. Sloane graciously assented—much more than assented.
"I shall be sorry to lose you, after so happy a connection," said the
old man. Theodore turned pale, stared a moment, and then, recovering his color
and his composure, declared that he should have no objection in life to coming
back.
"Bless your
soul!" cried the bonhomme, "you don't mean to say you
will leave your other sister all alone?"
To which Theodore
replied that he would arrange for her and her little girl to live with the
married pair. "It's the only proper thing," he remarked, as if it
were quite settled. Has it come to this, then, that Mr. Sloane actually wants
to turn him out of the house? The shameless old villain! He keeps smiling an
uncanny smile, which means, as I read it, that if the poor young man once
departs he shall never return on the old footing—for all his impudence!
20th.—This morning, at
breakfast, we had a terrific scene. A letter arrives for Theodore; he opens it,
turns white and red, frowns, falters, and then informs us that the clever widow
has broken off her engagement. No wedding, therefore, and no departure for
Theodore. The bonhomme was furious. In his fury he took the
liberty of calling poor Mrs. Parker (the sister) a very uncivil name. Theodore
rebuked him, with perfect good taste, and kept his temper.
"If my opinions
don't suit you, Mr. Lisle," the old man broke out, "and my mode of
expressing them displeases you, you know you can easily protect yourself."
"My dear Mr.
Sloane," said Theodore, "your opinions, as a general thing, interest
me deeply, and have never ceased to act beneficially upon the formation of my
own. Your mode of expressing them is always brilliant, and I wouldn't for the
world, after all our pleasant intercourse, separate from you in bitterness.
Only, I repeat, your qualification of my sister's conduct is perfectly uncalled
for. If you knew her, you would be the first to admit it."
There was something in
Theodore's look and manner, as he said these words, which puzzled me all the
morning. After dinner, finding myself alone with him, I told him I was glad he
was not obliged to go away. He looked at me with the mysterious smile I have
mentioned, thanked me, and fell into meditation. As this bescribbled chronicle
is the record of my follies as well of my hauts faits, I needn't
hesitate to say that for a moment I was a good deal vexed. What business has
this angel of candor to deal in signs and portents, to look unutterable things?
What right has he to do so with me especially, in whom he has always professed
an absolute confidence? Just as I was about to cry out, "Come, my dear fellow,
this affectation of mystery has lasted quite long enough—favor me at last with
the result of your cogitations!"—as I was on the point of thus expressing
my impatience of his ominous behavior, the oracle at last addressed itself to
utterance.
"You see, my dear
Max," he said, "I can't, in justice to myself, go away in obedience
to the sort of notice that was served on me this morning. What do you think of
my actual footing here?"
Theodore's actual
footing here seems to me impossible; of course I said so.
"No, I assure you
it's not," he answered. "I should, on the contrary, feel very
uncomfortable to think that I had come away, except by my own choice. You see a
man can't afford to cheapen himself. What are you laughing at?"
"I am laughing, in
the first place, my dear fellow, to hear on your lips the language of cold
calculation; and in the second place, at your odd notion of the process by
which a man keeps himself up in the market."
"I assure you it's
the correct notion. I came here as a particular favor to Mr. Sloane; it was
expressly understood so. The sort of work was odious to me; I had regularly to
break myself in. I had to trample on my convictions, preferences, prejudices. I
don't take such things easily; I take them hard; and when once the effort has
been made, I can't consent to have it wasted. If Mr. Sloane needed me then, he
needs me still. I am ignorant of any change having taken place in his
intentions, or in his means of satisfying them. I came, not to amuse him, but
to do a certain work; I hope to remain until the work is completed. To go away
sooner is to make a confession of incapacity which, I protest, costs me too
much. I am too conceited, if you like."
Theodore spoke these
words with a face which I have never seen him wear—a fixed, mechanical smile; a
hard, dry glitter in his eyes; a harsh, strident tone in his voice—in his whole
physiognomy a gleam, as it were, a note of defiance. Now I confess that for
defiance I have never been conscious of an especial relish. When I am defied I
am beastly. "My dear man," I replied, "your sentiments do you
prodigious credit. Your very ingenious theory of your present situation, as
well as your extremely pronounced sense of your personal value, are calculated
to insure you a degree of practical success which can very well dispense with
the furtherance of my poor good wishes." Oh, the grimness of his visage as
he listened to this, and, I suppose I may add, the grimness of mine! But I have
ceased to be puzzled. Theodore's conduct for the past ten days is suddenly
illumined with a backward, lurid ray. I will note down here a few plain truths
which it behooves me to take to heart—commit to memory. Theodore is jealous of
Maximus Austin. Theodore hates the said Maximus. Theodore has been seeking for
the past three months to see his name written, last but not least, in a certain
testamentary document: "Finally, I bequeath to my dear young friend,
Theodore Lisle, in return for invaluable services and unfailing devotion, the
bulk of my property, real and personal, consisting of—" (hereupon follows
an exhaustive enumeration of houses, lands, public securities, books, pictures,
horses, and dogs). It is for this that he has toiled, and watched, and prayed;
submitted to intellectual weariness and spiritual torture; accommodated himself
to levity, blasphemy, and insult. For this he sets his teeth and tightens his
grasp; for this he'll fight. Dear me, it's an immense weight off one's mind!
There are nothing, then, but vulgar, common laws; no sublime exceptions, no
transcendent anomalies. Theodore's a knave, a hypo—nay, nay; stay, irreverent
hand!—Theodore's a man! Well, that's all I want. He wants
fight—he shall have it. Have I got, at last, my simple, natural emotion?
21st.—I have lost no
time. This evening, late, after I had heard Theodore go to his room (I had left
the library early, on the pretext of having letters to write), I repaired to
Mr. Sloane, who had not yet gone to bed, and informed him I should be obliged
to leave him at once, and pick up a subsistence somehow in New York. He felt
the blow; it brought him straight down on his marrow-bones. He went through the
whole gamut of his arts and graces; he blustered, whimpered, entreated,
flattered. He tried to drag in Theodore's name; but this I, of course,
prevented. But, finally, why, why, WHY, after all my promises of
fidelity, must I thus cruelly desert him? Then came my trump card: I have spent
my last penny; while I stay, I'm a beggar. The remainder of this extraordinary
scene I have no power to describe: how the bonhomme, touched,
inflamed, inspired, by the thought of my destitution, and at the same time
annoyed, perplexed, bewildered at having to commit himself to doing anything
for me, worked himself into a nervous frenzy which deprived him of a clear
sense of the value of his words and his actions; how I, prompted by the
irresistible spirit of my desire to leap astride of his weakness and ride it
hard to the goal of my dreams, cunningly contrived to keep his spirit at the
fever-point, so that strength and reason and resistance should burn themselves
out. I shall probably never again have such a sensation as I enjoyed
to-night—actually feel a heated human heart throbbing and turning and
struggling in my grasp; know its pants, its spasms, its convulsions, and its final
senseless quiescence. At half-past one o'clock Mr. Sloane got out of his chair,
went to his secretary, opened a private drawer, and took out a folded paper.
"This is my will," he said, "made some seven weeks ago. If you
will stay with me I will destroy it."
"Really, Mr.
Sloane," I said, "if you think my purpose is to exert any pressure
upon your testamentary inclinations—"
"I will tear it in
pieces," he cried; "I will burn it up! I shall be as sick as a dog
to-morrow; but I will do it. A-a-h!"
He clapped his hand to
his side, as if in sudden, overwhelming pain, and sank back fainting into his
chair. A single glance assured me that he was unconscious. I possessed myself
of the paper, opened it, and perceived that he had left everything to his
saintly secretary. For an instant a savage, puerile feeling of hate popped up
in my bosom, and I came within a hair's-breadth of obeying my foremost
impulse—that of stuffing the document into the fire. Fortunately, my reason
overtook my passion, though for a moment it was an even race. I put the paper
back into the bureau, closed it, and rang the bell for Robert (the old man's
servant). Before he came I stood watching the poor, pale remnant of mortality
before me, and wondering whether those feeble life-gasps were numbered. He was
as white as a sheet, grimacing with pain—horribly ugly. Suddenly he opened his
eyes; they met my own; I fell on my knees and took his hands. They closed on
mine with a grasp strangely akin to the rigidity of death. Nevertheless, since
then he has revived, and has relapsed again into a comparatively healthy sleep.
Robert seems to know how to deal with him.
22d.—Mr. Sloane is
seriously ill—out of his mind and unconscious of people's identity. The doctor
has been here, off and on, all day, but this evening reports improvement. I
have kept out of the old man's room, and confined myself to my own, reflecting
largely upon the chance of his immediate death. Does Theodore know of the will?
Would it occur to him to divide the property? Would it occur to me, in his
place? We met at dinner, and talked in a grave, desultory, friendly fashion.
After all, he's an excellent fellow. I don't hate him. I don't even dislike
him. He jars on me, il m'agace; but that's no reason why I should
do him an evil turn. Nor shall I. The property is a fixed idea, that's all. I
shall get it if I can. We are fairly matched. Before heaven, no, we are not
fairly matched! Theodore has a conscience.
23d.—I am restless and
nervous—and for good reasons. Scribbling here keeps me quiet. This morning Mr.
Sloane is better; feeble and uncertain in mind, but unmistakably on the rise. I
may confess now that I feel relieved of a horrid burden. Last night I hardly
slept a wink. I lay awake listening to the pendulum of my clock. It seemed to say,
"He lives—he dies." I fully expected to hear it stop suddenly
at dies. But it kept going all the morning, and to a decidedly more
lively tune. In the afternoon the old man sent for me. I found him in his great
muffled bed, with his face the color of damp chalk, and his eyes glowing
faintly, like torches half stamped out. I was forcibly struck with the utter
loneliness of his lot. For all human attendance, my villainous self grinning at
his bedside and old Robert without, listening, doubtless, at the keyhole.
The bonhomme stared at me stupidly; then seemed to know me,
and greeted me with a sickly smile. It was some moments before he was able to
speak. At last he faintly bade me to descend into the library, open the secret
drawer of the secretary (which he contrived to direct me how to do), possess
myself of his will, and burn it up. He appears to have forgotten his having
taken it out night before last. I told him that I had an insurmountable
aversion to any personal dealings with the document. He smiled, patted the back
of my hand, and requested me, in that case, to get it, at least, and bring it
to him. I couldn't deny him that favor? No, I couldn't, indeed. I went down to
the library, therefore, and on entering the room found Theodore standing by the
fireplace with a bundle of papers. The secretary was open. I stood still,
looking from the violated cabinet to the documents in his hand. Among them I
recognized, by its shape and size, the paper of which I had intended to possess
myself. Without delay I walked straight up to him. He looked surprised, but not
confused. "I am afraid I shall have to trouble you to surrender one of
those papers," I said.
"Surrender,
Maximus? To anything of your own you are perfectly welcome.
I didn't know that you made use of Mr. Sloane's secretary. I was looking
for some pages of notes which I have made myself and in which I conceive
I have a property."
"This is what I
want, Theodore," I said; and I drew the will, unfolded, from between his
hands. As I did so his eyes fell upon the superscription, "Last Will and
Testament, March. F.S." He flushed an extraordinary crimson. Our eyes met.
Somehow—I don't know how or why, or for that matter why not—I burst into a
violent peal of laughter. Theodore stood staring, with two hot, bitter tears in
his eyes.
"Of course you
think I came to ferret out that thing," he said.
I shrugged my
shoulders—those of my body only. I confess, morally, I was on my knees with
contrition, but there was a fascination in it—a fatality. I remembered that in
the hurry of my movements the other evening I had slipped the will simply into
one of the outer drawers of the cabinet, among Theodore's own papers. "Mr.
Sloane sent me for it," I remarked.
"Very good; I am
glad to hear he's well enough to think of such things."
"He means to
destroy it."
"I hope, then, he
has another made."
"Mentally, I
suppose he has."
"Unfortunately, his
weakness isn't mental—or exclusively so."
"Oh, he will live
to make a dozen more," I said. "Do you know the purport of this
one?"
Theodore's color, by
this time, had died away into plain white. He shook his head. The doggedness of
the movement provoked me, and I wished to arouse his curiosity. "I have
his commission to destroy it."
Theodore smiled very
grandly. "It's not a task I envy you," he said.
"I should think
not—especially if you knew the import of the will." He stood with folded
arms, regarding me with his cold, detached eyes. I couldn't stand it.
"Come, it's your property! You are sole legatee. I give it up to
you." And I thrust the paper into his hand.
He received it
mechanically; but after a pause, bethinking himself, he unfolded it and cast
his eyes over the contents. Then he slowly smoothed it together and held it a
moment with a tremulous hand. "You say that Mr. Sloane directed you to
destroy it?" he finally inquired.
"I say so."
"And that you know
the contents?"
"Exactly."
"And that you were
about to do what he asked you?"
"On the contrary, I
declined."
Theodore fixed his eyes
for a moment on the superscription and then raised them again to my face.
"Thank you, Max," he said. "You have left me a real
satisfaction." He tore the sheet across and threw the bits into the fire.
We stood watching them burn. "Now he can make another," said
Theodore.
"Twenty
others," I replied.
"No," said
Theodore, "you will take care of that."
"You are very
bitter," I said, sharply enough.
"No, I am perfectly
indifferent. Farewell." And he put out his hand.
"Are you going
away?"
"Of course I am.
Good-by."
"Good-by, then. But
isn't your departure rather sudden?"
"I ought to have
gone three weeks ago—three weeks ago." I had taken his hand, he pulled it
away; his voice was trembling—there were tears in it.
"Is that indifference?"
I asked.
"It's something you
will never know!" he cried. "It's shame! I am not sorry you should
see what I feel. It will suggest to you, perhaps, that my heart has never been
in this filthy contest. Let me assure you, at any rate, that it hasn't; that it
has had nothing but scorn for the base perversion of my pride and my ambition.
I could easily shed tears of joy at their return—the return of the prodigals!
Tears of sorrow—sorrow—"
He was unable to go on.
He sank into a chair, covering his face with his hands.
"For God's sake,
stick to the joy!" I exclaimed.
He rose to his feet
again. "Well," he said, "it was for your sake that I parted with
my self-respect; with your assistance I recover it."
"How for my
sake?"
"For whom but you
would I have gone as far as I did? For what other purpose than that of keeping
our friendship whole would I have borne you company into this narrow pass? A
man whom I cared for less I would long since have parted with. You were
needed—you and something you have about you that always takes me so—to bring me
to this. You ennobled, exalted, enchanted the struggle. I did value
my prospect of coming into Mr. Sloane's property. I valued it for my poor
sister's sake as well as for my own, so long as it was the natural reward of
conscientious service, and not the prize of hypocrisy and cunning. With another
man than you I never would have contested such a prize. But you fascinated me,
even as my rival. You played with me, deceived me, betrayed me. I held my
ground, hoping you would see that what you were doing was not fair. But if you
have seen it, it has made no difference with you. For Mr. Sloane, from the
moment that, under your magical influence, he revealed his nasty little nature,
I had nothing but contempt."
"And for me
now?"
"Don't ask me. I
don't trust myself."
"Hate, I
suppose."
"Is that the best
you can imagine? Farewell."
"Is it a serious
farewell—farewell forever?"
"How can there be
any other?"
"I am sorry this
should be your point of view. It's characteristic. All the more reason then
that I should say a word in self-defence. You accuse me of having 'played with
you, deceived you, betrayed you.' It seems to me that you are quite beside the
mark. You say you were such a friend of mine; if so, you ought to be one still.
It was not to my fine sentiments you attached yourself, for I never had any or
pretended to any. In anything I have done recently, therefore, there has been
no inconsistency. I never pretended to take one's friendships so seriously. I
don't understand the word in the sense you attach to it. I don't understand the
feeling of affection between men. To me it means quite another thing. You give
it a meaning of your own; you enjoy the profit of your invention; it's no more
than just that you should pay the penalty. Only it seems to me rather hard
that I should pay it." Theodore remained silent, but he
looked quite sick. "Is it still a 'serious farewell'?" I went on.
"It seems a pity. After this clearing up, it appears to me that I shall be
on better terms with you. No man can have a deeper appreciation of your
excellent parts, a keener enjoyment of your society. I should very much regret
the loss of it."
"Have we, then, all
this while understood each other so little?" said
Theodore.
"Don't say 'we' and
'each other.' I think I have understood you."
"Very likely. It's
not for my having kept anything back."
"Well, I do you
justice. To me you have always been over-generous. Try now and be just."
Still he stood silent,
with his cold, hard frown; it was plain that, if he was to come back to me, it
would be from the other world—if there be one! What he was going to answer I
know not. The door opened, and Robert appeared, pale, trembling, his eyes
starting in his head.
"I verily believe
that poor Mr. Sloane is dead in his bed!" he cried.
There was a moment's
perfect silence. "Amen," said I. "Yes, old boy, try and be just."
Mr. Sloane had quietly died in my absence.
24th.—Theodore went up
to town this morning, having shaken hands with me in silence before he started.
Doctor Jones, and Brooks the attorney, have been very officious, and, by their
advice, I have telegraphed to a certain Miss Meredith, a maiden lady, by their
account the nearest of kin; or, in other words, simply a discarded niece of the
defunct. She telegraphs back that she will arrive in person for the funeral. I
shall remain till she comes. I have lost a fortune, but have I irretrievably
lost a friend? I am sure I can't say. Yes, I shall wait for Miss Meredith.
[1] The Galaxy,
July, 1869
2.YATIL [2]
BY F.D. MILLET
While in Paris, in the
spring of 1878, I witnessed an accident in a circus, which for a time made me
renounce all athletic exhibitions. Six horses were stationed side by side in
the ring before a spring-board, and the whole company of gymnasts ran and
turned somersaults from the spring over the horses, alighting on a mattress
spread on the ground. The agility of one finely developed young fellow excited
great applause every time he made the leap. He would shoot forward in the air
like a javelin, and in his flight curl up and turn over directly above the
mattress, dropping on his feet as lightly as a bird. This play went on for some
minutes, and at each round of applause the favorite seemed to execute his leap
with increased skill and grace. Finally, he was seen to gather himself a little
farther in the background than usual, evidently to prepare for a better start.
The instant his turn came he shot out of the crowd of attendants and launched
himself into the air with tremendous momentum. Almost quicker than the eye
could follow him, he had turned and was dropping to the ground, his arms held
above his head, which hung slightly forward, and his legs stretched to meet the
shock of the elastic mattress.
But this time he had
jumped an inch too far. His feet struck just on the edge of the mattress, and
he was thrown violently forward, doubling up on the ground with a dull thump,
which was heard all over the immense auditorium. He remained a second or two
motionless, then sprang to his feet, and as quickly sank to the ground again.
The ring attendants and two or three gymnasts rushed to him and took him up. The
clown, in evening dress, personating the mock ringmaster, the conventional
spotted merryman, and a stalwart gymnast in buff fleshings, bore the drooping
form of the favorite in their arms, and, followed by the bystanders, who
offered ineffectual assistance, carried the wounded man across the ring and
through the draped arch under the music gallery. Under any other circumstances
the group would have excited a laugh, for the audience was in that condition of
almost hysterical excitement when only the least effort of a clown is necessary
to cause a wave of laughter. But the moment the wounded man was lifted from the
ground, the whole strong light from the brilliant chandelier struck full on his
right leg dangling from the knee, with the foot hanging limp and turned inward.
A deep murmur of sympathy swelled and rolled around the crowded amphitheatre.
I left the circus, and
hundreds of others did the same. A dozen of us called at the box-office to ask
about the victim of the accident. He was advertised as "The Great Polish
Champion Bareback Rider and Aerial Gymnast." We found that he was really a
native of the East, whether Pole or Russian the ticket-seller did not know. His
real name was Nagy, and he had been engaged only recently, having returned a
few months before from a professional tour in North America. He was supposed to
have money, for he commanded a good salary, and was sober and faithful. The
accident, it was said, would probably disable him for a few weeks only, and
then he would resume his engagement.
The next day an account
of the accident was in the newspapers, and twenty-four hours later all Paris
had forgotten about it. For some reason or other I frequently thought of the
injured man, and had an occasional impulse to go and inquire after him; but I
never went. It seemed to me that I had seen his face before, when or where I
tried in vain to recall. It was not an impressive face, but I could call it up
at any moment as distinct to my mind's eye as a photograph to my physical
vision. Whenever I thought of him, a dim, very dim memory would flit through my
mind, which I could never seize and fix.
Two months later I was
walking up the Rue Richelieu, when some one, close beside me and a little
behind, asked me in Hungarian if I was a Magyar. I turned quickly to answer no,
surprised at being thus addressed, and beheld the disabled circus-rider. It
flashed upon me, the moment I saw his face, that I had seen him in Turin three
years before. My surprise at the sudden identification of the gymnast was
construed by him into vexation at being spoken to by a stranger. He began to
apologize for stopping me, and was moving away, when I asked him about the
accident, remarking that I was present on the evening of his misfortune. My
next question, put in order to detain him, was:
"Why did you ask if
I was a Hungarian?"
"Because you wear a
Hungarian hat," was the reply.
This was true. I
happened to have on a little round, soft felt hat, which I had purchased in
Buda Pesth.
"Well, but what if
I were Hungarian?"
"Nothing; only I
was lonely and wanted company, and you looked as if I had seen you somewhere
before. You are an artist, are you not?"
I said I was, and asked
him how he guessed it.
"I can't explain
how it is," he said, "but I always know them. Are you doing anything?"
"No," I
replied.
"Perhaps I may get
you something to do," he suggested. "What is your line?"
"Figures," I
answered, unable to divine how he thought he could assist me.
This reply seemed to
puzzle him a little, and he continued:
"Do you ride or do
the trapeze?"
It was my turn now to
look dazed, and it might easily have been gathered, from my expression, that I
was not flattered at being taken for a saw-dust artist. However, as he
apparently did not notice any change in my face, I explained without further
remark that I was a painter. The explanation did not seem to disturb him any;
he was evidently acquainted with the profession, and looked upon it as kindred
to his own.
As we walked along
through the great open quadrangle of the Tuileries, I had an opportunity of
studying his general appearance. He was neatly dressed, and, though pale, was
apparently in good health. Notwithstanding a painful limp his carriage was
erect, and his movements denoted great physical strength. On the bridge over
the Seine we paused for a moment and leaned on the parapet, and thus, for the
first time, stood nearly face to face. He looked earnestly at me a moment
without speaking, and then, shouting "Torino" so loudly and
earnestly as to attract the gaze of all the passers, he seized me by the hand,
and continued to shake it and repeat "Torino" over and over
again.
This word cleared up my
befogged memory like magic. There was no longer any mystery about the man
before me. The impulse which now drew us together was only the unconscious
souvenir of an earlier acquaintance, for we had met before. With the vision of
the Italian city, which came distinctly to my eyes at that moment, came also to
my mind every detail of an incident which had long since passed entirely from
my thoughts.
It was during the Turin
carnival, in 1875, that I happened to stop over for a day and a night, on my
way down from Paris to Venice. The festival was uncommonly dreary, for the air
was chilly, the sky gray and gloomy, and there was a total lack of spontaneity in
the popular spirit. The gaudy decorations of the Piazza and the Corso, the
numberless shows and booths, and the brilliant costumes, could not make it
appear a season of jollity and mirth, for the note of discord in the hearts of
the people was much too strong. King Carnival's might was on the wane, and
neither the influence of the Church nor the encouragement of the State was able
to bolster up the superannuated monarch. There was no communicativeness in even
what little fun there was going, and the day was a long and a tedious one. As I
was strolling around in rather a melancholy mood, just at the close of the
cavalcade, I saw the flaming posters of a circus, and knew my day was saved,
for I had a great fondness for the ring. An hour later I was seated in the
cheerfully lighted amphitheatre, and the old performance of the trained
stallions was going on as I had seen it a hundred times before. At last the
"Celebrated Cypriot Brothers, the Universal Bareback Riders," came
tripping gracefully into the ring, sprang lightly upon two black horses, and
were off around the narrow circle like the wind, now together, now apart,
performing all the while marvellous feats of strength and skill. It required no
study to discover that there was no relationship between the two performers.
One of them was a heavy, gross, dark-skinned man, with the careless bearing of
one who had been nursed in a circus. The other was a small, fair-haired youth
of nineteen or twenty years, with limbs as straight and as shapely as the
Narcissus, and with joints like the wiry-limbed fauns. His head was round, and
his face of a type which would never be called beautiful, although it was
strong in feature and attractive in expression. His eyes were small and
twinkling, his eyebrows heavy, and his mouth had a peculiar proud curl in it
which was never disturbed by the tame smile of the practised performer. He was
evidently a foreigner. He went through his acts with wonderful readiness and
with slight effort, and, while apparently enjoying keenly the exhilaration of
applause, he showed no trace of the blasé bearing of the old
stager. In nearly every act that followed he took a prominent part. On the
trapeze, somersaulting over horses placed side by side, grouping with his
so-called brother and a small lad, he did his full share of the work, and when
the programme was ended he came among the audience to sell photographs while
the lottery was being drawn.
As usual during the
carnival, there was a lottery arranged by the manager of the circus, and every
ticket had a number which entitled the holder to a chance in the prizes. When
the young gymnast came in turn to me, radiant in his salmon fleshings and blue
trunks, with slippers and bows to match, I could not help asking him if he was
an Italian.
"No, signor,
Magyar!" he replied, and I shortly found that his knowledge of Italian was
limited to a dozen words. I occupied him by selecting some photographs, and,
much to his surprise, spoke to him in his native tongue. When he learned I had
been in Hungary he was greatly pleased, and the impatience of other customers
for the photographs was the only thing that prevented him from becoming
communicative immediately. As he left me I slipped into his hand my
lottery-ticket, with the remark that I never had any luck, and hoped he would.
The numbers were,
meanwhile, rapidly drawn, the prizes being arranged in the order of their
value, each ticket taken from the hat denoting a prize, until all were
distributed. "Number twenty-eight—a pair of elegant vases!"
"Number sixteen—three bottles of vermouth!" "Number one hundred
and eighty-four—candlesticks and two bottles of vermouth!" "Number
four hundred and ten—three bottles of vermouth and a set of jewelry!"
"Number three hundred and nineteen—five bottles of vermouth!" and so on,
with more bottles of vermouth than anything else. Indeed, each prize had to be
floated on a few litres of the Turin specialty, and I began to think that
perhaps it would have been better, after all, not to have given my circus
friend the ticket, if he were to draw drink with it.
Many prizes were called
out, and at last only two numbers remained. The excitement was now intense, and
it did not diminish when the conductor of the lottery announced that the last
two numbers would draw the two great prizes of the evening, namely: An order on
a Turin tailor for a suit of clothes, and an order on a jeweller for a gold
watch and chain. The first of these two last numbers was taken out of the hat.
"Number
twenty-five—order for a suit of clothes!" was the announcement.
Twenty-five had been the
number of my ticket. I did not hear the last number drawn, for the Hungarian
was in front of my seat trying to press the order on me, and protesting against
appropriating my good luck. I wrote my name on the programme for him, with the
simple address, U.S.A., persuaded him to accept the windfall, and went home.
The next morning I left town.
On the occasion of our
mutual recognition in Paris, the circus boy began to relate, as soon as the
first flush of his surprise was over, the story of his life since the incident
in Turin. He had been to New York and Boston, and all the large sea-coast
towns; to Chicago, St. Louis, and even to San Francisco; always with a circus
company. Whenever he had had an opportunity in the United States, he had asked
for news of me.
"The United States
is so large!" he said, with a sigh. "Every one told me that, when I
showed the Turin programme with your name on it."
The reason why he had
kept the programme and tried to find me in America was because the lottery
ticket had been the direct means of his emigration, and, in fact, the first
piece of good fortune that had befallen him since he left his native town. When
he joined the circus he was an apprentice, and beside a certain number of hours
of gymnastic practice daily and service in the ring both afternoon and evening,
he had half a dozen horses to care for, his part of the tent to pack up and
load, and the team to drive to the next stopping-place. For sixteen and often
eighteen hours of hard work he received only his food and his performing
clothes. When he was counted as one of the troupe his duties were lightened,
but he got only enough money to pay his way with difficulty. Without a lira ahead,
and with no clothes but his rough working-suit and his performing costume, he
could not hope to escape from this sort of bondage. The luck of number
twenty-five had put him on his feet.
"All Hungarians
worship America," he said, "and when I saw that you were an American
I knew that my good fortune had begun in earnest. Of course I believed America
to be the land of plenty, and there could have been no stronger proof of this
than the generosity with which you, the first American I had ever seen, gave
me, a perfect stranger, such a valuable prize. When I remembered the number of
the ticket and the letter in the alphabet, Y, to which this number corresponds,
I was dazed at the significance of the omen, and resolved at once to seek my
fortune in the United States. I sold the order on the tailor for money enough
to buy a suit of ready-made clothes and pay my fare to Genoa. From this port I
worked my passage to Gibraltar, and thence, after performing a few weeks in a
small English circus, I went to New York in a fruit-vessel. As long as I was in
America everything prospered with me. I made a great deal of money, and spent a
great deal. After a couple of years I went to London with a company, and there
lost my pay and my position by the failure of the manager. In England my good
luck all left me. Circus people are too plenty there; everybody is an artist. I
could scarcely get anything to do in my line, so I drifted over to Paris."
We prolonged our stroll
for an hour, for although I did not anticipate any pleasure or profit from
continuing the acquaintance, there was yet a certain attraction in his
simplicity of manner and in his naïve faith in the value of my influence on his
fortunes. Before we parted he expressed again his ability to get me something
to do, but I did not credit his statement enough to correct the impression that
I was in need of employment. At his earnest solicitation I gave him my address,
concealing, as well as I could, my reluctance to encourage an acquaintance
which could not result in anything but annoyance.
One day passed, and two,
and on the third morning the porter showed him to my room.
"I have found you
work!" he cried, in the first breath.
Sure enough, he had been
to a Polish acquaintance who knew a countryman, a copyist in the Louvre. This
copyist had a superabundance of orders, and was glad to get some one to help
him finish them in haste. My gymnast was so much elated over his success at
finding occupation for me that I hadn't the heart to tell him that I was at
leisure only while hunting a studio. I therefore promised to go with him to the
Louvre some day, but I always found an excuse for not going.
For two or three weeks
we met at intervals. At various times, thinking he was in want, I pressed him
to accept the loan of a few francs, but he always stoutly refused. We went
together to his lodging-house, where the landlady, an English-woman, who
boarded most of the circus people, spoke of her "poor dear Mr.
Nodge," as she called him, in quite a maternal way, and assured me that he
had wanted for nothing, and should not so long as his wound disabled him. In
the course of a few days I had gathered from him a complete history of his
circus-life, which was full of adventure and hardship. He was, as I had thought
then, somewhat of a novice in the circus business at the time we met in Turin,
having left his home less than two years before. He had indeed been associated
as a regular member of the company only a few months, after having served a
difficult and wearing apprenticeship. He was born in Koloszvar, where his
father was a professor in the university, and there he grew up with three
brothers and a sister, in a comfortable home. He always had had a great desire
to see travel, and from early childhood developed a special fondness for
gymnastic feats. The thought of a circus made him fairly wild. On rare
occasions a travelling show visited this Transylvanian town, and his parents
with difficulty restrained him from following the circus away. At last, in
1873, one show, more complete and more brilliant than any one before seen
there, came in on the newly opened railway, and he, now a man, went away with
it, unable longer to restrain his passion for the profession. Always accustomed
to horses, and already a skilful acrobat, he was immediately accepted by the
manager as an apprentice, and after a season in Roumania and a disastrous trip
through Southern Austria, they came into Northern Italy, where I met him.
Whenever he spoke of his
early life he always became quiet and depressed, and for a long time I believed
that he brooded over his mistake in exchanging a happy home for the
vicissitudes of Bohemia. It came out slowly, however, that he was haunted by a
superstition, a strange and ingenious one, which was yet not without a certain
show of reason for its existence. Little by little I learned the following facts
about it: His father was of pure Szeklar or original Hungarian stock, as
dark-skinned as a Hindoo, and his mother was from one of the families of
Western Hungary, with probably some Saxon blood in her veins. His three
brothers were dark like his father, but he and his sister were blondes. He was
born with a peculiar red mark on his right shoulder, directly over the
scapular. This mark was shaped like a forked stick. His father had received a
wound in the insurrection of '48, a few months before the birth of him, the
youngest son, and this birth-mark reproduced the shape of the father's scar.
Among Hungarians his father passed for a very learned man. He spoke fluently
German, French, and Latin (the language used by Hungarians in common
communication with other nationalities), and took great pains to give his
children an acquaintance with each of these tongues. Their earliest playthings
were French alphabet-blocks, and the set which served as toys and tasks for
each of the elder brothers came at last to him as his legacy. The letters were
formed by the human figure in different attitudes, and each block had a little
couplet below the picture, beginning with the letter on the block. The Y
represented a gymnast hanging by his hands to a trapeze, and being a letter
which does not occur in the Hungarian language except in combinations, excited
most the interest and imagination of the youngsters. Thousands of times did
they practise the grouping of the figures on the blocks, and the Y always
served as a model for trapeze exercises. My friend, on account of his
birth-mark, which resembled a rude Y, was early dubbed by his brothers with the
nick-name Yatil, this being the first words of the French couplet printed below
the picture. Learning the French by heart, they believed the Y a-t-il to
be one word, and with boyish fondness for nick-names saddled the youngest with
this. It is easy to understand how the shape of this letter, borne on his body
in an indelible mark, and brought to his mind every moment of the day, came to
seem in some way connected with his life. As he grew up in this belief he
became more and more superstitious about the letter and about everything in the
remotest way connected with it.
The first great event of
his life was joining the circus, and to this the letter Y more or less
directly! led him. He left home on his twenty-fifth birth-day, and twenty five
was the number of the letter Y in the block-alphabet.
The second great event
of his life was the Turin lottery, and the number of the lucky ticket was
twenty-five. "The last sign given me," he said, "was the
accident in the circus here." As he spoke he rolled up the right leg of
his trowsers, and there, on the outside of the calf, about midway between the
knee and ankle, was a red scar forked like the letter Y.
From the time he
confided his superstition to me he sought me more than ever. I must confess to
feeling, at each visit of his, a little constrained and unnatural. He seemed to
lean on me as a protector, and to be hungry all the time for an intimate
sympathy I could never give him. Although I shared his secret, I could not
lighten the burden of his superstition. His wound had entirely healed, but as
his leg was still weak and he still continued to limp a little, he could not
resume his place in the circus. Between brooding over his superstition and
worrying about his accident, he grew very despondent. The climax of his
hopelessness was reached when the doctor told him at last that he would never
be able to vault again. The fracture had been a severe one, the bone having
protruded through the skin. The broken parts had knitted with great difficulty,
and the leg would never be as firm and as elastic as before. Besides, the
fracture had slightly shortened the lower leg. His circus career was therefore
ended, and he attributed his misfortune to the ill-omened letter Y.
Just about the time of
his greatest despondency war was declared between Russia and Turkey. The
Turkish embassadors were drumming up recruits all over Western Europe. News
came to the circus boarding-house that good riders were wanted for the Turkish
mounted gensdarmes. Nagy resolved to enlist, and we went together to the
Turkish embassy. He was enrolled after only a superficial examination, and was
directed to present himself on the following day to embark for Constantinople.
He begged me to go with him to the rendezvous, and there I bade him adieu. As I
was shaking his hand he showed me the certificate given him by the Turkish
embassador. It bore the date of May 25, and at the bottom was a signature in
Turkish characters, which could be readily distorted by the imagination into a
rude and scrawling Y.
A series of events
occurring immediately after Nagy left for Constantinople resulted in my own
unexpected departure in a civil capacity for the seat of war in the Russian
lines. The line of curious coincidences in the experience of the circus-rider
had impressed me very much at the time, but in the excitement of the Turkish
campaign I entirely forgot the circumstance. I do not, indeed, recall any
thought of Nagy during the first five months in the field. The day after the
fall of Plevna I rode through the deserted earthworks toward the town. The dead
were lying where they had fallen in the dramatic and useless sortie of the day
before. The dead on a battle-field always excite fresh interest, no matter if
the spectacle be an every-day one, and as I rode slowly along I studied the
attitudes of the fallen bodies, speculating on the relation between the
death-poses and the last impulse that had animated the living frame. Behind a
rude barricade of wagons and household goods, part of the train of
non-combatants which Osman Pasha had ordered to accompany the army in the
sortie, a great number of dead lay in confusion. The peculiar position of one
of these instantly attracted my eye. He had fallen on his face against the
barricade, with both arms stretched above his head, evidently killed instantly.
The figure on the alphabet-block, described by the circus-rider, came
immediately to my mind. My heart beat as I dismounted and looked at the dead
man's face. It was a genuine Turk.
This incident revived my
interest in the life of the circus-rider, and gave me an impulse to look among
the prisoners to see if by chance he might be with them. I spent a couple of
days in distributing tobacco and bread in the hospitals and among the thirty
thousand wretches herded shelterless in the snow. There were some of the
mounted gensdarmes among them, and I even found several Hungarians; but none of
them had ever heard of the circus-rider.
The passage of the
Balkans was a campaign full of excitement, and was accompanied by so much
hardship that selfishness got entirely the upper hand of me, and life became a
battle for physical comfort. After the passage of the mountain range we went
ahead so fast that I had little opportunity, even if I had the enterprise, to
look among the few prisoners for the circus-rider.
Time passed, and we were
at the end of a three days' fight near Philippopolis, in the middle of January.
Suleiman Pasha's army, defeated, disorganized, and at last disbanded, though to
that day still unconquered, had finished the tragic act of its last campaign
with the heroic stand made in the foothills of the Rhodope Mountains, near
Stanimaka, south of Philippopolis. A long month in the terrible cold, on the
summits of the Balkan range; the forced retreat through the snow after the
battle of Taskosen; the neck-and-neck race with the Russians down the valley of
the Maritza; finally, the hot little battle on the river-bank, and the two days
of hand-to-hand struggle in the vine-yard of Stanimaka—this was a campaign to
break the constitution of any soldier. Days without food, nights without
shelter from the mountain blasts, always marching and always fighting, supplies
and baggage lost, ammunition and artillery gone—human nature could hold out no
longer, and the Turkish army dissolved away into the defiles of the Rhodopes.
Unfortunately for her, Turkey has no literature to chronicle, no art to
perpetuate the heroism of her defenders.
The incidents of that
short campaign are too full of horror to be related. Not only did the demon of
war devour strong men, but found dainty morsels for its bloody maw in innocent
women and children. Whole families, crazed by the belief that capture was worse
than death, fought in the ranks with the soldiers. Women ambushed in coverts
shot the Russians as they rummaged the captured trains for much-needed food.
Little children, thrown into the snow by the flying parents, died of cold and
starvation, or were trampled to death by passing cavalry. Such a useless waste
of human life has not been recorded since the indiscriminate massacres of the
Middle Ages.
The sight of human
suffering soon blunts the sensibilities of any one who lives with it, so that he
is at last able to look upon it with no stronger feeling than that of
helplessness. Resigned to the inevitable, he is no longer impressed by the woes
of the individual. He looks upon the illness, wounds, and death of the soldier
as a part of the lot of all combatants, and comes to consider him an
insignificant unit of the great mass of men. At last only novelties in horrors
will excite his feelings.
I was riding back from
the Stanimaka battle-field sufficiently elated at the prospect of a speedy
termination of the war—now made certain by the breaking up of Suleiman's
army—to forget where I was, and to imagine myself back in my comfortable
apartments in Paris. I only awoke from my dream at the station where the
highway from Stanimaka crosses the railway line about a mile south of
Philippopolis. The great wooden barracks had been used as a hospital for
wounded Turks, and as I drew up my horse at the door the last of the lot of
four hundred, who had been starving there nearly a week, were being placed upon
carts to be transported to the town. The road to Philippopolis was crowded with
wounded and refugees. Peasant families struggled along with all their household
goods piled upon a single cart. Ammunition wagons and droves of cattle, rushing
along against the tide of human beings, toward the distant bivouacs, made the
confusion hopeless. Night was fast coming on, and in company with a Cossack,
who was, like myself, seeking the headquarters of General Gourko, I made my way
through the tangle of men, beasts, and wagons toward the town. It was one of
those chill, wet days of winter when there is little comfort away from a
blazing fire, and when good shelter for the night is an absolute necessity. The
drizzle had drenched my garments, and the snow-mud had soaked my boots. Sharp
gusts of piercing wind drove the cold mist along, and as the temperature fell
in the late afternoon the slush of the roads began to stiffen, and the fog
froze where it gathered. Every motion of the limbs seemed to expose some
unprotected part of the body to the cold and wet. No amount of exercise that
was possible with stiffened limbs and in wet garments would warm the blood.
Leading my horse, I splashed along, holding my arms away from my body, and only
moving my benumbed fingers to wipe the chill drip from my face. It was weather
to take the courage out of the strongest man, and the sight of the soaked and
shivering wounded, packed in the jolting carts or limping through the mud, gave
me, hardened as I was, a painful contraction of the heart. The best I could do
was to lift upon my worn-out horse one brave young fellow who was hobbling
along with a bandaged leg. Followed by the Cossack, whose horse bore a similar
burden, I hurried along, hoping to get under cover before dark. At the entrance
to the town numerous camp-fires burned in the bivouacs of the refugees, who
were huddled together in the shelter of their wagons, trying to warm themselves
in the smoke of the wet fuel. I could see the wounded, as they were jolted past
in the heavy carts, look longingly at the kettles of boiling maize which made
the evening meal of the houseless natives.
Inside the town the
wounded and the refugees were still more miserable than those we had passed on
the way. Loaded carts blocked the streets. Every house was occupied, and the
narrow sidewalks were crowded with Russian soldiers, who looked wretched enough
in their dripping overcoats, as they stamped their rag-swathed feet. At the
corner, in front of the great Khan, motley groups of Greeks, Bulgarians, and Russians
were gathered, listlessly watching the line of hobbling wounded as they turned
the corner to find their way among the carts, up the hill to the hospital, near
the Konak. By the time I reached the Khan the Cossack who accompanied me had
fallen behind in the confusion, and without waiting for him I pushed along,
wading in the gutter, dragging my horse by the bridle. Half way up the hill I
saw a crowd of natives watching with curiosity two Russian guardsmen and a
Turkish prisoner. The latter was evidently exhausted, for he was crouching in
the freezing mud of the street. Presently the soldiers shook him roughly and
raised him forcibly to his feet, and half supporting him between them they
moved slowly along, the Turk balancing on his stiffened legs and swinging from
side to side.
A most wretched object
he was to look at. He had neither boots nor fez. His feet were bare, and his
trowsers were torn off near the knee, and hung in tatters around his
mud-splashed legs. An end of the red sash fastened to his waist trailed far
behind in the mud. A blue cloth jacket hung loosely from his shoulders, and his
hands and wrists dangled from the ragged sleeves. His head rolled around at
each movement of the body, and at short intervals the muscles of the neck would
rigidly contract. All at once he drew himself up with a shudder and sank down
in the mud again.
The guardsmen were
themselves near the end of their strength, and their patience was wellnigh
finished as well. Rough mountain marching had torn the soles from their boots,
and great unsightly wraps of rawhide and rags were bound on their feet. The
thin worn overcoats, burned in many places, flapped dismally against their
ankles; and their caps, beaten out of shape by many storms, clung drenched to
their heads. They were in no condition to help any one to walk, for they could
scarcely get on alone. They stood a moment shivering, looked at each other,
shook their heads as if discouraged, and proceeded to rouse the Turk by hauling
him upon his feet again. The three moved on a few yards, and the prisoner fell
again, and the same operation was repeated. All this time I was crowding nearer
and nearer, and as I got within a half dozen paces the Turk fell once more, and
this time lay at full length in the mud. The guardsmen tried to rouse him by
shaking, but in vain. Finally, one of them, losing all patience, pricked him
with his bayonet on the lower part of the ribs exposed by the raising of the
jacket as he fell. I was now near enough to act, and with a sudden clutch I
pulled the guardsman away, whirled him around, and stood in his place. As I was
stooping over the Turk he raised himself slowly, doubtless aroused by the pain
of the puncture, and turned on me a most beseeching look, which changed at once
into something like joy and surprise. Immediately a deathlike pallor spread
over his face, and he sank back again with a groan.
By this time quite a
crowd of Bulgarians had gathered around us, and seemed to enjoy the sight of a
suffering enemy. It was evident that they did not intend to volunteer any
assistance, so I helped the wounded Russian down from my saddle, and invited
the natives rather sternly to put the Turk in his place. With true Bulgarian
spirit they refused to assist a Turk, and it required the argument of the rawhide
(nagajka) to bring them to their senses. Three of them, cornered and
flogged, lifted the unconscious man and carried him toward the horse, the
soldiers, meanwhile believing me to be an officer, standing in the attitude of
attention. As the Bulgarians bore the Turk to the horse, a few drops of blood
fell to the ground. I noticed then that he had his shirt tied around his left
shoulder, under his jacket. Supported in the saddle by two natives on each
side, his head falling forward on his breast, the wounded prisoner was carried
with all possible tenderness to the Stafford House hospital, near the Konak. As
we moved slowly up the hill I looked back, and saw the two guardsmen sitting on
the muddy sidewalk, with their guns leaning against their shoulders—too much
exhausted to go either way.
I found room for my
charge in one of the upper rooms of the hospital, where he was washed and put
into a warm bed. His wound proved to be a severe one. A Berdan bullet had
passed through the thick part of the left pectoral, out again, and into the
head of the humerus. The surgeon said that the arm would have to be operated
on, to remove the upper quarter of the bone.
The next morning I went
to the hospital to see what had become of the wounded man, for the incident of
the previous evening made a deep impression on my mind. As I walked through the
corridor I saw a group around a temporary bed in the corner. Some one was
evidently about to undergo an operation, for an assistant held at intervals a
great cone of linen over a haggard face on the pillow, and a strong smell of
chloroform filled the air. As I approached the surgeon turned around, and
recognizing me, with a nod and a smile said, "We are at work on your
friend." While he was speaking he bared the left shoulder of the wounded
man, and I saw the holes made by the bullet as it passed from the pectoral into
the upper part of the deltoid. Without waiting longer, the surgeon made a
straight cut downward from near the acromion through the thick fibre of the
deltoid to the bone. He tried to sever the tendons to slip the head of the
humerus from the socket, but failed. He wasted no time in further trial, but
made a second incision from the bullet-hole diagonally to the middle of the
first cut, and turned the pointed flap thus made up over the shoulder. It was
now easy to unjoint the bones, and but a moment's work to saw off the shattered
piece, tie the severed arteries, and bring the flap again into its place.
There was no time to
pause, for the surgeon began to fear the effects of the chloroform on the
patient. We hastened to revive him by every possible means at hand, throwing
cold water on him and warming his hands and feet. Although under the influence
of chloroform to the degree that he was insensible to pain, he had not been permitted
to lose his entire consciousness, and he appeared to be sensible of what we
were doing. Nevertheless, he awoke slowly, very slowly, the surgeon meanwhile
putting the stitches in the incision. At last he raised his eyelids and made a
movement with his lips. With a deliberate movement he surveyed the circle of
faces gathered closely around the bed. There was something in his eyes which
had an irresistible attraction for me, and I bent forward to await his gaze. As
his eyes met mine they changed as if a sudden light had struck them, and the
stony stare gave way to a look of intelligence and recognition. Then, through
the beard of a season's growth and behind the haggard mask before me, I saw at
once the circus-rider of Turin and Paris. I remember being scarcely excited or
surprised at the meeting, for a great sense of irresponsibility came over me,
and I involuntarily accepted the coincidence as a matter of course. He tried in
vain to speak, but held up his right hand, and feebly made with his fingers the
sign of the letter which had played such a part in the story of his life. Even
at that instant the light left his eyes, and something like a veil seemed drawn
over them. With the instinctive energy which possesses every one when there is
a chance of saving human life, we redoubled our efforts to restore the patient
to consciousness. But while we strove to feed the flame with some of our own
vitality, it flickered and went out, leaving the hue of ashes where the rosy
tinge of life had been. His heart was paralyzed.
As I turned away, my eye
caught the surgeon's incision, which was now plainly visible on the left
shoulder. The cut was in the form of the letter Y.
[2] Century
Magazine, March, 1883.
3.THE END OF NEW YORK [3]
BY PARK BENJAMIN
INTRODUCTORY
THE WAR CLOUD
Towards dusk on the
afternoon of Monday, December 5th, 1881, the French steamer "Canada,"
from Havre, arrived at her pier in New York City. Among the passengers was a
tall, dark, rather fine-looking man, of about middle-age. After the usual examination
of his baggage by the Custom House officials had been made, this person,
accompanied by a lady, took a hack at the entrance of the pier, and was driven
to the Fifth Avenue Hotel. The initials on the luggage strapped on the rear of
the vehicle were M.B.
In conversing with the
driver the gentleman—for his appearance and bearing fully indicated his right
to the title—spoke English, though somewhat imperfectly; with the lady he
talked in sonorous Castilian.
Apparently, no one
bestowed any particular notice upon the pair. They were two foreigners out of
the great throng of foreigners which lands daily in the metropolis; they were
Spaniards and reasonably well-to-do, seeing that they came over in the saloon,
and not in the steerage.
The names registered at
the hotel were Manuel Blanco and wife.
Late during the
following evening the lady personally came to the office seemingly in great
distress. An interpreter being procured, it was learned that Señor Blanco, in
response to a visiting-card sent to his room, had left the apartment shortly
after breakfast that morning, and had not since returned.
The lady explained that
he had no business affairs in New York, and that they were merely resting in
the city for a few days to recover from the effects of the ocean voyage, before
going to Charleston, S.C., their destination.
The clerk in the office
simply knew that a stranger had called and sent a card to Señor Blanco, and
that the two, after meeting, had left the hotel together.
The anxiety of Señora
Blanco was evidently excessive. She rejected such commonplace reasons as that
her husband might have lost his way, or that some unlooked-for business matters
had claimed his attention.
"No, no!" she
repeated, almost hysterically; "no beezness. Ah, Dios! El está
muerte."
A physician was sent
for, and the lady, who was fast reaching a stage of nervous prostration, placed
in his care. The hotel detective proceeded at once to Police Headquarters,
whence telegrams were despatched to the various precincts, giving a description
of the missing man, and making inquiries concerning him. The replies were all
in the negative: no such person had come under the notice of the police.
From what has thus far
been narrated, it might be inferred that Blanco's absence was due to one of
those strange disappearances which happen in great cities. The inference,
however, would be wrong. Blanco had not disappeared.
True, his agonized wife
and the police of New York City had no trace of his whereabouts; but Mr.
Michael Chalmette, an officer detailed by the U.S. Marshal in New Orleans to
arrest Leon Sangrado, at the request of the Republic of Chili, on the charge of
repeatedly committing murder and highway robbery in that country, was entirely
sure that the missing person was sitting beside him, handcuffed to his left
wrist, and that both were speeding toward New Orleans as fast as a railway-car
could take them.
When the French steamer
"Canada" arrived, Mr. Michael Chalmette, wearing the uniform and
badge of a Custom House officer, stationed himself by the gang-plank and
narrowly scrutinized each passenger that came ashore. While Blanco's trunks
were being examined, he stood near that gentleman, and furtively compared his
features with those on a photograph. It was Chalmette who sent the card to
Blanco's room, in the hotel, next day, and who induced Blanco to accompany him
in a carriage, as he said, to the Custom House, to arrange some irregularity in
the passing of Blanco's luggage. The driver of that carriage, however, was told
to go to the Pennsylvania Railroad Dépôt, in Jersey City.
Blanco evinced some
surprise on being taken across the ferry, but was easily satisfied by his
companion's explanation that the branch of the Custom House to be visited was
on the Jersey side.
When the station was
reached Chalmette led the way to the waiting-room, and quietly observed, before
the unsuspecting Blanco could finish a sentence beginning:
"Ees it posseeble
zat zees is ze Custom—"
"You are my
prisoner. You had better come without making trouble."
Blanco looked at him aghast—not
half comprehending the words.
"A prisoner—I—for
what?"
Chalmette returned no
answer, but produced his warrant.
"But I no
understand—I—"
Just then the warning
bell rung. Chalmette seized his prisoner by the arm and pushed him through the
gateway.
On the platform Blanco
made some slight resistance. The policeman, whose attention was attracted
thereby, after a few words with Chalmette, assisted the latter in forcing him
upon the train, which was already slowly moving out of the dépôt.
000
It is necessary to break
the thread of the story here to note an odd coincidence. While there is a
French steamer "Canada" belonging to the Compagnie Générale Trans
Atlantique, and plying between New York and Havre, there is also an English
steamer "Canada" belonging to the National Line, which travels
between New York and London. It so happened that on the same afternoon that the
French vessel came in, as before narrated, the English steamer of like name
also arrived.
Among the passengers who
landed from the English "Canada" there was also a couple, man and
woman, apparently Spaniards, and there was an undeniable resemblance between
the man and Blanco. The former, however, had features cast in a much rougher
mould, and his general bearing indicated that he was not a gentleman, as
plainly as Blanco's did the reverse.
The luggage of the pair
consisted of a single valise, which was carried
by the woman, the man striding on ahead, leisurely puffing a cigarette.
They hired no carriage, but walked from the pier, across and up West
Street, and took a street-car going to the east side of the city.
As soon as they left the
conveyance the man spread out his arms and expanded his chest with a long
breath. The woman half smiled, and said something to him in Spanish. Then they
mingled with the crowd around Tompkins Square and disappeared.
000
Two days after Blanco's
arrest the physician, now in constant attendance upon his wife, filed the death
certificate of a stillborn child. Puerperal fever set in, and the life of the
unhappy woman for more than two weeks trembled in the balance. During the first
week a telegram from New Orleans, which Blanco's captor had permitted him to
send, came, addressed to her.
The physician opened it;
but as she was almost constantly unconscious, it was impossible to inform her
of its contents for some days. Then she was simply told that her husband had
been heard from, and was safe. The doctor peremptorily forbade any information
being given her of Blanco's true situation; and as she could not understand the
language, and so glean intelligence from the newspapers, which contained
reports of the inquiry conducted by the Commissioner, and the complete
identification of the prisoner as Leon Sangrado, she, of course, remained in
ignorance of what had happened.
Some five weeks elapsed
before she was judged sufficiently strong to bear the shock which such news
would inevitably produce. Then she was told as gently as possible, all mention
of the nature of the charges against Blanco being avoided.
She listened in silent
surprise.
"But he has never
been in Chili in his life," she insisted.
The old doctor, himself
a Spaniard, looked at her pityingly, but said nothing.
"He has been Consul
before nowhere but at Trieste; how could he have been in South America?"
she continued.
"Consul? Is your
husband, then, in the Consular service of Spain?" queried the doctor,
somewhat surprised.
"He is here as
Consul to Charleston—in—ah, what is the name?—Carolina."
"Can you prove
that?" demanded the physician, somewhat excitedly.
"I can—that is, I
think there are official papers in the trunks. Is it necessary?"
"Very
necessary."
"Here are the keys,
then."
The doctor in her
presence opened the luggage, and in a curiously arranged secret compartment in
one of the trunks found the documents. After a few moments spent in looking
them over, he said:
"Do you feel strong
to-day?"
"Not very."
"I think you could
travel, however. I will see that your baggage is properly packed, if you will
be prepared to accompany me to-morrow morning."
"But whither?"
"To Washington; to
the Spanish Minister. This is a serious business."
Under the supervision of
the doctor the journey was safely accomplished.
After proper repose Señora Blanco and the physician proceeded to the
Spanish Legation, and within a very short time Señor Antonio Mantilla,
Minister Plenipotentiary and Envoy Extraordinary of His Catholic
Majesty, was in possession of Blanco's papers, and of the facts, so far
as known to his visitors, attending that gentleman's arrest.
Señor Mantilla looked
grave and said little. He thanked the physician, however, warmly for the part
he had taken in the matter, and calling a secretary placed Señora Blanco in his
charge, with instructions that she should receive the greatest care and
attention.
He then desired the
attendance of his Secretary of Legation, and the two
officials remained in earnest consultation for more than two hours.
During this period several telegrams were sent to the Spanish Consul at
New Orleans, and a long cipher-message to the Minister of Foreign
Affairs in Madrid.
A few days later a
lengthy report was received from the Consul at New Orleans, accompanied by
three letters from Blanco to his wife, not one of which had been forwarded from
the jail in which he was confined.
Another consultation was
held at the Spanish Legation, during which this report and an answering message
from Madrid were frequently referred to.
The report set forth the
facts of the identification of Blanco as Sangrado by the Chilian
representatives, with sufficient certainty to convince the U.S. Commissioner.
Until a late period in the inquiry Blanco had had no counsel. He had, however,
asseverated from the beginning that he was the Consul of Spain at Charleston—a
fact not believed, because there was already a Consul resident at that place.
Communication with that official simply showed that he expected to be
transferred to another post, but had not been informed of the name of his
successor. The Commissioner, seeing that Blanco was doing nothing to obtain
testimony in his own favor, quietly arranged that counsel should be provided
for him; and the lawyers, as a matter of course, at once sent to New York for
Blanco's papers.
Señora Blanco, being
then in a dangerous condition, was helpless. Search was made through the trunks,
without finding any trace of the documents hidden in the secret compartment.
The Legation of Spain in
Washington had information that Manuel Blanco had been sent to assume the
Consulship at Charleston, but no one could personally identify the prisoner to
be the Manuel Blanco appointed.
The Chilian witnesses
had sworn that the prisoner was Leon Sangrado in the most unequivocal
manner—and Chalmette deposed that he saw him land from the "Canada,"
in which vessel he had been instructed to look for the fugitive.
The facts, as thus
gathered by the Spanish diplomatists from the Consul at New Orleans, from
Señora Blanco, and from her physician, were complete. The outcome of their
deliberations upon them was twofold.
First.—The departure of Señora Blanco, under care of
an attaché of the Spanish Legation, to join her husband at New Orleans.
Second.—The following diplomatic communication from
the Minister of Spain to the Secretary of State of the United States of
America.
Legation of Spain at
Washington,
January 16th, 1882.
The undersigned, Envoy
Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of His Catholic Majesty, has the
honor to address the Honorable Secretary of State, with a view to obtaining
from the Federal Government reparation for the arrest of Señor Don Manuel
Blanco, His Catholic Majesty's Consul at Charleston, S.C., at the demand of the
Republic of Chili, on a charge of crime preferred by the Government of that
country. The undersigned is instructed to protest, in the most distinct terms,
against this grave breach of international obligations, to insist upon the
immediate release of the said Blanco, and to require from the Federal
Government an apology suited to the circumstances. The undersigned avails
himself, etc.,
ANTONIO MANTILLA.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE,
WASHINGTON, January
20th, 1882.
SIR: Referring to your
communication of the 16th inst., in which you protest against the arrest of the
person alleged to be Señor Don Manuel Blanco, His Catholic Majesty's Consul at
Charleston, at the instance of the Republic of Chili, and demand the release of
the said person, with a suitable apology from this Government in the premises,
I have the honor to inform you that the representatives of the Chilian
Government allege the person in question to be one Leon Sangrado, a fugitive
from justice, charged with the crimes of murder and robbery; that, before the
United States Commissioner at New Orleans, the Chilian representatives have
produced evidence identifying the prisoner as Leon Sangrado, which evidence has
warranted the said Commissioner in rendering judgment accordingly; and that the
proceedings and judgment, on review by the President of the United States, have
been confirmed, and the warrant of extradition ordered. I have the honor to
transmit herewith a copy of the record of the evidence in the case for your
Excellency's information. I have also to state that, in the circumstances, this
Government conceives itself to be acting in a spirit of strict international
comity with the Republic of Chili, and, upon the representations made by your
Excellency, cannot admit that any reparation or apology is due to the
Government of His Catholic Majesty.
I have the honor, etc.,
JAS. G. BLAINE,
Secretary of State.
Some days later the
Spanish Minister forwarded a note to the State Department, wherein, after the
usual formal recitals, he stated as follows:
The
undersigned has the honor to inform the Honorable Secretary of
State that, having transmitted his communication by cable to the
Government of His Catholic Majesty, he is now instructed to make
the following demands:
1st. That the Federal
Government shall deliver Señor Don Manuel Blanco, His Catholic Majesty's Consul
at Charleston, S.C., alleged to be Leon Sangrado, a fugitive from justice from
the Republic of Chili, to the undersigned, at the Legation of Spain at
Washington, by or before the first day of February, proximo.
2. That the Federal
Government shall address to the Government of His Catholic Majesty a formal and
solemn apology for the insult offered by the arrest of said Blanco. And, in
further proof thereof, shall, on said first day of February, at noon, cause the
Spanish flag to be hoisted over Fort Columbus, in New York Harbor; Fort Warren,
in Boston Harbor; the Navy Yard, in Washington; and at the mast-head of the
flag-ship of the North Atlantic squadron—then and there to be saluted with
twenty-one guns.
I have the honor, etc.,
ANTONIO MANTILLA.
The reply sent by
Secretary Blaine to this peremptory demand was, as might be expected, an
equally peremptory refusal.
Thereupon the Spanish
Minister demanded his passports, and with his
Legation left the country.
The passports of the
American Minister at Madrid were at the same time forwarded to him, and he
returned to the United States.
Blanco was delivered to
the Chilian representatives, and duly extradited, his wife accompanying him.
The anti-administration
newspapers commented with great severity upon the case, alleging that undue
haste was manifested in forwarding the proceedings; that proper opportunity was
not afforded the accused to establish his true identity; that the warrant of
extradition was illegal, inasmuch as it had been issued by an Assistant
Secretary of State during the absence of both the President and Secretary from
Washington, and that, consequently, there had been in fact no real review of
the proceedings by the Executive.
The administration
journals, on the contrary, found the extradition of the prisoner to be
perfectly within the letter of the law; but were not inclined to say much on
this point, preferring rather to applaud Mr. Blaine's new proof of a
"vigorous foreign policy," as exemplified in the previously quoted
correspondence with the Spanish Minister.
I.THE GATHERING OF THE
STORM
That the friendly
relations of two great nations should be ruptured by a difficulty which, to all
appearances, might easily have been adjusted, seems incredible; but it should
be remembered that at this period Spain and the United States were by no means
on the best of terms. Spanish war-vessels in the West Indies had been
overhauling American merchantmen in a high-handed way, which had already called
forth the remonstrances of our Government; and the complaints from Cuba of the
insecurity of property and life of American citizens had become more numerous
than ever. Still, the result of the dispute was a surprise to the world;
especially as the overt act of rupture had come from Spain, and not from the
United States, as had so frequently hitherto seemed probable.
The popular excitement
throughout the country was intense. There was a universal demand for war. It
was pointed out that the country was never so prosperous, or better able to
bear the burden of a conflict; that, with our immense resources, an army could
be raised and a navy equipped inside of sixty days; that such a war would be of
short duration, and that the result could be none other than the humiliation of
Spain, and the ceding to us of the Spanish West Indies as a war indemnity.
The House of
Representatives fairly rung with bellicose speeches, and the press, with a few
exceptions, reflected the popular feeling.
On the other hand,
however, there was a powerful party attempting to stem the precipitancy of the
nation. The great moneyed corporations viewed the matter with alarm, and
advocated peaceful settlement, or, at most, inaction. This, however, was
attributed to their fears of unsettlement of values, and consequent
depreciation of their property.
The Senate, refusing to
be influenced by popular clamor, steadily opposed all hasty legislation originating
in the lower House. The President and Cabinet brought down upon themselves the
bitter denunciation of the opposition press for "cowardly truckling to
Spain," because no immediate steps were taken to place army and navy on a
war footing, and no volunteers were called for.
A month went by. The
popular excitement in this period perceptibly decreased; and, as it did so, the
New York World and Tribune, which, from the first,
had given but weak support to the cry for war, became more outspoken against hostilities.
The bill agreed to by both Houses of Congress, providing for the immediate
construction of ten swift armored cruisers, was strongly attacked in both
journals, and the arming of the harbor forts, and the elaborate preparations
which began to be visible for protecting the harbor by torpedoes, were sneered
at as "useless precautions, dictated by an unworthy fear of a nation which
would never venture to attack us."
The stocks of the New
York Central, Western Union Telegraph, Lake Shore, and other corporations
controlled by Vanderbilt and Jay Gould, which had fallen during the excitement
of the previous month, rose slowly, but steadily.
On the afternoon of
March 6th, the Evening Telegram issued an extra, reporting the
sailing from Coruna of four Spanish ironclads. The announcement on the London
Stock Exchange was that they were going to Cuba.
On the following day
there was a decided fall in American Securities in London, and a weak market in
Wall Street; which degenerated into a rapidly declining one when it became
rumored that Gould was selling Western Union short in large blocks, and that
Vanderbilt's brokers were similarly disposing of N.Y. Central and other stocks.
At 10 o'clock that night
the news came that Spain had formally declared war upon the United States. It
was posted in all the hotels, and read from the stages of all the theatres. The
people flocked into the streets en masse. Speeches were made,
breathing defiance and demands for an immediate attack upon Spain, before
tremendous crowds, in Madison and Union Squares. No one slept that night.
Next morning there was a
panic in Wall Street, which was arrested, however, by the intelligence from
London that, although Government four-per-cents had fallen to 86, they were
steady at that figure, and that the Rothschilds and Baring Brothers were buying
them in largely. Before night Congress had voted a special appropriation of a
hundred million dollars for purposes of defense, authorized the immediate
construction of twenty armored ships, and the President issued his
proclamation, calling for the raising of four hundred thousand men "to
repel an invasion of the Union."
Within twenty-four hours
the regiments of the National Guard in New York and vicinity were mustered into
the service of the United States and ordered into camp, under command of
General Hancock. That officer at once began the construction of sea-coast
batteries on Coney Island, Rockaway Beach, and the New Jersey coast. A crack
city regiment was detailed to complete the partially finished fort on Sandy
Hook and throw up earthworks along the Peninsula; but, as the hands of most of
the men became quite sore through wielding shovels and picks, they were
relieved and sent to garrison Governor's Island, where they gave exhibition
drills daily, and, on Friday evenings, invited their female friends to hops of
the most enjoyable description. The Hook fort was subsequently completed by a
volunteer regiment of Cuban cigar-makers, from the Bowery.
As a matter of course,
notice was immediately given to all foreign vessels in port of the proposed
blocking of the Narrows and the Main, Swash and East Channels with torpedoes,
and forty-eight hours' time was accorded them wherein to take their departure.
The European steamers were the first to leave, each one towing from two to five
sailing-vessels. Later on, General Hancock impressed all the harbor tugs into
service; and, by their aid, before the specified period had elapsed, not a
single ship floating a foreign flag remained in New York Harbor. A battalion of
army engineers, under command of General Abbot, and another of sailors, under
Captain Selfridge, at once began operations.
In the Narrows,
torpedoes were moored at distances of one hundred feet apart, and were
connected with the shore by electric wires. At various points along the beach
shell-proof huts were constructed, to which these wires led. In each hut was
arranged a camera lucida, so that a picture of the harbor, over a limited area,
was thrown upon a whitened table. In this way an observer could recognize the
instant an enemy's vessel arrived over a sunken mine, and could explode the
latter by simply touching a button which allowed the electric current to pass
to the torpedo. In the Harbor channels the torpedoes were so arranged as to be
exploded on contact of an enemy's vessel with a partially submerged buoy.
The torpedo-stations on
Staten and Coney Islands and the Jersey coast were provided with movable
fish-torpedoes of the Ericsson and Lay types, intended to be sent out against a
hostile vessel, and manoeuvred from the shore. All the steam-tugs in the Harbor
were moored in Gowanus bay, and each tug was rigged with a long boom projecting
from her bow, on which a torpedo, containing some fifty pounds of dynamite, was
carried.
With the tugs, and serving
as flag-ship for the squadron, was the U.S. torpedo-boat "Alarm,"
Lieutenant-Commander H.H. Gorringe.
The armament of the
sea-coast batteries was not calculated to strike terror into the soul of any
nation owning a modern ironclad vessel. It consisted mainly of old-fashioned
smooth-bore guns, a system of artillery which has been rejected by every
European power as the weakest and most inefficient. The greatest range
attainable with the best of these cannon was 8000 yards, or some four and one
half miles. At one quarter this range their shot would be utterly unable to
penetrate even moderately thin armor. Besides these guns there were a few ten
and twelve-inch rifles of cast-iron, and hence of unreliable and inferior
material; some old smooth-bore cannon, converted into rifles by wrought-iron
linings; and a number of mortars and pieces of small calibre, altogether
contemptible in the light of the advances made in the art of war during the
last quarter of a century.
Meanwhile the inventors
were not idle, and the press fairly teemed with novel suggestions for the
defense of the city. It was proposed to run all the oil stored in the
Williamsburgh refineries into the lower bay, and set it on fire when the
enemy's fleet appeared.
The Herald suggested
the raising of a regiment of divers to live in a submarine fort, the guns of
which should be arranged to fire upwards into a vessel floating above, and
immediately offered to contribute $250,000 to begin the construction of such
defenses.
General Newton proposed
the building of continuous earthworks on both shores of the bay and Narrows,
behind which a broad-gauge railroad should be constructed. On the track he
placed heavy platform-cars, each car carrying one heavy gun. Embrasures were
made at regular intervals along the embankment. His idea was, that if a hostile
vessel made her way into the Harbor, the gun-cars should move along behind the
earthworks, keeping abreast of the ship, and thus pour into her a continuous
fire. Measures were promptly taken to follow this plan.
Mr. T.A. Edison
announced that he had invented everything which, up to that time, any one else
had suggested. He invited all the reporters to Menlo Park, and, after
elaborately explaining the merits of a new catarrh remedy, showed some lines on
a piece of paper, which, he said, represented huge electro-magnets, which he
proposed to set up along the coast, say, near Barnegat. When the enemy's iron
ships appeared, he proposed to excite these magnets, and draw the vessels on
the rocks. Somebody said that this notion had been anticipated by one Sindbad
the Sailor, whereupon Mr. Edison denounced that person as a "patent
pirate." He also said that these magnets would be exhibited in working
order next Christmas Eve.
Professor Bell proposed
the "induction balance," as a way of recognizing the approach of the
enemy's iron vessels. He went down the Bay with his instrument, and sent back
some telegrams which were alarming, until it was discovered that the professor
had made a slight error in the direction from which he asserted the ships were
coming, it being manifestly impossible for them to sail overland from the
Pacific, as his contrivance predicted.
The condition of affairs
in the city reminded one of the early days of the Rebellion. Wall Street was
panicky—chiefly because of the immense depreciation in railway securities.
Government four-per-cent bonds, however, had gone up to ninety-eight.
Provisions were high, and, through the stoppage of European commerce, the cost
of imported articles, such as dress-goods, tea, etc., became excessive.
Recruiting was going on everywhere; the regiments, as fast as organized, being
dispatched to different points along the sea-board, or to swell the numbers of
an army under command of General Sheridan, which was preparing to sail to Key
West, to invade Cuba.
During the month of
March New York remained in a state of suspense. Army contractors did a brisk
business; but otherwise there was little doing. News was eagerly sought. It was
known that Spain was mobilizing her army and fitting out transports; but beyond
this, and the dispatching of the four ironclads, which had duly reached Havana,
she had taken no steps pointing toward an invasion of the United States. All
the European nations had issued proclamations of neutrality, except Russia and
France. England had ordered the great Spanish ironclad, "El Cid," in
which Sir William Armstrong had just placed two 100-ton guns, out of her waters
inside of twenty-four hours after Spain had declared war; and this, although
the vessel was in many respects unfinished. The Queen's proclamation was most
stringent against the fitting out or coaling of the vessels of either
belligerent, and a special Act of Parliament was passed, inflicting penalties
of the greatest severity for any violation of it. John Bull evidently proposed
to pay for no more "Alabamas."
The first great news of
the war came during the first week in June. The Spanish screw corvette
"Tornado," six guns, had sailed from Cartagena for Havana. Off Cape
Trafalgar she encountered the "Lancaster," flag-ship of the United
States European squadron, bearing the flag of Rear-Admiral Nicholson. The
"Lancaster" carried two-eleven-inch and twenty nine-inch
old-fashioned smooth-bore Dahlgren guns. The action was short, sharp, and
decisive.
It terminated in the
surrender of the "Tornado," after the loss of her captain, five
officers, and forty of her crew. The "Lancaster" was badly cut up
about the rigging, but otherwise uninjured. Her loss was but five men. The
first tidings of this was the arrival of the "Tornado" in Hampton
Roads, with a prize crew on board, and the royal ensign of Spain floating
beneath the stars and stripes.
When the extras
announcing the news were shouted in the streets, the enthusiasm of the people
knew no bounds. From every building, from every window, the flag was displayed.
Throngs of excited men marched through the avenues, cheering and shouting, and
the recruiting was renewed so vigorously, that New York's quota of the four
hundred thousand men called for by the President was filled within the next
twenty-four hours after the news came.
In the midst of this
furore, the bulletins announced that the Spanish ironclads "Zaragoza"
and "Numancia" had sailed from Havana, with no destination announced;
that their consorts, the "Arapiles" and "Vittoria,"
together with three transports, "San Quentin," "Patino,"
and "Ferrol," the latter well laden with coal and provisions, were
preparing to follow; also, that the huge "El Cid" had been fitted for
sea, and was about to sail from Vigo, Spain.
Just before this
intelligence arrived, the United States steam frigate
"Franklin," forty-three guns, carrying the flag of Vice-Admiral
Stephen
C. Rowan, left Hampton Roads on a cruise, northwardly.
Where were the Spanish
ironclads going?
On Sunday morning, April
9th, Trinity Church was crowded with worshipers. The venerable Bishop of New
York was present, and was to deliver the sermon. His erect, stately form, clad
in the flowing robes of his office, had just appeared in the pulpit, and he had
spoken the words of his text, when a commotion in the rear of the church caused
him to stop and look up, wondering at the unseemly interruption.
A soldier emerged from
the crowd, and, making his way to the Astor pew, handed a letter to Mr. John
Jacob Astor. The ruddy face of that gentleman blanched as he read its contents.
Then he rose, walked to the pulpit, and handed the missive to the bishop.
A dead silence
prevailed—at last broken by these simple words:
"Brethren, the
war-vessels of the public enemy have appeared off our
Harbor. Let us pray."
A deep, heart-felt Amen
responded to the appeal made in eloquent, though faltering, tones; and then,
quiet and orderly, the congregation left the temple. It was fitting that such a
prayer should be the last ever offered in a sanctuary of which, but a few days
later, only a heap of smoking ruins remained.
The same news had been
forwarded to the other churches, and the congregations, dismissed, had gathered
in front of the great bulletin-boards which had been erected in the various
parts of the city. In huge letters were the words:
"A large steamer,
showing Spanish flag, sighted off Barnegat."
Shortly afterwards came
another dispatch:
"The United States
frigate 'Franklin' has been signaled off Fire
Island."
Then another dispatch:
"The Spanish
steamer has gone to the eastward."
And then, three hours
later:
"Heavy firing has
been heard from the south and east."
II.THE BATTLE OF FIRE
ISLAND
The
"Franklin," on leaving Fire Island, where she had communication with
the shore, stood to the westward. At 3 p.m. the mast-head look-out reported a
large steamer on the port bow. As is customary on vessels at sea, the
"Franklin" showed no colors; the stranger displayed a flag which
could not be made out.
On the poop-deck of the
"Franklin" were Admiral Rowan, Captain Greer, commanding the ship,
and the executive officer, Lieutenant-Commander Jewell.
"Mast-head, there!
can you make out her colors yet?" hailed the latter.
"No, sir."
"Take your glass
and go aloft, Mr. Rodgers," said Admiral Rowan to his aid; "perhaps
you can see better."
The officer rapidly
ascended the rigging to the foretopmast cross-trees.
"It is the English
flag, sir!" he shouted.
"Hoist English
colors, Captain," said the admiral, quietly; "and bend on our own,
ready to go up."
The red cross of St.
George, the British man-of-war flag, rose slowly to the peak.
The stranger was seen to
alter her course, and head for the "Franklin."
The admiral turned to
Captain Greer and nodded. The latter gave an order to a midshipman standing
near.
Rat-tat—rat-tat—rat-tat-tat-tat!
The quick drum-beat to
quarters for action rang sharply through the ship. The executive officer took
his speaking-trumpet and stationed himself on the quarter-deck. The men sprang
to their guns.
"Silence! man the
port-guns. Cast loose and provide!"
A momentary confusion,
as the thirty-eight nine-inch smooth-bore guns on the main-deck, the four
hundred-pound rifles on the spar-deck, and the eleven-inch pivot on the
forecastle were cleared of their tackle, and got ready for training. The guns'
crews then stood erect and silent in their places beside the guns, on the side
of the ship turned toward the enemy.
Meanwhile the magazine
had been opened, and the powder-boys flocked to the scuttles, receiving
cartridges in the leather boxes slung to their shoulders. Shell were hoisted
from below. The surgeon and his assistants, including the chaplain, laid out
instruments, and converted the cock-pit into an operating-room. The fires in
the galley were put out, and those under the boilers urged to their fiercest
heat. The decks were sanded, in grim anticipation of their becoming slippery
with blood. Tackles and slings were prepared to lower the wounded below. The
Gatling guns aloft were made ready to fire upon the enemy's decks, in case the
two vessels came near enough together.
"Prime!"
shouted the officer on the quarter-deck. Primers were placed in the vents of
the already loaded guns, and the gun-captains stepped back, tautening the
lock-strings, and bending down to glance along the sights.
"Point! Tell the
division officers to train on the craft that's coming, and wait orders."
This last command to a midshipman aid.
The silence throughout
the great ship was profound. The gun-captains eyed the approaching vessels over
the sights of their guns. Only the quick throb of the engines and the sough of
the waves were audible.
The two vessels were now
within some four miles of each other. There was no question but that the
stranger was a man-of-war—and an ironclad, at that—provided with a formidable
ram.
"I thought
so," suddenly ejaculated the admiral: "Now show him who we are."
The English flag had
been replaced by the red-yellow-and-red bars of Spain. Down came the red cross
from the peak of the "Franklin;" and then, not only there, but from
every mast-head, floated the stars and stripes.
A puff of smoke from the
Spaniard—a whirr, a shriek, and a solid shot struck the water, having passed
entirely over the American frigate.
"He fires at long
range!" remarked the admiral, calmly.
"It would be
useless for us to reply," answered the captain.
"Clearly so."
"Shall we stop and
wait for him, sir?"
"Wait for him? No!
Go for him! Four bells, sir! Ring four bells and go ahead fast!"
The clang of the
engine-bell resounded through the ship; the thump of the machinery grew more
rapid; the whole vessel thrilled and shook, as if eager for the attack.
The distance between the
two ships was reduced to about two miles.
Again the Spaniard
fired. The shot struck the "Franklin" broad on her port-bow, knocked
over a gun, killed six men, and passed through the other side of the ship.
Still the
"Franklin" pressed on.
Crash! a huge shell from
an Armstrong eighteen-ton gun burst between the fore and mainmasts; the bow
pivot-gun was dismounted; ten men of her crew down; the maintopmast stays cut,
and the maintopmast tottering. Crash! Another shell, and the jib-boom hangs
dragging under the bows; the fore topgallantmast is carried away. Men hacked at
the rigging to clear away the wreck which now impeded the ship's advance.
"Now let him have
it," said the admiral, quietly.
The captain speaks to
the executive officer, who shouts through his trumpet: "Port guns! Ready!
Fire!!"
The concussion of the
explosion made the ship stagger for a moment.
When the smoke cleared
away, the Spaniard's mizzenmast was seen dragging overboard; but otherwise no
damage had been inflicted.
"His armor is too
thick for us," gravely remarked the admiral; "get boom torpedoes over
the bows!"
"All ready, now,
sir," reported the captain.
"Continue firing,
and keep right for him."
"Shall we ram him,
sir?"
"Yes, sir; as
straight amidships as you can."
The "Franklin"
now poured in her fire with all possible rapidity; but it was evident that her
shot made little or no impression on the massive iron shield of her antagonist,
although it played havoc amid his rigging. Another fact now became
apparent—that the Spaniard was much the faster vessel of the two; for he was
evidently nearing the "Franklin" more quickly than the
"Franklin" was approaching him.
"Do you know who
that ship is?" asked the admiral.
"The 'Numancia,'
sir," replied the captain; "her armament is immensely better than
ours. She has twenty-five Armstrong guns."
Crash! crash! Two more
shells struck the wooden hull of the "Franklin" between the fore and
mainmasts, tearing a great rent in her side and literally annihilating the
crews of four guns.
"There is three
feet of water in the hold, sir and it is gaining!" shouted the carpenter
at the pump-well.
Men were sent at once to
the pumps.
Crash! This time a
double explosion, followed by dense clouds of steam.
Men, scalded and horribly burned, climbed up the ladders from below.
"Our boilers are
gone," reported the captain.
"Keep her broadside
toward the enemy, sir," returned the admiral.
The guns of the "Franklin"
were now firing slowly. Their smoke overhung the vessel so that the Spaniard
could not be seen, but the reports of his cannon sounded closer and closer.
Suddenly the huge prow
of the "Numancia" loomed up close aboard the
"Franklin."
"Starboard! Hard a
starboard!" shouted the admiral.
It was too late. There
was no one at the helm. A shell, bursting close to the wheel, had killed the
helmsman, and a fragment had buried itself in the captain's breast.
The admiral himself
turned to go toward the wheel, but suddenly staggered and pitched forward,
dead.
Then came the frightful
explosion of the "Numancia's" bow-torpedo, striking the ill-fated
frigate; and then the crushing and splintering of timbers under the fearful
stroke of the ram.
Five minutes afterwards
the Spanish war-ship was alone. Slowly the "Franklin" sank—her lofty
mast-heads going under with the stars and stripes still proudly floating from
them. The "Numancia" lowered her boats to pick up survivors. They
returned with one officer and two seamen—all that remained of the crew of
nearly one thousand souls.
The American flag ship
had been sunk by a fourth-rate European ironclad—the first practical proof of
the miserably short-sighted policy of a nation of fifty millions of
inhabitants, with an enormous coast line and innumerable ports to be protected,
relying for its safety upon a navy the fifty-five available vessels of which
are too slow to run away, and too lightly armed and too weakly built to defend
themselves.
The "Numancia"
hoisted her boats and stood to the westward. Shortly afterward she exchanged
signals with the "Zaragoza," "Arapiles" and
"Vittoria." The war-vessels drew together, the transports came
alongside of them, and fresh supplies of coal and provisions were delivered.
Then the transports headed to the south, and the men-of-war laid their course
for New York.
III.THE METROPOLIS
BELEAGUERED
Three ships of the
Spanish squadron named were armed with Armstrong guns. Their combined batteries
aggregated eight cannon of eighteen tons four of twelve tons, eleven of nine
tons, and twenty-eight of seven tons. The "Zaragoza" carried twenty
guns of another pattern, ranging in calibre from eleven to seven and
three-fourths inches. The total number of cannon which would thus be brought to
bear upon New York and its suburbs was seventy-one.
The shot of the
Armstrong guns above named vary in weight from four hundred to one hundred and
fifteen pounds. If the entire number of guns should each deliver one shot, the
total amount of iron projected would exceed six tons in weight.
The arrival of the
Spanish vessels was not known until dawn of the morning of April 11th. Then
they were descried on the horizon by the watchers at Sandy Hook. At first sight
it was supposed that they had encountered heavy weather and lost their light
spars; but, as they approached nearer, it was seen that each ship had sent down
all her upper rigging, and had housed topmasts.
There was no mistaking
what this meant. It was the stripping for battle.
It was also noticed that
the ships steamed very slowly in single file; that from the bows of each
projected a fork-like contrivance, and that in advance of the leader were
several steam-launches, between which, and crossing the path of the large
vessel, extended hawsers which dipped into the water. Evidently the new-comers
had a wholesome dread of torpedoes, and hence the use of bow torpedo-catchers
and the dragging-ropes.
No flag of any sort was
exhibited.
Meanwhile the guns of
all the sea-coast batteries along the shores had been manned, ready to fire
upon the huge black monsters as soon as they should come within range. The
order had been given to commence firing on the hoisting of a flag and on the
discharge of a heavy gun from the signal station on Sandy Hook, where General
Hancock had posted himself with his staff.
In the city the time for
excitement had passed. The business section was deserted, most of the men being
either in the fortifications or under arms in the camps, ready to move as
directed to repel any attempt on the part of the enemy to effect a landing.
There had been no
general exodus from New York, as it was not believed possible that the enemy's
missiles could reach the city proper. In Brooklyn, however, but few people
remained. All the churches in the city were open, and with singular unanimity
the people flocked into them. No public conveyances were running; few vehicles
moved through the streets. The silence was like that of a summer holiday, when
the people are in the suburbs, pleasure-seeking.
"They seem to have
stopped, general," said an aid who was attentively watching the advance of
the Spanish vessels through his glass.
"They are a long
way out of our range," remarked General Hancock. "We have nothing
that carries far enough to injure them. They are fully five miles out."
"Now they go ahead
again. No, they are turning," said the aid.
The leading ship had
ported her helm, and, followed by the others, filed to the eastward, bringing
the port broadsides to bear upon the Long Island batteries.
"They certainly are
not going into action there," said the general.
A cloud of white smoke
arose from the bow of the leading vessel, and then across the water came the
deep "boom" of a heavy gun.
"Why, that fellow
has fired out to sea," exclaimed one of the general's staff.
"No, it was a blank
cartridge. He fired to attract attention. See! there goes a white flag up to
his mast-head!" said the officer at the telescope: "A boat with a
flag-of-truce is putting off, general."
"Send a launch out
to meet it," said Hancock, shortly: "and see that it does not come
nearer than a mile or so from the shore."
A few minutes after, the
steam-yacht "Ideal," which had been offered by its owner as a
dispatch boat to the general, was swiftly running towards the Spanish
messenger.
The aid at the telescope
saw an officer step from the Spanish boat into the yacht, and then the latter
put back to the Hook, the enemy's launch remaining where she was.
The Spanish officer was
conducted to the presence of the general. In excellent English, he announced
himself as the Fleet Captain and Chief-of-Staff of the admiral commanding the
Spanish squadron present, and with much ceremony presented the communication
with which he was charged.
The general received the
missive courteously and opened it. The expression of astonishment which came
over his face as he read it for a moment gave place to one of anger. His eyes
flashed, his face reddened, and his fingers nervously played with the end of
his moustache. Then, as he read it over the second time, a rather contemptuous
smile seemed to lurk about the corners of his mouth.
The staff stood by in
silent but eager anticipation. The general held the letter in his hands behind
his back and walked up and down the small apartment, as if in deep thought,
raising his eyes occasionally to glance at the Spanish vessels, which lay
almost motionless, blowing off steam.
Finally, he turned to
the Spanish officer, who stood erect, with his hand resting upon the hilt of
his sword, and said, in a quiet, though determined, voice:
"You will make my
compliments to the admiral commanding, and deliver, in reply to his
communication, that which I will now dictate."
An aid at once seated
himself at the table, and, at the general's dictation, wrote as follows:
SENOR DON ALMIRANTE
VIZCARRO, Commanding Squadron off New York.
SIR: I have the honor to
acknowledge your communication of this date, sent per flag-of-truce, in which
you demand—
1st.—That immediate
surrender to the force under your command be made of the fortifications of this
harbor, together with the Navy Yard at Brooklyn, and all munitions of war here
existing.
2nd.—That the cities of
New York, Brooklyn and Jersey City do cause to be paid, on board of your
flag-ship, within three days after the said surrender, the sum of fifty
millions of dollars in gold, or in the paper currency of England or France.
And in which you
announce that non-acquiescence in the foregoing will be followed by the
bombardment of the said fortifications, the Navy Yard and the arsenals in New
York City, by your squadron, after the lapse of twenty-four hours from noon
this day.
In reply, I have to
state that these demands are peremptorily refused and I have most solemnly to
protest against so gross a violation of the laws of civilized warfare, as is
indicated in your intention to attack a city within a period too short to
enable the non-combatants to be safely removed.
I have the honor to be,
etc.,
WINFIELD S. HANCOCK,
Major-General Commanding.
This reply was
telegraphed to New York, and Mr. Pierrepont Edwards, Her Britannic Majesty's
Consul-General, was one of the first to receive it. He acted with the usual
force and promptness with which British interests and the lives of British
subjects are protected by British officials abroad. That is to say, he first
telegraphed to the British Minister at Washington, Mr. West, requesting, that
the three great ironclads, "Devastation," "Orion" and
"Agamemnon," all of which were then in Hampton Roads, be at once sent
to New York. Then he prepared a formal protest against the proposed action of
the Spanish Admiral, which all the other foreign consuls at once signed, and
which was delivered aboard the Spanish flag-ship by a boat bearing the British
flag before three o'clock that afternoon.
The Spanish admiral took
the protest into consideration to the extent of granting forty-eight hours'
time. The consuls protested again at this as not being sufficient, and demanded
five clear days. The admiral refused to grant more than three; but when, before
the three days had expired, the trio of English war-ships made their
appearance, and calmly moved between his fleet and the shore, he changed his
mind and granted the desired time—which was wise, seeing that the English
vessels could blow his squadron out of water with little trouble and not much injury
to themselves.
The railroads which go
out of New York, while perhaps adequate for all purposes of traffic in time of
peace, are scarcely equal to the removal from the city of several hundred
thousand women, children, sick and aged persons within a period of even five
days. People of this description cannot be moved as easily as armies; and
hence, when the morning of the fifth day dawned, fully one-half of the
non-combatant population was still in the city.
This, however, was
attributable not only to the inadequacy of the means of transportation, but to
the singular apathy—it was not fearlessness—of the people themselves. In the
great tenement districts, it became necessary to send soldiers into the houses
to drive people out of them.
Among the Irish and
Germans there was actual rioting, when force was thus used. The impression was
general that the missiles of the enemy could not reach the populated parts of
New York.
The crowds, however, at
the Grand Central Dépôt, trying to leave the city, were enormous. People were
placed in cattle-cars, on wood cars—in fact, every sort of conveyance adapted
to the tracks was pressed into service.
The Thirtieth Street
Dépôt, on the west side, also was crowded, and trains were leaving thence every
few minutes.
Just before noon, the
city was horror-stricken by the news of a frightful accident at Spuyten Duyvil.
An overloaded train from the Thirtieth Street Dépôt there, through a broken
switch, came into collision with another overloaded train from the Grand
Central Dépôt. The slaughter was horrible. Twelve cars were derailed, and more
than a hundred and twenty people, mostly women and children, killed.
While people were
repeating this news to one another with white faces and trembling lips, the
Spanish squadron was taking position and preparing to attack.
The English squadron
moved outside the Spanish ships, and stood off and on under easy steam.
At precisely noon the
white flag was lowered from the mast-head of the Spanish flag-ship and the
Spanish flags were hoisted by all of the vessels. Immediately afterwards the
"Numancia" delivered her broadside full upon the Coney Island
battery.
Instantly the flag from
the general's station was flung out, the signal-gun was discharged, and from
all the sea-coast batteries the firing began.
IV.IRON HAIL
The position chosen by
the attacking vessels was about one and a half miles to the south of Plumb
Inlet. This point is distant from Fort Hamilton six miles, from Sandy Hook
light seven miles, from Brooklyn Navy Yard nine and a half miles, and from the
City Hall, New York City, about eleven miles, in a straight line. An ample
depth of water to float ships drawing twenty-four feet here exists. The
situation was sufficiently distant from the shore batteries to render the
effect of their projectiles on the armor of the vessels quite inconsiderable.
The ships, however, did
not remain motionless, but steamed slowly around in a circle of some two miles
in diameter, each vessel delivering her fire as she reached the point above
specified. In this way, the chances of being struck by projectiles from shore
were not only lessened, but the injury which they could do was decreased by the
greater distance which they would be compelled to traverse to strike the ships
during the progress of the latter around the further side of the circle.
It was evident that the
Spanish commander had no idea of attempting to land his forces, but simply
proposed to keep up a slow, persistent bombardment. It was further apparent
that only his lighter artillery was directed upon the shore batteries, and that
he was practising with his heavy metal at high elevations, to find out how much
range he could get.
When the second day of
the bombardment opened, there were about a hundred thousand people still in New
York, including two of the city regiments doing police duty. A strong force for
this purpose was necessary, as a large number of roughs and criminals, who had
hurried away during the first panic, now returned, and signalized their advent
by the attempted pillage of the Vanderbilt residences.
About a hundred and
fifty of this mob remained on the pavement of Fifth Avenue, after a
well-directed mitrailleuse fire had been kept up for some fifteen minutes by
the troops. The rest took to their heels, and lurked about the lower part of
the city, waiting for a better opportunity, and thinking hungrily of the
contents of the magnificent dwellings in the up-town districts.
The sea-coast batteries
nearest to the attacking ships were soon rendered untenable by their fire. The
large hotels on Coney Island were all struck by shells and burned, and the
villages of Flatlands, Gravesend, and New Utrecht were quickly destroyed.
Shell after shell then
fell in Flatbush, and occasionally a terrific explosion in Prospect Park, in
Greenwood Cemetery, and in the outlying avenues of Brooklyn, showed that the
enemy was throwing his missiles over distances constantly augmenting.
On the morning of the
third day a futile attempt was made to blow up the "Numancia," first
by the Lay and then by the Ericsson submarine torpedo-boats. The Lay boat,
however, ran up on the east bank and could not be got off, and the Ericsson
started finely from the shore, but, apparently, sank before she had gone a
mile.
The attack by the
"Alarm" and her attendant fleet of torpedo-tugs had the effect of
stopping the bombardment and of concentrating the enemy's attention upon his
own safety. The tugs advanced gallantly to the onset, six of them rushing
almost simultaneously upon the "Vittoria." That vessel met them with
a broadside which sank four at once, and the other two were riddled by shell
from Hotchkiss revolving cannon from the decks of the Spaniard; their machinery
was crippled, and they drifted helplessly out to sea. Of the others, some ran
aground on the bank, some were sunk, and not one succeeded in exploding her
torpedo near a Spanish vessel. The "Alarm" planted a shell from her
bow-rifle, at close range, squarely into the stern of the "Zaragoza,"
piercing the armor and killing a dozen men, besides disabling two guns. She was
rammed, however, by the "Arapiles," and so badly injured as to compel
her to make her escape into shoal water to prevent sinking. There she grounded,
and the Spaniards leisurely made a target of her, although they considerately
permitted her crew to go ashore in their boats without firing a shot at them.
Meanwhile the remaining
citizens of New York had held a mass meeting, and appointed a committee of
Public Safety, with General Grant at its head. There had been a great popular
movement to have that gentleman put in supreme command of the army, but the
authorities at Washington, for some occult reason, known only to themselves,
had offered him a major-general's commission, which he promptly declined. Then
he deliberately went to the nearest recruiting-station and tried to enlist as a
private; but the recruiting-officer, after recovering his senses, with which he
parted in dumb astonishment for some seconds, refused him on the ground that he
was over forty-five years of age.
The general contented
himself with remarking: "Guess they'll want me yet," and thereupon
lighting a huge cigar, calmly marched out of the office and went over to
Flatbush, to "see where the shells are hitting;" serenely oblivious
of the possibility of personal danger involved in that proceeding.
As chief of the Safety
Committee, however, Grant became the real ruler of New York. Martial law
existed, and the senior colonel of the regiments quartered in the city was in
nominal charge; but, as this individual was not blessed with especial force of
character, he never asserted his authority, and, in fact, seemed rather pleased
to gravitate to the position of Grant's immediate subordinate.
On the evening of April
18th the watchers on Sandy Hook saw a fifth vessel join the Spanish fleet; a long,
low craft, having, apparently, two turrets and very light spars. They also saw
the admiral's flag on the "Numancia" lowered, only to be hoisted
again on the foremast of the new-comer.
At daybreak on the
following morning a shell crashed through the roof of the Fifth Avenue Hotel,
descended to the cellar, burst there and wrecked a quarter of the building.
What new fury had thus been let loose?
It has already been
stated that the great ironclad "El Cid" had sailed from Vigo—she had
arrived.
She carried four guns.
Two one-hundred-ton Armstrongs, each having an effectual range of 12 miles, and
two Krupp 15.7-inch guns, which throw shot weighing nearly 2000 pounds over ten
miles. Krupp claims a range of 15 miles; but this is doubtful. She also was
encased in 21-1/2 inches of compound steel and iron armor, capable of resisting
the projectiles of any cannon known—except, perhaps, those of her own
Armstrongs.
The most powerfully
armed and most impregnable ironclad in the world now lay before New York.
It was an Armstrong
shell which struck the Fifth Avenue Hotel. It was a
Krupp shell which shortly after knocked down the steeple of Trinity
Church as if it were a turret of cards.
In view of this new
attack General Grant was requested to call a meeting of the Committee of
Safety, to consider the question of capitulation, as it was evident that the
continuation of such a bombardment would speedily destroy property in value far
beyond the immense sum asked by the besiegers.
He notified the members
to meet in the City Hall. When he arrived, he found nobody but a messenger-boy,
who tremblingly emerged from the cellar.
The General quietly
removed his cigar and asked:
"Where's the
Committee?"
"They—they—is—up
ter Inwood, sir."
The boy's teeth
chattered so that he could hardly speak.
"What the deuce are
they doing there?"
"Dunno, sir. They
told me as to tell you, sir, that they wuz a Committee of Safety, and that's
wot they wanted, sir."
"Wanted what?"
"S-s-afety,
sir!"
"And they deputized
you to tell me that, eh?"
"Ye-yes, sir."
"And you looked for
me down in the cellar?"
"N-no, sir. I
wanted safety, too, sir. Oh, Lordy!"
This last interjection
was elicited by seeing the upper part of the Tribune tall
tower suddenly fly off, and land on the roof of the Sun building.
A sort of a sphinx-like
smile overspread the general's features.
He looked around for the
messenger-boy, but that youth was making extraordinary speed up Broadway.
The general leisurely
proceeded up that thoroughfare—occasionally stopping, as a shot went crashing into
some near building, to note the effect.
On arriving at Union
Square, he met a cavalry squad looking for him, and mounting the horse of one
of the men, he proceeded with this escort to the upper end of the island, which
was now densely packed with people.
The projectiles from the
heavy guns of the great ironclad were now falling in the lower part of the city
with terrible effect. The Western Union building was shattered from cellar to
roof; the City Hall was on fire; so also was St. Paul's Church and the Herald building.
The last-mentioned conflagration was put out by the editors and compositors of
that journal—the entire Herald staff being then in the
underground press-rooms, busily preparing and working off extras giving
the latest details of the bombardment.
The Morse Building was
completely demolished by two Krupp shells, and not an edifice in Wall Street,
except the sub-Treasury, had escaped total ruin.
The result of the
conference of the Safety Committee was the dispatching of a messenger to Sandy
Hook, informing General Hancock of the condition of affairs, and asking him to
request an armistice for parley.
The "Ideal,"
bearing a white flag, was at once dispatched to the Spanish flag-ship, and
shortly after the firing ceased.
The Spanish admiral
refused to alter the terms already proposed, except that, in view of the injury
already inflicted on the city and the probable increased difficulty of
collecting the sum demanded, he would agree to allow five days' time in which
to pay the latter, on board his flag-ship.
General Hancock declined
to consider this proposal.
"El Cid" now
began a new manoeuvre. All the steam-launches of the fleet, provided with long,
forked spars extending from their bows, formed in front of her, and, thus
preceded, she deliberately steamed up to the Main channel.
The fort on the Hook at
once opened upon her, but the shot glanced like dry peas from her armor. She,
in return, shelled the fort, the masonry of which literally crumbled before the
enormous projectiles hurled against it. Meanwhile, the launches had entered the
channel and were picking up such torpedoes as could be detected. Other
launches, having no crews on board, but being governed entirely by electric
wires, were sent into the channel and caused to drop counter mines, which, on
being fired, caused the explosion of such torpedoes as remained: thus making a
broad and safe channel for the ironclad to enter.
Finally the remaining
launches returned to the "Cid" and evidently reported the channel
clear for she boldly steamed into it, stopping only for an instant, when off
the end of the peninsula, to send a double charge of grape and canister from
her huge guns into the ranks of the fugitives, who were precipitately rushing
from the fort.
It was then that General
Hancock was killed although the fact has since often been disputed. His body,
wounded in a dozen places, was found on the sand near the highest wall of the
fort, from the top of which, it is conjectured, he was swept by the fearful
hail of the Spanish ironclad.
"El Cid" continued
on into the bay, occasionally stopping as signaled by the launches preceding
her, when a torpedo was encountered, and finally took up her position within
about a mile of Fort Hamilton, and hence about seven miles from the Battery.
As the projectiles from
the fort glanced harmlessly from her armor, she paid no attention to that
attack, but resumed her fire upon the city.
Shells now began to fall
as far up-town as Forty-second Street.
V.AT THE MERCY OF THE
FOE
Meanwhile, the other
four vessels had ceased their bombardment of the batteries, as the latter no
longer answered them.
They appeared to have
new work in hand.
During the following
afternoon a fresh sea-breeze set in. Then a large, swaying globe made its
appearance on the deck of each of the vessels. Examination with the telescope
showed to the signal men, who had established a new station on the Jersey
highlands, that these mysterious spheres were balloons; and that the ships were
about to dispatch them, was evident from the fact that small pilot-balloons
were soon sent up. These last were wafted directly toward the city.
What possible object
could the Spanish war-vessels have in this, was a question asked by every one,
as soon as the intelligence became known.
The balloon which rose
from the "Numancia" had a car attached, but there was clearly no one
in it. Therefore the balloons were not to be used for purposes of observation.
The people in New York
saw the balloons as they successively rose from the four vessels, and
wonderingly watched their progress.
They saw the first of
them gently sail toward the city until about over the Roman Catholic Cathedral
on Fifth Avenue. Then a dark object seemed to fall from the car, the lightened
balloon shot upward, the object struck the roof of the cathedral there was a
fearful explosion, a trembling of the earth as if an angry volcano were
beneath, and the crash of falling buildings followed.
Through the great clouds
of dust and smoke it could be seen that not only was the cathedral shattered,
but that the walls of every building adjacent to the square on which it stood
were down.
The Spaniards were
dropping nitro-glycerine bombs into the city from the balloons. They knew how long it would take the breeze to
waft the air-ships over the built-up portion, and it was an easy matter to
adjust clock-work in the car to cause the dropping of the torpedo at about the
proper time.
Accuracy was not needed.
A shell, filled with fifty or a hundred pounds of dynamite or nitro-glycerine,
would be sure to do terrible damage anywhere within a radius of three miles
around Madison Square.
A second balloon dropped
its charge into the receiving reservoir in Central Park, luckily doing no
damage, but throwing up a tremendous jet of water. The third and fourth
balloons let fall their dejectiles, the one among the tenements near Tompkins
Square destroying an entire block of houses simultaneously; the other on High
Bridge, completely shattering that structure, and so breaking the aqueduct
through which the city obtains its water supply.
The Spanish admiral now
ceased firing voluntarily and sent a message by flag-of-truce announcing his
intention to continue the throwing of balloon torpedoes into the city until it
capitulated, and, in order to avoid further destruction of property, he renewed
the proposal already made.
General Grant, on
receiving this message—for the citizens had literally forced him to take active
command of the troops—simply remarked:
"Let him fire
away!"
But the Safety Committee
vehemently protested; and finally, after much discussion, induced Grant to send
back word that the terms were accepted.
The situation was, in
truth, one of sadness—of bitter humiliation. The Empire City had fallen, and
lay at the mercy of a foreign foe. The immense ransom demanded must be raised
and paid, or the work of destruction would be resumed until the defenders of
the bay removed their torpedoes from the Narrows and permitted the Spanish
forces to enter and occupy the metropolis.
VI.THE FLAG WITH THE
LONE STAR
As it was manifestly
impossible to obtain fifty millions of dollars in specie and foreign notes
within New York—for all the money in the vaults of the banks and the treasury
had long since been sent to other cities—the general government assumed payment
of the amount demanded by the Spaniards, which, however, it was decided not to
make until just before the expiration of the last of the five days of grace.
As will now be seen,
this was a fortunate decision. The unremitting bombardment which had been
maintained by the four vessels off the Long Island shore had so greatly reduced
their supply of ammunition that it became necessary to send for more: and for
this purpose the "Vittoria" was dispatched to meet a transport which
had been ordered to sail from Cuba at about this time.
On the evening of the
third day the weather assumed a threatening appearance, and the "El
Cid" left her position near Fort Hamilton for a more secure anchorage near
Sandy Hook. The other ships stood out to sea.
It stormed heavily
during that night, and before evening on the morrow one of the strongest gales
ever known in this vicinity had set in.
The situation in which
the Spanish flag-ship now found herself was critical. She had put down her two
bower anchors, but they were clearly insufficient to hold her. To veer out
cable was dangerous, for it was not known how near the ship was to sunken
torpedoes; to allow her to drag was to run the double chance of striking a
torpedo or going ashore.
During the night she
parted both cables, and the morning found her firmly imbedded in the beach off
the Hook. Of the other vessels, the "Numancia" only was in sight.
The signal men, however,
could see black smoke on the horizon; and this they anxiously watched,
expecting momentarily to make out the "Arapiles" and
"Zaragoza." Shortly after daybreak, a thick fog settled down,
completely cutting off the seaward view.
In the signal station
were General Grant and several members of the Safety Commission. The ransom
money was in readiness, and the intention was to pay it over during the morning.
At about eight o'clock,
heavy firing was heard from the sea.
It was too far distant
to be accounted for by a supposed renewal of the bombardment by the Spanish
ships, even under the assumption that they had thus broken the truce.
The watchers at the
signal station looked at each other in astonishment, and eagerly waited for the
fog to lift.
An hour later, the mist
began to clear away. The sight that met the eyes of the spectators was one
never to be forgotten.
The "Numancia"
was evidently ashore on the East bank. Her fore and mainmasts were gone, and
clouds of dark smoke were lazily ascending from her forecastle. Suddenly, the
whole ship seemed to burst into a sheet of flame, there was a deep explosion,
the air was filled with flying fragments, and a blackened hull was all that was
left of the proud man-of-war.
The
"Arapiles," about two miles further out to sea, was making a gallant
defense against three strange vessels. Two, lying at short range on her
quarters, were pouring in a fearful fire; the third, which had evidently been
engaged with the "Numancia," was rapidly bearing down upon her,
apparently intending to ram.
Who could the strangers
be?
The flags which floated
from their mast-heads bore a strong resemblance to our own, yet they were not
the stars and stripes; for the stripes were replaced by but two broad bands of
red and white, and in the blue field there was but a single star.
"Chili, by
Jove!" ejaculated some one in the signal station.
He was right.
The new-comers were the
"Huascar," the "Almirante Cochrane" and the
"Blanco Encelada," the three armored vessels of the South American
Republic.
It was the
"Huascar" which was now bearing down upon the "Arapiles."
Suddenly, the Chilian
monitor was seen to slacken her speed and change her course.
She no longer meant to
ram; the necessity had ceased. At the same time, the other Chilian vessels
ceased firing.
The Spanish ensign on
the "Arapiles" had been lowered. In a few minutes after it rose
again, but this time surmounted by the Chilian flag.
Then the four vessels
stood in toward the Hook.
The watchers on the
signal station now waited in breathless suspense.
The
"Arapiles," with a prize crew from the other vessels to work her
guns, was to be made to attack her former consort, the stranded "El Cid;"
and that vessel, aware of her danger, was now firing rapidly at her approaching
enemies.
It was not reserved,
however, for the Chilians to complete their victory by the capture of the great
ironclad.
The giant was to be
killed by a pigmy scarce larger than one of his own huge weapons. A smaller
steam-launch slowly crept out from the Staten Island shore. But two men could
be seen on board of her—one in the bow, the other at the helm.
"They don't see us
yet, Ned," said the man in the bow.
"No; they have all
they can do to take care of the other fellows. Look out! Are you hurt?"
A shell from the
Chilians just then came over the Hook, and, bursting under the water near the
launch, deluged the boat with spray.
"Not a bit,"
said the other.
"Is your boom
clear?"
"All clear."
Bang! A shot, this time
from the Spaniard came skipping along the water in the direction of the launch,
and flew over the heads of the daring pair.
"Hang them! They've
seen us."
"Rig out your boom.
We're in for it now!"
The man in the stern pushed
shut the door of the boiler furnace, and turned on full steam.
The little craft fairly
leaped ahead.
The two men set their
teeth. He of the stern lashed the tiller amidships, and crept forward, aiding
the other to push out the long boom which projected from the bow.
Ten seconds passed. Then
the torpedo on the end of the boom struck the "El Cid" under the
stern. There was a crash—a vast upheaval of water and fragments.
The great ironclad
rolled over on her side and lay half submerged.
Of the two men who had
done this, one swam ashore bearing the other, wounded to the death.
A mighty cheer arose
from the Chilian fleet, repeated from the shore with redoubled volume.
"El Cid" lay
sullen and silent; two of her guns were pointing under water, two up to the clouds.
The "Arapiles"
fired the last shell at her own admiral—now a corpse, torn to pieces by the
torpedo.
Then some one scrambled
along the deck of the wrecked monster and lowered the Spanish flag.
"I think we'll keep
that money," remarked Grant, as he lit another cigar.
000
The Chilian fleet had
relieved New York. Elated by her victory over Peru, and thirsting for revenge
against Spain for the latter's merciless bombardment of Valparaiso in 1866, the
Chilians, as soon as they had learned of the declaration of war against the
United States, tore up the treaty of truce and armistice made with Spain in
1871, and announced themselves an ally of this country. Realizing the weakness
of our navy, and the unprotected position of our seaports, Chili instantly
dispatched her three ironclads to New York. They made the voyage with
remarkable celerity, stopping only for coal and provisions, and reached the
beleaguered city just in the nick of time, as has already been detailed.
It was fortunate that
the "Zaragoza" had been obliged to put so far out to sea that she
could not return in season to take part in the conflict, otherwise the result
might have been different.
As it was, when she came
back a day later, and discovered the position of affairs, she took to her heels
without delay.
It is not necessary here
to speak of the greeting which the Chilians received, or the thanks which were
lavished upon them by the people of the United States. Neither need we picture
the dismay of the citizens of New York when they came to realize the fearful
damage which had been inflicted upon their city. Fully one-half of the town lay
in ruins. The metropolis was the metropolis no longer. The proudest city of the
Great Republic had been at the mercy of a conqueror, and, as if this humiliation
were not deep enough, she owed her preservation from utter destruction to the
guns of an insignificant Republic of South America.
000
Six months after the
relief of the city, a Chilian sailor belonging to the "Huascar,"
which was lying off the Battery, stopped to watch a crowd of workmen who were
busily engaged in clearing away the ruins of some tenement buildings near
Tompkins Square.
The face of one of the
workmen had evidently attracted the foreigner's attention, as he gazed at him
intently and curiously.
Suddenly there was a
sharp detonation. The crowd scattered in all directions. An unexploded shell
which had lodged in the building had been struck by a pick in the hands of one
of the laborers, and had been fired.
The sailor helped carry
out the dead.
Among the victims was
the man at whom he had been so intently looking a moment before. This one he
took in his arms and bore him apart from the rest.
Nervously he tore open
the dead man's shirt. On the bared breast was a curiously shaped mole.
The sailor sank on his
knees in prayer beside the body for a moment. Then he turned, and addressing an
officer who, with a file of soldiers, had come upon the scene, and was
directing the removal of the dead, he asked in broken English, pointing to the corpse:
"Will you give me
this?"
"Why?"
"He was my brother—Leon
Sangrado."
The war had found a
victim in him who had caused it.
[3] Fiction, October 31, 1881
4.WHY THOMAS WAS
DISCHARGED [4]
BY GEORGE ARNOLD
Brant Beach is a long
promontory of rock and sand, jutting out at an acute angle from a barren
portion of the coast. Its farthest extremity is marked by a pile of
many-colored, wave-washed boulders; its junction with the mainland is the site
of the Brant House, a watering-place of excellent repute.
The attractions of this
spot are not numerous. There is surf-bathing all along the outer side of the
beach, and good swimming on the inner. The fishing is fair; and in still
weather yachting is rather a favorite amusement. Further than this there is
little to be said, save that the hotel is conducted upon liberal principles,
and the society generally select.
But to the lover of
nature—and who has the courage to avow himself aught else?—the sea-shore can
never be monotonous. The swirl and sweep of ever-shifting waters, the flying
mist of foam breaking away into a gray and ghostly distance down the beach, the
eternal drone of ocean, mingling itself with one's talk by day and with the
light dance-music in the parlors by night—all these are active sources of a
passive pleasure. And to lie at length upon the tawny sand, watching, through
half-closed eyes, the heaving waves, that mount against a dark blue sky wherein
great silvery masses of cloud float idly on, whiter than the sunlit sails that
fade and grow and fade along the horizon, while some fair damsel sits close by,
reading ancient ballads of a simple metre, or older legends of love and
romance—tell me, my eater of the fashionable lotos, is not this a diversion
well worth your having?
There is an air of easy
sociality among the guests at the Brant House, a disposition on the part of all
to contribute to the general amusement, that makes a summer sojourn on the
beach far more agreeable than in certain larger, more frequented
watering-places, where one is always in danger of discovering that the
gentlemanly person with whom he has been fraternizing is a faro-dealer, or that
the lady who has half-fascinated him is Anonyma herself. Still, some consider
the Brant rather slow, and many good folk were a trifle surprised when Mr.
Edwin Salsbury and Mr. Charles Burnham arrived by the late stage from Wikhasset
Station, with trunks enough for two first-class belles, and a most
unexceptionable man-servant in gray livery, in charge of two beautiful
setter-dogs.
These gentlemen seemed
to have imagined that they were about visiting some backwoods wilderness, some
savage tract of country, "remote, unfriended, melancholy, slow," for
they brought almost everything with them that men of elegant leisure could
require, as if the hotel were but four walls and a roof, which they must
furnish with their own chattels. I am sure it took Thomas, the man-servant, a
whole day to unpack the awnings, the bootjacks, the game-bags, the cigar-boxes,
the guns, the camp-stools, the liquor-cases, the bathing-suits, and other
paraphernalia that these pleasure-seekers brought. It must be owned, however,
that their room, a large one in the Bachelors' Quarter, facing the sea, wore a
very comfortable, sportsmanlike look when all was arranged.
Thus surrounded, the
young men betook themselves to the deliberate pursuit of idle pleasures. They
arose at nine and went down the shore, invariably returning at ten with one
unfortunate snipe, which was preserved on ice, with much ceremony, till wanted.
At this rate it took them a week to shoot a breakfast; but to see them sally
forth, splendid in velveteen and corduroy, with top-boots and a complete
harness of green cord and patent-leather straps, you would have imagined that
all game-birds were about to become extinct in that region. Their dogs, even,
recognized this great-cry-little-wool condition of things, and bounded off
joyously at the start, but came home crestfallen, with an air of canine
humiliation that would have aroused Mr. Mayhew's tenderest sympathies.
After breakfasting,
usually in their room, the friends enjoyed a long and contemplative smoke upon
the wide piazza in front of their windows, listlessly regarding the ever-varied
marine view that lay before them in flashing breadth and beauty. Their next
labor was to array themselves in wonderful morning-costumes of very shaggy
English cloth, shiny flasks and field-glasses about their shoulders, and loiter
down the beach, to the point and back, making much unnecessary effort over the
walk—a brief mile—which they spoke of, with importance, as their
"constitutional." This killed time till bathing-hour, and then
another toilet for dinner. After dinner a siesta: in the room, when the weather
was fresh; when otherwise, in hammocks hung from the rafters of the piazza. When
they had been domiciled a few days, they found it expedient to send home for
what they were pleased to term their "crabs" and "traps,"
and excited the envy of less fortunate guests by driving up and down the beach
at a racing gait to dissipate the languor of the after-dinner sleep.
This was their regular
routine for the day—varied, occasionally, when the tide served, by a fishing
trip down the narrow bay inside the point. For such emergencies they provided
themselves with a sail-boat and skipper, hired for the whole season, and
arrayed themselves in a highly nautical rig. The results were, large quantities
of sardines and pale sherry consumed by the young men, and a reasonable number
of sea-bass and blackfish caught by the skipper.
There were no regular
"hops" at the Brant House, but dancing in a quiet way every evening
to a flute, violin, and violoncello, played by some of the waiters. For a time
Burnham and Salsbury did not mingle much in these festivities, but loitered
about the halls and piazzas, very elegantly dressed and barbered (Thomas was an
unrivalled coiffeur), and apparently somewhat ennuyé.
That two well-made,
full-grown, intelligent, and healthy young men should lead such a life as this
for an entire summer might surprise one of a more active temperament. The
aimlessness and vacancy of an existence devoted to no earthly purpose save
one's own comfort must soon weary any man who knows what is the meaning of
real, earnest life—life with a battle to be fought and a victory to be won. But
these elegant young gentlemen comprehended nothing of all that: they had been
born with golden spoons in their mouths, and educated only to swallow the
delicately insipid lotos-honey that flows inexhaustibly from such shining
spoons. Clothes, complexions, polish of manner, and the avoidance of any sort
of shock were the simple objects of their solicitude.
I do not know that I
have any serious quarrel with such fellows, after all. They have strong
virtues. They are always clean; and your rough diamond, though manly and
courageous as Coeur de Lion, is not apt to be scrupulously nice in his habits.
Affability is another virtue. The Salsbury and Burnham kind of man bears malice
toward no one, and is disagreeable only when assailed by some hammer-and-tongs
utilitarian. All he asks is to be permitted to idle away his pleasant life
unmolested. Lastly, he is extremely ornamental. We all like to see pretty
things; and I am sure that Charley Burnham, in his fresh white duck suit, with
his fine, thoroughbred face—gentle as a girl's—shaded by a snowy Panama, his
blonde moustache carefully pointed, his golden hair clustering in the most
picturesque possible waves, his little red neck-ribbon—the only bit of color in
his dress—tied in a studiously careless knot, and his pure, untainted gloves of
pearl gray or lavender, was, if I may be allowed the expression, just as pretty
as a picture. And Ned Salsbury was not less "a joy forever,"
according to the dictum of the late Mr. Keats. He was darker than Burnham, with
very black hair, and a moustache worn in the manner the French call triste,
which became him, and increased the air of pensive melancholy that
distinguished his dark eyes, thoughtful attitudes, and slender figure. Not that
he was in the least degree pensive or melancholy, or that he had cause to be;
quite the contrary; but it was his style, and he did it well.
These two butterflies
sat, one afternoon, upon the piazza, smoking very large cigars, lost,
apparently, in profoundest meditation. Burnham, with his graceful head resting upon
one delicate hand, his clear blue eyes full of a pleasant light, and his face
warmed by a calm, unconscious smile, might have been revolving some splendid
scheme of universal philanthropy. The only utterance, however, forced from him
by the sublime thoughts that permeated his soul, was the emission of a white
rolling volume of fragrant smoke, accompanied by two words: "Doocéd
hot!"
Salsbury did not reply.
He sat, leaning back, with his fingers interlaced behind his head, and his
shadowy eyes downcast, as in sad remembrance of some long-lost love. So might a
poet have looked, while steeped in mournfully rapturous daydreams of remembered
passion and severance. So might Tennyson's hero have mused, while he sang:
"Oh,
that 'twere possible,
After long grief and pain,
To find the arms of my true love
Round me once again!"
But the poetic lips
opened not to such numbers. Salsbury gazed long and earnestly, and finally gave
vent to his emotion, indicating, with the amber tip of his cigar-tube, the setter
that slept in the sunshine at his feet.
"Shocking place,
this, for dogs!"—I regret to say he pronounced it
"dawgs"—"Why, Carlo is as fat—as fat as—as a—"
His mind was unequal to
a simile even, and he terminated the sentence in a murmur.
More silence; more
smoke; more profound meditation. Directly Charley
Burnham looked around with some show of vitality.
"There comes the
stage," said he.
The driver's bugle rang
merrily among the drifted sand-hills that lay warm and glowing in the orange
light of the setting sun. The young men leaned forward over the piazza-rail and
scrutinized the occupants of the vehicle as it appeared.
"Old gentleman and
lady, aw, and two children," said Ned Salsbury; "I hoped there would
be some nice girls."
This, in a voice of
ineffable tenderness and poetry, but with that odd, tired little drawl, so
epidemic in some of our universities.
"Look there, by
Jove!" cried Charley, with a real interest at last; "now that's what
I call a regular thing!"
The "regular
thing" was a low, four-wheeled pony-chaise of basket-work, drawn by two
jolly little fat ponies, black and shiny as vulcanite, which jogged rapidly in,
just far enough behind the stage to avoid its dust.
This vehicle was driven
by a young lady of decided beauty, with a spice of Amazonian spirit. She was
rather slender and very straight, with a jaunty little hat and feather perched
coquettishly above her dark brown hair, which was arranged in one heavy mass
and confined in a silken net. Her complexion was clear, without brilliancy; her
eyes blue as the ocean horizon, and spanned by sharp, characteristic brows; her
mouth small and decisive; and her whole cast of features indicative of quick
talent and independence.
Upon the seat beside her
sat another damsel, leaning indolently back in the corner of the carriage. This
one was a little fairer than the first, having one of those beautiful English
complexions of mingled rose and snow, and a dash of gold-dust in her hair where
the sun touched it. Her eyes, however, were dark hazel and full of fire, shaded
and intensified by their long, sweeping lashes. Her mouth was a rosebud, and
her chin and throat faultless in the delicious curve of their lines. In a word,
she was somewhat of the Venus-di-Milo type; her companion was more of a Diana.
Both were neatly habited in plain travelling-dresses and cloaks of black and
white plaid, and both seemed utterly unconscious of the battery of eyes and
eye-glasses that enfiladed them from the whole length of the piazza as they
passed.
"Who are
they?" asked Salsbury; "I don't know them."
"Nor I," said
Burnham; "but they look like people to know. They must be somebody."
Half an hour later the
hotel-office was besieged by a score of young men, all anxious for a peep at
the last names upon the register. It is needless to say that our friends were
not in the crowd. Ned Salsbury was no more the man to exhibit curiosity than
Charley Burnham was the man to join in a scramble for anything under the sun.
They had educated their emotions clear down, out of sight, and piled upon them
a mountain of well-bred inertia.
But, somehow or other,
these fellows who take no trouble are always the first to gain the end. A
special Providence seems to aid the poor, helpless creatures. So, while the
crowd still pressed at the office-desk, Jerry Swayne, the head clerk, happened
to pass directly by the piazza where the inert ones sat, and, raising a comical
eye, saluted them.
"Heavy arrivals
to-night. See the turnout?"
"Y-e-s,"
murmured Ned.
"Old Chapman and
family. His daughter drove the pony-phaeton, with her friend, a Miss Thurston.
Regular nobby ones. Chapman's the steam-ship man, you know. Worth thousands of
millions! I'd like to be connected with his family—by marriage, say!"—and
Jerry went off, rubbing his cropped head and smiling all over, as was his wont.
"I know who they
are now," said Charley. "Met a cousin of theirs, Joe
Faulkner, abroad two years ago. Doocéd fine fellow. Army."
The manly art of
wagoning is not pursued vigorously at Brant Beach. The roads are too heavy back
from the water, and the drive is confined to a narrow strip of wet sand along
the shore; so carriages are few, and the pony-chaise became a distinguished
element at once. Salsbury and Burnham whirled past it in their light
trotting-wagons at a furious pace, and looked hard at the two young ladies in
passing, but without eliciting even the smallest glance from them in return.
"Confounded distingué-looking
girls, and all that," owned Ned, "but, aw, fearfully unconscious of a
fellow!"
This condition of
matters continued until the young men were actually driven to acknowledge to
each other that they should not mind knowing the occupants of the pony
carriage. It was a great concession, and was rewarded duly. A bright, handsome
boy of seventeen, Miss Thurston's brother, came to pass a few days at the
seaside, and fraternized with everybody, but was especially delighted with Ned
Salsbury, who took him out sailing and shooting, and, I am afraid, gave him
cigars stealthily, when out of range of Miss Thurston's fine eyes. The result
was that the first time the lad walked on the beach with the two girls and met
the young man, introductions of an enthusiastic nature were instantly sprung
upon them. An attempt at conversation followed.
"How do you like
Brant Beach?" asked Ned.
"Oh, it is a very
pretty place," said Miss Chapman, "but not lively enough."
"Well, Burnham and
I find it pleasant; aw, we have lots of fun."
"Indeed! Why, what
do you do?"
"Oh, I don't know.
Everything."
"Is the shooting
good? I saw you with your guns yesterday."
"Well, there isn't
a great deal of game. There is some fishing, but we haven't caught much."
"How do you kill
time, then?"
Salsbury looked puzzled.
"Aw—it is a
first-rate air, you know. The table is good, and you can sleep like a top. And
then, you see, I like to smoke around, and do nothing, on the sea-shore. It is
real jolly to lie on the sand, aw, with all sorts of little bugs running over
you, and listen to the water swashing about!"
"Let's try
it!" cried vivacious Miss Chapman; and down she sat on the sand. The
others followed her example, and in five minutes they were picking up pretty
pebbles and chatting away as sociably as could be. The rumbling of the warning
gong surprised them.
At dinner Burnham and
Salsbury took seats opposite the ladies, and were honored with an introduction
to papa and mamma, a very dignified, heavy, rosy, old-school couple, who ate a
good deal and said very little. That evening, when flute and viol wooed the
lotos-eaters to agitate the light fantastic toe, these young gentlemen found
themselves in dancing humor, and revolved themselves into a grievous condition
of glow and wilt in various mystic and intoxicating measures with their
new-made friends.
On retiring, somewhat
after midnight, Miss Thurston paused while "doing her hair," and
addressed Miss Chapman.
"Did you observe,
Hattie, how very handsome those gentlemen are? Mr. Burnham looks like a prince
of the sang azur, and Mr. Salsbury like his poet-laureate."
"Yes, dear,"
responded Hattie; "I have been considering those flowers of the field and
lilies of the valley."
"Ned," said
Charlie, at about the same time, "we won't find anything nicer here this
season, I think."
"They're pretty
worth while," replied Ned, "and I'm rather pleased with them."
"Which do you like
best?"
"Oh, bother! I
haven't thought of that yet."
The next day the young
men delayed their "constitutional" until the ladies were ready to
walk, and the four strolled off together, mamma and the children following in
the pony-chaise. At the rocks on the end of the point Ned got his feet very wet
fishing up specimens of seaweed for the damsels; and Charley exerted himself
super-humanly in assisting them to a ledge which they considered favorable for
sketching purposes.
In the afternoon a sail
was arranged, and they took dinner on board the boat, with any amount of
hilarity and a good deal of discomfort. In the evening more dancing and
vigorous attentions to both the young ladies, but without a shadow of
partiality being shown by either of the four.
This was very nearly the
history of many days. It does not take long to get acquainted with people who
are willing, especially at watering-places; and in the course of a few weeks
these young folks were, to all intents and purposes, old friends—calling each
other by their given names, and conducting themselves with an easy familiarity
quite charming to behold. Their amusements were mostly in common now. The light
wagons were made to hold two each instead of one, and the matinal snipe escaped
death, and was happy over his early worm.
One day, however, Laura
Thurston had a headache, and Hattie Chapman stayed at home to take care of her;
so Burnham and Salsbury had to amuse themselves alone. They took their boat and
idled about the waters inside the point, dozing under an awning, smoking,
gaping, and wishing that headaches were out of fashion, while the taciturn and
tarry skipper instructed the dignified and urbane Thomas in the science of
trolling for blue-fish.
At length Ned tossed his
cigar-end overboard and braced himself for an effort.
"I say,
Charlie," said he, "this sort of thing can't go on forever, you know.
I've been thinking lately."
"Phenomenon!"
replied Charlie; "and what have you been thinking about?"
"Those girls. We've
got to choose."
"Why? Isn't it well
enough as it is?"
"Yes—so far. But I
think, aw, that we don't quite do them justice. They're grands partis,
you see. I hate to see clever girls wasting themselves on society, waiting and
waiting, and we fellows swimming about just like fish around a hook that isn't
baited properly."
Charley raised himself
upon his elbow.
"You don't mean to
tell me, Ned, that you have matrimonial intentions?"
"Oh, no! Still, why
not? We've all got to come to it some day, I suppose."
"Not yet, though.
It is a sacrifice we can escape for some years yet."
"Yes—of course—some
years; but we may begin to look about us a bit.
I'm, aw, I'm six and twenty, you know."
"And I'm very near
that. I suppose a fellow can't put off the yoke too long. After thirty chances
aren't so good. I don't know, by Jove! but what we ought to begin thinking of
it."
"But it is a
sacrifice. Society must lose a fellow, though, one time or another. And I don't
believe we will ever do better than we can now."
"Hardly, I
suspect."
"And we're keeping
other fellows away, maybe. It is a shame!"
Thomas ran his line in
rapidly, with nothing on the hook.
"Cap'n Hull,"
he said, gravely, "I had the biggest kind of a fish then
I'm sure; but d'rectly I went to pull him in, sir, he took and let go."
"Yaas,"
muttered the taciturn skipper, "the biggest fish allers falls back inter
the warter."
"I've been thinking
a little about this matter, too," said Charlie, after a pause, "and I
had about concluded we ought to pair off. But I'll be confounded if I know
which is the best! They're both nice girls."
"There isn't much
choice," Ned replied. "If they were as different, now, as you and me,
I'd take the blonde, of course, aw, and you'd take the brunette. But Hattie
Chapman's eyes are blue, and her hair isn't black, you know, so you can't call
her dark, exactly."
"No more than Laura
is exactly light. Her hair is brown more than golden, and her eyes are hazel.
Hasn't she a lovely complexion, though? By Jove!"
"Better than
Hattie's. Yet I don't know but Hattie's features are a little the best."
"They are. Now,
honest, Ned, which do you prefer? Say either; I'll take the one you don't want.
I haven't any choice."
"Neither have
I."
"How shall we
settle?"
"Aw, throw for
it?"
"Yes. Isn't there a
backgammon board forward, in that locker, Thomas?"
The board was found and
the dice produced.
"The highest takes
which?"
"Say Laura
Thurston."
"Very good;
throw."
"You first."
"No. Go on."
Charlie threw with about
the same amount of excitement he might have exhibited in a turkey raffle.
"Five-three,"
said he; "now for your luck."
"Six-four! Laura's
mine. Satisfied?"
"Perfectly—if you
are. If not, I don't mind exchanging."
"Oh, no. I'm
satisfied."
Both reclined upon the
deck once more with a sigh of relief, and a long silence followed.
"I say," began
Charlie, after a time, "it is a comfort to have these little matters
arranged without any trouble, eh?"
"Y-e-s."
"Do you know, I
think I'll marry mine?"
"I will, if you
will."
"Done! It is a
bargain."
This "little
matter" being arranged, a change gradually took place in the relations of
the four. Ned Salsbury began to invite Laura Thurston out driving and bathing
somewhat oftener than before, and Hattie Chapman somewhat less often; while
Charlie Burnham followed suit with the last-named young lady. As the line of demarcation
became fixed, the damsels recognized it, and accepted with gracious readiness
the cavaliers that Fate, through the agency of a chance-falling pair of dice,
had allotted to them.
The other guests of the
house remarked the new position of affairs, and passed whispers about it to the
effect that the girls had at last succeeded in getting their fish on hooks
instead of in a net. No suitors could have been more devoted than our friends.
It seemed as if each knight bestowed upon the chosen one all the attentions he
had hitherto given to both; and whether they went boating, sketching, or
strolling upon the sands, they were the very picture of a partie carrée of
lovers.
Naturally enough, as the
young men became more in earnest, with the reticence common to my sex they
spoke less frequently and freely on the subject. Once, however, after an
unusually pleasant afternoon, Salsbury ventured a few words.
"I say, we're a
couple of lucky dogs! Who'd have thought now, aw, that our summer was going to
turn out so well? I'm sure I didn't. How do you get along, Charley, boy?"
"Deliciously.
Smooth sailing enough. Wasn't it a good idea, though, to pair off? I'm just as
happy as a bee in clover. You seem to prosper, too, heh?"
"Couldn't ask
anything different. Nothing but devotion, and all that.
I'm delighted. I say, when are you going to pop?"
"Oh, I don't know.
It is only a matter of form. Sooner the better, I suppose, and have it
over."
"I was thinking of
next week. What do you say to a quiet picnic down on the rocks, and a walk
afterwards? We can separate, you know, and do the thing up
systematically."
"All right. I will,
if you will."
"That's another
bargain. I notice there isn't much doubt about the results."
"Hardly!"
A close observer might
have seen that the gentlemen increased their attentions a little from time to
time. The objects of their devotion perceived it, and smiled more and more
graciously upon them.
The day set for the
picnic arrived duly, and was radiant. It pains me to confess that my heroes
were a trifle nervous. Their apparel was more gorgeous and wonderful than ever,
and Thomas, who was anxious to be off courting Miss Chapman's lady's-maid,
found his masters dreadfully exacting in the matter of hair-dressing. At
length, however, the toilet was over, and "Solomon in all his glory"
would have been vastly astonished at finding himself "arrayed as one of
these."
The boat lay at the
pier, receiving large quantities of supplies for the trip, stowed by Thomas,
under the supervision of the grim and tarry skipper. When all was ready the
young men gingerly escorted their fair companions aboard, the lines were cast
off, and the boat glided gently down the bay, leaving Thomas free to fly to the
smart presence of Susan Jane and to draw glowing pictures for her of a neat
little porter-house in the city, wherein they should hold supreme sway, be
happy with each other, and let rooms up-stairs for single gentlemen.
The brisk land breeze
swelling the sail, the fluttering of the gay little flag at the gaff, the
musical rippling of water under the counter, and the spirited motion of the
boat combined, with the bland air and pleasant sunshine, to inspire the party
with much vivacity. They had not been many minutes afloat before the
guitar-case was opened, and the girls' voices—Laura's soprano and Hattie's
contralto—rang melodiously over the waves, mingled with feeble attempt at bass
accompaniment from their gorgeous guardians.
Before these vocal
exercises wearied, the skipper hauled down his jib, let go his anchor, and
brought the craft to just off the rocks; and bringing the yawl alongside,
unceremoniously plucked the girls down into it, without giving their cavaliers
a chance for the least display of agile courtliness. Rowing ashore, this same
tarry person left them huddled upon the beach, with their hopes, their hampers,
their emotions, and their baskets, and returned to the vessel to do a little
private fishing on his own account till wanted.
The maidens gave vent to
their high spirits by chasing each other among the rocks, gathering shells and
seaweed for the construction of those ephemeral little ornaments—fair, but
frail—in which the sex delights, singing, laughing, quoting poetry,
attitudinizing upon the peaks and ledges of the fine old boulders—mossy and
weedy and green with the wash of a thousand storms, worn into strange shapes,
and stained with the multitudinous dyes of mineral oxidization—and, in brief,
behaved themselves with all the charming abandon that so well
becomes young girls set free, by the entourage of a holiday
ramble, from the buckram and clear-starch of social etiquette.
Meanwhile Ned and
Charley smoked the pensive cigar of preparation in a sheltered corner, and
gazed out seaward, dreaming and seeing nothing.
Erelong the breeze and
the romp gave the young ladies not only a splendid color and sparkling eyes,
but excellent appetites also. The baskets and hampers were speedily unpacked,
the table-cloth laid on a broad, flat stone, so used by generations of Brant
House picnickers, and the party fell to. Laura's beautiful hair, a little
disordered, swept her blooming cheek, and cast a pearly shadow upon her neck.
Her bright eyes glanced archly out from under her half-raised veil, and there
was something inexpressibly naïve in the freedom with which
she ate, taking a bird's wing in her fingers, and boldly attacking it with
teeth as white and even as can be imagined. Notwithstanding all the mawkish
nonsense that has been put forth by sentimentalists concerning feminine eating,
I hold that it is one of the nicest things in the world to see a pretty woman
enjoying the creature comforts; and Byron himself, had he been one of this
picnic party, would have been unable to resist the admiration that filled the
souls of Burnham and Salsbury. Hattie Chapman stormed the fortress of boned
turkey with a gusto equal to that of Laura, and made highly successful raids
upon certain outlying salads and jellies. The young men were not in a very
ravenous condition; they were, as I have said, a little nervous, and bent their
energies principally to admiring the ladies and coquetting with pickled
oysters.
When the repast was
over, with much accompanying chat and laughter, Ned glanced significantly at
Charley, and proposed to Laura that they should walk up the beach to a place
where, he said, there were "some pretty rocks and things, you know."
She consented, and they marched off. Hattie also arose, and took her parasol,
as if to follow, but Charley remained seated, tracing mysterious diagrams upon
the table-cloth with his fork, and looked sublimely unconscious.
"Sha'n't we walk,
too?" Hattie asked.
"Oh, why, the fact
is," said he, hesitatingly, "I—I sprained my ankle getting out of
that confounded boat, so I don't feel much like exercising just now."
The young girl's face
expressed concern.
"That is too bad!
Why didn't you tell us of it before? Is it painful?
I'm so sorry!"
"N-no—it doesn't
hurt much. I dare say it will be all right in a minute. And then—I'd just as
soon stay here—with you—as to walk anywhere."
This very tenderly, with
a little sigh.
Hattie sat down again,
and began to talk to this factitious cripple in the pleasant, purring way some
damsels have, about the joys of the sea-shore, the happy summer that was, alas!
drawing to a close, her own enjoyment of life, and kindred topics, till Charley
saw an excellent opportunity to interrupt with some aspirations of his own,
which, he averred, must be realized before his life would be considered a
satisfactory success.
If you had ever been
placed in analogous circumstances, you know, of course, just about the sort of
thing that was being said by the two gentlemen at nearly the same moment: Ned,
loitering slowly along the sands with Laura on his arm, and Charley, stretched
in indolent picturesqueness upon the rocks, with Hattie sitting beside him. If
you do not know from experience, ask any candid friend who has been through the
form and ceremony of an orthodox proposal.
When the pedestrians
returned the two couples looked very hard at each other. All were smiling and
complacent, but devoid of any strange or unusual expression. Indeed, the
countenance is subject to such severe education, in good society, that one
almost always looks smiling and complacent. Demonstration is not fashionable,
and a man must preserve the same demeanor over the loss of a wife or a
glove-button, over the gift of a heart's whole devotion or a bundle of cigars.
Under all these visitations the complacent smile is in favor as the neatest,
most serviceable, and convenient form of non-committalism.
The sun was approaching
the blue range of misty hills that bounded the mainland swamps by this time; so
the skipper was signalled, the dinner paraphernalia gathered up, and the party
were soon en route for home once more. When the young ladies
were safely in, Ned and Charley met in their room, and each caught the other
looking at him stealthily. Both smiled.
"Did I give you
time, Charley?" asked Ned; "we came back rather soon."
"Oh, yes; plenty of
time."
"Did you—aw, did
you pop?
"Y-yes. Did
you?"
"Well—yes."
"And you
were—"
"Rejected, by
Jove!"
"So was I!"
The day following this
disastrous picnic the baggage of Mr. Edwin Salsbury and Mr. Charles Burnham was
sent to the depot at Wikhasset Station, and they presented themselves at the
hotel-office with a request for their bill. As Jerry Swayne deposited their key
upon its hook, he drew forth a small tri-cornered billet from the pigeon-hole
beneath, and presented it.
"Left for you this
morning, gentlemen."
It was directed to both,
and Charley read it over Ned's shoulder. It ran thus:
"DEAR BOYS: The
next time you divert yourselves by throwing dice for two young ladies, we pray
you not to do so in the presence of a valet who is upon terms of intimacy with
the maid of one of them.
"With many sincere
thanks for the amusement you have given us—often when you least suspected it—we
bid you a lasting adieu, and remain, with the best wishes,
"HATTIE CHAPMAN,
"LAURA THURSTON.
"Brant
House,
"Wednesday."
"It is all the
fault of that, aw—that confounded Thomas!" said Ned.
So Thomas was
discharged.
[4] Atlantic
Monthly, June, 1863.
5.THE TACHYPOMP [5]
A MATHEMATICAL
DEMONSTRATION
BY E.P. MITCHELL
There was nothing
mysterious about Professor Surd's dislike for me. I was the only poor
mathematician in an exceptionally mathematical class. The old gentleman sought
the lecture-room every morning with eagerness, and left it reluctantly. For was
it not a thing of joy to find seventy young men who, individually and
collectively, preferred x to XX; who had rather differentiate
than dissipate; and for whom the limbs of the heavenly bodies had more
attractions than those of earthly stars upon the spectacular stage?
So affairs went on
swimmingly between the Professor of Mathematics and the Junior Class at Polyp
University. In every man of the seventy the sage saw the logarithm of a
possible La Place, of a Sturm, or of a Newton. It was a delightful task for him
to lead them through the pleasant valleys of conic sections, and beside the
still waters of the integral calculus. Figuratively speaking, his problem was
not a hard one. He had only to manipulate, and eliminate, and to raise to a
higher power, and the triumphant result of examination day was assured.
But I was a disturbing
element, a perplexing unknown quantity, which had somehow crept into the work,
and which seriously threatened to impair the accuracy of his calculations. It
was a touching sight to behold the venerable mathematician as he pleaded with
me not so utterly to disregard precedent in the use of cotangents; or as he
urged, with eyes almost tearful, that ordinates were dangerous things to trifle
with. All in vain. More theorems went on to my cuff than into my head. Never
did chalk do so much work to so little purpose. And, therefore, it came that
Furnace Second was reduced to zero in Professor Surd's estimation. He looked
upon me with all the horror which an unalgebraic nature could inspire. I have
seen the Professor walk around an entire square rather than meet the man who
had no mathematics in his soul.
For Furnace Second were
no invitations to Professor Surd's house. Seventy of the class supped in
delegations around the periphery of the Professor's tea-table. The
seventy-first knew nothing of the charms of that perfect ellipse, with its twin
bunches of fuchsias and geraniums in gorgeous precision at the two foci.
This, unfortunately
enough, was no trifling deprivation. Not that I longed especially for segments
of Mrs. Surd's justly celebrated lemon pies; not that the spheroidal damsons of
her excellent preserving had any marked allurements; not even that I yearned to
hear the Professor's jocose table-talk about binomials, and chatty
illustrations of abstruse paradoxes. The explanation is far different.
Professor Surd had a daughter. Twenty years before, he made a proposition of
marriage to the present Mrs. S. He added a little Corollary to his proposition
not long after. The Corollary was a girl.
Abscissa Surd was as
perfectly symmetrical as Giotto's circle, and as pure, withal, as the
mathematics her father taught. It was just when spring was coming to extract
the roots of frozen-up vegetation that I fell in love with the Corollary. That
she herself was not indifferent I soon had reason to regard as a self-evident
truth.
The sagacious reader
will already recognize nearly all the elements necessary to a well-ordered
plot. We have introduced a heroine, inferred a hero, and constructed a hostile
parent after the most approved model. A movement for the story, a Deus
ex machina, is alone lacking. With considerable satisfaction I can promise a
perfect novelty in this line, a Deus ex machina never before
offered to the public.
It would be discounting
ordinary intelligence to say that I sought with unwearying assiduity to figure
my way into the stern father's good-will; that never did dullard apply himself
to mathematics more patiently than I; that never did faithfulness achieve such
meagre reward. Then I engaged a private tutor. His instructions met with no
better success.
My tutor's name was Jean
Marie Rivarol. He was a unique Alsatian—though Gallic in name, thoroughly
Teuton in nature; by birth a Frenchman, by education a German. His age was
thirty; his profession, omniscience; the wolf at his door, poverty; the
skeleton in his closet, a consuming but unrequited passion. The most recondite
principles of practical science were his toys; the deepest intricacies of
abstract science his diversions. Problems which were foreordained mysteries to
me were to him as clear as Tahoe water. Perhaps this very fact will explain our
lack of success in the relation of tutor and pupil; perhaps the failure is
alone due to my own unmitigated stupidity. Rivarol had hung about the skirts of
the University for several years; supplying his few wants by writing for
scientific journals, or by giving assistance to students who, like myself, were
characterized by a plethora of purse and a paucity of ideas; cooking, studying
and sleeping in his attic lodgings; and prosecuting queer experiments all by
himself.
We were not long
discovering that even this eccentric genius could not transplant brains into my
deficient skull. I gave over the struggle in despair. An unhappy year dragged
its slow length around. A gloomy year it was, brightened only by occasional
interviews with Abscissa, the Abbie of my thoughts and dreams.
Commencement day was
coming on apace. I was soon to go forth, with the rest of my class, to astonish
and delight a waiting world. The Professor seemed to avoid me more than ever.
Nothing but the conventionalities, I think kept him from shaping his treatment
of me on the basis of unconcealed disgust.
At last, in the very
recklessness of despair, I resolved to see him, plead with him, threaten him if
need be, and risk all my fortunes on one desperate chance. I wrote him a
somewhat defiant letter, stating my aspirations, and, as I flattered myself,
shrewdly giving him a week to get over the first shock of horrified surprise.
Then I was to call and learn my fate.
During the week of
suspense I nearly worried myself into a fever. It was first crazy hope, and
then saner despair. On Friday evening, when I presented myself at the
Professor's door, I was such a haggard, sleepy, dragged-out spectre, that even
Miss Jocasta, the harsh-favored maiden sister of the Surd's, admitted me with
commiserate regard, and suggested pennyroyal tea.
Professor Surd was at a
faculty meeting. Would I wait?
Yes, till all was blue,
if need be. Miss Abbie?
Abscissa had gone to
Wheelborough to visit a school-friend. The aged maiden hoped I would make
myself comfortable, and departed to the unknown haunts which knew Jocasta's
daily walk.
Comfortable! But I
settled myself in a great uneasy chair and waited, with the contradictory
spirit common to such junctures, dreading every step lest it should herald the
man whom, of all men, I wished to see.
I had been there at
least an hour, and was growing right drowsy.
At length Professor Surd
came in. He sat down in the dusk opposite me, and I thought his eyes glinted
with malignant pleasure as he said, abruptly:
"So, young man, you
think you are a fit husband for my girl?"
I stammered some inanity
about making up in affection what I lacked in merit; about my expectations,
family and the like. He quickly interrupted me.
"You misapprehend
me, sir. Your nature is destitute of those mathematical perceptions and acquirements
which are the only sure foundations of character. You have no mathematics in
you. You are fit for treason, stratagems, and spoils.—Shakespeare. Your narrow
intellect cannot understand and appreciate a generous mind. There is all the
difference between you and a Surd, if I may say it, which intervenes between an
infinitesimal and an infinite. Why, I will even venture to say that you do not
comprehend the Problem of the Couriers!"
I admitted that the
Problem of the Couriers should be classed rather without my list of
accomplishments than within it. I regretted this fault very deeply, and
suggested amendment. I faintly hoped that my fortune would be such—
"Money!" he
impatiently exclaimed. "Do you seek to bribe a Roman Senator with a penny
whistle? Why, boy, do you parade your paltry wealth, which, expressed in mills,
will not cover ten decimal places, before the eyes of a man who measures the
planets in their orbits, and close crowds infinity itself?"
I hastily disclaimed any
intention of obtruding my foolish dollars, and he went on:
"Your letter
surprised me not a little. I thought you would be the last
person in the world to presume to an alliance here. But having a regard for you
personally"—and again I saw malice twinkle in his small eyes—"and
still more regard for Abscissa's happiness, I have decided that you shall have
her—upon conditions. Upon conditions," he repeated, with a half-smothered
sneer.
"What are
they?" cried I, eagerly enough. "Only name them."
"Well, sir,"
he continued, and the deliberation of his speech seemed the very refinement of
cruelty, "you have only to prove yourself worthy an alliance with a
mathematical family. You have only to accomplish a task which I shall presently
give you. Your eyes ask me what it is. I will tell you. Distinguish yourself in
that noble branch of abstract science in which, you cannot but acknowledge, you
are at present sadly deficient. I will place Abscissa's hand in yours whenever
you shall come before me and square the circle to my satisfaction. No! That is
too easy a condition. I should cheat myself. Say perpetual motion. How do you
like that? Do you think it lies within the range of your mental capabilities?
You don't smile. Perhaps your talents don't run in the way of perpetual motion.
Several people have found that theirs didn't. I'll give you another chance. We
were speaking of the Problem of the Couriers, and I think you expressed a
desire to know more of that ingenious question. You shall have the opportunity.
Sit down some day, when you have nothing else to do, and discover the principle
of infinite speed. I mean the law of motion which shall accomplish an
infinitely great distance in an infinitely short time. You may mix in a little
practical mechanics, if you choose. Invent some method of taking the tardy
Courier over his road at the rate of sixty miles a minute. Demonstrate me this
discovery (when you have made it!) mathematically, and approximate it
practically, and Abscissa is yours. Until you can, I will thank you to trouble
neither myself nor her."
I could stand his
mocking no longer. I stumbled mechanically out of the room, and out of the
house. I even forgot my hat and gloves. For an hour I walked in the moonlight.
Gradually I succeeded to a more hopeful frame of mind. This was due to my ignorance
of mathematics. Had I understood the real meaning of what he asked, I should
have been utterly despondent.
Perhaps this problem of
sixty miles a minute was not so impossible after all. At any rate I could
attempt, though I might not succeed. And Rivarol came to my mind. I would ask
him. I would enlist his knowledge to accompany my own devoted perseverance. I
sought his lodgings at once.
The man of science lived
in the fourth story, back. I had never been in his room before. When I entered,
he was in the act of filling a beer mug from a carboy labelled Aqua
fortis.
"Seat you," he
said. "No, not in that chair. That is my Petty Cash Adjuster." But he
was a second too late. I had carelessly thrown myself into a chair of seductive
appearance. To my utter amazement it reached out two skeleton arms and clutched
me with a grasp against which I struggled in vain. Then a skull stretched
itself over my shoulder and grinned with ghastly familiarity close to my face.
Rivarol came to my aid
with many apologies. He touched a spring somewhere and the Petty Cash Adjuster
relaxed its horrid hold. I placed myself gingerly in a plain cane-bottomed
rocking-chair, which Rivarol assured me was a safe location.
"That seat,"
he said, "is an arrangement upon which I much felicitate myself. I made it
at Heidelberg. It has saved me a vast deal of small annoyance. I consign to its
embraces the friends who bore, and the visitors who exasperate, me. But it is
never so useful as when terrifying some tradesman with an insignificant account.
Hence the pet name which I have facetiously given it. They are invariably too
glad to purchase release at the price of a bill receipted. Do you well
apprehend the idea?"
While the Alsatian
diluted his glass of Aqua fortis, shook into it an infusion of bitters,
and tossed off the bumper with apparent relish, I had time to look around the
strange apartment.
The four corners of the
room were occupied respectively by a turning-lathe, a Rhumkorff Coil, a small
steam-engine and an orrery in stately motion. Tables, shelves, chairs and floor
supported an odd aggregation of tools, retorts, chemicals, gas-receivers,
philosophical instruments, boots, flasks, paper-collar boxes, books diminutive
and books of preposterous size. There were plaster busts of Aristotle, Archimedes,
and Comte, while a great drowsy owl was blinking away, perched on the benign
brow of Martin Farquhar Tupper. "He always roosts there when he proposes
to slumber," explained my tutor. "You are a bird of no ordinary
mind. Schlafen Sie wohl."
Through a closet door,
half open, I could see a human-like form covered with a sheet. Rivarol caught
my glance.
"That," said
he, "will be my masterpiece. It is a Microcosm, an Android, as yet only
partially complete. And why not? Albertus Magnus constructed an image perfect
to talk metaphysics and confute the schools. So did Sylvester II.; so did
Robertus Greathead. Roger Bacon made a brazen head that held discourses. But
the first named of these came to destruction. Thomas Aquinas got wrathful at
some of its syllogisms and smashed its head. The idea is reasonable enough.
Mental action will yet be reduced to laws as definite as those which govern the
physical. Why should not I accomplish a manikin which shall preach as original
discourses as the Rev. Dr. Allchin, or talk poetry as mechanically as Paul
Anapest? My Android can already work problems in vulgar fractions and compose
sonnets. I hope to teach it the Positive Philosophy."
Out of the bewildering
confusion of his effects Rivarol produced two pipes and filled them. He handed
one to me.
"And here," he
said, "I live and am tolerably comfortable. When my coat wears out at the
elbows I seek the tailor and am measured for another. When I am hungry I
promenade myself to the butcher's and bring home a pound or so of steak, which
I cook very nicely in three seconds by this oxy-hydrogen flame. Thirsty,
perhaps, I send for a carboy of Aqua fortis. But I have it charged,
all charged. My spirit is above any small pecuniary transaction. I loathe your
dirty greenbacks, and never handle what they call scrip."
"But are you never
pestered with bills?" I asked. "Don't the creditors worry your life
out?"
"Creditors!"
gasped Rivarol. "I have learned no such word in your very admirable
language. He who will allow his soul to be vexed by creditors is a relic of an
imperfect civilization. Of what use is science if it cannot avail a man who has
accounts current? Listen. The moment you or any one else enters the outside
door this little electric bell sounds me warning. Every successive step on Mrs.
Grimier's staircase is a spy and informer vigilant for my benefit. The first
step is trod upon. That trusty first step immediately telegraphs your weight.
Nothing could be simpler. It is exactly like any platform scale. The weight is
registered up here upon this dial. The second step records the size of my
visitor's feet. The third his height, the fourth his complexion, and so on. By
the time he reaches the top of the first flight I have a pretty accurate
description of him right here at my elbow, and quite a margin of time for
deliberation and action. Do you follow me? It is plain enough. Only the A B C
of my science."
"I see all
that," I said, "but I don't see how it helps you any. The knowledge
that a creditor is coming won't pay his bill. You can't escape unless you jump
out of the window."
Rivarol laughed softly.
"I will tell you. You shall see what becomes of any poor devil who goes to
demand money of me—of a man of science. Ha! ha! It pleases me. I was seven
weeks perfecting my Dun Suppressor. Did you know"—he whispered
exultingly—"did you know that there is a hole through the earth's centre?
Physicists have long suspected it; I was the first to find it. You have read
how Rhuyghens, the Dutch navigator, discovered in Kerguellen's Land an abysmal
pit which fourteen hundred fathoms of plumb-line failed to sound. Herr Tom,
that hole has no bottom! It runs from one surface of the earth to the antipodal
surface. It is diametric. But where is the antipodal spot? You stand upon it. I
learned this by the merest chance. I was deep-digging in Mrs. Grimler's cellar,
to bury a poor cat I had sacrificed in a galvanic experiment, when the earth
under my spade crumbled, caved in, and wonder-stricken I stood upon the brink
of a yawning shaft. I dropped a coal-hod in. It went down, down down, bounding
and rebounding. In two hours and a quarter that coal-hod came up again. I
caught it and restored it to the angry Grimler. Just think a minute. The
coal-hod went down, faster and faster, till it reached the centre of the earth.
There it would stop, were it not for acquired momentum. Beyond the centre its
journey was relatively upward, toward the opposite surface of the globe. So,
losing velocity, it went slower and slower till it reached that surface. Here
it came to rest for a second and then fell back again, eight thousand odd
miles, into my hands. Had I not interfered with it, it would have repeated its
journey, time after time, each trip of shorter extent, like the diminishing
oscillations of a pendulum, till it finally came to eternal rest at the centre
of the sphere. I am not slow to give a practical application to any such grand
discovery. My Dun Suppressor was born of it. A trap, just outside my chamber
door: a spring in here: a creditor on the trap:—need I say more?"
"But isn't it a
trifle inhuman?" I mildly suggested. "Plunging an unhappy being into
a perpetual journey to and from Kerguellen's Land, without a moment's
warning."
"I give them a
chance. When they come up the first time I wait at the mouth of the shaft with
a rope in hand. If they are reasonable and will come to terms, I fling them the
line. If they perish, 'tis their own fault. Only," he added, with a
melancholy smile, "the centre is getting so plugged up with creditors that
I am afraid there soon will be no choice whatever for 'em."
By this time I had
conceived a high opinion of my tutor's ability. If anybody could send me
waltzing through space at an infinite speed, Rivarol could do it. I filled my
pipe and told him the story. He heard with grave and patient attention. Then,
for full half an hour, he whiffed away in silence. Finally he spoke.
"The ancient cipher
has overreached himself. He has given you a choice of two problems, both of
which he deems insoluble. Neither of them is insoluble. The only gleam of
intelligence Old Cotangent showed was when he said that squaring the circle was
too easy. He was right. It would have given you your Liebchen in
five minutes. I squared the circle before I discarded pantalets. I will show
you the work—but it would be a digression, and you are in no mood for
digressions. Our first chance, therefore, lies in perpetual motion. Now, my
good friend, I will frankly tell you that, although I have compassed this
interesting problem, I do not choose to use it in your behalf. I too, Herr Tom,
have a heart. The loveliest of her sex frowns upon me. Her somewhat mature
charms are not for Jean Marie Rivarol. She has cruelly said that her years
demand of me filial rather than connubial regard. Is love a matter of years or
of eternity? This question did I put to the cold, yet lovely Jocasta."
"Jocasta
Surd!" I remarked in surprise, "Abscissa's aunt!"
"The same," he
said, sadly. "I will not attempt to conceal that upon the maiden Jocasta
my maiden heart has been bestowed. Give me your hand, my nephew in affliction
as in affection!"
Rivarol dashed away a
not discreditable tear, and resumed:
"My only hope lies
in this discovery of perpetual motion. It will give me the fame, the wealth.
Can Jocasta refuse these? If she can, there is only the trap-door
and—Kerguellen's Land!"
I bashfully asked to see
the perpetual-motion machine. My uncle in affliction shook his head.
"At another
time," he said. "Suffice it at present to say, that it is something
upon the principle of a woman's tongue. But you see now why we must turn in
your case to the alternative condition—infinite speed. There are several ways
in which this may be accomplished, theoretically. By the lever, for instance.
Imagine a lever with a very long and a very short arm. Apply power to the
shorter arm which will move it with great velocity. The end of the long arm
will move much faster. Now keep shortening the short arm and lengthening the
long one, and as you approach infinity in their difference of length, you
approach infinity in the speed of the long arm. It would be difficult to
demonstrate this practically to the Professor. We must seek another solution.
Jean Marie will meditate. Come to me in a fortnight. Good-night. But stop! Have
you the money—das Geld?"
"Much more than I
need."
"Good! Let us
strike hands. Gold and Knowledge; Science and Love. What may not such a
partnership achieve? We go to conquer thee, Abscissa. Vorwärts!"
When, at the end of a
fortnight, I sought Rivarol's chamber, I passed with some little trepidation
over the terminus of the Air Line to Kerguellen's Land, and evaded the extended
arms of the Petty Cash Adjuster. Rivarol drew a mug of ale for me, and filled
himself a retort of his own peculiar beverage.
"Come," he
said at length. "Let us drink success to the TACHYPOMP."
"The
TACHYPOMP?"
"Yes. Why
not? Tachu, quickly, and pempo, pepompa to send.
May it send you quickly to your wedding-day. Abscissa is yours. It is done.
When shall we start for the prairies?"
"Where is it?"
I asked, looking in vain around the room for any contrivance which might seem
calculated to advance matrimonial prospects.
"It is here,"
and he gave his forehead a significant tap. Then he held forth didactically.
"There is force
enough in existence to yield us a speed of sixty miles a minute, or even more.
All we need is the knowledge how to combine and apply it. The wise man will not
attempt to make some great force yield some great speed. He will keep adding
the little force to the little force, making each little force yield its little
speed, until an aggregate of little forces shall be a great force, yielding an
aggregate of little speeds, a great speed. The difficulty is not in aggregating
the forces; it lies in the corresponding aggregation of the speeds. One
musket-ball will go, say a mile. It is not hard to increase the force of
muskets to a thousand, yet the thousand musket-balls will go no farther, and no
faster, than the one. You see, then, where our trouble lies. We cannot readily
add speed to speed, as we add force to force. My discovery is simply the
utilization of a principle which extorts an increment of speed from each
increment of power. But this is the metaphysics of physics. Let us be practical
or nothing.
"When you have
walked forward, on a moving train, from the rear car, toward the engine, did
you ever think what you were really doing?"
"Why, yes, I have
generally been going to the smoking-car to have a cigar."
"Tut, tut—not that!
I mean, did it ever occur to you on such an occasion, that absolutely you were
moving faster than the train? The train passes the telegraph poles at the rate
of thirty miles an hour, say. You walk toward the smoking-car at the rate of
four miles an hour. Then you pass the telegraph poles at the
rate of thirty-four miles. Your absolute speed is the speed of the engine, plus
the speed of your own locomotion. Do you follow me?"
I began to get an
inkling of his meaning, and told him so.
"Very well. Let us
advance a step. Your addition to the speed of the engine is trivial, and the
space in which you can exercise it, limited. Now suppose two stations, A and B,
two miles distant by the track. Imagine a train of platform cars, the last car
resting at station A. The train is a mile long, say. The engine is therefore
within a mile of station B. Say the train can move a mile in ten minutes. The
last car, having two miles to go, would reach B in twenty minutes, but the
engine, a mile ahead, would get there in ten. You jump on the last car, at A,
in a prodigious hurry to reach Abscissa, who is at B. If you stay on the last
car it will be twenty long minutes before you see her. But the engine reaches B
and the fair lady in ten. You will be a stupid reasoner, and an indifferent
lover, if you don't put for the engine over those platform cars, as fast as your
legs will carry you. You can run a mile, the length of the train, in ten
minutes. Therefore, you reach Abscissa when the engine does, or in ten
minutes—ten minutes sooner than if you had lazily sat down upon the rear car
and talked politics with the brakeman. You have diminished the time by one
half. You have added your speed to that of the locomotive to some
purpose. Nicht wahr?"
I saw it perfectly; much
plainer, perhaps, for his putting in the clause about Abscissa.
He continued:
"This illustration,
though a slow one, leads up to a principle which may be carried to any extent.
Our first anxiety will be to spare your legs and wind. Let us suppose that the
two miles of track are perfectly straight, and make our train one platform car,
a mile long, with parallel rails laid upon its top. Put a little dummy engine
on these rails, and let it run to and fro along the platform car, while the
platform car is pulled along the ground track. Catch the idea? The dummy takes
your place. But it can run its mile much faster. Fancy that our locomotive is
strong enough to pull the platform car over the two miles in two minutes. The
dummy can attain the same speed. When the engine reaches B in one minute, the
dummy, having gone a mile a-top the platform car, reaches B also. We have so
combined the speeds of those two engines as to accomplish two miles in one
minute. Is this all we can do? Prepare to exercise your imagination."
I lit my pipe.
"Still two miles of
straight track, between A and B. On the track a long platform car, reaching
from A to within a quarter of a mile of B. We will now discard ordinary
locomotives and adopt as our motive power a series of compact magnetic engines,
distributed underneath the platform car, all along its length."
"I don't understand
those magnetic engines."
"Well, each of them
consists of a great iron horseshoe, rendered alternately a magnet and not a
magnet by an intermittent current of electricity from a battery, this current
in its turn regulated by clock-work. When the horseshoe is in the circuit, it
is a magnet, and it pulls its clapper toward it with enormous power. When it is
out of the circuit, the next second, it is not a magnet, and it lets the
clapper go. The clapper, oscillating to and fro, imparts a rotatory motion to a
fly-wheel, which transmits it to the drivers on the rails. Such are our motors.
They are no novelty, for trial has proved them practicable.
"With a magnetic
engine for every truck of wheels, we can reasonably expect to move our immense
car, and to drive it along at a speed, say, of a mile a minute.
"The forward end,
having but a quarter of a mile to go, will reach B in fifteen seconds. We will
call this platform car number 1. On top of number 1 are laid rails on which
another platform car, number 2, a quarter of a mile shorter than number 1, is
moved in precisely the same way. Number 2, in its turn, is surmounted by number
3, moving independently of the tiers beneath, and a quarter of a mile shorter
than number 2. Number 2 is a mile and a half long; number 3 a mile and a
quarter. Above, on successive levels, are number 4, a mile long; number 5,
three quarters of a mile; number 6, half a mile; number 7, a quarter of a mile,
and number 8, a short passenger car, on top of all.
"Each car moves
upon the car beneath it, independently of all the others, at the rate of a mile
a minute. Each car has its own magnetic engines. Well, the train being drawn up
with the latter end of each car resting against a lofty bumping-post at A, Tom
Furnace, the gentlemanly conductor, and Jean Marie Rivarol, engineer, mount by
a long ladder to the exalted number 8. The complicated mechanism is set in
motion. What happens?
"Number 8 runs a
quarter of a mile in fifteen seconds and reaches the end of number 7. Meanwhile
number 7 has run a quarter of a mile in the same time and reached the end of
number 6; number 6, a quarter of a mile in fifteen seconds, and reached the end
of number 5; number 5, the end of number 4; number 4, of number 3; number 3, of
number 2; number 2, of number 1. And number 1, in fifteen seconds, has gone its
quarter of a mile along the ground track, and has reached station B. All this
has been done in fifteen seconds. Wherefore, numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8
come to rest against the bumping-post at B, at precisely the same second. We,
in number 8, reach B just when number 1 reaches it. In other words, we
accomplish two miles in fifteen seconds. Each of the eight cars, moving at the
rate of a mile a minute, has contributed a quarter of a mile to our journey,
and has done its work in fifteen seconds. All the eight did their work at once,
during the same fifteen seconds. Consequently we have been whizzed through the
air at the somewhat startling speed of seven and a half seconds to the mile.
This is the Tachypomp. Does it justify the name?"
Although a little
bewildered by the complexity of cars, I apprehended the general principle of
the machine. I made a diagram, and understood it much better. "You have
merely improved on the idea of my moving faster than the train when I was going
to the smoking car?"
"Precisely. So far
we have kept within the bounds of the practicable. To satisfy the Professor,
you can theorize in something after this fashion: If we double the number of
cars, thus decreasing by one half the distance which each has to go, we shall
attain twice the speed. Each of the sixteen cars will have but one eighth of a
mile to go. At the uniform rate we have adopted, the two miles can be done in
seven and a half instead of fifteen seconds. With thirty-two cars, and a
sixteenth of a mile, or twenty rods difference in their length, we arrive at
the speed of a mile in less than two seconds; with sixty-four cars, each
travelling but ten rods, a mile under the second. More than sixty miles a
minute! If this isn't rapid enough for the Professor, tell him to go on,
increasing the number of his cars and diminishing the distance each one has to
run. If sixty-four cars yield a speed of a mile inside the second, let him
fancy a Tachypomp of six hundred and forty cars, and amuse himself calculating
the rate of car number 640. Just whisper to him that when he has an infinite
number of cars with an infinitesimal difference in their lengths, he will have
obtained that infinite speed for which he seems to yearn. Then demand
Abscissa."
I wrung my friend's hand
in silent and grateful admiration. I could say nothing.
"You have listened
to the man of theory," he said proudly. "You shall now behold the
practical engineer. We will go to the west of the Mississippi and find some
suitably level locality. We will erect thereon a model Tachypomp. We will
summon thereunto the professor, his daughter, and why not his fair sister
Jocasta, as well? We will take them a journey which shall much astonish the
venerable Surd. He shall place Abscissa's digits in yours and bless you both
with an algebraic formula. Jocasta shall contemplate with wonder the genius of
Rivarol. But we have much to do. We must ship to St. Joseph the vast amount of
material to be employed in the construction of the Tachypomp. We must engage a
small army of workmen to effect that construction, for we are to annihilate
time and space. Perhaps you had better see your bankers."
I rushed impetuously to
the door. There should be no delay.
"Stop! stop! Um
Gottes Willen, stop!" shrieked Rivarol. "I launched my butcher
this morning and I haven't bolted the——"
But it was too late. I
was upon the trap. It swung open with a crash, and I was plunged down, down,
down! I felt as if I were falling through illimitable space. I remember
wondering, as I rushed through the darkness, whether I should reach
Kerguellen's Land or stop at the centre. It seemed an eternity. Then my course
was suddenly and painfully arrested.
I opened my eyes. Around
me were the walls of Professor Surd's study. Under me was a hard, unyielding
plane which I knew too well was Professor Surd's study floor. Behind me was the
black, slippery, hair-cloth chair which had belched me forth, much as the whale
served Jonah. In front of me stood Professor Surd himself, looking down with a
not unpleasant smile.
"Good-evening, Mr.
Furnace. Let me help you up. You look tired, sir. No wonder you fell asleep
when I kept you so long waiting. Shall I get you a glass of wine? No? By the
way, since receiving your letter I find that you are a son of my old friend,
Judge Furnace. I have made inquiries, and see no reason why you should not make
Abscissa a good husband."
Still I can see no
reason why the Tachypomp should not have succeeded.
Can you?
[5] Scribner's
Monthly, March, 1874
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