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  THE INNER HOUSE

  BY

  WALTER BESANT

  AUTHOR OF
  "THE WORLD WENT VERY WELL THEN" "FOR FAITH AND FREEDOM"
  "ALL SORTS AND CONDITIONS OF MEN" "HERR PAULUS" ETC.


  NEW YORK
  HARPER & BROTHERS, FRANKLIN SQUARE
  1888




THE INNER HOUSE.




PROLOGUE.

AT THE ROYAL INSTITUTION.


"Professor!" cried the Director, rushing to meet their guest and
lecturer as the door was thrown open, and the great man appeared, calm
and composed, as if there was nothing more in the wind than an ordinary
Scientific Discourse. "You are always welcome, my friend, always
welcome"--the two enthusiasts for science wrung hands--"and never more
welcome than to-night. Then the great mystery is to be solved at last.
The Theatre is crammed with people. What does it mean? You must tell me
before you go in."

The Physicist smiled.

"I came to a conviction that I was on the true line five years ago," he
said. "It is only within the last six months that I have demonstrated
the thing to a certainty. I will tell you, my friend," he whispered,
"before we go in."

Then he advanced and shook hands with the President.

"Whatever the importance of your Discovery, Professor," said the
President, "we are fully sensible of the honor you have done us in
bringing it before an English audience first of all, and especially
before an audience of the Royal Institution."

"Ja, Ja, Herr President. But I give my Discovery to all the world at
this same hour. As for myself, I announce it to my very good friends
of the Royal Institution. Why not to my other very good friends of the
Royal Society? Because it is a thing which belongs to the whole world,
and not to scientific men only."

It was in the Library of the Royal Institution. The President and
Council of the Institution were gathered together to receive their
illustrious lecturer, and every face was touched with interrogation and
anxiety. What was this Great Discovery?

       *       *       *       *       *

For six months there had appeared, from time to time, mysterious
telegrams in the papers, all connected with this industrious
Professor's laboratory. Nothing definite, nothing certain: it was
whispered that a new discovery, soon about to be announced, would
entirely change the relations of man to man; of nation to nation.
Those who professed to be in the secret suggested that it might alter
all governments and abolish all laws. Why they said that I know not,
because certainly nobody was admitted to the laboratory, and the
Professor had no confidant. This big-headed man, with the enormous
bald forehead and the big glasses on his fat nose--it was long and
broad as well as fat--kept his own counsel. Yet, in some way, people
were perfectly certain that something wonderful was coming. So, when
Roger Bacon made his gunpowder, the monks might have whispered to
each other, only from the smell which came through the key-hole, that
now the Devil would at last be met upon his own ground. The telegrams
were continued with exasperating pertinacity, until over the whole
civilized world the eyes of all who loved science were turned upon that
modest laboratory in the little University of Ganzweltweisst am Rhein.
What was coming from it? One does not go so far as to say that all
interest in contemporary business, politics, art, and letters ceased;
but it is quite certain that every morning and every evening, when
everybody opened his paper, his first thought was to look for news from
Ganzweltweisst am Rhein.

But the days passed by, and no news came. This was especially hard on
the leader-writers, who were one and all waiting, each man longing
to have a cut in with the subject before anybody else got it. But
it was good for the people who write letters to the papers, because
they had so many opportunities of suggestion and surmise. And so
the leader-writers got something to talk about after all. For some
suggested that Prof. Schwarzbaum had found out a way to make food
artificially, by chemically compounding nitrogens, phosphates, and
so forth. And these philosophers built a magnificent Palace of
Imagination, in which dwelt a glorified mankind no longer occupied in
endless toil for the sake of providing meat and drink for themselves
and their families, but all engaged in the pursuit of knowledge, and
in Art of all kinds, such as Fiction, Poetry, Painting, Music, Acting,
and so forth, getting out of Life such a wealth of emotion, pleasure,
and culture as the world had never before imagined. Others there were
who thought that the great Discovery might be a method of instantaneous
transmission of matter from place to place; so that, as by the electric
wire one can send a message, so by some kind of electric method one
could send a human body from any one part of the world to any other in
a moment. This suggestion offered a fine field for the imagination; and
there was a novel written on this subject which had a great success,
until the Discovery itself was announced. Others, again, thought
that the new Discovery meant some great and wonderful development
of the Destructive Art; so that the whole of an army might be blown
into countless fragments by the touch of a button, the discharge of a
spring, the fall of a hammer. This took the fancy hugely, and it was
pleasant to read the imaginary developments of history as influenced by
this Discovery. But it seemed certain that the learned Professor would
keep it for the use of his own country. So that there was no longer any
room to doubt that, if this was the nature of the Discovery, the whole
of the habitable world must inevitably fall under the Teutonic yoke,
and an Empire of Armed Peace would set in, the like of which had never
before been witnessed upon the globe. On the whole, the prospect was
received everywhere, except in France and Russia, with resignation.
Even the United States remembered that they had already many millions
of Germans among them; and that the new Empire, though it would give
certainly all the places to these Germans, would also save them a
great many Elections, and therefore a good deal of trouble, and would
relieve the national conscience--long grievously oppressed in this
particular--of truckling to the Irish Vote. Dynamiters and anarchists,
however, were despondent, and Socialists regarded each other with an
ever-deepening gloom. This particular Theory of the great Discovery
met, in fact, with universal credence over the whole civilized globe.

From the great man himself there came no sign. Enterprising
interviewers failed to get speech with him. Scientific men wrote to
him, but got no real information in reply. And the minds of men grew
more and more agitated. Some great change was considered certain--but
what?

One morning--it was the morning of Thursday, June 20, 1890--there
appeared an advertisement in the papers. By the telegrams it was
discovered that a similar advertisement had been published in every
great city all over the world. That of the London papers differed from
others in one important respect--in this, namely: Professor Schwarzbaum
would himself, without any delay, read before a London audience a Paper
which should reveal his new Discovery. There was not, however, the
least hint in the announcement of the nature of this Discovery.

       *       *       *       *       *

"Yes," said the Physicist, speaking slowly, "I have given the
particulars to my friends over the whole earth; and, as London is still
the centre of the world, I resolved that I would myself communicate it
to the English."

"But what is it?--what is it?" asked the President.

"The Discovery," the Professor continued, "is to be announced at the
same moment all over the world, so that none of the newspapers shall
have an unfair start. It is now close upon nine o'clock by London time.
In Paris it is ten minutes past nine; in Berlin it is six minutes
before ten; at St. Petersburg it is eleven o'clock; at New York it
is four o'clock in the afternoon. Very good. When the clock in your
theatre points to nine exactly, at that moment everywhere the same
Paper will be read."

In fact, at that moment the clock began to strike. The President led
the way to the Theatre, followed by the Council. The Director remained
behind with the Lecturer of the evening.

"My friend," said Professor Schwarzbaum, "my subject is nothing
less"--he laid his finger upon the Director's arm--"nothing less than
'The Prolongation of the Vital Energy.'"

"What! The Prolongation of the Vital Energy? Do you know what that
means?" The Director turned pale. "Are we to understand--"

"Come," said the Professor, "we must not waste the time."

Then the Director, startled and pale, took his German brother by
the arm and led him into the Theatre, murmuring, "Prolongation ...
Prolongation ... Prolongation ... of the Vital--the Vital--Energy!"

The Theatre was crowded. There was not a vacant seat: there was no
more standing room on the stairs; the very doors of the gallery were
thronged: the great staircase was thronged with those who could not get
in, but waited to get the first news. Nay, outside the Institution,
Albemarle Street was crowded with people waiting to hear what this
great thing might be which all the world had waited six months to
hear. Within the Theatre, what an audience! For the first time in
English history, no respect at all had been paid to rank: the people
gathered in the Theatre were all that the great City could boast that
was distinguished in science, art, and letters. Those present were the
men who moved the world. Among them, naturally, a sprinkling of the
men who are born to the best things of the world, and are sometimes
told that they help to move it. There were ladies among the company
too--ladies well known in scientific and literary circles, with certain
great ladies led by curiosity. On the left-hand side of the Theatre,
for instance, close to the door, sat two very great ladies, indeed--one
of them the Countess of Thordisá, and the other her only daughter, the
Lady Mildred Carera. Leaning against the pillar beside them stood a
young man of singularly handsome appearance, tall and commanding of
stature.

"To you, Dr. Linister," said the Countess, "I suppose everything that
the Professor has to tell us will be already well known?"

"That," said Dr. Linister, "would be too much to expect."

"For me," her Ladyship went on delicately, "I love to catch Science on
the wing--on the wing--in her lighter moods, when she has something
really popular to tell."

Dr. Linister bowed. Then his eyes met those of the beautiful girl
sitting below him, and he leaned and whispered,

"I looked for you everywhere last night. You had led me to understand--"

"We went nowhere, after all. Mamma fancied she had a bad cold."

"Then this evening. May I be quite--quite sure?"

His voice dropped, and his fingers met hers beneath the fan. She drew
them away quickly, with a blush.

"Yes," she whispered, "you may find me to-night at Lady Chatterton's or
Lady Ingleby's."

From which you can understand that this young Dr. Linister was quite
a man in society. He was young, he had already a great reputation for
Biological research, he was the only son of a fashionable physician,
and he would be very rich. Therefore, in the season, Harry Linister was
_of_ the season.

On most of the faces present there sat an expression of anxiety, and
even fear. What was this new thing? Was the world really going to be
turned upside down? And when the West End was so very comfortable and
its position so very well assured! But there were a few present who
rubbed their hands at the thought of a great upturn of everything.
Up with the scum first; when that had been ladled overboard, a new
arrangement would be possible, to the advantage of those who rubbed
their hands.

When the clock struck nine, a dead silence fell upon the Theatre; not a
breath was heard; not a cough; not the rustle of a dress. Their faces
were pale with expectancy; their lips were parted; their very breathing
seemed arrested.

Then the President and the Council walked in and took their places.

"Ladies and Gentlemen," said the President shortly, "the learned
Professor will himself communicate to you the subject and title of his
Paper, and we may be certain beforehand that this subject and matter
will adorn the motto of the Society--_Illustrous commoda vitæ._"

Then Dr. Schwarzbaum stood at the table before them all, and looked
round the room. Lady Mildred glanced at the young man, Harry Linister.
He was staring at the German like the rest, speechless. She sighed.
Women did not in those days like love-making to be forgotten or
interrupted by anything, certainly not by science.

The learned German carried a small bundle of papers, which he laid on
the table. He carefully and slowly adjusted his spectacles. Then he
drew from his pocket a small leather case. Then he looked round the
room and smiled. That is to say, his lips were covered with a full
beard, so that the sweetness of the smile was mostly lost; but it was
observed under and behind the beard. The mere ghost of a smile; yet a
benevolent ghost.

The Lecturer began, somewhat in copy-book fashion, to remind his
audience that everything in Nature is born, grows slowly to maturity,
enjoys a brief period of full force and strength, then decays, and
finally dies. The tree of life is first a green sapling, and last a
white and leafless trunk. He expatiated at some length on the growth
of the young life. He pointed out that methods had been discovered to
hinder that growth, turn it into unnatural forms, even to stop and
destroy it altogether. He showed how the body is gradually strengthened
in all its parts; he showed, for his unscientific hearers, how the
various parts of the structure assume strength. All this was familiar
to most of his audience. Next he proceeded to dwell upon the period of
full maturity of bodily and mental strength, which, in a man, should
last from twenty-five to sixty, and even beyond that time. The decay
of the bodily, and even of the mental organs, may have already set
in, even when mind and body seem the most vigorous. At this period of
the discussion most of the audience were beginning to flag in their
attention. Was such a gathering as this assembled only to hear a
discussion on the growth and decay of the faculties? But the Director,
who knew what was coming, sat bolt upright, expectant. It was strange,
the people said afterwards, that no one should have suspected what was
coming. There was to be, everybody knew, a great announcement. That
was certain. Destruction, Locomotion, Food, Transmission of Thought,
Substitution of Speech for Writing--all these things, as has been seen,
had been suggested. But no one even guessed the real nature of the
Discovery. And now, with the exception of the people who always pretend
to have known all along, to have been favored with the Great Man's
Confidence, to have guessed the thing from the outset, no one had the
least suspicion.

Therefore, when the Professor suddenly stopped short, after a prolix
description of wasting power and wearied organs, and held up an
admonitory finger, everybody jumped, because now the Secret was to be
divulged. They had come to hear a great Secret.

"What is this Decay?" he asked. "What is it? Why does it begin? What
laws regulate it? What check can we place upon it? How can we prevent
it? How can we stay its progress? Can Science, which has done so much
to make Life happy--which has found out so many things by which Man's
brief span is crowded with delightful emotions--can Science do no more?
Cannot Science add to these gifts that more precious gift of all--the
lengthening of that brief span?"

Here everybody gasped.

"I ask," the speaker went on, "whether Science cannot put off that
day which closes the eyes and turns the body into a senseless lump?
Consider: we are no sooner arrived at the goal of our ambitions than
we have to go away; we are no sooner at the plenitude of our wisdom
and knowledge than we have to lay down all that we have learned and
go away--nay, we cannot even transmit to others our accumulations
of knowledge. They are lost. We are no sooner happy with those we
love than we have to leave them. We collect, but cannot enjoy; we
inherit--it is but for a day; we learn, but we have no time to use our
learning; we love--it is but for an hour; we pass our youth in hope,
our manhood in effort, and we die before we are old; we are strong,
but our strength passes like a dream; we are beautiful, but our beauty
perishes in a single day. Cannot, I ask again--cannot Science prolong
the Vital Force, and stay the destroying hand of Decay?"

At this point a wonderful passion seized upon many of the people
present; for some sprang to their feet and lifted hands and shouted,
some wept aloud, some clasped each other by the hand; there were lovers
among the crowd who fell openly into each other's arms; there were men
of learning who hugged imaginary books and looked up with wild eyes;
there were girls who smiled, thinking that their beauty might last
longer than a day; there were women down whose cheeks rolled the tears
of sorrow for their vanished beauty; there were old men who heard and
trembled.

One of them spoke--out of all this crowd only one found words. It was
an old statesman; an old man eloquent. He rose with shaking limbs.

"Sir," he cried, his voice still sonorous, "give me back my manhood!"

The Professor continued, regardless:

"Suppose," he said, "that Science had found out the way, not to restore
what is lost, but to arrest further loss; not to give back what is
gone--you might as well try to restore a leg that has been cut off--but
to prevent further loss. Consider this for a moment, I pray you. Those
who search into Nature's secrets might, if this were done for them,
carry on their investigations far beyond any point which had yet been
reached; those who cultivate Art might attain to a greater skill of
hand and truth of sight than has ever yet been seen; those who study
human nature might multiply their observations; those who love might
have a longer time for their passion; men who are strong might remain
strong; women who are beautiful might remain beautiful--"

"Sir," cried again the old man eloquent, "give me back my manhood!"

The Lecturer made no reply, but went on:

"The rich might have a time--a sensible length of time--in which to
enjoy their wealth; the young might remain young; the old might grow
no older; the feeble might not become more feeble--all for a prolonged
time. As for those whose lives could never become anything but a
burden to themselves and to the rest of the world--the crippled, the
criminal, the poor, the imbecile, the incompetent, the stupid, and the
frivolous--they would live out their allotted lives and die. It would
be for the salt of the earth, for the flower of mankind, for the men
strong of intellect and endowed above the common herd, that Science
would reserve this precious gift."

"Give me back my manhood!" cried again the old man eloquent.

But he was not alone, for they all sprang to their feet together
and cried aloud, shrieking, weeping, stretching forth hands,
"Give--give--give!" But the Director, who knew that what was asked for
would be given, sat silent and self-possessed.

The Speaker motioned them all to sit down again.

"I would not," he said, "limit this great gift to those alone whose
intellect leads the world. I would extend it to all who help to make
life beautiful and happy; to lovely women"--here the men heaved a sigh
so deep, so simultaneous, that it fell upon the ear like the voice
of thanksgiving from a Cathedral choir--"to those who love only the
empty show and pleasures and vainglories of life"--here many smiled,
especially of the younger sort--"even to some of those who desire
nothing of life but love and song and dalliance and laughter." Again
the younger sort smiled, and tried to look as if they had no connection
at all with that band. "I would extend this gift, I repeat, to all who
can themselves be happy in the sunshine and the light, and to all who
can make the happiness of others. Then, again, consider. When you have
enjoyed those things for a while; when your life has been prolonged, so
that you have enjoyed all that you desire in full measure and running
over; when not two or three years have passed, but perhaps two or three
centuries, you would then, of your own accord, put aside the aid of
Science and suffer your body to fall into the decay which awaits all
living matter. Contented and resigned, you would sink into the tomb,
not satiated with the joys of life, but satisfied to have had your
share. There would be no terror in death, since it would take none but
those who could say, 'I have had enough.' That day would surely come to
every one. There is nothing--not research and discovery, not the beauty
of Nature, not love and pleasure, not art, not flowers and sunshine
and perpetual youth--of which we should not in time grow weary.
Science cannot alter the Laws of Nature. Of all things there must be
an end. But she can prolong; she can avert; she can--Yes, my friends.
This is my Discovery; this is my Gift to Humanity; this is the fruit,
the outcome of my life; for me this great thing has been reserved.
Science can arrest decay. She can make you live--live on--live for
centuries--nay, I know not--why not?--she can, if you foolishly desire
it, make you live forever."

Now, when these words were spoken there fell a deep silence upon the
crowd. No one spoke; no one looked up; they were awed; they could not
realize what it meant that would be given them; they were suddenly
relieved of a great terror, the constant dread that lies in man's
heart, ever present, though we conceal it--the dread of Death; but they
could not, in a moment, understand that it was given.

But the Director sprang to his feet, and grasped his brother physicist
by the hand.

"Of all the sons of Science," he said, solemnly, "thou shalt be
proclaimed the first and best."

The assembly heard these words, but made no sign. There was no
applause--not a murmur, not a voice. They were stricken dumb with
wonder and with awe. They were going to live--to live on--to live for
centuries, nay, why not?--to live forever!

"You all know," the Professor continued, "how at a dinner a single
glass of champagne revives the spirits, looses the tongue, and brings
activity to the brain. The guests were weary; they were in decay;
the Champagne arrests that decay. My discovery is of another kind of
Champagne, which acts with a more lasting effect. It strengthens the
nerves, hardens the muscles, quickens the blood, and brings activity to
the digestion. With new strength of the body returns new strength to
the mind; mind and body are one." He paused a moment. Then he gave the
leather case into the hands of the Director. "This is my gift, I say. I
give to my brother full particulars and the history of the invention. I
seek no profit for myself. It is your own. This day a new epoch begins
for humanity. We shall not die, but live. Accident, fire, lightning,
may kill us. Against these things we cannot guard. But old age shall no
more fall upon us; decay shall no more rob us of our life and strength;
and death shall be voluntary. This is a great change. I know not if I
have done aright. That is for you to determine. See that you use this
gift aright."

Then, before the people had understood the last words, the speaker
stepped out of the Theatre and was gone.

But the Director of the Royal Institution stood in his place, and in
his hand was the leather case containing the GIFT OF LIFE.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Countess of Thordisá, who had been asleep throughout the lecture,
woke up when it was finished.

"How deeply interesting!" she sighed. "This it is, to catch Science on
the wing." Then she looked round. "Mildred, dear," she said, "has Dr.
Linister gone to find the carriage? Dear me! what a commotion! And at
the Royal Institution, of all places in the world!"

"I think, Mamma," said Lady Mildred, coldly, "that we had better get
some one else to find the carriage. Dr. Linister is over there. He is
better engaged."

He was; he was among his brother physicists; they were eagerly asking
questions and crowding round the Director. And the Theatre seemed
filled with mad people, who surged and crowded and pushed.

"Come, Mamma," said Lady Mildred, pale, but with a red spot on either
cheek, "we will leave them to fight it out."

Science had beaten love. She did not meet Harry Linister again that
night. And when they met again, long years afterwards, he passed her by
with eyes that showed he had clean forgotten her existence, unaltered
though she was in face and form.




CHAPTER I.

THE SUPPER-BELL.


When the big bell in the Tower of the House of Life struck the hour of
seven, the other bells began to chime as they had done every day at
this hour for I know not how many years. Very likely in the Library,
where we still keep a great collection of perfectly useless books,
there is preserved some History which may speak of these Bells, and
of the builders of the House. When these chimes began, the swifts and
jackdaws which live in the Tower began to fly about with a great show
of hurry, as if there was barely time for supper, though, as it was yet
only the month of July, the sun would not be setting for an hour or
more.

We have long since ceased to preach to the people, otherwise we might
make them learn a great deal from the animal world. They live, for
instance, from day to day; not only are their lives miserably short,
but they are always hungry, always fighting, always quarrelling, always
fierce in their loves and their jealousies. Watching the swifts, for
instance, which we may do nearly all day long, we ought to congratulate
ourselves on our own leisurely order, the adequate provision for food
made by the Wisdom of the College, the assurance of preservation also
established by that Wisdom, and our freedom from haste and anxiety, as
from the emotions of love, hatred, jealousy, and rivalry. But the time
has gone by for that kind of exhortation.

Thus, our people, who at this hour crowded the great Square, showed
in their faces, their attitudes, and their movements, the calm that
reigned in their souls. Some were lying on the grass; some were sitting
on the benches; some were strolling. They were for the most part alone;
if not alone--because habit often survives when the original cause of
the habit is gone--then in pairs.

In the old unhappy days there would have been restless activity--a
hurrying to and fro; there would have been laughter and
talking--everybody would have been talking; there would have been young
men eagerly courting the favors of young women, looking on them with
longing eyes, ready to fight for them, each for the girl he loved;
thinking each of the girl he loved as of a goddess or an angel--all
perfection. The girls themselves ardently desired this foolish worship.
Again, formerly, there would have been old men and old women looking
with melancholy eyes on the scenes they were about to quit, and
lamenting the days of their strength and their youth. And formerly
there would have been among the crowd beggars and paupers; there
would have been some masters and some servants; some noble and some
bourgeois; there would have been every conceivable difference in age,
rank, strength, intellect, and distinction.

Again, formerly there would have been the most insolent differences in
costume. Some of the men used to wear broadcloth, sleek and smooth,
with glossy hats and gloves, and flowers at their button-hole; while
beside them crawled the wretched half-clad objects pretending to sell
matches, but in reality begging for their bread. And some of the women
used to flaunt in dainty and expensive stuffs, setting off their
supposed charms (which were mostly made by the dress-maker's art)
with the curves and colors of their drapery. And beside them would be
crawling the wretched creatures to whom in the summer, when the days
were hot and fine, the Park was their only home, and rusty black their
only wear.

Now, no activity at all; no hurrying, no laughing, not even any
talking. That might have struck a visitor as one of the most remarkable
results of our system. No foolish talking. As for their dress, it
was all alike. The men wore blue flannel jackets and trousers, with
a flannel shirt and a flat blue cap; for the working hours they had
a rougher dress. The women wore a costume in gray, made of a stuff
called beige. It is a useful stuff, because it wears well; it is soft
and yet warm, and cannot be objected to by any of them on the score of
ugliness. What mutinies, what secret conspiracies, what mad revolts
had to be faced before the women could be made to understand that
Socialism--the only form of society which can now be accepted--must
be logical and complete! What is one woman more than another that she
should separate herself from her sisters by her dress? Therefore, since
their subjugation they all wear a gray beige frock, with a jacket of
the same, and a flat gray cap, like the men's, under which they are
made to gather up their hair.

This scene, indeed--the gathering of the People before the
supper-bell--is one of which I never tire. I look at all the eager,
hurrying swifts in the air, I remember the Past; and I think of the
Present when I gaze upon the great multitude, in which no one regardeth
his neighbor, none speaks to none. There are no individual aims, but
all is pure, unadulterated Socialism, with--not far distant--the
Ultimate Triumph of Science!

I desire to relate the exact circumstances connected with certain
recent events. It is generally known that they caused one deplorable
Death--one of our own Society, although not a Physician of the
HOUSE. I shall have to explain, before I begin the narrative,
certain points in our internal management which may differ from the
customs adopted elsewhere. We of the Later Era visit each other so
seldom that differences may easily grow up. Indeed, considering the
terrible dangers of travel--how, if one walks, there are the perils of
unfiltered water, damp beds, sprained ankles, byrsitis of the knee,
chills from frosts and showers; or if one gets into a wheeled vehicle,
the wheels may fall off, or the carriage may be overturned in a
ditch.... But why pursue the subject? I repeat, therefore, that I must
speak of the community and its order, but that as briefly as may be.

The Rebels have been driven forth from the Pale of Humanity to wander
where they please. In a few years they will be released--if that
has not already happened--by Death from the diseases and sufferings
which will fall upon them. Then we shall remember them no more. The
centuries will roll by, and they shall be forgotten; the very mounds of
earth which once marked the place of their burial will be level with
the ground around them. But the HOUSE and the Glory of the
HOUSE will continue.

Thus perish all the enemies of Science!

The City of Canterbury, as it was rebuilt when Socialism was finally
established, has in its centre a great Square, Park, or Garden, the
central breathing-place and relaxation ground of the City. Each side
is exactly half a mile in length. The Garden, thus occupying an area
of a fourth of a square mile, is planted with every kind of ornamental
tree, and laid out in flower-beds, winding walks, serpentine rivers,
lakes, cascades, bridges, grottos, summer-houses, lawns, and everything
that can help to make the place attractive. During the summer it is
thronged every evening with the people. On its west side has been
erected an enormous Palace of glass, low in height, but stretching
far away to the west, covering an immense area. Here the heat is
artificially maintained at temperatures varying with the season and the
plants that are in cultivation. In winter, frost, bad weather, and in
rain, it forms a place of recreation and rest. Here grow all kinds of
fruit-trees, with all kinds of vegetables, flowers, and plants. All the
year round it furnishes, in quantities sufficient for all our wants, an
endless supply of fruit; so that we have a supply of some during the
whole year, as grapes, bananas, and oranges; others for at least half
the year, as peaches, strawberries, and so forth; while of the commoner
vegetables, as peas, beans, and the like, there is now no season, but
they are grown continuously. In the old times we were dependent upon
the changes and chances of a capricious and variable climate. Now,
not only has the erection of these vast houses made us independent of
summer and winter, but the placing of much grass and corn land under
glass has also assured our crops and secured us from the danger of
famine. This is by no means one of the least advantages of modern
civilization.

On the South side of the Square stands our Public Hall. The building
has not, like the House of Life, any architectural beauty--why should
we aim at beauty, when efficiency is our sole object? The House of
Life was designed and erected when men thought perpetually of beauty,
working from their admiration of beauty in woman and in nature to
beauty in things which they made with their own hands, setting beauty
above usefulness; even thinking it necessary, when usefulness had been
attained, to add adornment, as when they added a Tower to the House of
Life, yet did nothing with their Tower and did not want it.

The Public Hall is built of red brick; it resembles a row of houses
each with a gable to the street. There is for each a broad plain door,
with a simple porch, below; and above, a broad plain window twenty feet
wide divided into four compartments or divisions, the whole set in a
framework of wood. The appearance of the Hall is, therefore, remarkably
plain. There are thirty-one of these gables, each forty feet wide; so
that the whole length of the Hall is twelve hundred and forty feet, or
nearly a quarter of a mile.

Within, the roof of each of these gables covers a Hall separated
from its neighbors by plain columns. They are all alike, except that
the middle Hall, set apart for the College, has a gallery originally
intended for an orchestra, now never used. In the central Hall one
table alone is placed; in all the others there are four, every Hall
accommodating eight hundred people and every table two hundred.
The length of each Hall is the same--namely, two hundred and fifty
feet. The Hall is lit by one large window at each end. There are no
carvings, sculptures, or other ornaments in the building. At the back
is an extensive range of buildings, all of brick, built in small
compartments, and fire-proof; they contain the kitchens, granaries,
_abattoirs_, larders, cellars, dairies, still-rooms, pantries,
curing-houses, ovens, breweries, and all the other offices and chambers
required for the daily provisioning of a city with twenty-four thousand
inhabitants.

On the East side of the Square there are two great groups of buildings.
That nearest to the Public Hall contains, in a series of buildings
which communicate with one another, the Library, the Museum, the
Armory, the Model-room, and the Picture Gallery. The last is a building
as old as the House. They were, when these events began, open to the
whole Community, though they were never visited by any even out of
idle curiosity. The inquisitive spirit is dead. For myself, I am not
anxious to see the people acquire, or revive, the habit of reading and
inquiring. It might be argued that the study of history might make
them contrast the present with the past, and shudder at the lot of
their forefathers. But I am going to show that this study may produce
quite the opposite effect. Or, there is the study of science. How
should this help the People? They have the College always studying
and investigating for their benefit the secrets of medical science,
which alone concerns their happiness. They might learn how to make
machines; but machinery requires steam, explosives, electricity, and
other uncontrolled and dangerous forces. Many thousands of lives were
formerly lost in the making and management of these machines, and we do
very well without them. They might, it is true, read the books which
tell of the people in former times. But why read works which are filled
with the Presence of Death, the Shortness of Life, and the intensity of
passions which we have almost forgotten? You shall see what comes of
these studies which seem so innocent.

I say, therefore, that I never had any wish to see the people flocking
into the Library. For the same reason--that a study and contemplation
of things past might unsettle or disturb the tranquillity of their
minds--I have never wished to see them in the Museum, the Armory, or
any other part of our Collections. And since the events of which I
have to tell, we have enclosed these buildings and added them to the
College, so that the people can no longer enter them even if they
wished.

The Curator of the Museum was an aged man, one of the few old men
left--in the old days he had held a title of some kind. He was placed
there because he was old and much broken, and could do no work.
Therefore he was told to keep the glass-cases free from dust and to
sweep the floors every morning. At the time of the Great Discovery he
had been an Earl or Viscount--I know not what--and by some accident he
escaped the Great Slaughter, when it was resolved to kill all the old
men and women in order to reduce the population to the number which the
land would support. I believe that he hid himself, and was secretly fed
by some man who had formerly been his groom, and still preserved some
remains of what he called attachment and duty, until such time as the
executions were over. Then he ventured forth again, and so great was
the horror of the recent massacre, with the recollection of the prayers
and shrieks of the victims, that he was allowed to continue alive. The
old man was troubled with an asthma which hardly permitted him an hour
of repose and was incurable. This would have made his life intolerable,
except that to live--only to live, in any pain and misery--is always
better than to die.

For the last few years the old man had a companion in the Museum. This
was a girl--the only girl in our Community--who called him--I know not
why (perhaps because the relationship really existed)--Grandfather,
and lived with him. She it was who dusted the cases and swept the
floors. She found some means of relieving the old man's asthma, and all
day long--would that I had discovered the fact, or suspected whither it
would lead the wretched girl!--she read the books of the Library and
studied the contents of the cases and talked to the old man, making him
tell her everything that belonged to the past. All she cared for was
the Past; all that she studied was to understand more and more--how men
lived then, and what they thought, and what they talked.

She was about eighteen years of age; but, indeed, we thought her
still a child. I know not how many years had elapsed since any in the
City were children, because it is a vain thing to keep account of the
years; if anything happens to distinguish them, it must be something
disastrous, because we have now arrived almost at the last stage
possible to man. It only remains for us to discover, not only how to
prevent disease, but how to annihilate it. Since, then, there is only
one step left to take in advance, every other event which can happen
must be in the nature of a calamity, and therefore may be forgotten.

I have said that Christine called the old man her grandfather. We have
long, long since agreed to forget old ties of blood. How can father
and son, mother and daughter, brother and sister continue for hundreds
of years, and when all remain fixed at the same age, to keep up the
old relationship? The maternal love dies out with us--it is now but
seldom called into existence--when the child can run about. Why not?
The animals, from whom we learn so much, desert their offspring when
they can feed themselves; our mothers cease to care for their children
when they are old enough to be the charge of the Community. Therefore
Christine's mother cheerfully suffered the child to leave her as soon
as she was old enough to sit in the Public Hall. Her grandfather--if
indeed he was her grandfather--obtained permission to have the child
with him. So she remained in the quiet Museum. We never imagined or
suspected, however, that the old man, who was eighty at the time of
the Great Discovery, remembered everything that took place when he was
young, and talked with the girl all day long about the Past.

I do not know who was Christine's father. It matters not now; and,
indeed, he never claimed his daughter. One smiles to think of the
importance formerly attached to fathers. We no longer work for their
support. We are no longer dependent upon their assistance; the father
does nothing for the son, nor the son for the father. Five hundred
years ago, say--or a thousand years ago--the father carried a baby in
his arms. What then? My own father--I believe he is my own father, but
on this point I may be mistaken--I saw yesterday taking his turn in
the hay-field. He seemed distressed with the heat and fatigue of it.
Why not? It makes no difference to me. He is, though not so young,
still as strong and as able-bodied as myself. Christine was called into
existence by the sanction of the College when one of the Community was
struck dead by lightning. It was my brother, I believe. The terrible
event filled us all with consternation. However, the population having
thus been diminished by one, it was resolved that the loss should be
repaired. There was precedent. A great many years previously, owing to
a man being killed by the fall of a hay-rick--all hay-ricks are now
made low--another birth had been allowed. That was a boy.

Let us now return to our Square. On the same side are the buildings
of the College. Here are the Anatomical collections, the storehouse
of Materia Medica, and the residences of the Arch Physician, the
Suffragan, the Fellows of the College or Associate Physicians, and the
Assistants or Experimenters. The buildings are plain and fire-proof.
The College has its own private gardens, which are large and filled
with trees. Here the Physicians walk and meditate, undisturbed by the
outer world. Here is also their Library.

On the North side of the Square stands the great and venerable House of
Life, the Glory of the City, the Pride of the whole Country.

It is very ancient. Formerly there were many such splendid monuments
standing in the country; now this alone remains. It was built in the
dim, distant ages, when men believed things now forgotten. It was
designed for the celebration of certain ceremonies or functions; their
nature and meaning may, I dare say, be ascertained by any who cares
to waste time in an inquiry so useless. The edifice itself could not
possibly be built in these times; first because we have no artificers
capable of rearing such a pile, and next because we have not among us
any one capable of conceiving it, or drawing the design of it; nay, we
have none who could execute the carved stone-work.

I do not say this with humility, but with satisfaction; for, if we
contemplate the building, we must acknowledge that, though it is, as I
have said, the Glory of the City, and though it is vast in proportions,
imposing by its grandeur, and splendid in its work, yet most of it is
perfectly useless. What need of the tall columns to support a roof
which might very well have been one-fourth the present height? Why
build the Tower at all? What is the good of the carved work? We of
the New Era build in brick, which is fire-proof; we put up structures
which are no larger than are wanted; we waste no labor, because we
grudge the time which must be spent in necessary work, over things
unnecessary. Besides, we are no longer tortured by the feverish anxiety
to do something--anything--by which we may be remembered when the
short span of life is past. Death to us is a thing which may happen by
accident, but not from old age or by disease. Why should men toil and
trouble in order to be remembered? All things are equal: why should one
man try to do something better than another--or what another cannot
do--or what is useless when it is done? Sculptures, pictures, Art of
any kind, will not add a single ear of corn to the general stock, or
a single glass of wine, or a yard of flannel. Therefore, we need not
regret the decay of Art.

As everybody knows, however, the HOUSE is the chief Laboratory
of the whole country. It is here that the Great Secret is preserved; it
is known to the Arch Physician and to his Suffragan alone. No other man
in the country knows by what process is compounded that potent liquid
which arrests decay and prolongs life, apparently without any bound or
limit. I say without any bound or limit. There certainly are croakers,
who maintain that at some future time--it may be this very year, it may
be a thousand years hence--the compound will lose its power, and so
we--all of us, even the College--must then inevitably begin to decay,
and after a few short years perish and sink into the silent grave. The
very thought causes a horror too dreadful for words; the limbs tremble,
the teeth chatter. But others declare that there is no fear whatever of
this result, and that the only dread is lest the whole College should
suddenly be struck by lightning, and so the Secret be lost. For though
none other than the Arch Physician and his Suffragan know the Secret,
the whole Society--the Fellows or Assistant Physicians--know in what
strong place the Secret is kept in writing, just as it was communicated
by the Discoverer. The Fellows of the College all assist in the
production of this precious liquid, which is made only in the HOUSE
OF LIFE. But none of them know whether they are working for the
great Arcanum itself, or on some of the many experiments conducted
for the Arch Physician. Even if one guessed, he would not dare to
communicate his suspicions even to a Brother-Fellow, being forbidden,
under the most awful of all penalties, that of Death itself, to divulge
the experiments and processes that he is ordered to carry out.

It is needless to say that if we are proud of the HOUSE, we
are equally proud of the City. There was formerly an old Canterbury,
of which pictures exist in the Library. The streets of that town
were narrow and winding; the houses were irregular in height, size,
and style. There were close courts, not six feet broad, in which no
air could circulate, and where fevers and other disorders were bred.
Some houses, again, stood in stately gardens, while others had none
at all; and the owners of the gardens kept them closed. But we can
easily understand what might have happened when private property was
recognized, and laws protected the so-called rights of owners. Now that
there is no property, there are no laws. There are also no crimes,
because there is no incentive to jealousy, rapine, or double-dealing.
Where there is no crime, there is that condition of Innocence which our
ancestors so eagerly desired, and sought by means which were perfectly
certain to fail.

How different is the Canterbury of the present! First, like all modern
towns, it is limited in size; there are in it twenty-four thousand
inhabitants, neither more nor less. Round its great central Square or
Garden are the public buildings. The streets, which branch off at
right angles, are all of the same width, the same length, and the same
appearance. They are planted with trees. The houses are built of red
brick, each house containing four rooms on the ground-floor--namely,
two on either side the door--and four on the first floor, with a
bath-room. The rooms are vaulted with brick, so that there is no fear
of fire. Every room has its own occupant; and as all the rooms are of
the same size, and are all furnished in the same way, with the same
regard to comfort and warmth, there is really no ground for complaint
or jealousies. The occupants also, who have the same meals in the same
Hall every day, cannot complain of inequalities, any more than they
can accuse each other of gluttonous living. In the matter of clothes,
again, it was at first expected that the grave difficulties with the
women as to uniformity of fashion and of material would continue to
trouble us; but with the decay of those emotions which formerly caused
so much trouble--since the men have ceased to court the women, and
the women have ceased to desire men's admiration--there has been no
opposition. All of them now are clad alike; gray is found the most
convenient color, soft beige the most convenient material.

The same beautiful equality rules the hours and methods of work. Five
hours a day are found ample, and everybody takes his time at every
kind of work, the men's work being kept separate from that given to
the women. I confess that the work is not performed with as much zeal
as one could wish; but think of the old times, when one had to work
eight, ten, and even eighteen hours a day in order to earn a poor and
miserable subsistence! What zeal could they have put into their work?
How different is this glorious equality in all things from the ancient
anomalies and injustices of class and rank, wealth and poverty! Why,
formerly, the chief pursuit of man was the pursuit of money. And now
there is no money at all, and our wealth lies in our barns and garners.

I must be forgiven if I dwell upon these contrasts. The history which
has to be told--how an attempt was actually made to destroy this Eden,
and to substitute in its place the old condition of things--fills me
with such indignation that I am constrained to speak.

Consider, for one other thing, the former condition of the world. It
was filled with diseases. People were not in any way protected. They
were allowed to live as they pleased. Consequently, they all committed
excesses and all contracted disease. Some drank too much, some ate too
much, some took no exercise, some took too little, some lay in bed too
long, some went to bed too late, some suffered themselves to fall into
violent rages, into remorse, into despair; some loved inordinately;
thousands worked too hard. All ran after Jack-o'-Lanterns continually;
for, before one there was dangled the hope of promotion, before another
that of glory, before another that of distinction, fame, or praise;
before another that of wealth, before another the chance of retiring
to rest and meditate during the brief remainder of his life--miserably
short even in its whole length. Then diseases fell upon them, and they
died.

We have now prevented all new diseases, though we cannot wholly cure
those which have so long existed. Rheumatism, gout, fevers, arise no
more, though of gout and other maladies there are hereditary cases. And
since there are no longer any old men among us, there are none of the
maladies to which old age is liable. No more pain, no more suffering,
no more anxiety, no more Death (except by accident) in the world. Yet
some of them would return to the old miseries; and for what?--for
what? You shall hear.

       *       *       *       *       *

When the Chimes began, the people turned their faces with one consent
towards the Public Hall, and a smile of satisfaction spread over all
their faces. They were going to Supper--the principal event of the
day. At the same moment a Procession issued from the iron gates of
the College. First marched our Warder, or Porter, John Lax, bearing
a halberd; next came an Assistant, carrying a cushion, on which were
the Keys of Gold, symbolical of the Gate of Life; then came another,
bearing our banner, with the Labarum or symbol of Life: the Assistants
followed, in ancient garb of cap and gown; then came the twelve Fellows
or Physicians of the College, in scarlet gowns and flat fur-lined
caps; after them, I myself--Samuel Grout, M.D., Suffragan--followed.
Last, there marched the first Person in the Realm--none other than the
Arch Physician Himself, Dr. Henry Linister, in lawn sleeves, a black
silk gown, and a scarlet hood. Four Beadles closed the Procession;
for, with us, the only deviation from equality absolute is made in the
case of the College. We are a Caste apart; we keep mankind alive and
free from pain. This is our work; this occupies all our thoughts. We
are, therefore, held in honor, and excused the ordinary work which the
others must daily perform. And behold the difference between ancient
and modern times! For, formerly, those who were held in honor and
had high office in this always sacred HOUSE were aged and
white-haired men who arrived at this distinction but a year or two
before they had to die. But we of the Holy College are as stalwart, as
strong, and as young as any man in the Hall. And so have we been for
hundreds of years, and so we mean to continue.

In the Public Hall, we take our meals apart in our own Hall; yet
the food is the same for all. Life is the common possession; it is
maintained for all by the same process--here must be no difference. Let
all, therefore, eat and drink alike.

When I consider, I repeat, the universal happiness, I am carried away,
first, with a burning indignation that any should be so mad as to mar
this happiness. They have failed; but they cost us, as you shall hear,
much trouble, and caused the lamentable death of a most zealous and
able officer.

Among the last to enter the gates were the girl Christine and her
grandfather, who walked slowly, coughing all the way.

"Come, grandad," she said, as we passed her, "take my arm. You will be
better after your dinner. Lean on me."

There was in her face so remarkable a light that I wonder now that no
suspicion or distrust possessed us. I call it light, for I can compare
it to nothing else. The easy, comfortable life our people led, and the
absence of all exciting work, the decay of reading, and the abandonment
of art, had left their faces placid to look upon, but dull. They were
certainly dull. They moved heavily; if they lifted their eyes, they
wanted the light that flashed from Christine's. It was a childish face
still--full of softness. No one would ever believe that a creature so
slight in form, so gentle to look upon, whose eyes were so soft, whose
cheeks were like the untouched bloom of a ripe peach, whose half-parted
lips were so rosy, was already harboring thoughts so abominable and
already conceiving an enterprise so wicked.

We do not suspect, in this our new World. As we have no property to
defend, no one is a thief; as everybody has as much of everything as
he wants, no one tries to get more; we fear not Death, and therefore
need no religion; we have no private ambitions to gratify, and no
private ends to attain; therefore we have long since ceased to be
suspicious. Least of all should we have been suspicious of Christine.
Why, but a year or two ago she was a little newly born babe, whom the
Holy College crowded to see as a new thing. And yet, was it possible
that one so young should be so corrupt?

"Suffragan," said the Arch Physician to me at supper, "I begin to think
that your Triumph of Science must be really complete."

"Why, Physician?"

"Because, day after day, that child leads the old man by the hand,
places him in his seat, and ministers, after the old, forgotten
fashion, to his slightest wants, and no one pays her the slightest
heed."

"Why should they?"

"A child--a beautiful child! A feeble old man! One who ministers to
another. Suffragan, the Past is indeed far, far away; but I knew not
until now that it was so utterly lost. Childhood and Age and the
offices of Love! And these things are wholly unheeded. Grout, you are
indeed a great man!"

He spoke in the mocking tone which was usual with him, so that we
never knew exactly whether he was in earnest or not; but I think that
on this occasion he was in earnest. No one but a very great man--none
smaller than Samuel Grout--myself--could have accomplished this miracle
upon the minds of the People. They did not minister one to the other.
Why should they? Everybody could eat his own ration without any help.
Offices of Love? These to pass unheeded? What did the Arch Physician
mean?




CHAPTER II.

GROUT, SUFFRAGAN.


It always pleases me, from my place at the College table, which is
raised two feet above the rest, to contemplate the multitude whom it
is our duty and our pleasure to keep in contentment and in health. It
is a daily joy to watch them flocking, as you have seen them flock, to
their meals. The heart glows to think of what we have done. I see the
faces of all light up with satisfaction at the prospect of the food;
it is the only thing that moves them. Yes, we have reduced life to
its simplest form. Here is true happiness. Nothing to hope, nothing
to fear--except accident; a little work for the common preservation;
a body of wise men always devising measures for the common good; food
plentiful and varied; gardens for repose and recreation, both summer
and winter; warmth, shelter, and the entire absence of all emotions.
Why, the very faces of the People are growing all alike--one face for
the men, and another for the women; perhaps in the far-off future the
face of the man will approach nearer and nearer to that of the woman,
and so all will be at last exactly alike, and the individual will
exist, indeed, no more. Then there will be, from first to last, among
the whole multitude neither distinction nor difference.

It is a face which fills one with contentment, though it will be many
centuries before it approaches completeness. It is a smooth face, there
are no lines in it; it is a grave face, the lips seldom smile, and
never laugh; the eyes are heavy, and move slowly; there has already
been achieved, though the change has been very gradual, the complete
banishment of that expression which has been preserved in every one of
the ancient portraits, which may be usefully studied for purposes of
contrast. Whatever the emotion attempted to be portrayed, and even when
the face was supposed to be at rest, there was always behind, visible
to the eye, an expression of anxiety or eagerness. Some kind of pain
always lies upon those old faces, even upon the youngest. How could it
be otherwise? On the morrow they would be dead. They had to crowd into
a few days whatever they could grasp of life.

As I sit there and watch our People at dinner, I see with satisfaction
that the old pain has gone out of their faces. They have lived so
long that they have forgotten Death. They live so easily that they
are contented with life: we have reduced existence to the simplest.
They eat and drink--it is their only pleasure; they work--it is a
necessity for health and existence--but their work takes them no longer
than till noontide; they lie in the sun, they sit in the shade, they
sleep. If they had once any knowledge, it is now forgotten; their old
ambitions, their old desires, all are forgotten. They sleep and eat,
they work and rest. To rest and to eat are pleasures which they never
desire to end. To live forever, to eat and drink forever--this is now
their only hope. And this has been accomplished for them by the Holy
College. Science has justified herself--this is the outcome of man's
long search for generations into the secrets of Nature. We, who have
carried on this search, have at length succeeded in stripping humanity
of all those things which formerly made existence intolerable to him.
He lives, he eats, he sleeps. Perhaps--I know not, but of this we
sometimes talk in the College--I say, perhaps--we may succeed in making
some kind of artificial food, as we compound the great Arcanum, with
simple ingredients and without labor. We may also extend the duration
of sleep; we may thus still further simplify existence. Man in the
end--as I propose to make and mould the People--will sleep until Nature
calls upon him to awake and eat. He will then eat, drink, and sleep
again, while the years roll by. He will lie heedless of all; he will
be heedless of the seasons, heedless of the centuries. Time will have
no meaning for him--a breathing, living, inarticulate mass will be all
that is left of the active, eager, chattering Man of the Past.

This may be done in the future, when yonder laboratory, which we call
the House of Life, shall yield the secrets of Nature deeper and deeper
still. At present we have arrived at this point--the chief pleasure
of life is to eat and to drink. We have taught the People so much,
of all the tastes which formerly gratified man this alone remains.
We provide them daily with a sufficiency and variety of food; there
are so many kinds of food, and the combinations are so endless, that
practically the choice of our cooks is unlimited. Good food, varied
food, well-cooked food, with drink also varied and pure, and the best
that can be made, make our public meals a daily joy. We have learned
to make all kinds of wine from the grapes in our hot-houses. It is so
abundant that every day, all the year round, the People may call for
a ration of what they please. We make also beer of every kind, cider,
perry, and mead. The gratification of the sense of taste helps to
remove the incentive to restlessness or discontent. The minds of most
are occupied by no other thought than that of the last feast and the
next; if they were to revolt, where would they find their next meal?
At the outset we had, I confess, grave difficulties. There was not in
existence any Holy College. We drifted without object or purpose. For a
long time the old ambitions remained; the old passions were continued;
the old ideas of private property prevailed; the old inequalities were
kept up. Presently there arose from those who had no property the
demand for a more equal share. The cry was fiercely resisted; then
there followed civil war for a space, till both sides were horrified
by the bloodshed that followed. Time also was on the side of them who
rebelled. I was one, because at the time when the whole nation was
admitted to a participation in the great Arcanum, I was myself a young
man of nineteen, employed as a washer of bottles in Dr. Linister's
laboratory, and therefore, according to the ideas of the time, a very
humble person. Time helped us in an unexpected way. Property was in the
hands of single individuals. Formerly they died and were succeeded by
their sons; now the sons grew tired of waiting. How much longer were
their fathers, who grew no older, to keep all the wealth to themselves?
Therefore, the civil war having come to an end, with no result except a
barren peace, the revolutionary party was presently joined by all but
the holders of property, and the State took over to itself the whole
wealth--that is to say, the whole land; there is no other wealth. Since
that time there has been no private property; for since it was clearly
unjust to take away from the father in order to give it to the son,
with no limitation as to the time of enjoyment, everything followed
the land--great houses, which were allowed to fall into ruin; pictures
and works of art, libraries, jewels, which are in Museums; and money,
which, however, ceased to be of value as soon as there was nothing
which could be bought.

As for me, I was so fortunate as to perceive--Dr. Linister daily
impressed it upon me--that of all occupations, that of Physicist would
very quickly become the most important. I therefore remained in my
employment, worked, read, experimented, and learned all that my master
had to teach me. The other professions, indeed, fell into decay more
speedily than some of us expected. There could be no more lawyers when
there was no more property. Even libel, which was formerly the cause
of many actions, became harmless when a man could not be injured; and,
besides, it is impossible to libel any man when there are no longer
any rules of conduct except the one duty of work, which is done in the
eyes of all and cannot be shirked. And how could Religion survive the
removal of Death to some possible remote future? They tried, it is
true, to keep up the pretence of it, and many, especially women, clung
to the old forms of faith for I know not how long. With the great mass,
religion ceased to have any influence as soon as life was assured. As
for Art, Learning, Science--other than that of Physics, Biology, and
Medicine--all gradually decayed and died away. And the old foolish
pursuit of Literature, which once occupied so many, and was even held
in a kind of honor--the writing of histories, poems, dramas, novels,
essays on human life--this also decayed and died, because men ceased to
be anxious about their past or their future, and were at last contented
to dwell in the present.

Another and a most important change which may be noted was the gradual
decline and disappearance of the passion called Love. This was once a
curious and inexplicable yearning--so much is certain--of two young
people towards each other, so that they were never content unless they
were together, and longed to live apart from the rest of the world,
each trying to make the other happier. At least, this is as I read
history. For my own part, as I was constantly occupied with Science, I
never felt this passion; or if I did, then I have quite forgotten it.
Now, at the outset people who were in love rejoiced beyond measure that
their happiness would last so long. They began, so long as the words
had any meaning, to call each other Angels, Goddesses, Divinely Fair,
possessed of every perfect gift, with other extravagancies, at the mere
recollection of which we should now blush. Presently they grew tired
of each other; they no longer lived apart from the rest of the world.
They separated; or, if they continued to walk together, it was from
force of habit. Some still continue thus to sit side by side. No new
connections were formed. People ceased desiring to make others happy,
because the State began to provide for everybody's happiness. The whole
essence of the old society was a fight. Everybody fought for existence.
Everybody trampled on the weaker. If a man loved a woman, he fought for
her as well as for himself. Love? Why, when the true principle of life
is recognized--the right of every individual to his or her share--and
that an equal share in everything--and when the continuance of life
is assured--what room is there for love? The very fact of the public
life--the constant companionship, the open mingling of women with men,
and this for year after year--the same women with the same men--has
destroyed the mystery which formerly hung about womanhood, and was in
itself the principal cause of love.

It is gone, therefore, and with it the most disturbing element of life.
Without love, without ambition, without suffering, without religion,
without quarrelling, without private rights, without rank or class,
life is calm, gentle, undisturbed. Therefore, they all sit down to
dinner in peace and contentment, every man's mind intent upon nothing
but the bill of fare.

This evening, directed by the observation of the Arch Physician, I
turned my eyes upon the girl Christine, who sat beside her grandfather.
I observed, first--but the fact inspired me with no suspicion--that she
was no longer a child, but a woman grown; and I began to wonder when
she would come with the rest for the Arcanum. Most women, when births
were common among us, used to come at about five-and-twenty; that is
to say, in the first year or two of full womanhood, before their worst
enemies--where there were two women, in the old days, there were two
enemies--could say that they had begun to fall off. If you look round
our table, you will see very few women older than twenty-four, and very
few men older than thirty. There were many women at this table who
might, perhaps, have been called beautiful in the old times; though
now the men had ceased to think of beauty, and the women had ceased to
desire admiration. Yet, if regular features, large eyes, small mouths,
a great quantity of hair, and a rounded figure are beautiful, then
there were many at the table who might have been called beautiful. But
the girl Christine--I observed the fact with scientific interest--was
so different from the other women that she seemed another kind of
creature.

Her eyes were soft; there is no scientific term to express this
softness of youth--one observes it especially in the young of the
_cervus_ kind. There was also a curious softness on her cheek, as
if something would be rubbed away if one touched it. And her voice
differed from that of her elder sisters; it was curiously gentle, and
full of that quality which may be remarked in the wood-dove when she
pairs in spring. They used to call it tenderness; but, since the thing
itself disappeared, the word has naturally fallen out of use.

Now, I might have observed with suspicion, whereas I only remarked
it as something strange, that the company among which Christine and
the old man sat were curiously stirred and uneasy. They were disturbed
out of their habitual tranquillity because the girl was discoursing to
them. She was telling them what she had learned about the Past.

"Oh," I heard her say, "it was a beautiful time! Why did they ever
suffer it to perish? Do you mean that you actually remember nothing of
it?"

They looked at each other sheepishly.

"There were soldiers--men were soldiers; they went out to fight, with
bands of music and the shouts of the people. There were whole armies
of soldiers--thousands of them. They dressed in beautiful glittering
clothes. Do you forget that?"

One of the men murmured, hazily, that there were soldiers.

"And there were sailors, who went upon the sea in great ships. Jack
Carera"--she turned to one of them--"you are a sailor, too. You ought
to remember."

"I remember the sailors very well indeed," said this young man, readily.

I always had my doubts about the wisdom of admitting our sailors among
the People. We have a few ships for the carriage of those things which
as yet we have not succeeded in growing for ourselves; these are manned
by a few hundred sailors who long ago volunteered, and have gone on
ever since. They are a brave race, ready to face the most terrible
dangers of tempest and shipwreck; but they are also a dangerous,
restless, talkative, questioning tribe. They have, in fact, preserved
almost as much independence as the College itself. They are now
confined to their own port of Sheerness.

Then the girl began to tell some pestilent story of love and shipwreck
and rescue; and at hearing it some of them looked puzzled and some
pained; but the sailor listened with all his ears.

"Where did you get that from, Christine?"

"Where I get everything--from the old Library. Come and read it in the
book, Jack."

"I am not much hand at reading. But some day, perhaps after next
voyage, Christine."

The girl poured out a glass of claret for the old man. Then she went on
telling them stories; but most of her neighbors seemed neither to hear
nor to comprehend. Only the sailor-man listened and nodded. Then she
laughed out loud.

At this sound, so strange, so unexpected, everybody within hearing
jumped. Her table was in the Hall next to our own, so that we heard the
laugh quite plainly.

The Arch Physician looked round approvingly.

"How many years since we heard a good, honest _young_ laugh, Suffragan?
Give us more children, and soften our hearts for us. But, no; the
heart you want is the hard, crusted, selfish heart. See! No one asks
why she laughed. They are all eating again now, just as if nothing had
happened. Happy, enviable People!"

Presently he turned to me and remarked, in his lofty manner, as if he
was above all the world,

"You cannot explain, Suffragan, why, at an unexpected touch, a sound,
a voice, a trifle, the memory may be suddenly awakened to things long,
long past and forgotten. Do you know what that laugh caused me to
remember? I cannot explain why, nor can you. It recalled the evening of
the Great Discovery--not the Discovery itself, but quite another thing.
I went there more to meet a girl than to hear what the German had to
say. As to that I expected very little. To meet that girl seemed of
far more importance. I meant to make love to her--love, Suffragan--a
thing which you can never understand--real, genuine love! I meant to
marry her. Well, I did meet her; and I arranged for a convenient place
where we could meet again after the Lecture. Then came the Discovery;
and I was carried away, body and soul, and forgot the girl and love and
everything in the stupefaction of this most wonderful Discovery, of
which we have made, between us, such admirable use."

You never knew whether the Arch Physician was in earnest or not. Truly,
we had made a most beautiful use of the Discovery; but it was not in
the way that Dr. Linister would have chosen.

"All this remembered just because a girl laughed! Suffragan, Science
cannot explain all."

I shall never pretend to deny that Dr. Linister's powers as a
physicist were of the first order, nor that his Discoveries warranted
his election to the Headship of the College. Yet, something was
due, perhaps, to his tall and commanding figure, and to the look of
authority which reigned naturally on his face, and to the way in
which he always stepped into the first rank. He was always the Chief,
long before the College of Physicians assumed the whole authority, in
everything that he joined. He opposed the extinction of property, and
would have had everybody win what he could, and keep it as long as he
would; he opposed the Massacre of the Old; he was opposed, in short, to
the majority of the College. Yet he was our Chief. His voice was clear,
and what he said always produced its effect, though it did not upset my
solid majority, or thwart the Grand Advance of the Triumph of Science.
As for me, my position has been won by sheer work and merit. My figure
is not commanding; I am short-sighted and dark-visaged; my voice is
rough; and as for manners, I have nothing to do with them. But in
Science there is but one second to Linister--and that is Grout.

When the supper came to an end, we rose and marched back to the
College in the same state and order with which we had arrived. As
for the people, some of them went out into the Garden; some remained
in the Hall. It was then nine o'clock, and twilight. Some went
straight to their own rooms, where they would smoke tobacco--an old
habit allowed by the College on account of its soothing and sedative
influence--before going to bed. By ten o'clock everybody would be in
bed and asleep. What more beautiful proof of the advance of Science
than the fact that the whole of the twenty-four thousand people who
formed the population of Canterbury dropped off to sleep the moment
they laid their heads upon the pillow? This it is to have learned
the proper quantities and kinds of food; the proper amount of bodily
exercise and work; and the complete subjugation of all the ancient
forces of unrest and disquiet. To be sure, we were all, with one or
two exceptions, in the very prime and flower of early manhood and
womanhood. It would be hard, indeed, if a young man of thirty should
not sleep well.

I was presently joined in the garden of the College by the Arch
Physician.

"Grout," he said, "let us sit and talk. My mind is disturbed. It is
always disturbed when the memory of the Past is forced upon me."

"The Evil Past," I said.

"If you please--the Evil Past. The question is, whether it was not
infinitely more tolerable for mankind than the Evil Present?"

We argued out the point; but it was one on which we could never agree,
for he remained saturated with the old ideas of private property and
individualism. He maintained that there are no Rights of Man at all,
except his Right to what he can get and what he can keep. He even went
so far as to say that the true use of the Great Discovery should have
been to cause the incompetent, the idle, the hereditarily corrupt, and
the vicious to die painlessly.

"As to those who were left," he said, "I would have taught them the
selfishness of staying too long. When they had taken time for work
and play and society and love, they should have been exhorted to go
away of their own accord, and to make room for their children. Then we
should have had always the due succession of father and son, mother and
daughter; always age and manhood and childhood; and always the world
advancing by the efforts of those who would have time to work for an
appreciable period. Instead, we have"--he waved his hand.

I was going to reply, when suddenly a voice light, clear, and sweet
broke upon our astonished ears. 'Twas the voice of a woman, and she was
singing. At first I hardly listened, because I knew that it could be
none other than the child Christine, whom, indeed, I had often heard
singing. It is natural, I believe, for children to sing. But the Arch
Physician listened, first with wonder, and then with every sign of
amazement. How could he be concerned by the voice of a child singing
silly verses? Then I heard the last lines of her song, which she sang,
I admit, with great vigor:

  "Oh, Love is worth the whole broad earth;
  Oh, Love is worth the whole broad earth;
        Give that, you give us all!"

"Grout," cried the Arch Physician, in tones of the deepest agitation,
"I choke--I am stifled. Listen! They are words that I wrote--I
myself wrote--with my own hand--long, long ago in the Past. I wrote
them for a girl--the girl I told you of at dinner. I loved her. I
thought never again to feel as I felt then. Yet the memory of that
feeling has come back to me. Is it possible? Can some things never
die? Can we administer no drug that will destroy memory? For the earth
reeled beneath my feet again, and my senses reeled, and I would once
more--yes, I would once more have given all the world--yes, life--even
life--only to call that woman mine for a year--a month--a day--an hour!"

The Arch Physician made this astonishing confession in a broken
and agitated voice. Then he rushed away, and left me alone in the
summer-house.

The singer could certainly have been none other than the girl
Christine. How should she get hold of Dr. Linister's love-song?
Strange! She had disturbed our peace at supper by laughing, and she had
agitated the Arch Physician himself to such a degree as I should have
believed impossible by singing a foolish old song. When I went to bed
there came into my mind some of the old idle talk about witches, and
I even dreamed that we were burning a witch who was filling our minds
with disturbing thoughts.




CHAPTER III.

CHRISTINE AT HOME.


When the girl Christine walked through the loitering crowd outside the
Hall, some of the people looked after her with wondering eyes.

"Strange!" said a woman. "She laughed! She laughed!"

"Ay," said another, "we have forgotten how to laugh. But we used to
laugh before"--she broke off with a sigh.

"And she sings," said a third. "I have heard her sing like a lark in
the Museum."

"Once," said the first woman, "we used to sing as well as laugh. I
remember, we used to sing. She makes us remember the old days."

"The bad old days"--it was one of the Assistant Physicians who
admonished her--"the times when nothing was certain, not even life,
from day to day. It should bring you increased happiness to think
sometimes of those old times."

The first woman who had spoken was one whom men would have called
beautiful in those old times, when their heads were turned by such a
thing as a woman's face. She was pale of cheek and had black eyes,
which, in those days of passion and jealousy, might have flashed like
lightning. Now they were dull. She was shapely of limb and figure too,
with an ample cheek and a full mouth. Formerly, in the days of love and
rage, those limbs would have been lithe and active; now they were heavy
and slow. Heaviness of movement and of eyes sensibly grows upon our
people. I welcome every indication of advance towards the Perfect Type
of Humanity which will do nothing but lie down, breathe, eat, and sleep.

"Yes," she replied with a deep sigh. "Nothing was certain. The bad old
times, when people died. But there was love, and we danced and sung and
laughed." She sighed again, and walked away alone, slowly, hanging her
head.

The girl passed through them, leading the old man by the hand.

I know very well, now, that we ought to have been suspicious. What
meant the gleam and sparkle of her eyes, when all other eyes were
dull? What meant the parting of her lips and the smile which always
lay upon them, when no one else smiled at all? Why did she carry her
head erect, when the rest walked with hanging heads? Why, again, did
she sing, when no one else sang? Why did she move as if her limbs were
on springs, when all the rest went slowly and heavily? These signs
meant mischief. I took them for the natural accompaniments of youth.
They meant more than youth: they meant dangerous curiosity; they
meant--presently--Purpose. How should one of the People dare to have a
Purpose unknown to the Sacred College? You shall hear.

All that followed was, in fact, due to our own blindness. We should
long before have shut up every avenue which might lead the curious to
the study of the Past; we should have closed the Museum and the Library
altogether. We did not, because we lived in the supposition that the
more the old times were investigated, the more the people would be
satisfied with the Present. When, indeed, one looks at the pictures
of battle, murder, cruelty, and all kinds of passion; when one reads
the old books, full of foolishness which can only be excused on the
plea of a life too short to have a right comprehension of anything, it
is amazing that the scene does not strike the observer with a kind of
horror. When, which is seldom, I carry my own memory back to the old
times and see myself before I went to the Laboratory, boy-of-all-work
to a Brewery, ordered here and there, working all day long with no
other prospect than to be a servant for a short span of life and then
to die; when I remember the people among whom I lived, poor, starving,
dependent from day to day on the chance of work, or, at best, from
week to week; when I think of the misery from which these poor people
have been rescued, I cannot find within me a spark of sympathy for the
misguided wretches who voluntarily exchanged their calm and happy
Present for the tumult and anxiety of the Past. However, we are not all
reasonable, as you shall hear.

It was already twilight outside, and in the Museum there was only
light enough to see that a few persons were assembled in the Great
Hall. Christine placed her grandfather in a high-backed wooden
chair, in which he spent most of his time, clutching at the arms and
fighting with his asthma. Then she turned up the electric light. It
showed a large, rather lofty room, oblong in shape. Old arms were
arranged round the walls; great glass-cases stood about, filled with a
collection of all kinds of things preserved from the old times. There
were illustrations of their arts, now entirely useless: such as the
jewels they wore, set in bracelets and necklaces; their gloves, fans,
rings, umbrellas, pictures, and statuary. Then there were cases filled
with the old implements of writing--paper, inkstands, pens, and so
forth--the people have long since left off writing; there were boxes
full of coins with which they bought things, and for which they sold
their freedom; there were things with which they played games--many
of them dangerous ones--and whiled away the tedium of their short
lives; there were models of the ships in which they went to sea, also
models of all kinds of engines and machines which slaves--they were
nearly all slaves--made for the purpose of getting more money for their
masters; there were also crowns, coronets, and mitres, which formerly
belonged to people who possessed what they called rank; there were the
praying-books which were formerly used every day in great buildings
like the House of Life; there were specimens of legal documents on
parchment, by the drawing up of which, when law existed, a great many
people procured a contemptible existence; there were also models, with
figures of the people in them, of Parliament Houses, Churches, and
Courts of Justice; there were life-size models of soldiers in uniform,
when men were of understanding so contemptible as to be tempted to
risk life--even life--in exchange for a gold-laced coat! But then our
ancestors were indescribably foolish. There were musical instruments of
all kinds--I have always been glad that music fell so soon into disuse.
It is impossible to cultivate contentment while music is practised.
Besides the ordinary weapons--sword, pike, and javelin--there were all
kinds of horrible inventions, such as vast cannons, torpedo boats,
dynamite shells, and so forth, for the destruction of towns, ships, and
armor. It is a great and splendid Collection, but it ought to have been
long, long before transferred to the custody of the Holy College.

The girl looked inquiringly at her visitors, counting them all. There
were ten--namely, five men and five women. Like all the people, they
were young--the men about thirty, the women about twenty-two or
twenty-three. The men were dressed in their blue flannels, with a
flat cap of the same material; the women in their gray beige, short
frock, the flat gray cap under which their hair was gathered, gray
stockings, and heavy shoes. The dress was, in fact, invented by myself
for both sexes. It has many advantages. First, there is always plenty
of the stuff to be had; next, both flannel and beige are soft, warm,
and healthy textures--with such a dress there is no possibility of
distinction or of superiority; and, lastly, with such a dress the women
have lost all power of setting forth their attractions so as to charm
the men with new fashions, crafty subtleties of dress, provocations
of the troublesome passion of love in the shape of jewels, ribbons,
gloves, and the like. No one wears gloves: all the women's hands are
hard; and although they are still young and their faces are unchanged,
their eyes are dull and hard. I am pleased to think that there is no
more foolishness of love among us.

The people were standing or sitting about, not together, but
separately--each by himself or herself. This tendency to solitary
habits is a most healthy indication of the advance of humanity.
Self-preservation is the first Law--separate and solitary existence is
the last condition--of mankind. They were silent and regardless of each
other. Their attitude showed the listlessness of their minds.

"I am glad you are here," said Christine. "You promised you would not
fail me. And yet, though you promised, I feared that at the last moment
you might change your mind. I was afraid that you would rather not be
disturbed in the even current of your thoughts."

"Why disturb our minds?" asked one, a woman. "We were at peace before
you began to talk of the Past. We had almost forgotten it. And it is so
long ago"--her voice sank to a murmur--"so long ago."

They all echoed,

"It is so long ago--so long ago!"

"Oh," cried the girl, "you call this to be at peace! Why, if you were
so many stones in the garden you could not be more truly at peace. To
work, to rest, to eat, to sleep--you call that Life! And yet you can
remember--if you please--the time when you were full of activity and
hope."

"If to remember is to regret, why should we invite the pain of regret?
We cannot have the old life except with the old conditions; the short
life and the--"

"If I could remember--if I had ever belonged to the Past," the girl
interrupted, quickly; "oh, I would remember every moment--I would
live every day of the old life over and over again. But I can do
nothing--nothing--but read of the splendid Past and look forward to
such a future as your own. Alas! why was I born at all, since I was
born into such a world as this? Why was I called into existence when
all the things of which I read every day have passed away? And what
remains in their place?"

"We have Life," said one of the men, but not confidently.

"Life! Yes--and what a life! Oh, what a life! Well, we waste time.
Listen now--and if you can, for once forget the present and recall the
past. Do not stay to think how great a gulf lies between; do not count
the years--indeed, you cannot. Whether they are one hundred or five
hundred they do not know, even at the Holy College itself. I am sure it
will make you happier--'twill console and comfort you--in this our life
of desperate monotony, only to remember--to recall--how you used to
live."

They answered with a look of blank bewilderment.

"It is so long ago--so long ago," said one of them again.

"Look around you. Here are all the things that used to be your own. Let
them help you to remember. Here are the arms that the men carried when
they went out to fight; here are the jewels that the women wore. Think
of your dress in the days when you were allowed to dress, and we did
not all wear frocks of gray beige, as if all women were exactly alike.
Will that not help?"

They looked about them helplessly. No, they did not yet remember; their
dull eyes were filled with a kind of anxious wonder, as might be seen
in one rudely awakened out of sleep. They looked at the things in the
great room, but that seemed to bring nothing back to their minds. The
Present was round them like a net which they could neither cut through
nor see through; it was a veil around them through which they could not
pass. It had been so long with them; it was so unchanging; for so long
they had had nothing to expect; for so long, therefore, they had not
cared to look back. The Holy College had produced, in fact, what it had
proposed and designed. The minds of the people had become quiescent.
And to think that so beautiful a state of things should be destroyed by
a girl--the only child in the Community!

"Will it help," said the girl, "if we turn down the light a little?
So. Now we are almost in darkness, but for the moonlight through the
window. In the old times, when you were children, I have read that
you loved to sit together and to tell stories. Let us tell each other
stories."

Nobody replied; but the young man called Jack took Christine's hand and
held it.

"Let us try," said the girl again. "I will tell you a story. Long ago
there were people called gentlefolk. Grandad here was a gentleman. I
have read about them in the old books. I wonder if any of you remember
those people. They were exempt from work; the lower sort worked for
them; they led a life of ease; they made their own work for themselves.
Some of the men fought for their country--it was in the old time,
you know, when men still fought; some worked for their country; some
worked for the welfare of those who worked for bread; some only amused
themselves; some were profligates, and did wicked things--"

She paused--no one responded.

"The women had no work to do at all. They only occupied themselves in
making everybody happy; they were treated with the greatest respect;
they were not allowed to do anything at all that could be done for
them; they played and sang; they painted and embroidered; they knew
foreign languages; they constantly inspired the men to do great things,
even if they should be killed."

Here all shuddered and trembled. Christine made haste to change the
subject.

"They wore beautiful dresses--think--dresses of silk and satin,
embroidered with gold, trimmed with lace; they had necklaces,
bracelets, and rings; their hands were white, and they wore long gloves
to their elbows; they dressed their hair as they pleased. Some wore
it long, like this." She pulled off her flat cap, and threw back her
long tresses, and quickly turned up the light. She was transformed!
The women started and gasped. "Take off your caps!" she ordered.
They obeyed, and at sight of the flowing locks that fell upon their
shoulders, curling, rippling, flowing, their eyes brightened, but only
for a moment.

"Yes," said the girl, "they wore their beautiful hair as they pleased.
Oh!"--she gathered in her hands the flowing tresses of one--"you have
such long and beautiful hair! It is a shame--it is a shame to hide it.
Think of the lovely dresses to match this beauty of the hair!"

"Oh," cried the women, "we remember the dresses. We remember them now.
Why make us remember them? It is so long ago--so long ago--and we can
never wear them any more."

"Nay; but you have the same beauty," said Christine. "That at least
remains. You have preserved your youth and your beauty."

"Of what good are our faces to us," said another woman, "with such a
dress as this? Men no longer look upon our beauty."

"Let us be," said the woman who had spoken first. "There can be no
change for us. Why disturb our minds? The Present is horrible. But we
have ceased to care much for anything: we do our day's work every
day--all the same hours of work; we wear the same dress--to every woman
the same dress; we eat and drink the same food--to every one the same;
we are happy because we have got all we can get, and we expect no more;
we never talk--why should we talk? When you laughed to-day it was like
an earthquake." Her words were strong, but her manner of speech was
a monotone. This way of speaking grows upon us; it is the easiest. I
watch the indications with interest. From rapid talk to slow talk; from
animated talk to monotony; the next step will be to silence absolute.
"There is no change for us," she repeated, "neither in summer nor in
winter. We have preserved our youth, but we have lost all the things
which the youthful used to desire. We thought to preserve our beauty;
what is the good of beauty with such a dress and such a life? Why
should we make ourselves miserable in remembering any of the things we
used to desire?"

"Oh," cried the girl, clasping her hands, "to me there is no pleasure
possible but in learning all about the Past. I read the old books, I
look at the old pictures, I play the old music, I sing the old songs;
but it is not enough. I know how you were dressed--not all alike in
gray beige frocks, but in lovely silk and beautiful embroidered stuffs.
I will show you presently how you dressed. I know how you danced and
played games and acted most beautiful plays, and I have read stories
about you; I know that you were always dissatisfied, and wanting
something or other. The stories are full of discontent; nobody ever
sits down satisfied except one pair. There is always one pair, and they
fall in Love--in Love," she repeated. "What is that, I wonder?" Then
she went on again: "They only want one thing then, and the story-books
are all about how they got it after wonderful adventures. There are no
adventures now. The books tell us all this, but I want more. I want to
know more: I want to see the old stories with my own eyes; I want to
see you in your old dresses, talking in your own old way. The books
cannot tell me how you talked and how you looked. I am sure it was not
as you talk now--because you never talk."

"There is no reason why we should talk. All the old desires have ceased
to be. We no longer want anything or expect anything."

"Come. I shall do my best to bring the Past back to you. First, I have
learned who you were. That is why I have called you together. In the
old times you all belonged to gentlefolk."

This announcement produced no effect at all. They listened with
lack-lustre looks. They had entirely forgotten that there were ever
such distinctions as gentle and simple.

"You will remember presently," said Christine, not discouraged. "I have
found out in the ancient Rolls your names and your families."

"Names and families," said one of the men, "are gone long ago.
Christine, what is the good of reviving the memory of things that can
never be restored?"

But the man named Jack Carera, the sailor of whom I have already
spoken, stepped forward. I have said that the sailors were a dangerous
class, on account of their independence and their good meaning.

"Tell us," he said, "about our families. Why, I, for one, have never
forgotten that I was once a gentleman. It is hard to tell now, because
they have made us all alike; but for many, many years--I know not how
many--we who had been gentlemen consorted together."

"You shall again," said Christine, "if you please. Listen, then. First,
my grandfather. He was called Sir Arthur Farrance, and he was called a
Baronet. To be a Baronet was, in those days, something greatly desired
by many people. A man, in the old books, was said to enjoy the title of
Baronet. But I know not why one man was so raised above another."

"Heugh! Heugh! Heugh!" coughed the old man. "I remember that. Why,
what is there to remember except the old times? I was a Baronet--the
fifth Baronet. My country place was in Sussex, and my town address was
White's and the Travellers'."

"Yes," Christine nodded. "My grandfather's memory is tenacious; he
forgets nothing of the things that happened when he was young. I
have learned a great deal from him. He seems to have known all your
grandmothers, for instance, and speaks of them as if he had loved them
all."

"I did--I did," said the old man. "I loved them every one."

The girl turned to the women before her--the dull-eyed, heavy-headed
women, all in the gray dresses exactly alike; but their gray flat caps
had been thrown off, and they looked disturbed, moved out of the common
languor.

"Now I will tell you who you were formerly. You"--she pointed to the
nearest--"were the Lady Mildred Carera, only daughter of the Earl of
Thordisá. Your father and mother survived the Discovery, but were
killed in the Great Massacre Year, when nearly all the old were put to
death. You were a great beauty in your time, and when the Discovery was
announced you were in your second season. People wondered who would
win you. But those who pretended to know talked of a young scientific
Professor."

The woman heard as if she was trying to understand a foreign language.
This was, in fact, a language without meaning to her. As yet she caught
nothing.

"You," said Christine, turning to the next, "were Dorothy Oliphant; you
were also young, beautiful, and an heiress; you, like Lady Mildred,
had all the men at your feet. I don't know what that means, but the
books say so. Then the Discovery came, and love-making, whatever that
was, seems to have gone out of fashion." The second woman heard this
information with lack-lustre eyes. What did it matter?

"You"--Christine turned to a third and to a fourth and fifth--"you were
Rosie Lorrayne; you, Adela Dupré; you, Susie Campbell. You were all in
Society; you were all young and beautiful and happy. Now for the men."
She turned to them. The sailor named Jack gazed upon her with eyes of
admiration. The other men, startled at first by the apparition of the
tresses, had relapsed into listlessness. They hardly looked up as she
addressed them.

First she pointed to the sailor.

"Your name--"

"I remember my name," he said. "I have not forgotten so much as
our friends. Sailors talk more with each other, and remember. I am
named John Carera, and I was formerly first-cousin to Lady Mildred.
Cousin"--he held out his hand--"have you forgotten your cousin? We used
to play together in the old times. You promised to marry me when you
should grow up."

Lady Mildred gave him her hand.

"It is so long ago--so long ago," she murmured; but her eyes were
troubled. She had begun to remember the things put away and forgotten
for so long.

"You"--Christine turned to another--"were Geoffrey Heron. You were
Captain in a Cavalry Regiment. You will remember that presently, and a
great deal more. You"--she turned to another--"were Laurence de Heyn,
and you were a young Lawyer, intending to be a Judge. You will remember
that, in time. You"--she turned to another--"were Jack Culliford; and
you were a Private Secretary, intending to go into Parliament, and
to rise perhaps to be Prime Minister. And you"--she turned to the
last--"were Arnold Buckland, already a Poet of Society. You will all
remember these things before long. Lastly, you all belonged to the
people who were born rich, and never used to have any care or anxiety
about their daily bread. Nor did you ever do any work, unless you
chose."

"It is so long ago," said Lady Mildred--her face was brighter
now--"that we have forgotten even that there ever were gentlefolk."

"It is not strange," said Christine, "that you should have forgotten
it. Why should you remember anything? We are only a herd, one with
another; one not greater, and one not less, than another. Now that
you know your names again and remember clearly, because I have
told you"--she repeated the information for fear they should again
forget--"who and what you were, each of you--you will go on to remember
more."

"Oh, what good? What good?" asked Lady Mildred.

"Because it will rouse you from your lethargy," said the girl,
impetuously. "Oh, you sit in silence day after day; you walk alone; you
ought to be together as you used to be, talking, playing. See! I have
read the books; your lives were full of excitement. It makes my heart
beat only to read how the men went out to fight, daring everything, for
the sake of the women they loved."

"The men love us no longer," said Lady Mildred.

"If the brave men fell--" But here all faces, except the sailor's,
turned pale, and they shuddered. Christine did not finish the sentence.
She, too, shuddered.

In the old times I remember how, being then errand-boy in the Brewery,
I used to listen, in the Whitechapel Road, to the men who, every Sunday
morning and evening, used to tell us that religion was a mockery and a
snare, invented by the so-called priests for their own selfish ends, so
that they might be kept in sloth and at their ease. There was no need
now for these orators. The old religion was clean dead and forgotten.
When men ceased to expect Death, what need was there to keep up any
interest in the future world, if there should be any? But the bare
mention of the dreadful thing is still enough to make all cheeks turn
pale. Every year, the farther off Death recedes, the more terrible he
looks. Therefore they all shuddered.

Among the musical instruments in the Museum there stands one, a square
wooden box on legs, with wires inside it. There are many other musical
instruments, the use of all (as I thought) forgotten. Very soon after
the Great Discovery people ceased to care for music. For my own part,
I have never been able to understand how the touching of chords and
the striking of hammers on wires can produce any effect at all upon
the mind except that of irritation. We preserve trumpets for the
processions of the College because mere noise awes people, and because
trumpets make more noise with less trouble than the human voice. But
with music, such as it used to be, we have now nothing to do at all.
I have been told that people were formerly greatly moved by music,
so that every kind of emotion was produced in their minds merely by
listening to a man or woman playing some instrument. It must have been
so, because Christine, merely by playing the old music to the company,
was able to bring back their minds to the long-forgotten Past. But it
must be remembered that she had disturbed their minds first.

She sat down, then, before this box, and she began to play upon it,
watching the people meanwhile. She played the music of their own
time--indeed, there has been none written since. It was a kind of
witchery. First the sailor named Jack sprang to his feet and began to
walk up and down the room with wild gestures and strange looks. Then
the rest, one by one, grew restless; they looked about them; they left
their chairs and began to look at each other, and at the things in the
cases. The Past was coming slowly into sight. I have heard how men at
sea perceive an island far away, but like a cloud on the horizon; how
the cloud grows larger and assumes outline; how this grows clearer and
larger still, until, before the ship reaches the harbor and drops her
anchor, the cliffs and the woods, and even the single trees on the
hill-sides, are clearly visible.

Thus the listeners gradually began to see the Past again. Now, to
feel these old times again, one must go back to them and become once
more part of them. It is possible, because we are still of the age
when we left them. Therefore, this little company, who had left the
old time when they were still young, began to look again as they had
then looked. Their eyes brightened, their cheeks flushed; their limbs
became elastic; their heads were thrown back; the faces of the women
grew soft, and those of the men strong; on all alike there fell once
more the look of restless expectancy and of unsatisfied yearning which
belonged to all ages in the old time.

Presently they began to murmur, I know not what, and then to whisper to
each other with gentle sighs. Then the girls--they were really girls
again--caught each other by the hand, and panted and sighed again; and
at last they fell upon each other's necks and kissed. As for the men,
they now stood erect and firm, but for the most part they gazed upon
the girls with wonder and admiration unspeakable, so great was the
power of witchery possessed by this insignificant girl.

Christine looked on and laughed gently. Then she suddenly changed her
music, and began to play a March loud and triumphant. And as she played
she spoke:

"When the brave soldiers came home from battle and from victory, it
was right that the people should all go forth to meet them. The music
played for them; the children strewed roses under their feet; the bells
were set ringing; the crowds cheered them; the women wept and laughed
at the same time, and waved them welcome. Nothing could be too good for
the men who fought for their country. Listen! I found the song of the
Victors' Return in an old book. I wonder if you remember it. I think it
is a very simple little thing."

Then she sang. She had a strong, clear voice--they had heard her
singing before--no one sang in the whole City except this child, and
already it had been observed that her singing made men restless. I
do not deny the fulness and richness of her voice; but the words she
sang--Dr. Linister's words, they were--are mere foolishness:

  "With flying flag, with beat of drum,
    Oh, brave and gallant show!
  In rags and tatters home they come--
    We love them better so.
  With sunburnt cheeks and wounds and scars;
    Yet still their swords are bright.
  Oh, welcome, welcome from the wars,
    Brave lads who fought the fight!

  "The girls they laugh, the girls they cry,
    'What shall their guerdon be?--
  Alas! that some must fall and die!--
    Bring forth our gauds to see.
  'Twere all too slight, give what we might,'
    Up spoke a soldier tall:
  'Oh, Love is worth the whole broad earth;
  Oh, Love is worth the whole broad earth;
    Give that, you give us all!'"

"Do you remember the song?" Christine asked.

They shook their heads. Yet it seemed familiar. They remembered some
such songs.

"Geoffrey Heron," said the girl, turning to one of the men, "you were
Captain Heron in the old days. You remember that you were in the army."

"Was I?" He started. "No; yes. I remember. I was Captain Heron. We rode
out of Portsmouth Dockyard Gates when we came home--all that were left
of us. The women were waiting on the Hard outside, and they laughed
and cried, and caught our hands, and ran beside the horses. Our ranks
were thin, for we had been pretty well knocked about. I remember now.
Yes--yes, I was--I was Captain Heron."

"Go into that room. You will find your old uniform. Take off the blue
flannels, and show us how you looked when you were in uniform."

As if it was nothing at all unusual, the man rose and obeyed. It was
observed that he now carried himself differently. He stood erect,
with shoulders squared, head up, and limbs straight. They all obeyed
whatever this girl ordered them to do.

Christine began to play again. She played another March, but always
loud and triumphant.

When the soldier came back he was dressed in the uniform which he had
worn in the time of the Great Discovery, when they left off taking
account of time.

"Oh!" cried Christine, springing to her feet. "See! See! Here is a
soldier! Here is a man who has fought!"

He stood before them dressed in a scarlet tunic and a white helmet; a
red sash hung across him, and on his breast were medals. At sight of
him the girl called Dorothy Oliphant changed countenance; all caught
their breath. The aspect of the man carried them, indeed, back to the
old, old time.

"Welcome home, Captain Heron," said Christine. "We have followed your
campaign day by day."

"We are home again," the soldier replied, gravely. "Unfortunately, we
have left a good many of our regiment behind."

"Behind? You mean--they--are--dead." Christine shuddered. The others
shuddered. Even Captain Heron himself for a moment turned pale. But he
was again in the Past, and the honor of his regiment was in his hands.

"You have fought with other men," said Christine. "Let me look in your
face. Yes--it is changed. You have the look of the fighting man in the
old pictures. You look as if you mean to have something, whatever it
is, whether other men want it or not. Oh, you have fought with men! It
is wonderful! Perhaps you have even killed men. Were you dreadfully
afraid?"

Captain Heron started and flushed.

"Afraid?" he asked. "Afraid?"

"Oh!" Christine clapped her hands. "I wanted to see that look. It is
the look of a man in sudden wrath. Forgive me! It is terrible to see a
man thus moved. No, Captain Heron, no! I understand. An officer in your
regiment could be afraid of nothing."

She sat down, still looking at him.

"I have seen a soldier," she said. Then she sprang to her feet.
"Now," she cried, "it is our turn. Come with me, you ladies; and you,
gentlemen, go into that room. For one night we will put on the dresses
you used to wear. Come!"

They obeyed. There was nothing that they would not have done, so
completely had she bewitched them. How long since they had been
addressed as ladies and gentlemen!

"Come," she said, in the room whither she led the women, "look about,
and choose what you please. But we must make haste."

There was a great pile of dainty dresses laid out for them to
choose--dresses in silk and all kinds of delicate stuffs, with
embroidery, lace, ribbons, jewels, chains, rings, bracelets, gloves,
fans, shoes--everything that the folly of the past time required to
make rich women seem as if they were not the same as their poorer
sisters.

They turned over the dresses, and cried out with admiration. Then they
hastened to tear off their ugly gray frocks, and began to dress.

But the girl called Dorothy Oliphant sank into a chair. "Oh, he has
forgotten me! he has forgotten me! Who am I that he should remember me
after all these years?"

"Why," said Christine, "how should he remember? What matters that you
have the same face? Think of your dull look and your heavy eyes; think
of the dowdy dress and the ugly cap. Wait till you have put on a pretty
frock and have dressed your hair; here is a chain of pearls which will
look pretty in your hair; here is a sweet colored silk. I am sure it
will fit you. Oh, it is a shame--it is a shame that we have to dress
so! Never mind. Now I have found out the old dresses, we will have many
evenings together. We will go back to the Past. He will remember you,
Dorothy dear. Oh, how could you give them up? How _could_ you give up
your lovely dresses?"

"We were made to give them up because there were not enough beautiful
dresses to go round. They said that no woman must be dressed better
than another. So they invented--it was Dr. Grout, the Suffragan, who
did it--the gray dress for the women and the blue flannel for the men.
And I had almost forgotten that there were such things. Christine, my
head is swimming. My heart is beating. I have not felt my heart beating
for I know not how long. Oh, will Geoffrey remember me when I am
dressed?"

"Quick! Of course he will. Let me dress you. Oh, I often come here in
the daytime and dress up, and pretend that it is the Past again. You
shall come with me. But I want to hear you talk as you used to talk,
and to see you dance as you used to dance. Then I shall understand it
all."

When they returned, the men were waiting for them. Their blue flannels
were exchanged for black cloth clothes, which it had been the custom
of those who called themselves gentlemen to wear in the evening.
In ancient times this was their absurd custom, kept up in order to
mark the difference between a gentleman and one of the lower class.
If you had no dress-coat, you were not a gentleman. How could men
ever tolerate, for a single day, the existence of such a social
difference? As for me, in the part of London where I lived, called
Whitechapel, there were no dress-coats. The change, however, seemed
to have transformed them. Their faces had an eager look, as if they
wanted something. Of course, in the old times everybody always wanted
something. You can see it in the pictures--the faces are never at rest;
in the portraits, the eyes are always seeking for something; nowhere
is there visible the least sign of contentment. These unfortunate men
had acquired, with their old clothes, something of the old restlessness.

Christine laughed aloud and clapped her hands.

The women did not laugh. They saluted the men, who bowed with a certain
coldness. The manners of the Past were coming back to them swiftly, but
the old ease was not recovered for the first quarter of an hour. Then
Captain Heron, who had changed his uniform for civilian dress, suddenly
flushed and stepped forward, whispering,

"Dorothy, you have forgotten me?"

Dorothy smiled softly, and gave him her hand with a quick sigh. No, she
had not forgotten him.

"Dance!" said Christine. "I want to see you dance. I will play for you."

She played a piece of music called a Waltz. When this kind of music
used to be played--I mean in the houses of (so-called) ladies, not
those of the People--the young men and women caught each other round
the waist and twirled round. They had many foolish customs, but none
more foolish, I should suppose, than this. I have never seen the
thing done, because all this foolishness was forgotten as soon as we
settled down to the enjoyment of the Great Discovery. When, therefore,
Christine began this music, they looked at each other for a few
moments, and then, inspired by memory, they fell into each other's arms
and began their dance.

She played for them for a quarter of an hour. While the rest danced,
the young man Jack stood beside the piano, as if he was chained to
the spot. She had bewitched them all, but none so much as this man.
He therefore gazed upon the girl with an admiration which certainly
belonged to the old time. Indeed, I have never been able to understand
how the Past could be so suddenly assumed. To admire--actually to
admire--a woman, knowing all the time--it is impossible to conceal the
fact--that she is your inferior, that she is inferior in strength and
intellect! Well, I have already called them unfortunate men; I can say
no more. How can people admire things below themselves? When she had
played for a quarter of an hour or so, this young man called upon her
to stop. The dancers stopped too, panting, their eyes full of light,
their cheeks flushed and their lips parted.

"Oh," Dorothy sighed, "I never thought to feel such happiness again. I
could dance on forever."

"With me?" murmured Geoffrey. "I was praying that the last round might
never stop. With me?"

"With you," she whispered.

"Come!" cried the young man Jack. "It is too bad. Christine must dance.
Play for us, Cousin Mildred, and I will give her a lesson."

Mildred laughed. Then she started at the unwonted sound. The others
laughed to hear it, and the walls of the Museum echoed with the
laughter of girls. The old man sat up in his chair and looked around.

"I thought I was at Philippe's, in Paris," he said. "I thought we were
having a supper after the theatre. There was Ninette, and there was
Madeleine--and--and--"

He looked about him bewildered. Then he dropped his head and went to
sleep again. When he was neither eating nor battling for his breath, he
was always sleeping.

"I am your cousin, Jack," said Mildred; "but I had long forgotten it.
And as for playing--but I will try. Perhaps the old touch will return."

It did. She played with far greater skill and power than the
self-taught Christine, but not (as they have said since) with greater
sweetness.

Then Jack took Christine and gave her a first lesson. It lasted nearly
half an hour.

"Oh," cried the girl, when Lady Mildred stopped, "I feel as if I had
been floating round in a dream. Was I a stupid pupil, Jack?"

"You were the aptest pupil that dancing-master ever had."

"I know now," she said, with panting breath and flushed cheeks, "what
dancing means. It is wonderful that the feet should answer to the
music. Surely you must have loved dancing?"

"We did," the girls replied; "we did. There was no greater pleasure in
the world."

"Why did you give it up?"

They looked at each other.

"After the Great Discovery," said Dorothy Oliphant, "we were so happy
to get rid of the terrors of old age, and the loss of our beauty, and
everything, that at first we thought of nothing else. When we tried to
dance again, something had gone out of it. The men were not the same.
Perhaps we were not the same. Everything languished after that. There
was no longer any enjoyment. We ceased to dance because we found no
pleasure in dancing."

"But now you do?" said Christine.

"To-night we do, because you have filled our hearts with the old
thoughts. To get out of the dull, dull round--why is it that we never
felt it dull till to-night? Oh, so long as we can remember the old
thoughts, let us continue to dance and to play and to sing. If the old
thoughts cease to come back to us"--she looked at Geoffrey--"let us
fall back into our dulness, like the men and women round us."

"It was to please me first," said Christine. "You were so very kind as
to come here to please me, because I can have no recollection at all of
the Past, and I was curious to understand what I read. Come again--to
please yourselves. Oh, I have learned so much--so very much more than I
ever expected! There are so many, many things that I did not dream of.
But let us always dance," she said--"let us always dance--let me always
feel every time you come as if there was nothing in the world but sweet
music calling me, and I was spinning round and round, but always in
some place far better and sweeter than this."

"Yes," Lady Mildred said, gravely. "Thus it was we used to feel."

"And I have seen you as you were--gentlemen and gentlewomen together.
Oh, it is beautiful! Come every night. Let us never cease to change the
dismal Present for the sunny Past. But there is one thing--one thing
that I cannot understand."

"What is that?" asked Lady Mildred.

"In the old books there is always, as I said before, a young man in
love with a girl. What is it--Love?" The girls sighed and cast down
their eyes. "Was it possible for a man so to love a girl as to desire
nothing in the world but to have her love, and even to throw away his
life--actually his very life--his very life--for her sake?"

"Dorothy," said Geoffrey, taking both her hands, "was it possible? Oh,
was it possible?"

Dorothy burst into tears.

"It _was_ possible!" she cried; "but oh, it is not possible any longer."

"Let us pretend," said Geoffrey, "let us dream that it is possible."

"Even to throw away your life--to die--actually your life?" asked
Christine. "To die? To exist no longer? To abandon life--for the sake
of another person?"

A sudden change passed over all their faces. The light died out of
their eyes; the smile died on their lips; the softness vanished from
the ladies' faces; the men hung their heads. All their gallantry left
them. And Geoffrey let Mildred's hands slip from his holding. The
thought of Death brought them all back to the Present.

"No," said Lady Mildred, sadly, and with changed voice, "such things
are no longer possible. Formerly, men despised death because it was
certain to come, in a few years at best; and why not, therefore,
to-morrow? But we cannot brave death any more. We live, each
for himself. That is the only safety; there is only the law of
self-preservation. All are alike; we cannot love each other any more,
because we are all alike. No woman is better than another in any man's
eyes, because we are all dressed the same, and we are all the same.
What more do we want?" she said, harshly. "There is no change for us;
we go from bed to work, from work to rest and food, and so to bed
again. What more can we want? We are all equals; we are all the same;
there are no more gentlewomen. Let us put on our gray frocks and our
flat caps again, and hide our hair and go home to bed."

"Yes, yes," cried Christine, "but you will come again. You will
come again, and we will make every night a Play and Pretence of the
beautiful--the lovely Past. When we lay aside the gray frocks, and let
down our hair, we shall go back to the old time--the dear old time."

The young man named Jack remained behind when the others were gone. "If
it were possible," he said, "for a man to give up everything--even his
life--for a woman, in the old times, when life was a rich and glorious
possession--how much more ought he not to be willing to lay it down,
now that it has been made a worthless weed?"

"I have never felt so happy"--the girl was thinking of something else.
"I have never dreamed that I could feel so happy. Now I know what I
have always longed for--to dance round and round forever, forgetting
all but the joy of the music and the dance. But oh, Jack"--her face
turned pale again--"how could they ever have been happy, even while
they waltzed, knowing that every minute brought them nearer and nearer
to the dreadful end?"

"I don't know. Christine, if I were you, I would never mention that
ugly topic again, except when we are not dressed up and acting. How
lovely they looked--all of them--but none of them to compare with the
sweetest rose-bud of the garden?"

He took her hand and kissed it, and then left her alone with the old
man in the great Museum.




CHAPTER IV.

WHAT IS LOVE?


It would be idle to dwell upon the repetition of such scenes as those
described in the last chapter. These unhappy persons continued to meet
day after day in the Museum; after changing their lawful garments
for the fantastic habits worn before the Great Discovery, they lost
themselves nightly in the imagination of the Past. They presently found
others among the People, who had also been gentlewomen and gentlemen
in the old days, and brought them also into the company; so that there
were now, every evening, some thirty gathered together. Nay, they even
procured food and made suppers for themselves, contrary to the practice
of common meals enjoined by the Holy College; they gloried in being a
company apart from the rest; and because they remembered the Past, they
had the audacity to give themselves, but only among themselves, airs of
superiority. In the daytime they wore the common dress, and were like
the rest of the People. The thing grew, however. Every evening they
recalled more of the long-vanished customs and modes of thought--one
remembering this and the other that little detail--until almost every
particular of the ancient life had returned to them. Then a strange
thing happened. For though the Present offered still--and this they
never denied--its calm, unchanging face, with no disasters to trouble
and no certain and miserable end to dread; with no anxieties, cares,
and miseries; with no ambitions and no struggles; they fell to yearning
after the old things; they grew to loathe the Present; they could
hardly sit with patience in the Public Hall; they went to their day's
work with ill-concealed disgust. Yet, so apathetic had the people grown
that nothing of this was observed; so careless and so unsuspicious
were we ourselves that though the singing and playing grew louder and
continued longer every evening, none of us suspected anything. Singing,
in my ears, was no more than an unmeaning noise; that the girl in the
Museum should sing and play seemed foolish, but then children are
foolish--they like to make a great noise.

One afternoon--it was some weeks since this dangerous fooling
began--the cause of the whole, the girl Christine, was in the Museum
alone. She had a book in her hand, and was reading in it. First she
read a few lines, and then paused and meditated a while. Then she read
again, and laughed gently to herself. And then she read, and changed
color. And again she read, and knitted her brows as one who considers
but cannot understand.

The place was quite deserted, save for her grandfather, who sat in his
great chair, propped up with pillows and fast asleep. He had passed a
bad night with his miserable asthma; in the morning, as often happens
with this disease, he found himself able to breathe again, and was now
therefore taking a good spell of sleep. His long white hair fell down
upon his shoulders, his wrinkled old cheek showed a thousand crows'
feet and lines innumerable; he looked a very, very old man. Yet he
was no more than seventy-five or so, in the language of the Past. He
belonged formerly to those who lived upon the labor of others, and
devoured their substance. Now, but for his asthma, which even the
College cannot cure, he should have been as perfectly happy as the
rest of the People. The sunshine which warmed his old limbs fell full
upon his chair; so that he seemed, of all the rare and curious objects
in that collection, the rarest and most curious. The old armor on the
wall, the trophies of arms, the glass vases containing all the things
of the past, were not so rare and curious as this old man--the only
old man left among us. I daily, for my own part, contemplated the old
man with a singular satisfaction. He was, I thought, a standing lesson
to the People, one daily set before their eyes. Here was the sole
surviving specimen of what in the Past was the best that the men and
women could expect--namely, to be spared until the age of seventy-five,
and then to linger on afflicted with miserable diseases and, slowly
or swiftly, to be tortured to death. Beholding that spectacle, I
argued, all the people ought to rub their hands in complacency and
gratitude. But our people had long ceased to reason or reflect. The
lesson was consequently thrown away upon them. Nay, when this girl
began her destructive career, those whom she dragged into her toils
only considered this old man because he would still be talking, as all
old men used to talk, about the days of his youth, for the purpose of
increasing their knowledge of the Past, and filling their foolish souls
with yearning after the bad old times.

While Christine read and pondered, the door of the Museum opened. The
young man called Jack stood there gazing upon her. She had thrown off
her cap, and her long brown curls lay over her shoulders. She had a
red rose in the bosom of her gray dress, and she had tied a crimson
scarf round her waist. Jack (suffer me to use the foolishness of their
language--of course his name was John)--closed the door silently.

"Christine," he whispered.

She started, and let her book fall. Then she gave him her hand, which
he raised to his lips. (Again I must ask leave to report a great deal
of foolishness.)

"It is the sweet old fashion," he said. "It is my homage to my lady."

They were now so far gone in folly that she accepted this act as if it
was one natural and becoming.

"I have been reading," she said, "a book full of extracts--all about
love. I have never understood what love is. If I ask Dorothy, she looks
at Geoffrey Heron and sighs. If I ask him, he tells me that he cannot
be my servant to teach me, because he is already sworn to another. What
does this mean? Have the old times come back again, so that men once
more call themselves slaves of love? Yet what does it mean?"

"Tell me," said Jack, "what you have been reading."

"Listen, then. Oh, it is the strangest extravagance! What did men mean
when they could gravely write down, and expect to be read, such things
as--

  "'I do love you more than words can wield the matter--
  Dearer than eyesight, space, and liberty;
  Beyond what can be valued, rich or rare?'

'Dearer than eyesight, space, and liberty.' Did they really mean that?"

"They meant more; they meant dearer than life itself!" said Jack,
slowly. "Only it was stupid always to say the same thing."

"Well, then, listen to this:

  "'Had I no eyes but ears, my ears would love
    That inward beauty and invisible;
  Or, were I deaf, thy outward parts would move
    Each part in me that were but sensible.
  Though neither eyes nor ears, to hear nor see,
  Yet should I be in love, by touching thee.'

Now, Jack, what can that mean? Was anything more absurd?"

"Read another extract, Christine."

"Here is a passage more difficult than any other:

  "'Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind;
  And therefore is wing'd Cupid painted blind.
  Nor hath Love's mind of any judgment taste;
  Wings and no eyes, figure unheedy haste.
  And therefore is Love said to be a child,
  Because in choice he is so oft beguiled.'

Tell me, if you can, what this means. But perhaps you were never in
love, Jack, in the old times."

"Romeo was in love before he met Juliet," said Jack. "I, too, have been
reading the old books, you see, Child. I remember--but how can I tell
you? I cannot speak like the poet. Yet I remember--I remember." He
looked round the room. "It is only here," he murmured, "that one can
clearly remember. Here are the very things which used to surround our
daily life. And here are youth and age. They were always with us in
the old time--youth and age. Youth with love before, and age with love
behind. Always we knew that as that old man, so should we become. The
chief joys of life belonged to youth; we knew very well that unless we
snatched them then we should never have them. To age we gave respect,
because age, we thought, had wisdom; but to us--to us--who were young,
age cried unceasingly--

  "'Gather ye rose-buds while ye may.'

If I could tell only you! Christine, come with me into the Picture
Gallery. My words are weak, but the poets and the painters speak for
us. Come! We shall find something there that will speak for me what I
have not words to say for myself."

Nothing in the whole world--I have maintained this in the College over
and over again--has done so much harm to Humanity as Art. In a world
of common-sense which deals with nothing but fact and actuality, Art
can have no place. Why imitate what we see around us? Artists cheated
the world; they pretended to imitate, and they distorted or they
exaggerated. They put a light into the sky that never was there; they
filled the human face with yearning after things impossible; they put
thoughts into the heart which had no business there; they made woman
into a goddess, and made love--simple love--a form of worship; they
exaggerated every joy; they created a heaven which could not exist. I
have seen their pictures, and I know it. Why--why did we not destroy
all works of Art long ago--or, at least, why did we not enclose the
Gallery, with the Museum, within the College wall?

The Picture Gallery is a long room with ancient stone walls; statuary
is arranged along the central line, and the pictures line the walls.

The young man led the girl into the Gallery and looked around him.
Presently he stopped at a figure in white marble. It represented a
woman, hands clasped, gazing upward. Anatomically, I must say, the
figure is fairly correct.

"See," he said, "when in the olden times our sculptors desired to
depict the Higher Life--which we have lost or thrown away for a
while--they carved the marble image of a woman. Her form represented
perfect beauty; her face represented perfect purity; the perfect
soul must be wedded to the perfect body, otherwise there can be no
perfection of Humanity. This is the Ideal Woman. Look in her face, look
at the curves of her form, look at the carriage of her head; such a
woman it was whom men used to love."

"But were women once like this? Could they look so? Had they such sweet
and tender faces? This figure makes me ashamed."

"When men were in love, Christine, the woman that each man loved became
in his mind such as this. He worshipped in his mistress the highest
form of life that he could conceive. Some men were gross, their ideals
were low; some were noble, then their ideals were high. Always there
were among mankind some men who were continually trying to raise the
ideal; always the mass of men were keeping the ideal low."

"Were the women ashamed to receive such worship? Because they must have
known what they were in cold reality."

"Perhaps to the nobler sort," said the young man, "to be thought so
good lifted up their hearts and kept them at that high level. But
indeed I know not. Remember that when men wrote the words that you
think extravagant, they were filled and wholly possessed with the image
of the Perfect Woman. Nay, the nobler and stronger their nature, the
more they were filled with that Vision. The deeper their love for any
woman, the higher they placed her on the Altar of their worship."

"And if another man should try to take that woman from them--"

"They would kill that other man," said Jack, with a fierce gleam in his
eye, which made the girl shudder. Yet she respected him for it.

"If another man should come between us now, Christine, I would--Nay,
dear, forgive my rude words. What has jealousy to do with you?"

She dropped her eyes and blushed, and in all her limbs she trembled.
This young man made her afraid. And yet--she knew not why--it made her
happy, only to be afraid of him.

"Let us see some of the pictures," said Jack.

There were many hundreds of them. They represented I know not what;
scenes of the old life in the old time. I dare say everything was
there, with all the exaggerations which pleased the painters and
cheated the senses of those who looked on. Fair women were painted
fairer than women could ever be; their eyes were larger, softer, fuller
of thought; their cheeks more tender, their limbs more comely.

There were battle scenes; the young man led the girl past them.
There were scenes from history--kings laying down crowns, traitors
receiving sentence, and so forth; he passed them by. There were groups
of nymphs, portraits of fair women, groups of girls dancing, girls
at play, girls laughing, girls bathing; he passed them by. Presently
he stopped before three panels side by side, representing a simple
allegory of the old time. In the first picture, two, a young man and
a girl, walked hand-in-hand beside a stream. The water danced and
rippled in the sunlight; behind them was an orchard full of blossom;
flowers sprang up at their feet--the flowers of spring. And they walked
hand-in-hand, gazing in each other's eyes. The second picture showed a
man in middle-age returning home from work; beside him walked his boys;
in the porch the mother sat with her daughters spinning at the wheel.
The stream was now a full majestic river; the trees were loaded with
fruit not yet ripe; the fields were covered with corn, green still,
but waving with light and shade under the summer sky; in the distance,
passing away, was a heavy thunder-cloud. In the third panel an old pair
stood beside a great river, looking out upon the ocean. Again they were
hand-in-hand. The sun was setting in great splendor across the sea; the
reapers were carrying their harvest home with songs and dances. And
the old people still gazed in each other's face, just as they had done
fifty years ago.

"See, Christine!" said Jack. "In the first panel, this pair think of
nothing but of each other. Presently they will have other thoughts. The
stream beside which they wander is the Stream of Life. It widens as
it goes. While they walk along its banks, the river grows broader and
deeper. This means that as they grow older they grow wiser and learn
more. So they go on continually, until they come to the mouth of the
river, where it loses itself in the ocean of--what our friends tremble
so much as to name. Tell me, is there terror, or doubt, or anxiety on
their faces now that they have come to the end?"

"No; their faces are entirely happy."

"This you do not understand. Christine, if you were sure that in the
end you would be as happy as that old woman at the end, would you be
content to begin with the beginning? Would you play the part of that
girl, and walk--with me--along the Stream of Life?"

He took her hand, but she made no reply, save that her eyes filled with
tears. Presently she murmured,

"They are always happy--at the beginning and at the end. Did they know
at the beginning that there would be an end?"

"They knew; everybody knew; the very children knew almost from infancy
the great Law of Nature, that for everything there is the allotted end.
They knew it."

"And yet they were always happy. I cannot understand it."

"We have destroyed that happiness," said the young man. "Love cannot
exist when there is no longer end, or change, or anything to hope or
fear--no mystery, nothing to hope or fear. What is a woman outside the
Museum in the eyes of the College? She is only the half of humanity,
subject to disease and requiring food at intervals. She no longer
attracts men by the sacred mystery of her beauty. She is not even
permitted any longer to make herself beautiful by her dress; nor is she
allowed to create the feeling of mystery and the unknown by seclusion.
She lives in the open, like the rest. We all live together; we know
what each one says and thinks and does; nay, most of us have left off
thinking and talking altogether."

But Christine was hardly listening; she could not understand this talk.
She was looking at the pictures.

"Oh," she said, "they look so happy! There is such a beautiful
contentment in their eyes! They love each other so, that they think of
nothing but their love. They have forgotten the end."

"Nay, but look at the end."

"They are happy still, although the river flows into the Ocean. How can
they be happy?"

"You shall learn more, Christine. You have seen enough to understand
that the talk of the Physicians about the miseries of the old time is
mischievous nonsense, with which they have fooled us into slavery."

"Oh, if they heard you--"

"Let them hear," he replied, sternly. "I hope, before long, we may make
them hear. Christine, you can restore the old love by your own example.
You alone have nothing to remember and nothing to unlearn. As for the
rest of us, we have old habits to forget and prejudices to overcome
before we can get back to the Past."

Then he led her to another picture.

The scene was a green village church-yard, standing amid trees--yews
and oaks--and round a gray old church. Six strong men bore a bier
piled with flowers towards an open grave, newly dug. Beside the grave
stood one in a white robe, carrying a book. Behind the bier followed,
hand-in-hand, a weeping company of men, women, and children. But he who
walked first wept not.

"Oh," cried Christine, "he is dead! He is dead!"

She burst into tears.

"Nay," said Jack; "it is the wife who is dead. The husband lives still.
See, he follows with tottering step. His grandchild leads him as you
lead your grandfather. And they are all weeping except him. Why does
he alone not weep? He has been married for fifty years and more; all
his life has been shared by the love and sympathy of the woman--the
dead woman. She is dead, my dear"--he repeated these words, taking the
girl's hands--"she is dead, and he sheds no tears. Why not? Look at
his face. Is it unhappy? Tell me, Christine, do you read the sorrow of
hopelessness in that old man's face?"

"No, no," she said. "He is grave, but he is not unhappy. Yet here is
Death, with all the terrible things that we read of in the books--the
deep pit, the body to be lowered in the grave--oh!"

She shuddered and turned her head.

"As I read his face," said Jack, "I see hope and consolation."

"Why is there a man in white?"

"I will tell you some time. Meanwhile, observe that the old man is
happy, though his wife is dead, and though he knows that to-morrow his
turn will come, and a grave will be dug for him beside his wife, and
he also will be laid among the cold clay-clods, as cold, as senseless
as them, there to lie while the great world rolls round and round. He
knows this, I say, and yet he is not unhappy."

"What does it mean, Jack?"

"I will tell you--soon."

"We who are sailors," this young man continued, "are not like the rest
of the world. We are always exposed to danger; we are not afraid to
speak of Death; and though we have taken advantage (as we thought) of
the Great Discovery, we have never forgotten the Past or the old ideas.
We have to think for ourselves, which makes us independent. There is
no Holy College on board ship, and no sacred Physician ventures his
precious life upon a rolling deck. When we come ashore, we look round
and see things. Then we go on board again and talk, in the night
watches below the stars. I think the Holy College would be pleased if
they could sometimes hear our talk. Christine, there is no happiness
left in the world except among those whom the Great Discovery cannot
save from the dangers of a storm. When you spoke to me my heart leaped
up, because I saw what as yet you do not see. The others were too
sluggish to remember, until you had dragged their thoughts into the old
channels; but there was no need to drag me; for I remember always, and
I only pretended until the others should come with me."

Christine heard only half of this, for she was looking at the picture
of the village funeral again.

"Oh, how could men be happy with such an end before them?" she cried.
"I cannot understand it. To be torn away, to be laid in a box, to be
put away deep underground, there to lie forever--oh!" She trembled
again. "And not to be unhappy!"

"Look round the room, Christine. Read the faces. Here are portraits of
men and women. Some of them are eager, some are calm, more are unhappy
for thinking of the end. Here is a battle-field; the dead and wounded
are lying about the ground. Look at this troop of horsemen charging.
Is there any terror in their faces? What do they care about the men
who have fallen? Their duty is to fight. See here again. It is a dying
girl. What do you read in her face? I see no fear, but a sweet joy of
resignation. Here is a man led forth to execution. There is no fear in
his face."

"I could never bear to be alone in this room, because Death is
everywhere, and no one seems to regard it."

"Christine, did you never hear, by any chance, from your grandfather
why people were not afraid?"

"No; he cannot bear to speak of such a thing. He trembles and shakes if
it is even mentioned. They all do, except you."

"What does he tell you?"

"He talks of the time when he was young. It was long before the Great
Discovery. Oh, he is very old. He was always going to feasts and
dances. He had a great many friends, and some of them used to sing
and dance in theatres. They were all very fond of suppers after the
theatre, and there was a great deal of singing and laughing. They
used to drive about in carriages, and they went to races. I do not
understand, very well, the pleasure of his life."

"Ah," said Jack, "he has forgotten the really important part of it."

They were at a part of the Gallery where there was a door of strong
oak, studded with big square nails, under an arch of carved stone.

"Have you ever been into this place?" he asked.

"Once I went in. But there is a dreadful tomb in it, with carved skulls
and the figure of a dead man. So I ran away."

"Come in with me. You shall not be frightened."

He turned the great iron handle, and pushed open the heavy door.

The room was lofty, with a pointed roof. It was lit by long narrow
windows, filled with painted glass. There were seats of carved wood,
with carved canopies on either side; there was the figure of a brass
eagle, with a great book upon it; and under the three lights of the
window at the end was a table covered with a cloth which hung in rags
and tatters, and was covered with dust. It was, in fact, an ancient
Chapel, shut up and suffered to fall into decay.

"This," said the young man, "is the Chapel where, in the old time, they
came to worship. They also worshipped in the great place that is now
the House of Life. But here some of them worshipped also, though with
less splendor."

"Did they," asked the girl, "worship the Beautiful Woman of their
dreams?"

"No, not the Beautiful Woman. They worshipped her outside. In this
Chapel they worshipped the Maker of Perfect Man and Perfect Woman. Come
in with me, and I will tell you something of what it meant."

       *       *       *       *       *

It was two hours and more before they came out of the Chapel. The
girl's eyes were full of tears, and tears lay upon his cheeks.

"My dear, my love," said Jack, "I have tried to show you how the old
true love was nourished and sustained. It would not have lived but for
the short duration of its life; it was the heritage of each generation,
to be passed on unto the next. Only on one condition was it possible.
It is a condition which you have been taught to believe horrible beyond
the power of words. I have tried to show you that it was not horrible.
My love, my sweet--fresh as the maidens who in the old time blossomed
and flowered, and presently fulfilled that condition--the only woman
among us who is young in heart, let us agree to love--we two--after the
old fashion, under the old conditions. Do not shiver, dear. There is
the old faith to sustain us. You shall go to sea with me. Perhaps we
shall be cast away and drowned; perhaps we shall contract some unknown
disease and die. We shall presently lie down to sleep, and awake
again in each other's arms once more in a new life which we cannot
now comprehend. Everything must have an end. Human life must have an
end, or it becomes horrible, monstrous, selfish. The life beyond will
be glorified beyond all our hopes, and beyond all our imagination. My
dear, are you afraid?"

She laid her head upon his shoulder.

"Oh, Jack, with you I am afraid of nothing. I should not be afraid to
die this very moment, if we died together. Is it really true? Can we
love now as men loved women long ago? Oh, can you love me so? I am so
weak and small a creature--so weak and foolish! I would die with you,
Jack--both together, taking each other by the hand; and oh, if you were
to die first, I could not live after. I must, then, die too. My head
is swimming--my heart is beating--lay your arm about me. Oh, love, my
love; I have never lived before. Oh, welcome Life, and welcome Death,
so that we may never, never more be parted!"




CHAPTER V.

THE OPEN DOOR.


It was in this way that the whole trouble began. There was an
inquisitive girl foolishly allowed to grow up in this ancient Museum
and among the old books, who developed a morbid curiosity for the Past,
of which the books and pictures and collections taught her something;
yet not all she wished to learn. She was unconsciously aided by the old
man, who had been approaching his second childhood even at the time
of the Great Discovery, and whose memory now continually carried him
backward to the days of his youth, without the least recollection of
the great intervals between. Lastly, there had come to the town, in
the pursuit of his business, a sailor, restless and discontented, as
is the case with all his class, questioning and independent; impatient
of authority, and curiously unable to forget the old times. The sailor
and the girl, between them, at first instigated and pushed on the
whole business; they were joined, no doubt, by many others; but these
two were the first leaders. The Chief Culprit of all, the nominal
Leader--but you shall presently hear what kind of excuse could be made
for him by himself. As for those whom they dragged reluctantly out
of the tranquillity of oblivion, they were at first wholly drawn from
the class which, at the outset, gave us so much trouble--the so-called
gentle class--who desired nothing so much as to continue to live under
the old conditions--namely, by the labor of others. It wanted, for
these people, only the revival of memory to produce the revival of
discontent. When their minds were once more filled with the thought
of the things they had lost--the leadership, the land, the wealth,
and with the memory of the arts which they had formerly loved--music,
painting, letters--and with the actual sight, once more restored to
them, of their old amusements--their dancing, their society, their
singing, their games; and when the foolish old idol, Love, was once
more trotted out, like an old-fashioned Guy Fawkes, decked in his
silly old rainbow tints; when, night after night, they actually began
to play, act, and to pretend these things, what could possibly follow
but revolt, with subsequent punishment and expulsion? You shall hear.
Of course, they would have been punished with expulsion had not--but
everything in its place.

Five or six weeks after the first evening, which I have described
at full length, the Museum was again occupied by the same company,
increased by a good many more. The women came in more readily, being
sooner caught with the bait of fine dress, which had such an attraction
for them that the mere sight of it caused them to forget everything
that had been done for them--their present tranquillity, their freedom
from agitation and anxiety--and carried them back to the old time, when
they wore, indeed, those dainty dresses. What they endured, besides,
they do not so readily remember; but the dresses carried back their
minds to the society which once filled up the whole worthless lives of
these poor creatures. I say, therefore, that it was easier to attract
the women than the men; for the latter, no bait at all corresponding
in power could be discovered. The company assembled were engaged in
much the same sort of make-believe and play-acting as on the first
evening. They were dressed in the old fashion; they danced, they sang,
they talked and laughed--actually they talked and laughed--though
what there is, from any view of life to laugh about, I never could
understand. Laughing, however, belonged to the old manners; and they
had now completely recovered the old manners--anything, however
foolish, which belonged to that time would have been welcomed by them.
So they laughed; for the same reason, they were full of animation;
and the old, old unhappy emotion which I had thought blotted out
forever--restlessness--had either broken out among them or was well
simulated. They were all young, save for the old man who sat in his
chair coughing, and sometimes talking. Christine had dressed him in a
velvet coat, which gave him great dignity, and made him look as if he
was taking part in the play. I say not that the acting was not very
good--of the kind. Acting of any kind could never have served any
useful purpose, even in the Past. Perhaps a company of beautiful women,
beautifully dressed, and of gallant men--I talk their own foolish
language--amusing themselves in this way, may have given pleasure to
some, but not to those among whom I was born. In the days when these
things were done every night at one part of the town, in another
part the men were drinking, if they had any money, and the women and
children were starving. And much they concerned themselves about
dancing and laughing! Laughing, indeed! My part of the town was where
they starved. There was mighty little laughing among us, I can promise
you.

In their masquerading they had naturally, as if it was a part of the
life they represented, assumed, as I have said, the old expression of
eagerness, as if there was always something wanting. And yet, I say,
they laughed with each other. In the unreasonable, illogical way of
the Past, although everybody always wanted everything for himself, and
tried to overreach his neighbor, it was the custom to pretend that
nobody wanted anything, but that everybody trusted his friend, and
that everybody lived for the sole purpose of helping other people.
Therefore, they shook hands continually, and grinned at each other when
they met, as if they were pleased to meet and--. Well, the hypocrisies
of the Past were as ridiculous as its selfishness was base.

But three of the party sat apart in the Picture Gallery. They were
Christine and the two cousins, Mildred and Jack Carera. They were
talking seriously and gravely.

"It comes, then," said Jack, "to this: that to all of us the Present
has grown to be utterly hateful, and to one or two of us intolerable."

"Intolerable!" the other two repeated.

"We are resolved, for our own selves at least, that we will have no
more of it, if we can help it. Are we not? But, Cousin Mildred, let
us remember that we are only three. Perhaps, among our friends in the
Museum, there may be half a dozen more who have learned to feel as
strongly as ourselves. Is half a dozen a Party large enough to effect
a Revolution? Remember, it is useless to think of remonstrance or
petition with the College. No King, Council, or Parliament in the Past
was ever half so autocratic as the College of Physicians.

"I used to read," he went on, "ages ago, about the Domination of
Priests. I don't think any Rule of Priests was ever half so intolerant
or so thorough as the Rule of the Physicians. They have not only
deprived us of the Right of Thought, but also of the Power of Thought.
The poor people cannot think. It is a truly desperate state of things.
A few years more and we, too, shall sink into the same awful slough--"

"Some of us were in it already, but Christine pulled us out," said
Mildred.

"Shall we ever get another chance of getting out?" Jack asked. "I think
not."

"Well, Jack, go on."

"As for these evening meetings of ours, you may be very sure that they
will be found out before long, and that they will be stopped. Do you
think that Grout--Grout!--will suffer his beloved invention of the
common dress to be trampled on? Do you imagine that Grout will suffer
the revival of the old forms of society?"

"Oh," Christine replied, "if we could convert Dr. Grout!"

"Another danger," said Jack, "is, that we may all get tired of these
meetings. You see, they are not the real thing. Formerly, the evening
followed the day; it was the feast after the fight. Where is now the
fight? And all the dancing, courting, pretty speeches, and tender
looks, meant only the fore-words of Love in earnest. Now, are we ready
again for Love in earnest? Can the men once more worship the women upon
whom they have gazed so long unmoved? If so, we must brave the College
and face the consequences. I know of two people only who are at present
so much in earnest as to brave the College. They are Christine and
myself."

He took the girl's hand and kissed it.

"You may add one more, Jack," said Mildred. "If you go away with
Christine, take me with you; for the Present is more intolerable than
any possible Future."

"That makes three, then. There may be more. Geoffrey and Dorothy are
never tired of whispering and billing. Perhaps they, too, are strong
enough to throw off the old terrors and to join us. But we shall see."

"I think," said Mildred, "it might depend partly on how the case is put
before them. If you made them see very clearly the miseries of their
present life, and made them yearn ardently for the things which they
have only just remembered, some of them might follow, at all costs. But
for most the College and what it holds would prove too much."

"Yet you yourself--and Christine--"

"As for me, it seems as if I remember more than anybody because I think
of the sorrows of the Past. I cannot tell now how I ever came to forget
those sorrows. And they are now grown so dear to me, that for the very
fear of losing them again, I would give up the Gift of the College and
go with you. As for Christine, she has never known at all the dread
which they now pretend used to fill all our minds and poisoned all
our lives. How, then, should she hesitate? Besides, she loves you,
Jack--and that is enough."

"Quite enough," said Christine, smiling.

"If you remember everything," Jack went on, gravely, "you remember,
Mildred, that there was something in life besides play and society. In
a corner of your father's park, for instance, there was an old gray
building, with a small tower and a peal of bells. The place stood in
a square enclosure, in which were an old broken cross, an ancient
yew-tree, two or three head-stones, and the graves of buried villagers.
You remember that place, Mildred? You and I have often played in that
ground; on weekdays we have prowled about the old building and read the
monuments on the walls; on Sundays we used to sit there with all the
people. Do you remember?"

Mildred clasped her hands.

"How could I ever forget?" she cried. "How could any of us forget?"

"Because Grout robbed you of your memory, my cousin. He could not rob
mine."

"Alas!" she lamented, "how can we ever get that back again?"

"By memory, Mildred. It will come back presently. Think of that, and
you will be less afraid to come with us. If that was able to comfort
the world formerly when the world was full of life and joy and needed
so little comfort, what should it not do for you now, when the world
is so dull and dismal, and the Awful Present is so long that it seems
never to have had a beginning, just as it promises never to have an
end. Courage, Cousin Mildred.

"And now," he went on, after a pause, "for my plan. My ship is bound
for any port to which the College may despatch her. She must sail in
about four or five weeks. I shall take you both on board. Christine
will be my wife--you shall be our companion. Perhaps one or two more
may go with us. We shall take certain things that we shall want. I can
procure all these without the least suspicion, and we shall sail to an
island of which I know, where the air is always warm and the soil is
fruitful. There the sailors shall land us and shall sail away, unless
they please to join us. And there we will live out our allotted lives,
without asking anything of the College. The revival of that lost part
of your memory, Mildred, will serve you in place of what they could
have given you. You agree? Well, that is settled, then. Let us go back."

       *       *       *       *       *

But, as you shall see, this plan was never carried out.

When all went away that evening, Mildred remained behind.

"Christine," she said, "I have something to tell you. Take me
somewhere--to some dark place--where we can whisper."

One might as well have talked at the top of his voice, just where they
were, for any chance of being heard; but guilt made the woman tremble.

"Come into the Picture Gallery," said Christine, leading the way. "No
one can hear what we say there. My dear, in the old days when people
were going to conspire they always began by going to dark galleries,
vaults, and secret places. This is quite delightful. I feel like a
conspirator."

"Don't laugh at me, dear," said Mildred; "for, indeed, when you
have heard what I have to say, you will feel very much more like a
conspirator."

The room was in darkness, but for the moonlight which poured in through
the windows of one side, and made queer work with the pictures on which
it fell. At the end the moonlight shone through the door, hardly ever
used, which led from the Gallery into the Garden of the College beyond.

"What is that?" Mildred caught Christine by the hand.

"It is the door leading into the College Gardens. How came it open?"

"Have you a key?"

"I suppose there is a key on the old rusty bunch hanging up in the
Museum, but I do not know--I have never tried the keys. Who could have
opened it?"

Christine walked down the Gallery hastily, Mildred following. The door
was standing wide open.

"Who has done this?" asked Christine, again. "I cannot tell who could
have opened the door, or why. It has never been opened before."

Mildred shuddered. "It is thrown open for some mischief," she said; "we
shall find out soon enough by whom."

Then they looked out through the door into the Garden of the College.
The door faced a semicircular lawn run wild with rank grass never
shorn; behind the lawn were trees; and the moonlight lay on all.

Suddenly the girls caught hands and shrank back into the door-way, for
a tall form emerged from the trees and appeared upon the lawn, where he
walked with hanging head and hands clasped behind his back.

"It is the Arch Physician!" Christine whispered.

"It is Harry Linister," Mildred murmured.

Then they retreated within and shut the door noiselessly; but they
could not lock or fasten it.

"I can see that part of the Garden from a window in the Library," said
Christine. "He walks there every morning and every evening. He is
always alone. He always hangs his head, and he always looks fit to cry
for trouble. What is the good of being Arch Physician, if you cannot
have things done as you want?"

"My dear," said Mildred, "I am afraid you do not quite understand. In
the old days--I mean not quite the dear old days, but in the time when
people still discussed things and we had not been robbed of memory and
of understanding--it was very well known that the Arch Physician was
out-voted in the College by Grout and his Party."

"By Doctor Grout?"

"My dear, Grout was never a Doctor. He only calls himself Doctor. I
remember when Grout was an ignorant man taken into Professor Linister's
Laboratory to wash up the pots and bottles. He was thin, just as
he is now--a short, dark, and sour-faced man, with bright eyes. Oh,
a clever man, I dare say, but ignorant, and full of hatred for the
class of culture and refinement. It was Grout who led the Party which
took away land and wealth from individuals and transferred all to the
State. It was Grout who ordered the Massacre of the Old. It was Grout
who invented the horrible cruelty of the Common Dress. It was Grout
who made the College what it is--not what it was meant to be. It was
originally the Guardian of Life and Health. It has become the Tyrant
of the People. It has destroyed everything--everything that makes life
possible--and it tells the People to be happy because they live. It is
Grout--Grout!--who has done this. Not the Arch Physician. Not Harry
Linister."

"Why do you say 'Harry Linister,' Mildred?"

"My dear, I think that of all women living I have the greatest cause to
hate the Great Discovery, because it robbed me of my lover."

"Tell me how, dear."

"I told you, Christine, that the revival of the Past was the revival
of sorrows that I would never again forget. Listen, then, and I will
tell you what they were. When the Great Discovery was announced, Harry
Linister was already a man well known in Science, Christine; but he was
also well known in Society as well. Science did not prevent him from
falling in love. And he fell in love with--me. Yes--with me. We met
that fatal evening at the Royal Institution, and we arranged, before
the Lecture, where we should meet after the Lecture. My dear, I knew
very well what he was going to say; and--oh, my poor heart!--how happy
I was to think of it! There was nobody in London more clever, more
handsome, and more promising than Harry. He was rich, if that mattered
anything to me; he was already a Fellow of the Royal Society, for some
great discoveries he had made; everybody said that a splendid career
was before him--and he loved me, Christine."

"Well?"

"Well, the news of the Great Discovery carried him out of himself. He
forgot his love--and me--and everything. When his eyes fell upon me
again, I know not how long after, I was in the hideous Common Dress,
and he no more recognized me than a stranger would recognize one out of
a herd of sheep."

"How could he forget? Do you think that Jack could ever forget me?"

"I am sure he will not, at any rate. Now, Christine, I am going to try
something serious. I am going to try to convert the Arch Physician
himself!"

"Mildred!"

"Why not? He is still a man, I suppose. Nobody ever thought that Grout
was a man; but Harry Linister was once a man, and should be still. And
if he have a memory as well as eyes, why--then--" she sighed. "But that
would be too much, indeed, to hope."

"What if you win him, Mildred?"

"Why, child, he used to love me. Is not that enough? Besides, he _knows
the Great Secret_. If we have him with us, we have also with us all the
people whom we can shake, push, or prick out of their present miserable
apathy. Why did we ever agree to the stupid work day by day? We began
by fighting for the wealth, and those who survived enjoyed it. Why
did we not go on fighting? Why did we consent to wear this hideous
dress? Why did we consent to be robbed of our intelligence, and to be
reduced to the condition of sheep? All because the College had the
Great Secret, and they made the People think that to forego that one
advantage was worse than all other evils that could happen to them. It
was Grout--the villany of Grout--that did it. Now, if we can by any
persuasion draw the Arch Physician over to ourselves, we win the cause
for all those who join us, because they will lose nothing."

"How will you win him, Mildred?"

"Child, you are young; you do not know the history of Delilah, of the
Sirens, of Circe, of Cleopatra, of Vivien, of a thousand Fair Ladies
who have witched away the senses of great men, so that they have become
as wax in the hands of their conquerors. Poor Harry! His heart was not
always as hard as stone, nor was it always as heavy as lead. I would
witch him, if I could, for his own happiness, poor lad!--and for mine
as well. Let him only come with us, bringing the precious Secret, and
we are safe!"

       *       *       *       *       *

It has been observed that many hard things were said concerning
me--Grout--and that I have, nevertheless, written them down. First the
things are all true, and I rejoice to think of the part that I have
always played in the conduct of the People since the Great Discovery
enabled me to obtain a share in that conduct. Next, it may be asked
how I became possessed of this information. That you shall presently
understand.

All that I have done in my public capacity--as for private life, I
never had any, except that one goes into a private room for sleep--has
been for the Advancement of Humanity. In order to effect this advance
with the greater ease, I found it necessary to get rid of useless
hands--therefore the Old were sacrificed; to adopt one common standard
in everything, so that there should be the same hours of work for all,
the same food both in quantity and quality, the same dress, and the
same housing. As by far the greater number belong to what were formerly
known as the lower classes, everything has been a gain for them. Now, a
gain for the majority is a gain for Humanity. As for the abolition of
disturbing emotions, such as Love, Jealousy, Ambition, Study, Learning,
and the like, the loss of them is, of course, pure gain. In short, I
willingly set down all that may be or has been said against myself,
being quite satisfied to let the truth speak for itself. I have now to
tell of the Daring Attempt made upon the Fidelity of the Chief--the
Arch Physician himself.




CHAPTER VI.

THE ARCH PHYSICIAN.


The Arch Physician generally walked in the College Gardens for
an hour or so every forenoon. They are very large and spacious
Gardens, including plantations of trees, orchards, ferneries, lawns,
flower-beds, and shrubberies. In one corner is a certain portion which,
having been left entirely alone by the gardeners, has long since become
like a tangled coppice, rather than a garden, covered with oaks and
elms and all kinds of trees, and overgrown with thick underwoods. It
was in this wild and secluded part that Dr. Linister daily walked. It
lay conveniently at the back of his own residence, and adjoining the
Museum and Picture Gallery. No one came here except himself, and but
for the beaten path which his footsteps had made in their daily walk,
the place would have become entirely overgrown. As it was, there were
thick growths of holly and of yew; tall hawthorn-trees, wild roses
spreading about among brambles; ferns grew tall in the shade, and
under the great trees there was a deep shadow even on the brightest
day. In this neglected wood there were creatures of all kinds--rabbits,
squirrels, snakes, moles, badgers, weasels, and stoats. There were also
birds of all kinds in the wood, and in the stream that ran through the
place there were otters. In this solitary place Dr. Linister walked
every day and meditated. The wildness and the solitude pleased and
soothed him. I have already explained that he had always, from the
outset, been most strongly opposed to the policy of the majority, and
that he was never free from a certain melancholy. Perhaps he meditated
on the world as he would have made it, had he been able to have his own
way.

       *       *       *       *       *

I have heard that much was said among the Rebels about my conduct
during these events, as wanting in Gratitude. In the first place,
if it is at all necessary for me to defend my conduct, let me point
out that my duty to the Authority of the House must come before
everything--certainly before the claims of private gratitude. In the
second place, I owe no gratitude at all to Dr. Linister, or to anybody.
I have made myself. Whatever I have done, alone I have done it, and
unaided. Dr. Linister, it is very true, received me into his laboratory
as bottle-washer and servant. Very good. He paid me my wages, and I
did his work for him. Much room for gratitude there. He looked for the
proper discharge of the work, and I looked for the regular payment of
the wages. Where does the gratitude come in? He next taught me the
elements of science. To be sure, he wanted the simpler part of his
experiments conducted by a skilled, not an ignorant, hand. Therefore
he taught me those elements. The better skilled the hand, the more he
could depend upon the successful conduct of his research. Therefore,
when he found that he could depend upon my eye and hand, he taught me
more, and encouraged me to work on my own account, and gave me the best
books to read. Very good. All for his own purposes.

What happened next? Presently, Grout the Bottle-washer became so
important in the laboratory that he became Grout the Assistant, or
Demonstrator; and another Bottle-washer was appointed--a worthy
creature who still performs that useful Function, and desires nothing
more than to wash the bottles truly and thoroughly. Next, Grout
became known outside the laboratory; many interesting and important
discoveries were made by Grout; then Grout became too big a man to be
any longer Dr. Linister's Assistant; he had his own laboratory; Grout
entered upon his own field of research. This was a practical field, and
one in which he quickly surpassed all others.

Remember that Dr. Linister never claimed, or looked for, gratitude.
He was much too wise a man. On all occasions, when it was becoming in
him, he spoke in the highest terms of his former Assistant's scientific
achievements.

There was, in fact, no question of Gratitude at all.

As for personal friendship, the association of years, the bond of
union, or work in common--these are mere phrases, the worn-out old
phrases of the vanished Past. Besides, there never was any personal
friendship. Quite the contrary. Dr. Linister was never able to forget
that in the old time I had been the servant and he the master. Where
equality has been so long established, the continual reminder of former
inequality is galling.

Dr. Linister, indeed, was always antipathetic from the beginning.
Except over a research, we could have nothing in common. In the old
days he was what they called a gentleman; he was also a scholar; he
used to play music and write verses; he would act and dance and sing,
and do all kinds of things; he was one of those men who always wanted
to do everything that other men can do, and to do it as well as other
men could do it. So that, though he was a great scientific worker,
he spent half his day at his club, or at his sports, or in Society;
that is to say, with the women--and mostly, I think, among the games
and amusements of the women. There was every day, I remember, a great
running to and fro of page-boys with notes from them; and he was always
ready to leave any, even the most important work, just to run after a
woman's caprice.

As for me, I never had any school education at all; I never had
anything to do with Society; the sight of a woman always filled me with
contempt for the man who could waste time in running after a creature
who knew no science, never cared for any, and was so wont to disfigure
her natural figure by the way she crowded on her misshapen clothes that
no one could guess what it was like beneath them. As for music, art,
and the rest of it, I never asked so much as what they meant; after I
began to make my way, I had the laboratory for work, play, and all.

When, again, it came to the time when the Property question became
acute, and we attempted to solve it by a Civil War, although Dr.
Linister adhered to his determination not to leave his laboratory, his
sympathies were always with individualism. Nay, he never disguised his
opinion, but was accustomed regularly to set it forth at our Council
meetings in the House of Life--that the abolition of property and
the establishment of the perfect Socialism were the greatest blows
ever inflicted upon civilization. It is not, however, civilization
which the College advances, but Science--which is a very different
thing--and the Scientific End of Humanity. The gradual extinction of
all the emotions--love, jealousy, ambition, rivalry--Dr. Linister
maintained, made life so poor a thing that painless extinction would be
the very best thing possible for the whole race. It is useless to point
out, to one so prejudiced, the enormous advantage gained in securing
constant tranquillity of mind. He was even, sometimes, an advocate for
the revival of fighting--fighting, the old barbarous way of settling
disputes, in which lives were thrown away by thousands on a single
field. Nor would he ever agree with the majority of the House that the
only End of Humanity is mere existence, at which Science should always
aim, prolonged without exertion, thought, care, or emotion of any kind.

In fact, according to the contention of my followers and myself, the
Triumph of Science is as follows: The Philosopher finds a creature,
extremely short-lived at the best, liable to every kind of disease
and suffering from external causes, torn to pieces from within by all
kinds of conflicting emotions; a creature most eager and insatiate
of appetite, fiery and impetuous, quarrelsome and murderous, most
difficult to drive or lead, guided only by its own selfish desires,
tormented by intellectual doubts and questions which can never be
answered. The Philosopher works upon this creature until he has moulded
it into another so different that no one would perceive any likeness to
the original creature. The new creature is immortal; it is free from
disease or the possibility of disease; it has no emotions, no desires,
and no intellectual restlessness. It breathes, eats, sleeps.

Such is my idea of Science Triumphant. It was never Dr. Linister's.

In manners, the Arch Physician preserved the old manners of courtesy
and deference which were the fashion when he was brought up. His
special work had been for many years the study of the so-called
incurable diseases, such as asthma, gout, rheumatism, and so forth.
For my own part, my mind, since I became Suffragan, has always been
occupied with Administration, having steadily in view the Triumph of
Science. I have, with this intention, made the Social Equality real and
complete from every point; I have also endeavored to simplify labor,
to enlarge the production and the distribution of food by mechanical
means, and thus to decrease the necessity for thought, contrivance,
and the exercise of ingenuity. Most of our work is so subdivided that
no one understands more than the little part of it which occupies
him for four hours every day. Workmen who know the whole process are
impossible. They ask, they inquire, they want to improve; when their
daily task is but a bit of mechanical drudgery, they do it without
thought and they come away. Since labor is necessary, let it be as
mechanical as possible, so that the head may not be in the least
concerned with the work of the hand. In this--my view of things--the
Arch Physician could never be brought to acquiesce. Had he been able
to have his own way, the whole of my magnificent scheme would have
been long ago destroyed and rendered impossible. I suppose it was
this impossibility of having his own way which afflicted him with so
profound a melancholy. His face was always sad, because he could never
reconcile himself to the doctrine of human equality, without which the
Perfection of Man is impossible.

It will be seen, in short, that the Arch Physician and myself held
hardly a single view in common. But he had been elected to his post,
and I to mine. We shared between us the Great Secret; and if my views
prevailed in our Council, it was due either to my own power of
impressing my views upon my colleagues, or to the truth and justice of
those views.

But as to gratitude, there was no room or cause for any.

       *       *       *       *       *

As, then, Dr. Linister walked to and fro upon the open space outside
the Picture Gallery, his hands behind him, his head hanging, and his
thoughts I know not where, he became conscious of something that was
out of the usual order. When one lives as we live, one day following
another, each like the one which went before, little departures from
the accustomed order disturb the mind. For many, many years the Doctor
had not given a thought to the Picture Gallery or to the door. Yet,
because it stood open, and he had been accustomed to see it closed, he
was disturbed, and presently lifted his head and discovered the cause.

The door stood open. Why? What was the door? Then he remembered what it
was, and whither it led. It opened into the ancient Picture Gallery,
the very existence of which he had forgotten, though every day he
saw the door and the building itself. The Picture Gallery! It was
full of the pictures painted in the last few years before the Great
Discovery; that is to say, it was full of the life which he had long
ago lived--nay, he lived it still. As he stood hesitating without the
door, that life came back to him with a strange yearning and sinking of
the heart. He had never, you see, ceased to regret it, nor had he ever
forgotten it. And now he was tempted to look upon it again. As well
might a monk in the old times look upon a picture of fair women years
after he had forsworn love.

He hesitated, his knees trembling, for merely thinking what was
within. Then he yielded to the temptation, and went into the Gallery.

The morning sun streamed through the window and lay upon the floor;
the motes danced in the sunshine; the Gallery was quite empty; but
on the walls hung, one above the other, five or six in each row, the
pictures of the Past. In some the pigments were faded; crimson was
pale-pink; green was gray; red was brown; but the figures were there,
and the Life which he had lost once more flashed upon his brain. He
saw the women whom once he had loved so much; they were lying on soft
couches, gazing upon him with eyes which made his heart to beat and his
whole frame to tremble; they were dancing; they were in boats, dressed
in dainty summer costume; they were playing lawn-tennis; they were in
drawing-rooms, on horseback, on lawns, in gardens; they were being
wooed by their lovers. What more? They were painted in fancy costumes,
ancient costumes, and even with no costume at all. And the more he
looked, the more his cheek glowed and his heart beat. Where had they
gone--the women of his youth?

Suddenly he heard the tinkling of a musical instrument. It was a thing
they used to call a zither. He started, as one awakened out of a dream.
Then he heard a voice singing; and it sang the same song he had heard
that night five or six weeks ago--his own song:

  "The girls they laugh, the girls they cry,
    'What shall their guerdon be?--
  Alas! that some must fall and die!--
    Bring forth our gauds to see.
  'Twere all too slight, give what we might.'
    Up spoke a soldier tall:
  'Oh! Love is worth the whole broad earth;
  Oh! Love is worth the whole broad earth;
    Give that, you give us all!'"

This time, however, it was another voice--a fuller and richer
voice--which sang those words.

Dr. Linister started again when the voice began. He changed color, and
his cheek grew pale.

"Heavens!" he murmured. "Are there phantoms in the air? What does it
mean? This is the second time--my own song--the foolish old song--my
own air--the foolish, tinkling air that they used to like! And the
voice--I remember the voice--whose voice is it? I remember the
voice--whose voice is it?"

He looked round him again, at the pictures, as if to find among them
the face he sought. The pictures showed all the life of the Past; the
ball-room with the dancers; the sports of the field; the drive in the
afternoon, the ride in the morning; the bevy of girls; the soldiers and
the sailors; the streets crowded with people; the vile slums and the
picturesque blackguardism of the City--but not the face he wanted. Then
he left off looking for the singer, and began to think of the faces
before him.

"On every face," he said, "there is unsatisfied desire. Yet they are
the happier for that very dissatisfaction. Yes--they are the happier."
He paused before a painted group of street children; some were playing
over the gutter; some were sitting on door-steps, carrying babies as
big as themselves; one was sucking a piece of orange-peel picked up on
the pavement; one was gnawing a crust. They were all ragged and half
starved. "Yet," said the Arch Physician, "they are happy. But we have
no children now. In those days they could paint and draw--and we have
lost the Art. Great heavens!" he cried, impatiently, "we have lost
every Art. Cruel! cruel!" Then from within there broke upon his ears a
strain of music. It was so long since he had heard any music that at
first it took away his breath. Wonderful that a mere sound such as that
of music should produce such an effect upon a man of science! "Oh," he
sighed, heavily, "we have even thrown away that! Yet--where--where does
the music come from? Who plays it?"

While he listened, carried away by the pictures and by the music and
by his own thoughts to the Past, his mind full of the Past, it did not
surprise him in the least that there came out from the door between the
Gallery and the Museum a young lady belonging absolutely to the Past.
There was no touch of the Present about her at all. She did not wear
the regulation dress; she did not wear the flat cap.

"It is," said Dr. Linister, "the Face that belongs to the Voice. I know
it now. Where did I see it last? To whom does it belong?"

She stood for a few moments in the sunshine. Behind her was a great
picture all crimson and purple, a mass of flaming color, before which
her tall and slight figure, dressed in a delicate stuff of soft creamy
color, stood clearly outlined. The front of the dress--at least that
part which covered the throat to the waist--was of some warmer color;
there were flowers at her left shoulder; her hair was braided tightly
round her head; round her neck was a ribbon with something hanging from
it; she wore brown gloves, and carried a straw hat dangling in her
hand. It was, perhaps, the sunshine which made her eyes so bright, her
cheek so glowing, her rosy lips so quivering.

She stood there, looking straight down the Hall, as if she saw no one.

Dr. Linister gazed and turned pale; his cheeks were so white that you
might have thought him about to faint; he reeled and trembled.

"GOOD GOD!" he murmured, falling back upon the interjection of
the Past, "we have lost the Beauty of women! Oh, Fools! Fools! We have
thrown all away--all--and for what?"

Then the girl came swiftly down the Hall towards him. A smile of
welcome was on her lips; a blush upon her cheek; her eyes looked up and
dropped again, and again looked up and once more dropped.

Then she stopped before him and held out both her hands.

"Harry Linister!" she cried, as if surprised, and with a little laugh,
"how long is it since last we met?"




CHAPTER VII.

THE FIDELITY OF JOHN LAX.


That morning, while I was in my private laboratory, idly turning over
certain Notes on experiments conducted for the artificial manufacture
of food, I was interrupted by a knock at the door.

My visitor was the Porter of the House of Life, our most trusted
servant, John Lax. His duty it was to sleep in the House--his chamber
being that ancient room over the South Porch--to inspect the furnaces
and laboratories after the work of the day was closed, and at all times
to keep an eye upon the Fabric itself, so that it should in no way fall
out of repair. His orders were also to kill any strangers who might try
to force their way into the House on any pretence whatever.

He was a stout, sturdy fellow, vigorous and strong, though the Great
Discovery had found him nearly forty years of age; his hair, though it
had gone bald on the top, was still thick on the sides, and gave him
a terrifying appearance under his cap of scarlet and gold. He carried
a great halberd as a wand of office, and his coat and cap matched each
other for color and for gold embroidery. Save as representing the
authority of the House and College, I would never have allowed such a
splendid appearance to any one.

"What have you come to tell me, John?" I asked.

I may explain that I had always found John Lax useful in keeping
me informed as to the internal condition of the College and its
Assistants--what was said and debated--what opinions were advanced, by
what men, and so forth.

"In the College itself, Suffragan," he said, "and in the House, things
are mighty dull and quiet. Blessed if a little Discontent or a Mutiny,
or something, wouldn't be worth having, just to shake up the lot.
There's not even a grumbler left. A little rising and a few heads
broken, and we should settle down again, quiet and contented again."

"Don't talk like a fool, John."

"Well, Suffragan, you like to hear all that goes on. I wonder what
you'll say to what I'm going to tell you now?"

"Go on, John. What is it?"

"It's irregular, Suffragan, but your Honor is above the Law; and,
before beginning a long story--mind you, a most important story it is--"

"What is it about? Who's in it?"

"Lots of the People are in it. They don't count. He's in it now--come!"

"He?"

John Lax had pointed over his shoulder so clearly in the direction of
the Arch Physician's residence that I could not but understand. Yet I
pretended.

"He, John? Who is he?"

"The Arch Physician is in it. There! Now, Suffragan, bring out that
bottle and a glass, and I can then tell you the story, without fear of
ill consequences to my throat that was once delicate."

I gave him the bottle and a glass, and, after drinking a tumblerful of
whiskey (forbidden to the People) he began.

Certain reasons, he said, had made him suspicious as to what went on
at night in the Museum during the last few weeks. The lights were up
until late at night. Once he tried the doors, and found that they were
locked. He heard the playing of music within, and the sound of many
voices.

Now, there is, as I told John Lax at this point, no law against the
assemblage of the People, nor against their sitting up, or singing and
playing together. I had, to be sure, hoped that they had long ceased to
desire to meet together, and had quite forgotten how to make music.

He remembered, John Lax went on to say, that there was a door leading
into the Picture Gallery from the College Garden--a door of which he
held the key.

He opened this door quietly, and then, night after night, he crept
into the Picture Gallery, and watched what went on through the door,
which opened upon the Museum. He had found, in fact, a place close by
the door, where, hidden behind a group of statuary, he could watch and
listen in almost perfect security.

I then heard, to my amazement, how a small company of the People were
every night carrying on a revival of the Past; not with the laudable
intention of disgusting themselves with the horrors of that time, but
exactly the contrary. It was only the pleasant side of that time--the
evening life of the rich and careless--which these foolish persons
reproduced.

They had, in fact, gone so far, John Lax told me, as to fall in love
with that time, to deride the Present, and to pour abuse upon my
name--mine--as the supposed chief author of the Social Equality. This
was very well for a beginning. This was a startling awakener out of
a Fool's Paradise. True, the company was small; they might be easily
dispersed or isolated; means might be found to terrify them into
submission. Yet it gave me a rude shock.

"I've had my suspicions," John Lax continued, "ever since one morning
when I looked into the Museum and see that young gal dressed up and
carrying on before the looking-glass, more like--well, more like an
actress at the Pav, as they used to make 'em, than like a decent woman.
But now there's more." He stopped and whispered, hoarsely, "Suffragan,
I've just come from a little turn about the Garden. Outside the Picture
Gallery, where there's a bit o' turf and a lot of trees all standin'
around, there's a very curious sight to see this minute; and if you'll
get up and go along o' me, Suffragan, you'll be pleased--you will,
indeed--astonished and pleased you will be."

I obeyed. I arose and followed this zealous servant. He led me to a
part of the Garden which I did not know; it was the place of which I
have spoken. Here, amid a great thick growth of underwood, he took me
into the ruins of an old garden or tool-house, built of wood, but the
planks were decaying and were starting apart.

"Stand there, and look and listen," whispered John Lax, grinning.

The open planks commanded a view of a semicircular lawn, where the
neglected grass had grown thick and rank. Almost under my eyes
there was sitting upon a fallen trunk a woman, fantastically
dressed--against the Rules--and at her feet lay none other than the
Arch Physician himself! Then, indeed, I pricked up my ears and listened
with all my might.

"Are we dreaming, Mildred?" he murmured. "Are we dreaming?"

"No, Harry; we have all been dreaming for a long, long time--never
mind how long. Just now we are not dreaming, we are truly awake. You
are my old playfellow, and I am your old sweetheart," she said, with a
little blush. "Tell me what you are doing--always in your laboratory. I
suppose, always finding some new secrets. Does it make you any happier,
Harry, to be always finding something new?"

"It is the only thing that makes life endurable--to discover the
secrets of Nature. For what other purpose do we live?"

"Then, Harry, for what purpose do the rest of us live, who do not
investigate those secrets? Can women be happy in no other way? We do
not prosecute any kind of research, you know."

"Happy? Are we in the Present or the Past, Mildred?"

He looked about him, as if expecting to see the figures of the Pictures
in the Gallery walking about upon the grass.

"Just now, Harry, we are in the Past. We are back--we two together--in
the glorious and beautiful Past, where everything was delightful.
Outside this place there is the horrible Present. You have made the
Present for us, and therefore you ought to know what it is. Let me
look at you, Harry. Why, the old look is coming back to your eyes.
Take off that black gown, Harry, and throw it away, while you are with
me. So. You are now my old friend again, and we can talk. You are no
longer the President of the Holy College, the terrible and venerable
Arch Physician, the Guardian of the House of Life. You are plain Harry
Linister again. Tell me, then, Harry, are you happy in this beautiful
Present that you have made?"

"No, Mildred; I am never happy."

"Then why not unmake the Present? Why not return to the Past?"

"It is impossible. We might go back to the Past for a little; but it
would become intolerable again, as it did before. Formerly there was no
time for any of the fleeting things of life to lose their rapture. All
things were enjoyed for a moment, and then vanished. Now"--he sighed
wearily--"they last--they last. So that there is nothing left for us
but the finding of new secrets. And for you, Mildred?"

"I have been in a dream," she replied. "Oh, a long, long nightmare,
that has never left me, day or night. I don't know how long it has
lasted. But it has lifted at last, thank GOD!"

The Arch Physician started and looked astonished.

"It seems a long time," he said, "since I heard those words. I thought
we had forgotten--"

"It was a dream of no change, day after day. Nothing happened. In
the morning we worked; in the afternoon we rested; in the evening we
took food; at night we slept. And the mind was dead. There were no
books to read; there was nothing to talk about; there was nothing
to hope. Always the same work--a piece of work that nobody cared
to do--a mechanical piece of work. Always the same dress--the same
hideous, horrible dress. We were all alike; there was nothing at all to
distinguish us. The Past seemed forgotten."

"Nothing can be ever forgotten," said Dr. Linister; "but it may be put
away for a time."

"Oh, when I think of all that we had forgotten, it seems terrible! Yet
we lived--how could we live?--it was not life. No thought, no care,
about anything. Every one centred in himself, careless of his neighbor.
Why, I did not know so much as the occupants of the rooms next to my
own. Men looked on women, and women on men, without thought or emotion.
Love was dead--Life was Death? Harry, it was a most dreadful dream. And
in the night there used to come a terrible nightmare of nothingness!
It was as if I floated alone in ether, far from the world or life, and
could find nothing--nothing--for the mind to grasp or think of. And
I woke at the point of madness. A dreadful dream! And yet we lived.
Rather than go back to that most terrible dream, I would--I would--"

She clasped her forehead with her hand and looked about her with
haggard eyes.

"Yes, yes," said Dr. Linister; "I ought to have guessed your
sufferings--by my own. Yet I have had my laboratory."

"Then I was shaken out of the dream by a girl--by Christine. And now we
are resolved--some of us--at all costs and hazards--yes, even if we are
debarred from the Great Discovery--to--live--again--to live--again!"
she repeated, slowly. "Do you know, Harry, what that means? To go
back--to live again! Only think what that means."

He was silent.

"Have you forgotten, Harry," she asked, softly, "what that means?"

"No," he said. "I remember everything; but I am trying to understand.
The accursed Present is around and above me, like a horrible black
Fog. How can we lift it? How can we live again?"

"Some of us have found out a way. In the morning we put on the odious
uniform, and do our allotted task among the poor wretches who are still
in that bad dream of never-ending monotony. We sit among them, silent
ourselves, trying to disguise the new light that has come back to our
eyes, in the Public Hall. In the evening we come here, put on the old
dresses, and live the old life."

"It is wonderful," he said. "I knew all along that human nature would
one day assert itself again. I told Grout so. He has always been quite
wrong!"

"Grout! What does Grout know of civilized life? Grout! Why, he was
your own bottle-washer--a common servant. He thought it was justice to
reduce everybody to his own level, and happiness for them to remain
there! Grout! Why, he has only one idea--to make us mere machines. Oh,
Harry!" she said, reproach in her eyes, "you are Arch Physician, and
you cannot alter things!"

"No; I have the majority of the College against me."

"Am I looking well, Harry, after all these years?"

She suddenly changed her voice and manner and laughed, and turned her
face to meet his. Witch! Abominable Witch!

"Well, Mildred, was it yesterday that I loved you? Was the Great
Discovery made only yesterday? Oh, you look lovelier than ever!"

"Lovely means worthy of love, Harry. But you have killed love."

"No, no. Love died. We did not kill love. Why did the men cease to love
the women? Was it that they saw them every day, and so grew tired of
them?"

"Perhaps it was because you took from us the things that might
have kept love alive; music, art, literature, grace, culture,
society--everything."

"We did not take them. They died."

"And then you dressed us all alike, in the most hideous costume ever
invented."

"It was Grout's dress."

"What is the good of being Arch Physician if one cannot have his own
way?"

Harry sighed.

"My place is in the laboratory," he said. "I experiment, and I
discover. The Suffragan administers. It has always been the rule. Yet
you live again, Mildred. Tell me more. I do not understand how you
contrive to live again."

"We have a little company of twenty or thirty, who meet together in the
evening after the dinner is over. No one else ever comes to the Museum.
As soon as it is dark, you know very well, the People all creep home
and go to bed; but my friends come here. It was Christine who began it.
She found or made the dresses for us; she beguiled us into forgetting
the Present and going back to the Past. Now we have succeeded in caring
nothing at all about the Present. We began by pretending. It is no
longer pretence. The Past lives again, and we hate the Present. Oh, we
hate and loathe it!"

"Yes, yes. But how do you revive the Past?"

"We have dances. You used to dance very well formerly, my dear Harry.
That was before you walked every day in a grand Procession, and took
the highest place in the Public Hall. I wonder if you could dance
again? Nature's secrets are not so heavy that they would clog your
feet, are they? We sing and play: the old music has been found, and
we are beginning to play it properly again. We talk; we act little
drawing-room plays; sometimes we draw or paint; and--oh, Harry!--the
men have begun again to make Love--real, ardent Love! All the dear old
passions are reviving. We are always finding other poor creatures like
ourselves, who were once ladies and gentlemen, and now are aimless and
soulless; and we recruit them."

"What will Grout say when he finds it out?"

"He can never make us go back to the Present again. So far, I defy
Grout, Harry."

The Arch Physician sighed.

"The old life!" he said; "the old life! I will confess, Mildred, that
I have never forgotten it--not for a day; and I have never ceased to
regret that it was not continued."

"Grout pulled it to pieces; but we will revive it."

"If it could be revived; but that is impossible."

"Nothing is impossible to you--nothing--to you. Consider, Harry," she
whispered. "You have the Secret."

He started and changed color.

"Yes, yes," he said; "but what then?"

"Come and see the old life revived. Come this evening; come, dear
Harry." She laid a hand upon his arm. "Come, for auld lang syne.
Can the old emotions revive again, even in the breast of the Arch
Physician?"

His eyes met hers. He trembled--a sure sign that the old spirit was
reviving in him. Then he spoke in a kind of murmur:

"I have been living alone so long--so long--that I thought there was
nothing left but solitude forever. Grout likes it. He will have it that
loneliness belongs to the Higher Life."

"Come to us," she replied, her hand still on his arm, her eyes turned
so as to look into his. Ah, shameless Witch! "We are not lonely; we
talk; we exchange looks and smiles. We have begun again to practise
the old arts; we have begun to read in each other's souls. Old thoughts
that we had long forgotten are pouring back into our minds; it is
strange to find them there again. Come, Harry; forget the laboratory
for a while, and come with us; but come without Grout. The mere aspect
of Grout would cause all our innocent joys to take flight and vanish.
Come! Be no more the Sacred Head of the Holy College, but my dear old
friend and companion, Harry Linister, who might have been but for the
Great Discovery--but that is foolish. Come, Harry; come this evening."




CHAPTER VIII.

THE ARCH TRAITOR.


I dismissed John Lax, charging him with the most profound secrecy. I
knew, and had known for a long time, that this man, formerly the avowed
enemy of aristocrats, nourished an extraordinary hatred for the Arch
Physician, and therefore I was certain that he would keep silence.

I resolved that I would myself keep a watch, and, if possible, be
present at the meeting of this evening. What would happen I knew not,
nor could I tell what to do; there are no laws in our community to
prevent such meetings. If the Arch Physician chooses to attend such a
play-acting, how is he to be prevented? But I would myself watch. You
shall hear how I was rewarded.

Dr. Linister was, as usual, melancholy and preoccupied at Supper.
He said nothing of what he intended. As for me, I looked about the
Hall to see if there were any whom I could detect, from any unnatural
restlessness, as members of this dangerous company; but I could see
none, except the girl Christine, whose vivacity might be allowed on
the score of youth. The face of John Lax, it is true, as he sat at
the lowest place of our table, betokened an ill-suppressed joy and an
eagerness quite interesting to one who understood the meaning of these
emotions. Poor John Lax! Never again shall we find one like unto him
for zeal and strength and courage.

I waited until half-past nine o'clock; then I sallied forth.

It was a dark night and still. There was no moon; the sky was cloudy;
no wind was in the air, and from time to time there were low rumblings
of distant thunder.

I made my way cautiously and noiselessly through the dark Garden to
the entrance of the Picture Gallery, which the faithful John Lax had
left open for me. I ventured, with every precaution, into the Gallery.
It seemed quite empty, but at the end there was a door opening into
the Museum, which poured a narrow stream of light straight down the
middle of the Gallery. I crept along the dark wall, and presently found
myself at the end close to this door. And here I came upon the group of
statuary of which John Lax had told me where I could crouch and hide in
perfect safety, unseen myself, yet able to see everything that went on
within.

I confess that even the revelations of John Lax had not prepared me for
the scene which met my eyes. There were thirty or forty men and women
present; the room was lit up; there were flowers in vases set about;
there was a musical instrument, at which one sat down and sang. When
she had finished, everybody began to laugh and talk. Then another sat
down and began to play, and then they went out upon the floor two by
two, in pairs, and began to twirl round like teetotums. As for their
dresses, I never saw the like; for the women were dressed in frocks
of silk--white, pink, cream-colored, trimmed with lace; with jewels
on their arms and necks, and long white gloves, and flowers in their
hair. In their hands they carried fans, and their dresses were low,
exposing their necks, and so much of their arms as was not covered up
with gloves. And they looked excited and eager. The expression which I
had striven so long to impart to their faces, that of tranquillity, was
gone. The old unhappy eagerness, with flashing eyes, flushed cheeks,
and panting breath, was come back to them again. Heavens! what could be
done? As for the men, they wore a black-cloth dress--all alike--why,
then, did they dislike the regulation blue flannel?--with a large
white shirt-front and white ties and white gloves. And they, too, were
full of the restless eagerness and excitement. So different were they
all from the men and women whom I had observed day after day in the
Public Hall, that I could remember not one except the girl Christine,
and--and--yes, among them there was none other than the Arch Physician
himself, laughing, talking, dancing among the rest.

I could see perfectly well through the open door, and I was quite
certain that no one could see me; but I crouched lower behind the
marble group when they began to come out two by two, and to talk
together in the dark Gallery.

First came the girl Christine and the sailor, Jack Carera. Him at all
events I remembered. They took each other's hands and began to kiss
each other, and to talk the greatest nonsense imaginable. No one would
ever believe that sane people could possibly talk such nonsense. Then
they went back and another pair came out, and went on in the same
ridiculous fashion. One has been to a Theatre in the old time and heard
a couple of lovers talking nonsense on the stage; but never on any
stage did I ever hear such false, extravagant, absurd stuff talked as I
did when I lay hidden behind that group in marble.

Presently I listened with interest renewed, because the pair which
came into the Gallery was none other than the pair I had that morning
watched in the Garden--the Arch Physician and the woman he called
Mildred, though now I should hardly have known her, because she was so
dressed up and disguised. She looked, indeed, a very splendid creature;
not in the least like a plain woman. And this, I take it, was what
these would-be great ladies desired--not to be taken as plain women.
Yet they were, in spite of their fine clothes, plain and simple women
just as much as any wench of Whitechapel in the old time.

"Harry," she said, "I thank you from my very heart for coming. Now we
shall have hope."

"What hope?" he replied, "what hope? What can I do for you while the
majority of the College continue to side with Grout? What hope can I
bring you?"

"Never mind the Majority. Consider, Harry. You have the Great Secret.
Let us all go away together and found a new colony, where we will have
no Grout; and we will live our own lives. Do you love me, Harry?"

"Love you, Mildred? Oh"--he sighed deeply--"it is a stream that has
been dammed up all these years!"

"What keeps us here?" asked the girl. "It is that in your hands lies
the Great Secret. Our people would be afraid to go without it. If we
have it, Jack will take us to some island that he knows of across the
seas. But we cannot go without the Secret. You shall bring it with you."

"When could we go?" he asked, whispering.

"We could go at any time--in a day--in a week--when you please. Oh,
Harry, will you indeed rescue us? Will you come with us? Some of us
are resolved to go--Secret or not. I am one of those. Will you let me
go--alone?"

"Is it impossible," he said, "that you should go without the Secret?"

"Yes," she said; "the people would be afraid. But oh, to think of a new
life, where we shall no longer be all the same, but different! Every
one shall have his own possessions again--whatever he can win; every
one his own profession; the women shall dress as they please; we shall
have Art--and Music--and Poetry again. And--oh, Harry!"--she leaned her
head upon his shoulder--"we shall have Love again. Oh, to think of it!
Oh, to think of it! Love once more! And with Love, think of all the
other things that will come back. _They must_ come back, Harry--the old
Faith which formerly made us happy--" Her voice choked, and she burst
into tears.

I crouched behind the statues, listening. What did she cry about? The
old Faith? She could have that if she wanted, I suppose, without crying
over it. No law whatever against it.

Dr. Linister said nothing, but I saw that he was shaking--actually
shaking--and trembling all over. A most remarkable person! Who would
have believed that weakness so lamentable could lie behind so much
science?

"I yield," he said--"I yield, Mildred. The Present is so horrible that
it absolves me even from the most solemn oath. Love has been killed--we
will revive it again. All the sweet and precious things that made
life happy have been killed; Art and Learning and Music, all have
been killed--we will revive them. Yes, I will go with you, my dear;
and--since you cannot go without--I will bring the Secret with me."

"Oh, Harry! Harry!" She flung herself into his arms. "You have made me
more happy than words can tell. Oh, you are mine--you are mine, and I
am yours!"

"As for the Secret," he went on, "it belongs, if it is to be used at
all, to all mankind. Why did the College of Physicians guard it in
their own jealous keeping, save to make themselves into a mysterious
and separate Caste? Must men always appoint sacred guardians of
so-called mysteries which belong to all? My dear, since the Great
Discovery, Man has been sinking lower and lower. He can go very little
lower now. You have been rescued from the appalling fate which Grout
calls the Triumph of Science. Yes--yes--" he repeated, as if uncertain,
"the Secret belongs to all or none. Let all have it and work out their
destiny in freedom, or let none have it, and so let us go back to the
old times, when such great things were done against the fearful odds of
so short and uncertain a span. Which would be the better?"

"Only come with us, my lover. Oh, can a simple woman make you happy?
Come with us; but let our friends know--else they will not come with
us--that whenever we go, we have the Secret."

"It belongs to all," he repeated. "Come with me, then, Mildred, to
the House of Life. You shall be the first to whom the Secret shall be
revealed. And you, if you please, shall tell it to all our friends.
It is the Secret, and that alone, which keeps up the Authority of the
College. Come. It is dark; but I have a key to the North Postern. Come
with me. In the beginning of this new Life which lies before us, I
will, if you wish, give the Secret to all who share it. Come, my Love,
my Bride."

He led her by the hand quickly down the Picture Gallery and out into
the Garden.

I looked round. The silly folk in the Museum were going on with their
masquerade--laughing, singing, dancing. The girl Christine ran in and
out among them with bright eyes and eager looks. And the eyes of the
sailor, Jack Carera, followed her everywhere. Oh yes. I knew what those
eyes meant--the old selfishness--the subjection of the Woman. She was
to be his Property. And yet she seemed to like it. Forever and anon
she made some excuse to pass him, and touched his hand as she passed
and smiled sweetly. I dare say that she was a beautiful girl--but
Beauty has nothing at all to do with the Administration of the people.
However, there was no time to be lost. The Arch Physician was going to
betray the Great Secret.

Happily he would have to go all the way round to the North Postern.
There was time, if I was quick, to call witnesses, and to seize him in
the very act. And then--the Penalty. Death! Death! Death!




CHAPTER IX.

IN THE INNER HOUSE.


The House of Life, you have already learned, is a great and venerable
building. We build no such houses now. No one but those who belong to
the Holy College--viz., the Arch Physician, the Suffragan, the Fellows
or Physicians, and the Assistants--are permitted to enter its doors
or to witness the work that is carried on within these walls. It is,
however, very well understood that this work concerns the prolongation
of the Vital Forces first, the preservation of Health next, and the
enlargement of scientific truth generally. The House is, in fact, the
great laboratory in which the Fellows conduct those researches of which
it is not permitted to speak outside. The prevention of disease, the
cure of hereditary and hitherto incurable diseases, the continual
lowering of the hours of labor, by new discoveries in Chemistry and
Physics, are now the principal objects of these researches. When,
in fact, we have discovered how to provide food chemically out of
simple matter, and thereby abolish the necessity for cultivation, no
more labor will be required, and Humanity will have taken the last
and greatest step of all--freedom from the necessity of toil. After
that, there will be no more need for labor, none for thought, none for
anxiety. At stated intervals food, chemically prepared, will be served
out; between those intervals man will lie at rest--asleep, or in the
torpor of unthinking rest. This will be, as I have said before, the
Triumph of Science.

The House, within, is as magnificent as it is without; that is to say,
it is spacious even beyond our requirements, and lofty even beyond the
wants of a laboratory. All day long the Fellows and the Assistants
work at their tables. Here is everything that Science wants--furnaces,
electric batteries, retorts, instruments of all kinds, and collections
of everything that may be wanted. Here--behind the Inner House--is a
great workshop where our glass vessels are made, where our instruments
are manufactured and repaired. The College contains two or three
hundred of Assistants working in their various departments. These
men, owing to the restlessness of their intellect, sometimes give
trouble, either because they want to learn more than the Fellows think
sufficient for them, or because they invent something unexpected,
or because they become dissatisfied with the tranquil conditions of
their life. Some of them from time to time have gone mad. Some, who
threatened more trouble, have been painlessly extinguished.

Within the House itself is the Inner House, to enter which is
forbidden, save to the Arch Physician, the Suffragan, and the Fellows.

This place is a kind of House within a House. Those who enter from
the South Porch see before them, more than half-way up the immense
building, steps, upon which stands a high screen of wood-work. This
screen, which is very ancient, protects the Inner House from entrance
or observation. It runs round the whole enclosure, and is most
profusely adorned with carved-work representing all kinds of things.
For my own part, I have never examined into the work, and I hardly
know what it is that is here figured. What does it advance science to
carve bunches of grapes (which everybody understands not to be grapes)
in wood? All these things in the House of Life--the carved wood,
the carved stone, the carved marble, the lofty pillars, the painted
windows--irritate and offend me. Yet the Arch Physician, who loved to
sit alone in the Inner House, would contemplate these works of Art with
a kind of rapture. Nay, he would wellnigh weep at thinking that now
there are no longer any who can work in that useless fashion.

As for what is within the Inner House, I must needs speak with caution.
Suffice it, therefore, to say that round the sides of the screen are
ancient carved seats under carved canopies, which are the seats of the
Fellows; and that on a raised stone platform, approached by several
steps, is placed the Coffer which contains the Secret of the Great
Discovery. The Arch Physician alone had the key of the Coffer; he and
his Suffragan alone possessed the Secret; the Fellows were only called
into the Inner House when a Council was held on some new Discovery or
some new adaptation of Science to the wants of Mankind.

Now, after overhearing the intended treason of the Arch Physician,
and witnessing his degradation and fall, I made haste to act; for
I plainly perceived that if the miraculous Prolongation of the
Vital Force should be allowed to pass out of our own hands, and to
become public property, an end would at once be put to the Order and
Discipline now so firmly established; the Authority of the College
would be trampled under foot; everybody would begin to live as they
pleased; the old social conditions might be revived; and the old
social inequalities would certainly begin again, because the strong
would trample on the weak. This was, perhaps, what Dr. Linister
designed. I remembered, now, how long it was before he could forget
the old distinctions; nay, how impossible it was for him ever to bring
himself to regard me, though his Suffragan--whom he had formerly made
his serving-man--as his equal. Thinking of that time, and of those
distinctions, strengthened my purpose. What I did and how I prevented
the treachery will approve itself to all who have the best interests of
mankind at heart.

       *       *       *       *       *

The House of Life after nightfall is very dark; the windows are high,
for the most part narrow, and, though there are a great many of them,
most are painted, so that even on a clear and bright day there is not
more light than enough to carry on experiments, and, if I had my way, I
would clear out all the painted glass. It is, of course, provided with
the electric light; but this is seldom used except in the short and
dark days of winter, when work is carried on after nightfall. In the
evening the place is absolutely empty. John Lax, the Porter, occupies
the South Porch and keeps the keys. But there is another and smaller
door in the north transept. It leads to a Court of Cloisters, the
ancient use of which has long been forgotten, the key of which is kept
by the Arch Physician himself.

It was with this key--at this entrance--that he came into the House. He
opened the door and closed it behind him. His footstep was not the only
one; a lighter step was heard on the stones as well. In the silence of
the place and time the closing of the door rumbled in the roof overhead
like distant thunder, and the falling of the footsteps echoed along the
walls of the great building.

The two companions did not speak.

A great many years ago, in the old times, there was a Murder done
here--a foul murder by a band of soldiers, who fell upon a Bishop or
Saint or Angel--I know not whom. The memory of the Murder has survived
the name of the victim and the very religion which he professed--it
was, perhaps, that which was still maintained among the aristocracy
when I was a boy. Not only is the memory of the murder preserved, but
John Lax--who, soon after the Great Discovery, when we took over the
building from the priests of the old religion, was appointed its Porter
and heard the old stories--would tell all those who chose to listen
how the Murderers came in at that small door and how the murder was
committed on such a spot, the stones of which are to this day red with
the blood of the murdered man. On the spot, however, stands now a great
electrical battery.

The Arch Physician, now about to betray his trust, led his companion,
the woman Mildred Carera, by the hand past this place to the steps
which lead to the Inner House. They ascended those steps. Standing
there, still outside the Inner House, Dr. Linister bade the woman turn
round and look upon the Great House of Life.

The clouds had dispersed, and the moonlight was now shining through the
windows of the South, lighting up the colored glass, painting bright
pictures and patterns upon the floor, and pouring white light through
those windows, which are not painted, upon the clustered pillars and
old monuments of the place. Those who were now gathered in the Inner
House listened, holding their breath in silence.

"Mildred," said Dr. Linister, "long, long years ago we stood together
upon this spot. It was after a Service of Praise and Prayer to the
God whom then the world worshipped. We came from town with a party
to see this Cathedral. When service was over, I scoffed at it in the
light manner of the time, which questioned everything and scoffed at
everything."

"I remember, Harry; and all through the service my mind was filled
with--you."

"I scoff no more, Mildred. We have seen to what a depth men can sink
when the Hope of the Future is taken from them. The memory of that
service comes back to me, and seems to consecrate the place and
the time. Mildred," he said, after a pause--oh, the House was very
silent--"this is a solemn and a sacred moment for us both. Here, side
by side, on the spot once sacred to the service of the God whom we have
long forgotten, let us renew the vows which were interrupted so long
ago. Mildred, with all my heart, with all my strength, I love thee."

"Harry," she murmured, "I am thine--even to Death itself."

"Even to Death itself," he replied. "Yes, if it comes to that. If the
Great Discovery itself must be abandoned; if we find that only at that
price can we regain the things we have lost."

"It was Grout who destroyed Religion--not the Great Discovery," said
the girl.

We kept silence in the House, but we heard every word. And this was
true, and my heart glowed to think how true it was.

"Nay, not Grout, nor a thousand Grouts. Without the certainty of
parting, Religion droops and dies. There must be something not
understood, something unknown, beyond our power of discovery, or the
dependence which is the ground of religion dies away in man's heart.
He who is immortal and commands the secrets of Nature, so that he
shall neither die, nor grow old, nor become feeble, nor fall into any
disease, feels no necessity for any religion. This House, Mildred, is
the expression of religion at the time of man's greatest dependence. To
the God in whom, short-lived, ignorant, full of disease, he trusted he
built this splendid place, and put into it all the beauty that he could
command of sculpture and of form. But it speaks no longer to the People
for whom it was built. When the Great Discovery was made, it would
surely have been better to have found out whither it was going to lead
us before we consented to receive it."

"Surely--" said Mildred, but the other interrupted her.

"We did not understand; we were blind--we were blind."

"Yet--we live."

"And you have just now told me how. Remember the things that men said
when the Discovery was made. We were to advance continually; we were to
scale heights hitherto unapproached; we were to achieve things hitherto
unknown in Art as well as in Science. Was it for the Common Meal, the
Common Dress, the Common Toil, the vacant face, the lips that never
smile, the eyes that never brighten, the tongue that never speaks, the
heart that beats only for itself, that we gave up the things we had?"

"We did not expect such an end, Harry."

"No; we had not the wit to expect it. Come, Mildred, I will give you
the Secret, and you may give it, if you please, to all the world. Oh,
I feel as if the centuries had fallen away! I am full of hope again. I
am full of the old life once more; and, Mildred--oh, my sweet!--I am
full of Love!"

He stooped and kissed her on the lips. Then he led her into the Inner
House.

       *       *       *       *       *

Now, just before Dr. Linister turned the key of the postern, the door
of the South Porch was softly closed, and a company of twenty men
walked lightly and noiselessly, in slippers, up the nave of the House.
Arrived at the Inner House, they ascended the steps and entered that
dark Chapel, every man making straight for his own seat and taking it
without a word or a breath. This was the College of Physicians hastily
called by me, and gathered together to witness the Great Treachery of
the Chief. They sat there silent and breathless listening to their talk.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Secret was kept in a cipher, intelligible only to the two who then
guarded it, in a fire-proof chest upon the stone table which was once
the altar of the old Faith.

Dr. Linister stood before the chest, his key in his hand.

"It would be better," he said, "if the new departure could be made
without the Secret. It would be far, far better if we could start again
under the old conditions; but if they are afraid to go without the
Secret, why--" He unlocked the chest. Then he paused again.

"How many years have I been the guardian of this Secret? Mildred,
when I think of the magnificent vistas which opened up before our
eyes when this Great Discovery was made; when I think of the culture
without bound or limit; the Art in which the hand was always to grow
more and more dexterous; the Science which was to advance with
gigantic strides--my child, I feel inclined to sink into the earth
with shame, only to compare that dream with the awful, the terrible,
the disgraceful reality! Let us all go away. Let us leave this place,
and let us make a new beginning, with sadder minds, yet with this
experience of the Present to guide us and to keep us from committing
worse follies. See, dear--here is the Secret. The cipher in which it is
written has a key which is in this paper. I place all in your hands.
If accident should destroy me, you have the Secret still for yourself
and friends. Use it well--use it better than we have used it. Kiss me,
Mildred. Oh, my dear!"

Then, as they lay in each other's arms, I turned on the electric light
and discovered them. The chest stood open; the papers, cipher, key and
all, were in the girl's hands; the Arch Physician was caught in the
very act of his supreme Treachery!

And lo! the Fellows of the Holy College were in the Inner House; every
man in his place, every man looking on, and every man standing upright
with eyes and gestures of scorn.

"Traitor!" they cried, one and all.

John Lax appeared at the door, halberd in hand.




CHAPTER X.

THE COUNCIL IN THE HOUSE.


"Brothers of the Holy College!" I cried, "you have beheld the
crime--you are witnesses of the Fact--you have actually seen the Arch
Physician himself revealing the Great Secret, which none of yourselves,
even of the College, hath been permitted to learn--the Secret confined
by the Wisdom of the College to himself and to his Suffragan."

"We are witnesses," they cried, with one consent. To my great
satisfaction, even those who were of Dr. Linister's party, and who
voted with him against the Administration and Policy of the College,
spoke, on this occasion, for the plain and undeniable truth.

"What," I asked, "is the Penalty when one of the least among us, even
an Assistant only, betrays to the People any of the secrets--even the
least secret--of the work carried on in this House?"

"It is DEATH," they replied, with one voice.

"It is DEATH," I repeated, pointing to the Arch Physician.

At such a moment, when nothing short of annihilation appeared in view,
one would have expected from the guilty pair an appearance of the
greatest consternation and dismay. On the contrary, the Arch Physician,
with an insensibility--or a bravado--which one would not have expected
of him, stood before us all, his arms folded, his eyes steady, his lips
even smiling. Beside him stood the girl, dressed in the ridiculous
mummery of the nineteenth century, bowed down, her face in her hands.

"It is I," she murmured--"it is I, Harry, who have brought you to
this. Oh, forgive me! Let us die together. Since I have awakened out
of the stupid torpor of the Present--since we remembered the Past--and
Love--let us die together; for I could not live without you." She knelt
at his feet, and laid her head upon his arm. "My love," she said, "my
Lord and Love! let me die with you."

At this extraordinary spectacle I laughed aloud. Love? I thought the
old wives' tales of Love and Lordship were long, long since dead and
forgotten. Yet here was a man for the sake of a woman--actually
because she wanted to go away and begin again the old pernicious
life--breaking his most sacred vows; and here was a woman--for the sake
of this man--actually and truly for his sake--asking for death--death
with him! Since, when they were both dead, there could be no more any
feeling one for the other, why ask for death? What good could that do
for either?

"Your wish," I said to this foolish woman, "shall be gratified, in
case the Judges of your case decide that your crime can be expiated
by no less a penalty. Fellows of the College, let this guilty pair be
confined for the night, and to-morrow we will try them solemnly in the
College Court according to ancient custom."

I know not how many years had elapsed since that Court was held. The
offences of the old time were for the most part against property--since
there had been no property, there had been no crimes of this kind.
Another class of old offences consisted of violence rising out of
quarrels; since almost all these quarrels originated in disputes about
property--every man in the old time who had property was either a thief
or the son of a thief, so that disputes were naturally incessant--there
could be no longer any such quarrels or any such violence. A third
class of crimes were caused by love, jealousy, and the like; these two
had happily, as we believed, disappeared forever.

The last class of crimes to vanish were those of mutiny. When the
People grew gradually to understand that the welfare of all was the
only rule of the governing body, and that selfishness, individualism,
property, privilege, would no longer be permitted, they left off
murmuring, and mutiny ceased. You have seen how orderly, how docile,
how tranquil, is the life of the People as it has been ordered by
the Sacred College. Alas! I thought that this order, this sheep-like
freedom from Thought, was going to be henceforth universal and
undisturbed.

Our prisoners made no opposition. John Lax, the Porter, bearing his
halberd of office, marched beside them. We closed in behind them, and
in this order we led them to the strong room over the South Porch,
which is provided with bars and a lock. It is the sleeping-chamber of
John Lax, but for this night he was to remain on the watch below.

Then, as Suffragan, I called a Council of Emergency in the Inner House,
taking the Presidency in the absence of the Arch Physician.

I told my brethren briefly what had happened; how my attention had
been called to the fact that a company of the People, headed by the
young girl called Christine, had begun to assemble every night in the
Museum, there to put on clothes which belonged to the old time, and to
masquerade in the manners, language, and amusements (so called) of that
time; that this assemblage, which might have been innocent and even
laudable if it led, as it should have done, to a detestation of the
old times, had proved mischievous, because, strangely enough, it had
exactly the opposite effect; that, in fact, everybody in the company
had fallen into an ardent yearning after the Past, and that all the
bad features of that bad time--the Social inequality, the Poverty, the
Injustice--were carefully ignored.

Upon this, one of Dr. Linister's Party arose, and begged permission
to interrupt the Suffragan. He wished to point out that memory was
indestructible; that even if we succeeded in reducing Mankind, as the
Suffragan wished, to be a mere breathing and feeding machine--the
Ultimate Triumph of Science--any one of these machines might be at any
time electrified into a full and exact memory of the Past; that, to
the average man, the Emotion of the Past would always be incomparably
preferable to the Tranquillity of the Present. What had just been done
would be done again.

I went on, after this interruption, to narrate how I set myself to
watch, and presently saw the Arch Physician himself enter the Museum;
how he exchanged his gown for the costume in which the men disfigured
themselves, play-acted, pretended, and masqueraded with them; danced
with them, no external respect whatever being paid to his rank; and
afterwards had certain love passages--actually love passages between
the Arch Physician and a Woman of the People!--which I overheard, and
repeated as far as I could remember them. The rest my brethren of the
College knew already; how I hastily summoned them, and led them into
the Inner House just before the arrival of the Criminals.

Thereupon, without any attempt of Dr. Linister's friends to the
contrary, it was Resolved that the Trial of the Arch Physician and his
accomplices should be held in the morning.

I next invited their attention to the behavior of the girl Christine.
She it was, I told them, who had instigated the whole of the business.
A culpable curiosity it was, no doubt, that first led her to consider
and study the ways of the ancient world; what should be the ways of the
Past to an honest and loyal person, satisfied with the Wisdom which
ruled the Present? She read the old books, looked at the old pictures,
and lived all day long in the old Museum. There were many things which
she could not understand; she wanted to understand these things; and
she conceived a violent, unreasoning admiration for the old time, which
appeared to this foolish girl to be a continual round of pleasure
and excitement. Therefore she gathered together a company of those
who had belonged to the richer class in the days when property was
permitted. She artfully awakened them out of their contentment, sowed
the seeds of dissatisfaction among them, caused them to remember the
Past with a vehement longing to reproduce the worst part of it--namely,
the manners and customs of the richer class--the people for whom the
bulk of mankind toiled, so that the privileged few might have nothing
to do but to feast, dance, sing, and make love. I asked the College,
therefore, what should be done with such a girl, warning them that one
Penalty, and one only, would meet the case and render for the future
such outbreaks impossible.

Again the Physician who had spoken before rose up and remarked that
such outbreaks were inevitable, because the memory is indestructible.

"You have here," he said, "a return to the Past, because a young girl,
by reading the old books, has been able to stimulate the memory of
those who were born in the Past. Other things may bring about the
same result; a dream, the talking together of two former friends.
Let the girl alone. She has acted as we might have expected a young
girl--the only young girl among us--to have acted. She has found that
the Past, which some of us have represented as full of woe and horror,
had its pleasant side; she asks why that pleasant side could not be
reproduced. I, myself, or any of us, might ask the same question. Nay,
it is well known that I protest--and always shall protest, my friends
and I--against the Theory of the Suffragan. His Triumph of Science
we consider horrible to the last degree. I, for one, shall never be
satisfied until the Present is wholly abolished, and until we have gone
back to the good old system of Individualism, and begun to encourage
the People once more to cultivate the old happiness by the old methods
of their own exertion."

I replied that my own recollection of the old time was perfectly clear,
and that there was nothing but unhappiness in it. As a child I lived in
the street; I never had enough to eat; I was cuffed and kicked; I could
never go to bed at night until my father, who always came home drunk,
was asleep; the streets were full of miserable children like myself.
Where was the happiness described by my learned brother? Where was the
pleasant side? More I said, but it suffices to record that by a clear
majority it was Resolved to arrest the girl Christine in the morning,
and to try all three prisoners, as soon as the Court could be prepared
for them, according to ancient usage.

Early in the morning I sought an interview with the Arch Physician.
I found him, with the woman Mildred, sitting in the Chamber over the
Porch. There was no look of terror, or even of dejection, on the face
of either. Rather there was an expression as of exaltation. Yet they
were actually going to die--to cease breathing--to lose consciousness!

I told the prisoner that I desired to represent my own conduct in its
true light. I reminded him that, with him, I was guardian of the Holy
Secret. The power and authority of the College, I pointed out, were
wholly dependent upon the preservation of that Secret in its own hands.
By divulging it to the People he would make them as independent of
the Physician as the Great Discovery itself had made them independent
of the Priest. The latter had, as he pretended, the Keys of the After
Life. The former did actually hold those of the Actual Life. The
authority of the Physician gone, the people would proceed to divide
among themselves, to split up into factions, to fight and quarrel, to
hold private property, and in fact would speedily return to the old
times, and all the work that we had accomplished would be destroyed.
Every man would have the knowledge of the Secret for himself and his
family. They would all begin to fight again--first for the family, next
for the Commune, and then for the tribe or nation. All this would have
been brought about by his treachery had not I prevented it.

"Yes," he said, "doubtless you are quite right, Grout." He spoke
quite in the old manner, as if I had been still his servant in the
old laboratory. It was not till afterwards that I remembered this,
and became enraged to think of his arrogance. "We will not argue
the matter. It is not worth while. You acted after your kind, and
as I might have expected." Again it was not until afterwards that I
considered what he meant and was enraged. "When we allowed gentlehood
to be destroyed, gentle manners, honor, dignity, and such old virtues
went too. You acted--for yourself--very well, Grout. Have you anything
more to say? As for us, we have gone back to the old times, this young
lady and I--quite to the old, old times." He took her hand and kissed
it, while his eyes met hers, and they were filled with a tenderness
which amazed me. "This lady, Grout," he said, "has done me the honor of
accepting my hand. You will understand that no greater happiness could
have befallen me. The rest that follows is of no importance--none--not
the least. My dear, this is Grout, formerly employed in my laboratory.
Unfortunately he has no experience of Love, or of any of the Arts or
Culture of the good old Time; but a man of great intelligence. You can
go, Grout."




CHAPTER XI.

THE TRIAL AND SENTENCE.


I was greatly pleased with the honest zeal shown by John Lax, the
Porter, on this occasion. When, after snatching three or four hours'
sleep, I repaired to the House, I found that worthy creature polishing
at a grindstone nothing less than a great, heavy Execution Axe, which
had done service many times in the old, old days on Tower Hill, and had
since peacefully reposed in the Museum.

"Suffragan," he said, "I am making ready." His feet turned the treadle,
and the wheel flew round, and the sparks showered from the blunt old
weapon. He tried the edge with his finger. "'Tis not so sharp as a
razor," he said, "but 'twill serve."

"John Lax, methinks you anticipate the sentence of the Court."

"Suffragan, with submission, it is Death to divulge any secret of
this House. It is Death even for me, Porter of the House, to tell
them outside of any Researches or Experiments that I may observe in
my service about the House. And if so great a Penalty is pronounced
against one who would reveal such trifles as I could divulge, what of
the Great Secret itself?"

"Lax, you are a worthy man. Know, therefore, that this Secret once
divulged, the Authority of the College would vanish; and we, even the
Physicians themselves--to say nothing of the Assistants, the Bedells,
and you yourself--would become no better than the Common People. You
do well to be zealous."

John Lax nodded his head. He was a taciturn man habitually; but now he
became loquacious. He stopped the grindstone, laid down the axe, and
rammed his hands into his pockets.

"When I see them women dressed up like swells--" he began, grinning.

"John, this kind of language belongs to the old days, when even speech
was unequal."

"No matter; you understand it. Lord! Sammy Grout, the brewer's boy--we
were both Whitechapel pets; but I was an old 'un of five and thirty,
while you were on'y beginning to walk the Waste with a gal on your
arm--p'r'aps--and a ha'penny fag in your mouth. Hold on, now. It's like
this--"

What with the insolence of Dr. Linister, and the sight of the old
dresses, and the sound of the old language, I myself was carried away.
Yes, I was once more Sam Grout; again I walked upon the pavement of the
Whitechapel Road; again I was a boy in the great brewery of Mile End
Road.

"Go on, John Lax," I said, with condescension. "Revive, if it is
possible, something of the Past. I give you full leave. But when you
come to the Present, forget not the reverence due to the Suffragan."

"Right, guv'nor. Well, then, it's like this. I see them men and women
dressed up in the old fallals, and goin' on like I've seen 'em goin'
on long ago with their insolence and their haw-haws--damn 'em--and
all the old feelings came back to me, and I thought I was spoutin'
again on a Sunday mornin', and askin' my fellow-countrymen if they
always meant to sit down and be slaves. And the memory came back to
me--ah! proper it did--of a speech I made 'em one mornin' all about
this French Revolution. 'Less 'ave our own Revolution,' I sez, sez
I. 'Less bring out all the Bloomin' Kings and Queens,' I sez, 'the
Dukes and Markisses, the fat Bishops and the lazy Parsons. Less do
what the French did. Less make 'em shorter by the 'ed,' I sez. That's
what I said that mornin'. Some of the people laughed, and some of 'em
went away. There never was a lot more difficult to move than them
Whitechappellers. They'd listen--and then they'd go away. They'd too
much fine speeches give 'em--that was the matter with 'em--too much.
Nothing never came of it. That night I was in the Public havin' a
drop, and we began to talk. There was a row, and a bit of a fight. But
before we was fired out I up and said plain, for everybody to hear,
that when it came to choppin' off their noble 'eds I'd be the man to do
it--and joyful, I said. Well now, Sammy Grout, you were in that Public
Bar among that crowd--maybe you've forgotten it. But I remember you
very well. You was standin' there, and you laughed about the choppin'.
You've forgotten, Sammy. Think. It was a fine summer evenin': you
weren't in Church. Come now--you can't say you ever went to Church,
Sammy Grout."

"I never did. But go on, John Lax. Recall as much of the Past as you
wish, if it makes you love the Present more. I would not say aught to
diminish an honest zeal."

"Right, guv'nor. Well, I never got that chance. There was no choppin'
of 'eds at all. When we had to murder the old people, your Honor would
have it done scientifically; and there was as many old working-men
killed off as swells, which was a thousand pities, an' made a cove's
heart bleed. What I say is this. Here we've got a return to the old
Times. Quite unexpected it is. Now we've got such a chance, which
will never come again, let 'em just see how the old Times worked. Have
a Procession, with the Executioner goin' before the criminals, his
axe on his shoulder ready to begin. If you could only be Sammy Grout
again--but that can't be, I'm afraid--what a day's outing you would
have had to be sure! Suffragan, let us show 'em how the old Times
worked. And let me be the Executioner. I'll do it, I promise you,
proper. I've got the old spirit upon me--ah! and the old strength,
too--just as I had then. Oh! It's too much!" He sat down and hugged
the axe. I thought he would have kissed it. "It's too much! To think
that the time would ever come when I should execute a swell--and that
swell the Arch Physician himself. Damn him! He's always looked as if
everybody else was dirt beneath his feet."

"I know not," I told him gently, "what may be the decision of the
Court. But, John Lax, continue to grind your axe. I would not throw
cold water on honest zeal. Your strength, you say, is equal to your
spirit. You will not flinch at the last moment. Ah! we have some honest
men left."

The Court was held that morning in the nave of the House itself. The
Judges, who were the whole College of Physicians, sat in a semicircle;
whereas the three prisoners stood in a row--the Arch Physician carrying
himself with a haughty insolence which did not assist his chances:
clinging to his arm, still in her silk dress, with her bracelets and
chains, and her hair artfully arranged, was the woman called Mildred.
She looked once, hurriedly, at the row of Judges, and then turned
with a shudder--she found small comfort in those faces--to her lover,
and laid her head upon his shoulder, while he supported her with his
arm. The degradation and folly of the Arch Physician, apart from the
question of his guilt, as shown in this behavior, were complete.

Beside Mildred stood the girl Christine. Her face was flushed; her
eyes were bright: she stood with clasped hands, looking steadily at
the Judges: she wore, instead of the Regulation Dress, a frock of
white stuff, which she had found, I suppose, in the Museum--as if open
disobedience of our laws would prove a passport to favor. She had let
her long hair fall upon her shoulders and down her back. Perhaps she
hoped to conquer her Judges by her beauty--old time phrase! Woman's
beauty, indeed, to Judges who know every bone and every muscle in
woman's body, and can appreciate the nature of her intellect, as well
as of her structure! Woman's Beauty! As if that could ever again move
the world!

Behind the President's Chair--I was the President--stood John Lax,
bearing his halberd of office.

The Doors of the House were closed: the usual sounds of Laboratory work
were silent: the Assistants, who usually at this hour would have been
engaged in Research and Experiment, were crowded outside the Court.

I have been told, since, that there were omitted at the Trial many
formalities which should have been observed at such a Trial. For
instance, there should have been a Clerk or two to make notes of the
proceedings: there should have been a Formal Indictment: and there
should have been Witnesses. But these are idle forms. The guilt of the
Prisoners was proved: we had seen it with our own eyes. We were both
Judges and Witnesses.

I was once, however, in the old days, charged (and fined) before a
magistrate in Bow Street for assaulting a Constable, and therefore I
know something of how a Criminal Court should proceed. So, without any
unnecessary formalities, I conducted the Trial according to Common
Sense.

"What is your name?" I asked the Arch Physician.

"Harry Linister--once M.D. of Cambridge, and Fellow of the Royal
Society."

"What are you by trade?"

"Physicist and Arch Physician of the Holy College of the Inner House."

"We shall see how long you will be able to describe yourself by those
titles. Female Prisoner--you in the middle--what is your name?"

"I am the Lady Mildred Carera, daughter of the Earl of Thordisá."

"Come--come--none of your Ladyships and Earls here. We are now all
equal. You are plain Mildred. And yours--you girl in the white frock?
How dare you, either of you, appear before us in open violation of the
Rules?"

"I am named Christine," she replied. "I have put on the white frock
because it is becoming."

At this point I was interrupted by a whisper from John Lax.

"Christine's friends," he said, "are gathering in the Museum, and they
are very noisy. They threaten to give trouble."

"When the Trial and Execution are over," I told him, "arrest them every
one. Let them all be confined in the Museum. To-morrow, or perhaps this
afternoon, we will try them as well."

The man grinned with satisfaction. Had he known what a fatal mistake
I was making, he would not have grinned. Rather would his face have
expressed the most dreadful horror.

Then the Trial proceeded.

"Dr. Linister," I said, "it is a very singular point in this case that
we have not to ask you whether you plead 'guilty' or 'not guilty,'
because we have all seen you with our own eyes engaged in the very act
with which you are charged. You _are_ guilty."

"I am," he replied, calmly.

"Your companion is also guilty. I saw her practising upon you those
blandishments, or silly arts, by which women formerly lured men. We
also saw her on the point of receiving from you the Great Secret, which
must never be suffered to leave this Building."

"Yes," she said, "if he is guilty, I am guilty as well."

"As for you" (I turned to Christine), "you have been so short a time
in the world--only nineteen years or so--that to leave it will cause
little pain to you. It is not as if you had taken root with all the
years of life which the others have enjoyed. Yet the Court would fail
in its duty did it not point out the enormity of your offence. You were
allowed to grow up undisturbed in the old Museum: you spent your time
in developing a morbid curiosity into the Past. You were so curious to
see with your own eyes what it was to outward show, that you cast about
to find among the tranquil and contented People some whose minds you
might disturb and lead back to the restless old times. This was a most
guilty breach of confidence. Have you anything to say? Do you confess?"

"Yes, I confess."

"Next, you, with this woman and a Company who will also be brought to
Justice before long, began to assemble together, and to revive, with
the assistance of books, pictures, dress, and music, a portion of the
Past. But what portion? Was it the portion of the vast majority, full
of disease, injustice, and starvation? Did you show how the old Times
filled the houses with struggling needlewomen and men who refused to
struggle any longer? Did you show the Poor and the Unemployed? Not at
all. You showed the life of the Rich and the Idle. And so you revived
a longing for what shall never--never--be permitted to return--the
Period of Property and the Reign of Individualism. It was your crime
to misrepresent the Past, and to set forth the Exception as the Rule.
This must be made impossible for the future. What have you to say,
Christine?"

"Nothing. I told you before. Nothing. I have confessed. Why keep on
asking me?"

She looked round the Court with no apparent fear. I suppose it was
because she was so young, and had not yet felt any apprehension of the
Fate which was now so near unto her.

"Dr. Linister," I said, "before considering its sentence, the Court
will hear what you may have to say."

"I have but little to say," he replied. "Everybody in the College
knows that I have always been opposed to the methods adopted by the
Suffragan and the College. During the last few days, however, I have
been enabled to go back once more to the half-forgotten Past, and have
experienced once more the Emotions of which you have robbed Life. I
have seen once more, after many, many years, the Fighting Passion, the
Passion of Private Rights, and"--his voice dropped to a whisper--"I
have experienced once more the Passion of Love." He stooped and kissed
the woman Mildred on the forehead. "I regret that we did not succeed.
Had we not been caught, we should by this time have been beyond your
power--the Secret with us, to use or not, as we pleased--with a company
strong enough to defy you, and with the old Life again before us, such
as we enjoyed before you robbed us of it. We should have welcomed the
old Life, even under the old conditions: we welcome, instead of it, the
Thing which, only to think of, makes your hearts almost to stop beating
with fear and horror."

He stopped. That was a speech likely to win indulgence from the Court,
was it not?

I turned to the woman Mildred.

"And you?" I asked.

"What have I to say? The Present I loathe--I loathe--I loathe. I
would not go back to it if you offered me instant release with that
condition. I have found Love. Let me die--let me die--let me die!"

She clung to her lover passionately, weeping and sobbing. He soothed
her and caressed her. John Lax, behind me, snorted.

Then I asked the girl Christine what she wished to say.

She laughed--she actually laughed.

"Oh!" she said, "in return for the past weeks, there is no punishment
which I would not cheerfully endure. We have had--oh! the most
delightful time. It has been like a dream. Oh! Cruel, horrid, wicked
men! You found such a Life in the old Time, and you destroyed it; and
what have you given us in return? You have made us all equal who were
born unequal. Go, look at the sad and heavy faces of the People. You
have taken away everything, deliberately. You have destroyed all--all.
You have left nothing worth living for. Why, I am like Mildred. I
would not go back to the Present again if I could! Yes, for one thing
I would--to try and raise a Company of Men--not sheep--and hound them
on to storm this place, and to kill--yes, to kill"--the girl looked
so dangerous that any thought of mercy was impossible--"every one who
belongs to this Accursed House of Life!"

Here was a pretty outcome of study in the Museum! Here was a firebrand
let loose among us straight from the bad old Nineteenth Century! And we
had allowed this girl actually to grow up in our very midst.

Well, she finished, and stood trembling with rage, cheeks burning, eyes
flashing--a very fury.

I invited the Court to retire to the Inner House, and took their
opinions one by one.

They were unanimous on several points--first, that the position of
things was most dangerous to the Authority of the College and the
safety of the People; next, that the punishment of Death alone would
meet the case; thirdly, that, in future, the Museum, with the Library
and Picture Galleries, must be incorporated with the College itself, so
that this danger of the possible awakening of memory should be removed.

Here, however, our unanimity ceased. For the Fellow, of whom I have
already spoken as having always followed the Arch Physician, arose
and again insisted that what had happened to-day might very well
happen again: that nothing was more uncertain in its action, or more
indestructible, than human memory: so that, from time to time, we must
look for the arising of some Leader or Prophet who would shake up the
people and bring them out of their torpor to a state of discontent
and yearning after the lost. Wherefore he exhorted us to reconsider
our Administration, and to provide some safety-valve for the active
spirits. As to the Death of the three criminals, he would not, he could
not, oppose it. He proposed, however, that the mode of Death should be
optional. So great a light of Science as the Arch Physician had many
secrets, and could doubtless procure himself sudden and painless death
if he chose. Let him have that choice for himself and his companions;
and, as regards the girl, let her be cast into a deep sleep, and then
painlessly smothered by gas, without a sentence being pronounced upon
her at all. This leniency, he said, was demanded by her youth and her
inexperience.

In reply, I pointed out that, as regards our Administration, we were
not then considering it at all: that as for the mode of punishment,
he had not only to consider the criminals, but also the People, and
the effect of the Punishment upon them: we were not only to punish,
but also to deter. I therefore begged the Court to go back to one of
the former methods, and to one of the really horrible and barbarous,
yet comparatively painless, methods. I showed that a mere report or
announcement, made in the Public Hall, that the Arch Physician had been
executed for Treason, would produce little or no effect upon the public
mind, even if it were added that the two women, Mildred and Christine,
had suffered with him: that our people needed to see the thing itself,
in order to feel its true horror and to remember it. If Death alone
were wanted, I argued, there were dozens of ways in which Life might be
painlessly extinguished. But it was not Death alone that we desired;
it was Terror that we wished to establish, in order to prevent another
such attempt.

"Let them," I concluded, "be taken forth in solemn Procession to the
open space before the Public Hall; we ourselves will form part of that
Procession. Let them in that place, in the sight of all the People, be
publicly decapitated by the Porter of the House, John Lax."

There was a good deal of opposition, at first, to this proposition,
because it seemed barbarous and cruel; but the danger which had
threatened the Authority--nay, the very existence--of the College,
caused the opposition to give way. Why, if I had not been on the watch,
the Secret would have been gone: the College would have been ruined. It
was due to me that my proposals should be accepted. The sentence was
agreed upon.

I am bound to confess that, on being brought back to receive the
sentence of the Court, the Prisoners behaved with unexpected
Fortitude. The male criminal turned pale, but only for a moment, and
the two women caught each other by the hand. But they offered no prayer
for mercy.

They were led back to their prison in the South Porch, until the
necessary Preparations could be made.




CHAPTER XII.

THE REBELS.


It is useless to regret a thing that is done and over; otherwise one
might very bitterly regret two or three steps in these proceedings.
At the same time, it may be argued that what happened was the exact
opposite of what we had every reason to expect, and therefore we could
not blame ourselves with the event. After uncounted years of blind
obedience, respect for authority, and unquestioning submission, had
we not a full right to expect a continuance of the same spirit? What
we did not know or suspect was the violence of the reaction that had
set in. Not only had these revolutionaries gone back to the Past, but
to the very worst traditions of the Past. They had not only become
anxious to restore these old traditions; they had actually become men
of violence, and were ready to back up their new convictions by an
appeal to arms. We ought to have arrested the conspirators as soon
as they assembled; we ought to have locked them up in the Museum and
starved them into submission; we ought to have executed our criminals
in private; in short, we ought to have done just exactly what we did
not do.

While the Trial was proceeding, the new Party of Disorder were, as John
Lax reported, gathered together in the Museum, considering what was
best to be done.

They now knew all. When John Lax, in the morning, arrested the girl
Christine, by my orders, he told her in plain language what had already
happened.

"The Arch Physician is a Prisoner," he said. "He has been locked up all
night in my room, over the South Porch. I watched below. Ha! If he had
tried to escape, my instructions were to knock him on the head, Arch
Physician or not. The woman Mildred is a Prisoner, as well. She was
locked up with him. They may hold each other's hands and look into each
other's eyes, in my room, as much as they please. And now, young woman,
it is your turn."

"Mine?"

"Yours, my gal. So march along o' me."

"Why, what have I done that I should be arrested?"

"That you shall hear. March, I say. You are my Prisoner. You will
stand your Trial--ah!" He smacked his lips to show his satisfaction,
and wagged his head. He was a true Child of the People, and could not
conceal his gratification at the discomfiture of traitors. "You will
hear what the Court has to say--ah!" Again he repeated this sign of
satisfaction. "You will be tried, and you will hear the Sentence of
the Court--ah, ah! Do you know what it will be? Death!" he whispered.
"Death for all! I see the sentence in the Suffragan's face. Oh! he
means it."

The girl heard without reply; but her cheeks turned pale.

"You won't mind much," he went on. "You hardly know what it is to live.
You haven't been alive long enough to feel what it means. You're only a
chit of a girl. If it wasn't for the example, I dare say they would let
you off. But they won't--they won't. Don't try it on. Don't think of
going on your knees, or anything else. Don't go weeping or crying. The
Court is as hard as nails."

The honest fellow said this in his zeal for justice, and in the hope
that nothing should be said or done which might avert just punishment.
Otherwise, had this girl, who was, after all, young and ignorant,
thrown herself fully and frankly upon our mercy, perhaps--I do not
say--some of us might have been disposed to spare her. As it was--but
you have seen.

"We waste time," he said. "March!"

She was dressed, as I have already related, in a masquerade white dress
of the old time, with I know not what of ribbon round her waist, and
wore her hair floating down her back.

The old man--her grandfather, as she called him--sat in his arm-chair,
looking on and coughing. John Lax paid no attention to him at all.

"Good-by, grandad," she said, kissing him. "You will not see me any
more, because they are going to kill me. You will find your inhaler
in its place; but I am afraid you will have to manage for the future
without any help. No one helps anybody in this beautiful Present. They
are going to kill me. Do you understand? Poor old man! Good-by!"

She kissed him again and walked away with John Lax through the Picture
Gallery, and so into the College Gardens, and by the north postern into
the House of Life.

       *       *       *       *       *

When she was gone the old man looked about him feebly. Then he began to
understand what had happened. His grandchild, the nurse and stay of his
feebleness, was gone from him. She was going to be killed.

He was reckoned a very stupid old man always. To keep the cases in the
Museum free from dust was all that he could do. But the revival of the
Past acted upon him as it had acted upon the others: it took him out of
his torpor and quickened his perceptions.

"Killed?" he cried. "My grandchild to be killed?"

He was not so stupid as not to know that there were possible protectors
for her, if he could find them in time. Then he seized his stick and
hurried as fast as his tottering limbs would carry him to the nearest
field, where he knew the sailor, named John, or Jack, Carera, was
employed for the time among the peas and beans.

"Jack Carera!" he cried, looking wildly about him and flourishing with
his stick. "Jack! they are going to kill her! Jack--Jack Carera!--I
say," he repeated. "Where is Jack Carera? Call him, somebody. They are
going to kill her! They have taken my child a prisoner to the House of
Life. I say Jack--Jack! Where is he? Where is he?"

The men were working in gangs. Nobody paid the least heed to the old
man. They looked up, saw an old man--his hat blown off, his long white
hair waving in the wind--brandishing wildly his stick, and shrieking
for Jack. Then they went on with their work; it was no business of
theirs. Docile, meek, and unquestioning are the People.

By accident, however, Jack was within hearing, and presently ran across
the field.

"What is it?" he cried. "What has happened?"

"They have taken prisoner," the old man gasped, "the--the--Arch
Physician--and--Lady Mildred--They are going to try them to-day
before the College of Physicians. And now they have taken my girl--my
Christine--and they will try her too. They will try them all, and they
will kill them all."

"That shall be seen," said Jack, a fierce look in his eyes. "Go back
to the Museum, old man, and wait for me. Keep quiet, if you can: wait
for me."

In half an hour he had collected together the whole of the company, men
and women, which formed their Party. They were thirty in number, and
they came in from work in the Regulation Dress.

The sailor briefly related what had happened.

"Now," he said, "before we do anything more, let us put on the dress of
the nineteenth century. That will help us to remember that our future
depends upon ourselves, and will put heart in us."

This done, he made them a speech.

First, he reminded them how, by the help of one girl alone, the memory
of the Past had been restored to them; next, he bade them keep in their
minds the whole of that Past--every portion of it--and to brace up
their courage with the thought of it--how delightful and desirable it
was. And then he exhorted them to think of the Present, which he called
loathsome, shameful, vile, and other bad names.

"We are in the gravest crisis of our fortunes," he concluded. "On our
action this day depends our whole future. Either we emerge from this
crisis free men and women, or we sink back into the Present, dull and
dismal, without hope and without thought. Nay, there is more. If we do
not rescue ourselves, we shall be very speedily finished off by the
College. Do you think they will ever forgive us? Not so. As they deal
with the Arch Physician and these two ladies, so they will deal with
us. Better so. Better a thousand times to suffer Death at once, than to
fall back into that wretched condition to which we were reduced. What!
You, who have learned once more what is meant by Love, will you give
that up? Will you give up these secret assemblies where we revive the
glorious Past, and feel again the old thoughts and the old ambitions?
Never--swear with me--never! never! never!"

They shouted together; they waved their hands; they were resolved. The
men's eyes were alive again; in short, they were back again to the Past
of their young days.

"First," said Jack, "let us arm."

He led them to a part of the Museum where certain old weapons stood
stacked. Thanks to the Curator and to Christine, they had been kept
bright and clear from rust by the application of oil.

"Here are swords, lances, rifles--but we have no ammunition--bayonets.
Let us take the rifles and bayonets. So. To every man one. Now, the
time presses. The Trial is going on. It may be too late in a few
minutes to save the prisoners. Let us resolve."

Two plans suggested themselves at once. The first of these was to rush
before the House of Life, break open the gates, and tear the prisoners
from the hands of the Judges. The next was to ascertain, somehow, what
was being done. The former counsel prevailed, and the men were already
making ready for the attack when the great Bell of the House began to
toll solemnly.

"What is that?" cried the women, shuddering.

It went on tolling, at regular intervals of a quarter of a minute. It
was the knell for three persons about to die.

Then the doors of the South Porch flew open, and one of the Bedells
came forth.

"What does that mean?" they asked.

The Bedell walked across the great Garden and began to ring the Bell of
the Public Hall--the Dinner Bell.

Instantly the People began to flock in from the workshops and the
fields, from all quarters, in obedience to a summons rarely issued.
They flocked in slowly, and without the least animation, showing not
the faintest interest in the proceedings. No doubt there was something
or other--it mattered not what--ordered by the College.

"Go, somebody," cried Jack--"go, Hilda," he turned to one of the girls;
"slip on your working dress; run and find out what is being done. Oh!
if we are too late, they shall pay--they shall pay! Courage, men! Here
are fifteen of us, well-armed and stout. We are equal to the whole of
that coward mob. Run, Hilda, run!"

Hilda pushed her way through the crowd.

"What is it?" she asked the Bedell, eagerly. "What has happened?"

"You shall hear," he replied. "The most dreadful thing that can
happen--a thing that has not happened since--.... But you will hear."

He waited a little longer, until all seemed to be assembled. Then he
stood upon a garden-bench and lifted up his voice:

"Listen! listen! listen!" he cried. "By order of the Holy College,
listen! Know ye all that, for his crimes and treacheries, the Arch
Physician has been deposed from his sacred office. Know ye all that he
is condemned to die." There was here a slight movement--a shiver--as
of a wood, on a still autumn day, at the first breath of the wind. "He
is condemned to die. He will be brought out without delay, and will
be executed in the sight of the whole People." Here they trembled.
"There are also condemned with him, as accomplices in his guilt, two
women--named respectively Mildred, or Mildred Carera in the old style,
and the girl Christine. Listen! listen! listen! It is forbidden to
any either to leave the place during the time of punishment, or to
interfere in order to stay punishment, or in any way to move or meddle
in the matter. Listen! Listen! Long live the Holy College!"

With that he descended and made his way back to the House. But Hilda
ran to the Museum with the news.

"Why," said Jack, "what could happen better? In the House, no one knows
what devilry of electricity and stuff they may have ready to hand.
Here, in the open, we can defy them. Nothing remains but to wait until
the prisoners are brought out, and then--then," he gasped, "remember
what we were. Geoffrey, you wear the old uniform. Let the spirit of
your old regiment fire your heart again. Ay, ay, you will do. Now,
let us a drill a little and practice fighting together, shoulder to
shoulder. Why, we are invincible."

Said I not that we might, if we ever regretted anything, regret that we
did not lock these conspirators in the Museum before we brought out our
prisoners to their death?

The great Bell of the House tolled; the People stood about in their
quiet way, looking on, apparently unmoved, while the carpenters quickly
hammered together a scaffold some six feet high.

Well. I confess it. The whole business was a mistake: the People were
gone lower down than I had ever hoped: save for the shudder which
naturally seized them on mention of the word Death, they showed no sign
of concern. If, even then, I had gone forth to see how they took it, I
might have reversed the order, and carried out the execution within.
They wanted no lesson. Their Past, if it were once revived, would
for the most part be a past of such struggling for life, and so much
misery, that it was not likely they would care to revive it. Better the
daily course, unchanged, unchangeable. Yet we know not. As my colleague
in the House said, the memory is perhaps a thing indestructible. At a
touch, at a flash of light, the whole of their minds might be lit up
again; and the emotions, remembered and restored, might again seem
what once they seemed, worth living for.

Still the great Bell tolled, and the carpenters hammered, and the
scaffold, strong and high, stood waiting for the criminals; and on the
scaffold a block, brought from the butcher's shop. But the People said
not a single word to each other, waiting, like sheep--only, unlike
sheep, they did not huddle together. In the chamber over the Porch the
prisoners awaited the completion of the preparations; and in the Museum
the fifteen conspirators stood waiting, armed and ready for their Deed
of Violence.




CHAPTER XIII.

THE EXECUTION.


As the clock struck two, a messenger brought the news that the
Preparations were complete.

The College was still sitting in Council. One of the Physicians
proposed that before the Execution the Arch Physician should be brought
before us to be subjected to a last examination. I saw no use for this
measure, but I did not oppose it; and presently John Lax, armed with
his sharpened axe, brought the Prisoners before the Conclave of his
late brethren.

"Dr. Linister," I said, "before we start upon that Procession from
which you will not return, have you any communication to make to the
College? Your Researches--"

"They are all in order, properly drawn up, arranged in columns, and
indexed," he replied. "I trust they will prove to advance the Cause of
Science--true Science--not the degradation of Humanity."

"Such as they are, we shall use them," I replied, "according to the
Wisdom of the College. Is there anything else you wish to communicate?
Are there ideas in your brain which you would wish to write down before
you die? Remember, in a few minutes you will be a senseless lump of
clay, rolling round and round the world forever, like all the other
lumps which form the crust of the Earth."

"I have nothing more to communicate. Perhaps, Suffragan, you are wrong
about the senseless lumps of clay. And now, if you please, do not delay
the end longer, for the sake of those poor girls waiting in suspense."

I could have wished more outward show of horror--prayers for
forgiveness. No: Dr. Linister was always, in his own mind, an
Aristocrat. The aristocratic spirit! How it survives even after the
whole of the Past might have been supposed to be forgotten. Well: he
was a tall and manly man, and he looked a born leader--a good many of
them in the old days used to have that look. For my own part, I am
short and black of face. No one would call me a leader born. But I
deposed the Aristocrat. And as for him--what has become of him?

"What would you have done for the People?" I asked him, "that would
have been better for them than forgetfulness and freedom from pain and
anxiety? You have always opposed the Majority. Tell us, at this supreme
moment, what you would have done for them."

"I know not now," he replied. "A month ago I should have told you that
I would have revived the ancient order; I would have given the good
things of the world to them who were strong enough to win them in the
struggle: hard work, bad food, low condition should have been, as
it used to be, the lot of the incompetent. I would have recognized
in women their instinct for fine dress; I would have encouraged the
revival of Love: I would have restored the Arts. But now--now--"

"Now," I said, "that you have begun to make the attempt, you recognize
at last that there is nothing better for them all than forgetfulness
and freedom from anxiety, struggle, and thought."

"Not so," he replied. "Not at all. I understand that unless the
Spirit of Man mounts higher continually, the earthly things must grow
stale and tedious, and so must perish. Yea: all the things which
once we thought so beautiful--Music, Art, Letters, Philosophy, Love,
Society--they must all wither and perish, if Life be prolonged, unless
the Spirit is borne continually upward. And this we have not tried to
effect."

"The Spirit of Man? I thought that old superstition was cleared away
and done with long ago. I have never found the Spirit in my Laboratory.
Have you?"

"No, I have not. That is not the place to find it."

"Well. Since you have changed your mind--"

"With us, the Spirit of Man has been sinking lower and lower, till it
is clean forgotten. Man now lives for himself alone. The Triumph of
Science, Suffragan, is yours. No more death; no more pain; no more
ambition: equality absolute and the ultimate lump of human flesh,
incorruptible, breathing, sleeping, absorbing food, living. Science can
do no more."

"I am glad, even at this last moment, to receive this submission of
your opinions."

"But," he said, his eye flashing, "remember. The Spirit of Man only
sleeps: it doth not die. Such an awakening as you have witnessed among
a few of us will some day--by an accident, by a trick of memory--how do
I know? by a Dream! fly through the heads of these poor helpless sheep
and turn them again into Men and Women, who will rend you. Now take me
away."

It is pleasant to my self-esteem, I say, to record that one who was so
great an inquirer into the Secrets of Nature should at such a moment
give way and confess that I was right in my administration of the
People. Pity that he should talk the old nonsense. Why, I learned to
despise it in the old days when I was a boy and listened to the fiery
orators of the Whitechapel Road.

The Procession was formed. It was like that of the Daily March to
the Public Hall, with certain changes. One of them was that the Arch
Physician now walked in the middle instead of at the end; he was no
more clothed in the robes of office, but in the strange and unbecoming
garb in which he was arrested. Before him walked the two women. They
held a book between them, brought out of the Library by Christine, and
one of them read aloud. It was, I believe, part of the incantation or
fetish worship of the old time: and as they read, the tears rolled down
their cheeks; yet they did not seem to be afraid.

Before the Prisoners marched John Lax, bearing the dreadful axe, which
he had now polished until it was like a mirror or a laboratory tool for
brightness. And on his face there still shone the honest satisfaction
of one whose heart is joyed to execute punishment upon traitors. He
showed this joy in a manner perhaps unseemly to the gravity of the
occasion, grinning as he walked and feeling the edge of the axe with
his fingers.

The way seemed long. I, for one, was anxious to get the business
over and done with. I was oppressed by certain fears--or doubts--as
if something would happen. Along the way on either side stood the
People, ranged in order, silent, dutiful, stupid. I scanned their faces
narrowly as I walked. In most there was not a gleam of intelligence.
They understood nothing. Here and there a face which showed a spark of
uneasiness or terror. For the most part, nothing. I began to understand
that we had made a blunder in holding a Public Execution. If it was
meant to impress the People, it failed to do so. That was certain, so
far.

What happened immediately afterwards did, however, impress them as much
as they could be impressed.

Immediately in front of the Public Hall stood the newly-erected
scaffold. It was about six feet high, with a low hand-rail round it,
and it was draped in black. The block stood in the middle.

It was arranged that the Executioner should first mount the scaffold
alone, there to await the criminals. The College of Physicians were
to sit in a semicircle of seats arranged for them on one side of it,
the Bedells standing behind them; the Assistants of the College were
arranged on the opposite side of the scaffold. The first to suffer was
to be the girl Christine. The second, the woman Mildred. Last, the
greatest criminal of the three, the Arch Physician himself.

The first part of the programme was perfectly carried out. John Lax,
clothed in red, big and burly, his red face glowing, stood on the
scaffold beside the block, leaning on the dreadful axe. The Sacred
College were seated in their places; the Bedells stood behind them;
the Assistants sat on the other side. The Prisoners stood before the
College. So far all went well. Then I rose and read in a loud voice the
Crimes which had been committed and the sentence of the Court. When I
concluded I looked around. There was a vast sea of heads before me.
In the midst I observed some kind of commotion as of people who were
pushing to the front. It was in the direction of the Museum. But this I
hardly noticed, my mind being full of the Example which was about to
be made. As for the immobility of the People's faces, it was something
truly wonderful.

"Let the woman Christine," I cried, "mount the scaffold and meet her
doom!"

The girl threw herself into the arms of the other woman, and they
kissed each other. Then she tore herself away, and the next moment she
would have mounted the steps and knelt before the block, but....

The confusion which had sprung up in the direction of the Museum
increased suddenly to a tumult. Right and left the people parted,
flying and shrieking. And there came running through the lane thus
formed a company of men, dressed in fantastic garments of various
colors, armed with ancient weapons, and crying aloud, "To the Rescue!
To the Rescue!"

Then I sprang to my feet, amazed. Was it possible--could it be
possible--that the Holy College of Physicians should be actually defied?

It was possible; more, it was exactly what these wretched persons
proposed to dare and to do.

As for what followed, it took but a moment. The men burst into the
circle thus armed and thus determined. We all sprang to our feet
and recoiled. But there was one who met them with equal courage and
defiance. Had there been--but how could there be?--any more, we should
have made a wholesome example of the Rebels.

John Lax was this one.

He leaped from the scaffold with a roar like a lion, and threw himself
upon the men who advanced, swinging his heavy axe around him as if it
had been a walking-stick. No wild beast deprived of its prey could
have presented such a terrible appearance. Baffled revenge--rage--the
thirst for battle--all showed themselves in this giant as he turned a
fearless front to his enemies and swung his terrible axe.

I thought the rebels would have run. They wavered; they fell back;
then at a word from their leader--it was none other than the dangerous
man, the sailor called Jack, or John, Carera--they closed in and stood
shoulder to shoulder, every man holding his weapon in readiness. They
were armed with the ancient weapon called the rifle, with a bayonet
thrust in at the end of it.

"Close in, my men; stand firm!" shouted the sailor. "Leave John Lax to
me. Ho! ho! John Lax, you and I will fight this out. I know you. You
were the spy who did the mischief. Come on. Stand firm, my men; and if
I fall, make a speedy end of this spy and rescue the Prisoners."

He sprang to the front, and for a moment the two men confronted
each other. Then John Lax, with another roar, swung his axe. Had it
descended upon the sailor's head, there would have been an end of him.
But--I know little of fighting; but it is certain that the fellow was a
coward. For he actually leaped lightly back and dodged the blow. Then,
when the axe had swung round so as to leave his adversary's side in a
defenceless position, this disgraceful coward leaped forward and took
a shameful advantage of this accident, and drove his bayonet up to the
hilt in the unfortunate Executioner's body!

John Lax dropped his axe, threw up his arms, and fell heavily
backwards. He was dead. He was killed instantaneously. Anything more
terrible, more murderous, more cowardly, I never witnessed. I know,
I say, little of fighting and war. But this, I must always maintain,
was a foul blow. John Lax had aimed his stroke and missed, it is true,
owing to the cowardly leap of his enemy out of the way. But in the name
of common fairness his adversary should have permitted him to resume
his fighting position. As it was, he only waited, cowardly, till the
heavy axe swinging round exposed John's side, and then stepped in and
took his advantage. This I call murder, and not war.

John Lax was quite dead. Our brave and zealous servant was dead. He
lay on his back; there was a little pool of blood on the ground: his
clothes were stained with blood: his face was already white. Was it
possible? Our servant--the sacred servant of the Holy House--was dead!
He had been killed! A servant of the Holy College had been killed! What
next? What dreadful thing would follow? And the Criminals were rescued!

By this time we were all standing bewildered, horrified, in an
undignified crowd, Fellows and Assistants together. Then I spoke, but I
fear in a trembling voice.

"Men!" I said. "Know you what you do? Go back to the place whence you
came, and await the punishment due to your crime. Back, I say!"

"Form in Square," ordered the murderer, paying no heed at all to my
commands.

The Rebels arranged themselves--as if they had rehearsed the thing for
weeks--every man with his weapon ready: five on a side, forming three
sides of a square, of which the scaffold formed the fourth. Within the
Square stood the three prisoners.

"O Jack!" cried Christine. "We never dreamed of this."

"O Harry!" murmured Mildred, falling into the arms of the rescued Dr.
Linister. At such a moment, the first thing they thought of was this
new-found love. And yet there are some who have maintained that human
nature could have been continued by Science on the old lines! Folly at
the bottom of everything! Folly and Vanity!

"Sir," the Sailor man addressed Dr. Linister, "you are now our Chief.
Take this sword and the command."

He threw a crimson sash over the shoulders of him who but a minute
before was waiting to be executed, and placed in his hands a drawn
sword.

Then the Chief--I am bound to say that he looked as if he were born to
command--mounted the scaffold and looked round with eyes of authority.

"Let the poor People be dismissed," he said. "Bid them disperse--go
home--go to walk, and to rest or sleep, or anything that is left in the
unhappy blank that we call their mind."

Then he turned to the College.

"There were some among you, my former Brethren," he said, "who in times
past were friends of my own. You voted with me against the degradation
of the People, but in vain. We have often communed together on the
insufficiency of Science and the unwisdom of the modern methods. Come
out from the College, my friends, and join us. We have the Great
Secret, and we have all the knowledge of Science that there is. Cast in
your lot with mine."

Five or six of the Fellows stepped forth--they were those who had
always voted for the Arch Physician--among them was the man who had
spoken on the uncertainty of memory. These were admitted within the
line of armed men. Nay, their gowns of office were taken from them
and they presently received weapons. About twenty or thirty of the
Assistants also fell out and were admitted to the ranks of the Rebels.

"There come no more?" asked the Chief. "Well, choose for yourselves.
Captain Heron, make the crowd stand back--clear them away with the butt
ends of your rifles, if they will not go when they are told. So. Now
let the rest of the College return to the House. Captain Carera, take
ten men and drive them back. Let the first who stops, or endeavors
to make the others stop, or attempts to address the people, be run
through, as you despatched the man John Lax. Fellows and Assistants of
the College--back to the place whence you came. Back, as quickly as may
be, or it will be the worse for you."

The ten men stepped out with lowered bayonets. We saw them approaching
with murder in their eyes, and we turned and fled. It was not a
retreat: it was a helter-skelter run--one over the other. If one fell,
the savage Rebels prodded him in fleshy parts and roared with laughter.
Fellows, Assistants, and Bedells alike--we fell over each other,
elbowing and fighting, until we found ourselves at last--some with
bleeding noses, some with black eyes, some with broken ribs, all with
torn gowns--within the House of Life.

The Rebels stood outside the South Porch, laughing at our discomfiture.

"Wardens of the Great Secret," said Captain Carera, "you have no longer
any Secret to guard. Meantime, until the pleasure of the Chief, and
the Sentence of the Court is pronounced, REMEMBER. He who
endeavors to escape from the House will assuredly meet his death. Think
of John Lax, and do not dare to resist the authority of the Army."

Then he shut the door upon us and locked it, and we heard the footsteps
of the men as they marched away in order.

This, then, was the result of my most fatal error. Had we, as we might
so easily have done, executed our prisoners in the House itself,
and locked up the Rebels in the Museum, these evils would not have
happened. It is futile to regret the past, which can never be undone.
But it is impossible not to regret a blunder which produced such fatal
results.




CHAPTER XIV.

PRISONERS.


Thus, then, were the tables turned upon us. We were locked up,
prisoners--actually the Sacred College, prisoners--in the House of Life
itself, and the Great Secret was probably by this time in the hands of
the Rebels, to whom the Arch Traitor had no doubt given it, as he had
proposed to do when we arrested him. Lost to us forever! What would
become of the College when the Great Mystery was lost to it? Where
would be its dignity? Where its authority?

The first question--we read it in each other's eyes without asking
it--was, however, not what would become of our authority, but of
ourselves. What were they going to do with us? They had killed the
unfortunate John Lax solely because he stood up manfully for the
College. What could we expect? Besides, we had fully intended to kill
the Rebels. Now we were penned up like fowls in a coop, altogether
at their mercy. Could one have believed that the Holy College, the
Source of Health, the Maintainer of Life, would ever have been driven
to its House, as to a prison, like a herd of swine to their sty; made
to run head over heels, tumbling over one another, without dignity
or self-respect; shoved, bundled, cuffed, and kicked into the House
of Life, and locked up, with the promise of instant Death to any who
should endeavor to escape? But did they mean to kill us? That was the
Question before us. Why should they not? We should have killed the
Arch Physician, had they suffered it; and now they had all the power.

I confess that the thought of this probability filled my mind with
so great a terror that the more I thought of it the more my teeth
chattered and my knees knocked together. Nay, the very tears--the
first since I was a little boy--came into my eyes in thinking that
I must abandon my Laboratory and all my Researches, almost at the
very moment when the Triumph of Science was well within my grasp, and
I was ready--nearly--to present Mankind at his last and best. But
at this juncture the Assistants showed by their behavior and their
carriage--now greatly wanting in respect--that they looked to us for
aid, and I hastily called together the remaining Fellows in the Inner
House.

We took our places and looked at each other in dismay which could not
be concealed.

"Brothers," I said, because they looked to me for speech, "it cannot
be denied that the Situation is full of Danger. Never before has the
College been in danger so imminent. At this very instant they may be
sending armed soldiers to murder us."

At this moment there happened to be a movement of many feet in the
nave, and it seemed as if the thing was actually upon us. I sat down,
pale and trembling. The others did the same. It was several minutes
before confidence was so far restored that we could speak coherently.

"We have lived so long," I said, "and we have known so long the
pleasure of Scientific Research, that the mere thought of Death fills
us with apprehensions that the common people cannot guess. Our superior
nature makes us doubly sensitive. Perhaps--let us hope--they may not
kill us--perhaps they may make demands upon us to which we can yield.
They will certainly turn us out of the College and House of Life and
install themselves, unless we find a way to turn the tables. But we may
buy our lives: we may even become their assistants. Our knowledge may
be placed at their disposal--"

"Yes, yes," they all agreed. "Life before everything. We will yield to
any conditions."

"The Great Secret has gone out of our keeping," I went on. "Dr.
Linister has probably communicated it to all alike. There goes the
whole Authority, the whole Mystery, of the College."

"We are ruined!" echoed the Fellows in dismay.

"Half a dozen of our Fellows have gone over, too. There is not now a
Secret, or a Scientific Discovery, or a Process, concerning Life, Food,
Health, or Disease, that they do not know as well as ourselves. And
they have all the Power. What will they do with it? What can we do to
get it out of their hands?"

Then began a Babel of suggestions and ideas. Unfortunately every plan
proposed involved the necessity of some one risking or losing his
life. In the old times, when there were always men risking and losing
their lives for some cause or other, I suppose there would have been
no difficulty at all. I had been accustomed to laugh at this foolish
sacrifice of one's self--since there is but one life--for pay, or for
the good of others. Now, however, I confess that we should have found
it most convenient if we could have persuaded some to risk--very likely
they would not actually have lost--their lives for the sake of the Holy
College. For instance, the first plan that occurred to us was this. We
numbered, even after the late defections, two hundred strong in the
College. This so-called "Army" of the Rebels could not be more than
seventy, counting the deserters from the College. Why should we not
break open the doors and sally forth, a hundred--two hundred--strong,
armed with weapons from the laboratory, provided with bottles of nitric
and sulphuric acid, and fall upon the Rebel army suddenly while they
were unprepared for us?

This plan so far carried me away that I called together the whole of
the College--Assistants, Bedells, and all--and laid it before them. I
pointed out that the overwhelming nature of the force we could hurl
upon the enemy would cause so great a terror to fall upon them that
they would instantly drop their arms and fly as fast as they could run,
when our men would have nothing more to do but to run after and kill
them.

The men looked at one another with doubtful eyes. Finally, one impudent
rascal said that as the Physicians themselves had most to lose, they
should themselves lead the assault. "We will follow the Suffragan and
the Fellows," he said.

I endeavored to make them understand that the most valuable lives
should always be preserved until the last. But in this I failed.

The idea, therefore, of a sortie in force had to be abandoned.

It was next proposed that we should dig a tunnel under the Public Hall
and blow up the Rebels with some of the old explosives. But to dig a
tunnel takes time, and then who would risk his life with the explosive?

It was further proposed to send out a deputation of two or three, who
should preach to the Rebels and point out the terrible consequences of
their continued mutiny. But this appeared impracticable, for the simple
reason that no one could be found to brave the threat of Captain Carera
of death to any who ventured out. Besides, it was pointed out, with
some reason, that if our messengers were suffered to reach the Rebels,
no one would be moved by the threats of helpless prisoners unable to
effect their own release. As for what was proposed to be done with
electricity, hand-grenades, dynamite, and so forth, I pass all that
over. In a word, we found that we could do nothing. We were prisoners.

Then an idea occurred to me. I remembered how, many years before, Dr.
Linister, who had always a mind full of resource and ingenuity, made
a discovery by means of which one man, armed with a single weapon
easy to carry, could annihilate a whole army. If war had continued in
the world, this weapon would have put an immediate stop to it. But
war ceased, and it was never used. Now, I thought, if I could find
that weapon or any account or drawing of its manufacture, I should be
able from the commanding height of the Tower, with my own hand, to
annihilate Dr. Linister and all his following.

I proceeded, with the assistance of the whole College, to hunt among
the volumes of Researches and Experiments. There were thousands of
them. We spent many days in the search. But we found it not. When we
were tired of the search we would climb up into the Tower and look out
upon the scene below, which was full of activity and bustle. Oh! if we
could only by simply pointing the weapon, only by pressing a knob, see
our enemies swiftly and suddenly overwhelmed by Death!

But we could not find that Discovery anywhere. There were whole rows of
volumes which consisted of nothing but indexes. But we could not find
it in any of them. And so this hope failed.

They did not kill us. Every day they opened the doors and called for
men to come forth and fetch food. But they did not kill us.

Yet the danger was ever present in our minds. After a week the College
resolved that, since one alone of the body knew the Great Secret,
that one being the most likely to be selected for execution if there
were any such step taken, it was expedient that the Secret should be
revealed to the whole College. I protested, but had to obey. To part
with that Secret was like parting with all my power. I was no longer
invested with the sanctity of one who held that Secret: the Suffragan
became a simple Fellow of the College: he was henceforth only one of
those who conducted Researches into Health and Food and the like.

This suspense and imprisonment lasted for three weeks. Then the
Rebels, as you shall hear, did the most wonderful and most unexpected
thing in the world. Why they did it, when they had the House of Life,
the College, and all in their own hands, and could have established
themselves there and done whatever they pleased with the People, I have
never been able to understand.




CHAPTER XV.

THE RECRUITING SERGEANT.


When the College had thus ignominiously been driven into the House
and the key turned upon us, the Rebels looked at each other with the
greatest satisfaction.

"So far," said Jack, "we have succeeded beyond our greatest hopes. The
Prisoners are rescued; the only man with any fight in him has been
put out of the temptation to fight any more; the Holy College are
made Prisoners; ourselves are masters of the field, and certain to
remain so; and the People are like lambs--nothing to be feared from
them--nothing, apparently, to be hoped."

They had been reduced to terror by the violence of the Rebels in
pushing through them; they had rushed away, screaming: those of them
who witnessed the horrible murder of John Lax were also seized with
panic, and fled. But when no more terrifying things befell, they
speedily relapsed into their habitual indifference, and crept back
again, as if nothing had happened at all, to dawdle away their time in
the sunshine and upon the garden benches--every man alone, as usual.
That the Holy College were Prisoners--that Rebels had usurped the
Authority--affected them not a whit, even if they understood it. My
administration had been even too successful. One could no longer look
to the People for anything. They were now, even more rapidly than I had
thought possible, passing into the last stages of human existence.

"Ye Gods!" cried Dr. Linister, swearing in the language of the Past and
by the shadows long forgotten. "Ye Gods! How stupid they have become! I
knew not that they were so far gone. Can nothing move them? They have
seen a victorious Rebellion--a Revolution, not without bloodshed. But
they pay no heed. Will nothing move them? Will words? Call some of them
together, Jack. Drive them here. Let us try to speak to them. It may be
that I shall touch some chord which will recall the Past. It was thus
that you--we--were all awakened from that deadly Torpor."

Being thus summoned, the People--men and women--flocked about the
scaffold, now stripped of its black draperies, and listened while Dr.
Linister harangued them. They were told to stand and listen, and they
obeyed, without a gleam in their patient, sheep-like faces to show that
they understood.

       *       *       *       *       *

"I can do no more!" cried Dr. Linister, after three-quarters of an hour.

He had drawn a skilful and moving picture of the Past; he had depicted
its glories and its joys, compared with the dismal realities of the
Present. He dwelt upon their loveless and passionless existence; he
showed them how they were gradually sinking lower and lower--that they
would soon lose the intelligence necessary even for the daily task.
Then he asked them if they would join his friends and himself in the
new Life which they were about to begin: it should be full of all the
old things--endeavor, struggle, ambition, and Love. They should be
alive, not half dead.

More he said--a great deal more--but to no purpose. If they showed any
intelligence at all, it was terror at the thought of change.

Dr. Linister descended.

"It is no use," he said. "Will you try, Jack?"

"Not by speaking. But I will try another plan."

He disappeared, and presently came back again, having visited the
cellars behind the Public Halls. After him came servants, rolling
barrels and casks at his direction.

"I am going to try the effect of a good drink," said Jack. "In the old
days they were always getting drunk, and the trades had each their
favorite liquor. It is now no one knows how long since these poor
fellows have had to become sober, because they could no longer exceed
their ration. Let us encourage them to get drunk. I am sure that ought
to touch a chord."

This disgraceful idea was actually carried out. Drink of all
kinds--spirits, beer, and every sort of intoxicating liquor--were
brought forth, and the men were invited to sit down and drink freely,
after the manner of the old time.

When they saw the casks brought out and placed on stands, each ready
with its spigot, and, beside the casks, the tables and benches, spread
for them--on the benches, pipes and tobacco--gleams of intelligence
seemed to steal into their eyes.

"Come," said Jack, "sit down, my friends; sit down, all of you. Now
then, what will you drink? What shall it be? Call for what you like
best. Here is a barrel of beer; here is stout; here are gin, whiskey,
rum, Hollands, and brandy. What will you have? Call for what you
please. Take your pipes. Why, it is the old time over again."

They looked at each other stupidly. The very names of these drinks
had been long forgotten by them. But they presently accepted the
invitation, and began to drink greedily. At seven o'clock, when the
Supper Bell rang, there were at least three hundred men lying about,
in various stages of drunkenness. Some were fast asleep, stretched
at their full length on the ground; some lay with their heads on the
table; some sat, clutching at the pewter mugs; some were vacuously
laughing or noisily singing.

"What do you make of your experiment?" asked Dr. Linister. "Have you
struck your chord?"

"Well, they have done once more what they used to do," said Jack,
despondently; "and they have done it in the same old way. I don't
think there could ever have been any real jolliness about the dogs,
who got drunk as fast as ever they could. I expected a more gradual
business. I thought the drink would first unloose their tongues, and
set them talking. Then I hoped that they would, in this way, be led
to remember the Past; and I thought that directly they began to show
any recollection at all, I would knock off the supply and carry on
the memory. But the experiment has failed, unless"--here a gleam of
hope shone in his face--"to-morrow's hot coppers prove a sensation so
unusual as to revive the memory of their last experience in the same
direction--never mind how many years ago. Hot coppers _may_ produce
that result."

He ordered the casks to be rolled back to the cellars. That evening the
Rebels, headed by Dr. Linister--all dressed in scarlet and gold, with
swords--and with them the ladies--(they were called ladies now, nothing
less--not women of the People any more)--came to the Public Hall,
dressed for the evening in strange garments, with bracelets, necklaces,
jewels, gloves, and things which most of the People had never seen. But
they seemed to take no heed of these things.

"They are hopeless," said Jack. "Nothing moves them. We shall have to
begin our new life with our own company of thirty."

"Leave them to us," said Mildred. "Remember, it was by dress that
Christine aroused us from our stagnant condition; and it was by us that
you men were first awakened. Leave them to us."

After the evening meal the ladies went about from table to table,
talking to the women. Many of these, who had belonged to the working
classes in the old Time, and had no recollection at all of fine dress,
looked stupidly at the ladies' dainty attire. But there were others
whose faces seemed to show possibilities of other things. And to these
the ladies addressed themselves. First, they asked them to look at
their fine frocks and bangles and things; and next, if any admiration
was awakened, they begged them to take off their flat caps and to let
down their hair. Some of them consented, and laughed with new-born
pride in showing off their long-forgotten beauty. Then the ladies tied
ribbons round their necks and waists, put flowers into their hair, and
made them look in the glass. Not one of those who laughed and looked in
the glass but followed the ladies that evening to the Museum.

They came--a company of Recruits fifty strong, all girls. And then the
whole evening was devoted to bringing back the Past. It came quickly
enough to most. To some, a sad Past, full of hard, underpaid work;
to some, a Past of enforced idleness; to some, a Past of work and
pay and contentment. They were shopgirls, work-girls, ballet-girls,
barmaids--all kinds of girls. To every one was given a pretty and
becoming dress; not one but was rejoiced at the prospect of changing
the calm and quiet Present for the emotions and the struggles of the
Past.

But they were not allowed to rest idle. Next day these girls again,
with the ladies, went out and tried the effect of their new dress
and their newly-restored beauty upon other women first, and the men
afterwards. As they went about, lightly and gracefully, singing,
laughing, daintily dressed, many of the men began to lift up their
sleepy eyes, and to look after them. And when the girls saw these
symptoms, they laid siege to such a man, two or three together; or
perhaps one alone would undertake the task, if he was more than
commonly susceptible. As for those on whom bright eyes, smiles,
laughter, and pretty dresses produced no effect, they let them alone
altogether. But still Recruits came in fast.

Every night they did all in their power to make the Past live again.
They played the old Comedies, Melodramas, and Farces in the Public
Hall; they sang the old songs; they encouraged the Recruits to sing;
they gave the men tobacco and beer; they had dances and music. Every
morning the original company of Rebels sat in Council. Every afternoon
the Recruits, dressed like soldiers of the Past, were drawn up,
drilled, and put through all kinds of bodily exercise.

       *       *       *       *       *

We were Prisoners, I said, for three weeks.

One morning, at the end of that time, a message came to us from the
"Headquarters of the Army." This was now their official style and
title. The Chief ordered the immediate attendance of the Suffragan and
two Fellows of the College of Physicians.

At this terrifying order, I confess that I fell into so violent a
trembling--for, indeed, my last hour seemed now at hand--that I
could no longer stand upright; and, in this condition of mind, I was
carried--being unable to walk, and more dead than alive--out of the
House of Life to the Headquarters of the Rebel Army.




CHAPTER XVI.

A MOST UNEXPECTED CONCLUSION.


I confess, I say, that I was borne in a half-fainting condition from
the House of Life.

"Farewell, Suffragan, farewell!" said my Brethren of the College,
gathered within the South Porch, where a guard of armed Rebels waited
for us. "Your turn to-day, ours to-morrow! Farewell! Yet if any
concessions can be made--"

Yes--yes--if any concessions could be made, only to save life, they
might be certain that I should make them. The two Fellows of the
College upon whom the lot--they drew lots--had fallen, accompanied me,
with cheeks as pallid and hearts as full of terror as my own.

A company of twenty men, armed, escorted us. I looked on the way
for lines of People to witness the Downfall of the College and the
Execution of its Heads. I looked for the scaffold which we had erected,
and for the executioner whom we had provided. I listened for the Great
Bell which we had caused to be rung.

Strange! There were no People at all; the way from the House was
quite clear; the People were engaged as usual at their work. I saw no
scaffold, and no executioner. I heard no Great Bell. Yet the absence of
these things did not reassure me in the least.

But everything, even in these short three weeks, was changed. Nearly
the whole of the open space before the Public Hall was now covered with
rows of gay-colored tents, over which flew bright little flags. They
were quite small tents, meant, I learned afterwards, for sleeping.
Besides these there were great tents open at the sides, and spread,
within, with tables and benches, at which sat men smoking tobacco
and drinking beer, though it was as yet only the forenoon. Some of
them were playing cards, some were reading books, and some--a great
many--were eagerly talking. They were all dressed in tunics of scarlet,
green, and gray, and wore leathern belts with helmets--the costume
seemed familiar to me. Then I remembered; it was the old dress of a
soldier. Wonderful! After Science had lavished all her resources in
order to suppress and destroy among the People the old passions--at the
very first opportunity the Rebels had succeeded in awakening them again
in their worst and most odious form!

There were also large open spaces upon which, regardless of the
flower-beds, some of the men were marching up and down in line,
carrying arms, and performing evolutions to the command of an officer.

Some of the men, again, lay sprawling about on benches, merely looking
on and doing nothing--yet with a lively satisfaction in their faces.
They ought to have been in the fields or the workshops. And everywhere
among the men, looking on at the drill, sitting in the tents, walking
beside them, sitting with them on the benches, were the girls, dressed
and adorned after the bad old false style, in which the women pretended
to heighten and set off what they are pleased to call their charms by
garments fantastically cut, the immodest display of an arm or a neck,
hair curiously dressed and adorned, colored ribbons, flowers stuck in
their hats, and ornaments tied on wherever it was possible. And such
joy and pride in these silly decorations! No one would believe how
these girls looked at each other and themselves. But to think that
the poor silly men should have fallen into the nets thus clumsily
spread for them! And this, after all our demonstrations to show that
woman bears in every limb the mark of inferiority, so that contempt,
or at least pity, and not admiration at all, to say nothing of the
extraordinary foolish passion of Love, should be the feeling of man for
woman! However, at this moment I was naturally too much occupied with
my own danger to think of these things.

One thing, however, one could not avoid remarking. The Rebellion must
have spread with astonishing rapidity. It was no longer a company of
fifteen or sixteen men--it was a great Army that we saw. And there was
no longer any doubt possible as to the movement. The Past was restored.
In the faces of the young men and the girls, as we passed through them,
I remarked, sick with terror as I was, the old, old expression which I
hoped we had abolished forever--the eagerness, the unsatisfied desire,
and the Individualism. Yes--the Individualism. I saw on their faces,
plain to read, the newly-restored Rights of Property.

Why, as I walked through one of the groups, composed of men and women,
one of the men suddenly rushed forward and struck another in the face
with his fist.

"She's my girl!" he cried, hoarsely. "Touch her if you dare."

They closed round the pair and led them off.

"Going to fight it out," said one of our Guards.

To fight it out! What a Fall! To fight it out!--To call a woman--or
anything else--your own after all our teaching. And to fight it out!
And all this arrived at in three weeks!

These things I observed, I say, as one observes things in a dream, and
remembers afterwards.

My heart failed me altogether, and I nearly fainted, when we stopped at
a long tent before which floated a flag on a flagstaff.

They carried me within and placed me in a chair. As soon as my eyes
recovered the power of sight I saw, sitting at the head of the table,
Dr. Linister, dressed in some sort of scarlet coat, with a sash and
gold lace. Then, indeed, I gave myself up for lost. It was the Court,
and we were called before it to receive sentence. At his side sat half
a dozen officers bravely dressed. The tent was filled with others,
including many women richly dressed--I observed the woman Mildred, clad
in crimson velvet, and the girl Christine, in white, and I thought they
regarded me with vindictive eyes.

When we were seated, Dr. Linister looked up--his face was always grave,
but it was no longer melancholy. There was in it, now, something of
Hope or Triumph or Resolution--I know not what.

"Brothers," he said, gravely, "once my brothers of the College, I have
called you before us in order to make a communication of the greatest
importance, and one which will doubtless cause you considerable
surprise. What is the matter, Suffragan? Hold him up, somebody. We
desire that you should hear from our own lips what we propose to do.

"First, will somebody give Dr. Grout a glass of wine or brandy, or
something? Pray be reassured, gentlemen. No harm, I promise, shall
happen to any of you. First, in a day or two the doors of the House
will be thrown open, and you shall be free again to renew your old
life--if you still feel disposed to do so. I repeat that no violence is
intended towards you. Grout, pull yourself together, man. Sit up, and
leave off shaking. You will be able without opposition, I say, to carry
on again your Administration of the People on the old lines. I trust,
however, that you will consider the situation, and the condition to
which you have reduced unfortunate Humanity, very seriously.

"In short, though we are absolute masters of the situation, and now
command a Force against which it would be absurd for you to contend,
we are going to abandon the Field, and leave everything to you." Were
we dreaming? "The Present is so odious to our People; the surroundings
of this place are so full of the horrible and loathsome Present, that
we have resolved to leave it altogether. We find, in fact, that it
will be impossible to begin the new Life until all traces of your
Administration are removed or lost. And we shall be so much clogged by
your Public Halls, your houses, your system, and the miserable lives to
which you have reduced most of the men and women, that we must either
send them--and you--away, or go away ourselves. On the whole, it will
give us less trouble to go away ourselves. Therefore, as soon as our
Preparations are ready, we shall go.

"We shall carry with us from the Common Stores all that we shall be
likely to want in starting our New Community. We shall leave you to
work out, undisturbed, the Triumph of Science, as you understand it,
upon these poor wretches, already more than half stupefied by your
treatment.

"We shall take with us all those whom by any means--by the beauty of
women, the splendor of arms, the ancient dresses, the ancient music,
the ancient dances--we have been able to awaken from their torpor. They
amount in all to no more than a thousand or so of young men and as many
maidens. As for the rest, they are sunk in a lethargy so deep that
we have been unable to rouse them. They are already very near to the
condition which you desire.

"Yet I know not. These poor dull brains may be swiftly and suddenly
fired with some contagion which may at any time ruin your calculations
and destroy the boasted Triumph. Do not rely too much upon the Torpor
of this apparently helpless herd. You had at the beginning a grand
weapon with which to enslave them. You could keep them alive, and you
could save them from disease--if only they were obedient. If they once
get beyond the recollection or the fear of either, what will you do?

"We go"--he paused, and looked round the room, filled with the eager
faces which brought the Past back to me--futile eagerness! ever
pressing on, gaining nothing, sinking into the grave before there
was time to gain anything! That had come back--that! "We go," he
repeated--his face had long been so melancholy that one hardly knew
him for the same man, so triumphant was it now--"we go to repair the
mistakes of many, many years. We go to lead Mankind back into the
ancient paths. It was not altogether you, my friends, who destroyed
Humanity; it was mainly the unfortunate Discovery of the German
Professor. We were working admirably in the right direction; we were
making life longer, which was then far too short; we were gradually
preventing diseases, which had been beyond the control of our wisest
men; we were, by slow degrees, in the only true way--through the
Revelation of Nature--feeling our way to Health and Prolongation of
Life. Yet, whatever happened, whatever we might discover, the First Law
of Life--which we did not understand--was that to all things earthly
there must come an End.

"Then happened the event by which that End was indefinitely postponed.

"Again, I say, I blame not you so much as the current of events which
bore you along. It seemed logical that everybody, able or imbecile,
weak or strong, healthy or sickly, skilled or incompetent, should alike
reap the Fruits of the Great Discovery. If he did so, he was also
entitled to his equal share in the world's goods. This was the Right
of Man, put forward as if there could be no question at all about it.
Every child was to inherit an equal share of everything. It was a false
and a mischievous claim. What every child inherited was the right of
fighting for his share, without danger of injustice or oppression. And
the next step, after the Slaughter of the Old, was the forbidding of
more births. What that has done for the world, look round and see for
yourselves in the torpor of the women and the apathy of the men.

"The People by this time had learned the great lesson that you wished
to teach them--that Death and Disease were the only two evils. Then the
College of Physicians took the place of the former Priesthood, with its
own Mysteries to guard and its gifts to distribute. I do not deny that
you--we--have done the work well. The Prevention of the old Diseases
is nearly perfect. Yet, at any moment, a new class of Disease may
spring up and baffle all your Science."

He had often talked in this way before, but never with so much
authority. Yet he was going to abandon the whole--all that he and his
friends had gained! Were we dreaming? His talk about my Administration
affected me not one whit. I knew all his arguments. But the thought
that he was going away, that he would actually leave us in Power and
Possession, filled me with amazement.

The others looked and listened as if he were speaking for them.

"The Right of Man to an equal share in everything has been carried out.
Look around you, and ask yourselves if the result is satisfactory. I
have often asked you that question. You have replied that the Present
is only a stage in the Triumph of Science. What is the next stage? To
that question also you have a reply.

"Well, we give it back to you--the whole of your Present; your People,
so stupid, so docile, so sluggish; your House; your College; your
Secrecy; your Mystery; your Authority. Take them. You shall have them
again, to do with them as seems fit to you."

At these words my heart welled over with joy. Would he really--but on
what conditions?--would he really give us back the whole?

There were no conditions. He meant exactly what he said. He would give
everything back to us. Were we dreaming? Were we dreaming?

"As for me and my friends," he said, "we shall sally forth to found a
new Settlement, and to govern it by the ideas of the Past. No one in
our Settlement will be obliged to work; but if he does not, he shall
certainly starve. Nobody will inherit any share to anything except
what he may win by struggle. There will be no equality at all, but
every man shall have what he can honestly get for himself. No women
shall be compelled to work; but they may work if they please, and at
such things as they please. Many old and long-forgotten things have
been already revived; such as Love: we are in love again--we, who
actually forgot what love was like for all the years which we have
ceased to number or to chronicle. It is impossible to describe to
you, my former Brother Suffragan, who never even in the old days felt
the passion--the intense joy, the ecstasy--of Love." The other men
murmured approval. "But Love is a plant which, while it is hardy to
endure many things, withers and dies under certain conditions. It was
found to flourish in the old time, through all the changes of life: it
survived the time of youth and beauty; it lasted through middle age;
flourished through the scenes of old age; it lasted beyond the grave.
It endured changes of fortune, decay of health, poverty, sickness, and
even helplessness. But one thing kills Love. It cannot endure the dull
monotony which has followed the Great Discovery: it cannot live long
while the face and form know no change; while the voice never changes;
while the dress, the hours of work, the work itself, the food, know no
change. These are things which kill the Flower of Love. Now, all things
desirable--this is a saying too hard for you, Suffragan--depend upon
Love. With Love, they have revived: the courtesy of man to woman; the
deference of the stronger to the weaker; the stimulus of work; hope and
ambition; self-sacrifice; unselfishness; devotion; the sweet illusions
of imagination--all these things have been born again within the last
three weeks. They have been born again, and, with them, the necessity
of an End. All things earthly most have an end." The Chief looked
round him: the men murmured approval, and tears stood in the eyes of
the women. "We cannot let them die. And since the First Law of Love is
change--and the Certain End--we have resolved, Suffragan, on forgetting
the Grand Discovery." Could this be our late Arch Physician? Were
we dreaming? "We shall forego any share in it. Only the chiefs here
gathered together know as yet what has been resolved. Little by little
the truth will get possession of our people that an End is ordained."

We made no reply to this extraordinary announcement. What could we say?
We only gasped with wonder.

"You cannot understand this, Grout. I do not expect that you should.
For long years past I have understood that the Great Discovery was the
greatest misfortune that ever happened to mankind. For all things must
have an End: else all that is worth preserving will wither and die.

"I have nearly done. You can go back to your House, and you can carry
on your Administration as you please. But there is a warning which we
have first to pronounce before we let you go. Your Ultimate Triumph of
Science is too great a degradation of Humanity to be endured. In years
to come when our successors rule in our place, they shall send an army
here to inquire into the conduct of your Trust. If we find the People
more brutish, deeper sunk in apathy and torpor, that army will seize
the House of Life and the College of Physicians, and will destroy your
laboratories, and will suffer all--men and women of the People and
Fellows of the Sacred College alike--to die. Never forget this warning.
You shall surely die.

"One more point, and I have done. I mention it with diffidence, Grout,
because I cannot hope for your sympathy. Your own convictions on the
subject were arrived at--you have often told us--when you were a boy,
and were based upon the arguments of a Sunday-morning Spouter in the
Whitechapel Road. I believe that John Lax, deceased, was the Learned
Authority who convinced you. Therefore, you will not understand me,
Grout, when I tell you that we have found the Soul again--the long-lost
Soul. All earthly things must have an End. But there are things beyond
that end. Most astonishing things are likely to follow from this
discovery. Long thoughts and great hopes have already begun to spring
up in our minds. Our people are reading again--the old Literature is
full of the Soul: they are reading the great Poets of old, and are
beginning to understand what they mean. I cannot make this intelligible
to you, Grout. You will not understand all that this discovery brings
with it. You will never, never understand that it is a Discovery ten
times--a million times--greater and better for mankind than the Great
Discovery itself, of which you and I alone held the Secret.

"I take that Secret with me because I cannot forget it. But, I repeat,
we shall never use it. Soon, very soon, the new active life will make
men once more familiar with the old figure who carried a scythe. There
will be accidents; new diseases will arise; age will creep slowly
on--the Great Discovery will be quietly forgotten in minds which
you had made so dull that they could not understand when we rescued
them what it meant. But we, the leaders, shall know well that their
happiness must have an End. All earthly things," he repeated, for
the fifth time, "must have an End. That is all, Grout; but when you
hear from me again, unless the Administration is changed indeed, the
People--the College--and you, my Suffragan--shall all die together. You
shall die, Grout! You and your friends shall die! And so, Farewell.
Guard. Take them back to the House."

We returned to the House relieved of our terror, but much amazed. I
had heard, in the old days, how men would be so blockishly possessed
by the thought of a woman--a creature inferior to man--that they
would throw away everything in the world for her sake. And now Dr.
Linister himself--with all those who followed after him--had given
up everything; because if Life goes, what is there left? And for the
sake of a woman? What could it mean? How to explain this madness on
any scientific theory? We told our Colleagues, and they marvelled; and
some suspected a trick. But Dr. Linister was not a man to play tricks.
As for the Soul and all that rubbish, if Dr. Linister was so mad as
to give up everything for a woman, he might just as well adopt all
the old Creeds together. That was no concern of ours. And as for this
precious discovery about things earthly coming to an end, what had that
to do with the calm and tranquil state of pure existence which we were
providing for mankind? Why should that ever have an end?

       *       *       *       *       *

That threatened army has never come. For some time the thought of it
gave us considerable uneasiness. But it has never come; and I believe,
for my own part, that now it never will come. As for the People,
there has been no such outbreak of Memory as was prophesied. On the
contrary, they have approached more and more, in docility, meekness,
mindlessness, and absence of purpose, to the magnificent Ideal which I
cherish for them. I know not when it will arrive; but the time is as
certain to come as the morrow's sun is to dawn, when the last stage of
Humanity will be reached--an inert mass of breathing, feeding, sleeping
flesh, kept by the Holy College--the Triumph of Science--free from
Decay and Death.

They went away in the afternoon, three or four days later. They took
with them everything from the Public Stores which they thought would be
useful: provisions of all kinds; wine, beer, and cider in casks; stuff
for clothing; furniture; everything that they could think of. They took
the pictures out of the Gallery, the books from the Library, and nearly
everything that was in the Museum. From the laboratory in the House
they took a great number of volumes and a quantity of instruments. At
the last moment, nearly all the Assistants and the workmen agreed to
join them; so that we were left with numbers greatly reduced. It is
impossible to enumerate the vast quantities of things which they took
with them. The wagons in which they were packed covered a couple of
miles of road: the drivers were taken from the People, and ordered to
discharge their duty; and, as they never came back, these poor wretches
probably perished with the Rebels. They went forth in perfect order:
first, an advance guard of mounted men; then a portion of the main
body, among whom rode the Chief with his staff. After them came the
women, some riding on horseback, among whom were the woman Mildred and
the girl Christine, showing in their faces that foolish and excited
happiness which is so different from the sweet tranquillity which we
have introduced. Indeed, all the women were beyond themselves with
this silly happiness. They sang, they laughed, they talked. Some sat
in carriages of all kinds, some in wagons; some walked; and, what with
their chatter and their dresses, one would have thought them a company
of monkeys dressed up. After the women came the wagons, and, lastly,
the rest of the men. I forgot to say that they had bands of music with
them--drums, fifes, cornets, and all kinds of musical instruments--and
that they carried flags, and that the men sang as they marched.

Whither they went, or what became of them--whether they carried out the
desperate resolve of giving up the Great Discovery--I know not. They
marched away, and we returned to our former life.

       *       *       *       *       *

One thing more I must relate.

We--that is, the College--were seated, reassured as to our safety,
watching this great Departure.

Five minutes or so after the women had passed, I observed two of my
own friends--learned Fellows of the College, who had always followed
my lead and voted with me--eagerly whispering each other, and plucking
one another by the sleeve. Then they suddenly rose and pulled off
their black gowns, and fled swiftly in the direction of the wagons and
carriages where the women sat.

We have never seen or heard from any of these unfortunate men since.

       *       *       *       *       *

I am now myself the Arch Physician.


THE END.

BY WALTER BESANT.


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