At A Winter's Fire
At A Winter's Fire
Capes
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AT A WINTER'S FIRE
by
BERNARD CAPES
1899
All except three of the following Tales have already appeared in English or
American Magazines. The best thanks of the author are due to the Editors of the
"Cornhill," "Macmillan's," "Lippincott's" and "Pearson's" Magazines, and to the
Editor of the "Sketch," for permission to reprint such of the stories as have been
published in their pages.
Contents
DARK DIGNUM
A LAZY ROMANCE
BLACK VENN
DINAH'S MAMMOTH
It so fell that one dark evening in the month of June I was belated in the Bernese
Oberland. Dusk overtook me toiling along the great Chamounix Road, and in the
heart of a most desolate gorge, whose towering snow-flung walls seemed—as
the day sucked inwards to a point secret as a leech's mouth—to close about me
like a monstrous amphitheatre of ghosts. The rutted road, dipping and climbing
toilfully against the shouldering of great tumbled boulders, or winning for itself
but narrow foothold over slippery ridges, was thawed clear of snow; but the cold
soft peril yet lay upon its flanks thick enough for a wintry plunge of ten feet, or
may be fifty where the edge of the causeway fell over to the lower furrows of the
ravine. It was a matter of policy to go with caution, and a thing of some moment
to hear the thud and splintering of little distant icefalls about one in the darkness.
Now and again a cold arrow of wind would sing down from the frosty peaks
above or jerk with a squiggle of laughter among the fallen slabs in the valley.
And these were the only voices to prick me on through a dreariness lonely as
death.
I knew the road, but not its night terrors. Passing along it some days before in the
glory of sunshine, broad paddocks and islands of green had comforted the
shattered white ruin of the place, and I had traversed it merely as a magnificent
episode in the indifferent history of my life. Now, as it seemed, I became one
with it—an awful waif of solemnity, a thing apart from mankind and its warm
intercourse and ruddy inn doors, a spectral anomaly, whose austere epitaph was
once writ upon the snow coating some fallen slab of those glimmering about me.
I thought the whole gorge smelt of tombs, like the vault of a cathedral. I thought,
in the incomprehensible low moaning sound that ever and again seemed to eddy
about me when the wind had swooped and passed, that I recognised the forlorn
voices of brother spirits long since dead and forgotten of the world.
Suddenly I felt the sweat cold under the knapsack that swung upon my back;
stopped, faced about and became human again. Ridge over ridge to my right the
mountain summits fell away against a fathomless sky; and topping the
furthermost was a little paring of silver light, the coronet of the rising moon. But
the glory of the full orb was in the retrospect; for, closing the savage vista of the
ravine, stood up far away a cluster of jagged pinnacles—opal, translucent,
lustrous as the peaks of icebergs that are the frozen music of the sea.
It was the toothed summit of the Aiguille Verte, now prosaically bathed in the
light of the full moon; but to me, looking from that grim and passionless hollow,
it stood for the white hand of God lifted in menace to the evil spirits of the glen.
I drank my fill of the good sight, and then turned me to my tramp again with a
freshness in my throat as though it had gulped a glass of champagne. Presently I
knew myself descending, leaving, as I felt rather than saw, the stark horror of the
gorge and its glimmering snow patches above me. Puffs of a warmer air purred
past my face with little friendly sighs of welcome, and the hum of a far-off
torrent struck like a wedge into the indurated fibre of the night. As I dropped,
however, the mountain heads grew up against the moon, and withheld the
comfort of her radiance; and it was not until the whimper of the torrent had
quickened about me to a plunging roar, and my foot was on the striding bridge
that took its waters at a step, that her light broke through a topmost cleft in the
hills, and made glory of the leaping thunder that crashed beneath my feet.
Thereafter all was peace. The road led downwards into a broadening valley,
where the smell of flowers came about me, and the mountain walls withdrew and
were no longer overwhelming. The slope eased off, dipping and rising no more
than a ground swell; and by-and-by I was on a level track that ran straight as a
stretched ribbon and was reasonable to my tired feet.
Now the first dusky châlets of the hamlet of Bel-Oiseau straggled towards me,
and it was music in my ears to hear the cattle blow and rattle in their stalls under
the sleeping lofts as I passed outside in the moonlight. Five minutes more, and
the great zinc onion on the spire of the church glistened towards me, and I was in
the heart of the silent village.
From the deep green shadow cast by the graveyard wall, heavily buttressed
against avalanches, a form wriggled out into the moonlight and fell with a dusty
thud at my feet, mowing and chopping at the air with its aimless claws. I started
back with a sudden jerk of my pulses. The thing was horrible by reason of its
inarticulate voice, which issued from the shapeless folds of its writhings like the
wet gutturizing of a back-broken horse. Instinct with repulsion, I stood a moment
dismayed, when light flashed from an open doorway a dozen yards further down
the street, and a woman ran across to the prostrate form.
"Up, graceless one!" she cried; "and carry thy seven devils within doors!"
The figure gathered itself together at her voice, and stood in an angle of the
buttresses quaking and shielding its eyes with two gaunt arms.
"Can I not exchange a word with Mère Pettit," scolded the woman, "but thou
must sneak from behind my back on thy crazed moon-hunting?"
"Pity, pity," moaned the figure; and then the woman noticed me, and dropped a
curtsy.
"Pardon," she said; "but he has been affronting Monsieur with his antics?"
"It is sad."
"Monsieur knows not how sad. It is so always, but most a great deal when the
moon is full. He was a good lad once."
Monsieur puts his hand in his pocket. Madame hears the clink of coin and
touches the enclosed fingers with her own delicately. Monsieur withdraws his
hand empty.
"Pardon, Madame."
"Monsieur has the courage of a gentleman. Come, Camille, little fool! a sweet
good-night to Monsieur."
"Monsieur does not know? The Hôtel Royal was burned to the walls six months
since."
"I keep Monsieur talking, and the night wind is sharp from the snow. It is ill for a
heated skin, and one should be indoors. I have a bedroom that is at Monsieur's
disposition, if Monsieur will condescend?"
This is how I came to quarter myself on Madame Barbière and her idiot son, and
how I ultimately learned from the lips of the latter the strange story of his own
immediate fall from reason and the dear light of intellect.
*****
By day Camille Barbière proved to be a young man, some five and twenty years
of age, of a handsome and impressive exterior. His dark hair lay close about his
well-shaped head; his features were regular and cut bold as an Etruscan cameo;
his limbs were elastic and moulded into the supple finish of one whose life has
not been set upon level roads. At a speculative distance he appeared a straight
specimen of a Burgundian youth—sinewy, clean-formed, and graceful, though
slender to gauntness; and it was only on nearer contact that one marvelled to see
the soul die out of him, as a face set in the shadow of leafage resolves itself into
some accident of twisted branches as one approaches the billowing tree that
presented it.
The soul of Camille, the idiot, had warped long after its earthly tabernacle had
grown firm and fair to look upon. Cause and effect were not one from birth in
him; and the result was a most wistful expression, as though the lost intellect
were for ever struggling and failing to recall its ancient mastery. Mostly he was a
gentle young man, noteworthy for nothing but the uncomplaining patience with
which he daily observed the monotonous routine of simple duties that were now
all-sufficient for the poor life that had "crept so long on a broken wing." He
milked the big, red, barrel-bodied cow, and churned industriously for butter; he
kept the little vegetable garden in order and nursed the Savoys into fatness like
plumping babies; he drove the goats to pasture on the mountain slopes, and all
day sat among the rhododendrons, the forgotten soul behind his eyes conning the
dead language of fate, as a foreigner vainly interrogates the abstruse complexity
of an idiom.
The "story" I have called it; but it was none. He was out on the hills one
moonlight night, and came home in the early morning mad. That was all.
This had happened some eight years before, when he was a lad of seventeen—a
strong, beautiful lad, his mother told me; and with a dreamy "poet's corner" in
his brain, she added, but in her own better way of putting it. She had no shame
that her shepherd should be an Endymion. In Switzerland they still look upon
Nature as a respectable pursuit for a young man.
Well, they had thought him possessed of a devil; and his father had at first
sought to exorcise it with a chamois-hide thong, as Munchausen flogged the
black fox out of his skin. But the counter-irritant failed of its purpose. The devil
clung deep, and rent poor Camille with periodic convulsions of insanity.
It was noted that his derangement waxed and waned with the monthly moon;
that it assumed a virulent character with the passing of the second quarter, and
culminated, as the orb reached its fulness, in a species of delirium, during which
it was necessary to carefully watch him; that it diminished with the lessening
crescent until it fell away into a quiet abeyance of faculties that was but a step
apart from the normal intelligence of his kind. At his worst he was a stricken
madman acutely sensitive to impressions; at his best an inoffensive peasant who
said nothing foolish and nothing wise.
When he was twenty, his father died, and Camille and his mother had to make
out existence in company.
Now, the veil, in my first knowledge of him, was never rent; yet occasionally it
seemed to me to gape in a manner that let a little momentary finger of light
through, in the flashing of which a soul kindled and shut in his eyes, like a hard-
dying spark in ashes. I wished to know what gave life to the spark, and I set to
pondering the problem.
"But no, Monsieur, truly. This place—bah! we are here imbeciles all to the great
world, without doubt; but Camille!—he was by nature of those who make the
history of cities—a rose in the wilderness. Monsieur smiles?"
"A scholar of nature, Monsieur; a dreamer of dreams such as they become who
walk much with the spirits on the lonely mountains."
"Torrents, and avalanches, and the good material forces of nature, Madame
means."
"Ah! Monsieur may talk, but he knows. He has heard the föhn sweep down from
the hills and spin the great stones off the house-roofs. And one may look and see
nothing, yet the stones go. It is the wind that runs before the avalanche that snaps
the pine trees; and the wind is the spirit that calls down the great snow-slips."
"But how may Madame who sees nothing; know then a spirit to be abroad?"
"My faith; one may know one's foot is on the wild mint without shifting one's
sole to look."
"Madame will pardon me. No doubt also one may know a spirit by the smell of
sulphur?"
"Monsieur is a sceptic. It comes with the knowledge of cities. There are even
such in little Bel-Oiseau, since the evil time when they took to engrossing the
contracts of good citizens on the skins of the poor jew-beards that give us flesh
and milk. It is horrible as the Tannery of Meudon. In my young days, Monsieur,
such agreements were inscribed upon wood."
"Quite so, Madame, and entirely to the point. Also one may see from whom
Camille inherited his wandering propensities. But for his fall—it was always
unaccountable?"
"Monsieur, as one trips on the edge of a crevasse and disappears. His soul
dropped into the frozen cleft that one cannot fathom."
"But surely. There was no dark secret in my Camille's life. If the little head held
pictures beyond the ken of us simple women, the angels painted them of a
certainty. Moreover, it is that I willingly recount this grief to the wise friend that
may know a solution."
"It was in such a parched summer as this threatens to be that my Camille came
home in the mists of the morning possessed. He was often out on the sweet hills
all night—that was nothing. It had been a full moon, and the whiteness of it was
on his face like leprosy, but his hands were hot with fever. Ah, the dreadful
summer! The milk turned sour in the cows' udders and the tufts of the stone
pines on the mountains fell into ashes like Dead Sea fruit. The springs were
dried, and the great cascade of Buet fell to half its volume."
"Of a surety. Monsieur must have passed the rocky ravine that vomits the torrent,
on his way hither."
"Never."
"And why?"
"Who may say? The ways of the afflicted are not our ways. Only I know that
Camille will never drive his flock to pasture near the lip of that dark valley."
"That is strange. Can the place have associations for him connected with his
malady?"
But I was to know later on, with a little reeling of the reason also.
*****
The hunted eyes of the stricken looked into mine with a piercing glance of fear.
"I!" The idiot fell upon the grass with a sort of gobbling cry. I thought it the
prelude to a fit of some sort, and was stepping towards him, when he rose to his
feet, waved me off and hurried away down the slope homewards.
A day or two afterwards I joined Camille at midday on the heights where he was
pasturing his flocks. He had shifted his ground a little distance westwards, and I
could not find him at once. At last I spied him, his back to a rock, his hand
dabbled for coolness in a little runnel that trickled at his side. He looked up and
greeted me with a smile. He had conceived an affection for me, this poor lost
soul.
"It will go soon," he said, referring to the miniature streamlet. "It is safe in the
woods; but to-morrow or next day the sun will lap it up ere it can reach the skirt
of the shadow above there. A farewell kiss to you, little stream!"
He bent and sipped a mouthful of the clear water. He was in a more reasonable
state than he had shown for long, though it was now close on the moon's final
quarter, a period that should have marked a more general tenor of placidity in
him. The summer solstice, was, however, at hand, and the weather sultry to a
degree—as it had been, I did not fail to remember, the year of his seizure.
"Camille," I said, "why to-day hast thou shifted thy ground a little in the
direction of the Buet ravine?"
"Monsieur has asked it," he said. "It was to impel Monsieur to ask it that I
moved. Does Monsieur seek a guide?"
"Monsieur, last night I dreamed and one came to me. Was it my father? I know
not, I know not. But he put my forehead to his breast, and the evil left it, and I
remembered without terror. 'Reveal the secret to the stranger,' he said; 'that he
may share thy burden and comfort thee; for he is strong where thou art weak,
and the vision shall not scare him.' Monsieur, wilt thou come?"
He called to the leader of his flock: "Petitjean! stray not, my little one. I shall be
back sooner than the daisies close." Then he turned to me again. I noticed a
pallid, desperate look in his face, as though he were strung to great effort; but it
was the face of a mindless one still.
"Do you not fear?" he said, in a whisper; and the apple in his throat seemed all
choking core.
"I fear nothing," I answered with a smile; yet the still sombreness of the woods
found a little tremor in my breast.
"It is good," he answered, regarding me. "The angel spoke truth. Follow,
Monsieur."
He went off through the trees of a sudden, and I had much ado to keep pace with
him. He ran as one urged on by a sure sense of doom, looking neither to right nor
left. His mountain instincts had remained with him when memory itself had
closed around like a fog, leaving him face to face and isolated with his one
unconfessed point of terror. Swiftly we made our way, ever slightly climbing,
along the rugged hillside, and soon broke into country very wild and dismal. The
pastoral character of the scene lessened and altogether disappeared. The trees
grew matted and grotesquely gnarled, huddling together in menacing battalions
—save where some plunging rock had burst like a shell, forcing a clearing and
strewing the black moss with a jagged wreck of splinters. Here no flowers crept
for warmth, no sentinel marmot turned his little scut with a whistle of alarm to
vanish like a red shadow. All was melancholy and silence and the massed
defiance of ever-impending ruin. Storm, and avalanche, and the bitter snap of
frost had wrought their havoc year by year, till an uncrippled branch was a rare
distinction. The very saplings, of stunted growth, bore the air of thieves reared in
a rookery of crime.
We strode with difficulty in an inhuman twilight through this great dark quickset
of Nature, and had paused a moment where the thronging trunks thinned
somewhat, when a little mouthing moan came towards us on the crest of a ripple
of wind. My companion stopped on the instant, and clutched my arm, his face
twisting with panic.
"Yes, yes—it was good. Help me, Monsieur, and I will try—yes, I will try!"
I drew his arm within mine, and together we stumbled on. The undergrowth
grew denser and more fantastic; the murmur filled out, increased and resolved
itself into a sound of falling water that ever took shape, and volume, and depth,
till its crash shook the ground at our feet. Then in a moment a white blaze of sky
came at us through the trunks, and we burst through the fringe of the wood to
find ourselves facing the opposite side of a long cleft in the mountain and the
blade's edge of a roaring cataract.
It shot out over the lip of the fall, twenty feet above us, in a curve like a scimitar,
passed in one sheet the spot where we stood, and dived into a sunless pool thirty
feet below with a thunderous boom. What it may have been in full phases of the
stream, I know not; yet even now it was sufficiently magnificent to give pause to
a dying soul eager to shake off the restless horror of the world. The flat of its
broad blade divided the lofty black walls of a deep and savage ravine, on whose
jagged shelves some starved clumps of rhododendron shook in the wind of the
torrent. Far down the narrow gully we could see the passion of water tossing,
champed white with the ravening of its jaws, until it took a bend of the cliffs at a
leap and rushed from sight.
We stood upon a little platform of coarse grass and bramble, whose fringe
dipped and nodded fitfully as the sprinkle caught it. Beyond, the sliding sheet of
water looked like a great strap of steel, reeled ceaselessly off a whirling drum
pivoted between the hills. The midday sun shot like a piston down the shaft of
the valley, painting purple spears and angles behind its abutting rocks, and
hitting full upon the upper curve of the fall; but half-way down the cataract
slipped into shadow.
My brain sickened with the endless gliding and turmoil of descent, and I turned
aside to speak to my companion. He was kneeling upon the grass, his eyes fixed
and staring, his white lips mumbling some crippled memory of a prayer. He
started and cowered down as I touched him on the shoulder.
"My God, Monsieur! the cave under the fall! It is there the horror is."
He pointed to a little gap in the fringing bushes with shaking finger. I stole
gingerly in the direction he indicated. With every step I took the awful
fascination of the descending water increased upon me. It seemed hideous and
abnormal to stand mid-way against a perpendicularly-rushing torrent. Above or
below the effect would have been different; but here, to look up was to feel one's
feet dragging towards the unseen—to look down and pass from vision of the lip
of the fall was to become the waif of a force that was unaccountable.
I had a battle with my nerves, and triumphed. As I approached the opening in the
brambles I became conscious of a certain relief. At a little distance the cataract
had seemed to actually wash in its descent the edge of the platform. Now I found
it to be further away than I had imagined, the ground dropping in a sharp slope
to a sort of rocky buttress which lay obliquely on the slant of the ravine, and was
the true margin of the torrent. Before I essayed the descent, I glanced back at my
companion. He was kneeling where I had left him, his hands pressed to his face,
his features hidden; but looking back once again, when I had with infinite
caution accomplished the downward climb, I saw that he had crept to the edge of
the slope, and was watching me with wide, terrified eyes. I waved my hand to
him and turned to the wonderful vision of water that now passed almost within
reach of my arm. I stood near the point where the whole glassy breadth glided at
once from sunlight into shadow. It fell silently, without a break, for only its feet
far below trod the thunder.
Now, as I peered about, I noticed a little cleft in the rocky margin, a minute's
climb above me. I was attracted to this by an appearance of smoke or steam that
incessantly emerged from it, as though some witch's caldron were simmering
alongside the fall. Spray it might be, or the condensing of water splashed on the
granite; but of this I might not be sure. Therefore I determined to investigate, and
straightway began climbing the rocks—with my heart in my mouth, it must be
confessed, for the foothold was undesirable and the way perilous. And all the
time I was conscious that the white face of Camille watched me from above. As
I reached the cleft I fancied I heard a queer sort of gasping sob issue from his
lips, but to this I could give no heed in the sudden wonder that broke upon me.
For, lo! it appeared that the cleft led straight to a narrow platform or ledge of
rock right underneath the fall itself, but extending how far I could not see, by
reason of the steam that filled the passage, and for which I was unable to
account. Footing it carefully and groping my way, I set step in the little water-
curtained chamber and advanced a pace or two. Suddenly, light grew about me,
and a beautiful rose of fire appeared on the wall of the passage in the midst of
what seemed a vitrified scoop in the rock.
Marvelling, I put out my hand to touch it, and fell back on the narrow floor with
a scream of anguish. An inch farther, and these lines had not been written. As it
was, the fall caught me by the fingers with the suck of a cat-fish, and it was only
a gigantic wrench that saved me from slipping off the ledge. The jerk brought
my head against the rock with a stunning blow, and for some moments I lay
dizzy and confused, daring hardly to breathe, and conscious only of a burning
and blistering agony in my right hand.
At length I summoned courage to gather my limbs together and crawl out the
way I had entered. The distance was but a few paces, yet to traverse these
seemed an interminable nightmare of swaying and stumbling. I know only one
other occasion upon which the liberal atmosphere of the open earth seemed
sweeter to my senses when I reached it than it did on this.
I tumbled somehow through the cleft, and sat down, shaking, upon the grass of
the slope beyond; but, happening to throw myself backwards in the reeling
faintness induced by my fright and the pain of my head, my eyes encountered a
sight that woke me at once to full activity.
Balanced upon the very verge of the slope, his face and neck craned forward, his
jaw dropped, a sick, tranced look upon his features, stood Camille. I saw him
topple, and shouted to him; but before my voice was well out, he swayed,
collapsed, and came down with a running thud that shook the ground. Once he
wheeled over, like a shot rabbit, and, bounding thwack with his head against a
flat boulder not a dozen yards from me, lay stunned and motionless.
I scrambled to him, quaking all over. His breath came quick, and a spirt of blood
jerked from a sliced cut in his forehead at every pump of his heart.
I kicked out a wad of cool moist turf, and clapped it in a pad over the wound, my
handkerchief under. For his body, he was shaken and bruised, but otherwise not
seriously hurt.
I have no explanation to offer. Only I know that, as a fall will set a long-stopped
watch pulsing again, the blow here seemed to have restored the misplaced
intellect to its normal balance.
When he woke, there was a new soft light of sanity in his eyes that was pathetic
in the extreme.
"A little while," he said, "and I shall know. The punishment was just."
"Hush! The cloud has rolled away. I stand naked before le bon Dieu.
Monsieur, lift me up; I am strong."
"Ah, the poor hand!" he murmured. "Monsieur has touched the disc of fire."
"Monsieur shall know—ah! yes, he shall know; but not now. Monsieur, my
mother."
I bound up his bruised forehead and my own burnt hand as well as I was able,
and helped him to his feet. He stood upon them staggering; but in a minute could
essay to stumble on the homeward journey with assistance. It was a long and
toilsome progress; but in time we accomplished it. Often we had to sit down in
the blasted woods and rest awhile; often moisten our parched mouths at the
runnels of snow-water that thridded the undergrowth. The shadows were slanting
eastwards as we reached the clearing we had quitted some hours earlier, and the
goats had disappeared. Petitjean was leading his charges homewards in default
of a human commander, and presently we overtook them browsingly loitering
and desirous of definite instructions.
I pass over Camille's meeting with his mother, and the wonder, and fear, and pity
of it all. Our hurts were attended to, and the battery of questions met with the
best armour of tact at command. For myself, I said that I had scorched my hand
against a red-hot rock, which was strictly true; for Camille, that it were wisest to
take no early advantage of the reason that God had restored to him. She was
voluble, tearful, half-hysterical with joy and the ecstasy of gratitude.
"That a blow should effect the marvel! Monsieur, but it passes comprehension."
All night long I heard her stirring and sobbing softly outside his door, for I slept
little, owing to pain and the wonder in my mind. But towards morning I dozed,
and my dreams were feverish and full of terror.
The next day Camille kept his bed and I my room. By this I at least escaped the
first onset of local curiosity, for the villagers naturally made of Camille's
restoration a nine-days' wonder. But towards evening Madame Barbière brought
a message from him that he would like to see Monsieur alone, if Monsieur
would condescend to visit him in his room. I went at once, and found him, as
Haydon found Keats, lying in a white bed, hectic, and on his back. He greeted
me with a smile peculiarly sweet and restful.
"Not now—not now; the good God has made me sound. I remember, and am not
terrified."
I closed the door and took a seat by his bedside. There, with my hand shading
my eyes from the level glory of sunset that flamed into the room, I listened to the
strange tale of Camille's seizure.
*****
"Once, Monsieur, I lived in myself and was exultant with a loneliness of fancied
knowledge. My youth was my excuse; but God could not pardon me all. I read
where I could find books, and chance put an evil choice in my way, for I learned
to sneer at His name, His heaven, His hell. Each man has his god in self-will, I
thought in my pride, and through it alone he accepts the responsibility of life and
death. He is his own curse or blessing here and hereafter, inheriting no sin and
earning no doom but such as he himself inflicts upon himself. I interpret this
from the world about me, and knowing it, I have no fear and own no tyrant but
my own passions. Monsieur, it was through fear the most terrible that God
asserted Himself to me."
The light was fading in the west, and a lance of shadow fell upon the white bed,
as though the hushed day were putting a finger to its lips as it withdrew.
"I was no coward then, Monsieur—that at least I may say. I lived among the
mountains, and on their ledges the feet of my own goats were not surer. Often, in
summer, I spent the night among the woods and hills, reading in them the story
of the ages, and exploring, exploring till my feet were wearier than my brain.
Strangers came from far to see the great cascade; but none but I—and you, too,
Monsieur, now—know the track through the thicket that leads to the cave under
the waters. I found it by chance, and, like you, was scorched by the fire, though
not badly."
"Camille—the cause?"
"Monsieur, I will tell you a wonderful thing. The falling waters there make a
monstrous burning glass, when the hot sun is upon them, which has melted the
rock behind like wax."
He half rose on his elbow, his face, crossed by the bandage, grey as stone in the
gathering dusk. Hereafter he spoke in an awed whisper.
"When the knowledge broke upon me, I grew great to myself in the possession
of a wonderful secret. Day after day I visited the cave and examined this
phenomenon—and yet another more marvellous in its connection with the first.
The huge lens was a simple accident of curved rocks and convex water, planed
smooth as crystal. In other than a droughty summer it would probably not exist;
the spouting torrent would overwhelm it—but I know not. Was not this
astonishing enough? Yet Nature had worked a second miracle to mock in
anticipation the self-sufficient plagiarism of little man. I noticed that the rays of
the sun concentrated in the lens only during the half-hour of the orb's apparent
crossing of the ravine. Then the light smote upon a strange curved little fan of
water, that spouted from a high crevice at the mouth of the shallow vitrified
tunnel, and devoured it, and played upon the rocks behind, that hissed and
sputtered like pitch, and the place was blind with steam. But when the tooth of
fire was withdrawn, the tiny inner cascade fell again and wrought coolness with
its sprinkling.
"I did not discover this all at once, for at first fright took me, and it was enough
to watch for the moment of the light's appearance and then flee with a little
laughter. But one day I ventured back into the cave after the sun had crossed the
valley, and the steam had died away, and the rock cooled behind the miniature
cascade.
"I looked through the lens, and it seemed full of a great white light that blazed
into my eyes, so that I fell back through the inner fan of water and was well
soused by it; but my sight presently recovering, I stood forward in the scoop of
rock admiring the dainty hollow curve the fan took in its fall. By-and-by I
became aware that I was looking out through a smaller lens upon the great one,
and that strange whirling mists seemed to be sweeping across a huge disc, within
touch of my hand almost.
"It was long before I grasped the meaning of this; but, in a flash, it came upon
me. The great lens formed the object glass, the small, the eyeglass, of a natural
telescope of tremendous power, that drew the high summer clouds down within
seeming touch and opened out the heavens before my staring eyes.
"I had read in a book of Huyghens, Guinand, Newton, Herschel—the great high-
priests of science who had striven through patient years to read the hieroglyphics
of the heavens. 'The wise imbeciles,' I thought. 'They toiled and died, and Nature
held no mirror up to them. For me, the poor Camille, she has worked in secret
while they grew old and passed unsatisfied.'
"Shall I tell you what I saw then and many nights after? Rings and crosses in the
heavens of golden mist, spangled, as it seemed, with jewels; stars as big as cart-
wheels, twinkling points no longer, but round, like great bosses of molten fire;
things shadowy, luminous, of strange colours and stranger forms, that seemed to
brush the waters as they passed, but were in reality vast distances away.
"Sometimes the thrust of wind up the ravine would produce a tremulous motion
in the image at the focus of the mirror; but this was seldom. For the most part the
wonderful lenses presented a steady curvature, not flawless, but of magnificent
capacity.
"Now it flashed upon me that, when the moon was at the full, she would top the
valley in the direct path of my telescope's range of view. At the thought I grew
exultant. I—I, little Camille, should first read aright the history of this strange
satellite. The instrument that could give shape to the stars would interpret to me
the composition of that lonely orb as clearly as though I stood upon her surface.
"As the time of her fulness drew near I grew feverish with excitement. I was
sickening, as it were, to my madness, for never more should I look upon her
willingly, with eyes either speculative or insane."
At this point Camille broke off for a little space, and lay back on his pillow.
When he spoke again it was out of the darkness, with his face turned to the wall.
"Monsieur, I cannot dwell upon it—I must hasten. We have no right to peer
beyond the boundary God has drawn for us. I saw His hell—I saw His hell, I tell
you. It is peopled with the damned—silent, horrible, distorted in the midst of
ashes and desolation. It was a memory that, like the snake of Aaron, devoured all
others till yesterday—till yesterday, by Christ's mercy."
*****
It seemed to me, as the days wore on, that Camille had but recovered his reason
at the expense of his life; that the long rest deemed necessary for him after his
bitter period of brain exhaustion might in the end prove an everlasting one.
Possibly the blow to his head had, in expelling the seven devils, wounded
beyond cure the vital function that had fostered them. He lay white, patient, and
sweet-tempered to all, but moved by no inclination to rise and re-assume the
many-coloured garment of life.
His description of the dreadful desert in the sky I looked upon, merely, as an
abiding memory of the brain phantasm that had finally overthrown a reason,
already tottering under the tremendous excitement induced by his discovery of
the lenses, and the magnified images they had presented to him. That there was
truth in the asserted fact of the existence of these, my own experience convinced
me; and curiosity as to this alone impelled me to the determination of
investigating further, when my hand should be sufficiently recovered to act as no
hindrance to me in forcing my way once more through the dense woods that
bounded the waterfall. Moreover, the dispassionate enquiry of a mind less
sensitive to impressions might, in the result, do more towards restoring the
warped imagination of my friend to its normal state than any amount of spoken
scepticism.
To Camille I said nothing of my resolve; but waited on, chafing at the slow
healing of my wounds. In the meantime the period of the full moon approached,
and I decided, at whatever cost, to make the venture on the evening she topped
her orbit, if circumstances at the worst should prevent my doing so sooner—and
thus it turned out.
On the eve of my enterprise, the first fair spring of rain in a drought of two
months fell, to my disappointment, among the hills; for I feared an increase of
the torrent and the effacement of the mighty lens. I set off, however, on the
afternoon of the following day, in hot sunshine, mentally prognosticating a
favourable termination to my expedition, and telling Madame Barbière not to
expect me back till late.
In leisurely fashion I made my way along the track we had previously traversed,
risking no divergence through overhaste, and carefully examining all landmarks
before deciding on any direction. Thus slowly proceeding, I had the good fortune
to come within sound of the cataract as the sun was sinking behind the mountain
ridges to my front; and presently emerged from the woods at the very spot we
had struck in our former journey together.
A chilly twilight reigned in the ravine, and the noise that came up from the ruin
of the torrent seemed doubly accented by reason of it. The sound of water
moving in darkness has always conveyed to me an impression of something
horrible and deadly, be it nothing of more moment than the drip and hollow
tinkle of a gutter pipe. But the crash in this echoing gorge was appalling indeed.
For some moments I stood on the brink of the slope, looking across at the great
knife of the fall, with a little shiver of fear. Then I shook myself, laughed, and
without further ado took my courage in hand, and scrambled down the declivity
and up again towards the cleft in the rocks.
Here the chill of heart gripped me again—the watery sliding tunnel looked so
evil in the contracting gloom. A false step in that humid chamber, and my bones
would pound and crackle on the rocks forty feet below. It must be gone through
with now, however; and, taking a long breath, I set foot in the passage under the
curving downpour that seemed taut as an arched muscle.
In a moment I became conscious that some great power was before me. Across a
vast, irregular disc filled with the ashy whiteness of the outer twilight, strange,
unaccountable forms, misty and undefined, passed, and repassed, and vanished.
Cirrus they might have been, or the shadows flung by homing flights of birds;
but of this I could not be certain. As the dusk deepened they showed no more,
and presently I gazed only into a violet fathomless darkness.
My own excitement now was great; and I found some difficulty in keeping it
under control. But for the moment, it seemed to me, I pined greatly for free
commune with the liberal atmosphere of earth. Therefore, I dipped under the
little fall and made my cautious way to the margin of the cataract.
I was surprised to find for how long a time the phenomenon had absorbed me.
The moon was already high in the heavens, and making towards the ravine with
rapid steps. Far below, the tumbling waters flashed in her rays, and on all sides
great tiers of solemn, trees stood up at attention to salute her.
When her disc silvered the inner rim of the slope I had descended, I returned to
my post of observation with tingling nerves. The field of the great object lens
was already suffused with the radiance of her approach.
Suddenly my pupils shrank before the apparition of a ghastly grey light, and all
in a moment I was face to face with a segment of desolation more horrible than
any desert. Monstrous growths of leprosy that had bubbled up and stiffened;
fields of ashen slime—the sloughing of a world of corruption; hills of demon,
fungus swollen with the fatness of putrefaction; and, in the midst of all, dim,
convulsed shapes wallowing, protruding, or stumbling aimlessly onwards, till
they sank and disappeared.
*****
Madame Barbière threw up her hands when she let me in at the door. My
appearance, no doubt, was ghastly. I knew not the hour nor the lapse of time
covered by my wanderings about the hills, my face hidden in my palms, a drawn
feeling about my heart, my lips muttering—muttering fragments of prayers, and
my throat jerking with horrible laughter.
"I heard the rain on the hills. The lens will have been blurred. Monsieur has been
spared much."
"God, in His mercy, pity thee! And me—oh, Camille, and me too!"
"He has held out His white hand to me. I go, when I go, with a safe conduct."
*****
He went before the week was out. The drought had broken and for five days the
thunder crashed and the wild rain swept the mountains. On the morning of the
sixth a drenched shepherd reported in the village that a landslip had choked the
fall of Buet, and completely altered its shape. Madame Barbière broke into the
room where I was sitting with Camille, big with the news. She little guessed how
it affected her listeners.
"The bon Dieu" said Camille, when she had gone, "has thundered His curse on
Nature for revealing His secrets. I, who have penetrated into the forbidden, must
perish."
"And I, Camille?"
"Now, write this for me, and believe it if you can. We are not in a conspiracy of
imagination—I and the dear courageous."
Therefore I do write it, speaking in the person of Monsieur ——, and largely
from his dictation; and my friend shall amuse himself over the nature of its
reception.
*****
"One morning (it was in late May)," says Monsieur ——, "my Fidèle and I left
the Hôtel du Mont Blanc for a ramble amongst the hills. We were a little
adventurous, because we were innocent. We took no guide but our
commonsense; and that served us very ill—or very well, according to the point
of view. Ours was that of the birds, singing to the sky and careless of the snake
in the grass so long as they can pipe their tune. Of a surety that is the only
course. If one would make provision against every chance of accident, one must
dematerialize. To die is the only way to secure oneself from fatality.
"Still, it is a wise precaution, I will admit, not to eat of all hedge fruit because
blackberries are sweet. Some day, after the fiftieth stomach-ache, we shall learn
wisdom, my Fidèle and I.
"'Fools rush in where angels fear to tread.' That, I know, comes into the
English gospel.
"Well, I will tell you, I am content to be considered of the first; and my Fidèle is
assuredly of the second. Yet did she fear, or I rush in? On the contrary, I have a
little laughing thought that it was the angel inveighed against the dulness of
caution when the fool would have hesitated.
"Now, it was before the season of the Alps; and the mountain aubergistes were,
for the most part, not arrived at their desolate hill-taverns. Nor were guides at all
in evidence, being yet engaged, the sturdy souls, over their winter occupations.
One, no doubt, we could have procured, had we wished it; but we did not. We
would explore under the aegis of no cicerone but our curiosity. That was native
to us, if the district was strange.
"'And that, I am convinced,' said Fidèle, 'is nothing more nor less than one of
those many windows that give light to the monsters of the under-earth.'
"'Little imbecile! In some places this window is six hundred feet thick.'
"'So?' she said. 'That is because their dim eyes could not endure the full light of
the sun.'
"We had brought a tin box of sandwiches with us; and this, with my large pewter
flask full of wine, was slung upon my back. For we had been told the Hôtel du
Montenvert was yet closed; and, sure enough when we reached it, the building
stood black in a pool of snow, its shuttered windows forlorn, and long icicles
hung from the eaves.
"The depression induced by this sight was momentary. We turned from it to the
panorama of majestic loveliness that stretched below and around us. The glacier
—that rolling sea of glass—descended from the enormous gates of the hills. Its
source was the white furnace of the skies; its substance the crystal refuse of the
stars; and from its margins the splintered peaks stood up in a thousand forms of
beauty. Right and left, in the hollows of the mountains, the mist lay like ponds,
opal and translucent; and the shafts of the pine trees standing in it looked like the
reflections of themselves.
"It made the eyes ache—this silence of greatness; and it became a relief to shift
one's gaze to the reality of one's near neighbourhood—the grass, and the
rhododendron bushes, and even the dull walls of the deserted auberge.
"A narrow path dipped over the hill-side and fled into the very jaws of the
moraine. Down the first of this path we raced, hand in hand; but soon, finding
the impetus overmastering us, we pulled up with difficulty, and descended the
rest of the way circumspectly.
"At the foot of the steep slope we came upon the little wooden hutch where,
ordinarily, one may procure a guide (also rough socks to stretch over one's boots)
for the passage of the glacier. Now, however, the shed was closed and tenantless;
and we must e'en dispense with a conductor, should we adventure further.
"'We shall be, mon ami, when we have crossed. A guide could not alter that.'
"We clambered down amongst huge stones. Fidèle's little feet went in and out of
the crannies like sand-martins. Suddenly, before we realized it, we were on the
glacier.
"Fidèle exclaimed.
"Alas! she was justified. This torrent of majestic crystal—seen from above so
smooth and bountiful—a flood of the milk of Nature dispensed from the white
bosom of the hills! Now, near at hand, what do we find it? A medley of opaque
blocks, smeared with grit and rubbish; a vast ruin of avalanches hurled together
and consolidated, and of the colour of rock salt.
"'Peste!' I cried. 'We must get to the opposite bank, for all that.
"We clasped hands and set forth on our little traversée, our landmark an odd-
shaped needle of spar on the further side. My faith! it was simple. The paveurs
of Nature had left the road a trifle rough, that was all. Suddenly we came upon a
wide fissure stretched obliquely like the mouth of a sole. Going glibly, we learnt
a small lesson of caution therefrom. Six paces, and we should have tumbled in.
"We looked over fearfully. Here, in truth, was real ice at last—green as bottle-
glass at the edges, and melting into unfathomable deeps of glowing blue.
"In a moment, with a shriek like that of escaping steam, a windy demon leapt at
us from the underneath. It was all of winter in a breath. It seemed to shrivel the
skin from our faces—the flesh from our bones. We staggered backwards.
"'Mon ami! mon ami!' cried Fidèle, 'my heart is a stone; my eyes are two blisters
of water!'
"We danced as the blood returned unwilling to our veins. It was minutes before
we could proceed.
"Well, we made the passage safely, and toiled up the steep, loose moraine
beyond—to find the track over which was harder than crossing the glacier. But
we did it, and struck the path along the hillside, which leads by the Mauvais Pas
(the mauvais quart d'heure) to the little cabaret called the Chapeau. This tavern,
too, was shut and dismal. It did not matter. We sat like sparrows on a railing, and
munched our egg-sandwiches and drank our wine in a sort of glorious
stupefaction. For right opposite us was the vast glacier-fall, whose crashing foam
was towers and parapets of ice, that went over and rolled into the valley below, a
ruin of thunder.
"Far beyond, where the mouth of the gorge spread out littered with monstrous
destruction, we saw the hundred threads of the glacier streams collect into a
single rope of silver, that went drawn between the hills, a highway of water. It
was all a majestic panorama of grey and pearly white—the sky, the torrents, the
mountains; but the blue and rusty green of the stone pines, flung abroad in
hanging woods and coppices, broke up and distributed the infinite serenity of the
snow fields.
"Presently, having drunk deep of rich content, we rose to retrace our steps. For,
spurred by vanity, we must be returning the way we had come, to show our
confident experience of glaciers.
"All went well. Actually we had passed over near two-thirds of the ice-bed,
when a touch on my arm stayed me, and ma mie looked into my eyes, very
comical and insolent.
"'Little cabbage,' she said; 'will you not put your new knowledge to account?'
"She laughed and pressed my arm to her side. Her heart fluttered like a nestling
after its first flight.
"'To rest on the little prowess of a small adventure! No, no! Shall he who has
learnt to swim be always content to bathe in shallow water?'
"'Fidèle!' I gasped.
"'Ah!' she exclaimed, nodding her head; 'but poor men! They are mules. They
spill their blood on the scaling ladders when the town gate is open.'
"'But, yes,' she said, 'it needs a woman to see. It is but two o'clock. Let us ascend
the glacier, like a staircase; and presently we shall stand upon the summit of the
mountain. Those last little peaks above the ice can be of no importance.'
"I was touched, astounded by the sublimity of her idea. Had no one, then, ever
thought of this before?
"I swear we must have toiled upwards half a mile, when the catastrophe took
place.
"It was raining then—a dense small mist; and the ice was as if it had been
greased. We were proceeding with infinite care, arm in arm, tucked close
together. A little doubt, I think, was beginning to oppress us. We could move
only with much caution and difficulty; and there were noises—sounds like the
clapping of great hands in those rocky attics above us. Then there would come a
slamming report, as if the window of the unknown had been burst open by
demons; and the moans of the lost would issue, surging down upon the world.
"These thunders, as we were afterwards told, are caused by the splitting of the
ice when there comes a fall in the barometer. Then the glacier will yawn like a
sliced junket.
"My faith! what a simile! But again the point of view, my friend.
"All in a moment I heard a little cluck. I looked down. Alas! the fine spirit was
obscured. Fidèle was weeping.
"'Chut! chut!' I exclaimed in consternation. 'We will go back at once.'
"I held her convulsively. It happened in an instant, before one could leap aside.
The bed of snow on which we were standing broke down into the crevasse it had
bridged, and let us through to the depths.
"Will you believe what follows? Pinch your nose and open your mouth. You
shall take the whole draught at a breath. The ice at the point where we entered
was five hundred feet thick; and we fell to the very bottom of it.
"Ha! ha! Is it difficult to swallow? But it is true—it is quite true. Here I sit,
sound and safe, and eminently sane, and that after a fall of five hundred feet.
"Now, listen.
"We went down, welded together, with a rush and a buzz like a cannon-ball.
Thoughts? Ah! my friend, I had none. Who can think even in a high wind? And
here the wind of our going would have brained an ox. Only one desperate
instinct I had, one little forlorn remnant of humanity—to shield the love of my
heart. So my arms never left her; and we fell together. I dreaded nothing, feared
nothing, foresaw no terror in the inevitable mangling crash of the end. For time,
that is necessary to emotion, was annihilated. We had outstripped it, and left
sense and reason sluggishly following in our wake.
"Sense, yes; but not altogether sensation. Flashingly I was conscious here of
incredibly swift transitions, from cold to deeper wells of frost; thence down
through a stratum of death and negation, between mere blind walls of frigid
inhumanity, to have been stayed a moment by which would have pointed all our
limbs as stiff as icicles, as stiff as those of frogs plunged into boiling water. But
we passed and fell, still crashing upon no obstruction; and thought pursued us,
tailing further behind.
"It was the passage of the eternal night—frozen, self-contained; awful as any
fancied darkness that is without one tradition of a star. Yet, struggling hereafter
to, in some shadowy sense, renew my feelings of the moment, it seemed to me
that I had not fallen through darkness at all; but rather that the friction of descent
had kindled an inner radiance in me that was independent of the vision of the
eyes, and full of promise of a sudden illumination of the soul.
"Now, after falling what depths God knows, I become numbly aware of a little
griding sensation at my back, that communicated a whistling small vibration to
my whole frame. This intensified, became more pronounced. Perceptibly, in that
magnificent refinement of speed, our enormous pace I felt to decrease ever so
little. Still we had so far outstripped intelligence as that I was incapable of
considering the cause of the change.
"Suddenly, for the first time, pain made itself known; and immediately reason,
plunging from above, overtook me, and I could think.
"Then it was I became conscious that, instead of falling, we were rising, rising
with immense swiftness, but at a pace that momently slackened—rising, slipping
over ice and in contact with it,
"The muscles of my arms, clasped still about Fidèle, involuntarily swelled to her.
My God! there was a tiny answering pressure. I could have screamed with joy;
but physical anguish overmastered me. My back seemed bursting into flame.
"There had been noise in our descent, as only now I knew by its cessation—a
hissing sound as of wire whirring from a draw-plate. In the profound enormous
silence that, at last, enwrapped us, the bliss of freedom from that metallic
accompaniment fell on me like a balm. My eyelids closed. Possibly I fainted.
"'Fidèle!'
"'I can speak, but I cannot look. If I hide so for ever I can die bravely.'
"Her voice, her dear voice was so odd; but, Mon Dieu! how wonderful in its
courage! That, Heaven be praised! is no monopoly of intellect. Indeed, it is
imagination that makes men cowards; and to the lack of this possibly we owed
our salvation.
"Now, calm and freed of that haunting jar of descent, I became conscious that a
sound, that I had at first taken for the rush of my own arteries, had an origin
apart from us. It was like the wash and thunder of waters in a deep sewer.
"'Fidèle!' I said again.
"'I am listening.'
"'Hear, then! Canst thou free my right arm, that I may feel for the lucifers in my
pocket?'
"She moved at once, never raising her face from my breast. I groped for the box,
found it; and manipulating with one hand, succeeded in striking a match. It
flamed up—a long wax vesta.
"A glory of sleek fires sprang on the instant into life. We lay imprisoned in a
house of glass at the foot of a smooth incline rising behind us to unknown
heights. A wall of porous and opaque ice-rubbish, into which our feet had
plunged deep, had stayed our progress.
"I placed the box by my side ready for use. Our last moments should be lavish of
splendour. Stooping for another match, to kindle from the flame of the near-
expired one, a thought struck me. Why had we not been at once frozen to death?
Yet we lay where we had brought up, as snug and glowing as if we were
wrapped in bedclothes.
"The answer came to me in a flash. We had fallen sheer to the glacier bed,
which, warmed by subterraneous heat, was ever in process of melting. Possibly,
but a comparatively thin curtain of perforated ice separated us from the under
torrent.
"I lit a second match, turned about, and gave a start of terror. There, imbedded in
the transparent wall at my very shoulder, was something—the body of a man.
"For how long ages had he been travelling to the valley, and from what heights?
He was of a bygone generation, by his huge coat cuffs, his metal buttons, by his
shoe buckles and the white stockings on his legs, which were pressed thin and
sharp, as if cut out of paper. Had he been a climber, an explorer—a
contemporary, perhaps, of Saussure and a rival? And what had been his
unrecorded fate? To slip into a crevasse, and so for the parted ice to snap upon
him again, like a hideous jaw? Its work done, it might at least have opened and
dropped him through—not held him intact to jog us, out of all that world of
despair, with his battered elbow!
"I dropped the match I was holding. I tightened my clasp convulsively about
Fidèle. Thank God she, at any rate, was blind to this horror within a horror!
"All at once—was it the start I had given, or the natural process of dissolution
beneath our feet?—we were moving again. Swift—swifter! Fidèle uttered a little
moaning cry. The rubbish of ice crashed below us, and we sank through.
"I knew nothing, then, but that we were in water—that we had fallen from a little
height, and were being hurried along. The torrent, now deep, now so shallow
that my feet scraped its bed, gushed in my ears and blinded my eyes.
"Still I hugged Fidèle, and I could feel by her returning grasp that she lived. The
water was not unbearably cold as yet. The air that came through cracks and
crevasses had not force to overcome the under warmth.
"I felt something slide against me—clutched and held on. It was a brave pine
log. Could I recover it at this date I would convert it into a flagstaff for the
tricolour. It was our raft, our refuge; and it carried us to safety.
"I cannot give the extravagant processes of that long journey. It was all a
rushing, swirling dream—a mad race of mystery and sublimity, to which the
only conscious periods were wild, flitting glimpses of wonderful ice arabesques,
caught momentarily as we passed under fissures that let the light of day through
dimly.
"Gradually a ghostly radiance grew to encompass us; and by a like gradation the
water waxed intensely cold. Hope then was blazing in our hearts; but this new
deathliness went nigh to quench it altogether. Yet, had we guessed the reason, we
could have foregone the despair. For, in truth, we were approaching that
shallower terrace of the glacier beyond the fall, through which the light could
force some weak passage, and the air make itself felt, blowing upon the beds of
ice.
"This, then, was the end. We swept into a huge cavern of ice—through it—
beyond it, into the green valley and the world that we love. And there, where the
torrent splits up into a score of insignificant streams, we grounded and crawled
to dry land and sat down and laughed.
"Yes, we could do it—we could laugh. Is that not bathos? But Fidèle and
I have a theory that laughter is the chief earnest of immortality.
"To dry land I have said. Mon Dieu! the torrent was no wetter. It rains in the
Chamounix valley. We looked to see whence we had fallen, and not even the
Chapeau was visible through the mist.
"I needed not to seek further explanation of the pain I had suffered—was
suffering then, indeed, as I had reason to know when ecstasy permitted a return
of sensation. My back bears the scars at this moment.
"'It shall remain there for ever!' I cried, 'like the badge of a cocher de fiacre, who
has made the fastest journey on record. 'Coachman! from the glacier to the
valley.' 'Mais oui, monsieur. Down this crevasse, if you please.'
"And that is the history of our adventure.
"Why we were not dashed to pieces? But that, as I accept it, is easy of
elucidation. Imagine a vast crescent moon, with a downward nick from the end
of the tail. This form the fissure took, in one enormous sweep and drop towards
the mouth of the valley. Now, as we rushed headlong, the gentle curve received
us from space to substance quite gradually, until we were whirring forward
wholly on the latter, my luggage suffering the brunt of the friction. The upward
sweep of the crescent diminished our progress—more and yet more—until we
switched over the lower point and shot quietly down the incline beyond. And all
this in ample room, and without meeting with a single unfriendly obstacle.
"'Ta, ta, ta!' she says. 'But they will not believe a word of it all.'"
THE VANISHING HOUSE
"My grandfather," said the banjo, "drank 'dog's-nose,' my father drank 'dog's-
nose,' and I drink 'dog's-nose.' If that ain't heredity, there's no virtue in the board
schools."
"Ah!" said the piccolo, "you're always a-boasting of your science. And so, I
suppose, your son'll drink 'dog's-nose,' too?"
"No," retorted the banjo, with a rumbling laugh, like wind in the bung-hole of an
empty cask; "for I ain't got none. The family ends with me; which is a pity, for
I'm a full-stop to be proud on."
There was Christmas company in the Good Intent, and the sanded tap-room,
with its trestle tables and sprigs of holly stuck under sooty beams reeked with
smoke and the steam of hot gin and water.
"How much could you put down of a night, Jack?" said a little grinning man by
the door.
"Why," said the banjo, "enough to lay the dustiest ghost as ever walked."
"Ah!" said the banjo, chuckling. "There's nothing like settin' one sperit to lay
another; and there I could give you proof number two of heredity."
"What! Don't you go for to say you ever see'd a ghost!"
"Haven't I? What are you whisperin' about, you blushful chap there by the
winder?"
"I was only remarking sir, 'twere snawin' like the devil."
"Is it? Then the devil has been misjudged these eighteen hundred and ninety odd
years."
"But did you ever see a ghost?" said the little grinning man, pursuing his subject.
"No, I didn't, sir," mimicked the banjo, "saving in coffee grounds. But my
grandfather in his cups see'd one; which brings us to number three in the matter
of heredity."
"Give us the story, Jack," said the "bones," whose agued shins were
extemporizing a rattle on their own account before the fire.
"Well, I don't mind," said the fat man. "It's seasonable; and I'm seasonable, like
the blessed plum-pudden, I am; and the more burnt brandy you set about me, the
richer and headier I'll go down."
"You blow your aggrawation into your pipe and sealing-wax the stops," said his
friend.
"What did you say your grandfather did?" asked the piccolo.
"What!" said the little man by the door. "You don't include them cockt hatses in
your expeerunce?"
"My grandfather wore 'em, sir. He wore a play-actin' coat, too, and buckles to his
shoes, when he'd got any; and he and a friend or two made a permanency of
'waits' (only they called 'em according to the season), and got their profit goin'
from house to house, principally in the country, and discoursin' music at the low
rate of whatever they could get for it."
"Ain't you comin' to the ghost, Jack?" said the little man hungrily.
"All in course, sir. Well, gentlemen, it was hard times pretty often with my
grandfather and his friends, as you may suppose; and never so much as when
they had to trudge it across country, with the nor'-easter buzzin' in their teeth and
the snow piled on their cockt hats like lemon sponge on entry dishes. The
rewards, I've heard him say—for he lived to be ninety, nevertheless—was poor
compensation for the drifts, and the inflienza, and the broken chilblains; but now
and again they'd get a fair skinful of liquor from a jolly squire, as 'd set 'em up
like boggarts mended wi' new broomsticks."
"Now," said the banjo, "it's of a pertikler night and a pertikler skinful that I'm a-
going to tell you; and that night fell dark, and that skinful were took a hundred
years ago this December, as I'm a Jack-pudden!"
"They were down in the sou'-west country, which they little knew; and were
anighing Winchester city, or should 'a' been. But they got muzzed on the ungodly
downs, and before they guessed, they was off the track. My good hat! there they
was, as lost in the snow as three nutshells a-sinkin' into a hasty pudden. Well,
they wandered round; pretty confident at first, but getting madder and madder as
every sense of their bearings slipped from them. And the bitter cold took their
vitals, so as they saw nothing but a great winding sheet stretched abroad for to
wrap their dead carcasses in.
"At last my grandfather he stopt and pulled hisself together with an awful face,
and says he: 'We're Christmas pie for the carrying-on crows if we don't prove
ourselves human. Let's fetch out our pipes and blow our trouble into 'em.' So
they stood together, like as if they was before a house, and they played 'Kate of
Aberdare' mighty dismal and flat, for their fingers froze to the keys.
"Now, I tell you, they hadn't climbed over the first stave, when there come a skirl
of wind and spindrift of snow as almost took them off of their feet; and, on the
going down of it, Jem Sloke, as played the hautboy, dropped the reed from his
mouth, and called out, 'Sakes alive! if we fools ain't been standin' outside a
gentleman's gate all the time, and not knowin' it!'
"You might 'a' knocked the three of 'em down wi' a barley straw, as they stared
and stared, and then fell into a low, enjoyin' laugh. For they was standin' not six
fut from a tall iron gate in a stone wall, and behind these was a great house
showin' out dim, with the winders all lighted up.
"'Lord!' chuckled my grandfather, 'to think o' the tricks o' this vagarious country!
But, as we're here, we'll go on and give 'em a taste of our quality.'
"They put new heart into the next movement, as you may guess; and they hadn't
fair started on it, when the door of the house swung open, and down the shaft of
light that shot out as far as the gate there come a smiling young gal, with a tray
of glasses in her hands.
"Now she come to the bars; and she took and put a glass through, not sayin'
nothin', but invitin' some one to drink with a silent laugh.
"Did any one take that glass? Of course he did, you'll be thinkin'; and you'll be
thinkin' wrong. Not a man of the three moved. They was struck like as stone, and
their lips was gone the colour of sloe berries. Not a man took the glass. For why?
The moment the gal presented it, each saw the face of a thing lookin' out of the
winder over the porch, and the face was hidjus beyond words, and the shadder of
it, with the light behind, stretched out and reached to the gal, and made her
hidjus, too.
"At last my grandfather give a groan and put out his hand; and, as he did it, the
face went, and the gal was beautiful to see agen.
"'Death and the devil!' said he. 'It's one or both, either way; and I prefer 'em hot
to cold!'
"He drank off half the glass, smacked his lips, and stood staring a moment.
"'Dear, dear!' said the gal, in a voice like falling water, 'you've drunk blood, sir!'
"My grandfather gave a yell, slapped the rest of the liquor in the faces of his
friends, and threw the cup agen the bars. It broke with a noise like thunder, and
at that he up'd with his hands and fell full length into the snow."
There was a pause. The little man by the door was twisting nervously in his
chair.
"He come to," said the banjo solemnly, "in the bitter break of dawn; that is, he
come to as much of hisself as he ever was after. He give a squiggle and lifted his
head; and there was he and his friends a-lyin' on the snow of the high downs."
"Narry a sign of either, sir, but just the sky and the white stretch; and one other
thing."
There was a second pause, and the banjo blew into the bowl of his pipe.
"They cleared out of that neighbourhood double quick, you'll bet," said he. "But
my grandfather was never the same man agen. His face took purple, while his
friends' only remained splashed with red, same as birth marks; and, I tell you, if
he ever ventur'd upon 'Kate of Aberdare,' his cheeks swelled up to the reed of his
clarinet, like as a blue plum on a stalk. And forty year after, he died of what they
call solution of blood to the brain."
"And you can't have better proof than that," said the little man.
"That's what I say," said the banjo. "Next player, gentlemen, please."
DARK DIGNUM
"I'd not go higher, sir," said my landlady's father. I made out his warning through
the shrill piping of the wind; and stopped and took in the plunging seascape from
where I stood. The boom of the waves came up from a vast distance beneath; sky
and the horizon of running water seemed hurrying upon us over the lip of the
rearing cliff.
"It crumbles!" he cried. "It crumbles near the edge like as frosted mortar. I've
seen a noble sheep, sir, eighty pound of mutton, browsing here one moment, and
seen it go down the next in a puff of white dust. Hark to that! Do you hear it?"
Through the tumult of the wind in that high place came a liquid vibrant sound,
like the muffled stroke of iron on an anvil. I thought it the gobble of water in
clanging caves deep down below.
The old man chuckled joyously. He was my cicerone for the nonce; had come
out of his chair by the ingle-nook to taste a little the salt of life. The north-easter
flashed in the white cataracts of his eyes and woke a feeble activity in his
scrannel limbs. When the wind blew loud, his daughter had told me, he was
always restless, like an imprisoned sea-gull. He would be up and out. He would
rise and flap his old draggled pinions, as if the great air fanned an expiring spark
into flame.
"It is a bell!" he cried—"the bell of old St. Dunstan's, that was swallowed by the
waters in the dark times."
He did not hear me. He was punching with his staff at one of a number of little
green mounds that lay about us.
"I could tell you a story of these," he said. "Do you know where we stand?"
"Ay, sir; though it still bore the name of the new yard in my first memory of it."
He dwelt a minute, dense with introspection. Suddenly he sat himself down upon
a mossy bulge in the turf, and waved me imperiously to a place beside him.
"The old order changeth," he said. "The only lasting foundations of men's works
shall be godliness and law-biding. Long ago they builded a new church—here,
high up on the cliffs, where the waters could not reach; and, lo! the waters
wrought beneath and sapped the foundations, and the church fell into the sea."
"The godless are fools," he chattered knowingly. "Look here at these bents—
thirty of 'em, may be. Tombstones, sir; perished like man his works, and the
decayed stumps of them coated with salt grass."
"They raised it out there," he said, "and further—a temple of bonded stone. They
thought to bribe the Lord to a partnership in their corruption, and He answered
by casting down the fair mansion into the waves."
"Well," I said. "It seems a certain foolishness to set the edifice so close to the
margin."
Again he chuckled.
"It was close, close, as you say; yet none so close as you might think nowadays.
Time hath gnawed here like a rat on a cheese. But the foolishness appeared in
setting the brave mansion between the winds and its own graveyard. Let the dead
lie seawards, one had thought, and the church inland where we stand. So had the
bell rung to this day; and only the charnel bones flaked piecemeal into the sea."
"Sir, I said the foolishness appeared. But, I tell you, there was foresight in the
disposition—in neighbouring the building to the cliff path. For so they could the
easier enter unobserved, and store their Tcegs of Nantes brandy in the belly of
the organ."
"Smugglers?"'
"It was a nest of 'em—traffickers in the eternal fire o' weekdays, and on the
Sabbath, who so sanctimonious? But honesty comes not from the washing, like a
clean shirt, nor can the piety of one day purge the evil of six. They built their
church anigh the margin, forasmuch as it was handy, and that they thought,
'Surely the Lord will not undermine His own?' A rare community o' blasphemers,
fro' the parson that took his regular toll of the organ-loft, to him that sounded the
keys and pulled out the joyous stops as if they was so many spigots to what lay
behind."
"I speak of nigh a century and a half ago. I speak of the time o' the Seven Years'
War and of Exciseman Jones, that, twenty year after he were buried, took his
revenge on the cliff side of the man that done him to death."
"Ay, it is; and of my grandfather, that were a boy when they laid, and was glad to
lay, the exciseman deep as they could dig; for the sight of his sooty face in his
coffin was worse than a bad dream."
The old man edged closer to me, and spoke in a sibilant voice.
"He were murdered, sir, foully and horribly, for all they could never bring it
home to the culprit."
He was nothing loth. The wind, the place of perished tombs, the very wild-blown
locks of this 'withered apple-john', were eerie accompaniments to the tale he
piped in my ear:—
"At that time Dark Dignum was a young man with a reputation above his years
for profaneness and audacity. Ugly things there were said about him; and
amongst many wicked he was feared for his wickedness. Exciseman Jones had
his eye on him; and that was bad for Exciseman Jones.
"Now one murk December night Exciseman Jones staggered home with a bloody
long slice down his scalp, and the red drip from it spotting the cobble-stones.
"'Summut fell on him from a winder,' said Dark Dignum, a little later, as he were
drinkin' hisself hoarse in the Black Boy. 'Summut fell on him retributive, as you
might call it. For, would you believe it, the man had at the moment been
threatenin' me? He did. He said, "I know damn well about you, Dignum; and for
all your damn ingenuity, I'll bring you with a crack to the ground yet."'
"What had happened? Nobody knew, sir. But Exciseman Jones was in his bed for
a fortnight; and when he got on his legs again, it was pretty evident there was a
hate between the two men that only blood-spillin' could satisfy.
"So far as is known, they never spoke to one another again. They played their
game of death in silence—the lawful, cold and unfathomable; the unlawful,
swaggerin' and crool—and twenty year separated the first move and the last.
"This were the first, sir—as Dark Dignum leaked it out long after in his cups.
This were the first; and it brought Exciseman Jones to his grave on the cliff here.
"It were a deep soft summer night; and the young smuggler sat by hisself in the
long room of the Black Boy. Now, I tell you he were a fox-ship intriguer—grand,
I should call him, in the aloneness of his villainy. He would play his dark games
out of his own hand; and sure, of all his wickedness, this game must have
seemed the sum.
"I say he sat by hisself; and I hear the listening ghost of him call me a liar. For
there were another body present, though invisible to mortal eye; and that second
party were Exciseman Jones, who was hidden up the chimney.
"How had he inveigled him there? Ah, they've met and worried that point out
since. No other will ever know the truth this side the grave. But reports come to
be whispered; and reports said as how Dignum had made an appointment with a
bodiless master of a smack as never floated, to meet him in the Black Boy and
arrange for to run a cargo as would never be shipped; and that somehow he
managed to acquent Exciseman Jones o' this dissembling appointment, and to
secure his presence in hidin' to witness it.
"That's conjecture; for Dignum never let on so far. But what is known for certain
is that Exciseman Jones, who were as daring and determined as his enemy—
p'r'aps more so—for some reason was in the chimney, on to a grating in which he
had managed to lower hisself from the roof; and that he could, if given time,
have scrambled up again with difficulty, but was debarred from going lower.
And, further, this is known—that, as Dignum sat on, pretendin' to yawn and
huggin' his black intent, a little sut plopped down the chimney and scattered on
the coals of the laid fire beneath.
"At that—'Curse this waitin'!' said he. 'The room's as chill as a belfry'; and he got
to his feet, with a secret grin, and strolled to the hearthstone.
"'I wonder,' said he, 'will the landlord object if I ventur' upon a glint of fire for
comfort's sake?' and he pulled out his flint and steel, struck a spark, and with no
more feelin' than he'd express in lighting a pipe, set the flame to the sticks.
"The trapt rat above never stirred or give tongue. My God! what a man! Sich a
nature could afford to bide and bide—ay, for twenty year, if need be.
"Dignum would have enjoyed the sound of a cry; but he never got it. He listened
with the grin fixed on his face; and of a sudden he heard a scrambling struggle,
like as a dog with the colic jumping at a wall; and presently, as the sticks blazed
and the smoke rose denser, a thick coughin', as of a consumptive man under bed-
clothes. Still no cry, nor any appeal for mercy; no, not from the time he lit the
fire till a horrible rattle come down, which was the last twitches of somethin' that
choked and died on the sooty gratin' above.
"When all was quiet, Dignum he knocks with his foot on the floor and sits
hisself down before the hearth, with a face like a pillow for innocence.
"'I were chilled and lit it,' says he to the landlord. 'You don't mind?'
"He give a boisterous laugh, and ordered in a double noggin of humming stuff.
"'Here,' he says, when it comes, 'is to the health of Exciseman Jones, that swore
to bring me to the ground.'
"Were those words the last of its death-throe, or an echo from beyond?
Ah! we may question; but they were heard by two men.
"Dignum went free. What could they prove agen him? Not that he knew there
was aught in the chimney when he lit the fire. The other would scarcely have
acquent him of his plans. And Exciseman Jones was hurried into his grave
alongside the church up here.
"And therein he lay for twenty year, despite that, not a twelvemonth after his
coming, the sacrilegious house itself sunk roaring into the waters. For the Lord
would have none of it, and, biding His time, struck through a fortnight of deluge,
and hurled church and cliff into ruin. But the yard remained, and, nighest the
seaward edge of it, Exciseman Jones slept in his fearful winding sheet and bided
his time.
"It came when my grandfather were a young man of thirty, and mighty close and
confidential with Dark Dignum. God forgive him! Doubtless he were led away
by the older smuggler, that had a grace of villainy about him, 'tis said, and used
Lord Chesterfield's printed letters for wadding to his bullets.
"By then he was a ramping, roaring devil; but, for all his bold hands were stained
with crime, the memory of Exciseman Jones and of his promise dwelled with
him and darkened him ever more and more, and never left him. So those that
knew him said.
"Now all these years the cliff edge agen the graveyard, where it was broke off,
was scabbing into the sea below. But still they used this way of ascent for their
ungodly traffic; and over the ruin of the cliff they had drove a new path for to
carry up their kegs.
"It was a cloudy night in March, with scud and a fitful moon, and there was a
sloop in the offing, and under the shore a loaded boat that had just pulled in with
muffled rowlocks. Out of this Dark Dignum was the first to sling hisself a brace
of rundlets; and my grandfather followed with two more. They made softly for
the cliff path—began the ascent—was half-way up.
"Whiz!—a stone of chalk went by them with a skirl, and slapped into the rubble
below.
"'Some more of St. Dunstan's gravel!' cried Dignum, pantin' out a reckless laugh
under his load; and on they went again.
"Hwish!—a bigger lump came like a thunderbolt, and the wind of it took the
bloody smuggler's hat and sent it swooping into the darkness like a bird.
"The words was hardly out of his mouth, when there flew such a volley of chalk
stones as made my grandfather, though none had touched him, fall upon the path
where he stood, and begin to gabble out what he could call to mind of the
prayers for the dying. He was in the midst of it, when he heard a scream come
from his companion as froze the very marrow in his bones. He looked up,
thinkin' his hour had come.
"My God! What a sight he saw! The moon had shone out of a sudden, and the
light of it struck down on Dignum's face, and that was the colour of dirty
parchment. And he looked higher, and give a sort of sob.
"For there, stickin' out of the cliff side, was half the body of Exciseman Jones,
with its arms stretched abroad, and it was clawin' out lumps of chalk and hurling
them down at Dignum!
"And even as he took this in through his terror, a great ball of white came
hurtling, and went full on to the man's face with a splash—and he were spun
down into the deep night below, a nameless thing."
The old creature came to a stop, his eyes glinting with a febrile excitement.
"Ay," he said doubtfully. "The cliff had flaked away by degrees to his very grave.
They found his skelington stickin' out of the chalk."
"My grandfather? There were something happened made him renounce the devil.
He died one of the elect. His youth were heedless and unregenerate; but, 'tis said,
after he were turned thirty he never smiled agen. There was a reason. Did I ever
tell you the story of Dark Dignum and Exciseman Jones?"
WILLIAM TYRWHITT'S "COPY"
This is the story of William Tyrwhitt, who went to King's Cobb for rest and
change, and, with the latter, at least, was so far accommodated as for a time to
get beyond himself and into regions foreign to his experiences or his desires.
And for this condition of his I hold myself something responsible, inasmuch as it
was my inquisitiveness was the means of inducing him to an exploration, of
which the result, with its measure of weirdness, was for him alone. But, it seems,
I was appointed an agent of the unexplainable without my knowledge, and it was
simply my misfortune to find my first unwitting commission in the selling of a
friend.
I was for a few days, about the end of a particular July, lodged in that little old
seaboard town of Dorset that is called King's Cobb. Thither there came to me
one morning a letter from William Tyrwhitt, the polemical journalist (a queer
fish, like the cuttle, with an ink-bag for the confusion of enemies), complaining
that he was fagged and used up, and desiring me to say that nowhere could
complete rest be obtained as in King's Cobb.
I wrote and assured him on this point. The town, I said, lay wrapped in the hills
as in blankets, its head only, winking a sleepy eye, projecting from the top of the
broad steep gully in which it was stretched at ease. Thither few came to the
droning coast; and such as did, looked up at the High Street baking in the sun,
and, thinking of Jacob's ladder, composed them to slumber upon the sand and
left the climbing to the angels. Here, I said, the air and the sea were so still that
one could hear the oysters snoring in their beds; and the little frizzle of surf on
the beach was like to the sound to dreaming ears of bacon frying in the kitchens
of the blest.
William Tyrwhitt came, and I met him at the station, six or seven miles away. He
was all strained and springless, like a broken child's toy—"not like that William
who, with lance in rest, shot through the lists in Fleet Street." A disputative
galley-puller could have triumphed over him morally; a child physically.
The drive in the inn brake, by undulating roads and scented valleys, shamed his
cheek to a little flush of self-assertion.
"I will sleep under the vines," he said, "and the grapes shall drop into my
mouth."
We alighted at the crown of the High Street, purposing to descend on foot the
remaining distance to the shore.
"Behold," I exclaimed, "how the gulls float in the shimmer, like ashes tossed
aloft by the white draught of a fire! Behold these ancient buildings nodding to
the everlasting lullaby of the bay waters! The cliffs are black with the heat
apoplexy; the lobster is drawn scarlet to the surface. You shall be like an addled
egg put into an incubator."
"So," he said, "I shall rest and not hatch. The very thought is like sweet oil on a
burn."
He stayed with me a week, and his body waxed wondrous round and rosy, while
his eye acquired a foolish and vacant expression. So it was with me. We rolled
together, by shore and by road of this sluggard place, like spent billiard balls;
and if by chance we cannoned, we swerved sleepily apart, until, perhaps, one
would fall into a pocket of the sand, and the other bring up against a cushion of
sea-wall.
Yet, for all its enervating atmosphere, King's Cobb has its fine traditions of a
sturdy independence, and a slashing history withal; and its aspect is as
picturesque as that of an opera bouffe fishing-harbour. Then, too, its High Street,
as well as its meandering rivulets of low streets, is rich in buildings, venerable
and antique.
By then we were so sinewless and demoralized that we could hear in the distant
strains of the European Concert nothing but an orchestra of sweet sounds, and
would have given ourselves away in any situation with a pound of tea.
Therefore, perhaps, it was well for us that, a peremptory summons to town
reaching me after seven days of comradeship with William, I must make shift to
collect my faculties with my effects, and return to the more bracing climate of
Fleet Street.
And here, you will note, begins the story of William Tyrwhitt, who would linger
yet a few days in that hanging garden of the south coast, and who would pull
himself together and collect matter for "copy."
I was to leave in the afternoon, and the morning we spent in aimlessly rambling
about the town. Towards mid-day, a slight shower drove us to shelter under the
green verandah of a house, standing up from the lower fall of the High Street,
that we had often observed in our wanderings. This house—or rather houses, for
it was a block of two—was very tall and odd-looking, being all built of clean
squares of a whitish granite; and the double porch in the middle base—led up to
by side-going steps behind thin iron railings—roofed with green-painted zinc. In
some of the windows were jalousies, but the general aspect of the exterior was
gaunt and rigid; and the whole block bore a dismal, deserted look, as if it had not
been lived in for years.
Now we had taken refuge in the porch of that half that lay uppermost on the
slope; and here we noticed that, at a late date, the building was seemingly in
process of repair, painters' pots and brushes lying on a window-sill, and a pair of
steps showing within through the glass.
We pushed at the door; it yielded. We entered, shut ourselves in, and paused to
the sound of our own footsteps echoing and laughing from corners and high
places. On the ground floor were two or three good-sized rooms with modern
grates, but cornices, chimney-pieces, embrasures finely Jacobean. There were
innumerable under-stair and over-head cupboards, too, and pantries, and closets,
and passages going off darkly into the unknown.
We clomb the stairway—to the first floor—to the second. Here was all pure
Jacobean; but the walls were crumbling, the paper peeling, the windows dim and
foul with dirt.
I have never known a place with such echoes. They shook from a footstep like
nuts rattling out of a bag; a mouse behind the skirting led a whole camp-
following of them; to ask a question was, as in that other House, to awaken the
derisive shouts of an Opposition. Yet, in the intervals of silence, there fell a
deadliness of quiet that was quite appalling by force of contrast.
"Pooh!" said William Tyrwhitt; "I could take up my abode here with a feather
bed."
I followed him—a little reluctantly, I confess. Gloom and shadow had fallen
upon the town, and this old deserted hulk of an abode was ghostly to a degree.
There was no film of dust on its every shelf or sill that did not seem to me to
bear the impress of some phantom finger feeling its way along. A glint of
stealthy eyes would look from dark uncertain corners; a thin evil vapour appear
to rise through the cracks of the boards from the unvisited cellars in the
basement.
We went on, our nervous feet apologetic to the grit they crunched; and, when we
were come to near the end of this dreary annexe, turned off to the left into a short
gloom of passage that led to a closed door.
Pushing this open, we found a drop of some half-dozen steps, and, going
gingerly down these, stopped with a common exclamation of surprise on our
lips.
Perhaps our wonder was justified, for we were in the stern cabin of an ancient
West Indiaman.
Some twenty feet long by twelve wide—there it all was, from the deck transoms
above, to the side lockers and great curved window, sloping outwards to the
floor and glazed with little panes in galleries, that filled the whole end of the
room. Thereout we looked, over the degraded garden, to the lower quarters of
the town—as if, indeed, we were perched high up on waves—and even to a
segment of the broad bay that swept by them.
But the room itself! What phantasy of old sea-dog or master-mariner had
conceived it? What palsied spirit, condemned to rust in inactivity, had found
solace in this burlesque of shipcraft? To renew the past in such a fixture, to work
oneself up to the old glow of flight and action, and then, while one stamped and
rocked maniacally, to feel the refusal of so much as a timber to respond to one's
fervour of animation! It was a grotesque picture.
Now, this cherished chamber had shared the fate of the rest. The paint and
gilding were all cracked and blistered away; much of the glass of the stern-frame
was gone or hung loose in its sashes; the elaborately carved lockers mouldered
on the walls.
These were but dummies when we came to examine them—mere slabs attached
to the brickwork, and decaying with it.
"There should be a case-bottle and rummers in one, at least," said
William Tyrwhitt.
It had been such a little strained voice that it was with something like
astonishment I looked upon the speaker. Whence he had issued I could not
guess; but there he stood behind us, nodding and smiling—a squab, thick-set old
fellow with a great bald head, and, for all the hair on his face, a tuft like a teasel
sprouting from his under lip.
He was in his shirt-sleeves, without coat or vest; and I noticed that his dirty lawn
was oddly plaited in front, and that about his ample paunch was buckled a broad
belt of leather. Greased hip-boots encased his lower limbs, and the heels of these
were drawn together as he bowed.
"Permit me," said the stranger—and he held out to us a tin pannikin (produced
from Heaven knows where) that swam with fragrance.
I shook my head. William Tyrwhitt, that fated man, did otherwise. He accepted
the vessel and drained it.
"It smacks of all Castille," he said, handing it back with a sigh of ecstasy. "Who
the devil are you, sir?"
"Peregrine Iron, sir, at your service—Captain Penegrine Iron, of the Raven sloop
amongst others. You are very welcome to the run of my poor abode."
"Not at all," he said, addressing all his courtesy to William. Me, since my
rejection of his beaker, he took pains to ignore.
"Not at all," he said. "Your intrusion was quite natural under the circumstances. I
take a pleasure in being your cicerone. This cabin (he waved his hand
pompously)—a fancy of mine, sir, a fancy of mine. The actual material of the
latest of my commands brought hither and adapted to the exigencies of shore
life. It enables me to live eternally in the past—a most satisfying illusion. Come
to-night and have a pipe and a glass with me."
"That is right," he exclaimed. "You will find me here. Good-bye for the present."
As we plunged like dazed men into the street, now grown sunny, I turned on my
friend.
"William," I said, "did you happen to look back as we left the cabin?"
"No."
"I did."
"Well?"
"Well?"
That afternoon I went back to town, and left the offensive William to his fate.
*****
The very day following that of my retreat, I was polishing phrases by gaslight in
the dull sitting-room of my lodgings in the Lambeth Road, when he staggered in
upon me. His face was like a sheep's, white and vacant; his hands had caught a
trick of groping blindly along the backs of chairs.
"An awful one, no doubt; and to obtain surcease of the haunting memory of it,
you must confide its processes to me. But, first, I must put it to you, which is the
more pusillanimous—to refuse to submit one's manliness to the tyranny of the
unlawful, or to rush into situations you have not the nerve to adapt yourself to?"
"Neither could I. And that was my very reason for declining the invitation. Now
proceed."
It was long before he could. But presently he essayed, and gathered voice with
the advance of his narrative, and even unconsciously threw it into something the
form of "copy." And here it is as he murmured it, but with a gasp for every full-
stop.
"I confess I was so far moved by the tone of your protest as, after your departure,
to make some cautious inquiries about the house we had visited. I could discover
nothing to satisfy my curiosity. It was known to have been untenanted for a great
number of years; but as to who was the landlord, whether Captain Iron or
another, no one could inform me; and the agent for the property was of the
adjacent town where you met me. I was not fortunate, indeed, in finding that any
one even knew of the oddly appointed room; but considering that, owing to the
time the house had remained vacant, the existence of this eccentricity could be a
tradition only with some casual few, my failure did not strike me as being at all
bodeful. On the contrary, it only whetted my desire to investigate further in
person, and penetrate to the heart of a very captivating little mystery. But
probably, I thought, it is quite simple of solution, and the fact of the repairers and
the landlord being in evidence at one time, a natural coincidence.
"I dined well, and sallied forth about nine o'clock. It was a night pregnant with
possibilities. The lower strata of air were calm, but overhead the wind went
down the sea with a noise of baggage-wagons, and there was an ominous
hurrying and gathering together of forces under the bellying standards of the
clouds.
"As I went up the steps of the lonely building, the High Street seemed to turn all
its staring eyes of lamps in my direction. 'What a droll fellow!' they appeared to
be saying; 'and how will he look when he reissues?'
"'There ain't nubbudy in that house,' croaked a small boy, who had paused below,
squinting up at me.
"I found myself in the most profound darkness—that darkness, if I may use the
paradox, of a peopled desolation that men of but little nerve or resolution find
insupportable. To me, trained to a serenity of stoicism, it could make no
demoralizing appeal. I had out my matchbox, opened it at leisure, and, while the
whole vaulting blackness seemed to tick and rustle with secret movement, took a
half-dozen vestas into my hand, struck one alight, and, by its dim radiance, made
my way through the building by the passages we had penetrated in the morning.
If at all I shrank or perspired on my spectral journey, I swear I was not conscious
of doing so.
"I came to the door of the cabin. All was black and silent.
"Now, I must tell you, it was here my heart gave its first somersault. I had fallen,
as I say, into a black vault of emptiness; yet, as I rose, bruised and dazed, to my
feet, there was the cabin all alight from a great lanthorn that swung from the
ceiling, and our friend of the morning seated at a table, with a case-bottle of rum
and glasses before him.
"I stared incredulous. Yes, there could be no doubt it was he, and pretty flushed
with drink, too, by his appearance.
"'A handsome manner of boarding a craft you've got, sir,' said he, glooming at
me.
"'Oh, curse the long jaw of him! Fill your cheek with that, you Barbary ape, and
wag your tail if you can, but burn your tongue.'
"He pointed to the case-bottle with a forefinger that was like a dirty parsnip.
What induced me to swallow the insult, and even some of the pungent liquor of
his rude offering? The itch for 'copy' was, no doubt, at the bottom of it.
"I sat down opposite my host, filled and drained a bumper. The fire ran to my
brain, so that the whole room seemed to pitch and courtesy.
"'Back room, by thunder!' said he. 'Why, of course—just a step into the garden
where the roses and the buttercupses be agrowing.'
"'Has the night turned foul?' I muttered. 'What a noise the rain makes beating on
the window!'
"'It's like to be a foul one for you, at least,' said he. 'But, as for the rain, it's
blazing moonlight.'
"I turned to the broad casement in astonishment. My God! what did I see? Oh,
my friend, my friend! will you believe me? By the melancholy glow that spread
therethrough I saw that the whole room was rising and sinking in rhythmical
motion; that the lights of King's Cobb had disappeared, and that in their place
was revealed a world of pale and tossing water, the pursuing waves of which
leapt and clutched at the glass with innocuous fingers.
"'Look, look!' I shrieked. 'They follow us—they struggle to get at you, you
bloody murderer!'
"They came rising on the crests of the billows; they hurried fast in our wake,
tumbling and swaying, their stretched, drowned faces now lifted to the
moonlight, now over-washed in the long trenches of water. They were rolled
against the galleries of glass, on which their hair slapped like ribbons of seaweed
—a score of ghastly white corpses, with strained black eyes and pointed stiff
elbows crookt up in vain for air.
"I was mad, but I knew it all now. This was no house, but the good, ill-fated
vessel Rayo, once bound for Jamaica, but on the voyage fallen into the hands of
the bloody buccaneer, Paul Hardman, and her crew made to walk the plank, and
most of her passengers. I knew that the dark scoundrel had boarded and mastered
her, and—having first fired and sunk his own sloop—had steered her straight for
the Cuban coast, making disposition of what remained of the passengers on the
way, and I knew that my great-grandfather had been one of these doomed
survivors, and that he had been shot and murdered under orders of the ruffian
that now sat before me. All this, as retailed by one who sailed for a season under
Hardman to save his skin, is matter of old private history; and of common report
was it that the monster buccaneer, after years of successful trading in the ship he
had stolen, went into secret and prosperous retirement under an assumed name,
and was never heard of more on the high seas. But, it seemed, it was for the
great-grandson of one of his victims to play yet a sympathetic part in the grey
old tragedy.
"How did this come to me in a moment—or, rather, what was that dream buzzing
in my brain of 'proof' and 'copy' and all the tame stagnation of a long delirium of
order? I had nothing in common with the latter. In some telepathic way—
influenced by these past-dated surroundings—dropped into the very den of this
Procrustes of the seas, I was there to re-enact the fearful scene that had found its
climax in the brain of my ancestor.
"I rushed to the window, thence back to within a yard of the glowering
buccaneer, before whom I stood, with tost arms, wild and menacing.
"'They follow you!' I screamed. 'Passive, relentless, and deadly, they follow in
your wake and will not be denied. The strong, the helpless, the coarse and the
beautiful—all you have killed and mutilated in your wanton devilry—they are
on your heels like a pack of spectre-hounds, and sooner or later they will have
you in their cold arms and hale you down to the secret places of terror. Look at
Beston, who leads, with a fearful smile on his mouth! Look at that pale girl you
tortured, whose hair writhes and lengthens—a swarm of snakes nosing the hull
for some open port-hole to enter by! Dog and devil, you are betrayed by your
own hideous cruelty!'
"He rose and struck at me blindly; staggered, and found his filthy voice in a
shriek of rage.
"'Jorinder! make hell of the galley-fire! Heat some irons red and fetch out a
bucket of pitch. We'll learn this dandy galloot his manners!'
"It was not to be. Something, a physical sensation like the jerk of a hiccup,
shook my frame; and immediately the waters of being seemed to burst their dam
and flow out peaceably into a valley of rest."
"You see me here," he said. "I woke this morning, and found myself lying on the
floor of that shattered and battered closet, and a starved demon of a cat licking
up something from the boards. When I drove her away, there was a patch there
like ancient dried blood."
"My head? Why, the bullet seemed stuck in it between the temples; and there I
am afraid it is still."
"Just so. Now, William Tyrwhitt, you must take a Turkish, bath and some
cooling salts, and then come and tell me all about it again."
"Ah! you don't believe me, I see. I never supposed you would.
Good-night!"
I had slept but two nights at King's Cobb, when I saw distinctly that the novel
with which I was to revolutionize society and my own fortunes, and with the
purpose of writing which in an unvexed seclusion I had buried myself in this
expedient hamlet on the South Coast, was withered in the bud beyond
redemption. To this lamentable canker of a seedling hope the eternal harmony of
the sea was a principal contributor; but Miss Whiffle confirmed the blight. I had
fled from the jangle of a city, and the worries incidental to a life of threepenny
sociabilities; and the result was—
I had rooms on the Parade—a suggestive mouthful. But then the Parade is such a
modest little affair. The town itself is flung down a steep hill, at the mouth of a
verdurous gorge; and lies pitched so far as the very waterside, a picturesque
jumble of wall and roof. Its banked edges bristle and stand up in the bight of a
vaster bay, with a crooked breakwater, like a bent finger, beckoning passing sails
to its harbourage—an invitation which most are coy of accepting. For the
attractions of King's Cobb are—comparatively—limited, and its nearest station
is a full six miles distant along a switchback road.
Possibly this last fact may have militated against the popularity of King's Cobb
as a holiday resort. If so, all the better; and may enterprise for ever languish in
the matter. For vulgarity can claim no commoner purpose with fashion than is
shown in that destruction of ancient landmarks and double gilding of new which
follows the "opening out" of some unsophisticated colony of simple souls.
King's Cobb, if "remote and unfriended," is neither "melancholy" nor "slow"; but
it is small, and all its fine little history—for it has had a stirring one—has ruffled
itself out on a liliputian platform.
Than this, its insignificance, I desired nothing better. I wished to feel the
comparative importance of the individual, which one cannot do in crowded
colonies. I coveted surroundings that should be primitive—an atmosphere in
which my thoughts could speak to me coherent. I would be as one in a cave,
looking forth on sea, and sky, and the buoyant glory of Nature; unvexed of
conventions; untrammelled by social observances; building up my enchanted
palace of the imagination against such a background as only the unsullied
majesty of sky and ocean could present. For the result was to crown with my
name an epoch in literature; and hither in future ages should the pilgrim stand at
gaze, murmuring to himself, 'And here he wrote it!'
I laid my head on my pillow, that first night of my stay, with a brimming brain
and a heart of high resolve. The two little windows, under a thatched roof, of my
sleeping place (that lay over my sitting-room, and both looked oceanwards) were
open to the inpour of sweet hot air; and only the regular wash of the sea below
broke the close stillness of the night. I say this was all; and, with the memory
upon me, I could easily, at any time, break the second commandment.
Veritably had I pitched my tent on the wide littoral of rest. So I thought with a
smile, as I composed myself for slumber.
I slept, and I woke, and I lay awake for hours. Every vext problem of my life and
of the hereafter presented itself to me, and had to be argued out and puzzled over
with maddening reiteration. The reason for this was evident and flagrant. It had
woven itself into the tissue of my brief unconsciousness, and was now
recognised as, ineradicably, part of myself.
The tide was incoming, that was all, and the waves currycombed the beach with
a swishing monotony that would have dehumanized an ostler.
This rings like the undue inflation of a little theme. I ask no pity for it, nor do I
make apology for my weakness. Men there may be, no doubt, to whom the
unceasing recurrent thump and scream of a coasting tide on shingle speaks, even
in sleep, of the bountiful rhythm of Nature. I am not one of them—at least, since
I visited King's Cobb. The noise of the waters got into my brain and stayed there.
It turned everything else out—sleep, thought, faith, hope, and charity. From that
first awakening my skull was a mere globe of stagnant fluid, for any disease
germs that listed to propagate in.
Perhaps I was too near the coast-line. The highest appreciations of Nature's
thunderous forces are conceived, I believe, in the muffled seclusion of the study.
I had heard of still-rooms. I did not quite know what they were; but they seemed
to me an indispensable part of seaside lodgings, and for the rest of that night I
ardently and almost tearfully longed to be in one.
I came down in the morning jaded and utterly unrefreshed. It was patent that I
was in no state to so much as outline the preliminaries of my great undertaking.
"Use shall accustom me," I groaned. "I shall scarcely notice it to-night."
And it was at this point that Miss Whiffle walked like a banshee into the
disturbed chambers of my life, and completed my demoralization.
This lady had secured me for a month. My rights extended over the lantern-
windowed sitting-room and the bedroom above it. They were to include,
moreover, board of a select quality.
She came to receive my orders after breakfast (tepid chicory and an omelette
like a fragment of scorched blanket) with her head wrapped up in a towel. Thus
habited she had the effrontery to trust the meal had been to my liking. I gave
myself away at once by weakly answering, "Oh, certainly!"
"As to dinner, sir," she said faintly, "it is agreed, no kitching fire in the hevening.
That is understood."
"Dear me!" I exclaimed, for her face was horribly contorted. "Are you in pain?"
"Toothache?"
She was taken with a sharp spasm of laughter, mirthless, but consciously
expressive of all the familiar processes of self-effacement under torture.
"I arks nothing but my duty, sir," she said. "That is the myrrh and balsam to a
racking 'ed. Not but what I owns to a shrinking like unto death over the thought
of what lays before me this very morning. Rest and quiet is needful, but it's little
I shall get of either out of a kitching fire in the dog days. And what would you
fancy for your dinner, sir?"
"I am sorry," I murmured, "that you should suffer on my account. I suppose there
is nothing cold—"
"Not enough, sir, in all the 'ouse to bait a mousetrap. Nor would I inconvenience
you, if not for your own kind suggestion. But potted meats is 'andy and ever
sweet, and if I might make bold to propose a tin—"
"I must arks your pardin, sir. But to walk out in this 'eat, and every rolling pebble
under my foot a knife through my 'ed—no, sir. I make bold to claim that
consideration for myself."
Then I added, in the forlorn hope of justifying my moral ineptitude to myself, "If
you take my advice, you will lie down."
"And where, sir?" she answered, with a particularly patient smile. "The beds is
unmade as yet, sir," she went on, in a suffering decline, "and rumpled sheets is
thorns to a bursting brain."
"I made bold to think, if you 'ad 'appened to been a-going to bathe, the only
quiet place in the 'ouse—" she murmured, in semi-detached sentences, and put
her hand to her brow.
Five minutes later (I fear no one will credit it) I was outside the house, and Miss
Whiffle was installed, towel and all, upon my sofa.
For a moment I really think the outrageous absurdity of the situation did goad
me to the tottering point of rebellion. I had not the courage, however, to let
myself go, and, as usual, succumbed to the tyranny of circumstances.
It was a blazing morning. The flat sea lay panting on its coasts, as if, for all its
liquid sparkle, it were athirst; and the town, under the oven of its hills, burned
red-hot, like pottery in a kiln.
I went and bought my tinned meat (a form of preserve quite odious to me) and
strolled back disconsolately to the Parade. Occasionally, flitting past the lantern
window, I would steal a side glance into the cool luminosity of my own
inaccessible parlour; and there always, reclining at her ease upon my sofa, was
the ineradicable presentment of Miss Whiffle.
All this was but the forerunner and earnest of a month's long martyrdom. That
night the sea had me by the nerves again, and for many nights after; and,
although I grew in time to a certain tolerance of the booming monotony, it was
the tolerance of a dully resigned, not an indifferent, brain.
When it came to the second morning, not only the novel, but the mere idea of my
ever having contemplated writing one, was a thing with me to feebly marvel
over. And from that time I set myself down to exist and broil only, doling out a
languid interest to the locality, the shimmer of whose baking hill-sides made all
life a quivering, glaring phantom of itself.
Miss Whiffle tyrannized over me more or less according to her mood; but she
did not usurp my sitting-room again. I used to sit by the hour at the lantern
window, in a sort of greasy blankness, like a meat pudding, and vacantly
scrutinize the loiterers who passed by on the hot asphalt of the Parade. Screened
by the window curtains, I could see and hear without endangering my own
privacy; and many were the odd interchanges of speech that fell from strangers
unconscious of a listener.
One particularly festering day after dinner I had the excitement of quite a pretty
little quarrel for dessert. Miss Whiffle had stuffed me with suet, in meat and
pudding, to a point of stupefaction that stopped short only of absolute
insensibility; and in this state I took up my usual post at the window, awaiting in
swollen vacuity the possibilities of the afternoon.
On the horizon violet-hot sea and sky showed scarce a line of demarcation
between them. Nearer in the waves snored stertorously from exhausted lungs, as
if the very tide were in extremis. Not a breath of air fanned the pitiless Parade,
and the sole accent on life came from a droning, monotonous voice pitched from
somewhere in querulous complaint.
"Frarsty!" it wailed, "Frarsty! I warnt thee!" and again, "I warnt thee, Frarsty!
Frarsty! Frar—r—r—rsty!" drawn out in an inconceivable passionlessness of
desire again and again, till I felt myself absorbing the ridiculous yearning for an
absurd person and inclined to weep hysterical tears at his unresponsiveness.
"Friends," went his formula, nasal and forcibly spasmodic in the best gull-
catcher style, "p'raps you will ask why I, a able-bodied man, are asking for ass—
ist—ance in your town. Friends, I answer, becorse I cannot get work and becorse
I cannot starve. Any honest work I would be thankful for; but no one will give it
to me."
Then he hove into sight—a gastropodous tub of a fellow, with a rascally red eye;
and I shrank behind my curtains, for I never court parley with such gentlemen.
He spotted me, of course,—rogues of his feather have a hawk's eye for timid
quarry,—and his bloated face appeared at the window.
After that I was left to myself, heat and haze alone reigning without; and
presently, I think, I must have fallen into a suetty doze, for I was semi-conscious
of voices raised in dispute for a length of time, before I roused to the fact that
two people were quarrelling just outside my window.
They were a young man—almost a boy—and a girl of about his own age; and
both evidently belonged to the labouring classes.
She was, I took occasion to notice, aggressively pretty in that hot red and black
style that finds its warmest admirers in a class cultivated above that to which she
belonged; and she was scorning and flouting her slow, perplexed swain with that
over-measure of vehemence characteristic of a sex devoid of the sense of
proportion.
"Aw!" she was saying, as I came into focus of their dispute. "That's the moral of
a mahn, it is. Yer ter work when ye like an' ter play when ye like, and the girls
hahs ter sit and dangle their heels fer yer honours' convenience."
"I doan't arlays get my likes, Jenny, or I shud a' met you yesterday."
"We worked ower late pulling the lias, I tell yer. 'Twould 'a' meant half a day's
wages garn if I'd com', and theer, my dear, 'ud been reason for another delay in
oor getting spliced."
"You're fine and vulgar, upon my word! A little free, too, and a little mistook.
I've no mind ter get spliced, as yer carls it, wi' a chap as cannot see's way ter
keep tryst."
"Doan't I? Yer'll answer fer me in everything, 't seems. But yer've got enough ter
answer fer yerself, Jack Curtice. I'm none of the sort ter go or stay at anny
mahn's pleasure. There's kerps and dabs in the sea yet, Jack Curtice; and fatter
ones ter fish fer, too."
"I understand my own vally; and that isn't ter be kep' drarging my toes on the
Parade half an a'rtenoon fer a chap as thinks he be better engaged summer else."
"And yer gone ter break wi' me fer thart?"
"Good-bye, Mr. Curtice," she said, and jerked her nose high and walked off.
Now here was an inconsistent jade, and I felt sorry and relieved for the sake of
the young fellow.
He stood, after the manner of his kind, amazed and speechless. Man's saving
faculty of logic was in him, but tongue-tied; and he could not express his
intuitive recognition of the self-contradictory. Such natures frequently make
reason articulate through a blow—a rough way of knocking her into shape, but
commonly effectual. Jack, however, was evidently a large gentle swain of the
dumb-suffering type—one of those unresisting leviathans of good-humour, upon
whom a woman loves to vent that passion of the illogical which an antipathetic
sex has vainly tried to laugh her out of conceit with.
I peered a little longer, and presently saw Mr. Curtice walk off in a state
compound of bewilderment and abject depression.
This was the beginning to me of an interest apart from that which had brought
me to King's Cobb. A real nutshell drama had usurped the place of that fictitious
one that had as yet failed to mark an epoch by so much as a scratch. I accepted
the former as some solace for the intolerable wrong inflicted upon me by the sea
and Miss Whiffle.
Apart, and judged on their natural merits, I took Jack for a good stolid fellow,
innately and a little aggravatingly virtuous, and perhaps a trifle more just than
generous.
Jenny, I felt, had the spurious brilliancy of that division of her sex that claims as
intuition an inability to master the processes of thought, and attributes to this
faculty all fortunate conclusions, but none that is faulty. I thought, with some
commiseration for him, that at bottom her manner showed some real leaning
towards the lover she had discarded—that she felt the need of a pincushion, as it
were, into which to stick the little points of her malevolence. I think I was
inclined to be hard on her. I have felt the same antagonism many times towards
beauty that was unattainable by me. For she was richly pretty, without doubt.
When in the neighbourhood of one another, however, they were wont to assume
an elaborate artificiality of speech and manner in communion with their friends,
that was designed with each to point the moral of a complete indifference and
forgetfulness. But the girl was by far the better actor; and not only did she play
her own part convincingly, but she generally managed to show up in her rival
that sense of mortification that it was his fond hope he was effectually
concealing.
A fortnight passed; and, lo! there came the end of the lovers' quarrel in all
dramatic appropriateness.
By that time the doings of Jack and Jenny had come to be my mind's only refuge
from such a vacancy of outlook as I had never before experienced. "All down the
coast," that summer, "the languid air did swoon." The earth broiled, and very
thought perspired; and Miss Whiffle's voice was like a steam-whistle.
One day, as I was exhaustedly trifling with my meridian meal, and balancing the
gratification against the trouble of eating lumpy tapioca pudding, a muffled,
rolling thud broke upon my ears, making the window and floor vibrate slightly.
It seemed so distant and unimportant that I took no notice of it; and it was only
when, ten minutes later, I became aware that certain excited townsfolk were
scurrying past outside that I roused slowly to the thought that here was
something unusual toward. Then, indeed, a sort of insane abandon flashed into
life in me, and I leapt to my feet with maniac eyes. Something stirring in King's
Cobb! I should have thought nothing less than the last trump could have pricked
it out of its accustomed grooves; and that even then it would have slipped back
into them with a sluggish sense of grievance after the first flourish.
I left my congealing dish, snatched up my hat, and joined the attenuated chase. It
was making in one direction—a point, apparently, to the east of the town. As I
sped excited through the narrow and tortuous streets, a great bulge of acrid dust
bellied upon me suddenly at a corner; and, turning the latter, I plunged into a
perfect fog of the same gritty smoke. In this, phantom figures moved, appeared,
and vanished; hoarse cries resounded, and a general air of wild confusion and
alarm prevailed. For the moment, I felt as if some history of the town's past were
re-enacting, as if a sudden swoop of Frank or Dutchman upon the coast had
called forth all the defensive ardour of its people. There was nothing of
gunpowder in the stringent opacity, however; but, rather, a strong suggestion of
ancient and disintegrated mortar.
A shape sped by me in the fog, and I managed to stay and question it.
"House fell down," was the breathless answer; "and a poor chap left aloft on the
ruins."
Then I grew as insane as the rest of the company. I strode aimlessly to and fro,
striving at every coign to pierce with my eyesight the white drift. I pushed back
my hat; I gnawed my knuckles; I felt that I could not stay still, yet knew not for
what point to make. Almost I felt that in another moment I should screech out—
when a breath of sea air caught the skirt of the cloud, and rolled the bulk of it up
and away over the house-tops.
Then, at once, was revealed to me the cause and object of all this gaggle, and
confusion, and outcry. It was revealed to the crowd, too, that stood about me,
and, in the revelation, the noise of its mouthing went off and faded, till a tense
silence reigned and the murmur of one's breathing seemed a sacrilege.
I saw before me a ruinous space—a great ragged gap in a lofty block of brick
and mortar. This block had evidently, at one time, consisted of two high semi-
detached houses, and of these, one lay a monstrous heap of tumbled and
shattered débris. A ruin, but not quite; for, as the course of a landslip will often
tower with great spires and pinnacles of rock and ragged earth that have
withstood the pull and onset of the moving hill-side, so here a high sheet of
shattered wall, crowned with a cluster of toppling chimneys, stood up stark in
the midst of the general overthrow. And there aloft, clinging to the crumbling
stack, that might at any moment part, and fling and crush him into the savage
ruin below, stood the figure of a solitary man. And the man was my friend of the
Parade, Jack Curtice.
I could see and recognise him plainly—even the frantic clutch of his hands and
the deadly pallor of his face.
White dust rose from the heap, like smoke from an extinguished fire; and ever,
as we looked, spars and splinters of brick tore away from the high fragment yet
standing, and plunged with a thud into the wrack underneath.
It was glaringly evident that not long could elapse before wall and man would
come down with a hideous, shattering run. A slip, a wilder clutch at his frail
support, might in an instant precipitate the calamity.
Then from the upturned faces of the women cries of pity and anguish broke
forth, and men nipped one another's arms and gasped, and knew not what
counsel to offer.
"Do summut! do summut!" cried the women; and their mates only shook off
their pleadings with a peevish show of callousness, that was merely the dumb
anguish of undemonstrativeness. For, while their throats were thick, their
practical brains were busy.
Some one suggested a ladder, and in a moment there was an aimless scurrying
and turning amongst the women.
"Why don't 'ee stir theeself and hunt for un, Jarge?" panted one that stood near
me, twisting hysterically upon a slow youth at her side.
"Shut up, 'Liza!" he answered gruffly; then, with a sort of indrawn gasp—"Look
art the wall, lass—look art the wall!"
One foot of the clinging figure high up was seen to move slightly, and a little
bomb of mortar span out into the air and burst into dust on a projecting brick. A
long shrill sigh broke from the crowd.
Then the male wiseheads came together, and, desperate to snap the chord of
impotent suspense, mooted and rejected plan after plan that their sane judgment
knew from the first to be impracticable.
At the outset it was plainly impossible for a soul to approach the ruins. Apart
from the almost certain mangling such a venture would entail upon the explorer,
the least stirring or shifting of the great heap of rubbish flung about the base of
the wall would certainly risk the immediate collapse of the latter.
Nothing short of the great Roc itself could, it seemed, snatch the poor fellow
from his death perch.
There came suddenly an ominous silence. Then strode out in front of his fellows
—and he moved so close to the ruin that the women whimpered and held one
another—an old, rough-bearded chap in stained corduroy.
He hollowed his hands to his mouth, he cleared his hoarse throat two or three
times. Only a little trailing screech came from it at first. Then he cursed his
weakness, and pulled himself together.
"Hullo!"
"My lard! my poor lard! we've thought oor best, arnd we can do nothun fower
'ee."
Instantly a shrill protest of horror went up from the women. This was not what
they had expected.
"What! leave the mis'rable boy to his fate!"
At the moment a girl, flushed, blowzed, breathless, broke through the skirt of the
mob and barred his retreat.
"Oh!" she panted, shaking her jet-black noddle at him—"here's a parcel o' gor-
crows for discussin' help to a Christian marn! What! a score o' wiselings, and not
one to hit oot the means and the way?"
She had only just heard, and had run a mile to the rescue of her old lad.
The women caught her enthusiasm, and jeered and cheered formlessly, as their
manner is; for each desired for her own voice a separate recognition.
Jenny pushed rudely past the abashed gaffer. She was hatless, and her hair had
tumbled abroad. She raised her face, with the eyes shining.
"Hold on a bit longer, Jack!" she screamed. "Don't move till I tell 'ee.
I'm agone to save thee, Jack!"
Again from the women a rapturous cry broke out. What incompetent noodles
appeared their masters in juxtaposition with this fearless, defiant creature.
The man up aloft seemed to shiver in the shock of the outcry; and once more
some fragments of mortar rolled from under his feet and bounded into the
depths. The girl rounded upon the voicers.
"Hold thee blazing tongues!" she cried in fury. "D'ee warnt to shake un from his
perch?"
Her quick eyes and intelligence had found what she wanted in a builder's yard no
great distance away.
"Follow, a dozen o' you!" she cried; and sped off in the direction she had
indicated.
Just twelve men, and no more, obeyed her. She was mistress of the situation, and
the crowd felt it. They made room for the dominant intellect, and awaited
developments, watching, in suppressed excitement and trepidation, the figure—
whom exhaustion was slowly mastering—high up above them.
Suddenly a sort of huge L-shaped structure moved down the street, until it stood
opposite the ruined house. Then, twisting and rearing itself aloft, it took to itself
the form of a lofty, slender gallows.
"Now!" shrieked the girl, red-hot, reliant, never still for a moment; "as marny as
can hold to each end there, and swing the blessed boom out towards him!"
Fifty may have responded. They swarmed like ants about the upraised pole, and
she drove them into position—a black knot of men hauling on the triple cordage
—left, right, and middle, like the ribs of a tent.
They saw her meaning and fell into place with a shout. To hold the projecting
pole levered up at that height was a test of weight and muscle, even without their
man on the end of it; but there were plenty more to help pull, did their united
force waver.
The crowd held its breath. Here and there a strangled sob was rent from
overstrained lungs; here and there the wailing voice of a baby whined up and
subsided.
The pole swung round with the toiling men—neared him on the ruin. He turned
his head and saw, shifted his position and staggered. Jenny gave a piercing
screech. The men, thinking something was wrong, paused a moment.
A horrible silence succeeded, then a single woman yelled, and her cry was
echoed by fifty hoarse voices.
The noise came from those at the ropes. They were straining and tugging, and
some of them bobbed up and down like peas on a drum.
"More on ye! more on ye! We've hooked un, and he's got the pull of a sea
sarpint!"
The ropes became thick with striving men. The whole street resounded with a
medley of cries.
Then the point of the boom swung slowly out of the fog, and there was the
rescued man swinging and swaying at the end of it.
They lowered him gradually into the street. But the strain upon them was awful,
and he came down with a run the last few yards.
Then they let the angle of the gallows wheel over as it listed, and stood and
mopped their hot foreheads, while the crowd rushed for the poor shaky subject
of all its turmoil.
I could not get within fifty feet of him; or, I think, I should have given him and
Jenny then and there all my fortune.
She dimpled at him and obeyed, with the soft suggestion of accent that was like
a tender confidence. Her feet were sunk in Devonshire grass; her name was on
the birth register of a little Devonshire sea-town; yet the sun of France was in her
veins as surely as his caress was on her lips.
Therefore she said "George" with a sweet dragging sound that greatly fluttered
the sensibilities of the person addressed, and not infrequently led them to alight,
like Prince Dummling's queen bee, on the very mouth of that honeyed flower of
speech.
Now Plancine put her cheek on her George's rough sleeve, and said she,—
"Never!" he murmured fervently. "A double cataract could not deprive me of that
vision. It is printed here, Plancine."
"Yes," he said. "It is a sandwich-box, an empty one. I would not consign your
image to such a deplorable casket. My heart was what I meant. How I hate
sandwiches—misers shivering between sheets—a vile gastronomic economy!"
"Poor boy! I will make you little dough-cakes when you go apainting."
"I must. But the person who invented them was no gentleman!"
"Say what?"
"My soul, I cannot go back on my principles, for all that the violets of your eyes
have sprouted under the shadow of a venerable family-tree."
"That is very prettily said. You may kiss my thumb-nail with the white spot in it
for luck. No, sir. That is presuming. Now I am snug, and you may talk."
"The fine soul! For fifty years he has stood square to adversity with a smile on
his face. Could I ever achieve that? Already I cry out on poverty; because I want
an unencumbered field for work, and—yes, one other trifle."
He took Plancine's face between his hands and looked very lovingly into her
eyes.
"I think I did the old man too much honour," he said. "You nestling of eighteen
—what credit to scout misfortune with such a bird at one's side!"
So they coo'd, these two. The June scents of the little garden were wafted all
about them. The moon had come up out of the sea, and, finding a trellis of
branches over their heads, hung their young brows with coronals of shadowy
leaves, like the old dame she was, rummaging in her trinket box for something
for her favourites.
In the dimly-luminous parlour (that smelt of folios and warm coffee) of the little
dark house in the background, the figure of papa, poring at the table over
geological maps, was visible.
Fifty years ago an émigré, denounced, proscribed, and escaped from the ruin of a
shattered society: here, in '49, a stately, large-boned man, placidly enjoying the
consciousness of a serene dignity maintained at the expense of much and
prolonged self-effacement—this was papa.
Grey hair, thinning but slightly near the temples; grey moustache and beard
pointed de bouc; flowered dressing-gown girdled about a heart as simple as a
child's—this was papa, papa who grubbed over his ordnance surveys while the
young folks outside whispered of the stars.
Right beneath them—the latter—a broad gully of the hills went plunging
precipitously, all rolled with leaf and flower, to the undercliff of soft blue lias
and the very roof ridges of King's Cobb, whose walls and chimneys, now
snowed with light, fretted a scallop of the striding bay that swept the land here
like a scythe.
Plancine's village, a lofty appanage or suburb of this little seaboard town at the
hill-foot, seemed rather the parent stock from which the other had emancipated
itself. For all down the steep slope that fled from Upper to King's Cobb was
flung a débris of houses that, like the ice-fall of a glacier, would appear to have
broken from the main body and gone careering into the valley below.
It was in point of fact, however, but a subordinate hamlet—a hanging garden for
the jaded tourist in the dog days, when his soul stifled in the oven of the sea-
level cliffs—an eyrie for Plancine, and for George, the earnest painter, a Paradise
before the fall.
And now says George, "We have talked all round your confession, and still
I wait to give you absolution."
"I will confess. I read it in one of papa's books that is called the Talmud."
"Plancine!"
"—must take finely sifted ashes, and strew them round his bed; and in the
morning he will see their foot-tracks, as a cock's. I did it."
"You did?"
"Last night, yes. And what a business I had afterwards sweeping them up!"
"Something—yes—I think so. But it might have been mice. There are plenty up
there."
"Now you are an odd Plancine! What did you want with the ghosts of the dead?"
"I will tell you, you tall man; and you will not abuse my confidence. George, for
all your gay independence, you must allow me a little family pride and a little
pathetic interest in the fortunes of the dead and gone De Jussacs."
"It is Plancine, who knows so little:—that 'The Terror' would have guillotined
her father, a boy of fourteen: that he escaped to Prussia, to Belgium, to England;
for six years always a wanderer and a fugitive: that he was wrecked on this dear
coast and, penniless, started life anew here on his little accomplishments: that he
made out a meagre existence, and late in the order of years (he was fifty) married
an expatriated countrywoman, who died—George, my mother died when I was
seventeen months old—and that is where I stop. My good, big father—so lonely,
so poor, and so silent! He tells me little. He speaks scantily of the past. But he
was a Vicomte and is the last of his line; and I wanted the ghosts to explain to
me so much that I have never learned."
The moonlight fell upon her sweet, pale, uplifted face. There were tears in her
eyes that glittered like frost.
But George, for all his love, showed a little masculine impatience.
"Reserve is very good," he said; "but we can't all be Lord Burleighs by holding
our tongues. There is a sort of silence that is pregnant with nothing."
"No, dear. But why does he make such a mystery of his past? I would have mine
as clear as a window, for all to look through. Why does he treat me with such
suave and courteous opposition—permitting my suit, yet withholding his
consent?"
"Perhaps he cannot dissociate the two. Then, he admires your genius and
commends your courage; but your poor purse hungers, my lover, and he desires
riches for his Plancine."
"And Plancine?"
"She will die a grey-haired maid for thee, 'O Richard! O my king!'"
"My sweet—my bird—my wife! Oh, that you could be that now and kiss me on
to fortune! I should be double-souled and inspired. A few months, and Madame
la Vicomtesse should 'walk in silk attire.' I flame at the picture. Why will your
father not yield you gracefully, instead of plying us with that eternal enigma of
Black Venn?"
"Because enthusiasm alone may not command wealth," said a deep voice near
them.
Papa had come upon them unobserved. The young man wheeled and charged
while his blood was hot.
"I have served like Jacob. You cannot doubt my single-hearted devotion?"
"I doubt nothing, my George" (about his accent there was no tender
compromise)—"I doubt nothing, but that the balance at your bankers' is
excessive."
"But yes, my friend; for bullion is the algebraic formula that represents comfort.
When Black Venn slips his apron—"
"When Black Venn slips his apron," repeated the father quietly, "I shall be in a
position to consider your suit."
"Ah!" the quiet, strong voice went on; and in the old eyes turned moonwards one
might have fancied one could read a certain pathos of abnegation, or
approaching self-sacrifice; "but it will, and shortly, for I prophesy. It was no idle
cruelty of mine that first suggested this condition, but a natural reluctance to sign
myself back to utter loneliness."
"A little patience," said De Jussac, pressing his moustache to the round head,
"and you will honour this weary prophet, I think. I was up on the cliff to-day.
The great crack is ever widening. A bowling wind, a loud thunderstorm, and that
apron of the hill will tear from its bondage and sink sweltering down the slopes."
In the moment of speaking a tremor seized all his limbs, his eyes glared
maniacal, his outstretched arm pointed seawards.
In the offing of the bay was a vessel making for the unseen harbour below. It
stood up black against the moonlight, its sails and yards presenting some
fantastic resemblance to that engine of blood.
George stepped back and hung his head embarrassed. He had more than once
been witness of a like seizure. It was the guillotine fright—the fright that had
smitten the boy of fourteen, and had pursued the man ever since with periodic
attacks of illusion. Anything—a branch, a door-post, a window, would suggest
the hateful form during those periods—happily brief—when the poor mind was
temporarily unhinged. No doubt, in earlier years, the fits had occurred
frequently. Now they were rare, and generally, it seemed, attributable to some
strong excitement or emotion.
Plancine knew how to act. She put her hand over the frantic eyes, and led the old
man stumbling up the garden path. She was going to sing to him from the little
sweet folk-ballads of the old gay France before the trouble came—
Love floated on the freshet of her voice straight into the heart of the young man
who stood without.
II
Perhaps at first it had not been the least of the bitterness in M. De Jussac's cup of
calamity that his mere pride of name must adjust itself to its altered conditions.
That the Vicomte De Jussac should have been expatriated because he declined
when called upon to contribute his heart's blood to the red conduit in the
Faubourg St. Antoine was certainly an infamy, but one of which the very essence
was that unquestioning acknowledgment of his rank. That the land of his
adoption should have dubbed him Mr. Jussuks—in stolid unconsciousness, too,
of the solecism—was an outrage of a totally different order—an outrage only to
be condoned on the score that an impenetrable insular gaucherie, and not a
malicious impertinence, was responsible for it.
Mr. Jussuks had, however, outlived his sense of the injurious appellation; had
outlived much prejudice, the wear of poverty, his memory of many things, and,
very early, his scorn of the plebeian processes that to the impecunious are a
condition of living at all. He was certainly a man of courageous independence,
inasmuch as from the hour of his setting foot in England—and that was at the
outset of the century—he had controlled his own little fortunes without a hand to
help him over the deep places.
Of his first struggles little is known but this—that for years, turning to account
some small knowledge of draughtsmanship he had acquired, he found
employment in ladies' academies, of which there was a plenitude at that date in
King's Cobb.
Out of these the émigré made money, and so was enabled to pursue and enlarge
upon his researches. Presently he prospered into a competence, married (poor
Mademoiselle Belleville, of the Silver Street Academy, who died of typhoid at
the end of a couple of summers), and so grew into the kindly old age of the
absorbed and gentle naturalist, with his Plancine budding at his side.
What in all these fifty years had he forgotten? His name, his rank, his very
origin? Much, no doubt. But that there was one haunting memory that had dwelt
with him throughout, his child and her lover were to learn—one memory, and
that dreadful recurring illusion of the guillotine.
"When Black Venn slips his apron, I shall be in a position to consider your suit."
Surely that was an odd and enigmatical condition, entirely remote from the
subject at issue? Yet from the moment of the first impassioned pleadings of the
stricken George, De Jussac had insisted upon it as one from which there should
be no appeal.
Now the Black Venn referred to was a great mound of lias that rolled up and
inland, in the far sweep of the bay, from the giddy margin of the lower ruin of
cliffs. These—mere compressed mountains of mud, blown by the winds and
battered by the sea—were in a constant state of yawn and collapse. Yard by yard
they yielded to the scourge of Time, and landslides were of common occurrence.
All along the middle slope of Black Venn itself, a wide, deep fissure, dark and
impenetrable, had stretched from ages unrecorded. But the eventual opening-out
of this crevasse, and the consequent subsidence of the incline, or apron, below it,
had been foretold by Mr. De Jussac; and this, in fact, was the condition to which
he had alluded.
III
The light shining steadily through a front window of the cottage flickered and
shifted. The young man in the rain and storm outside danced with impatience.
Suddenly the door opened, and Plancine's father stood there, candle in hand.
"The hill, sir—the hill! It's fallen! You were right. You must stand by your word.
Black Venn has slipped his apron!"
"My God, no!" he whispered again, and dived into a cupboard under the stair.
Thence he reappeared with a horn lantern and his old blue cloak.
"No, no, no! Do you trifle with your destiny? It has happened opportunely, while
all are within doors and we have a clear field. How do you know? have you
seen? Is it possible to descend to it from above?"
Toiling onward, like driven cattle, they swerved from the road presently and
breasted a sharp incline. Their boots squelched on the sodden turf; the wind bore
on them heavily.
George saw the dancing lanthorn go up the slope in front of him like a will-o'-
the-wisp—stop, and swing steady, heard the loud cry of jubilation that issued
from the withered throat.
They stood together on the verge of the upper lip of the fissure. It was a cliff
now, twenty, thirty feet to its base. The lower ground had fallen like a dead jaw;
had slipped—none so great a distance—down the slope leading to the under-
cliff, and lay a billowing mass subsided upon itself.
"No, no! now! My God! I demand it. Others may forestall us if we delay. See,
my friend, I wish but my own; and what proof of right have I if another should
snatch the treasure?"
"The treasure?"
"It is our fortune that lies there—yours, and mine, and the little Plancine's. Do I
know what I say? Hurry, hurry, hurry! while my heart does not burst."
He forced the lanthorn into the young man's hands. He was panting and sobbing
like a child. Before the other realized his intention, he had flung himself upon his
hands and knees, had slipped over the edge, and was scrambling down the
broken wall of lias.
There was nothing for George but to take his own life in hand and humour his
venerated elder. He followed with the lanthorn, thinking of Plancine a little, and
hoping he should fall on a soft place.
But they got down in safety, breathing hard and extremely dirty. Caution, it is
true, reacts very commonly upon itself.
The moment his companion's feet touched bottom, De Jussac snatched the light
from his hand, roughly enough to send him off his balance, and went scurrying
to and fro along the face of the cliff like a mad thing.
"I cannot find it!" he cried, rushing back after an interval—nervous, in an agony
of restlessness—a very pitiable old man.
"The box—the casket! It could never perish. It was of sheet-iron. Look, look, my
friend! Your eyes are younger than mine—a box, a foot long, of hard iron!"
"Bones," said he, peering down. "Some old mastodon, I expect. Is this your
treasure?"
De Jussac was glaring. His head drooped lower and lower. His lips were parted,
and the line of strong white teeth showed between them. His voice, when he
spoke, was quite fearful in its low intensity.
"Bones—yes, and human. Where they lie, the other must be near. Ah,
Lacombe, Lacombe; you will yield me my own at last!"
He was shaking a slow finger at the poor remnants—a rib or two, the half of a
yellow skull.
Suddenly he was down on his knees, tearing at the black, thick soil, diving into
it, tossing it hither and thither.
A pause, a rending exclamation, and he was on his feet again with a scream of
ecstasy. An oblong casket, rusty, corroded, but unbroken, was in his hand.
They found, after some search, a difficult way up. By-and-by they stood once
more on the lip of the fall, and paused for breath.
It was at this very instant that De Jussac dropped the box beside him and threw
up his hands.
"The guillotine!" he shrieked, and fell headlong into the pit he had just issued
from.
IV
The poor bandaged figure; the approaching death; the dog whining softly in the
yard.
"Nay, cry not, little one! I go very happy. That (he indicated by a motion of his
eyelids the fatal box, which, yet unopened, lay on a table by the sunny window)
shall repay thee for thy long devotion, for thy poverty, and for thy brave
sweetness with the old papa."
"But they are diamonds, Plancine—such diamonds, my bird. They have flashed
at Versailles, at the little Trianon. They were honoured to lie on the breast of a
beautiful and courageous woman—thine aunt, Plancine; the most noble the
Comtesse de la Morne. She gave her wealth, almost her life, for her king—all
but her diamonds. It was at Brussels, whither I had escaped from The Terror—I,
a weak and desolate boy of but fourteen. I lived with her, in her common, cheap
lodging. For five years we made out our friendless and deserted existence in
company. In truth, we were an embarrassment, and they looked at us askance.
Long after her mind failed her, the memory of her own former beauty dwelt with
her; yet she could not comprehend but that it was still a talisman to conjure with.
Even to the end she would deck herself and coquet to her glass. But she was
good and faithful, Plancine; and, at the last, when she was dying, she gave me
this box. 'It contains all that is left to me of my former condition,' she said. 'It
shall make thy fortune for thee in England, my nephew, whither thou must
journey when poor Dorine is underground.' By that I knew it was her cherished
diamonds she bequeathed me. 'They do not want thee here,' she said. 'Thou must
take boat for England when I am gone.'
The young man was standing sorrowful by the open window. He could have seen
the sailing-boats in the bay, the sailing clouds in the sky placidly floating over a
world of serene and verdurous loveliness. But his vision was all inward, of the
piteous calm, following storm and disaster, in which the dying voice from the
bed was like the lapping of little waves.
He came at once and stood over Plancine, not daring to touch her.
"It was not wilfulness, but my great love," said the broken, gentle voice, "that
made the condition. All of you I cannot extol, knowing what I have known. But
you are an honest gentleman and a true, my brave; and you shall make this
dearest a noble husband."
Waveringly George stole his hand towards the bowed head and let it rest there.
From the battered face a smile broke like flowers from a blasted soil.
He saw the eyes questioning what the lips would not ask.
"But how I lost it?" he said. "I took the box; I obeyed her behests. The moment
was acute; the times peremptory. I sailed for England, hurriedly and secretly,
never to this day having feasted my eyes on what lies within there. With me went
Lacombe, Madame's 'runner' in the old days—a stolid Berrichon, who had lived
upon her bounty to the end. The rogue! the ingrate! We were wrecked upon this
coast; we plunged and came ashore. I know not who were lost or saved; but
Lacombe and I clung together and were thrown upon the land, the box still in my
grasp. We climbed the cliffs where a stair had been cut; we broke eastwards from
the upper slopes and staggered on through the blown darkness. Suddenly
Lacombe stopped. The day was faint then on the watery horizon; and in the
ghostly light I saw his face and read the murder in it. We were standing on the
verge of the cleft under Black Venn. 'No further!' he whispered. 'You must go
down there!' He snatched the box from my hand. In the instant of his doing so,
stricken by the death terror, the affection to which I was then much subject
seized me. I screamed, 'My God! the guillotine!' Taken by surprise, he started
back, staggered, and went down crashing to the fate he had designed for me. I
seemed to lie prostrate for hours, while his moans came up fainter and fainter till
they ceased. Then I rose and faced life, lonely, friendless, and a beggar."
The restless wandering of his eyes travelled over his daughter's head to the rusty
casket by the window.
"It was very well," he whispered. "I thank my God that He has permitted me at
the perfect moment to realize my investment in that dead rascal's dishonesty.
Have I ever desired wealth save for my little pouponne here? And I have sorely
tried thee, my George. But the old naturalist had such faith in his prediction.
Now—"
His vision was glazing; the muscles of his face were quietly settling to the repose
that death only can command.
"Now, I would see the fruit of my prophecy; would see it all hung on the neck, in
the hair of my child, that I may die rejoicing. Canst thou force the casket,
George?"
The young man turned with a stifled groan. Some tools lay on a shelf hard by.
He grasped a chisel and went to his task with shaking hands.
The box was all eaten and corroded. It was a matter of but a few seconds to prise
it open. The lid fell back on the table with a rusty clang.
"Ah!" cried the dying man. "What now? Dost thou see them? Quick! quick! to
glorify this little head! Are they not exquisite?"
George was gazing down with a dull, vacant feeling at his heart.
"They—Mr. De Jussac, they are loveliness itself. Plancine, I will not touch them.
You must be the first."
He strode to the kneeling girl; lifted, almost roughly dragged her to her feet.
"Come!" he said; and, supporting her across the room, whispered madly in her
ear: "Pretend! For God's sake, pretend!"
Plancine's swimming eyes looked down, looked upon a litter of perished rags of
paper, and, lying in the midst of the rubbish, an ancient stained and cockled
miniature of a powdered Louis Seize coquette.
This was all. This was the treasure the old crazed vanity had thought sufficient to
build her nephew his fortune.
The diamonds! Probably these had long before been sacrificed to the armies
ineffectively manoeuvring for the destruction of Monsieur "Veto's" enemies.
Plancine lifted her head. Thereafter George never ceased to recall with a glad
pride the nobility that had shone in her eyes.
"My papa!" she cried softly, going swiftly to the bed; "they are beautiful as the
stars that glittered over the old untroubled France!"
"The guillotine!" he cried. "The beams break into flowers! The axe is a shaft of
light!"
PART I
OF POLYHISTOR'S NARRATIVE
WRITTEN FOR, BUT NEVER INSERTED IN, THE ——- FAMILY MAGAZINE
The eyes of Polyhistor—as he sat before the fire at night—took in the tawdry
surroundings of his lodging-house room with nothing of that apathy of
resignation to his personal [Greek: anankê] which of all moods is to Fortune, the
goddess of spontaneity, the most antipathetic. Indeed, he felt his wit, like
Romeo's, to be of cheveril; and his conviction that it needed only the pull of
circumstance to stretch it "from an inch narrow to an ell broad" expressed but the
very wooing quality of a constitutional optimism.
Now this inherent optimism is at least a serviceable weapon when it takes the
form of self-reliance. It is always at hand in an emergency—a guard of honour to
the soul. The loneliness of individual life must learn self-respect from within, not
without; and were all creeds to be mixed, that truism should be found their
precipitate.
With no present good fortune but the capacity for desiring it; with the right to
affix a letter or so—like grace after skilly—to his name; with the consciousness
that, having overcome theoretical pharmaceutics masterfully, he was now
combatting practical dispensing slavishly; with full confidence in his social
position (he stood under the shadow of "high connections," like the little winged
"Victory" in a conqueror's hand, he chose to think) to help him to eventual
distinction, he toasted his toes that sour winter evening and reviewed in comfort
an army of prospects.
Also his thoughts reverted indulgently to the incidents and experiences of the
previous night.
Lady Barbara, to do her justice, trades upon her position only in so far as it
shapes itself the straight road to her desires. She is a carpet adventurer—an
explorer amongst the nerves of moral sensation, to whom the discovery of an
untrodden mental tract is a pure delight, and the more delightful the more
ephemeral. She flits from guest to guest, shooting out to each a little proboscis,
as it were, and happy if its point touches a speck of honey. She gathers from all,
and stores the sweet agglomerate, let us hope, to feed upon it in the winter of her
life, when the hive of her busy brain shall be thatched with snow.
*****
"Polyhistor, indeed!" she writes. "The conceit of some people! He seems to take
himself for a sort of Admirable Crichton, and all because his chance meeting
with the gentleman referred to (a very interesting person, who is, I understand,
reforming our prisons) brought him the offer of an appointment quite beyond his
deserts. I was very glad to hear of it, however, and I asked the creature to
contribute a paper recording his first impressions of this notable man; instead of
which he begins with an opinionated rigmarole about himself, and goes on from
bad to worse by describing a long conversation he had about prison reform with
that horrid, masculine Mrs. C——, whom all the officers call 'Charlie,' and who
thinks that for men to grow humane is a sign of their decadence. Of course I
shall 'cut' the whole of their talk together (it is a blessed privilege to be an
editor), and jump to the part where Polyhistor (!) describes the notable person's
visit to him, which was due to his (the N.P.'s) having the night before overheard
some of the conversation between those two."
*****
She had dated man's decadence from the moment when he began to "poor-
fellow" irreclaimable savagery on the score of heredity.
She had repudiated the old humbug of sex superiority because she had seen it
fall on its face to howl over a trodden worm, with the result that it discovered
itself hollow behind, like the elf-maiden.
She had said: "Once you taught us divinely—argumentum baculinum," said she;
"(for you are the sons of God, you know). But you have since so insisted upon
the Rights of Humanity that we have learned ourselves in the phrase, and that the
earthy have the best right to precedence on the earth."
And thereupon Charlie had launched into abuse of what she called the latest
masculine fad—prison reform, to wit—and a heated discussion between her and
Polyhistor had ensued, in the midst of which she had happened to glance behind
her, to find that very notable person who is the subject of this narrative
vouchsafing a silent attention to her diatribe. And then—
But at this period to his cogitations Polyhistor's landlady entered with a card,
which she presented to his consideration:—
Polyhistor was beginning, "May I inquire—" when the other took him up with a
vehement frankness that he found engaging at once.
"This is a great intrusion. Will you pardon me? I heard some remarks of yours
last night that deeply interested me. I obtained your name and address of our
hostess, and took the liberty of—"
"Good. It was a motley assemblage, as you say. Yet I'm inclined to think
I found my pearl in the oyster. I'm afraid I interrupted—eh?"
"No, no, not at all. Only some idle scribbling. I'd finished."
"Ah! it's a noble gift—the gift of song; precious through its rarity."
Polyhistor caught a note of emotion in his visitor's voice, and glanced at him
curiously.
"But," said the stranger, coming to earth, "I am lingering beside the mark. I must
try to justify my solecism in manners by a straight reference to the object of my
visit. That is, in the first instance, a matter of business."
"Business!"
"I am a man with a purpose, seeking the hopefullest means to an end. Plainly: if I
could procure you the post of resident doctor at D—— gaol, would you be
disposed to accept it?"
"I can affect no surprise at yours," said the visitor, attentively regarding
Polyhistor. "It is perfectly natural. Let me forestall some unnecessary expression
of it. My offer seems unaccountable to you, seeing that we never met until last
night. But I don't move entirely in the dark. I have ventured in the interval to
inform myself as to the details of your career. I was entirely one with much of
your expression of opinion as to the treatment of criminals, in which you
controverted the crude and unpleasant scepticism of the lady you talked with."
(Poor New Charlie!) "Combining the two, I come to the immediate conclusion
that you are the man for my purpose."
"You have dumbfounded me. I don't know what to answer. You have views, I
know, as to prison treatment. Will you sketch them? Will you talk on, while I try
to bring my scattered wits to a focus?"
"Certainly I will. Let me, in the first instance, recall to you a few words of your
own. They ran somewhat in this fashion: Is not the man of practical genius the
man who is most apt at solving the little problems of resourcefulness in life? Do
you remember them?"
"Perhaps I do, in a cruder form."
Polyhistor nodded, still at sea, and the other went on with a smile:—
"Yes; but abnormally developed in a single direction. His one object is to out-
manoeuvre in a game of desperate and immoral chances. The tactical spirit in
him has none of the higher ambition. It has felt itself in the degree only that
stops at defiance."
"We must endeavour to lead him to respect of self by showing him what his
mind is capable of. I argue on no sectarian, no religious grounds even. Is it
possible to make a man's self his most precious possession? Anyhow, I work to
that end. A doctor purges before building up with a tonic. I eliminate cant and
hypocrisy, and then introduce self-respect. It isn't enough to employ a man's
hands only. Initiation in some labour that should prove wholesome and
remunerative is a redeeming factor, but it isn't all. His mind must work also, and
awaken to its capacities. If it rusts, the body reverts to inhuman instincts."
"Quite so. My patients are invited to exchange views with their guardians in a
spirit of perfect friendliness; to solve little problems of practical moment; to
acquire the pride of self-reliance. We have competitions, such as certain
newspapers open to their readers, in a simple form. I draw up the questions
myself. The answers give me insight into the mental conditions of the
competitors. Upon insight I proceed. I am fortunate in private means, and I am in
a position to offer modest prizes to the winners. Whenever such an one is
discharged, he finds awaiting him the tools most handy to his vocation. I bid him
go forth in no pharisaical spirit, and invite him to communicate with me. I wish
the shadow of the gaol to extend no further than the road whereon it lies.
Henceforth, we are acquaintances with a common interest at heart. Isn't it
monstrous that a state-fixed degree of misconduct should earn a man social
ostracism? Parents are generally inclined to rule extra tenderness towards a child
whose peccadilloes have brought him a whipping. For myself, I have no faith in
police supervision. Give a culprit his term and have done with it. I find the
majority who come back to me are ticket-of-leave men.
"Have I said enough? I offer you the reversion of the post. The present holder of
it leaves in a month's time. Please to determine here and at once."
"Yes."
*****
So far wrote Polyhistor in the bonny days of early manhood—an attempt made
in a spasm of enthusiasm inspired in him and humoured by his most engaging
Mentor, to record his first impressions of a notable personality not many days
after its introduction to him. He has never taken up the tale again until now,
when an insistent sense, as of a task left unfinished, compels him to the effort.
Over his sweet Mentor the grass lies thick, and flowers of aged stalk bloom
perennially, and "Oh, the difference to me!"
To me, for it is time to drop the poor conceit, the pseudonym that once served its
little purpose to awaken tender derision.
I take up the old and stained manuscript, with its marginalia, that are like the dim
call from a far-away voice, and I know that, so I am driven to record the sequel
to that gay introduction, it must be in a spirit of sombreness most deadly by
contrast. I look at the faded opening words. The fire of the first line of the
narrative is long out; the grate is cold some forty years—forty years!—and I
think I have been a little chill during all that time. But, though the room rustle
with phantoms and menace stalk in the retrospect, I shall acquit my conscience
of its burden, refusing to be bullied by the counsel of a destiny that subpoena'd
me entirely against my will.
PART II
OF POLYHISTOR'S NARRATIVE
At the same time I was fully bent on justifying my little cockney patron's choice
by a resolute subscription to his theories of prison management.
The interval of forced inactivity must have sorely tried the patience of the
Governor. Practical theorists condemned to rust too often eat out their own
hearts. Major Shrike never referred to this period, and, indeed, laboriously
snubbed any allusion to it.
*****
One evening (it was during the second month of my appointment) we were
sitting in his private study—a dark, comfortable room lined with books. It was
an occasion on which a new characteristic of the man was offered to my
inspection.
"No, no, no! A hawker's opportuneness; that describes it. These fellows would
make death itself a vulgarity."
"Not a tittle. Heaven forfend! A sheet and a turnip are poetry to their
manifestations. It's as crude and sour soil for us to work on as any I know. We'll
cart it wholesale."
"As to what?"
"The supernatural."
"It is a principle with me to oppose bullying. We are here for a definite purpose
—his duty plain to any man who wills to read it. There may be disembodied
spirits who seek to distress or annoy where they can no longer control. If there
are, mine, which is not yet divorced from its means to material action, declines
to be influenced by any irresponsible whimsey, emanating from a place whose
denizens appear to be actuated by a mere frivolous antagonism to all human
order and progress."
I laughed.
"It should be for you," I said, "to learn to shiver, like the boy in the fairy tale."
"I cannot", he answered, with a peculiar quiet smile; "and yet prisons, above all
places, should be haunted."
*****
Very shortly after his arrival I was called to the cell of the medium,
F——. He suffered, by his own statement, from severe pains in the head.
"I see things; my case has no comparison with others. To a man of my super-
sensitiveness close confinement is mere cruelty."
Later in the day I visited him again. He was then white and sullen; but under his
mood I could read real excitement of some sort.
"Very well," I said, "I don't mean to bandy words with you"; and I turned to go.
"Doctor, your mission's a merciful one. I'm not trying to sauce you. For
God's sake have me moved! I can see further than most, I tell you!"
The fellow's manner gave me pause. He was patently and beyond the pride of
concealment terrified.
"It isn't that I see, but I know. The cell's not empty!"
"I will make inquiries," I said. "You may take that for a promise. If the cell
proves empty, you stop where you are."
I noticed that he dropped his hands with a lost gesture as I left him. I was
sufficiently moved to accost the warder who awaited me on the spot.
Before I could respond, F—— came suddenly to the door, which I still held
open.
"No, I can't."
"You can't?"
"No, sir."
Quite baffled by the man's obstinacy, I said no more, but walked off. If my anger
was roused, my curiosity was piqued in proportion.
*****
I had no opportunity of interviewing the Governor all day, but at night I visited
him by invitation to play a game of piquet.
I found him "tasting" his books, with which the room was well lined, and
drawing with relish at an excellent cigar in the intervals of the courses.
He nodded to me, and held out an open volume in his left hand.
"Listen to this fellow," he said, tapping the page with his fingers:—
"'The most tolerable sort of Revenge, is for those wrongs which there is no Law
to remedy: But then, let a man take heed, the Revenge be such, as there is no law
to punish: Else, a man's Enemy, is still before hand, and it is two for one. Some,
when they take Revenge, are Desirous the party should know, whence it cometh.
This is the more Generous. For the Delight seemeth to be, not so much in doing
the Hurt, as in making the Party repent: But Base and Crafty Cowards are like
the Arrow that flyeth in the Dark. Cosmus, Duke of Florence, had a Desperate
Saying against Perfidious or Neglecting Friends, as if these wrongs were
unpardonable. You shall reade (saith he) that we are commanded to forgive our
Enemies: But you never read, that we are commanded, to forgive our Friends.'
"Who?" said I.
"Francis Bacon, who screwed his wit to his philosophy, like a hammer-head to
its handle, and knocked a nail in at every blow. How many of our friends round
about here would be picking oakum now if they had made a gospel of that
quotation?"
"You mean they take no heed that the Law may punish for that for which it gives
no remedy?"
"Precisely; and specifically as to revenge. The criminal, from the murderer to the
petty pilferer, is actuated solely by the spirit of vengeance—vengeance blind and
speechless—towards a system that forces him into a position quite outside his
natural instincts."
"As to that, we have left Nature in the thicket. It is hopeless hunting for her
now."
"We hear her breathing sometimes, my friend. Otherwise Her Majesty's prison
locks would rust. But, I grant you, we have grown so unfamiliar with her that we
call her simplest manifestations _super_natural nowadays."
"That reminds me. I visited F—— this afternoon. The man was in a queer way—
not foxing, in my opinion. Hysteria, probably."
"Well?"
"He refused."
"That settles it, of course. The manner of Johnson's refusal was a bit uncivil, but
—"
He had been looking at me intently all this time—so intently that I was
conscious of a little embarrassment and confusion. His mouth was set like a dash
between brackets, and his eyes glistened. Now his features relaxed, and he gave
a short high neigh of a laugh.
"My dear fellow, you must make allowances for the rough old lurcher. He was a
soldier. He is all cut and measured out to the regimental pattern. With him Major
Shrike, like the king, can do no wrong. Did I ever tell you he served under me in
India? He did; and, moreover, I saved his life there."
"In an engagement?"
"Worse—from the bite of a snake. It was a mere question of will. I told him to
wake and walk, and he did. They had thought him already in rigor mortis; and,
as for him—well, his devotion to me since has been single to the last degree."
"To be sure. And he's quite in my confidence. You must pass over the old
beggar's churlishness."
I laughed an assent. And then an odd thing happened. As I spoke, I had walked
over to a bookcase on the opposite side of the room to that on which my host
stood. Near this bookcase hung a mirror—an oblong affair, set in brass repoussé
work—on the wall; and, happening to glance into it as I approached, I caught
sight of the Major's reflection as he turned his face to follow my movement.
I say "turned his face"—a formal description only. What met my startled gaze
was an image of some nameless horror—of features grooved, and battered, and
shapeless, as if they had been torn by a wild beast.
I gave a little indrawn gasp and turned about. There stood the Major, plainly
himself, with a pleasant smile on his face.
"I didn't know there was anything wrong with it," he said, still abstracted and
apart. And, indeed, when by sheer mental effort I forced myself to look again,
there stood my companion as he stood in the room.
I dismissed the folly from my mind, and set myself resolutely to inspecting the
books marshalled before me. Roving amongst them, I pulled out, entirely at
random, a thin, worn duodecimo, that was thrust well back at a shelf end, as if it
shrank from comparison with its prosperous and portly neighbours. Nothing but
chance impelled me to the choice; and I don't know to this day what the ragged
volume was about. It opened naturally at a marker that lay in it—a folded slip of
paper, yellow with age; and glancing at this, a printed name caught my eye.
With some stir of curiosity, I spread the slip out. It was a title-page to a volume,
of poems, presumably; and the author was James Shrike.
Before I could speak to explain, he had come hurriedly across the room and had
rudely snatched the paper out of my hand.
"How did this get—" he began; then in a moment came to himself, and
apologized for his ill manners.
"I thought every scrap of the stuff had been destroyed", he said, and tore the
page into fragments. "It is an ancient effusion, doctor—perhaps the greatest folly
of my life; but it's something of a sore subject with me, and I shall be obliged if
you'll not refer to it again."
Surely here was a new side-light that played upon my friend and superior a little
fantastically.
*****
Then I saw that something was wrong with the cell's inmate, and that my
services were required.
The medium was struggling on the floor, in what looked like an epileptic fit, and
Johnson and another warder were holding him from doing an injury to himself.
"Heerd him guggling," he said, "and thought as something were up. You come
timely, sir."
More assistance was procured, and I ordered the prisoner's removal to the
infirmary. For a minute, before following him, I was left alone with Johnson.
"It came to a climax, then?" I said, looking the man steadily in the face.
I walked deliberately up to the closed door of the adjoining cell, which was the
last on that side of the corridor. Huddled against the massive end wall, and half
imbedded in it, as it seemed, it lay in a certain shadow, and bore every sign of
dust and disuse. Looking closely, I saw that the trap in the door was not only
firmly bolted, but screwed into its socket.
"You have your orders", I said sternly, "and do well to hold by them. I doubt,
nevertheless, if they include impertinence to your superiors."
"I look straight on my duty, sir," he said, a little abashed. "I don't wish to give
offence."
He did not, I feel sure. He followed his instinct to throw me off the scent, that
was all.
I strode off in a fume, and after attending F—— in the infirmary, went promptly
to my own quarters.
I was in an odd frame of mind, and for long tramped my sitting-room to and fro,
too restless to go to bed, or, as an alternative, to settle down to a book. There was
a welling up in my heart of some emotion that I could neither trace nor define. It
seemed neighbour to terror, neighbour to an intense fainting pity, yet was not
distinctly either of these. Indeed, where was cause for one, or the subject of the
other? F—— might have endured mental sufferings which it was only human to
help to end, yet F—— was a swindling rogue, who, once relieved, merited no
further consideration.
It was not on him my sentiments were wasted. Who, then, was responsible for
them?
There is a very plain line of demarcation between the legitimate spirit of inquiry
and mere apish curiosity. I could recognise it, I have no doubt, as a rule, yet in
my then mood, under the influence of a kind of morbid seizure, inquisitiveness
took me by the throat. I could not whistle my mind from the chase of a certain
graveyard will-o'-the-wisp; and on it went stumbling and floundering through
bog and mire, until it fell into a state of collapse, and was useful for nothing else.
I went to bed and to sleep without difficulty, but I was conscious of myself all
the time, and of a shadowless horror that seemed to come stealthily out of
corners and to bend over and look at me, and to be nothing but a curtain or a
hanging coat when I started and stared.
Over and over again this happened, and my temperature rose by leaps, and
suddenly I saw that if I failed to assert myself, and promptly, fever would lap me
in a consuming fire. Then in a moment I broke into a profuse perspiration, and
sank exhausted into delicious unconsciousness.
Morning found me restored to vigour, but still with the maggot of curiosity
boring in my brain. It worked there all day, and for many subsequent days, and at
last it seemed as if my every faculty were honeycombed with its ramifications.
Then "this will not do", I thought, but still the tunnelling process went on.
At first I would not acknowledge to myself what all this mental to-do was about.
I was ashamed of my new development, in fact, and nervous, too, in a degree of
what it might reveal in the matter of moral degeneration; but gradually, as the
curious devil mastered me, I grew into such harmony with it that I could shut my
eyes no longer to the true purpose of its insistence. It was the closed cell about
which my thoughts hovered like crows circling round carrion.
*****
"In the dead waste and middle" of a certain night I awoke with a strange, quick
recovery of consciousness. There was the passing of a single expiration, and I
had been asleep and was awake. I had gone to bed with no sense of premonition
or of resolve in a particular direction; I sat up a monomaniac. It was as if,
swelling in the silent hours, the tumour of curiosity had come to a head, and in a
moment it was necessary to operate upon it.
All strung to a sort of exaltation, I rose noiselessly and dressed myself with
rapid, nervous hands. My every faculty was focussed upon a solitary point.
Without and around there was nothing but shadow and uncertainty. I seemed
conscious only of a shaft of light, as it were, traversing the darkness and globing
itself in a steady disc of radiance on a lonely door.
Slipping out into the great echoing vault of the prison in stockinged feet, I sped
with no hesitation of purpose in the direction of the corridor that was my goal.
Surely some resolute Providence guided and encompassed me, for no meeting
with the night patrol occurred at any point to embarrass or deter me. Like a ghost
myself, I flitted along the stone flags of the passages, hardly waking a murmur
from them in my progress.
Without, I knew, a wild and stormy wind thundered on the walls of the prison.
Within, where the very atmosphere was self-contained, a cold and solemn peace
held like an irrevocable judgment.
I found myself as if in a dream before the sealed door that had for days harassed
my waking thoughts. Dim light from a distant gas jet made a patch of yellow
upon one of its panels; the rest was buttressed with shadow.
A sense of fear and constriction was upon me as I drew softly from my pocket a
screwdriver I had brought with me. It never occurred to me, I swear, that the
quest was no business of mine, and that even now I could withdraw from it, and
no one be the wiser. But I was afraid—I was afraid. And there was not even the
negative comfort of knowing that the neighbouring cell was tenanted. It gaped
like a ghostly garret next door to a deserted house.
What reason had I to be there at all, or, being there, to fear? I can no more
explain than tell how it was that I, an impartial follower of my vocation, had
allowed myself to be tricked by that in the nerves I had made it my interest to
study and combat in others.
My hand that held the tool was cold and wet. The stiff little shriek of the first
screw, as it turned at first uneasily in its socket, sent a jarring thrill through me.
But I persevered, and it came out readily by-and-by, as did the four or five others
that held the trap secure.
Then I paused a moment; and, I confess, the quick pant of fear seemed to come
grey from my lips. There were sounds about me—the deep breathing of
imprisoned men; and I envied the sleepers their hard-wrung repose.
At last, in one access of determination, I put out my hand, and sliding back the
bolt, hurriedly flung open the trap. An acrid whiff of dust assailed my nostrils as
I stepped back a pace and stood expectant of anything—or nothing. What did I
wish, or dread, or foresee? The complete absurdity of my behaviour was
revealed to me in a moment. I could shake off the incubus here and now, and be
a sane man again.
I had staggered back with that cry in my throat, when I felt fingers like iron
clamps close on my arm and hold it. The grip, more than the face I turned to
look upon in my surging terror, was forcibly human.
It was the warder Johnson who had seized me, and my heart bounded as I met
the cold fury of his eyes.
"Prying!" he said, in a hoarse, savage whisper. "So you will, will you?
And now let the devil help you!"
It was not this fellow I feared, though his white face was set like a demon's; and
in the thick of my terror I made a feeble attempt to assert my authority.
In his frenzy he shook my arm as a terrier shakes a rat, and, like a dog, he held
on, daring me to release myself.
For the moment an instinct half-murderous leapt in me. It sank and was
overwhelmed in a slough of some more secret emotion.
He gave a snapping laugh like a cough. His rage waxed second by second. There
was a maniacal suggestiveness in it; and not much longer, it was evident, could
he have it under control. I saw it run and congest in his eyes; and, on the instant
of its accumulation, he tore at me with a sudden wild strength, and drove me up
against the very door of the secret cell.
"Let me go, you ruffian!" I cried, struggling to free myself from his grasp.
It was useless. He held me madly. There was no beating him off: and, so holding
me, he managed to produce a single key from one of his pockets, and to slip it
with a rusty clang into the lock of the door.
"You dirty, prying civilian!" he panted at me, as he swayed this way and that
with the pull of my body. "You shall have your wish, by G—! You want to see
inside, do you? Look, then!"
He dashed open the door as he spoke, and pulled me violently into the opening.
A great waft of the cold, dank air came at us, and with it—what?
The warder had jerked his dark lantern from his belt, and now—an arm of his
still clasped about one of mine—snapped the slide open.
"Where is it?" he muttered, directing the disc of light round and about the floor
of the cell. I ceased struggling. Some counter influence was raising an odd
curiosity in me.
He was setting the light slowly travelling along the stone flags close by the wall
over against us, and now, so guiding it, looked askance at me with a small,
greedy smile.
I looked, and saw twirling on the floor, in the patch of radiance cast by the lamp,
a little eddy of dust, it seemed. This eddy was never still, but went circling in
that stagnant place without apparent cause or influence; and, as it circled, it
moved slowly on by wall and corner, so that presently in its progress it must
reach us where we stood.
Now, draughts will play queer freaks in quiet places, and of this trifling
phenomenon I should have taken little note ordinarily. But, I must say at once,
that as I gazed upon the odd moving thing my heart seemed to fall in upon itself
like a drained artery.
"Johnson!" I cried, "I must get out of this. I don't know what's the matter, or—
Why do you hold me? D—n it! man, let me go; let me go, I say!"
As I grappled with him he dropped the lantern with a crash and flung his arms
violently about me.
"You don't!" he panted, the muscles of his bent and rigid neck seeming actually
to cut into my shoulder-blade. "You don't, by G—! You came of your own
accord, and now you shall take your bellyful!"
It was a struggle for life or death, or, worse, for life and reason. But I was young
and wiry, and held my own, if I could do little more. Yet there was something to
combat beyond the mere brute strength of the man I struggled with, for I fought
in an atmosphere of horror unexplainable, and I knew that inch by inch the thing
on the floor was circling round in our direction.
Suddenly in the breathing darkness I felt it close upon us, gave one mortal yell of
fear, and, with a last despairing fury, tore myself from the encircling arms, and
sprang into the corridor without. As I plunged and leapt, the warder clutched at
me, missed, caught a foot on the edge of the door, and, as the latter whirled to
with a clap, fell heavily at my feet in a fit. Then, as I stood staring down upon
him, steps sounded along the corridor and the voices of scared men hurrying up.
*****
Ill and shaken, and, for the time, little in love with life, yet fearing death as I had
never dreaded it before, I spent the rest of that horrible night huddled between
my crumpled sheets, fearing to look forth, fearing to think, wild only to be far
away, to be housed in some green and innocent hamlet, where I might forget the
madness and the terror in learning to walk the unvext paths of placid souls. I had
not fairly knocked under until alone with my new dread familiar. That unction I
could lay to my heart, at least. I had done the manly part by the stricken warder,
whom I had attended to his own home, in a row of little tenements that stood
south of the prison walls. I had replied to all inquiries with some dignity and
spirit, attributing my ruffled condition to an assault on the part of Johnson, when
he was already under the shadow of his seizure. I had directed his removal, and
grudged him no professional attention that it was in my power to bestow. But
afterwards, locked into my room, my whole nervous system broke up like a
trodden ant-hill, leaving me conscious of nothing but an aimless scurrying terror
and the black swarm of thoughts, so that I verily fancied my reason would give
under the strain.
Near morning I fell into a troubled sleep, throughout which the drawn twitch of
muscle seemed an accent on every word of ill-omen I had ever spelt out of the
alphabet of fear. If my body rested, my brain was an open chamber for any toad
of ugliness that listed to "sit at squat" in.
Suddenly I woke to the fact that there was a knocking at my door—that there
had been for some little time.
I cried, "Come in!" finding a weak restorative in the mere sound of my own
human voice; then, remembering the key was turned, bade the visitor wait until I
could come to him.
Scrambling, feeling dazed and white-livered, out of bed, I opened the door, and
met one of the warders on the threshold. The man looked scared, and his lips, I
noticed, were set in a somewhat boding fashion.
"Can you come at once, sir?" he said. "There's summat wrong with the
Governor."
I turned away, feeling sick. I hurriedly pulled on coat and trousers, and hurriedly
went off with my summoner. Reason was all absorbed in a wildest phantasy of
apprehension.
"Vokins see him go down the corridor about half after eight, sir, and see him give
a start like when he noticed the trap open. It's never been so before in my time.
Johnson must ha' done it last night, before he were took."
"Yes, yes."
"The man said the Governor went to shut it, it seemed, and to draw his face
to'ards the bars in so doin'. Then he see him a-lookin' through, as he thought; but
nat'rally it weren't no business of his'n, and he went off about his work. But
when he come anigh agen, fifteen minutes later, there were the Governor in the
same position; and he got scared over it, and called out to one or two of us."
"Why didn't one of you ask the Major if anything was wrong?"
"Bless you! we did; and no answer. And we pulled him, compatible with
discipline, but—"
"But what?"
"He's stuck."
"Stuck!"
"See for yourself, sir. That's all I ask."
I did, a moment later. A little group was collected about the door of cell 47, and
the members of it spoke together in whispers, as if they were frightened men.
One young fellow, with a face white in patches, as if it had been floured, slid
from them as I approached, and accosted me tremulously.
"Don't be an ass!" I said, in a determined voice, "There's nothing here that can't
be explained. Make way for me, please!"
They parted and let me through, and I saw him. He stood, spruce, frock-coated,
dapper, as he always was, with his face pressed against and into the grill, and
either hand raised and clenched tightly round a bar of the trap. His posture was
as of one caught and striving frantically to release himself; yet the narrowness of
the interval between the rails precluded so extravagant an idea. He stood quite
motionless—taut and on the strain, as it were—and nothing of his face was
visible but the back ridges of his jaw-bones, showing white through a bush of
red whiskers.
"Major Shrike!" I rapped out, and, allowing myself no hesitation, reached forth
my hand and grasped his shoulder. The body vibrated under my touch, but he
neither answered nor made sign of hearing me. Then I pulled at him forcibly, and
ever with increasing strength. His fingers held like steel braces. He seemed glued
to the trap, like Theseus to the rock.
Hastily I peered round, to see if I could get glimpse of his face. I noticed enough
to send me back with a little stagger.
"Has none of you got a key to this door?" I asked, reviewing the scared faces
about me, than which my own was no less troubled, I feel sure.
"Only the Governor, sir," said the warder who had fetched me. "There's not a
man but him amongst us that ever seen this opened."
He was wrong there, I could have told him; but held my tongue, for obvious
reasons.
Not a soul stirred. Even had not sense of discipline precluded, that of a certain
inhuman atmosphere made fearful creatures of them all.
I turned once more to the stiff-strung figure, had actually put hand on it, when an
exclamation from Vokins arrested me.
Sure enough there was—Johnson's, no doubt, that had been shot from its socket
by the clapping to of the door, and afterwards kicked aside by the warder in his
convulsive struggles.
I stooped, only too thankful for the respite, and drew it forth. I had seen it but
once before, yet I recognised it at a glance.
Now, I confess, my heart felt ill as I slipped the key into the wards, and a
sickness of resentment at the tyranny of Fate in making me its helpless minister
surged up in my veins. Once, with my fingers on the iron loop, I paused, and
ventured a fearful side glance at the figure whose crookt elbow almost touched
my face; then, strung to the high pitch of inevitability, I shot the lock, pushed at
the door, and in the act, made a back leap into the corridor.
Scarcely, in doing so, did I look for the totter and collapse outwards of the rigid
form. I had expected to see it fall away, face down, into the cell, as its support
swung from it. Yet it was, I swear, as if something from within had relaxed its
grasp and given the fearful dead man a swingeing push outwards as the door
opened.
It went on its back, with a dusty slap on the stone flags, and from all its
spectators—me included—came a sudden drawn sound, like wind in a keyhole.
What can I say, or how describe it? A dead thing it was—but the face!
Barred with livid scars where the grating rails had crossed it, the rest seemed to
have been worked and kneaded into a mere featureless plate of yellow and
expressionless flesh.
*****
There was an interval following the experience above narrated, during which a
certain personality that had once been mine was effaced or suspended, and I
seemed a passive creature, innocent of the least desire of independence. It was
not that I was actually ill or actually insane. A merciful Providence set my finer
wits slumbering, that was all, leaving me a sufficiency of the grosser faculties
that were necessary to the right ordering of my behaviour.
I kept to my room, it is true, and even lay a good deal in bed; but this was more
to satisfy the busy scruples of a locum tenens—a practitioner of the
neighbourhood, who came daily to the prison to officiate in my absence—than to
cosset a complaint that in its inactivity was purely negative. I could review what
had happened with a calmness as profound as if I had read of it in a book. I
could have wished to continue my duties, indeed, had the power of insistence
remained to me. But the saner medicus was acute where I had gone blunt, and
bade me to the restful course. He was right. I was mentally stunned, and had I
not slept off my lethargy, I should have gone mad in an hour—leapt at a bound,
probably, from inertia to flaming lunacy.
"Hammond," I said one day, "I have never yet asked you. How did I give my
evidence at the inquest?"
"That's good. But it was a difficult course to steer. You conducted the post-
mortem. Did any peculiarity in the dead man's face strike you?"
"Nothing but this: that the excessive contraction of the bicipital muscles had
brought the features into such forcible contact with the bars as to cause bruising
and actual abrasion. He must have been dead some little time when you found
him."
"And nothing else? You noticed nothing else in his face—a sort of obliteration of
what makes one human, I mean?"
"Oh, dear, no! nothing but the painful constriction that marks any ordinary fatal
attack of angina pectoris.—There's a rum breach of promise case in the paper to-
day. You should read it; it'll make you laugh."
I had no more inclination to laugh than to sigh; but I accepted the change of
subject with an equanimity now habitual to me.
*****
One morning I sat up in bed, and knew that consciousness was wide awake in
me once more. It had slept, and now rose refreshed, but trembling. Looking
back, all in a flutter of new responsibility, along the misty path by way of which
I had recently loitered, I shook with an awful thankfulness at sight of the pitfalls
I had skirted and escaped—of the demons my witlessness had baffled.
The joy of life was in my heart again, but chastened and made pitiful by
experience.
"Go slow at first, old man," he said. "You've fairly sloughed the old skin; but
give the sun time to toughen the new one. Walk in it at present, and be content."
I was, in great measure, and I followed his advice. I got leave of absence, and
ran down for a month in the country to a certain house we wot of, where kindly
ministration to my convalescence was only one of the many blisses to be put to
an account of rosy days.
Ah, me! ah, me! when was it? A year ago, or two-thirds of a lifetime? Alas!
"Age with stealing steps hath clawde me with his crowch." And will the yews
root in my heart, I wonder?
I was well, sane, recovered, when one morning, towards the end of my visit, I
received a letter from Hammond, enclosing a packet addressed to me, and
jealously sealed and fastened. My friend's communication ran as follows:—
"There died here yesterday afternoon a warder, Johnson—he who had that
apoplectic seizure, you will remember, the night before poor Shrike's exit. I
attended him to the end, and, being alone with him an hour before the finish, he
took the enclosed from under his pillow, and a solemn oath from me that I would
forward it direct to you, sealed as you will find it, and permit no other soul to
examine or even touch it. I acquit myself of the charge, but, my dear fellow, with
an uneasy sense of the responsibility I incur in thus possibly suggesting to you a
retrospect of events which you had much best consign to the limbo of the—not
unexplainable, but not worth trying to explain. It was patent from what I have
gathered that you were in an overstrung and excitable condition at that time, and
that your temporary collapse was purely nervous in its character. It seems there
was some nonsense abroad in the prison about a certain cell, and that there were
fools who thought fit to associate Johnson's attack and the other's death with the
opening of that cell's door. I have given the new Governor a tip, and he has
stopped all that. We have examined the cell in company, and found it, as one
might suppose, a very ordinary chamber. The two men died perfectly natural
deaths, and there is the last to be said on the subject. I mention it only from the
fear that enclosed may contain some allusion to the rubbish, a perusal of which
might check the wholesome convalescence of your thoughts. If you take my
advice, you will throw the packet into the fire unread. At least, if you do
examine it, postpone the duty till you feel yourself absolutely impervious to any
mental trickery, and—bear in mind that you are a worthy member of a
particularly matter-of-fact and unemotional profession."
*****
I smiled at the last clause, for I was now in a condition to feel a rather warm
shame over my erst weak-knee'd collapse before a sheet and an illuminated
turnip. I took the packet to my bedroom, shut the door, and sat myself down by
the open window. The garden lay below me, and the dewy meadows beyond. In
the one, bees were busy ruffling the ruddy gillyflowers and April stocks; in the
other, the hedge twigs were all frosted with Mary buds, as if Spring had brushed
them with the fleece of her wings in passing.
I fetched a sigh of content as I broke the seal of the packet and brought out the
enclosure. Somewhere in the garden a little sardonic laugh was clipt to silence. It
came from groom or maid, no doubt; yet it thrilled me with an odd feeling of
uncanniness, and I shivered slightly.
"Bah!" I said to myself determinedly. "There is a shrewd nip in the wind, for all
the show of sunlight;" and I rose, pulled down the window, and resumed my
seat.
Then in the closed room, that had become deathly quiet by contrast, I opened
and read the dead man's letter.
*****
"Sir,—I hope you will read what I here put down. I lay it on you as a solemn
injunction, for I am a dying man, and I know it. And to who is my death due, and
the Governor's death, if not to you, for your pryin' and curiosity, as surely as if
you had drove a nife through our harts? Therefore, I say, Read this, and take my
burden from me, for it has been a burden; and now it is right that you that
interfered should have it on your own mortal shoulders. The Major is dead and I
am dying, and in the first of my fit it went on in my head like cimbells that the
trap was left open, and that if he passed he would look in and it would get him.
For he knew not fear, neither would he submit to bullying by God or devil.
"Now I will tell you the truth, and Heaven quit you of your responsibility in our
destruction.
"There wasn't another man to me like the Governor in all the countries of the
world. Once he brought me to life after doctors had given me up for dead; but he
willed it, and I lived; and ever afterwards I loved him as a dog loves its master.
That was in the Punjab; and I came home to England with him, and was his
servant when he got his appointment to the jail here. I tell you he was a proud
and fierce man, but under control and tender to those he favoured; and I will tell
you also a strange thing about him. Though he was a soldier and an officer, and
strict in discipline as made men fear and admire him, his heart at bottom was all
for books, and literature, and such-like gentle crafts. I had his confidence, as a
man gives his confidence to his dog, and before me sometimes he unbent as he
never would before others. In this way I learnt the bitter sorrow of his life. He
had once hoped to be a poet, acknowledged as such before the world. He was by
natur' an idelist, as they call it, and God knows what it meant to him to come out
of the woods, so to speak, and sweat in the dust of cities; but he did it, for his
will was of tempered steel. He buried his dreams in the clouds and came down to
earth greatly resolved, but with one undying hate. It is not good to hate as he
could, and worse to be hated by such as him; and I will tell you the story, and
what it led to.
"It was when he was a subaltern that he made up his mind to the plunge. For
years he had placed all his hopes and confidents in a book of verses he had
wrote, and added to, and improved during that time. A little encouragement, a
little word of praise, was all he looked for, and then he was ready to buckle to
again, profitin' by advice, and do better. He put all the love and beauty of his
heart into that book, and at last, after doubt, and anguish, and much diffidents, he
published it and give it to the world. Sir, it fell what they call still-born from the
press. It was like a green leaf flutterin' down in a dead wood. To a proud and
hopeful man, bubblin' with music, the pain of neglect, when he come to realize
it, was terrible. But nothing was said, and there was nothing to say. In silence he
had to endure and suffer.
"But one day, during maneuvers, there came to the camp a grey-faced man, a
newspaper correspondent, and young Shrike knocked up a friendship with him.
Now how it come about I cannot tell, but so it did that this skip-kennel wormed
the lad's sorrow out of him, and his confidents, swore he'd been damnabilly used,
and that when he got back he'd crack up the book himself in his own paper. He
was a fool for his pains, and a serpent in his cruelty. The notice come out as
promised, and, my God! the author was laughed and mocked at from beginning
to end. Even confidentses he had given to the creature was twisted to his
ridicule, and his very appearance joked over. And the mess got wind of it, and
made a rare story for the dog days.
"He bore it like a soldier, and that he became heart and liver from the moment.
But he put something to the account of the grey-faced man and locked it up in
his breast.
"He come across him again years afterwards in India, and told him very politely
that he hadn't forgotten him, and didn't intend to. But he was anigh losin' sight of
him there for ever and a day, for the creature took cholera, or what looked like it,
and rubbed shoulders with death and the devil before he pulled through. And he
come across him again over here, and that was the last of him, as you shall see
presently.
"Once, after I knew the Major (he were Captain then), I was a-brushin' his coat,
and he stood a long while before the glass. Then he twisted upon me, with a
smile on his mouth, and says he,—
"'The dog was right, Johnson: this isn't the face of a poet. I was a presumtious
ass, and born to cast up figgers with a pen behind my ear.'
"'Captain,' I says, 'if you was skinned, you'd look like any other man without his.
The quality of a soul isn't expressed by a coat.'
"'Well,' he answers, 'my soul's pretty clean-swept, I think, save for one Bluebeard
chamber in it that's been kep' locked ever so many years. It's nice and dirty by
this time, I expect,' he says. Then the grin comes on his mouth again. 'I'll open it
some day,' he says, 'and look. There's something in it about comparing me to a
dancing dervish, with the wind in my petticuts. Perhaps I'll get the chance to set
somebody else dancing by-and-by.'
"He did, and took it, and the Bluebeard chamber come to be opened in this very
jail.
"It was when the system was lying fallow, so to speak, and the prison was
deserted. Nobody was there but him and me and the echoes from the empty
courts. The contract for restoration hadn't been signed, and for months, and more
than a year, we lay idle, nothing bein' done.
"Near the beginnin' of this period, one day comes, for the third time of the
Major's seein' him, the grey-faced man. 'Let bygones be bygones,' he says. 'I was
a good friend to you, though you didn't know it; and now, I expect, you're in the
way to thank me.'
"'Of course,' he answers. 'Where would be your fame and reputation as one of
the leadin' prison reformers of the day if you had kep' on in that riming
nonsense?'
"'I've come,' says the grey-faced man, 'to examine and report upon your system.'
"'Absolutely without. I haven't even a wife to advise me,' he says, with a yellow
grin. What once passed for cholera had set the bile on his skin like paint, and he
had caught a manner of coughing behind his hand like a toast-master.
"'I know,' says the Major, looking him steady in the face, 'that what you say
about me and my affairs is sure to be actuated by conscientious motives.'
"'Not at all,' says the Major; 'and, in proof, I invite you to be my guest for the
night, and to-morrow I'll show you over the prison and explain my system.'
"The creature cried, 'Done!' and they set to and discussed jail matters in great
earnestness. I couldn't guess the Governor's intentions, but, somehow, his
manner troubled me. And yet I can remember only one point of his talk. He were
always dead against making public show of his birds. 'They're there for
reformation, not ignimony,' he'd say. Prisons in the old days were often, with the
asylum and the work'us, made the holiday show-places of towns. I've heard of
one Justice of the Peace, up North, who, to save himself trouble, used to sign a
lot of blank orders for leave to view, so that applicants needn't bother him when
they wanted to go over. They've changed all that, and the Governor were
instrumental in the change.
"'It's against my rule,' he said that night, 'to exhibit to a stranger without a
Government permit; but, seein' the place is empty, and for old remembrance'
sake, I'll make an exception in your favour, and you shall learn all I can show
you of the inside of a prison.'
"He treated his guest royally; so much that when we assembled the next mornin'
for the inspection, the grey-faced man were shaky as a wet dog. But the Major
were all set prim and dry, like the soldier he was.
"We went straight away down corridor B, and at cell 47 we stopped.
"'We will begin our inspection here,' said the Governor. 'Johnson, open the door.'
"I had the keys of the row; fitted in the right one, and pushed open the door.
"'After you, sir,' said the Major; and the creature walked in, and he shut the door
on him.
"I think he smelt a rat at once, for he began beating on the wood and calling out
to us. But the Major only turned round to me with his face like a stone.
"'Take that key from the bunch,' he said, 'and give it to me.'
"I obeyed, all in a tremble, and he took and put it in his pocket.
"'My God, Major!' I whispered, 'what are you going to do with him?'
"'Silence, sir!' he said. 'How dare you question your superior officer!'
"The Governor, he listened to it a moment like music; then he unbolted and flung
open the trap, and the creature's face came at it like a wild beast's.
"'Sir,' said the Major to it, 'you can't better understand my system than by
experiencing it. What an article for your paper you could write already—almost
as pungint a one as that in which you ruined the hopes and prospects of a young
cockney poet.'
"The man mouthed at the bars. He was half-mad, I think, in that one minute.
"'When you are quite quiet—deathly quiet,' said the Major, 'you shall come out.
Not before;' and he shut the trap in its face very softly.
"'Come, Johnson, march!' he said, and took the lead, and we walked out of the
prison.
"I was like to faint, but I dared not disobey, and the man's screeching followed us
all down the empty corridors and halls, until we shut the first great door on it.
"It may have gone on for hours, alone in that awful emptiness. The creature was
a reptile, but the thought sickened my heart.
"And from that hour till his death, five months later, he rotted and maddened in
his dreadful tomb."
*****
There was more, but I pushed the ghastly confession from me at this point in
uncontrollable loathing and terror. Was it possible—possible, that injured vanity
could so falsify its victim's every tradition of decency?
"Oh!" I muttered, "what a disease is ambition! Who takes one step towards it
puts his foot on Alsirat!"
It was minutes before my shocked nerves were equal to a resumption of the task;
but at last I took it up again, with a groan.
*****
"I don't think at first I realized the full mischief the Governor intended to do. At
least, I hoped he only meant to give the man a good fright and then let him go. I
might have known better. How could he ever release him without ruining
himself?
"The next morning he summoned me to attend him. There was a strange new
look of triumph in his face, and in his hand he held a heavy hunting-crop. I pray
to God he acted in madness, but my duty and obedience was to him.
"'There is sport toward, Johnson,' he said. 'My dervish has got to dance.'
"I followed him quiet. We listened when I opened the jail door, but the place was
silent as the grave. But from the cell, when we reached it, came a low,
whispering sound.
"'All right,' he said, and put the key in the door and flung it open.
"He were sittin' crouched on the ground, and he looked up at us vacant-like. His
face were all fallen down, as it were, and his mouth never ceased to shake and
whisper.
"The Major shut the door and posted me in a corner. Then he moved to the
creature with his whip.
"'Up!' he cried. 'Up, you dervish, and dance to us!' and he brought the thong with
a smack across his shoulders.
"The creature leapt under the blow, and then to his feet with a cry, and the Major
whipped him till he danced. All round the cell he drove him, lashing and cutting
—and again, and many times again, until the poor thing rolled on the floor
whimpering and sobbing. I shall have to give an account of this some day. I shall
have to whip my master with a red-hot serpent round the blazing furnace of the
pit, and I shall do it with agony, because here my love and my obedience was to
him.
"When it was finished, he bade me put down food and drink that I had brought
with me, and come away with him; and we went, leaving him rolling on the floor
of the cell, and shut him alone in the empty prison until we should come again at
the same time to-morrow.
"So day by day this went on, and the dancing three or four times a week, until at
last the whip could be left behind, for the man would scream and begin to dance
at the mere turning of the key in the lock. And he danced for four months, but
not the fifth.
"Nobody official came near us all this time. The prison stood lonely as a
deserted ruin where dark things have been done.
"Once, with fear and trembling, I asked my master how he would account for the
inmate of 47 if he was suddenly called upon by authority to open the cell; and he
answered, smiling,—
"I should say it was my mad brother. By his own account, he showed me a
brother's love, you know. It would be thought a liberty; but the authorities, I
think, would stretch a point for me. But if I got sufficient notice, I should clear
out the cell.'
"I asked him how, with my eyes rather than my lips, and he answered me only
with a look.
"And all this time he was, outside the prison, living the life of a good man—
helping the needy, ministering to the poor. He even entertained occasionally, and
had more than one noisy party in his house.
"But the fifth month the creature danced no more. He was a dumb, silent animal
then, with matted hair and beard; and when one entered he would only look up at
one pitifully, as if he said, 'My long punishment is nearly ended'. How it came
that no inquiry was ever made about him I know not, but none ever was. Perhaps
he was one of the wandering gentry that nobody ever knows where they are next.
He was unmarried, and had apparently not told of his intended journey to a soul.
"And at the last he died in the night. We found him lying stiff and stark in the
morning, and scratched with a piece of black crust on a stone of the wall these
strange words: 'An Eddy on the Floor'. Just that—nothing else.
"Then the Governor came and looked down, and was silent. Suddenly he caught
me by the shoulder.
"'Johnson', he cried, 'if it was to do again, I would do it! I repent of nothing. But
he has paid the penalty, and we call quits. May he rest in peace!'
"'Amen!' I answered low. Yet I knew our turn must come for this.
"We buried him in quicklime under the wall where the murderers lie, and I made
the cell trim and rubbed out the writing, and the Governor locked all up and took
away the key. But he locked in more than he bargained for.
"For months the place was left to itself, and neither of us went anigh 47. Then
one day the workmen was to be put in, and the Major he took me round with him
for a last examination of the place before they come.
"He hesitated a bit outside a particular cell; but at last he drove in the key and
kicked open the door.
"My heart was thumpin', I tell you, as I looked over his shoulder. What did we
see? What you well understand, sir; but, for all it was no more than that, we
knew as well as if it was shouted in our ears that it was him, dancin'. It went
round by the walls and drew towards us, and as it stole near I screamed out, 'An
Eddy on the Floor!' and seized and dragged the Major out and clapped to the
door behind us.
"'Johnson', he said, 'I'm not to be frighted or coerced. He may dance, but he shall
dance alone. Get a screwdriver and some screws and fasten up this trap. No one
from this time looks into this cell.'
"I did as he bid me, sweatin'; and I swear all the time I wrought I dreaded a hand
would come through the trap and clutch mine.
"On one pretex' or another, from that day till the night you meddled with it, he
kep' that cell as close shut as a tomb. And he went his ways, discardin' the past
from that time forth. Now and again a over-sensitive prisoner in the next cell
would complain of feelin' uncomfortable. If possible, he would be removed to
another; if not, he was damd for his fancies. And so it might be goin' on to now,
if you hadn't pried and interfered. I don't blame you at this moment, sir. Likely
you were an instrument in the hands of Providence; only, as the instrument, you
must now take the burden of the truth on your own shoulders. I am a dying man,
but I cannot die till I have confessed. Per'aps you may find it in your hart some
day to give up a prayer for me—but it must be for the Major as well.
"J. JOHNSON."
*****
On a day early in the summer of the present year Miss Dinah Groom was found
lying dead off a field-path of the little obscure Wiltshire village which she had
named her "rest and be thankful." At the date of her decease she was not an old
woman, though any one marking her white hair and much-furrowed features
might have supposed her one. The hair, however, was ample in quantity, the
wrinkles rather so many under-scores of energy than evidences of senility; and
until the blinds were down over her soul, she had looked into and across the
world with a pair of eyes that seemed to reflect the very blue and white of a June
sky. No doubt she had thought to breast the hills and sail the seas again in some
renaissance of vigour. No doubt her "retreat," like a Roman Catholic's, was
designed to be merely temporary. She aped the hermit for the sake of a sojourn
in the hermitage. She came to her island of Avalon to be restored of her weary
limbs and her blistered feet, so to speak; and there her heart, too weak for her
spirit, failed her, and she fell amongst the young budding poppies, and died.
Yet (and here I must speak with discretion, for I have no sufficient data to go
upon) there was that of contradictoriness in her character that, I have reason to
believe, she had borne children, and had even been right and particular as to their
temporal welfare until such time as, in the nature of things, they were of an age
to make shift for themselves. This, virtually, I know to be the case; and that, once
quit of the primitive maternal responsibility, she gave no more thought to them
than a thrush gives to its fledglings when she has educated them to their first
flights, and to the useful knack of cracking a snail on a stone.
My own feeling about Dinah Groom was that she had "thrown back" a long way
over the heads of heredity, and that, in her fearlessness, in her undegenerate
physique, in the animal regularity of her face and form, she presented to modern
days a startling aboriginal type.
*****
Now, I must premise that I arrogate to myself no exhibitory rights in this lady.
She was familiar with and to many from the foremost ranks of those who "follow
knowledge like a sinking star"; those great and restless spirits to whom inaction
reads stagnation. To such, in all probability, I tell, in speaking of Dinah Groom, a
twice-told tale; and, therefore—inasmuch as I make it my business only to print
what is hitherto unrecorded—to them I give the assurance that I do not claim to
have "discovered" their friend.
*****
"They are the mastodons of Cuvier, no doubt; but, then, Cuvier never saw a
mastodon, you know."
"But I have; and I tell you Griset and Cuvier are very nearly right."
I expressed no surprise.
"Yes, I think I am; and there is a quiet of expectancy abroad. I hear the ghost of
my dead brother walking in the corridor, Dinah; and we are all waiting for you to
speak."
She struck a match, kindled the little crackling tube, and threw the light out into
the shrubbery. It traced a tiny arc of flame and vanished. The sky was full of the
mewing of lost kittens, it seemed. The sound came from innumerable peewits,
that fled and circled above the slopes of the darkening meadows below.
"What an uncomfortable seer you are!" she said, "to people this dear human
night with your fancies. No doubt, now, you will read between the lines of that
bird speech down there?" (She looked at me curiously, but with none of the
mournful speculativeness of a soul struggling against the dimness of its own
vision.) "To me it is articulate happiness—nothing more abstruse. Yes, I have
seen a mastodon; and I was as glad to happen on the beast as a naturalist is glad
to find a missing link in a chain of evidence. From the moment, I knew myself
quite clearly to be the recovered heir to this abused planet."
She paused a moment, and contracted her brows, as if regretfully and in anger.
"If I had only seen it sooner!" she cried, low; "before I had, in my pride of
strength, tested the poison that has bewildered the brains of my sisters!"
Her general reserve was her self-armour against the bolts of the Philistines. What
worldling would not have read mania in much that was spoken by this sane
woman? Yet, indeed, if we were all to find the power to give expression to our
inmost thoughts, madness and sanity would have to change places in the order of
affairs.
"Once," said Dinah—"and it was when I was a young woman—a man in whom I
was interested shipped as passenger on a whaling vessel. This friend was what is
called a degenerate. Physically and morally he had yielded his claim to any share
in that province of the sun, that his race had conquered and annexed only to find
it antipathetic to its needs. Combative effort was grown impossible to him, as in
time it will grow to you all. You drop from the world like dead flies from a wall.
He could not physic his soul with woods, and groves, and waters. To his
perceptions, life was become an abnormality—a disease of which he sickened,
as you all must when the last of the fever of aggression has been diluted out of
your veins. You die of your triumph, as the bee dies of his own weapon of
offence; and you can find no antidote to the poison in the nature you have
inoculated with your own virus.
"He consented, and, after some difficulty (for there is an economy of room in
whalers), we obtained passage in a vessel and sailed into the unknown. Our life
and our food were simple and rugged; but the keen air, the relief from luxury, the
novelty and the wonder, wrought upon my companion and renewed him, so that
presently I was amused to note in him signs of a moral preening—some smug
resumption of that arrogant air of superiority that is a tradition with your race."
Miss Groom here puckered her lips, and breathed a little destructive laugh upon
her cigarette ash.
"It did not last long," she said. "We encountered very bad weather, and his
nerves again went by the board. That was in the 60th longitude, I think (where
whales were still to be found in those years), and seven hundred miles or so to
the east of Spitzbergen. On the day—it was in August—that the storm first
overtook us, the boats were out in pursuit of a 'right' whale, as, I believe, the men
called it—a great bull creature, and piebald like a horse; and I saw the spouting
of his breath as if a water main had burst in a London fog. The wind came in a
sudden charge from the northwest, and the whale dived with a harpoon in its
back; and in the confusion a reel fouled, and one of the boats was whipt under in
a moment—half a mile down, perhaps—and its crew drawn with it, and their
lungs, full of air, burst like bubbles. We had no time to think of them. We got the
other boat-load on board, and then the gale sent us crashing down the slopes of
the sea. I have no knowledge of how long we were curst of the tempest and the
sport of its ravings. I only know that when it released us at last, we had been
hurled a thousand miles eastwards. The long interval was all a hellish jangle in
which time seemed obliterated. Sometimes we saw the sun—a furious red globe;
and we seemed to stand still while it raced down the sky and ricocheted over the
furthermost waves like a red-hot cannon ball. Sometimes in pitch darkness the
wild sense of flight and expectation was an ecstasy. But through all my friend lay
in a half-delirious stupor.
"At length a morning broke, full of icy scud, but the sea panting and exhausted
of its rage. As a child catches its breath after a storm of tears, so it would heave
up suddenly, and vibrate, and sink; and we rocked upon it, a ruined hulk. We
were off a flat, vacant shore—if shore you could call it—whose margin, for
miles inland, it seemed, undulated with the lifting of the swell. It was treeless
desolation manifest; and on our sea side, as far as the eye could reach, the water
bobbed and winked with countless spars of ice.
"I will tell you at once, my friend,—we were brought to opposite an inhuman
swamp on the coast of Siberia, fifty miles or more to the west of North-east
Cape; and there what remained of the crew made shift to cast anchor; and for a
day and night the ragged ship curtsied to the land, like a blind beggar to an
empty street, and we only dozed in our corners and wondered at the silence.
"By-and-by the men made a raft, and that took us all ashore. There was
something like a definite coast-line, then; but for long before we touched it the
undersides of the planks were scraping and hissing over vegetation. This was the
winter fur of the land—thick, coarse tundra moss; and on that we pitched a
camp, and on that we remained for long weeks while the ship was mending. It
was a weird, lonely time. Once or twice strange, wandering creatures came our
way—little, belted men, with hairless faces, who rode up on strong horses, and
liked to exhibit their skilful management of them. They talked to us in their
chirpy jargon (Toongus, I think it was called); but jargon it must needs remain to
us.
"Well, we made a patch of the hulk, and we shipped in her again. We were
fortunate to be able to do that, for, with every stiffish wind blowing inshore, we
had feared she would drag her moorings and ground immovably on the swamps.
The land, indeed, was so flat and low that, whenever the sea rose at all, it
threshed the very plains and crackled in the moss; and we were glad, despite the
risk, to leave so lifeless a place."
Dinah paused to light another cigarette, and to inhale the ecstasy of the first puff
or so before she continued. Up through the still evening, from a curve of the
main road that crooked an elbow to her front garden, came what sounded like the
purring of a great cat—the wind in the telegraph wires.
"I do please; for why should I keep it to myself? It makes no difference; only I
warn you, if you quote me, you will be writ down a fool or a maniac. This
relation lacks witnesses, for the whaler—that I subsequently quitted for another
homing vessel—was never heard of in port any more."
She looked at me with some serious scrutiny before she went on.
"Now, one morning early in September, a dense bright fog dropped suddenly
upon the waters. We were making what sail we could—with our crippled spars
and stunted trees of masts—and this it were useless to shorten, and so invite a
rearward bombardment from the chasing hummocks. So we kept our course by
the compass, and trailed on through a blind mist while fear drummed in our
throats. The demoralization of my friend was by this time complete. For myself,
I seldom had a thought but that Nature would sheathe her claws when she played
with me.
"The words were on his lips when we struck with a noise like the splintering of
glass. We were all thrown down, and my companion screamed like a mad thing.
The captain rose and ran to the bows; and in a moment he came back and his
beard was shaking.
"There you have man in his invincible moods. They drank till they were in a
condition to face death; and then they found that our situation was rather
improved than otherwise by the collision. For—so it appeared—we had run full
tilt for a perpendicular fissure in a huge block, and into that our bows were
firmly wedged, the nature of the impact distributing the shock, and the berg itself
carrying us along with it and protecting us.
"Now the dipping motion of the vessel was exchanged for a heavy regular wash
along its stern quarters; for the bows were so much raised as that I felt a little
strain on my knees as I went forward to satisfy my curiosity with a view of the
icy mass into which we were penetrated. I waited, indeed, until the crew were
come aft again from looking, and my friend crept timidly at my shoulder; but
when we reached the stem, there was one of the hands, a little soberer than his
fellows, sprawled over the bulwarks, and staring with all his eyes into the green
lift of the wall against him.
"'Nowt, nowt,' said he; 'but a turble monster, like a pram stuck in jelly.'
"I laughed, and went to his side. The fog, as I have said, was dense and bright,
and one could see into it a little way, as into a milky white agate. But now and
again a film of it would pull thin, and then sunlight came through and made a
dim radiance of the ice.
"He cocked an eye and leered up at me. 'Look steady and sober,' he said, 'and
you'll make en owut like as in a glass darkly.'
"I gave a little gasp and my friend a cry before the words were issued from the
man's mouth. Drawn by some current of air, the fog at the moment blew out of
the cleft, like smoke from a chimney; and there, before our gaze, was a great
curved tusk coming up through the ice and inside it.
"Now I clapped my hands in an agony, lest the fog should close in again, and the
vision fade before my eyes; for, following the sweep of the tusk, I was aware of
the phantom presentment of some monster creature lying imbedded within the
ice, its mighty carcase prostrate as it had fallen; the conformation of its
enormous forehead presented directly to our gaze. Its little toffee-ball eyes—
little proportionately, that is to say—squinted at us, it seemed, through half-
closed lids, and a huge, hairy trunk lay curled, like the proboscis of a dead moth,
between its tree-like fore-legs. Away beyond, the great red-brown drum of its
hide bellied upward on ribs as thick as a Dutch galliot's, and sprouting from its
shoulders was the hump I have mentioned, but here, from its position, sprawled
abroad and lying over in a shapeless mass.
"There was something else—horribly nauseating but for its strangeness. The
brute had been partly disembowelled, as there was ample evidence to show, for
the ice had preserved all.
"I saw in a moment; turned, and called excitedly to the captain. He—all the crew
—came tumbling forward up the slippery deck. I seized him by the shoulder.
"'Do you see?' I screamed—'the human hand beckoning to us from that great
body!'
"'One o' them bloomin' pre-hadymite cows!' he muttered; 'caught in the cold nip,
by thunder! and some unfortnit crept into her for warmth.'
"He stared at me. All in an instant a little paltry demon of avarice blinked out of
his eye-holes.
"'Why,' he said slowly, 'who knows but it mayn't be a gal a-jingling from top to
toe with gold curtain rings!'
"He was a furious dare-devil immediately, and quick, and savage, and
peremptory. His spirit entered into his men. They went over the side with pikes
and axes, and, scrambling for any foothold, set to work on the ice like maniacs.
In the lust of cupidity they did not even think how they wrought against their
own safety and that of the ship.
"The point of the uppermost tusk came to within a foot of the ice-surface. This
they soon reached, and, prising frantically with crowbars, flaked off and rolled
away half-ton blocks of the superincumbent mass. I need not detail the fierce
process. In half an hour they had laid bare a great segment of that part of the
trunk whence the hand protruded, and then they paused, and at a word flung
down their tools.
"I was leaning over the bulwarks watching them. I could contain my excitement
no longer.
"They lay beneath the mighty ribs as in a cage, of which the intercostal spaces
were a foot in width, and the bars of a strength to maintain the enormous
pressure of that which had surrounded and entombed them; they lay in one close
group, their naked limbs smeared with the stain of their prison—a man, a
woman, and a tiny child. From their faces, and their unfallen flesh, they might
have been sleeping; but they were not; they were come down to us, a transfixture
of death—prehistoric people in a prehistoric brute, and their eyes—their eyes!"
Dinah's voice trailed off into silence. Some expression that I could not interpret
was on her face. There was regret in it, but nothing of pathos or mysticism.
Suddenly she breathed out a great sigh and resumed her narrative.
"You will want to know how they looked, these lifeless survivors of a remote
race from a remote time? I will try to tell you. The men hacked away the ribs
with their axes, and laid bare the group lying in the hollow scooped out of the
fallen beast. They were little people, and the man, according to your modern
canons of taste, was by far the most beautiful of the three. He sat erect, with one
uplifted arm projected through the ribs; as if, surprised by the frost-stroke, he
had started to escape, and had been petrified in the act. His face, wondering and
delicate as a baby's, was hairless; and his head only a pretty infantile down
covered—a curling floss as radiant as spun glass. His wide-open eyes glinted yet
with a hyacinth blue, and it was difficult to realize that they were dead and
vacant.
"The woman was of coarser mould, ruddy, vigorous, brown-haired and eyed. She
looked the very hamadryad of some blossoming tree, a sweet capricious
daughter of the blameless earth. Everything luxuriated in her—colour, hair, and
lusty flesh; and the child she held to her bosom with a manner that indescribably
commingled contempt, and resentment, and a passion of proprietorship.
"Now, my friend, I must tell you how the sight operated upon me and upon my
companion. For myself, I can only say that, looking upon that fine, independent
fore-mother of my race, I felt the sun in my veins and the winy fragrance of
antique woods and pastures. I laughed; I clapped my hands; I danced on the ice-
rubbish, so that they thought me mad. But, for the other—the man—he was in a
different plight. He was transfigured; his nervousness was gone in a flash. He
cast himself down upon his knees, and gazed and gazed, his hands clasped, upon
that sleek, mild progenitor of his, that pure image of gentle self-containment,
whose very meekness suggested an indomitable will.
"Suddenly he, my friend, cried out: 'This is one caught in the process of
materialization! It is not flesh; my God, no!'
"On the instant there came a splintering snap, and the floe rocked and curtsied.
"There was a wild scamper for safety. I was carried with the throng. It was not
until I was hauled on board once more that I thought of my friend. He still knelt
where we had fled from him, a wrapt, strange expression on his face.
"Now at that he turned his head and looked at me; but he never moved, and his
voice came to me quiet and exultant.
"'Lost!' he said, 'ay, for forty-three years: and here, here I find myself!'
"We dipped, and the wash of the water came about our bows. The block of ice
swerved, made a sluggish half-pirouette and dropped astern.
"With the echo of my cry he was a phantom, a blot, had vanished in the rearward
fog; and thereout a little joyous laugh came to me.
PROEM
Heaven's Nursery
Now I am to tell you of a thing that befell in the year 1665 of the Great Plague,
when the hearts of certain amongst men, grown callous in wickedness upon that
rebound from an inhuman austerity, were opened to the vision of a terror that
moved and spoke not in the silent places of the fields. Forasmuch as, however, in
the recovery from delirium a patient may marvel over the incredulity of
neighbours who refuse to give credence to the presentments that have been ipso
facto to him, so, the nation being sound again, and its constitution hale, I expect
little but a laugh for my piety in relating of the following incident; which,
nevertheless, is as essential true as that he who shall look through the knot-hole
in the plank of a coffin shall acquire the evil eye.
For, indeed, in those days of a wild fear and confusion, when every condition
that maketh for reason was set wandering by a devious path, and all men sitting
as in a theatre of death looked to see the curtain rise upon God knows what
horrors, it was vouchsafed to many to witness sights and sounds beyond the
compass of Nature, and that as if the devil and his minions had profited by the
anarchy to slip unobserved into the world. And I know that this is so, for all the
insolence of a recovered scepticism; and, as to the unseen, we are like one that
traverseth the dark with a lanthorn, himself the skipper of a little moving blot of
light, but a positive mark for any secret foe without the circumference of its
radiance.
Be that as it may, and whether it was our particular ill-fortune, or, as some
asserted, our particular wickedness, that made of our village an inviting back-
door of entrance to the Prince of Darkness, I know not; but so it is that disease
and contagion are ever inclined to penetrate by way of flaws or humours where
the veil of the flesh is already perforated, as a kite circleth round its quarry,
looking for the weak place to strike: and, without doubt, in that land of
corruption we were a very foul blot indeed.
How this came about it were idle to speculate; yet no man shall have the
hardihood to affirm that it was otherwise. Nor do I seek to extenuate myself,
who was in truth no better than my neighbours in most that made us a
community of drunkards and forswearers both lewd and abominable. For in that
village a depravity that was like madness had come to possess the heads of the
people, and no man durst take his stand on honesty or even common decency, for
fear he should be set upon by his comrades and drummed out of his government
on a pint pot. Yet for myself I will say was one only redeeming quality, and that
was the pure love I bore to my solitary orphaned child, the little Margery.
Now, our Vicar—a patient and God-fearing man, for all his predial tithes were
impropriated by his lord, that was an absentee and a sheriff in London—did little
to stem that current of lewdness that had set in strong with the Restoration. And
this was from no lack of virtue in himself, but rather from a natural invertebracy,
as one may say, and an order of mind that, yet being no order, is made the sport
of any sophister with a wit for paragram. Thus it always is that mere example is
of little avail without precept,—of which, however, it is an important condition,
—and that the successful directors of men be not those who go to the van and
lead, unconscious of the gibes and mockery in their rear, but such rather as drive
the mob before them with a smiting hand and no infirmity of purpose. So, if a
certain affection for our pastor dwelt in our hearts, no title of respect was there to
leaven it and justify his high office before Him that consigned the trust; and ever
deeper and deeper we sank in the slough of corruption, until was brought about
this pass—that naught but some scourging despotism of the Church should
acquit us of the fate of Sodom. That such, at the eleventh hour, was vouchsafed
us of God's mercy, it is my purpose to show; and, doubtless, this offering of a
loop-hole was to account by reason of the devil's having debarked his reserves,
as it were, in our port; and so quartering upon us a soldiery that we were, at no
invitation of our own, to maintain, stood us a certain extenuation.
It was late in the order of things before in our village so much as a rumour of the
plague reached us. Newspapers were not in those days, and reports, being by
word of mouth, travelled slowly, and were often spent bullets by the time they
fell amongst us. Yet, by May, some gossip there was of the distemper having
gotten a hold in certain quarters of London and increasing, and this alarmed our
people, though it made no abatement of their profligacy. But presently the
reports coming thicker, with confirmation of the terror and panic that was
enlarging on all sides, we must take measures for our safety; though into June
and July, when the pestilence was raging, none infected had come our way, and
that from our remote and isolated position. Yet it needs but fear for the crown to
that wickedness that is self-indulgence; and forasmuch as this fear fattens like a
toadstool on the decomposition it springs from, it grew with us to the proportions
that we were set to kill or destroy any that should approach us from the stricken
districts.
And then suddenly there appeared in our midst he that was appointed to be our
scourge and our cautery.
Whence he came, or how, no man of us could say. Only one day we were a
community of roysterers and scoffers, impious and abominable, and the next he
was amongst us smiting and thundering.
Some would have it that he was an old collegiate of our Vicar's, but at last one of
those wandering Dissenters that found never as now the times opportune to their
teachings—a theory to which our minister's treatment of the stranger gave
colour. For from the moment of his appearance he took the reins of government,
as it were, appropriating the pulpit and launching his bolts therefrom, with the
full consent and encouragement of the other. There were those, again, who were
resolved that his commission was from a high place, whither news of our infamy
had reached, and that we had best give him a respectful hearing, lest we should
run a chance of having our hearing stopped altogether. A few were convinced he
was no man at all, but rather a fiend sent to thresh us with the scourge of our
own contriving, that we might be tender, like steak, for the cooking; and yet
other few regarded him with terror, as an actual figure or embodiment of the
distemper.
But, generally, after the first surprise, the feeling of resentment at his intrusion
woke and gained ground, and we were much put about that he should have thus
assumed the pastorship without invitation, quartering with our Vicar; who kept
himself aloof and was little seen, and seeking to drive us by terror, and
amazement, and a great menace of retribution. For, in truth, this was not the
method to which we were wont, and it both angered and disturbed us.
This feeling would have enlarged the sooner, perhaps, were it not for a certain
restraining influence possessed of the new-comer, which neighboured him with
darkness and mystery. For he was above the common tall, and ever appeared in
public with a slouched hat, that concealed all the upper part of his face and
showed little otherwise but the dense black beard that dropped upon his breast
like a shadow.
Now with August came a fresh burst of panic, how the desolation increased and
the land was overrun with swarms of infected persons seeking an asylum from
the city; and our anger rose high against the stranger, who yet dwelt with us and
encouraged the distemper of our minds by furious denunciations of our guilt.
Thus far, for all the corruption of our hearts, we had maintained the practice of
church-going, thinking, maybe, poor fools! to hoodwink the Almighty with a
show of reverence; but now, as by a common consent, we neglected the
observances and loitered of a Sabbath in the fields, and thither at the last the
strange man pursued us and ended the matter.
For so it fell that at the time of the harvest's ripening a goodish body of us males
was gathered one Sunday for coolness about the neighbourhood of the dripping
well, whose waters were a tradition, for they had long gone dry. This well was
situate in a sort of cave or deep scoop at the foot of a cliff of limestone, to which
the cultivated ground that led up to it fell somewhat. High above, the cliff broke
away into a wide stretch of pasture land, but the face of the rock itself was all
patched with bramble and little starved birch-trees clutching for foothold; and in
like manner the excavation beneath was half-stifled and gloomed over with
undergrowth, so that it looked a place very dismal and uninviting, save in the
ardour of the dog-days.
Within, where had been the basin, was a great shattered hole going down to
unknown depths; and this no man had thought to explore, for a mystery held
about the spot that was doubtless the foster-child of ignorance.
But to the front of the well and of the cliff stretched a noble field of corn, and
this field was of an uncommon shape, being, roughly, a vast circle and a little
one joined by a neck and in suggestion not unlike an hour-glass; and into the
crop thereof, which was of goodly weight and condition, were the first sickles to
be put on the morrow.
Now as we stood or lay around, idly discussing of the news, and congratulating
ourselves that we were featly quit of our incubus, to us along the meadow path,
his shadow jumping on the corn, came the very subject of our gossip.
He strode up, looking neither to right nor left, and with the first word that fell,
low and damnatory, from his lips, we knew that the moment had come when,
whether for good or evil, he intended to cast us from him and acquit himself of
further responsibility in our direction.
"Behold!" he cried, pausing over against us, "I go from among ye! Behold, ye
that have not obeyed nor inclined your ear, but have walked every one in the
imagination of his evil heart! Saith the Lord, 'I will bring evil upon them, which
they shall not be able to escape; and though they shall cry unto Me, I will not
hearken unto them.'"
His voice rang out, and a dark silence fell among us. It was pregnant, but with
little of humility. We had had enough of this interloper and his abuse. Then, like
Jeremiah, he went to prophesy:—
"I read ye, men of Anathoth, and the murder in your hearts. Ye that have
worshipped the shameful thing and burned incense to Baal—shall I cringe that
ye devise against me, or not rather pray to the Lord of Hosts, 'Let me see Thy
vengeance on them'? And He answereth, 'I will bring evil upon the men of
Anathoth, even the year of their visitation.'"
Now, though I was no participator in that direful thing that followed, I stood by,
nor interfered, and so must share the blame. For there were men risen all about,
and their faces lowering, and it seemed that it would go hard with the stranger
were he not more particular.
But he moved forward, with a stately and commanding gesture, and stood with
his back to the well-scoop and threatened us and spoke.
"Lo!" he shrieked, "your hour is upon you! Ye shall be mowed down like ripe
corn, and the shadow of your name shall be swept from the earth! The glass of
your iniquity is turned, and when its sand is run through, not a man of ye shall
be!"
He raised his arm aloft, and in a moment he was overborne. Even then, as all say,
none got sight of his face; but he fought with lowered head, and his black beard
flapped like a wounded crow. But suddenly a boy-child ran forward of the
bystanders, crying and screaming,—
"Hurt him not! They are hurting him—oh, me! oh, me!"
And from the sweat and struggle came his voice, gasping, "I spare the little
children!"
Then only I know of the surge and the crash towards the well-mouth, of an
instant cessation of motion, and immediately of men toiling hither and thither
with boulders and huge blocks, which they piled over the rent, and so sealed it
with a cromlech of stone.
II
That, in the heat of rage and of terror, we had gone farther than we had at first
designed, our gloom and our silence on the morrow attested. True we were quit
of our incubus, but on such terms as not even the severity of the times could
excuse. For the man had but chastised us to our improvement; and to destroy the
scourge is not to condone the offence. For myself, as I bore up the little Margery
to my shoulder on my way to the reaping, I felt the burden of guilt so great as
that I found myself muttering of an apology to the Lord that I durst put myself
into touch with innocence. "But the walk would fatigue her otherwise," I
murmured; and, when we were come to the field, I took and carried her into the
upper or little meadow, out of reach of the scythes, and placed her to sleep
amongst the corn, and so left her with a groan.
But when I was come anew to my comrades, who stood at the lower extremity of
the field—and this was the bottom of the hour-glass, so to speak—I was aware
of a stir amongst them, and, advancing closer, that they were all intent upon the
neighbourhood of the field I had left, staring like distraught creatures, and
holding well together, as if in a panic. Therefore, following the direction of their
eyes, and of one that pointed with rigid finger, I turned me about, and looked
whence I had come; and my heart went with a somersault, and in a moment I
was all sick and dazed.
For I saw, at the upper curve of the meadow, where the well lay in gloom, that a
man had sprung out of the earth, as it seemed, and was started reaping; and the
face of this man was all in shadow, from which his beard ran out and down like a
stream of gall.
He reaped swiftly and steadily, swinging like a pendulum; but, though the
sheaves fell to him right and left, no swish of the scythe came to us, nor any
sound but the beating of our own hearts.
Now, from the first moment of my looking, no doubt was in my lost soul but that
this was him we had destroyed come back to verify his prophecy in ministering
to the vengeance of the Lord of Hosts; and at the thought a deep groan rent my
bosom, and was echoed by those about me. But scarcely was it issued when a
second terror smote me as that I near reeled. Margery—my babe! put to sleep
there in the path of the Black Reaper!
At that, though they called to me, I sprang forward like a madman, and running
along the meadow, through the neck of the glass, reached the little thing, and
stooped and snatched her into my arms. She was sound and unfrighted, as I felt
with a burst of thankfulness; but, looking about me, as I turned again to fly, I had
near dropped in my tracks for the sickness and horror I experienced in the nearer
neighbourhood of the apparition. For, though it never raised its head, or changed
the steady swing of its shoulders, I knew that it was aware of and was reaping at
me. Now, I tell you, it was ten yards away, yet the point of the scythe came
gliding upon me silently, like a snake, through the stalks, and at that I screamed
out and ran for my life.
I escaped, sweating with terror; but when I was sped back to the men, there was
all the village collected, and our Vicar to the front, praying from a throat that
rattled like a dead leaf in a draught. I know not what he said, for the low cries of
the women filled the air; but his face was white as a smock, and his fingers
writhed in one another like a knot of worms.
"The plague is upon us!" they wailed. "We shall be mowed down like ripe corn!"
And even as they shrieked the Black Reaper paused, and, putting away his
scythe, stooped and gathered up a sheaf in his arms and stood it on end. And,
with the very act, a man—one that had been forward in yesterday's business—
fell down amongst us yelling and foaming; and he rent his breast in his frenzy,
revealing the purple blot thereon, and he passed blaspheming. And the reaper
stooped and stooped again, and with every sheaf he gathered together one of us
fell stricken and rolled in his agony, while the rest stood by palsied.
But, when at length all that was cut was accounted for, and a dozen of us were
gone each to his judgment, and he had taken up his scythe to reap anew, a wild
fury woke in the breasts of some of the more abandoned and reckless amongst
us.
"It is not to be tolerated!" they cried. "Let us at once fire the corn and burn this
sorcerer!"
And with that, some fire or six of them, emboldened by despair, ran up into the
little field, and, separating, had out each his flint and fired the crop in his own
place, and retreated to the narrow part for safety.
Now the reaper rested on his scythe, as if unexpectedly acquitted of a part of his
labour; but the corn flamed up in these five or six directions, and was consumed
in each to the compass of a single sheaf: whereat the fire died away. And with its
dying the faces of those that had ventured went black as coal; and they flung up
their arms, screaming, and fell prone where they stood, and were hidden from
our view.
Then, indeed, despair seized upon all of us that survived, and we made no doubt
but that we were to be exterminated and wiped from the earth for our sins, as
were the men of Anathoth. And for an hour the Black Reaper mowed and
trussed, till he had cut all from the little upper field and was approached to the
neck of juncture with the lower and larger. And before us that remained, and
who were drawn back amongst the trees, weeping and praying, a fifth of our
comrades lay foul, and dead, and sweltering, and all blotched over with the
dreadful mark of the pestilence.
Now, as I say, the reaper was nearing the neck of juncture; and so we knew that
if he should once pass into the great field towards us and continue his mowing,
not one of us should be left to give earnest of our repentance.
Then, as it seemed, our Vicar came to a resolution, moving forward with a face
all wrapt and entranced; and he strode up the meadow path and approached the
apparition, and stretched out his arms to it entreating. And we saw the other
pause, awaiting him; and, as he came near, put forth his hand, and so, gently, on
the good old head. But as we looked, catching at our breaths with a little pathos
of hope, the priestly face was thrown back radiant, and the figure of him that
would give his life for us sank amongst the yet standing corn and disappeared
from our sight.
So at last we yielded ourselves fully to our despair; for if our pastor should find
no mercy, what possibility of it could be for us!
It was in this moment of an uttermost grief and horror, when each stood apart
from his neighbour, fearing the contamination of his presence, that there was
vouchsafed to me, of God's pity, a wild and sudden inspiration. Still to my neck
fastened the little Margery—not frighted, it seemed, but mazed—and other babes
there were in plenty, that clung to their mothers' skirts and peeped out,
wondering at the strange show.
I ran to the front and shrieked: "The children! the children! He will not touch the
little children! Bring them and set them in his path!" And so crying I sped to the
neck of meadow, and loosened the soft arms from my throat, and put the little
one down within the corn.
Now at once the women saw what I would be at, and full a score of them
snatched up their babes and followed me. And here we were reckless for
ourselves; but we knelt the innocents in one close line across the neck of land, so
that the Black Reaper should not find space between any of them to swing his
scythe. And having done this, we fell back with our hearts bubbling in our
breasts, and we stood panting and watched.
He had paused over that one full sheaf of his reaping; but now, with the sound of
the women's running, he seized his weapon again and set to upon the narrow belt
of corn that yet separated him from the children. But presently, coming out upon
the tender array, his scythe stopped and trailed in his hand, and for a full minute
he stood like a figure of stone. Then thrice he walked slowly backwards and
forwards along the line, seeking for an interval whereby he might pass; and the
children laughed at him like silver bells, showing no fear, and perchance meeting
that of love in his eyes that was hidden from us.
Then of a sudden he came to before the midmost of the line, and, while we drew
our breath like dying souls, stooped and snapped his blade across his knee, and,
holding the two parts in his hand, turned and strode back into the shadow of the
dripping well. There arrived, he paused once more, and, twisting him about,
waved his hand once to us and vanished into the blackness. But there were those
who affirmed that in that instant of his turning, his face was revealed, and that it
was a face radiant and beautiful as an angel's.
Such is the history of the wild judgment that befell us, and by grace of the little
children was foregone; and such was the stranger whose name no man ever
heard tell, but whom many have since sought to identify with that spirit of the
pestilence that entered into men's hearts and confounded them, so that they saw
visions and were afterwards confused in their memories.
But this I may say, that when at last our courage would fetch us to that little field
of death, we found it to be all blackened and blasted, so as nothing would take
root there then or ever since; and it was as if, after all the golden sand of the
hour-glass was run away and the lives of the most impious with it, the destroyer
saw fit to stay his hand for sake of the babes that he had pronounced innocent,
and for such as were spared to witness to His judgment. And this I do here, with
a heart as contrite as if it were the morrow of the visitation, the which with me it
ever has remained.
A VOICE FROM THE PIT
"Signor, we are arrived," whispered the old man in my ear; and he put out a
sudden cold hand, corded like melon rind, to stay me in the stumbling darkness.
We were on a tilted table-land of the mountain; and, looking forth and below, the
far indigo crescent of the bay, where it swept towards Castellamare, seemed to
rise up at me, as if it were a perpendicular wall, across which the white crests of
the waves flew like ghost moths.
We skirted a boulder, and came upon a field of sleek purple lava sown all over
with little lemon jets of silent smoke, which in their wan and melancholy glow
might have been the corpse lights of those innumerable dead whose tombstone
was the mountain itself.
Far away to the right the great projecting socket of the crater flickered
intermittently with a nerve of fire. It was like the glinting of the watchful eye of
some vast Crustacean, and in that harsh and stupendous desolation seemed the
final crown and expression of utter inhumanity.
"In the bay yesterday the Signor saved my life. I give the Signor, in return, my
life's secret."
He seized my right hand in his left with a sinewy clutch, and pointed a stiff
finger at the luminous blots.
"See there, and there, and there," he shrilled. "One floats and wavers like a
spineless ribbon of seaweed in the water; another burns with a steady radiance; a
third blares from its fissure like a flame driven by the blowpipe. It is all a
question of the under-draught, and some may feel it a little, and some a little
more or a little less. Ah! but I will show you one that feels it not at all—a hole, a
narrow shaft that goes straight down into the pit of the great hell, and is cold as
the mouth of a barbel."
The bones of his face stood out like rocks against sand, and the pupils of his
maniac eyes were glazed or fell into shadow as the volcano lightnings fluttered.
I leaned over his shoulder, and looked down upon the hollow revealed by the
displaced boulder. It was like the bell of a mighty trumpet, and in the middle a
puckered opening seemed to suck inwards, as it were the mouth of some
subterranean monster risen to the surface of the world for air.
"Quick! quick!" muttered Paolo. "The Signor must place his ear to the hole."
With a little odd stir at my heart, I dropped upon my knees and leaned my head
deep into the cup. I must have stayed thus for a full minute before I drew myself
back and looked up at the old mountaineer. His eyes gazed down into mine with
mad intensity.
"I heard a long surging thunder, Paolo, and the deep shrill screaming of many
gas jets."
"Signor, it is the booming of the everlasting fire, and thou hast heard the voices
of the damned."
"Listen and believe!" he cried; and funnelling his hands about his lips, he
stooped over the central hole.
Something answered back. What was it? A malformed and twisted echo? A
whistle of imprisoned steam tricked into some horrible caricature of a human
voice?
"Paolo!" it seemed to wail, weak and faint with agony. "L'arqua, l'arqua, Paolo!"
The old man sprang to his feet and, looking down upon me in a sort of terrible
triumph, unslung a water-flask from his belt, and, pulling out the cork, poured
the cold liquid down into the puckered orifice. Then I felt his clutch on my arm
again.
I rose with a ghost of a laugh, and once more addressed my ear to the opening.
"Paolo," I cried, as I rose and stood before him—and there was an admonitory
note in my voice—"a feather may decide the balance. Beware meddling with
hidden thunders, or thou mayst set rolling such another tombstone as that on
which these corpse fires are yet flaming."
"We of the mountains, Signor, know more things than we may tell of."
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