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LIVRO V

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CAPÍTULO I

 

            I COME now to a stage in my story which I would gladly omit, or at least touch upon very lightly. It relates to myself and my connection with the Carol family. That connection, it is true, is sufficiently close and important to make some reference to myself indispensable. I am, nevertheless, strongly of opinion that a far less detailed account would better tend to maintain the harmonious proportions of the narrative, while it would certainly be infinitely more agreeable to my own feelings, to say nothing of those of my readers. Having, however, a coadjutor in the task, and that one whom my readers will assuredly recognize as entitled to dictate, being no other than the daughter of Christmas Carol, backed by powerful friends, – I find myself overruled, and compelled to submit. When I state that I persevered in my opposition until sundry CAPÍTULOs of my own biography had been actually composed for me – the said CAPÍTULOs being altogether monstrous and impossible, being the work of one far too favourably disposed towards me to be critical – I trust my readers will consider themselves fortunate in having only this modicum of egotism thrust upon them.

 

 

            In following my avocations as a student in the library of the British Museum, it happens occasionally that I come across old books of imaginative fiction, in which the writers have set down their views of the condition of society when civilization should

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have advanced far beyond the stage reached in their own day. English, French, German, and American writers all tried their hand at such forecasting of the future; but, ingenious as were their attempts, there is one respect in which their sagacity was woefully at fault: – most of all so in those of France, where ecclesiasticism and political organization bore greatest sway; and least of all so in those of America, where individual freedom most prevailed.

 

            The error of these prophets consisted m their regarding physical science as destined to dominate man to such an extent as to destroy the individuality of his character, and mechanise his very affections. It is true that the writings to which I am referring belong principally to a period when the human mind was yet so much under the influence of rigid inflexible systems of thought in religion, politics, and society, as to make it very difficult for men to realize the true nature and functions of the new power which was to regenerate the earth. They thought that in exchanging Dogma for Science they would merely be exchanging one hard master for another. As it had ever been the aim of Dogma to crystallize, if not to suppress, all the humanity of human nature; so it would, they supposed, be the business of science to deprive character of individuality, and life of contrast and variety, by making all men alike, and converting the world into one vast Chinese empire. My story will have failed in respect of at least one of its main ends, if it does not enable my younger readers to see that under the reign of Science, Civilization has come to consist, not in the suppression, but in the development of individual character and genius, to the utmost extent compatible with the security and convenience of the whole mass.

 

            It is by many a bitter experience that the world has learnt that systems of organization are no substitute for personal development. The Ruler, whether he wields the sceptre, the lash, or that yet more dire instrument – spiritual terror – is, until the principle of Tear be discarded altogether for that of Knowledge, but a driver of slaves who will some day break out into disastrous revolt. If I have dwelt much on the Emancipation

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and its great achievement – the liberation of the National Church from its dogmatic basis, and the consequent preservation of its organization, prestige, and resources to the State – it is because this was the event which alone rendered truly rational education possible in England; the event which, by combating and ultimately defeating the spirit of Jesuitism in all its various manifestations – ecclesiaticism, communism, socialism, and trades-unionism – and so destroying from among us the love of drilling and dictating to our fellows, and of making ourselves a rule to others, constituted the basis of all our subsequent advances. So long as the State supported this spirit in the Church, it was powerless against its action in society. Our unreserved acceptance of the axiom that the prime function of government is the maintenance of liberty, religious, political, social, and industrial, was indispensable to the fulfilment of the modern era. The too long deferred assumption by Government of the functions of the Policeman, strong, energetic, and ubiquitous, was the death-blow to the tyranny alike of priest and parent, peasant and artisan.

 

            Then for the first time in the world’s history was a people really free, free to think, to speak, to work, to win, and to enjoy; free from every tyranny, – saving one.

 

            Saving one: for there was, and is, an exception to the rule of entire freedom; an exception founded in the very constitution of our own nature, even the tyranny of the Affections, – a tyranny requiring not less than any other, the restraint of a developed intellect. What mattered it to me that I dwelt in the land of liberty, where the whole order of society was contrived expressly to secure my freedom, when feelings which were a part of myself, and from which I could not escape, demanded the sacrifices which cost me so dear? What mattered it that the law of the land would have justified my evasion from all family ties, on the plea that I had a right to my own soul, and that my soul, thus bound, was not my own, when the law of affection within me compelled me to remain, even at the price of my utter self-annihilation? Useless indeed, in such case to argue that the individual ought to assert himself,

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and be true to the lights vouchsafed to him. The only comfort possible for those who have not the resolution to declare them-selves in you, and sever the connection ere it has become confirmed by time, consists in looking forward to a day when the progress of enlightenment shall have involved even parents such as those now in the Remnant, and when the inalienable right of children to their own souls shall be fully recognized by the most indomitable sectarian. It is to my former associates of the Remnant that I say this, on the chance of my pages finding admission within those adamantine walls. Those who are of the Emancipation need it not. They have already long since recognized it as a sacred duty to encourage their children to form and follow their own judgment in all matters of opinion, and in all their professions to put Conviction before Compliance. It is thus in reality as well as in theory, that, the Emancipation repudiates the world-old practice of human sacrifice.

 

            How my own eyes were first opened, and how I first met Christmas Carol at the Alberthalla – two events which are always associated together in my mind – have already been related. My story brings me now to the time when the acquaintance thus begun was to bear its due fruit.

 

            It may seem strange that I had failed to recognize one in whom my family had so special an interest. The fact is that, although in my childhood I had heard my father speak of an adventure which had happened to him in his youth in connection with an iceberg and an infant, the story had, through my mother’s reticence, faded into a dim tradition.

 

            It was about eight years after that first meeting before I again saw him. In the interval I had become a man, and his name had grown familiar to me as that of one of our most honoured citizens, and not less remarkable for his origin and wealth, than for his character, genius, and achievements. Since our first meeting I lad always kept him vividly before me, watching, though from a, distance, every movement in which he bore a part. I longed intensely, to know more of him, but was withheld by my constitutional shyness and a not unjustifiable

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pride, from making any approach. There would be naught, I felt, between two men placed in positions so different, save favour from one and obligation from the other.

 

            Besides, the exclusiveness of my family ties operated as an impassable barrier to detain me from the great outer world. I had, at the time of which I am now speaking, a twofold object in life, namely, to keep from my mother the knowledge both of the change which had come over my religious opinions, and of a serious reverse of fortune which had befallen me. Each of us had derived from my father an income sufficient for all our moderate wants. But I, being ambitious of something beyond this, had put my money into speculative investments, and lost it. My mother’s income was untouched, but it sufficed only for herself. I hardly knew which intelligence would most grieve her, the loss of my money or the loss of my religion; for I was far from being convinced that her piety was of that unpractical sort which leads some persons to regard spiritual prosperity as a satisfactory counterpoise to temporal adversity. However, either would cause her acute agony, and embitter the remainder of her days. I determined, therefore, to make no apparent diminution in the cost of my living, but to earn the means by steadfast labour. Even here my adherence to the Remnant stood in my way. I could not look beyond our own circle either for the objects or for the rewards of my work. All must be done within the narrow limits of the Sect, or my labours would be regarded as unhallowed, and myself as reprobate. Even in making excuses for my newly found faculty of industry, I was forced sometimes to sail so near the wind as to feel very un-comfortable at the deceit I was practising. It was only by persuading myself that the bigotry in deference to which I was acting, was a sort of madness, and that it is lawful to deceive a madman for his own benefit, that I managed to reconcile myself to the necessity. If I committed a wrong in thus acting, the compensation must be found in the motive that prompted it. It was solely to spare my mother the misery which a knowledge of the truth would have caused her.

 

            That she ought not to have experienced unhappiness at my

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following my own judgment, and asserting my own individuality of character, I am well aware. But it is a fixed idea among parents in the Remnant, that they are so infallibly right in their own notions respecting all things, that their children are hopelessly lost if they venture to differ from them. So saturated are they with a sense of the Absolute, as to have no comprehension whatever of the Relative. It may be asked why, when I had learnt to rejoice in my new-found liberty of soul, I did not seek to make my mother a sharer in my joy. The answer is easy. I did not think she would be damned for not believing as I did. Whereas she was certain I should be damned for not believing as she did. I could not be guilty of the cruelty of letting my mother know – at least in this life, where I could prevent it – that I was to be damned.

 

            I preferred that she should think me stingy. I know that she thought I had become unreasonably economical, and absurdly industrious. I know, too, that she feared the effect of my devotion to my work on my soul’s prospects. Absorbed in worldly labour, I was apt to be withdrawn from God. This was a favourite notion in the Remnant. All doing was so likely to be wrong-doing, that they held it better to do nothing than run the risk of doing wrong. My art underwent a change. The demand for paintings of sacred subjects being confined to our own sect, the sale was too small to answer my purpose. Besides, I had become tired of producing them. With my emancipation from bondage I had learnt to recognize the beauty and sanctity of humanity and its affections. I painted a series of tableaux illustrative of my new phase, but unfortunately was not sufficiently careful to conceal them from my mother’s watchful eyes. She reproached me for venturing so near the “broad path.” I took them to the publishing office of an Art and Literature Association of high standing, and whose agent I had heard well spoken of. Telling this man my business, I enjoined him to keep my name absolutely secret.

 

            He was greatly surprised at the request, and said it was quite a new thing to him that an artist should refuse the fame of his work. “Was it diffidence?” he would venture to ask; “because

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there was sufficient talent in the drawings to render such a sentiment misplaced.”

 

            I told him that my reasons were connected with private family circumstances, which, while they induced me to work for pay, compelled me also to work unknown – unknown, that was, to my relatives.

 

            “Your work would be much more valuable,’’ he said, “with a name to it.”

 

            I replied that I was aware of that, but for the present, at least, must be content to be a loser to that extent. Of the two, fames, not fame, must be my lot for the present.

 

            He explained to me that he was only a publishing agent for an Association of Authors, and that it would be necessary to submit them to a committee. “We never,” he continued, “Issue any works unless it appears to us to possess a certain amount of merit, and likely to be acceptable to some class of society, – what class does not matter to us. Our imprimatur being sufficient to insure us against loss, we are able to publish everything at our own risk, taking only a small percentage of the profits to reimburse outlay and expenses. And as artists do not care to quaff their wine out of the skulls of their brethren, the rest goes to the author.”

 

            I left my work with him, and a few days afterwards received a note saying that the committee had been struck not only by the originality and execution of the designs, but also by the continuity of idea existing between them, and were willing to publish them in a volume, if I would provide a story to which they might serve as illustrations. But a name must be attached, though not necessarily the real name.

 

            To this I consented, and adopting a pseudonym, set to work in the new direction. I was by no means satisfied with the result, but the committee and their agent were. The time thus occupied, too, was so long, for I got on but slowly, that only the hope of succeeding in laying a foundation for future success reconciled me to the privations I was forced to undergo rather than get into debt for my living. My mother noticed my loss of appetite at home. I led her to believe I had eaten

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something while out. I really had lost my appetite, for I was sick and harassed with delay and apprehension.

 

            The publication paid for itself, but brought me little beyond some favourable notices in the press. The agent, however, assured me that I had made a good beginning, and my future work would be sought for, and encouraged me to persevere in both lines. In the meantime I was at my wits’ end to keep up appearances at home. My clothes became too shabby for me to appear at the social gatherings of our set; and I had to make every decent excuse I could think of for not accompanying my mother to the place of worship where alone, in ‘her view, a soul could gain a certainty of safety.

 

            My physical strength became so reduced, that my mind was affected also. I actually envied those who had none to grieve over them if they committed suicide. The object of all my endeavours being to save my mother from sorrow on whatever score, suicide was one of the last things I could, consistently, contemplate.

 

            One day I called at the publishing office, and told the agent that if he could not dispose of the originals of my drawings I would take them home. He said that some enquiries had lately been made by a person who would only purchase them on condition of knowing the artist’s real name. He added, with a somewhat singular expression of countenance, that if he were in my place he should think twice before refusing the terms. But that, of course, pride must be paid for.

 

            “Pride!” I exclaimed. “Do you think it is pride that keeps me back? listen, and I will tell you all.”

 

            He listened, and I told him all, even to how my mother lived in comfort, while I lived with her and starved, rather than lei her know either that I had forsaken her creed or lost my own fortune. He seemed really interested, and said he had often heard of such a sect as the Remnant, but had no idea such narrowness could hare survived to our day. After a good deal more talk, he repeated his advice to let him impart my name to the lady who had taken a. liking for my drawings.

 

            “A lady!”

 

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            “Yes, one of the P. M.s. And I assure you, you could not find a better set of patrons.”

 

            “P. M.s! And what may they be?” I asked.

 

            “Ah, sir, I forgot. You have lived out of the world, and are not familiar with things that everybody else knows. The P. M.s is a colloquial term for the well-known heiresses’ club, and means Particular Maidens. The members are all young ladies of fortune and station, who decline the association of merely fashionable and wealthy men, and make-a point of looking out for young men, especially struggling ones, of genius and aspiration, either to adorn their club gatherings, or to bestow themselves upon in marriage. I assure you, sir, you may do worse than dispose of your works in that quarter – or yourself either,” he added after a pause, smiling.

 

            I was still so incompletely emancipated from the traditions of my sect, that I regarded all such associations of women with a considerable amount of repugnance. I knew what they would be if composed of such women as there were in the Remnant. While the idea of a marriage for money, or of being indebted to a woman for the means of living, excited my scorn and horror. I said as much to my friend, for such, since I had told him my story, I felt him to be.

 

            He replied that there was many a nice woman who would be only grateful to a man whom she could love and esteem, for taking care of herself and fortune, and not consider that he was under any obligation to her.

 

            I confessed that I myself had never been able to see why it should not be so, but that I had never yet discovered a woman whom I could credit with the possession of sufficient magnanimity to make such a position tolerable to a man’s self-respect. “I consider,” I added, “That the highest compliment that can pass between the sexes, is for a poor man to marry a rich woman. A man never credits a woman with such largeness of heart as when he puts it in her power to suspect him of having mercenary motives in his love.”

 

            I observed that as we conversed, he paused from time to time to write something, but without breaking the thread of our talk.

 

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            “Many a man thinks in the same way, while he is young,” he said. “But I never knew one regret the money, however much he regretted his choice of a subject.”

 

            “Well,” I said, “as I should marry only for the love that would make a home of my home, such an association as you describe would be to me a constant sore.”

 

            “The money would enable you to buy poultices.”

 

            “I am afraid my poultice would prove a blister,” I answered, laughing, and departed, leaving my paintings for further consideration.

 

 

 

CAPÍTULO II

 

            THE notion of combining whatever talents I possessed into a harmonious whole, became especially pleasing to me. I had always been a dabbler in verses, and now glanced through my portfolio to see if I had any which would bear illustrating. The artist who is not a mere imitator, I held, ought to be both poet and painter. There can be no reason why both modes of expression should not be united in the same work, as music with singing. I found some which suited me, and having illustrated them to my fancy, took them to the office. To my intense astonishment, the agent at once wrote me a cheque in payment, far exceeding anything I had dared to hope for, even after long waiting.

 

            “Soul is up in the market just now,” he said, smiling. “Always put soul into your work, and it shall be equally well paid.”

 

            “May I ask any questions?” I enquired.

 

            “Nay, I cannot encourage such inconsistency in one who insists on being himself anonymous.”

 

            He then made me an offer for the originals of the illustrations already published. I gladly accepted it, and left his office with my head in the clouds.

 

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            The removal of one difficulty served to launch me into another. I could obtain payment provided I could work. But my mother’s failing health made her terribly exacting in her demands upon my time. She could not bear that I should be away from her side; and to be with her meant to be idle, so far as any paying work was concerned.

 

            At length, becoming worse, she was recommended to pass the summer at a favourite watering-place in Iceland. It was only by means of the money I had earned that I was enabled to accompany her. So we went, she little dreaming on how slender a chance my acquiescence had depended, and I shuddering at the narrowness of my escape from being compelled to reveal to her my poverty in justification of my refusal.

 

            I had long wished to see Iceland, – that country without a fellow, in the fantastic peculiarity of its formation. I was curious to witness the giant contest between volcano and glacier; to live beneath a sun that, for the whole summer long, scarcely sets, and to know also what it was to breathe perpetual darkness. Modern physiologists had excited in me a desire to test, in my own person, the truth of their theories respecting the influence upon the human system of the prolonged presence or absence of sunshine. I was now to see it tested upon her in whom all my affections were centered, – even upon my mother, whom, for the heart complaint that was wearing her down, the doctors were sending to pass the summer in Iceland; for the new cure for such malady was sunshine. Patients not too far gone to be able to endure the journey, were believed to have been kept alive for years by shifting their position, every six months, from one Pole to the other, where Sanatoria had been made for their reception, the journey between being performed by air.

 

            The physicians hesitated to subject my mother to the longer journey, – to the North Pole. Neither could she with safety travel by aërial conveyance. So we went by sea, in the Scot-and-Ice-land Ferry, and took up our abode on the northern shore of the island. I told the agent of my intended journey, and its cause, and of the satisfaction it gave me to be able to

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devote the first proceeds of my new work to such an object. I said also that I feared my work would be sadly hindered by the interruption.

 

            He expressed a contrary opinion on this head. I was just the man that ought to travel. No new scenes or experiences would be thrown away upon my work. Let me only give my-self wholly up to nature, but “nature with a soul,” he said, and I need have no anxiety on the score of success in art, whether written or painted. “In the meantime,” he added, “If you can manage to send me any light or fugitive pieces struck off in the intervals of heavier and more permanent work, I will at once remit the proceeds to you. You must not be above the production of what the trade calls Pot-boilers; such things have a use above that which their name indicates. They are a relief and rest from more serious work, and enable the artist to return to it with increased zest. It is not given to mortals to live always up to the same high pitch. The tension must be loosened sometimes. The universe is not peopled exclusively with archangels. The artist, as well as the ordinary man, must relax his morals. In other words, he must condescend to consider what other people think and like, as well as what he himself thinks and likes. Granted that he stoops in so doing; well, self-abasement, in moderation, may be a judicious alterative. It has often happened that in stooping, he has stooped to conquer. Let me give you an instance. Once upon a time, somewhere, I believe, about the beginning of the Emancipation period, there was an author who had expended himself in elaborating his highest ideals of faith, and art, and life, for the elevation of his countrymen. His work was admired by all, read by many, enthusiastically praised by some, but bought by so few (for they were books of instruction, rather than amusement), that the author himself was in a fair Way to starve; for, like you, he had hazarded and lost the fortune he had in possession when he started on his literary career.

 

            “Well, he determined to make the public not only admire and praise him, but buy him. So he set to work and wrote a tale, which, while outwardly affecting to illustrate all the

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excellencies of his country and times, was in reality a bitter satire upon the follies and shams of society. The rich bought it because they found in it an apotheosis of Dives; the poor, because it exalted Lazarus. The sceptical bought it because it exposed the fallacies of the priests; the pious, because it upheld the Church and respected religion. The Materialists bought it because it represented matter as the basis of the mind; the Spiritualists, because it described mind as pervading and shaping matter. The old bought it because it gave them ground of hope for an hereafter; the young, because it bade them make the best use of this world, without reference to a life beyond. The men bought it because it bantered the foibles of women; and the women, because it upheld their claims as against the men. The ignorant bought it because they could understand every word in it; and the learned, because it contained an esoteric meaning discernible only by themselves.

 

            “So the money poured in, and the author became rich; but the richer he became, the more ashamed he was of himself and of his kind. He had at last won success, but at the expense of his ideal. Was Satan, then, he asked himself, really the god of this world, and the human conscience but a delusion and a snare?

 

            “Now mark the moral. By thus making himself, as it were, ‘a little lower than the angels’ – by condescending, I mean, to an ideal more closely approximating to that of the general – he had caught the public, and established a rapport which resulted in creating a demand for his earlier writings scarcely inferior to that for his later one. As the teacher of a new faith may work vulgar miracles to draw the attention of the crowd to his pure doctrines, so his higher work had been advertised by his lower. I make you a present of the hint; and-wish you fare well.”

 

            “One word,” I said. “What was the title of his successful book? I have much faith in titles.”

 

            “As it consisted,” he replied, “of ideas already floating, more or less vaguely, in men’s minds, and flattered the most

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popular feelings, it was very appropriately called, In the Air; or, Made to Sell.

 

            The early part of my sojourn in Iceland, was passed in making acquaintance with the natural wonders of the, island. Now that I had the most invigorating of all diets – Hope – to animate me, I could yield, without reserve, to the elation produced by the bracing airs and strange scenery. My mind, thus renovated, rose to new inspirations, in which the ordinary and the commonplace seemed to me to have no part. I had one great work on hand, partly literary, partly artistic; but I did not fail to follow the advice I had received, and send home from time to time the stray sparks which were struck out in its elaboration. Yet in these I did not consciously derogate from the high ideal to which I had devoted myself. And I was most thankful to be spared the necessity fordoing so. My publisher was true to his word, and thus I was enabled to live in comfort, and even to provide my mother with little luxuries which had otherwise been unattainable. It seemed to me as if some good genius must have been watching for my arrival at the lowest depth of despair, in order to seize the moment and make it the turning point of my destiny.

 

            On one point I was somewhat uneasy. I had, in one of my moments of depression, made a rough draft of an advertisement, containing an appeal for aid on behalf of a student of art, who, having lost his own fortune, desired the means of continuing his career, if any could be found to support him until success should enable him to repay them. It was not so much that I seriously thought of sending such an advertisement to the papers; I had drawn it up merely to see how it would look when written.

 

            This I had lost, and for some time I was under an apprehension that my mother had found it. Even when I at length ascertained that this vas not the case, I continued to be uncomfortable at the idea of its having got into strange hands. I shrank from the thought of such a revelation of myself.

 

            At first my mother seemed to derive benefit from the change.

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But towards the end of the summer she was so decidedly worse that I felt convinced the end could not be far off. I now found myself in a very curious frame of mind. Tenderly attached as I was to her, and ready to devote myself utterly to the promotion of her recovery, I was constantly pondering whether her recovery would be the best thing that could happen either for herself or for me. The more I hated such a line of thought and drove it from me, the more it persisted in haunting me. It was only by resolutely refusing to regard them as my own thoughts, and treating them as thoughts naturally occurring to a disinterested bystander who might be weighing all the pros and cons of the situation – much, in short, as Providence itself might be supposed to do – that I kept myself from being made exclusively miserable by them.

 

            One fact I could not hide from myself. For our lives to be perfectly happy it was necessary that my mother and myself be in perfect-accord, without any concealments. I knew the fatal influence of the system of intellectual suppression pursued in the Remnant, too well not to be aware that a change on her part was absolutely impossible. All intellectual independence was regarded as the result of worse than moral depravity. And the knowledge that I had come to certain conclusions which did not coincide with her own traditional ones, would be accompanied by the conviction either that I had been changed at nurse, or that she had given birth to a child of wrath, with whom she could have neither part nor lot in the future world.

 

            But, however potent my motive for deception, and however merciful to her my resolution, I could not be blind to the fact that such habit of deception was far from agreeable to myself, or favourable to my moral health; and also that it was very doubtful how long I should be able to maintain it. Determined as were the efforts of the Remnant to shut out every gleam of light coming from the outer world, they could not always succeed in preventing names and deeds and words of note from penetrating into their retreat. The literary agent knew my name, if nobody else did, and so long as it remained a small name, would probably keep it secret. But what if it grew to

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fame? Was my whole career to be sacrificed, and I sink to lower aims and lower work, for the express purpose of eluding fame lest my name might reach my mother’s ears?

 

            It was thus a singular conflict of opposing feelings to which I was at this time a prey. The very consolation I derived from success was embittered by the thought of the pleasure my mother was losing through her inability to sympathize in that success. I learnt then that the concealment of our joys from those to whom we are profoundly attached, is far more grievous to endure than the concealment of our sorrows. If grief is halved by sympathy, assuredly joy is more than doubled.

 

            That in the event of my mother’s death, her income would become mine, was a motive which, I rejoice to say, scarce thrust itself at all before me. It was only my resolute resolve to drive all such canvassings away as the snares of an enemy, and combine to the very best of my ability, my work with her health and comfort, that carried me through this distressing period, and when at length she departed, prevented my having any feeling regarding myself, save the satisfaction of having sacrificed myself to the utmost for her.

 

            Her death was doubtless accelerated by the unusually severe climate of that season. As I have since learnt, it not unfrequently happens that large masses of ice become detached from the coast of Greenland and drift across to Iceland, where they form into a compact body, and for the time utterly ruin the climate of the island. This was the case in the year that we were there. What we ought to have done was to go on to the clear warm seas at the Pole; but my mother could not or would not make another move.’ Even the homeward passage by sea was closed by the ice, arid it was useless to propose to her to travel by air.

 

            After her death my grief and sense of isolation were very keen. She had many friends and I had many acquaintances in the Remnant. But from all these I was now cut off. I was not one of themselves, and did not intend to claim a place among them under false pretences. That was over for me. But elsewhere l knew not where to seek for a friend, scarcely

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for an acquaintance. The ordinary engrossments for men of my age, love and marriage, were beyond the reach even of my dreams. Putting all my work aside, I allowed the Arctic winter that was closing in upon the isle to enshroud my*spirits with a more than Arctic dreariness. A volume of narratives of the Arctic explorations of old times – when men were forced to content themselves with traversing the surface of the earth without cutting the knot of their difficulties by soaring into the air – helped to beguile but not to cheer those dark days. Having some of my father’s papers with me, I chose that season for looking through them. Among them I found some lines indicating that he, too, had vividly realized a like situation, aided no doubt by his recollections of his own early adventure. The lines in question had been suggested by the story of an explorer who had lost the whole of his comrades, and remained prisoned fast for successive years from all possibility of returning to his home and his love. It is, however, less for any intrinsic quality than for their connection with our story, that I have thought fit to insert them here, and consented to do the same with those of my own which follow: –

 

“As Arctic voyagers muse upon the zone

Wherein they gathered up their sunny youth,

And glow again amid the chilling scene –

A brief relapse of joy, when pent among

Those everlasting solitudes, to think

The sun still shines afar, but not for them,

And ne’er for them may shine: to know that soon

Those joyless seas may be a burial place

From which their frozen souls will hardly mount;

Or should they chance to ’scape their shattered bark,

’Tis but to drag a drear existence on,

A Lapland life instead of genial home –

Thus must I lead a dull inferior lot,

Ho warmth without, but that one fire within,

Cherished as life from the surrounding cold.”

 

            When I resumed work I illustrated these lines – supplying the sun’s absence by an electric-lamp – and forwarded the result to the literary agent by aëromotive, a regular service being

(p. 382)

maintained throughout the year. I could not make up my mind to return home myself, simply because I felt that I had no home to return to, and was not yet equal to the task of seeking for one. I was not unhappy; for the release from the constant anxiety and concealment of my later years, operated to balance my sense of bereavement. Moreover, my mother had been spared the pain of knowing that I was an apostate. If, where she was now, the knowledge had reached her, she would with that knowledge, know also the sanctity of the instinct and the resolve which had guided me. For do not the dead see things “with larger other eyes?”

 

            The keenness of my sensations under my new position, and the weird wildness of the country, brought me several inspirations which I duly turned to account, never failing to receive immediate and satisfactory returns. I thus came to welcome any occurrence which afforded me a vivid idea, that might be both poetically and pictorially expressed. It was an additional satisfaction to me to find that some of my lines were deemed worthy also of musical expression; and that, through the same kind agency, I gained an advantage from their publication as songs.

 

            I mention these details by way of leading up to an incident which not only provided me in the first instance with a subject for illustration, but ultimately affected the whole tenor of my life.

 

            The summer sojourners in Iceland had all taken flight. I thought myself the sole stranger in the island. My principal delight after the day’s work was over, was to go down to the shore and watch the masses of ice growing into bergs, as “by the pressure of the ice fields which now extended far beyond the horizon, it was forced up into conjunction with the glaciers which descended from the mountains. The aspect of the fantastic shapes, and the strange groaning and travailing of the massive crystal, as if in. The throes of a new birth – the whole at times transparent with magical light of blue or green, or glistening and crackling as it reflected the gleams of the Aurora – exercised a fascination which I found it hard to shake off.

(p. 383)

The natives, either from use or from dulness, were insensible to the scene; and my enjoyment therefore was wont to be a solitary one.

 

            One evening, however, I detected a figure moving on the ice at a perilous distance from the shore. After watching its movements for some time, my eyes became sufficiently accustomed to the dim light to perceive that it was a woman. Now and then sounds reached me as of one declaiming, and the idea was borne out by the motion of the arms. She passed near me on her return to the shore, but without perceiving me, and to my surprise I recognized her as one of the visitors of the past summer; an exceedingly lovely girl of some eighteen years of age, whose variableness of expression had often struck me, when I had passed her walking with her companion, a fair handsome middle-aged lady.

 

            The aspect of this girl produced on me the impression that she was suffering from some heart-affection, but not of the kind for which a sojourn in Iceland is commonly prescribed. When her thoughts were diverted from herself, it seemed to me, no maiden could be more bright and gleeful. Absorbed in contemplation, she was the picture of woe.

 

            After seeing that she had returned safe to her dwelling, I suffered my imagination to dwell on her, and her strange manner and reckless action; and to frame an hypothesis which found vent in the following verses.

 

A maiden stood on a sunny shore,

Where the waters rippled brightly,

And tender breezes gently bore

The song she sang so lightly

“Dance as thou wilt, oh happy sea!

My heart leaps up in gladder glee,

Far brighter rays within me shine,

Than gild that dazzling breast of thine!”

 

A woman stood on the rocky shore,

Where the waves were driving madly,

And scarce was heard amid their roar,

The strain she poured so sadly.

(p. 384)

“Rave as thou wilt, oh, driven sea,

Thou canst not match my agony:

On sharper rocks than thou dost know,

My all of joy is dashed to woe.”

 

Again, beside the ice-bound shore,

Where the ocean, frozen, slumbers;

The wintry breezes slowly bore

Her low and measured numbers.

“Freeze to thy depths, oh marble sea;

This heart will colder, harder be!

Nor sun, nor wind, again can move

My stricken soul to life or love.”

 

            Having illustrated these verses, making for the last one a facsimile of the scene I had witnessed, and which had suggested them, I sent my work home; but could not so easily dismiss this lovely, and evidently unhappy, girl from my mind. I sought for opportunities of seeing her close. I ascertained the name she and her companion were known by, but it was strange to me. So far as was apparent, they were mother and daughter, in retirement for the daughter’s health.

 

            My glimpses of them were but rare, and the scene on the shore was not repeated. However, I saw the young lady close enough and often enough to become deeply impressed with a sense of her beauty and worth. Whether or not I was absolutely in love, I do not undertake to determine. I tried to think that I was not, but that only my fancy was touched, for the idea of coining my heart into money was infinitely repugnant to me. I have reason to believe, however, that the most popular able-book in London, and particularly in the Triangle, before that winter was over, was one which contained the two sets of verses just given, with illustrations in which the colour-printers had admirably seconded the artist’s designs; and also a third set, upon the significance of which the reader may form his own hypothesis; the whole volume being entitled Winter Reminiscences of an Artist in Iceland.

 

Why haunt me when I know thou dost not love me?

Why haunt me when thou never canst be mine?

(p. 385)

’Tis not thy bliss to fill the air above me

With gleams of visions false e’en while divine.

 

Why wilt thou still diffuse thy look and tone

O’er every spot my wand’ring footsteps seek?

Why leave me not to tread my path alone,

Unwatched by eyes of thine, so pure and meek?

 

Yet, no, I cannot with thine image part,

Or cease with thoughts of thee my soul to fill.

Thou dost not love me, perfect as thou art;

But I love ever, therefore haunt me still!

 

 

 

CAPÍTULO III

 

            ON my return to England, I took up a temporary abode in the Intellectual quarter in London; and removed thither all my effects, thus completely forsaking both the neighbourhood and the association-s of the Remnant. I was enabled to do this without regret, regarding, as I did, that sect as the cause of all the miseries of my life, foremost among which stood the barrier erected by their superstition between my mother’s soul and my own. Regarding, I say, this sect as worshippers of a demon, and believers in human sacrifices, sacrifices of minds and consciences, if not of body, I was not disposed to endure the remonstrances which my apostasy was sure to evoke from my mother’s friends. As I had no notion of letting my purpose be affected by anything they might say, I thought it best to escape the annoyance of listening to them, by holding myself altogether aloof.

 

            But, while thus abhorring the system to which I had been subjected, and resenting the unhappiness it had caused me, I found myself hesitating to declare positively that the evil had, in my case, been an unmixed one. I fancied that I could trace the development of anything that might be valuable in my

(p. 386)

disposition or character to the hard training I had undergone I n the conflict between duty and affection. But though, for me, from evil had been educed good, it did not follow that I should be kindly affected towards the evil. Besides, might not the character which was capable of such alchemy, have been, under other and more favourable conditions, far more advantageously developed.

 

 

            I said something of this kind one evening, when in conversation with a little group of men whom I met in the salon of the Triangle. My friend, the literary agent, was a member, and on my returning to England free from all motive for concealment, he introduced me to the Club as a visitor. The evening in question was the first I had ever passed in society that was congenial to me. I was so little accustomed to the ways of the living world, that, while observing with all my eyes, and listening with all my ears, I scarcely ventured to exercise my tongue. In ‘fact, I felt very much as I imagine one to feel who, after being blind for years, first opens his eyes upon the things around him.

 

            But the kindness I met with when it was known that I was not merely the artist of several of the favourite books then lying on the salon table, but one of the family of Wilmer’s who had been so long and favourably known in the Triangle as the close friends of the Avenils, and their early associates in the guardianship of the young Carol, whose name had since been in the months, and whose character in the hearts, of all men, – the kindness I hereupon met with broke down all my diffidence and reserve, and made me feel that a t last I had come among my own kind. A stray soul welcomed to bliss by sympathizing angels, could not feel otherwise than; did on that ever-to-be-remembered evening.

 

            The group to which I had been introduced consisted of my host, L o rd Avenil and some of us sisters, the son of Mistress Susanna, a fine young fellow of nearly my own age, who tore his mother’s name, and another, who at first sat writing at a table near us, and to whom my host said he would presently introduce me.

 

(p. 387)

            Young Avenil apologized for the absence of several of his aunts and cousins, who he said would otherwise have made a point of being present to welcome me, but were under an obligation to attend in some distant town at the opening of a new Triangle, of which they were the architects and decorators.

 

            The questions with which I was plied respecting the history of my family since their secession from the world to the Remnant, and the nature of the life led by the sect, gave me plenty to say without betraying my ignorance of things in general. It seemed to me that the man who sat at the writing table, though apparently intent on his occupation, was not unobservant of our conversation. His face was in shade, and I could not discern his features, but thought that I could now and then feel a gleam, as from lustrous eyes, resting upon me.

 

            I had, in reply to their friendly curiosity, been describing the feelings with which I now regarded the sect from whose blighting influences I had effected my escape, very much in the terms I have set down a little above. The stranger had caught my words, and apparently found some chord in his nature struck by them. For the first time he joined in the conversation, saying, without a word of ceremony, –

 

            “Your own nature has divined the spell with which once upon a time I found myself obliged to conjure away the demon of negation for a young friend in circumstances not altogether different from your own. He, too, was an artist, but through ease of circumstances was idle and luxurious. He believed in the superintendence of unseen influences, and reproached them for not interfering to save his life from being wasted, but had not strength of resolution to make the necessary effort himself. Prayer, as you doubtless have often observed, is very apt to take the form of requiring another to do our duty for us. In the wantonness of idleness he took to gambling, and did not leave it until he had lost the whole of his fortune. He was now more than ever bitter against those whom he considered as the guardians of his fate. But he had not leisure to indulge his bitterness. Necessity compelled him to turn his hand to toil. I watched, but said nothing. His work succeeded, for it

(p. 388)

was very good, and he made a name and a fortune. ‘l have beaten the spirits,’ he said to me exultingly. ‘When I trusted myself to fortune they let it turn against me, and min me. I have remade myself by myself! No thanks to my kind guardians!’

 

            “ ‘And you are happier now,’ I said, ‘than before your adversity?’

 

            “ ‘Happier and better. It has made me a man!’

 

            “ ‘And without your providential spirits having any hand in it?’

 

            “ ‘Why, they turned the luck against me,’ he said.

 

            “ ‘But if you are so much better,’ I asked, ‘can you say the luck was really against you?’

 

            “ ‘Ah, I see!’ he said, and added, ‘It is a case, I suppose, of things working together for good. But I did not know that I could be called one who “loved God.” ”

 

            “And of course you suggested that perhaps the love was the other way,” interposed Lord Avenil, addressing the speaker. “But, my dear Carol, do you know that that is the most immoral story I ever heard even you tell. It is a direct incentive to gambling. What will our new-found friend here think of the company be has got among. Come, I am glad you have done writing. I have been wanting to introduce you to the son of your earliest nurse, Lawrence Wilmer, in whose arms you were first dandled on the iceberg, and to whose ingenuity you owe your very name.”

 

            “I am glad you did not introduce us before,” said the other, rising and advancing to me with the look in his eyes and over his whole countenance that I well remembered, – the look that perforce drew all men to him. “I am glad you did not introduce us before. The delay has enabled me to wish to know the son of my dear lost Lawrence Wilmer for his own sake, as well as for his father’s. But you must know,” he added, “that unless I am very much mistaken, this is not our first interview. Am I not right?” he said, addressing me.

 

            “It is so, indeed,” I said, “and that first interview has never left my memory. But I did not think our few moment’s converse

(p. 389)

in the Alberthalla could have enabled you to remember me. Besides, I was but a lad then.”

 

            “Ah,” he replied, “I read souls, not faces merely. And I am disposed to think that though your face be older, your soul is younger than it then was.”

 

 

            The conversation which followed was of a kind the most grateful to me, making me feel that from an adventurer and an outcast, I had become a member of a family and a home. I was about to retire with the friend who had brought me, but was stopped by Carol, who said that he would take it as a great favour if I would accompany him to his own rooms, as he wished some further converse with me. He then walked some steps with the literary agent, and I heard him on parting from him say, –

 

            “My dear sir, you have performed my commission to my complete satisfaction, and earned my warm gratitude. He seems all that you have described him.”

 

            Then rejoining the party, he said, –

 

            “Avenil, you will forgive my appropriation of our friend for the rest of the evening. There is much that I wish to talk about with him. Indeed, you must not be surprised if l grudge a large share of him at all.”

 

            Thus I found myself installed more as a son than as a stranger in the private dwelling-rooms of Christmas Carol. The only change I noted in him was that he seemed at times less buoyant of manner and spirit than he had at first appeared to me, as if through the burden of some present grief. But this was only when silent. In conversing he was all himself.

 

            To my surprise, what he took most interest in was my recent sojourn in Iceland. The few questions he asked about my previous life indicated a familiarity with it altogether unaccountable to me at that time. The incidents of my stay in Iceland, which had suggested the verses and illustrations already referred to, were the points on which he seemed specially anxious to gather information.

 

(p. 390)

            I told him all I had seen that bore on the subject, not concealing the sentiment which had been evoked in my breast. I acknowledged my ignorance as to how far love or compassion predominated in me. That the damsel was as pure and good as she was beautiful and sad, I declared that I had no manner of doubt, and should esteem myself fortunate could I have the privilege of consoling her.

 

            He said that, artist-like, I had evidently constructed a complete romance upon a slender foundation; and that it would probably be better for my career as an artist, as well as for my happiness, were I to keep to my dream, and shun the reality. He added with a smile, which appeared to me to have in it more of sadness than of mirth, that he hoped I was not seriously smitten.

 

            I replied that I did not think I was at present, but felt that I might very easily become so, inasmuch as I was singularly amenable to the influence of faces and voices, and had considerable faith in my faculty of divining character by them. I added that the conclusion which now seemed to me most probable, was that this young lady was suffering as much through her own act as through that of another, for I had read in her looks contrition as well as resignation; yet nevertheless, I was convinced that even if she had herself committed a wrong, it was not through lack, but through excess of heart; and I could forgive any act that had been thus prompted, no matter what it might be. “In the sect in which I was brought up,” I added, “we profess to hold in high estimation a book which we are taught to believe is now-a-days little considered by any hut ourselves, – not that we understand it, or get much beside harm from it. I have, however, always found a mighty significance in one of its utterances. It is this: – ‘Her sins, which are many, are forgiven her, for she loved much.’ My own people, following, I believe, some of the early Christian fathers, hold that this sentence ought to “be expunged, as having an immoral tendency. For me, it contains the whole gospel. I cannot bring myself even to regard as sin that which is done for love, and not for self.”

 

(p. 391)

            I suffered myself to be led on in this way, seeing that, so far from attempting to direct the conversation into another channel, he was at least content with the topic. To myself it was so great a relief, after my life of suppression and reticence, to utter my mind freely to one whom I intuitively recognized as capable of comprehending me, that I experienced not the slightest pang at such departure from my habitual reserve.

 

            “We have left far behind us,” he remarked, in an absent, meditative manner, “The times in which love and sin were commonly linked together in people’s minds. Sin now-a-days is associated with breach of contract, or unfaithfulness, both being forms of selfishness. However imprudent an individual may be in yielding to the impulses of love, there is no sin unless some one be defrauded thereby, though, of course, there may be much inconvenience. This is now the popular and general sentiment on the subject, and humanity has gained infinitely in happiness since its adoption. Still, I can imagine a nature so constituted ns to feel bitter mortification on the score of having ignored the judgment of those who were entitled to be taken into confidence, – a mortification that would constitute repentance, and make a second and like defect of conduct impossible.”

 

            I said that it seemed to me that the sentiment of mortification was scarcely possible, except in one who had previously regarded himself as infallible. That as I read life, it is a series of lessons from experience; by its very constitution involving error, even error moral as well as intellectual.

 

            “The old contest,” he said, manifestly speaking to himself rather than to me, “between experience and intuition. I have taught her to follow heart alone, even as I myself have followed it, and naught but sorrow has come of it, sorrow to both of us.”

 

            Here the clock seemed to have caught his eye, for he said, looking at it, –

 

            “There will be no more signals tonight. I thank you for having given me your company thus late. Tomorrow, if I am not making too great a demand upon you, I shall have matters of greater interest to impart to you. I quite long for the time

(p. 392)

when you will become a resident with us. Avenil says it will be like old times to have a Wilmer once more in the Triangle. I wonder whether you will find in any of his nieces a charm to counteract your recent impression.

 

            I left him after promising to return for breakfast, and having a sort of instinctive conviction that he knew more of me than he bad said, or than I could comprehend, and that there was a relation between our lives scarcely to be accounted for by the fact of his having been first nursed by my father on the iceberg. His conversation also perplexed me. Though coherent in itself, it seemed to vary its object, and point sometimes to himself, sometimes to my own recent experience, and sometimes to some third person with whom his mind evidently was much occupied.

 

 

 

CAPÍTULO IV

 

            BREAKFAST was already prepared when I arrived at the Triangle next morning. But my host was engaged in an adjoining room, and I had leisure to look round the apartment into which I had been shown. It was the same that I had been in over night, a small and sumptuous chamber, evidently a favourite one, to judge from its comfortable homelike aspect, and the character of its conveniences and decorations.

 

            Being an author and an artist, my first glances of course fell upon the books on the tables, and the paintings on the walls. I was pleased rather than surprised to find among the former my own little works. My feeling was one of blank astonishment, when, on going round the room, I found, carefully set up upon a stand by themselves, the whole of the originals of my published drawings, excepting the very latest ones.

 

            While I was gazing in wonder at them, Christmas Carol entered, and apologized for his delay, saying that he was always at the mercy of his telegraphs, and required his friends to make

(p. 393)

allowance for him. Perceiving what I was looking at, he smiled, and said that his daughter had been so much pleased with the first specimens she had seen of that style, that she insisted on purchasing the whole of the series. “I suspect also,” he added, “That she was a little piqued by the artist’s refusal to allow his name to be made known.”

 

            “Does she know it now?” I asked.

 

            He said, “No;” and in answer to my question whether she was a member of the club known as the P. M.s, he said “Yes,” but that she rarely availed herself of her membership, being of a somewhat too retiring and domestic disposition to feel quite at ease in the Common room of a club. “Poor Zöe,” he added, “she has been very much out of health of late, and has caused me great anxiety. I should like to introduce my dear nurse’s son to her. Can you spare yourself to me tomorrow for the day, to run down to my place in Surrey? “She is staying there at present, with her stepmother. We shall find there one whose affection for your father will make him overjoyed to see you, – Bertie Greathead.”

 

            We agreed to start about noon; and in the interval I was made acquainted with so much of his history and pursuits as enabled me to comprehend his exact position, and feel that he was in no way a stranger to me. I was introduced also to the room in which he had been occupied when I arrived. It was a very large one, and entirely taken up with the machinery whereby he controlled the various works he had in hand. In addition to numerous telegraphs, there were surveys and drawings of various portions of the Sahara and the Mediterranean coast; with tables showing the exact progress of the work, and the areas already covered with water. So vivid were his descriptions of the various processes and details that I could almost fancy myself in the country itself, and a witness of his mighty efforts to raise half a continent to a higher stage of development, physical and moral.

 

            About the man himself there was a simplicity and genuineness of character which showed him to be greater than all his works. I said something in reference to the tenets of my old

(p. 394)

sect, – to the effect that his life was a refutation of their doctrine that the world was so much more fit to be damned than to be saved that only supernatural interposition could accomplish any improvement.

 

            He replied that a work called divine, as Creation, if anything, is undoubtedly entitled to be, would fall very far short of deserving such an epithet unless it contained within itself the elements of its own improvement: but that, for his part, he had a strong objection to the use of such words as divine and supernatural, as being apt to mislead. People might as well talk of the super-divine origin of the Deity, as of the supernatural origin of Nature.

 

            His reference to his second wife excited in me unbounded astonishment. Not that I had the slightest right to indulge such a feeling, but the whole aspect and character of the man were so strongly suggestive of steadfast, undying constancy to a cherished ideal, that I could not reconcile myself to the notion of his being married again. And I soon found myself fancying that he was of my mind in the matter, and had not succeeded in reconciling himself to it, now that it had been done.

 

            I was somewhat disappointed to find that our excursion into Surrey was to be made by railway. I hoped to have gone in the famous Ariel. To my enquiry whether he was as fond of aërializing as formerly, he said that his enjoyment depended on his being free from anxiety. He could not bear to burden the light airs aloft with mortal cares and sorrows. “The soaring bird,” he said, “is always joyous, whether he utter himself in song, or le mute in ecstasy. When he has griefs which will not be left the hind, he refrains from making the ascent.”

 

            His longest journeys, however, compelled him to travel as of old, in his Ariel. He was expecting to make one shortly to Africa. The works, which had been so many years in operation, were now approaching completion. He would take me with him to see the first reunion of the Mediterranean and the Sahara, after their long divorce. Already so vast a quantity of fresh water had made its way through the excavations as to

(p. 395)

form several considerable lakes, and many regrets had been expressed at the prospect of their freshness being destroyed by the introduction of the sea. The people who uttered these regrets, however, had no conception of the real magnitude of the contemplated results. Already, he said, had the elongated Shary, in its issue from Lake Tchad, formed a broad and deep channel almost into the heart of the Sahara, and deposited myriads of acres of rich alluvial soil at a level somewhat above that which would be reached by the new sea. The people of Timbuctoo, delighted with the result of the experiment, had themselves proposed to turn the surplus waters of the Niger into the desert. Even from the far off low-lying coast lands of Senegambia and Guinea, came the cry:

 

            “Take our surplus waters, and relieve us of the perpetual curse of inundation and fever.”

 

            The emperor’s engineers had reported that their portion of the work was fast approaching completion, and that the waters of the Mediterranean and Red Seas would soon mingle in the bed of the Desert. In the meantime, he added, the work of raising the people of Soudan above the reach of ignorance and superstition, has been wondrously facilitated by their contemplation of, and participation in, the vast physical operations in progress. Superstition being the product of man’s ignorance of nature and of its capacity for being subdued and controlled, the sentiment soon vanishes in presence of a Science that teaches him that he is himself the appointed conqueror of nature. The people of Central Africa are now well advanced on the path which our own civilization struck out for itself.

 

            My meeting with Bertie Greathead, whom we took in our way, was of the most delightful description. The kind-hearted old man seized upon every point about me that served to remind him of my father, and made me feel at once’ that my life was enriched by the acquisition of another genuine friend. He detained Carol for some minutes after I had ‘parted from him, and then called me back to say I might always count on a home and a welcome whenever I chose to come that way, which be hoped might be often.

 

(p. 396)

            On reaching our destination, Carol’s demeanour indicated more uneasiness than he had hitherto betrayed. As it certainly was not owing to any ill news he had received of his daughter from Bertie, I was at a loss to account for his manifest preoccupation; – unless, indeed, it arose from the recollection of his first marriage mingling with reflections upon the second.

 

            It must be remembered that at this time his domestic history was altogether unknown to me. That his second choice was a good one, whatever the first, might have been fairly augured from the handsome presence and gracious manner of the lady who met us at the door, and after affectionately embracing him, welcomed me, with an admirably proportioned admixture of precision and effusion. If in this first meeting there was anything that jarred on me, it assuredly was not on the side of the lady, but rather on that of her husband, whose manner struck me as colder and more restrained than was appropriate either to the occasion or to the persons concerned.

 

            “Our darling Zöe,” said the lady, amiably overlooking all defects, “would have rejoiced to unite her greetings with mine, but her sad health causes her to keep much aloof from society, – even from mine, though living in the same house. I do trust, my dear Christmas, that your visit will quicken her spirits somewhat.”

 

            “Where is she? Is she well enough to see us?” he asked, in a tone that betrayed no intention of being beguiled into using more words than were absolutely necessary.

 

            “She is in her own apartments, and, of course, able to see her father,” replied the lady, marking the last word with a strong emphasis.

 

            “Then I will ask you, Amelia, to entertain Mr. Wilmer, while I go and see her. He is an author and an artist, and so will be able to appreciate your descriptive “and creative talents.”

 

            Before he could leave the room, the door opened, and a young lady entered, and, running up to Carol, embraced him tenderly. She was tall and fair, but with dark, expressive eyes, and a somewhat Oriental cast of countenance, and about nineteen

(p. 396)

years of age. Great as was her beauty, it struck me that the illness from which she was suffering must have enhanced it by the delicacy ‘it imparted to her aspect. Leading her towards me, her father said, – “Zöe, I have at last captured the artist who refused to give you his name, and brought him to you, to be properly punished for his churlishness. But I must beg you to deal leniently with him, as he is no other than Lawrence Wilmer, the son of the lad who first nursed your father when on the iceberg.”

 

            As she advanced towards me, I fairly gasped. I had not recognized the elder lady, – her stepmother; but I could not be wrong in identifying Zöe with the subject of my dreams, poems, and pictures in Iceland.

 

            Zöe, on her part, regarded me with a look of almost stupid wonderment, for which, as she could not by any possibility have recognized me, I was altogether at a loss to account.

 

            Looking round in my bewilderment, my glance chanced to rest upon the face of the stepmother. The look of intense annoyance which I there beheld, did not serve to interpret to me the situation.

 

            Quickly recovering herself, Amelia (for thus I shall take the liberty of styling her in future) said, in a voice but little corresponding with her recent expression of countenance, for it was bland to a degree:

 

            “Dearest Zöe, are you not exceedingly rash to venture into the presence of strangers in your weak state? Do be guided by me, and retire to your own apartments until we are alone. Pray persuade her, Christmas, to take my advice?”

 

            Neither father nor daughter took any notice of her pleadings; but Zöe came up close to me, and, taking my hand, said:

 

            “We ought to have been friends long ago. Please let me date back and consider that we were so.”

 

            Then turning to her father, she said, still holding my hand:

 

            “Now, papa, darling, I am going to take off my new-found old friend to talk with him all by myself. When you want us, you will find us in my room.”

 

            And she actually led me away without suffering me to raise

(p. 398)

an objection against such abrupt desertion of the party. I caught, however, a glance of encouragement from her father, upon whose face there was a curiously mingled look of apprehension and gratification.

 

            She did not utter a word until we had arrived at her own little drawing-room, and I followed her example. She told me afterwards that she liked me for that, as any other man would have talked all the way. Entering the room, she led me straight up to a picture-stand, on which stood some drawings which I was at no loss to recognize. They were my Iceland illustrations; one of them representing the incident of my beholding her out on the floe, making wild moan to the ice-locked deep.

 

            “There!” she exclaimed, pointing to the stand, “I will say nothing to you, and hear nothing from you, until you have explained to me how you came to paint those pictures and write those verses.”

 

            Her eager look as she said this, impressed me with the idea that her mind was still suffering from the shock it had evidently received before her visit to Iceland. Doubtful how my answer would affect her, I led her to the sofa, and made her sit down before I satisfied her curiosity.

 

            “I was in Iceland,” I said, “at the same time that you were there.”

 

            “Then you saw me go out upon the ice-field to drown my-self, and come back without having done so because I couldn’t find a hole?”

 

            “I must ask your pardon,” I returned, “for the liberty I have taken in representing a scene which concerned you. Had it occurred to me that it would ever be recognized by one to whom it might give pain, nothing would have induced me to take it.”

 

            “You mistake me,” she said. “Tell me how much you know about me?”

 

            “I know nothing but what my own eyes showed me in Iceland, – that you were good,’ and lovely, and yet unhappy; and what I have learnt today, – that you are the daughter of the

(p. 399)

most admirable of men, and one for whom. I ought to have an hereditary friendship.”

 

            “You may add, and the step-daughter and sister-in-law of a white demon.”

 

            “What! You are married!” I exclaimed.

 

            “Yes,” she replied, sadly. “I was in too great a hurry. But I am going to be unmarried. My heart has no place for the false. Oh, what a fool I have been! Even my father does not know all, or nearly all. He has brought you to me to be my old friend. Your works revealed you to me as a friend who knew and understood me long before we met. Now that we have met, I have with you all the confidence of old friendship.”

 

            I pressed her hand for a moment, partly in order to assure her of my sympathy, and partly to calm her excitement; for I felt that she was not altogether herself. But I kept silence. Presently she continued, –

 

            “You cannot imagine the relief it is to me to find one who can sympathize without chattering. Oh, that woman! with her sharp-cut lips and careful elocution! How could my father have been so blinded to her character! But he is not a man of the world, – I mean of this world; and her art was supreme. She got tired of practising it when married; or, rather, it was that she found it impossible to be a hypocrite every hour and moment, and marriage is such a revealer. But I am afraid it was all my doing. I wished him to marry her. Her kindness to me was so artfully contrived, that neither of us saw through it until the mischief was done. There was always something about her that jarred on us, though.”

 

            Not knowing what to say, I said nothing, but felt that her antipathy, whatever its object or its justice, was already shared by me.

 

            “Nothing can give me back what I have lost,” she continued, “or remove from my life the evil flavour of the past. Personally I shall be free, on that I am resolved, and my father will not refuse his consent, when he hears what I have to tell him, much as he hates divorces for any.” The law allows divorce to those who are married under a false pretence. But how will it be

(p. 400)

with him? It is true that there is virtually a separation between them, but I doubt whether oven her vileness will suffice to reconcile him to a divorce for himself?

 

            “What! is she not true to him?”

 

            “True? Oh, yes, she is true to him, with all the constancy of a cold, hard nature, scheming ever for its own ends. Stay, you are Artist, and therefore Observer. Did you notice the colour of her complexion and hair?”

 

            “I was struck by their amazing clearness and brilliancy, but scarcely bad time to note more.”

 

            “Do you attach any importance to colouring, in relation to character?”

 

            “Yes, indeed. The addition or subtraction of a warm tint often makes all the difference between a true and kind heart, and a false and selfish one.” And as I spoke, I glanced significantly at her hair, which was of the warmest brown and gold.

 

            “Well, this woman has the cold white hue that belongs to the latter, in her yellow metallic hair and dear skin. Oh! the spectroscopists must be right, when they say that races and temperaments vary according to the metals which enter into their composition. For I am sure that an analysis of Amelia would reveal very strongly the lines indicating the presence of tin and copper, or whatever may be the constituents of brass. My mother bad the rich warm auburn, though much lighter than mine. I know little of her, save that she had been reared in tropical Africa, and possessed a temperament so ardent and impulsive, that she found it impossible to tone herself down to civilization-point. I have been inclined to think that it was the very contrast that led my father to make this last selection. For I know he had much unhappiness in the first.”

 

            “Then his second marriage was scarcely one of mere affection?”

 

            “He thought it was on her side, so well “did she play her part. But he was as much influenced by gratitude, and consideration for me, as by any thought of himself. Oh, how I hate all the kindness she showed me, when l think of the calculating spirit which prompted it.”

 

(p. 401)

            By the time we finished talking, I understood that Zöe and her father had been betrayed into alliances with Amelia Bliss and her brother George, who was much under her influence. The plan had been for the lady to ingratiate herself with Carol, by displaying such affection for Zöe, and such exquisite propriety of sentiment and manner, that he should think he could not entrust his daughter’s education and introduction to better hands. During Zöe’s childhood, Amelia bad lived much at the house in Surrey, and at length, with well-feigned reluctance, and solely she declared for the sake of her darling charge, consented to become her step-mother. Even with the attainment of this great end, she did not at once throw off the mask, but waited until Zöe’s affections had been won by her brother, and a marriage actually contracted. This latter event had taken place in Carol’s absence in Africa, and without his knowledge or expectation, Zöe’s feelings being worked upon by the brother and sister until they were beyond the control of her judgment. It was, however, only on receiving a message in approbation, purporting to come from her father, whom she worshipped, that she finally consented. The aim of all this scheming was, of course, Carol’s wealth. Having secured, so far as was possible, a claim upon this, their caution relaxed. Zöe perceived that she was not loved for her own sake, and Carol found that the fair exterior and plausible demeanour of his wife were but masks to a hard and insincere nature. The first indication she gave of being other than she had hitherto appeared, was her reckless disregard of accuracy in ordinary conversation. To such a degree did she learn to carry this fault, that it was, I have heard, no rare thing for her audience to gaze from her to each other in wonderment, as with precise verbiage ‘and ostentatious affability she poured forth utterances of which the falsehood was too apparent to be glossed over by any other term.

 

            Indeed, she seemed at length to have no other conception of conversation than as a vehicle for boasting; and, regarding the slightest statement made’ by another as intended for a boast, she invariably endeavoured in her replies to cap what had been said.

 

(p. 402)

            To complete ray sketch, and dwell no longer than necessary upon a hateful theme, I may here add that, as the love of display grew with the possession of means to indulge it, there was no department of life in which she did not endeavour to outvie all who came into contact with her. The range and assurance of her conversation demonstrated her pretensions to universal knowledge; and no matter what the eminence of the scholar who ventured to correct her blunders, the attempt invariably terminated in a triumph for her, achieved by sheer force of assertion. So confident was she of the perfection of her own wit, that she allowed none of her attempts at humour to pass without being ‘repeated until not a person present could escape knowing them by heart.

 

            Her husband, after his first shock of amazement at the manifestation of these oppressive characteristics, strove hard to be blind and deaf to them. Observing with more pain than surprise the gradual withdrawal of his acquaintances, and even of his friends, from any society in which she was present, he endeavoured to show her that such displays, even of knowledge, would be in the worst possible taste; but that when they were displays of ignorance, they were utterly intolerable to a refined and educated society. Her way of taking the rebuke revealed an innate vulgarity of soul that altogether sickened him; and in regard to anything that could be brought within the category of mere taste, he never repeated the experiment. His next remonstrance was evoked by her habit of indulging in utterances of the severest uncharity against any person whose reported conduct appeared to her to contain an element of ambiguity. It was with every nerve of his moral nature quivering with indignation, that he listened as she picked the characters of people to pieces, and ascribed bad motives for their conduct, or scoffed at all notions of mercy and forgiveness, even in cases where errors had been atoned for by years of repentance and well-doing. It was only when no longer able to bear the infliction, that he exclaimed, –

 

            “Silence, woman! Do not further blaspheme God’s creatures by finding only evil in them. Are you so conscious of perfect

(p. 403)

rectitude in your own every thought, word, and deed, as to be secure in condemning all others?”

 

            “I am sorry,” she replied, “To find that you do not appreciate a pure and a faithful wife too well to address her in that strain. I will retire to my own apartment and leave you to your reflections. I cannot be humiliated by my husband, whom I only consented to marry for his own sake, and that of his – his – dear child. Oh! that I had retained my independence.” And here she put her handkerchief to her eyes and sobbed, delicately.

 

            “Hear me,” he said, sternly, “and lay to heart what I say. It is no matter for boasting to have the physical characteristic you call purity, when every thought and word is an outrage against every virtue of the soul. Infinitely better is the ardour of the fire than the chastity of the iceberg, for with warmth there is a possibility of life; whereas, of the disposition you evince, there can come nought but utter death. My whole moral nature rises in revolt against the insincerity and hardness you seem to delight in exhibiting. Unless you amend, we must dwell apart.”

 

            It required all the knowledge I have since obtained of Carol’s domestic history, to make me understand how such a monstrous union as this second marriage could ever come about. I can see now how that the very nature of the difference between poor Nannie and this woman contributed to mislead him. He had no fear of any rude impulsive outbreak on the part of Amelia; or of anything being said save that which was exactly the proper thing to suit the occasion. Actress at heart, cold, pitiless, and insincere, – many a less fine, less suspicions nature than Christmas Carol’s might have fallen a victim to her wiles, even without undergoing the long and artfully contrived process of ingratiation, whereby the father was made to believe that in wedding her he was giving as mother to his daughter one thoroughly proved to be worthy of all confidence and affection.

 

            My conversation with Zöe was terminated by the entry of her father, whose face bore an exceedingly grave expression. Zöe commenced pouring out her thanks to him for having

(p. 404)

brought the very brother that she needed, but stopped on observing her father’s face, and said to him in a whisper, –

 

            “Has she been telling you?”

 

            “My dear child,” replied Carol, “I have come to take you and Lawrence to lunch. I hope I have not left him here long enough to tire you.”

 

            “Oh no,” said Zöe, “he is just what I want my friend to be. He lets me talk on and on as wildly as my troublesome head prompts me to do. And when he speaks, it is all so natural and simple that it does not tire me in the least. So different from Amelia’s fatiguing way.”

 

            On reaching the luncheon room we were received with a glance of the keenest scrutiny; but the voice and manner relaxed not a particle of their ordinary careful graciousness. In consequence of Zöe’s remarks I paid particular heed to her stepmother’s complexion, and was startled at noting the accuracy with which she had, so far as I could see, detected the secret of that lady’s character. Probably the marvellous contrast between her own colouring and that of her foe, had unconsciously suggested the hypothesis. Zöe had, in addition to the pure auburn of her mother, just sufficient infusion of her father’s darker blood to give a rich Oriental shade to her whole complexion. Her hair, as I have said, had a basis of gold, but verged on a deep warm brown; a hue which indicated a temperament that required all the larger brain she had derived from her father to balance the mighty impulses of her heart. She was manifestly of a rich and roomy nature; and incapable of a petty action or thought.

 

            Amelia, on the other hand, had the aspect of one from whose veins all the blood has been drawn, and whose vitality is nourished only by a cold colourless lymph. Pondering on this peculiarity as we sat at table, and comparing the lady’s manner with the account I had just heard of her character, I was suddenly struck by a certain look about her which at once suggested the idea that, though whiter of complexion than the whites themselves, her blood was not purely white, but contained a dark infusion, probably of Hindoo or African.

 

(p. 405)

            Observing her closely, with this notion in my mind, I came to the conclusion that she was, either nearly or remotely, of Eurasian descent, that is, a cross between an European and an Asiatic. If this was the case, all was accounted for; and Carol had brought his misfortune upon himself, by failing to ascertain the breed with which he was allying himself.

 

            The more I dwelt upon the characteristics of his wife, as described to me by Zöe, the more did I recognize the identity between them, and those which mark the race of half-castes that owes its origin to our ancient rule in India. The physical beauty and moral deficiency which are too apt to combine in persons thus derived, seemed to have united their extremes in the specimen before me. When once I had arrived at my hypothesis, every word, look and gesture served to confirm it. There was the cold eye, the hard, precise intonation, the watchful glance, the keen ear, the fawning flattering tongue, the head so flat at the top as to indicate the utter absence of a moral sense, but having in front strongly developed faculties of perception and imitation, and at the rear all its capacity for love centered on self, and perhaps on one of its own kind, but the latter through habit of association rather than through tenderness or affinity of character.

 

            This, as I came soon to learn, was the nature of the bond between Amelia and her brother. He was the sole being, beside herself, for whom she cared; and their connection with the Carols was the result of a carefully planned and well executed conspiracy. The sister had, by arts already indicated, gained their entire confidence for herself. The brother was regarded by Carol with distrust, which, out of regard for his wife, he refrained from communicating to his daughter. But his absence in Africa was taken advantage of by both brother and sister, to effect against Zöe what in former times would have been stigmatized as a deliberate seduction. This crime, as an offence in the eye of the law, has with us no existence, each sex being, under their altered relations, held responsible for its own act. Morally, however, the blame rests entirely upon the side which takes advantage of the inexperience, and

(p. 406)

warm feeling, and lack of protection, of the other, to obtain under false pretences that which would be denied were the facts fully known.

 

            Zöe’s horror on discovering that she had been deceived and betrayed, was based solely in her own moral nature. Her un-happiness on this score was sufficient without the added agony of the social stigma once attached to the hopeless victim of the seducer’s arts. Society now-a-days accords to a girl under such circumstances, either a passing laugh of good-natured ridicule, or a smile of kindly compassion, and bids her be more careful in the choice of her next lover. Its serious reprobation falls upon the man. Thenceforth, he has no chance of getting a decent woman to accept him. The sex itself avenges its betrayed member. The fact that I am able to tell and publish this history of Zöe’s first connection, without doing her fair fame the slightest injury, will, at least for those conversant with social history, indicate the enormous amelioration the position of women has undergone.

 

            The fact that Zöe was an inmate of her father’s house, and dependent upon him, imparted to her betrayal a degree of criminality which would be wanting in the case of a girl occupying a less private position. A woman who in early life goes forth from the parental roof to earn her own living and make her own home, avows thereby her readiness to take her chance in the conflict of wits, and an offence against her is not regarded by society with the same degree of reprobation as if she had retained the inexperience and helplessness incident to home nurture. There is the difference that exists between luring a lamb from the fold and pursuing wild game.

 

            The bitterness of Zöe’s feeling had been aggravated by her father’s conduct when he returned from Africa to find his beloved child sacrificed to a man whom he deemed altogether unworthy of her.

 

            “Could you not wait for my return,” he asked, “before giving yourself up wholly?”

 

            “Oh, my father,” she had replied, “I could wait, but he could not. They told me you approved. I believed him to be good; and I – I – loved him.”

 

(p. 407)

            This was enough for the tender parent. He set himself to make the best of it. Perhaps after all, he was prejudiced, and there was more good in Zöe’s lover than he had allowed. He would ask him to come and live in the house, and give him a trial.

 

            The test of constant companionship soon settled the question for Zöe as well as for her father. George Bliss manifested all the evil characteristics of his sister, with this addition, – he had not only basely treated a woman with whom he had been previously allied, but he had denied that any such connection had existed.

 

            He was dismissed, Amelia vehemently protesting her own innocence of any intention to deceive, though owning that her regard for both parties had led her to desire and encourage their union. Zöe perceived, however, that the statements which had been made to herself did not correspond with those made to her father. But the question – who was responsible for the forged message which alone had procured Zöe’s consent? – had remained undetermined. Worshipping her father as she did, the slightest hint of his disapprobation would have sufficed to keep her from yielding.

 

            In their anxiety to be just to Amelia, father and daughter had somewhat receded from their position of hostility and distrust, and encouraged themselves to hope that the recent experiences would have a beneficial effect upon her character. It was while under the influence of this reaction that Zöe had made the trip to Iceland with her stepmother, during the summer that I was there. Since their return, Amelia’s evil characteristics had reasserted their sway, with, if possible, more than the old intensity, reducing both father and daughter to despair.

 

            The freedom with which I had been received by Zöe was altogether foreign to her character. Her mind, which had never recovered from its first shock, had just been excited afresh by a new discovery, which she intended on that very day to communicate to her father. She had been dreading the effect the intelligence might have in embittering his relations with

(p. 408)

Amelia; and eagerly welcomed in me one whose presence might be of service. She had a twofold justification, she said, for at once trusting me wholly. There was the sympathy already revealed in my works; and the fact that her father had never introduced anyone to her in the way he introduced me. His whole demeanour had said to her, “Zöe, he is one of ourselves. Recognize in him a long-lost brother.” Even long afterwards, when completely restored to health, she would have it that I must have regarded her behaviour as deficient in proper reserve, and it required no little art on my part to soothe the distress she suffered on this score. Indeed, I doubt whether it was thoroughly cured until I had recourse to a somewhat extreme remedy. But of that it would he premature to speak now.

 

            Amelia had hitherto, as I have said, received all the benefit of the doubt entertained as to her complicity in her brother’s treachery. By Zöe’s discovery, the doubt was removed. She had overheard in the garden a conversation between the pair, which convicted the sister of being the most culpable of the two, for it revealed her as the author and contriver of the plot, and forger of the false message. Zöe had resolved to relate the circumstance to her father on that very afternoon. It had been a question with her whether she should do so privately, or in her stepmother’s presence. I advised the former, feeling that children, no matter of what age, should never be suffered to witness altercations, or even discussions, between their parents.

 

            My advice was taken, and after lunch – which the scarcely suppressed excitement of Zöe, the anxiety of her father, who was ignorant of the cause of her manner, and the suspicious watchfulness of the stepmother, who struck me as looking on me as a possible obstacle to her brother’s rehabilitation, made anything but a cheerful meal – Zöe took her father apart, and left me alone with Amelia.

 

            I found myself haunted l)y an idea which. kept recurring to me with increased force, namely, that Amelia was not altogether a stranger to me. But I could not recall a single circumstance in confirmation of it. However, we began to talk.

 

            “The Blisses had a great name in India, once,” I said.

(p. 409)

“You are probably descended from the same distinguished family.”

 

            I wanted to obtain an admission of her connection with that country, with a view to verifying my theory of her Eurasian origin; but I was too clever and overreached myself. My ascription to her of a distinguished ancestry set her off on such a flight of glorification of herself and parentage, that I began to feel myself in the presence of one of the most elevated of human lineage. How many times her family had proved the salvation of our empire in Asia, how regal the blood which flowed in their veins, how vast the wealth they had lavished for their country’s good, how wise and courageous the men, how beautiful and good the women, how eagerly sought their alliance in marriage, and how great the condescension of herself and her brother in consenting to associate with the ordinary folk of modern days, – on these and numerous other topics flight soared above flight until I was only saved from being overwhelmed by the augustness of the presence in which I sat, by suddenly recollecting that there was no necessity for believing a word she uttered. So well had she acted, that I had totally forgotten the character Zöe had given me of her. But now this came to me in all its force, needing no further confirmation. Christmas Carol married to an ingrained liar! There could be no greater tribute to her skill in mendacity, than that it had baffled his almost preternatural insight. I saw now the significance of his remark when commending me to her to be entertained by her creative and descriptive talents. It was a sarcasm! Christmas Carol become sarcastic! Here was another tribute to her powers. She had turned the sweetest of natures into bitterness. Truly he was right when he said that she revolted his whole moral being. Association with her was a moral suicide. I saw but one means of rescue for him. Under the old laws that would have been closed. They forbade divorce save as a premium on one sort of vice. Under them Carol would have been chained to this woman “until death did them part,” all, forsooth, because she was “pure,” or because he was so. Away with a word that can be used to describe two things so infinitely wide

(p. 410)

asunder as the respective purities of these two. Worse than worthless is such purity of body where the whole nature is an incarnate adultery with all the powers of malignance. Amelia knew that Carol detested the notion of divorce, and that the soul of Zöe was the personification of constancy. This conviction was the rock upon which her confidence reposed.

 

            Of course, a nature like hers could not realize its own exceeding hatefulness in Carol’s eyes, any more than Carol could all at once comprehend the extent of her vileness. She was too keen, however, not to be conscious of the gulf between them. But she consoled herself by the reflection that in case the worst happened and she was turned adrift, it would be with a hand-some competence to continue her career elsewhere. A man in Carol’s position, and of his character, could not, she argued, throw over one who had held such relations with him, on any other terms, whatever her fault.

 

 

            A message summoned me to Zöe’s room. On my way, I met Carol, who was going to take my place in the conversation with his wife. His face told me that he now knew all, and had taken his resolution. His words charged me to endeavour to soothe Zöe’s excitement.

 

 

 

CAPÍTULO V

 

            THE same evening Carol, Zöe, and I returned to London. On the way, he apologized to me for having dragged me into his domestic affairs. He had been taken by surprise, he said, by the revelation which awaited him; but his daughter’s discovery of the deliberate imposition which had been practised upon them, and of her step-mother’s share it, left him no option but to act at once. Of course the scene had been a most painful one. For the first time the wretched Amelia had found false-hood fail her. All was over between the two families. He

(p. 411)

had pensioned off his wife and his daughter’s husband, on condition that they left him and Zöe absolutely free, and never again ventured within their range.

 

            “And now, for the first time in my life,” he said, “I thank God that he has made divorce.”

 

            Yet he presently added, –

 

            “Had I thought it possible I could save her, I would have continued to endure, and not put her away from me. For a nature genuine and true, however narrow and perverse, I could bear all things. But pharisaic pretence and hollow conventionalism, however fair-seeming outwardly, revolt my whole soul.”

 

            She had owned, he told me later, that but for her conviction that he never would take that extreme step, she would not have presumed upon his forbearance, but would have continued to act her adopted character to the end.

 

            The even had the effrontery to offer him at parting a piece of advice, telling him to be sure and keep her successor on her good behaviour by making the connection one of limited liability only. “We women,” she had said, “who, having neither fortune of our own, nor the ability or inclination to earn our own living by industry, are dependent upon men, are obliged to enact characters which are not natural to us; especially with such men as you, my dear Christmas, who are made to be cajoled. For we have no moral sense, as you call it, of our own, or at least, cannot afford to keep one; though we may affect to have one, and even to be guided by it, in imitation of you, that is, until we deem it safe to throw off the mask. Now that I have been so foolish as to lose you by throwing it off too completely, I suppose I shall have to resume it for a while. I must not let my next success intoxicate me in the same way. Not that I deem myself, or my brother, to have failed entirely. And I am sure you do not grudge our arms such little spoil as they have won for us?”

 

            “Grudge it to you!” he had replied. “Oh, no. You are fairly entitled to every shilling of it. You have earned it hardly. Ah, how hardly! far more so than either of you know. May it prove a blessing to you! Farewell.”

 

(p. 412)

            Before we quitted the train, the notion which had been haunting me about Amelia, made itself clear to me. I now recollected that she had in early life been a member of the Remnant, though not of my mother’s circle. None had known why she had quitted it; but the gossip about her had implied that her perversion was due to her failure to obtain all the credit due to the devoutness of her demeanour. The character she had left behind was that of being a mere actress, who had taken up with the most formal ritual for the sake of the facilities it gave her for compensating the lack of sincere piety by an ostentatious parade of its outward appearance.

 

            On my telling Carol what I had recollected about her, he said that she had, in the very beginning of their acquaintance, owned to him that she had abandoned the faith in which she was brought up, in consequence of the emptiness and unreality of its formalism; and claimed his sympathy for the painful struggles of conscience she had undergone, – a sympathy he had unsuspectingly accorded.

 

            “Perhaps, after all,” he continued, “I am unduly hard upon her. Had she been reared in a less narrow system, she might have found legitimate scope for her talents as a professional actress. Whereas, under a regime of repression, the propensity to falsehood has eaten into and vitiated her whole character.”

 

 

            After we reached the Triangle, Zöe continued to be so painfully affected that her father bade her retire at once, and sent for medical aid. He, too, vas much depressed, and requested me to stay with him. We sat up together, but spoke little; a word now and then, at considerable intervals. He, like his daughter, preferred silent sympathy to that of the loquacious sort. His utterances, when he did speak, showed that his suffering was for humanity, not for himself.

 

            “Two hearts, and two only, have I specially striven to attach to myself, and redeem by love. In what I have failed I know not. Well, well; better to think the fault is I n myself, than condemn humanity utterly.”

 

            I ventured to suggest that, although we might find it very

(p. 413)

hard to admit that the Supreme may have an ideal for us which is not our ideal for ourselves; yet, with so many types in the physical world, it might be that we erred in demanding that there be but one in the moral.

 

            “Surely,” he replied, musingly, “love is a fire that ought to be able to fuse and assimilate all.”

 

            I had no opinions myself. As Artist, my love had been for freedom and beauty. And on such an occasion, and in such a presence, I should not have propounded opinions if I had been possessed of any. The sentiments expressed by him belonged to the category of feeling, and to one who feels, opinions and arguments are impertinences. Placed as I was, an expression only of sympathy was fitting, and sympathy might well be exhibited in following the train of thought indicated by him. So, not in answer to his last remark, but in pursuance of it I said, –

 

            “Yet, if all things proceed from love, it would seem that love must really be the source even of the differences which lead to our disappointments. If the initial and final stages of being belong to love, harmony, or identity, it may be necessary that the intermediate condition involve opposites and antagonisms. It is as impossible to conceive of conscious existence without differences and degrees, as of a whole without parts, or life without motion. And if opposites of physical nature, why not of moral? In objecting to the essential conditions of life, people really object to life itself. They would have the fruit without the flower, or the flower without the plant, or the plant without the soil, or the soil without the elements, OF the elements without the activity which makes them contend, and mingle, and fructify; in short, they would have results without processes.”

 

            “Forgive me,” he said, “if I have suffered my mind to dwell on one of your earlier remarks, instead of following you throughout. You have unawares trodden upon the heels of a mystery communicated to me many years ago, in one of my flights into the Empyrean: – that with spiritual natures, sex is the product of love, not the reverse as in the merely animal

(p. 414)

world. Without entering on the vexed question, whether in our own case the individual mind precedes and forms the individual body, it is clear that what I have said must be the case, if the absolute mind precedes the material universe. For, if all things have their origin in universal love, the sentiment of love must have existed prior to the manifestation which we call sex.”

 

            “So that what we call good and evil,” I suggested, “may be as male and female to each other, between them constituting and producing life.”

 

            He smiled at this, and enquired to which category I assigned which function; but I confessed myself unable to offer a rule on this point, and said that probably it is sometimes one and sometimes the other. Only, that on the theory of the attraction of opposites, in order to make a perfect marriage between mortals, the better the one side is, the worse the other should be. And at this he smiled again – but not, it seemed to me, as implying that he considered what I had said to be altogether absurd – and remarked that marriage assumed many forms. There were marriages of intensification, as in the spiritual world; marriages of completion, as in the ideal world; and marriages of correction, or discipline, as in the actual world. And here he sighed.

 

 

            Some days passed before Zöe consented to see me again. Her father took her consent as a sign of amendment. The excitement which had characterized our first meeting, and under whose influence she had so readily made me her confidant, had quite passed away. In her present phase of reaction, she took an exaggerated view of what she persisted in regarding as her unfeminine forwardness, and expressed herself as ashamed to see me. I sent back a jocular message, saying that if it would put her more at ease to know that I was out of the world, I should be happy to do her the service of quitting it; but that I thought it a, better plan that she should convince me, by ocular proof, of the extreme propriety of her demeanour when she was quite herself. I could not, however, help deriving a certain

(p. 415)

gratification from her self-banishment. For the self-consciousness indicated by her conduct seemed to me inconsistent with a merely fraternal sentiment.

 

 

            As the daughter mended, the father lost ground. Avenil urged a more active life. His body suffered through his mind. Let him occupy his mind with other things, and all would soon be well. I was now a member of the Triangle, and saw much of him. I sought to bring him down to the Conversation Hall in the evenings, but he shrank from the general view. To me there was an immense delight in the society of the Hall. Tire cultivated intelligence, broad views, and kindly spirit which marked it, perpetually suggested to me a contrast with the sectarianism in which I had been reared. It was as if I had escaped from the stifling confinement and gloom of a vault, into the free air and light of heaven. It seemed so strange to me to find Truth regarded as the sole criterion of any statement, and not its agreement with the tenets of a sect.

 

            The only society which Christmas Carol would receive was that of a few of his most intimate friends, and this in his own rooms. Suddenly he announced his intention of taking Zöe abroad for a change. When I heard this I secretly hoped to be allowed to form one of the party. Either divining or sharing my wish, he said that he hoped on some future tour to have me with him; but this time he thought he was hest consulting the object of his journey by taking his daughter alone.

 

            I thanked him for his thought of me at such a moment, and said that, while I felt toward him and his all the affection and confidence which result ordinarily only from a life-long association, I sometimes marvelled at the existence of such a sentiment on his part.

 

            He smiled, and said, –

 

            “I have known you longer and better than you are aware of. Since our first meeting, in the Alberthalla, I have never lost sight of you. I know your faithfulness, and your labour, and your patience, and how, out of pure tenderness of heart, you strove painfully to reconcile two hardly compatible duties, –

(p. 416)

your duty to your parent, with that which you owed to your own soul. I have seen you tried, and found you true, and that before ever you were aware that any eye beheld you; save that of the Everlasting Conscience.”

 

            “You would scarcely award me the credit of having laboured and not fainted, if you knew all,” I managed to say, my eyes swimming and voice faltering, not less at his words than at the recollections evoked by them.

 

            “I know,” he said, “and regret the extremity to which at one time you were brought. It was owing to my own unparalleled engrossment just then, that I suffered you nearly to slip out of my reach.”

 

            Here he rose, and going to a cabinet, took out a sheet of paper, which he brought and placed in my hands, saying, –

 

            “The loss of this saved you. Do you not remember that it was the turning point of your fortune?”

 

            Glancing at it, I found it was the rough draft of the advertisement my desperation had prompted me to draw up, and which, I now perceived, I must have dropped in the publishing office.

 

            “You don’t look at the other side,” he remarked.

 

            Turning it, I found there some sentences which I had totally forgotten having written. Sentences which showed that, whether speculatively or practically, I had so far familiarized myself with the idea of suicide, as to sum up the arguments for and against it. The conclusion then come to was, that in yielding to the temptation, I should be giving my mother the very un-happiness I was then sacrificing myself to spare her.

 

            “To have carried out the project there contemplated,” he said, “would indeed have been. a terrible waste of your time and powers. But I am going to make a clean breast and tell you all, even though you may resent my action as somewhat impertinent. I chanced to le in the inner room when you were conversing with the agent, and could not avoid hearing your indignant rejection of his suggestion of a mercenary marriage. Partly to spare your own feeling, I would not let you know that you had been overheard. I had always felt as a

(p. 417)

child to your father, and in turn felt as a father to his child. This must be my excuse. Zöe’s attraction to you through your work was altogether spontaneous. I need not describe my satisfaction at finding who it was that had excited her interest. Your position at home made open interference impracticable. I was a black sheep to the pietists of the Remnant; and to have revealed myself then as your friend, would have been to defeat what at that time was the object of your life. In all that the agent did, he acted for me. It is true that I then considered you wrong in not endeavouring to win over your mother at least to a comprehension of your principles and motives; for I thought affection, truthfulness, and sincerity such as yours must sooner or later find an echo in every human heart; most of all in that of your own parent. My own experiences, however, have now convinced me of the contrary, and shown me that you reconciled, in the only way possible to you, the conflicting claims of affection and of faithfulness to your own convictions. You and I alike may find comfort in regarding such absolute incapacity for sympathy as a species of insanity. There is an insanity which comes by training, as well as that which comes by nature; – though too often the one but supplements the other, as in that which takes the form of a narrow sectarianism. You see I speak unreservedly to you, even as to my own son. Would that you could have indeed occupied that place!”

 

            “Is it too late?” I cried, startled out of my cherished secret by this utterance, and the emotion which accompanied it.

 

            “Too late? Yes, you are fit for something better than to be sacrificed to one who is about ––”

 

            He was unable to finish. His voice faltered, and tears ran down his cheek.

 

            “Great Heavens!” I exclaimed, divining his meaning. “I never thought of that. Poor, poor, darling, how terribly she must suffer in the thought.”

 

            “You think that but for that,” he said, “you might have reciprocated her attraction to you?”

 

            “But for that!” I cried. “Aye, and in spite of that! I

(p. 418)

meant all that I said when I expressed my tolerance for the error that comes through excess of heart. Do not breathe a word of it to Zöe; but suffer me, when this trouble is overpast, to strive to win her affection, and convert the brother she deems me, into the lover she deserves.”

 

            He looked his gratitude, and I added, –

 

            “Would that I could believe it would comfort her to know that I, at least, am utterly devoted to her.”

 

            “Nothing can comfort her at present,” he said, “save the assurance that she is not despised by others as she despises herself.”

 

 

 

CAPÍTULO VI

 

            THE great work approached its completion. Already were hundreds of square miles of the Sahara covered with fresh water which had found its way from beneath through the excavations. The admission of the ocean would cover thousands of square miles, even right up to the point where the river which issued from Lake Tchad was bringing down its rich sediment to fertilize the shore of the new sea. Careful surveys had been made to ascertain the precise limits to which the inundation would rise, and all populations within those limits had been removed to a safe elevation. So broad and deep was the channel by which the water was to enter, that the spectacle of its first admission was looked forward to with much interest and curiosity. Already a town had sprung up at the entrance, and a spacious harbour had been constructed by means of extensive breakwaters. The Emperor of Soudan, mindful of his challenge to a race between his own engineering operations and those of his cousin, had confessed himself the loser, ascribing his defeat to the unexpected hardness of the rock to be pierced. He hoped, however, that even if his tunnel could not be extended to the Red Sea, it might still be utilized for purposes of irrigation.

 

(p. 419)

            The rock and soil left to serve as a barrier to the sea until the final moment of admission, were so cut and bored as to be readily carried away, by the rush and deposited in the deeper hollows of the desert. The agency whereby the last obstacle was to be removed from the channel’s mouth, consisted of a vast system of mines, which were to be exploded simultaneously.

 

            The labour of supervising the final preparations had been most beneficial to Carol’s health. He appeared to his friends to be once more himself. Zöe, too, had regained much of her old brightness and elasticity, though not until after she had passed through a most severe ordeal.

 

            We went, together with a large party from the Triangle, to the opening ceremony. The assemblage of vessels and notables from all parts of the world, made the occasion one of un-paralleled magnificence. Of course, Christmas Carol, as the projector and executor of the scheme, would under any circumstances have been the most conspicuous personage present. But his more than imperial munificence in undertaking and carrying through such vast operations at his own sole cost, and without prospect of ulterior gain to himself, and the world-wide reputation he had acquired for the singular benevolence, simplicity, and nobility of his character – in some of the ruder countries obtaining for him the credit of a supernatural origin – these, not to reckon his personal beauty of face and form, caused him to be the one person whom to have seen, was to have seen all, and to have missed, was to have missed all.

 

            At a given signal, in sight of the multitudes assembled on land, sea, and in air, the mines were fired. A number of muffled explosions in rapid succession was then heard, and the whole mass heaved and sank and rose again, like the surface of a boiling fluid. Then from myriads of pores the smoke oozed slowly out, showing that every particle of the soil was loosened from its neighbour. This absence of coherence in the mass was presently demonstrated by a slight movement of the surface, in the direction of the channel. This was proof that the experiment had succeeded; for the movement was caused by the

(p. 420)

pressure of the sea against the mouth of the channel. A few moments more, and the intervening obstacles had been swept away, as the sea rushed, a broad and mighty stream, through the opening, and along its appointed course, towards the heart of the Sahara, that vast region, from which it had for myriads and myriads of ages been utterly divorced, but with which now it was to be rejoined in a happy union for evermore!

 

            The success of the enterprise thus far being ensured, the Emperor of Soudan, as the next principal personage concerned, turned to Carol and tenderly embraced him, placing at the same time a magnificent jewelled chain about his neck, while salvos of artillery rent the air.

 

            The likeness between the royal cousins was undeniable; but, I was assured, not so striking as it had been. The Emperor was much the stouter of the two, and his countenance bore an. expression indicative of a life of self-indulgence, and little calculated to win trust. At least, such was the impression it made upon me.

 

            Then followed an outburst of music from bands stationed not only on the earth and the sea, but also in the air, their combined harmonies mingling with the rush of the waters as they hastened towards the longing desert in such volume as to suggest the idea that the level of the ocean itself must soon be sensibly lowered; a rush that would continue for months, until the thirsty sands of the new ocean-bed were satisfied, and could drink no more, and every remote nook and comer of the desert filled up to the level of the Mediterranean itself.

 

            The music of the bands then ceased, and a myriad voices, chiefly of the labourers who had been employed on the works, commenced pouring forth to a wild melodious chant, the anthem, –

 

“Return, oh Sea! unto thine ancient bed,

Where waits thy Desert Bride,

With dust bespread,

And parching sand –

Her fount of tears all dried –

Waits for thy moistening hand

To cool her fevered head.

Return! return! oh Sea!”

 

(p. 421)

            The words were written by me without any idea of their finding publicity. But Carol took a fancy to them, and having turned them into Arabic, and had them set to music, he made their performance a feature in the proceedings of that great day. The final verse – that lauding the hero of the event – I ought to state, was added surreptitiously, and took him entirely by surprise. The whole was sung with vast enthusiasm; the blending of the musical rhythm as it rose and fell, with the constant rush and roar of the flood, producing an effect altogether extraordinary.

 

            Even with night the music did not cease. The whole of the parties who were afloat in the air, had made an excursion down the course of the stream to witness its issue from the channel, and diffusion over the low-lying reaches of the desert. Music had accompanied us all the way, and long after we had returned to our resting-place and lain down to sleep, it might be heard in the air, now far_ and now near, now high and now low, now singly and now massed, as the aërial bands flitted to and fro, ever maintaining their sweet utterances, careering and wheeling over the landscape like a flight of tuneful curlews.

 

            It had been a question how best to dispose of the vast quantity of rock and soil which had been excavated; and it was decided to heap it in a mass near the interior end of the channel, so as to form a foundation for a maritime city. This city, it was urged by the assembled magnates, ought to be called after its founder. They accordingly fixed upon the name it now bears, which will serve to perpetuate the beloved memory to all future time.

 

            There was nothing to detain us longer on the spot. The hot season was advancing, and Zöe was still far from strong. Carol invited me to accompany him and his daughter to Switzerland, where the best effects might be expected from the mountain airs, and where, as he said, I should find fresh scenes on which to exercise my art.

 

 

 

(p. 422)

CAPÍTULO VII

 

            HIGH up on the slopes of the Alps, in green vales embosomed amid peaks, passes, and glaciers, inhaling new life with every breath, and new vigour with every step of our daily rambles, we passed the happiest days it had been my lot to know. Carol was much occupied in examining and tabulating the accounts daily received from various points in the Sahara of the rise and advance of the waters. And I worked hard at my painting, giving meanwhile lessons to Zöe, who had insisted on learning from me.

 

            Thus constantly and intimately associated with her, and witnessing the abounding richness and fullness of her nature, I learnt to comprehend and appreciate the impulse which prompts the true woman to rank her love as supreme above all prudences and conventions whatsoever. Her soul was a sea which but needed some fitting shore on which to break and lavish all the blessings of its ineffable tenderness. So harmoniously was she constructed, that it was impossible to tell whether it was in heart or brain that her ideas and impulses had their origin. Thinking and feeling were with her an identical process. In short, in every respect of heart, mind, form and demeanour, she was all that I could wish a woman to be, save that she seemed to be utterly unconscious that I was not really her brother.

 

            Much in her as I could trace of her father, there was also much for which he could not be considered responsible. Her colouring of character as well as complexion showed this. She was something more than merely the feminine of himself, a difference not attributable to difference of sex. It was on my telling him the result of my analysis that he gave me the history of her mother. I then clearly saw that Zöe was the due resultant of the compounded natures of her parents.

 

            On my owning to him the disappointment I felt at her apparent inaccessibility to anything like the tender feeling I entertained for her, he bade me have patience, and not betray my

(p. 423)

passion by the slightest word or sign. “Nature,” he said, “is the best teacher and guide. The healing of a wound cannot be hurried, for it is a growth that is required. A premature disclosure might put all back. Nothing can be done at present beyond making the conditions favourable to the growth we desire.”

 

 

            “Making the conditions favourable to the growth we desire.” The more I pondered over this utterance, the more fully was the depth of the philosophy contained in it revealed to me. I saw too, that it comprised the ruling principle of his life. Nothing about him was too insignificant to illustrate it. He applied it alike to the regeneration of a planet, the development of a soul, and the cultivation of a flower. To bring out the latent indwelling Deity that he recognized as substanding all existence, was for him the sole end of the life worth living.

 

            The phrase, – “background of Deity,” was used by him one day, as resting by the edge of a glacier, he called the attention of Zöe and myself to an exquisite little flower, which was flourishing there in spite, apparently, of the most unfavourable conditions of chilling ice and naked rock.

 

            “See,” he said, “how this plant seems to contradict all our theories respecting the necessity to growth, of the conditions favourable to it. Can you account for its flourishing in such a spot, Zöe?”

 

            “Why should it not,” she replied, somewhat bitterly, I fancied, “when evil flourishes under conditions which appear to us to be favourable only to good?”

 

            “Succeeding so well, under such conditions,” I suggested, “To what might it not have attained under more favourable ones?”

 

            “Thus do the life and character of each of us ever tinge our philosophy! “said Carol, with a smile of sadness. “But yours, Lawrence, is not in perfect accord with itself. The point is one which no man can determine. Who knows how far the discipline of uncongenial conditions serves to produce that which is best in us? If I mistake not, you once admitted as much to me.

 

(p. 424)

            I said that certainly I had found, even in my work as an artist, a liability to be carried in a direction contrary to the influences prevailing at the moment. For instance, it was always in summer that I succeeded inmost vividly representing the phenomena of winter, and in winter those of summer. It seemed as if there were a reaction against one’s actual conditions.

 

            “The ideal,” he said, “is more to you than the actual, and requires the force of contrasts to elucidate it. It is often so in life and character, as well as in art. Yet, nevertheless, and in spite of all anomalies, it is our duty to make the conditions as favourable as possible to the best, even though we know they sometimes will fail to produce the best. For what is the beauty of this very flower but the result of conditions favourable to such beauty, enjoyed by its progenitors near or remote? And what the evil which Zöe deprecates, but a survival from times, perchance long past, of the effect of conditions unfavourable to good?”

 

            “We should hardly have noticed this flower had we found it in a conservatory,” observed Zöe. “Instead of reigning a queen of beauty there, it would be but a humble courtier.”

 

            Something suggested to me the ancient class-feuds, by which, prior to the Emancipation, our social system was disfigured. And I made a remark to the effect that if the elements were possessed of sentiments corresponding to those of humanity, we might find the soil, the moisture, the atmosphere, and the light, grudging the flower the very sweetness and beauty which it derived from them; much as the labouring classes used to indulge in enmity against the wealth, culture, and refinement which were the noblest result of their own toil.

 

            “Add,” said Carol, “chiefly owing to the selfishness which once governed the distribution of those results. Those who had the power took all, and gave back nothing beyond what they were obliged. A veritable Jacob’s ladder has been man’s ascent, first physical, then mental, from the first step planted in earth, to the apex piercing the clouds. In each of his stages, – the struggle for individual existence, the organization for

(p. 425)

conquest and supremacy, and the final one of combination for mutual advantage, such as the conditions so always have been the results. It is when the parts show themselves so engrossed by their own personal interests, as they deem them, as to be incapable of sympathizing with and aiding the higher destinies of the whole, that a state of things is produced which contains the elements of its own destruction. That is my definition of evil.”

 

            I had long wished to know precisely what form the Universe had assumed in his mind, and I took this opportunity to make a remark which led him to give expression to it.

 

            “Whatever the state or stage of existence,” he said, “There must still be a mystery recognizable by the faculties of those who are in that stage. The ability to apprehend such mystery involves the passage to a higher class. And until we have such ability, we are always liable to be in some error respecting the things which he immediately below it. My view of the higher phenomena of the Universe may be utterly in error, although I have taken into account all the facts which I have been able to find in those phenomena, and tried to generalize from them with an unprejudiced mind. However, for the present, this is where I stand. Deity, which is the All, has put forth out of himself, as it were, the whole substance of which the Universe is composed, withdrawing himself into the background, and leaving each various portion to the control of certain unvarying rules. These rules constitute the Laws of Nature. Proceeding through an infinity of stages, these portions gradually attain a consistency and consolidation which render them incapable of relapse into a lower stage.

 

            “That is, they become, as individuals, indestructible and immortal. But to be this, they must harmonize in their character and emotions with the great Whole from which they originally sprang. Failing to do this, by reason of discordant self-engrossment, they prove themselves unfitted to endure, and so decompose and become resolved into their original elements, their constituents remingling with the surrounding universe. It is thus that whatever is sufficiently beautiful and good continues,

(p. 426)

by force of its own attraction, to endure and grow; while that which is obnoxious becomes dispersed, and vanishes by force of its own inherent antagonism to the general conditions of existence. I like thus to think of the good as enduring for ever, and of the evil as being dissolved and recast in fresh moulds, to come out good and enduring in its turn. I say, I like to think this. I cannot prove that it is so. Though at present I see nothing that is inconsistent with its being so.”

 

            I ventured to remark that, at any rate, he had determined for himself the question between Theism and Atheism in favour of the former.

 

            “Call it rather,” he said, “the question whether the material with which infinity was originally filled, and of which, therefore, the universe is composed, possessed among its other endowments faculties corresponding to those of sensation, consciousness, and thought, as a whole? Yes, I do so decide it, at least for myself; and for this reason. If the organized and individual portions alone were capable of thought, they would be superior to the rest, and able to penetrate its mystery; and so, a part would be superior to the whole. But the existence of mystery incomprehensible by the parts, demonstrates for me the superiority of the Whole in all qualities possessed by those parts. It baffles the utmost scrutiny of the most advanced intelligence of any of its parts. What but a superior intelligence can do that? But, beyond these or other reasons, I have feelings, – feelings which compel me to the same result. It is a necessity of my nature to personify the whole, and to regard the laws of nature as but the thoughts of God. But I am not therefore unable to comprehend the stand-point of those who deem it most probable that, as in the individualized part, so in the Universal Whole, the mechanical and automatic should precede the mental and conscious. Let each be faithful to his own lights. Only the presumption which leads men to dogmatize is utterly condemned. Imagine anyone who possessed but a fractional knowledge of our natures and circumstances, claiming dogmatically to define one of ourselves! Methinks we should resent it as a great liberty.”

 

(p. 427)

            “Ah! father,” cried Zöe, “This flower, pretty as it is, will not be among your indestructibles. See! it is drooping already. And, look! here is a worm at the core eating away its heart.”

 

            As she said this, I observed his whole frame shiver as with a sudden tremor.

 

 

            Walking homewards he resumed the subject of conditions, saying, –

 

            “When I think of the force that has been constantly exerted through myriads of generations, to compel men to hate liberty, to hate each other, and to fear the light, and how tremendous is the strength of hereditary impressions thus accumulated, I am lost in wonder at the marvellous vitality of the divine spark within us. That it should have survived those ages of falsehood and suppression, is to me the standing miracle of the world. You remember, Lawrence, our first meeting, and the effect your first lesson in English history had upon you? Well, will you believe it? there was a time when one of England’s greatest and most trusted Ministers sought to conciliate a priesthood by excluding that very study from an university course. The people of England were then but half awake. But this roused them thoroughly. ‘Perish,’ they said, ‘a legion of ministers, whatever our debt to them, sooner than thus curtail Knowledge and subordinate Truth in deference to that old serpent of Sacerdotalism, which has so long deceived the Earth.’ Ah! they were grand times, those that led up to the Emancipation. Of all the past periods of our country’s history, it is then that I should have chosen to live. And the owls and bats who lived in them used to declaim against ‘the decay of Faith!’ ”

 

            So the summer came and passed.

 

 

 

(p. 428)

CAPÍTULO II

 

            WE were still in Switzerland, when the ear of Carol, ever on the alert to succour or to save, was caught by a cry of distress which came from Egypt. Famine was not yet actually in the land. It was the prospect for the next year that was so gloomy. July, August, had come and gone, and the Nile, which ought to be at its utmost height in September had scarcely risen above its lowest point; and the lowest point that year had been below any ever before known. The failure was, thus, to an extent absolutely unprecedented. It meant starvation to millions. Already were the superstitious populace crying out that it was sent in vengeance for the attempt to redeem the Sahara from its ancient curse. That the judgment was specially intended for Egypt, for consenting to the scheme of her hereditary rival and foe, the royal house of Abyssinia, was manifest from the fact that there had been no lack of rain to swell the Upper Nile and its tributaries. It was by a supernatural intervention that the due, flow of the river had been arrested.

 

            September past, all hope vanished. The river ought to have been now fast subsiding from its inundation. From the parched plains of Egypt and Nubia, teeming with their millions, rose such a cry as can come only from a nation which sees itself on the point of perishing. The heart of the world was stirred; but ere its hands could act, a mighty aërial fleet dispatched by Carol, and laden with food, dropped down, as heaven-sent, into the midst of the now starving masses. But the report, again reiterated, that there had been no lack of rain at the sources, induced him to take another step. He dispatched a confidential scientific expedition by fast aëromotive to ascertain the truth of the statement, and the point at which, if true, the river ceased to fill its bed. The greatness of the distance intervening between the Nile and his excavations made it utterly impossible, he thought, that there should be any connection

(p. 429)

between the two regions to account for the river’s failure. Perhaps some accident had occurred with the imperial operations to the south.” The engineers had some time since reported that they had tapped several springs, the water from which was so abundant as to impede their operations. The tone of the Soudan, and especially of the Abyssinian press at this time, was so menacing and even exultant in respect to their ancient enemy, as to lead Carol to make strong remonstrances to the Emperor, and to represent that such uncivilized conduct seriously imperilled the country’s prospects of admission to the Confederacy of Nations.

 

            The report brought back to Carol excited his utmost alarm. His agent had first come upon the river at Khartoom, where the clear and thick Niles join to form the great river of Egypt. He thought, by attacking his task at this point, to ascertain which branch was in fault. To his surprise he found that both branches had been filled to their usual height, so that the escape must be at some point lower down. On seeking to obtain information, he found himself utterly baffled by the ignorance, real or pretended, of the people.

 

            Leaving Khartoom, he next dropped down upon the river at the point where it is joined by one of its most important branches, the Atbara, – about one hundred and fifty miles below Khartoom. Here he found the natives in a state of wonder and alarm at the extraordinary aspect of things. The branch had performed its duty as usual, but scarcely any water had come down the bed of the main stream. The people, little advanced in civilization or intelligence beyond their remote forefathers, were at first very shy of their interrogator; but, representing himself as allied to the food-commission for relieving the distress caused by the drought, he gained their confidence sufficiently to learn that they had attempted to ascend the river in order to ascertain the cause of its drying up, but were stopped just above Shendy by a party of troops who said that the government had issued orders prohibiting all persons from approaching the river beyond that point.

 

            Now, between Shendy and Halfay, for a space of about fourteen

(p. 430)

miles, the Nile runs in a deep narrow stream through a defile formed by rocky hills. A gloomy place is this, and one which the people of the country care little to visit. The precaution observed in respect to it, therefore, seemed all the more strange to our party of explorers. They knew that the Emperor was driving a tunnel from the Sahara to the Red Sea, but its precise course had not been made known, and the river’s bed was here at least a thousand feet above the sea-level.

 

            Having fixed the point of disappearance within a space of forty or fifty miles, and finding the passage barred, the explorers determined to proceed cautiously. By dint of liberal payment, they obtained the guidance of a native who knew the country well. Then waiting till nightfall before starting, they rose to a height sufficient to escape being seen, and proceeded slowly up the river, making careful observations with their glasses as they went along. They knew that about the centre of the defile was one of the cataracts of the Nile – the sixth – and for the sound of this they watched. As they failed to hear it, they gradually descended towards the earth. To make sure of not missing it. The country seemed utterly deserted, and no lights or other signs of human presence were to be seen. They therefore became bolder, and approached quite close to the river. They thus found the place of the cataract; but the amount of water that flowed over it was so scanty as fully to account for the absence of the expected noise.

 

            Ascending a little further, a glare of distant lights became visible. Seeing this, they rose higher in the air, and continuing their course, presently heard the noise as of a camp, and a prolonged roar as of a mighty rush of waters, but with a more muffled sound than would be made by a cataract.

 

            Pausing directly over the spot, they were able, by means of the lights with which the camp was freely illuminated, to perceive what was taking place below. The guide soon detected a change in the aspect of the spot. His description, added to the testimony of their own eyes and ears, explained all. But at first he was too terrified to speak. Those below were demons, he declared, and not mortals; for they had dug a hole in the

(p. 431)

world, and were pouring the river into it! A further inspection made it appear that a gigantic dam had been constructed slantways across the gorge, and a cutting made in the base of the mountain on the western bank, at the lower end of the dam, and that through this cutting the river was flowing into a deep hollow, for only thus could they account for the roar of its passage.

 

            To make quite sure, they descended upon the river at a short distance above the camp. Here they found the stream flowing full and free as at ordinary times. Then, returning to the place where it disappeared, they crossed the mountain, in order to ascertain whether it issued on the other side. They even went to some distance, but found no traces of it. A final visit of inspection was then made to the place of disappearance, and then it was determined to turn the aëromotive westwards; for Carol had instructed the leader, in case he found himself at a loss, to proceed to the camp at the mouth of the Imperial tunnel, and turn his wits to the best account. He gave “him for this purpose the exact position, in latitude and longitude, of the spot in question. First, however, they returned to Shendy, and set down their guide, charging him, for the present, if possible, to hold his tongue.

 

            In consequence of the mists which covered the earth, and extended far above it, they were compelled to rise to a great height in order to ascertain their position by stellar observations. Having at length arrived over the spot which they were seeking, they returned towards the earth. Here, while still far up, the sounds of music and revelry plainly greeted their approach; for sounds ascend from the earth far more readily than they descend to it. The camp was a blaze of light. Corning near, they saw the Imperial banner floating above a vast pavilion. The sound of rushing waters, too, rose to their ears. Every one below was evidently too busily engaged in carousing to observe them. They would descend close to the earth and make sure, before reporting to their employer.

 

            There was no longer room for doubt. At a distance below the camp, short, yet far enough to be safe, and a little to the

(p. 432)

side of it, where the ground sloped rapidly, was the mouth of an enormous tunnel, and from it issued a volume of water, so vast that it could only be supplied by the sea or a great river. To ascertain which of the two, it was necessary only to taste it. This was soon done. Letting down a vessel, they drew it up filled. The water was muddy, but perfectly fresh. But, listen, what is the meaning of the chorus yonder carousers are singing so lustily? The words are Arabic, and the music is rude. This is the burden of their song: –

 

 

            “Rescued from the hands of robbers, welcome back, O Nile, to thine own kindred. No longer shall Egypt be fat with the fat of Abyssinia, but fed by thee the desert shall rejoice; yea, the Sahara itself shall be turned into a garden! Amen. Amen!”

 

 

 

CAPÍTULO IX

 

            ON learning these things, Carol dispatched a telegraphic message to the Emperor of Soudan. It ran thus: –

 

 

“MY COUSIN, –

 

            “Relieve, I pray thee, my mind, which is sore disturbed by an evil dream concerning thee. I have dreamt that thou art the cause of the dire calamity which has befallen thy neighbours the Egyptians, in that thou hast turned the Nile from its bed into the desert, and deprived them of the means whereon they have ever depended for their subsistence. Say to me, if thou canst do so truly, that this is but a dream, and that thou art not seeking to repay thine ancient grudge against Egypt by returning evil for evil.”

 

 

            This was the answer that he received: –

 

(p. 433)

“MY COUSIN, –

 

            “Peace and good-will from me to thee. Truly thou art the best of dreamers in all respects save one, namely, that thy dreams are not dreams, but realities. What thou sayest is true. The Nile, our Nile, has at length, and at my instigation, abandoned the strangers whom for tens of thousands of years it has nourished with sustenance drawn from us, and has returned to its proper allegiance. A wrong is not less a wrong because it is ancient. What I have done, I have done within my own territory, and in furtherance of the welfare of my own people. Every rectification of an established wrong produces suffering for a time. Yet even towards mine enemies have I acted tenderly, inasmuch as I have left them the rich and ample streams of the Atbara, wherewith by judicious contrivance they can sufficiently water their lands. But, even should this old and evil Egypt utterly fail and vanish, there will not be wanting a new and a better Egypt to take its place. Already is the Nile depositing its rich soil upon the sands of the Sahara, and flowing, a noble river, to meet the sea wherewith thy god-like hand has redeemed and gladdened the desert. Come when thou canst to

 

THY LOVING COUSIN.”

 

 

            “This takes away my last hope,” he said. “In spite of the fact that the river at that point is at least a thousand feet above the level required for his projected tunnel to the sea, I had been trying to persuade myself that he had yielded only to the temptation of an after-thought. But this shown that he has deceived me from the first.” And he handed me the message.

 

            “The plea is a specious one,” I said, when l had read it; “but I suspect the Federal Council will have little difficulty in meeting it, whether by argument or by force. You must keep that to publish, in case anyone suspects you of being a party to the scheme.”

 

            “Suspect me!” he cried. “No, no! I may at least trust that I am above suspicion. But your first thought has indicated

(p. 434)

one course that I must take.” And he penned a dispatch in reply to the Emperor’s: –

 

 

            “COUSIN, – the argument which thou hast used is as unworthy of thy head as the deed which thou hast done is of thy heart. Unless the wrong committed against Egypt be repaired, and that speedily, the Federal Council will repair it for thee, and at thy cost. Even I, who am now, partly for my work in the Sahara and on thy behalf, a member of that great tribunal, will give my voice against thee. As it is, thou hast by this act indefinitely deferred the admission of thy country to the Confederation of the Nations. The barbarity of thy deed is incompatible with the civilization required of its members. What arrangement may be affected in the future to secure an equitable division of the Nile, after thou shalt, by careful husbanding and augmenting of its sources, have increased the volume of its waters beyond that which is required by Egypt, cannot now be said. The, duty required of me is more urgent. I devote myself utterly to the rescue of the millions who, through thee, are perishing for lack of food. The fortune which I derived from thy crown jewels shall minister to the preservation of that crown from execration and ignominy.”

 

 

            When I had read this, he said to me, –

 

            “What I have done hitherto has been done out of income. This emergency can be met only by a sacrifice of principal. We will return home at once, and place Zöe with our friends, and then go to superintend in person the distribution of sup-plies in Egypt. I think I read you aright when I take this to be your desire.”

 

            Following his wont when a wrong was done, he still sought to find pleas in mitigation of his cousin’s act. Anything seemed better than to be compelled to regard it as a treachery conceived in the beginning. But a consultation with his engineers showed his hopes to be untenable. An underground exploration demonstrated the tunnel to have been raised above the level necessary for its declared purpose long before it approached the

(p. 435)

river. The change of the stratum to be pierced, from hard limestone to soft sandstone, had greatly facilitated the operations, and the downward course of the water through many miles of the tunnel was so rapid as to greatly enlarge the channel for itself.

 

 

            The memory of these events is too fresh to need any recalling by me. ‘How rapidly the world’s horror at the act of the monarch of the dark continent, and its consequences, was succeeded by the world’s wonder at the self-immolation of him who determined to thwart that act and avert those consequences, is too well known to require description here. Christmas Carol determined to save Egypt by himself; not that he could or would dissuade others from aiding, but by his promptitude and the immensity of his efforts he anticipated and distanced all competition. Summoned by him, from all quarters of the heavens sped “argosies of magic sails,” laden with the essentials of life, and dropping down with their precious cargoes in the midst of the hungry and grateful populations.

 

            For a whole year must these millions be supported by such charity, even were the Nile restored in time to afford supplies for the year following. In spite of the danger he was incurring, the Emperor remained obdurate. Although knowing that a solemn appeal had been made to the Federal Council, he refused to restore the river, and sent an army to guard the dam and the entrance to his tunnel against the Egyptians. But, an army on the ground to withstand an army in the air! The idea would be madness. Carol, however, clung to the hope that it was madness, and not badness that had perverted the mind of his cousin; for it was upon this theory that he accounted for all the villains of history. Avenil’s theory is the same, only he uses it to account for the saints of history. Urging this plea in arrest of the Council’s vengeance, and eager to save life to the utmost, he requested that an aërial force, comprising a strong working party, might be placed at his disposal, to be employed on a service known only to the Council.

His request was granted; and leaving me in charge of the

(p. 436)

food-distribution, the organization of which was now perfected, he suddenly descended with the Federal squadron upon the camp at the dam. The event was as he expected. Not a man of the Imperial forces would risk an encounter. The first shell, dropped so as to explode over their heads, dispersed the entire garrison, and the miners of the expedition were left unmolested to work their will upon the dam and tunnel.

 

            So vast and solid were the works, that it was evident their construction must have employed thousands of men for years. On one side, the mountain had been pierced to make way for the river, and on the other it had been cast into the bed and walled up with mighty rocks, to turn the river into its new channel. In addition to this, a tunnel of enormous dimensions had been hewn through the solid rock for scores of miles towards the desert.

 

            The first thing was to mine the dam, with a view to blowing it up. This was no small task, but the expedition was equal to it, and having made preparations for a series of explosions, at a given signal the mass was so loosened that it yielded to the pressure of the water, and went rushing with it down the now open channel of the river.

 

            So low cut, however, was the tunnel, that a considerable portion of the stream still escaped into it. The stoppage of this was a task of greater difficulty; and it was necessary to accomplish it solidly, so that on its next rise the river should be safe from a return to the tunnel. ‘On the successful conclusion of the work, Carol rejoined me in Egypt, exceedingly broken in health by his wear of mind and body. For more than from his tremendous physical exertions, did he suffer from the thought of his cousin’s perfidy. His sensitive soul seemed to be struck to its-quick, as by the fang of a venomous serpent. His illness assumed so serious a character as to make his immediate return home imperative.

 

            In order to guard against a reconstruction of the dam, one of the vessels of the squadron was detached, with orders to cruise at intervals over the locality.

 

 

 

(p. 437)

CAPÍTULO X

 

            EVEN when restored to the quiet of his own home, and tended assiduously by Zöe, Bertie, and myself, Carol failed to regain his lost health. Zöe manifested all the joy to see me that I could wish, but its quality was not of the kind I desired. Her demeanour continued to have the perfect frankness befitting a sister, but obstinately refused to take any other form. She gladly admitted me to share in all the offices of ministering to her father, precisely as if I had been a born brother to her.

 

            I, meanwhile, made my home with Bertie, becoming as much attached to him as does everyone else who has the opportunity. He had outgrown the liability to the sudden illnesses which so alarmed his friends a few years back, so that old ago found him a hale and hearty man. Together we daily walked to and fro between the two houses, and from him I learnt many particulars of Carol’s life which before were unknown to me. He was very grave about his “dear boy,” as he always called him, and said that it was far more from a moral than from a physical’ shock that he was suffering.

 

            Carol’s own hopelessness of his recovery was a bad symptom. He maintained that his work was done, and had ended in disappointment. Hearts were harder than rocks. The latter by a little industry and skill were redeemable. The former resisted alike all influences of love and of friendship. l low he had failed to win the souls of his wives, was already known to me. Now he would tell me all the story of the Emperor, and I should see what cause he had for despair. Twice had he saved his capital from the destruction it would inevitably have met at the hands of the Federal Council, besides heaping benefits innumerable upon him and his people; but now no word came of repentance or sorrow. What was the meaning of the advantages with which he had been endowed, if their exercise thus resulted in ignominious failure ?

 

            I adjured him to take a more sanguine view of things. He

(p. 438)

judged by too high a standard, even the impossible standard of his own ideal; although the result had not been what his imagination had framed, yet for all others it had been truly immense. In any case, a beautiful example, such as he had set the world, could never be lost.

 

            Referring to Zöe, he said that hut for her he should be glad to be at rest. She needed some one to lean upon. What did I think of her? Had the interval been sufficient to enable her to become herself again?

 

            I told him that I believed her to be perfectly recovered, only that she had taken a firm resolve to lead a solitary life. Her very frankness with me showed that she regarded all men as brothers.

 

            “And you?” he said, regarding me with a wistful smile. “Are you still of the same mind?”

 

            I assured him that, with me, to know Zöe was to love her, but that I had repressed every indication of the feeling, through fear of its making a barrier between us if known to her. “I sometimes,” I added, “am disposed to think she still regrets her severance from that man, even though she would on no account be again associated with him.”

 

 

            Avenil, who came at short intervals, went away each time more depressed. “Never before was I disposed to believe in a broken heart,” he said. “Yet I can find nothing else to account for his state.”

 

            The doctor agreed with Avenil, but said that Carol’s was a constitution of which the heart was the basis. To injure him in the emotional region was to strike at his most vital part. With him it was as if the body were but a function of the mind, not the mind of the body.

 

            “Bertie, dear,” said Zöe one day, “my father tells us that he wants nothing but to be at rest. Does he say the same to you? Is there anything that could be done to bring him comfort?”

 

            “I hate to bring a pang to your dear heart,” replied the old man. “If you will know, there is one thing that preys upon him, but he shrinks from obtaining comfort at your cost.”

 

(p. 439)

            “My cost! What is my cost to his happiness?”

 

            “He says he would die in peace if he only could see you worthily wedded first.”

 

            Her lip, ordinarily so indicative of sweetness, curled with scorn.

 

            “I worthily wedded! Bertie, have either you, he, or I lost our memories?” and sinking into a sofa, she murmured, “I worthily wedded! I worthily wedded!”

 

            “Bertie!” she said, springing up again, “has my father fixed upon any ‘worthy’ man to be the victim?”

 

            Catching his eye, she again exclaimed, –

 

            “I see your – his meaning. No, – Lawrence Wilmer is too good a man for such a fate. Happily he has no such thought of me. He is a model of a brother, and I hope to retain him as one.

 

            “My dear Zöe,” replied Bertie, “there is no respect in which you show yourself to be your father’s own child more than in your throwing your life away in remorse for the faults of others. Now, without being in Lawrence’s confidence or secrets, I read him very differently from you. My impression is that he is longing to win your love, but fears by betraying his feeling to repel you from him, and so lose altogether the delight of your society.”

 

            While listening to this speech her colour changed rapidly, she sank down upon the sofa, and gasped as for breath. Presently recovering herself she said, speaking more quietly than before, –

 

            “I think you must be mistaken about Mr. Wilmer’s sentiments. I am sure he looks upon me only as a sister, and that a somewhat fallen one, whose due is compassion rather than love.”

 

            She said this with a formality which, as Bertie perceived, cost her an effort.

 

            “Then at least the idea of his caring for you is not disagreeable to you? “said the old man, hazarding a bold stroke in order to surprise her out of her secret, if she had one.

 

            Zöe was silent. She could not contradict him; and she would not speak untruly.

 

(p. 440)

            “My darling child, this will make your father intensely happy. May I tell him?”

 

            “Your imagination is outrunning your facts, at least with one of the parties concerned,” she replied, somewhat saucily, it appeared to Bertie; but he saw that her eyes were brimming over with tears, and that she spoke under an effort to check them.

 

            “I promise not to betray you, in case I am wrong about Lawrence.”

 

            “Oh, Bertie dear, you know my history. I feel as if I had no right to let myself love anyone, and still less to accept love.”

 

            “Well, I don’t see it in that light myself, and I doubt whether anybody else does; but that is all better said to your father, or to – to ––”

 

            She stopped the rest by a kiss, and made him promise again not to betray her.

 

 

            Finding the invalid somewhat revived the day following this conversation, Bertie took occasion to speak of me, remarking casually that he could quite understand that the presence of one so entirely devoted and trustworthy, must he a vast solace.

 

            I shall not repeat the gratifying things said by Carol in answer, though they will ever be treasured by me as a precious testimonial. But Bertie went on to say that what he could not understand was, any young man being so much with Zöe without falling utterly in love with her. Now it seemed, to him, he said, that nothing could be more fitting than that I should become a son to him in reality as; was in affection and conduct.

 

            “Perhaps,” said Carol, “he thinks ho would have no chance, and withholds himself from speech through fear of offending her.”

 

            “I see the awkwardness of the situation,” returned Bertie; “but young men are too apt to let their diffidence interfere with the happiness, not of themselves only, but of those who trust to them to take the initiative. It seems to me so natural

(p. 441)

and probable that a girl should be attracted by a man of his stamp, to say nothing of his family associations with you, that I only wonder that on her part Zöe is not as much in love with him as he ought to be with her.”

 

            Cunning old Bertie! falling, unsuspecting, into the trap, Carol exclaimed –

 

            “Oh, that she were! there would then be happiness all round.”

 

            “Yes, if he cared likewise for her.”

 

            “But he does! he does! We have often spoken of it together. She, however, seems bent on remaining unwed. I can quite appreciate her feeling,” he added; “she feels herself humiliated by what has already occurred to her, and shrinks from again loving, or allowing herself to be loved. She is not as the great majority of girls are now-a-days.”

 

            “She comes of a proud stock, I know,” remarked Bertie drily.

 

            Carol looked at him inquiringly.

 

            “I mean,” he continued, “that she inherits a tendency to feel as much mortified when she has made a mistake, as if she had forfeited a recognized claim to infallibility. Now, I consider it true humility, when one has failed in anything, not to brood over the failure – life may be better employed – but to try again until one succeeds. One does that in learning a new game of amusement. How much more in the game of life!”

 

            “Would to heaven she would try again, if only for this once. Zöe united to Lawrence, my last wish would be gratified.”

 

            “Tell him to ask her.”

 

            “You think she will consent?”

 

            “I say nothing positively; but I am following my observations. Even supposing she cares much for him, the ease with which he contrives to conceal his feeling for her, in time may come to disgust her. A woman is very apt to distrust a love that can so effectually hide itself. Further delay may ruin his chance altogether.”

 

            “My ever wise Bertie, pray how came you to know so much about women?”

 

(p. 442)

            At my next interview with Carol, he spoke of his wish to see us united, and said that he almost thought it better that I should strain a point and ask Zöe, than delay too long. “You might even,” he said, “do it under the appearance of consulting her, as on a matter in which both your feelings and mine were enlisted, but in which nevertheless we were anxious to defer to her wishes.”

 

            He was too ill and exhausted for me to think of following his advice that day. The weather was intensely hot and still. Longing for the cool upper airs in which he had been wont to take delight, he had given directions to have a balloon constructed, on the old gaseous system, but with all the modern improvements. It was to be kept captive by a line attached to a windlass in the garden, so that he might ascend and be drawn back at will. Avenil himself superintended the construction. The sick man’s eagerness to have it finished, struck me as a hopeful sign, but Avenil and the doctor shook their heads. It was made of a material warranted to restrain the gas for an indefinite period from fulfilling its longings to mix with the atmosphere; and Carol struck us as almost whimsical I n his determination to fit it with a variety of contrivances for which, under the circumstances, we could see no use. In these he was assisted by Bertie, who regarded the whole affair as an elaborate toy, but nevertheless gave his aid gladly for the sake of his sick friend.

 

            On the first ascent he lay out so many hours under the stars, having mounted in the afternoon, that we were somewhat uneasy at his failing to give the expected signal for being drawn down. However, when at length he returned to us, he was so cheerful and invigorated that we entertained hopes that the balloon was to prove the best of doctors. This was on the day after he had suggested my making my appeal to Zöe.

 

            On retiring to rest he said to his daughter:

 

            “I had a strange longing, Zöe, when lying up yonder, to cut my tether and soar away never to return. I think it was only the idea of leaving you alone and unprotected that restrained me. Would it, darling, he such a very great sacrifice for you to make to my comfort, to marry Lawrence?”

 

(p. 443)

            I was at the furthest end of the room, and observed only that they were conversing in a low tone.

 

            “I fear, my father,” she replied, in a faltering voice, and l joking very much abashed, “I fear that it would be too great a sacrifice to ask of – him.”

 

            “So that if he were ready to make it, you would not object?”

 

            “For your sake, my father, I would not be out-done in generosity.”

 

            A lurking smile revealed all to him. Kissing her fair broad brow, he said:

 

            “Then, should Lawrence likewise not deem it too great a sacrifice, and say as much to you, you will not take offence? I should miss him greatly were he compelled to quit us. A repulse from you would be a sentence of banishment. Perhaps he had better keep silence, at least until I am gone?”

 

            “Nay, if he has aught upon his mind, I should prefer that he speak. Whatever the issue, we could still live together as – as we have done. I should not think so very much the worse of him, as to require his dismissal.”

 

            So they parted, Carol once more calling out to me his good-night as he left the room.

 

 

            I rarely lingered after his retirement, and now was undecided whether to say to Zöe that which was uppermost in my thoughts. What served most to restrain me was the reflection that it might appear selfish to speak to her of myself and my wishes while he was so ill.

 

            Looking up from the book over which, while thus pondering, I had been bending, I found Zöe standing before me, regarding me steadfastly with her dark, lustrous eyes.

 

            For a moment neither of us spoke. Then she said:

 

            “What is it you have been reading, Lawrence?”

 

            It was a book of dramas, of the Victorian period. One passage had especially struck me, though occurring in a play which was disfigured and spoilt by false, history and gross prejudices. I had been wishing to read it to Carol, but refrained through fear of recalling evil memories.

 

(p. 444)

            “Sit down here, Zöe, and look at this,’’ I said, making a place for her beside me. “See how a poet of many generations ago wrote as if he discerned the relation between colour and constitution. In this play of Charles I, the unfortunate king is made to say to his treacherous favourite:

 

“ ‘I saw a picture once by a great master;

‘Twas an old man’s head.

Narrow and evil was its wrinkled brow;

Eyes close and cunning; a dull vulpine smile;

‘Twas called a JUDAS. Wide that artist err’d.

Judas had eyes like thine, of candid blue;

His skin was soft; his hair of stainless gold;

Upon his brow shone the white stamp of truth;

And lips like thine did give the traitor-kiss.’

 

“Is it not a full-length picture of your stepmother; that is, supposing the fairness to have been of her white, bloodless hue?”

 

            “Aye, and still more so of – Oh, Lawrence, how could you remind me of him?”

 

            “My darling Zöe!” I exclaimed, thunderstruck at my heedlessness. “I would not have pained you for the world. I thought only of the sister. You know I have never seen George Bliss. To me he is but a phantom, though a phantom whom to secure your happiness I would pursue to the world’s end, until I had driven him beyond the flaming bounds of space; aye, and will, Zöe, if you will tell me that by inflicting such vengeance upon him, l can ease your heart of but the smallest pang.”

 

            “You would do so much for me, Lawrence? My father was wondering just now which of us would make the greatest sacrifice for him.”

 

            “Well, Zöe, I am ready to enter the lists with you. What is to be the nature of the competition?”

 

            “I like what you said of George Bliss just now. It is a relief to me to think that you regard him only as a phantom. It will help me to banish my evil memories.”

 

            “Tell me, Zöe, do you mean that you really have been

(p. 445)

allowing the past to influence the disposition of your plans, and – and affections for the future?”

 

            “In what way do you mean, Lawrence?”

 

            “For instance, is it on that account that you have withdrawn yourself from Society, and become to all intents and purposes a nun, holding yourself in so that no man, not even I, who almost live with you, would venture to speak to you of love – no matter how mighty the impulse – for fear of grieving and offending you?”

 

            “Yes, Lawrence, it is so.”

 

            “And why, pray?”

 

            “Because I am a woman, and have a woman’s instincts.”

 

            “Then hear me, Zöe,” I said, placing my hand upon hers.

 

            “It is because you are a woman and have a woman’s instincts, that you are absolved from all shadow of blame for the past, and therefore from all cause for unhappiness in the future. It is because you are a woman and have a woman’s instincts, that you are capable of putting love before prudence, and lavishing all the wealth of your nature upon that which is un-worthy of you. And, further, it is because you are a woman and have a woman’s instincts, even to this extent of not despising wholly that which is not wholly worthy your regard, that I presume to tell you that I love you, and to ask you whether I may hope you will ever consent to bless my life with the gift of the only woman I have ever loved or longed for.”

 

            She seemed very much surprised, and said:

 

            “How long have you felt thus toward me?”

 

            The little book of my winter in Iceland was lying on the table before us. Opening it at the verse beginning, –

 

            “Why haunt me when I know thou dost not love me?”

 

            I told her that it began with the first sight of her, and had grown ever since, the more I saw her, until it had become an indispensable portion of my being.

 

            “Oh, Lawrence, Lawrence, how happy this will make my father!” And her head bent forward until it rested on the hand in which I was still holding hers.

 

(p. 446)

            “Why, he has known of it all along.”

 

            “I don’t understand. Known of what?”

 

            “Of my love for you. That was not wanting to make his happiness.”

 

            “My dear, dull Lawrence!”

 

            “You love me, then! That must be your meaning. Sweetest Zöe, how could you torment me so long?”

 

            “Can you not divine? I thought you had read me thoroughly. Listen, Lawrence: if I did not love you, I wished, oh, so earnestly, that it were lawful for me to do so. But I dared not let myself love an honourable and true man, or to let him love me. Spare my speaking. Can you, will you not see that I – I – felt you were worthy to have all the freshness of my heart and soul and body, and that I could only offer you the soiled, unworthy creature that I am!”

 

            When ecstasy had subsided sufficiently to allow of conversation, I said,

 

            “My own precious Zöe, what a thing it is to have a higher law than. That of the Conventional! Here is your dear father killing himself for the lapse of another from an ideal that other does not recognize; and his daughter destroying her happiness and mine, to say nothing of her father’s, because she was not endowed with an infallibility that made her superior to the arts of villains! Really, Zöe darling, such vanity needed such correction. Let us believe the discipline has been purposely provided for you. And now let me kiss away those tears, and we will go and tell your, nay, our father, that we have agreed that no sacrifice is too great to be made to his happiness, and are prepared for his sake to put up with each other!”

 

            “Dear Lawrence, I love to be bantered by you. It proves your confidence in the reality of our affection. But you too, you know, have not been exempt from submission to a higher law than that of the Conventional. The Conventional bids us be truthful and honest under all circumstances. And you practised concealment and deceit to save your mother from pain. And you have never before told me you loved me!”

 

*          *          *          *          *

 

(p. 447)

            A gentle tap at his chamber door elicited permission to enter. Carol had not gone to his bed, but was reclining, wrapped in a dressing gown, beside the open window, gazing at the starry heavens. Our unwonted appearance at such an hour, and linked hand in hand, told him all.

 

            “I can have no delay,” he said, “for I know not how soon I may be called away. I have been listening to the sweet voices up yonder, and they have come nearer tonight than ever before. This only was needed to enable me to depart in perfect peace. Tomorrow, Zöe, – nay, I will not be so precipitate, – the day after, you will give me the right to call Lawrence my son?”

 

            Presently he continued, –

 

            “That Egyptian business has made nearly as great inroads upon my fortune as upon my health. One cannot keep so many millions of people for a twelvemonth upon nothing, you know. But there is enough left to make the wheels of life go smoothly. Don’t go home tonight, Lawrence. Let me feel that you are, as my son should be, when he has a sick father, in the room adjoining mine. Yonder is Bertie’s wire. Signal to him not to expect you back tonight, and the cause. He will rejoice even as one of ourselves.”

 

 

 

CAPÍTULO XI

 

            “So long as ye both do live, or love?” asked the lawyer, as he took from his bag a number of forms of marriage-contracts for us to make a selection from.

 

            “Charms or chains?” said Bertie, gaily, putting the query into other words.

 

            “Remember that the former are very liable to be galled by the latter,” observed Lord Avenil; – for all our chief friends were present to congratulate us and witness our union.

 

            “It is quite true,” said Mistress Susanna, with a significant

(p. 448)

look, “That people are apt to be kept on their good behaviour by the knowledge that a separation is easy.”

 

            “But it is not infallible, as I know to my – gain,” said Bessie, evidently on a second thought substituting the word gain for cost. She was always a favourite of Carol’s, and more than ever since, in obedience to her heart, she had vanquished her pride, and returned to her husband.

 

            “With whom does the decision rest?” I asked of the lawyer.

 

            He said that it is a matter of arrangement between the parties, the lady, if under age, generally being represented by her parents.

 

            “My daughter and I waive all voice in the matter,” said Carol from his couch, “and leave it entirely to you, Lawrence. We have agreed to accept your decision, whatever it be.”

 

            This put me in a position of considerable embarrassment. A marriage of the first class is soluble only for unfaithfulness, or some tremendous fault equally impossible of contemplation by one placed as I was, and this accompanied by all the horrors of a public investigation. On the other hand, the advantages of fortune and position were all on the side of the lady. In claiming such a marriage, I should be appropriating a life-interest in her fortune. I asked the lawyer to repeat his interrogation.

 

            “So long as ye both do live, or love?”

 

            “I may be very stupid,” I said, “but I fail to see the distinction. Do you see it, Zöe?”

 

            She left her father’s side, where she had been sitting with her hand in his, and came and kissed me on the forehead.

 

            “Thank you, Lawrence,” she said. “I may truly declare that my life shall end with my love. I cannot survive second failure.”

 

            “My dear Zöe! I did not mean a bit what you mean. I meant that my love would only end with my life.”

 

            She did not kiss me this time, but sat down by me, and held my hand in hers. It seemed wonderful to me, now that I knew the magnetism of her caress, to think that I had been so long and so much in her society without learning it before. The

(p. 449)

readiness with which her nature opened to the sunshine of affection, showed how severe was the frost by which it had hitherto been closed.

 

            At length, I said that my difficulty in coming to a decision depended, not on any positive sentiment of mine, but on the peculiarity of our respective positions. All the material advantages being on the other side, I did not consider myself entitled to consult my own feelings and wishes as I should do were I in a thoroughly independent position.

 

            “I anticipated the dilemma,” said my dear Zöe’s father, “and have endeavoured to provide against it. This, Lawrence, is a deed of gift by which I settle on you a fortune sufficient to justify you in deciding according both to your judgment and your heart. Mark only that we do not seek to influence your determination, but shall love and respect you truly whatever it be. So far from that, the fortune is yours whether you wed Zöe or not.”

 

            Somehow, my circulation seemed to have become deranged. My head was feeling dizzy, and my heart had taken to thumping against my side in a manner that I thought must have been audible all over the room. And, what was yet more curious, it seemed to me to beat in rhythmical time with the words, –

 

“Let your heart speak, Lawrence Wilmer!”

“Let your heart speak, Lawrence Wilmer!”

 

            More for the purpose of gaining time to collect myself, than for any other cause, I asked the lawyer to repeat his interrogation once again.

 

            “So long as ye both do live, or love?”

 

            “For life!” I exclaimed, with a vehemence l was unable to control or to account for. “For life, or not at all!”

 

            The cause of my perturbation has since become apparent to me. The contact of Zöe’s hand, backed as it was by the intense’ desire of the whole abundant vitality of her nature, had completely magnetized me. It was the impulse of her blood

(p. 450)

that was circulating through my veins, her heart that was throbbing in my breast, and her wish that made in my mind the rhythm, –

 

“Let your heart speak, Lawrence Wilmer!”

 

She herself, however, was quite unconscious of the effect she was producing upon me, though she admitted that she felt while then sitting beside me as if her being was in. some mysterious way identified with mine.

 

            There was no mistaking the satisfaction with which my decision, and the heartiness with which I had enunciated it, were regarded.

 

            “My son, in very truth!” exclaimed Carol, first embracing me, and then joining my hand to that of his daughter. Even Susanna indicated her approbation, by admitting that no rule is without its exception, and remarking, ––” Our Zöe’s character is one that requires the constant presence and support of a husband. Indeed, she will have nothing else to occupy her.” And the lawyer proceeded to select from his bundle a form of the first-class, for the signature of ourselves and witnesses.

 

            The one drawback to our gladness was the illness of our dear father, – for so I shall now call him. And here it occurs to me that some of my readers may be at a loss to account for the change made sometime back in my manner of styling him, namely, when, for the familiar and affectionate Criss, I substituted the formal surname. This is the explanation. During the period prior to my intimacy with him, I knew him only through the medium of those whom a life-long and affectionate friendship justified in using the familiar and endearing abbreviation. Seeing him with their eyes, and hearing him with their ears, he naturally was for me the Criss he was for them. But when I came upon the scene and knew him for myself, I did not deem it meet to adopt the same familiar tone. If nothing else, the difference between our ages and positions made it unseemly for me to do so. Thus it is that from Criss

(p. 451)

he became in my narrative Carol, or Christmas Carol. I could not bring myself to use his conventional title of honour, shrinking as he himself did from it. And now that he has become my father, all other names are merged in that one cherished appellation.

 

 

            Whether owing to his entering upon a new phase in his disease, or to a resolution to lessen our anxiety on his account during this first period of our union, he certainly manifested such an increase of vigour and cheerfulness as to fill us with hopes for the best. He insisted on my taking Zöe a short tour, and introducing her anew as my wife to the circle at the Triangle, Bertie the while occupying our place by his side. The season continued to be oppressively hot and calm; but the device of the captive balloon ministered vastly to his relief. He made Bertie also ascend with him, and read his correspondence to him in it. His best hours were those thus spent aloft, and it was there he obtained his most invigorating slumber.

 

 

            Our hopes were renewed but to be disappointed. We had not long returned, when a rapid change for the worse set in. He was fully aware of its significance, and told the doctor he should not trouble him much longer. He conversed much with me in a tone that, though low and weak, was full of gladness. He told me of all his plans for the good of mankind, and spoke much of Africa as of a country whose welfare was especially dear to him, notwithstanding the fatal return he had reaped from it. “I suppose you know,” he added, “That my cousin the Emperor, having no heir, is the last of his line. Happily, the result of his reign has been to enable his people to dispense with the monarchy, by fitting them for the higher condition of self-government. However, should they at any time need a sovereign, the old royal blood will still exist in a son of Zöe’s. Not that I think you would be wise to remind them, or to avail yourself, of the fact. Successions and restorations, founded upon an ancient prestige, have invariably proved a curse to all

(p. 452)

concerned. The world must live its own life.” With regard to the Emperor himself, he charged me to do whatever might he in my power to lessen the remorse he might feel at having contributed to his death; though he admitted, on the other hand, that it might he useful for the people of Soudan to know the truth. Thus might his death, he said, he of more avail than his life. Some causes never prosper until they have had their martyr.

 

            “Such reflection will bring hut poor comfort to us,” I said, scarcely able to speak for the fullness of my heart; “Though history fully hears it out, even that of Him whom of all men you have ever most loved and cherished. It must be an additional embitterment,” I continued, “To know that one’s end has been compassed by the treachery of a chosen friend. Yet, even the least fallible of human hearts was forced to admit the existence of a ‘son of perdition,’ redeemable by no love, and to lament over his failure to save him.”

 

            “I suppose it ought to comfort me,” he returned, “To think that, whereas He met with one, the traitors to me have been hut two. That, however, is not the thought from which my comfort comes. I am unable to recognize any as a child of perdition. It is not given to me to fathom all moral mysteries, hut I see enough to enable me to trust, and that not faintly, the larger, nay, the largest hope – the hope that at last, far off it may be, yet at last to all, good will be the final goal ––”

 

            I recognized the quotation he was too weak to finish.

 

            Recovering a little, he continued, –

 

            “After I am gone tell this to the Emperor, my cousin, with my love and pardon. Tell it, too, to her from whom I was compelled to separate. It is not the good who are to me a proof of the hereafter, but the bad. And, that, not for their chastisement, but for their amendment: that is, their development, the development in them of the moral sense – that divine spark, of whose marvellous vitality we have before spoken – a development necessary, one would suppose, for His own satisfaction, as well as for their benefit. That is, if like man, He hates leaving any portion of his work unfinished.”

 

(p. 453)

            Zöe and I sat much by his couch watching the face with the divine eyes closed, and often detecting no appearance of breathing; hut there was ever over all the smile of intense peace.

 

            More than once we thought him gone, when he returned to consciousness with ideas which seemed freshly gathered from the communion of saints. Once we thought he was wandering in mind, for we discerned amid his murmurings words that seemed to us utterly irrelevant. But presently his wan face lit up joyously, and he exclaimed in a voice of more than his wonted power, –

 

            “Yes! yes! It is indeed encouraging. To what may not life come, when we see the progress it has already made!” An utterance to which Avenil afterwards supplied the clue, as well as its relation to the words which had struck us as so irrelevant. Those words were Aquarium and Zoological. His mind was running upon a conversation he had held with Avenil on a recent visit to the institutions indicated, a conversation in which they had made the objects before them the text of a discussion on their respective theories of existence and evolution.

 

            The subject had evidently taken great hold of him; and it was with no little interest that Zöe and I continued to listen to the workings of his mind in relation to it, as he continued his colloquy with the Invisible.

 

            “All is clear now; even the Justice that was so dark and inscrutable. I see now that the Universe is thy first thought, and not the mere translation into fact of a thought already conceived, and that in some way mysterious to us, Thou thyself livest therein. But thou seemedst to me sometimes to think too slowly. I wanted heaven to be reached at a single bound. Impatient myself, I rebelled against thy patience. I could not bear that men should themselves build the ladder-by which they must rise, toilsome round by round. Oh, how I rejoice in my conviction of thy inexorable justice, for therein alone lies safety for all. Out upon those who would divorce it from mercy, and thrust themselves between. Thy justice and

(p. 454)

thy mercy are one and the same. Oh, men my brothers, what have ye not suffered through that divorce! The justice, that could swerve to one side could swerve also to the other. But trusting the justice, ye cannot but trust the maker of. The conditions to be content with the products; seeing that it would be injustice to make” the products disproportionate to the conditions. If the conditions have a tight to exist, the products have a like right. The poor soil and the arid” sky are as much a part of the universal order as the rich garden, soft rain, and warm sunshine. It is just that one should yield a crop which the other would despise. It would be unjust were both to yield alike. It is only from those to whom much is given that much is required. The worm! the worm is one of the conditions; yes, Amelia, even the worm that eats out the heart! Nannie, darling! are you listening”? and do you comprehend? See! you have taught me something.”

 

            Speaking thus, he suddenly raised himself and looked around with a bewildered air. The sight of Zöe and me recalled him to the present, and he said, –

 

            “You believe, Lawrence, that the good will ultimately prevail. You must revise your belief, for it is wrong. The good is always prevailing, though we may perceive it not. Ponder this and you will learn that, from the very nature and definition of good, it cannot be otherwise. For by good we mean that which assimilates and harmonizes to the greatest extent its surrounding conditions: that which works in truest sympathy with the essential nature of the rest. That is evil which by its very selfishness arraigns the rest against it. Good needs no power working from without to make it triumphant. It triumphs by winning the sympathies of all to work with it.”

 

            For some time he remained unconscious to all around, and murmuring words that were hard to understand, though the voice was not the voice of grief. After a while, either through their becoming clearer, or our ears being better trained, we learnt to comprehend their import. While occupied one day in listening to them, Bertie being with us, Avenil appeared at the door, asking mutely if he might enter. Beckoning him to tread softly over, the carpet, he approached noiselessly and

(p. 455)

joined the group. The murmuring was going on, though so faintly as to require close listening if we would catch its meaning.

 

            Avenil bent down and listened.

 

            “There is music and rhythm,” he whispered. “It is more singing than talking. What can it be that he sings at such a moment? Me thought I caught the words. ‘Heaven the reflex of earth.’ ”

 

            He was answered by Zöe, unconsciously using the words of her father’s favourite poet:

 

            “He sings of what the world will be when the years have died away!”

 

            “He leaves the world as he entered it: a Christmas Carol to the last,” said Bertie.

 

            After a while his eyes opened, and brightened as they rested on Avenil.

 

            “Master Charles, dear,” he said, using his old boyish phrase for him, “I was wishing for you. I want you to take Zöe and Lawrence back to the Triangle with you tonight. Do not speak, please, but gratify me,” he added, turning his eyes to us. “I want this night the repose of absolute solitude – solitude, that is, so far as this world and its affections are concerned. I wish to be alone with ––” and here his voice became inaudible.

 

            He was evidently bent upon it, and with heavy hearts we obeyed him, first impressing our kisses on his brow. Bertie was the last to leave him, even as he had been the first to receive him. We intended, however, to return very early next day.

 

 

            In the morning we were aroused by a messenger bearing a letter from Bertie. It said, “He is gone; gone as he himself wished to go. I remained with him a while after your departure. He appeared to rally, and asked me to help him to walk across the garden to the balloon. The effort of making those few steps exhausted his strength. On reaching the balloon he was forced to he down in the car. After a little while, it being quite dark, he asked me to light a signal lamp, the pale green one, containing Avenil’s famous composition. Its

(p. 456)

brilliant light seemed to inspirit him, for he declared he would go aloft, and have his sleep there. ‘I think, dear Bertie,’ he said, ‘that I should die happier, if that were possible, did I know that I should for ever remain aloft in the land of dreams. Should, by any chance, the balloon escape with me, and bear ray body upwards, do not send in search of it. Let it be, so long as the elements suffer it. A wild fancy you will think this, Bertie, but it is my fancy. Now kiss me, Bertie, and set the windlass free. Tell the servants to await my signal for hauling me in; or if that does not come – and it may not, you know (he smiled significantly as he said this) – they may let me be till morning, unless the wind comes on to blow strongly.’

 

            “As he finished speaking, he composed himself on the little couch in the balloon, in the attitude of one of the recumbent monumental figures in the ancient cathedrals, his face illuminated by the signal lamp, already looking like the face of the peaceful dead. I lingered, not liking to let him go where he would be alone and far from help; but he cried to mo, ‘Now! Bertie, now I am ready. Let me rise!’ and so with reluctant hand I pressed the spring of the windlass, and suffered the balloon slowly to ascend. The night was intensely still. ‘Perhaps,’ I said to myself ‘the airs aloft will revive him once more, according to their wont, and the morning will bring him back better.’

 

            “Alas, dear friends, I have to tell you that the morning failed to bring him back at all.

 

            “I had gone into the house to he down just as I was, keeping my face upturned to the window whence I could see the light of his signal lamp. I am old, and I was weary and heavy with sadness, and I suppose I dropped asleep. But on waking I could no longer see the light. Calling one of his attendants, I enquired whether he could see it, for it might be that there was a mist either in the air or in my eyes. He said that either it must have gone out, or else the balloon had escaped.

 

            “Hastening into the garden, I stumbled over what proved to be a coil of rope. The man reached the windlass, and cried that it was indeed so, the balloon had broken loose, and his master was lost.

 

(p. 457)

            “At my bidding he brought a light, and we searched for the rope, over which I had stumbled. It was indeed the line by which the balloon had been attached to the windlass, and which now lay with its vast length in coils about the lawn. I examined the end, to ascertain whether the escape had been intended or accidental. There was no breakage: it had been regularly detached from its fastenings. I remembered then that the attachment had been made by an ingenious contrivance, which, while it was impossible to become loosened of itself, was yet capable of detachment by a slight pull.

 

            “Dear ones, with whom I mourn as for a son prematurely taken from me, though this be so, there is no need to suppose that our beloved one hastened his own end. His latest words show that he contemplated the probability of his not surviving until morning: also that he coveted to take his rest in the dear upper airs rather than on the murky earth. I am convinced that, feeling his dying struggle upon him, he, in a final convulsion, withdrew the attaching bolt, and soared upwards, body and soul together. The vessel which bears him, a very ship of heaven, will never come down again; at least, not in the days of any now dwelling upon earth. Nay, such is its extraordinary buoyancy – he would have it so, to steady it in the wind, while yet a captive – that, on being released, it must at once have shot far up into those rare strata of airs whither no living person can follow it, for death would overcome them long before they could reach the altitude where alone it will find its balance and fixed height.

 

            “Let us, then, think of him we loved, not as mouldering in the damp earth, but as riding, even in death free and joyous, upon the blasts he so loved to surmount in life, and sleeping the sleep of the righteous, or mingling with the pure spirits of his living dreams.”

*          *          *          *          *

            “Oh, Lawrence, Lawrence, can it really be that we shall see him no more? that he can never again come down to us? May not the fresh airs aloft revive him, as they so oft have done? Ah, I see you have no hope, and that I must be resigned. But, oh, what a sense of perpetual unrest it gives me to think of him

(p. 458)

lying out upon the breezes, subject to no conditions of regular motion or speed, but evermore a sport to the most capricious of elements. I have been longing for night that we might sweep the heavens for his pale green star. It is so calm that it may yet be within range of the great Reflector in the Observatory. Come up and search with me.”

 

            “Let us not call the element he loved so well capricious, my Zöe,” I replied, as we ascended to the astronomical tower of the Triangle. “None better than he comprehended the secret of its impulses. The perfect sympathy subsisting between the atmosphere and the sun; its responsiveness to every varying thrill that expresses itself to us in heat, colour, magnetism, light, was for him the most significant symbol of the dependence of the individual upon the universal soul. Born in a balloon, I verily believe that by his own choice, though the action of some divine instinct, he is also buried in a balloon. Buried, as Bertie well says, not to moulder in damp dark earth, but far above the corroding influences of our lower atmosphere; far above the lightning-ranges; far above the breezes such as we know them; even in those blue depths of air whence he was wont in life to seek his inspirations. Let us rather envy him his Euthanasia!”

 

            “Ah, and if I thought that they would still visit him, and whisper to him of the Above, I should rejoice and no longer think of him as lonely. Believe you it can be so?”

 

            “Dearest, we cannot better honour his teaching than by emulating his trustfulness. Do you remember his saying that, as perfect love casts out fear, so perfect knowledge would leave no space for hope? Zöe, let ns cherish hope.”

 

 

 

CAPÍTULO XII

 

            THE time that has elapsed since I commenced my labour of love, has been far longer than I anticipated. I hoped also to

(p. 459)

have given a much fuller account, and to have told it in fewer words. My principal difficulty has been to make a selection from the mass of materials which have flowed in upon me from all quarters, – materials of which each item is a separate testimonial to the excellencies I undertook to exhibit.

 

            For one reason in particular I rejoice that my work is finished, however imperfect and inadequate it be. It is a reason which would have had his eager sympathy had he lived. Already are the semi-civilized populations of Africa regarding him as more than man, and seeking a place to assign to him in their ecclesiastical calendars; not seeing, in their superstitious folly, that to claim for him a rank of that above humanity is to detract from his merits as a man. He himself would be the first to declare, could he have foreseen the occasion, that his sole miracle-workers were Heart, Brain, and Circumstance. “Love me, if ye will. Follow me, if ye can, in that which I have done well. But worship only the Supreme.”

 

            If this memoir achieve no other end than to show the peoples who seek thus to honour him, that they are thereby doing him dishonour, and not him only, but the Creation in which he was a factor, I shall deem myself fully repaid. For I shall have done that which he would desire to have done, and done it in the spirit he would approve.

 

            I trust that it will fulfil this end, and yet another also; and that the example here set forth will incite many to whom these days of vast accumulated wealth and enormous scientific appliance have given the power, like him to –

 

“Fly, discaged, to sweep,

In ever-highering eagle-circles, up

To the great Sun of glory, and thence swoop

Down upon all things base, and dash them dead;”

 

as sang his favourite poet of the Victorian era, of one who might well have passed for his prototype.

 

            And for those, too, who are neither wealthy nor learned, may he, without being summoned from his chosen rest in the deeps of air, prove ever nigh in their hearts and minds as a controlling ideal of their aspirations.

 

(p. 460)

            In his divine simplicity and comprehension, the man himself was far greater than aught that he said or did, or than can be said of him. Of his principal achievement, I will only add that the ocean-stream, whose first rush into the Sahara we witnessed together, is now a steady and equable current, just strong enough to replace the loss by evaporation of the warm and shallow sea which occupies the place of the desert up to the very borders of the plateau of Soudan. Already has this new creation proved beneficial to the climate of the surrounding regions. Clouds heavy with moisture now fling their grateful shadows, and freely pour their abundance on the once accursed plains. And no longer do the toilsome paths of the sandy desert whiten beneath the bones of its travellers, but above them speed the swift electric ships and gladsome sails.

 

 

            The moral victory is greater even than the physical. Jerusalem has avowed her share in the Emperor’s deed, and is not ashamed to make amends. Avenil deemed it due to his friend’s memory, and to international justice, to bring the complicity of the Jews before the Council of Federated Nations. The offence was held a serious one, for it was committed by one member of the Federation against another member. That the exasperation of Egypt has been allayed without exacting exemplary retribution, is due solely to the memory of him who sacrificed himself to avert her destruction. It is as a tribute to that memory that Egypt has consented to bury in oblivion her ancient feud with Israel, and to grasp in amity the hand of Ethiopia.

 

            May it be that by the life and death of Christmas Carol, more than one Eastern Question will be advanced towards its final solution!”

 

 

 

THE END

 

 

 

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