4161 lines
212 KiB
Plaintext
4161 lines
212 KiB
Plaintext
64 page printout
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Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
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**** ****
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THE OUTCAST
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by
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Winwood Reade
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LONDON:
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WATTS & Co.,
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5 & 6 JOHNSON'S COURT, FLEET STREET, E.C.4
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First published in the Thinkers Library,
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October, 1933
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INTRODUCTION
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MANY readers of The Martyrdom of Man must have speculated upon
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the character and the fate of the other books written by the same
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hand. It seems on the face of it incredible that a work which, on
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its first appearance in 1872, won its way to popular favor in spite
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of total neglect or unbridled condemnation by the newspapers and
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reviews, and in spite of its slashing onslaughts upon accepted
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opinions, should stand quite alone. No favorable review of this
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disturbing volume appeared until 1906, yet edition after edition
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||
bore witness to a steady demand. Even upon the post-war generation,
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to whom the successes of the Victorian age mean less than nothing,
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Winwood Reade's vision of the world has cast its spell. Within ten
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years fully one hundred thousand copies have passed into
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circulation. No shadow of mortality has yet fallen upon its pages.
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Is there nothing else among his writings that yet lives?
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If this question had to be answered without qualification in
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the negative, an adequate explanation might be given on two
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grounds. Winwood Reade died young, at the age of thirty-six -- an
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age when, in the comparatively slow-maturing period during which he
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lived, achievement might be expected to have only begun. Moreover,
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his earlier writings were written in fiction form, to which his
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powers were not well adapted. In choosing the vehicle of fiction
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Winwood Reade was probably inspired by the example of his famous
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uncle, Charles Reade, who was fresh risen to fame at the time when
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Winwood was at Oxford. Before he was twenty-one Winwood published
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a short novel, 'Charlotte and Myra,' following this a year later
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||
with a three-decker 'Liberty Hall, Oxon,' in which the lives of
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undergraduates were portrayed. Both were failures, and the
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disappointment over these early ventures may have had something to
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do with their author's decision, in 1862, to visit Africa as an
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explorer. It was in Africa, during a series of adventurous
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journeys, followed by experiences as 'The Times' correspondent
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during the Ashanti War, that he gathered much of the material woven
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||
later into 'The Martyrdom of Man.' During 1865 another novel
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appeared -- 'See-Saw,' a story dealing with Roman Catholicism in
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Italy and Protestantism in England -- but it was no more fortunate
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than its predecessors. In his 'African Sketch Book' Reade confessed
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that "my books are literary insects, doomed to a trifling and
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ephemeral existence, to buzz and hum for a season -- and to die."
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|
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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|
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THE OUTCAST
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The books in which he recorded his African adventures were
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somewhat more fortunate, though they failed to bring him his due
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recognition as an intrepid explorer. According to Mr. F. Legge,
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||
"the cause which chiefly contributed to the public neglect of his
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||
results was the extraordinary form in which he thought fit to
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publish them. They did not appear at all until three years after
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his return to England, and then only in the form of a journal kept
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||
while in the bush for the perusal of a lady whom he addresses as
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'Dear Margaret,' and for whom he seems to have had a deep and
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tender affection." Further, although this work, the 'African Sketch
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Book,' contained much solid information on anthropological matters
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and several good maps, it "was stuffed with tales of savage life
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which are avowedly, like the illustrations with which it abounds,
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drawn from the imagination merely."
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Only in 'The Martyrdom of Man,' in an earlier work 'The Veil
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||
of Isis' (1861) recounting the history of the Druids, and in 'The
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Story of the Ashanti Campaign,' which amplifies his contributions
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to The Times, does Winwood Reade make a definite departure from the
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fictional model at which he first tried his hand. It is
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significant, therefore, that in his last book, 'The Outcast,' he
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returns to this model and uses it as a vehicle for the expression
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of his deepest thoughts on the problems of life -- or, rather, the
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problem of life.
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'The Outcast' was written during his last illness. His
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strength had been undermined during his earlier journeys in Africa,
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and the dysentery and fever contracted in the Ashanti campaign
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broke down his last defenses. Death was near, and in the nearness
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of death he penned his brief and eloquent confession of faith. It
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was published in 1875 -- the year of his, death -- and within that
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year it had passed into a third edition.
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Since then 'The Outcast' has not, until now, been reprinted.
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But it has not been forgotten. Copies have been treasured by their
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possessors and passed to trusted and discerning friends. The
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passage of time has proved that although the book cannot rival 'The
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Martyrdom of Man' in magnitude or brilliance, and although the
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treatment recalls the conventions of an age that seems almost
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archaic, it has the touch of greatness and the universal appeal
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that defy time and change. Each generation as it emerges to the
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stage of conscious reflection confronts anew the ancient puzzle of
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the existence of evil. Each of us must, in our own way, settle our
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account with a universe which involves the martyrdom of man. Here,
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through the medium of a story which is really a philosophical
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essay, Winwood Reade discusses more than one solution, from the
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bankrupt evasion of suicide to the illusory prospect of
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compensation in another world where the errors of omniscience shall
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be made good. His own solution is finally offered -- a solution
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based on the frank acceptance of facts of life, sinister and
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cheerful alike, and culminates in the faith that man may, by the
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exercise of reason and goodwill, become the master of a happier
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destiny. He finds joy and fulfillment in a religion of service: "To
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labor and love without hope of requital or reward, what religion
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could be more pure and more sublime?"
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||
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||
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||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
2
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||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
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|
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A few days after Winwood Reade's death, Charles Reade wrote
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that he had died "heir to considerable estates which he did not
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live long enough to inherit, and gifted with genius which he had no
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||
time to mature." While this is a just estimate, we may console
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||
ourselves with the though that during his short span Winwood Reade
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lived intensely, thought deeply, and gave expression to his zeal
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for intellectual honesty and his fervor for human betterment in two
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volumes which still illumine the mind and touch the heart.
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**** ****
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LETTER I
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MY DEAR FRANK, -- I welcome you back to your native land, and
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take it for granted that you and Ellen are tired enough of
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travelling. Life in a strange country is always artificial -- it
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||
seems to me like being at a play -- and constant change becomes
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monotonous after a time. I hear from Ellen that she intends to stop
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in London a week before joining you at home; and I shall reserve
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||
till then my latest budget of news about the tenants, and the
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||
harvest, and the pets, and the penny readings, &c. just now I can
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||
think of little else but the tragedy at Dr. Scott's, some account
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of which no doubt you have seen in the papers. But I will tell you
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the whole story.
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Arthur Elliott was the only son of a wealthy landed
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proprietor, one of my nearest neighbors, and a brother magistrate.
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Arthur had a most amiable nature, and was tenderly loved, not only
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by his parents, but by all who knew him intimately. His attainments
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||
were remarkable, as I can testify; for we read much together. He
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||
was an excellent classical scholar, but his favorite study was that
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||
of metaphysics, from which he was led to the study of natural
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science. Religion was the poetry and passion of his life; and,
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||
though of a different belief, it afforded me pleasure to hear him
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||
discourse on the grandeur and benevolence of God. Sometimes when we
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||
were together in a deep green wood on a sultry summer afternoon; or
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||
sometimes walking at night beneath the glorious starlit sky; or
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||
sometimes when reading the dialogues of Plato, some divine thought
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||
rose from the book like an immortal spirit from the grave, and
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||
passed into his soul; then the tears would stream from his eyes,
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||
and falling on his knees he would utter praises or prayers in words
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||
of surpassing eloquence, and with a voice of the sweetest melody.
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||
And often -- how well I remember it now -- often at such times his
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||
gestures grew wild and almost furious, his utterance was choked,
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||
and a strange bubbling sound came from his mouth. Dr. Scott, who
|
||
was present on one of these occasions, watched him I thought, with
|
||
an air of anxiety; and I heard that he advised the Elliotts to take
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||
away their son from his books and send him abroad with a travelling
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||
tutor. But Arthur disliked the idea of leaving home, and his
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||
parents did not urge him to go, believing that the danger was
|
||
imaginary. So he remained, and things went on as before.
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||
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||
One day he came to me in trouble. He had been reading the
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||
great work of Malthus -- the 'Essay on Population' -- and said that
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||
it made him doubt the goodness of God. I replied with the usual
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||
common-place remarks; he listened to me attentively, then sighed,
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||
shook his head, and went away. A little while afterwards he read
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
3
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||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
'The Origin of Species,' which had just come out, and which proves
|
||
that the Law of Population is the chief agent by which Evolution
|
||
has been produced. From that time he began to show symptoms of
|
||
insanity -- which disease, it is thought, he inherited from one of
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||
his progenitors. He dressed always in black, and said that he was
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||
in mourning for mankind. The works of Malthus and Darwin, bound in
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||
somber covers, were placed on a table in his room; the first was
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lettered outside 'The Book of Doubt,' and the second 'The Book of
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||
Despair.' He took long solitary walks in the most secluded parts of
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||
the estate, and was sometimes seen gesticulating to the heavens,
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||
sometimes seated by the wayside plucking grass and casting it from
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||
him with a strange, tremulous movement of the hands. It was in vain
|
||
that his good parents and the rector attempted to soothe his
|
||
troubled mind with the hopes and consolations of a future life. He
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||
said that a wrong was always a wrong, and that no reward could
|
||
atone for unmerited punishment. It was then I thought it right to
|
||
express my own opinions on the subject of theology. But, though
|
||
Arthur could cease to love and revere, he could not cease to
|
||
believe. I have often observed that men of powerful intellect,
|
||
especially those of the poetic constitution, find it almost
|
||
impossible to shake off the faith which has been taught them in
|
||
their childhood. In Arthur's case the boldest spirit of inquiry and
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||
a remorseless power of induction were allied to a rigid habit of
|
||
belief. If he could have closed his eyes, in common with so many
|
||
inquirers, to the barbarous element in nature, or simply dismissed
|
||
it from his mind after a brief period of discomfort, he might have
|
||
continued to believe in the God of his imagination and preserved
|
||
his happiness. If, on the other hand, unable to escape from
|
||
positive fact, he could have given up, or doubted ever so little,
|
||
the dogma of a Personal Creator, he would, I believe, have finally
|
||
found repose. As it was, he fell into a most deplorable condition.
|
||
His God had never been an abstraction, but a Father and a Friend;
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||
and now, by ever brooding on the subject, by ever directing his
|
||
thoughts towards this Imaginary Person, he actually felt its
|
||
presence, as the hermit in the desert after months of
|
||
contemplation, as the cenobite in the solitary cell. With him,
|
||
however, it was not love and devotion, it was anger and hatred,
|
||
which kindled the dangerous fire in the brain, inspired the vision,
|
||
and forced him to commune with the shadow of his mind.
|
||
|
||
He spent much of his time with me, and at last I wearied of
|
||
his complaints. I told him that it was useless to repine against
|
||
the Inexorable; that after all there was more good than evil in the
|
||
world if we went the right way to find it; and that if he
|
||
sympathized so much with the miseries of men he should try to
|
||
mitigate them, instead of pouring forth idle lamentations. He
|
||
looked at me sadly, and embraced me, resting his head upon my
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||
shoulder; he never spoke of his troubles again, and I often
|
||
repented of my harshness. But not long afterwards we all thought
|
||
that he was saved. He became betrothed to a lovely and charming
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||
girl, Miss Lilian Moore, who was visiting at the rectory. She
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||
seemed to possess some tranquillizing power; her eyes, were calm
|
||
and deep, and goodness was written in every feature of her face.
|
||
She saw that Arthur required occupation, and asked him to compose
|
||
some stories to amuse her. He complied, and wrote a number of
|
||
tales, in which the trees, and flowers, and rocks, and animals were
|
||
his characters and heroes. These stories were fanciful, quaint, and
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
4
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
humorous; and several being published in the magazines, attracted
|
||
notice from the press. Arthur received more than one flattering
|
||
offer from London publishing firms, and began to show himself
|
||
ambitious of literary fame. He had now quite recovered his health
|
||
and happiness; he saw Lilian every day; but ah, Frank, how shall I
|
||
tell you, the dear girl caught an infectious fever from nursing a
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||
sick child in the village, and died. Arthur went to the funeral,
|
||
but sat a little way off on the tombstone plucking the grass and
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||
casting it from him with the strange movement of the hands I
|
||
mentioned before. As the service was ended the clock struck twelve.
|
||
He got up and said, "The wedding will be late!" and approached the
|
||
grave which had just been filled up. Then he flung himself upon it
|
||
with fearful shrieks and curses against the supposed Author of the
|
||
world. When people attempted to lead him away he dashed them to the
|
||
ground with superhuman strength. Yet even in this fearful attack of
|
||
mania he seemed to recognize his father, and only shrank back from
|
||
the aged hands carousingly placed upon his arm. He was taken to Dr.
|
||
Scott's private asylum, which was but a little way from the church,
|
||
and in a few days ceased to be violent, asked for his papers and
|
||
books, and, having obtained them studied from morning to night. He
|
||
appeared perfectly quiet and contented; but every night, when the
|
||
church clock struck twelve, he opened the window of his room, which
|
||
was on the ground floor, murmured the name of Lilian, folded his
|
||
arms upon his breast, as if he had embraced her, and kissed the
|
||
air. Then, with the connivance of his servant, he sprang out of the
|
||
window and walked to the churchyard, followed by the man, who at
|
||
least never let him go out of his sight. All the while he conversed
|
||
(as if with Lilian) in the most animated manner, and, having
|
||
reached the grave, made movements with his hands as if covering her
|
||
up; after which he said "Good-night" in a cheerful voice and
|
||
returned. These promenades were, of course, discovered in time.
|
||
Arthur was carefully watched, the servant was dismissed, the
|
||
windows were barred. Nothing else could have been done, yet there
|
||
is too much reason to fear that this restraint proved injurious.
|
||
When the hour of midnight drew near he became uneasy and restless;
|
||
and when prevented from going to the window be fell into a state of
|
||
dejection. He no longer slept well, and was often troubled with
|
||
visions and dreams. One morning, when he awoke, he sat up in bed,
|
||
and laughed till the tears ran out of his eyes. He sent for the
|
||
doctor, and told him he had "found it all out," and, when asked to
|
||
explain what he meant, replied that it was an original idea -- a
|
||
most important discovery -- and that he should send it to a
|
||
magazine. "If I told you what it was," he continued, "you would
|
||
keep me here all my life, and pass off my idea on a deluded public
|
||
as your own." The doctor, to humor him, replied that he was
|
||
incapable of such malpractice. "Ah, well!" replied Arthur, "at
|
||
ordinary times, and in ordinary cases, no doubt you are an honest
|
||
man; but here the temptation would be too strong. Still, I don't
|
||
mind telling you my title. It's 'A New Thing under the Moon.'" He
|
||
then burst out laughing again, and rubbed his hands together with
|
||
glee. In the afternoon he became violent, said he should "throw up
|
||
his part," and tried to spring out of the window, dashing himself
|
||
against the bars. He was placed in a padded room. The next day he
|
||
was quiet as usual, and asked for paper and ink; but as the doctor
|
||
wished to get him to sleep, of which he stood in much need, this
|
||
request was refused. At first he seemed angry, then shrugged his
|
||
shoulders and smiled. It was afterwards found that he had a note-
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
5
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
book and pencil in his pocket. At ten o'clock p.m. he appeared
|
||
drowsy, but said that he could not sleep with people in the room;
|
||
and Dr. Scott told the attendants to go outside, but to look in
|
||
from time to time. In an hour or so he seemed to fall into a sleep,
|
||
which was probably assumed, and the vigilance of the watchers was
|
||
relaxed. But in the grey hour of the dawn they heard a struggle in
|
||
the room and a choked kind of cry. They pushed the door, but it had
|
||
been secured from within by a small piece of wood wedged in
|
||
underneath. They forced it open at last, and the body of the
|
||
unfortunate young man was found hanging from the window bar. Life
|
||
was extinct. On the table was a note-book in which he had been
|
||
writing. Dr. Scott has just sent it over, and advises me to read
|
||
it; so in my next letter I may give you an account of its contents.
|
||
Such, dear son-in-law, is the sad history of Arthur Elliott.
|
||
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
LETTER II
|
||
|
||
MY DEAR FRANK, -- I enclose you a copy of Elliott's last
|
||
production, written in a state of insanity, just before he
|
||
committed suicide. It will reach you, I hope, before. Ellen's
|
||
return, as I suppose you would not wish her to see it. You make it
|
||
a rule, I know, not to discuss theology with women, and I am much
|
||
of your opinion. When Ellen was a girl I carefully attended to the
|
||
culture of her mind, and encouraged her to read works of philosophy
|
||
and science. But, though I saw that she possessed a vigorous
|
||
intellect, I did not dare to carry her beyond the limits of Theism.
|
||
I feared that for her my faith would be but a system of cold and
|
||
comfortless philosophy, and that if at some future time, in
|
||
adversity or suffering, a religion became necessary to her, she
|
||
would run no slight risk of falling into Superstition. I saved her
|
||
from that danger by teaching her to believe in a God, compared with
|
||
whom the God of the Bible is a very indifferent character. But I
|
||
need not say that my God, though a nobler conception, is just as
|
||
much a creature of fiction as the other. They are both made by
|
||
human heads, as idols are made by human hands; only, while the
|
||
people of the churches and the chapels worship an idol of brass, I
|
||
gave my daughter an idol of gold. I formed her a God of the purest
|
||
and noblest ideas, and she still believes it to be real. Of course,
|
||
some day or other she may discover the deception; and were she to
|
||
read the enclosed manuscript, she would, I think, cease to believe
|
||
in the Divine benevolence, and next would begin to suspect that the
|
||
Being called God is as much a fabulous creature as Jupiter, Mars,
|
||
or Apollo. And then comes the great question, "Would she be able to
|
||
accept our religion, which demands such an utter abnegation of
|
||
self? Would she even understand it?" I fear that she would lapse
|
||
into that state of skepticism and indifference which, in a woman at
|
||
least, is more odious and harmful than superstition.
|
||
|
||
I therefore advise you not to show her this manuscript. But
|
||
read it yourself without delay, for you will be able to enjoy it.
|
||
It will not make you tremble in your shoes. You have climbed above
|
||
theology, as the Alpine mountaineer above the clouds.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
6
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
A NEW THING UNDER THE MOON
|
||
|
||
The habit of reading in bed is delightful, but the books used
|
||
for that purpose should be carefully selected. It was most
|
||
imprudent of me to read, and at Dr. Scott's of all places in the
|
||
world, the 'Confessions of an Opium-Eater' just after three
|
||
chapters of Butler's Analogy. I might have known that it would give
|
||
me mental indigestion. Needless to say that I had a dream, and such
|
||
a dream! or rather such a series of dreams! Yet, though I spent a
|
||
bad night, it is some consolation to reflect it was so ordained for
|
||
the good of mankind. I am willing indeed to admit that the system
|
||
of Cosmogony set forth in my dream may possibly not be true, and I
|
||
shall not claim for it the name of Revelation as other dreamers
|
||
have done; I merely assert that my theory of Cause and Creation is
|
||
the best that has ever been propounded. It explains all the facts
|
||
of history and nature, is in harmony with science, and is supported
|
||
by analogy. Above all, it is quite original; nothing like it has
|
||
ever been imagined before; and, though Solomon wisely observes that
|
||
there is no new thing under the Sun, there may be a new thing under
|
||
the Moon; and dreams are exceptions to every rule. However, my
|
||
readers shall judge for themselves
|
||
|
||
I dreamt, first of all, I was standing, as it seemed to me, in
|
||
Space, and I had a curious kind of impression that the Infinite was
|
||
not too large, but just the right size for a person of my
|
||
dimensions. I observed something in the distance of a dark and
|
||
shadowy appearance, in form like a promontory, of which I could
|
||
plainly perceive the extremity or point, but not the base and
|
||
middle parts, although, as the point was exactly opposite my range
|
||
of vision, and was turned away from me, it was clear that the bulk
|
||
of the promontory must be situated between me and the extremity in
|
||
question. This puzzled me much, and after staring some time I
|
||
closed my left eye in order to see more distinctly. Then up shot a
|
||
huge wall to the left of my right and still open eye. If you look
|
||
at your nose with both eyes open, and then look at it with one eye
|
||
shut, you will understand what I mean. I had, in fact, been
|
||
surveying the tip of my own nose, which was distant many thousand
|
||
miles from the middle of my face. I glanced at my shoulders, but
|
||
they extended indefinitely into space; I could not see either of my
|
||
hands, they were too far off; and when I lifted one up it seemed
|
||
like a huge flesh-colored mountain sailing towards me through the
|
||
air, and threatening to crush me if I did not pull it back. Then I
|
||
thought what a dreadful thing it was to have such a nose, and a
|
||
body which could be measured only by means of a trigonometrical
|
||
survey. A cold perspiration broke out on my forehead, and I
|
||
calculated that each drop was about the size of the Atlantic Ocean.
|
||
This woke me with a start. I sat up in bed, felt my nose, and then,
|
||
cursing all opium-eaters, lay down and fell asleep again.
|
||
|
||
I next dreamt that I was seated in an amphitheater or circus,
|
||
in the midst of a large audience. I was conscious that I had the
|
||
same body as before, and that all the persons present were equally
|
||
enormous; yet I could see the ends of my shoulders, and my nose did
|
||
not seem to be long; the reason of which I suppose to be this --
|
||
that in my previous dream I was in a transitional state; my body
|
||
had become that of the Demigods, whose kingdom I had entered, while
|
||
my eyesight remained in the human condition. But now my vision had
|
||
also been enlarged, and I soon found that it possessed
|
||
extraordinary powers.
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
7
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
The arena of the circus must have been many millions of miles
|
||
in extent, and was a bottomless pit of pure ether, traversed by a
|
||
bright shining ball, round which sailed a number of dark little
|
||
beads attending its course. Now I fancied I had seen them somewhere
|
||
before. I looked at them again more attentively, -- there could be
|
||
no doubt at all about the matter, -- it was the Solar System.
|
||
|
||
My mind was still that of a mortal; so, instead of looking
|
||
down on our little universe with the calm curiosity of a superior
|
||
being, I had the injured feeling of an inhabitant, and rose to go,
|
||
saying, "It is only an ornery after all."
|
||
|
||
However, I observed that the eyes of the spectators were all
|
||
turned in the direction of the Earth; so I looked at it too; and
|
||
then, oh, wonder of wonders what did I behold!
|
||
|
||
I could see the whole globe, and everything upon it, even
|
||
worlds of animalcule too minute to be distinguished with the best
|
||
microscopes; even the waves of light, invisible to mortals, which
|
||
break upon the surface of the Earth like the waves of the sea upon
|
||
the shore. I could see every man woman, and child, and study their
|
||
actions without effort or confusion. I could view, at the same
|
||
time, numberless dramas of domestic life which were being performed
|
||
within the dramas of the nations; while these were only parts of
|
||
the great drama of the Earth. It is, of course, difficult to
|
||
explain how so many different objects could be at the same time
|
||
gathered by the eye, transmitted to the brain, and assimilated by
|
||
the intellect. It would be difficult to explain to a maggot how the
|
||
eye of a man can take in a landscape at a glance. Yet these powers
|
||
of vision will not seem excessive when the size of the eye is taken
|
||
into consideration. I should say that the pupil of a demigod's eye
|
||
is about double the sun's diameter, and no doubt, if dissected,
|
||
would be found to contain lenses of extraordinary structure. But I
|
||
have merely to record facts and am not called upon to offer
|
||
explanations.
|
||
|
||
The pleasure I derived at first from looking at the Earth was
|
||
soon marred by the fearful tragedies which I saw everywhere
|
||
enacted. It was nearly all blood and tears; and, unable to gaze any
|
||
longer on the torture of my kind, I rose to leave the theater. At
|
||
the same time one of the audience went out, followed by a titter
|
||
from the crowd, and I recognized in him the likeness of an
|
||
historical personage; or, rather, the historical personage was a
|
||
likeness of him. Then I understood that this earth-life of ours is
|
||
only a satirical play, that our great men are caricatures of famous
|
||
demigods, their vicissitudes and actions, ingenious lampoons. And
|
||
is this all? thought I to myself. Are we with our proud aspirations
|
||
only as puppets in a show? Are love, ambition, and religious
|
||
sentiment -- the tremulous passion, the desire of fame, the divine
|
||
yearnings of the soul -- are these but as the jerkings of a wire
|
||
cunningly contrived? Are the terrible combats of life as gladiator-
|
||
games to make the demigods a holiday? Ah, then it is sad! and yet
|
||
do not men as it is often martyr their lives to make a noise in the
|
||
world and gain the plaudits of a human audience? And should not we
|
||
who aspire to greatness rejoice that we play before the Immortals,
|
||
and may hope to achieve celestial fame? Thus I tried to console my
|
||
suffering heart; but alas! it was in vain. I had a hope -- one last
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
8
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
hope -- and now it was destroyed. For I saw that the dead cannot be
|
||
united, since we are but as shadows that vanish away. All is lost,
|
||
all is done; farewell for ever, Lilian: farewell, my only love, for
|
||
evermore.
|
||
|
||
I fled into Space. But I found that the senses of hearing and
|
||
smell were endowed with powers not less marvelous than those of the
|
||
sight. Though now far away, I could smell the Earth, which gave
|
||
forth a carrion stench not only from its body but its soul. Each
|
||
vice had its horrible odor. It is true that each virtue had its
|
||
fragrance as well, and sometimes, though rarely, a breath of
|
||
perfume floated through the air. And now strange sounds arose. I
|
||
heard the humming of the Earth as it spun, and the roaring of the
|
||
fire in its innermost depths. I heard the whispers of conscience
|
||
and the chidings of remorse, the sighs of unrequited love, the
|
||
cries of many agonies. At the same time I heard the audience
|
||
hooting and shouting, Off! off! Shame! Apologize! Where is the Lord
|
||
Chamberlain? But in the midst of this turmoil the cries of anguish
|
||
were hushed, a sweet balmy smell was diffused through space, the
|
||
voices of the earth rose in a strain of enchanting melody, and
|
||
thunders of applause seemed to indicate that the drama was
|
||
concluded. Then I woke up and found my cheeks all wet with tears
|
||
which I had shed.
|
||
|
||
My servant, who is very attentive -- perhaps a little over-
|
||
attentive -- has taken my lamp away, but there is a splendid moon,
|
||
and I am writing near the window by its light. I do not understand
|
||
why, the day after my dream, they put me into this room, which is
|
||
not so large as my own, and furnished in very bad taste, the walls
|
||
being stuffed like a first-class carriage on a railway. Where are
|
||
my books? What mean those sentinel footsteps outside, the door
|
||
stealthily opened, and the cold grey eyes which search into my
|
||
soul? Ha! ha! ha! Look at those little black imps dancing in the
|
||
moonlight on the floor! Patter, patter, patter! pit-a-pat, pit-a-
|
||
pat! Ah! Lilian, my dear, you should not come out at night in that
|
||
thin white shroud, and it's no use your coming here any more. The
|
||
windows are barred, and I can't take you home to the quiet
|
||
churchyard and put you to bed in your cozy little grave. We can
|
||
meet no more by the light of the moon. Besides, it is but a play;
|
||
we should only be amusing the people up there. Oh! cruel Author,
|
||
why did you kill her? -- in the first act, too; very inartistic. At
|
||
least I don't know. As this life is a penny-gaff sort of
|
||
performance, it was more effective to do it when she was young, for
|
||
if she was old and ugly no one would care. But who could see her
|
||
die then with the beauty of girlhood still blushing upon her, and
|
||
her death caught nursing the poor sick child; who could see her die
|
||
then without being smitten to the heart? It must have brought down
|
||
the house. Weep, ye gods, weep your oceanic tears, and wait your
|
||
sighs in gentle gales to mourn poor Lilian. And her lover lying on
|
||
the grave, digging at the ground with his nails and teeth, seized,
|
||
bound hand and foot, and then brought here. Oh, no doubt it was a
|
||
fine stroke of art -- most charmingly devised. Well, it's a hard
|
||
world, and we cannot all be kings and queens; to one is the part of
|
||
the villain -- he is hissed; to another the maiden in distress; and
|
||
poor Mad Tom must be played too.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
9
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
I kept myself awake, for I feared another dream; but the odors
|
||
of the earth lingered in my nostrils, and its horrible cries still
|
||
sounded in my ears. After all, I thought it was best to sleep if I
|
||
could. Luckily, the last number of the 'Quarterly Review' happened
|
||
to be in the room, and I knew that Dr. Scott recommends this
|
||
publication in cases of sleeplessness and nervous excitement. The
|
||
article I selected was a perfect soporific -- an essay on the
|
||
Darwinian Theory, and before I had finished the preamble it had
|
||
sent me to sleep. But on that fatal night even the 'Quarterly
|
||
Review' could not prevent me from dreaming; and, in fact, I dreamt
|
||
of a review, for my third dream took me to a Demigod club where I
|
||
found the following critique in a periodical lying on the table. I
|
||
wrote it from memory as soon as I awoke.
|
||
|
||
THE REVIEW
|
||
|
||
The custom of creating worlds, and of peopling them with
|
||
animated beings who reflect the vices or follies of the day, or
|
||
offer an example of ideal virtues and moral excellence, has of late
|
||
become popular in art; and, though it may be a fashion which, like
|
||
others of its kind, will soon pass away, it is in the meantime for
|
||
us, who are critics and censors, to pass judgment on all such works
|
||
as succeed in obtaining the attention of the public. The anonymous
|
||
drama which has just been performed is said to be a first attempt;
|
||
and this we should have inferred from internal evidence. For,
|
||
though the work is by no means deficient in power, and contains
|
||
some original ideas, there is a want of symmetry in form and of
|
||
finish in detail, a prodigal waste of raw material, a roughness of
|
||
style and execution which bear the stamp of inexperience. However,
|
||
as will be shown, it is chiefly on moral grounds that we think this
|
||
production ought to be condemned.
|
||
|
||
The work is simple in conception and modest in design. We have
|
||
not here, as in some ambitious compositions, a number of inhabited
|
||
worlds contributing each its part to the story. One system only is
|
||
placed upon the stage, and the action is confined to one planet of
|
||
that system.
|
||
|
||
At first the world was presented to our view as a fiery cloud.
|
||
It became compressed to a Sun, which advanced through Space,
|
||
rotating on its axis, and cast off certain pieces from itself like
|
||
tyres from a wheel. These cooled into planetary bodies, and one of
|
||
them, called by its inhabitants 'The Earth,' was the scene of the
|
||
drama which we shall now endeavor to describe. We observed with
|
||
unmixed pleasure the gradual growth of the planet from a cinder
|
||
enveloped in cloud to a globe covered with water; the sun-rays
|
||
causing the origin of life; the floating animalcules and one-celled
|
||
plants; the rise of the land from the deep, and its naked skin
|
||
being clothed with a green mantle of palm and fern vegetation.
|
||
Monstrous reptiles and ungainly quadrupeds inhabited the primeval
|
||
marshes of the earth; and at night the croaking of enormous frogs
|
||
rose like thunder in the air. But as time flowed on the face of the
|
||
earth assumed a more gentle and benignant expression; flowers
|
||
blossomed in the forest, and the voices of singing birds were
|
||
heard; the quadrupeds became less gigantic in size, but more
|
||
graceful and varied in their forms; and finally Men appeared upon
|
||
the scene, roaming in herds through the forest, clambering the
|
||
trees, jabbering semi-articulate sounds. But, as language formed
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
10
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
upon their lips, the erect posture was assumed, the fore-foot was
|
||
used as a hand, weapons were invented, fire was discovered, caverns
|
||
in the rock, burrows in the ground, and platforms on the trees were
|
||
exchanged for huts surrounded by gardens. Wild animals were tamed,
|
||
the seed-bearing grasses were cultured into grain, canoes glided on
|
||
the waters, commerce became the rival of war, which, once
|
||
incessant, was now occasional. The tribes were united into nations,
|
||
the nations into empires, great cities flourished on the banks of
|
||
rivers and by harbors on the sea-shore; classes were divided, the
|
||
arts and sciences arose. At first these were kept as state secrets,
|
||
and often perished with the state. At first wealth, culture, and
|
||
power belonged exclusively to the dominant caste, while the masses
|
||
labored in subjection. But by means of useful inventions knowledge
|
||
was widely diffused, and the passion for liberty entered the bosom
|
||
of the people. One nation after another shook itself free from the
|
||
tyranny of kings and the tyranny of priests. When class
|
||
restrictions were removed all could hope by honest labor to better
|
||
their condition, and all striving for their own ends assisted the
|
||
onward movement of the world. At a later period the social equality
|
||
of men extinguished personal ambition, and the Welfare of the Race
|
||
was the aim of those who labored for distinction. Fame could be
|
||
obtained only by adding something to the knowledge or the happiness
|
||
of men. Finally war ceased; the malignant forces of Nature were
|
||
subdued, vice and disease were eradicated, the earth became a
|
||
pleasure garden, and men learnt to bear without repining a painless
|
||
death in extreme old age.
|
||
|
||
We suppose that the moral purpose of this drama is to teach
|
||
the doctrine of Improvement, and to illustrate that tendency to
|
||
Progress which pervades the universe. The evolution of mind from
|
||
matter, by means of natural law, shows the innate power of that
|
||
tendency or force, and the efforts by which Man achieves his own
|
||
comparative perfection are no doubt intended as a protest against
|
||
that habit of quiescence and content which is perhaps the natural
|
||
failing of Immortals. We think that the satire on theology is
|
||
wholesome and just. Nothing could be more ludicrous than to see
|
||
these ephemeral beings, these creatures of a moment, building
|
||
little houses in honor of the First Cause and glibly explaining
|
||
mysteries which we do not profess to understand. This may serve as
|
||
a warning to certain presumptuous philosophers who fabricate
|
||
theories respecting the Supreme; for how can we know that we are
|
||
not in the same relative position to beings of a higher race as
|
||
those pygmies we create to ourselves? At least it is certain that
|
||
our intellects, great as they are, or great as we think them to be,
|
||
are unable to explain primary phenomena or to solve the problems of
|
||
Cause, Existence, and Futurity. So far then we go with our author;
|
||
and in numberless ways he has justly derided the follies of our
|
||
race. We can afford to forgive him for creating human reviewers to
|
||
parody our profession, the more so as coarse caricature fails of
|
||
its effect; but we must object to the introduction of personal
|
||
portraits; it was settled long ago as a dogma in art that mere
|
||
copies should have no place in a creation. This, however, is not a
|
||
defect on which we shall dwell, for, though in itself serious
|
||
enough, it is light and trivial when compared with the faults it is
|
||
now our duty to expose.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
11
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
In the first place, it is most degrading that these men who
|
||
are made in our image, who in their exterior form and mental
|
||
faculties partly resemble ourselves, should be suffered to retain
|
||
both in body and mind so much of the lower animals. The Creator
|
||
may, perhaps, reply that he laid down the law of gradual
|
||
transition, and that all traces of the beast in man could not be
|
||
expelled except by departing from the law. But since he
|
||
transformed, by gradual transition, the muzzle or snout to the lips
|
||
of beauty radiant with smiles, the hairy paw to the skilful and
|
||
delicate hand, he might surely have found some way to obliterate by
|
||
change the instincts and actions of which we complain. No one can
|
||
deny that he is ingenious enough when he chooses; the shark's jaw
|
||
and the serpent's fang are models of dexterous contrivance, though
|
||
we do not envy him these inventions. In any case, the difficulty is
|
||
one of his own making, and if he could have devised no other plan
|
||
he should have modified his law of evolution. It might have been
|
||
less philosophical, but it would have been more decent; and we must
|
||
own that we prefer an error in art to an outrage on decorum.
|
||
|
||
Secondly, the development of matter to mind, of quadruped to
|
||
man, of savage to civilized nations, is laudable enough as an idea;
|
||
but how has it been carried out? As regards the first stage of the
|
||
progress we have only to praise and admire; but how has progress
|
||
been produced in the animated world? We are almost ashamed to
|
||
explain a law which, in its recklessness of life and prodigality of
|
||
pain, almost amounts to a crime. In cold forethought the Creator so
|
||
disposed the forces of nature that more animated beings were born
|
||
than could possibly obtain subsistence on the earth. This caused a
|
||
struggle for existence, a desperate and universal war; the best and
|
||
improved animals were alone able to survive, and so in time
|
||
Evolution was produced. We shall not deny that there is a kind of
|
||
perverted ingenuity in the composition of this law; but the waste
|
||
of life is not less clumsy than it is cruel. By means of this same
|
||
struggle for existence, man was raised from the bestial state and
|
||
his early discoveries were made. Afterwards, ambition of fame, and
|
||
later still more noble motives came into force, but that was
|
||
towards the conclusion of the drama. At first, every step in the
|
||
human progress was won by conflict, and every invention resulted
|
||
from calamity. The most odious vices and crimes were at one time
|
||
useful to humanity, while war, tyranny, and superstition assisted
|
||
the development of man.
|
||
|
||
Evil unhappily exists, and we do not condemn its employment in
|
||
art. We are not in favor of those impossible dramas in which only
|
||
the virtues are displayed. But we do condemn this confusion of evil
|
||
and good, and maintain that nothing can be more immoral than to
|
||
make crime the assistant of progress and vice the seed of which
|
||
virtue is the fruit.
|
||
|
||
Again, Death is a useful and perhaps indispensable appliance
|
||
in works of this kind, but so potent a means of exciting sympathy
|
||
should be employed with moderation. Now what do we find here? The
|
||
law of evolution is the law of death. Massacre is incessant;
|
||
flowers, animals, and men die at every moment; the earth is a vast
|
||
slaughter-house, and the ocean reddened with blood. Nor, incredible
|
||
as it may seem, is that the worst. With a talent for torture which
|
||
rouses our wonder only next to our disgust, the Creator has smitten
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
12
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
the animated world, even to the insects, with numerous painful and
|
||
lingering diseases, while the intellect is also afflicted with
|
||
maladies peculiar to itself. The affections which at first would
|
||
appear to afford some meager consolation in the martyrdom of man
|
||
are themselves too often the cause of mental pain and incurable
|
||
despair. What can be said for such a world? What kind of defence or
|
||
excuse can there be for its Creator? It is true that he made men
|
||
himself, but that does not justify his cruelty. The Supreme has
|
||
endowed us with the power of producing and destroying animated
|
||
forms, but so terrible a gift should not be abused. We should never
|
||
forget that though these little creatures live only for a moment,
|
||
they are yet sentient beings, and their torments while they last
|
||
are real and intense. Who could view that melancholy Earth and
|
||
those writhing masses of humanity, who could hear those agonizing
|
||
cries without a shudder of pain and a glow of honest indignation
|
||
against the Author of such woes and wrongs? Many of the audience
|
||
withdrew, while others hooted the Creator, and at one time we
|
||
thought his planet would be damned. But, all's well that ends well
|
||
is the easy maxim of a pleasure-seeking world, and the public,
|
||
fickle and easily impressed, applauded the virtuous finale and
|
||
forgot the horrors that had gone before. We were unable to do so,
|
||
and declare that it seemed to us a most cruel and immoral
|
||
exhibition. That is what we have to say. We know nothing of the
|
||
author, but if we should meet him at a future time shall be happy
|
||
to hear what he can say to exonerate himself. We do not wish to be
|
||
too hard upon a young beginner whose talents cannot be disputed,
|
||
and we trust that this critique, which is not unkindly meant in
|
||
spite of its severity, will induce him to reform. When next he
|
||
produces a world let it be one which we can take our wives and
|
||
daughters to see, which will excite in the audience none but the
|
||
nobler sentiments, and which also, we must add, will give us a more
|
||
favorable impression of the personal character of its Creator.
|
||
|
||
LETTER III
|
||
|
||
So, Ellen, you have been into Bluebeard's chamber; you have
|
||
read the manuscript; and these ravings of a lunatic have made you
|
||
doubt the existence of a Personal God. You suspect that I doubt it
|
||
too. My dear, you are wrong; I disbelieve it. There is no doubt in
|
||
my mind about the matter.
|
||
|
||
Oh, Daughter of Eve, an apple from the Tree of Knowledge was
|
||
hidden in a drawer; then came the serpent Curiosity; and now,
|
||
having eaten, you are banished from the Eden of belief. You wish me
|
||
to tell you the whole truth, or what I believe to be the truth.
|
||
Well, it can do you no harm in the present condition of your mind
|
||
and may do you good -- though as to that I am not very sanguine.
|
||
But I will not merely expound my religious opinions; I will
|
||
describe their birth and growth in my mind. I will tell you the
|
||
story of my life.
|
||
|
||
Ah! the story of my life. ... Apart from all matters of
|
||
religion it will deeply, too deeply, interest you. I fear, my
|
||
darling, it will give you much pain; yet it is right that you
|
||
should hear it; and you will be inclined more than ever, I believe,
|
||
to pity and succor the unfortunate when you learn in what misery
|
||
your childhood was passed.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
13
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
You tell me that sometimes when you approach anything that is
|
||
dead, a strange and horrible scene rises like a picture to your
|
||
mind. You see a bare and squalid room -- the walls blackened with
|
||
dirt, the broken window-panes stuffed with rags. On the floor a
|
||
woman with long yellow hair; beside her a man on his knees dressed
|
||
in a ragged black coat; behind him some men and women of coarse and
|
||
evil countenance, yet grave and sad, whispering together.
|
||
|
||
You shall now learn what was this scene which your memory has
|
||
faithfully though fitfully retained. You shall learn how your
|
||
father was an outcast, reduced to the extremity of sorrow, to the
|
||
brink of despair; how his misfortunes resembled, but exceeded,
|
||
those of the unhappy Elliott, and how narrowly he escaped a similar
|
||
fate.
|
||
|
||
LETTER IV
|
||
|
||
IN the last century an East India nabob named Mordaunt
|
||
returned to England with an immense fortune, said to have been
|
||
obtained in no very creditable manner from the treasury of a Rajah
|
||
in Bengal at whose court he was Resident. My father, his only son,
|
||
inherited several landed estates and a large sum of money in the
|
||
funds. He was sent to Eton and Christchurch, at which latter place
|
||
of education he chiefly distinguished himself as an athlete; he
|
||
also rode hard across country, was a noted skittle-player, and had
|
||
gained much academic fame by successfully bruising with bargees.
|
||
But all this came to an end before he left the university, for he
|
||
went to hear a noted field-preacher, intending to create a
|
||
disturbance, and was converted on the spot. He gave up his old
|
||
habits and companions, read hard for his degree, went into orders,
|
||
and took the living of Harborne-in-the-Moors, which was in his own
|
||
presentation. Such is the account of his youth, which I received
|
||
from the excellent Bishop of T----, who was his contemporary. There
|
||
was nothing in my father's appearance to show that he had ever been
|
||
inclined to dissipation, or even to innocent pleasure. His features
|
||
were inexpressibly severe; his eyes were cold and hard, and
|
||
overhung with thick, bushy eyebrows; his lips were thin and Closely
|
||
compressed. His strength was great, as I, when a boy, knew to my
|
||
cost; and even his hands had a stern aspect, being broad and
|
||
powerful, the spaces between the knuckles covered with long, black
|
||
hairs. He did not send me to school, but taught me Greek, Latin,
|
||
mathematics, and divinity himself; and seldom, I believe, has any
|
||
apprentice been more harshly treated by his master. However, I
|
||
ought to remind you that I was born in a flogging, cudgelling age,
|
||
and that humanity to schoolboys is a virtue of recent growth.
|
||
Moreover, my father was not indulgent to himself, and no paid
|
||
tutor, however conscientious, would have toiled as he did with me.
|
||
His day's work was almost incredible. He rose at daybreak, and read
|
||
Hebrew and theology till breakfast: if it was winter, he laid and
|
||
lighted his own fire. The forenoon and afternoon he devoted to me,
|
||
except at two intervals which I spent in amusement, he in attending
|
||
to the duties of his parish. He allowed me to pass the evenings
|
||
with my mother while he corrected my exercises, and studied the
|
||
lessons of the next day in Homer, Aristotle, Virgil, or Tacitus,
|
||
comparing the various readings and referring to the German
|
||
commentators and critics as if he were preparing an exhaustive
|
||
treatise on the subject. His religion was of the lowest Calvinistic
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
14
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
type, but at least it was sincere. He allowed himself no pleasures
|
||
of any kind, and though less strict with my mother and myself, we
|
||
lived in a very frugal manner. After his death I was informed by
|
||
the family lawyer that he spent immense sums in anonymous donations
|
||
for religious and charitable purposes. My mother died in the belief
|
||
that he was a miser and had never done a benevolent action in his
|
||
life,, He thought it right to conceal from her this giving of alms,
|
||
and perhaps also he loved her more than he allowed her to suppose.
|
||
But he did not make her very happy. Ah, what would have been my
|
||
life without her! How often she caught me in her arms as I fled
|
||
from the chamber of torture and kissed my bruised and bleeding
|
||
hands! How often she soothed my wounded spirit with words of the
|
||
tenderest love, and persuaded me to endure with patience the trials
|
||
of my childish life! I did not then know that she suffered more
|
||
than myself. She was ardent and romantic, fond of intellectual
|
||
society, and not indifferent to admiration, possessed of remarkable
|
||
beauty and many elegant accomplishments. But Harborne was a lone
|
||
and sequestered village in the moors, and my father objected to
|
||
social pleasures; so we received no visitors.
|
||
|
||
She had a heart which pined for affection; and he was a man of
|
||
stone. She once told me that my birth had saved her from absolute
|
||
despair: thenceforth she had something to live for, something to
|
||
love. Often, as she pressed me to her bosom, she would gaze into my
|
||
face with a timid, searching, craving look; and when with some cold
|
||
words I tried to shake myself free, her deep, dark eyes would fill
|
||
with tears. So it was also in your case, dear Ellen, and so no
|
||
doubt you have found it with your little girl. Children cannot love
|
||
us as we love them; and when they become old enough to return our
|
||
affection, they leave us to marry or to make their way in the
|
||
world. Happily it is good for us to love as it is good for us to
|
||
labor, even when the reward is slight and inadequate.
|
||
|
||
My mother was a sad invalid, being afflicted with a pulmonary
|
||
complaint which required constant attendance. The parish doctor saw
|
||
her nearly every day, and received a fixed fee or salary per annum.
|
||
Herbert Chalmers, whose name is yet remembered in science, was a
|
||
student of promise and repute who had taken the cure of bodies in
|
||
the parish of Harborne, partly for the sake of daily bread, and
|
||
partly to study that particular phase of the profession. He had not
|
||
been there more than a year when his friends obtained him a
|
||
lucrative appointment. He thanked them and declined it, saying he
|
||
was not ambitious and preferred living in the country. Now as the
|
||
duties of a parish doctor combine in themselves all that is most
|
||
unpleasant in the life of an apothecary's apprentice and the
|
||
checkered existence of a post-boy, namely the rolling and pinching
|
||
of innumerable pills, and long night-rides in the hardest of
|
||
weather, his friends thought him out of his wits; but they could
|
||
not change his resolution. Some time afterwards a relation died and
|
||
left him a fortune. He built a mansion with a laboratory, hot-
|
||
houses, and rooms suitable for collections and experiments, engaged
|
||
a medical assistant, and devoted his time to scientific researches
|
||
on the physiology and chemistry of the vegetable kingdom. But he
|
||
still remained the doctor of the parish and attended all difficult
|
||
cases himself. He reversed the usual order of things, for when he
|
||
left a poor patient he slipped a guinea into his hand: that was the
|
||
good doctor's idea of being humorous. His skill and unremitting
|
||
care certainly prolonged my dear mother's life, though it could not
|
||
save her from death at the early age of forty-three.
|
||
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
15
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
I had always been told from my boyhood that I was to be a
|
||
clergyman; my father and mother both wished it, and I had no desire
|
||
for any other profession. My college life was quite uneventful. I
|
||
joined no set, indulged in none of the popular amusements, such as
|
||
boating or cricket; and, living for the most part in my rooms, made
|
||
neither enemies nor friends. I took a first class in Great Go, and
|
||
the Bishop of T----, who ordained me, wrote a most kind letter to
|
||
congratulate my father on the good examination I had passed in
|
||
divinity. I preached my first sermon in Harborne Church; and though
|
||
no one was there but our tenants and servants, my parents and the
|
||
doctor, I did not dare raise my eyes from the book, and felt myself
|
||
blushing two or three times as I read out some eloquent passages
|
||
which I had composed in a state of exaltation, but which now seemed
|
||
rather too fine for the occasion. However, my mother was delighted
|
||
with this maiden composition, and felt very proud that I was
|
||
ordained.
|
||
|
||
On Sundays, Dr. Chalmers always dined with us in the middle of
|
||
the day; and that same afternoon we were strolling together in the
|
||
garden -- my mother, the doctor and I -- when she said, "Well,
|
||
doctor, you have not quite wasted your life in this dismal place;
|
||
for you have made me live long enough to enjoy one day of perfect
|
||
happiness." He made some reply which I do not remember, and then
|
||
she said, "But tell me, dear doctor, I do not understand; why do
|
||
you stay here when you might go to London and become the intimate
|
||
friend of Davy, and Buckland, and the other great men with whom you
|
||
correspond?" He answered, "That is my secret; and female curiosity
|
||
cannot always be indulged." "Well, then, tell me.something else,"
|
||
she said. "Is it true you are going to be married? " He smiled and
|
||
shook his head, and replied that it was not true. He was now forty-
|
||
six years of age, and his day was gone. "Oh, doctor," she said,
|
||
"you mustn't say that. Have you forgotten I am forty-three? Is my
|
||
day gone too? " She drew herself up and looked very beautiful. Then
|
||
she said, "You are still young enough, why do you not marry? Are
|
||
you a woman hater? "Again he smiled, but this time I thought rather
|
||
sadly, and said he was far from being that. "And do you not find it
|
||
very lonely living in that great house by yourself? "Yes," he said,
|
||
"it is very lonely." "And do you not sometimes feel unhappy?" "Yes,
|
||
sometimes I feel very unhappy indeed." "And you do not think that
|
||
if you were to marry ...?" "I cannot," he replied, "Is it for the
|
||
same reason that prevented you from taking that appointment?"
|
||
"Yes," he replied in a sharp voice, "it is the same reason." "Will
|
||
you not tell me what it is?" (He shook his head.) "Ah, my dear
|
||
friend, it would be better. You have something on your mind; will
|
||
you not trust it to me? You have saved my life again and again;
|
||
will you not let me prove my gratitude? Oh, disburden your heart,
|
||
I beseech you. Edward, dear, leave us alone."
|
||
|
||
"No, sir," said he with emphasis, "do not go away." My mother
|
||
thought that he was angry, and laid her hand upon his arm. I saw
|
||
his lips turn pale, but he said in a firm voice, "Ellen Mordaunt,
|
||
I thank you for your sympathy, but I cannot tell you this secret of
|
||
my life, it would make you unhappy, and would give me no relief,
|
||
but quite the contrary." He then shook hands with us both, and
|
||
saying he was wanted at home, walked quickly towards the garden
|
||
gate.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
16
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
My mother looked after him, her eyes wide open with
|
||
astonishment. I said there was a skeleton in every house. "Oh!" she
|
||
cried, "Edward, what do you mean? He cannot have done anything
|
||
wrong; that is impossible."
|
||
|
||
I did not reply, and we walked up and down the gravel walk. My
|
||
mother seemed buried in thought. Suddenly she gave an exclamation
|
||
and put her hand to her heart. She turned round and went a few
|
||
steps as if to overtake the doctor, who had just reached the gate
|
||
and paused there to look at us as he passed through. "Are you in
|
||
pain, mother?" said I; "let me run after Dr. Chalmers?" "No," she
|
||
cried earnestly, "do not call him back;" and seizing my hand she
|
||
pressed it with convulsive force. I remained silent and lost in
|
||
wonder, as she had been a moment before.
|
||
|
||
Then she said in her own quiet voice, "It was only a passing
|
||
spasm, and Dr. Chalmers has other patients to attend. It is getting
|
||
rather cold; I think we had better go in."
|
||
|
||
We went indoors, and my mother, complaining of a headache,
|
||
retired to her room. The next morning I was awoke by the sun-beams
|
||
streaming through the window. It was a fine spring morning, the
|
||
birds in the garden were singing merrily. I felt in glorious
|
||
health; the blood seemed to dance in my veins. Hitherto I had known
|
||
no serious cares, and the troubles of childhood were past. A bright
|
||
calm life was before me, and as I reflected on my happy condition
|
||
my heart was filled with the love of God and with gratitude for his
|
||
goodness.
|
||
|
||
One of the servants came in, gave me a letter, and hastened
|
||
from the room. The letter was from my father. I have it before me
|
||
now, yellow and crumpled and stained -- written more than thirty
|
||
years ago -- yet still I weep as I read it.
|
||
|
||
"My son, I cannot see you to-day. It has pleased the Lord to
|
||
chasten us with a heavy and sore affliction. Last night when I went
|
||
to bed at a late hour your mother was asleep, but seemed to be
|
||
dreaming. She turned from side to side, and was whispering
|
||
something under her breath. I stooped down and listened, and heard
|
||
her say the doctor's name. Then I feared that she was ill. Still
|
||
sleeping, she flung her arms round my neck and awoke. When she saw
|
||
me she gave a scream and shrank to the farther side of the bed.
|
||
'Wife,' I said, 'you have a fever; your face is flushed, and your
|
||
hands are burning hot.; I will send James for the doctor at once.'
|
||
I moved towards the bell, but she sprang from the bed and
|
||
exclaimed, 'It is nothing, I am quite well, indeed I am; you must
|
||
not send for him. Oh, do not send for him!' I saw that she was
|
||
delirious, and rang the bell in spite of her feeble efforts to
|
||
prevent me. Then she gave a great cry; the blood rushed from her
|
||
lips and she fell to the floor. When I raised her in my arms she
|
||
was dead."
|
||
|
||
LETTER V
|
||
|
||
I REMAINED three months at home, and my father was very gentle
|
||
and kind. One Sunday, as we stood side by side in the churchyard
|
||
looking at the grave, he put his hand on my shoulder and said, "You
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
17
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
were a good son to her." I noticed that his sermons were more
|
||
humane, his mien and manners less austere; and I heard the coachman
|
||
(an old servant) declare that "master was quite a changed man." But
|
||
before I left home his old severity seemed to be returning.
|
||
|
||
The Bishop of T---- gave me a small living at Stilbroke in
|
||
----shire. The rectory being out of repair, I was invited by Mr.
|
||
Jameson, apparently the squire, for his letter was dated Stilbroke
|
||
Court, to stay at his house until my own was habitable. I accepted
|
||
this invitation. A talkative neighbor on the coach told me that Mr.
|
||
Jameson was a London tradesman retired from business, who about ten
|
||
years ago had bought the manor of Stilbroke and set up as a country
|
||
gentleman. "But," added my informant with a grin, and sinking his
|
||
voice to a whisper, "the gentry don't call upon him, and he's not
|
||
in the commission of the peace." He then went on to inform me that
|
||
Mr. Jameson had one son, a lieutenant or captain in the Guards, and
|
||
one daughter, who was lady of the house, her mother being dead. He
|
||
said, "You'll find the bishop there spending the day; he's come
|
||
down to consecrate a church." My companion then proceeded to elicit
|
||
from me as much information respecting myself as I felt disposed to
|
||
give him, and got down at a village near Stilbroke. I supposed he
|
||
was a lawyer, or land agent, or something of that kind. I found
|
||
Stilbroke Court a fine specimen of the old English manor-house, and
|
||
Mr. Jameson, who came out of doors to welcome me, certainly seemed
|
||
at first sight a fine specimen of the old English country
|
||
gentleman. He wore a blue coat with brass buttons and a buff-
|
||
colored waistcoat, and a snowy neck-cloth swathed round his throat.
|
||
He had also a full-blooded, country-looking complexion; but when he
|
||
spoke there was beneath a false accent of rusticity, a certain
|
||
intonation which savored of the counter. I also observed in our
|
||
first interview that he spoke with much hesitation, and made long
|
||
stops between every phrase, the reason being, as I was afterwards
|
||
able to infer, that on account of the bishop's presence he was
|
||
leaving out the expletives with which he usually garnished his
|
||
discourse. For when he first came down to Stilbroke, supposing that
|
||
every country gentleman swore, he assiduously practiced the habit;
|
||
and by the time he had discovered his mistake, the habit was
|
||
acquired and could not be shaken off.
|
||
|
||
I felt some little trepidation when I found myself in the same
|
||
room with the bishop. But Dr. Lambton came forward to meet me, and
|
||
shook me warmly by the hand. Mr. Jameson asked me what I would have
|
||
to eat, and resting his hands in a peculiar manner on the table,
|
||
described the various dainties before him as if they were articles
|
||
he wanted to sell. He was ... that is ... very glad to see me.
|
||
Hoped I had a pleasant journey. Heard that the roads were ...
|
||
extremely bad and heavy after the rain. Then I heard him mutter to
|
||
himself, "Damn the damns, can't keep them down."
|
||
|
||
The bishop took me out for a walk in the grounds after lunch.
|
||
He talked about my father and his own college days, described
|
||
Oxford as it was in the last generation, gave me many practical
|
||
hints respecting my parochial duties, and made me promise I would
|
||
write to him as a friend if ever I required his advice.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
18
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
He was to go away that afternoon, and we now saw the carriage
|
||
driving round the sweep. Bidding me good-bye, he hastened to the
|
||
house, and I walked along the gravel path, darkened by rain, to the
|
||
end of the garden, where I found a little iron gate opening into a
|
||
wood. But it was not an ordinary wood, being planted with many
|
||
foreign trees, and bright with crimson rhododendrons. In other
|
||
parts of the wilderness," as it was called, nature was left
|
||
undisturbed; tiny little pathlets marked the "runs" of hares, and
|
||
in thick patches of bramble were their "forms." The beech-mast of
|
||
last year, brown twigs and dry leaves littered the ground, which
|
||
was carpeted with moss and ribbed with the roots of trees. One
|
||
charming little dell that I discovered was filled with blue-bells,
|
||
more beautiful in color, I thought, than the flowers of the
|
||
Himalaya shrub.
|
||
|
||
Brought up as I had been amidst desolate moors, it gave me an
|
||
exquisite pleasure to walk in the shade of trees, to inhale their
|
||
delicate fragrance, to view their dark pillar-like trunks and fair
|
||
edifice of foliage. I stood on the brink of the dell and gazed down
|
||
on the flowers like a blue lake lying in its depths. A few others
|
||
of these wild hyacinths were growing singly or in clusters on the
|
||
sides of the dell mingled with young ferns of the tenderest green,
|
||
and one flower was growing at my feet. I had almost stepped upon
|
||
it. A little way off, the sunlight descending through a window in
|
||
the leafy roof flowed through the wood like a silvery stream, while
|
||
around me the trunks of trees were flecked with patches of light.
|
||
I heard a chirrup overhead and saw a squirrel leaping nimbly from
|
||
branch to branch, running home to its young in the dusk, Sometimes
|
||
the wind rustled faintly in the branches overhead and cast down
|
||
raindrops shining like pearls as they fell. I was softened by these
|
||
sweet influences. A tender melancholy stole upon me. A memory never
|
||
long absent returned to my heart which was its home. Mine eyes
|
||
streaming with tears fell on the hyacinth growing at my feet. I
|
||
stooped down and caressed it with my hand. "Oh, delicate flower,"
|
||
I said, "your life is short enough and I will not pluck it from
|
||
you; but if I could plant you in a garden where death and decay
|
||
were unknown, then I would gather you at once. Thus God gathers
|
||
beautiful souls; he loves them and takes them to himself. Dear
|
||
mother, I weep not for you, but for myself; I know that you are
|
||
happy, it is I -- it is I who am forlorn."
|
||
|
||
I put my hand in my bosom and drew forth a locket, and pressed
|
||
it to my lips. Mother, I said, send a ray of your love for me into
|
||
some woman's heart that resembles your own, and so brighten my
|
||
solitary life.
|
||
|
||
Then I lifted up my eyes and saw standing beside me a young
|
||
lady of surpassing loveliness. She wore a white muslin dress of the
|
||
kind which my mother used to wear; and from under her broad garden
|
||
hat, long tresses of golden hair fell upon her shoulders. Her face
|
||
had a grave and gentle expression which I know not how to describe,
|
||
her complexion was pale, her eyes of a soft and liquid blue. Such
|
||
was your mother when I first looked upon her. She was then only
|
||
seventeen, the purest, the most affectionate of women, and one of
|
||
the most unfortunate.
|
||
|
||
I rose and bowed; she shook hands as if we were friends.
|
||
"Papa," she said, "sent me to call you."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
19
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
We went towards the house; she made room for me in the narrow
|
||
path to walk by her side. I furtively wiped the tears from my eyes.
|
||
She blushed and said, "I fear, Mr. Mordaunt, that you are in much
|
||
trouble?"
|
||
|
||
"My mother is dead," I replied; "and she was my only friend."
|
||
|
||
"Your only friend," she said timidly; "and your father?"
|
||
|
||
"I cannot love him," I answered, "so much as I wish;" and I
|
||
gave a sigh. She sighed too. "Our parents," she said, "are our best
|
||
friends, but sometimes ---" Then she checked herself and said,
|
||
"Have you a sister?" "Ah, no," I replied, "if I had a sister then
|
||
I should be happy, for I would make her live with me here."
|
||
|
||
"And what," she said a little more gaily, "what would you make
|
||
your sister do -- besides keeping house?"
|
||
|
||
"I would make her go with me to visit the poor and the sick --
|
||
to tell you the truth, I am rather afraid of them -- and she would
|
||
teach me what to do. And then there would be someone who cared for
|
||
me. It is hard to be alone in the world."
|
||
|
||
She did not reply. Her father took me over the village and
|
||
gave me an account of my parish, prosing and swearing dreadfully.
|
||
The next morning Miss Jameson came to me in the garden, followed by
|
||
a maid carrying a covered basket on her arm. "Would you like," she
|
||
said, "to be introduced to some of your parishioners?" I assented,
|
||
of course, and enjoyed my second visit to the village more than the
|
||
first. Margaret and I soon became intimate friends, and indeed
|
||
almost like brother and sister. I stayed a month in the house, and
|
||
when I went to live at the rectory our companionship was not
|
||
interrupted. We were together all the day; and I almost reproached
|
||
myself for being so happy a few months after my mother's death.
|
||
|
||
But about the middle of August the house was filled with
|
||
guests, and Margaret's time was so taken up that we seldom saw each
|
||
other alone. At the end of the month her brother came down with the
|
||
Honorable William Fitzclarence, his friend. Captain Jameson was a
|
||
sodden-faced dissolute-looking young man, with a carefully
|
||
cultivated lisp and a vulgar laugh. He never pronounced the letter
|
||
"r" except by inadvertence, and never replied to a question without
|
||
screwing an eye-glass into his orbit, and surveying the other
|
||
person through it with an air of mild astonishment, as if he had
|
||
never seen him before. In short, he had taken the part of the dandy
|
||
as his father had taken that of the country gentleman. In each case
|
||
the impersonation was clever, which is all that can be said.
|
||
Fitzclarence was a character. The heir to a peerage and a vast
|
||
fortune, he was what was then called a "Philosophical Radical." He
|
||
sat at the feet of James Mill, dined tete-a-tete with the famous
|
||
Jeremy, and wrote for the 'Westminster Review.' He was one of the
|
||
agitators for Reform, and was also reputed to be a violent hater of
|
||
the Bible and the Church, a second Tom Paine. In those days a
|
||
Radical aristocrat was almost unknown, and I really think he was
|
||
the first of the species. The popular theory was that his head was
|
||
turned, and certainly his manners were singular and his language
|
||
often extravagant. As soon as he became excited in conversation he
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
20
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
wriggled and writhed in his chair, and when he finished what he had
|
||
to say, snapped his jaws sharply together like a dog at a fly.
|
||
Though he disapproved of the game-laws he had a passion for
|
||
shooting, and having quarrelled with all his relations, was induced
|
||
by the fame of the Stilbroke turnip-fields to accept young
|
||
Jameson's invitation. The other guests were mostly City people, and
|
||
among them was an heiress to whom Mr. Jameson anxiously directed
|
||
the attention of his son; for he was not enormously rich, and the
|
||
captain was enormously extravagant.
|
||
|
||
One day when I was dining at the house the conversation turned
|
||
at dessert, after the ladies had left the table, upon the recent
|
||
discoveries in geology, which revealed the earth's antiquity and
|
||
the creation of fish, reptiles, and quadrupeds in epochs separated
|
||
by vast intervals of time. Fitzclarence expounded the matter with
|
||
much lucidity, and each guest was apparently drawing his own
|
||
conclusions for himself when Captain Jameson blurted out:
|
||
|
||
"Then the world was not made in six days. after all."
|
||
|
||
There was a dead silence, and all eyes were turned upon me. I
|
||
said that the geologists must be mistaken if such was their theory,
|
||
because it was clearly stated in the Bible that God had made the
|
||
world in six days.
|
||
|
||
"Well then, Mr. Mordaunt," said Fitzclarence, "you do not
|
||
agree with those of your brethren who declare that the six days in
|
||
question were not actual days, but geological periods?
|
||
|
||
"How can they say that," I replied, "when each day is
|
||
described as having an evening and morning, and when it is also
|
||
said that God 'blessed the seventh day and sanctified it'?"
|
||
|
||
"Nothing," answered Fitzclarence, "could be proved more
|
||
completely and concisely. We may, therefore, take it for granted
|
||
that the six days of Genesis are not geological periods? "He looked
|
||
at me with a questioning air. I bowed and smiled, and was going to
|
||
change the conversation, when he said: "But now, if it were proved
|
||
as an actual fact, beyond the shadow of a doubt, by the same kind
|
||
of evidence as that which proves that the earth revolves round the
|
||
sun -- supposing, I say, it could be proved that the world was not
|
||
made in six days, but that thousands and thousands of years
|
||
intervened between, for example, the fish and birds of the fifth
|
||
day, and man who was created on the sixth, what may I ask would you
|
||
say then? "
|
||
|
||
"My dear sir," I replied, "you might as well ask what I would
|
||
say if it could be proved that a circle is square."
|
||
|
||
But supposing it could be proved -- please to answer for my
|
||
argument's sake -- what then?"
|
||
|
||
"Then," I replied, "of course it would be proved that the
|
||
Bible was not inspired."
|
||
|
||
"Good," said Fitzclarence, rising from the table. "Well now,
|
||
I will tell you this. It has been proved," And he walked out of the
|
||
room.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
21
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
Mr. Jameson poured forth a volley of oaths at his son for
|
||
having set Fitz upon his hobby. The next day Fitzclarence wrote me
|
||
a letter apologizing for his rudeness and begging me not to think
|
||
of what he had said. The advice was kindly meant, but quite
|
||
unnecessary; what he said seemed to me incredible, and it soon
|
||
passed away from my mind. Not so, however, with the man. I observed
|
||
that he gave up shooting and passed all the day at the house. Mr.
|
||
Jameson, who knew my father to be rich, had always encouraged my
|
||
visits, but now his manner was changed, and whenever we had any
|
||
business to discuss, he was careful to make the appointment at the
|
||
rectory. An infallible instinct warned me that Fitzclarence was my
|
||
rival, and a gossiping servant confirmed it. My rival, I say, for
|
||
now I discovered that I loved Margaret. So long as we were
|
||
constantly together I was contented with her friendship; the days
|
||
passed happily; I did not attempt to analyze my feelings; I did not
|
||
reflect on the future. But, as soon as we were separated, my
|
||
affection forced back upon itself became craving and intense.
|
||
Unable to see her or speak with her as before, she became the
|
||
constant companion of my thoughts. And now came the fear that I
|
||
should lose her altogether. From my library window I could see into
|
||
the Stilbroke grounds. Every day, at the same hour, they walked
|
||
together on the terrarel he speaking with animated gestures, she
|
||
listening with attention -- no doubt with admiration. He was a
|
||
noted orator, how could she resist his eloquence? Besides, he was
|
||
heir to a peerage and her father was a tradesman.
|
||
|
||
Soon it was all over the village that they were engaged. A
|
||
farmer told me the news, and declared Mr. Jameson himself had
|
||
hinted as much to him, saying that before very long they'd hear
|
||
wedding bells. Strange as it may seem, from that time I became more
|
||
easy in my mind. It was a relief to be out of suspense, and now my
|
||
duty lay clear before me; silence, self-conquest, resignation. I
|
||
even smiled at the thought that perhaps I might have to marry them.
|
||
At this time I read for the first time the 'Imitation of Jesus
|
||
Christ,' and became enamored of the spiritual life. I resolved to
|
||
place my happiness no more in earthly pleasures and human
|
||
affections, but to seek only the divine love by purification of the
|
||
soul, and fasting, and prayer, and exclusion of mundane thoughts.
|
||
I resolved to banish Margaret from my mind and memory; when her
|
||
vision forced itself upon me, I took up the 'Imitation' or the
|
||
Bible. In the solitude of the night I found it hard to abstain from
|
||
thinking of her, and I kept a taper burning opposite the bed to
|
||
remind me of my resolution. I tied myself down in the chair to be
|
||
prevented from going to the window at the time when she walked upon
|
||
the terrace. In church I forbade myself to glance at the pew where
|
||
she sat. My whole time was passed in idle devotion and selfish
|
||
cares for the well-being of my soul. I almost ceased to visit my
|
||
parishioners, and yearned to seclude myself wholly from the world.
|
||
|
||
A few months more and my ruin would have been complete. I
|
||
should have become a mere God-fawning devotee. But this was not to
|
||
be. Mr. Jameson called upon me one morning and said: "Come, parson,
|
||
I say, you have dropped us. Won't you call over to-day and have a
|
||
bit of lunch?"
|
||
|
||
I declined. "Ah," said he, "I know what it is. You don't like
|
||
that infidel fellow; but he's gone away, and young Hopeful's gone
|
||
with him. They had one day at the pheasants, that's all."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
22
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
"What," said I, "Mr. Fitzclarence gone away! but, I thought
|
||
---"
|
||
|
||
"Ah, yes, you thought, and so did a good many more. But I'd
|
||
never let my girl marry a damned infidel."
|
||
|
||
"Oh, please, Mr. Jameson, do not swear," said I.
|
||
|
||
"I am not swearing," said he. "I use the word
|
||
ecclesiastically, just as you might in the pulpit; though it's
|
||
enough to make anybody swear the way those fellows go on with their
|
||
cursed atheism. Well, they'll find out their mistake some day. But
|
||
you'll come, won't you? Let me tell Margaret you will."
|
||
|
||
I looked up at him. His little keen eyes were diving into
|
||
mine. "My daughter," he said with emphasis, "will be very glad to
|
||
see you; very glad to see you."
|
||
|
||
"I will come," said I. He went out, and I heard him chuckle as
|
||
he went down stairs. There was little attempt at disguise in his
|
||
words or his manner. Margaret was mine! At this thought the blood
|
||
rushed from my heart and flamed on my pale ascetic face. I tore the
|
||
hair shirt from my bosom. I dashed Thomas a Kempis on the flames.
|
||
I knelt down and prayed. I jumped up and danced, exclaiming, "She
|
||
is mine! She refused him for me! "As rivers, released from their
|
||
bonds of ice, pour down swift torrents from the hills, so the
|
||
natural feelings of my heart, so long held down by frozen piety,
|
||
coursed swiftly through my frame and made me drunk with excitement
|
||
and joy. However, I calmed down, and felt rather foolish as I took
|
||
the 'Imitation,' all charred and smoking, from the fire. I
|
||
remembered that, after all, nothing was certain as yet; and soon I
|
||
became just as anxious as I had before been confident. It wanted an
|
||
hour of the time, but I could not wait any longer and went up to
|
||
the house. She was in the drawing-room alone. As I entered at the
|
||
door I felt a strange faintness and fluttering within me. In a few
|
||
minutes my fate would be decided. Her look reassured me, and the
|
||
gentle pressure of her hand and the tone in which she said, "It is
|
||
so long since I have seen you."
|
||
|
||
We conversed for some time. I feared to speak, and yet for my
|
||
own peace of mind I knew it must be done that day, and that hour.
|
||
At last I said with a bantering air, "Margaret, I hear that you
|
||
have had an offer of marriage?" "Yes," she said with a smile, "and
|
||
poor papa was so disappointed." "And why did you not marry him?" I
|
||
asked. She blushed and turned her head aside. I took her hand in
|
||
mine. "Tell me, dear Margaret," I whispered. She looked up, and
|
||
told me with her eyes. Then I clasped her in my arms; I strained
|
||
her to my breast; I pressed my lips to hers and fondled her long
|
||
golden hair. Oh, raptures of a first and innocent love, who can
|
||
describe them? What power have words to express the deep inner
|
||
feelings of the heart? I can only tell you I was happy -- that is
|
||
all.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
23
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
LETTER VI
|
||
|
||
My father approved of the match and promised me a liberal
|
||
allowance. The marriage was to take place in a twelvemonth. Captain
|
||
Jameson did not deign to give us his blessing, being deeply
|
||
offended with his sister for her refusal of Fitzclarence, for he
|
||
preferred a brother-in-law with a handle to his name. His father's
|
||
sentiments were not dissimilar, but he took the trouble to conceal
|
||
them, having come to the conclusion that it would be foolish to
|
||
refuse the heir to a large fortune because the heir to a still
|
||
larger fortune and a peerage had been lost. So he was always loud
|
||
and boisterous with me to show his cordiality. One day, at
|
||
luncheon, he winked and said, "The bishop has a good opinion of
|
||
you, Master Ned, a deuced good opinion of you."
|
||
|
||
I said I was glad to hear that I was so honored. No prelate
|
||
was more loved in his diocese or more distinguished on the bench.
|
||
|
||
"Cannot you remember what he said, dear papa? asked Margaret,
|
||
blushing with pleasure.
|
||
|
||
"I should rather think I could," he replied. "'Mr. Jameson,'
|
||
said my Lord, 'Mr. Jameson,' said he, 'our young friend did well at
|
||
college, damned well, and, by Jove, he'll do the right thing by
|
||
your parish.'"
|
||
|
||
"Oh, papa!" exclaimed Margaret, "he could not have said that."
|
||
|
||
"Well, my dear," said her father, somewhat confused, "I don't
|
||
mean to say he used those very words, but that was the general
|
||
sense."
|
||
|
||
A servant came in with the letters of the afternoon post. Mr.
|
||
Jameson's face fell as he examined the blue envelopes. "Ah!"
|
||
muttered he, "I know what these are well enough. Reform -- reform
|
||
is all the cry. I wish they could pass a bill for reforming
|
||
extravagant sons."
|
||
|
||
"You know, dearest Edward," said Margaret, as we walked to the
|
||
rectory together, "Robert spends a great deal of money -- papa
|
||
would send him into the Guards -- and we have heard that he gambles
|
||
at Crockford's. And he is so dreadfully conceited; he would not
|
||
even look at Miss Brown when she was here. His wife, he says, must
|
||
have three things -- birth, beauty, and money (or blunt, as he
|
||
calls it). Now, as he has neither of the three to offer in return
|
||
---"
|
||
|
||
"But your father is rich?" said I. Margaret shook her head.
|
||
"Papa," she said, "was in such a hurry to be a country gentleman
|
||
that he gave up his business too soon, and though he is an
|
||
excellent manager, and spends very little money on himself, he does
|
||
not seem able to refuse Robert anything. The rents of the farms on
|
||
the estate just cover our expenses down here, and I fear that
|
||
papa's other money is going very fast. When he asked me to marry
|
||
Fitzclarence, he said, 'My girl, you must not marry a poor man, for
|
||
if at any future time you should want money, God only knows whether
|
||
I should be able to assist you.'"
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
24
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
Dear Margaret, thought I, as I went up to my library, when we
|
||
are married you will not need any money from your father. None of
|
||
these sordid cares shall trouble your life.
|
||
|
||
I sat down in my arm-chair and abandoned myself to reverie. I
|
||
had now found in love -- chaste, secure, requited love -- that calm
|
||
of mind which I had sought in monkish devotion. No passion
|
||
disturbed me; no disquietude alarmed me; no sad experience made me
|
||
doubt my future happiness. I knew not the dangers of life. I
|
||
pictured myself the rector of a large parish, and Margaret the
|
||
queen of our world, distributing her bounty to the poor,
|
||
alleviating their miserable lot. Often we had planned and plotted
|
||
together how we could do good. And I saw her seated by my side
|
||
after the labors of the day, and rosy-cheeked children clambered on
|
||
my knees. And the love of my children unborn filled my heart, and
|
||
I revelled in anticipated joys.
|
||
|
||
While thus I was wrapped in sweet meditation, I observed lying
|
||
on the table before me a large brown-paper parcel which must have
|
||
come down by the London coach that afternoon. I found that it
|
||
contained Lyell's 'Principles of Geology,' and some other works
|
||
upon that science. I supposed these were sent by the disappointed
|
||
rival, and with no good intent; and as I turned over the books a
|
||
letter dropped out. It was without an envelope, and as follows: --
|
||
|
||
DEAR YOUTH, -- Here are the books you ask for, viz. the grand
|
||
work of Lyell, and the orthodox attempts at a reply. Why on earth
|
||
do you want them? Are you going to study these problems? If so, it
|
||
would be better than some of your other occupations. I hear that
|
||
you go very often to the top of St. James' Street. Ah, beware!
|
||
|
||
"Impossible to accept your invitation. I only go to Reform
|
||
dinners nowadays. I talk, think, dream of nothing else. All is
|
||
going on well: we are certain to succeed.
|
||
|
||
"Lastly, oblige me, once for all, by not writing as you do
|
||
about a certain young lady. I admire her, I esteem her, I love her;
|
||
it was my fault that she could not love me; but it eases my vanity
|
||
to know that there was a prior attachment. -- FITZ."
|
||
|
||
It was now evident that the books came from the captain, who
|
||
had mislaid the letter in the parcel. I thought I could best
|
||
disappoint his benevolent intentions by reading them carefully
|
||
through; in fact, I had intended to order from London the latest
|
||
works upon geology, as I considered it my duty to study the enemy's
|
||
arguments in order to be able to refute them. I began to read the
|
||
'Principles' at once, and was soon captivated by the beauty of the
|
||
style, the modesty of the author, and the wondrous world he opened
|
||
to my view. There was not an allusion to theology in the book,
|
||
which I read all through like a novel, with no sensation but that
|
||
of enjoyment. But when I remembered afterwards the duration of time
|
||
and absence of catastrophe on which it insisted, I was seriously
|
||
troubled, and I read it again, now well on my guard, and in a
|
||
hostile attitude of mind. But I could discern no flaw in the
|
||
reasoning, and could only venture to hope that the facts were not
|
||
to be relied on. Having spent a week upon the 'Principles,' taking
|
||
many notes, and honestly forcing my brain to receive ideas it did
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
25
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
not like (which I found at first very difficult), I took from the
|
||
parcel an orthodox work which was then of much repute in the
|
||
religious world. This book settled the matter in my mind: it was
|
||
not unfairly written, admitted the facts which science had
|
||
established, and tried to reconcile them with the Mosaic account of
|
||
the creation. It was most ingenious -- a perfect specimen of
|
||
special pleading -- but nevertheless could only deceive those who
|
||
wished to be deceived: no doubt the author was among that number;
|
||
I do not question his sincerity. There was also a pamphlet in the
|
||
parcel, written by a clergyman, who allowed that the first chapter
|
||
of Genesis could not be accepted as literal truth, but argued that
|
||
it was of no consequence, as the Bible was intended to teach us
|
||
religion, not to teach us geology. For me it was enough that there
|
||
was one mistake in the Bible; that proved it could not have been
|
||
written by God.
|
||
|
||
The next six months I devoted to biblical studies. I read the
|
||
Bible all through, with no commentary but that of common sense, and
|
||
the scales fell from my eyes. Never did I more keenly appreciate
|
||
the beauties of the book as a literary production; but I found
|
||
proofs in every page that it was written by men, and by men
|
||
immersed in superstition. I passed many unhappy hours, for old
|
||
beliefs are not torn up without a pang; but my chief feeling was
|
||
one of burning shame, that I could ever have credited the many
|
||
profane and ridiculous fables contained in the Bible. It seemed to
|
||
me an awful blasphemy to assert that the great God of heaven
|
||
clothed himself in the body of a man, and I prayed him to forgive
|
||
me for having believed it. My conception of the Creator was
|
||
ennobled, my devotion was increased, a pure and sublime Theism
|
||
reconciled me to the loss of some illusions. Thus I did not suffer
|
||
as much as might have been anticipated.
|
||
|
||
But I was a clergyman. I was the priest of what I now believed
|
||
to be a pagan religion, and received money to teach what I knew to
|
||
be false. I felt it incumbent upon me at once to leave the Church
|
||
and to enter some other profession. Mr. Watson, the rector of the
|
||
neighboring parish, frequently visited Stilbroke Court; his wife
|
||
was a friend of Margaret's, and he, I knew, was a man of temperate
|
||
views, who would patiently hear what I had to say and advise me how
|
||
to carry out my resolution.
|
||
|
||
LETTER VII
|
||
|
||
MR. WATSON had a large family, as was shown by the number of
|
||
small caps and coats hanging up in the hall. I was ushered into an
|
||
apartment which, like a desert island, bore no traces of human
|
||
habitation. Everything remained as it had come from the hands of
|
||
the upholsterer. The atmosphere was damp and cold, as if no fire
|
||
had ever been lighted in the polished grate. The chairs and sofas
|
||
looked as if they were in a shop-window; the gorgeous books on the
|
||
central table had perhaps never been opened, certainly never been
|
||
read. All feudal castles contained a dungeon in which malefactors
|
||
were cast; and in many old-fashioned houses a desert chamber is set
|
||
apart for the reception of guests. I did not like to sit down for
|
||
fear I should crease something, and did not dare to walk about for
|
||
fear of soiling the carpet; as it was, I could see a bootmark which
|
||
the lady of the house would view with no less horror than Robinson
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
26
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
Crusoe the footprint in the sand. I therefore remained in a most
|
||
uncomfortable attitude, while the door was constantly opened by
|
||
small children who peeped in and made faces at me, and then shut it
|
||
with a bang and a shout of exultation. At last the rustle of a silk
|
||
dress announced that the change of toilet was completed, and Mrs.
|
||
Watson came into the room, round which she glanced with an air of
|
||
evident pride. She begged me to sit down; but I said I was anxious
|
||
to see Mr. Watson at once, so she led the way into his study,
|
||
having made me promise that I would take a dish of tea before I
|
||
went home. Soon afterwards I heard, not without satisfaction, the
|
||
sound of manual punishment, accompanied by shouts which were not of
|
||
a gleeful character.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Watson was seated in his study, reading Paley's 'Natural
|
||
Theology' and smoking a long clay pipe. When I had explained the
|
||
object of my visit, he did not seem surprised, but asked me a
|
||
number of questions which showed that he was well acquainted with
|
||
works of science and philosophy. Having received my replies, he
|
||
reflected a little, and then said, laying down his pipe, "I see you
|
||
have thought out this matter for yourself and have not taken it at
|
||
second-hand. It would be useless for me to try and move you out of
|
||
your position. I shall therefore place myself in that position; I
|
||
shall admit (for argument's sake, you understand) that you have
|
||
found out the truth. We shall, therefore, discuss what is best for
|
||
you to do."
|
||
|
||
"Surely," I said, "there can be no doubt about that. I ought
|
||
to act according to the truth."
|
||
|
||
"You think it is your duty to withdraw from the Church?"
|
||
|
||
"Most certainly," I answered, "and I have come here to ask
|
||
your advice as to how to proceed in this difficult matter. I do not
|
||
wish to cause scandal or to give unnecessary pain. But remaining in
|
||
the Church is out of the question altogether."
|
||
|
||
"Gently, gently," he replied; "allow me to ask you what are
|
||
your circumstances? What have you to live upon when you are
|
||
married?"
|
||
|
||
"I inherit a sum of money from my mother, the interest of
|
||
which is 150 pounds a year. That is my own. Besides that, my father
|
||
has promised me a liberal allowance, and then there is the money I
|
||
shall make."
|
||
|
||
"Perhaps your father may refuse to give you an allowance when
|
||
he finds that you have left the Church. Is that quite impossible?"
|
||
|
||
A little reflection forced me to admit that it was not quite
|
||
impossible; but, on the contrary, rather probable than otherwise.
|
||
"However," said I, "that matters little; I am young, I will enter
|
||
another profession, I will make my way in the world."
|
||
|
||
"You are not then aware," said Mr. Watson, that clergymen are
|
||
forbidden by law to enter any other profession?" [This law has
|
||
since been repealed.]
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
27
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
"Then," said I, nothing daunted, "I will get work from
|
||
publishers and editors. I shall easily get on."
|
||
|
||
"Excuse me," he replied; "I have lived some years in London
|
||
and have written for the press. Hundreds of indigent clergymen,
|
||
many of whom are fine scholars, seek in vain for employment of that
|
||
kind. The supply far exceeds the demand. No; look at the future
|
||
fairly in the face and don't stir up a vague mist of hopes and
|
||
illusions. If you leave the Church you cannot marry Margaret."
|
||
|
||
I was stupefied. Strange to say, I had never thought of this.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Watson did not interrupt my meditations, but quietly
|
||
filled another pipe and began to smoke again. I said, "What do you
|
||
advise?"
|
||
|
||
"I think," said he in a kind voice, "that I can show you are
|
||
not bound by the moral law to give up the Church."
|
||
|
||
"Ah, sir," said I, "duty speaks to me clearly enough, though
|
||
I have not, I feel it, the strength to obey its commands. I cannot
|
||
part from Margaret. But I know that I ought."
|
||
|
||
"All moralists are agreed," he replied, "that the welfare of
|
||
mankind is the test of the Right. The virtues so called are virtues
|
||
because they contribute to human happiness. If they become
|
||
injurious they cease to be virtues. Now life is so constituted that
|
||
no positive dogma, no undeviating rule can be laid down for the
|
||
guidance of conduct. In a broad sense, we may say it is for the
|
||
welfare of mankind that everyone should speak the truth, but there
|
||
are many exceptions to the rule. No one would hesitate to tell a
|
||
lie in order to save the life of an innocent man. Here, as often
|
||
happens, there is a choice between two evils, and the lesser evil
|
||
is selected. It is wrong to tell a lie, but it is more wrong to
|
||
participate in murder. Or, if you please, we may put it another
|
||
way. Here is a choice between two virtues. It is good to tell the
|
||
truth, but far better to save an innocent life from destruction,
|
||
while the struggle it costs the good man to lie adds to the
|
||
nobleness of the deed.
|
||
|
||
"Having thus proved, as, I think you will allow, that there
|
||
can be a case in which falsehood is a virtue, I will take a case
|
||
which, from what I know of the clergy, happens, I imagine, very
|
||
often. A parson with a wife and family of children entirely
|
||
dependent upon him ceases to believe in the doctrines of the
|
||
Anglican Church. His first impulse is to obey the voice of his
|
||
conscience, and to leave the Church, but a little reflection warns
|
||
him that if he did so his wife and children would starve. He
|
||
chooses the lesser of two evils. He becomes, if you will, a
|
||
hypocrite" -- (here the pipe fell and broke into splinters on the
|
||
hearth) --" that he may not violate the sacred duties of the
|
||
husband and the father.
|
||
|
||
"And now, my dear Edward (if you will allow me so to call
|
||
you), which, in your case, is the greater evil, and which is the
|
||
less? If you were a man living alone and bound by no ties to
|
||
another human heart; if your leaving the Church would only involve
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
28
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
loss of money and social position, I would say, Be honest, be free!
|
||
live on bread and water, work with your hands, break stones upon
|
||
the road, rather than be untrue. But you are not alone; a life is
|
||
entwined round yours like the ivy round that larch over there on
|
||
the lawn. Margaret loves you. And consider how much harm you will
|
||
do to others if you proclaim yourself an infidel; consider how much
|
||
good you may do if you remain in the Church. You need never preach
|
||
a doctrinal sermon; in the New Testament you will find maxims of
|
||
the purest morality and precepts of the tenderest love. Let these
|
||
be your texts. What does it matter, after all, if your parishioners
|
||
believe in some fabulous legends of the East and some Greek
|
||
definitions of the Undefinable? These are only intellectual errors.
|
||
You are not surely like those theologians who maintain that an
|
||
incorrect theory of the Universe involves eternal perdition. You
|
||
believe in a life of future rewards and punishments, and it is in
|
||
your power, as a clergyman, to convert men and women from a life of
|
||
brutality and vice. Outside the Church you could do little; but,
|
||
clothed with its authority, how much sin you might destroy, how
|
||
much misery you might alleviate! Let this be your atonement, and it
|
||
will not be refused -- it will not be refused."
|
||
|
||
The good man's eyes were filled with tears, and he said as he
|
||
pressed my hand: "Let us not speak of this again unless it is
|
||
necessary for you. It is a painful subject for me."
|
||
|
||
We are easily won over by arguments to that which we secretly
|
||
wish. That same evening I wrote to inform Mr. Watson that I had
|
||
determined to take his advice, and, as he desired, would not allude
|
||
to the matter again, I read no theological books, increased my
|
||
devotional exercises, and spent the greater part of the day with
|
||
the sick and the poor. Practicing the strictest economy, I was able
|
||
to give away in charity all the money I received from the Church.
|
||
Thus I quieted my conscience for a time -- but only for a time. It
|
||
was not with me a question of the moral law and of the duty of man
|
||
to man. I was deeply, fervidly religious; and when I knelt down by
|
||
my bedside at night to confess myself to God, when I reviewed my
|
||
conduct of the day, I could not believe that it was pleasing in his
|
||
sight. I felt myself a traitor to him -- a coward, who paid outward
|
||
allegiance to a false God and worshipped the true God in secret as
|
||
if it were a sin. I felt that I was doing wrong. My conscience
|
||
spoke in no uncertain voice. I could only sigh and weep, and pray
|
||
God to have mercy on my weakness and forgive Me.
|
||
|
||
But I knew my own guilt in which I persevered, and I knew that
|
||
I did not deserve to be forgiven. And in time there came upon me in
|
||
these nightly prayers -- often prolonged till the dawn -- a
|
||
conviction that God had turned his face away. For when I offered up
|
||
my supplications, no response came back to my heart; that wondrous
|
||
feeling of relief and consolation, the reflex action of the soul
|
||
which rewards those who pray with intensity and faith, ceased to
|
||
exist for me, and I rose from my knees unrefreshed. Yet when I
|
||
thought of proclaiming the truth, of parting for ever from my love,
|
||
I cried, "It is impossible!"
|
||
|
||
Now I began to suffer the most horrible torments. As I lay in
|
||
bed unable to sleep, I saw lights dancing in the room and shadows
|
||
passing to and fro; I heard groans and sobs, mingled with bursts of
|
||
smothered laughter. One night I beheld my mother and Margaret in
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
29
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
heaven, whilst I was borne past them by demons, and a voice cried
|
||
aloud, "They believed in the false, but they were sincere. To you
|
||
the truth was revealed and you hid it in your heart."
|
||
|
||
The Sunday I dreaded as a day of doom. The tolling of the bell
|
||
seemed to summon me to the tortures of the rack. Often, when I was
|
||
reading the lessons, I felt an almost uncontrollable impulse to
|
||
throw down the Book and proclaim it a lie. Often, as I was
|
||
preaching, voices whispered in my ear all kinds of blasphemous
|
||
things, and sometimes I thought that I had repeated them, and,
|
||
stopping short, would question the faces of the congregation to see
|
||
if it were so. Ah, terrible days! even now it would give me pain to
|
||
enter that church. I see it before me as if it were only yesterday
|
||
-- the white-washed walls, with texts in many-colored letters --
|
||
the plain, open pews, and the people ranged in long rows -- the
|
||
window of crimson glass, and the sun-rays lying like blood streaks
|
||
on the floor.
|
||
|
||
Margaret saw that I was ill and begged me to go to the
|
||
seaside. She thought I had overworked myself among the poor; and,
|
||
indeed, my labors were prodigious -- but they had been a kind of
|
||
relief. I did not take her advice, for I felt that I must make an
|
||
end. Mr. Watson's arguments might be perfectly just, but in every
|
||
great crisis of the mind it is feeling, not reason, that decides.
|
||
Convinced that if I continued my life of falsehood and silence I
|
||
should forfeit my eternal happiness, I resolved to seek security --
|
||
even at the cost of Margaret. Again and again I sought her to tell
|
||
the sad news, but when I came within the charm of her presence, I
|
||
felt as if I could suffer anything, even the torments of the
|
||
damned, rather than relinquish her love. Then, again, when I
|
||
returned to my house, haunted by demons, I cursed my cowardice and
|
||
swore that next time should be the last. But my confession was
|
||
wrung from me by an accident.
|
||
|
||
One evening, Margaret and I strolled out after dinner to the
|
||
wilderness. We went to the hyacinth dell; the flowers were as
|
||
beautiful as ever; it was the same time of year. We stood on the
|
||
spot where then we had met. I told her I thought at first she was
|
||
an angel from my mother in heaven; and she said with a blush that
|
||
she loved me from the first because I looked so pale and sad; pity
|
||
made her take me to her heart. We spoke yet more of the past and
|
||
revived tender memories; for a brief space I forgot the troubles
|
||
that menaced our life.
|
||
|
||
We saw Margaret's maid tripping down the path which led from
|
||
the village to the house. She held a letter in her hand, and said
|
||
that as she was passing the post-office a gentleman's groom rode up
|
||
and inquired the way to the rectory. When she found that he had a
|
||
letter for me she took charge of it, thinking I would like to see
|
||
it at once.
|
||
|
||
Margaret took the letter from her hand. "Oh, thank you, Jane,"
|
||
she said, "it is important indeed!" And she showed me the episcopal
|
||
seal. Jane smiled and curtseyed and went on to the house.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
30
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
I opened the letter, and we read it together. The bishop had
|
||
heard of my labors, and was glad to say it was now in his power to
|
||
give me a wider field. He offered me a parish in the county town
|
||
with a salary of 800 pounds a year.
|
||
|
||
Margaret clapped her hands. "Oh," she said, "this is the high-
|
||
road to fortune. You will be as great as you are good."
|
||
|
||
Then she stopped and looked at me in wonder.
|
||
|
||
"I cannot take it," I said; "I am an infidel."
|
||
|
||
She started back in horror, clasping her hands. She thought
|
||
that I was mad.
|
||
|
||
"I have long concealed it from you," I said. "It is all over
|
||
now. Dear Margaret, we must part -- for ever."
|
||
|
||
She turned ashy pale and trembled all over.
|
||
|
||
"O Thou Divine Ruler," I cried, "eternal Spirit of Truth, for
|
||
thee I have wounded this heart that I love more than all that is on
|
||
earth. Give her strength to bear this affliction."
|
||
|
||
She sank on my breast and flung her arms round my neck.
|
||
"Edward," she said, as she raised her haggard face towards mine,
|
||
"Edward, I cannot give you up. I am still your betrothed. I will be
|
||
your wife for better for worse, rich or poor, sinner or saint --
|
||
what do I care? Without you I shall die."
|
||
|
||
"My child," I said, "the Almighty God has sent us here for a
|
||
few short and unhappy years, not to do that which is pleasant, but
|
||
that which is good, and to prepare for the life beyond the grave.
|
||
You must not disobey your father; and he will never consent to our
|
||
marriage. From this day I cease to be a clergyman."
|
||
|
||
"You do not love me," she cried.
|
||
|
||
"I do not love you, Margaret! Look at these sunken cheeks,
|
||
these hollow eyes, these emaciated hands. Love and religion, love
|
||
and honor have daily contended within me; see, have I not
|
||
suffered?"
|
||
|
||
"And love has lost! love has lost!" she cried, and clung to me
|
||
with her despairing arms. Not a tear dimmed her eyes, which were
|
||
filled with and woe. "Edward," she whispered, "let us be silent;
|
||
let us keep this dangerous secret for a time' Ah, I have a way. You
|
||
are too ill to take a large parish. You are forced to travel for
|
||
your health; but before you go we shall be married. Then we will
|
||
live abroad for a long, long time; and then --"
|
||
|
||
"O God!" I cried in a loud voice, "preserve me!"
|
||
|
||
Her head drooped upon her bosom.
|
||
|
||
"Preserve us," I said, "from sin and hypocrisy."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
31
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
She drew back and folded her trembling hands, pallid from
|
||
violent emotion. "Command me," she said, "and I obey."
|
||
|
||
"Dear love," I said, "let us suffer on earth that we may be
|
||
united hereafter, to part no more."
|
||
|
||
"Then, life, pass quickly," she said; "and come death, to make
|
||
us meet again."
|
||
|
||
"As a perishable day," I said, "life will pass, and death will
|
||
soon come to herald in the dawn."
|
||
|
||
I pressed her to my heart. The shades of evening descended,
|
||
and the voices of the wilderness were hushed. The pale moon arose;
|
||
the hours passed by. Twice, thrice, the great bell rang from the
|
||
house; again and again we said farewell, again and again we flew
|
||
back to each other's arms. At length we saw torches gleaming
|
||
through the trees. One last kiss and she ran down the path to the
|
||
house. I returned to the spot where first we had met, and gathered
|
||
some flowers and put them in my breast.
|
||
|
||
LETTER VIII
|
||
|
||
WHEN I returned home, I told the servants that particular
|
||
business called me to London at once, and that I might perhaps not
|
||
return for some little time. The whole night I was engaged in
|
||
writing letters: to Margaret a long farewell; to Mr. Jamesod, a
|
||
short note explaining my departure. I wrote to my father, gave my
|
||
reasons for quitting the Church, and promised to write again as
|
||
soon as I had a fixed address. I sent my cheque book to Mr. Watson,
|
||
and begged him to pay the tradesmen, servants, &c., and to send my
|
||
personal effects to an address which I would afterwards
|
||
communicate. I also asked him to permit his curate to take my duty
|
||
till someone should be sent by the bishop in my place. Having
|
||
packed a small valise, which I carried in my hand, I walked down
|
||
into the village a little before day break and posted the letters.
|
||
Then I waited for the coach. The grey streaks of dawn were
|
||
beginning to flushing into pink, the birds were twitter and to
|
||
shake the dew from their plumage, laboring men were going to their
|
||
work, when the horn sounded and the horses' hoofs rang sharply on
|
||
the road. In a few minutes more I was borne swiftly away, looking
|
||
back on a vanishing scene and lamenting the joys that were gone.
|
||
|
||
I took lodgings for a week at a market-town twenty miles from
|
||
Stilbroke, on the London road. Thence I wrote two letters to the
|
||
Bishop of T----; the first was a formal resignation of my living;
|
||
in the other, which I marked "Private," I thanked him for his great
|
||
kindness, and related at length the process of thought which had
|
||
led to the change of my belief.
|
||
|
||
He wrote back the kindest letter possible, and told me how he
|
||
himself, when at my age, had also passed through a period of
|
||
skeptical gloom and had all but given up his profession. However,
|
||
his doubts soon passed away and never returned to trouble him
|
||
again. He advised me to travel on the Continent for a year, and
|
||
before the twelvemonth was ended he had little doubt that I should
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
32
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
have returned to my belief. In the meantime my interests should not
|
||
suffer; he should consider my absence as sick leave; for he was
|
||
sure that my brain was over-worked and that this attack of
|
||
infidelity resulted from physical disease.
|
||
|
||
Return to my belief! As well might a river return to its
|
||
source. My reply was respectfully, gratefully expressed; but it was
|
||
conclusive.
|
||
|
||
This correspondence being ended, and Mr. Watson having sent me
|
||
my clothes and books, nothing detained me in the town; and now I
|
||
felt a yearning for home. I remembered what Margaret had said, that
|
||
"our parents are our best friends." I remembered my father's
|
||
kindness when last I was at Harborne, and the promptness with which
|
||
he had consented to my marriage. I believed that, in spite of his
|
||
cold exterior, he really loved me tenderly; and it was my duty to
|
||
consult him before I began my new life. I thought of going to
|
||
London; but if he wished me to stay with him I would obey.
|
||
|
||
As soon as I had made up my mind to go home, I felt too
|
||
impatient to wait for a reply, and wrote word to say that I was
|
||
coming by the next day's coach.
|
||
|
||
Harborne was not on the coaching road; and I alighted as usual
|
||
at a wayside inn, about five miles from the village. The ostler
|
||
took down my luggage and greeted me in the accents of the north,
|
||
which sounded home-like to my ears. Presently I saw the dog-cart in
|
||
the distance, and James drove up to the door. The horse had his
|
||
water and hay, James had his beer, and I was just stepping up when
|
||
he suddenly said, "Beg pardon, Master Eddard, I nearly forgot this
|
||
here; "and he took a handkerchief out of his hat, and a letter out
|
||
of the handkerchief. I read it with one foot still upon the step.
|
||
It was from my father, who said that he could not receive in his
|
||
house a hardened infidel; and that if I came in spite of his
|
||
letter, he would turn me out in the presence of the servants.
|
||
|
||
I ordered the ostler to take out the luggage and carry it
|
||
indoors. James became red in the face. "Bain't you coming home,
|
||
sir?" said he. "No, James," said I; "my father and I have a quarrel
|
||
it seems; but I daresay we shall make it up by and by." He touched
|
||
his hat and slowly drove off. I inquired if a coach would again
|
||
pass the house that day. They said that none would pass either way
|
||
till the next morning at eight o'clock. I ordered a bed and some
|
||
dinner, and then going up to my room locked the door.
|
||
|
||
I tried to eat something at dinner, for I knew that I had need
|
||
of bodily strength; but it was impossible. The sight of food
|
||
disgusted me. Feeling restless and excited, I went out of doors and
|
||
walked quickly along a familiar path. A strong wind was blowing
|
||
from the north; and across the moon sailed the clouds, tinged by
|
||
its tawny halo and pierced by its cold white rays. Around me lay
|
||
the moors like a wide black sea. On, on I walked, wailing aloud. At
|
||
length I could give vent to my grief. Nobody could hear me. O
|
||
miserable man! two sorrows had stricken me at once. I had lost my
|
||
love; I had lost my home. I was an OUTCAST; alone and desolate.
|
||
Then my blood boiled and my tears dried up; and I cursed my hard-
|
||
hearted father who had put me to shame that day.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
33
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
Lights twinkled in the distance. Harborne was before me. I
|
||
skirted the village and climbed a steep hill lying on the left. The
|
||
sky was now covered with clouds, and the wind was boisterous. A
|
||
storm was coming up.
|
||
|
||
The church loomed before me mistily on the summit of the hill.
|
||
I found that the gate was not locked, and entered the graveyard.
|
||
Above the grass mounds and small stone slabs, a white obelisk rose;
|
||
I fell on my knees before it, as before an altar, and prayed to
|
||
God. I summoned the spirit of my mother from the past, and she to
|
||
my memory vividly returned. Again I saw her face so loving and
|
||
resigned; again I heard her sweet sad voice. And as I thought of
|
||
the long years she had passed with a loveless man in a lonely
|
||
house, and what she must have suffered, and how she had endured, I
|
||
repented of my own poor rage and resolved that her life should be
|
||
my example, and that never would I cherish an unkind thought
|
||
against my father any more. For what pleasure had I left but that
|
||
of being good?
|
||
|
||
The black night deepened, and still I remained kneeling by the
|
||
tomb. But now the storm, which had long been gathering, burst
|
||
forth; in a few minutes I was drenched to the skin, and the moist
|
||
wind penetrated to my bones. I tried to shelter myself beneath the
|
||
yew, but it creaked, and groaned, and swayed to and fro as if about
|
||
to be torn from its roots. Then I crouched under the wall and fell
|
||
into a stupefied sleep.
|
||
|
||
When I awoke, the storm had ceased, the sky had cleared, the
|
||
moon, dull and red, was near the horizon. I knew that the dawn must
|
||
be near, and that I must go back to the inn. But my limbs were
|
||
cramped, I could scarcely stir, and my whole body was racked with
|
||
pain. I dragged myself along on my hands and knees, and this
|
||
movement partly restored my circulation. But to walk five miles! It
|
||
seemed hardly possible. Yet done it must be, somehow or another.
|
||
|
||
At that moment I heard the sound of wheels. A man driving a
|
||
gig stopped at the churchyard gate, and, having fastened the
|
||
horses' reins to the post, walked slowly to my mother's tomb.
|
||
|
||
He bared his head and stood with his arms folded on his
|
||
breast, gazing intently on the grave. Then he said in a low voice,
|
||
Ellen! and turned to go away. I cried out his name and staggered
|
||
towards him. He bore me in his arms to the gate, put me beside him
|
||
in the gig, and drove at full gallop to his house. Having given me
|
||
some brandy, he called two men and made them rub me with flesh-
|
||
gloves from head to foot. But the next day I was delirious with
|
||
fever.
|
||
|
||
LETTER IX
|
||
|
||
AN overworked brain, a troubled heart, days of incessant
|
||
anxiety, and nights without sleep were the true elements of my
|
||
illness, and exposure to the storm but its proximate cause. Sooner
|
||
or later it must have come; and I was fortunate in being cast like
|
||
a waif by the winds into the house of Dr. Chalmers. He restored me
|
||
to health; but I was in bed some weeks, and my convalescence was
|
||
slow, though not tedious. For many it is a happy time, that period
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
34
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
which lies between sickness and health. It has its own delicate
|
||
enjoyments, such as the singing of a bird, the scent of a flower,
|
||
the prospect of the blue sky, the mere sensation of being in the
|
||
bright open air. The brain soon becomes weary, but a calm and
|
||
soothing sleep at once relieves its fatigue. The selfishness of
|
||
suffering is past; gratitude and love, which too often cease with
|
||
convalescence, then at least animate even the coldest dispositions.
|
||
|
||
I used to sit for hours in an easy-chair watching the doctor
|
||
as he performed chemical experiments, or made microscopic
|
||
observations. When I had regained my health, I began the study of
|
||
physical science; and in six months had made considerable progress,
|
||
not only in the literature, but also in the practice, if I may use
|
||
the expression, of astronomy, chemistry, botany, geology, and
|
||
comparative anatomy.
|
||
|
||
But could Dr. Chalmers teach me all this? Was he a universal
|
||
genius? The fact is that his house was a College of the Sciences.
|
||
Since I had left home he had taken to live with him, besides his
|
||
medical assistant, three scientific men whom he called his
|
||
Professors. They were an astronomer, a geologist, and a comparative
|
||
anatomist -- all men of mature years who, having given up their
|
||
lives to pure science, had found it difficult to live. Dr. Chalmers
|
||
had plucked them out of poverty and had given them a home, only
|
||
stipulating in return that they should work, and regularly publish
|
||
the results of their researches. They were all delighted when I was
|
||
presented to them as a pupil, and spared no pains to make me a
|
||
proficient, each in turn privately assuring me that his science was
|
||
the most important and the most interesting. I spent an hour or two
|
||
with each of them every day.
|
||
|
||
The Anatomist inhabited a room built over the stables. On a
|
||
large marble table usually lay some quaint-looking animal which he
|
||
was dissecting; and round the room were arranged, in systematic
|
||
order, the skeletons of the animal kingdom, culminating in a
|
||
chimpanzee and a man, standing side by side, their arms
|
||
affectionately interlocked. The Anatomist told me that his parents,
|
||
who were poor, had sent him to Guy's Hospital. He had passed a good
|
||
examination and had taken his diploma; but a visit to the Museum of
|
||
the College of Surgeons sent him out of his senses; from that time
|
||
he could think of nothing else but comparative anatomy; and Dr.
|
||
Chalmers saved him from starvation.
|
||
|
||
The Geologist resided in a fine library, furnished with works
|
||
on his science in English, German, and French, and colored maps and
|
||
diagrams hung from the walls. He had a large cabinet filled with
|
||
specimens of rocks, and of precious minerals in nests of cotton
|
||
wool; and promised that when I had mastered these and read up the
|
||
text-books he would give me lessons in field geology, and show me
|
||
nature at work, and take me where I could study the "dip" of
|
||
strata, and "faults," and other phenomena, which could be but
|
||
imperfectly learnt from books. The Geologist had once been a
|
||
laborer, and had taught himself to read and write. The finding of
|
||
some fossils in a quarry "set him on to geology," which he studied
|
||
after his day's work was done; and the rector of the parish, having
|
||
a taste for the science, obtained him a situation in a small
|
||
country museum. There he educated himself and continued his
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
35
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
favorite pursuit; and there he was found by Dr. Chalmers, who
|
||
offered him bed and board, and all his time to himself, and as much
|
||
pocket-money as he might require.
|
||
|
||
The Astronomer had been an optician. He studied the sun and
|
||
the moon and the stars from a tower at the end of the garden, with
|
||
a small chamber at the top almost filled by an enormous telescope.
|
||
The roof of the observatory was a dome in which was a fissure or
|
||
window-like opening. The telescope being pointed towards that part
|
||
of the sky which was to be the field of observation, a crank was
|
||
turned, and the dome, which rested on cannon-balls in grooves,
|
||
turned round till the window came opposite the telescope. On a
|
||
table were papers covered with abstruse mathematical calculations.
|
||
|
||
The Professors met at dinner in the evening, and I found their
|
||
conversation delightful and instructive. After dinner they went to
|
||
the Common-room, as it was called, where they read the papers and
|
||
the scientific periodicals. To these they contributed, but each
|
||
Professor was also preparing a book, the labor of years, and the
|
||
summary of a life's investigations. The Volcanoes of the Moon --
|
||
the Natural Arrangement of Fossils -- the Homologies of the Animal
|
||
Kingdom, were the titles of these forthcoming works. Dr. Chalmers
|
||
had already published a book on the chemistry of plants. He
|
||
maintained that it was the duty of every student in science,
|
||
history, and all other provinces of knowledge, to place on record
|
||
in a permanent and accessible form the result of his research and
|
||
experience. To amass knowledge, and to take it to the grave, was to
|
||
be a miser of that which was to mankind more precious than gold.
|
||
Such a person, however learned he might be, was utterly useless to
|
||
his species; and the modesty which shrank from publication was in
|
||
most cases an excessive vanity resembling disease.
|
||
|
||
He advised me to continue my general studies for some months
|
||
more and then to select one science. He had little doubt that I
|
||
would fix upon geology, in which case some knowledge of botany and
|
||
comparative anatomy would be indispensable; and therefore my
|
||
present work would not be thrown away.
|
||
|
||
I followed his advice and utilized my opportunities. But you
|
||
must not think that Margaret was forgotten. If the virulence of my
|
||
grief had abated, the dull aching pain yet remained. I told Dr.
|
||
Chalmers how the ardor of the spiritual life had once enabled me to
|
||
drive Margaret from my mind, and I asked him if he thought that
|
||
devotion to science would have a similar effect.
|
||
|
||
"Why," said he, "do you wish to forget her? I should say,
|
||
rather hallow and preserve her memory, place her image on the altar
|
||
of your heart; believe that she is the witness and judge of your
|
||
actions and your thoughts; then your life will be noble and pure.
|
||
Love without hope, then your love will be to you as a religion, for
|
||
none so nearly approaches the love that is divine."
|
||
|
||
These words, extravagant as they may seem, touched me deeply,
|
||
for I knew that he had given up his life to a hopeless love which
|
||
he had kept during long years chained down within his breast, as in
|
||
a dungeon, and had fed it only with the bread of affliction and the
|
||
water of tears.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
36
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
However, I must proceed more quickly with my narrative. It was
|
||
tacitly settled between the doctor and myself that I was always to
|
||
stay at his house, and he also projected visits to London,
|
||
geological excursions, and so forth. One day as I was passing
|
||
through a shrubbery near the stable-yard (which overlooked the
|
||
road), I heard James, who was in the dog-cart, talking with one of
|
||
the doctor's grooms, and as they spoke very loud I soon discovered
|
||
that my father was the subject of the conversation. He was like a
|
||
mad dog, James said, when he heard that I was living with the
|
||
doctor. He had taken the latter to task, James being present, and
|
||
"had got as good as he gave, with sommat to spare; and he was that
|
||
furious he'd ride over the moors and leap the stone walls rather
|
||
than pass the doctor's house." This seemed to afford satisfaction
|
||
to the servants, for my father was not universally beloved; but it
|
||
was a sad blow for me. I felt that I must go. When I announced this
|
||
resolution to my friend, he said I owed my father no duty since he
|
||
had cast me off, I replied that still he was my father. He had
|
||
brought me up, I had lived upon his bread, he had loved me so far
|
||
as was in him to love, he had sacrificed to me many long hours, and
|
||
had placed all his hopes in my gaining glory, or at least doing my
|
||
duty in the Church. Those hopes I had shattered; the last half of
|
||
his life I had embittered. It could not be helped; it was not my
|
||
fault; but still so it was, and at least I ought not to cause him
|
||
unnecessary pain. It would cost me much to go away, for I was very
|
||
happy there; but my conscience left me no choice.
|
||
|
||
"Do you love your father?" inquired the doctor.
|
||
|
||
I answered without hesitation, "No."
|
||
|
||
"I," he said, "made a sacrifice for one whom I loved. But you
|
||
can sacrifice yourself for one whom you do not love, and yet you
|
||
say you are not a Christian."
|
||
|
||
"Because I have ceased to be a Christian," I replied, "that is
|
||
to say, because I have ceased to believe in the Divinity of Christ,
|
||
is that a reason for me to reject what is good in the teaching of
|
||
a good man?"
|
||
|
||
Dr. Chalmers was much depressed by this determination; he
|
||
loved me for myself, and not only for myself. Often I had observed
|
||
his eyes fixed sadly and fondly on my face, in which he saw the
|
||
features of one who was no more. However, in a few days something
|
||
occurred which gave another channel to his thoughts.
|
||
|
||
He received a letter from my father, to the following effect:
|
||
It was all over the country, that on the night of my arrival he (my
|
||
father) had discovered in a secret drawer a packet of letters from
|
||
Dr. Chalmers to my mother. Having read these letters, he showed
|
||
them to me, and turned me out of doors; and I, of course, was
|
||
adopted by the doctor. My father said that this mischievous tale
|
||
would be kept alive so long as I remained where I was; he made no
|
||
appeal to me, whom he looked upon as "lost," but if Dr. Chalmers
|
||
cared for the reputation of a lady who could no longer defend
|
||
herself, he would prove it by sending me away. He must see for
|
||
himself that this abominable scandal had arisen wholly and solely
|
||
from the fact of my being harbored in his house.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
37
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
Dr. Chalmers at first declared that the story was a trick, but
|
||
that I could not allow, for I knew that my father would never tell
|
||
a lie. A few inquiries made through a trustworthy servant brought
|
||
ample confirmation of the fact. It made a sad impression on the
|
||
doctor's mind. "For a quarter of a century," he said, "I have lived
|
||
with these people, and there is not one amongst them who has not
|
||
received a personal kindness at my hands. She also was good to them
|
||
all, and this is how they speak of us. Oh, poor human nature --
|
||
poor human nature!"
|
||
|
||
He resolved to leave Harborne and never to see it again.
|
||
Having placed the establishment under the charge of his housekeeper
|
||
till he could make some permanent arrangements for the Professors,
|
||
he went with me up to London. He declared that he would travel and
|
||
explore the wild countries of the world, and seek in savage life
|
||
that gratitude of which civilized men merely possess a shadowy
|
||
remnant -- the relic of primitive times. I may as well say at once
|
||
that he was not very successful. At Mozambique he bought and set
|
||
free a negro slave who stole his gold watch and decamped with a
|
||
slave-hunting expedition into the interior. In Patagonia he rescued
|
||
a wife from being half-murdered by her giant of a husband -- in
|
||
return for which she assisted with a hearty good-will her lord and
|
||
master to belabor him. Lastly, he took up his abode in Brazil with
|
||
a tribe of Bush Indians, who, having begged from him all that he
|
||
had in his possession, stripped him of his clothes and turned him
|
||
out of their camp as an idle vagabond who knew nothing of hunting
|
||
or fishing and was not able to pay for his keep.
|
||
|
||
LETTER X
|
||
|
||
BEFORE Dr. Chalmers left England he saw me embarked in my
|
||
new profession -- if such it can be called. He begged me to
|
||
accept from him a small annuity, but I said my 150 pounds a year
|
||
was almost sufficient for my wants, and the rest I ought to earn
|
||
for myself. He then introduced me to his publishers, Jansen and
|
||
Haines, in Paternoster Row. This firm, now extinct, was famous in
|
||
its day for the publication of the classics; of original
|
||
scientific works; of translations from the German; of lexicons,
|
||
encyclopedias, annotated catalogues, and so forth. Now, my father
|
||
had taught me German, on account of its value in "dogmatik," and
|
||
the doctor had made me take it up again on account of its value
|
||
in geology. French, and a little Italian, I had learnt from my
|
||
mother. I had a general smattering of science, while the prima
|
||
classes before my name in the University Calendar incontestably
|
||
proved my classical learning and made a profound impression on
|
||
the firm. Having first tested my capacity for work, they set me
|
||
on their Paternoster Cyclopedia, which was rather out of date, to
|
||
correct its errors and insert the latest additions to knowledge.
|
||
As change of work is a species of repose, I was also employed to
|
||
enlarge and improve a Greek lexicon which they had published for
|
||
"the use of colleges and schools." I agreed to produce a stated
|
||
quantity of "copy" per week, and they to pay me the sum of 3
|
||
pounds for the same. Thus I had now 300 pounds a year and was
|
||
perfectly content. I took lodgings near the British Museum, in
|
||
the reading-room of which my days were passed. It was not the
|
||
magnificent hall I once took you to see -- the paradise of
|
||
learned loungers and spectacled flirts -- but a dingy apartment
|
||
frequented by none but genuine students.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
38
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
At first I was obliged to work very hard and had not an hour
|
||
to myself; but when I had hit upon a system, and learnt the art
|
||
of reference, I was able to complete my appointed task at the
|
||
Museum, and could study in the evening for my own pleasure and
|
||
improvement. I must own that often I felt my existence lonely and
|
||
monotonous. The days followed one another, and all, except
|
||
Sundays, were the same. One evening, as I sat by my fire, I said
|
||
to myself, "What a poor life is this, drudging from morning to
|
||
night just to earn food, and lodgings, and clothes! You have no
|
||
one to care for you, no one to converse with, no friend, not even
|
||
an acquaintance. You say 'Good morning' to your landlady at the
|
||
lodgings, and you make some remark about the weather to the man
|
||
who takes charge of your umbrella at the Museum. You go once a
|
||
week to Paternoster Row, hand your roll of manuscript across the
|
||
counter, and receive three sovereigns in an envelope. Such are
|
||
the social pleasures you enjoy; there is no place for you in the
|
||
human family; years will pass, and your life will not change, and
|
||
at length you will become an old man, and, unloved, unpitied,
|
||
will go down with sorrow to the grave."
|
||
|
||
Then I felt sick at heart, and the tears rose to my eyes,
|
||
and I thought of the happiness I had lost. "Oh! Margaret, dear
|
||
Margaret!" I cried, "do you still remember? do you still lament?
|
||
Do you weep for me as I weep for you? Does a vision haunt you
|
||
sleeping and awake -- by night a dream, by day a memory?
|
||
|
||
"Past are the joys of love, the thirsty kisses, and the long
|
||
embrace; past are the hours of chaste converse and tender
|
||
confidence; past are the hopes that once were all assured. None
|
||
but Margaret can be my wife, and she for me is dead and buried in
|
||
the grave. I must go through life solitary and alone; no pretty
|
||
children will clamber on my knee. Alone -- alone -- alone. O God,
|
||
my Father, and my Friend, you have poured love into my heart, and
|
||
my nature is affectionate. Must I be lonely and childless? Is
|
||
that, indeed, my destiny? Then, I pray you, assist me to bear
|
||
life with patience to the end."
|
||
|
||
At that moment the servant brought in a copy of Mrs.
|
||
Carter's 'Epictetus' which I had ordered at a book-shop that day
|
||
as I was coming home. I opened it at hazard and began to read;
|
||
and soon, as if by a magic spell, my pains were charmed away, my
|
||
mind was filled with serene and elevated thoughts. Ah, what a
|
||
divine gift is that which, by scattering some ink drops on paper,
|
||
can, after two thousand years, still give solace to hearts in
|
||
sickness and adversity! It is said that the ancient Egyptians
|
||
placed over their public library this inscription, The medicine
|
||
of the soul; and in all such melancholy hours as that I have
|
||
described, I used to take up a great writer of the past or
|
||
present time, and in half an hour my troubles were forgotten. It
|
||
was this antidote to sorrow, and also my discipline of daily
|
||
work, which saved me from brooding on my woes. I do not think
|
||
that I loved Margaret less than she loved me; but I certainly
|
||
suffered less, as I was soon to learn.
|
||
|
||
One day I met Mr. Jameson in New Oxford Street. To my
|
||
surprise his face brightened up when he saw me, and he said, "Ah,
|
||
here you are! I've been looking for you everywhere."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
39
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
"Looking for me, Mr. Jameson," I repeated.
|
||
|
||
"Well, no," said he, "not exactly that; but I've been in
|
||
London some time (Stilbroke is let), and I've been always
|
||
expecting to see you in the theater saloons, or larking about at
|
||
the Finish, or some of those places."
|
||
|
||
"And pray, sir," I asked, "why should you expect to find me
|
||
in such scenes of dissipation?"
|
||
|
||
"Why, ain't you an infidel?" he said. "And don't they always
|
||
knock about town? But there, I didn't mean to offend you. Why,
|
||
you're as red as a turkey-cock! Is there any place handy where we
|
||
can have a quiet bit of chat?"
|
||
|
||
I took him to my lodgings, which were small but comfortable.
|
||
"Well," said he, "this is a snug little crib; and the Governor
|
||
ain't cut up rough after all?
|
||
|
||
I explained to him what my circumstances were, and said
|
||
that, "Thank God, I had as much money as I wanted."
|
||
|
||
"Thank God!" said he. "Then you do believe there's a God,
|
||
after all?
|
||
|
||
"Certainly, I do."
|
||
|
||
"Well, then, you believe in the Bible too?
|
||
|
||
"No," said I; "not all of it."
|
||
|
||
"My dear fellow," he said, "you contradict yourself; for how
|
||
can you believe in God and not believe in God's Word? But, then,
|
||
never mind -- that's not the point -- that's not the point."
|
||
|
||
He walked up and down the room, muttering according to his
|
||
wont when excited or disturbed. "Three hundred a year isn't much
|
||
-- but it's bread -- it's bread. Will your father disinherit you,
|
||
Mr. Edward, do you think?"
|
||
|
||
"That, I should say, was certain," I replied.
|
||
|
||
He went on, walking backwards and forwards, saying, "Bad,
|
||
sir, bad; but it must be done; there's no choice -- no choice."
|
||
|
||
I was much puzzled by this strange behavior, and the
|
||
questions he asked, and his evident anxiety as he waited for my
|
||
answers. Something rose within me, too vague to be called hope; a
|
||
kind of expectation. Finally, Mr. Jameson put on his gloves and
|
||
said, "I want to see you on particular business; will you call at
|
||
----'s Private Hotel in Half-Moon Street, at nine o'clock this
|
||
evening."
|
||
|
||
I went there at nine o'clock, and was shown into a large,
|
||
dimly-lighted drawing-room. A young woman came and advanced
|
||
hastily towards me. It was Margaret's maid. "Please to sit down,"
|
||
said she, pointing to the sofa near which I was standing. "Jane,"
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
40
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
I said, "tell me ----" "Sit down, sir," said she. I sat down. "It
|
||
is all right," she said with emphasis, "and Miss Margaret will be
|
||
down directly." My head swam round and fell back on the pillow of
|
||
the sofa. "So I thought," muttered the girl. "No, Jane," I said,
|
||
"I have not fainted, but it was very near." "Bear up, sir," she
|
||
said, "and be calm. Do not agitate my mistress; she is still very
|
||
ill ----"
|
||
|
||
"What has happened?" I asked. "What has happened!" she said
|
||
bitterly. "Why, what else could have happened! When you ran off
|
||
like a thief in the night, Miss Margaret took ill; and since that
|
||
day she has never laughed nor cried; and she never said a word,
|
||
but just pined and pined away. And then the doctor and Mrs.
|
||
Watson told her father that he must find you for her again or she
|
||
would die. And he promised he would, and that made her hearten up
|
||
a little. Oh! sir, be kind to her, for she's the best young lady
|
||
in the world, and she's going to send me away because you can't
|
||
afford her a maid; and my old mother's got only my wages to live
|
||
on, or I'd serve her gladly for nothing. O dear!
|
||
|
||
I put a sovereign into her hand and said, "There, Jane, give
|
||
that to your mother, or buy something pretty for yourself; and
|
||
you must not mind leaving your mistress, for you will get married
|
||
yourself before very long, I dare say."
|
||
|
||
This vulgar panacea for the woes of the lower classes seldom
|
||
fails of its effect; and Jane wiped her eyes, smiled, dropped me
|
||
a curtsey, and saying, "I wish you all happiness, sir, and many
|
||
of them," went out of the room.
|
||
|
||
I waited. The moments seemed hours, and she did not come.
|
||
The lamp burned dimly and cast vague shadows on the ceiling
|
||
overhead. The fire crackled in the grate; the furniture creaked;
|
||
hasty footsteps passed along the street; Piccadilly murmured in
|
||
the distance. Why did she not come? Presentiments assailed me.
|
||
Her father had changed his mind; she had fallen ill. A misfortune
|
||
had happened. I cast myself in a chair by the fire and resigned
|
||
myself to melancholy thoughts. Then suddenly something quivered
|
||
through me like a flame. I felt that she was standing by my side.
|
||
|
||
But was this my beautiful Margaret? Pale and hollow were her
|
||
cheeks, and the dress hung loosely on her wasted form. She looked
|
||
at me sadly with her sweet blue eyes. I drew her towards me and
|
||
kissed her pale and trembling lips. I took her on my knees and
|
||
laid her head upon my breast. Thus she remained -- sometimes
|
||
uttering a sigh, sometimes nestling her head more closely to my
|
||
bosom, as one who had been long weary and would sleep. Two hours
|
||
glided by; the girl came in to take her to bed. I rose and said,
|
||
"To-morrow." No other word passed between us in this meeting sad
|
||
as a farewell.
|
||
|
||
LETTER XI
|
||
|
||
AND this same sadness at first underlay our married life. I
|
||
was perfectly content so far as my own lot was concerned; for me
|
||
our marriage was all pure gain; I did my work as usual, and then,
|
||
instead of the gloomy parlor of my bachelor days, I returned to a
|
||
love-bright home. But it pained me to see that my wife was not
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
41
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
happy; and yet how could it be otherwise? This was not the life
|
||
of which we had spoken in the days of our betrothal; this
|
||
lodging-house parlor and bedroom; this solitude and separation, I
|
||
at the museum, she in utter loneliness. This it was which
|
||
troubled her, not our poverty. She did not care for books, and
|
||
was not a musician: she had no intellectual resources, and could
|
||
not amuse herself when she was alone. As the wife of a curate she
|
||
would have been in her proper sphere. She loved the sick and the
|
||
poor, and all old people and children. She loved all who were
|
||
helpless and in want, and spent much of her time by cottage
|
||
bedsides, and by the arm-chairs of the aged placed out in the
|
||
sun. But in London none of these kindly occupations came within
|
||
her life; and she had no gossip with female acquaintances, none
|
||
of those little gregarious pleasures which women think more of
|
||
than men perhaps can understand. Then her health was shattered,
|
||
and often I saw her looking mournfully on her thin neck and
|
||
emaciated arms. Once only I alluded to her illness. She blushed,
|
||
and hid her bead in my breast, and said that "only women knew how
|
||
to love." Then she burst into tears. But save on this occasion I
|
||
never saw her give way to sadness. I inferred rather than
|
||
perceived the sorrow at her heart, for in my presence she was
|
||
cheerful and vivacious. I gave up my book-hours, and read only
|
||
now and then at odd moments: my evenings belonged to Margaret,
|
||
and were spent in playing at chess, draughts, &c., or in
|
||
conversation.
|
||
|
||
When you were born, my dear child, we found our lodgings
|
||
rather small, for a baby takes up a good deal of room. But we
|
||
determined not to increase our expenses, for we had no
|
||
expectations from my father (who had not answered the letter in
|
||
which I informed him of my marriage), nor from hers. The
|
||
Guardsman continued his extravagance, till at last Mr. Jameson
|
||
summoned up courage to declare that he should not have another
|
||
farthing unless he sold out. Captain Jameson asked his father
|
||
what a damned tradesman like him meant talking that way to an
|
||
officer in Her Majesty's Guards, but finally the matter was
|
||
compromised by his exchanging into a cavalry regiment.
|
||
|
||
I must now beg you to suppose that four years had elapsed
|
||
since our marriage. I was engaged by Jansen and Haines in
|
||
compiling notices of the "obscure names" in a Classical
|
||
Dictionary, which was intended to supersede Lempriere, at that
|
||
time alone in the field. Margaret was also engaged on a work of
|
||
education. The arrival of Miss Ellen Mordaunt into our social
|
||
circle was a most fortunate event: my dear wife had now all that
|
||
she wished for; she was never lonely, being never alone; and was
|
||
perfectly happy and contented. She often said if our life had few
|
||
pleasures it had also few cares: and that if we were rich we
|
||
should always be anxious and fretful about some trifle or
|
||
another. And we had one very great pleasure. Every summer we
|
||
spent a fortnight at Limmerleigh, on the East Coast. A lawyer
|
||
from that little town, with his wife and daughter, once took the
|
||
drawing-room floor in the house where we lodged, and we happened
|
||
to make their acquaintance. They saw that Margaret was in
|
||
delicate health, and suggested a trip to the seaside, and placed
|
||
their house at our disposal for a fortnight, saying they should
|
||
be glad to have someone there who would take care of the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
42
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
furniture, garden, &c. This same arrangement was repeated the
|
||
next year and the next: the Irvines always went away for two or
|
||
three weeks in the summer, and then we took our holiday.
|
||
|
||
One Sunday, Margaret came to me with her eyes cast down, and
|
||
said, blushing a little, that she had a favor to ask: would I go
|
||
to church with her that morning? I said that I would go to church
|
||
with her as often as she pleased, and we always went together
|
||
after that. Dear Margaret! she had secret hopes that I might be
|
||
converted, and used to glance anxiously at me when the preacher
|
||
alluded to infidelity. She was much perplexed by my long and
|
||
fervent devotions in the morning and the evening; for she could
|
||
not understand how one could worship God and yet not be a
|
||
Christian. But we never discussed matters of religion.
|
||
|
||
Well, as I said, we had been four years married, and
|
||
Margaret was happy. Then came the great calamity. Captain Jameson
|
||
had soon obtained an evil reputation in his regiment. The passion
|
||
for gambling of the last generation was already in its decline;
|
||
and a man was looked upon with disfavor who carried dice in his
|
||
pocket and held out a pack of cards like a pistol to everyone who
|
||
called upon him at his quarters. Moreover, ugly stories got
|
||
afloat; the colonel warned young cornets against him, and he
|
||
withdrew from the Guards' club, not, it was said, without
|
||
pressure from within. In fact, Captain Jameson was not only a
|
||
thoroughly unscrupulous gambler, but also "tout" or agent to a
|
||
famous West-End usurer, into whose toils he decayed many a young
|
||
officer, receiving a commission on his ruin. This commission was
|
||
so small, and the destruction of future prospects and happiness
|
||
so great, that it was really like burning down a friend's house
|
||
to roast an apple. But what did he care? He was one of those men
|
||
who are quite insensible to the suffering they cause, and are
|
||
never troubled with qualms of any kind either before or after an
|
||
event. However, his career was suddenly brought to a close, and
|
||
he involved others in his fall. A young subaltern was heavily in
|
||
debt and wished to raise a large sum of money. His father was
|
||
immensely rich, and Jameson having reported the case by letter to
|
||
his principal, received his instructions. He told Lieutenant
|
||
Smith (as I will call him) that he could have the 8000 pounds
|
||
whenever he pleased; his note of hand would be sufficient; but,
|
||
as it was pure speculation on the part of the people in London,
|
||
it would have to be paid for accordingly. This, of course, the
|
||
man of great expectations did not mind in the least, and asked
|
||
Captain Jameson to go up to town and arrange the "transaction,"
|
||
giving him the note of hand and full authority to act on his
|
||
behalf. Captain Jameson obtained the 8000 pounds and his
|
||
commission, went to Crockford's to gamble with the latter, and
|
||
lost it, and then lost the eight thousand pounds. Lieutenant
|
||
Smith wisely wrote to his father, and confessed all, in
|
||
consequence of which Captain Jameson shortly afterward wrote to
|
||
his father and informed him that unless 8000 pounds were produced
|
||
within a few days, the matter would go to the C.C.C. In other
|
||
words, he would be charged with felony, arrested, tried, and no
|
||
doubt transported for the same.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
43
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
Mr. Jameson's late foreman, and the family lawyer, and
|
||
myself held council together. It was found that Stilbroke had
|
||
been sold; that Mr. Jameson no longer possessed eight thousand
|
||
pounds, that the sale of his son's commission was not a
|
||
sufficient addition, and that to make up that sum it would be
|
||
necessary for me to contribute my stock of money in the funds. I
|
||
did not hesitate for a moment; my wife's family was mine, and the
|
||
sacrifice was made. A few days afterwards, the Jamesons, father
|
||
and son, the foreman and I met together at the lawyer's in
|
||
Lincoln's Inn Fields. It had been made a stipulation with the
|
||
captain that he should emigrate, and measures had been taken to
|
||
prevent him from evading this arrangement. The lawyer read out
|
||
the accounts. "Then there is nothing left over?" said the
|
||
foreman. "Only this twenty-pound note which will pay for Captain
|
||
Jameson's passage to Australia and buy him a rope when he gets
|
||
there," said the lawyer. "Or perhaps the colony will save him
|
||
that expense."
|
||
|
||
Captain Jameson took the money and retired. Mr. Jameson
|
||
looked from one to another with a bewildered air. "Did you say
|
||
there was nothing left, Mr. Lawyer; nothing left of all that
|
||
money I earned? I worked hard for it, gentlemen. I was up early
|
||
and late. I never wasted an hour. I was honest in all my
|
||
dealings. Yes, yes; poor Bob has spent it all." Then he looked
|
||
round at us again. "How," said he, "am I to live?"
|
||
|
||
I was, of course, prepared with an answer to this question,
|
||
and had taken a bedroom for him at home. But the foreman said,
|
||
"Come, my dear, kind old master; come and live with me." Then he
|
||
turned to me and said, "Excuse me, sir, for taking your place;
|
||
but you have done enough." He rose and went out, and my poor
|
||
father-in-law tottered after him, holding his hand. He died in a
|
||
few months; and Captain Jameson was shot in a gambling-house in
|
||
Sydney, soon after his arrival, for something equivalent to what
|
||
is called "welching" on the Turf.
|
||
|
||
It would have been better, perhaps, to have kept our money
|
||
and left him to his fate; and yet, I am sure, we acted on the
|
||
right principle. For he might have reformed; he might have become
|
||
an honest, hard-working man, and even acquired a fortune. In
|
||
novels, the air of australia has a wonderfully restorative effect
|
||
on the characters of emigrants; and sometimes, no doubt, it is so
|
||
in real life. Margaret said that he had great natural ability,
|
||
and he must have had some qualities to make him the friend of
|
||
Fitzclarence. But the passion for play quickly depraves a man;
|
||
what are the pleasures of society or culture to those who have
|
||
sat knee-deep in cards, and played night and day without
|
||
intermission? Gambling is the most dangerous of vices, because
|
||
its excitements are incomparable, and are followed by no
|
||
reaction; it ruins, but it does not satiate.
|
||
|
||
We now lived from hand to mouth, but I was not alarmed; and
|
||
there seemed no reason for alarm. Thousands of married persons
|
||
were in a position not less precarious; it was, in fact, the
|
||
ordinary lot. I was earning 150 pounds a year, and knew I could
|
||
get copying and translating to do, for such work had been offered
|
||
to me by other readers at the Museum. And, in fact, before long I
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
44
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
was fully employed. But the work was miserably paid and was often
|
||
required in haste. My evenings were no longer devoted to
|
||
Margaret. I had to write -- write -- write from morning to
|
||
midnight, or even to the following dawn. Thus, by immense
|
||
efforts, I was able to make two pounds a week. When job-work was
|
||
slack I tried my hand at literary composition, and wrote about
|
||
twenty essays on social and literary subjects, which I dropped
|
||
into Editor's boxes; but none of them ever appeared in print, so
|
||
I confined myself to the manual labor of the scribe. We were
|
||
still fifty pounds short of our previous income, and Margaret had
|
||
to practice the mean little arts of economy, the saving and
|
||
hashing the scraps of one meal for another, and so forth. I hate
|
||
extravagance and waste; but it seems to me that this kind of
|
||
thrift is apt to make the mind sordid and money paramount. "My
|
||
dear," said I to her one day, "there are two kinds of poverty.
|
||
When we had 300 pounds a year, if we had taken a house, we should
|
||
have found it difficult to make both ends meet. But you were
|
||
content with these bachelor lodgings and money never troubled us.
|
||
In one sense of the word we were poor; but, as a matter of fact,
|
||
we lived easily on a small scale. Well, now we are poor; our
|
||
regular expenses are too much for our income, and so we have to
|
||
scrape and stint in little matters, and think of pennies at every
|
||
hour of the day. We have lost 50 pounds a year, and ought to
|
||
reduce our expenses by living in a more humble way. At first we
|
||
may find it hard to give up those little comforts to which we
|
||
have been long accustomed; but habit will soon make us happy
|
||
without them, and there will be an end to all this petty trouble
|
||
and anxiety."
|
||
|
||
Margaret had grown fond of our dingy rooms and was sorry to
|
||
leave them. It was there we had spent our honeymoon, and there
|
||
you were born. However, she assented at once, as she did to all
|
||
that I proposed; but a misfortune postponed our departure, and
|
||
then rendered it no longer a question of choice and free-will.
|
||
Alas! I had said there were two kinds of poverty. We had soon to
|
||
learn by terrible experience that there were other kinds, the
|
||
horrors of which may not be, cannot be, fully described. A part
|
||
only of the truth I shall unfold.
|
||
|
||
LETTER XII
|
||
|
||
As I told you, I read and wrote all day, and the greater
|
||
part of the night as well. My night-work was mostly copying, and
|
||
I made the mistake of writing on white paper, which is very
|
||
trying to the eyes; I was also employed for some time copying
|
||
manuscripts in a private library, and this work taxed my eyesight
|
||
severely. I found that when I woke up in the morning, my eyelids
|
||
were glued together, and a young doctor, whose acquaintance I had
|
||
made at the reading-room, observing them to be watery and
|
||
bloodshot, advised me to give them rest for a month. But how
|
||
could I pass a month without doing any work, unless we could pass
|
||
it without eating any food? I hoped for the best and worked on as
|
||
before; and the consequences may be imagined. The next time I
|
||
caught cold it flew to my eyes, inflammation set in, and a few
|
||
days afterwards I was sightless.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
45
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
My employers were exceedingly kind. They sent me ten pounds
|
||
on account and begged me not to be anxious. I always did my work
|
||
honestly and well, and they would not lose me on any account.
|
||
They would find a substitute while I was ill, and as soon as I
|
||
had recovered my health, there was my place ready for me.
|
||
Unluckily, I twice returned to my work too soon (money was so
|
||
needful to us), and twice I relapsed. This caused the firm much
|
||
inconvenience and threw my eyes into a bad state. The disease
|
||
assumed a chronic form, and a great oculist whom I consulted,
|
||
said that time, rest, country air, nourishing food, and attention
|
||
to the general health were the only medicines he could recommend.
|
||
|
||
Margaret had a good deal of jewellery, chiefly presents from
|
||
her father. This we were now forced to sell, and obtained what we
|
||
thought a considerable sum. We felt quite confident, that before
|
||
it was spent my health would be restored, and went to live near
|
||
Hempstead Heath where we found board and lodging at a very
|
||
reasonable rate. But my eyes became worse, and, returning to
|
||
London, we took a bedroom near the hospital at Charing Cross, for
|
||
which I had procured an out-patient's ticket. There my case
|
||
received every attention; but, as the oculist had predicted,
|
||
medicines did me no good. Our money being now nearly at an end,
|
||
we migrated to the neighborhood of Islington, where we took a
|
||
garret at four shillings a week. We spent little money, but none
|
||
came in; and, slowly, slowly our store decreased, till at last it
|
||
was finished altogether. Hitherto, my dearest wife had alleviated
|
||
the sorrows of my blindness by reading to me from my favorite
|
||
books, but now they had to go too. I got very little for them,
|
||
but we lived on the money two weeks.
|
||
|
||
"Dear Edward," said my wife, "you must let me write to your
|
||
father, or our poor little Elly will starve." I gave my consent,
|
||
of course, and she wrote; but no answer was received. We made
|
||
inquiries about Dr. Chalmers. He had gone on a canoe voyage up
|
||
the Amazon and had not been heard of for a year.
|
||
|
||
On my left hand I wore a gold ring, which my mother had made
|
||
me promise always to wear in memory of her; but I thought that
|
||
our destitution released me from this promise to the dead.
|
||
However, I would not sell it; I would only pawn it, and within a
|
||
year's time I should surely be able to redeem it.
|
||
|
||
One evening at dusk I went out and walked backwards and
|
||
forwards before several pawnbroker's shops; but they were all too
|
||
public -- too near the crowded thoroughfare. At last I saw some
|
||
way off, down a narrow side-street the three golden balls
|
||
branching out from the wall of a house. This I thought was the
|
||
place for me; so taking off my green shade, for fear of being
|
||
conspicuous, and looking anxiously around me, though I only knew
|
||
two or three persons in London, I slipped in at the door, which
|
||
was invitingly ajar. I found inside three small doors, which
|
||
opened into cells or private boxes with partitions on either
|
||
side, so that those who stood before the counter could not see
|
||
one another.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
46
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
The shop-man was talking in a jocular manner to a woman in
|
||
the box on my left; and having tied up her bundle of linen, put
|
||
it on a shelf, pinned a ticket to it, and handed her the
|
||
duplicate, he wished her good-day, and came to me. I handed him
|
||
the ring, and he took it to the light, examined it carefully, and
|
||
offered to advance me two pounds. I said that would do very well,
|
||
as I only wanted the money for a few days. As I made this very
|
||
foolish speech a tall thin young man in the box on my right
|
||
stretched himself half over the counter and looked round into my
|
||
box with a derisive expression on his face. The next evening I
|
||
saw him talking to some girls before a public-house, with his
|
||
white hat cocked on one side and a cigar in his mouth. There,
|
||
thought I is a Captain Jameson of low degree, and perhaps he too
|
||
has ruined his relations.
|
||
|
||
I learnt before long to go to the pawnbrokers without shame,
|
||
and even to bargain with the shop-man. Little by little
|
||
everything went -- our boxes, our clothes -- nearly all we had
|
||
except what we wore. For the first time we were in debt; we owed
|
||
a week's rent. The landlady came to us, and said "she saw we
|
||
couldn't pay the rent, and she wouldn't demand it. But she'd got
|
||
an old lodger come back who wanted our room, and so out we must
|
||
go. There was his portmantle down-stairs, and him waiting in her
|
||
parlor, We must foot it at once."
|
||
|
||
The little we had was soon made into a bundle, which I tied
|
||
to a stick, as I had seen tramps do in the country. Your mother
|
||
took you in her arms, and so we went out into the street.
|
||
|
||
It was the month of November. A fine drizzly rain filled the
|
||
air, and covered the pavement with a layer of damp in which the
|
||
gaslights were reflected. We walked eastward, keeping close to
|
||
the houses on the right-hand side, for the street was thronged
|
||
with men going home from the City. What a heartless crowd it
|
||
seemed to us poor exiles of happiness, outcasts from humanity.
|
||
There was scarcely a woman among them. They had pale resolute
|
||
faces, and walked as fast as they were able, looking neither to
|
||
the right nor to the left. Weary of being jolted and pushed, we
|
||
sank under a doorway and watched them go by. An elderly man,
|
||
poorly but neatly dressed, noticed us as he passed; he went on a
|
||
few steps, paused, hesitated, then returned, put a penny in my
|
||
hand, and went quickly away. We bought a roll, which we divided
|
||
into three equal parts. It was the first time we had eaten that
|
||
day.
|
||
|
||
The street grew empty, as it seemed, of a sudden, and we
|
||
continued our journey. We made you walk a little now and then,
|
||
and carried you by turns. Margaret insisted on this, though
|
||
scarcely able to bear your weight. For a long time past she had
|
||
been in failing health, and I knew she must be feeling very ill;
|
||
but she said not a word in complaint. Sometimes she gently
|
||
pressed my hand; sometimes I put my arm round her waist and gave
|
||
her a kiss. Our love was greater than our misery.
|
||
|
||
We were now in the heart of the City, and it resembled a
|
||
city of the dead. The streets that in day teemed with human
|
||
beings were silent and deserted.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
47
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
In the midst of these vast solitudes we felt like travellers
|
||
lost in a wilderness of stone. We sat down and rested for a
|
||
while. Then Margaret said, "Dear Edward, my courage faints. Will
|
||
you pray with me?"
|
||
|
||
"No, Margaret," I answered, "I pray no more, God is hard-
|
||
hearted."
|
||
|
||
"Edward! Edward!" she cried with a gesture of affright, "do
|
||
not put such thoughts into my heart; they come there often, and I
|
||
drive them away. Oh! my dear husband, make me good; help me to
|
||
place my trust in God, and to love him, and to ---
|
||
|
||
Her words ended in sobs.
|
||
|
||
I embraced her and knelt on the cold stones. But I did it
|
||
only of my love for her. I was sullen and rebellious. She knelt
|
||
also, and prayed aloud with the sleeping child in her arms.
|
||
|
||
A policeman came up while thus we were engaged and told us
|
||
to move on. I laughed a mocking laugh to myself. Yet my wife, was
|
||
cheered by this hasty prayer and her eyes brightened up. When we
|
||
had gone a little way she stopped and said, "Edward, it is
|
||
useless to walk about like this; we can sleep in the workhouse,
|
||
and that is better than being out of doors."
|
||
|
||
I had thought of this and feared to propose it, but it was
|
||
no time for sentiment and pride. I saw a man coming towards us,
|
||
and when he drew near it was plain that he belonged to the class
|
||
who could give poor vagrants information and advice. He wore a
|
||
fur cap on his head and a white comforter round his throat; he
|
||
slouched along with his hands in the pockets of his corduroy
|
||
trousers and was whistling a tune. I asked him if he could direct
|
||
us to the nearest workhouse, where we might sleep. "Well," said
|
||
he, "you won't get much sleep in them institutions. Why won't you
|
||
go to a model lodging-house? It's only a penny a night, and every
|
||
luxury of the season." I replied that we had not so much as a
|
||
penny. "God strike me dead!" said he, catching up my hand, and
|
||
feeling the tips of my fingers; "you're gentlefolk, too, by your
|
||
hand". "We were," said I, "a long time ago." "I dare say now,"
|
||
said he in a coaxing voice, "as you were a clerk or something of
|
||
that?" "Yes," said I, "not exactly a clerk, but doing the same
|
||
kind of work." "And when your eyes went bad," he said, glancing
|
||
at my green shade, "they gave you the sack?" I nodded. "And then
|
||
you spouted all you'd got, except what's there in your bundle,
|
||
and I don't think it's much, and you got behind hand with your
|
||
rent, and they turned you out into the streets?"
|
||
|
||
I told him he had guessed right.
|
||
|
||
"Guessed I" said this man learned in misery, "it ain't
|
||
guessing at all. Can't I see it before me just as plain as a
|
||
play-bill on the wall? Now come along with me, and I'll give you
|
||
a night's lodging and a bit of hot supper into the bargain. I'm
|
||
flush, for I've just done a good bit of work. Don't trouble, sir;
|
||
I'll carry the young'un."
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
48
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
"I suppose," said I, "that you are a skilled working-man."
|
||
|
||
Yes," he replied, "there ain't a skilleder man than me in my
|
||
own line -- bar one. I began life as a policeman, but I saw the
|
||
error of my ways, and left off making war on my fellow-creatures
|
||
what never done me any harm."
|
||
|
||
I asked several other questions, and he returned answers
|
||
which I did not always understand, and which seemed intended
|
||
chiefly for his own amusement, as he chuckled to himself after he
|
||
had made them. He took us beyond the Bank, into a part of London
|
||
where I had never been before. I saw to my astonishment a great
|
||
wide street lined on both sides of the way with innumerable trays
|
||
or trucks of fruit, fish, and other edibles, each truck being
|
||
lighted by a candle in a glass shade. The pavement was crowded
|
||
with people, all of the lower class, and the bustle was
|
||
extraordinary. Our companion told us that this was the
|
||
Whitechapel Road, and seeing that Margaret and I were both very
|
||
weak, he bought us a penny cup of coffee. This gave us new
|
||
strength, and we were able to keep up with him, though he walked
|
||
very quickly, glancing from side to side and sometimes looking
|
||
back over his shoulder. He said that it was against his
|
||
principles, as a respectable working man, to dawdle in the
|
||
streets; then he had such a large acquaintance in the Force, he
|
||
feared he might perhaps be detained if he met any of them.
|
||
|
||
"Lor' bless you," said he, "they wouldn't let me go. I might
|
||
tell 'em I'd got particular business, or that my old mother was
|
||
anxious if I stopped out late, or that I was taking home friends
|
||
to supper -- they wouldn't listen to a word. They're so wary
|
||
pressing in their invitations, are my old pals, they won't take
|
||
no refusal, not at any price whatever." He now left the
|
||
Whitechapel Road, and, turning to the right, plunged us into a
|
||
perfect labyrinth of by-streets and alleys. Some of these streets
|
||
were deserted like those in the City, and we passed two large
|
||
buildings, each of which perfumed the air for a considerable
|
||
distance; the first was a sugar bakery, the second a brewery,
|
||
which last our guide sniffed with much satisfaction. One street
|
||
we entered was devoted to festivity. Nearly every house was
|
||
brilliantly lighted, and from half-open doors proceeded the
|
||
sounds of harp and fiddle and thumping of feet; or laughter,
|
||
clamor, and song. Women without any bonnets strolled to and fro,
|
||
and half-drunken sailors rollicked merrily along. Not far from
|
||
this street we came to another, in which the houses were all more
|
||
or less dilapidated, and most of them seemed to be empty. The man
|
||
told us we were "nearly there," and, giving a long shrill
|
||
whistle, stopped to listen as if for a reply. Two whistles
|
||
responded from the bottom of the street. He then pushed quickly
|
||
on, passed under an arch into a small court, and, knocking at the
|
||
door of a house within, called for a light. An old woman opened
|
||
the door with a farthing dip in her hand, and the man having
|
||
chucked her under the chin, and asked her if she felt pretty
|
||
bobbish, led us up to a room on the second floor. It was a poor
|
||
bare room enough, the walls blackened with dirt, the broken
|
||
window-panes stuffed with rags; but it was a sweet refuge to us
|
||
that night after our weary wanderings. Our host told us the old
|
||
woman was his mother, and we mustn't mind her being cross, she
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
49
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
being a real good sort all the same. He went out and talked with
|
||
her some time. At first her voice sounded keen and shrill, but it
|
||
softened down, and she came in with a mattress and blanket, which
|
||
she laid on the floor, then served us some sausages, with
|
||
potatoes backed in their skins.
|
||
|
||
After we had supped, our host came in and sat with us,
|
||
smoking a short clay pipe. I was now able to study his
|
||
appearance. On his right hand was a fresh red scar which he tried
|
||
to keep covered with his left. It seemed like the bite of a dog.
|
||
The expression of his face was not prepossessing. His look was
|
||
kind, but it was askant, and there was something cunning in his
|
||
smile. When he paid us little acts of attention, such as
|
||
arranging the mattress, or making up the fire, it was done, so I
|
||
thought, in an underhanded kind of way. However, I stopped myself
|
||
in the midst of these reflections, which were not very grateful,
|
||
and thanked him warmly for having saved us from the miseries of
|
||
the street. He mumbled something about a workhouse being no place
|
||
for her -- pointing at my wife with his thumb.
|
||
|
||
I observed a heap of tools in the Corner of the room, and
|
||
made some remark about them. He at once became vivacious and
|
||
talkative as he was in the street, and his eyes twinkled in a
|
||
most singular manner as he spoke. "You see," said he, "I'm in the
|
||
patent lock and key line. Now, here is a little inwention of my
|
||
own." He showed me a leaden hammer capped with leather. "What
|
||
d'ye think it's for? I'll tell you. Gentlemen often loses the
|
||
keys of their patent safes, and then they send to the shop and
|
||
ask for a man to open 'em. Of course they don't send the safe,
|
||
'cos it's full of gold and bank-notes. Well, it's no good trying
|
||
to pick a patent lock; so the safe has to be opened by force with
|
||
a wedge and a hammer. Now, I needn't tell you, gentlemen don't
|
||
like a noise being made in their house like a blacksmith's shop;
|
||
it wakes up the baby, sets the dogs barking, and alarms the
|
||
neighborhood. So I inments this leather cap hammer, and it drives
|
||
the wedge in without making any noise."
|
||
|
||
"I suppose you have taken out a patent?" said I.
|
||
|
||
"Well, no," said he, "I ain't done that -- not ex-act-ly.
|
||
But it's been the means of putting money in my pocket all the
|
||
same. There's Jem Black what works with me, he goes to the Hall
|
||
of Science and cultiwates his mind; and he says to me, 'Thomas,
|
||
that's a beautiful inwention; Thomas, I'm proud of you; Thomas,
|
||
you're a benefactor of our specie."'
|
||
|
||
He now left us to ourselves, taking the tools with him, and
|
||
in the morning gave us a breakfast of tea, and bacon, and eggs.
|
||
In the midst of the meal a man rushed into the room and whispered
|
||
something in his ear. I heard the word "peached." Our host sprang
|
||
up, wrung me by the hand, and hastened out followed by his
|
||
friend. In the afternoon the old woman came in. She was crying.
|
||
She said, "We should never see her son any more." I asked her
|
||
why. She only shook her head and covered her face with her apron,
|
||
and rocked herself to and fro. After a time she went out.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
50
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
A sergeant of police came in with two constables and
|
||
searched the room. I now began to understand, and asked if the
|
||
man who lived there had been taken up. The sergeant looked at me
|
||
with some surprise and said, "Yes; burglary with violence."
|
||
|
||
The old woman left the house, and no one disturbed us in our
|
||
occupation of the room. We lived chiefly on dry bread, which I
|
||
begged from servants and at bakers' shops. I never begged for
|
||
money, at Margaret's earnest request. Thus we were kept from
|
||
actual starvation; but my poor wife became weaker and weaker
|
||
every day. Then came a hard frost. We had no fire, and when I
|
||
felt the keen air streaming in at the window, I knew that it
|
||
would kill her. She lay with her eyes fixed upon me, trembling
|
||
and shivering, yet pressing you to her bosom, chafing your hands
|
||
and bare feet, while you cried in a weak, plaintive voice, "Poor
|
||
Elly! so hungry, so cold!
|
||
|
||
Oh, Edward," she said, "if I could only have some tea; I
|
||
think it would save me."
|
||
|
||
I went first to a large coal-yard, and picked up the pieces
|
||
which were lying in the street near the gate, and put them in a
|
||
cloth I had brought with me for that purpose. A gentleman who was
|
||
coming out of the yard stopped and said, "Are you so poor that
|
||
you can't afford to buy coals this terrible weather?"
|
||
|
||
"I cannot even buy food," I answered; "and my wife is
|
||
dying."
|
||
|
||
"You have a gentleman's voice," said he.
|
||
|
||
"I was once a clergyman."
|
||
|
||
"I have known many cases of this kind," he replied, "and
|
||
excuse my saying so; the cause has been always the same --
|
||
drink."
|
||
|
||
"In my case," said I, "it was something you may think worse
|
||
-- Infidelity. Then followed sickness from overwork, doubtless a
|
||
judgment you would call it. These eyes failed me, and they fail
|
||
me still, or I should be at work."
|
||
|
||
"Well," said he, "I dare say I can find you something to do
|
||
which won't try your eyes. Meet me here to-morrow at the same
|
||
hour, and in the meantime take this for immediate necessities."
|
||
He gave me a five-pound note and stepped into a brougham, which
|
||
was out of sight before I had recovered from my astonishment. It
|
||
causes me a pang even now when I think of that broken
|
||
appointment. Why it was broken he never could know, and must have
|
||
supposed I was drinking the money. Perhaps (who can tell?) it may
|
||
have set him against being charitable any more.
|
||
|
||
I went to a grocer's and changed the note. I almost feared
|
||
he would say it was a bad one, for the luck seemed too great to
|
||
be true. I bought some tea and some coals and wood, and borrowed
|
||
a tea-pot and mug from the people in the house. Margaret seemed
|
||
to be asleep. I would not wake her till the tea was quite ready;
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
51
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
then I would put the mattress close down by the fire; and when
|
||
she had finished her tea, I would go to the cook-shop and buy her
|
||
some good strong soup.
|
||
|
||
Her eyes opened; I sat down beside her on the floor, and
|
||
told her the good news. She smiled; then her face changed in a
|
||
curious manner; she put up her lips to be kissed like a child
|
||
before it goes to sleep, and expired.
|
||
|
||
I sat there without moving. The dusky shadows were falling
|
||
on the floor when a hand was placed upon my shoulder. I looked
|
||
round. It was a City Missionary whom I had often seen passing
|
||
from house to house; but he had never been to my room before. "My
|
||
brother," he said, "you are in affliction."
|
||
|
||
I started to my feet. "There has been murder done here," I
|
||
cried.
|
||
|
||
"What," said he, turning pale, "do you suspect ----"
|
||
|
||
"God has murdered her," I said. "The God who made her, the
|
||
God whom she loved and faithfully obeyed."
|
||
|
||
He looked softly into my furious eyes and said, Do you
|
||
think, then, that she is dead? No, dear friend, she is but
|
||
released from this poor tenement of clay, and now lives with God
|
||
in paradise."
|
||
|
||
"And could not," I cried, "could not this benevolent God
|
||
make her happy in another world without inflicting these horrible
|
||
tortures upon her? Look at that body, once so beautiful, battered
|
||
and beaten by its maker. And it is not only her body he has
|
||
wounded. If her soul could be made visible, it would show the
|
||
marks of many a cruel and savage blow."
|
||
|
||
"Oh, silence these angry thoughts," he said, "and be
|
||
resigned to the will of God. For he is our sovereign and our
|
||
Lord; it is he who has made us and not we ourselves; we are his
|
||
people, and the sheep of his pasture. My friend, let me implore
|
||
you to humble your heart and kneel with me before the throne."
|
||
|
||
"What," I cried, with anger redoubled, "pray to that
|
||
monster, that demon, that fiend! Think you that I, like a
|
||
grovelling hound, will lick the hand that strikes without mercy
|
||
and without provocation? Think you I am as the base Oriental
|
||
slave, who presses the bowstring to his lips and to his brow?
|
||
Think you that I fear his malignant rage? Hear me, bloodthirsty
|
||
tyrant of the skies, you have power, and can rack me with
|
||
everlasting pains. But I curse you, I defy you ... murderer ...
|
||
fiend ... "
|
||
|
||
The foam fell from my mouth on my hands. I saw the
|
||
missionary running from the room. Then I swooned and fell
|
||
senseless to the ground.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
52
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
When I came to myself I was still alone. I went to the
|
||
window and looked out. Snow was failing heavily, and already the
|
||
roofs of the houses were white. I listened to the roar of the
|
||
streets. I pondered on my misery; and I thought of the black
|
||
river which I had once crossed on such a night. The bridge was
|
||
lonely I remembered. Few people passed by, and their footsteps
|
||
could be heard from afar. But again fierce wrath rose within me;
|
||
and I cried with a loud voice, "God, you shall not conquer me; I
|
||
will fight out my life to its natural end."
|
||
|
||
Then a tiny little hand was put into mine, and a little
|
||
voice said in a pleading tone, "Papa, why do you talk so angry
|
||
and loud? you will wake up mamma. And you never look at Elly
|
||
to-day. Poor Elly! so hungry, so cold!"
|
||
|
||
Then I was stricken with shame and self-disgust. I had let
|
||
my poor child starve whilst I was ranting idly at the clouds.
|
||
|
||
I took out a handful of coins. "O thou vile dross!" I cried,
|
||
"thou canst not give true happiness, yet without thee is misery
|
||
and death. See, Elly, here is some money to play with, and I will
|
||
go out and buy you something nice."
|
||
|
||
Your eyes sparkled -- we all love money by instinct -- and
|
||
you took the silver in your lap. I knelt down beside the
|
||
inanimate body, and asked it in a whisper to forgive me, for I
|
||
felt that with my foolish rage I had profaned the presence of the
|
||
dead. Presently you ran to me with a frightened face and pushed
|
||
the money into my hands.
|
||
|
||
A number of men and women were standing behind me, looking
|
||
sadly on the corpse. Then they led me away to another room.
|
||
Thieves and prostitutes did the last offices of love for the body
|
||
of my poor Margaret.
|
||
|
||
LETTER XIII
|
||
|
||
WHEN I awoke from sleep -- a sleep, as I thought, of many
|
||
dreams -- I was in the room where Margaret had died. But her body
|
||
was not there. The sun was shining brightly, the window was open,
|
||
and the air that came in was balmy and warm. I sat up and looked
|
||
out; there was no snow on the ground; flowers were blooming in a
|
||
box on the sill, and a lark was singing in a cage fastened to the
|
||
wall outside.
|
||
|
||
This I could not understand; besides, I was lying in a bed
|
||
placed under the window. How had it come there? I glanced round
|
||
the room. It was furnished. There was a plain deal table and
|
||
several rush-bottomed chairs, and cups and saucers, dishes and
|
||
plates in shelves, and a kitchen dresser; and signs of cooking in
|
||
the grate. I lay back in bed and tried to collect my thoughts.
|
||
|
||
The door opened, and two young women came in.
|
||
|
||
"If you please," said I.
|
||
|
||
"Hark, Sal, he speaks!" said one of them. "Lord!
|
||
I feel 'most afraid."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
53
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
"Oh, you fool! said the other; and coming towards me she
|
||
drew a chair up to the bedside. Well, sir?" she cried.
|
||
|
||
"Where is the -- Where is Margaret?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
"She was buried long ago," said the girl.
|
||
|
||
"Long ago! it was only last night that it happened. How can
|
||
you talk to me like that?
|
||
|
||
"Hush, hush," she said, in a soft soothing voice; "listen to
|
||
me while I tell you. That was three months gone by, and all that
|
||
time you've been very ill. Then it was winter -- cold, snowy
|
||
winter. Don't you remember? And now it is the spring. Feel the
|
||
warm air coming in at the window; hear the lark singing, smell
|
||
the sweet flowers, see the blue sky.,)
|
||
|
||
Then those were not dreams after all, those days and nights
|
||
that had followed one another, those faces I had seen, those
|
||
voices I had heard.
|
||
|
||
"Where is she buried?" I asked.
|
||
|
||
She held up her finger. "You must not speak of that or your
|
||
illness will come back."
|
||
|
||
"Tell me then, who are you?" I said, "and who is that girl
|
||
over there?"
|
||
|
||
"We belong to him as brought you here. She is my sister, and
|
||
we live in this and in another room. But now you're well you
|
||
shall have this one to yourself."
|
||
|
||
"I believe," said I, "that you have saved my life." Her eyes
|
||
became full of tenderness. "Yes," she said, "I have saved your
|
||
life." Then she put her hand in her pocket. "The parson gave me
|
||
this for you as soon as you got well."
|
||
|
||
It was a New Testament. "But I cannot read," said I. "Try
|
||
it," said she, smiling. I opened and read without difficulty; my
|
||
sight was restored! One malady had destroyed the other. I uttered
|
||
an exclamation of delight. At the same moment the other girl who
|
||
had gone out of the room a few moments before, brought you in,
|
||
very nicely dressed, and your golden hair carefully combed out.
|
||
"Kiss your papa, Elly," said the girl named Sarah, "he knows you
|
||
now." Then, as she turned to go, she said, "If you think you owe
|
||
me anything, please do not fret yourself ill, and ask me no
|
||
questions about myself or my sister."
|
||
|
||
In a few days I was able to walk about, and tried to obtain
|
||
some employment. But my appearance did not recommend me, for I
|
||
was in rags, and my toes protruded from my boots. However, I
|
||
called upon a law-stationer who was attracted rather than
|
||
repelled by my evident poverty. This worthy man, as his shopman
|
||
afterwards informed me, employed by preference persons in a state
|
||
of utter destitution, as he usually found them not only grateful
|
||
for his kindness, but also willing to work on very moderate
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
54
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
terms. Having inspected my calligraphy (I had learned to write
|
||
clerk's hand), he feared it would not do, but just as I was going
|
||
from the shop, called me back and offered to pay me so much a
|
||
folio -- half the regulation price -- which I accepted gladly
|
||
enough. I wrote to Jansen and Haines, and said that my eyesight
|
||
being now perfectly restored, I hoped they would allow me to
|
||
resume my connection with the firm. I gave the law-stationer's as
|
||
an address, and the publishers replied by return of post, that
|
||
they had made arrangements with another gentleman in respect to
|
||
the Classical Dictionary, but as soon as they had an opportunity,
|
||
they would gladly avail themselves of my valuable services, and
|
||
would lose no time in communicating with me.
|
||
|
||
No one would tell me where Margaret was buried, for they
|
||
feared it might cause a relapse if I went to her grave. And I
|
||
never found it out, for we changed our name when we went to live
|
||
at the thief's house. Margaret was buried under the name we had
|
||
assumed, and I could not remember it after my illness. On the day
|
||
of my recovery, I told Sarah that my name was Mordaunt, and this
|
||
trifling circumstance shaped out my future destiny by giving a
|
||
clue to those who were in search.
|
||
|
||
I will tell you a strange thing. My illness caused by the
|
||
passion of grief had swallowed up and absorbed that grief to
|
||
itself. I did not mourn for Margaret, and almost rejoiced that
|
||
she was taken from a life so full of suffering and pain. Now, the
|
||
object of my life was to save you from such trials as she had
|
||
undergone. I would work hard, and restore you to that position in
|
||
which your parents had been born.
|
||
|
||
The day after I received the letter from Jansen and Haines,
|
||
as I was standing near the door of the house, three whistles
|
||
sounded, or rather shrieked, in the street outside. At once there
|
||
was great commotion in the court. Several men dashed into their
|
||
houses, and then emerging through the skylights, ran nimbly over
|
||
the roofs. Those who were not frightened were inquisitive, and
|
||
crowded to the windows and doors. The cause of all this stir was
|
||
a middle-aged man with a fresh-colored face and yellowish
|
||
whiskers streaked with grey. As he came into the court an old man
|
||
(who had probably retired from business) went up to him and said,
|
||
"Is anybody wanted?
|
||
|
||
"No," said the other; "private inquiry." Then be glanced at
|
||
my face, and gave me a letter addressed Edward Mordaunt, Esq.
|
||
"That is for you, sir, I think," said he.
|
||
|
||
This letter was from my father's lawyer, who informed me
|
||
that Mr. Mordaunt was travelling abroad when my wife's letter was
|
||
written: he replied to it when he came back, and as we had
|
||
changed our address, his reply was returned by the Dead Letter
|
||
Post Office. Mr. Mordaunt had then instructed him (the lawyer) to
|
||
find out where I was, but all inquiries had failed, till at last
|
||
a detective had heard of a person named Mordaunt living in the
|
||
thieves' quarter, Whitechapel, and ascertained that the person in
|
||
question was a gentleman by birth and answered to my description.
|
||
Mr. Mordaunt, on receiving this information, was grieved, but not
|
||
surprised to find that my infidel opinions had led me to adopt a
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
55
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
career of crime, and that, having defied the laws of God, I
|
||
should now set myself in opposition to the laws of man. In order
|
||
to save a soul from perdition he was willing to adopt his
|
||
grandchild, on the understanding that I made no attempt to see
|
||
her again; and so long as I adhered to this condition be would
|
||
pay me an annuity equal to that which I had squandered.
|
||
|
||
I said that I would consider the matter, and send a reply in
|
||
a few days. I felt it was my duty to think of nothing else but
|
||
your own welfare and happiness. I should endeavor to silence my
|
||
affection for you since that affection would be a vice if it
|
||
persuaded me to sacrifice your future. In my hands was your fate;
|
||
what a terrible responsibility! If I could earn for myself a
|
||
respectable position you would, I thought, have a happier
|
||
childhood, and grow up a better woman than if educated by that
|
||
austere old man. But was it in my power to escape from this
|
||
kennel of crime? That morning the state of my eyes had given me
|
||
cause for alarm, and in my weak state of health overwork might
|
||
soon set them wrong again. Breathing a pestiferous air, living on
|
||
insufficient food, it was not likely that I should regain my full
|
||
strength, and without it I was doomed to remain in my prison-
|
||
house. Before I went free I had debts to pay -- debts which would
|
||
never be claimed and could never be forgotten. After much thought
|
||
I came to this determination. The next morning I would call upon
|
||
the publishers, and tell them how I was situated, and ask them
|
||
for pity's sake to give me a helping hand, not in the way of
|
||
charity, but of employment. If they refused, then you should go;
|
||
and though I feared your life would not be a happy one, at least
|
||
you would not be brought up in a den of thieves.
|
||
|
||
I obtained on hire a suit of black clothes, which, though
|
||
threadbare and worm-eaten, were better than the rags I usually
|
||
wore.
|
||
|
||
As I stooped down to kiss you before I left the house, I
|
||
could not refrain from tears. "Oh, my beloved child," I said,
|
||
"they will take you from me and I shall never see you again. They
|
||
will tell you that I am a wicked man, and teach you to hate and
|
||
despise me. My darling, it is hard to give you up; but I must --
|
||
I must -- if it is for your good."
|
||
|
||
The tears rolled down my cheeks, and you took out your
|
||
little handkerchief and wiped them away. I put on my hat. Then
|
||
you said you would go too, and without waiting for an answer put
|
||
on your things and thrust your hand into mine. "And why," thought
|
||
I, "should I not take her? It may be our last day together." So
|
||
off we went, through alleys and by-ways, into the Whitechapel
|
||
Road, and past the Bank towards St. Paul's. It was a bright sunny
|
||
morning, and the streets, I thought, were even more crowded than
|
||
usual. Many a hard-featured man of business turned back to look
|
||
at the pretty child perched upon my arm, her blue eyes bright
|
||
with excitement, her hair shining like gold in the sun. I entered
|
||
the well-known shop in Paternoster Row, and said I wished to see
|
||
Mr. Haines on particular business. The clerk gave a start of
|
||
recognition, then coldly said he feared Mr. Haines was out, but
|
||
would go and see. My heart sank. Perhaps I might not be able to
|
||
obtain an interview.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
56
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
At that moment I saw the Bishop of T--- at the other end of
|
||
the shop, turning over the pages of a new book. I felt my lips
|
||
quiver. You observed it, and said in a clear shrill voice, "Do
|
||
not cry again, dear papa, do not cry again." The bishop looked up
|
||
from his book, and then bending over the counter asked a question
|
||
of the clerk. I heard the words, "poor scholar ... used to do
|
||
work for the firm." The bishop came towards me with a face full
|
||
of benevolence and compassion. When our eyes met he cried, "What!
|
||
Do I see Mr. Mordaunt?"
|
||
|
||
"Yes, my lord," I replied, "I am that unfortunate man."
|
||
|
||
He took me by the hand, and, pressing it kindly in his, led
|
||
me to the chair where he had been seated; but the clerk, with an
|
||
obsequious bow, showed us into an office like an old-fashioned
|
||
pew; a kind of box with wooden sides and a railing round the top;
|
||
inside, a desk and two stools. I told the good bishop all that
|
||
had happened since I left Stilbroke. He listened attentively to
|
||
my narrative, and said, "Wait here a little while, and I will see
|
||
Mr. Haines: I am sure he will give you something to do." Then,
|
||
having paused for a moment, he said, "Understand, Mr. Mordaunt, I
|
||
do not sympathies with your opinions; they are most hateful to
|
||
me; but your distress ----" He put his hand to his heart, and
|
||
said, "it has gone in here." He stooped down and kissed you, and
|
||
hurried from the office. That was the last time we met, for in
|
||
after-days he always avoided me, and I did not force myself upon
|
||
him; but often I have gone to the House of Lords to have the
|
||
pleasure of looking on the face of my dear benefactor.
|
||
|
||
In a quarter of an hour I was called up to Mr. Haines' room.
|
||
He appeared rather confused, but I did not think him to blame for
|
||
his answer to my last letter. A publisher's is a house of
|
||
business, not a charitable institution. "Mr. Mordaunt," he said,
|
||
his Lordship has just asked me to provide you with some literary
|
||
work, and I am happy to say that it is in my power to do so. We
|
||
have been commissioned by a client of ours, who is something of a
|
||
connoisseur in the classics, to bring out an edition of
|
||
Thucydides, with critical notes. He wishes it put into good
|
||
hands, and the bishop assures us that you have the requisite
|
||
scholarship; besides, we know that you took a first-class at
|
||
Oxford, a fact which speaks for itself. The editor is to receive
|
||
three hundred pounds, and here" (handing me a cheque) "is a
|
||
hundred in advance. But we make this stipulation, that you go
|
||
into the country for the full space of three months and take a
|
||
complete rest, that your system may recover its tone. It is easy
|
||
to see that you are still far from being well, and if you begin
|
||
work too soon we shall have the old trouble over again. So we
|
||
make this condition on behalf of the ---, of our client. At the
|
||
end of three months we shall expect you to return and prepare the
|
||
work for the following book-season. And now I wish you a pleasant
|
||
holiday, and shall be glad to hear how you are getting on
|
||
whenever you are able to write me a line."
|
||
|
||
It was, of course, easy enough to understand whence came
|
||
this shower of gold; but I did not trouble the bishop with a
|
||
letter of thanks. I thought that the best way of showing my
|
||
gratitude was to follow his instructions, and to edit the work in
|
||
such a manner as to give him satisfaction.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
57
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
Having cashed the cheque, I went back with you to the court
|
||
in Whitechapel. Sarah was seated by the fire in my room cooking
|
||
our dinner. I told her I was going, and had come back with Ellen
|
||
to wish her good-bye. At the same time I gave her some money to
|
||
repay her for what she had spent during my illness, and also
|
||
wrote down an address to which she could apply whenever she was
|
||
in need of any more. She took the notes with an air of
|
||
indifference and thrust them into the bosom of her dress.
|
||
|
||
"Sarah," said I, "you saved me from death, and now I can
|
||
save you from something as bad. Will you come with me and take
|
||
care of Elly, and be a good girl?"
|
||
|
||
Her eyes brightened for a moment. Then she turned to the
|
||
fire. "No," said she, "I mustn't leave Jem; it's only me keeps
|
||
him from the drink."
|
||
|
||
She would not speak another word or even shake hands; and
|
||
when you kissed her she turned her head impatiently aside.
|
||
|
||
Ah! who can understand a woman's heart? Who could tell by
|
||
that cold set face what feelings were surging in her bosom? I
|
||
have not said much about this girl, for there was bad in her as
|
||
well as good, as many a robbed, half-murdered sailor had
|
||
discovered to his cost; and I knew that any attempt to reclaim
|
||
her would probably fail. But I also knew she would never do you
|
||
any harm; that I could judge of from the past.
|
||
|
||
I have not described her character in full; nor have I
|
||
described in full the horrible life of that White-chapel court.
|
||
But I have shown -- for it was my duty in justice and gratitude
|
||
to show -- that even in that sink of iniquity, even amongst those
|
||
degraded and ferocious beings there were hearts full of
|
||
compassion and eager to soccer the distressed.
|
||
|
||
That same afternoon I bought from the clothes-man a suit of
|
||
the most gentlemanly garments he possessed; they had rather a
|
||
marine aspect, but that did not so much matter, as we were going
|
||
to the seaside. I redeemed my mother's ring and some trifles that
|
||
had belonged to Margaret, and bought back some of my books (dear
|
||
old companions and friends) which had not been disposed of I also
|
||
had you dressed out like a fine little lady, and started for
|
||
Limmerleigh that same afternoon.
|
||
|
||
Thus ended the days of my adversity.
|
||
|
||
LETTER XIV
|
||
|
||
MY first month at Limmerleigh was spent in a state of
|
||
unalloyed delight. To see innocent faces, to breathe the fresh
|
||
air, was pleasure enough for one who had been imprisoned so long
|
||
in a den of crime, a dungeon of disease. My strength was rapidly
|
||
restored, and new blood flowed through my veins, as sap in dry
|
||
trees when the winter is past. But my brain having recovered its
|
||
vigor, forced me to remember and reflect. I was in the midst of
|
||
scenes hallowed and endeared by the memory of Margaret. I thought
|
||
of all her virtues, her piety, and love. I had never known her to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
58
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
be angry or cold, and she bore the most terrible calamities with
|
||
cheerfulness and courage. When I came home to our hideous garret
|
||
in Whitechapel, I found the same affectionate welcome as in the
|
||
days of our prosperity; and when I gave her the scraps of dry
|
||
bread which I had begged, she took them joyfully and jestingly,
|
||
as if it were a feast. She once said that she thought Jesus and
|
||
his disciples must have lived like ourselves, because it was in
|
||
the Lord's Prayer, "Give us this day our daily bread;" and this
|
||
fancy invested for her with a halo of romance our miserable
|
||
lives. Her trust in God seldom wavered, but seemed to be
|
||
strengthened by affliction, and the more she suffered the more
|
||
she loved. My nature was not so submissive, and though now the
|
||
spirit of foolish and impotent wrath had passed away -- though
|
||
now the old habit of devotion was knocking at the door of my
|
||
heart -- though now I longed to worship God, it was necessary
|
||
first I should be able to revere him. I considered that if he
|
||
were omnipotent, the death of Margaret was a crime; but from this
|
||
painful conclusion I took refuge in a theory I had seen somewhere
|
||
suggested, that God was perfectly benevolent, and had made the
|
||
world as well as he was able, but that his power was contracted
|
||
and controlled by the evil nature of the material with which he
|
||
had to deal. This gave me comfort for a time, but I soon saw
|
||
through the fallacy. For since men have been upon the earth they
|
||
have made it better; and therefore, before they came upon the
|
||
earth, God could have made it better had he pleased. If not, man
|
||
is more powerful than God, which is contrary to reason.
|
||
|
||
But the opposite theory brought me to an equally ludicrous
|
||
dilemma. For no man, if endowed with miraculous power, his moral
|
||
nature being left unchanged, would be guilty of making a world in
|
||
which murder is as the mainspring to a watch. Therefore man is
|
||
more good than God, which again is absurd.
|
||
|
||
I now began to suspect that our conception of God was
|
||
entirely erroneous. For what is the definition of God? A Perfect
|
||
Mind. And what is Mind? It is a product of the earth, a created
|
||
thing, existing within the lower animals in a rudimentary
|
||
condition, and in truth not less human than the body. Mind cannot
|
||
create, it can only arrange and dispose, as Shelley remarked long
|
||
ago. Even a perfect mind could not create a grain of sand. We
|
||
suppose that God is a mind, or has a mind, because mind is the
|
||
highest species of force with which we are acquainted; and if we
|
||
must define God, it is the best definition of which the human
|
||
intellect is capable. But is it for man to define God? Is it
|
||
probable that we who are but as animalcules crawling on a speck
|
||
of matter floating in space -- an infinitesimal fraction of the
|
||
Universe -- is it probable that we should be able to form from
|
||
our minds a correct image of the Creator?
|
||
|
||
At this time I happened to read the well-known passage in
|
||
Bacon's 'Advancement of Learning' -- " Certain it is that God
|
||
worketh nothing in nature except by second causes"; and this set
|
||
me thinking on all that I had read in scientific works about
|
||
natural law governing physical phenomena; and thence I was taken
|
||
on to the conclusion that all moral phenomena and events are also
|
||
subject to fixed and invariable law; that God has no personal
|
||
relations with the earth; and that his entity or being is higher
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
59
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
than a perfect mind, and far beyond human comprehension. But
|
||
perhaps some clue might be obtained to the intentions of God in
|
||
regard to ourselves by a careful study of the natural laws which
|
||
govern the earth, as these laws, which for brevity's sake I shall
|
||
sometimes call Nature, may fairly be considered the expression of
|
||
his Will.
|
||
|
||
My friends, the Irvines, had left Limmerleigh, and their
|
||
villa was for sale. One day I entered the garden, where I had
|
||
passed so many delightful hours. It was now quite neglected. The
|
||
lawn was strewed with brown and yellow leaves; the shrubberies
|
||
were ragged and wild; weeds covered the gravel paths and the
|
||
well-known flower-beds, which once were splendid with color and
|
||
delicious with perfume. Everything bore the impress of decay. I
|
||
went to Margaret's favorite rose-bush; it was dead! Alas! thought
|
||
I, the same cruel law pervades the whole animated kingdom. Trees
|
||
and flowers, insects and birds, the fish of the sea, the beasts
|
||
of the earth -- all must die, as men die, after a life of combat
|
||
and pain.
|
||
|
||
Then I considered this fact from another point of view. Was
|
||
it not strange that Man, who is God's "noblest work," should be
|
||
subject to the same law as the lower animals, to the same law
|
||
even as the flower? Was it not strange that Nature should treat
|
||
the greatest men with the same unconcern as the meanest creatures
|
||
of the soil, slaying wit a breath of pestilence a genius over his
|
||
noble work, as she sweeps away with a breath of wind a spider
|
||
spinning in its web? The injustice of this law, and its
|
||
imperfection, troubled me exceedingly. After much thought I found
|
||
the solution of the problem; but it was a sad discovery.
|
||
|
||
We are not sent upon the earth to pass through an ordeal,
|
||
and to be rewarded or punished in another world, after death,
|
||
according to our actions. We are sent upon the earth for the sake
|
||
of the earth. In common with the atoms of water and air, we are
|
||
part of the material with which the Creator, through secondary
|
||
laws, carries out his scheme, whatever it may be. Those laws are
|
||
evil and imperfect to us as they are to the insects and the
|
||
flowers, but they were not arranged for our approval and
|
||
convenience, and are no doubt perfect as regards the purpose for
|
||
which they were designed.
|
||
|
||
This made me very sad. I reasoned with myself that it was
|
||
but a theory; yet I felt it was the truth, and it forced itself
|
||
upon me in spite of the aversion it provoked. I was humbled and
|
||
mortified. So then we were merely as slaves, merely as lower
|
||
animals, merely as potters' clay! And where now was the hope of a
|
||
life beyond the grave? It is the best argument in favor of a
|
||
future life that man deserves compensation for unmerited
|
||
suffering; but if man is only raw material that hope falls to the
|
||
ground. Then again the spirit of science spoke within me. "It is
|
||
probable that in death the mind is decomposed (nothing is ever
|
||
destroyed), and that its elements are recombined into other forms
|
||
of mental life, so that though the individual intellect perishes,
|
||
nothing is lost to the race. If this supposition be correct,
|
||
great men bequeath not only their works but their minds to
|
||
Humanity."
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
60
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
One soft June night I went out and sat on a cliff
|
||
overhanging the seashore. The voices of the hay-reapers working
|
||
by moonlight mingled with the sound of the waves breaking on the
|
||
beach. On the west, dark pine woods lined the horizon; on the
|
||
east lay the grey ocean; above was a cloudless sky, shining with
|
||
innumerable stars, each Star a sun, the center and sovereign of a
|
||
system. My head swam as, gazing upwards, I beheld worlds lying as
|
||
thickly together as leaves in a forest -- at least so it seemed;
|
||
we know that in reality vast distances divide them. Oh,
|
||
prodigious universe! I sighed. And oh, poor, vain, ignorant man,
|
||
that could believe all these were made for him. Low indeed is our
|
||
true condition in this wondrous galaxy of worlds. We call
|
||
ourselves God's "noblest work," but perhaps there are in those
|
||
distant orbs, or rather in the planets by which they are
|
||
attended, beings who would look upon us as we look upon the ants
|
||
and the bees; to whom our highest efforts of mind would seem but
|
||
as curious instincts or faint gleams of rudimentary intelligence.
|
||
|
||
At that moment a gun was fired from the sea; the reapers
|
||
came running to the brink of the cliff; and a great ship passed,
|
||
gliding through the waters against wind and tide, its chimney of
|
||
flame casting sparks into the air. It was the first steamer I had
|
||
seen, and I rejoiced at this triumph of Art over Nature. Ha! ha!
|
||
thought I, if man is small in relation to the Universe, he is
|
||
great in relation to the Earth. He abbreviates distance and time,
|
||
and brings the nations together. He covers the wilderness with
|
||
cities, and cornfields, and gardens. He modifies climate and
|
||
dispels disease. In every generation he makes the world happier
|
||
and better than it was before.
|
||
|
||
I sprang to my feet and walked quickly to and fro. My brain
|
||
was in a whirl. I saw the light again, the blessed light of hope
|
||
and joy. "If we," I exclaimed, "are fellow-slaves with the
|
||
humblest creatures of the earth, and even with the elements, we
|
||
are also fellow-workers with God, and assistants of his
|
||
inscrutable designs. For it is plain that one part of the Divine
|
||
Scheme is the progress of the earth from a lair of wild beasts
|
||
and savages to a paradise of happiness and virtue, and that Man
|
||
has been selected to represent the good, to extinguish the evil;
|
||
to be the Ormuzd that shall conquer Ahriman; to master by the
|
||
powers of his intellect those laws of which he is now the subject
|
||
and the slave."
|
||
|
||
And I believed that when Man fully understood and realized
|
||
his mission, a new religion would animate his life. It would be a
|
||
religious duty to battle with the evil in Nature and to labor for
|
||
the glory of the planet, since for that purpose men were placed
|
||
by God upon the earth. The intellect would be carefully trained;
|
||
idleness and ignorance would be stigmatized as sins. The social
|
||
affections would be developed to the fullest extent, and all men
|
||
would abandon the hopes of personal immortality as a selfish
|
||
craving at variance with the general welfare of the race. Having
|
||
cast aside these personal desires, they would labor for
|
||
posterity, and look forward with chivalrous delight to the bliss
|
||
that others would enjoy.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
61
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
Then I cast aside all thought for the future fate of my own
|
||
soul. To labor and love without hope of requital or reward, what
|
||
religion could be more pure and more sublime? Hitherto I had
|
||
looked on the Earth as a strange country, and life as the journey
|
||
of a traveller. But now the Earth became my fatherland, and all
|
||
mankind my fellow-countrymen. I kissed the grass and flowers
|
||
growing on the brink of the cliff; I sang to the waters, and the
|
||
winds, and the beasts, and the birds, saying, "Together we
|
||
accomplish the work of the Creator." And then -- smile at me
|
||
Ellen if you will -- I felt a rapture of love for the whole human
|
||
race. I resolved to preach the New Gospel far and wide, and
|
||
proclaim the glorious mission of mankind.
|
||
|
||
This dream of prophecy did not last beyond the night.
|
||
However, I had discovered a religion for myself; never since have
|
||
I been distressed by the problems of existence; and I then laid
|
||
down a rule of life to which I have always rigidly adhered.
|
||
|
||
My time at Limmerleigh being now at an end, I returned to
|
||
London and worked at the Thucydides, which was received with much
|
||
favor at both Universities. Henceforth I was a known man, and Mr.
|
||
Haines, who was alone in the firm, and advanced in years, offered
|
||
me a situation, with a fair prospect of becoming junior partner.
|
||
Then Dr. Chalmers returned from the uttermost ends of the earth,
|
||
took up his abode in town, and made me live with him. He
|
||
published his notes on the Flora of the countries he had visited,
|
||
and was made a Fellow of the Royal Society. He gave Sunday
|
||
evening receptions, at which I had the pleasure of meeting nearly
|
||
all the great men of science, and many distinguished authors and
|
||
artists. All urged him to prepare his Narrative for publication;
|
||
but he had begun to travel too late in life; the book was beyond
|
||
his strength; and the dear noble-hearted man died in my arms only
|
||
three years after his return.
|
||
|
||
Shortly afterwards my father also died. He left the bulk of
|
||
his fortune to various Christian missions for the conversion of
|
||
India, as some compensation to the natives of that country for
|
||
the exactions and oppressions of his father, the Nabob, when
|
||
Resident at the court of Goruckpore. My name was not mentioned in
|
||
the will; but the Hollywood estate was entailed, and therefore
|
||
came into my hands. Had I known this, Margaret's life would have
|
||
been saved; but I did not even know that there was such an estate
|
||
in existence. I was informed by James, whom I now took into my
|
||
service (or rather I gave him a pension), that my father's
|
||
health, in spite of his iron constitution, had quite broken down
|
||
of late years. Something seemed to be preying on his mind, and
|
||
ten years before his death he left Harborne altogether. I believe
|
||
that he loved me in his heart, and suffered like another Brutus.
|
||
But what else could he have done? He acted rightly according to
|
||
his barbarous Calvinistic creed. In his eyes I was a servant of
|
||
Satan; and he refused me admission to his house, as he believed
|
||
that God would refuse me admission to heaven when I died. Such is
|
||
Faith! It is not only opposed to Reason, but to Charity; and with
|
||
an unnatural piety can tear the fibers of a father's heart and
|
||
leave him wounded to languish and to die. It was the perfection
|
||
of his belief that led to so much misery.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
62
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
If I were a young man endowed with literary powers, and
|
||
about to begin my career, I should adopt as the work of my life
|
||
the Diffusion of Doubt; for doubt dissipates superstition and
|
||
softens the rancor of religious life. Without doubt there can be
|
||
no tolerance, and the history of tolerance is the history of
|
||
doubt. The skepticism spread by Voltaire humanized the dogmas of
|
||
the Roman Church; and we ourselves are passing through a silent,
|
||
gradual, but momentous doubting revolution. What is it that has
|
||
made the clergymen of all denominations in these later days so
|
||
temperate in their views, so considerate for the opinions of
|
||
others? It is Doubt arising from discoveries in science, and from
|
||
numberless works in which religious topics have been treated with
|
||
freedom of spirit. Certainly there has been a wonderful change
|
||
within the last twenty years. When I lived with Dr. Chalmers in
|
||
London, men spoke of these matters under their breath, but now
|
||
ladies discuss them freely enough: and I have heard a clergyman
|
||
of the Church of England say things in the pulpit which in my
|
||
younger days very few laymen would have dared to say at a dinner-
|
||
party. Yet in spite of all this progress much religious
|
||
persecution goes on, and bigotry abounds. The diffusion of Doubt
|
||
is the only remedy for these evils; and though the hacking and
|
||
hewing of old beliefs must cause much suffering, it is better
|
||
that a thousand should suffer rather than that one crime of
|
||
intolerance should be committed.
|
||
|
||
I now withdrew from the firm and adopted the pleasant life
|
||
of the country gentleman, retaining, however, the habits of the
|
||
scholar. I had determined when I left Limmerleigh never to pass a
|
||
day without doing a kind action; and also to contribute something
|
||
every day to the general knowledge of mankind. Having no special
|
||
talents, I was at first puzzled what to do. However, I thought it
|
||
might be of use if I translated into popular English some of the
|
||
great writers of antiquity. This, as you know, has been my daily
|
||
task for many years, and the works already published attest my
|
||
industry.
|
||
|
||
And now a last word about my religion. It has been with me
|
||
very many years. We are no longer strangers to each other. It has
|
||
given me peace. It has made me content. It has taught me to value
|
||
and enjoy life, yet not to dread annihilation.
|
||
|
||
I believe in God the Incomprehensible, whose nature man can
|
||
never ascertain. To adore this extraordinary power would be
|
||
irrational; nor do I allow myself to speculate upon the mystery;
|
||
for it is wrong to waste the powers of the brain, which might
|
||
otherwise be usefully employed, in reflecting on problems which
|
||
cannot be solved.
|
||
|
||
I continue to gather knowledge, and shall do so to my last
|
||
hour. I endeavor to be good, and rigidly watch my temper and my
|
||
thoughts. I seek the happiness of others. I will own that often
|
||
in these twenty-five years I have sighed for my old belief, when
|
||
to me God was semi-human and man was semi-divine; and after
|
||
death, life began, and happiness never ceased; and my mother, my
|
||
Margaret, would be joined to me again. And also sometimes my
|
||
heart has rebelled against the fate of the human race, doomed to
|
||
work like the coral insects of the sea. But I learnt how to
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
63
|
||
|
||
THE OUTCAST
|
||
|
||
stifle such repinings and regrets; and now I have attained the
|
||
perfection of unselfishness as regards the disposition of my
|
||
soul. Last year, when I was given up by the doctors and expected
|
||
to die every hour, I had no desire whatever to begin a new state
|
||
of existence; and it even seemed ludicrous to me, the idea of my
|
||
feeble imperfect mind being transplanted to another world. It
|
||
was, I thought, just and natural that I should go back to the
|
||
Earth whence I came.
|
||
|
||
I have little more to say. I think you will admit, my dear
|
||
Ellen, that one may cease to believe in a Personal God and in the
|
||
Immortality of the Soul, and yet not cease to be a good and even
|
||
a religious man; indeed, I think I have proved something more --
|
||
namely, that this Religion of Unselfishness, for those who are
|
||
able to embrace it, is far more ennobling than any religion which
|
||
holds out the hope of celestial rewards. It may be that precisely
|
||
on account of its unselfishness and purity it can make but few
|
||
converts in the present condition of the human mind; and
|
||
certainly long ages must elapse before it can become the Religion
|
||
of the World. But I believe that year by year the power of this
|
||
religion will increase, and that more and more, as time goes on,
|
||
it will give rest to troubled hearts, as it did to mine at
|
||
Limmerleigh.
|
||
|
||
Lastly, there is one thing you ought to understand. I
|
||
disbelieve in a future life; and this disbelief amounts to a
|
||
positive conviction. But I may be mistaken, It is impossible to
|
||
know. The doctrine or theory of a future life is not contrary to
|
||
reason like that of a Personal Creator. We can show it to be most
|
||
improbable; but on the other hand we must allow that it is a
|
||
possible contingency.
|
||
|
||
Well now, you might say, "Suppose that a good man, converted
|
||
by your arguments, gave, up the belief in his own immortality,
|
||
loved others, labored for others, strove to purify his heart, but
|
||
took no heed for his own soul, and died believing in annihilation
|
||
and there should be a future life after all -- what then? "Why,
|
||
then he would be perfectly prepared for the life which he did not
|
||
anticipate. For this is a beautiful quality of our religion. We
|
||
disbelieve in future rewards, and so eradicate all selfish
|
||
longings from our hearts; but if, contrary to our expectations,
|
||
there should be a future life with rewards, none will be able to
|
||
rank with ourselves. For what life is so highly deserving of
|
||
reward as that which is spent in doing good without the hope or
|
||
desire of reward?
|
||
**** ****
|
||
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
|
||
scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
|
||
suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
|
||
Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
|
||
nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
|
||
religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
|
||
the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
|
||
that America can again become what its Founders intended --
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
64
|
||
|