| Manalive | |
| by G. K. Chesterton | |
| First published 1912 by Thomas Nelson and Sons | |
| Electronic edition MANALIV0 published 1993 by Jim Henry III | |
| Edited by Martin Ward (Martin.Ward@durham.ac.uk) | |
| PLEASE report any typos you may happen to notice, such as misplaced | |
| punctuation and the like, to | |
| Martin Ward (Martin.Ward@durham.ac.uk) | |
| and | |
| Jim Henry III 405 Gardner Road Stockbridge, GA 30281-1515 | |
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| Thank you! I hope you enjoy reading _Manalive_ as much as I have. | |
| I will soon be releasing _Tales of the Long Bow_, also by G. K. Chesterton. | |
| Table of Contents | |
| Part I: The Enigmas of Innocent Smith | |
| I. How the Great Wind Came to Beacon House | |
| II. The Luggage of an Optimist | |
| III. The Banner of Beacon | |
| IV. The Garden of the God | |
| V. The Allegorical Practical Joker | |
| Part II: The Explanations of Innocent Smith | |
| I. The Eye of Death; or, the Murder Charge | |
| II. The Two Curates; or, the Burglary Charge | |
| III. The Round Road; or, the Desertion Charge | |
| IV. The Wild Weddings; or, the Polygamy Charge | |
| V. How the Great Wind went from Beacon House | |
| Part I | |
| The Enigmas of Innocent Smith | |
| Chapter I | |
| How the Great Wind Came | |
| to Beacon House | |
| A wind sprang high in the west, like a wave of unreasonable happiness, | |
| and tore eastward across England, trailing with it the frosty | |
| scent of forests and the cold intoxication of the sea. | |
| It a million holes and corners it refreshed a man like a flagon, | |
| and astonished him like a blow. In the inmost chambers of | |
| intricate and embowered houses it woke like a domestic explosion, | |
| littering the floor with some professor's papers till they seemed | |
| as precious as fugitive, or blowing out the candle by which a | |
| boy read "Treasure Island" and wrapping him in roaring dark. | |
| But everywhere it bore drama into undramatic lives, | |
| and carried the trump of crisis across the world. | |
| Many a harassed mother in a mean backyard had looked at | |
| a five dwarfish shirts on the clothes-line as at some small, | |
| sick tragedy; it was as if she had hanged her five children. | |
| The wind came, and they were full and kicking as if five fat | |
| imps had sprung into them; and far down in her oppressed | |
| subconscious she half-remembered those coarse comedies of her | |
| fathers when the elves still dwelt in the homes of men. | |
| Many an unnoticed girl in a dank walled garden had tossed | |
| herself into the hammock with the same intolerant gesture | |
| with which she might have tossed herself into the Thames; | |
| and that wind rent the waving wall of woods and lifted | |
| the hammock like a balloon, and showed her shapes of quaint | |
| clouds far beyond, and pictures of bright villages far below, | |
| as if she rode heaven in a fairy boat. Many a dusty clerk | |
| or cleric, plodding a telescopic road of poplars, thought for | |
| the hundredth time that they were like the plumes of a hearse; | |
| when this invisible energy caught and swung and clashed them | |
| round his head like a wreath or salutation of seraphic wings. | |
| There was in it something more inspired and authoritative even | |
| than the old wind of the proverb; for this was the good wind | |
| that blows nobody harm. | |
| The flying blast struck London just where it scales the northern heights, | |
| terrace above terrace, as precipitous as Edinburgh. It was round | |
| about this place that some poet, probably drunk, looked up astonished | |
| at all those streets gone skywards, and (thinking vaguely of glaciers | |
| and roped mountaineers) gave it the name of Swiss Cottage, which it has | |
| never been able to shake off. At some stage of those heights a terrace | |
| of tall gray houses, mostly empty and almost as desolate as the Grampians, | |
| curved round at the western end, so that the last building, a boarding | |
| establishment called "Beacon House," offered abruptly to the sunset its high, | |
| narrow and towering termination, like the prow of some deserted ship. | |
| The ship, however, was not wholly deserted. The proprietor | |
| of the boarding-house, a Mrs. Duke, was one of those helpless | |
| persons against whom fate wars in vain; she smiled vaguely both | |
| before and after all her calamities; she was too soft to be hurt. | |
| But by the aid (or rather under the orders) of a strenuous niece | |
| she always kept the remains of a clientele, mostly of young | |
| but listless folks. And there were actually five inmates | |
| standing disconsolately about the garden when the great gale | |
| broke at the base of the terminal tower behind them, as the sea | |
| bursts against the base of an outstanding cliff. | |
| All day that hill of houses over London had been domed and sealed up with | |
| cold cloud. Yet three men and two girls had at last found even the gray | |
| and chilly garden more tolerable than the black and cheerless interior. | |
| When the wind came it split the sky and shouldered the cloudland left | |
| and right, unbarring great clear furnaces of evening gold. The burst of light | |
| released and the burst of air blowing seemed to come almost simultaneously; | |
| and the wind especially caught everything in a throttling violence. | |
| The bright short grass lay all one way like brushed hair. | |
| Every shrub in the garden tugged at its roots like a dog at the collar, | |
| and strained every leaping leaf after the hunting and exterminating element. | |
| Now and again a twig would snap and fly like a bolt from an arbalist. | |
| The three man stood stiffly and aslant against the wind, as if leaning against | |
| a wall. The two ladies disappeared into the house; rather, to speak truly, | |
| they were blown into the house. Their two frocks, blue and white, | |
| looked like two big broken flowers, driving and drifting upon the gale. | |
| Nor is such a poetic fancy inappropriate, for there was something | |
| oddly romantic about this inrush of air and light after a long, | |
| leaden and unlifting day. Grass and garden trees seemed glittering | |
| with something at once good and unnatural, like a fire from fairyland. | |
| It seemed like a strange sunrise at the wrong end of the day. | |
| The girl in white dived in quickly enough, for she wore | |
| a white hat of the proportions of a parachute, which might | |
| have wafted her away into the coloured clouds of evening. | |
| She was their one splash of splendour, and irradiated wealth | |
| in that impecunious place (staying there temporarily with a | |
| friend), an heiress in a small way, by name Rosamund Hunt, | |
| brown-eyed, round-faced, but resolute and rather boisterous. | |
| On top of her wealth she was good-humoured and rather good-looking; | |
| but she had not married, perhaps because there was always | |
| a crowd of men around her. She was not fast (though some | |
| might have called her vulgar), but she gave irresolute youths | |
| an impression of being at once popular and inaccessible. | |
| A man felt as if he had fallen in love with Cleopatra, | |
| or as if he were asking for a great actress at the stage door. | |
| Indeed, some theatrical spangles seemed to cling about Miss Hunt; | |
| she played the guitar and the mandoline; she always wanted charades; | |
| and with that great rending of the sky by sun and storm, | |
| she felt a girlish melodrama swell again within her. | |
| To the crashing orchestration of the air the clouds rose | |
| like the curtain of some long-expected pantomime. | |
| Nor, oddly, was the girl in blue entirely unimpressed by this | |
| apocalypse in a private garden; though she was one of most prosaic | |
| and practical creatures alive. She was, indeed, no other than | |
| the strenuous niece whose strength alone upheld that mansion of decay. | |
| But as the gale swung and swelled the blue and white skirts till they | |
| took on the monstrous contours of Victorian crinolines, a sunken memory | |
| stirred in her that was almost romance--a memory of a dusty volume | |
| in _Punch_ in an aunt's house in infancy: pictures of crinoline hoops | |
| and croquet hoops and some pretty story, of which perhaps they were a part. | |
| This half-perceptible fragrance in her thoughts faded almost instantly, | |
| and Diana Duke entered the house even more promptly than her companion. | |
| Tall, slim, aquiline, and dark, she seemed made for such swiftness. | |
| In body she was of the breed of those birds and beasts that are at once | |
| long and alert, like greyhounds or herons or even like an innocent snake. | |
| The whole house revolved on her as on a rod of steel. It would | |
| be wrong to say that she commanded; for her own efficiency was so | |
| impatient that she obeyed herself before any one else obeyed her. | |
| Before electricians could mend a bell or locksmiths open a door, | |
| before dentists could pluck a tooth or butlers draw a tight cork, | |
| it was done already with the silent violence of her slim hands. | |
| She was light; but there was nothing leaping about her lightness. | |
| She spurned the ground, and she meant to spurn it. People talk | |
| of the pathos and failure of plain women; but it is a more terrible | |
| thing that a beautiful woman may succeed in everything but womanhood. | |
| "It's enough to blow your head off," said the young woman in white, | |
| going to the looking-glass. | |
| The young woman in blue made no reply, but put away her gardening gloves, | |
| and then went to the sideboard and began to spread out an afternoon | |
| cloth for tea. | |
| "Enough to blow your head off, I say," said Miss Rosamund Hunt, | |
| with the unruffled cheeriness of one whose songs and speeches | |
| had always been safe for an encore. | |
| "Only your hat, I think," said Diana Duke, "but I dare say that it | |
| sometimes more important." | |
| Rosamund's face showed for an instant the offence of a | |
| spoilt child, and then the humour of a very healthy person. | |
| She broke into a laugh and said, "Well, it would have to be a big | |
| wind to blow your head off." | |
| There was another silence; and the sunset breaking more and more from | |
| the sundering clouds, filled the room with soft fire and painted the dull | |
| walls with ruby and gold. | |
| "Somebody once told me," said Rosamund Hunt, "that it's easier | |
| to keep one's head when one has lost one's heart." | |
| "Oh, don't talk such rubbish," said Diana with savage sharpness. | |
| Outside, the garden was clad in a golden splendour; | |
| but the wind was still stiffly blowing, and the three men | |
| who stood their ground might also have considered the problem | |
| of hats and heads. And, indeed, their position, touching hats, | |
| was somewhat typical of them. The tallest of the three abode | |
| the blast in a high silk hat, which the wind seemed to charge | |
| as vainly as that other sullen tower, the house behind him. | |
| The second man tried to hold on a stiff straw hat at all angles, | |
| and ultimately held it in his hand. The third had no hat, and, | |
| by his attitude, seemed never to have had one in his life. | |
| Perhaps this wind was a kind of fairy wand to test men and women, | |
| for there was much of the three men in this difference. | |
| The man in the solid silk hat was the embodiment of silkiness and solidity. | |
| He was a big, bland, bored and (as some said) boring man, with flat | |
| fair hair and handsome heavy features; a prosperous young doctor | |
| by the name of Warner. But if his blondness and blandness seemed | |
| at first a little fatuous, it is certain that he was no fool. | |
| If Rosamund Hunt was the only person there with much money, | |
| he was the only person who had as yet found any kind of fame. | |
| His treatise on "The Probable Existence of Pain in the Lowest Organisms" | |
| had been universally hailed by the scientific world as at once solid | |
| and daring. In short, he undoubtedly had brains; and perhaps it was | |
| not his fault if they were the kind of brains that most men desire | |
| to analyze with a poker. | |
| The young man who put his hat off and on was a scientific amateur in a | |
| small way, and worshipped the great Warner with a solemn freshness. | |
| It was, in fact, at his invitation that the distinguished doctor | |
| was present; for Warner lived in no such ramshackle lodging-house, | |
| but in a professional palace in Harley Street. This young | |
| man was really the youngest and best-looking of the three. | |
| But he was one of those persons, both male and female, | |
| who seem doomed to be good-looking and insignificant. | |
| Brown-haired, high-coloured, and shy, he seemed to lose | |
| the delicacy of his features in a sort of blur of brown | |
| and red as he stood blushing and blinking against the wind. | |
| He was one of those obvious unnoticeable people: | |
| every one knew that he was Arthur Inglewood, unmarried, moral, | |
| decidedly intelligent, living on a little money of his own, | |
| and hiding himself in the two hobbies of photography and cycling. | |
| Everybody knew him and forgot him; even as he stood there in the | |
| glare of golden sunset there was something about him indistinct, | |
| like one of his own red-brown amateur photographs. | |
| The third man had no hat; he was lean, in light, vaguely | |
| sporting clothes, and the large pipe in his mouth made him look | |
| all the leaner. He had a long ironical face, blue-black hair, | |
| the blue eyes of an Irishman, and the blue chin of an actor. | |
| An Irishman he was, an actor he was not, except in the old | |
| days of Miss Hunt's charades, being, as a matter of fact, | |
| an obscure and flippant journalist named Michael Moon. He had | |
| once been hazily supposed to be reading for the Bar; | |
| but (as Warner would say with his rather elephantine wit) | |
| it was mostly at another kind of bar that his friends found him. | |
| Moon, however, did not drink, nor even frequently get drunk; | |
| he simply was a gentleman who liked low company. | |
| This was partly because company is quieter than society: | |
| and if he enjoyed talking to a barmaid (as apparently | |
| he did), it was chiefly because the barmaid did the talking. | |
| Moreover he would often bring other talent to assist her. | |
| He shared that strange trick of all men of his type, intellectual and | |
| without ambition--the trick of going about with his mental inferiors. | |
| There was a small resilient Jew named Moses Gould in the same | |
| boarding-house, a man whose negro vitality and vulgarity amused | |
| Michael so much that he went round with him from bar to bar, | |
| like the owner of a performing monkey. | |
| The colossal clearance which the wind had made of that cloudy sky grew | |
| clearer and clearer; chamber within chamber seemed to open in heaven. | |
| One felt one might at last find something lighter than light. | |
| In the fullness of this silent effulgence all things collected their | |
| colours again: the gray trunks turned silver, and the drab gravel gold. | |
| One bird fluttered like a loosened leaf from one tree to another, | |
| and his brown feathers were brushed with fire. | |
| "Inglewood," said Michael Moon, with his blue eye on the bird, | |
| "have you any friends?" | |
| Dr. Warner mistook the person addressed, and turning a broad | |
| beaming face, said,-- | |
| "Oh yes, I go out a great deal." | |
| Michael Moon gave a tragic grin, and waited for his real informant, | |
| who spoke a moment after in a voice curiously cool, fresh and young, | |
| as coming out of that brown and even dusty interior. | |
| "Really," answered Inglewood, "I'm afraid I've lost touch with | |
| my old friends. The greatest friend I ever had was at school, | |
| a fellow named Smith. It's odd you should mention it, because I | |
| was thinking of him to-day, though I haven't seen him for seven | |
| or eight years. He was on the science side with me at school-- | |
| a clever fellow though queer; and he went up to Oxford when I | |
| went to Germany. The fact is, it's rather a sad story. | |
| I often asked him to come and see me, and when I heard nothing I | |
| made inquiries, you know. I was shocked to learn that poor Smith | |
| had gone off his head. The accounts were a bit cloudy, of course, | |
| some saying that he had recovered again; but they always say that. | |
| About a year ago I got a telegram from him myself. The telegram, | |
| I'm sorry to say, put the matter beyond a doubt." | |
| "Quite so," assented Dr. Warner stolidly; "insanity is generally incurable." | |
| "So is sanity," said the Irishman, and studied him with a dreary eye. | |
| "Symptoms?" asked the doctor. "What was this telegram?" | |
| "It's a shame to joke about such things," said Inglewood, in his honest, | |
| embarrassed way; "the telegram was Smith's illness, not Smith. The actual | |
| words were, `Man found alive with two legs.'" | |
| "Alive with two legs," repeated Michael, frowning. "Perhaps a version | |
| of alive and kicking? I don't know much about people out of their senses; | |
| but I suppose they ought to be kicking." | |
| "And people in their senses?" asked Warner, smiling. | |
| "Oh, they ought to be kicked," said Michael with sudden heartiness. | |
| "The message is clearly insane," continued the impenetrable Warner. | |
| "The best test is a reference to the undeveloped normal type. | |
| Even a baby does not expect to find a man with three legs." | |
| "Three legs," said Michael Moon, "would be very convenient in this wind." | |
| A fresh eruption of the atmosphere had indeed almost thrown them | |
| off their balance and broken the blackened trees in the garden. | |
| Beyond, all sorts of accidental objects could be seen scouring | |
| the wind-scoured sky--straws, sticks, rags, papers, and, in the distance, | |
| a disappearing hat. Its disappearance, however, was not final; | |
| after an interval of minutes they saw it again, much larger and closer, | |
| like a white panama, towering up into the heavens like a balloon, | |
| staggering to and fro for an instant like a stricken kite, | |
| and then settling in the centre of their own lawn as falteringly | |
| as a fallen leaf. | |
| "Somebody's lost a good hat," said Dr. Warner shortly. | |
| Almost as he spoke, another object came over the garden wall, | |
| flying after the fluttering panama. It was a big green umbrella. | |
| After that came hurtling a huge yellow Gladstone bag, | |
| and after that came a figure like a flying wheel of legs, | |
| as in the shield of the Isle of Man. | |
| But though for a flash it seemed to have five or six legs, | |
| it alighted upon two, like the man in the queer telegram. | |
| It took the form of a large light-haired man in gay green holiday clothes. | |
| He had bright blonde hair that the wind brushed back like a German's, | |
| a flushed eager face like a cherub's, and a prominent pointing nose, | |
| a little like a dog's. His head, however, was by no means cherubic | |
| in the sense of being without a body. On the contrary, on his vast | |
| shoulders and shape generally gigantesque, his head looked oddly | |
| and unnaturally small. This have rise to a scientific theory | |
| (which his conduct fully supported) that he was an idiot. | |
| Inglewood had a politeness instinctive and yet awkward. | |
| His life was full of arrested half gestures of assistance. | |
| And even this prodigy of a big man in green, leaping the wall | |
| like a bright green grasshopper, did not paralyze that small | |
| altruism of his habits in such a matter as a lost hat. | |
| He was stepping forward to recover the green gentleman's | |
| head-gear, when he was struck rigid with a roar like a bull's. | |
| "Unsportsmanlike!" bellowed the big man. "Give it fair play, | |
| give it fair play!" And he came after his own hat quickly | |
| but cautiously, with burning eyes. The hat had seemed at first | |
| to droop and dawdle as in ostentatious langour on the sunny lawn; | |
| but the wind again freshening and rising, it went dancing down | |
| the garden with the devilry of a ~pas de quatre~. The eccentric went | |
| bounding after it with kangaroo leaps and bursts of breathless speech, | |
| of which it was not always easy to pick up the thread: | |
| "Fair play, fair play... sport of kings... chase their crowns... | |
| quite humane... tramontana... cardinals chase red hats... old | |
| English hunting... started a hat in Bramber Combe... hat at bay... | |
| mangled hounds... Got him!" | |
| As the winds rose out of a roar into a shriek, he leapt into the sky | |
| on his strong, fantastic legs, snatched at the vanishing hat, | |
| missed it, and pitched sprawling face foremost on the grass. | |
| The hat rose over him like a bird in triumph. But its triumph | |
| was premature; for the lunatic, flung forward on his hands, | |
| threw up his boots behind, waved his two legs in the air | |
| like symbolic ensigns (so that they actually thought again | |
| of the telegram), and actually caught the hat with his feet. | |
| A prolonged and piercing yell of wind split the welkin from end to end. | |
| The eyes of all the men were blinded by the invisible blast, | |
| as by a strange, clear cataract of transparency rushing between | |
| them and all objects about them. But as the large man fell back | |
| in a sitting posture and solemnly crowned himself with the hat, | |
| Michael found, to his incredulous surprise, that he had been | |
| holding his breath, like a man watching a duel. | |
| While that tall wind was at the top of its sky-scraping energy, | |
| another short cry was heard, beginning very querulous, but ending | |
| very quick, swallowed in abrupt silence. The shiny black cylinder | |
| of Dr. Warner's official hat sailed off his head in the long, | |
| smooth parabola of an airship, and in almost cresting a garden | |
| tree was caught in the topmost branches. Another hat was gone. | |
| Those in that garden felt themselves caught in an unaccustomed eddy | |
| of things happening; no one seemed to know what would blow away next. | |
| Before they could speculate, the cheering and hallooing hat-hunter | |
| was already halfway up the tree, swinging himself from fork to fork | |
| with his strong, bent, grasshopper legs, and still giving forth | |
| his gasping, mysterious comments. | |
| "Tree of life... Ygdrasil... climb for centuries perhaps... owls nesting | |
| in the hat... remotest generations of owls... still usurpers... gone | |
| to heaven... man in the moon wears it... brigand... not yours... belongs | |
| to depressed medical man... in garden... give it up... give it up!" | |
| The tree swung and swept and thrashed to and fro in the thundering | |
| wind like a thistle, and flamed in the full sunshine like a bonfire. | |
| The green, fantastic human figure, vivid against its autumn red and gold, | |
| was already among its highest and craziest branches, which by bare luck did | |
| not break with the weight of his big body. He was up there among the last | |
| tossing leaves and the first twinkling stars of evening, still talking | |
| to himself cheerfully, reasoningly, half apologetically, in little gasps. | |
| He might well be out of breath, for his whole preposterous raid had | |
| gone with one rush; he had bounded the wall once like a football, | |
| swept down the garden like a slide, and shot up the tree like a rocket. | |
| The other three men seemed buried under incident piled on incident-- | |
| a wild world where one thing began before another thing left off. | |
| All three had the first thought. The tree had been there for the five years | |
| they had known the boarding-house. Each one of them was active and strong. | |
| No one of them had even thought of climbing it. Beyond that, | |
| Inglewood felt first the mere fact of colour. The bright brisk leaves, | |
| the bleak blue sky, the wild green arms and legs, reminded him irrationally | |
| of something glowing in his infancy, something akin to a gaudy man | |
| on a golden tree; perhaps it was only painted monkey on a stick. | |
| Oddly enough, Michael Moon, though more of a humourist, was touched on | |
| a tenderer nerve, half remembered the old, young theatricals with Rosamund, | |
| and was amused to find himself almost quoting Shakespeare-- | |
| "For valour. Is not love a Hercules, | |
| Still climbing trees in the Hesperides?" | |
| Even the immovable man of science had a bright, bewildered sensation | |
| that the Time Machine had given a great jerk, and gone forward | |
| with rather rattling rapidity. | |
| He was not, however, wholly prepared for what happened next. | |
| The man in green, riding the frail topmost bough like a witch on a very risky | |
| broomstick, reached up and rent the black hat from its airy nest of twigs. | |
| It had been broken across a heavy bough in the first burst of its passage, | |
| a tangle of branches in torn and scored and scratched it in every direction, | |
| a clap of wind and foliage had flattened it like a concertina; nor can it | |
| be said that the obliging gentleman with the sharp nose showed any adequate | |
| tenderness for its structure when he finally unhooked it from its place. | |
| When he had found it, however, his proceedings were by some counted singular. | |
| He waved it with a loud whoop of triumph, and then immediately appeared | |
| to fall backwards off the tree, to which, however, he remained | |
| attached by his long strong legs, like a monkey swung by his tail. | |
| Hanging thus head downwards above the unhelmed Warner, he gravely proceeded | |
| to drop the battered silk cylinder upon his brows. "Every man a king," | |
| explained the inverted philosopher, "every hat (consequently) a crown. | |
| But this is a crown out of heaven." | |
| And he again attempted the coronation of Warner, who, however, moved away | |
| with great abruptness from the hovering diadem; not seeming, strangely enough, | |
| to wish for his former decoration in its present state. | |
| "Wrong, wrong!" cried the obliging person hilariously. | |
| "Always wear uniform, even if it's shabby uniform! | |
| Ritualists may always be untidy. Go to a dance with soot on | |
| your shirt-front; but go with a shirt-front. Huntsman wears old coat, | |
| but old pink coat. Wear a topper, even if it's got no top. | |
| It's the symbol that counts, old cock. Take your hat, | |
| because it is your hat after all; its nap rubbed all off | |
| by the bark, dears, and its brim not the least bit curled; | |
| but for old sakes' sake it is still, dears, the nobbiest tile | |
| in the world." | |
| Speaking thus, with a wild comfortableness, he settled or smashed | |
| the shapeless silk hat over the face of the disturbed physician, | |
| and fell on his feet among the other men, still talking, | |
| beaming and breathless. | |
| "Why don't they make more games out of wind?" he asked in some excitement. | |
| "Kites are all right, but why should it only be kites? Why, I thought | |
| of three other games for a windy day while I was climbing that tree. | |
| Here's one of them: you take a lot of pepper--" | |
| "I think," interposed Moon, with a sardonic mildness, | |
| "that your games are already sufficiently interesting. | |
| Are you, may I ask, a professional acrobat on a tour, | |
| or a travelling advertisement of Sunny Jim? How and why do you | |
| display all this energy for clearing walls and climbing trees | |
| in our melancholy, but at least rational, suburbs?" | |
| The stranger, so far as so loud a person was capable of it, | |
| appeared to grow confidential. | |
| "Well, it's a trick of my own," he confessed candidly. | |
| "I do it by having two legs." | |
| Arthur Inglewood, who had sunk into the background of this scene of folly, | |
| started and stared at the newcomer with his short-sighted eyes screwed up | |
| and his high colour slightly heightened. | |
| "Why, I believe you're Smith," he cried with his fresh, almost boyish voice; | |
| and then after an instant's stare, "and yet I'm not sure." | |
| "I have a card, I think," said the unknown, with baffling solemnity--"a card | |
| with my real name, my titles, offices, and true purpose on this earth." | |
| He drew out slowly from an upper waistcoat pocket a scarlet | |
| card-case, and as slowly produced a very large card. | |
| Even in the instant of its production, they fancied it was | |
| of a queer shape, unlike the cards of ordinary gentlemen. | |
| But it was there only for an instant; for as it passed from | |
| his fingers to Arthur's, one or another slipped his hold. | |
| The strident, tearing gale in that garden carried away | |
| the stranger's card to join the wild waste paper of the universe; | |
| and that great western wind shook the whole house and passed. | |
| Chapter II | |
| The Luggage of an Optimist | |
| We all remember the fairy tales of science in our infancy, which played | |
| with the supposition that large animals could jump in the proportion | |
| of small ones. If an elephant were as strong as a grasshopper, he could | |
| (I suppose) spring clean out of the Zoological Gardens and alight | |
| trumpeting upon Primrose Hill. If a whale could leap from the sea | |
| like a trout, perhaps men might look up and see one soaring above | |
| Yarmouth like the winged island of Laputa. Such natural energy, | |
| though sublime, might certainly be inconvenient, and much of this | |
| inconvenience attended the gaiety and good intentions of the man in green. | |
| He was too large for everything, because he was lively as well as large. | |
| By a fortunate physical provision, most very substantial creatures | |
| are also reposeful; and middle-class boarding-houses in the lesser | |
| parts of London are not built for a man as big as a bull and excitable | |
| as a kitten. | |
| When Inglewood followed the stranger into the boarding-house, | |
| he found him talking earnestly (and in his own opinion privately) | |
| to the helpless Mrs. Duke. That fat, faint lady could only | |
| goggle up like a dying fish at the enormous new gentleman, | |
| who politely offered himself as a lodger, with vast gestures | |
| of the wide white hat in one hand, and the yellow Gladstone bag | |
| in the other. Fortunately, Mrs. Duke's more efficient niece | |
| and partner was there to complete the contract; for, indeed, | |
| all the people of the house had somehow collected in the room. | |
| This fact, in truth, was typical of the whole episode. | |
| The visitor created an atmosphere of comic crisis; and from | |
| the time he came into the house to the time he left it, he somehow | |
| got the company to gather and even follow (though in derision) | |
| as children gather and follow a Punch and Judy. An hour ago, | |
| and for four years previously, these people had avoided | |
| each other, even when they had really liked each other. | |
| They had slid in and out of dismal and deserted rooms in search | |
| of particular newspapers or private needlework. Even now they | |
| all came casually, as with varying interests; but they all came. | |
| There was the embarrassed Inglewood, still a sort of red shadow; | |
| there was the unembarrassed Warner, a pallid but solid substance. | |
| There was Michael Moon offering like a riddle the contrast | |
| of the horsy crudeness of his clothes and the sombre sagacity | |
| of his visage. He was now joined by his yet more comic crony, | |
| Moses Gould. Swaggering on short legs with a prosperous | |
| purple tie, he was the gayest of godless little dogs; | |
| but like a dog also in this, that however he danced and | |
| wagged with delight, the two dark eyes on each side of his | |
| protuberant nose glistened gloomily like black buttons. | |
| There was Miss Rosamund Hunt, still with the find white hat | |
| framing her square, good-looking face, and still with her native | |
| air of being dressed for some party that never came off. | |
| She also, like Mr. Moon, had a new companion, new so far as this | |
| narrative goes, but in reality an old friend and a protegee. | |
| This was a slight young woman in dark gray, and in no way | |
| notable but for a load of dull red hair, of which the shape | |
| somehow gave her pale face that triangular, almost peaked, | |
| appearance which was given by the lowering headdress and deep rich | |
| ruff of the Elizabethan beauties. Her surname seemed to be Gray, | |
| and Miss Hunt called her Mary, in that indescribable tone | |
| applied to a dependent who has practically become a friend. | |
| She wore a small silver cross on her very business-like | |
| gray clothes, and was the only member of the party who went | |
| to church. Last, but the reverse of least, there as Diana Duke, | |
| studying the newcomer with eyes of steel, and listening | |
| carefully to every idiotic word he said. As for Mrs. Duke, | |
| she smiled up at him, but never dreamed of listening to him. | |
| She had never really listened to any one in her life; which, some said, | |
| was why she had survived. | |
| Nevertheless, Mrs. Duke was pleased with her new guest's | |
| concentration of courtesy upon herself; for no one ever spoke | |
| seriously to her any more than she listened seriously to any one. | |
| And she almost beamed as the stranger, with yet wider and almost | |
| whirling gestures of explanation with his huge hat and bag, | |
| apologized for having entered by the wall instead of the front door. | |
| He was understood to put it down to an unfortunate family tradition | |
| of neatness and care of his clothes. | |
| "My mother was rather strict about it, to tell the truth," | |
| he said, lowering his voice, to Mrs. Duke. "She never liked | |
| me to lose my cap at school. And when a man's been taught | |
| to be tidy and neat it sticks to him." | |
| Mrs. Duke weakly gasped that she was sure he must have had a good mother; | |
| but her niece seemed inclined to probe the matter further. | |
| "You've got a funny idea of neatness," she said, "if it's | |
| jumping garden walls and clambering up garden trees. | |
| A man can't very well climb a tree tidily." | |
| "He can clear a wall neatly," said Michael Moon; "I saw him do it." | |
| Smith seemed to be regarding the girl with genuine astonishment. | |
| "My dear young lady," he said, "I was tidying the tree. You don't want | |
| last year's hats there, do you, any more than last year's leaves? | |
| The wind takes off the leaves, but it couldn't manage the hat; that wind, | |
| I suppose, has tidied whole forests to-day. Rum idea this is, that tidiness | |
| is a timid, quiet sort of thing; why, tidiness is a toil for giants. | |
| You can't tidy anything without untidying yourself; just look at my trousers. | |
| Don't you know that? Haven't you ever had a spring cleaning?" | |
| "Oh yes, sir," said Mrs. Duke, almost eagerly. "You will find | |
| everything of that sort quite nice." For the first time she | |
| had heard two words that she could understand. | |
| Miss Diana Duke seemed to be studying the stranger with a sort of spasm | |
| of calculation; then her black eyes snapped with decision, and she said | |
| that he could have a particular bedroom on the top floor if he liked: | |
| and the silent and sensitive Inglewood, who had been on the rack through | |
| these cross-purposes, eagerly offered to show him up to the room. | |
| Smith went up the stairs four at a time, and when he bumped his head | |
| against the ultimate ceiling, Inglewood had an odd sensation that the tall | |
| house was much shorter than it used to be. | |
| Arthur Inglewood followed his old friend--or his new friend, | |
| for he did not very clearly know which he was. The face looked | |
| very like his old schoolfellow's at one second and very unlike | |
| at another. And when Inglewood broke through his native | |
| politeness so far as to say suddenly, "Is your name Smith?" | |
| he received only the unenlightening reply, "Quite right; | |
| quite right. Very good. Excellent!" Which appeared to Inglewood, | |
| on reflection, rather the speech of a new-born babe accepting | |
| a name than of a grown-up man admitting one. | |
| Despite these doubts about identity, the hapless Inglewood | |
| watched the other unpack, and stood about his bedroom in all | |
| the impotent attitudes of the male friend. Mr. Smith unpacked | |
| with the same kind of whirling accuracy with which he climbed | |
| a tree--throwing things out of his bag as if they were rubbish, | |
| yet managing to distribute quite a regular pattern all round | |
| him on the floor. | |
| As he did so he continued to talk in the same somewhat gasping manner | |
| (he had come upstairs four steps at a time, but even without this his style | |
| of speech was breathless and fragmentary), and his remarks were still | |
| a string of more or less significant but often separate pictures. | |
| "Like the day of judgement," he said, throwing a bottle | |
| so that it somehow settled, rocking on its right end. | |
| "People say vast universe... infinity and astronomy; | |
| not sure... I think things are too close together... packed up; | |
| for travelling... stars too close, really... why, the sun's | |
| a star, too close to be seen properly; the earth's a star, | |
| too close to be seen at all... too many pebbles on the beach; | |
| ought all to be put in rings; too many blades of grass to study... | |
| feathers on a bird make the brain reel; wait till the big bag | |
| is unpacked... may all be put in our right places then." | |
| Here he stopped, literally for breath--throwing a shirt to the other end | |
| of the room, and then a bottle of ink so that it fell quite neatly beyond it. | |
| Inglewood looked round on this strange, half-symmetrical disorder with | |
| an increasing doubt. | |
| In fact, the more one explored Mr. Smith's holiday luggage, | |
| the less one could make anything of it. One peculiarity of it | |
| was that almost everything seemed to be there for the wrong reason; | |
| what is secondary with every one else was primary with him. | |
| He would wrap up a pot or pan in brown paper; and the unthinking | |
| assistant would discover that the pot was valueless or even unnecessary, | |
| and that it was the brown paper that was truly precious. | |
| He produced two or three boxes of cigars, and explained | |
| with plain and perplexing sincerity that he was no smoker, | |
| but that cigar-box wood was by far the best for fretwork. | |
| He also exhibited about six small bottles of wine, white and red, | |
| and Inglewood, happening to note a Volnay which he knew to be excellent, | |
| supposed at first that the stranger was an epicure in vintages. | |
| He was therefore surprised to find that the next bottle was a vile sham | |
| claret from the colonies, which even colonials (to do them justice) | |
| do not drink. It was only then that he observed that all six | |
| bottles had those bright metallic seals of various tints, | |
| and seemed to have been chosen solely because they have the three | |
| primary and three secondary colours: red, blue, and yellow; | |
| green, violet and orange. There grew upon Inglewood an almost | |
| creepy sense of the real childishness of this creature. | |
| For Smith was really, so far as human psychology can be, innocent. | |
| He had the sensualities of innocence: he loved the stickiness of gum, | |
| and he cut white wood greedily as if he were cutting a cake. | |
| To this man wine was not a doubtful thing to be defended or denounced; | |
| it was a quaintly coloured syrup, such as a child sees in a shop window. | |
| He talked dominantly and rushed the social situation; | |
| but he was not asserting himself, like a superman in a modern play. | |
| He was simply forgetting himself, like a little boy at a party. | |
| He had somehow made the giant stride from babyhood to manhood, | |
| and missed that crisis in youth when most of us grow old. | |
| As he shunted his big bag, Arthur observed the initials | |
| I. S. printed on one side of it, and remembered that Smith had | |
| been called Innocent Smith at school, though whether as a formal | |
| Christian name or a moral description he could not remember. | |
| He was just about to venture another question, when there was a knock | |
| at the door, and the short figure of Mr. Gould offered itself, | |
| with the melancholy Moon, standing like his tall crooked shadow, | |
| behind him. They had drifted up the stairs after the other two | |
| men with the wandering gregariousness of the male. | |
| "Hope there's no intrusion," said the beaming Moses with a glow | |
| of good nature, but not the airiest tinge of apology. | |
| "The truth is," said Michael Moon with comparative courtesy, | |
| "we thought we might see if they had made you comfortable. | |
| Miss Duke is rather--" | |
| "I know," cried the stranger, looking up radiantly from his bag; | |
| "magnificent, isn't she? Go close to her--hear military music going by, | |
| like Joan of Arc." | |
| Inglewood stared and stared at the speaker like one who has | |
| just heard a wild fairy tale, which nevertheless contains | |
| one small and forgotten fact. For he remembered how he had | |
| himself thought of Jeanne d'Arc years ago, when, hardly more | |
| than a schoolboy, he had first come to the boarding-house. Long | |
| since the pulverizing rationalism of his friend Dr. Warner had | |
| crushed such youthful ignorances and disproportionate dreams. | |
| Under the Warnerian scepticism and science of hopeless | |
| human types, Inglewood had long come to regard himself as | |
| a timid, insufficient, and "weak" type, who would never marry; | |
| to regard Diana Duke as a materialistic maidservant; | |
| and to regard his first fancy for her as the small, | |
| dull farce of a collegian kissing his landlady's daughter. | |
| And yet the phrase about military music moved him queerly, | |
| as if he had heard those distant drums. | |
| "She has to keep things pretty tight, as is only natural," said Moon, | |
| glancing round the rather dwarfish room, with its wedge of slanted ceiling, | |
| like the conical hood of a dwarf. | |
| "Rather a small box for you, sir," said the waggish Mr. Gould. | |
| "Splendid room, though," answered Mr. Smith enthusiastically, with his | |
| head inside his Gladstone bag. "I love these pointed sorts of rooms, | |
| like Gothic. By the way," he cried out, pointing in quite a startling way, | |
| "where does that door lead to?" | |
| "To certain death, I should say," answered Michael Moon, staring up at | |
| a dust-stained and disused trapdoor in the sloping roof of the attic. | |
| "I don't think there's a loft there; and I don't know what else it could | |
| lead to." Long before he had finished his sentence the man at the door | |
| in the ceiling, swung himself somehow on to the ledge beneath it, | |
| wrenched it open after a struggle, and clambered through it. | |
| For a moment they saw the two symbolic legs standing like a truncated statue; | |
| then they vanished. Through the hole thus burst in the roof appeared | |
| the empty and lucid sky of evening, with one great many-coloured cloud | |
| sailing across it like a whole county upside down. | |
| "Hullo, you fellows!" came the far cry of Innocent Smith, | |
| apparently from some remote pinnacle. "Come up here; | |
| and bring some of my things to eat and drink. It's just the spot | |
| for a picnic." | |
| With a sudden impulse Michael snatched two of the small | |
| bottles of wine, one in each solid fist; and Arthur Inglewood, | |
| as if mesmerized, groped for a biscuit tin and a big jar of ginger. | |
| The enormous hand of Innocent Smith appearing through the aperture, | |
| like a giant's in a fairy tale, received these tributes and bore them | |
| off to the eyrie; then they both hoisted themselves out of the window. | |
| They were both athletic, and even gymnastic; Inglewood through his | |
| concern for hygiene, and Moon through his concern for sport, which was | |
| not quite so idle and inactive as that of the average sportsman. | |
| Also they both had a light-headed burst of celestial sensation when | |
| the door was burst in the roof, as if a door had been burst in the sky, | |
| and they could climb out on to the very roof of the universe. | |
| They were both men who had long been unconsciously imprisoned in | |
| the commonplace, though one took it comically, and the other seriously. | |
| They were both men, nevertheless, in whom sentiment had never died. | |
| But Mr. Moses Gould had an equal contempt for their suicidal athletics | |
| and their subconscious transcendentalism, and he stood and laughed | |
| at the thing with the shameless rationality of another race. | |
| When the singular Smith, astride of a chimney-pot, learnt that Gould | |
| was not following, his infantile officiousness and good nature | |
| forced him to dive back into the attic to comfort or persuade; | |
| and Inglewood and Moon were left alone on the long gray-green | |
| ridge of the slate roof, with their feet against gutters and their | |
| backs against chimney-pots, looking agnostically at each other. | |
| Their first feeling was that they had come out into eternity, | |
| and that eternity was very like topsy-turvydom. One definition | |
| occurred to both of them--that he had come out into the light | |
| of that lucid and radiant ignorance in which all beliefs had begun. | |
| The sky above them was full of mythology. Heaven seemed deep | |
| enough to hold all the gods. The round of the ether turned | |
| from green to yellow gradually like a great unripe fruit. | |
| All around the sunken sun it was like a lemon; round all the east | |
| it was a sort of golden green, more suggestive of a greengage; | |
| but the whole had still he emptiness of daylight and none of the secrecy | |
| of dusk. Tumbled here and there across this gold and pale green | |
| were shards and shattered masses of inky purple cloud, which seemed | |
| falling towards the earth in every kind of colossal perspective. | |
| One of them really had the character of some many-mitred, many-bearded, | |
| many-winged Assyrian image, huge head downwards, hurled out of heaven-- | |
| a sort of false Jehovah, who was perhaps Satan. All the other clouds | |
| had preposterous pinnacled shapes, as if the god's palaces had been | |
| flung after him. | |
| And yet, while the empty heaven was full of silent catastrophe, the height | |
| of human buildings above which they sat held here and there a tiny trivial | |
| noise that was the exact antithesis; and they heard some six streets below | |
| a newsboy calling, and a bell bidding to chapel. They could also hear | |
| talk out of the garden below; and realized that the irrepressible Smith | |
| must have followed Gould downstairs, for his eager and pleading accents | |
| could be heard, followed by the half-humourous protests of Miss Duke | |
| and the full and very youthful laughter of Rosamund Hunt. The air had | |
| that cold kindness that comes after a storm. Michael Moon drank it in with | |
| as serious a relish as he had drunk the little bottle of cheap claret, | |
| which he had emptied almost at a draught. Inglewood went on eating ginger | |
| very slowly and with a solemnity unfathomable as the sky above him. | |
| There was still enough stir in the freshness of the atmosphere to make them | |
| almost fancy they could smell the garden soil and the last roses of autumn. | |
| Suddenly there came from the darkening room a silvery ping and pong which | |
| told them that Rosamund had brought out the long-neglected mandoline. | |
| After the first few notes there was more of the distant bell-like laughter. | |
| "Inglewood," said Michael Moon, "have you ever heard that I | |
| am a blackguard?" | |
| "I haven't heard it, and I don't believe it," answered Inglewood, | |
| after an odd pause. "But I have heard you were--what they | |
| call rather wild." | |
| "If you have heard that I am wild, you can contradict the rumour," | |
| said Moon, with an extraordinary calm; "I am tame. | |
| I am quite tame; I am about the tamest beast that crawls. | |
| I drink too much of the same kind of whisky at the same time | |
| every night. I even drink about the same amount too much. | |
| I go to the same number of public-houses. I meet the same damned | |
| women with mauve faces. I hear the same number of dirty stories-- | |
| generally the same dirty stories. You may assure my friends, | |
| Inglewood, that you see before you a person whom civilization | |
| has thoroughly tamed." | |
| Arthur Inglewood was staring with feelings that made him nearly | |
| fall off the roof, for indeed the Irishman's face, always sinister, | |
| was now almost demoniacal. | |
| "Christ confound it!" cried out Moon, suddenly clutching the empty | |
| claret bottle, "this is about the thinnest and filthiest wine | |
| I ever uncorked, and it's the only drink I have really enjoyed | |
| for nine years. I was never wild until just ten minutes ago." | |
| And he sent the bottle whizzing, a wheel of glass, far away beyond | |
| the garden into the road, where, in the profound evening silence, | |
| they could even hear it break and part upon the stones. | |
| "Moon," said Arthur Inglewood, rather huskily, "you mustn't be | |
| so bitter about it. Everyone has to take the world as he finds it; | |
| of course one often finds it a bit dull--" | |
| "That fellow doesn't," said Michael decisively; "I mean that | |
| fellow Smith. I have a fancy there's some method in his madness. | |
| It looks as if he could turn into a sort of wonderland any minute by taking | |
| one step out of the plain road. Who would have thought of that trapdoor? | |
| Who would have thought that this cursed colonial claret could taste quite | |
| nice among the chimney-pots? Perhaps that is the real key of fairyland. | |
| Perhaps Nosey Gould's beastly little Empire Cigarettes ought only to | |
| be smoked on stilts, or something of that sort. Perhaps Mrs. Duke's | |
| cold leg of mutton would seem quite appetizing at the top of a tree. | |
| Perhaps even my damned, dirty, monotonous drizzle of Old Bill Whisky--" | |
| "Don't be so rough on yourself," said Inglewood, in serious distress. | |
| "The dullness isn't your fault or the whisky's. Fellows who don't-- | |
| fellows like me I mean--have just the same feeling that it's all rather | |
| flat and a failure. But the world's made like that; it's all survival. | |
| Some people are made to get on, like Warner; and some people are | |
| made to stick quiet, like me. You can't help your temperament. | |
| I know you're much cleverer than I am; but you can't help having | |
| all the loose ways of a poor literary chap, and I can't help | |
| having all the doubts and helplessness of a small scientific chap, | |
| any more than a fish can help floating or a fern can help curling up. | |
| Humanity, as Warner said so well in that lecture, really consists | |
| of quite different tribes of animals all disguised as men." | |
| In the dim garden below the buzz of talk was suddenly broken | |
| by Miss Hunt's musical instrument banging with the abruptness | |
| of artillery into a vulgar but spirited tune. | |
| Rosamund's voice came up rich and strong in the words of some fatuous, | |
| fashionable coon song-- | |
| "Darkies sing a song on the old plantation, | |
| Sing it as we sang it in days long since gone by." | |
| Inglewood's brown eyes softened and saddened still more as he continued | |
| his monologue of resignation to such a rollicking and romantic tune. | |
| But the blue eyes of Michael Moon brightened and hardened with a light | |
| that Inglewood did not understand. Many centuries, and many villages | |
| and valleys, would have been happier if Inglewood or Inglewood's countrymen | |
| had ever understood that light, or guessed at the first blink that it | |
| was the battle star of Ireland. | |
| "Nothing can ever alter it; it's in the wheels of the universe," | |
| went on Inglewood, in a low voice: "some men are weak and some strong, | |
| and the only thing we can do is to know that we are weak. | |
| I have been in love lots of times, but I could not do anything, | |
| for I remembered my own fickleness. I have formed opinions, but I | |
| haven't the cheek to push them, because I've so often changed them. | |
| That's the upshot, old fellow. We can't trust ourselves-- | |
| and we can't help it." | |
| Michael had risen to his feet, and stood poised in a perilous position | |
| at the end of the roof, like some dark statue hung above its gable. | |
| Behind him, huge clouds of an almost impossible purple turned slowly | |
| topsy-turvy in the silent anarchy of heaven. Their gyration made | |
| the dark figure seem yet dizzier. | |
| "Let us..." he said, and was suddenly silent. | |
| "Let us what?" asked Arthur Inglewood, rising equally quick though somewhat | |
| more cautiously, for his friend seemed to find some difficulty in speech. | |
| "Let us go and do some of these things we can't do," said Michael. | |
| At the same moment there burst out of the trapdoor below them | |
| the cockatoo hair and flushed face of Innocent Smith, calling to | |
| them that they must come down as the "concert" was in full swing, | |
| and Mr. Moses Gould was about to recite "Young Lochinvar." | |
| As they dropped into Innocent's attic they nearly tumbled over its | |
| entertaining impedimenta again. Inglewood, staring at the littered floor, | |
| thought instinctively of the littered floor of a nursery. | |
| He was therefore the more moved, and even shocked, when his eye fell | |
| on a large well-polished American revolver. | |
| "Hullo!" he cried, stepping back from the steely glitter as men step back | |
| from a serpent; "are you afraid of burglars? or when and why do you deal | |
| death out of that machine gun?" | |
| "Oh, that!" said Smith, throwing it a single glance; "I deal life | |
| out of that," and he went bounding down the stairs. | |
| Chapter III | |
| The Banner of Beacon | |
| All next day at Beacon House there was a crazy sense that it was | |
| everybody's birthday. It is the fashion to talk of institutions | |
| as cold and cramping things. The truth is that when people are in | |
| exceptionally high spirits, really wild with freedom and invention, | |
| they always must, and they always do, create institutions. | |
| When men are weary they fall into anarchy; but while they are gay | |
| and vigorous they invariably make rules. This, which is true of all | |
| the churches and republics of history, is also true of the most | |
| trivial parlour game or the most unsophisticated meadow romp. | |
| We are never free until some institution frees us; and liberty | |
| cannot exist till it is declared by authority. Even the wild | |
| authority of the harlequin Smith was still authority, because it | |
| produced everywhere a crop of crazy regulations and conditions. | |
| He filled every one with his own half-lunatic life; but it was not | |
| expressed in destruction, but rather in a dizzy and toppling construction. | |
| Each person with a hobby found it turning into an institution. | |
| Rosamund's songs seemed to coalesce into a kind of opera; | |
| Michael's jests and paragraphs into a magazine. His pipe and her | |
| mandoline seemed between them to make a sort of smoking concert. | |
| The bashful and bewildered Arthur Inglewood almost struggled against his | |
| own growing importance. He felt as if, in spite of him, his photographs | |
| were turning into a picture gallery, and his bicycle into a gymkhana. | |
| But no one had any time to criticize these impromptu estates and offices, | |
| for they followed each other in wild succession like the topics | |
| of a rambling talker. | |
| Existence with such a man was an obstacle race made out of | |
| pleasant obstacles. Out of any homely and trivial object he could | |
| drag reels of exaggeration, like a conjurer. Nothing could | |
| be more shy and impersonal than poor Arthur's photography. | |
| Yet the preposterous Smith was seen assisting him eagerly through | |
| sunny morning hours, and an indefensible sequence described | |
| as "Moral Photography" began to unroll about the boarding-house. | |
| It was only a version of the old photographer's joke which | |
| produces the same figure twice on one plate, making a man | |
| play chess with himself, dine with himself, and so on. | |
| But these plates were more hysterical and ambitious--as, "Miss Hunt | |
| forgets Herself," showing that lady answering her own too | |
| rapturous recognition with a most appalling stare of ignorance; | |
| or "Mr. Moon questions Himself," in which Mr. Moon appeared as one | |
| driven to madness under his own legal cross-examination, which was | |
| conducted with a long forefinger and an air of ferocious waggery. | |
| One highly successful trilogy--representing Inglewood recognizing | |
| Inglewood, Inglewood prostrating himself before Inglewood, | |
| and Inglewood severely beating Inglewood with a stick-- | |
| Innocent Smith wanted to have enlarged and put up in the hall, | |
| like a sort of fresco, with the inscription,-- | |
| "Self-reverence, self-knowledge, self-control-- | |
| These three alone will make a man a prig." | |
| -- Tennyson. | |
| Nothing, again, could be more prosaic and impenetrable than | |
| the domestic energies of Miss Diana Duke. But Innocent had somehow | |
| blundered on the discovery that her thrifty dressmaking went | |
| with a considerable feminine care for dress--the one feminine thing | |
| that had never failed her solitary self-respect. In consequence Smith | |
| pestered her with a theory (which he really seemed to take seriously) | |
| that ladies might combine economy with magnificence if they would | |
| draw light chalk patterns on a plain dress and then dust them | |
| off again. He set up "Smith's Lightning Dressmaking Company," | |
| with two screens, a cardboard placard, and box of bright soft crayons; | |
| and Miss Diana actually threw him an abandoned black overall | |
| or working dress on which to exercise the talents of a modiste. | |
| He promptly produced for her a garment aflame with red and gold sunflowers; | |
| she held it up an instant to her shoulders, and looked like an empress. | |
| And Arthur Inglewood, some hours afterwards cleaning his bicycle | |
| (with his usual air of being inextricably hidden in it), glanced up; | |
| and his hot face grew hotter, for Diana stood laughing for one | |
| flash in the doorway, and her dark robe was rich with the green | |
| and purple of great decorative peacocks, like a secret garden | |
| in the "Arabian Nights." A pang too swift to be named pain | |
| or pleasure went through his heart like an old-world rapier. | |
| He remembered how pretty he thought her years ago, when he was | |
| ready to fall in love with anybody; but it was like remembering | |
| a worship of some Babylonian princess in some previous existence. | |
| At his next glimpse of her (and he caught himself awaiting it) | |
| the purple and green chalk was dusted off, and she went by quickly | |
| in her working clothes. | |
| As for Mrs. Duke, none who knew that matron could conceive her as | |
| actively resisting this invasion that had turned her house upside down. | |
| But among the most exact observers it was seriously believed that she | |
| liked it. For she was one of those women who at bottom regard all | |
| men as equally mad, wild animals of some utterly separate species. | |
| And it is doubtful if she really saw anything more eccentric or | |
| inexplicable in Smith's chimney-pot picnics or crimson sunflowers | |
| than she had in the chemicals of Inglewood or the sardonic speeches | |
| of Moon. Courtesy, on the other hand, is a thing that anybody | |
| can understand, and Smith's manners were as courteous as they | |
| were unconventional. She said he was "a real gentleman," by which she | |
| simply meant a kind-hearted man, which is a very different thing. | |
| She would sit at the head of the table with fat, folded hands and a fat, | |
| folded smile for hours and hours, while every one else was talking at once. | |
| At least, the only other exception was Rosamund's companion, | |
| Mary Gray, whose silence was of a much more eager sort. Though she | |
| never spoke she always looked as if she might speak any minute. | |
| Perhaps this is the very definition of a companion. Innocent Smith | |
| seemed to throw himself, as into other adventures, into the adventure | |
| of making her talk. He never succeeded, yet he was never snubbed; | |
| if he achieved anything, it was only to draw attention to this quiet figure, | |
| and to turn her, by ever so little, from a modesty to a mystery. | |
| But if she was a riddle, every one recognized that she was a fresh | |
| and unspoilt riddle, like the riddle of the sky and the woods in spring. | |
| Indeed, though she was rather older than the other two girls, | |
| she had an early morning ardour, a fresh earnestness of youth, | |
| which Rosamund seemed to have lost in the mere spending of money, | |
| and Diana in the mere guarding of it. Smith looked at her again and again. | |
| Her eyes and mouth were set in her face the wrong way--which was really | |
| the right way. She had the knack of saying everything with her face: | |
| her silence was a sort of steady applause. | |
| But among the hilarious experiments of that holiday | |
| (which seemed more like a week's holiday than a day's) | |
| one experiment towers supreme, not because it was any sillier | |
| or more successful than the others, but because out of this | |
| particular folly flowed all of the odd events that were to follow. | |
| All the other practical jokes exploded of themselves, and left vacancy; | |
| all the other fictions returned upon themselves, and were finished | |
| like a song. But the string of solid and startling events-- | |
| which were to include a hansom cab, a detective, a pistol, | |
| and a marriage licence--were all made primarily possible | |
| by the joke about the High Court of Beacon. | |
| It had originated, not with Innocent Smith, but with Michael Moon. He was | |
| in a strange glow and pressure of spirits, and talked incessantly; | |
| yet he had never been more sarcastic, and even inhuman. | |
| He used his old useless knowledge as a barrister to talk | |
| entertainingly of a tribunal that was a parody on the pompous | |
| anomalies of English law. The High Court of Beacon, he declared, | |
| was a splendid example of our free and sensible constitution. | |
| It had been founded by King John in defiance of the Magna Carta, | |
| and now held absolute power over windmills, wine and spirit licences, | |
| ladies traveling in Turkey, revision of sentences for dog-stealing | |
| and parricide, as well as anything whatever that happened in the town of | |
| Market Bosworth. The whole hundred and nine seneschals of the High Court | |
| of Beacon met once in every four centuries; but in the intervals | |
| (as Mr. Moon explained) the whole powers of the institution were vested | |
| in Mrs. Duke. Tossed about among the rest of the company, however, | |
| the High Court did not retain its historical and legal seriousness, | |
| but was used somewhat unscrupulously in a riot of domestic detail. | |
| If somebody spilt the Worcester Sauce on the tablecloth, he was quite | |
| sure it was a rite without which the sittings and findings of the Court | |
| would be invalid; or if somebody wanted a window to remain shut, | |
| he would suddenly remember that none but the third son of the lord | |
| of the manor of Penge had the right to open it. They even went | |
| to the length of making arrests and conducting criminal inquiries. | |
| The proposed trial of Moses Gould for patriotism was rather | |
| above the heads of the company, especially of the criminal; | |
| but the trial of Inglewood on a charge of photographic libel, | |
| and his triumphant acquittal upon a plea of insanity, were admitted | |
| to be in the best tradition of the Court. | |
| But when Smith was in wild spirits he grew more and more serious, not more and | |
| more flippant like Michael Moon. This proposal of a private court of justice, | |
| which Moon had thrown off with the detachment of a political humourist, | |
| Smith really caught hold of with the eagerness of an abstract philosopher. | |
| It was by far the best thing they could do, he declared, to claim sovereign | |
| powers even for the individual household. | |
| "You believe in Home Rule for Ireland; I believe in Home Rule for homes," | |
| he cried eagerly to Michael. "It would be better if every father | |
| COULD kill his son, as with the old Romans; it would be better, | |
| because nobody would be killed. Let's issue a Declaration | |
| of Independence from Beacon House. We could grow enough greens | |
| in that garden to support us, and when the tax-collector comes let's | |
| tell him we're self-supporting, and play on him with the hose. | |
| ...Well, perhaps, as you say, we couldn't very well have a hose, | |
| as that comes from the main; but we could sink a well in this chalk, | |
| and a lot could be done with water-jugs... Let this really be | |
| Beacon House. Let's light a bonfire of independence on the roof, | |
| and see house after house answering it across the valley of | |
| the Thames! Let us begin the League of the Free Families! Away with | |
| Local Government! A fig for Local Patriotism! Let every house | |
| be a sovereign state as this is, and judge its own children by its | |
| own law, as we do by the Court of Beacon. Let us cut the painter, | |
| and begin to be happy together, as if we were on a desert island." | |
| "I know that desert island," said Michael Moon; "it only | |
| exists in the `Swiss Family Robinson.' A man feels a strange | |
| desire for some sort of vegetable milk, and crash comes down | |
| some unexpected cocoa-nut from some undiscovered monkey. | |
| A literary man feels inclined to pen a sonnet, and at once | |
| an officious porcupine rushes out of a thicket and shoots out | |
| one of his quills." | |
| "Don't you say a word against the `Swiss Family Robinson,'" | |
| cried Innocent with great warmth. "It mayn't be | |
| exact science, but it's dead accurate philosophy. | |
| When you're really shipwrecked, you do really find what you want. | |
| When you're really on a desert island, you never find it a desert. | |
| If we were really besieged in this garden, we'd find a hundred | |
| English birds and English berries that we never knew were here. | |
| If we were snowed up in this room, we'd be the better for reading | |
| scores of books in that bookcase that we don't even know are there; | |
| we'd have talks with each other, good, terrible talks, that we shall | |
| go to the grave without guessing; we'd find materials for everything-- | |
| christening, marriage, or funeral; yes, even for a coronation-- | |
| if we didn't decide to be a republic." | |
| "A coronation on `Swiss Family' lines, I suppose," said Michael, laughing. | |
| "Oh, I know you would find everything in that atmosphere. If we wanted | |
| such a simple thing, for instance, as a Coronation Canopy, we should | |
| walk down beyond the geraniums and find the Canopy Tree in full bloom. | |
| If we wanted such a trifle as a crown of gold, why, we should be | |
| digging up dandelions, and we should find a gold mine under the lawn. | |
| And when we wanted oil for the ceremony, why I suppose a great storm | |
| would wash everything on shore, and we should find there was a Whale | |
| on the premises." | |
| "And so there IS a whale on the premises for all you know," | |
| asseverated Smith, striking the table with passion. | |
| "I bet you've never examined the premises! I bet you've | |
| never been round at the back as I was this morning-- | |
| for I found the very thing you say could only grow on a tree. | |
| There's an old sort of square tent up against the dustbin; | |
| it's got three holes in the canvas, and a pole's broken, | |
| so it's not much good as a tent, but as a Canopy--" And his | |
| voice quite failed him to express its shining adequacy; | |
| then he went on with controversial eagerness: "You see I | |
| take every challenge as you make it. I believe every blessed | |
| thing you say couldn't be here has been here all the time. | |
| You say you want a whale washed up for oil. Why, there's oil | |
| in that cruet-stand at your elbow; and I don't believe | |
| anybody has touched it or thought of it for years. | |
| And as for your gold crown, we're none of us wealthy here, | |
| but we could collect enough ten-shilling bits from our own | |
| pockets to string round a man's head for half an hour; | |
| or one of Miss Hunt's gold bangles is nearly big enough to--" | |
| The good-humoured Rosamund was almost choking with laughter. | |
| "All is not gold that glitters," she said, "and besides--" | |
| "What a mistake that is!" cried Innocent Smith, | |
| leaping up in great excitement. "All is gold that glitters-- | |
| especially now we are a Sovereign State. What's the good | |
| of a Sovereign State if you can't define a sovereign? | |
| We can make anything a precious metal, as men could in the morning | |
| of the world. They didn't choose gold because it was rare; | |
| your scientists can tell you twenty sorts of slime much rarer. | |
| They chose gold because it was bright--because it was | |
| a hard thing to find, but pretty when you've found it. | |
| You can't fight with golden swords or eat golden biscuits; | |
| you can only look at it--an you can look at it out here." | |
| With one of his incalculable motions he sprang back and burst open | |
| the doors into the garden. At the same time also, with one of his | |
| gestures that never seemed at the instant so unconventional as they were, | |
| he stretched out his hand to Mary Gray, and led her out on to the lawn | |
| as if for a dance. | |
| The French windows, thus flung open, let in an evening even lovelier than that | |
| of the day before. The west was swimming with sanguine colours, and a sort | |
| of sleepy flame lay along the lawn. The twisted shadows of the one or two | |
| garden trees showed upon this sheen, not gray or black, as in common daylight, | |
| but like arabesques written in vivid violet ink on some page of Eastern gold. | |
| The sunset was one of those festive and yet mysterious conflagrations in | |
| which common things by their colours remind us of costly or curious things. | |
| The slates upon the sloping roof burned like the plumes of a vast peacock, | |
| in every mysterious blend of blue and green. The red-brown bricks of | |
| the wall glowed with all the October tints of strong ruby and tawny wines. | |
| The sun seemed to set each object alight with a different coloured flame, | |
| like a man lighting fireworks; and even Innocent's hair, which was of a rather | |
| colourless fairness, seemed to have a flame of pagan gold on it as he strode | |
| across the lawn towards the one tall ridge of rockery. | |
| "What would be the good of gold," he was saying, "if it did not glitter? | |
| Why should we care for a black sovereign any more than for a | |
| black sun at noon? A black button would do just as well. | |
| Don't you see that everything in this garden looks like a jewel? | |
| And will you kindly tell me what the deuce is the good of a jewel | |
| except that it looks like a jewel? Leave off buying and selling, | |
| and start looking! Open your eyes, and you'll wake up in | |
| the New Jerusalem. | |
| "All is gold that glitters-- | |
| Tree and tower of brass; | |
| Rolls the golden evening air | |
| Down the golden grass. | |
| Kick the cry to Jericho, | |
| How yellow mud is sold, | |
| All is gold that glitters, | |
| For the glitter is the gold." | |
| "And who wrote that?" asked Rosamund, amused. | |
| "No one will ever write it," answered Smith, and cleared the rockery | |
| with a flying leap. | |
| "Really," said Rosamund to Michael Moon, "he ought to be sent to an asylum. | |
| Don't you think so?" | |
| "I beg your pardon," inquired Michael, rather sombrely; his long, | |
| swarthy head was dark against the sunset, and, either by accident or mood, | |
| he had the look of something isolated and even hostile amid the social | |
| extravagance of the garden. | |
| "I only said Mr. Smith ought to go to an asylum," repeated the lady. | |
| The lean face seemed to grow longer and longer, for Moon was | |
| unmistakably sneering. "No," he said; "I don't think it's | |
| at all necessary." | |
| "What do you mean?" asked Rosamund quickly. "Why not?" | |
| "Because he is in one now," answered Michael Moon, in a quiet but ugly voice. | |
| "Why, didn't you know?" | |
| "What?" cried the girl, and there was a break in her voice; | |
| for the Irishman's face and voice were really almost creepy. | |
| With his dark figure and dark sayings in all that sunshine | |
| he looked like the devil in paradise. | |
| "I'm sorry," he continued, with a sort of harsh humility. | |
| "Of course we don't talk about it much... but I thought we | |
| all really knew." | |
| "Knew what?" | |
| "Well," answered Moon, "that Beacon House is a certain rather singular | |
| sort of house--a house with the tiles loose, shall we say? Innocent Smith | |
| is only the doctor that visits us; hadn't you come when he called before? | |
| As most of our maladies are melancholic, of course he has to be extra cheery. | |
| Sanity, of course, seems a very bumptious eccentric thing to us. | |
| Jumping over a wall, climbing a tree--that's his bedside manner." | |
| "You daren't say such a thing!" cried Rosamund in a rage. | |
| "You daren't suggest that I--" | |
| "Not more than I am," said Michael soothingly; "not more than the rest of us. | |
| Haven't you ever noticed that Miss Duke never sits still--a notorious sign? | |
| Haven't you ever observed that Inglewood is always washing his hands-- | |
| a known mark of mental disease? I, of course, am a dipsomaniac." | |
| "I don't believe you," broke out his companion, not without agitation. | |
| "I've heard you had some bad habits--" | |
| "All habits are bad habits," said Michael, with deadly calm. | |
| "Madness does not come by breaking out, but by giving in; by settling down | |
| in some dirty, little, self-repeating circle of ideas; by being tamed. | |
| YOU went mad about money, because you're an heiress." | |
| "It's a lie," cried Rosamund furiously. "I never was mean about money." | |
| "You were worse," said Michael, in a low voice and yet violently. | |
| "You thought that other people were. You thought every man who came near | |
| you must be a fortune-hunter; you would not let yourself go and be sane; | |
| and now you're mad and I'm mad, and serve us right." | |
| "You brute!" said Rosamund, quite white. "And is this true?" | |
| With the intellectual cruelty of which the Celt is capable | |
| when his abysses are in revolt, Michael was silent for | |
| some seconds, and then stepped back with an ironical bow. | |
| "Not literally true, of course," he said; "only really true. | |
| An allegory, shall we say? a social satire." | |
| "And I hate and despise your satires," cried Rosamund Hunt, | |
| letting loose her whole forcible female personality like a cyclone, | |
| and speaking every word to wound. "I despise it as I despise | |
| your rank tobacco, and your nasty, loungy ways, and your snarling, | |
| and your Radicalism, and your old clothes, and your potty | |
| little newspaper, and your rotten failure at everything. | |
| I don't care whether you call it snobbishness or not, I like | |
| life and success, and jolly things to look at, and action. | |
| You won't frighten me with Diogenes; I prefer Alexander." | |
| "Victrix causa deae--" said Michael gloomily; and this angered | |
| her more, as, not knowing what it meant, she imagined it | |
| to be witty. | |
| "Oh, I dare say you know Greek," she said, with cheerful inaccuracy; | |
| "you haven't done much with that either." And she crossed the garden, | |
| pursuing the vanished Innocent and Mary. | |
| In doing so she passed Inglewood, who was returning to the house slowly, | |
| and with a thought-clouded brow. He was one of those men who are | |
| quite clever, but quite the reverse of quick. As he came back | |
| out of the sunset garden into the twilight parlour, Diana Duke | |
| slipped swiftly to her feet and began putting away the tea things. | |
| But it was not before Inglewood had seen an instantaneous picture so unique | |
| that he might well have snapshotted it with his everlasting camera. | |
| For Diana had been sitting in front of her unfinished work with her chin | |
| on her hand, looking straight out of the window in pure thoughtless thought. | |
| "You are busy," said Arthur, oddly embarrassed with what he had seen, | |
| and wishing to ignore it. | |
| "There's no time for dreaming in this world," answered the young lady | |
| with her back to him. | |
| "I have been thinking lately," said Inglewood in a low voice, | |
| "that there's no time for waking up." | |
| She did not reply, and he walked to the window and looked out on the garden. | |
| "I don't smoke or drink, you know," he said irrelevantly, | |
| "because I think they're drugs. And yet I fancy all hobbies, | |
| like my camera and bicycle, are drugs too. Getting under a | |
| black hood, getting into a dark room--getting into a hole anyhow. | |
| Drugging myself with speed, and sunshine, and fatigue, and fresh air. | |
| Pedalling the machine so fast that I turn into a machine myself. | |
| That's the matter with all of us. We're too busy to wake up." | |
| "Well," said the girl solidly, "what is there to wake up to?" | |
| "There must be!" cried Inglewood, turning round in a singular | |
| excitement--"there must be something to wake up to! | |
| All we do is preparations--your cleanliness, and my healthiness, | |
| and Warner's scientific appliances. We're always preparing | |
| for something--something that never comes off. I ventilate | |
| the house, and you sweep the house; but what is going to HAPPEN | |
| in the house?" | |
| She was looking at him quietly, but with very bright eyes, | |
| and seemed to be searching for some form of words which she | |
| could not find. | |
| Before she could speak the door burst open, and the boisterous Rosamund Hunt, | |
| in her flamboyant white hat, boa, and parasol, stood framed in the doorway. | |
| She was in a breathing heat, and on her open face was an expression of | |
| the most infantile astonishment. | |
| "Well, here's a fine game!" she said, panting. "What am I to do now, | |
| I wonder? I've wired for Dr. Warner; that's all I can think of doing." | |
| "What is the matter?" asked Diana, rather sharply, but moving | |
| forward like one used to be called upon for assistance. | |
| "It's Mary," said the heiress, "my companion Mary Gray: | |
| that cracked friend of yours called Smith has proposed to her | |
| in the garden, after ten hours' acquaintance, and he wants | |
| to go off with her now for a special licence." | |
| Arthur Inglewood walked to the open French windows and looked | |
| out on the garden, still golden with evening light. | |
| Nothing moved there but a bird or two hopping and twittering; | |
| but beyond the hedge and railings, in the road outside | |
| the garden gate, a hansom cab was waiting, with the yellow | |
| Gladstone bag on top of it. | |
| Chapter IV | |
| The Garden of the God | |
| Diana Duke seemed inexplicably irritated at the abrupt entrance | |
| and utterance of the other girl. | |
| "Well," she said shortly, "I suppose Miss Gray can decline him if she | |
| doesn't want to marry him." | |
| "But she DOES want to marry him!" cried Rosamund in exasperation. | |
| "She's a wild, wicked fool, and I won't be parted from her." | |
| "Perhaps," said Diana icily, "but I really don't see what we can do." | |
| "But the man's balmy, Diana," reasoned her friend angrily. | |
| "I can't let my nice governess marry a man that's balmy! | |
| You or somebody MUST stop it!--Mr. Inglewood, you're a man; | |
| go and tell them they simply can't." | |
| "Unfortunately, it seems to me they simply can," said Inglewood, | |
| with a depressed air. "I have far less right of intervention | |
| than Miss Duke, besides having, of course, far less moral | |
| force than she." | |
| "You haven't either of you got much," cried Rosamund, | |
| the last stays of her formidable temper giving way; | |
| "I think I'll go somewhere else for a little sense and pluck. | |
| I think I know some one who will help me more than you do, | |
| at any rate... he's a cantankerous beast, but he's a man, | |
| and has a mind, and knows it..." And she flung out into the garden, | |
| with cheeks aflame, and the parasol whirling like a Catherine wheel. | |
| She found Michael Moon standing under the garden tree, looking over | |
| the hedge; hunched like a bird of prey, with his large pipe hanging down | |
| his long blue chin. The very hardness of his expression pleased her, | |
| after the nonsense of the new engagement and the shilly-shallying | |
| of her other friends. | |
| "I am sorry I was cross, Mr. Moon," she said frankly. "I hated you | |
| for being a cynic; but I've been well punished, for I want a cynic | |
| just now. I've had my fill of sentiment--I'm fed up with it. | |
| The world's gone mad, Mr. Moon--all except the cynics, I think. | |
| That maniac Smith wants to marry my old friend Mary, and she-- | |
| and she--doesn't seem to mind." | |
| Seeing his attentive face still undisturbedly smoking, she added smartly, | |
| "I'm not joking; that's Mr. Smith's cab outside. He swears he'll | |
| take her off now to his aunt's, and go for a special licence. | |
| Do give me some practical advice, Mr. Moon." | |
| Mr. Moon took his pipe out of his mouth, held it in his hand | |
| for an instant reflectively, and then tossed it to the other side | |
| of the garden. "My practical advice to you is this," he said: | |
| "Let him go for his special licence, and ask him to get another | |
| one for you and me." | |
| "Is that one of your jokes?" asked the young lady. | |
| "Do say what you really mean." | |
| "I mean that Innocent Smith is a man of business," | |
| said Moon with ponderous precision--"a plain, practical man: | |
| a man of affairs; a man of facts and the daylight. | |
| He has let down twenty ton of good building bricks suddenly | |
| on my head, and I am glad to say they have woken me up. | |
| We went to sleep a little while ago on this very lawn, in this | |
| very sunlight. We have had a little nap for five years or so, | |
| but now we're going to be married, Rosamund, and I can't see | |
| why that cab..." | |
| "Really," said Rosamund stoutly, "I don't know what you mean." | |
| "What a lie! cried Michael, advancing on her with brightening eyes. | |
| "I'm all for lies in an ordinary way; but don't you see that to-night | |
| they won't do? We've wandered into a world of facts, old girl. | |
| That grass growing, and that sun going down, and that cab at the door, | |
| are facts. You used to torment and excuse yourself by saying I | |
| was after your money, and didn't really love you. But if I stood | |
| here now and told you I didn't love you--you wouldn't believe me: | |
| for truth is in this garden to-night." | |
| "Really, Mr. Moon..." said Rosamund, rather more faintly. | |
| He kept two big blue magnetic eyes fixed on her face. | |
| "Is my name Moon?" he asked. "Is your name Hunt? On my honour, | |
| they sound to me as quaint and as distant as Red Indian names. | |
| It's as if your name was `Swim' and my name was `Sunrise.' But our | |
| real names are Husband and Wife, as they were when we fell asleep." | |
| "It is no good," said Rosamund, with real tears in her eyes; | |
| "one can never go back." | |
| "I can go where I damn please," said Michael, "and I can carry | |
| you on my shoulder." | |
| "But really, Michael, really, you must stop and think!" | |
| cried the girl earnestly. "You could carry me off my feet, I dare say, | |
| soul and body, but it may be bitter bad business for all that. | |
| These things done in that romantic rush, like Mr. Smith's, they-- | |
| they do attract women, I don't deny it. As you say, we're all | |
| telling the truth to-night. They've attracted poor Mary, for one. | |
| They attract me, Michael. But the cold fact remains: | |
| imprudent marriages do lead to long unhappiness and disappointment-- | |
| you've got used to your drinks and things--I shan't be | |
| pretty much longer--" | |
| "Imprudent marriages!" roared Michael. "And pray where in earth | |
| or heaven are there any prudent marriages? Might as well talk | |
| about prudent suicides. You and I have dawdled round each other | |
| long enough, and are we any safer than Smith and Mary Gray, | |
| who met last night? You never know a husband till you marry him. | |
| Unhappy! of course you'll be unhappy. Who the devil are you | |
| that you shouldn't be unhappy, like the mother that bore you? | |
| Disappointed! of course we'll be disappointed. I, for one, | |
| don't expect till I die to be so good a man as I am at this minute-- | |
| a tower with all the trumpets shouting." | |
| "You see all this," said Rosamund, with a grand sincerity in her solid face, | |
| "and do you really want to marry me?" | |
| "My darling, what else is there to do?" reasoned the Irishman. "What other | |
| occupation is there for an active man on this earth, except to | |
| marry you? What's the alternative to marriage, barring sleep? | |
| It's not liberty, Rosamund. Unless you marry God, as our nuns do in Ireland, | |
| you must marry Man--that is Me. The only third thing is to marry yourself-- | |
| yourself, yourself, yourself--the only companion that is never satisfied-- | |
| and never satisfactory." | |
| "Michael," said Miss Hunt, in a very soft voice, "if you won't talk so much, | |
| I'll marry you." | |
| "It's no time for talking," cried Michael Moon; singing is the only thing. | |
| Can't you find that mandoline of yours, Rosamund?" | |
| "Go and fetch it for me," said Rosamund, with crisp and sharp authority. | |
| The lounging Mr. Moon stood for one split second astonished; | |
| then he shot away across the lawn, as if shod with the feathered | |
| shoes out of the Greek fairy tale. He cleared three yards | |
| and fifteen daisies at a leap, out of mere bodily levity; | |
| but when he came within a yard or two of the open parlour windows, | |
| his flying feet fell in their old manner like lead; | |
| he twisted round and came back slowly, whistling. The events | |
| of that enchanted evening were not at an end. | |
| Inside the dark sitting-room of which Moon had caught a glimpse a curious | |
| thing had happened, almost an instant after the intemperate exit | |
| of Rosamund. It was something which, occurring in that obscure parlour, | |
| seemed to Arthur Inglewood like heaven and earth turning head over heels, | |
| the sea being the ceiling and the stars the floor. No words can express | |
| how it astonished him, as it astonishes all simple men when it happens. | |
| Yet the stiffest female stoicism seems separated from it only by a sheet of | |
| paper or a sheet of steel. It indicates no surrender, far less any sympathy. | |
| The most rigid and ruthless woman can begin to cry, just as the most | |
| effeminate man can grow a beard. It is a separate sexual power, | |
| and proves nothing one way or the other about force of character. | |
| But to young men ignorant of women, like Arthur Inglewood, to see Diana Duke | |
| crying was like seeing a motor-car shedding tears of petrol. | |
| He could never have given (even if his really manly modesty had permitted it) | |
| any vaguest vision of what he did when he saw that portent. He acted | |
| as men do when a theatre catches fire--very differently from how they | |
| would have conceived themselves as acting, whether for better or worse. | |
| He had a faint memory of certain half-stifled explanations, that the heiress | |
| was the one really paying guest, and she would go, and the bailiffs | |
| (in consequence) would come; but after that he knew nothing of his own | |
| conduct except by the protests it evoked. | |
| "Leave me alone, Mr. Inglewood--leave me alone; that's not the way to help." | |
| "But I can help you," said Arthur, with grinding certainty; | |
| "I can, I can, I can..." | |
| "Why, you said," cried the girl, "that you were much weaker than me." | |
| "So I am weaker than you," said Arthur, in a voice that went | |
| vibrating through everything, "but not just now." | |
| "Let go my hands!" cried Diana. "I won't be bullied." | |
| In one element he was much stronger than she--the matter of humour. | |
| This leapt up in him suddenly, and he laughed, saying: "Well, you are mean. | |
| You know quite well you'll bully me all the rest of my life. | |
| You might allow a man the one minute of his life when he's allowed to bully." | |
| It was as extraordinary for him to laugh as for her to cry, | |
| and for the first time since her childhood Diana was entirely | |
| off her guard. | |
| "Do you mean you want to marry me?" she said. | |
| "Why, there's a cab at the door!" cried Inglewood, springing up | |
| with an unconscious energy and bursting open the glass doors | |
| that led into the garden. | |
| As he led her out by the hand they realized somehow for the first time | |
| that the house and garden were on a steep height over London. And yet, | |
| though they felt the place to be uplifted, they felt it also to be secret: | |
| it was like some round walled garden on the top of one of the | |
| turrets of heaven. | |
| Inglewood looked around dreamily, his brown eyes devouring | |
| all sorts of details with a senseless delight. He noticed for | |
| the first time that the railings of the gate beyond the garden | |
| bushes were moulded like little spearheads and painted blue. | |
| He noticed that one of the blue spears was loosened in its place, | |
| and hung sideways; and this almost made him laugh. He thought it | |
| somehow exquisitely harmless and funny that the railing should | |
| be crooked; he thought he should like to know how it happened, | |
| who did it, and how the man was getting on. | |
| When they were gone a few feet across that fiery grass realized | |
| that they were not alone. Rosamund Hunt and the eccentric | |
| Mr. Moon, both of whom they had last seen in the blackest | |
| temper of detachment, were standing together on the lawn. | |
| They were standing in quite an ordinary manner, and yet they | |
| looked somehow like people in a book. | |
| "Oh," said Diana, "what lovely air!" | |
| "I know," called out Rosamund, with a pleasure so positive | |
| that it rang out like a complaint. "It's just like that horrid, | |
| beastly fizzy stuff they gave me that made me feel happy." | |
| "Oh, it isn't like anything but itself!" answered Diana, breathing deeply. | |
| "Why, it's all cold, and yet it feels like fire." | |
| "Balmy is the word we use in Fleet Street," | |
| said Mr. Moon. "Balmy--especially on the crumpet." | |
| And he fanned himself quite unnecessarily with his straw hat. | |
| They were all full of little leaps and pulsations of objectless | |
| and airy energy. Diana stirred and stretched her long arms rigidly, | |
| as if crucified, in a sort of excruciating restfulness; | |
| Michael stood still for long intervals, with gathered muscles, | |
| then spun round like a teetotum, and stood still again; | |
| Rosamund did not trip, for women never trip, except when they | |
| fall on their noses, but she struck the ground with her foot | |
| as she moved, as if to some inaudible dance tune; and Inglewood, | |
| leaning quite quietly against a tree, had unconsciously | |
| clutched a branch and shaken it with a creative violence. | |
| Those giant gestures of Man, that made the high statues | |
| and the strokes of war, tossed and tormented all their limbs. | |
| Silently as they strolled and stood they were bursting like | |
| batteries with an animal magnetism. | |
| "And now," cried Moon quite suddenly, stretching out a hand on each side, | |
| "let's dance round that bush!" | |
| "Why, what bush do you mean?" asked Rosamund, looking round with a sort | |
| of radiant rudeness. | |
| "The bush that isn't there," said Michael--"the Mulberry Bush." | |
| They had taken each other's hands, half laughing and quite ritually; | |
| and before they could disconnect again Michael spun them all round, | |
| like a demon spinning the world for a top. Diana felt, as the circle of | |
| the horizon flew instantaneously around her, a far aerial sense of the ring | |
| of heights beyond London and corners where she had climbed as a child; | |
| she seemed almost to hear the rooks cawing about the old pines on Highgate, | |
| or to see the glowworms gathering and kindling in the woods of Box Hill. | |
| The circle broke--as all such perfect circles of levity must break-- | |
| and sent its author, Michael, flying, as by centrifugal force, far away | |
| against the blue rails of the gate. When reeling there he suddenly | |
| raised shout after shout of a new and quite dramatic character. | |
| "Why, it's Warner!" he shouted, waving his arms. "It's jolly old Warner-- | |
| with a new silk hat and the old silk moustache!" | |
| "Is that Dr. Warner?" cried Rosamund, bounding forward in a | |
| burst of memory, amusement, and distress. "Oh, I'm so sorry! | |
| Oh, do tell him it's all right!" | |
| "Let's take hands and tell him," said Michael Moon. For indeed, | |
| while they were talking, another hansom cab had dashed up behind | |
| the one already waiting, and Dr. Herbert Warner, leaving a companion | |
| in the cab, had carefully deposited himself on the pavement. | |
| Now, when you are an eminent physician and are wired for by | |
| an heiress to come to a case of dangerous mania, and when, | |
| as you come in through the garden to the house, the heiress | |
| and her landlady and two of the gentlemen boarders join hands | |
| and dance round you in a ring, calling out, "It's all right! it's | |
| all right!" you are apt to be flustered and even displeased. | |
| Dr. Warner was a placid but hardly a placable person. | |
| The two things are by no means the same; and even when Moon explained | |
| to him that he, Warner, with his high hat and tall, solid figure, | |
| was just such a classic figure as OUGHT to be danced round | |
| by a ring of laughing maidens on some old golden Greek seashore-- | |
| even then he seemed to miss the point of the general rejoicing. | |
| "Inglewood!" cried Dr. Warner, fixing his former disciple with a stare, | |
| "are you mad?" | |
| Arthur flushed to the roots of his brown hair, but he answered, | |
| easily and quietly enough, "Not now. The truth is, Warner, I've just | |
| made a rather important medical discovery--quite in your line." | |
| "What do you mean?" asked the great doctor stiffly--"what discovery?" | |
| "I've discovered that health really is catching, like disease," | |
| answered Arthur. | |
| "Yes; sanity has broken out, and is spreading," said Michael, | |
| performing a ~pas seul~ with a thoughtful expression. | |
| "Twenty thousand more cases taken to the hospitals; | |
| nurses employed night and day." | |
| Dr. Warner studied Michael's grave face and lightly moving | |
| legs with an unfathomed wonder. "And is THIS, may I ask," | |
| he said, "the sanity that is spreading?" | |
| "You must forgive me, Dr. Warner," cried Rosamund Hunt heartily. | |
| "I know I've treated you badly; but indeed it was all a mistake. | |
| I was in a frightfully bad temper when I sent for you, but now | |
| it all seems like a dream--and and Mr. Smith is the sweetest, | |
| most sensible, most delightful old thing that ever existed, | |
| and he may marry any one he likes--except me." | |
| "I should suggest Mrs. Duke," said Michael. | |
| The gravity of Dr. Warner's face increased. He took a slip | |
| of pink paper from his waistcoat pocket, with his pale | |
| blue eyes quietly fixed on Rosamund's face all the time. | |
| He spoke with a not inexcusable frigidity. | |
| "Really, Miss Hunt," he said, "you are not yet very reassuring. | |
| You sent me this wire only half an hour ago: `Come at once, | |
| if possible, with another doctor. Man--Innocent Smith--gone mad | |
| on premises, and doing dreadful things. Do you know anything of him?' | |
| I went round at once to a distinguished colleague of mine, a doctor | |
| who is also a private detective and an authority on criminal lunacy; | |
| he has come round with me, and is waiting in the cab. Now you calmly | |
| tell me that this criminal madman is a highly sweet and sane old thing, | |
| with accompaniments that set me speculating on your own definition of sanity. | |
| I hardly comprehend the change." | |
| "Oh, how can one explain a change in sun and moon and everybody's soul?" | |
| cried Rosamund, in despair. "Must I confess we had got so morbid | |
| as to think him mad merely because he wanted to get married; and that we | |
| didn't even know it was only because we wanted to get married ourselves? | |
| We'll humiliate ourselves, if you like, doctor; we're happy enough." | |
| "Where is Mr. Smith?" asked Warner of Inglewood very sharply. | |
| Arthur started; he had forgotten all about the central figure of their farce, | |
| who had not been visible for an hour or more. | |
| "I--I think he's on the other side of the house, by the dustbin," he said. | |
| "He may be on the road to Russia," said Warner, "but he must be found." | |
| And he strode away and disappeared round a corner of the house | |
| by the sunflowers. | |
| "I hope," said Rosamund, "he won't really interfere with Mr. Smith." | |
| "Interfere with the daisies!" said Michael with a snort. | |
| "A man can't be locked up for falling in love--at least | |
| I hope not." | |
| "No; I think even a doctor couldn't make a disease out of him. | |
| He'd throw off the doctor like the disease, don't you know? | |
| I believe it's a case of a sort of holy well. I believe Innocent Smith | |
| is simply innocent, and that is why he is so extraordinary." | |
| It was Rosamund who spoke, restlessly tracing circles in the grass | |
| with the point of her white shoe. | |
| "I think," said Inglewood, "that Smith is not extraordinary at all. | |
| He's comic just because he's so startlingly commonplace. | |
| Don't you know what it is to be all one family circle, with aunts | |
| and uncles, when a schoolboy comes home for the holidays? | |
| That bag there on the cab is only a schoolboy's hamper. | |
| This tree here in the garden is only the sort of tree that any | |
| schoolboy would have climbed. Yes, that's the thing that has | |
| haunted us all about him, the thing we could never fit a word to. | |
| Whether he is my old schoolfellow or no, at least he is all my | |
| old schoolfellows. He is the endless bun-eating, ball-throwing | |
| animal that we have all been." | |
| "That is only you absurd boys," said Diana. "I don't believe | |
| any girl was ever so silly, and I'm sure no girl was ever | |
| so happy, except--" and she stopped. | |
| "I will tell you the truth about Innocent Smith," said Michael Moon in a | |
| low voice. "Dr. Warner has gone to look for him in vain. He is not there. | |
| Haven't you noticed that we never saw him since we found ourselves? | |
| He was an astral baby born on all four of us; he was only our own | |
| youth returned. Long before poor old Warner had clambered out of his cab, | |
| the thing we called Smith had dissolved into dew and light on this lawn. | |
| Once or twice more, by the mercy of God, we may feel the thing, | |
| but the man we shall never see. In a spring garden before breakfast | |
| we shall smell the smell called Smith. In the snapping of brisk twigs | |
| in tiny fires we shall hear a noise named Smith. Everything insatiable | |
| and innocent in the grasses that gobble up the earth like at a bun feast, | |
| in the white mornings that split the sky as a boy splits up white firwood, | |
| we may feel for one instant the presence of an impetuous purity; | |
| but his innocence was too close to the unconsciousness of inanimate things | |
| not to melt back at a mere touch into the mild hedges and heavens; he--" | |
| He was interrupted from behind the house by a bang like that of a bomb. | |
| Almost at the same instant the stranger in the cab sprang out of it, | |
| leaving it rocking upon the stones of the road. He clutched the blue railings | |
| of the garden, and peered eagerly over them in the direction of the noise. | |
| He was a small, loose, yet alert man, very thin, with a face that seemed | |
| made out of fish bones, and a silk hat quite as rigid and resplendent | |
| as Warner's, but thrust back recklessly on the hinder part of his head. | |
| "Murder!" he shrieked, in a high and feminine but very penetrating voice. | |
| "Stop that murderer there!" | |
| Even as he shrieked a second shot shook the lower windows | |
| of the house, and with the noise of it Dr. Herbert Warner came | |
| flying round the corner like a leaping rabbit. Yet before | |
| he had reached the group a third discharge had deafened them, | |
| and they saw with their own eyes two spots of white sky drilled | |
| through the second of the unhappy Herbert's high hats. | |
| The next moment the fugitive physician fell over a flowerpot, | |
| and came down on all floors, staring like a cow. The hat with | |
| the two shot-holes in it rolled upon the gravel path before him, | |
| and Innocent Smith came round the corner like a railway train. | |
| He was looking twice his proper size--a giant clad in green, | |
| the big revolver still smoking in his hand, his face sanguine | |
| and in shadow, his eyes blazing like all stars, and his yellow | |
| hair standing out all ways like Struwelpeter's. | |
| Though this startling scene hung but an instant in stillness, | |
| Inglewood had time to feel once more what he had felt when | |
| he saw the other lovers standing on the lawn--the sensation | |
| of a certain cut and coloured clearness that belongs rather | |
| to the things of art than to the things of experience. | |
| The broken flowerpot with its red-hot geraniums, the green | |
| bulk of Smith and the black bulk of Warner, the blue-spiked | |
| railings behind, clutched by the stranger's yellow vulture | |
| claws and peered over by his long vulture neck, the silk hat | |
| on the gravel, and the little cloudlet of smoke floating | |
| across the garden as innocently as the puff of a cigarette-- | |
| all these seemed unnaturally distinct and definite. | |
| They existed, like symbols, in an ecstasy of separation. | |
| Indeed, every object grew more and more particular | |
| and precious because the whole picture was breaking up. | |
| Things look so bright just before they burst. | |
| Long before his fancies had begun, let alone ceased, | |
| Arthur had stepped across and taken one of Smith's arms. | |
| Simultaneously the little stranger had run up the steps and taken | |
| the other. Smith went into peals of laughter, and surrendered | |
| his pistol with perfect willingness. Moon raised the doctor | |
| to his feet, and then went and leaned sullenly on the garden gate. | |
| The girls were quiet and vigilant, as good women mostly | |
| are in instants of catastrophe, but their faces showed that, | |
| somehow or other, a light had been dashed out of the sky. | |
| The doctor himself, when he had risen, collected his hat and wits, | |
| and dusting himself down with an air of great disgust, turned to | |
| them in brief apology. He was very white with his recent panic, | |
| but he spoke with perfect self-control. | |
| "You will excuse us, ladies," he said; "my friend and | |
| Mr. Inglewood are both scientists in their several ways. | |
| I think we had better all take Mr. Smith indoors, and communicate | |
| with you later." | |
| And under the guard of the three natural philosophers the disarmed Smith | |
| was led tactfully into the house, still roaring with laughter. | |
| From time to time during the next twenty minutes his distant | |
| boom of mirth could again be heard through the half-open window; | |
| but there came no echo of the quiet voices of the physicians. | |
| The girls walked about the garden together, rubbing up each other's | |
| spirits as best they might; Michael Moon still hung heavily against | |
| the gate. Somewhere about the expiration of that time Dr. Warner | |
| came out of the house with a face less pale but even more stern, | |
| and the little man with the fish-bone face advanced gravely in his rear. | |
| And if the face of Warner in the sunlight was that of a hanging judge, | |
| the face of the little man behind was more like a death's head. | |
| "Miss Hunt," said Dr. Herbert Warner, "I only wish to offer you my warm | |
| thanks and admiration. By your prompt courage and wisdom in sending | |
| for us by wire this evening, you have enabled us to capture and put out | |
| of mischief one of the most cruel and terrible of the enemies of humanity-- | |
| a criminal whose plausibility and pitilessness have never been before | |
| combined in flesh." | |
| Rosamund looked across at him with a white, blank face and blinking eyes. | |
| "What do you mean?" she asked. "You can't mean Mr. Smith?" | |
| "He has gone by many other names," said the doctor gravely, | |
| "and not one he did not leave to be cursed behind him. That man, | |
| Miss Hunt, has left a track of blood and tears across the world. | |
| Whether he is mad as well as wicked, we are trying, in the interests | |
| of science, to discover. In any case, we shall have to take him | |
| to a magistrate first, even if only on the road to a lunatic asylum. | |
| But the lunatic asylum in which he is confined will have to be | |
| sealed with wall within wall, and ringed with guns like a fortress, | |
| or he will break out again to bring forth carnage and darkness | |
| on the earth." | |
| Rosamund looked at the two doctors, her face growing paler and paler. | |
| Then her eyes strayed to Michael, who was leaning on the gate; | |
| but he continued to lean on it without moving, with his face turned | |
| away towards the darkening road. | |
| Chapter V | |
| The Allegorical Practical Joker | |
| The criminal specialist who had come with Dr. Warner was a somewhat more | |
| urbane and even dapper figure than he had appeared when clutching the railings | |
| and craning his neck into the garden. He even looked comparatively young | |
| when he took his hat off, having fair hair parted in the middle and carefully | |
| curled on each side, and lively movements, especially of the hands. | |
| He had a dandified monocle slung round his neck by a broad black ribbon, | |
| and a big bow tie, as if a big American moth had alighted on him. | |
| His dress and gestures were bright enough for a boy's; it was only when you | |
| looked at the fish-bone face that you beheld something acrid and old. | |
| His manners were excellent, though hardly English, and he had two | |
| half-conscious tricks by which people who only met him once remembered him. | |
| One was a trick of closing his eyes when he wished to be particularly polite; | |
| the other was one of lifting his joined thumb and forefinger in the air as if | |
| holding a pinch of snuff, when he was hesitating or hovering over a word. | |
| But hose who were longer in his company tended to forget these oddities | |
| in the stream of his quaint and solemn conversation and really singular views. | |
| "Miss Hunt," said Dr. Warner, "this is Dr. Cyrus Pym." | |
| Dr. Cyrus Pym shut his eyes during the introduction, rather as if he were | |
| "playing fair" in some child's game, and gave a prompt little bow, | |
| which somehow suddenly revealed him as a citizen of the United States. | |
| "Dr. Cyrus Pym," continued Warner (Dr. Pym shut his eyes again), "is perhaps | |
| the first criminological expert of America. We are very fortunate to be able | |
| to consult with him in this extraordinary case--" | |
| "I can't make head or tail of anything," said Rosamund. "How can | |
| poor Mr. Smith be so dreadful as he is by your account?" | |
| "Or by your telegram," said Herbert Warner, smiling. | |
| "Oh, you don't understand," cried the girl impatiently. | |
| "Why, he's done us all more good than going to church." | |
| "I think I can explain to the young lady," said Dr. Cyrus Pym. "This criminal | |
| or maniac Smith is a very genius of evil, and has a method of his own, | |
| a method of the most daring ingenuity. He is popular wherever he goes, | |
| for he invades every house as an uproarious child. People are | |
| getting suspicious of all the respectable disguises for a scoundrel; | |
| so he always uses the disguise of--what shall I say--the Bohemian, | |
| the blameless Bohemian. He always carries people off their feet. | |
| People are used to the mask of conventional good conduct. | |
| He goes in for eccentric good-nature. You expect a Don Juan to dress | |
| up as a solemn and solid Spanish merchant; but you're not prepared | |
| when he dresses up as Don Quixote. You expect a humbug to behave like | |
| Sir Charles Grandison; because (with all respect, Miss Hunt, for the deep, | |
| tear-moving tenderness of Samuel Richardson) Sir Charles Grandison | |
| so often behaved like a humbug. But no real red-blooded citizen is quite | |
| ready for a humbug that models himself not on Sir Charles Grandison | |
| but on Sir Roger de Coverly. Setting up to be a good man a little cracked | |
| is a new criminal incognito, Miss Hunt. It's been a great notion, | |
| and uncommonly successful; but its success just makes it mighty cruel. | |
| I can forgive Dick Turpin if he impersonates Dr. Busby; I can't forgive | |
| him when he impersonates Dr. Johnson. The saint with a tile loose | |
| is a bit too sacred, I guess, to be parodied." | |
| "But how do you know," cried Rosamund desperately, "that Mr. Smith | |
| is a known criminal?" | |
| "I collated all the documents," said the American, "when my friend Warner | |
| knocked me up on receipt of your cable. It is my professional affair | |
| to know these facts, Miss Hunt; and there's no more doubt about them | |
| than about the Bradshaw down at the depot. This man has hitherto escaped | |
| the law, through his admirable affectations of infancy or insanity. | |
| But I myself, as a specialist, have privately authenticated notes | |
| of some eighteen or twenty crimes attempted or achieved in this manner. | |
| He comes to houses as he has to this, and gets a grand popularity. | |
| He makes things go. They do go; when he's gone the things are gone. | |
| Gone, Miss Hunt, gone, a man's life or a man's spoons, or more often a woman. | |
| I assure you I have all the memoranda." | |
| "I have seen them," said Warner solidly, "I can assure you | |
| that all this is correct." | |
| "The most unmanly aspect, according to my feelings," went on the American | |
| doctor, "is this perpetual deception of innocent women by a wild simulation | |
| of innocence. From almost every house where this great imaginative devil | |
| has been, he has taken some poor girl away with him; some say he's got | |
| a hypnotic eye with his other queer features, and that they go like automata. | |
| What's become of all those poor girls nobody knows. Murdered, I dare say; | |
| for we've lots of instances, besides this one, of his turning his hand | |
| to murder, though none ever brought him under the law. Anyhow, our most | |
| modern methods of research can't find any trace of the wretched women. | |
| It's when I think of them that I am really moved, Miss Hunt. And I've | |
| really nothing else to say just now except what Dr. Warner has said." | |
| "Quite so," said Warner, with a smile that seemed moulded in marble--"that | |
| we all have to thank you very much for that telegram." | |
| The little Yankee scientist had been speaking with such evident | |
| sincerity that one forgot the tricks of his voice and manner-- | |
| the falling eyelids, the rising intonation, and the poised | |
| finger and thumb--which were at other times a little comic. | |
| It was not so much that he was cleverer than Warner; | |
| perhaps he was not so clever, though he was more celebrated. | |
| But he had what Warner never had, a fresh and unaffected seriousness-- | |
| the great American virtue of simplicity. Rosamund knitted | |
| her brows and looked gloomily toward the darkening house | |
| that contained the dark prodigy. | |
| Broad daylight still endured; but it had already changed from gold to silver, | |
| and was changing from silver to gray. The long plumy shadows of the one or | |
| two trees in the garden faded more and more upon a dead background of dusk. | |
| In the sharpest and deepest shadow, which was the entrance to the house | |
| by the big French windows, Rosamund could watch a hurried consultation | |
| between Inglewood (who was still left in charge of the mysterious captive) | |
| and Diana, who had moved to his assistance from without. After a few minutes | |
| and gestures they went inside, shutting the glass doors upon the garden; | |
| and the garden seemed to grow grayer still. | |
| The American gentleman named Pym seemed to be turning and on the move | |
| in the same direction; but before he started he spoke to Rosamund with a | |
| flash of that guileless tact which redeemed much of his childish vanity, | |
| and with something of that spontaneous poetry which made it difficult, | |
| pedantic as he was, to call him a pedant. | |
| "I'm vurry sorry, Miss Hunt," he said; "but Dr. Warner and I, | |
| as two quali-FIED practitioners, had better take Mr. Smith | |
| away in that cab, and the less said about it the better. | |
| Don't you agitate yourself, Miss Hunt. You've just got to think | |
| that we're taking away a monstrosity, something that oughtn't to be | |
| at all--something like one of those gods in your Britannic Museum, | |
| all wings, and beards, and legs, and eyes, and no shape. | |
| That's what Smith is, and you shall soon be quit of him." | |
| He had already taken a step towards the house, and Warner was about | |
| to follow him, when the glass doors were opened again and Diana Duke | |
| came out with more than her usual quickness across the lawn. | |
| Her face was aquiver with worry and excitement, and her dark earnest | |
| eyes fixed only on the other girl. | |
| "Rosamund," she cried in despair, "what shall I do with her?" | |
| "With her?" cried Miss Hunt, with a violent jump. "O lord, | |
| he isn't a woman too, is he?" | |
| "No, no, no," said Dr. Pym soothingly, as if in common fairness. | |
| "A woman? no, really, he is not so bad as that." | |
| "I mean your friend Mary Gray," retorted Diana with equal tartness. | |
| "What on earth am I to do with her?" | |
| "How can we tell her about Smith, you mean," answered Rosamund, her face | |
| at once clouded and softening. "Yes, it will be pretty painful." | |
| "But I HAVE told her," exploded Diana, with more than her | |
| congenital exasperation. "I have told her, and she doesn't seem to mind. | |
| She still says she's going away with Smith in that cab." | |
| "But it's impossible!" ejaculated Rosamund. "Why, Mary is | |
| really religious. She--" | |
| She stopped in time to realize that Mary Gray was comparatively | |
| close to her on the lawn. Her quiet companion had come down very | |
| quietly into the garden, but dressed very decisively for travel. | |
| She had a neat but very ancient blue tam-o'-shanter on her head, | |
| and was pulling some rather threadbare gray gloves on to her hands. | |
| Yet the two tints fitted excellently with her heavy copper-coloured hair; | |
| the more excellently for the touch of shabbiness: for a woman's clothes | |
| never suit her so well as when they seem to suit her by accident. | |
| But in this case the woman had a quality yet more unique and attractive. | |
| In such gray hours, when the sun is sunk and the skies are | |
| already sad, it will often happen that one reflection at some | |
| occasional angle will cause to linger the last of the light. | |
| A scrap of window, a scrap of water, a scrap of looking-glass, | |
| will be full of the fire that is lost to all the rest of the earth. | |
| The quaint, almost triangular face of Mary Gray was like some | |
| triangular piece of mirror that could still repeat the splendour | |
| of hours before. Mary, though she was always graceful, | |
| could never before have properly been called beautiful; and yet | |
| her happiness amid all that misery was so beautiful as to make | |
| a man catch his breath. | |
| "O Diana," cried Rosamund in a lower voice and altering her phrase; | |
| "but how did you tell her?" | |
| "It is quite easy to tell her," answered Diana sombrely; | |
| "it makes no impression at all." | |
| "I'm afraid I've kept everything waiting," said Mary Gray apologetically, | |
| "and now we must really say good-bye. Innocent is taking me to his aunt's | |
| over at Hampstead, and I'm afraid she goes to bed early." | |
| Her words were quite casual and practical, but there was a sort | |
| of sleepy light in her eyes that was more baffling than darkness; | |
| she was like one speaking absently with her eye on some | |
| very distant object. | |
| "Mary, Mary," cried Rosamund, almost breaking down, "I'm so sorry about it, | |
| but the thing can't be at all. We--we have found out all about Mr. Smith." | |
| "All?" repeated Mary, with a low and curious intonation; | |
| "why, that must be awfully exciting." | |
| There was no noise for an instant and no motion except that | |
| the silent Michael Moon, leaning on the gate, lifted his head, | |
| as it might be to listen. Then Rosamund remaining speechless, | |
| Dr. Pym came to her rescue in a definite way. | |
| "To begin with," he said, "this man Smith is constantly attempting murder. | |
| The Warden of Brakespeare College--" | |
| "I know," said Mary, with a vague but radiant smile. | |
| "Innocent told me." | |
| "I can't say what he told you," replied Pym quickly, "but I'm very much | |
| afraid it wasn't true. The plain truth is that the man's stained | |
| with every known human crime. I assure you I have all the documents. | |
| I have evidence of his committing burglary, signed by a most eminent | |
| English curate. I have--" | |
| "Oh, but there were two curates," cried Mary, with a certain gentle eagerness; | |
| "that was what made it so much funnier." | |
| The darkened glass doors of the house opened once more, | |
| and Inglewood appeared for an instant, making a sort of signal. | |
| The American doctor bowed, the English doctor did not, | |
| but they both set out stolidly towards the house. | |
| No one else moved, not even Michael hanging on the gate; | |
| but the back of his head and shoulders had still an indescribable | |
| indication that he was listening to every word. | |
| "But don't you understand, Mary," cried Rosamund in despair; "don't you | |
| know that awful things have happened even before our very eyes. | |
| I should have thought you would have heard the revolver shots upstairs." | |
| "Yes, I heard the shots," said Mary almost brightly; "but I was busy packing | |
| just then. And Innocent had told me he was going to shoot at Dr. Warner; | |
| so it wasn't worth while to come down." | |
| "Oh, I don't understand what you mean," cried Rosamund Hunt, | |
| stamping, "but you must and shall understand what I mean. | |
| I don't care how cruelly I put it, if only I can save you. | |
| I mean that your Innocent Smith is the most awfully wicked | |
| man in the world. He has sent bullets at lots of other men | |
| and gone off in cabs with lots of other women. And he seems | |
| to have killed the women too, for nobody can find them." | |
| "He is really rather naughty sometimes," said Mary Gray, | |
| laughing softly as she buttoned her old gray gloves. | |
| "Oh, this is really mesmerism, or something," said Rosamund, | |
| and burst into tears. | |
| At the same moment the two black-clad doctors appeared out | |
| of the house with their great green-clad captive between them. | |
| He made no resistance, but was still laughing in a groggy | |
| and half-witted style. Arthur Inglewood followed in the rear, | |
| a dark and red study in the last shades of distress and shame. | |
| In this black, funereal, and painfully realistic style the exit | |
| from Beacon House was made by a man whose entrance a day before | |
| had been effected by the happy leaping of a wall and the hilarious | |
| climbing of a tree. No one moved of the groups in the garden | |
| except Mary Gray, who stepped forward quite naturally, | |
| calling out, "Are you ready, Innocent? Our cab's been waiting | |
| such a long time." | |
| "Ladies and gentlemen," said Dr. Warner firmly, "I must insist on asking | |
| this lady to stand aside. We shall have trouble enough as it is, | |
| with the three of us in a cab." | |
| "But it IS our cab," persisted Mary. "Why, there's Innocent's yellow | |
| bag on the top of it." | |
| "Stand aside," repeated Warner roughly. "And you, Mr. Moon, | |
| please be so obliging as to move a moment. Come, come! the sooner | |
| this ugly business is over the better--and how can we open the gate | |
| if you will keep leaning on it?" | |
| Michael Moon looked at his long lean forefinger, and seemed | |
| to consider and reconsider this argument. "Yes, he said at last; | |
| "but how can I lean on this gate if you keep on opening it?" | |
| "Oh, get out of the way!" cried Warner, almost good-humouredly. | |
| "You can lean on the gate any time." | |
| "No," said Moon reflectively. "Seldom the time and the place | |
| and the blue gate altogether; and it all depends whether you | |
| come of an old country family. My ancestors leaned on gates | |
| before any one had discovered how to open them." | |
| "Michael!" cried Arthur Inglewood in a kind of agony, "are you going to get | |
| out of the way?" | |
| "Why, no; I think not," said Michael, after some meditation, | |
| and swung himself slowly round, so that he confronted the company, | |
| while still, in a lounging attitude, occupying the path. | |
| "Hullo!" he called out suddenly; "what are you doing to Mr. Smith?" | |
| "Taking him away," answered Warner shortly, "to be examined." | |
| "Matriculation?" asked Moon brightly. | |
| "By a magistrate," said the other curtly. | |
| "And what other magistrate," cried Michael, raising his voice, | |
| "dares to try what befell on this free soil, save only the ancient | |
| and independent Dukes of Beacon? What other court dares to try | |
| one of our company, save only the High Court of Beacon? Have you | |
| forgotten that only this afternoon we flew the flag of independence | |
| and severed ourselves from all the nations of the earth?" | |
| "Michael," cried Rosamund, wringing her hands, "how can you stand | |
| there talking nonsense? Why, you saw the dreadful thing yourself. | |
| You were there when he went mad. It was you that helped the doctor | |
| up when he fell over the flower-pot." | |
| "And the High Court of Beacon," replied Moon with hauteur, | |
| "has special powers in all cases concerning lunatics, | |
| flower-pots, and doctors who fall down in gardens. | |
| It's in our very first charter from Edward I: `Si medicus | |
| quisquam in horto prostratus--'" | |
| "Out of the way!" cried Warner with sudden fury, "or we will force | |
| you out of it." | |
| "What!" cried Michael Moon, with a cry of hilarious fierceness. | |
| "Shall I die in defence of this sacred pale? Will you paint | |
| these blue railings red with my gore?" and he laid hold of one | |
| of the blue spikes behind him. As Inglewood had noticed earlier | |
| in the evening, the railing was loose and crooked at this place, | |
| and the painted iron staff and spearhead came away in Michael's | |
| hand as he shook it. | |
| "See!" he cried, brandishing this broken javelin in the air, | |
| "the very lances round Beacon Tower leap from their places to defend it. | |
| Ah, in such a place and hour it is a fine thing to die alone!" | |
| And in a voice like a drum he rolled the noble lines of Ronsard-- | |
| "Ou pour l'honneur de Dieu, ou pour le droit de mon prince, Navre, | |
| poitrine ouverte, au bord de mon province." | |
| "Sakes alive!" said the American gentleman, almost in an awed tone. | |
| Then he added, "Are there two maniacs here?" | |
| "No; there are five," thundered Moon. "Smith and I are the only | |
| sane people left." | |
| "Michael!" cried Rosamund; "Michael, what does it mean?" | |
| "It means bosh!" roared Michael, and slung his painted spear | |
| hurtling to the other end of the garden. "It means that doctors | |
| are bosh, and criminology is bosh, and Americans are bosh-- | |
| much more bosh than our Court of Beacon. It means, you fatheads, | |
| that Innocent Smith is no more mad or bad than the bird | |
| on that tree." | |
| "But, my dear Moon," began Inglewood in his modest manner, "these gentlemen--" | |
| "On the word of two doctors," exploded Moon again, | |
| without listening to anybody else, "shut up in a private hell | |
| on the word of two doctors! And such doctors! Oh, my hat! | |
| Look at 'em!--do just look at 'em! Would you read a book, | |
| or buy a dog, or go to a hotel on the advice of twenty such? | |
| My people came from Ireland, and were Catholics. What would | |
| you say if I called a man wicked on the word of two priests?" | |
| "But it isn't only their word, Michael," reasoned Rosamund; | |
| "they've got evidence too." | |
| "Have you looked at it?" asked Moon. | |
| "No," said Rosamund, with a sort of faint surprise; "these gentlemen | |
| are in charge of it." | |
| "And of everything else, it seems to me," said Michael. "Why, you | |
| haven't even had the decency to consult Mrs. Duke." | |
| "Oh, that's no use," said Diana in an undertone to Rosamund; "Auntie can't | |
| say `Bo!' to a goose." | |
| "I am glad to hear it," answered Michael, "for with such a flock of geese | |
| to say it to, the horrid expletive might be constantly on her lips. | |
| For my part, I simply refuse to let things be done in this light | |
| and airy style. I appeal to Mrs. Duke--it's her house." | |
| "Mrs. Duke?" repeated Inglewood doubtfully. | |
| "Yes, Mrs. Duke," said Michael firmly, "commonly called the Iron Duke." | |
| "If you ask Auntie," said Diana quietly, "she'll only be for doing nothing | |
| at all. Her only idea is to hush things up or to let things slide. | |
| That just suits her." | |
| "Yes," replied Michael Moon; "and, as it happens, it just suits | |
| all of us. You are impatient with your elders, Miss Duke; | |
| but when you are as old yourself you will know what Napoleon knew-- | |
| that half one's letters answer themselves if you can only refrain | |
| from the fleshly appetite of answering them." | |
| He was still lounging in the same absurd attitude, with his elbow | |
| on the grate, but his voice had altered abruptly for the third time; | |
| just as it had changed from the mock heroic to the humanly indignant, | |
| it now changed to the airy incisiveness of a lawyer giving | |
| good legal advice. | |
| "It isn't only your aunt who wants to keep this quiet if | |
| she can," he said; "we all want to keep it quiet if we can. | |
| Look at the large facts--the big bones of the case. I believe | |
| those scientific gentlemen have made a highly scientific mistake. | |
| I believe Smith is as blameless as a buttercup. I admit | |
| buttercups don't often let off loaded pistols in private houses; | |
| I admit there is something demanding explanation. | |
| But I am morally certain there's some blunder, or some joke, | |
| or some allegory, or some accident behind all this. | |
| Well, suppose I'm wrong. We've disarmed him; we're five men | |
| to hold him; he may as well go to a lock-up later on as now. | |
| But suppose there's even a chance of my being right. | |
| Is it anybody's interest here to wash this linen in public? | |
| "Come, I'll take each of you in order. Once take Smith outside that gate, | |
| and you take him into the front page of the evening papers. I know; | |
| I've written the front page myself. Miss Duke, do you or your aunt want | |
| a sort of notice stuck up over your boarding-house--`Doctors shot here.' | |
| No, no--doctors are rubbish, as I said; but you don't want the rubbish | |
| shot here. Arthur, suppose I am right, or suppose I am wrong. | |
| Smith has appeared as an old schoolfellow of yours. Mark my words, | |
| if he's proved guilty, the Organs of Public Opinion will say you | |
| introduced him. If he's proved innocent, they will say you helped | |
| to collar him. Rosamund, my dear, suppose I am right or wrong. | |
| If he's proved guilty, they'll say you engaged your companion to him. | |
| If he's proved innocent, they'll print that telegram. | |
| I know the Organs, damn them." | |
| He stopped an instant; for this rapid rationalism left him more | |
| breathless than had either his theatrical or his real denunciation. | |
| But he was plainly in earnest, as well as positive and lucid; | |
| as was proved by his proceeding quickly the moment he had | |
| found his breath. | |
| "It is just the same," he cried, "with our medical friends. | |
| You will say that Dr. Warner has a grievance. I agree. | |
| But does he want specially to be snapshotted by all the | |
| journalists ~prostratus in horto~? It was no fault of his, | |
| but the scene was not very dignified even for him. | |
| He must have justice; but does he want to ask for justice, | |
| not only on his knees, but on his hands and knees? | |
| Does he want to enter the court of justice on all fours? | |
| Doctors are not allowed to advertise; and I'm sure no | |
| doctor wants to advertise himself as looking like that. | |
| And even for our American guest the interest is the same. | |
| Let us suppose that he has conclusive documents. | |
| Let us assume that he has revelations really worth reading. | |
| Well, in a legal inquiry (or a medical inquiry, for that matter) | |
| ten to one he won't be allowed to read them. He'll be tripped | |
| up every two or three minutes with some tangle of old rules. | |
| A man can't tell the truth in public nowadays. But he can | |
| still tell it in private; he can tell it inside that house." | |
| "It is quite true," said Dr. Cyrus Pym, who had listened throughout | |
| the speech with a seriousness which only an American could have retained | |
| through such a scene. "It is true that I have been per-ceptibly less | |
| hampered in private inquiries." | |
| "Dr. Pym!" cried Warner in a sort of sudden anger. | |
| "Dr. Pym! you aren't really going to admit--" | |
| "Smith may be mad," went on the melancholy Moon in a monologue | |
| that seemed as heavy as a hatchet, "but there was something | |
| after all in what he said about Home Rule for every home. | |
| Yes, there is something, when all's said and done, in the High Court | |
| of Beacon. It is really true that human beings might often get | |
| some sort of domestic justice where just now they can only get | |
| legal injustice--oh, I am a lawyer too, and I know that as well. | |
| It is true that there's too much official and indirect power. | |
| Often and often the thing a whole nation can't settle is just the thing | |
| a family could settle. Scores of young criminals have been fined | |
| and sent to jail when they ought to have been thrashed and sent to bed. | |
| Scores of men, I am sure, have had a lifetime at Hanwell when they | |
| only wanted a week at Brighton. There IS something in Smith's | |
| notion of domestic self-government; and I propose that we put it | |
| into practice. You have the prisoner; you have the documents. | |
| Come, we are a company of free, white, Christian people, | |
| such as might be besieged in a town or cast up on a desert island. | |
| Let us do this thing ourselves. Let us go into that house there | |
| and sit down and find out with our own eyes and ears whether this | |
| thing is true or not; whether this Smith is a man or a monster. | |
| If we can't do a little thing like that, what right have we to put | |
| crosses on ballot papers?" | |
| Inglewood and Pym exchanged a glance; and Warner, who was no fool, | |
| saw in that glance that Moon was gaining ground. The motives that led | |
| Arthur to think of surrender were indeed very different from those | |
| which affected Dr. Cyrus Pym. All Arthur's instincts were on the side | |
| of privacy and polite settlement; he was very English and would often | |
| endure wrongs rather than right them by scenes and serious rhetoric. | |
| To play at once the buffoon and the knight-errant, like his Irish friend, | |
| would have been absolute torture to him; but even the semi-official | |
| part he had played that afternoon was very painful. He was not likely | |
| to be reluctant if any one could convince him that his duty was to let | |
| sleeping dogs lie. | |
| On the other hand, Cyrus Pym belonged to a country in which things are | |
| possible that seem crazy to the English. Regulations and authorities exactly | |
| like one of Innocent's pranks or one of Michael's satires really exist, | |
| propped by placid policemen and imposed on bustling business men. | |
| Pym knew whole States which are vast and yet secret and fanciful; | |
| each is as big as a nation yet as private as a lost village, and as | |
| unexpected as an apple-pie bed. States where no man may have a cigarette, | |
| States where any man may have ten wives, very strict prohibition States, | |
| very lax divorce States--all these large local vagaries had prepared | |
| Cyrus Pym's mind for small local vagaries in a smaller country. | |
| Infinitely more remote from England than any Russian or Italian, | |
| utterly incapable of even conceiving what English conventions are, | |
| he could not see the social impossibility of the Court of Beacon. It is | |
| firmly believed by those who shared the experiment, that to the very | |
| end Pym believed in that phantasmal court and supposed it to be | |
| some Britannic institution. | |
| Towards the synod thus somewhat at a standstill there approached | |
| through the growing haze and gloaming a short dark figure with a walk | |
| apparently founded on the imperfect repression of a negro breakdown. | |
| Something at once in the familiarity and the incongruity of this | |
| being moved Michael to even heartier outbursts of a healthy | |
| and humane flippancy. | |
| "Why, here's little Nosey Gould," he exclaimed. "Isn't the mere | |
| sight of him enough to banish all your morbid reflections?" | |
| "Really," replied Dr. Warner," I really fail to see how Mr. Gould | |
| affects the question; and I once more demand--" | |
| "Hello! what's the funeral, gents?" inquired the newcomer with the air | |
| of an uproarious umpire. "Doctor demandin' something? Always the way | |
| at a boarding-house, you know. Always lots of demand. No supply." | |
| As delicately and impartially as he could, Michael restated his position, | |
| and indicated generally that Smith had been guilty of certain dangerous | |
| and dubious acts, and that there had even arisen an allegation that | |
| he was insane. | |
| "Well, of course he is," said Moses Gould equably; "it don't | |
| need old 'Olmes to see that. The 'awk-like face of 'Olmes," | |
| he added with abstract relish, "showed a shide of disappointment, | |
| the sleuth-like Gould 'avin' got there before 'im." | |
| "If he is mad," began Inglewood. | |
| "Well," said Moses, "when a cove gets out on the tile the first night | |
| there's generally a tile loose." | |
| "You never objected before," said Diana Duke rather stiffly, | |
| "and you're generally pretty free with your complaints." | |
| "I don't compline of him," said Moses magnanimously, "the poor chap's | |
| 'armless enough; you might tie 'im up in the garden her and 'e'd make | |
| noises at the burglars." | |
| "Moses," said Moon with solemn fervour, "you are the incarnation | |
| of Common Sense. You think Mr. Innocent is mad. Let me introduce you | |
| to the incarnation of Scientific Theory. He also thinks Mr. Innocent | |
| is mad.--Doctor, this is my friend Mr. Gould.--Moses, this is the celebrated | |
| Dr. Pym." The celebrated Dr. Cyrus Pym closed his eyes and bowed. | |
| He also murmured his national war-cry in a low voice, which sounded | |
| like "Pleased to meet you." | |
| "Now you two people," said Michael cheerfully, "who both think our poor | |
| friend mad, shall jolly well go into that house over there and prove him mad. | |
| What could be more powerful than the combination of Scientific Theory | |
| with Common Sense? United you stand; divided you fall. I will not be | |
| so uncivil as to suggest that Dr. Pym has no common sense; I confine myself | |
| to recording the chronological accident that he has not shown us any so far. | |
| I take the freedom of an old friend in staking my shirt that Moses has no | |
| scientific theory. Yet against this strong coalition I am ready to appear, | |
| armed with nothing but an intuition--which is American for a guess." | |
| "Distinguished by Mr. Gould's assistance," said Pym, opening his | |
| eyes suddenly. "I gather that though he and I are identical | |
| in primary di-agnosis there is yet between us something that | |
| cannot be called a disagreement, something which we may perhaps | |
| call a--" He put the points of thumb and forefinger together, | |
| spreading the other fingers exquisitely in the air, and seemed | |
| to be waiting for somebody else to tell him what to say. | |
| "Catchin' flies?" inquired the affable Moses. | |
| "A divergence," said Dr. Pym, with a refined sigh of relief; "a divergence. | |
| Granted that the man in question is deranged, he would not necessarily | |
| be all that science requires in a homicidal maniac--" | |
| "Has it occurred to you," observed Moon, who was leaning on the gate again, | |
| and did not turn round, "that if he were a homicidal maniac he might have | |
| killed us all here while we were talking." | |
| Something exploded silently in all their minds, like sealed | |
| dynamite in some forgotten cellars. They all remembered | |
| for the first time for some hour or two that the monster | |
| of whom they were talking was standing quietly among them. | |
| They had left him in the garden like a garden statue; there might | |
| have been a dolphin coiling round his legs, or a fountain | |
| pouring out of his mouth, for all the notice they had taken | |
| of Innocent Smith. He stood with his crest of blonde, blown hair | |
| thrust somewhat forward, his fresh-coloured, rather short-sighted | |
| face looking patiently downwards at nothing in particular, | |
| his huge shoulders humped, and his hands in his trousers pockets. | |
| So far as they could guess he had not moved at all. | |
| His green coat might have been cut out of the green turf | |
| on which he stood. In his shadow Pym had expounded and | |
| Rosamund expostulated, Michael had ranted and Moses had ragged. | |
| He had remained like a thing graven; the god of the garden. | |
| A sparrow had perched on one of his heavy shoulders; and then, | |
| after correcting its costume of feathers, had flown away. | |
| "Why," cried Michael, with a shout of laughter, "the Court of Beacon | |
| has opened--and shut up again too. You all know now I am right. | |
| Your buried common sense has told you what my buried common sense has | |
| told me. Smith might have fired off a hundred cannons instead of a pistol, | |
| and you would still know he was harmless as I know he is harmless. | |
| Back we all go to the house and clear a room for discussion. | |
| For the High Court of Beacon, which has already arrived at its decision, | |
| is just about to begin its inquiry." | |
| "Just a goin' to begin!" cried little Mr. Moses in an extraordinary | |
| sort of disinterested excitement, like that of an animal during music | |
| or a thunderstorm. "Follow on to the 'Igh Court of Eggs and Bacon; | |
| 'ave a kipper from the old firm! 'Is Lordship complimented | |
| Mr. Gould on the 'igh professional delicacy 'e had shown, | |
| and which was worthy of the best traditions of the Saloon Bar-- | |
| and three of Scotch hot, miss! Oh, chase me, girls!" | |
| The girls betraying no temptation to chase him, he went away in a | |
| sort of waddling dance of pure excitement; and has made a circuit | |
| of the garden before he reappeared, breathless but still beaming. | |
| Moon had known his man when he realized that no people presented | |
| to Moses Gould could be quite serious, even if they were | |
| quite furious. The glass doors stood open on the side nearest | |
| to Mr. Moses Gould; and as the feet of that festive idiot were | |
| evidently turned in the same direction, everybody else went | |
| that way with the unanimity of some uproarious procession. | |
| Only Diana Duke retained enough rigidity to say the thing that had | |
| been boiling at her fierce feminine lips for the last few hours. | |
| Under the shadow of tragedy she had kept it back as unsympathetic. | |
| "In that case," she said sharply, "these cabs can be sent away." | |
| "Well, Innocent must have his bag, you know," said Mary with a smile. | |
| "I dare say the cabman would get it down for us." | |
| "I'll get the bag," said Smith, speaking for the first time in hours; | |
| his voice sounded remote and rude, like the voice of a statue. | |
| Those who had so long danced and disputed round his immobility | |
| were left breathless by his precipitance. With a run and spring | |
| he was out of the garden into the street; with a spring and | |
| one quivering kick he was actually on the roof of the cab. | |
| The cabman happened to be standing by the horse's head, having just | |
| removed its emptied nose-bag. Smith seemed for an instant to be | |
| rolling about on the cab's back in the embraces of his Gladstone bag. | |
| The next instant, however, he had rolled, as if by a royal luck, | |
| into the high seat behind, and with a shriek of piercing and | |
| appalling suddenness had sent the horse flying and scampering | |
| down the street. | |
| His evanescence was so violent and swift, that this time it | |
| was all the other people who were turned into garden statues. | |
| Mr. Moses Gould, however, being ill-adapted both physically and morally | |
| for the purposes of permanent sculpture, came to life some time before | |
| the rest, and, turning to Moon, remarked, like a man starting chattily | |
| with a stranger on an omnibus, "Tile loose, eh? Cab loose anyhow." | |
| There followed a fatal silence; and then Dr. Warner said, with a sneer | |
| like a club of stone,-- | |
| "This is what comes of the Court of Beacon, Mr. Moon. You have let | |
| loose a maniac on the whole metropolis." | |
| Beacon House stood, as has been said, at the end of a long crescent | |
| of continuous houses. The little garden that shut it in ran out into | |
| a sharp point like a green cape pushed out into the sea of two streets. | |
| Smith and his cab shot up one side of the triangle, and certainly | |
| most of those standing inside of it never expected to see him again. | |
| At the apex, however, he turned the horse sharply round and drove with equal | |
| violence up the other side of the garden, visible to all those in the group. | |
| With a common impulse the little crowd ran across the lawn as if to stop him, | |
| but they soon had reason to duck and recoil. Even as he vanished up | |
| street for the second time, he let the big yellow bag fly from his hand, | |
| so that it fell in the centre of the garden, scattering the company | |
| like a bomb, and nearly damaging Dr. Warner's hat for the third time. | |
| Long before they had collected themselves, the cab had shot away with a | |
| shriek that went into a whisper. | |
| "Well," said Michael Moon, with a queer note in his voice; | |
| "you may as well all go inside anyhow. We've got two relics | |
| of Mr. Smith at least; his fiancee and his trunk." | |
| "Why do you want us to go inside?" asked Arthur Inglewood, | |
| in whose red brow and rough brown hair botheration seemed | |
| to have reached its limit. | |
| "I want the rest to go in," said Michael in a clear voice, | |
| "because I want the whole of this garden in which to talk to you." | |
| There was an atmosphere of irrational doubt; it was really getting colder, | |
| and a night wind had begun to wave the one or two trees in the twilight. | |
| Dr. Warner, however, spoke in a voice devoid of indecision. | |
| "I refuse to listen to any such proposal," he said; "you have lost | |
| this ruffian, and I must find him." | |
| "I don't ask you to listen to any proposal," answered Moon quietly; | |
| "I only ask you to listen." | |
| He made a silencing movement with his hand, and immediately | |
| the whistling noise that had been lost in the dark streets on one side | |
| of the house could be heard from quite a new quarter on the other side. | |
| Through the night-maze of streets the noise increased with incredible | |
| rapidity, and the next moment the flying hoofs and flashing wheels had | |
| swept up to the blue-railed gate at which they had originally stood. | |
| Mr. Smith got down from his perch with an air of absent-mindedness, | |
| and coming back into the garden stood in the same elephantine | |
| attitude as before. | |
| "Get inside! get inside!" cried Moon hilariously, with the air | |
| of one shooing a company of cats. "Come, come, be quick about it! | |
| Didn't I tell you I wanted to talk to Inglewood?" | |
| How they were all really driven into the house again it would | |
| have been difficult afterwards to say. They had reached the point | |
| of being exhausted with incongruities, as people at a farce | |
| are ill with laughing, and the brisk growth of the storm among | |
| the trees seemed like a final gesture of things in general. | |
| Inglewood lingered behind them, saying with a certain amicable | |
| exasperation, "I say, do you really want to speak to me?" | |
| "I do," said Michael, "very much." | |
| Nigh had come as it generally does, quicker than the twilight had seemed | |
| to promise. While the human eye still felt the sky as light gray, a very | |
| large and lustrous moon appearing abruptly above a bulk of roofs and trees, | |
| proved by contrast that the sky was already a very dark gray indeed. | |
| A drift of barren leaves across the lawn, a drift of riven clouds across | |
| the sky, seemed to be lifted on the same strong and yet laborious wind. | |
| "Arthur," said Michael, "I began with an intuition; but now I am sure. | |
| You and I are going to defend this friend of yours before the blessed Court | |
| of Beacon, and to clear him too--clear him of both crime and lunacy. | |
| Just listen to me while I preach to you for a bit." They walked up | |
| and down the darkening garden together as Michael Moon went on. | |
| "Can you," asked Michael, "shut your eyes and see some of those queer old | |
| hieroglyphics they stuck up on white walls in the old hot countries. | |
| How stiff they were in shape and yet how gaudy in colour. | |
| Think of some alphabet of arbitrary figures picked out in black and red, | |
| or white and green, with some old Semitic crowd of Nosey Gould's | |
| ancestors staring at it, and try to think why the people put it | |
| up at all." | |
| Inglewood's first instinct was to think that his perplexing friend | |
| had really gone off his head at last; there seemed so reckless | |
| a flight of irrelevancy from the tropic-pictured walls he was | |
| asked to imagine to the gray, wind-swept, and somewhat chilly | |
| suburban garden in which he was actually kicking his heels. | |
| How he could be more happy in one by imagining the other he could | |
| not conceive. Both (in themselves) were unpleasant. | |
| "Why does everybody repeat riddles," went on Moon abruptly, | |
| "even if they've forgotten the answers? Riddles are easy to remember | |
| because they are hard to guess. So were those stiff old symbols | |
| in black, red, or green easy to remember because they had been hard | |
| to guess. Their colours were plain. Their shapes were plain. | |
| Everything was plain except the meaning." | |
| Inglewood was about to open his mouth in an amiable protest, but Moon | |
| went on, plunging quicker and quicker up and down the garden and smoking | |
| faster and faster. "Dances, too," he said; "dances were not frivolous. | |
| Dances were harder to understand than inscriptions and texts. | |
| The old dances were stiff, ceremonial, highly coloured but silent. | |
| Have you noticed anything odd about Smith?" | |
| "Well, really," cried Inglewood, left behind in a collapse of humour, | |
| "have I noticed anything else?" | |
| "Have you noticed this about him," asked Moon, with unshaken persistency, | |
| "that he has done so much and said so little? When first he came he talked, | |
| but in a gasping, irregular sort of way, as if he wasn't used to it. | |
| All he really did was actions--painting red flowers on black gowns or throwing | |
| yellow bags on to the grass. I tell you that big green figure is figurative-- | |
| like any green figure capering on some white Eastern wall." | |
| "My dear Michael," cried Inglewood, in a rising irritation which increased | |
| with the rising wind, "you are getting absurdly fanciful." | |
| "I think of what has just happened," said Michael steadily. | |
| "The man has not spoken for hours; and yet he has been speaking | |
| all the time. He fired three shots from a six-shooter and then | |
| gave it up to us, when he might have shot us dead in our boots. | |
| How could he express his trust in us better than that? | |
| He wanted to be tried by us. How could he have shown it better | |
| than by standing quite still and letting us discuss it? | |
| He wanted to show that he stood there willingly, | |
| and could escape if he liked. How could he have shown it | |
| better than by escaping in the cab and coming back again? | |
| Innocent Smith is not a madman--he is a ritualist. He wants to | |
| express himself, not with his tongue, but with his arms and legs-- | |
| with my body I thee worship, as it says in the marriage service. | |
| I begin to understand the old plays and pageants. I see why | |
| the mutes at a funeral were mute. I see why the mummers were mum. | |
| They MEANT something; and Smith means something too. | |
| All other jokes have to be noisy--like little Nosey Gould's jokes, | |
| for instance. The only silent jokes are the practical jokes. | |
| Poor Smith, properly considered, is an allegorical practical joker. | |
| What he has really done in this house has been as frantic | |
| as a war-dance, but as silent as a picture." | |
| "I suppose you mean," said the other dubiously, "that we have got to find out | |
| what all these crimes meant, as if they were so many coloured picture-puzzles. | |
| But even supposing that they do mean something--why, Lord bless my soul!--" | |
| Taking the turn of the garden quite naturally, he had lifted | |
| his eyes to the moon, by this time risen big and luminous, | |
| and had seen a huge, half-human figure sitting on the garden wall. | |
| It was outlined so sharply against the moon that for the first flash | |
| it was hard to be certain even that it was human: the hunched | |
| shoulders and outstanding hair had rather the air of a colossal cat. | |
| It resembled a cat also in the fact that when first startled it | |
| sprang up and ran with easy activity along the top of the wall. | |
| As it ran, however, its heavy shoulders and small stooping head | |
| rather suggested a baboon. The instant it came within reach | |
| of a tree it made an ape-like leap and was lost in the branches. | |
| The gale, which by this time was shaking every shrub in the garden, | |
| made the identification yet more difficult, since it melted | |
| the moving limbs of the fugitive in the multitudinous moving | |
| limbs of the tree. | |
| "Who is there?" shouted Arthur. "Who are you? Are you Innocent?" | |
| "Not quite," answered an obscure voice among the leaves. | |
| "I cheated you once about a penknife." | |
| The wind in the garden had gathered strength, and was throwing the tree | |
| backwards and forwards with the man in the thick of it, just as it | |
| had on the gay and golden afternoon when he had first arrived. | |
| "But are you Smith?" asked Inglewood as in an agony. | |
| "Very nearly," said the voice out of the tossing tree. | |
| "But you must have some real names," shrieked Inglewood in despair. | |
| "You must call yourself something." | |
| "Call myself something," thundered the obscure voice, shaking the tree | |
| so that all its ten thousand leaves seemed to be talking at once. | |
| "I call myself Roland Oliver Isaiah Charlemagne Arthur Hildebrand | |
| Homer Danton Michaelangelo Shakespeare Brakespeare--" | |
| "But, manalive!" began Inglewood in exasperation. | |
| "That's right! that's right!" came with a roar out of the rocking tree; | |
| "that's my real name." And he broke a branch, and one or two autumn | |
| leaves fluttered away across the moon. | |
| Part II | |
| The Explanations of Innocent Smith | |
| Chapter I | |
| The Eye of Death; | |
| or, the Murder Charge | |
| The dining-room of the Dukes had been set out for the Court | |
| of Beacon with a certain impromptu pomposity that seemed somehow | |
| to increase its cosiness. The big room was, as it were, | |
| cut up into small rooms, with walls only waist high--the sort | |
| of separation that children make when they are playing at shops. | |
| This had been done by Moses Gould and Michael Moon | |
| (the two most active members of this remarkable inquiry) | |
| with the ordinary furniture of the place. At one end of the long | |
| mahogany table was set the one enormous garden chair, which was | |
| surmounted by the old torn tent or umbrella which Smith himself | |
| had suggested as a coronation canopy. Inside this erection | |
| could be perceived the dumpy form of Mrs. Duke, with cushions | |
| and a form of countenance that already threatened slumber. | |
| At the other end sat the accused Smith, in a kind of dock; | |
| for he was carefully fenced in with a quadrilateral of light | |
| bedroom chairs, any of which he could have tossed out the window | |
| with his big toe. He had been provided with pens and paper, | |
| out of the latter of which he made paper boats, paper darts, | |
| and paper dolls contentedly throughout the whole proceedings. | |
| He never spoke or even looked up, but seemed as unconscious | |
| as a child on the floor of an empty nursery. | |
| On a row of chairs raised high on the top of a long settee sat | |
| the three young ladies with their backs up against the window, | |
| and Mary Gray in the middle; it was something between a jury | |
| box and the stall of the Queen of Beauty at a tournament. | |
| Down the centre of the long table Moon had built a low barrier | |
| out of eight bound volumes of "Good Words" to express the moral | |
| wall that divided the conflicting parties. On the right side | |
| sat the two advocates of the prosecution, Dr. Pym and Mr. Gould; | |
| behind a barricade of books and documents, chiefly (in the case | |
| of Dr. Pym) solid volumes of criminology. On the other side, | |
| Moon and Inglewood, for the defence, were also fortified | |
| with books and papers; but as these included several old yellow | |
| volumes by Ouida and Wilkie Collins, the hand of Mr. Moon | |
| seemed to have been somewhat careless and comprehensive. | |
| As for the victim and prosecutor, Dr. Warner, Moon wanted at first | |
| to have him kept entirely behind a high screen in the court, | |
| urging the indelicacy of his appearance in court, but privately | |
| assuring him of an unofficial permission to peep over the top | |
| now and then. Dr. Warner, however, failed to rise to the chivalry | |
| of such a course, and after some little disturbance and discussion | |
| he was accommodated with a seat on the right side of the table | |
| in a line with his legal advisers. | |
| It was before this solidly-established tribunal that Dr. Cyrus Pym, | |
| after passing a hand through the honey-coloured hair over each ear, | |
| rose to open the case. His statement was clear and even restrained, | |
| and such flights of imagery as occurred in it only attracted attention | |
| by a certain indescribable abruptness, not uncommon in the flowers | |
| of American speech. | |
| He planted the points of his ten frail fingers on the mahogany, | |
| closed his eyes, and opened his mouth. "The time has gone by," | |
| he said, "when murder could be regarded as a moral and individual act, | |
| important perhaps to the murderer, perhaps to the murdered. | |
| Science has profoundly..." here he paused, poising his compressed | |
| finger and thumb in the air as if he were holding an elusive idea | |
| very tight by its tail, then he screwed up his eyes and said | |
| "modified," and let it go--"has profoundly Modified our view of death. | |
| In superstitious ages it was regarded as the termination of life, | |
| catastrophic, and even tragic, and was often surrounded by solemnity. | |
| Brighter days, however, have dawned, and we now see death as universal | |
| and inevitable, as part of that great soul-stirring and heart-upholding | |
| average which we call for convenience the order of nature. | |
| In the same way we have come to consider murder socially. | |
| Rising above the mere private feelings of a man while being forcibly | |
| deprived of life, we are privileged to behold murder as a mighty whole, | |
| to see the rich rotation of the cosmos, bringing, as it brings | |
| the golden harvests and the golden-bearded harvesters, the return | |
| for ever of the slayers and the slain." | |
| He looked down, somewhat affected with his own eloquence, coughed slightly, | |
| putting up four of his pointed fingers with the excellent manners | |
| of Boston, and continued: "There is but one result of this happier | |
| and humaner outlook which concerns the wretched man before us. | |
| It is that thoroughly elucidated by a Milwaukee doctor, | |
| our great secret-guessing Sonnenschein, in his great work, | |
| `The Destructive Type.' We do not denounce Smith as a murderer, | |
| but rather as a murderous man. The type is such that its very life-- | |
| I might say its very health--is in killing. Some hold that it is | |
| not properly an aberration, but a newer and even a higher creature. | |
| My dear old friend Dr. Bulger, who kept ferrets--" (here Moon | |
| suddenly ejaculated a loud "hurrah!" but so instantaneously | |
| resumed his tragic expression that Mrs. Duke looked everywhere | |
| else for the sound); Dr. Pym continued somewhat sternly--"who, | |
| in the interests of knowledge, kept ferrets, felt that the creature's | |
| ferocity is not utilitarian, but absolutely an end in itself. | |
| However this may be with ferrets, it is certainly so with the prisoner. | |
| In his other iniquities you may find the cunning of the maniac; | |
| but his acts of blood have almost the simplicity of sanity. | |
| But it is the awful sanity of the sun and the elements--a cruel, | |
| an evil sanity. As soon stay the iris-leapt cataracts of our virgin | |
| West as stay the natural force that sends him forth to slay. | |
| No environment, however scientific, could have softened him. | |
| Place that man in the silver-silent purity of the palest cloister, | |
| and there will be some deed of violence done with the crozier or the alb. | |
| Rear him in a happy nursery, amid our brave-browed Anglo-Saxon infancy, | |
| and he will find some way to strangle with the skipping-rope | |
| or brain with the brick. Circumstances may be favourable, | |
| training may be admirable, hopes may be high, but the huge elemental | |
| hunger of Innocent Smith for blood will in its appointed season | |
| burst like a well-timed bomb." | |
| Arthur Inglewood glanced curiously for an instant at the huge creature | |
| at the foot of the table, who was fitting a paper figure with a cocked hat, | |
| and then looked back at Dr. Pym, who was concluding in a quieter tone. | |
| "It only remains for us," he said, "to bring forward actual evidence | |
| of his previous attempts. By an agreement already made with the Court | |
| and the leaders of the defence, we are permitted to put in evidence authentic | |
| letters from witnesses to these scenes, which the defence is free to examine. | |
| Out of several cases of such outrages we have decided to select one-- | |
| the clearest and most scandalous. I will therefore, without further delay, | |
| call on my junior, Mr. Gould, to read two letters--one from the Sub-Warden and | |
| the other from the porter of Brakespeare College, in Cambridge University." | |
| Gould jumped up with a jerk like a jack-in-the-box, an academic-looking | |
| paper in his hand and a fever of importance on his face. | |
| He began in a loud, high, cockney voice that was as abrupt | |
| as a cock-crow:-- | |
| "Sir,--Hi am the Sub-Warden of Brikespeare College, Cambridge--" | |
| "Lord have mercy on us," muttered Moon, making a backward movement as men | |
| do when a gun goes off. | |
| "Sir,--Hi am the Sub-Warden of Brikespeare College, Cambridge," | |
| proclaimed the uncompromising Moses, "and I can endorse the description | |
| you gave of the un'appy Smith. It was not alone my unfortunate duty | |
| to rebuke many of the lesser violences of his undergraduate period, | |
| but I was actually a witness to the last iniquity which terminated | |
| that period. Hi happened to passing under the house of my friend | |
| the Warden of Brikespeare, which is semi-detached from the College | |
| and connected with it by two or three very ancient arches or props, | |
| like bridges, across a small strip of water connected with the river. | |
| To my grave astonishment I be'eld my eminent friend suspended in mid-air | |
| and clinging to one of these pieces of masonry, his appearance and | |
| attitude indicatin' that he suffered from the grivest apprehensions. | |
| After a short time I heard two very loud shots, and distinctly perceived | |
| the unfortunate undergraduate Smith leaning far out of the Warden's | |
| window and aiming at the Warden repeatedly with a revolver. | |
| Upon seeing me, Smith burst into a loud laugh (in which | |
| impertinence was mingled with insanity), and appeared to desist. | |
| I sent the college porter for a ladder, and he succeeded in detaching | |
| the Warden from his painful position. Smith was sent down. | |
| The photograph I enclose is from the group of the University Rifle Club | |
| prizemen, and represents him as he was when at the College.--Hi am, | |
| your obedient servant, Amos Boulter." | |
| "The other letter," continued Gould in a glow of triumph, "is from the porter, | |
| and won't take long to read. | |
| "Dear Sir,--It is quite true that I am the porter of Brikespeare College, | |
| and that I 'elped the Warden down when the young man was shooting at him, | |
| as Mr. Boulter has said in his letter. The young man who was shooting at | |
| him was Mr. Smith, the same that is in the photograph Mr. Boulter sends.-- | |
| Yours respectfully, Samuel Barker." | |
| Gould handed the two letters across to Moon, who examined them. | |
| But for the vocal divergences in the matter of h's and a's, | |
| the Sub-Warden's letter was exactly as Gould had rendered it; | |
| and both that and the porter's letter were plainly genuine. | |
| Moon handed them to Inglewood, who handed them back in silence | |
| to Moses Gould. | |
| "So far as this first charge of continual attempted murder is concerned," | |
| said Dr. Pym, standing up for the last time, "that is my case." | |
| Michael Moon rose for the defence with an air of depression which gave | |
| little hope at the outset to the sympathizers with the prisoner. | |
| He did not, he said, propose to follow the doctor into doctor | |
| into the abstract questions. "I do not know enough to be | |
| an agnostic," he said, rather wearily, "and I can only master | |
| the known and admitted elements in such controversies. | |
| As for science and religion, the known and admitted facts | |
| are plain enough. All that the parsons say is unproved. | |
| All that the doctors say is disproved. That's the only difference | |
| between science and religion there's ever been, or will be. | |
| Yet these new discoveries touch me, somehow," he said, | |
| looking down sorrowfully at his boots. "They remind me of a dear | |
| old great-aunt of mine who used to enjoy them in her youth. | |
| It brings tears to my eyes. I can see the old bucket by the garden | |
| fence and the line of shimmering poplars behind--" | |
| "Hi! here, stop the 'bus a bit," cried Mr. Moses Gould, rising in a sort | |
| of perspiration. "We want to give the defence a fair run--like gents, | |
| you know; but any gent would draw the line at shimmering poplars." | |
| "Well, hang it all," said Moon, in an injured manner, "if Dr. Pym | |
| may have an old friend with ferrets, why mayn't I have an old | |
| aunt with poplars?" | |
| "I am sure," said Mrs. Duke, bridling, with something almost | |
| like a shaky authority, "Mr. Moon may have what aunts he likes." | |
| "Why, as to liking her," began Moon, "I--but perhaps, | |
| as you say, she is scarcely the core of the question. | |
| I repeat that I do not mean to follow the abstract speculation. | |
| For, indeed, my answer to Dr. Pym is simple and severely concrete. | |
| Dr. Pym has only treated one side of the psychology of murder. | |
| If it is true that there is a kind of man who has a natural | |
| tendency to murder, is it not equally true"--here he lowered | |
| his voice and spoke with a crushing quietude and earnestness--"is | |
| it not equally true that there is a kind of man who has | |
| a natural tendency to get murdered? Is it not at least | |
| a hypothesis holding the field that Dr. Warner is such a man? | |
| I do not speak without the book, any more than my learned friend. | |
| The whole matter is expounded in Dr. Moonenschein's monumental work, | |
| `The Destructible Doctor,' with diagrams, showing the various ways | |
| in which such a person as Dr. Warner may be resolved into his elements. | |
| In the light of these facts--" | |
| "Hi, stop the 'bus! stop the 'bus!" cried Moses, jumping up and down and | |
| gesticulating in great excitement. "My principal's got something to say! | |
| My principal wants to do a bit of talkin'." | |
| Dr. Pym was indeed on his feet, looking pallid and rather vicious. | |
| "I have strictly CON-fined myself," he said nasally, | |
| "to books to which immediate reference can be made. | |
| I have Sonnenschein's `Destructive Type' here on the table, | |
| if the defence wish to see it. Where is this wonderful work | |
| on Destructability Mr. Moon is talking about? Does it exist? | |
| Can he produce it?" | |
| "Produce it!" cried the Irishman with a rich scorn. | |
| "I'll produce it in a week if you'll pay for the ink and paper." | |
| "Would it have much authority?" asked Pym, sitting down. | |
| "Oh, authority!" said Moon lightly; "that depends on a fellow's religion." | |
| Dr. Pym jumped up again. "Our authority is based on masses | |
| of accurate detail," he said. "It deals with a region in which | |
| things can be handled and tested. My opponent will at least | |
| admit that death is a fact of experience." | |
| "Not of mine," said Moon mournfully, shaking his head. | |
| "I've never experienced such a thing in all my life." | |
| "Well, really," said Dr. Pym, and sat down sharply amid a crackle of papers. | |
| "So we see," resumed Moon, in the same melancholy voice, "that a | |
| man like Dr. Warner is, in the mysterious workings of evolution, | |
| doomed to such attacks. My client's onslaught, even if it occurred, | |
| was not unique. I have in my hand letters from more than one acquaintance | |
| of Dr. Warner whom that remarkable man has affected in the same way. | |
| Following the example of my learned friends I will read only two of them. | |
| The first is from an honest and laborious matron living off the Harrow Road. | |
| "Mr. Moon, Sir,--Yes, I did throw a sorsepan at him. Wot then? | |
| It was all I had to throw, all the soft things being porned, | |
| and if your Docter Warner doesn't like having sorsepans thrown at him, | |
| don't let him wear his hat in a respectable woman's parler, and tell | |
| him to leave orf smiling or tell us the joke.--Yours respectfully, | |
| Hannah Miles. | |
| "The other letter is from a physician of some note in Dublin, | |
| with whom Dr. Warner was once engaged in consultation. | |
| He writes as follows:-- | |
| "Dear Sir,--The incident to which you refer is one which I regret, | |
| and which, moreover, I have never been able to explain. | |
| My own branch of medicine is not mental; and I should be glad to have | |
| the view of a mental specialist on my singular momentary and indeed | |
| almost automatic action. To say that I `pulled Dr. Warner's nose,' | |
| is, however, inaccurate in a respect that strikes me as important. | |
| That I punched his nose I must cheerfully admit (I need not say with | |
| what regret); but pulling seems to me to imply a precision of objective | |
| with which I cannot reproach myself. In comparison with this, the act | |
| of punching was an outward, instantaneous, and even natural gesture.-- | |
| Believe me, yours faithfully, Burton Lestrange. | |
| "I have numberless other letters," continued Moon, "all bearing witness | |
| to this widespread feeling about my eminent friend; and I therefore think | |
| that Dr. Pym should have admitted this side of the question in his survey. | |
| We are in the presence, as Dr. Pym so truly says, of a natural force. | |
| As soon stay the cataract of the London water-works as stay | |
| the great tendency of Dr. Warner to be assassinated by somebody. | |
| Place that man in a Quakers' meeting, among the most peaceful of Christians, | |
| and he will immediately be beaten to death with sticks of chocolate. | |
| Place him among the angels of the New Jerusalem, and he will be stoned | |
| to death with precious stones. Circumstances may be beautiful and wonderful, | |
| the average may be heart-upholding, the harvester may be golden-bearded, | |
| the doctor may be secret-guessing, the cataract may be iris-leapt, | |
| the Anglo-Saxon infant may be brave-browed, but against and above | |
| all these prodigies the grand simple tendency of Dr. Warner to get | |
| murdered will still pursue its way until it happily and triumphantly | |
| succeeds at last." | |
| He pronounced this peroration with an appearance of strong emotion. | |
| But even stronger emotions were manifesting themselves on the other | |
| side of the table. Dr. Warner had leaned his large body quite across | |
| the little figure of Moses Gould and was talking in excited whispers | |
| to Dr. Pym. That expert nodded a great many times and finally started | |
| to his feet with a sincere expression of sternness. | |
| "Ladies and gentlemen," he cried indignantly, "as my colleague has said, | |
| we should be delighted to give any latitude to the defence--if there | |
| were a defence. But Mr. Moon seems to think he is there to make jokes-- | |
| very good jokes I dare say, but not at all adapted to assist his client. | |
| He picks holes in science. He picks holes in my client's social popularity. | |
| He picks holes in my literary style, which doesn't seem to suit his high-toned | |
| European taste. But how does this picking of holes affect the issue? | |
| This Smith has picked two holes in my client's hat, and with an inch better | |
| aim would have picked two holes in his head. All the jokes in the world | |
| won't unpick those holes or be any use for the defence." | |
| Inglewood looked down in some embarrassment, as if shaken by the evident | |
| fairness of this, but Moon still gazed at his opponent in a dreamy way. | |
| "The defence?" he said vaguely--"oh, I haven't begun that yet." | |
| "You certainly have not," said Pym warmly, amid a murmur of applause | |
| from his side, which the other side found it impossible to answer. | |
| "Perhaps, if you have any defence, which has been doubtful from | |
| the very beginning--" | |
| "While you're standing up," said Moon, in the same almost sleepy style, | |
| "perhaps I might ask you a question." | |
| "A question? Certainly," said Pym stiffly. "It was distinctly | |
| arranged between us that as we could not cross-examine | |
| the witnesses, we might vicariously cross-examine each other. | |
| We are in a position to invite all such inquiry." | |
| "I think you said," observed Moon absently, "that none of the prisoner's | |
| shots really hit the doctor." | |
| "For the cause of science," cried the complacent Pym, "fortunately not." | |
| "Yet they were fired from a few feet away." | |
| "Yes; about four feet." | |
| "And no shots hit the Warden, though they were fired quite close | |
| to him too?" asked Moon. | |
| "That is so," said the witness gravely. | |
| "I think," said Moon, suppressing a slight yawn, "that your Sub-Warden | |
| mentioned that Smith was one of the University's record men for shooting." | |
| "Why, as to that--" began Pym, after an instant of stillness. | |
| "A second question," continued Moon, comparatively curtly. | |
| "You said there were other cases of the accused trying to kill people. | |
| Why have you not got evidence of them?" | |
| The American planted the points of his fingers on the table again. | |
| "In those cases," he said precisely, "there was no evidence from outsiders, | |
| as in the Cambridge case, but only the evidence of the actual victims." | |
| "Why didn't you get their evidence?" | |
| "In the case of the actual victims," said Pym, "there was some difficulty | |
| and reluctance, and--" | |
| "Do you mean," asked Moon, "that none of the actual victims would | |
| appear against the prisoner?" | |
| "That would be exaggerative," began the other. | |
| "A third question," said Moon, so sharply that every one jumped. | |
| "You've got the evidence of the Sub-Warden who heard some shots; | |
| where's the evidence of the Warden himself who was shot at? | |
| The Warden of Brakespeare lives, a prosperous gentleman." | |
| "We did ask for a statement from him," said Pym a little nervously; | |
| "but it was so eccentrically expressed that we suppressed it out | |
| of deference to an old gentleman whose past services to science | |
| have been great." | |
| Moon leaned forward. "You mean, I suppose," he said, "that his statement | |
| was favourable to the prisoner." | |
| "It might be understood so," replied the American doctor; | |
| "but, really, it was difficult to understand at all. | |
| In fact, we sent it back to him." | |
| "You have no longer, then, any statement signed by the Warden of Brakespeare." | |
| "No." | |
| "I only ask," said Michael quietly, "because we have. | |
| To conclude my case I will ask my junior, Mr. Inglewood, | |
| to read a statement of the true story--a statement attested | |
| as true by the signature of the Warden himself." | |
| Arthur Inglewood rose with several papers in his hand, and though | |
| he looked somewhat refined and self-effacing, as he always did, | |
| the spectators were surprised to feel that his presence was, | |
| upon the whole, more efficient and sufficing than his leader's. He was, | |
| in truth, one of those modest men who cannot speak until they are told | |
| to speak; and then can speak well. Moon was entirely the opposite. | |
| His own impudences amused him in private, but they slightly | |
| embarrassed him in public; he felt a fool while he was speaking, | |
| whereas Inglewood felt a fool only because he could not speak. | |
| The moment he had anything to say he could speak; | |
| and the moment he could speak, speaking seemed quite natural. | |
| Nothing in this universe seemed quite natural to Michael Moon. | |
| "As my colleague has just explained," said Inglewood, "there are | |
| two enigmas or inconsistencies on which we base the defence. | |
| The first is a plain physical fact. By the admission of everybody, | |
| by the very evidence adduced by the prosecution, it is clear | |
| that the accused was celebrated as a specially good shot. | |
| Yet on both the occasions complained of he shot from a distance of four | |
| or five feet, and shot at him four or five times, and never hit him once. | |
| That is the first startling circumstance on which we base our argument. | |
| The second, as my colleague has urged, is the curious fact that we cannot | |
| find a single victim of these alleged outrages to speak for himself. | |
| Subordinates speak for him. Porters climb up ladders to him. | |
| But he himself is silent. Ladies and gentlemen, I propose to explain | |
| on the spot both the riddle of the shots and the riddle of the silence. | |
| I will first of all read the covering letter in which the true account | |
| of the Cambridge incident is contained, and then that document itself. | |
| When you have heard both, there will be no doubt about your decision. | |
| The covering letter runs as follows:-- | |
| "Dear Sir,--The following is a very exact and even vivid account of the | |
| incident as it really happened at Brakespeare College. We, the undersigned, | |
| do not see any particular reason why we should refer it to any | |
| isolated authorship. The truth is, it has been a composite production; | |
| and we have even had some difference of opinion about the adjectives. | |
| But every word of it is true.--We are, yours faithfully, | |
| "Wilfred Emerson Eames, | |
| "Warden of Brakespeare College, Cambridge. | |
| "Innocent Smith. | |
| "The enclosed statement," continued Inglewood, "runs as follows:-- | |
| "A celebrated English university backs so abruptly on the river, | |
| that it has, so to speak, to be propped up and patched | |
| with all sorts of bridges and semi-detached buildings. | |
| The river splits itself into several small streams and canals, | |
| so that in one or two corners the place has almost the look | |
| of Venice. It was so especially in the case with which we | |
| are concerned, in which a few flying buttresses or airy ribs of stone | |
| sprang across a strip of water to connect Brakespeare College | |
| with the house of the Warden of Brakespeare. | |
| "The country around these colleges is flat; but it does not | |
| seem flat when one is thus in the midst of the colleges. | |
| For in these flat fens there are always wandering lakes and lingering | |
| rivers of water. And these always change what might have been | |
| a scheme of horizontal lines into a scheme of vertical lines. | |
| Wherever there is water the height of high buildings is doubled, | |
| and a British brick house becomes a Babylonian tower. | |
| In that shining unshaken surface the houses hang head | |
| downwards exactly to their highest or lowest chimney. | |
| The coral-coloured cloud seen in that abyss is as far | |
| below the world as its original appears above it. | |
| Every scrap of water is not only a window but a skylight. | |
| Earth splits under men's feet into precipitous aerial perspectives, | |
| into which a bird could as easily wing its way as--" | |
| Dr. Cyrus Pym rose in protest. The documents he had put | |
| in evidence had been confined to cold affirmation of fact. | |
| The defence, in a general way, had an indubitable right to put | |
| their case in their own way, but all this landscape gardening | |
| seemed to him (Dr. Cyrus Pym) to be not up to the business. | |
| "Will the leader of the defence tell me," he asked, "how it can | |
| possibly affect this case, that a cloud was cor'l-coloured, | |
| or that a bird could have winged itself anywhere?" | |
| "Oh, I don't know," said Michael, lifting himself lazily; | |
| "you see, you don't know yet what our defence is. | |
| Till you know that, don't you see, anything may be relevant. | |
| Why, suppose," he said suddenly, as if an idea had struck him, | |
| "suppose we wanted to prove the old Warden colour-blind. | |
| Suppose he was shot by a black man with white hair, when he | |
| thought he was being shot by a white man with yellow hair! | |
| To ascertain if that cloud was really and truly coral-coloured | |
| might be of the most massive importance." | |
| He paused with a seriousness which was hardly generally shared, | |
| and continued with the same fluence: "Or suppose we wanted to | |
| maintain that the Warden committed suicide--that he just got Smith | |
| to hold the pistol as Brutus's slave held the sword. Why, it would | |
| make all the difference whether the Warden could see himself plain | |
| in still water. Still water has made hundreds of suicides: | |
| one sees oneself so very--well, so very plain." | |
| "Do you, perhaps," inquired Pym with austere irony, "maintain that your client | |
| was a bird of some sort--say, a flamingo?" | |
| "In the matter of his being a flamingo," said Moon with sudden severity, | |
| "my client reserves his defence." | |
| No one quite knowing what to make of this, Mr. Moon resumed his seat | |
| and Inglewood resumed the reading of his document:-- | |
| "There is something pleasing to a mystic in such a land of mirrors. | |
| For a mystic is one who holds that two worlds are better than one. | |
| In the highest sense, indeed, all thought is reflection. | |
| "This is the real truth, in the saying that second thoughts are best. | |
| Animals have no second thoughts; man alone is able to see his own | |
| thought double, as a drunkard sees a lamp-post; man alone is able | |
| to see his own thought upside down as one sees a house in a puddle. | |
| This duplication of mentality, as in a mirror, is (we repeat) | |
| the inmost thing of human philosophy. There is a mystical, even a | |
| monstrous truth, in the statement that two heads are better than one. | |
| But they ought both to grow on the same body.'" | |
| "I know it's a little transcendental at first," interposed Inglewood, | |
| beaming round with a broad apology, "but you see this document was written | |
| in collaboration by a don and a--" | |
| "Drunkard, eh?" suggested Moses Gould, beginning to enjoy himself. | |
| "I rather think," proceeded Inglewood with an unruffled | |
| and critical air, "that this part was written by the don. | |
| I merely warn the Court that the statement, though indubitably accurate, | |
| bears here and there the trace of coming from two authors." | |
| "In that case," said Dr. Pym, leaning back and sniffing, | |
| "I cannot agree with them that two heads are better than one." | |
| "The undersigned persons think it needless to touch on a kindred | |
| problem so often discussed at committees for University Reform: | |
| the question of whether dons see double because they are drunk, | |
| or get drunk because they see double. It is enough for them | |
| (the undersigned persons) if they are able to pursue their own peculiar | |
| and profitable theme--which is puddles. What (the undersigned | |
| persons ask themselves) is a puddle? A puddle repeats infinity, | |
| and is full of light; nevertheless, if analyzed objectively, | |
| a puddle is a piece of dirty water spread very thin on mud. | |
| The two great historic universities of England have all this large | |
| and level and reflective brilliance. Nevertheless, or, rather, on the | |
| other hand, they are puddles--puddles, puddles, puddles, puddles. | |
| The undersigned persons ask you to excuse an emphasis inseparable | |
| from strong conviction." | |
| Inglewood ignored a somewhat wild expression on the faces of some present, | |
| and continued with eminent cheerfulness:-- | |
| "Such were the thoughts that failed to cross the mind of | |
| the undergraduate Smith as he picked his way among the stripes | |
| of canal and the glittering rainy gutters into which the water | |
| broke up round the back of Brakespeare College. Had these thoughts | |
| crossed his mind he would have been much happier than he was. | |
| Unfortunately he did not know that his puzzles were puddles. | |
| He did not know that the academic mind reflects infinity and is full | |
| of light by the simple process of being shallow and standing still. | |
| In his case, therefore, there was something solemn, and even evil | |
| about the infinity implied. It was half-way through a starry | |
| night of bewildering brilliancy; stars were both above and below. | |
| To young Smith's sullen fancy the skies below seemed even hollower | |
| than the skies above; he had a horrible idea that if he counted | |
| the stars he would find one too many in the pool. | |
| "In crossing the little paths and bridges he felt like one stepping | |
| on the black and slender ribs of some cosmic Eiffel Tower. For to him, | |
| and nearly all the educated youth of that epoch, the stars were cruel things. | |
| Though they glowed in the great dome every night, they were an enormous | |
| and ugly secret; they uncovered the nakedness of nature; they were a glimpse | |
| of the iron wheels and pulleys behind the scenes. For the young men | |
| of that sad time thought that the god always comes from the machine. | |
| They did not know that in reality the machine only comes from the god. | |
| IN short, they were all pessimists, and starlight was atrocious to them-- | |
| atrocious because it was true. All their universe was black with white spots. | |
| "Smith looked up with relief from the glittering pools below | |
| to the glittering skies and the great black bulk of the college. | |
| The only light other than stars glowed through one peacock-green | |
| curtain in the upper part of the building, marking where | |
| Dr. Emerson Eames always worked till morning and received | |
| his friends and favourite pupils at any hour of the night. | |
| Indeed, it was to his rooms that the melancholy Smith was bound. | |
| Smith had been at Dr. Eames's lecture for the first half of the morning, | |
| and at pistol practice and fencing in a saloon for the second half. | |
| He had been sculling madly for the first half of the afternoon | |
| and thinking idly (and still more madly) for the second half. | |
| He had gone to a supper where he was uproarious, and on to a debating | |
| club where he was perfectly insufferable, and the melancholy | |
| Smith was melancholy still. Then, as he was going home to his | |
| diggings he remembered the eccentricity of his friend and master, | |
| the Warden of Brakespeare, and resolved desperately to turn | |
| in to that gentleman's private house. | |
| "Emerson Eames was an eccentric in many ways, but his throne | |
| in philosophy and metaphysics was of international eminence; | |
| the university could hardly have afforded to lose him, and, moreover, | |
| a don has only to continue any of his bad habits long enough | |
| to make them a part of the British Constitution. The bad habits | |
| of Emerson Eames were to sit up all night and to be a student | |
| of Schopenhauer. Personally, he was a lean, lounging sort of man, | |
| with a blond pointed beard, not so very much older than his | |
| pupil Smith in the matter of mere years, but older by centuries | |
| in the two essential respects of having a European reputation | |
| and a bald head. | |
| "`I came, against the rules, at this unearthly hour,' said Smith, who was | |
| nothing to the eye except a very big man trying to make himself small, | |
| `because I am coming to the conclusion that existence is really too rotten. | |
| I know all the arguments of the thinkers that think otherwise--bishops, | |
| and agnostics, and those sort of people. And knowing you were the greatest | |
| living authority on the pessimist thinkers--' | |
| "`All thinkers,' said Eames, `are pessimist thinkers.' | |
| "After a patch of pause, not the first--for this depressing conversation | |
| had gone on for some hours with alternations of cynicism and silence-- | |
| the Warden continued with his air of weary brilliancy: `It's all a question | |
| of wrong calculation. The most flies into the candle because he doesn't | |
| happen to know that the game is not worth the candle. The wasp gets | |
| into the jam in hearty and hopeful efforts to get the jam into him. | |
| IN the same way the vulgar people want to enjoy life just as they want | |
| to enjoy gin--because they are too stupid to see that they are paying too big | |
| a price for it. That they never find happiness--that they don't even know | |
| how to look for it--is proved by the paralyzing clumsiness and ugliness | |
| of everything they do. Their discordant colours are cries of pain. | |
| Look at the brick villas beyond the college on this side of the river. | |
| There's one with spotted blinds; look at it! just go and look at it!' | |
| "`Of course,' he went on dreamily, `one or two men see the sober | |
| fact a long way off--they go mad. Do you notice that maniacs mostly | |
| try either to destroy other things, or (if they are thoughtful) | |
| to destroy themselves? The madman is the man behind the scenes, | |
| like the man that wanders about the coulisse of a theater. | |
| He has only opened the wrong door and come into the right place. | |
| He sees things at the right angle. But the common world--' | |
| "`Oh, hang the common world!' said the sullen Smith, letting his fist | |
| fall on the table in an idle despair. | |
| "`Let's give it a bad name first,' said the Professor calmly, | |
| `and then hang it. A puppy with hydrophobia would probably struggle | |
| for life while we killed it; but if we were kind we should kill it. | |
| So an omniscient god would put us out of our pain. | |
| He would strike us dead.' | |
| "`Why doesn't he strike us dead?' asked the undergraduate abstractedly, | |
| plunging his hands into his pockets. | |
| "`He is dead himself,' said the philosopher; `that is where | |
| he is really enviable.' | |
| "`To any one who thinks,' proceeded Eames, `the pleasures of life, | |
| trivial and soon tasteless, and bribes to bring us into a torture chamber. | |
| We all see that for any thinking man mere extinction is the... What | |
| are you doing?... Are you mad?... Put that thing down.' | |
| "Dr. Eames had turned his tired but still talkative head over his shoulder, | |
| and had found himself looking into a small round black hole, rimmed by a | |
| six-sided circlet of steel, with a sort of spike standing up on the top. | |
| It fixed him like an iron eye. Through those eternal instants during | |
| which the reason is stunned he did not even know what it was. | |
| Then he saw behind it the chambered barrel and cocked hammer of | |
| a revolver, and behind that the flushed and rather heavy face of Smith, | |
| apparently quite unchanged, or even more mild than before. | |
| "`I'll help you out of your hole, old man,' said Smith, | |
| with rough tenderness. `I'll put the puppy out of his pain.' | |
| "Emerson Eames retreated towards the window. `Do you mean | |
| to kill me?' he cried. | |
| "`It's not a thing I'd do for every one,' said Smith with emotion; | |
| `but you and I seem to have got so intimate to-night, somehow. | |
| I know all your troubles now, and the only cure, old chap.' | |
| "`Put that thing down,' shouted the Warden. | |
| "`It'll soon be over, you know,' said Smith with the air of a | |
| sympathetic dentist. And as the Warden made a run for the window | |
| and balcony, his benefactor followed him with a firm step | |
| and a compassionate expression. | |
| "Both men were perhaps surprised to see that the gray and white | |
| of early daybreak had already come. One of them, however, | |
| had emotions calculated to swallow up surprise. Brakespeare College | |
| was one of the few that retained real traces of Gothic ornament, | |
| and just beneath Dr. Eames's balcony there ran out what had perhaps | |
| been a flying buttress, still shapelessly shaped into gray beasts | |
| and devils, but blinded with mosses and washed out with rains. | |
| With an ungainly and most courageous leap, Eames sprang out on this | |
| antique bridge, as the only possible mode of escape from the maniac. | |
| He sat astride of it, still in his academic gown, dangling his | |
| long thin legs, and considering further chances of flight. | |
| The whitening daylight opened under as well as over him that | |
| impression of vertical infinity already remarked about the little | |
| lakes round Brakespeare. Looking down and seeing the spires | |
| and chimneys pendent in the pools, they felt alone in space. | |
| They felt as if they were looking over the edge from the North Pole | |
| and seeing the South Pole below. | |
| "`Hang the world, we said,' observed Smith, `and the world is hanged. | |
| "He has hanged the world upon nothing," says the Bible. Do you like being | |
| hanged upon nothing? I'm going to be hanged upon something myself. | |
| I'm going to swing for you... Dear, tender old phrase,' he murmured; | |
| `never true till this moment. I am going to swing for you. | |
| For you, dear friend. For your sake. At your express desire.' | |
| "`Help!' cried the Warden of Brakespeare College; `help!' | |
| "`The puppy struggles,' said the undergraduate, with an eye of pity, | |
| `the poor puppy struggles. How fortunate it is that I am wiser | |
| and kinder than he,' and he sighted his weapon so as exactly to cover | |
| the upper part of Eames's bald head. | |
| "`Smith,' said the philosopher with a sudden change to a sort | |
| of ghastly lucidity, `I shall go mad.' | |
| "`And so look at things from the right angle,' observed Smith, | |
| sighing gently. `Ah, but madness is only a palliative at best, | |
| a drug. The only cure is an operation--an operation that is | |
| always successful: death.' | |
| "As he spoke the sun rose. It seemed to put colour into everything, | |
| with the rapidity of a lightning artist. A fleet of little | |
| clouds sailing across the sky changed from pigeon-gray to pink. | |
| All over the little academic town the tops of different buildings | |
| took on different tints: here the sun would pick out the green | |
| enameled on a pinnacle, there the scarlet tiles of a villa; | |
| here the copper ornament on some artistic shop, and there | |
| the sea-blue slates of some old and steep church roof. | |
| All these coloured crests seemed to have something oddly | |
| individual and significant about them, like crests of famous | |
| knights pointed out in a pageant or a battlefield: they each | |
| arrested the eye, especially the rolling eye of Emerson Eames | |
| as he looked round on the morning and accepted it as his last. | |
| Through a narrow chink between a black timber tavern and a big | |
| gray college he could see a clock with gilt hands which the | |
| sunshine set on fire. He stared at it as though hypnotized; | |
| and suddenly the clock began to strike, as if in personal reply. | |
| As if at a signal, clock after clock took up the cry: | |
| all the churches awoke like chickens at cockcrow. | |
| The birds were already noisy in the trees behind the college. | |
| The sun rose, gathering glory that seemed too full for the deep | |
| skies to hold, and the shallow waters beneath them seemed golden | |
| and brimming and deep enough for the thirst of the gods. | |
| Just round the corner of the College, and visible from his crazy perch, | |
| were the brightest specks on that bright landscape, the villa | |
| with the spotted blinds which he had made his text that night. | |
| He wondered for the first time what people lived in them. | |
| "Suddenly he called out with mere querulous authority, | |
| as he might have called to a student to shut a door. | |
| "`Let me come off this place,' he cried; `I can't bear it.' | |
| "`I rather doubt if it will bear you,' said Smith critically; | |
| `but before you break your neck, or I blow out your brains, | |
| or let you back into this room (on which complex points I | |
| am undecided) I want the metaphysical point cleared up. | |
| Do I understand that you want to get back to life?' | |
| "`I'd give anything to get back,' replied the unhappy professor. | |
| "`Give anything!' cried Smith; `then, blast your impudence, | |
| give us a song!' | |
| "`What song do you mean?' demanded the exasperated Eames; `what song?' | |
| "`A hymn, I think, would be most appropriate,' answered the other gravely. | |
| `I'll let you off if you'll repeat after me the words-- | |
| "`I thank the goodness and the grace | |
| That on my birth have smiled. | |
| And perched me on this curious place, | |
| A happy English child.' | |
| "Dr. Emerson Eames having briefly complied, his persecutor abruptly | |
| told him to hold his hands up in the air. Vaguely connecting this | |
| proceeding with the usual conduct of brigands and bushrangers, | |
| Mr. Eames held them up, very stiffly, but without marked surprise. | |
| A bird alighting on his stone seat took no more notice of him | |
| than of a comic statue. | |
| "`You are now engaged in public worship,' remarked Smith severely, | |
| `and before I have done with you, you shall thank God for the very ducks | |
| on the pond.' | |
| "`The celebrated pessimist half articulately expressed his perfect | |
| readiness to thank God for the ducks on the pond. | |
| "`Not forgetting the drakes,' said Smith sternly. | |
| (Eames weakly conceded the drakes.) `Not forgetting anything, please. | |
| You shall thank heaven for churches and chapels and villas | |
| and vulgar people and puddles and pots and pans and sticks | |
| and rags and bones and spotted blinds.' | |
| "`All right, all right,' repeated the victim in despair; | |
| `sticks and rags and bones and blinds.' | |
| "`Spotted blinds, I think we said,' remarked Smith with a | |
| rogueish ruthlessness, and wagging the pistol-barrel at him | |
| like a long metallic finger. | |
| "`Spotted blinds,' said Emerson Eames faintly. | |
| "`You can't say fairer than that,' admitted the younger man, | |
| `and now I'll just tell you this to wind up with. | |
| If you really were what you profess to be, I don't see that it | |
| would matter to snail or seraph if you broke your impious stiff | |
| neck and dashed out all your drivelling devil-worshipping brains. | |
| But in strict biographical fact you are a very nice fellow, | |
| addicted to talking putrid nonsense, and I love you like a brother. | |
| I shall therefore fire off all my cartridges round your head | |
| so as not to hit you (I am a good shot, you may be glad to hear), | |
| and then we will go in and have some breakfast.' | |
| "He then let off two barrels in the air, which the Professor | |
| endured with singular firmness, and then said, `But don't fire | |
| them all off.' | |
| "`Why not' asked the other buoyantly. | |
| "`Keep them,' asked his companion, `for the next man you meet | |
| who talks as we were talking.' | |
| "It was at this moment that Smith, looking down, perceived apoplectic | |
| terror upon the face of the Sub-Warden, and heard the refined shriek | |
| with which he summoned the porter and the ladder. | |
| "It took Dr. Eames some little time to disentangle himself from | |
| the ladder,and some little time longer to disentangle himself | |
| from the Sub-Warden. But as soon as he could do so unobtrusively, | |
| he rejoined his companion in the late extraordinary scene. | |
| He was astonished to find the gigantic Smith heavily shaken, | |
| and sitting with his shaggy head on his hands. When addressed, | |
| he lifted a very pale face. | |
| "`Why, what is the matter?' asked Eames, whose own nerves had by this | |
| time twittered themselves quiet, like the morning birds. | |
| "`I must ask your indulgence,' said Smith, rather brokenly. | |
| `I must ask you to realize that I have just had an escape from death.' | |
| "`YOU have had an escape from death?' repeated the Professor | |
| in not unpardonable irritation. `Well, of all the cheek--' | |
| "`Oh, don't you understand, don't you understand?' cried the pale young | |
| man impatiently. `I had to do it, Eames,; I had to prove you wrong or die. | |
| When a man's young, he nearly always has some one whom he thinks the top-water | |
| mark of the mind of man--some one who knows all about it, if anybody knows. | |
| "`Well, you were that to me; you spoke with authority, | |
| and not as the scribes. Nobody could comfort me if YOU | |
| said there was no comfort. If you really thought there was | |
| nothing anywhere, it was because you had been there to see. | |
| Don't you see that I HAD to prove you didn't really mean it?-- | |
| or else drown myself in the canal.' | |
| "`Well,' said Eames hesitatingly, `I think perhaps you confuse--' | |
| "`Oh, don't tell me that!' cried Smith with the sudden clairvoyance | |
| of mental pain; `don't tell me I confuse enjoyment of existence | |
| with the Will to Live! That's German, and German is High Dutch, | |
| and High Dutch is Double Dutch. The thing I saw shining in your | |
| eyes when you dangled on that bridge was enjoyment of life "the | |
| Will to Live." What you knew when you sat on that damned gargoyle | |
| was that the world, when all is said and done, is a wonderful and | |
| beautiful place; I know it, because I knew it at the same minute. | |
| I saw the gray clouds turn pink, and the little gilt clock in the crack | |
| between the houses. It was THOSE things you hated leaving, not Life, | |
| whatever that is. Eames, we've been to the brink of death together; | |
| won't you admit I'm right?' | |
| "`Yes, said Eames very slowly, `I think you are right. | |
| You shall have a First!' | |
| "`Right!' cried Smith, springing up reanimated. `I've passed with honours, | |
| and now let me go and see about being sent down.' | |
| "`You needn't be sent down,' said Eames with the quiet | |
| confidence of twelve years of intrigue. `Everything with us | |
| comes from the man on top to the people just round him: | |
| I am the man on top, and I shall tell the people round | |
| me the truth.' | |
| "`The massive Mr. Smith rose and went firmly to the window, | |
| but he spoke with equal firmness. `I must be sent down,' | |
| he said, `and the people must not be told the truth.' | |
| "`And why not' asked the other. | |
| "`Because I mean to follow your advice,' answered the massive youth, | |
| `I mean to keep the remaining shots for people in the shameful state | |
| you and I were in last night--I wish we could even plead drunkenness. | |
| I mean to keep those bullets for pessimists--pills for pale people. | |
| And in this way I want to walk the world like a wonderful surprise-- | |
| to float as idly as the thistledown, and come as silently as the sunrise; | |
| not to be expected any more than the thunderbolt, not to be | |
| recalled any more than the dying breeze. I don't want people to | |
| anticipate me as a well-known practical joke. I want both my gifts | |
| to come virgin and violent, the death and the life after death. | |
| I am going to hold a pistol to the head of the Modern Man. But I | |
| shall not use it to kill him--only to bring him to life. | |
| I begin to see a new meaning in being the skeleton at the feast.' | |
| "`You could scarcely be called a skeleton,' said Dr. Eames, smiling. | |
| "`That comes of being so much at the feast,' answered the massive youth. | |
| `No skeleton can keep his figure if he is always dining out. | |
| But that is not quite what I meant: what I mean is that I caught | |
| a kind of glimpse of the meaning of death and all that--the skull | |
| and cross-bones, the ~memento mori~. It isn't only meant to remind | |
| us of a future life, but to remind us of a present life too. | |
| With our weak spirits we should grow old in eternity if we were not kept | |
| young by death. Providence has to cut immortality into lengths for us, | |
| as nurses cut the bread and butter into fingers.' | |
| "Then he added suddenly in a voice of unnatural actuality, | |
| `But I know something now, Eames. I knew it when I saw | |
| the clouds turn pink.' | |
| "`What do you mean?' asked Eames. `What did you know?' | |
| "`I knew for the first time that murder is really wrong.' | |
| "He gripped Dr. Eames's hand and groped his way somewhat unsteadily | |
| to the door. Before he had vanished through it he had added, | |
| `It's very dangerous, though, when a man thinks for a split second | |
| that he understands death.' | |
| "Dr. Eames remained in repose and rumination some hours after his | |
| late assailant had left. Then he rose, took his hat and umbrella, | |
| and went for a brisk if rotatory walk. Several times, | |
| however, he stood outside the villa with the spotted blinds, | |
| studying them intently with his head slightly on one side. | |
| Some took him for a lunatic and some for an intending purchaser. | |
| He is not yet sure that the two characters would be widely different. | |
| "The above narrative has been constructed on a principle which is, | |
| in the opinion of the undersigned persons, new in the art of letters. | |
| Each of the two actors is described as he appeared to the other. | |
| But the undersigned persons absolutely guarantee the exactitude | |
| of the story; and if their version of the thing be questioned, they, | |
| the undersigned persons, would deucedly well like to know who does | |
| know about it if they don't. | |
| "The undersigned persons will now adjourn to `The Spotted Dog' | |
| for beer. Farewell. | |
| "(Signed) James Emerson Eames, | |
| "Warden of Brakespeare College, Cambridge. | |
| "Innocent Smith." | |
| Chapter II | |
| The Two Curates; | |
| or, the Burglary Charge | |
| Arthur Inglewood handed the document he had just read to the leaders | |
| of the prosecution, who examined it with their heads together. | |
| Both the Jew and the American were of sensitive and excitable stocks, | |
| and they revealed by the jumpings and bumpings of the black head and the | |
| yellow that nothing could be done in the way of denial of the document. | |
| The letter from the Warden was as authentic as the letter from the | |
| Sub-Warden, however regrettably different in dignity and social tone. | |
| "Very few words," said Inglewood, "are required to conclude | |
| our case in this matter. Surely it is now plain that our client | |
| carried his pistol about with the eccentric but innocent | |
| purpose of giving a wholesome scare to those whom he regarded | |
| as blasphemers. In each case the scare was so wholesome | |
| that the victim himself has dated from it as from a new birth. | |
| Smith, so far from being a madman, is rather a mad doctor-- | |
| he walks the world curing frenzies and not distributing them. | |
| That is the answer to the two unanswerable questions which I | |
| put to the prosecutors. That is why they dared not produce | |
| a line by any one who had actually confronted the pistol. | |
| All who had actually confronted the pistol confessed that they | |
| had profited by it. That was why Smith, though a good shot, | |
| never hit anybody. He never hit anybody because he was a good shot. | |
| His mind was as clear of murder as his hands are of blood. | |
| This, I say, is the only possible explanation of these facts | |
| and of all the other facts. No one can possibly explain | |
| the Warden's conduct except by believing the Warden's story. | |
| Even Dr. Pym, who is a very factory of ingenious theories, | |
| could find no other theory to cover the case." | |
| "There are promising per-spectives in hypnotism and dual personality," | |
| said Dr. Cyrus Pym dreamily; "the science of criminology is in | |
| its infancy, and--" | |
| "Infancy!" cried Moon, jerking his red pencil in the air with a gesture | |
| of enlightenment; "why, that explains it!" | |
| "I repeat," proceeded Inglewood, "that neither Dr. Pym nor any one else | |
| can account on any other theory but ours for the Warden's signature, | |
| for the shots missed and the witnesses missing." | |
| The little Yankee had slipped to his feet with some return | |
| of a cock-fighting coolness. "The defence," he said, | |
| "omits a coldly colossal fact. They say we produce none of | |
| the actual victims. Wal, here is one victim--England's celebrated | |
| and stricken Warner. I reckon he is pretty well produced. | |
| And they suggest that all the outrages were followed | |
| by reconciliation. Wal, there's no flies on England's Warner; | |
| and he isn't reconciliated much." | |
| "My learned friend," said Moon, getting elaborately to his feet, | |
| "must remember that the science of shooting Dr. Warner is in its infancy. | |
| Dr. Warner would strike the idlest eye as one specially difficult to startle | |
| into any recognition of the glory of God. We admit that our client, | |
| in this one instance, failed, and that the operation was not successful. | |
| But I am empowered to offer, on behalf of my client, a proposal | |
| for operating on Dr. Warner again, at his earliest convenience, | |
| and without further fees." | |
| "'Ang it all, Michael," cried Gould, quite serious for the first time | |
| in his life, "you might give us a bit of bally sense for a chinge." | |
| "What was Dr. Warner talking about just before the first shot?" | |
| asked Moon sharply. | |
| "The creature," said Dr. Warner superciliously, "asked me, | |
| with characteristic rationality, whether it was my birthday." | |
| "And you answered, with characteristic swank," cried Moon, shooting out | |
| a long lean finger, as rigid and arresting as the pistol of Smith, | |
| "that you didn't keep your birthday." | |
| "Something like that," assented the doctor. | |
| "Then," continued Moon, "he asked you why not, and you said it was because you | |
| didn't see that birth was anything to rejoice over. Agreed? Now is there | |
| any one who doubts that our tale is true?" | |
| There was a cold crash of stillness in the room; and Moon said, "Pax populi | |
| vox Dei; it is the silence of the people that is the voice of God. Or in | |
| Dr. Pym's more civilized language, it is up to him to open the next charge. | |
| On this we claim an acquittal." | |
| It was about an hour later. Dr. Cyrus Pym had remained for an unprecedented | |
| time with his eyes closed and his thumb and finger in the air. | |
| It almost seemed as if he had been "struck so," as the nurses say; | |
| and in the deathly silence Michael Moon felt forced to relieve | |
| the strain with some remark. For the last half-hour or so the eminent | |
| criminologist had been explaining that science took the same view | |
| of offences against property as id did of offences against life. | |
| "Most murder," he had said, "is a variation of homicidal mania, | |
| and in the same way most theft is a version of kleptomania. | |
| I cannot entertain any doubt that my learned friends opposite | |
| adequately con-ceive how this must involve a scheme of punishment | |
| more tol'rant and humane than the cruel methods of ancient codes. | |
| They will doubtless exhibit consciousness of a chasm so eminently yawning, | |
| so thought-arresting, so--" It was here that he paused and indulged | |
| in the delicate gesture to which allusion has been made; and Michael | |
| could bear it no longer. | |
| "Yes, yes," he said impatiently, "we admit the chasm. | |
| The old cruel codes accuse a man of theft and send him | |
| to prison for ten years. The tolerant and humane ticket | |
| accuses him of nothing and sends him to prison for ever. | |
| We pass the chasm." | |
| It was characteristic of the eminent Pym, in one of his trances | |
| of verbal fastidiousness, that he went on, unconscious not only | |
| of his opponent's interruption, but even of his own pause. | |
| "So stock-improving," continued Dr. Cyrus Pym, "so fraught | |
| with real high hopes of the future. Science therefore | |
| regards thieves, in the abstract, just as it regards murderers. | |
| It regards them not as sinners to be punished for an arbitrary period, | |
| but as patients to be detained and cared for," (his first two digits | |
| closed again as he hesitated)--"in short, for the required period. | |
| But there is something special in the case we investigate here. | |
| Kleptomania commonly con-joins itself--" | |
| "I beg pardon," said Michael; "I did not ask just now because, | |
| to tell the truth, I really though Dr. Pym, though seemingly vertical, | |
| was enjoying well-earned slumber, with a pinch in his fingers | |
| of scentless and delicate dust. But now that things are moving | |
| a little more, there is something I should really like to know. | |
| I have hung on Dr. Pym's lips, of course, with an interest that it | |
| were weak to call rapture, but I have so far been unable to form | |
| any conjecture about what the accused, in the present instance, | |
| is supposed to have been and gone and done." | |
| "If Mr. Moon will have patience," said Pym with dignity, "he will find | |
| that this was the very point to which my exposition was di-rected. | |
| Kleptomania, I say, exhibits itself as a kind of physical attraction | |
| to certain defined materials; and it has been held (by no less a man | |
| than Harris) that this is the ultimate explanation of the strict | |
| specialism and vurry narrow professional outlook of most criminals. | |
| One will have an irresistible physical impulsion towards pearl | |
| sleeve-links, while he passes over the most elegant and celebrated | |
| diamond sleeve-links, placed about in the most conspicuous locations. | |
| Another will impede his flight with no less than forty-seven buttoned boots, | |
| while elastic-sided boots leave him cold, and even sarcastic. | |
| The specialism of the criminal, I repeat, is a mark rather of insanity | |
| than of any brightness of business habits; but there is one kind | |
| of depredator to whom this principle is at first sight hard to apply. | |
| I allude to our fellow-citizen the housebreaker. | |
| "It has been maintained by some of our boldest young | |
| truth-seekers, that the eye of a burglar beyond the back-garden | |
| wall could hardly be caught and hypnotized by a fork | |
| that is insulated in a locked box under the butler's bed. | |
| They have thrown down the gauntlet to American science on this point. | |
| They declare that diamond links are not left about in conspicuous | |
| locations in the haunts of the lower classes, as they were | |
| in the great test experiment of Calypso College. We hope this | |
| experiment here will be an answer to that young ringing challenge, | |
| and will bring the burglar once more into line and union | |
| with his fellow criminals." | |
| Moon, whose face had gone through every phase of black bewilderment | |
| for five minutes past, suddenly lifted his hand and struck the table | |
| in explosive enlightenment. | |
| "Oh, I see!" he cried; "you mean that Smith is a burglar." | |
| "I thought I made it quite ad'quately lucid," said Mr. Pym, | |
| folding up his eyelids. It was typical of this topsy-turvy private | |
| trial that all the eloquent extras, all the rhetoric or digression | |
| on either side, was exasperating and unintelligible to the other. | |
| Moon could not make head or tail of the solemnity of a new civilization. | |
| Pym could not make head or tail of the gaiety of an old one. | |
| "All the cases in which Smith has figured as an expropriator," | |
| continued the American doctor, "are cases of burglary. | |
| Pursuing the same course as in the previous case, we select | |
| the indubitable instance from the rest, and we take the most | |
| correct cast-iron evidence. I will now call on my colleague, | |
| Mr. Gould, to read a letter we have received from the earnest, | |
| unspotted Canon of Durham, Canon Hawkins." | |
| Mr. Moses Gould leapt up with his usual alacrity to read the letter from | |
| the earnest and unspotted Hawkins. Moses Gould could imitate a farmyard well, | |
| Sir Henry Irving not so well, Marie Lloyd to a point of excellence, and the | |
| new motor horns in a manner that put him upon the platform of great artists. | |
| But his imitation of a Canon of Durham was not convincing; indeed, the sense | |
| of the letter was so much obscured by the extraordinary leaps and gasps of his | |
| pronunciation that it is perhaps better to print it here as Moon read it when, | |
| a little later, it was handed across the table. | |
| "Dear Sir,--I can scarcely feel surprise that the incident | |
| you mention, private as it was, should have filtered through | |
| our omnivorous journals to the mere populace; for the position | |
| I have since attained makes me, I conceive, a public character, | |
| and this was certainly the most extraordinary incident | |
| in a not uneventful and perhaps not an unimportant career. | |
| I am by no means without experience in scenes of civil tumult. | |
| I have faced many a political crisis in the old Primrose League | |
| days at Herne Bay, and, before I broke with the wilder set, | |
| have spent many a night at the Christian Social Union. But this | |
| other experience was quite inconceivable. I can only describe | |
| it as the letting loose of a place which it is not for me, | |
| as a clergyman, to mention. | |
| "It occurred in the days when I was, for a short period, | |
| a curate at Hoxton; and the other curate, then my colleague, | |
| induced me to attend a meeting which he described, I must say | |
| profanely described, as calculated to promote the kingdom | |
| of God. I found, on the contrary, that it consisted entirely | |
| of men in corduroys and greasy clothes whose manners were coarse | |
| and their opinions extreme. | |
| "Of my colleague in question I wish to speak with the fullest | |
| respect and friendliness, and I will therefore say little. | |
| No one can be more convinced than I of the evil of politic | |
| in the pulpit; and I never offer my congregation any advice | |
| about voting except in cases in which I feel strongly that they | |
| are likely to make an erroneous selection. But, while I do | |
| not mean to touch at all upon political or social problems, | |
| I must say that for a clergyman to countenance, even in jest, | |
| such discredited nostrums of dissipated demagogues as Socialism | |
| or Radicalism partakes of the character of the betrayal | |
| of a sacred trust. Far be it from me to say a word against | |
| the Reverend Raymond Percy, the colleague in question. | |
| He was brilliant, I suppose, and to some apparently fascinating; | |
| but a clergyman who talks like a Socialist, wears his hair | |
| like a pianist, and behaves like an intoxicated person, | |
| will never rise in his profession, or even obtain the admiration | |
| of the good and wise. Nor is it for me to utter my personal | |
| judgements of the appearance of the people in the hall. | |
| Yet a glance round the room, revealing ranks of debased | |
| and envious faces--" | |
| "Adopting," said Moon explosively, for he was getting restive--"adopting | |
| the reverend gentleman's favourite figure of logic, may I say that | |
| while tortures would not tear from me a whisper about his intellect, | |
| he is a blasted old jackass." | |
| "Really!" said Dr. Pym; "I protest." | |
| "You must keep quiet, Michael," said Inglewood; "they have a right | |
| to read their story." | |
| "Chair! Chair! Chair!" cried Gould, rolling about exuberantly in his own; | |
| and Pym glanced for a moment towards the canopy which covered all | |
| the authority of the Court of Beacon. | |
| "Oh, don't wake the old lady," said Moon, lowering his voice in a moody | |
| good-humour. "I apologize. I won't interrupt again." | |
| Before the little eddy of interruption was ended the reading | |
| of the clergyman's letter was already continuing. | |
| "The proceedings opened with a speech from my colleague, of which I | |
| will say nothing. It was deplorable. Many of the audience | |
| were Irish, and showed the weakness of that impetuous people. | |
| When gathered together into gangs and conspiracies they seem | |
| to lose altogether that lovable good-nature and readiness to accept | |
| anything one tells them which distinguishes them as individuals." | |
| With a slight start, Michael rose to his feet, bowed solemnly, | |
| and sat down again. | |
| "These persons, if not silent, were at least applausive during the speech | |
| of Mr. Percy. He descended to their level with witticisms about rent | |
| and a reserve of labour. Confiscation, expropriation, arbitration, and such | |
| words with which I cannot soil my lips, recurred constantly. Some hours | |
| afterward the storm broke. I had been addressing the meeting for some time, | |
| pointing out the lack of thrift in the working classes, their insufficient | |
| attendance at evening service, their neglect of the Harvest Festival, and of | |
| many other things that might materially help them to improve their lot. | |
| It was, I think, about this time that an extraordinary interruption occurred. | |
| An enormous, powerful man, partly concealed with white plaster, | |
| arose in the middle of the hall, and offered (in a loud, roaring voice, | |
| like a bull's) some observations which seemed to be in a foreign language. | |
| Mr. Raymond Percy, my colleague, descended to his level by entering into | |
| a duel of repartee, in which he appeared to be the victor. The meeting | |
| began to behave more respectfully for a little; yet before I had said twelve | |
| sentences more the rush was made for the platform. The enormous plasterer, | |
| in particular, plunged towards us, shaking the earth like an elephant; | |
| and I really do not know what would have happened if a man equally large, | |
| but not quite so ill-dressed, had not jumped up also and held him away. | |
| This other big man shouted a sort of speech to the mob as he was shoving | |
| them back. I don't know what he said, but, what with shouting and shoving | |
| and such horseplay, he got us out at a back door, while the wretched people | |
| went roaring down another passage. | |
| "Then follows the truly extraordinary part of my story. When he had got | |
| us outside, in a mean backyard of blistered grass leading into a lane | |
| with a very lonely-looking lamp-post, this giant addressed me as follows: | |
| `You are well out of that, sir; now you'd better come along with me. | |
| I want you to help me in an act of social justice, such as we've all | |
| been talking about. Come along!' And turning his big back abruptly, | |
| he led us down the lean old lane with the one lean old lamp-post, | |
| we scarcely knowing what to do but to follow him. He had certainly | |
| helped us in a most difficult situation, and, as a gentleman, I could | |
| not treat such a benefactor with suspicion without grave grounds. | |
| Such also was the view of my Socialistic colleague, who (with all | |
| his dreadful talk of arbitration) is a gentleman also. In fact, | |
| he comes of the Staffordshire Percies, a branch of the old house, | |
| and has the black hair and pale, clear-cut face of the whole family. | |
| I cannot but refer it to vanity that he should heighten his personal | |
| advantages with black velvet or a red cross of considerable ostentation, | |
| and certainly--but I digress. | |
| "A fog was coming up the street, and that last lost lamp-post | |
| faded behind us in a way that certainly depressed the mind. | |
| The large man in front of us looked larger and larger in the haze. | |
| He did not turn round, but he said with his huge back to us, | |
| `All that talking's no good; we want a little practical Socialism.' | |
| "`I quite agree,' said Percy; `but I always like to understand things | |
| in theory before I put them into practice.' | |
| "`Oh, you just leave that to me,' said the practical Socialist, | |
| or whatever he was, with the most terrifying vagueness. | |
| `I have a way with me. I'm a Permeator.' | |
| "`I could not imagine what he meant, but my companion laughed, | |
| so I was sufficiently reassured to continue the unaccountable journey | |
| for the present. It led us through most singular ways; out of the lane, | |
| where we were already rather cramped, into a paved passage, | |
| at the end of which we passed through a wooden gate left open. | |
| We then found ourselves, in the increasing darkness and vapour, | |
| crossing what appeared to be a beaten path across a kitchen garden. | |
| I called out to the enormous person going on in front, but he answered | |
| obscurely that it was a short cut. | |
| "I was just repeating my very natural doubt to my clerical companion | |
| when I was brought up against a short ladder, apparently leading | |
| to a higher level of road. My thoughtless companion ran up it so | |
| quickly that I could not do otherwise than follow as best I could. | |
| The path on which I then planted my feet was quite unprecedentedly narrow. | |
| I had never had to walk along a thoroughfare so exiguous. | |
| Along one side of it grew what, in the dark and density of air, | |
| I first took to be some short, strong thicket of shrubs. Then I saw | |
| that they were not short shrubs; they were the tops of tall trees. | |
| I, an English gentleman and clergyman of the Church of England--I was | |
| walking along the top of a garden wall like a tom cat. | |
| "I am glad to say that I stopped within my first five steps, | |
| and let loose my just reprobation, balancing myself as best I | |
| could all the time. | |
| "`It's a right-of-way,"' declared my indefensible informant. | |
| `It's closed to traffic once in a hundred years.' | |
| "`Mr. Percy, Mr. Percy!' I called out; `you are not going | |
| on with this blackguard?' | |
| "`Why, I think so,' answered my unhappy colleague flippantly. | |
| `I think you and I are bigger blackguards than he is, | |
| whatever he is.' | |
| "`I am a burglar,' explained the big creature quite calmly. | |
| `I am a member of the Fabian Society. I take back the wealth stolen | |
| by the capitalist, not by sweeping civil war and revolution, but by reform | |
| fitted to the special occasion--here a little and there a little. | |
| Do you see that fifth house along the terrace with the flat roof? | |
| I'm permeating that one to-night.' | |
| "`Whether this is a crime or a joke,' I cried, `I desire to be quit of it.' | |
| "`The ladder is just behind you,' answered the creature | |
| with horrible courtesy; `and, before you go, do let me give | |
| you my card.' | |
| "If I had had the presence of mind to show any proper spirit I | |
| should have flung it away, though any adequate gesture of the kind | |
| would have gravely affected my equilibrium upon the wall. | |
| As it was, in the wildness of the moment, I put it in my | |
| waistcoat pocket, and, picking my way back by wall and ladder, | |
| landed in the respectable streets once more. Not before, however, | |
| I had seen with my own eyes the two awful and lamentable facts-- | |
| that the burglar was climbing up a slanting roof towards | |
| the chimneys, and that Raymond Percy (a priest of God and, | |
| what was worse, a gentleman) was crawling up after him. | |
| I have never seen either of them since that day. | |
| "In consequence of this soul-searching experience I severed | |
| my connection with the wild set. I am far from saying that | |
| every member of the Christian Social Union must necessarily | |
| be a burglar. I have no right to bring any such charge. | |
| But it gave me a hint of what courses may lead to in many cases; | |
| and I saw them no more. | |
| "I have only to add that the photograph you enclose, taken by a | |
| Mr. Inglewood, is undoubtedly that of the burglar in question. | |
| When I got home that night I looked at his card, and he was inscribed | |
| there under the name of Innocent Smith.--Yours faithfully, | |
| "John Clement Hawkins." | |
| Moon merely went through the form of glancing at the paper. He knew that | |
| the prosecutors could not have invented so heavy a document; that Moses Gould | |
| (for one) could no more write like a canon than he could read like one. | |
| After handing it back he rose to open the defence on the burglary charge. | |
| "We wish," said Michael, "to give all reasonable facilities to | |
| the prosecution; especially as it will save the time of the whole court. | |
| The latter object I shall once again pursue by passing over all | |
| those points of theory which are so dear to Dr. Pym. I know how they | |
| are made. Perjury is a variety of aphasia, leading a man to say | |
| one thing instead of another. Forgery is a kind of writer's cramp, | |
| forcing a man to write his uncle's name instead of his own. | |
| Piracy on the high seas is probably a form of sea-sickness. But it is | |
| unnecessary for us to inquire into the causes of a fact which we deny. | |
| Innocent Smith never did commit burglary at all. | |
| "I should like to claim the power permitted by our previous arrangement, | |
| and ask the prosecution two or three questions." | |
| Dr. Cyrus Pym closed his eyes to indicate a courteous assent. | |
| "In the first place," continued Moon, "have you the date of Canon Hawkins's | |
| last glimpse of Smith and Percy climbing up the walls and roofs?" | |
| "Ho, yus!" called out Gould smartly. "November thirteen, eighteen ninety-one." | |
| "Have you," continued Moon, "identified the houses in Hoxton up | |
| which they climbed?" | |
| "Must have been Ladysmith Terrace out of the highroad," | |
| answered Gould with the same clockwork readiness. | |
| "Well," said Michael, cocking an eyebrow at him, "was there any burglary | |
| in that terrace that night? Surely you could find that out." | |
| "There may well have been," said the doctor primly, after a pause, | |
| "an unsuccessful one that led to no legalities." | |
| "Another question," proceeded Michael. "Canon Hawkins, in his | |
| blood-and-thunder boyish way, left off at the exciting moment. | |
| Why don't you produce the evidence of the other clergyman, | |
| who actually followed the burglar and presumably was present | |
| at the crime?" | |
| Dr. Pym rose and planted the points of his fingers on the table, | |
| as he did when he was specially confident of the clearness | |
| of his reply. | |
| "We have entirely failed," he said, "to track the other clergyman, | |
| who seems to have melted into the ether after Canon Hawkins had | |
| seen him as-cending the gutters and the leads. I am fully aware | |
| that this may strike many as sing'lar; yet, upon reflection, | |
| I think it will appear pretty natural to a bright thinker. | |
| This Mr. Raymond Percy is admittedly, by the canon's evidence, | |
| a minister of eccentric ways. His con-nection with England's proudest | |
| and fairest does not seemingly prevent a taste for the society | |
| of the real low-down. On the other hand, the prisoner Smith is, | |
| by general agreement, a man of irr'sistible fascination. | |
| I entertain no doubt that Smith led the Revered Percy into the crime | |
| and forced him to hide his head in the real crim'nal class. | |
| That would fully account for his non-appearance, and the failure | |
| of all attempts to trace him." | |
| "It is impossible, then, to trace him?" asked Moon. | |
| "Impossible," repeated the specialist, shutting his eyes. | |
| "You are sure it's impossible?" | |
| "Oh dry up, Michael," cried Gould, irritably. "We'd 'have | |
| found 'im if we could, for you bet 'e saw the burglary. | |
| Look for your own 'ead in the dustbin. You'll find that-- | |
| after a bit," and his voice died away in grumbling. | |
| "Arthur," directed Michael Moon, sitting down, "kindly read | |
| Mr. Raymond Percy's letter to the court." | |
| "Wishing, as Mr. Moon has said, to shorten the proceedings as much | |
| as possible," began Inglewood, "I will not read the first part | |
| of the letter sent to us. It is only fair to the prosecution | |
| to admit the account given by the second clergyman fully ratifies, | |
| as far as the facts are concerned, that given by the first clergyman. | |
| We concede, then, the canon's story so far as it goes. This must | |
| necessarily be valuable to the prosecutor and also convenient to the court. | |
| I begin Mr. Percy's letter, then, at the point when all three men | |
| were standing on the garden wall:-- | |
| "As I watched Hawkins wavering on the wall, I made up my own mind | |
| not to waver. A cloud of wrath was on my brain, like the cloud | |
| of copper fog on the houses and gardens round. My decision was | |
| violent and simple; yet the thoughts that led up to it were so | |
| complicated and contradictory that I could not retrace them now. | |
| I knew Hawkins was a kind, innocent gentleman; and I would have | |
| given ten pounds for the pleasure of kicking him down the road. | |
| That God should allow good people to be as bestially stupid as that-- | |
| rose against me like a towering blasphemy. | |
| "At Oxford, I fear, I had the artistic temperament rather badly; | |
| and artists love to be limited. I liked the church as a pretty pattern; | |
| discipline was mere decoration. I delighted in mere divisions of time; | |
| I liked eating fish on Friday. But then I like fish; and the fast | |
| was made for men who like meat. Then I came to Hoxton and found men | |
| who had fasted for five hundred years; men who had to gnaw fish because | |
| they could not get meat--and fish-bones when they could not get fish. | |
| As too many British officers treat the army as a review, so I had treated | |
| the Church Militant as if it were the Church Pageant. Hoxton cures that. | |
| Then I realized that for eighteen hundred years the Church Militant | |
| had not been a pageant, but a riot--and a suppressed riot. | |
| There, still living patiently in Hoxton, were the people to whom | |
| the tremendous promises had been made. In the face of that I had | |
| to become a revolutionary if I was to continue to be religious. | |
| In Hoxton one cannot be a conservative without being also an atheist-- | |
| and a pessimist. Nobody but the devil could want to conserve Hoxton. | |
| "On the top of all this comes Hawkins. If he had cursed all the Hoxton men, | |
| excommunicated them, and told them they were going to hell, I should | |
| have rather admired him. If he had ordered them all to be burned | |
| in the market-place, I should still have had that patience that all | |
| good Christians have with the wrongs inflicted on other people. | |
| But there is no priestcraft about Hawkins--nor any other kind of craft. | |
| He is as perfectly incapable of being a priest as he is of being a carpenter | |
| or a cabman or a gardener or a plasterer. He is a perfect gentleman; | |
| that is his complaint. He does not impose his creed, but simply his class. | |
| He never said a word of religion in the whole of his damnable address. | |
| He simply said all the things his brother, the major, would have said. | |
| A voice from heaven assures me that he has a brother, and that this | |
| brother is a major. | |
| "When this helpless aristocrat had praised cleanliness in the body | |
| and convention in the soul to people who could hardly keep body | |
| and soul together, the stampede against our platform began. | |
| I took part in his undeserved rescue, I followed his | |
| obscure deliverer, until (as I have said) we stood together | |
| on the wall above the dim gardens, already clouding with fog. | |
| Then I looked at the curate and at the burglar, and decided, in a spasm | |
| of inspiration, that the burglar was the better man of the two. | |
| The burglar seemed quite as kind and human as the curate was-- | |
| and he was also brave and self-reliant, which the curate was not. | |
| I knew there was no virtue in the upper class, for I belong to | |
| it myself; I knew there was not so very much in the lower class, | |
| for I had lived with it a long time. Many old texts about | |
| the despised and persecuted came back to my mind, and I thought | |
| that the saints might well be hidden in the criminal class. | |
| About the time Hawkins let himself down the ladder I was crawling | |
| up a low, sloping, blue-slate roof after the large man, who went | |
| leaping in front of me like a gorilla. | |
| "This upward scramble was short, and we soon found | |
| ourselves tramping along a broad road of flat roofs, | |
| broader than many big thoroughfares, with chimney-pots here | |
| and there that seemed in the haze as bulky as small forts. | |
| The asphyxiation of the fog seemed to increase the somewhat | |
| swollen and morbid anger under which my brain and body laboured. | |
| The sky and all those things that are commonly clear seemed | |
| overpowered by sinister spirits. Tall spectres with turbans of vapour | |
| seemed to stand higher than the sun or moon, eclipsing both. | |
| I thought dimly of illustrations to the `Arabian Nights' | |
| on brown paper with rich but sombre tints, showing genii | |
| gathering round the Seal of Solomon. By the way, what was | |
| the Seal of Solomon? Nothing to do with sealing-wax really, | |
| I suppose; but my muddled fancy felt the thick clouds as being | |
| of that heavy and clinging substance, of strong opaque colour, | |
| poured out of boiling pots and stamped into monstrous emblems. | |
| "The first effect of the tall turbaned vapours was that discoloured | |
| look of pea-soup or coffee brown of which Londoners commonly speak. | |
| But the scene grew subtler with familiarity. We stood above the average | |
| of the housetops and saw something of that thing called smoke, which in | |
| great cities creates the strange thing called fog. Beneath us rose | |
| a forest of chimney-pots. And there stood in every chimney-pot, as if it | |
| were a flower-pot, a brief shrub or a tall tree of coloured vapour. | |
| The colours of the smoke were various; for some chimneys were from | |
| firesides and some from factories, and some again from mere rubbish heaps. | |
| And yet, though the tints were all varied, they all seemed unnatural, | |
| like fumes from a witch's pot. It was as if the shameful and ugly | |
| shapes growing shapeless in the cauldron sent up each its separate | |
| spurt of steam, coloured according to the fish or flesh consumed. | |
| Here, aglow from underneath, were dark red clouds, such as might drift | |
| from dark jars of sacrificial blood; there the vapour was dark indigo gray, | |
| like the long hair of witches steeped in the hell-broth. In another | |
| place the smoke was of an awful opaque ivory yellow, such as might | |
| be the disembodiment of one of their old, leprous waxen images. | |
| But right across it ran a line of bright, sinister, sulphurous green, | |
| as clear and crooked as Arabic--" | |
| Mr. Moses Gould once more attempted the arrest of the 'bus. | |
| He was understood to suggest that the reader should shorten | |
| the proceedings by leaving out all the adjectives. Mrs. Duke, | |
| who had woken up, observed that she was sure it was all very nice, | |
| and the decision was duly noted down by Moses with a blue, | |
| and by Michael with a red, pencil. Inglewood then resumed | |
| the reading of the document. | |
| "Then I read the writing of the smoke. Smoke was like the modern | |
| city that makes it; it is not always dull or ugly, but it is always | |
| wicked and vain. | |
| "Modern England was like a cloud of smoke; it could carry | |
| all colours, but it could leave nothing but a stain. It was our | |
| weakness and not our strength that put a rich refuse in the sky. | |
| These were the rivers of our vanity pouring into the void. | |
| We had taken the sacred circle of the whirlwind, and looked down on it, | |
| and seen it as a whirlpool. And then we had used it as a sink. | |
| It was a good symbol of the mutiny in my own mind. | |
| Only our worst things were going to heaven. Only our criminals | |
| could still ascend like angels. | |
| "As my brain was blinded with such emotions, my guide stopped | |
| by one of the big chimney-pots that stood at the regular intervals | |
| like lamp-posts along that uplifted and aerial highway. | |
| He put his heavy hand upon it, and for the moment I thought he was | |
| merely leaning on it, tired with his steep scramble along the terrace. | |
| So far as I could guess from the abysses, full of fog on either side, | |
| and the veiled lights of red brown and old gold glowing through | |
| them now and again, we were on the top of one of those long, | |
| consecutive, and genteel rows of houses which are still to be | |
| found lifting their heads above poorer districts, the remains | |
| of some rage of optimism in earlier speculative builders. | |
| Probably enough, they were entirely untenanted, or tenanted | |
| only by such small clans of the poor as gather also in the old | |
| emptied palaces of Italy. Indeed, some little time later, | |
| when the fog had lifted a little, I discovered that we | |
| were walking round a semi-circle of crescent which fell away | |
| below us into one flat square or wide street below another, | |
| like a giant stairway, in a manner not unknown in the eccentric | |
| building of London, and looking like the last ledges of the land. | |
| But a cloud sealed the giant stairway as yet. | |
| "My speculation about the sullen skyscape, however, were interrupted | |
| by something as unexpected as the moon falling from the sky. | |
| Instead of my burglar lifting his hand from the chimney | |
| he leaned on, he leaned on it a little more heavily, and the whole | |
| chimney-pot turned over like the opening top of an inkstand. | |
| I remembered the short ladder leaning against the low wall and felt | |
| sure he had arranged his criminal approach long before. | |
| "The collapse of the big chimney-pot ought to have been the culmination | |
| of my chaotic feelings; but, to tell the truth, it produced a sudden sense | |
| of comedy and even of comfort. I could not recall what connected this | |
| abrupt bit of housebreaking with some quaint but still kindly fancies. | |
| Then I remembered the delightful and uproarious scenes of roofs and chimneys | |
| in the harlequinades of my childhood, and was darkly and quite irrationally | |
| comforted by a sense of unsubstantiality in the scene, as if the houses | |
| were of lath and paint and pasteboard, and were only meant to be tumbled | |
| in and out of by policemen and pantaloons. The law-breaking of my companion | |
| seemed not only seriously excusable, but even comically excusable. | |
| Who were all these pompous preposterous people with their footmen and their | |
| foot-scrapers, their chimney-pots and their chimney-pot hats, that they | |
| should prevent a poor clown from getting sausages if he wanted them? | |
| One would suppose that property was a serious thing. I had reached, | |
| as it were, a higher level of that mountainous and vapourous visions, | |
| the heaven of a higher levity. | |
| "My guide had jumped down into the dark cavity revealed by the displaced | |
| chimney-pot. He must have landed at a level considerably lower, for, | |
| tall as he was, nothing but his weirdly tousled head remained visible. | |
| Something again far off, and yet familiar, pleased me about this way | |
| of invading the houses of men. I thought of little chimney-sweeps, | |
| and `The Water Babies;' but I decided that it was not that. | |
| Then I remembered what it was that made me connect such topsy-turvy | |
| trespass with ideas quite opposite to the idea of crime. | |
| Christmas Eve, of course, and Santa Claus coming down the chimney. | |
| "Almost at the same instant the hairy head disappeared into the black hole; | |
| but I heard a voice calling to me from below. A second or two afterwards, | |
| the hairy head reappeared; it was dark against the more fiery part of the fog, | |
| and nothing could be spelt of its expression, but its voice called on me | |
| to follow with that enthusiastic impatience proper only among old friends. | |
| I jumped into the gulf, and as blindly as Curtius, for I was still thinking | |
| of Santa Claus and the traditional virtue of such vertical entrance. | |
| "In every well-appointed gentleman's house, I reflected, there was | |
| the front door for the gentlemen, and the side door for the tradesmen; | |
| but there was also the top door for the gods. The chimney is, | |
| so to speak, the underground passage between earth and heaven. | |
| By this starry tunnel Santa Claus manages--like the skylark-- | |
| to be true to the kindred points of heaven and home. | |
| Nay, owing to certain conventions, and a widely distributed lack | |
| of courage for climbing, this door was, perhaps, little used. | |
| But Santa Claus's door was really the front door: | |
| it was the door fronting the universe. | |
| "I thought this as I groped my way across the black garret, or loft below | |
| the roof, and scrambled down the squat ladder that let us down into a yet | |
| larger loft below. Yet it was not till I was half-way down the ladder that I | |
| suddenly stood still, and thought for an instant of retracing all my steps, | |
| as my companion had retraced them from the beginning of the garden wall. | |
| The name of Santa Claus had suddenly brought me back to my senses. | |
| I remembered why Santa Clause came, and why he was welcome. | |
| "I was brought up in the propertied classes, and with all | |
| their horror of offences against property. I had heard all | |
| the regular denunciations of robbery, both right and wrong; | |
| I had read the Ten Commandments in church a thousand times. | |
| And then and there, at the age of thirty-four, half-way | |
| down a ladder in a dark room in the bodily act of burglar, | |
| I saw suddenly for the first time that theft, after all, | |
| is really wrong. | |
| "It was too late to turn back, however, and I followed | |
| the strangely soft footsteps of my huge companion across | |
| the lower and larger loft, till he knelt down on a part | |
| of the bare flooring and, after a few fumbling efforts, | |
| lifted a sort of trapdoor. This released a light from below, | |
| and we found ourselves looking down into a lamp-lit sitting room, | |
| of the sort that in large houses often leads out of a bedroom, | |
| and is an adjunct to it. Light thus breaking from beneath | |
| our feet like a soundless explosion, showed that the trapdoor | |
| just lifted was clogged with dust and rust, and had doubtless | |
| been long disused until the advent of my enterprising friend. | |
| But I did not look at this long, for the sight of the shining | |
| room underneath us had an almost unnatural attractiveness. | |
| To enter a modern interior at so strange an angle, | |
| by so forgotten a door, was an epoch in one's psychology. | |
| It was like having found a fourth dimension. | |
| "My companion dropped from the aperture into the room so suddenly | |
| and soundlessly, that I could do nothing but follow him; | |
| though, for lack of practice in crime, I was by no means soundless. | |
| Before the echo of my boots had died away, the big burglar | |
| had gone quickly to the door, half opened it, and stood looking | |
| down the staircase and listening. Then, leaving the door | |
| still half open, he came back into the middle of the room, | |
| and ran his roving blue eye round its furniture and ornament. | |
| The room was comfortably lined with books in that rich and human | |
| way that makes the walls seem alive; it was a deep and full, | |
| but slovenly, bookcase, of the sort that is constantly ransacked | |
| for the purposes of reading in bed. One of those stunted | |
| German stoves that look like red goblins stood in a corner, | |
| and a sideboard of walnut wood with closed doors in its lower part. | |
| There were three windows, high but narrow. After another glance round, | |
| my housebreaker plucked the walnut doors open and rummaged inside. | |
| He found nothing there, apparently, except an extremely | |
| handsome cut-glass decanter, containing what looked like port. | |
| Somehow the sight of the thief returning with this ridiculous little | |
| luxury in his hand woke within me once more all the revelation | |
| and revulsion I had felt above. | |
| "`Don't do it!' I cried quite incoherently, `Santa Claus--' | |
| "`Ah,' said the burglar, as he put the decanter on the table | |
| and stood looking at me, `you've thought about that, too.' | |
| "`I can't express a millionth part of what I've thought of,' I cried, | |
| `but it's something like this... oh, can't you see it? Why are children | |
| not afraid of Santa Claus, though he comes like a thief in the night? | |
| He is permitted secrecy, trespass, almost treachery--because there are | |
| more toys where he has been. What should we feel if there were less? | |
| Down what chimney from hell would come the goblin that should take | |
| away the children's balls and dolls while they slept? Could a Greek | |
| tragedy be more gray and cruel than that daybreak and awakening? | |
| Dog-stealer, horse-stealer, man-stealer--can you think of anything | |
| so base as a toy-stealer?' | |
| "The burglar, as if absently, took a large revolver from his pocket and laid | |
| it on the table beside the decanter, but still kept his blue reflective eyes | |
| fixed on my face. | |
| "`Man!' I said, `all stealing is toy-stealing. That's why | |
| it's really wrong. The goods of the unhappy children of men | |
| should be really respected because of their worthlessness. | |
| I know Naboth's vineyard is as painted as Noah's Ark. I know | |
| Nathan's ewe-lamb is really a woolly baa-lamb on a wooden stand. | |
| That is why I could not take them away. I did not mind so much, | |
| as long as I thought of men's things as their valuables; | |
| but I dare not put a hand upon their vanities.' | |
| "After a moment I added abruptly, `Only saints and sages ought to be robbed. | |
| They may be stripped and pillaged; but not the poor little worldly people | |
| of the things that are their poor little pride.' | |
| "He set out two wineglasses from the cupboard, filled them both, | |
| and lifted one of them with a salutation towards his lips. | |
| "`Don't do it!' I cried. `It might be the last bottle of some rotten | |
| vintage or other. The master of this house may be quite proud of it. | |
| Don't you see there's something sacred in the silliness of such things?' | |
| "`It's not the last bottle,' answered my criminal calmly; | |
| `there's plenty more in the cellar.' | |
| "`You know the house, then?' I said. | |
| "`Too well,' he answered, with a sadness so strange as to have | |
| something eerie about it. `I am always trying to forget what I know-- | |
| and to find what I don't know.' He drained his glass. | |
| `Besides,' he added, `it will do him good.' | |
| "`What will do him good?' | |
| "`The wine I'm drinking,' said the strange person. | |
| "`Does he drink too much, then?' I inquired. | |
| "`No,' he answered, `not unless I do.' | |
| "`Do you mean,' I demanded, `that the owner of this house approves | |
| of all you do?' | |
| "`God forbid,' he answered; `but he has to do the same.' | |
| "The dead face of the fog looking in at all three windows | |
| unreasonable increased a sense of riddle, and even terror, | |
| about this tall, narrow house we had entered out of the sky. | |
| I had once more the notion about the gigantic genii-- | |
| I fancied that enormous Egyptian faces, of the dead reds | |
| and yellows of Egypt, were staring in at each window of our | |
| little lamp-lit room as at a lighted stage of marionettes. | |
| My companion went on playing with the pistol in front of him, | |
| and talking with the same rather creepy confidentialness. | |
| "`I am always trying to find him--to catch him unawares. | |
| I come in through skylights and trapdoors to find him; | |
| but whenever I find him--he is doing what I am doing.' | |
| "I sprang to my feet with a thrill of fear. `There is some one coming,' | |
| I cried, and my cry had something of a shriek in it. "Not from | |
| the stairs below, but along the passage from the inner bedchamber | |
| (which seemed somehow to make it more alarming), footsteps were | |
| coming nearer. I am quite unable to say what mystery, or monster, | |
| or double, I expected to see when the door was pushed open from within. | |
| I am only quite certain that I did not expect to see what I did see. | |
| "Framed in the open doorway stood, with an air of great serenity, | |
| a rather tall young woman, definitely though indefinably artistic-- | |
| her dress the colour of spring and her hair of autumn leaves, | |
| with a face which, though still comparatively young, | |
| conveyed experience as well as intelligence. All she said was, | |
| `I didn't hear you come in.' | |
| "`I came in another way,' said the Permeator, somewhat vaguely. | |
| `I'd left my latchkey at home.' | |
| "I got to my feet in a mixture of politeness and mania. | |
| `I'm really very sorry,' I cried. `I know my position is irregular. | |
| Would you be so obliging as to tell me whose house this is.?' | |
| "`Mine,' said the burglar, `May I present you to my wife?' | |
| "I doubtfully, and somewhat slowly, resumed my seat; | |
| and I did not get out of it till nearly morning. Mrs. Smith | |
| (such was the prosaic name of this far from prosaic household) | |
| lingered a little, talking slightly and pleasantly. | |
| She left on my mind the impression of a certain odd mixture | |
| of shyness and sharpness; as if she knew the world well, | |
| but was still a little harmlessly afraid of it. | |
| Perhaps the possession of so jumpy and incalculable a husband | |
| had left her a little nervous. Anyhow, when she had retired | |
| to the inner chamber once more, that extraordinary man poured | |
| forth his apologia and autobiography over the dwindling wine. | |
| "He had been sent to Cambridge with a view to a mathematical | |
| and scientific, rather than a classical or literary, career. | |
| A starless nihilism was then the philosophy of the schools; | |
| and it bred in him a war between the members and the spirit, | |
| but one in which the members were right. While his brain | |
| accepted the black creed, his very body rebelled against it. | |
| As he put it, his right hand taught him terrible things. | |
| As the authorities of Cambridge University put it, unfortunately, | |
| it had taken the form of his right hand flourishing a loaded | |
| firearm in the very face of a distinguished don, and driving | |
| him to climb out of the window and cling to a waterspout. | |
| He had done it solely because the poor don had professed | |
| in theory a preference for non-existence. For this | |
| very unacademic type of argument he had been sent down. | |
| Vomiting as he was with revulsion, from the pessimism that had | |
| quailed under his pistol, he made himself a kind of fanatic | |
| of the joy of life. He cut across all the associations | |
| of serious-minded men. He was gay, but by no means careless. | |
| His practical jokes were more in earnest than verbal ones. | |
| Though not an optimist in the absurd sense of maintaining that | |
| life is all beer and skittles, he did really seem to maintain | |
| that beer and skittles are the most serious part of it. | |
| `What is more immortal,' he would cry, `than love and war? | |
| Type of all desire and joy--beer. Type of all battle | |
| and conquest--skittles.' | |
| "There was something in him of what the old world called | |
| the solemnity of revels--when they spoke of `solemnizing' | |
| a mere masquerade or wedding banquet. Nevertheless he was not | |
| a mere pagan any more than he was a mere practical joker. | |
| His eccentricities sprang from a static fact of faith, | |
| in itself mystical, and even childlike and Christian. | |
| "`I don't deny,' he said, `that there should be priests to remind | |
| men that they will one day die. I only say that at certain | |
| strange epochs it is necessary to have another kind of priests, | |
| called poets, actually to remind men that they are not dead yet. | |
| The intellectuals among whom I moved were not even alive enough | |
| to fear death. They hadn't enough blood in them to be cowards. | |
| Until a pistol barrel was poked under their very noses they never | |
| even knew they had been born. For ages looking up an eternal | |
| perspective it might be true that life is a learning to die. | |
| But for these little white rats it was just as true that death | |
| was their only chance of learning to live.' | |
| "His creed of wonder was Christian by this absolute test; that he felt | |
| it continually slipping from himself as much as from others. | |
| He had the same pistol for himself, as Brutus said of the dagger. | |
| He continually ran preposterous risks of high precipice or headlong | |
| speed to keep alive the mere conviction that he was alive. | |
| He treasured up trivial and yet insane details that had once | |
| reminded him of the awful subconscious reality. When the don | |
| had hung on the stone gutter, the sight of his long dangling legs, | |
| vibrating in the void like wings, somehow awoke the naked satire | |
| of the old definition of man as a two-legged animal without feathers. | |
| The wretched professor had been brought into peril by his head, | |
| which he had so elaborately cultivated, and only saved | |
| by his legs, which he had treated with coldness and neglect. | |
| Smith could think of no other way of announcing or recording this, | |
| except to send a telegram to an old friend (by this time a | |
| total stranger) to say that he had just seen a man with two legs; | |
| and that the man was alive. | |
| "The uprush of his released optimism burst into stars like a rocket | |
| when he suddenly fell in love. He happened to be shooting a high | |
| and very headlong weir in a canoe, by way of proving to himself | |
| that he was alive; and he soon found himself involved in some doubt | |
| about the continuance of the fact. What was worse, he found he had | |
| equally jeopardized a harmless lady alone in a rowing-boat, and one | |
| who had provoked death by no professions of philosophic negation. | |
| He apologized in wild gasps through all his wild wet labours to bring | |
| her to the shore, and when he had done so at last, he seems to have | |
| proposed to her on the bank. Anyhow, with the same impetuosity | |
| with which he had nearly murdered her, he completely married her; | |
| and she was the lady in green to whom I had recently and `good-night.' | |
| "They had settled down in these high narrow houses | |
| near Highbury. Perhaps, indeed, that is hardly the word. | |
| One could strictly say that Smith was married, that he was very | |
| happily married, that he not only did not care for any woman | |
| but his wife, but did not seem to care for any place but his home; | |
| but perhaps one could hardly say that he had settled down. | |
| `I am a very domestic fellow,' he explained with gravity, | |
| `and have often come in through a broken window rather than be | |
| late for tea.' | |
| "He lashed his soul with laughter to prevent it falling asleep. | |
| He lost his wife a series of excellent servants by knocking at | |
| the door as a total stranger, and asking if Mr. Smith lived there | |
| and what kind of a man he was. The London general servant is not | |
| used to the master indulging in such transcendental ironies. | |
| And it was found impossible to explain to her that he did it in order | |
| to feel the same interest in his own affairs that he always felt | |
| in other people's. | |
| "`I know there's a fellow called Smith,' he said in his rather | |
| weird way, `living in one of the tall houses in this terrace. | |
| I know he is really happy, and yet I can never catch him at it.' | |
| "Sometimes he would, of a sudden, treat his wife with a kind of paralyzed | |
| politeness, like a young stranger struck with love at first sight. | |
| Sometimes he would extend this poetic fear to the very furniture; | |
| would seem to apologize to the chair he sat on, and climb the staircase | |
| as cautiously as a cragsman, to renew in himself the sense of their skeleton | |
| of reality. Every stair is a ladder and every stool a leg, he said. | |
| And at other times he would play the stranger exactly in the opposite sense, | |
| and would enter by another way, so as to feel like a thief and a robber. | |
| He would break and violate his own home, as he had done with me that night. | |
| It was near morning before I could tear myself from this queer confidence | |
| of the Man Who Would Not Die, and as I shook hands with him on the doorstep | |
| the last load of fog was lifting, and rifts of daylight revealed the stairway | |
| of irregular street levels that looked like the end of the world. | |
| "It will be enough for many to say that I had passed a night with a maniac. | |
| What other term, it will be said, could be applied to such a being? | |
| A man who reminds himself that he is married by pretending not to be married! | |
| A man who tries to covet his own goods instead of his neighbor's! On | |
| this I have but one word to say, and I feel it of my honour to say it, | |
| though no one understands. I believe the maniac was one of those who | |
| do not merely come, but are sent; sent like a great gale upon ships | |
| by Him who made His angels winds and His messengers a flaming fire. | |
| This, at least, I know for certain. Whether such men have laughed | |
| or wept, we have laughed at their laughter as much as at their weeping. | |
| Whether they cursed or blessed the world, they have never fitted it. | |
| It is true that men have shrunk from the sting of a great satirist | |
| as if from the sting of an adder. But it is equally true that men flee | |
| from the embrace of a great optimist as from the embrace of a bear. | |
| Nothing brings down more curses than a real benediction. | |
| For the goodness of good things, like the badness of bad things, | |
| is a prodigy past speech; it is to be pictured rather than spoken. | |
| We shall have gone deeper than the deeps of heaven and grown older than | |
| the oldest angels before we feel, even in its first faint vibrations, | |
| the everlasting violence of that double passion with which God hates | |
| and loves the world.--I am, yours faithfully, | |
| "Raymond Percy." | |
| "Oh, 'oly, 'oly, 'oly!" said Mr. Moses Gould. | |
| The instant he had spoken all the rest knew they had been | |
| in an almost religious state of submission and assent. | |
| Something had bound them together; something in the sacred tradition | |
| of the last two words of the letter; something also in the touching | |
| and boyish embarrassment with which Inglewood had read them-- | |
| for he had all the thin-skinned reverence of the agnostic. | |
| Moses Gould was as good a fellow in his way as ever lived; | |
| far kinder to his family than more refined men of pleasure, | |
| simple and steadfast in his admiration, a thoroughly wholesome | |
| animal and a thoroughly genuine character. But wherever there | |
| is conflict, crises come in which any soul, personal or racial, | |
| unconsciously turns on the world the most hateful of its hundred faces. | |
| English reverence, Irish mysticism, American idealism, | |
| looked up and saw on the face of Moses a certain smile. | |
| It was that smile of the Cynic Triumphant, which has been the tocsin | |
| for many a cruel riot in Russian villages or mediaeval towns. | |
| "Oh, 'oly, 'oly, 'oly!" said Moses Gould. | |
| Finding that this was not well received, he explained further, | |
| exuberance deepening on his dark exuberant features. | |
| "Always fun to see a bloke swallow a wasp when 'e's corfin' up a fly," | |
| he said pleasantly. "Don't you see you've bunged up old Smith anyhow. | |
| If this parson's tale's O.K.--why, Smith is 'ot. 'E's pretty 'ot. | |
| We find him elopin' with Miss Gray (best respects!) in a cab. | |
| Well, what abart this Mrs. Smith the curate talks of, with her | |
| blarsted shyness--transmigogrified into a blighted sharpness? | |
| Miss Gray ain't been very sharp, but I reckon she'll be pretty shy." | |
| "Don't be a brute," growled Michael Moon. | |
| None could lift their eyes to look at Mary; but Inglewood sent a glance | |
| along the table at Innocent Smith. He was still bowed above his paper toys, | |
| and a wrinkle was on his forehead that might have been worry or shame. | |
| He carefully plucked out one corner of a complicated paper and tucked it | |
| in elsewhere; then the wrinkle vanished and he looked relieved. | |
| Chapter III | |
| The Round Road; | |
| or, the Desertion Charge | |
| Pym rose with sincere embarrassment; for he was an American, | |
| and his respect for ladies was real, and not at all scientific. | |
| "Ignoring," he said, "the delicate and considerable knightly protests | |
| that have been called forth by my colleague's native sense of oration, | |
| and apologizing to all for whom our wild search for truth seems unsuitable | |
| to the grand ruins of a feudal land, I still think my colleague's question | |
| by no means devoid of rel'vancy. The last charge against the accused was | |
| one of burglary; the next charge on the paper is of bigamy and desertion. | |
| It does without question appear that the defence, in aspiring to rebut | |
| this last charge, have really admitted the next. Either Innocent Smith | |
| is still under a charge of attempted burglary, or else that is exploded; | |
| but he is pretty well fixed for attempted bigamy. It all depends on | |
| what view we take of the alleged letter from Curate Percy. Under these | |
| conditions I feel justified in claiming my right to questions. | |
| May I ask how the defence got hold of the letter from Curate Percy? Did it | |
| come direct from the prisoner?" | |
| "We have had nothing direct from the prisoner," said Moon quietly. | |
| "The few documents which the defence guarantees came to us | |
| from another quarter." | |
| "From what quarter?" asked Dr. Pym. | |
| "If you insist," answered Moon, "we had them from Miss Gray. | |
| "Dr. Cyrus Pym quite forgot to close his eyes, and, instead, | |
| opened them very wide. | |
| "Do you really mean to say," he said, "that Miss Gray was in possession | |
| of this document testifying to a previous Mrs. Smith?" | |
| "Quite so," said Inglewood, and sat down. | |
| The doctor said something about infatuation in a low and painful voice, | |
| and then with visible difficulty continued his opening remarks. | |
| "Unfortunately the tragic truth revealed by Curate Percy's narrative | |
| is only too crushingly confirmed by other and shocking documents | |
| in our own possession. Of these the principal and most certain is | |
| the testimony of Innocent Smith's gardener, who was present at the most | |
| dramatic and eye-opening of his many acts of marital infidelity. | |
| Mr. Gould, the gardener, please." | |
| Mr. Gould, with his tireless cheerfulness, arose to present the gardener. | |
| That functionary explained that he had served Mr. and Mrs. Innocent Smith when | |
| they had a little house on the edge of Croydon. From the gardener's tale, | |
| with its many small allusions, Inglewood grew certain he had seen the place. | |
| It was one of those corners of town or country that one does not forget, | |
| for it looked like a frontier. The garden hung very high above | |
| the lane, and its end was steep and sharp, like a fortress. | |
| Beyond was a roll of real country, with a white path sprawling across it, | |
| and the roots, boles, and branches of great gray trees writhing and twisting | |
| against the sky. But as if to assert that the lane itself was suburban, | |
| were sharply relieved against that gray and tossing upland a lamp-post | |
| that stood exactly at the corner. Inglewood was sure of the place; | |
| he had passed it twenty times in his constitutionals on the bicycle; | |
| he had always dimly felt it was a place where something might occur. | |
| But it gave him quite a shiver to feel that the face of his frightful friend | |
| or enemy Smith might at any time have appeared over the garden bushes above. | |
| The gardener's account, unlike like the curate's, was quite free | |
| from decorative adjectives, however many he may have uttered privately | |
| when writing it. He simply said that on a particular morning Mr. Smith | |
| came out and began to play about with a rake, as he often did. | |
| Sometimes he would tickle the nose of his eldest child (he had two children); | |
| sometimes he would hook the rake on to the branch of a tree, | |
| and hoist himself up with horrible gymnastic jerks, like those of | |
| a giant frog in its final agony. Never, apparently, did he think | |
| of putting the rake to any of its proper uses, and the gardener, | |
| in consequence, treated his actions with coldness and brevity. | |
| But the gardener was certain that on one particular morning in October he | |
| (the gardener) had come round the corner of the house carrying the hose, | |
| had seen Mr. Smith standing on the lawn in a striped red and white jacket | |
| (which might have been his smoking-jacket, but was quite as like a part | |
| of his pyjamas), and had heard him then and there call out to his wife, | |
| who was looking out of the bedroom window on to the garden, these decisive | |
| and very loud expressions-- | |
| "I won't stay here any longer. I've got another wife and much | |
| better children a long way from here. My other wife's got redder | |
| hair than yours, and my other garden's got a much finer situation; | |
| and I'm going off to them." | |
| With these words, apparently, he sent the rake flying far up into the sky, | |
| higher than many could have shot an arrow, and caught it again. | |
| Then he cleared the hedge at a leap and alighted on his feet down | |
| in the lane below, and set off up the road without even a hat. | |
| Much of the picture was doubtless supplied by Inglewood's accidental | |
| memory of the place. He could see with his mind's eye that big | |
| bare-headed figure with the ragged rake swaggering up the crooked | |
| woodland road, and leaving lamp-post and pillar-box behind. | |
| But the gardener, on his own account, was quite prepared to swear | |
| to the public confession of bigamy, to the temporary disappearance | |
| of the rake in the sky, and the final disappearance of the man up | |
| the road. Moreover, being a local man, he could swear that, beyond some | |
| local rumours that Smith had embarked on the south-eastern coast, | |
| nothing was known of him again. | |
| This impression was somewhat curiously clinched by Michael Moon in the few | |
| but clear phrases in which he opened the defence upon the third charge. | |
| So far from denying that Smith had fled from Croydon and disappeared on | |
| the Continent, he seemed prepared to prove all this on his own account. | |
| "I hope you are not so insular," he said, "that you will not respect | |
| the word of a French innkeeper as much as that of an English gardener. | |
| By Mr. Inglewood's favour we will hear the French innkeeper." | |
| Before the company had decided the delicate point Inglewood was already | |
| reading the account in question. It was in French. It seemed to them | |
| to run something like this:-- | |
| "Sir,--Yes; I am Durobin of Durobin's Cafe on the sea-front at Gras, | |
| rather north of Dunquerque. I am willing to write all I know | |
| of the stranger out of the sea. | |
| "I have no sympathy with eccentrics or poets. A man of sense | |
| looks for beauty in things deliberately intended to be beautiful, | |
| such as a trim flower-bed or an ivory statuette. One does not permit | |
| beauty to pervade one's whole life, just as one does not pave | |
| all the roads with ivory or cover all the fields with geraniums. | |
| My faith, but we should miss the onions! | |
| "But whether I read things backwards through my memory, or whether there | |
| are indeed atmospheres of psychology which the eye of science cannot | |
| as yet pierce, it is the humiliating fact that on that particular evening | |
| I felt like a poet--like any little rascal of a poet who drinks absinthe | |
| in the mad Montmartre. | |
| "Positively the sea itself looked like absinthe, green and bitter | |
| and poisonous. I had never known it look so unfamiliar before. | |
| In the sky was that early and stormy darkness that is so depressing to | |
| the mind, and the wind blew shrilly round the little lonely coloured kiosk | |
| where they sell the newspapers, and along the sand-hills by the shore. | |
| There I saw a fishing-boat with a brown sail standing in silently from | |
| the sea. It was already quite close, and out of it clambered a man | |
| of monstrous stature, who came wading to shore with the water not up | |
| to his knees, though it would have reached the hips of many men. | |
| He leaned on a long rake or pole, which looked like a trident, and made him | |
| look like a Triton. Wet as he was, and with strips of seaweed clinging | |
| to him, he walked across to my cafe, and, sitting down at a table outside, | |
| asked for cherry brandy, a liqueur which I keep, but is seldom demanded. | |
| Then the monster, with great politeness, invited me to partake | |
| of a vermouth before my dinner, and we fell into conversation. | |
| He had apparently crossed from Kent by a small boat got at a private | |
| bargain because of some odd fancy he had for passing promptly in an | |
| easterly direction, and not waiting for any of the official boats. | |
| He was, he somewhat vaguely explained, looking for a house. When I | |
| naturally asked him where the house was, he answered that he did not know; | |
| it was on an island; it was somewhere to the east; or, as he expressed | |
| it with a hazy and yet impatient gesture, `over there.' | |
| "I asked him how, if he did not know the place, he would know it when he | |
| saw it. Here he suddenly ceased to be hazy, and became alarmingly minute. | |
| He gave a description of the house detailed enough for an auctioneer. | |
| I have forgotten nearly all the details except the last two, which were | |
| that the lamp-post was painted green, and that there was a red pillar-box | |
| at the corner. | |
| "`A red pillar-box!' I cried in astonishment. `Why, the place must | |
| be in England!' | |
| "`I had forgotten,' he said, nodding heavily. `That is the island's name.' | |
| "`But, ~nom du nom~,' I cried testily, `you've just come | |
| from England, my boy.' | |
| "`They SAID it was England,' said my imbecile, conspiratorially. | |
| `They said it was Kent. But Kentish men are such liars one can't | |
| believe anything they say.' | |
| "`Monsieur,' I said, `you must pardon me. I am elderly, | |
| and the ~fumisteries~ of the young men are beyond me. | |
| I go by common sense, or, at the largest, by that extension | |
| of applied common sense called science.' | |
| "`Science!' cried the stranger. `There is only one good things | |
| science ever discovered--a good thing, good tidings of great joy-- | |
| that the world is round.' | |
| "I told him with civility that his words conveyed no impression | |
| to my intelligence. `I mean,' he said, `that going right round | |
| the world is the shortest way to where you are already.' | |
| "`Is it not even shorter,' I asked, `to stop where you are?' | |
| "`No, no, no!' he cried emphatically. `That way is long and very weary. | |
| At the end of the world, at the back of the dawn, I shall find | |
| the wife I really married and the house that is really mine. | |
| And that house will have a greener lamp-post and a redder pillar-box. | |
| Do you,' he asked with a sudden intensity, `do you never want to rush | |
| out of your house in order to find it?' | |
| "`No, I think not,' I replied; `reason tells a man from | |
| the first to adapt his desires to the probable supply of life. | |
| I remain here, content to fulfil the life of man. | |
| All my interests are here, and most of my friends, and--' | |
| "`And yet,' he cried, starting to his almost terrific height, | |
| `you made the French Revolution!' | |
| "`Pardon me," I said, `I am not quite so elderly. | |
| A relative perhaps.' | |
| "`I mean your sort did!' exclaimed this personage. | |
| `Yes, your damned smug, settled, sensible sort made | |
| the French Revolution. Oh! I know some say it was no good, | |
| and you're just back where you were before. Why, blast it all, | |
| that's just where we all want to be--back where we were before! | |
| That is revolution--going right round! Every revolution, | |
| like a repentance, is a return.' | |
| "He was so excited that I waited till he had taken his seat again, | |
| and then said something indifferent and soothing; but he struck | |
| the tiny table with his colossal fist and went on. | |
| "`I am going to have a revolution, not a French Revolution, but an | |
| English Revolution. God has given to each tribe its own type of mutiny. | |
| The Frenchmen march against the citadel of the city together; the Englishman | |
| marches to the outskirts of the town, and alone. But I am going to turn | |
| the world upside down, too. I'm going to turn myself upside down. | |
| I'm going to walk upside down in the cursed upsidedownland of the Antipodes, | |
| where trees and men hang head downward in the sky. But my revolution, | |
| like yours, like the earth's, will end up in the holy, happy place-- | |
| the celestial, incredible place--the place where we were before.' | |
| "With these remarks, which can scarcely be reconciled with reason, | |
| he leapt from the seat and strode away into the twilight, | |
| swinging his pole and leaving behind him an excessive payment, | |
| which also pointed to some loss of mental balance. | |
| This is all I know of the episode of the man landed from the | |
| fishing-boat, and I hope it may serve the interests of justice.-- | |
| Accept, Sir, the assurances of the very high consideration, | |
| with which I have the honour to be your obedient servant, | |
| "Jules Durobin." | |
| "The next document in our dossier," continued Inglewood, | |
| "comes from the town of Crazok, in the central plains of Russia, | |
| and runs as follows:-- | |
| "Sir,--My name is Paul Nickolaiovitch: I am the stationmaster | |
| at the station near Crazok. The great trains go by across | |
| the plains taking people to China, but very few people get | |
| down at the platform where I have to watch. This makes my life | |
| rather lonely, and I am thrown back much upon the books I have. | |
| But I cannot discuss these very much with my neighbours, | |
| for enlightened ideas have not spread in this part of Russia | |
| so much as in other parts. Many of the peasants round here | |
| have never heard of Bernard Shaw. | |
| "I am a Liberal, and do my best to spread Liberal ideas; but since | |
| the failure of the revolution this has been even more difficult. | |
| The revolutionists committed many acts contrary to the pure principles | |
| of humanitarianism, with which indeed, owing to the scarcity of books, | |
| they were ill acquainted. I did not approve of these cruel acts, | |
| though provoked by the tyranny of the government; but now there | |
| is a tendency to reproach all Intelligents with the memory of them. | |
| This is very unfortunate for Intelligents. | |
| "It was when the railway strike was almost over, and a few trains | |
| came through at long intervals, that I stood one day watching | |
| a train that had come in. Only one person got out of the train, | |
| far away up at the other end of it, for it was a very long train. | |
| It was evening, with a cold, greenish sky. A little snow had fallen, | |
| but not enough to whiten the plain, which stretched away a sort | |
| of sad purple in all directions, save where the flat tops | |
| of some distant tablelands caught the evening light like lakes. | |
| As the solitary man came stamping along on the thin snow by the train | |
| he grew larger and larger; I thought I had never seen so large a man. | |
| But he looked even taller than he was, I think, because his | |
| shoulders were very big and his head comparatively little. | |
| From the big shoulders hung a tattered old jacket, striped dull | |
| red and dirty white, very thin for the winter, and one hand rested | |
| on a huge pole such as peasants rake in weeds with to burn them. | |
| "Before he had traversed the full length of the train he was entangled in one | |
| of those knots of rowdies that were the embers of the extinct revolution, | |
| though they mostly disgraced themselves upon the government side. | |
| I was just moving to his assistance, when he whirled up his rake and laid | |
| out right and left with such energy that he came through them without scathe | |
| and strode right up to me, leaving them staggered and really astonished. | |
| "Yet when he reached me, after so abrupt an assertion of his aim, | |
| he could only say rather dubiously in French that he wanted a house. | |
| "`There are not many houses to be had round here,' I answered | |
| in the same language, `the district has been very disturbed. | |
| A revolution, as you know, has recently been suppressed. | |
| Any further building--' | |
| "`Oh! I don't mean that,' he cried; `I mean a real house--a live house. | |
| It really is a live house, for it runs away from me.' | |
| "`I am ashamed to say that something in his phrase or gesture | |
| moved me profoundly. We Russians are brought up in an atmosphere | |
| of folk-lore, and its unfortunate effects can still be seen | |
| in the bright colours of the children's dolls and of the ikons. | |
| For an instant the idea of a house running away from a man gave | |
| me pleasure, for the enlightenment of man moves slowly. | |
| "`Have you no other house of your own?' I asked. | |
| "`I have left it,' he said very sadly. `It was not the house that grew dull, | |
| but I that grew dull in it. My wife was better than all women, and yet I | |
| could not feel it.' | |
| "`And so,' I said with sympathy, `you walked straight out of the front door, | |
| like a masculine Nora.' | |
| "`Nora?' he inquired politely, apparently supposing it to be a Russian word. | |
| "`I mean Nora in "The Doll's House,"' I replied. | |
| "At this he looked very much astonished, and I knew he was an Englishman; | |
| for Englishmen always think that Russians study nothing but `ukases.' | |
| "`"The Doll's House"?' he cried vehemently; `why, that is just where Ibsen | |
| was so wrong! Why, the whole aim of a house is to be a doll's house. | |
| Don't you remember, when you were a child, how those little windows | |
| WERE windows, while the big windows weren't. A child has a doll's house, | |
| and shrieks when a front door opens inwards. A banker has a real house, | |
| yet how numerous are the bankers who fail to emit the faintest shriek | |
| when their real front doors open inwards.' | |
| "Something from the folk-lore of my infancy still kept me foolishly silent; | |
| and before I could speak, the Englishman had leaned over and was saying | |
| in a sort of loud whisper, `I have found out how to make a big thing small. | |
| I have found out how to turn a house into a doll's house. Get a long | |
| way off it: God lets us turn all things into toys by his great gift | |
| of distance. Once let me see my old brick house standing up quite | |
| little against the horizon, and I shall want to go back to it again. | |
| I shall see the funny little toy lamp-post painted green against the gate, | |
| and all the dear little people like dolls looking out of the window. | |
| For the windows really open in my doll's house.' | |
| "`But why?' I asked, `should you wish to return to that particular | |
| doll's house? Having taken, like Nora, the bold step against convention, | |
| having made yourself in the conventional sense disreputable, having dared | |
| to be free, why should you not take advantage of your freedom? | |
| As the greatest modern writers have pointed out, what you called your | |
| marriage was only your mood. You have a right to leave it all behind, | |
| like the clippings of your hair or the parings of your nails. | |
| Having once escaped, you have the world before you. Though the words | |
| may seem strange to you, you are free in Russia.' | |
| "He sat with his dreamy eyes on the dark circles of the plains, | |
| where the only moving thing was the long and labouring trail of smoke | |
| out of the railway engine, violet in tint, volcanic in outline, | |
| the one hot and heavy cloud of that cold clear evening of pale green. | |
| "`Yes,' he said with a huge sigh, `I am free in Russia. You are right. | |
| I could really walk into that town over there and have love all over again, | |
| and perhaps marry some beautiful woman and begin again, and nobody could | |
| ever find me. Yes, you have certainly convinced me of something.' | |
| "His tone was so queer and mystical that I felt impelled to ask | |
| him what he meant, and of what exactly I had convinced him. | |
| "`You have convinced me,' he said with the same dreamy eye, | |
| `why it is really wicked and dangerous for a man to run away | |
| from his wife.' | |
| "`And why is it dangerous?' I inquired. | |
| "`Why, because nobody can find him,' answered this odd person, | |
| `and we all want to be found.' | |
| "`The most original modern thinkers,' I remarked, | |
| `Ibsen, Gorki, Nietzsche, Shaw, would all rather say that what we | |
| want most is to be lost: to find ourselves in untrodden paths, | |
| and to do unprecedented things: to break with the past and belong | |
| to the future.' | |
| "He rose to his whole height somewhat sleepily, and looked round on | |
| what was, I confess, a somewhat desolate scene--the dark purple plains, | |
| the neglected railroad, the few ragged knots of malcontents. | |
| `I shall not find the house here,' he said. `It is still eastward-- | |
| further and further eastward.' | |
| "Then he turned upon me with something like fury, and struck the foot | |
| of his pole upon the frozen earth. | |
| "`And if I do go back to my country,' he cried, `I may be locked up in a | |
| madhouse before I reach my own house. I have been a bit unconventional | |
| in my time! Why, Nietzsche stood in a row of ramrods in the silly old | |
| Prussian army, and Shaw takes temperance beverages in the suburbs; | |
| but the things I do are unprecedented things. This round road I | |
| am treading is an untrodden path. I do believe in breaking out; | |
| I am a revolutionist. But don't you see that all these real leaps | |
| and destructions and escapes are only attempts to get back to Eden-- | |
| to something we have had, to something we at least have heard of? | |
| Don't you see one only breaks the fence or shoots the moon in order | |
| to get HOME?' | |
| "`No,' I answered after due reflection, `I don't think I should accept that.' | |
| "`Ah,' he said with a sort of a sigh, `then you have explained a second | |
| thing to me.' | |
| "`What do you mean?' I asked; `what thing?' | |
| "`Why your revolution has failed,' he said; and walking across quite | |
| suddenly to the train he got into it just as it was steaming away at last. | |
| And as I saw the long snaky tail of it disappear along the darkening flats. | |
| "I saw no more of him. But though his views were adverse to the best | |
| advanced thought, he struck me as an interesting person: I should | |
| like to find out if he has produced any literary works.--Yours, etc., | |
| "Paul Nickolaiovitch." | |
| There was something in this odd set of glimpses into foreign lives which kept | |
| the absurd tribunal quieter than it had hitherto been, and it was again | |
| without interruption that Inglewood opened another paper upon his pile. | |
| "The Court will be indulgent," he said, "if the next note lacks the special | |
| ceremonies of our letter-writing. It is ceremonious enough in its own way:-- | |
| "The Celestial Principles are permanent: Greeting.--I am Wong-Hi, | |
| and I tend the temple of all the ancestors of my family in the forest | |
| of Fu. The man that broke through the sky and came to me said that it | |
| must be very dull, but I showed him the wrongness of his thought. | |
| I am indeed in one place, for my uncle took me to this | |
| temple when I was a boy, and in this I shall doubtless die. | |
| But if a man remain in one place he shall see that the place changes. | |
| The pagoda of my temple stands up silently out of all the trees, | |
| like a yellow pagoda above many green pagodas. But the skies | |
| are sometimes blue like porcelain, and sometimes green like jade, | |
| and sometimes red like garnet. But the night is always ebony | |
| and always returns, said the Emperor Ho. | |
| "The sky-breaker came at evening very suddenly, for I had hardly | |
| seen any stirring in the tops of the green trees over which I look | |
| as over a sea, when I go to the top of the temple at morning. | |
| And yet when he came, it was as if an elephant had strayed | |
| from the armies of the great kings of India. For palms snapped, | |
| and bamboos broke, and there came forth in the sunshine before | |
| the temple one taller than the sons of men. | |
| "Strips of red and white hung about him like ribbons of a carnival, | |
| and he carried a pole with a row of teeth on it like the teeth of a dragon. | |
| His face was white and discomposed, after the fashion of the foreigners, | |
| so that they look like dead men filled with devils; and he spoke | |
| our speech brokenly. | |
| "He said to me, `This is only a temple; I am trying to find a house.' | |
| And then he told me with indelicate haste that the lamp outside his house | |
| was green, and that there was a red post at the corner of it. | |
| "`I have not seen your house nor any houses,' I answered. | |
| `I dwell in this temple and serve the gods.' | |
| "`Do you believe in the gods?' he asked with hunger in his eyes, | |
| like the hunger of dogs. And this seemed to me a strange question | |
| to ask, for what should a man do except what men have done? | |
| "`My Lord,' I said, `it must be good for men to hold up their hands even | |
| if the skies are empty. For if there are gods, they will be pleased, | |
| and if there are none, then there are none to be displeased. | |
| Sometimes the skies are gold and sometimes porphyry and sometimes | |
| ebony, but the trees and the temple stand still under it all. | |
| So the great Confucius taught us that if we do always the same things | |
| with our hands and our feet as do the wise beasts and birds, with our | |
| heads we may think many things: yes, my Lord, and doubt many things. | |
| So long as men offer rice at the right season, and kindle lanterns | |
| at the right hour, it matters little whether there be gods or no. | |
| For these things are not to appease gods, but to appease men.' | |
| "He came yet closer to me, so that he seemed enormous; | |
| yet his look was very gentle. | |
| "`Break your temple,' he said, `and your gods will be freed.' | |
| "And I, smiling at his simplicity, answered: `And so, if there be no gods, | |
| I shall have nothing but a broken temple.' | |
| "And at this, that giant from whom the light of reason was | |
| withheld threw out his mighty arms and asked me to forgive him. | |
| And when I asked him for what he should be forgiven he answered: | |
| `For being right.' | |
| "`Your idols and emperors are so old and wise and satisfying,' | |
| he cried, `it is a shame that they should be wrong. | |
| We are so vulgar and violent, we have done you so many iniquities-- | |
| it is a shame we should be right after all.' | |
| "And I, still enduring his harmlessness, asked him why he thought | |
| that he and his people were right. | |
| "And he answered: `We are right because we are bound where | |
| men should be bound, and free where men should be free. | |
| We are right because we doubt and destroy laws and customs-- | |
| but we do not doubt our own right to destroy them. For you live | |
| by customs, but we live by creeds. Behold me! In my country I | |
| am called Smith. My country is abandoned, my name is defiled, | |
| because I pursue around the world what really belongs to me. | |
| You are steadfast as the trees because you do not believe. | |
| I am as fickle as the tempest because I do believe. | |
| I do believe in my own house, which I shall find again. | |
| And at the last remaineth the green lantern and the red post.' | |
| "I said to him: `At the last remaineth only wisdom.' | |
| "But even as I said the word he uttered a horrible shout, | |
| and rushing forward disappeared among the trees. | |
| I have not seen this man again nor any other man. | |
| The virtues of the wise are of fine brass. | |
| "Wong-Hi." | |
| "The next letter I have to read," proceeded Arthur Inglewood, "will probably | |
| make clear the nature of our client's curious but innocent experiment. | |
| It is dated from a mountain village in California, and runs as follows:-- | |
| "Sir,--A person answering to the rather extraordinary | |
| description required certainly went, some time ago, | |
| over the high pass of the Sierras on which I live and | |
| of which I am probably the sole stationary inhabitant. | |
| I keep a rudimentary tavern, rather ruder than a hut, | |
| on the very top of this specially steep and threatening pass. | |
| My name is Louis Hara, and the very name may puzzle you | |
| about my nationality. Well, it puzzles me a great deal. | |
| When one has been for fifteen years without society it is hard | |
| to have patriotism; and where there is not even a hamlet it | |
| is difficult to invent a nation. My father was an Irishman of | |
| the fiercest and most free-shooting of the old Californian kind. | |
| My mother was a Spaniard, proud of descent from the old | |
| Spanish families round San Francisco, yet accused for all that | |
| of some admixture of Red Indian blood. I was well educated | |
| and fond of music and books. But, like many other hybrids, | |
| I was too good or too bad for the world; and after attempting | |
| many things I was glad enough to get a sufficient though | |
| a lonely living in this little cabaret in the mountains. | |
| In my solitude I fell into many of the ways of a savage. | |
| Like an Eskimo, I was shapeless in winter; like a Red Indian, I wore | |
| in hot summers nothing but a pair of leather trousers, with a | |
| great straw hat as big as a parasol to defend me from the sun. | |
| I had a bowie knife at my belt and a long gun under my arm; | |
| and I dare say I produced a pretty wild impression on the few | |
| peaceable travellers that could climb up to my place. | |
| But I promise you I never looked as mad as that man did. | |
| Compared with him I was Fifth Avenue. | |
| "I dare say that living under the very top of the Sierras has an odd | |
| effect on the mind; one tends to think of those lonely rocks not as peaks | |
| coming to a point, but rather as pillars holding up heaven itself. | |
| Straight cliffs sail up and away beyond the hope of the eagles; | |
| cliffs so tall that they seem to attract the stars and collect them as | |
| sea-crags collect a mere glitter of phosphorous. These terraces and towers | |
| of rock do not, like smaller crests, seem to be the end of the world. | |
| Rather they seem to be its awful beginning: its huge foundations. | |
| We could almost fancy the mountain branching out above us like a tree | |
| of stone, and carrying all those cosmic lights like a candelabrum. | |
| For just as the peaks failed us, soaring impossibly far, | |
| so the stars crowded us (as it seemed), coming impossibly near. | |
| The spheres burst about us more like thunderbolts hurled at the earth | |
| than planets circling placidly about it. | |
| "All this may have driven me mad: I am not sure. I know there is one | |
| angle of the road down the pass where the rock leans out a little, | |
| and on window nights I seem to hear it clashing overhead with other rocks-- | |
| yes, city against city and citadel against citadel, far up into the night. | |
| It was on such an evening that the strange man struggled up the pass. | |
| Broadly speaking, only strange men did struggle up the pass. | |
| But I had never seen one like this one before. | |
| "He carried (I cannot conceive why) a long, dilapidated | |
| garden rake, all bearded and bedraggled with grasses, | |
| so that it looked like the ensign of some old barbarian tribe. | |
| His hair, which was as long and rank as the grass, hung down | |
| below his huge shoulders; and such clothes as clung about him | |
| were rags and tongues of red and yellow, so that he had the air | |
| of being dressed like an Indian in feathers or autumn leaves. | |
| The rake or pitchfork, or whatever it was, he used sometimes | |
| as an alpenstock, sometimes (I was told) as a weapon. | |
| I do not know why he should have used it as a weapon, for he had, | |
| and afterwards showed me, an excellent six-shooter in his pocket. | |
| `But THAT,' he said, `I use only for peaceful purposes.' | |
| I have no notion what he meant. | |
| "He sat down on the rough bench outside my inn and drank some wine | |
| from the vineyards below, sighing with ecstasy over it like one | |
| who had travelled long among alien, cruel things and found at last | |
| something that he knew. Then he sat staring rather foolishly at | |
| the rude lantern of lead and coloured glass that hangs over my door. | |
| It is old, but of no value; my grandmother gave it to me long ago: | |
| she was devout, and it happens that the glass is painted with a crude | |
| picture of Bethlehem and the Wise Men and the Star. He seemed | |
| so mesmerized with the transparent glow of Our Lady's blue gown and | |
| the big gold star behind, that he led me also to look at the thing, | |
| which I had not done for fourteen years. | |
| "Then he slowly withdrew his eyes from this and looked out eastward | |
| where the road fell away below us. The sunset sky was a vault | |
| of rich velvet, fading away into mauve and silver round the edges | |
| of the dark mountain ampitheatre; and between us and the ravine below | |
| rose up out of the deeps and went up into the heights the straight | |
| solitary rock we call Green Finger. Of a queer volcanic colour, | |
| and wrinkled all over with what looks undecipherable writing, | |
| it hung there like a Babylonian pillar or needle. | |
| "The man silently stretched out his rake in that direction, | |
| and before he spoke I knew what he meant. Beyond the great green | |
| rock in the purple sky hung a single star. | |
| "`A star in the east,' he said in a strange hoarse voice like one of our | |
| ancient eagles'. `The wise men followed the star and found the house. | |
| But if I followed the star, should I find the house?' | |
| "`It depends perhaps,' I said, smiling, `on whether you are a wise man.' | |
| I refrained from adding that he certainly didn't look it. | |
| "`You may judge for yourself,' he answered. `I am a man who left his own | |
| house because he could no longer bear to be away from it.' | |
| "`It certainly sounds paradoxical,' I said. | |
| "`I heard my wife and children talking and saw them moving | |
| about the room,' he continued, `and all the time I knew | |
| they were walking and talking in another house thousands | |
| of miles away, under the light of different skies, and beyond | |
| the series of the seas. I loved them with a devouring love, | |
| because they seemed not only distant but unattainable. | |
| Never did human creatures seem so dear and so desirable: | |
| but I seemed like a cold ghost; therefore I cast off | |
| their dust from my feet for a testimony. Nay, I did more. | |
| I spurned the world under my feet so that it swung full circle | |
| like a treadmill.' | |
| "`Do you really mean,' I cried, `that you have come right round the world? | |
| Your speech is English, yet you are coming from the west.' | |
| "`My pilgrimage is not yet accomplished,' he replied sadly. | |
| `I have become a pilgrim to cure myself of being an exile.' | |
| "Something in the word `pilgrim' awoke down in the roots | |
| of my ruinous experience memories of what my fathers had | |
| felt about the world, and of something from whence I came. | |
| I looked again at the little pictured lantern at which I had | |
| not looked for fourteen years. | |
| "`My grandmother,' I said in a low tone, `would have said that we | |
| were all in exile, and that no earthly house could cure the holy | |
| home-sickness that forbids us rest.' | |
| "He was silent a long while, and watched a single eagle drift | |
| out beyond the Green Finger into the darkening void. | |
| "Then he said, `I think your grandmother was right,' and stood up | |
| leaning on his grassy pole. `I think that must be the reason,' | |
| he said--`the secret of this life of man, so ecstatic and so unappeased. | |
| But I think there is more to be said. I think God has given us | |
| the love of special places, of a hearth and of a native land, | |
| for a good reason.' | |
| "`I dare say,' I said. `What reason?' | |
| "`Because otherwise,' he said, pointing his pole out at the sky and the abyss, | |
| `we might worship that.' | |
| "`What do you mean?' I demanded. | |
| "`Eternity,' he said in his harsh voice, `the largest of the idols-- | |
| the mightiest of the rivals of God.' | |
| "`You mean pantheism and infinity and all that,' I suggested. | |
| "`I mean,' he said with increasing vehemence, `that if there be a house | |
| for me in heaven it will either have a green lamp-post and a hedge, | |
| or something quite as positive and personal as a green lamp-post | |
| and a hedge. I mean that God bade me love one spot and serve it, | |
| and do all things however wild in praise of it, so that this one spot | |
| might be a witness against all the infinities and the sophistries, | |
| that Paradise is somewhere and not anywhere, is something and not anything. | |
| And I would not be so very much surprised if the house in heaven had | |
| a real green lamp-post after all.' | |
| "With which he shouldered his pole and went striding down | |
| the perilous paths below, and left me alone with the eagles. | |
| But since he went a fever of homelessness will often shake me. | |
| I am troubled by rainy meadows and mud cabins that I have | |
| never seen; and I wonder whether America will endure.-- | |
| Yours faithfully, Louis Hara." | |
| After a short silence Inglewood said: "And, finally, we desire | |
| to put in as evidence the following document:-- | |
| "This is to say that I am Ruth Davis, and have been housemaid to | |
| Mrs. I. Smith at `The Laurels' in Croydon for the last six months. | |
| When I came the lady was alone, with two children; she was not a widow, | |
| but her husband was away. She was left with plenty of money and did not | |
| seem disturbed about him, though she often hoped he would be back soon. | |
| She said he was rather eccentric and a little change did him good. | |
| One evening last week I was bringing the tea-things out on to the lawn | |
| when I nearly dropped them. The end of a long rake was suddenly stuck | |
| over the hedge, and planted like a jumping-pole; and over the hedge, | |
| just like a monkey on a stick, came a huge, horrible man, all hairy | |
| and ragged like Robinson Crusoe. I screamed out, but my mistress didn't | |
| even get out of her chair, but smiled and said he wanted shaving. | |
| Then he sat down quite calmly at the garden table and took a cup | |
| of tea, and then I realized that this must be Mr. Smith himself. | |
| He has stopped here ever since and does not really give much trouble, | |
| though I sometimes fancy he is a little weak in his head. | |
| "Ruth Davis. | |
| "P.S.--I forgot to say that he looked round at the garden and said, | |
| very loud and strong: `Oh, what a lovely place you've got;' | |
| just as if he'd never seen it before." | |
| The room had been growing dark and drowsy; the afternoon sun sent one | |
| heavy shaft of powdered gold across it, which fell with an intangible | |
| solemnity upon the empty seat of Mary Gray, for the younger women | |
| had left the court before the more recent of the investigations. | |
| Mrs. Duke was still asleep, and Innocent Smith, looking like a large | |
| hunchback in the twilight, was bending closer and closer to his paper toys. | |
| But the five men really engaged in the controversy, and concerned not | |
| to convince the tribunal but to convince each other, still sat round | |
| the table like the Committee of Public Safety. | |
| Suddenly Moses Gould banged one big scientific book on top of another, | |
| cocked his little legs up against the table, tipped his chair | |
| backwards so far as to be in direct danger of falling over, | |
| emitted a startling and prolonged whistle like a steam engine, | |
| and asserted that it was all his eye. | |
| When asked by Moon what was all his eye, he banged down behind | |
| the books again and answered with considerable excitement, | |
| throwing his papers about. "All those fairy-tales you've | |
| been reading out," he said. "Oh! don't talk to me! | |
| I ain't littery and that, but I know fairy-tales when I hear 'em. | |
| I got a bit stumped in some of the philosophical bits | |
| and felt inclined to go out for a B. and S. But we're living | |
| in West 'Ampstead and not in 'Ell; and the long and the short | |
| of it is that some things 'appen and some things don't 'appen. | |
| Those are the things that don't 'appen." | |
| "I thought," said Moon gravely, "that we quite clearly explained--" | |
| "Oh yes, old chap, you quite clearly explained," assented Mr. Gould | |
| with extraordinary volubility. "You'd explain an elephant | |
| off the doorstep, you would. I ain't a clever chap like you; | |
| but I ain't a born natural, Michael Moon, and when there's | |
| an elephant on my doorstep I don't listen to no explanations. | |
| `It's got a trunk,' I says.--`My trunk,' you says: | |
| `I'm fond of travellin', and a change does me good.'--`But | |
| the blasted thing's got tusks,' I says.--`Don't look a gift 'orse | |
| in the mouth,' you says, `but thank the goodness and the graice | |
| that on your birth 'as smiled.'--`But it's nearly as big as | |
| the 'ouse,' I says.--`That's the bloomin' perspective,' you says, | |
| `and the sacred magic of distance.'--`Why, the elephant's trumpetin' | |
| like the Day of Judgement,' I says.--`That's your own conscience | |
| a-talking to you, Moses Gould,' you says in a grive and | |
| tender voice. Well, I 'ave got a conscience as much as you. | |
| I don't believe most of the things they tell you in church | |
| on Sundays; and I don't believe these 'ere things any more | |
| because you goes on about 'em as if you was in church. | |
| I believe an elephant's a great big ugly dingerous beast-- | |
| and I believe Smith's another." | |
| "Do you mean to say," asked Inglewood, "that you still doubt the evidence | |
| of exculpation we have brought forward?" | |
| "Yes, I do still doubt it," said Gould warmly. "It's all | |
| a bit too far-fetched, and some of it a bit too far off. | |
| 'Ow can we test all those tales? 'Ow can we drop in and buy | |
| the `Pink 'Un' at the railway station at Kosky Wosky or whatever | |
| it was? 'Ow can we go and do a gargle at the saloon-bar on top | |
| of the Sierra Mountains? But anybody can go and see Bunting's | |
| boarding-house at Worthing." | |
| Moon regarded him with an expression of real or assumed surprise. | |
| "Any one," continued Gould, "can call on Mr. Trip." | |
| "It is a comforting thought," replied Michael with restraint; | |
| "but why should any one call on Mr. Trip?" | |
| "For just exactly the sime reason," cried the excited Moses, | |
| hammering on the table with both hands, "for just exactly the sime | |
| reason that he should communicate with Messrs. 'Anbury and Bootle | |
| of Paternoster Row and with Miss Gridley's 'igh class Academy | |
| at 'Endon, and with old Lady Bullingdon who lives at Penge." | |
| "Again, to go at once to the moral roots of life," said Michael, | |
| "why is it among the duties of man to communicate with old | |
| Lady Bullingdon who lives at Penge?" | |
| "It ain't one of the duties of man," said Gould, "nor one of his pleasures, | |
| either, I can tell you. She takes the crumpet, does Lady Bullingdon | |
| at Penge. But it's one of the duties of a prosecutor pursuin' | |
| the innocent, blameless butterfly career of your friend Smith, | |
| and it's the sime with all the others I mentioned." | |
| "But why do you bring in these people here?" asked Inglewood. | |
| "Why! Because we've got proof enough to sink a steamboat," | |
| roared Moses; "because I've got the papers in my very 'and; | |
| because your precious Innocent is a blackguard and 'ome smasher, | |
| and these are the 'omes he's smashed. I don't set up for a 'oly man; | |
| but I wouldn't 'ave all those poor girls on my conscience for something. | |
| And I think a chap that's capable of deserting and perhaps | |
| killing 'em all is about capable of cracking a crib or shootin' | |
| an old schoolmaster--so I don't care much about the other yarns | |
| one way or another." | |
| "I think," said Dr. Cyrus Pym with a refined cough, | |
| "that we are approaching this matter rather irregularly. | |
| This is really the fourth charge on the charge sheet, | |
| and perhaps I had better put it before you in an ordered | |
| and scientific manner." | |
| Nothing but a faint groan from Michael broke the silence | |
| of the darkening room. | |
| Chapter IV | |
| The Wild Weddings; | |
| or, the Polygamy Charge | |
| "A modern man," said Dr. Cyrus Pym, "must, if he be thoughtful, | |
| approach the problem of marriage with some caution. | |
| Marriage is a stage--doubtless a suitable stage--in the long | |
| advance of mankind towards a goal which we cannot as yet conceive; | |
| which we are not, perhaps, as yet fitted even to desire. | |
| What, gentlemen, is the ethical position of marriage? | |
| Have we outlived it?" | |
| "Outlived it?" broke out Moon; "why, nobody's ever survived it! | |
| Look at all the people married since Adam and Eve--and all | |
| as dead as mutton." | |
| "This is no doubt an inter-pellation joc'lar in its character," | |
| said Dr. Pym frigidly. "I cannot tell what may be Mr. Moon's | |
| matured and ethical view of marriage--" | |
| "I can tell," said Michael savagely, out of the gloom. "Marriage is a duel | |
| to the death, which no man of honour should decline." | |
| "Michael," said Arthur Inglewood in a low voice, "you MUST keep quiet." | |
| "Mr. Moon," said Pym with exquisite good temper, "probably regards | |
| the institution in a more antiquated manner. Probably he would make | |
| it stringent and uniform. He would treat divorce in some great soul | |
| of steel--the divorce of a Julius Caesar or of a Salt Ring Robinson-- | |
| exactly as he would treat some no-account tramp or labourer who | |
| scoots from his wife. Science has views broader and more humane. | |
| Just as murder for the scientist is a thirst for absolute destruction, | |
| just as theft for the scientist is a hunger for monotonous acquisition, | |
| so polygamy for the scientist is an extreme development of the instinct | |
| for variety. A man thus afflicted is incapable of constancy. | |
| Doubtless there is a physical cause for this flitting from flower to flower-- | |
| as there is, doubtless, for the intermittent groaning which appears | |
| to afflict Mr. Moon at the present moment. Our own world-scorning | |
| Winterbottom has even dared to say, `For a certain rare and fine | |
| physical type polygamy is but the realization of the variety of females, | |
| as comradeship is the realization of the variety of males.' | |
| In any case, the type that tends to variety is recognized by all | |
| authoritative inquirers. Such a type, if the widower of a negress, | |
| does in many ascertained cases espouse ~en seconde noces~ an albino; | |
| such a type, when freed from the gigantic embraces of a female Patagonian, | |
| will often evolve from its own imaginative instinct the consoling figure of | |
| an Eskimo. To such a type there can be no doubt that the prisoner belongs. | |
| If blind doom and unbearable temptation constitute any slight excuse | |
| for a man, there is no doubt that he has these excuses. | |
| "Earlier in the inquiry the defence showed real chivalric | |
| ideality in admitting half of our story without further dispute. | |
| We should like to acknowledge and imitate so eminently large-hearted | |
| a style by conceding also that the story told by Curate Percy about | |
| the canoe, the weir, and the young wife seems to be substantially true. | |
| Apparently Smith did marry a young woman he had nearly run down in a boat; | |
| it only remains to be considered whether it would not have been | |
| kinder of him to have murdered her instead of marrying her. | |
| In confirmation of this fact I can now con-cede to the defence | |
| an unquestionable record of such a marriage." | |
| So saying, he handed across to Michael a cutting from the | |
| "Maidenhead Gazette" which distinctly recorded the marriage | |
| of the daughter of a "coach," a tutor well known in the place, | |
| to Mr. Innocent Smith, late of Brakespeare College, Cambridge. | |
| When Dr. Pym resumed it was realized that his face had grown | |
| at once both tragic and triumphant. | |
| "I pause upon this pre-liminary fact," he said seriously, | |
| "because this fact alone would give us the victory, | |
| were we aspiring after victory and not after truth. | |
| As far as the personal and domestic problem holds us, | |
| that problem is solved. Dr. Warner and I entered this house at | |
| an instant of highly emotional diff'culty. England's Warner has | |
| entered many houses to save human kind from sickness; this time | |
| he entered to save an innocent lady from a walking pestilence. | |
| Smith was just about to carry away a young girl from this house; | |
| his cab and bag were at the very door. He had told her she was | |
| going to await the marriage license at the house of his aunt. | |
| That aunt," continued Cyrus Pym, his face darkening grandly--"that | |
| visionary aunt had been the dancing will-o'-the-wisp | |
| who had led many a high-souled maiden to her doom. | |
| Into how many virginal ears has he whispered that holy word? | |
| When he said `aunt' there glowed about her all the merriment | |
| and high morality of the Anglo-Saxon home. Kettles began to hum, | |
| pussy cats to purr, in that very wild cab that was being | |
| driven to destruction." | |
| Inglewood looked up, to find, to his astonishment (as many another | |
| denizen of the eastern hemisphere has found), that the American was | |
| not only perfectly serious, but was really eloquent and affecting-- | |
| when the difference of the hemispheres was adjusted. | |
| "It is therefore atrociously evident that the man Smith has at | |
| least represented himself to one innocent female of this house | |
| as an eligible bachelor, being, in fact, a married man. I agree with | |
| my colleague, Mr. Gould, that no other crime could approximate to this. | |
| As to whether what our ancestors called purity has any ultimate ethical | |
| value indeed, science hesitates with a high, proud hesitation. | |
| But what hesitation can there be about the baseness of a citizen | |
| who ventures, by brutal experiments upon living females, to anticipate | |
| the verdict of science on such a point? | |
| "The woman mentioned by Curate Percy as living with Smith | |
| in Highbury may or may not be the same as the lady he married | |
| in Maidenhead. If one short sweet spell of constancy and heart | |
| repose interrupted the plunging torrent of his profligate life, | |
| we will not deprive him of that long past possibility. | |
| After that conjectural date, alas, he seems to have plunged deeper | |
| and deeper into the shaking quagmires of infidelity and shame." | |
| Dr. Pym closed his eyes, but the unfortunate fact that there was no more | |
| light left this familiar signal without its full and proper moral effect. | |
| After a pause, which almost partook of the character of prayer, he continued. | |
| "The first instance of the accused's repeated and irregular nuptials," | |
| he exclaimed, "comes from Lady Bullingdon, who expresses herself | |
| with the high haughtiness which must be excused in those who look | |
| out upon all mankind from the turrets of a Norman and ancestral keep. | |
| The communication she has sent to us runs as follows:-- | |
| "Lady Bullingdon recalls the painful incident to which reference | |
| is made, and has no desire to deal with it in detail. | |
| The girl Polly Green was a perfectly adequate dressmaker, | |
| and lived in the village for about two years. Her unattached | |
| condition was bad for her as well as for the general morality | |
| of the village. Lady Bullingdon, therefore, allowed it to be | |
| understood that she favoured the marriage of the young woman. | |
| The villagers, naturally wishing to oblige Lady Bullingdon, | |
| came forward in several cases; and all would have been well had it | |
| not been for the deplorable eccentricity or depravity of the girl | |
| Green herself. Lady Bullingdon supposes that where there is | |
| a village there must be a village idiot, and in her village, | |
| it seems, there was one of these wretched creatures. | |
| Lady Bullingdon only saw him once, and she is quite aware | |
| that it is really difficult to distinguish between actual | |
| idiots and the ordinary heavy type of the rural lower classes. | |
| She noticed, however, the startling smallness of his head | |
| in comparison to the rest of his body; and, indeed, the fact | |
| of his having appeared upon election day wearing the rosette | |
| of both the two opposing parties appears to Lady Bullingdon | |
| to put the matter quite beyond doubt. Lady Bullingdon was | |
| astounded to learn that this afflicted being had put himself | |
| forward as one of the suitors of the girl in question. | |
| Lady Bullingdon's nephew interviewed the wretch upon the point, | |
| telling him that he was a `donkey' to dream of such a thing, | |
| and actually received, along with an imbecile grin, | |
| the answer that donkeys generally go after carrots. | |
| But Lady Bullingdon was yet further amazed to find the unhappy | |
| girl inclined to accept this monstrous proposal, though she | |
| was actually asked in marriage by Garth, the undertaker, a man | |
| in a far superior position to her own. Lady Bullingdon could not, | |
| of course, countenance such an arrangement for a moment, | |
| and the two unhappy persons escaped for a clandestine marriage. | |
| Lady Bullingdon cannot exactly recall the man's name, | |
| but thinks it was Smith. He was always called in the village | |
| the Innocent. Later, Lady Bullingdon believes he murdered | |
| Green in a mental outbreak." | |
| "The next communication," proceeded Pym, "is more conspicuous for brevity, | |
| but I am of the opinion that it will adequately convey the upshot. | |
| It is dated from the offices of Messrs. Hanbury and Bootle, publishers, | |
| and is as follows:-- | |
| "Sir,--Yrs. rcd. and conts. noted. Rumour re typewriter possibly refers | |
| to a Miss Blake or similar name, left here nine years ago to marry an | |
| organ-grinder. Case was undoubtedly curious, and attracted police attention. | |
| Girl worked excellently till about Oct. 1907, when apparently went mad. | |
| Record was written at the time, part of which I enclose.-- | |
| Yrs., etc., W. Trip." | |
| "The fuller statement runs as follows:-- | |
| "On October 12 a letter was sent from this office to Messrs. | |
| Bernard and Juke, bookbinders. Opened by Mr. Juke, it was found | |
| to contain the following: `Sir, our Mr. Trip will call at 3, | |
| as we wish to know whether it is really decided 00000073bb!!!!!xy.' | |
| To this Mr. Juke, a person of a playful mind, returned the answer: | |
| `Sir, I am in a position to give it as my most decided opinion | |
| that it is not really decided that 00000073bb!!!!!xy.' Yrs., etc., | |
| `J. Juke.' | |
| "On receiving this extraordinary reply, our Mr. Trip asked for the original | |
| letter sent from him, and found that the typewriter had indeed substituted | |
| these demented hieroglyphics for the sentences really dictated to her. | |
| Our Mr. Trip interviewed the girl, fearing that she was in an | |
| unbalanced state, and was not much reassured when she merely remarked | |
| that she always went like that when she heard the barrel organ. | |
| Becoming yet more hysterical and extravagant, she made a series of most | |
| improbable statements--as, that she was engaged to the barrel-organ man, | |
| that he was in the habit of serenading her on that instrument, | |
| that she was in the habit of playing back to him upon the typewriter | |
| (in the style of King Richard and Blondel), and that the organ man's | |
| musical ear was so exquisite and his adoration of herself so ardent | |
| that he could detect the note of the different letters on the machine, | |
| and was enraptured by them as by a melody. To all these statements | |
| of course our Mr. Trip and the rest of us only paid that sort of assent | |
| that is paid to persons who must as quickly as possible be put in the | |
| charge of their relations. But on our conducting the lady downstairs, | |
| her story received the most startling and even exasperating confirmation; | |
| for the organ-grinder, an enormous man with a small head and manifestly | |
| a fellow-lunatic, had pushed his barrel organ in at the office doors | |
| like a battering-ram, and was boisterously demanding his alleged fiancee. | |
| When I myself came on the scene he was flinging his great, ape-like arms about | |
| and reciting a poem to her. But we were used to lunatics coming and reciting | |
| poems in our office, and we were not quite prepared for what followed. | |
| The actual verse he uttered began, I think, | |
| `O vivid, inviolate head, | |
| Ringed --' | |
| but he never got any further. Mr. Trip made a sharp | |
| movement towards him, and the next moment the giant picked | |
| up the poor lady typewriter like a doll, sat her on top | |
| of the organ, ran it with a crash out of the office doors, | |
| and raced away down the street like a flying wheelbarrow. | |
| I put the police upon the matter; but no trace of the amazing | |
| pair could be found. I was sorry myself; for the lady was | |
| not only pleasant but unusually cultivated for her position. | |
| As I am leaving the service of Messrs. Hanbury and Bootle, I put | |
| these things in a record and leave it with them. | |
| "(Signed) Aubrey Clarke, | |
| Publishers' reader." | |
| "And the last document," said Dr. Pym complacently, "is from | |
| one of those high-souled women who have in this age introduced | |
| your English girlhood to hockey, the higher mathematics, | |
| and every form of ideality. | |
| "Dear Sir (she writes),--I have no objection to telling you | |
| the facts about the absurd incident you mention; though I would | |
| ask you to communicate them with some caution, for such things, | |
| however entertaining in the abstract, are not always auxiliary | |
| to the success of a girls' school. The truth is this: | |
| I wanted some one to deliver a lecture on a philological | |
| or historical question--a lecture which, while containing | |
| solid educational matter, should be a little more popular and | |
| entertaining than usual, as it was the last lecture of the term. | |
| I remembered that a Mr. Smith of Cambridge had written somewhere | |
| or other an amusing essay about his own somewhat ubiquitous name-- | |
| an essay which showed considerable knowledge of genealogy | |
| and topography. I wrote to him, asking if he would come and | |
| give us a bright address upon English surnames; and he did. | |
| It was very bright, almost too bright. To put the matter otherwise, | |
| by the time that he was halfway through it became apparent | |
| to the other mistresses and myself that the man was totally | |
| and entirely off his head. He began rationally enough by dealing | |
| with the two departments of place names and trade names, and he said | |
| (quite rightly, I dare say) that the loss of all significance | |
| in names was an instance of the deadening of civilization. | |
| But then he went on calmly to maintain that every man who had | |
| a place name ought to go to live in that place, and that every | |
| man who had a trade name ought instantly to adopt that trade; | |
| that people named after colours should always dress in those colours, | |
| and that people named after trees or plants (such as Beech or Rose) | |
| ought to surround and decorate themselves with these vegetables. | |
| In a slight discussion that arose afterwards among the elder girls | |
| the difficulties of the proposal were clearly, and even eagerly, | |
| pointed out. It was urged, for instance, by Miss Younghusband | |
| that it was substantially impossible for her to play the part | |
| assigned to her; Miss Mann was in a similar dilemma, from which | |
| no modern views on the sexes could apparently extricate her; | |
| and some young ladies, whose surnames happened to be Low, Coward, | |
| and Craven, were quite enthusiastic against the idea. | |
| But all this happened afterwards. What happened at the crucial | |
| moment was that the lecturer produced several horseshoes and a | |
| large iron hammer from his bag, announced his immediate intention | |
| of setting up a smithy in the neighbourhood, and called on every | |
| one to rise in the same cause as for a heroic revolution. | |
| The other mistresses and I attempted to stop the wretched man, | |
| but I must confess that by an accident this very intercession | |
| produced the worst explosion of his insanity. He was waving | |
| the hammer, and wildly demanding the names of everybody; | |
| and it so happened that Miss Brown, one of the younger teachers, | |
| was wearing a brown dress--a reddish-brown dress that went quietly | |
| enough with the warmer colour of her hair, as well she knew. | |
| She was a nice girl, and nice girls do know about those things. | |
| But when our maniac discovered that we really had a Miss Brown | |
| who WAS brown, his ~idee fixe~ blew up like a powder magazine, | |
| and there, in the presence of all the mistresses and girls, | |
| he publicly proposed to the lady in the red-brown dress. | |
| You can imagine the effect of such a scene at a girls' school. | |
| At least, if you fail to imagine it, I certainly fail | |
| to describe it. | |
| "Of course, the anarchy died down in a week or two, and I can | |
| think of it now as a joke. There was only one curious detail, | |
| which I will tell you, as you say your inquiry is vital; but I should | |
| desire you to consider it a little more confidential than the rest. | |
| Miss Brown, who was an excellent girl in every way, did quite | |
| suddenly and surreptitiously leave us only a day or two afterwards. | |
| I should never have thought that her head would be the one | |
| to be really turned by so absurd an excitement.--Believe me, | |
| yours faithfully, Ada Gridley. | |
| "I think," said Pym, with a really convincing simplicity and seriousness, | |
| "that these letters speak for themselves." | |
| Mr. Moon rose for the last time in a darkness that gave no hint | |
| of whether his native gravity was mixed with his native irony. | |
| "Throughout this inquiry," he said, "but especially in this its | |
| closing phase, the prosecution has perpetually relied upon one argument; | |
| I mean the fact that no one knows what has become of all the unhappy | |
| women apparently seduced by Smith. There is no sort of proof | |
| that they were murdered, but that implication is perpetually made | |
| when the question is asked as to how they died. Now I am not | |
| interested in how they died, or when they died, or whether they died. | |
| But I am interested in another analogous question--that of how they | |
| were born, and when they were born, and whether they were born. | |
| Do not misunderstand me. I do not dispute the existence of | |
| these women, or the veracity of those who have witnessed to them. | |
| I merely remark on the notable fact that only one of these victims, | |
| the Maidenhead girl, is described as having any home or parents. | |
| All the rest are boarders or birds of passage--a guest, a solitary | |
| dressmaker, a bachelor-girl doing typewriting. Lady Bullingdon, | |
| looking from her turrets, which she bought from the Whartons with | |
| the old soap-boiler's money when she jumped at marrying an unsuccessful | |
| gentleman from Ulster--Lady Bullingdon, looking out from those turrets, | |
| did really see an object which she describes as Green. Mr. Trip, | |
| of Hanbury and Bootle, really did have a typewriter betrothed | |
| to Smith. Miss Gridley, though idealistic, is absolutely honest. | |
| She did house, feed, and teach a young woman whom Smith succeeded | |
| in decoying away. We admit that all these women really lived. | |
| But we still ask whether they were ever born?" | |
| "Oh, crikey!" said Moses Gould, stifled with amusement. | |
| "There could hardly," interposed Pym with a quiet smile, | |
| "be a better instance of the neglect of true scientific process. | |
| The scientist, when once convinced of the fact of vitality | |
| and consciousness, would infer from these the previous | |
| process of generation." | |
| "If these gals," said Gould impatiently--"if these gals were all alive | |
| (all alive O!) I'd chance a fiver they were all born." | |
| "You'd lose your fiver," said Michael, speaking gravely out of the gloom. | |
| "All those admirable ladies were alive. They were more alive for having | |
| come into contact with Smith. They were all quite definitely alive, | |
| but only one of them was ever born." | |
| "Are you asking us to believe--" began Dr. Pym. | |
| "I am asking you a second question," said Moon sternly. "Can the court | |
| now sitting throw any light on a truly singular circumstance? | |
| Dr. Pym, in his interesting lecture on what are called, I believe, | |
| the relations of the sexes, said that Smith was the slave | |
| of a lust for variety which would lead a man first to a negress | |
| and then to an albino, first to a Patagonian giantess and then | |
| to a tiny Eskimo. But is there any evidence of such variety here? | |
| Is there any trace of a gigantic Patagonian in the story? | |
| Was the typewriter an Eskimo? So picturesque a circumstance would not | |
| surely have escaped remark. Was Lady Bullingdon's dressmaker a negress? | |
| A voice in my bosom answers, `No!' Lady Bullingdon, I am sure, | |
| would think a negress so conspicuous as to be almost Socialistic, | |
| and would feel something a little rakish even about an albino. | |
| "But was there in Smith's taste any such variety as the learned | |
| doctor describes? So far as our slight materials go, | |
| the very opposite seems to be the case. We have only | |
| one actual description of any of the prisoner's wives-- | |
| the short but highly poetic account by the aesthetic curate. | |
| `Her dress was the colour of spring, and her hair of autumn leaves.' | |
| Autumn leaves, of course, are of various colours, some of | |
| which would be rather startling in hair (green, for instance); | |
| but I think such an expression would be most naturally used of | |
| the shades from red-brown to red, especially as ladies with their | |
| coppery-coloured hair do frequently wear light artistic greens. | |
| Now when we come to the next wife, we find the eccentric lover, | |
| when told he is a donkey, answering that donkeys always go | |
| after carrots; a remark which Lady Bullingdon evidently | |
| regarded as pointless and part of the natural table-talk of a | |
| village idiot, but which has an obvious meaning if we suppose | |
| that Polly's hair was red. Passing to the next wife, the one | |
| he took from the girls' school, we find Miss Gridley noticing | |
| that the schoolgirl in question wore `a reddish-brown dress, | |
| that went quietly enough with the warmer colour of her hair.' | |
| In other words, the colour of the girl's hair was something redder | |
| than red-brown. Lastly, the romantic organ-grinder declaimed | |
| in the office some poetry that only got as far as the words,-- | |
| `O vivid, inviolate head, | |
| Ringed --' | |
| But I think that a wide study of the worst modern poets | |
| will enable us to guess that `ringed with a glory of red,' | |
| or `ringed with its passionate red,' was the line that rhymed | |
| to `head.' In this case once more, therefore, there is good | |
| reason to suppose that Smith fell in love with a girl with | |
| some sort of auburn or darkish-red hair--rather," he said, | |
| looking down at the table, "rather like Miss Gray's hair." | |
| Cyrus Pym was leaning forward with lowered eyelids, | |
| ready with one of his more pedantic interpellations; | |
| but Moses Gould suddenly struck his forefinger on his nose, | |
| with an expression of extreme astonishment and intelligence | |
| in his brilliant eyes. | |
| "Mr. Moon's contention at present," interposed Pym, "is not, | |
| even if veracious, inconsistent with the lunatico-criminal view | |
| of I. Smith, which we have nailed to the mast. Science has | |
| long anticipated such a complication. An incurable attraction | |
| to a particular type of physical woman is one of the commonest | |
| of criminal per-versities, and when not considered narrowly, | |
| but in the light of induction and evolution--" | |
| "At this late stage," said Michael Moon very quietly, "I may perhaps | |
| relieve myself of a simple emotion that has been pressing me | |
| throughout the proceedings, by saying that induction and evolution | |
| may go and boil themselves. The Missing Link and all that is | |
| well enough for kids, but I'm talking about things we know here. | |
| All we know of the Missing Link is that he is missing--and he won't | |
| be missed either. I know all about his human head and his horrid tail; | |
| they belong to a very old game called `Heads I win, tails you lose.' | |
| If you do find a fellow's bones, it proves he lived a long while ago; | |
| if you don't find his bones, it proves how long ago he lived. | |
| That is the game you've been playing with this Smith affair. | |
| Because Smith's head is small for his shoulders you call | |
| him microcephalous; if it had been large, you'd have called it | |
| water-on-the-brain. As long as poor old Smith's seraglio seemed | |
| pretty various, variety was the sign of madness: now, because it's | |
| turning out to be a bit monochrome--now monotony is the sign of madness. | |
| I suffer from all the disadvantages of being a grown-up person, | |
| and I'm jolly well going to get some of the advantages too; | |
| and with all politeness I propose not to be bullied with long words | |
| instead of short reasons, or consider your business a triumphant | |
| progress merely because you're always finding out that you were wrong. | |
| Having relieved myself of these feelings, I have merely to add | |
| that I regard Dr. Pym as an ornament to the world far more beautiful | |
| than the Parthenon, or the monument on Bunker's Hill, and that I | |
| propose to resume and conclude my remarks on the many marriages | |
| of Mr. Innocent Smith. | |
| "Besides this red hair, there is another unifying thread that | |
| runs through these scattered incidents. There is something | |
| very peculiar and suggestive about the names of these women. | |
| Mr. Trip, you will remember, said he thought the typewriter's | |
| name was Blake, but could not remember exactly. | |
| I suggest that it might have been Black, and in that case we | |
| have a curious series: Miss Green in Lady Bullingdon's village; | |
| Miss Brown at the Hendon School; Miss Black at the publishers. | |
| A chord of colours, as it were, which ends up with Miss Gray | |
| at Beacon House, West Hampstead." | |
| Amid a dead silence Moon continued his exposition. | |
| "What is the meaning of this queer coincidence about colours? | |
| Personally I cannot doubt for a moment that these names are purely | |
| arbitrary names, assumed as part of some general scheme or joke. | |
| I think it very probably that they were taken from a series of costumes-- | |
| that Polly Green only meant Polly (or Mary) when in green, | |
| and that Mary Gray only means Mary (or Polly) when in gray. | |
| This would explain--" | |
| Cyrus Pym was standing up rigid and almost pallid. | |
| "Do you actually mean to suggest--" he cried. | |
| "Yes," said Michael; "I do mean to suggest that. Innocent Smith has had | |
| many wooings, and many weddings for all I know; but he has had only one wife. | |
| She was sitting on that chair an hour ago, and is now talking to Miss Duke | |
| in the garden. | |
| "Yes, Innocent Smith has behaved here, as he has on hundreds of | |
| other occasions, upon a plain and perfectly blameless principle. | |
| It is odd and extravagant in the modern world, but not more than any other | |
| principle plainly applied in the modern world would be. His principle | |
| can be quite simply stated: he refuses to die while he is still alive. | |
| He seeks to remind himself, by every electric shock to the intellect, | |
| that he is still a man alive, walking on two legs about the world. | |
| For this reason he fires bullets at his best friends; for this reason | |
| he arranges ladders and collapsible chimneys to steal his own property; | |
| for this reason he goes plodding around a whole planet to get back to his | |
| own home; and for this reason he has been in the habit of taking the woman | |
| whom he loved with a permanent loyalty, and leaving her about (so to speak) | |
| at schools, boarding-houses, and places of business, so that he might | |
| recover her again and again with a raid and a romantic elopement. | |
| He seriously sought by a perpetual recapture of his bride to keep alive | |
| the sense of her perpetual value, and the perils that should be run | |
| for her sake. | |
| "So far his motives are clear enough; but perhaps his convictions are | |
| not quite so clear. I think Innocent Smith has an idea at the bottom | |
| of all this. I am by no means sure that I believe it myself, but I am | |
| quite sure that it is worth a man's uttering and defending. | |
| "The idea that Smith is attacking is this. Living in an entangled | |
| civilization, he have come to think certain things wrong which are | |
| not wrong at all. We have come to think outbreak and exuberance, | |
| banging and barging, rotting and wrecking, wrong. In themselves they | |
| are not merely pardonable; they are unimpeachable. There is nothing | |
| wicked about firing a pistol off even at a friend, so long as you do not | |
| mean to hit him and know you won't. It is no more wrong than throwing | |
| a pebble at the sea--less, for you do occasionally hit the sea. | |
| There is nothing wrong in bashing down a chimney-pot and breaking | |
| through a roof, so long as you are not injuring the life or property | |
| of other men. It is no more wrong to choose to enter a house from | |
| the top than to choose to open a packing-case from the bottom. | |
| There is nothing wicked about walking round the world and coming back | |
| to your own house; it is no more wicked than walking round the garden | |
| and coming back to your own house. And there is nothing wicked | |
| about picking up your wife here, there, and everywhere, if, forsaking | |
| all others, you keep only to her so long as you both shall live. | |
| It is as innocent as playing a game of hide-and-seek in the garden. | |
| You associate such acts with blackguardism by a mere snobbish association, | |
| as you think there is something vaguely vile about going (or being | |
| seen going) into a pawnbroker's or a public-house. You think there | |
| is something squalid and commonplace about such a connection. | |
| You are mistaken. | |
| "This man's spiritual power has been precisely this, | |
| that he has distinguished between custom and creed. | |
| He has broken the conventions, but he has kept the commandments. | |
| It is as if a man were found gambling wildly in a gambling hell, | |
| and you found that he only played for trouser buttons. | |
| It is as if you found a man making a clandestine appointment | |
| with a lady at a Covent Garden ball, and then you found it | |
| was his grandmother. Everything is ugly and discreditable, | |
| except the facts; everything is wrong about him, except that | |
| he has done no wrong. | |
| "It will then be asked, `Why does Innocent Smith continued far into his | |
| middle age a farcical existence, that exposes him to so many false charges?' | |
| To this I merely answer that he does it because he really is happy, | |
| because he really is hilarious, because he really is a man and alive. | |
| He is so young that climbing garden trees and playing silly | |
| practical jokes are still to him what they once were to us all. | |
| And if you ask me yet again why he alone among men should be fed | |
| with such inexhaustible follies, I have a very simple answer to that, | |
| though it is one that will not be approved. | |
| "There is but one answer, and I am sorry if you don't like it. | |
| If Innocent is happy, it is because he IS innocent. If he can defy | |
| the conventions, it is just because he can keep the commandments. | |
| It is just because he does not want to kill but to excite to life | |
| that a pistol is still as exciting to him as it is to a schoolboy. | |
| It is just because he does not want to steal, because he does not covet | |
| his neighbour's goods, that he has captured the trick (oh, how we all | |
| long for it!), the trick of coveting his own goods. It is just because | |
| he does not want to commit adultery that he achieves the romance of sex; | |
| it is just because he loves one wife that he has a hundred honeymoons. | |
| If he had really murdered a man, if he had really deserted a woman, | |
| he would not be able to feel that a pistol or a love-letter was like a song-- | |
| at least, not a comic song." | |
| "Do not imagine, please, that any such attitude is easy | |
| to me or appeals in any particular way to my sympathies. | |
| I am an Irishman, and a certain sorrow is in my bones, bred either | |
| of the persecutions of my creed, or of my creed itself. | |
| Speaking singly, I feel as if a man was tied to tragedy, | |
| and there was no way out of the trap of old age and doubt. | |
| But if there is a way out, then, by Christ and St. Patrick, | |
| this is the way out. If one could keep as happy as a child or a dog, | |
| it would be by being as innocent as a child, or as sinless as a dog. | |
| Barely and brutally to be good--that may be the road, | |
| and he may have found it. Well, well, well, I see a look | |
| of skepticism on the face of my old friend Moses. Mr. Gould | |
| does not believe that being perfectly good in all respects | |
| would make a man merry." | |
| "No," said Gould, with an unusual and convincing gravity; | |
| "I do not believe that being perfectly good in all respects | |
| would make a man merry." | |
| "Well," said Michael quietly, "will you tell me one thing? | |
| Which of us has ever tried it?" | |
| A silence ensued, rather like the silence of some long geological | |
| epoch which awaits the emergence of some unexpected type; | |
| for there rose at last in the stillness a massive figure | |
| that the other men had almost completely forgotten. | |
| "Well, gentlemen," said Dr. Warner cheerfully, "I've been pretty | |
| well entertained with all this pointless and incompetent tomfoolery | |
| for a couple of days; but it seems to be wearing rather thin, | |
| and I'm engaged for a city dinner. Among the hundred flowers | |
| of futility on both sides I was unable to detect any sort of reason | |
| why a lunatic should be allowed to shoot me in the back garden." | |
| He had settled his silk hat on his head and gone out sailing placidly to | |
| the garden gate, while the almost wailing voice of Pym still followed him: | |
| "But really the bullet missed you by several feet." And another voice added: | |
| "The bullet missed him by several years." | |
| There was a long and mainly unmeaning silence, and then | |
| Moon said suddenly, "We have been sitting with a ghost. | |
| Dr. Herbert Warner died years ago." | |
| Chapter V | |
| How the Great Wind Went | |
| from Beacon House | |
| Mary was walking between Diana and Rosamund slowly up and down the garden; | |
| they were silent, and the sun had set. Such spaces of daylight as remained | |
| open in the west were of a warm-tinted white, which can be compared | |
| to nothing but a cream cheese; and the lines of plumy cloud that ran | |
| across them had a soft but vivid violet bloom, like a violet smoke. | |
| All the rest of the scene swept and faded away into a dove-like gray, | |
| and seemed to melt and mount into Mary's dark-gray figure until she seemed | |
| clothed with the garden and the skies. There was something in these last | |
| quiet colours that gave her a setting and a supremacy; and the twilight, | |
| which concealed Diana's statelier figure and Rosamund's braver array, | |
| exhibited and emphasized her, leaving her the lady of the garden, and alone. | |
| When they spoke at last it was evident that a conversation long | |
| fallen silent was being revived. | |
| "But where is your husband taking you?" asked Diana in her practical voice. | |
| "To an aunt," said Mary; "that's just the joke. There really | |
| is an aunt, and we left the children with her when I arranged | |
| to be turned out of the other boarding-house down the road. | |
| We never take more than a week of this kind of holiday, | |
| but sometimes we take two of them together." | |
| "Does the aunt mind much?" asked Rosamund innocently. "Of course, | |
| I dare say it's very narrow-minded and--what's that other word?-- | |
| you know, what Goliath was--but I've known many aunts who would | |
| think it--well, silly." | |
| "Silly?" cried Mary with great heartiness. "Oh, my Sunday hat! | |
| I should think it was silly! But what do you expect? | |
| He really is a good man, and it might have been snakes or something." | |
| "Snakes?" inquired Rosamund, with a slightly puzzled interest. | |
| "Uncle Harry kept snakes, and said they loved him," replied Mary | |
| with perfect simplicity. "Auntie let him have them in his pockets, | |
| but not in the bedroom." | |
| "And you--" began Diana, knitting her dark brows a little. | |
| "Oh, I do as auntie did," said Mary; "as long as we're not away | |
| from the children more than a fortnight together I play the game. | |
| He calls me `Manalive;' and you must write it all one word, | |
| or he's quite flustered." | |
| "But if men want things like that," began Diana. | |
| "Oh, what's the good of talking about men?" cried Mary impatiently; | |
| "why, one might as well be a lady novelist or some horrid thing. | |
| There aren't any men. There are no such people. There's a man; | |
| and whoever he is he's quite different." | |
| "So there is no safety," said Diana in a low voice. | |
| "Oh, I don't know," answered Mary, lightly enough; | |
| "there's only two things generally true of them. | |
| At certain curious times they're just fit to take care of us, | |
| and they're never fit to take care of themselves." | |
| "There is a gale getting up," said Rosamund suddenly. | |
| "Look at those trees over there, a long way off, and the | |
| clouds going quicker." | |
| "I know what you're thinking about," said Mary; "and don't | |
| you be silly fools. Don't you listen to the lady novelists. | |
| You go down the king's highway; for God's truth, it is | |
| God's. Yes, my dear Michael will often be extremely untidy. | |
| Arthur Inglewood will be worse--he'll be untidy. But what else | |
| are all the trees and clouds for, you silly kittens?" | |
| "The clouds and trees are all waving about," said Rosamund. "There is | |
| a storm coming, and it makes me feel quite excited, somehow. Michael is | |
| really rather like a storm: he frightens me and makes me happy." | |
| "Don't you be frightened," said Mary. "All over, these men | |
| have one advantage; they are the sort that go out." | |
| A sudden thrust of wind through the trees drifted the dying leaves along | |
| the path, and they could hear the far-off trees roaring faintly. | |
| "I mean," said Mary, "they are the kind that look outwards and get interested | |
| in the world. It doesn't matter a bit whether it's arguing, or bicycling, | |
| or breaking down the ends of the earth as poor old Innocent does. Stick to | |
| the man who looks out of the window and tries to understand the world. | |
| Keep clear of the man who looks in at the window and tries to understand you. | |
| When poor old Adam had gone out gardening (Arthur will go out gardening), | |
| the other sort came along and wormed himself in, nasty old snake." | |
| "You agree with your aunt," said Rosamund, smiling: "no snakes | |
| in the bedroom." | |
| "I didn't agree with my aunt very much," replied Mary simply, | |
| "but I think she was right to let Uncle Harry collect dragons | |
| and griffins, so long as it got him out of the house." | |
| Almost at the same moment lights sprang up inside the darkened house, | |
| turning the two glass doors into the garden into gates of beaten gold. | |
| The golden gates were burst open, and the enormous Smith, who had | |
| sat like a clumsy statue for so many hours, came flying and turning | |
| cart-wheels down the lawn and shouting, "Acquitted! acquitted!" | |
| Echoing the cry, Michael scampered across the lawn to Rosamund and | |
| wildly swung her into a few steps of what was supposed to be a waltz. | |
| But the company knew Innocent and Michael by this time, | |
| and their extravagances were gaily taken for granted; it was far | |
| more extraordinary that Arthur Inglewood walked straight up to Diana | |
| and kissed her as if it had been his sister's birthday. Even Dr. Pym, | |
| though he refrained from dancing, looked on with real benevolence; | |
| for indeed the whole of the absurd revelation had disturbed him | |
| less than the others; he half supposed that such irresponsible | |
| tribunals and insane discussions were part of the mediaeval mummeries | |
| of the Old Land. | |
| While the tempest tore the sky as with trumpets, window after window was | |
| lighted up in the house within; and before the company, broken with laughter | |
| and the buffeting of the wind, had groped their way to the house again, | |
| they saw that the great apish figure of Innocent Smith had clambered | |
| out of his own attic window, and roaring again and again, "Beacon House!" | |
| whirled round his head a huge log or trunk from the wood fire below, | |
| of which the river of crimson flame and purple smoke drove out on | |
| the deafening air. | |
| He was evident enough to have been seen from three counties; | |
| but when the wind died down, and the party, at the top of | |
| their evening's merriment, looked again for Mary and for him, | |
| they were not to be found. | |
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