In the Days of the Comet
In the Days of the CometPROLOGUE. BOOK THE FIRSTCHAPTER THE FIRSTCHAPTER THE SECONDCHAPTER THE THIRDCHAPTER THE FOURTHCHAPTER THE FIFTHBOOK THE SECONDCHAPTER THE FIRSTCHAPTER THE SECONDCHAPTER THE THIRDBOOK THE THIRDCHAPTER THE FIRSTCHAPTER THE SECONDCHAPTER THE THIRDTHE EPILOGUE. Copyright
In the Days of the Comet
H. G. Wells
PROLOGUE.
THE MAN WHO WROTE IN THE TOWER
I SAW a gray-haired man, a figure of hale age, sitting at a desk
and writing.
He seemed to be in a room in a tower, very high, so that through
the tall window on his left one perceived only distances, a remote
horizon of sea, a headland and that vague haze and glitter in the
sunset that many miles away marks a city. All the appointments of
this room were orderly and beautiful, and in some subtle quality,
in this small difference and that, new to me and strange. They were
in no fashion I could name, and the simple costume the man wore
suggested neither period nor country. It might, I thought, be the
Happy Future, or Utopia, or the Land of Simple Dreams; an errant
mote of memory, Henry James's phrase and story of "The Great Good
Place," twinkled across my mind, and passed and left no light. The
man I saw wrote with a thing like a fountain pen, a modern touch
that prohibited any historical retrospection, and as he finished
each sheet, writing in an easy flowing hand, he added it to a
growing pile upon a graceful little table under the window. His
last done sheets lay loose, partly covering others that were
clipped together into fascicles. Clearly he was unaware of my
presence, and I stood waiting until his pen should come to a pause.
Old as he certainly was he wrote with a steady hand. . . . I
discovered that a concave speculum hung slantingly high over his
head; a movement in this caught my attention sharply, and I looked
up to see, distorted and made fantastic but bright and beautifully
colored, the magnified, reflected, evasive rendering of a palace,
of a terrace, of the vista of a great roadway with many people,
people exaggerated, impossible-looking because of the curvature of
the mirror, going to and fro. I turned my head quickly that I might
see more clearly through the window behind me, but it was too high
for me to survey this nearer scene directly, and after a momentary
pause I came back to that distorting mirror again. But now the
writer was leaning back in his chair. He put down his pen and
sighed the half resentful sigh—"ah! you, work, you! how you gratify
and tire me!"—of a man who has been writing to his satisfaction.
"What is this place," I asked, "and who are you?" He looked around
with the quick movement of surprise. "What is this place?" I
repeated, "and where am I?" He regarded me steadfastly for a moment
under his wrinkled brows, and then his expression softened to a
smile. He pointed to a chair beside the table. "I am writing," he
said. "About this?" "About the change." I sat down. It was a very
comfortable chair, and well placed under the light. "If you would
like to read—" he said. I indicated the manuscript. "This
explains?" I asked. "That explains," he answered. He drew a fresh
sheet of paper toward him as he looked at me. I glanced from him
about his apartment and back to the little table. A fascicle marked
very distinctly "1" caught my attention, and I took it up. I smiled
in his friendly eyes. "Very well," said I, suddenly at my ease, and
he nodded and went on writing. And in a mood between confidence and
curiosity, I began to read. This is the story that happy,
active-looking old man in that pleasant place had written.
BOOK THE FIRST
THE COMET
CHAPTER THE FIRST
DUST IN THE SHADOWSSection 1I HAVE set myself to write the story of the Great Change, so
far as it has affected my own life and the lives of one or two
people closely connected with me, primarily to please
myself.Long ago in my crude unhappy youth, I conceived the desire of
writing a book. To scribble secretly and dream of authorship was
one of my chief alleviations, and I read with a sympathetic envy
every scrap I could get about the world of literature and the lives
of literary people. It is something, even amidst this present
happiness, to find leisure and opportunity to take up and partially
realize these old and hopeless dreams. But that alone, in a world
where so much of vivid and increasing interest presents itself to
be done, even by an old man, would not, I think, suffice to set me
at this desk. I find some such recapitulation of my past as this
will involve, is becoming necessary to my own secure mental
continuity. The passage of years brings a man at last to
retrospection; at seventy-two one's youth is far more important
than it was at forty. And I am out of touch with my youth. The old
life seems so cut off from the new, so alien and so unreasonable,
that at times I find it bordering upon the incredible. The data
have gone, the buildings and places. I stopped dead the other
afternoon in my walk across the moor, where once the dismal
outskirts of Swathinglea straggled toward Leet, and asked, "Was it
here indeed that I crouched among the weeds and refuse and broken
crockery and loaded my revolver ready for murder? Did ever such a
thing happen in my life? Was such a mood and thought and intention
ever possible to me? Rather, has not some queer nightmare spirit
out of dreamland slipped a pseudo-memory into the records of my
vanished life?" There must be many alive still who have the same
perplexities. And I think too that those who are now growing up to
take our places in the great enterprise of mankind, will need many
such narratives as mine for even the most partial conception of the
old world of shadows that came before our day. It chances too that
my case is fairly typical of the Change; I was caught midway in a
gust of passion; and a curious accident put me for a time in the
very nucleus of the new order.My memory takes me back across the interval of fifty years to
a little ill-lit room with a sash window open to a starry sky, and
instantly there returns to me the characteristic smell of that
room, the penetrating odor of an ill-trimmed lamp, burning cheap
paraffin. Lighting by electricity had then been perfected for
fifteen years, but still the larger portion of the world used these
lamps. All this first scene will go, in my mind at least, to that
olfactory accompaniment. That was the evening smell of the room. By
day it had a more subtle aroma, a closeness, a peculiar sort of
faint pungency that I associate—I know not why—with
dust.Let me describe this room to you in detail. It was perhaps
eight feet by seven in area and rather higher than either of these
dimensions; the ceiling was of plaster, cracked and bulging in
places, gray with the soot of the lamp, and in one place discolored
by a system of yellow and olive-green stains caused by the
percolation of damp from above. The walls were covered with
dun-colored paper, upon which had been printed in oblique
reiteration a crimson shape, something of the nature of a curly
ostrich feather, or an acanthus flower, that had in its less faded
moments a sort of dingy gaiety. There were several big
plaster-rimmed wounds in this, caused by Parload's ineffectual
attempts to get nails into the wall, whereby there might hang
pictures. One nail had hit between two bricks and got home, and
from this depended, sustained a little insecurely by frayed and
knotted blind-cord, Parload's hanging bookshelves, planks painted
over with a treacly blue enamel and further decorated by a fringe
of pinked American cloth insecurely fixed by tacks. Below this was
a little table that behaved with a mulish vindictiveness to any
knee that was thrust beneath it suddenly; it was covered with a
cloth whose pattern of red and black had been rendered less
monotonous by the accidents of Parload's versatile ink bottle, and
on it, leit motif of the whole, stood and stank the lamp. This
lamp, you must understand, was of some whitish translucent
substance that was neither china nor glass, it had a shade of the
same substance, a shade that did not protect the eyes of a reader
in any measure, and it seemed admirably adapted to bring into
pitiless prominence the fact that, after the lamp's trimming, dust
and paraffin had been smeared over its exterior with a reckless
generosity.The uneven floor boards of this apartment were covered with
scratched enamel of chocolate hue, on which a small island of
frayed carpet dimly blossomed in the dust and shadows.There was a very small grate, made of cast-iron in one piece
and painted buff, and a still smaller misfit of a cast-iron fender
that confessed the gray stone of the hearth. No fire was laid, only
a few scraps of torn paper and the bowl of a broken corn-cob pipe
were visible behind the bars, and in the corner and rather thrust
away was an angular japanned coal-box with a damaged hinge. It was
the custom in those days to warm every room separately from a
separate fireplace, more prolific of dirt than heat, and the
rickety sash window, the small chimney, and the loose-fitting door
were expected to organize the ventilation of the room among
themselves without any further direction.Parload's truckle bed hid its gray sheets beneath an old
patchwork counterpane on one side of the room, and veiled his boxes
and suchlike oddments, and invading the two corners of the window
were an old whatnot and the washhandstand, on which were
distributed the simple appliances of his toilet.This washhandstand had been made of deal by some one with an
excess of turnery appliances in a hurry, who had tried to distract
attention from the rough economies of his workmanship by an
arresting ornamentation of blobs and bulbs upon the joints and
legs. Apparently the piece had then been placed in the hands of
some person of infinite leisure equipped with a pot of ocherous
paint, varnish, and a set of flexible combs. This person had first
painted the article, then, I fancy, smeared it with varnish, and
then sat down to work with the combs to streak and comb the varnish
into a weird imitation of the grain of some nightmare timber. The
washhandstand so made had evidently had a prolonged career of
violent use, had been chipped, kicked, splintered, punched,
stained, scorched, hammered, dessicated, damped, and defiled, had
met indeed with almost every possible adventure except a
conflagration or a scrubbing, until at last it had come to this
high refuge of Parload's attic to sustain the simple requirements
of Parload's personal cleanliness. There were, in chief, a basin
and a jug of water and a slop-pail of tin, and, further, a piece of
yellow soap in a tray, a tooth-brush, a rat-tailed shaving brush,
one huckaback towel, and one or two other minor articles. In those
days only very prosperous people had more than such an equipage,
and it is to be remarked that every drop of water Parload used had
to be carried by an unfortunate servant girl,—the "slavey," Parload
called her—up from the basement to the top of the house and
subsequently down again. Already we begin to forget how modern an
invention is personal cleanliness. It is a fact that Parload had
never stripped for a swim in his life; never had a simultaneous
bath all over his body since his childhood. Not one in fifty of us
did in the days of which I am telling you.A chest, also singularly grained and streaked, of two large
and two small drawers, held Parload's reserve of garments, and pegs
on the door carried his two hats and completed this inventory of a
"bed-sitting-room" as I knew it before the Change. But I had
forgotten—there was also a chair with a "squab" that apologized
inadequately for the defects of its cane seat. I forgot that for
the moment because I was sitting on the chair on the occasion that
best begins this story.I have described Parload's room with such particularity
because it will help you to understand the key in which my earlier
chapters are written, but you must not imagine that this singular
equipment or the smell of the lamp engaged my attention at that
time to the slightest degree. I took all this grimy unpleasantness
as if it were the most natural and proper setting for existence
imaginable. It was the world as I knew it. My mind was entirely
occupied then by graver and intenser matters, and it is only now in
the distant retrospect that I see these details of environment as
being remarkable, as significant, as indeed obviously the outward
visible manifestations of the old world disorder in our
hearts.Section 2Parload stood at the open window, opera-glass in hand, and
sought and found and was uncertain about and lost again, the new
comet.I thought the comet no more than a nuisance then because I
wanted to talk of other matters. But Parload was full of it. My
head was hot, I was feverish with interlacing annoyances and
bitterness, I wanted to open my heart to him—at least I wanted to
relieve my heart by some romantic rendering of my troubles—and I
gave but little heed to the things he told me. It was the first
time I had heard of this new speck among the countless specks of
heaven, and I did not care if I never heard of the thing
again.We were two youths much of an age together, Parload was two
and twenty, and eight months older than I. He was—I think his
proper definition was "engrossing clerk" to a little solicitor in
Overcastle, while I was third in the office staff of Rawdon's
pot-bank in Clayton. We had met first in the "Parliament" of the
Young Men's Christian Association of Swathinglea; we had found we
attended simultaneous classes in Overcastle, he in science and I in
shorthand, and had started a practice of walking home together, and
so our friendship came into being. (Swathinglea, Clayton, and
Overcastle were contiguous towns, I should mention, in the great
industrial area of the Midlands.) We had shared each other's secret
of religious doubt, we had confided to one another a common
interest in Socialism, he had come twice to supper at my mother's
on a Sunday night, and I was free of his apartment. He was then a
tall, flaxen-haired, gawky youth, with a disproportionate
development of neck and wrist, and capable of vast enthusiasm; he
gave two evenings a week to the evening classes of the organized
science school in Overcastle, physiography was his favorite
"subject," and through this insidious opening of his mind the
wonder of outer space had come to take possession of his soul. He
had commandeered an old opera-glass from his uncle who farmed at
Leet over the moors, he had bought a cheap paper planisphere and
Whitaker's Almanac, and for a time day and moonlight were mere
blank interruptions to the one satisfactory reality in his
life—star-gazing. It was the deeps that had seized him, the
immensities, and the mysterious possibilities that might float
unlit in that unplumbed abyss. With infinite labor and the help of
a very precise article in The Heavens, a little monthly magazine
that catered for those who were under this obsession, he had at
last got his opera-glass upon the new visitor to our system from
outer space. He gazed in a sort of rapture upon that quivering
little smudge of light among the shining pin-points—and gazed. My
troubles had to wait for him."Wonderful," he sighed, and then as though his first emphasis
did not satisfy him, "wonderful!"He turned to me. "Wouldn't you like to see?"I had to look, and then I had to listen, how that this
scarce-visible intruder was to be, was presently to be, one of the
largest comets this world has ever seen, how that its course must
bring it within at most—so many score of millions of miles from the
earth, a mere step, Parload seemed to think that; how that the
spectroscope was already sounding its chemical secrets, perplexed
by the unprecedented band in the green, how it was even now being
photographed in the very act of unwinding—in an unusual direction—a
sunward tail (which presently it wound up again), and all the while
in a sort of undertow I was thinking first of Nettie Stuart and the
letter she had just written me, and then of old Rawdon's detestable
face as I had seen it that afternoon. Now I planned answers to
Nettie and now belated repartees to my employer, and then again
"Nettie" was blazing all across the background of my thoughts. . .
.Nettie Stuart was daughter of the head gardener of the rich
Mr. Verrall's widow, and she and I had kissed and become
sweethearts before we were eighteen years old. My mother and hers
were second cousins and old schoolfellows, and though my mother had
been widowed untimely by a train accident, and had been reduced to
letting lodgings (she was the Clayton curate's landlady), a
position esteemed much lower than that of Mrs. Stuart, a kindly
custom of occasional visits to the gardener's cottage at Checkshill
Towers still kept the friends in touch. Commonly I went with her.
And I remember it was in the dusk of one bright evening in July,
one of those long golden evenings that do not so much give way to
night as admit at last, upon courtesy, the moon and a choice
retinue of stars, that Nettie and I, at the pond of goldfish where
the yew-bordered walks converged, made our shy beginners' vow. I
remember still—something will always stir in me at that memory—the
tremulous emotion of that adventure. Nettie was dressed in white,
her hair went off in waves of soft darkness from above her dark
shining eyes; there was a little necklace of pearls about her
sweetly modeled neck, and a little coin of gold that nestled in her
throat. I kissed her half-reluctant lips, and for three years of my
life thereafter—nay! I almost think for all the rest of her life
and mine—I could have died for her sake.You must understand—and every year it becomes increasingly
difficult to understand—how entirely different the world was then
from what it is now. It was a dark world; it was full of
preventable disorder, preventable diseases, and preventable pain,
of harshness and stupid unpremeditated cruelties; but yet, it may
be even by virtue of the general darkness, there were moments of a
rare and evanescent beauty that seem no longer possible in my
experience. The great Change has come for ever more, happiness and
beauty are our atmosphere, there is peace on earth and good will to
all men. None would dare to dream of returning to the sorrows of
the former time, and yet that misery was pierced, ever and again
its gray curtain was stabbed through and through by joys of an
intensity, by perceptions of a keenness that it seems to me are now
altogether gone out of life. Is it the Change, I wonder, that has
robbed life of its extremes, or is it perhaps only this, that youth
has left me—even the strength of middle years leaves me now—and
taken its despairs and raptures, leaving me judgment, perhaps,
sympathy, memories?I cannot tell. One would need to be young now and to have
been young then as well, to decide that impossible
problem.Perhaps a cool observer even in the old days would have found
little beauty in our grouping. I have our two photographs at hand
in this bureau as I write, and they show me a gawky youth in
ill-fitting ready-made clothing, and Nettie—Indeed Nettie is badly
dressed, and her attitude is more than a little stiff; but I can
see her through the picture, and her living brightness and
something of that mystery of charm she had for me, comes back again
to my mind. Her face has triumphed over the photographer—or I would
long ago have cast this picture away.The reality of beauty yields itself to no words. I wish that
I had the sister art and could draw in my margin something that
escapes description. There was a sort of gravity in her eyes. There
was something, a matter of the minutest difference, about her upper
lip so that her mouth closed sweetly and broke very sweetly to a
smile. That grave, sweet smile!After we had kissed and decided not to tell our parents for
awhile of the irrevocable choice we had made, the time came for us
to part, shyly and before others, and I and my mother went off back
across the moonlit park—the bracken thickets rustling with startled
deer—to the railway station at Checkshill and so to our dingy
basement in Clayton, and I saw no more of Nettie—except that I saw
her in my thoughts—for nearly a year. But at our next meeting it
was decided that we must correspond, and this we did with much
elaboration of secrecy, for Nettie would have no one at home, not
even her only sister, know of her attachment. So I had to send my
precious documents sealed and under cover by way of a confidential
schoolfellow of hers who lived near London. . . . I could write
that address down now, though house and street and suburb have gone
beyond any man's tracing.Our correspondence began our estrangement, because for the
first time we came into more than sensuous contact and our minds
sought expression.Now you must understand that the world of thought in those
days was in the strangest condition, it was choked with obsolete
inadequate formulae, it was tortuous to a maze-like degree with
secondary contrivances and adaptations, suppressions, conventions,
and subterfuges. Base immediacies fouled the truth on every man's
lips. I was brought up by my mother in a quaint old-fashioned
narrow faith in certain religious formulae, certain rules of
conduct, certain conceptions of social and political order, that
had no more relevance to the realities and needs of everyday
contemporary life than if they were clean linen that had been put
away with lavender in a drawer. Indeed, her religion did actually
smell of lavender; on Sundays she put away all the things of
reality, the garments and even the furnishings of everyday, hid her
hands, that were gnarled and sometimes chapped with scrubbing, in
black, carefully mended gloves, assumed her old black silk dress
and bonnet and took me, unnaturally clean and sweet also, to
church. There we sang and bowed and heard sonorous prayers and
joined in sonorous responses, and rose with a congregational sigh
refreshed and relieved when the doxology, with its opening "Now to
God the Father, God the Son," bowed out the tame, brief sermon.
There was a hell in that religion of my mother's, a red-haired hell
of curly flames that had once been very terrible; there was a
devil, who was also ex officio the British King's enemy, and much
denunciation of the wicked lusts of the flesh; we were expected to
believe that most of our poor unhappy world was to atone for its
muddle and trouble here by suffering exquisite torments for ever
after, world without end, Amen. But indeed those curly flames
looked rather jolly. The whole thing had been mellowed and faded
into a gentle unreality long before my time; if it had much terror
even in my childhood I have forgotten it, it was not so terrible as
the giant who was killed by the Beanstalk, and I see it all now as
a setting for my poor old mother's worn and grimy face, and almost
lovingly as a part of her. And Mr. Gabbitas, our plump little
lodger, strangely transformed in his vestments and lifting his
voice manfully to the quality of those Elizabethan prayers, seemed,
I think, to give her a special and peculiar interest with God. She
radiated her own tremulous gentleness upon Him, and redeemed Him
from all the implications of vindictive theologians; she was in
truth, had I but perceived it, the effectual answer to all she
would have taught me.So I see it now, but there is something harsh in the earnest
intensity of youth, and having at first taken all these things
quite seriously, the fiery hell and God's vindictiveness at any
neglect, as though they were as much a matter of fact as Bladden's
iron-works and Rawdon's pot-bank, I presently with an equal
seriousness flung them out of my mind again.Mr. Gabbitas, you see, did sometimes, as the phrase went,
"take notice" of me, he had induced me to go on reading after I
left school, and with the best intentions in the world and to
anticipate the poison of the times, he had lent me Burble's
"Scepticism Answered," and drawn my attention to the library of the
Institute in Clayton.The excellent Burble was a great shock to me. It seemed clear
from his answers to the sceptic that the case for doctrinal
orthodoxy and all that faded and by no means awful hereafter, which
I had hitherto accepted as I accepted the sun, was an extremely
poor one, and to hammer home that idea the first book I got from
the Institute happened to be an American edition of the collected
works of Shelley, his gassy prose as well as his atmospheric verse.
I was soon ripe for blatant unbelief. And at the Young Men's
Christian Association I presently made the acquaintance of Parload,
who told me, under promises of the most sinister secrecy, that he
was "a Socialist out and out." He lent me several copies of a
periodical with the clamant title of The Clarion, which was just
taking up a crusade against the accepted religion. The adolescent
years of any fairly intelligent youth lie open, and will always lie
healthily open, to the contagion of philosophical doubts, of scorns
and new ideas, and I will confess I had the fever of that phase
badly. Doubt, I say, but it was not so much doubt—which is a
complex thing—as startled emphatic denial. "Have I believed THIS!"
And I was also, you must remember, just beginning love-letters to
Nettie.We live now in these days, when the Great Change has been in
most things accomplished, in a time when every one is being
educated to a sort of intellectual gentleness, a gentleness that
abates nothing from our vigor, and it is hard to understand the
stifled and struggling manner in which my generation of common
young men did its thinking. To think at all about certain questions
was an act of rebellion that set one oscillating between the
furtive and the defiant. People begin to find Shelley—for all his
melody—noisy and ill conditioned now because his Anarchs have
vanished, yet there was a time when novel thought HAD to go to that
tune of breaking glass. It becomes a little difficult to imagine
the yeasty state of mind, the disposition to shout and say, "Yah!"
at constituted authority, to sustain a persistent note of
provocation such as we raw youngsters displayed. I began to read
with avidity such writing as Carlyle, Browning, and Heine have left
for the perplexity of posterity, and not only to read and admire
but to imitate. My letters to Nettie, after one or two genuinely
intended displays of perfervid tenderness, broke out toward
theology, sociology, and the cosmos in turgid and startling
expressions. No doubt they puzzled her extremely.I retain the keenest sympathy and something inexplicably near
to envy for my own departed youth, but I should find it difficult
to maintain my case against any one who would condemn me altogether
as having been a very silly, posturing, emotional hobbledehoy
indeed and quite like my faded photograph. And when I try to recall
what exactly must have been the quality and tenor of my more
sustained efforts to write memorably to my sweetheart, I confess I
shiver. . . Yet I wish they were not all destroyed.Her letters to me were simple enough, written in a roundish,
unformed hand and badly phrased. Her first two or three showed a
shy pleasure in the use of the word "dear," and I remember being
first puzzled and then, when I understood, delighted, because she
had written "Willie ASTHORE" under my name. "Asthore," I gathered,
meant "darling." But when the evidences of my fermentation began,
her answers were less happy.I will not weary you with the story of how we quarreled in
our silly youthful way, and how I went the next Sunday, all
uninvited, to Checkshill, and made it worse, and how afterward I
wrote a letter that she thought was "lovely," and mended the
matter. Nor will I tell of all our subsequent fluctuations of
misunderstanding. Always I was the offender and the final penitent
until this last trouble that was now beginning; and in between we
had some tender near moments, and I loved her very greatly. There
was this misfortune in the business, that in the darkness, and
alone, I thought with great intensity of her, of her eyes, of her
touch, of her sweet and delightful presence, but when I sat down to
write I thought of Shelley and Burns and myself, and other such
irrelevant matters. When one is in love, in this fermenting way, it
is harder to make love than it is when one does not love at all.
And as for Nettie, she loved, I know, not me but those gentle
mysteries. It was not my voice should rouse her dreams to passion.
. . So our letters continued to jar. Then suddenly she wrote me one
doubting whether she could ever care for any one who was a
Socialist and did not believe in Church, and then hard upon it came
another note with unexpected novelties of phrasing. She thought we
were not suited to each other, we differed so in tastes and ideas,
she had long thought of releasing me from our engagement. In fact,
though I really did not apprehend it fully at the first shock, I
was dismissed. Her letter had reached me when I came home after old
Rawdon's none too civil refusal to raise my wages. On this
particular evening of which I write, therefore, I was in a state of
feverish adjustment to two new and amazing, two nearly overwhelming
facts, that I was neither indispensable to Nettie nor at Rawdon's.
And to talk of comets!Where did I stand?I had grown so accustomed to think of Nettie as inseparably
mine—the whole tradition of "true love" pointed me to that—that for
her to face about with these precise small phrases toward
abandonment, after we had kissed and whispered and come so close in
the little adventurous familiarities of the young, shocked me
profoundly. I! I! And Rawdon didn't find me indispensable either. I
felt I was suddenly repudiated by the universe and threatened with
effacement, that in some positive and emphatic way I must at once
assert myself. There was no balm in the religion I had learnt, or
in the irreligion I had adopted, for wounded
self-love.Should I fling up Rawdon's place at once and then in some
extraordinary, swift manner make the fortune of Frobisher's
adjacent and closely competitive pot-bank?The first part of that program, at any rate, would be easy of
accomplishment, to go to Rawdon and say, "You will hear from me
again," but for the rest, Frobisher might fail me. That, however,
was a secondary issue. The predominant affair was with Nettie. I
found my mind thick-shot with flying fragments of rhetoric that
might be of service in the letter I would write her. Scorn, irony,
tenderness—what was it to be?"Brother!" said Parload, suddenly."What?" said I."They're firing up at Bladden's iron-works, and the smoke
comes right across my bit of sky."The interruption came just as I was ripe to discharge my
thoughts upon him."Parload," said I, "very likely I shall have to leave all
this. OldRawdon won't give me a rise in my wages, and after having
asked Idon't think I can stand going on upon the old terms anymore.
See?So I may have to clear out of Clayton for good and
all."Section 3That made Parload put down the opera-glass and look at
me."It's a bad time to change just now," he said after a little
pause.Rawdon had said as much, in a less agreeable
tone.But with Parload I felt always a disposition to the heroic
note. "I'm tired," I said, "of humdrum drudgery for other men. One
may as well starve one's body out of a place as to starve one's
soul in one.""I don't know about that altogether," began Parload, slowly.
. . .And with that we began one of our interminable conversations,
one of those long, wandering, intensely generalizing, diffusely
personal talks that will be dear to the hearts of intelligent
youths until the world comes to an end. The Change has not
abolished that, anyhow.It would be an incredible feat of memory for me now to recall
all that meandering haze of words, indeed I recall scarcely any of
it, though its circumstances and atmosphere stand out, a sharp,
clear picture in my mind. I posed after my manner and behaved very
foolishly no doubt, a wounded, smarting egotist, and Parload played
his part of the philosopher preoccupied with the
deeps.We were presently abroad, walking through the warm summer's
night and talking all the more freely for that. But one thing that
I said I can remember. "I wish at times," said I, with a gesture at
the heavens, "that comet of yours or some such thing would indeed
strike this world—and wipe us all away, strikes, wars, tumults,
loves, jealousies, and all the wretchedness of life!""Ah!" said Parload, and the thought seemed to hang about
him."It could only add to the miseries of life," he said
irrelevantly, when presently I was discoursing of other
things."What would?""Collision with a comet. It would only throw things back. It
would only make what was left of life more savage than it is at
present.""But why should ANYTHING be left of life?" said I. . .
.That was our style, you know, and meanwhile we walked
together up the narrow street outside his lodging, up the stepway
and the lanes toward Clayton Crest and the high road.But my memories carry me back so effectually to those days
before the Change that I forget that now all these places have been
altered beyond recognition, that the narrow street and the stepway
and the view from Clayton Crest, and indeed all the world in which
I was born and bred and made, has vanished clean away, out of space
and out of time, and wellnigh out of the imagination of all those
who are younger by a generation than I. You cannot see, as I can
see, the dark empty way between the mean houses, the dark empty way
lit by a bleary gas-lamp at the corner, you cannot feel the hard
checkered pavement under your boots, you cannot mark the dimly lit
windows here and there, and the shadows upon the ugly and often
patched and crooked blinds of the people cooped within. Nor can you
presently pass the beerhouse with its brighter gas and its queer,
screening windows, nor get a whiff of foul air and foul language
from its door, nor see the crumpled furtive figure—some rascal
child—that slinks past us down the steps.We crossed the longer street, up which a clumsy steam tram,
vomiting smoke and sparks, made its clangorous way, and adown which
one saw the greasy brilliance of shop fronts and the naphtha flares
of hawkers' barrows dripping fire into the night. A hazy movement
of people swayed along that road, and we heard the voice of an
itinerant preacher from a waste place between the houses. You
cannot see these things as I can see them, nor can you
figure—unless you know the pictures that great artist Hyde has left
the world—the effect of the great hoarding by which we passed, lit
below by a gas-lamp and towering up to a sudden sharp black edge
against the pallid sky.Those hoardings! They were the brightest colored things in
all that vanished world. Upon them, in successive layers of paste
and paper, all the rough enterprises of that time joined in
chromatic discord; pill vendors and preachers, theaters and
charities, marvelous soaps and astonishing pickles, typewriting
machines and sewing machines, mingled in a sort of visualized
clamor. And passing that there was a muddy lane of cinders, a lane
without a light, that used its many puddles to borrow a star or so
from the sky. We splashed along unheeding as we
talked.Then across the allotments, a wilderness of cabbages and
evil-looking sheds, past a gaunt abandoned factory, and so to the
high road. The high road ascended in a curve past a few houses and
a beerhouse or so, and round until all the valley in which four
industrial towns lay crowded and confluent was
overlooked.I will admit that with the twilight there came a spell of
weird magnificence over all that land and brooded on it until dawn.
The horrible meanness of its details was veiled, the hutches that
were homes, the bristling multitudes of chimneys, the ugly patches
of unwilling vegetation amidst the makeshift fences of barrel-stave
and wire. The rusty scars that framed the opposite ridges where the
iron ore was taken and the barren mountains of slag from the blast
furnaces were veiled; the reek and boiling smoke and dust from
foundry, pot-bank, and furnace, transfigured and assimilated by the
night. The dust-laden atmosphere that was gray oppression through
the day became at sundown a mystery of deep translucent colors, of
blues and purples, of somber and vivid reds, of strange bright
clearnesses of green and yellow athwart the darkling sky. Each
upstart furnace, when its monarch sun had gone, crowned itself with
flames, the dark cinder heaps began to glow with quivering fires,
and each pot-bank squatted rebellious in a volcanic coronet of
light. The empire of the day broke into a thousand feudal baronies
of burning coal. The minor streets across the valley picked
themselves out with gas-lamps of faint yellow, that brightened and
mingled at all the principal squares and crossings with the
greenish pallor of incandescent mantles and the high cold glare of
the electric arc. The interlacing railways lifted bright
signal-boxes over their intersections, and signal stars of red and
green in rectangular constellations. The trains became articulated
black serpents breathing fire.Moreover, high overhead, like a thing put out of reach and
near forgotten, Parload had rediscovered a realm that was ruled by
neither sun nor furnace, the universe of stars.This was the scene of many a talk we two had held together.
And if in the daytime we went right over the crest and looked
westward there was farmland, there were parks and great mansions,
the spire of a distant cathedral, and sometimes when the weather
was near raining, the crests of remote mountains hung clearly in
the sky. Beyond the range of sight indeed, out beyond, there was
Checkshill; I felt it there always, and in the darkness more than I
did by day. Checkshill, and Nettie!And to us two youngsters as we walked along the cinder path
beside the rutted road and argued out our perplexities, it seemed
that this ridge gave us compendiously a view of our whole
world.There on the one hand in a crowded darkness, about the ugly
factories and work-places, the workers herded together, ill
clothed, ill nourished, ill taught, badly and expensively served at
every occasion in life, uncertain even of their insufficient
livelihood from day to day, the chapels and churches and
public-houses swelling up amidst their wretched homes like
saprophytes amidst a general corruption, and on the other, in
space, freedom, and dignity, scarce heeding the few cottages, as
overcrowded as they were picturesque, in which the laborers
festered, lived the landlords and masters who owned pot-banks and
forge and farm and mine. Far away, distant, beautiful, irrelevant,
from out of a little cluster of secondhand bookshops,
ecclesiastical residences, and the inns and incidentals of a
decaying market town, the cathedral of Lowchester pointed a
beautiful, unemphatic spire to vague incredible skies. So it seemed
to us that the whole world was planned in those youthful first
impressions.We saw everything simple, as young men will. We had our
angry, confident solutions, and whosoever would criticize them was
a friend of the robbers. It was a clear case of robbery, we held,
visibly so; there in those great houses lurked the Landlord and the
Capitalist, with his scoundrel the Lawyer, with his cheat the
Priest, and we others were all the victims of their deliberate
villainies. No doubt they winked and chuckled over their rare
wines, amidst their dazzling, wickedly dressed women, and plotted
further grinding for the faces of the poor. And amidst all the
squalor on the other hand, amidst brutalities, ignorance, and
drunkenness, suffered multitudinously their blameless victim, the
Working Man. And we, almost at the first glance, had found all this
out, it had merely to be asserted now with sufficient rhetoric and
vehemence to change the face of the whole world. The Working Man
would arise—in the form of a Labor Party, and with young men like
Parload and myself to represent him—and come to his own, and
then———?Then the robbers would get it hot, and everything would be
extremely satisfactory.Unless my memory plays me strange tricks that does no
injustice to the creed of thought and action that Parload and I
held as the final result of human wisdom. We believed it with heat,
and rejected with heat the most obvious qualification of its
harshness. At times in our great talks we were full of heady hopes
for the near triumph of our doctrine, more often our mood was hot
resentment at the wickedness and stupidity that delayed so plain
and simple a reconstruction of the order of the world. Then we grew
malignant, and thought of barricades and significant violence. I
was very bitter, I know, upon this night of which I am now
particularly telling, and the only face upon the hydra of
Capitalism and Monopoly that I could see at all clearly, smiled
exactly as old Rawdon had smiled when he refused to give me more
than a paltry twenty shillings a week.I wanted intensely to salve my self-respect by some revenge
upon him, and I felt that if that could be done by slaying the
hydra, I might drag its carcass to the feet of Nettie, and settle
my other trouble as well. "What do you think of me NOW,
Nettie?"That at any rate comes near enough to the quality of my
thinking, then, for you to imagine how I gesticulated and spouted
to Parload that night. You figure us as little black figures,
unprepossessing in the outline, set in the midst of that desolating
night of flaming industrialism, and my little voice with a
rhetorical twang protesting, denouncing. . . .You will consider those notions of my youth poor silly
violent stuff; particularly if you are of the younger generation
born since the Change you will be of that opinion. Nowadays the
whole world thinks clearly, thinks with deliberation, pellucid
certainties, you find it impossible to imagine how any other
thinking could have been possible. Let me tell you then how you can
bring yourself to something like the condition of our former state.
In the first place you must get yourself out of health by unwise
drinking and eating, and out of condition by neglecting your
exercise, then you must contrive to be worried very much and made
very anxious and uncomfortable, and then you must work very hard
for four or five days and for long hours every day at something too
petty to be interesting, too complex to be mechanical, and without
any personal significance to you whatever. This done, get
straightway into a room that is not ventilated at all, and that is
already full of foul air, and there set yourself to think out some
very complicated problem. In a very little while you will find
yourself in a state of intellectual muddle, annoyed, impatient,
snatching at the obvious presently in choosing and rejecting
conclusions haphazard. Try to play chess under such conditions and
you will play stupidly and lose your temper. Try to do anything
that taxes the brain or temper and you will fail.Now, the whole world before the Change was as sick and
feverish as that, it was worried and overworked and perplexed by
problems that would not get stated simply, that changed and evaded
solution, it was in an atmosphere that had corrupted and thickened
past breathing; there was no thorough cool thinking in the world at
all. There was nothing in the mind of the world anywhere but
half-truths, hasty assumptions, hallucinations, and emotions.
Nothing. . . .I know it seems incredible, that already some of the younger
men are beginning to doubt the greatness of the Change our world
has undergone, but read—read the newspapers of that time. Every age
becomes mitigated and a little ennobled in our minds as it recedes
into the past. It is the part of those who like myself have stories
of that time to tell, to supply, by a scrupulous spiritual realism,
some antidote to that glamour.Section 4Always with Parload I was chief talker.I can look back upon myself with, I believe, an almost
perfect detachment, things have so changed that indeed now I am
another being, with scarce anything in common with that boastful
foolish youngster whose troubles I recall. I see him vulgarly
theatrical, egotistical, insincere, indeed I do not like him save
with that instinctive material sympathy that is the fruit of
incessant intimacy. Because he was myself I may be able to feel and
write understandingly about motives that will put him out of
sympathy with nearly every reader, but why should I palliate or
defend his quality?Always, I say, I did the talking, and it would have amazed me
beyond measure if any one had told me that mine was not the greater
intelligence in these wordy encounters. Parload was a quiet youth,
and stiff and restrained in all things, while I had that supreme
gift for young men and democracies, the gift of copious expression.
Parload I diagnosed in my secret heart as a trifle dull; he posed
as pregnant quiet, I thought, and was obsessed by the congenial
notion of "scientific caution." I did not remark that while my
hands were chiefly useful for gesticulation or holding a pen
Parload's hands could do all sorts of things, and I did not think
therefore that fibers must run from those fingers to something in
his brain. Nor, though I bragged perpetually of my shorthand, of my
literature, of my indispensable share in Rawdon's business, did
Parload lay stress on the conics and calculus he "mugged" in the
organized science school. Parload is a famous man now, a great
figure in a great time, his work upon intersecting radiations has
broadened the intellectual horizon of mankind for ever, and I, who
am at best a hewer of intellectual wood, a drawer of living water,
can smile, and he can smile, to think how I patronized and posed
and jabbered over him in the darkness of those early
days.That night I was shrill and eloquent beyond measure. Rawdon
was, of course, the hub upon which I went round—Rawdon and the
Rawdonesque employer and the injustice of "wages slavery" and all
the immediate conditions of that industrial blind alley up which it
seemed our lives were thrust. But ever and again I glanced at other
things. Nettie was always there in the background of my mind,
regarding me enigmatically. It was part of my pose to Parload that
I had a romantic love-affair somewhere away beyond the sphere of
our intercourse, and that note gave a Byronic resonance to many of
the nonsensical things I produced for his
astonishment.I will not weary you with too detailed an account of the talk
of a foolish youth who was also distressed and unhappy, and whose
voice was balm for the humiliations that smarted in his eyes.
Indeed, now in many particulars I cannot disentangle this harangue
of which I tell from many of the things I may have said in other
talks to Parload. For example, I forget if it was then or before or
afterwards that, as it were by accident, I let out what might be
taken as an admission that I was addicted to drugs."You shouldn't do that," said Parload, suddenly. "It won't do
to poison your brains with that."My brains, my eloquence, were to be very important assets to
our party in the coming revolution. . . .But one thing does clearly belong to this particular
conversation I am recalling. When I started out it was quite
settled in the back of my mind that I must not leave Rawdon's. I
simply wanted to abuse my employer to Parload. But I talked myself
quite out of touch with all the cogent reasons there were for
sticking to my place, and I got home that night irrevocably
committed to a spirited—not to say a defiant—policy with my
employer."I can't stand Rawdon's much longer," I said to Parload by
way of a flourish."There's hard times coming," said Parload."Next winter.""Sooner. The Americans have been overproducing, and they mean
to dump. The iron trade is going to have convulsions.""I don't care. Pot-banks are steady.""With a corner in borax? No. I've heard—""What have you heard?"