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-
- THE POISON BELT, by ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE
-
- Digitized by Cardinalis Etext Press, C.E.K.
- Posted to Wiretap in July 1993, as poison.dyl.
-
- This text is in the PUBLIC DOMAIN.
-
-
-
- THE POISON BELT
- BY
- ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE
-
- HODDER AND STOUGHTON
- LONDON NEW YORK TORONTO
- COPYRIGHT, 1913.
-
- Being an account of another adventure of
- Prof. George E. Challenger, Lord John
- Roxton, Prof. Summerlee, and Mr. E. D.
- Malone, the discoverers of "The Lost World"
-
-
- Chapter I
- THE BLURING OF LINES
-
- It is imperative that now at once, while these stupendous events
- are still clear in my mind, I should set them down with that
- exactness of detail which time may blur. But even as I do so, I
- am overwhelmed by the wonder of the fact that it should be our
- little group of the "Lost World"--Professor Challenger,
- Professor Summerlee, Lord John Roxton, and myself--who have
- passed through this amazing experience.
-
- When, some years ago, I chronicled in the _Daily Gazette___ our
- epoch-making journey in South America, I little thought that it
- should ever fall to my lot to tell an even stranger personal
- experience, one which is unique in all human annals and must
- stand out in the records of history as a great peak among the
- humble foothills which surround it. The event itself will always
- be marvellous, but the circumstances that we four were together
- at the time of this extraordinary episode came about in a most
- natural and, indeed, inevitable fashion. I will explain the
- events which led up to it as shortly and as clearly as I can,
- though I am well aware that the fuller the detail upon such a
- subject the more welcome it will be to the reader, for the
- public curiosity has been and still is insatiable.
-
- It was upon Friday, the twenty-seventh of August--a date forever
- memorable in the history of the world--that I went down to the
- office of my paper and asked for three days' leave of absence
- from Mr. McArdle, who still presided over our news department.
- The good old Scotchman shook his head, scratched his dwindling
- fringe of ruddy fluff, and finally put his reluctance into words.
-
- "I was thinking, Mr. Malone, that we could employ you to
- advantage these days. I was thinking there was a story that you
- are the only man that could handle as it should be handled."
-
- "I am sorry for that," said I, trying to hide my disappointment.
- "Of course if I am needed, there is an end of the matter. But the
- engagement was important and intimate. If I could be spared----"
-
- "Well, I don't see that you can."
-
- It was bitter, but I had to put the best face I could upon it.
- After all, it was my own fault, for I should have known by this
- time that a journalist has no right to make plans of his own.
-
- "Then I'll think no more of it," said I with as much
- cheerfulness as I could assume at so short a notice. "What was
- it that you wanted me to do?"
-
- "Well, it was just to interview that deevil of a man down at
- Rotherfield."
-
- "You don't mean Professor Challenger?" I cried.
-
- "Aye, it's just him that I do mean. He ran young Alec Simpson of
- the _Courier_ a mile down the high road last week by the collar
- of his coat and the slack of his breeches. You'll have read of
- it, likely, in the police report. Our boys would as soon
- interview a loose alligator in the zoo. But you could do it, I'm
- thinking--an old friend like you."
-
- "Why," said I, greatly relieved, "this makes it all easy. It so
- happens that it was to visit Professor Challenger at Rotherfield
- that I was asking for leave of absence. The fact is, that it is
- the anniversary of our main adventure on the plateau three years
- ago, and he has asked our whole party down to his house to see
- him and celebrate the occasion."
-
- "Capital!" cried McArdle, rubbing his hands and beaming through
- his glasses. "Then you will be able to get his opeenions out of
- him. In any other man I would say it was all moonshine, but the
- fellow has made good once, and who knows but he may again!"
-
- "Get what out of him?" I asked. "What has he been doing?"
-
- "Haven't you seen his letter on `Scientific Possibeelities' in
- to-day's _Times_?"
-
- "No."
-
- McArdle dived down and picked a copy from the floor.
-
- "Read it aloud," said he, indicating a column with his finger.
- "I'd be glad to hear it again, for I am not sure now that I have
- the man's meaning clear in my head."
-
- This was the letter which I read to the news editor of the _Gazette_:--
-
-
- "SCIENTIFIC POSSIBILITIES"
-
- "Sir,--I have read with amusement, not wholly unmixed with some
- less complimentary emotion, the complacent and wholly fatuous
- letter of James Wilson MacPhail which has lately appeared in
- your columns upon the subject of the blurring of Fraunhofer's
- lines in the spectra both of the planets and of the fixed stars.
- He dismisses the matter as of no significance. To a wider
- intelligence it may well seem of very great possible
- importance--so great as to involve the ultimate welfare of every
- man, woman, and child upon this planet. I can hardly hope, by
- the use of scientific language, to convey any sense of my
- meaning to those ineffectual people who gather their ideas from
- the columns of a daily newspaper. I will endeavour, therefore, to
- condescend to their limitation and to indicate the situation by
- the use of a homely analogy which will be within the limits of
- the intelligence of your readers."
-
- "Man, he's a wonder--a living wonder!" said McArdle, shaking his
- head reflectively. "He'd put up the feathers of a sucking-dove
- and set up a riot in a Quakers' meeting. No wonder he has made
- London too hot for him. It's a peety, Mr. Malone, for it's a
- grand brain! We'll let's have the analogy."
-
- "We will suppose," I read, "that a small bundle of connected
- corks was launched in a sluggish current upon a voyage across
- the Atlantic. The corks drift slowly on from day to day with the
- same conditions all round them. If the corks were sentient we
- could imagine that they would consider these conditions to be
- permanent and assured. But we, with our superior knowledge, know
- that many things might happen to surprise the corks. They might
- possibly float up against a ship, or a sleeping whale, or become
- entangled in seaweed. In any case, their voyage would probably
- end by their being thrown up on the rocky coast of Labrador. But
- what could they know of all this while they drifted so gently day
- by day in what they thought was a limitless and homogeneous ocean?
-
- Your readers will possibly comprehend that the Atlantic, in this
- parable, stands for the mighty ocean of ether through which we
- drift and that the bunch of corks represents the little and
- obscure planetary system to which we belong. A third-rate sun,
- with its rag tag and bobtail of insignificant satellites, we
- float under the same daily conditions towards some unknown end,
- some squalid catastrophe which will overwhelm us at the ultimate
- confines of space, where we are swept over an etheric Niagara or
- dashed upon some unthinkable Labrador. I see no room here for
- the shallow and ignorant optimism of your correspondent, Mr.
- James Wilson MacPhail, but many reasons why we should watch with
- a very close and interested attention every indication of change
- in those cosmic surroundings upon which our own ultimate fate
- may depend."
-
- "Man, he'd have made a grand meenister," said McArdle. "It just
- booms like an organ. Let's get doun to what it is that's
- troubling him."
-
- The general blurring and shifting of Fraunhofer's lines of the
- spectrum point, in my opinion, to a widespread cosmic change of
- a subtle and singular character. Light from a planet is the
- reflected light of the sun. Light from a star is a self-produced
- light. But the spectra both from planets and stars have, in this
- instance, all undergone the same change. Is it, then, a change
- in those planets and stars? To me such an idea is inconceivable.
- What common change could simultaneously come upon them all? Is
- it a change in our own atmosphere? It is possible, but in the
- highest degree improbable, since we see no signs of it around
- us, and chemical analysis has failed to reveal it. What, then,
- is the third possibility? That it may be a change in the
- conducting medium, in that infinitely fine ether which extends
- from star to star and pervades the whole universe. Deep in that
- ocean we are floating upon a slow current. Might that current
- not drift us into belts of ether which are novel and have
- properties of which we have never conceived? There is a change
- somewhere. This cosmic disturbance of the spectrum proves it. It
- may be a good change. It may be an evil one. It may be a neutral
- one. We do not know. Shallow observers may treat the matter as
- one which can be disregarded, but one who like myself is
- possessed of the deeper intelligence of the true philosopher
- will understand that the possibilities of the universe are
- incalculable and that the wisest man is he who holds himself
- ready for the unexpected. To take an obvious example, who would
- undertake to say that the mysterious and universal outbreak of
- illness, recorded in your columns this very morning as having
- broken out among the indigenous races of Sumatra, has no
- connection with some cosmic change to which they may respond
- more quickly than the more complex peoples of Europe? I throw
- out the idea for what it is worth. To assert it is, in the
- present stage, as unprofitable as to deny it, but it is an
- unimaginative numskull who is too dense to perceive that it is
- well within the bounds of scientific possibility.
-
- "Yours faithfully,
- "GEORGE EDWARD CHALLENGER.
-
- "THE BRIARS, ROTHERFIELD."
-
-
- "It's a fine, steemulating letter," said McArdle thoughtfully,
- fitting a cigarette into the long glass tube which he used as a
- holder. "What's your opeenion of it, Mr. Malone?"
-
- I had to confess my total and humiliating ignorance of the
- subject at issue. What, for example, were Fraunhofer's lines?
- McArdle had just been studying the matter with the aid of our
- tame scientist at the office, and he picked from his desk two of
- those many-coloured spectral bands which bear a general
- resemblance to the hat-ribbons of some young and ambitious
- cricket club. He pointed out to me that there were certain black
- lines which formed crossbars upon the series of brilliant colours
- extending from the red at one end through gradations of orange,
- yellow, green, blue, and indigo to the violet at the other.
-
- "Those dark bands are Fraunhofer's lines," said he. "The colours
- are just light itself. Every light, if you can split it up with
- a prism, gives the same colours. They tell us nothing. It is the
- lines that count, because they vary according to what it may be
- that produces the light. It is these lines that have been
- blurred instead of clear this last week, and all the astronomers
- have been quarreling over the reason. Here's a photograph of the
- blurred lines for our issue to-morrow. The public have taken no
- interest in the matter up to now, but this letter of
- Challenger's in the _Times_ will make them wake up, I'm thinking."
-
- "And this about Sumatra?"
- "Well, it's a long cry from a blurred line in a spectrum to a
- sick nigger in Sumatra. And yet the chiel has shown us once
- before that he knows what he's talking about. There is some
- queer illness down yonder, that's beyond all doubt, and to-day
- there's a cable just come in from Singapore that the lighthouses
- are out of action in the Straits of Sundan, and two ships on the
- beach in consequence. Anyhow, it's good enough for you to
- interview Challenger upon. If you get anything definite, let us
- have a column by Monday."
-
- I was coming out from the news editor's room, turning over my
- new mission in my mind, when I heard my name called from the
- waiting-room below. It was a telegraph-boy with a wire which had
- been forwarded from my lodgings at Streatham. The message was
- from the very man we had been discussing, and ran thus:--
-
- Malone, 17, Hill Street, Streatham.--Bring oxygen.--Challenger.
-
- "Bring oxygen!" The Professor, as I remembered him, had an
- elephantine sense of humour capable of the most clumsy and
- unwieldly gambollings. Was this one of those jokes which used to
- reduce him to uproarious laughter, when his eyes would disappear
- and he was all gaping mouth and wagging beard, supremely
- indifferent to the gravity of all around him? I turned the words
- over, but could make nothing even remotely jocose out of them.
- Then surely it was a concise order--though a very strange one.
- He was the last man in the world whose deliberate command I
- should care to disobey. Possibly some chemical experiment was
- afoot; possibly----Well, it was no business of mine to speculate
- upon why he wanted it. I must get it. There was nearly an hour
- before I should catch the train at Victoria. I took a taxi, and
- having ascertained the address from the telephone book, I made
- for the Oxygen Tube Supply Company in Oxford Street.
-
- As I alighted on the pavement at my destination, two youths
- emerged from the door of the establishment carrying an iron
- cylinder, which, with some trouble, they hoisted into a waiting
- motor-car. An elderly man was at their heels scolding and
- directing in a creaky, sardonic voice. He turned towards me.
- There was no mistaking those austere features and that goatee
- beard. It was my old cross-grained companion, Professor Summerlee.
-
- "What!" he cried. "Don't tell me that _you_ have had one of these
- preposterous telegrams for oxygen?"
-
- I exhibited it.
-
- "Well, well! I have had one too, and, as you see, very much
- against the grain, I have acted upon it. Our good friend is as
- impossible as ever. The need for oxygen could not have been so
- urgent that he must desert the usual means of supply and
- encroach upon the time of those who are really busier than
- himself. Why could he not order it direct?"
-
- I could only suggest that he probably wanted it at once.
-
- "Or thought he did, which is quite another matter. But it is
- superfluous now for you to purchase any, since I have this
- considerable supply."
-
- "Still, for some reason he seems to wish that I should bring
- oxygen too. It will be safer to do exactly what he tells me."
-
- Accordingly, in spite of many grumbles and remonstrances from
- Summerlee, I ordered an additional tube, which was placed with
- the other in his motor-car, for he had offered me a lift to
- Victoria.
-
- I turned away to pay off my taxi, the driver of which was very
- cantankerous and abusive over his fare. As I came back to
- Professor Summerlee, he was having a furious altercation with
- the men who had carried down the oxygen, his little white goat's
- beard jerking with indignation. One of the fellows called him,
- I remember, "a silly old bleached cockatoo," which so enraged
- his chauffeur that he bounded out of his seat to take the part
- of his insulted master, and it was all we could do to prevent a
- riot in the street.
-
- These little things may seem trivial to relate, and passed as
- mere incidents at the time. It is only now, as I look back, that
- I see their relation to the whole story which I have to unfold.
-
- The chauffeur must, as it seemed to me, have been a novice or
- else have lost his nerve in this disturbance, for he drove
- vilely on the way to the station. Twice we nearly had collisions
- with other equally erratic vehicles, and I remember remarking
- to Summerlee that the standard of driving in London
- had very much declined. Once we brushed the very edge of a
- great crowd which was watching a fight at the corner of the
- Mall. The people, who were much excited, raised cries of
- anger at the clumsy driving, and one fellow sprang upon the
- step and waved a stick above our heads. I pushed him off, but
- we were glad when we had got clear of them and safe out of
- the park. These little events, coming one after the other,
- left me very jangled in my nerves, and I could see from my
- companion's petulant manner that his own patience had got to
- a low ebb.
-
- But our good humour was restored when we saw Lord John Roxton
- waiting for us upon the platform, his tall, thin figure clad
- in a yellow tweed shooting-suit. His keen face, with those
- unforgettable eyes, so fierce and yet so humorous, flushed
- with pleasure at the sight of us. His ruddy hair was shot
- with grey, and the furrows upon his brow had been cut a
- little deeper by Time's chisel, but in all else he was the
- Lord John who had been our good comrade in the past.
-
- "Hullo, Herr Professor! Hullo, young fella!" he shouted as
- he came toward us.
-
- He roared with amusement when he saw the oxygen cylinders
- upon the porter's trolly behind us. "So you've got them
- too!" he cried. "Mine is in the van. Whatever can the old
- dear be after?"
-
- "Have you seen his letter in the _Times_?" I asked.
-
- "What was it?"
-
- "Stuff and nonsense!" said Summerlee Harshly.
-
- "Well, it's at the bottom of this oxygen business, or I am
- mistaken," said I.
-
- "Stuff and nonsense!" cried Summerlee again with quite
- unnecessary violence. We had all got into a first-class
- smoker, and he had already lit the short and charred old
- briar pipe which seemed to singe the end of his long,
- aggressive nose.
-
- "Friend Challenger is a clever man," said he with great
- vehemence. "No one can deny it. It's a fool that denies it.
- Look at his hat. There's a sixty-ounce brain inside it--a big
- engine, running smooth, and turning out clean work. Show me
- the engine-house and I'll tell you the size of the engine.
- But he is a born charlatan--you've heard me tell him so to
- his face--a born charlatan, with a kind of dramatic trick of
- jumping into the limelight. Things are quiet, so friend
- Challenger sees a chance to set the public talking about him.
- You don't imagine that he seriously believes all this
- nonsense about a change in the ether and a danger to the
- human race? Was ever such a cock-and-bull story in this life?"
-
- He sat like an old white raven, croaking and shaking with
- sardonic laughter.
-
- A wave of anger passed through me as I listened to Summerlee.
- It was disgraceful that he should speak thus of the leader
- who had been the source of all our fame and given us such an
- experience as no men have ever enjoyed. I had opened my mouth
- to utter some hot retort, when Lord John got before me.
-
- "You had a scrap once before with old man Challenger," said
- he sternly, "and you were down and out inside ten seconds. It
- seems to me, Professor Summerlee, he's beyond your class, and
- the best you can do with him is to walk wide and leave him alone."
-
- "Besides," said I, "he has been a good friend to every one of
- us. Whatever his faults may be, he is as straight as a line,
- and I don't believe he ever speaks evil of his comrades behind
- their backs."
-
- "Well said, young fellah-my-lad," said Lord John Roxton. Then,
- with a kindly smile, he slapped Professor Summerlee upon his
- shoulder. "Come, Herr Professor, we're not going to quarrel at
- this time of day. We've seen too much together. But keep off the
- grass when you get near Challenger, for this young fellah and I
- have a bit of a weakness for the old dear."
-
- But Summerlee was in no humour for compromise. His face was
- screwed up in rigid disapproval, and thick curls of angry smoke
- rolled up from his pipe.
-
- "As to you, Lord John Roxton," he creaked, "your opinion upon a
- matter of science is of as much value in my eyes as my views
- upon a new type of shot-gun would be in yours. I have my own
- judgment, sir, and I use it in my own way. Because it has misled
- me once, is that any reason why I should accept without
- criticism anything, however far-fetched, which this man may care
- to put forward? Are we to have a Pope of science, with
- infallible decrees laid down _ex cathedra_, and accepted without
- question by the poor humble public? I tell you, sir, that I have
- a brain of my own and that I should feel myself to be a snob and
- a slave if I did not use it. If it pleases you to believe this
- rigmarole about ether and Fraunhofer's lines upon the spectrum,
- do so by all means, but do not ask one who is older and wiser
- than yourself to share in your folly. Is it not evident that if
- the ether were affected to the degree which he maintains, and if
- it were obnoxious to human health, the result of it would
- already be apparent upon ourselves?" Here he laughed with
- uproarious triumph over his own argument. "Yes, sir, we should
- already be very far from our normal selves, and instead of
- sitting quietly discussing scientific problems in a railway
- train we should be showing actual symptoms of the poison which
- was working within us. Where do we see any signs of this
- poisonous cosmic disturbance? Answer me that, sir! Answer me
- that! Come, come, no evasion! I pin you to an answer!"
-
- I felt more and more angry. There was something very irritating
- and aggressive in Summerlee's demeanour.
-
- "I think that if you knew more about the facts you might be less
- positive in your opinion," said I.
-
- Summerlee took his pipe from his mouth and fixed me with a stony stare.
-
- "Pray what do you mean, sir, by that somewhat impertinent observation?"
-
- "I mean that when I was leaving the office the news editor told
- me that a telegram had come in confirming the general illness of
- the Sumatra natives, and adding that the lights had not been lit
- in the Straits of Sunda."
-
- "Really, there should be some limits to human folly!" cried
- Summerlee in a positive fury. "Is it possible that you do not
- realize that ether, if for a moment we adopt Challenger's
- preposterous supposition, is a universal substance which is the
- same here as at the other side of the world? Do you for an
- instant suppose that there is an English ether and a Sumatran
- ether? Perhaps you imagine that the ether of Kent is in some way
- superior to the ether of Surrey, through which this train is now
- bearing us. There really are no bounds to the credulity and
- ignorance of the average layman. Is it conceivable that the
- ether in Sumatra should be so deadly as to cause total
- insensibility at the very time when the ether here has had no
- appreciable effect upon us whatever? Personally, I can truly say
- that I never felt stronger in body or better balanced in mind in
- my life."
-
- "That may be. I don't profess to be a scientific man," said I,
- "though I have heard somewhere that the science of one
- generation is usually the fallacy of the next. But it does not
- take much common sense to see that, as we seem to know so little
- about ether, it might be affected by some local conditions in
- various parts of the world and might show an effect over there
- which would only develop later with us."
-
- "With `might' and `may' you can prove anything," cried Summerlee
- furiously. "Pigs may fly. Yes, sir, pigs _may_ fly--but they
- don't. It is not worth arguing with you. Challenger has filled
- you with his nonsense and you are both incapable of reason. I
- had as soon lay arguments before those railway cushions."
-
- "I must say, Professor Summerlee, that your manners do not seem
- to have improved since I last had the pleasure of meeting you,"
- said Lord John severely.
-
- "You lordlings are not accustomed to hear the truth," Summerlee
- answered with a bitter smile. "It comes as a bit of a shock,
- does it not, when someone makes you realize that your title
- leaves you none the less a very ignorant man?"
-
- "Upon my word, sir," said Lord John, very stern and rigid, "if
- you were a younger man you would not dare to speak to me in so
- offensive a fashion."
-
- Summerlee thrust out his chin, with its little wagging tuft of
- goatee beard.
-
- "I would have you know, sir, that, young or old, there has never
- been a time in my life when I was afraid to speak my mind to an
- ignorant coxcomb--yes, sir, an ignorant coxcomb, if you had as
- many titles as slaves could invent and fools could adopt."
-
- For a moment Lord John's eyes blazed, and then, with a
- tremendous effort, he mastered his anger and leaned back in his
- seat with arms folded and a bitter smile upon his face. To me
- all this was dreadful and deplorable. Like a wave, the memory of
- the past swept over me, the good comradeship, the happy,
- adventurous days--all that we had suffered and worked for and
- won. That it should have come to this--to insults and abuse!
- Suddenly I was sobbing--sobbing in loud, gulping, uncontrollable
- sobs which refused to be concealed. My companions looked at me
- in surprise. I covered my face with my hands.
-
- "It's all right," said I. "Only--only it _is_ such a pity!"
-
- "You're ill, young fellah, that's what's amiss with you," said
- Lord John. "I thought you were queer from the first."
-
- "Your habits, sir, have not mended in these three years," said
- Summerlee, shaking his head. "I also did not fail to observe
- your strange manner the moment we met. You need not waste your
- sympathy, Lord John. These tears are purely alcoholic. The man
- has been drinking. By the way, Lord John, I called you a coxcomb
- just now, which was perhaps unduly severe. But the word reminds
- me of a small accomplishment, trivial but amusing, which I used
- to possess. You know me as the austere man of science. Can you
- believe that I once had a well-deserved reputation in several
- nurseries as a farmyard imitator? Perhaps I can help you to pass
- the time in a pleasant way. Would it amuse you to hear me crow
- like a cock?"
-
- "No, sir," said Lord John, who was still greatly offended, "it
- would _not_ amuse me."
-
- "My imitation of the clucking hen who had just laid an egg was
- also considered rather above the average. Might I venture?"
-
- "No, sir, no--certainly not."
-
- But in spite of this earnest prohibition, Professor Summerlee
- laid down his pipe and for the rest of our journey he
- entertained--or failed to entertain--us by a succession of bird
- and animal cries which seemed so absurd that my tears were
- suddenly changed into boisterous laughter, which must have
- become quite hysterical as I sat opposite this grave Professor
- and saw him--or rather heard him--in the character of the
- uproarious rooster or the puppy whose tail had been trodden
- upon. Once Lord John passed across his newspaper, upon the
- margin of which he had written in pencil, "Poor devil! Mad as a
- hatter." No doubt it was very eccentric, and yet the performance
- struck me as extraordinarily clever and amusing.
-
- Whilst this was going on, Lord John leaned forward and told me
- some interminable story about a buffalo and an Indian rajah
- which seemed to me to have neither beginning nor end. Professor
- Summerlee had just begun to chirrup like a canary, and Lord John
- to get to the climax of his story, when the train drew up at
- Jarvis Brook, which had been given us as the station for Rotherfield.
-
- And there was Challenger to meet us. His appearance was
- glorious. Not all the turkey-cocks in creation could match the
- slow, high-stepping dignity with which he paraded his own
- railway station and the benignant smile of condescending
- encouragement with which he regarded everybody around him. If he
- had changed in anything since the days of old, it was that his
- points had become accentuated. The huge head and broad sweep of
- forehead, with its plastered lock of black hair, seemed even
- greater than before. His black beard poured forward in a more
- impressive cascade, and his clear grey eyes, with their insolent
- and sardonic eyelids, were even more masterful than of yore.
-
- He gave me the amused hand-shake and encouraging smile which the
- head master bestows upon the small boy, and, having greeted the
- others and helped to collect their bags and their cylinders of
- oxygen, he stowed us and them away in a large motor-car which was
- driven by the same impassive Austin, the man of few words, whom
- I had seen in the character of butler upon the occasion of my
- first eventful visit to the Professor. Our journey led us up a
- winding hill through beautiful country. I sat in front with the
- chauffeur, but behind me my three comrades seemed to me to be
- all talking together. Lord John was still struggling with his
- buffalo story, so far as I could make out, while once again I
- heard, as of old, the deep rumble of Challenger and the
- insistent accents of Summerlee as their brains locked in high
- and fierce scientific debate. Suddenly Austin slanted his
- mahogany face toward me without taking his eyes from his
- steering-wheel.
-
- "I'm under notice," said he.
-
- "Dear me!" said I.
-
- Everything seemed strange to-day. Everyone said queer, unexpected
- things. It was like a dream.
-
- "It's forty-seven times," said Austin reflectively.
-
- "When do you go?" I asked, for want of some better observation.
- "I don't go," said Austin.
-
- The conversation seemed to have ended there, but presently he
- came back to it.
-
- "If I was to go, who would look after 'im?" He jerked his head
- toward his master. "Who would 'e get to serve 'im?"
-
- "Someone else," I suggested lamely.
-
- "Not 'e. No one would stay a week. If I was to go, that 'ouse
- would run down like a watch with the mainspring out. I'm telling
- you because you're 'is friend, and you ought to know. If I was
- to take 'im at 'is word--but there, I wouldn't have the 'eart.
- 'E and the missus would be like two babes left out in a bundle.
- I'm just everything. And then 'e goes and gives me notice."
-
- "Why would no one stay?" I asked.
-
- "Well, they wouldn't make allowances, same as I do. 'E's a very
- clever man, the master--so clever that 'e's clean balmy
- sometimes. I've seen 'im right off 'is onion, and no error.
- Well, look what 'e did this morning."
-
- "What did he do?"
-
- Austin bent over to me.
-
- "'E bit the 'ousekeeper," said he in a hoarse whisper.
-
- "Bit her?"
-
- "Yes, sir. Bit 'er on the leg. I saw 'er with my own eyes
- startin' a marathon from the 'all-door."
-
- "Good gracious!"
- "So you'd say, sir, if you could see some of the goings on. 'E
- don't make friends with the neighbors. There's some of them
- thinks that when 'e was up among those monsters you wrote about,
- it was just `'Ome, Sweet 'Ome' for the master, and 'e was never
- in fitter company. That's what _they_ say. But I've served 'im ten
- years, and I'm fond of 'im, and, mind you, 'e's a great man,
- when all's said an' done, and it's an honor to serve 'im. But 'e
- does try one cruel at times. Now look at that, sir. That ain't
- what you might call old-fashioned 'ospitality, is it now? Just
- you read it for yourself."
-
- The car on its lowest speed had ground its way up a steep,
- curving ascent. At the corner a notice-board peered over a
- well-clipped hedge. As Austin said, it was not difficult to
- read, for the words were few and arresting:--
-
- |---------------------------------------|
- | WARNING. |
- | ---- |
- | Visitors, Pressmen, and Mendicants |
- | are not encouraged. |
- | |
- | G. E. CHALLENGER. |
- |_______________________________________|
-
-
- "No, it's not what you might call 'earty," said Austin, shaking
- his head and glancing up at the deplorable placard. "It wouldn't
- look well in a Christmas card. I beg your pardon, sir, for I
- haven't spoke as much as this for many a long year, but to-day my
- feelings seem to 'ave got the better of me. 'E can sack me till
- 'e's blue in the face, but I ain't going, and that's flat. I'm
- 'is man and 'e's my master, and so it will be, I expect, to the
- end of the chapter."
-
- We had passed between the white posts of a gate and up a curving
- drive, lined with rhododendron bushes. Beyond stood a low brick
- house, picked out with white woodwork, very comfortable and
- pretty. Mrs. Challenger, a small, dainty, smiling figure, stood
- in the open doorway to welcome us.
-
- "Well, my dear," said Challenger, bustling out of the car, "here
- are our visitors. It is something new for us to have visitors,
- is it not? No love lost between us and our neighbors, is there?
- If they could get rat poison into our baker's cart, I expect it
- would be there."
-
- "It's dreadful--dreadful!" cried the lady, between laughter and
- tears. "George is always quarreling with everyone. We haven't a
- friend on the countryside."
-
- "It enables me to concentrate my attention upon my incomparable
- wife," said Challenger, passing his short, thick arm round her
- waist. Picture a gorilla and a gazelle, and you have the pair of
- them. "Come, come, these gentlemen are tired from the journey,
- and luncheon should be ready. Has Sarah returned?"
-
- The lady shook her head ruefully, and the Professor laughed
- loudly and stroked his beard in his masterful fashion.
-
- "Austin," he cried, "when you have put up the car you will
- kindly help your mistress to lay the lunch. Now, gentlemen, will
- you please step into my study, for there are one or two very
- urgent things which I am anxious to say to you."
-
-
- Chapter II
- THE TIDE OF DEATH
-
- As we crossed the hall the telephone-bell rang, and we were the
- involuntary auditors of Professor Challenger's end of the
- ensuing dialogue. I say "we," but no one within a hundred yards
- could have failed to hear the booming of that monstrous voice, which
- reverberated through the house. His answers lingered in my mind.
-
- "Yes, yes, of course, it is I.... Yes, certainly, _the_ Professor
- Challenger, the famous Professor, who else?... Of course, every
- word of it, otherwise I should not have written it.... I
- shouldn't be surprised.... There is every indication of it....
- Within a day or so at the furthest.... Well, I can't help that,
- can I?... Very unpleasant, no doubt, but I rather fancy it will
- affect more important people than you. There is no use whining
- about it.... No, I couldn't possibly. You must take your
- chance.... That's enough, sir. Nonsense! I have something more
- important to do than to listen to such twaddle."
-
- He shut off with a crash and led us upstairs into a large airy
- apartment which formed his study. On the great mahogany desk
- seven or eight unopened telegrams were lying.
-
- "Really," he said as he gathered them up, "I begin to think that
- it would save my correspondents' money if I were to adopt a
- telegraphic address. Possibly `Noah, Rotherfield,' would be the
- most appropriate."
-
- As usual when he made an obscure joke, he leaned against the
- desk and bellowed in a paroxysm of laughter, his hands shaking
- so that he could hardly open the envelopes.
-
- "Noah! Noah!" he gasped, with a face of beetroot, while Lord
- John and I smiled in sympathy and Summerlee, like a dyspeptic
- goat, wagged his head in sardonic disagreement. Finally
- Challenger, still rumbling and exploding, began to open his
- telegrams. The three of us stood in the bow window and occupied
- ourselves in admiring the magnificent view.
-
- It was certainly worth looking at. The road in its gentle curves
- had really brought us to a considerable elevation--seven hundred
- feet, as we afterwards discovered. Challenger's house was on the
- very edge of the hill, and from its southern face, in which was
- the study window, one looked across the vast stretch of the
- weald to where the gentle curves of the South Downs formed an
- undulating horizon. In a cleft of the hills a haze of smoke
- marked the position of Lewes. Immediately at our feet there lay
- a rolling plain of heather, with the long, vivid green stretches
- of the Crowborough golf course, all dotted with the players. A
- little to the south, through an opening in the woods, we could
- see a section of the main line from London to Brighton. In the
- immediate foreground, under our very noses, was a small enclosed
- yard, in which stood the car which had brought us from the station.
-
- An ejaculation from Challenger caused us to turn. He had read
- his telegrams and had arranged them in a little methodical pile
- upon his desk. His broad, rugged face, or as much of it as was
- visible over the matted beard, was still deeply flushed, and he
- seemed to be under the influence of some strong excitement.
-
- "Well, gentlemen," he said, in a voice as if he was addressing
- a public meeting, "this is indeed an interesting reunion, and it
- takes place under extraordinary--I may say
- unprecedented--circumstances. May I ask if you have observed
- anything upon your journey from town?"
-
- "The only thing which I observed," said Summerlee with a sour
- smile, "was that our young friend here has not improved in his
- manners during the years that have passed. I am sorry to state
- that I have had to seriously complain of his conduct in the
- train, and I should be wanting in frankness if I did not say
- that it has left a most unpleasant impression in my mind."
-
- "Well, well, we all get a bit prosy sometimes," said Lord John.
- "The young fellah meant no real harm. After all, he's an
- International, so if he takes half an hour to describe a game of
- football he has more right to do it than most folk."
-
- "Half an hour to describe a game!" I cried indignantly. "Why, it
- was you that took half an hour with some long-winded story about
- a buffalo. Professor Summerlee will be my witness."
-
- "I can hardly judge which of you was the most utterly wearisome,"
- said Summerlee. "I declare to you, Challenger, that I never wish
- to hear of football or of buffaloes so long as I live."
-
- "I have never said one word to-day about football," I protested.
-
- Lord John gave a shrill whistle, and Summerlee shook his head sadly.
-
- "So early in the day too," said he. "It is indeed deplorable. As
- I sat there in sad but thoughtful silence----"
-
- "In silence!" cried Lord John. "Why, you were doin' a music-hall
- turn of imitations all the way--more like a runaway gramophone
- than a man."
-
- Summerlee drew himself up in bitter protest.
-
- "You are pleased to be facetious, Lord John," said he with a
- face of vinegar.
-
- "Why, dash it all, this is clear madness," cried Lord John.
- "Each of us seems to know what the others did and none of us
- knows what he did himself. Let's put it all together from the
- first. We got into a first-class smoker, that's clear, ain't
- it? Then we began to quarrel over friend Challenger's letter in
- the _Times_."
-
- "Oh, you did, did you?" rumbled our host, his eyelids beginning to droop.
-
- "You said, Summerlee, that there was no possible truth in his contention."
-
- "Dear me!" said Challenger, puffing out his chest and stroking
- his beard. "No possible truth! I seem to have heard the words
- before. And may I ask with what arguments the great and famous
- Professor Summerlee proceeded to demolish the humble individual
- who had ventured to express an opinion upon a matter of
- scientific possibility? Perhaps before he exterminates that
- unfortunate nonentity he will condescend to give some reasons
- for the adverse views which he has formed."
-
- He bowed and shrugged and spread open his hands as he spoke with
- his elaborate and elephantine sarcasm.
-
- "The reason was simple enough," said the dogged Summerlee. "I
- contended that if the ether surrounding the earth was so toxic
- in one quarter that it produced dangerous symptoms, it was
- hardly likely that we three in the railway carriage should be
- entirely unaffected."
-
- The explanation only brought uproarious merriment from
- Challenger. He laughed until everything in the room seemed to
- rattle and quiver.
-
- "Our worthy Summerlee is, not for the first time, somewhat out
- of touch with the facts of the situation," said he at last,
- mopping his heated brow. "Now, gentlemen, I cannot make my point
- better than by detailing to you what I have myself done this
- morning. You will the more easily condone any mental abberation
- upon your own part when you realize that even I have had moments
- when my balance has been disturbed. We have had for some years
- in this household a housekeeper--one Sarah, with whose second
- name I have never attempted to burden my memory. She is a woman
- of a severe and forbidding aspect, prim and demure in her
- bearing, very impassive in her nature, and never known within
- our experience to show signs of any emotion. As I sat alone at
- my breakfast--Mrs. Challenger is in the habit of keeping her
- room of a morning--it suddenly entered my head that it would be
- entertaining and instructive to see whether I could find any
- limits to this woman's inperturbability. I devised a simple but
- effective experiment. Having upset a small vase of flowers which
- stood in the centre of the cloth, I rang the bell and slipped
- under the table. She entered and, seeing the room empty,
- imagined that I had withdrawn to the study. As I had expected,
- she approached and leaned over the table to replace the vase. I
- had a vision of a cotton stocking and an elastic-sided boot.
- Protruding my head, I sank my teeth into the calf of her leg.
- The experiment was successful beyond belief. For some moments
- she stood paralyzed, staring down at my head. Then with a shriek
- she tore herself free and rushed from the room. I pursued her
- with some thoughts of an explanation, but she flew down the
- drive, and some minutes afterwards I was able to pick her out
- with my field-glasses traveling very rapidly in a south-westerly
- direction. I tell you the anecdote for what it is worth. I drop
- it into your brains and await its germination. Is it
- illuminative? Has it conveyed anything to your minds? What do
- _you_ think of it, Lord John?"
-
- Lord John shook his head gravely.
-
- "You'll be gettin' into serious trouble some of these days if
- you don't put a brake on," said he.
-
- "Perhaps you have some observation to make, Summerlee?"
-
- "You should drop all work instantly, Challenger, and take three
- months in a German watering-place," said he.
-
- "Profound! Profound!" cried Challenger. "Now, my young friend,
- is it possible that wisdom may come from you where your seniors
- have so signally failed?"
-
- And it did. I say it with all modesty, but it did. Of course, it
- all seems obvious enough to you who know what occurred, but it
- was not so very clear when everything was new. But it came on me
- suddenly with the full force of absolute conviction.
-
- "Poison!" I cried.
-
- Then, even as I said the word, my mind flashed back over the
- whole morning's experiences, past Lord John with his buffalo,
- past my own hysterical tears, past the outrageous conduct of
- Professor Summerlee, to the queer happenings in London, the row
- in the park, the driving of the chauffeur, the quarrel at the
- oxygen warehouse. Everything fitted suddenly into its place.
-
- "Of course," I cried again. "It is poison. We are all poisoned."
-
- "Exactly," said Challenger, rubbing his hands, "we are all
- poisoned. Our planet has swum into the poison belt of ether, and
- is now flying deeper into it at the rate of some millions of
- miles a minute. Our young friend has expressed the cause of all
- our troubles and perplexities in a single word, `poison.'"
-
- We looked at each other in amazed silence. No comment seemed to
- meet the situation.
-
- "There is a mental inhibition by which such symptoms can be
- checked and controlled," said Challenger. "I cannot expect to
- find it developed in all of you to the same point which it has
- reached in me, for I suppose that the strength of our different
- mental processes bears some proportion to each other.
- But no doubt it is appreciable even in our young friend here.
- After the little outburst of high spirits which so alarmed my
- domestic I sat down and reasoned with myself. I put it to myself
- that I had never before felt impelled to bite any of my
- household. The impulse had then been an abnormal one. In an
- instant I perceived the truth. My pulse upon examination was ten
- beats above the usual, and my reflexes were increased. I called
- upon my higher and saner self, the real G. E. C., seated serene
- and impregnable behind all mere molecular disturbance. I
- summoned him, I say, to watch the foolish mental tricks
- which the poison would play. I found that I was indeed the
- master. I could recognize and control a disordered mind. It was
- a remarkable exhibition of the victory of mind over matter, for
- it was a victory over that particular form of matter which is
- most intimately connected with mind. I might almost say that
- mind was at fault and that personality controlled it. Thus, when
- my wife came downstairs and I was impelled to slip behind the
- door and alarm her by some wild cry as she entered, I was able
- to stifle the impulse and to greet her with dignity and
- restraint. An overpowering desire to quack like a duck was met
- and mastered in the same fashion.
-
- Later, when I descended to order the car and found Austin
- bending over it absorbed in repairs, I controlled my open hand
- even after I had lifted it and refrained from giving him an
- experience which would possibly have caused him to follow in the
- steps of the housekeeper. On the contrary, I touched him on the
- shoulder and ordered the car to be at the door in time to meet
- your train. At the present instant I am most forcibly tempted to
- take Professor Summerlee by that silly old beard of his and to
- shake his head violently backwards and forwards. And yet, as you
- see, I am perfectly restrained. Let me commend my example to you."
-
- "I'll look out for that buffalo," said Lord John.
-
- "And I for the football match."
- "It may be that you are right, Challenger," said Summerlee in a
- chastened voice. "I am willing to admit that my turn of mind is
- critical rather than constructive and that I am not a ready
- convert to any new theory, especially when it happens to be so
- unusual and fantastic as this one. However, as I cast my mind
- back over the events of the morning, and as I reconsider the
- fatuous conduct of my companions, I find it easy to believe that
- some poison of an exciting kind was responsible for their symptoms."
-
- Challenger slapped his colleague good-humouredly upon the
- shoulder. "We progress," said he. "Decidedly we progress."
-
- "And pray, sir," asked Summerlee humbly, "what is your opinion
- as to the present outlook?"
-
- "With your permission I will say a few words upon that subject."
- He seated himself upon his desk, his short, stumpy legs swinging
- in front of him. "We are assisting at a tremendous and awful
- function. It is, in my opinion, the end of the world."
-
- The end of the world! Our eyes turned to the great bow-window
- and we looked out at the summer beauty of the country-side, the
- long slopes of heather, the great country-houses, the cozy
- farms, the pleasure-seekers upon the links.
-
- The end of the world! One had often heard the words, but the
- idea that they could ever have an immediate practical
- significance, that it should not be at some vague date, but now,
- to-day, that was a tremendous, a staggering thought. We were all
- struck solemn and waited in silence for Challenger to continue.
- His overpowering presence and appearance lent such force to the
- solemnity of his words that for a moment all the crudities and
- absurdities of the man vanished, and he loomed before us as
- something majestic and beyond the range of ordinary humanity.
- Then to me, at least, there came back the cheering recollection
- of how twice since we had entered the room he had roared with
- laughter. Surely, I thought, there are limits to mental
- detachment. The crisis cannot be so great or so pressing after all.
-
- `You will conceive a bunch of grapes," said he, "which are
- covered by some infinitesimal but noxious bacillus. The gardener
- passes it through a disinfecting medium. It may be that he
- desires his grapes to be cleaner. It may be that he needs space
- to breed some fresh bacillus less noxious than the last. He dips
- it into the poison and they are gone. Our Gardener is, in my
- opinion, about to dip the solar system, and the human bacillus,
- the little mortal vibrio which twisted and wriggled upon the
- outer rind of the earth, will in an instant be sterilized out of
- existence."
-
- Again there was silence. It was broken by the high trill of the
- telephone-bell.
-
- "There is one of our bacilli squeaking for help," said he with
- a grim smile. "They are beginning to realize that their continued
- existence is not really one of the necessities of the universe."
-
- He was gone from the room for a minute or two. I remember that
- none of us spoke in his absence. The situation seemed beyond all
- words or comments.
-
- "The medical officer of health for Brighton," said he when he
- returned. "The symptoms are for some reason developing more
- rapidly upon the sea level. Our seven hundred feet of elevation
- give us an advantage. Folk seem to have learned that I am the
- first authority upon the question. No doubt it comes from my
- letter in the _Times_. That was the mayor of a provincial town
- with whom I talked when we first arrived. You may have heard me
- upon the telephone. He seemed to put an entirely inflated value
- upon his own life. I helped him to readjust his ideas."
-
- Summerlee had risen and was standing by the window. His thin,
- bony hands were trembling with his emotion.
-
- "Challenger," said he earnestly, "this thing is too serious for
- mere futile argument. Do not suppose that I desire to irritate
- you by any question I may ask. But I put it to you whether there
- may not be some fallacy in your information or in your
- reasoning. There is the sun shining as brightly as ever in the
- blue sky. There are the heather and the flowers and the birds.
- There are the folk enjoying themselves upon the golf-links and
- the laborers yonder cutting the corn. You tell us that they and
- we may be upon the very brink of destruction--that this sunlit
- day may be that day of doom which the human race has so long
- awaited. So far as we know, you found this tremendous judgment
- upon what? Upon some abnormal lines in a spectrum--upon rumours
- from Sumatra--upon some curious personal excitement which we have
- discerned in each other. This latter symptom is not so marked
- but that you and we could, by a deliberate effort, control it.
- You need not stand on ceremony with us, Challenger. We have all
- faced death together before now. Speak out, and let us know
- exactly where we stand, and what, in your opinion, are our
- prospects for our future."
-
- It was a brave, good speech, a speech from that stanch and
- strong spirit which lay behind all the acidities and
- angularities of the old zoologist. Lord John rose and shook him
- by the hand.
-
- "My sentiment to a tick," said he. "Now, Challenger, it's up to
- you to tell us where we are. We ain't nervous folk, as you know
- well; but when it comes to makin' a week-end visit and finding
- you've run full butt into the Day of Judgment, it wants a bit of
- explainin'. What's the danger, and how much of it is there, and
- what are we goin' to do to meet it?"
-
- He stood, tall and strong, in the sunshine at the window, with
- his brown hand upon the shoulder of Summerlee. I was lying back
- in an armchair, an extinguished cigarette between my lips, in
- that sort of half-dazed state in which impressions become
- exceedingly distinct. It may have been a new phase of the
- poisoning, but the delirious promptings had all passed away and
- were succeeded by an exceedingly languid and, at the same time,
- perceptive state of mind. I was a spectator. It did not seem to
- be any personal concern of mine. But here were three strong men
- at a great crisis, and it was fascinating to observe them.
- Challenger bent his heavy brows and stroked his beard before he
- answered. One could see that he was very carefully weighing his words.
-
- "What was the last news when you left London?" he asked.
-
- "I was at the _Gazette_ office about ten," said I. "There was a
- Reuter just come in from Singapore to the effect that the
- sickness seemed to be universal in Sumatra and that the
- lighthouses had not been lit in consequence."
-
- "Events have been moving somewhat rapidly since then," said
- Challenger, picking up his pile of telegrams. "I am in close
- touch both with the authorities and with the press, so that news
- is converging upon me from all parts. There is, in fact, a
- general and very insistent demand that I should come to London;
- but I see no good end to be served. From the accounts the
- poisonous effect begins with mental excitement; the rioting in
- Paris this morning is said to have been very violent, and the
- Welsh colliers are in a state of uproar. So far as the evidence
- to hand can be trusted, this stimulative stage, which varies
- much in races and in individuals, is succeeded by a certain
- exaltation and mental lucidity--I seem to discern some signs of
- it in our young friend here--which, after an appreciable
- interval, turns to coma, deepening rapidly into death. I fancy,
- so far as my toxicology carries me, that there are some
- vegetable nerve poisons----"
-
- "Datura," suggested Summerlee.
- "Excellent!" cried Challenger. "It would make for scientific
- precision if we named our toxic agent. Let it be daturon. To
- you, my dear Summerlee, belongs the honour--posthumous, alas, but
- none the less unique--of having given a name to the universal
- destroyer, the Great Gardener's disinfectant. The symptoms of
- daturon, then, may be taken to be such as I indicate. That it
- will involve the whole world and that no life can possibly
- remain behind seems to me to be certain, since ether is a
- universal medium. Up to now it has been capricious in the places
- which it has attacked, but the difference is only a matter of a
- few hours, and it is like an advancing tide which covers one
- strip of sand and then another, running hither and thither in
- irregular streams, until at last it has submerged it all. There
- are laws at work in connection with the action and distribution
- of daturon which would have been of deep interest had the time
- at our disposal permitted us to study them. So far as I can
- trace them"--here he glanced over his telegrams--"the less
- developed races have been the first to respond to its influence.
- There are deplorable accounts from Africa, and the Australian
- aborigines appear to have been already exterminated. The
- Northern races have as yet shown greater resisting power than
- the Southern. This, you see, is dated from Marseilles at
- nine-forty-five this morning. I give it to you verbatim:--
-
- "`All night delirious excitement throughout Provence. Tumult of
- vine growers at Nimes. Socialistic upheaval at Toulon. Sudden
- illness attended by coma attacked population this morning.
- _Peste foudroyante_. Great numbers of dead in the streets.
- Paralysis of business and universal chaos.'
-
- "An hour later came the following, from the same source:--
-
- "`We are threatened with utter extermination. Cathedrals and
- churches full to overflowing. The dead outnumber the living. It
- is inconceivable and horrible. Decease seems to be painless, but
- swift and inevitable.'
- "There is a similar telegram from Paris, where the development
- is not yet as acute. India and Persia appear to be utterly wiped
- out. The Slavonic population of Austria is down, while the
- Teutonic has hardly been affected. Speaking generally, the
- dwellers upon the plains and upon the seashore seem, so far as
- my limited information goes, to have felt the effects more
- rapidly than those inland or on the heights. Even a little
- elevation makes a considerable difference, and perhaps if there
- be a survivor of the human race, he will again be found upon the
- summit of some Ararat. Even our own little hill may presently
- prove to be a temporary island amid a sea of disaster. But at the
- present rate of advance a few short hours will submerge us all."
-
- Lord John Roxton wiped his brow.
-
- "What beats me," said he, "is how you could sit there laughin'
- with that stack of telegrams under your hand. I've seen death as
- often as most folk, but universal death--it's awful!"
-
- "As to the laughter," said Challenger, "you will bear in mind
- that, like yourselves, I have not been exempt from the
- stimulating cerebral effects of the etheric poison. But as to
- the horror with which universal death appears to inspire you, I
- would put it to you that it is somewhat exaggerated. If you were
- sent to sea alone in an open boat to some unknown destination,
- your heart might well sink within you. The isolation, the
- uncertainty, would oppress you. But if your voyage were made in
- a goodly ship, which bore within it all your relations and your
- friends, you would feel that, however uncertain your destination
- might still remain, you would at least have one common and
- simultaneous experience which would hold you to the end in the
- same close communion. A lonely death may be terrible, but a
- universal one, as painless as this would appear to be, is not,
- in my judgment, a matter for apprehension. Indeed, I could
- sympathize with the person who took the view that the horror lay
- in the idea of surviving when all that is learned, famous, and
- exalted had passed away."
-
- "What, then, do you propose to do?" asked Summerlee, who had for
- once nodded his assent to the reasoning of his brother scientist.
-
- "To take our lunch," said Challenger as the boom of a gong
- sounded through the house. "We have a cook whose omelettes are
- only excelled by her cutlets. We can but trust that no cosmic
- disturbance has dulled her excellent abilities. My Scharzberger
- of '96 must also be rescued, so far as our earnest and united
- efforts can do it, from what would be a deplorable waste of a
- great vintage." He levered his great bulk off the desk, upon
- which he had sat while he announced the doom of the planet.
- "Come," said he. "If there is little time left, there is the
- more need that we should spend it in sober and reasonable
- enjoyment."
-
- And, indeed, it proved to be a very merry meal. It is true that
- we could not forget our awful situation. The full solemnity of
- the event loomed ever at the back of our minds and tempered our
- thoughts. But surely it is the soul which has never faced death
- which shies strongly from it at the end. To each of us men it
- had, for one great epoch in our lives, been a familiar presence.
- As to the lady, she leaned upon the strong guidance of her
- mighty husband and was well content to go whither his path might
- lead. The future was our fate. The present was our own. We
- passed it in goodly comradeship and gentle merriment. Our minds
- were, as I have said, singularly lucid. Even I struck sparks at
- times. As to Challenger, he was wonderful! Never have I so
- realized the elemental greatness of the man, the sweep and power
- of his understanding. Summerlee drew him on with his chorus of
- subacid criticism, while Lord John and I laughed at the contest
- and the lady, her hand upon his sleeve, controlled the
- bellowings of the philosopher. Life, death, fate, the destiny of
- man--these were the stupendous subjects of that memorable hour,
- made vital by the fact that as the meal progressed strange,
- sudden exaltations in my mind and tinglings in my limbs
- proclaimed that the invisible tide of death was slowly and
- gently rising around us. Once I saw Lord John put his hand
- suddenly to his eyes, and once Summerlee dropped back for an
- instant in his chair. Each breath we breathed was charged with
- strange forces. And yet our minds were happy and at ease.
- Presently Austin laid the cigarettes upon the table and was
- about to withdraw.
-
- "Austin!" said his master.
-
- "Yes, sir?"
-
- "I thank you for your faithful service." A smile stole over the
- servant's gnarled face.
-
- "I've done my duty, sir."
-
- "I'm expecting the end of the world to-day, Austin."
-
- "Yes, sir. What time, sir?"
-
- "I can't say, Austin. Before evening."
-
- "Very good, sir."
-
- The taciturn Austin saluted and withdrew. Challenger lit a
- cigarette, and, drawing his chair closer to his wife's, he
- took her hand in his.
-
- "You know how matters stand, dear," said he. "I have explained
- it also to our friends here. You're not afraid are you?"
-
- "It won't be painful, George?"
-
- "No more than laughing-gas at the dentist's. Every time you have
- had it you have practically died."
-
- "But that is a pleasant sensation."
-
- "So may death be. The worn-out bodily machine can't record its
- impression, but we know the mental pleasure which lies in a
- dream or a trance. Nature may build a beautiful door and hang it
- with many a gauzy and shimmering curtain to make an entrance to
- the new life for our wondering souls. In all my probings of the
- actual, I have always found wisdom and kindness at the core; and
- if ever the frightened mortal needs tenderness, it is surely as
- he makes the passage perilous from life to life. No, Summerlee,
- I will have none of your materialism, for I, at least, am too
- great a thing to end in mere physical constituents, a packet of
- salts and three bucketfuls of water. Here--here"--and he beat
- his great head with his huge, hairy fist--"there is something
- which uses matter, but is not of it--something which might
- destroy death, but which death can never destroy."
-
- "Talkin' of death," said Lord John. "I'm a Christian of sorts,
- but it seems to me there was somethin' mighty natural in those
- ancestors of ours who were buried with their axes and bows and
- arrows and the like, same as if they were livin' on just the
- same as they used to. I don't know," he added, looking round the
- table in a shamefaced way, "that I wouldn't feel more homely
- myself if I was put away with my old .450 Express and the
- fowlin'-piece, the shorter one with the rubbered stock, and a
- clip or two of cartridges--just a fool's fancy, of course, but
- there it is. How does it strike you, Herr Professor?"
-
- "Well," said Summerlee, "since you ask my opinion, it strikes me
- as an indefensible throwback to the Stone Age or before it. I'm
- of the twentieth century myself, and would wish to die like a
- reasonable civilized man. I don't know that I am more afraid of
- death than the rest of you, for I am an oldish man, and, come
- what may, I can't have very much longer to live; but it is all
- against my nature to sit waiting without a struggle like a sheep
- for the butcher. Is it quite certain, Challenger, that there is
- nothing we can do?"
-
- "To save us--nothing," said Challenger. "To prolong our lives a
- few hours and thus to see the evolution of this mighty tragedy
- before we are actually involved in it--that may prove to be
- within my powers. I have taken certain steps----"
-
- "The oxygen?"
-
- "Exactly. The oxygen."
-
- "But what can oxygen effect in the face of a poisoning of the
- ether? There is not a greater difference in quality between a
- brick-bat and a gas than there is between oxygen and ether. They
- are different planes of matter. They cannot impinge upon one
- another. Come, Challenger, you could not defend such a proposition."
-
- "My good Summerlee, this etheric poison is most certainly
- influenced by material agents. We see it in the methods and
- distribution of the outbreak. We should not _a priori_ have
- expected it, but it is undoubtedly a fact. Hence I am strongly
- of opinion that a gas like oxygen, which increases the vitality
- and the resisting power of the body, would be extremely likely
- to delay the action of what you have so happily named the
- daturon. It may be that I am mistaken, but I have every
- confidence in the correctness of my reasoning."
-
- "Well," said Lord John, "if we've got to sit suckin' at those
- tubes like so many babies with their bottles, I'm not takin' any."
-
- "There will be no need for that," Challenger answered. "We have
- made arrangements--it is to my wife that you chiefly owe
- it--that her boudoir shall be made as airtight as is
- practicable. With matting and varnished paper."
- "Good heavens, Challenger, you don't suppose you can keep out
- ether with varnished paper?"
-
- "Really, my worthy friend, you are a trifle perverse in missing the
- point. It is not to keep out the ether that we have gone to such
- trouble. It is to keep in the oxygen. I trust that if we can
- ensure an atmosphere hyper-oxygenated to a certain point, we may
- be able to retain our senses. I had two tubes of the gas and you
- have brought me three more. It is not much, but it is something."
-
- "How long will they last?"
-
- "I have not an idea. We will not turn them on until our symptoms
- become unbearable. Then we shall dole the gas out as it is
- urgently needed. It may give us some hours, possibly even some
- days, on which we may look out upon a blasted world. Our own
- fate is delayed to that extent, and we will have the very
- singular experience, we five, of being, in all probability, the
- absolute rear guard of the human race upon its march into the
- unknown. Perhaps you will be kind enough now to give me a hand
- with the cylinders. It seems to me that the atmosphere already
- grows somewhat more oppressive."
-
-
- Chapter III
- SUBMERGED
-
- The chamber which was destined to be the scene of our
- unforgettable experience was a charmingly feminine sitting-room,
- some fourteen or sixteen feet square. At the end of it, divided
- by a curtain of red velvet, was a small apartment which formed
- the Professor's dressing-room. This in turn opened into a large
- bedroom. The curtain was still hanging, but the boudoir and
- dressing-room could be taken as one chamber for the purposes of
- our experiment. One door and the window frame had been plastered
- round with varnished paper so as to be practically sealed. Above
- the other door, which opened on to the landing, there hung a
- fanlight which could be drawn by a cord when some ventilation
- became absolutely necessary. A large shrub in a tub stood in
- each corner.
-
- "How to get rid of our excessive carbon dioxide without unduly
- wasting our oxygen is a delicate and vital question," said
- Challenger, looking round him after the five iron tubes had been
- laid side by side against the wall. "With longer time for
- preparation I could have brought the whole concentrated force of
- my intelligence to bear more fully upon the problem, but as it
- is we must do what we can. The shrubs will be of some small
- service. Two of the oxygen tubes are ready to be turned on at an
- instant's notice, so that we cannot be taken unawares. At the
- same time, it would be well not to go far from the room, as the
- crisis may be a sudden and urgent one."
-
- There was a broad, low window opening out upon a balcony. The
- view beyond was the same as that which we had already admired
- from the study. Looking out, I could see no sign of disorder
- anywhere. There was a road curving down the side of the hill,
- under my very eyes. A cab from the station, one of those
- prehistoric survivals which are only to be found in our country
- villages, was toiling slowly up the hill. Lower down was a nurse
- girl wheeling a perambulator and leading a second child by the
- hand. The blue reeks of smoke from the cottages gave the whole
- widespread landscape an air of settled order and homely comfort.
- Nowhere in the blue heaven or on the sunlit earth was there any
- foreshadowing of a catastrophe. The harvesters were back in the
- fields once more and the golfers, in pairs and fours, were still
- streaming round the links. There was so strange a turmoil within
- my own head, and such a jangling of my overstrung nerves, that
- the indifference of those people was amazing.
-
- "Those fellows don't seem to feel any ill effects," said I,
- pointing down at the links.
-
- "Have you played golf?" asked Lord John.
-
- "No, I have not."
-
- "Well, young fellah, when you do you'll learn that once fairly
- out on a round, it would take the crack of doom to stop a true
- golfer. Halloa! There's that telephone-bell again."
-
- From time to time during and after lunch the high, insistent
- ring had summoned the Professor. He gave us the news as it came
- through to him in a few curt sentences. Such terrific items had
- never been registered in the world's history before. The great
- shadow was creeping up from the south like a rising tide of
- death. Egypt had gone through its delirium and was now comatose.
- Spain and Portugal, after a wild frenzy in which the Clericals
- and the Anarchists had fought most desperately, were now fallen
- silent. No cable messages were received any longer from South
- America. In North America the southern states, after some
- terrible racial rioting, had succumbed to the poison. North of
- Maryland the effect was not yet marked, and in Canada it was
- hardly perceptible. Belgium, Holland, and Denmark had each in
- turn been affected. Despairing messages were flashing from every
- quarter to the great centres of learning, to the chemists and
- the doctors of world-wide repute, imploring their advice. The
- astronomers too were deluged with inquiries. Nothing could be
- done. The thing was universal and beyond our human knowledge or
- control. It was death--painless but inevitable--death for young
- and old, for weak and strong, for rich and poor, without hope or
- possibility of escape. Such was the news which, in scattered,
- distracted messages, the telephone had brought us. The great
- cities already knew their fate and so far as we could gather
- were preparing to meet it with dignity and resignation. Yet here
- were our golfers and laborers like the lambs who gambol under
- the shadow of the knife. It seemed amazing. And yet how could
- they know? It had all come upon us in one giant stride. What was
- there in the morning paper to alarm them? And now it was but
- three in the afternoon. Even as we looked some rumour seemed to
- have spread, for we saw the reapers hurrying from the fields.
- Some of the golfers were returning to the club-house. They were
- running as if taking refuge from a shower. Their little caddies
- trailed behind them. Others were continuing their game. The
- nurse had turned and was pushing her perambulator hurriedly up
- the hill again. I noticed that she had her hand to her brow. The
- cab had stopped and the tired horse, with his head sunk to his
- knees, was resting. Above there was a perfect summer sky--one
- huge vault of unbroken blue, save for a few fleecy white clouds
- over the distant downs. If the human race must die to-day, it was
- at least upon a glorious death-bed. And yet all that gentle
- loveliness of nature made this terrific and wholesale
- destruction the more pitiable and awful. Surely it was too
- goodly a residence that we should be so swiftly, so ruthlessly,
- evicted from it!
-
- But I have said that the telephone-bell had rung once more.
- Suddenly I heard Challenger's tremendous voice from the hall.
-
- "Malone!" he cried. "You are wanted."
- I rushed down to the instrument. It was McArdle speaking from London.
-
- "That you, Mr. Malone?" cried his familiar voice. "Mr. Malone,
- there are terrible goings-on in London. For God's sake, see if
- Professor Challenger can suggest anything that can be done."
-
- "He can suggest nothing, sir," I answered. "He regards the
- crisis as universal and inevitable. We have some oxygen here,
- but it can only defer our fate for a few hours."
-
- "Oxygen!" cried the agonized voice. "There is no time to get
- any. The office has been a perfect pandemonium ever since you
- left in the morning. Now half of the staff are insensible. I am
- weighed down with heaviness myself. From my window I can see the
- people lying thick in Fleet Street. The traffic is all held up.
- Judging by the last telegrams, the whole world----"
-
- His voice had been sinking, and suddenly stopped. An instant
- later I heard through the telephone a muffled thud, as if his
- head had fallen forward on the desk.
-
- "Mr. McArdle!" I cried. "Mr. McArdle!"
-
- There was no answer. I knew as I replaced the receiver that I
- should never hear his voice again.
-
- At that instant, just as I took a step backwards from the
- telephone, the thing was on us. It was as if we were bathers, up
- to our shoulders in water, who suddenly are submerged by a
- rolling wave. An invisible hand seemed to have quietly closed
- round my throat and to be gently pressing the life from me. I
- was conscious of immense oppression upon my chest, great
- tightness within my head, a loud singing in my ears, and bright
- flashes before my eyes. I staggered to the balustrades of the
- stair. At the same moment, rushing and snorting like a wounded
- buffalo, Challenger dashed past me, a terrible vision, with
- red-purple face, engorged eyes, and bristling hair. His little
- wife, insensible to all appearance, was slung over his great
- shoulder, and he blundered and thundered up the stair,
- scrambling and tripping, but carrying himself and her through
- sheer will-force through that mephitic atmosphere to the haven
- of temporary safety. At the sight of his effort I too rushed up
- the steps, clambering, falling, clutching at the rail, until I
- tumbled half senseless upon by face on the upper landing. Lord
- John's fingers of steel were in the collar of my coat, and a
- moment later I was stretched upon my back, unable to speak or
- move, on the boudoir carpet. The woman lay beside me, and
- Summerlee was bunched in a chair by the window, his head nearly
- touching his knees. As in a dream I saw Challenger, like a
- monstrous beetle, crawling slowly across the floor, and a moment
- later I heard the gentle hissing of the escaping oxygen.
- Challenger breathed two or three times with enormous gulps, his
- lungs roaring as he drew in the vital gas.
-
- "It works!" he cried exultantly. "My reasoning has been
- justified!" He was up on his feet again, alert and strong. With
- a tube in his hand he rushed over to his wife and held it to her
- face. In a few seconds she moaned, stirred, and sat up. He
- turned to me, and I felt the tide of life stealing warmly
- through my arteries. My reason told me that it was but a little
- respite, and yet, carelessly as we talk of its value, every hour
- of existence now seemed an inestimable thing. Never have I known
- such a thrill of sensuous joy as came with that freshet of life.
- The weight fell away from my lungs, the band loosened from my
- brow, a sweet feeling of peace and gentle, languid comfort stole
- over me. I lay watching Summerlee revive under the same remedy,
- and finally Lord John took his turn. He sprang to his feet and
- gave me a hand to rise, while Challenger picked up his wife and
- laid her on the settee.
-
- "Oh, George, I am so sorry you brought me back," she said,
- holding him by the hand. "The door of death is indeed, as you
- said, hung with beautiful, shimmering curtains; for, once the
- choking feeling had passed, it was all unspeakably soothing and
- beautiful. Why have you dragged me back?"
-
- "Because I wish that we make the passage together. We have been
- together so many years. It would be sad to fall apart at the
- supreme moment."
-
- For a moment in his tender voice I caught a glimpse of a new
- Challenger, something very far from the bullying, ranting,
- arrogant man who had alternately amazed and offended his
- generation. Here in the shadow of death was the innermost
- Challenger, the man who had won and held a woman's love.
- Suddenly his mood changed and he was our strong captain once again.
-
- "Alone of all mankind I saw and foretold this catastrophe," said
- he with a ring of exultation and scientific triumph in his
- voice. "As to you, my good Summerlee, I trust your last doubts
- have been resolved as to the meaning of the blurring of the
- lines in the spectrum and that you will no longer contend that
- my letter in the _Times_ was based upon a delusion."
-
- For once our pugnacious colleague was deaf to a challenge. He
- could but sit gasping and stretching his long, thin limbs, as if
- to assure himself that he was still really upon this planet.
- Challenger walked across to the oxygen tube, and the sound of
- the loud hissing fell away till it was the most gentle sibilation.
-
- "We must husband our supply of the gas," said he. "The
- atmosphere of the room is now strongly hyperoxygenated, and I
- take it that none of us feel any distressing symptoms. We can
- only determine by actual experiments what amount added to the
- air will serve to neutralize the poison. Let us see how that
- will do."
-
- We sat in silent nervous tension for five minutes or more,
- observing our own sensations. I had just begun to fancy that I
- felt the constriction round my temples again when Mrs.
- Challenger called out from the sofa that she was fainting. Her
- husband turned on more gas.
-
- "In pre-scientific days," said he, "they used to keep a white
- mouse in every submarine, as its more delicate organization gave
- signs of a vicious atmosphere before it was perceived by the
- sailors. You, my dear, will be our white mouse. I have now
- increased the supply and you are better."
-
- "Yes, I am better."
-
- "Possibly we have hit upon the correct mixture. When we have
- ascertained exactly how little will serve we shall be able to
- compute how long we shall be able to exist. Unfortunately, in
- resuscitating ourselves we have already consumed a considerable
- proportion of this first tube."
-
- "Does it matter?" asked Lord John, who was standing with his
- hands in his pockets close to the window. "If we have to go,
- what is the use of holdin' on? You don't suppose there's any
- chance for us?"
-
- Challenger smiled and shook his head.
-
- "Well, then, don't you think there is more dignity in takin' the
- jump and not waitin' to he pushed in? If it must be so, I'm for
- sayin' our prayers, turnin' off the gas, and openin' the window."
-
- "Why not?" said the lady bravely. "Surely, George, Lord John is
- right and it is better so."
-
- "I most strongly object," cried Summerlee in a querulous voice.
- "When we must die let us by all means die, but to deliberately
- anticipate death seems to me to be a foolish and unjustifiable action."
-
- "What does our young friend say to it?" asked Challenger.
-
- "I think we should see it to the end."
-
- "And I am strongly of the same opinion," said he.
-
- "Then, George, if you say so, I think so too," cried the lady.
-
- "Well, well, I'm only puttin' it as an argument," said Lord
- John. "If you all want to see it through I am with you. It's
- dooced interestin', and no mistake about that. I've had my share
- of adventures in my life, and as many thrills as most folk, but
- I'm endin' on my top note."
-
- "Granting the continuity of life," said Challenger.
-
- "A large assumption!" cried Summerlee. Challenger stared at him
- in silent reproof.
-
- "Granting the continuity of life," said he, in his most didactic
- manner, "none of us can predicate what opportunities of
- observation one may have from what we may call the spirit plane
- to the plane of matter. It surely must be evident to the most
- obtuse person" (here he glared a Summerlee) "that it is while we
- are ourselves material that we are most fitted to watch and form
- a judgment upon material phenomena. Therefore it is only by
- keeping alive for these few extra hours that we can hope to
- carry on with us to some future existence a clear conception of
- the most stupendous event that the world, or the universe so far
- as we know it, has ever encountered. To me it would seem a
- deplorable thing that we should in any way curtail by so much as
- a minute so wonderful an experience."
-
- "I am strongly of the same opinion," cried Summerlee.
-
- "Carried without a division," said Lord John. "By George, that
- poor devil of a chauffeur of yours down in the yard has made his
- last journey. No use makin' a sally and bringin' him in?"
-
- "It would be absolute madness," cried Summerlee.
-
- "Well, I suppose it would," said Lord John. "It couldn't help him
- and would scatter our gas all over the house, even if we ever got
- back alive. My word, look at the little birds under the trees!"
-
- We drew four chairs up to the long, low window, the lady still
- resting with closed eyes upon the settee. I remember that the
- monstrous and grotesque idea crossed my mind--the illusion may
- have been heightened by the heavy stuffiness of the air which we
- were breathing--that we were in four front seats of the stalls
- at the last act of the drama of the world.
-
- In the immediate foreground, beneath our very eyes, was the
- small yard with the half-cleaned motor-car standing in it.
- Austin, the chauffeur, had received his final notice at last, for
- he was sprawling beside the wheel, with a great black bruise
- upon his forehead where it had struck the step or mud-guard in
- falling. He still held in his hand the nozzle of the hose with
- which he had been washing down his machine. A couple of small
- plane trees stood in the corner of the yard, and underneath them
- lay several pathetic little balls of fluffy feathers, with tiny
- feet uplifted. The sweep of death's scythe had included
- everything, great and small, within its swath.
-
- Over the wall of the yard we looked down upon the winding road,
- which led to the station. A group of the reapers whom we had
- seen running from the fields were lying all pell-mell, their
- bodies crossing each other, at the bottom of it. Farther up, the
- nurse-girl lay with her head and shoulders propped against the
- slope of the grassy bank. She had taken the baby from the
- perambulator, and it was a motionless bundle of wraps in her
- arms. Close behind her a tiny patch upon the roadside showed
- where the little boy was stretched. Still nearer to us was the
- dead cab-horse, kneeling between the shafts. The old driver was
- hanging over the splash-board like some grotesque scarecrow, his
- arms dangling absurdly in front of him. Through the window we
- could dimly discern that a young man was seated inside. The door was
- swinging open and his hand was grasping the handle, as if he had
- attempted to leap forth at the last instant. In the middle
- distance lay the golf links, dotted as they had been in the
- morning with the dark figures of the golfers, lying motionless
- upon the grass of the course or among the heather which skirted
- it. On one particular green there were eight bodies stretched
- where a foursome with its caddies had held to their game to the
- last. No bird flew in the blue vault of heaven, no man or beast
- moved upon the vast countryside which lay before us. The evening
- sun shone its peaceful radiance across it, but there brooded
- over it all the stillness and the silence of universal death--a
- death in which we were so soon to join. At the present instant
- that one frail sheet of glass, by holding in the extra oxygen
- which counteracted the poisoned ether, shut us off from the fate
- of all our kind. For a few short hours the knowledge and
- foresight of one man could preserve our little oasis of life in
- the vast desert of death and save us from participation in the
- common catastrophe. Then the gas would run low, we too should
- lie gasping upon that cherry-coloured boudoir carpet, and the
- fate of the human race and of all earthly life would be
- complete. For a long time, in a mood which was too solemn for
- speech, we looked out at the tragic world.
-
- "There is a house on fire," said Challenger at last, pointing to
- a column of smoke which rose above the trees. "There will, I
- expect, be many such--possibly whole cities in flames--when we
- consider how many folk may have dropped with lights in their
- hands. The fact of combustion is in itself enough to show that
- the proportion of oxygen in the atmosphere is normal and that it
- is the ether which is at fault. Ah, there you see another blaze
- on the top of Crowborough Hill. It is the golf clubhouse, or I
- am mistaken. There is the church clock chiming the hour. It
- would interest our philosophers to know that man-made mechanisms
- has survived the race who made it."
-
- "By George!" cried Lord John, rising excitedly from his chair.
- "What's that puff of smoke? It's a train."
-
- We heard the roar of it, and presently it came flying into
- sight, going at what seemed to me to be a prodigious speed.
- Whence it had come, or how far, we had no means of knowing. Only
- by some miracle of luck could it have gone any distance. But now
- we were to see the terrific end of its career. A train of coal
- trucks stood motionless upon the line. We held our breath as the
- express roared along the same track. The crash was horrible.
- Engine and carriages piled themselves into a hill of splintered
- wood and twisted iron. Red spurts of flame flickered up from the
- wreckage until it was all ablaze. For half an hour we sat with
- hardly a word, stunned by the stupendous sight.
-
- "Poor, poor people!" cried Mrs. Challenger at last, clinging
- with a whimper to her husband's arm.
-
- "My dear, the passengers on that train were no more animate than
- the coals into which they crashed or the carbon which they have
- now become," said Challenger, stroking her hand soothingly. "It
- was a train of the living when it left Victoria, but it was
- driven and freighted by the dead long before it reached its fate."
-
- "All over the world the same thing must be going on," said I as
- a vision of strange happenings rose before me. "Think of the
- ships at sea--how they will steam on and on, until the furnaces
- die down or until they run full tilt upon some beach. The
- sailing ships too--how they will back and fill with their cargoes
- of dead sailors, while their timbers rot and their joints leak,
- till one by one they sink below the surface. Perhaps a century
- hence the Atlantic may still be dotted with the old drifting
- derelicts."
-
- "And the folk in the coal-mines," said Summerlee with a dismal
- chuckle. "If ever geologists should by any chance live upon
- earth again they will have some strange theories of the
- existence of man in carboniferous strata."
-
- "I don't profess to know about such things," remarked Lord John,
- "but it seems to me the earth will be `To let, empty,' after
- this. When once our human crowd is wiped off it, how will it
- ever get on again?"
-
- "The world was empty before," Challenger answered gravely.
- "Under laws which in their inception are beyond and above us, it
- became peopled. Why may the same process not happen again?"
-
- "My dear Challenger, you can't mean that?"
-
- "I am not in the habit, Professor Summerlee, of saying things
- which I do not mean. The observation is trivial." Out went the
- beard and down came the eyelids.
-
- "Well, you lived an obstinate dogmatist, and you mean to die
- one," said Summerlee sourly.
-
- "And you, sir, have lived an unimaginative obstructionist and
- never can hope now to emerge from it."
-
- "Your worst critics will never accuse you of lacking
- imagination," Summerlee retorted.
-
- "Upon my word!" said Lord John. "It would be like you if you
- used up our last gasp of oxygen in abusing each other. What can
- it matter whether folk come back or not? It surely won't be in
- our time." "In that remark, sir, you betray your own very
- pronounced limitations," said Challenger severely. "The true
- scientific mind is not to be tied down by its own conditions of
- time and space. It builds itself an observatory erected upon the
- border line of present, which separates the infinite past from
- the infinite future. From this sure post it makes its sallies
- even to the beginning and to the end of all things. As to death,
- the scientific mind dies at its post working in normal and
- methodic fashion to the end. It disregards so petty a thing as
- its own physical dissolution as completely as it does all other
- limitations upon the plane of matter. Am I right, Professor
- Summerlee?"
-
- Summerlee grumbled an ungracious assent.
-
- "With certain reservations, I agree," said he.
-
- "The ideal scientific mind," continued Challenger--"I put it in
- the third person rather than appear to be too
- self-complacent--the ideal scientific mind should be capable of
- thinking out a point of abstract knowledge in the interval
- between its owner falling from a balloon and reaching the earth.
- Men of this strong fibre are needed to form the conquerors of
- nature and the bodyguard of truth."
-
- "It strikes me nature's on top this time," said Lord John,
- looking out of the window. "I've read some leadin' articles
- about you gentlemen controllin' her, but she's gettin' a bit of
- her own back."
-
- "It is but a temporary setback," said Challenger with
- conviction. "A few million years, what are they in the great
- cycle of time? The vegetable world has, as you can see,
- survived. Look at the leaves of that plane tree. The birds are
- dead, but the plant flourishes. From this vegetable life in pond
- and in marsh will come, in time, the tiny crawling microscopic
- slugs which are the pioneers of that great army of life in which
- for the instant we five have the extraordinary duty of serving as
- rear guard. Once the lowest form of life has established itself,
- the final advent of man is as certain as the growth of the oak
- from the acorn. The old circle will swing round once more."
-
- "But the poison?" I asked. "Will that not nip life in the bud?"
-
- "The poison may be a mere stratum or layer in the ether--a
- mephitic Gulf Stream across that mighty ocean in which we float.
- Or tolerance may be established and life accommodate itself to
- a new condition. The mere fact that with a comparatively small
- hyperoxygenation of our blood we can hold out against it is
- surely a proof in itself that no very great change would be
- needed to enable animal life to endure it."
-
- The smoking house beyond the trees had burst into flames. We
- could see the high tongues of fire shooting up into the air.
-
- "It's pretty awful," muttered Lord John, more impressed than I
- had ever seen him.
-
- "Well, after all, what does it matter?" I remarked. "The world
- is dead. Cremation is surely the best burial."
-
- "It would shorten us up if this house went ablaze."
-
- "I foresaw the danger," said Challenger, "and asked my wife to
- guard against it."
-
- "Everything is quite safe, dear. But my head begins to throb
- again. What a dreadful atmosphere!"
-
- "We must change it," said Challenger. He bent over his cylinder
- of oxygen.
-
- "It's nearly empty," said he. "It has lasted us some three and a
- half hours. It is now close on eight o'cloek. We shall get through
- the night comfortably. I should expect the end about nine
- o'clock to-morrow morning. We shall see one sunrise, which shall
- be all our own."
-
- He turned on his second tube and opened for half a minute the
- fanlight over the door. Then as the air became perceptibly
- better, but our own symptoms more acute, he closed it once again.
-
- "By the way," said he, "man does not live upon oxygen alone.
- It's dinner time and over. I assure you, gentlemen, that when I
- invited you to my home and to what I had hoped would be an
- interesting reunion, I had intended that my kitchen should
- justify itself. However, we must do what we can. I am sure that
- you will agree with me that it would be folly to consume our air
- too rapidly by lighting an oil-stove. I have some small provision
- of cold meats, bread, and pickles which, with a couple of
- bottles of claret, may serve our turn. Thank you, my dear--now
- as ever you are the queen of managers."
-
- It was indeed wonderful how, with the self-respect and sense of
- propriety of the British housekeeper, the lady had within a few
- minutes adorned the central table with a snow-white cloth, laid
- the napkins upon it, and set forth the simple meal with all the
- elegance of civilization, including an electric torch lamp in
- the centre. Wonderful also was it to find that our appetites were
- ravenous.
-
- "It is the measure of our emotion," said Challenger with that
- air of condescension with which he brought his scientific mind
- to the explanation of humble facts. "We have gone through a
- great crisis. That means molecular disturbance. That in turn
- means the need for repair. Great sorrow or great joy should
- bring intense hunger--not abstinence from food, as our novelists
- will have it."
-
- "That's why the country folk have great feasts at funerals," I hazarded.
-
- "Exactly. Our young friend has hit upon an excellent
- illustration. Let me give you another slice of tongue."
-
- "The same with savages," said Lord John, cutting away at the
- beef. "I've seen them buryin' a chief up the Aruwimi River, and
- they ate a hippo that must have weighed as much as a tribe.
- There are some of them down New Guinea way that eat the
- late-lamented himself, just by way of a last tidy up. Well, of
- all the funeral feasts on this earth, I suppose the one we are
- takin' is the queerest."
-
- "The strange thing is," said Mrs. Challenger, "that I find it
- impossible to feel grief for those who are gone. There are my
- father and mother at Bedford. I know that they are dead, and yet
- in this tremendous universal tragedy I can feel no sharp sorrow
- for any individuals, even for them."
-
- "And my old mother in her cottage in Ireland," said I. "I can
- see her in my mind's eye, with her shawl and her lace cap, lying
- back with closed eyes in the old high-backed chair near the
- window, her glasses and her book beside her. Why should I mourn.
- her? She has passed and I am passing, and I may be nearer her in
- some other life than England is to Ireland. Yet I grieve to
- think that that dear body is no more."
-
- "As to the body," remarked Challenger, "we do not mourn over the
- parings of our nails nor the cut locks of our hair, though they
- were once part of ourselves. Neither does a one-legged man yearn
- sentimentally over his missing member. The physical body has
- rather been a source of pain and fatigue to us. It is the
- constant index of our limitations. Why then should we worry
- about its detachment from our psychical selves?"
-
- "If they can indeed be detached," Summerlee grumbled. "But,
- anyhow, universal death is dreadful."
-
- "As I have already explained," said Challenger, "a universal
- death must in its nature be far less terrible than a isolated one."
-
- "Same in a battle," remarked Lord John. "If you saw a single man
- lying on that floor with his chest knocked in and a hole in his
- face it would turn you sick. But I've seen ten thousand on their
- backs in the Soudan, and it gave me no such feelin', for when you
- are makin' history the life of any man is too small a thing to
- worry over. When a thousand million pass over together, same as
- happened to-day, you can't pick your own partic'lar out of the crowd."
-
- "I wish it were well over with us," said the lady wistfully.
- "Oh, George, I am so frightened."
-
- "You'll be the bravest of us all, little lady, when the time
- comes. I've been a blusterous old husband to you, dear, but
- you'll just bear in mind that G. E. C. is as he was made and
- couldn't help himself. After all, you wouldn't have had anyone else?"
-
- "No one in the whole wide world, dear," said she, and put her
- arms round his bull neck. We three walked to the window and
- stood amazed at the sight which met our eyes.
-
- Darkness had fallen and the dead world was shrouded in gloom.
- But right across the southern horizon was one long vivid scarlet
- streak, waxing and waning in vivid pulses of life, leaping
- suddenly to a crimson zenith and then dying down to a glowing
- line of fire.
-
- "Lewes is ablaze!"
-
- "No, it is Brighton which is burning," said Challenger, stepping
- across to join us. "You can see the curved back of the downs
- against the glow. That fire is miles on the farther side of it.
- The whole town must be alight."
-
- There were several red glares at different points, and the pile
- of _debris_ upon the railway line was still smoldering darkly,
- but they all seemed mere pin-points of light compared to that
- monstrous conflagration throbbing beyond the hills. What copy it
- would have made for the _Gazette_! Had ever a journalist such an
- opening and so little chance of using it--the scoop of scoops,
- and no one to appreciate it? And then, suddenly, the old
- instinct of recording came over me. If these men of science
- could be so true to their life's work to the very end, why
- should not I, in my humble way, be as constant? No human eye
- might ever rest upon what I had done. But the long night had to
- be passed somehow, and for me at least, sleep seemed to be out
- of the question. My notes would help to pass the weary hours and
- to occupy my thoughts. Thus it is that now I have before me the
- notebook with its scribbled pages, written confusedly upon my
- knee in the dim, waning light of our one electric torch. Had I
- the literary touch, they might have been worthy of the occasion,
- As it is, they may still serve to bring to other minds the
- long-drawn emotions and tremors of that awful night.
-
-
- Chapter IV
- A DIARY OF THE DYING
-
- How strange the words look scribbled at the top of the empty
- page of my book! How stranger still that it is I, Edward Malone,
- who have written them--I who started only some twelve hours ago
- from my rooms in Streatham without one thought of the marvels
- which the day was to bring forth! I look back at the chain of
- incidents, my interview with McArdle, Challenger's first note of
- alarm in the _Times_, the absurd journey in the train, the
- pleasant luncheon, the catastrophe, and now it has come to
- this--that we linger alone upon an empty planet, and so sure is
- our fate that I can regard these lines, written from mechanical
- professional habit and never to be seen by human eyes, as the
- words of one who is already dead, so closely does he stand to
- the shadowed borderland over which all outside this one little
- circle of friends have already gone. I feel how wise and true
- were the words of Challenger when he said that the real tragedy
- would be if we were left behind when all that is noble and good
- and beautiful had passed. But of that there can surely be no
- danger. Already our second tube of oxygen is drawing to an end.
- We can count the poor dregs of our lives almost to a minute.
-
- We have just been treated to a lecture, a good quarter of an
- hour long, from Challenger, who was so excited that he roared
- and bellowed as if he were addressing his old rows of scientific
- sceptics in the Queen's Hall. He had certainly a strange
- audience to harangue: his wife perfectly acquiescent and
- absolutely ignorant of his meaning, Summerlee seated in the
- shadow, querulous and critical but interested, Lord John
- lounging in a corner somewhat bored by the whole proceeding, and
- myself beside the window watching the scene with a kind of
- detached attention, as if it were all a dream or something in
- which I had no personal interest whatever. Challenger sat at the
- centre table with the electric light illuminating the slide
- under the microscope which he had brought from his dressing
- room. The small vivid circle of white light from the mirror left
- half of his rugged, bearded face in brilliant radiance and half
- in deepest shadow. He had, it seems, been working of late upon
- the lowest forms of life, and what excited him at the present
- moment was that in the microscopic slide made up the day before
- he found the amoeba to he still alive.
-
- "You can see it for yourselves," he kept repeating in great
- excitement. "Summerlee, will you step across and satisfy
- yourself upon the point? Malone, will you kindly verify what I
- say? The little spindle-shaped things in the centre are diatoms
- and may be disregarded since they are probably vegetable rather
- than animal. But the right-hand side you will see an undoubted
- amoeba, moving sluggishly across the field. The upper screw is
- the fine adjustment. Look at it for yourselves."
-
- Summerlee did so and acquiesced. So did I and perceived a little
- creature which looked as if it were made of ground glass flowing
- in a sticky way across the lighted circle. Lord John was
- prepared to take him on trust.
-
- "I'm not troublin' my head whether he's alive or dead," said he.
- "We don't so much as know each other by sight, so why should I
- take it to heart? I don't suppose he's worryin' himself over the
- state of _our_ health."
-
- I laughed at this, and Challenger looked in my direction with
- his coldest and most supercilious stare. It was a most
- petrifying experience.
-
- "The flippancy of the half-educated is more obstructive to
- science than the obtuseness of the ignorant," said he. "If Lord
- John Roxton would condescend----"
-
- "My dear George, don't be so peppery," said his wife, with her
- hand on the black mane that drooped over the microscope. "What
- can it matter whether the amoeba is alive or not?"
-
- "It matters a great deal," said Challenger gruffly.
-
- "Well, let's hear about it," said Lord John with a good-humoured
- smile. "We may as well talk about that as anything else. If you
- think I've been too off-hand with the thing, or hurt its feelin's
- in any way, I'll apologize."
-
- "For my part," remarked Summerlee in his creaky, argumentative
- voice, "I can't see why you should attach such importance to the
- creature being alive. It is in the same atmosphere as ourselves,
- so naturally the poison does not act upon it. If it were outside
- of this room it would be dead, like all other animal life."
-
- "Your remarks, my good Summerlee," said Challenger with enormous
- condescension (oh, if I could paint that over-bearing, arrogant
- face in the vivid circle of reflection from the microscope
- mirror!)--"your remarks show that you imperfectly appreciate
- the situation. This specimen was mounted yesterday and is
- hermetically sealed. None of our oxygen can reach it. But the
- ether, of course, has penetrated to it, as to every other point
- upon the universe. Therefore, it has survived the poison. Hence,
- we may argue that every amoeba outside this room, instead of
- being dead, as you have erroneously stated, has really survived
- the catastrophe."
-
- "Well, even now I don't feel inclined to hip-hurrah about it,"
- said Lord John. "What does it matter?"
-
- "It just matters this, that the world is a living instead of a
- dead one. If you had the scientific imagination, you would cast
- your mind forward from this one fact, and you would see some few
- millions of years hence--a mere passing moment in the enormous
- flux of the ages--the whole world teeming once more with the
- animal and human life which will spring from this tiny root. You
- have seen a prairie fire where the flames have swept every trace
- of grass or plant from the surface of the earth and left only a
- blackened waste. You would think that it must be forever desert.
- Yet the roots of growth have been left behind, and when you pass
- the place a few years hence you can no longer tell where the
- black scars used to be. Here in this tiny creature are the roots
- of growth of the animal world, and by its inherent development,
- and evolution, it will surely in time remove every trace of this
- incomparable crisis in which we are now involved."
-
- "Dooced interestin'!" said Lord John, lounging across and
- looking through the microscope. "Funny little chap to hang
- number one among the family portraits. Got a fine big shirt-stud
- on him!"
-
- "The dark object is his nucleus," said Challenger with the air
- of a nurse teaching letters to a baby.
-
- "Well, we needn't feel lonely," said Lord John laughing.
- "There's somebody livin' besides us on the earth."
-
- "You seem to take it for granted, Challenger," said Summerlee,
- "that the object for which this world was created was that it
- should produce and sustain human life."
-
- "Well, sir, and what object do you suggest?" asked Challenger,
- bristling at the least hint of contradiction.
-
- "Sometimes I think that it is only the monstrous conceit of
- mankind which makes him think that all this stage was erected
- for him to strut upon."
-
- "We cannot be dogmatic about it, but at least without what you
- have ventured to call monstrous conceit we can surely say that
- we are the highest thing in nature."
-
- "The highest of which we have cognizance."
-
- "That, sir, goes without saying."
-
- "Think of all the millions and possibly billions of years that
- the earth swung empty through space--or, if not empty, at least
- without a sign or thought of the human race. Think of it, washed
- by the rain and scorched by the sun and swept by the wind for
- those unnumbered ages. Man only came into being yesterday so far
- as geological times goes. Why, then, should it be taken for
- granted that all this stupendous preparation was for his benefit?"
-
- "For whose then--or for what?"
-
- Summerlee shrugged his shoulders.
-
- "How can we tell? For some reason altogether beyond our
- conception--and man may have been a mere accident, a by-product
- evolved in the process. It is as if the scum upon the surface of
- the ocean imagined that the ocean was created in order to
- produce and sustain it or a mouse in a cathedral thought that
- the building was its own proper ordained residence."
-
- I have jotted down the very words of their argument, but now it
- degenerates into a mere noisy wrangle with much polysyllabic
- scientific jargon upon each side. It is no doubt a privilege to
- hear two such brains discuss the highest questions; but as they
- are in perpetual disagreement, plain folk like Lord John and I
- get little that is positive from the exhibition. They neutralize
- each other and we are left as they found us. Now the hubbub has
- ceased, and Summerlee is coiled up in his chair, while
- Challenger, still fingering the screws of his microscope, is
- keeping up a continual low, deep, inarticulate growl like the
- sea after a storm. Lord John comes over to me, and we look out
- together into the night.
-
- There is a pale new moon--the last moon that human eyes will
- ever rest upon--and the stars are most brilliant. Even in the
- clear plateau air of South America I have never seen them
- brighter. Possibly this etheric change has some effect upon
- light. The funeral pyre of Brighton is still blazing, and there
- is a very distant patch of scarlet in the western sky, which may
- mean trouble at Arundel or Chichester, possibly even at
- Portsmouth. I sit and muse and make an occasional note. There is
- a sweet melancholy in the air. Youth and beauty and chivalry and
- love--is this to be the end of it all? The starlit earth looks
- a dreamland of gentle peace. Who would imagine it as the
- terrible Golgotha strewn with the bodies of the human race?
- Suddenly, I find myself laughing.
-
- "Halloa, young fellah!" says Lord John, staring at me in
- surprise. "We could do with a joke in these hard times. What was
- it, then?"
-
- "I was thinking of all the great unsolved questions," I answer,
- "the questions that we spent so much labor and thought over.
- Think of Anglo-German competition, for example--or the Persian
- Gulf that my old chief was so keen about. Whoever would have
- guessed, when we fumed and fretted so, how they were to be
- eventually solved?"
-
- We fall into silence again. I fancy that each of us is thinking
- of friends that have gone before. Mrs. Challenger is sobbing
- quietly, and her husband is whispering to her. My mind turns to
- all the most unlikely people, and I see each of them lying white
- and rigid as poor Austin does in the yard. There is McArdle, for
- example, I know exactly where he is, with his face upon his
- writing desk and his hand on his own telephone, just as I heard
- him fall. Beaumont, the editor, too--I suppose he is lying upon
- the blue-and-red Turkey carpet which adorned his sanctum. And
- the fellows in the reporters' room--Macdona and Murray and Bond.
- They had certainly died hard at work on their job, with note-books
- full of vivid impressions and strange happenings in their
- hands. I could just imagine how this one would have been packed
- off to the doctors, and that other to Westminster, and yet a
- third to St. Paul's. What glorious rows of head-lines they must
- have seen as a last vision beautiful, never destined to
- materialize in printer's ink! I could see Macdona among the
- doctors--"Hope in Harley Street"--Mac had always a weakness for
- alliteration. "Interview with Mr. Soley Wilson." "Famous
- Specialist says `Never despair!'" "Our Special Correspondent
- found the eminent scientist seated upon the roof, whither he had
- retreated to avoid the crowd of terrified patients who had
- stormed his dwelling. With a manner which plainly showed his
- appreciation of the immense gravity of the occasion, the
- celebrated physician refused to admit that every avenue of hope
- had been closed." That's how Mac would start. Then there was
- Bond; he would probably do St. Paul's. He fancied his own
- literary touch. My word, what a theme for him! "Standing in the
- little gallery under the dome and looking down upon that packed
- mass of despairing humanity, groveling at this last instant
- before a Power which they had so persistently ignored, there
- rose to my ears from the swaying crowd such a low moan of
- entreaty and terror, such a shuddering cry for help to the
- Unknown, that----" and so forth.
-
- Yes, it would be a great end for a reporter, though, like
- myself, he would die with the treasures still unused. What would
- Bond not give, poor chap, to see "J. H. B." at the foot of a
- column like that?
-
- But what drivel I am writing! It is just an attempt to pass the
- weary time. Mrs. Challenger has gone to the inner dressing-room,
- and the Professor says that she is asleep. He is making notes
- and consulting books at the central table, as calmly as if years
- of placid work lay before him. He writes with a very noisy quill
- pen which seems to be screeching scorn at all who disagree with him.
-
- Summerlee has dropped off in his chair and gives from time to
- time a peculiarly exasperating snore. Lord John lies back with
- his hands in his pockets and his eyes closed. How people can
- sleep under such conditions is more than I can imagine.
-
- Three-thirty a.m. I have just wakened with a start. It was five
- minutes past eleven when I made my last entry. I remember
- winding up my watch and noting the time. So I have wasted some
- five hours of the little span still left to us. Who would have
- believed it possible? But I feel very much fresher, and ready
- for my fate--or try to persuade myself that I am. And yet, the
- fitter a man is, and the higher his tide of life, the more must
- he shrink from death. How wise and how merciful is that
- provision of nature by which his earthly anchor is usually
- loosened by many little imperceptible tugs, until his
- consciousness has drifted out of its untenable earthly harbor
- into the great sea beyond!
-
- Mrs. Challenger is still in the dressing room. Challenger has
- fallen asleep in his chair. What a picture! His enormous frame
- leans back, his huge, hairy hands are clasped across his
- waistcoat, and his head is so tilted that I can see nothing
- above his collar save a tangled bristle of luxuriant beard. He
- shakes with the vibration of his own snoring. Summerlee adds his
- occasional high tenor to Challenger's sonorous bass. Lord John
- is sleeping also, his long body doubled up sideways in a
- basket-chair. The first cold light of dawn is just stealing into
- the room, and everything is grey and mournful.
-
- I look out at the sunrise--that fateful sunrise which will shine
- upon an unpeopled world. The human race is gone, extinguished in
- a day, but the planets swing round and the tides rise or fall,
- and the wind whispers, and all nature goes her way, down, as it
- would seem, to the very amoeba, with never a sign that he who
- styled himself the lord of creation had ever blessed or cursed
- the universe with his presence. Down in the yard lies Austin
- with sprawling limbs, his face glimmering white in the dawn, and
- the hose nozzle still projecting from his dead hand. The whole
- of human kind is typified in that one half-ludicrous and
- half-pathetic figure, lying so helpless beside the machine which
- it used to control.
-
-
- Here end the notes which I made at the time. Henceforward events
- were too swift and too poignant to allow me to write, but they
- are too clearly outlined in my memory that any detail could
- escape me.
-
- Some chokiness in my throat made me look at the oxygen
- cylinders, and I was startled at what I saw. The sands of our
- lives were running very low. At some period in the night
- Challenger had switched the tube from the third to the fourth
- cylinder. Now it was clear that this also was nearly exhausted.
- That horrible feeling of constriction was closing in upon me. I
- ran across and, unscrewing the nozzle, I changed it to our last
- supply. Even as I did so my conscience pricked me, for I felt
- that perhaps if I had held my hand all of them might have passed
- in their sleep. The thought was banished, however, by the voice
- of the lady from the inner room crying:--
-
- "George, George, I am stifling!"
-
- "It is all right, Mrs. Challenger," I answered as the others
- started to their feet. "I have just turned on a fresh supply."
-
- Even at such a moment I could not help smiling at Challenger,
- who with a great hairy fist in each eye was like a huge, bearded
- baby, new wakened out of sleep. Summerlee was shivering like a
- man with the ague, human fears, as he realized his position,
- rising for an instant above the stoicism of the man of science.
- Lord John, however, was as cool and alert as if he had just been
- roused on a hunting morning.
-
- "Fifthly and lastly," said he, glancing at the tube. "Say, young
- fellah, don't tell me you've been writin' up your impressions in
- that paper on your knee."
-
- "Just a few notes to pass the time."
-
- "Well, I don't believe anyone but an Irishman would have done
- that. I expect you'll have to wait till little brother amoeba
- gets grown up before you'll find a reader. He don't seem to take
- much stock of things just at present. Well, Herr Professor, what
- are the prospects?"
-
- Challenger was looking out at the great drifts of morning mist
- which lay over the landscape. Here and there the wooded hills
- rose like conical islands out of this woolly sea.
-
- "It might be a winding sheet," said Mrs. Challenger, who had
- entered in her dressing-gown. "There's that song of yours,
- George, `Ring out the old, ring in the new.' It was prophetic.
- But you are shivering, my poor dear friends. I have been warm
- under a coverlet all night, and you cold in your chairs. But
- I'll soon set you right."
-
- The brave little creature hurried away, and presently we heard
- the sizzling of a kettle. She was back soon with five steaming
- cups of cocoa upon a tray.
-
- "Drink these," said she. "You will feel so much better."
-
- And we did. Summerlee asked if he might light his pipe, and we
- all had cigarettes. It steadied our nerves, I think, but it was
- a mistake, for it made a dreadful atmosphere in that stuffy
- room. Challenger had to open the ventilator.
-
- "How long, Challenger?" asked Lord John.
-
- "Possibly three hours," he answered with a shrug.
-
- "I used to be frightened," said his wife. "But the nearer I get to
- it, the easier it seems. Don't you think we ought to pray, George?"
-
- "You will pray, dear, if you wish," the big man answered, very
- gently. "We all have our own ways of praying. Mine is a complete
- acquiescence in whatever fate may send me--a cheerful
- acquiescence. The highest religion and the highest science seem
- to unite on that."
-
- "I cannot truthfully describe my mental attitude as acquiescence
- and far less cheerful acquiescence," grumbled Summerlee over his
- pipe. "I submit because I have to. I confess that I should have
- liked another year of life to finish my classification of the
- chalk fossils."
-
- "Your unfinished work is a small thing," said Challenger
- pompously, "when weighed against the fact that my own _magnum
- opus_, `The Ladder of Life,' is still in the first stages. My
- brain, my reading, my experience--in fact, my whole unique
- equipment--were to be condensed into that epoch-making volume.
- And yet, as I say, I acquiesce."
-
- "I expect we've all left some loose ends stickin' out," said
- Lord John. "What are yours, young fellah?"
-
- "I was working at a book of verses," I answered.
-
- "Well, the world has escaped that, anyhow," said Lord John.
- "There's always compensation somewhere if you grope around."
-
- "What about you?" I asked.
-
- "Well, it just so happens that I was tidied up and ready. I'd
- promised Merivale to go to Tibet for a snow leopard in the
- spring. But it's hard on you, Mrs. Challenger, when you have
- just built up this pretty home."
-
- "Where George is, there is my home. But, oh, what would I not
- give for one last walk together in the fresh morning air upon
- those beautiful downs!"
-
- Our hearts re-echoed her words. The sun had burst through the
- gauzy mists which veiled it, and the whole broad Weald was
- washed in golden light. Sitting in our dark and poisonous
- atmosphere that glorious, clean, wind-swept countryside seemed
- a very dream of beauty. Mrs. Challenger held her hand stretched
- out to it in her longing. We drew up chairs and sat in a
- semicircle in the window. The atmosphere was already very close.
- It seemed to me that the shadows of death were drawing in upon
- us--the last of our race. It was like an invisible curtain
- closing down upon every side.
-
- "That cylinder is not lastin' too well," said Lord John with a
- long gasp for breath.
-
- "The amount contained is variable," said Challenger, "depending
- upon the pressure and care with which it has been bottled. I am
- inclined to agree with you, Roxton, that this one is defective."
-
- "So we are to be cheated out of the last hour of our lives,"
- Summerlee remarked bitterly. "An excellent final illustration of
- the sordid age in which we have lived. Well, Challenger, now is
- your time if you wish to study the subjective phenomena of
- physical dissolution."
-
- "Sit on the stool at my knee and give me your hand," said
- Challenger to his wife. "I think, my friends, that a further
- delay in this insufferable atmosphere is hardly advisable. You
- would not desire it, dear, would you?"
-
- His wife gave a little groan and sank her face against his leg.
-
- "I've seen the folk bathin' in the Serpentine in winter," said
- Lord John. "When the rest are in, you see one or two shiverin'
- on the bank, envyin' the others that have taken the plunge. It's
- the last that have the worst of it. I'm all for a header and
- have done with it."
-
- "You would open the window and face the ether?"
-
- "Better be poisoned than stifled."
-
- Summerlee nodded his reluctant acquiescence and held out his
- thin hand to Challenger.
-
- "We've had our quarrels in our time, but that's all over," said
- he. "We were good friends and had a respect for each other under
- the surface. Good-by!"
-
- "Good-by, young fellah!" said Lord John. "The window's plastered
- up. You can't open it."
-
- Challenger stooped and raised his wife, pressing her to his
- breast, while she threw her arms round his neck.
-
- "Give me that field-glass, Malone," said he gravely.
-
- I handed it to him.
-
- "Into the hands of the Power that made us we render ourselves
- again!" he shouted in his voice of thunder, and at the words he
- hurled the field-glass through the window.
-
- Full in our flushed faces, before the last tinkle of falling
- fragments had died away, there came the wholesome breath of the
- wind, blowing strong and sweet.
-
- I don't know how long we sat in amazed silence. Then as in a
- dream, I heard Challenger's voice once more.
-
- "We are back in normal conditions," he cried. "The world has
- cleared the poison belt, but we alone of all mankind are saved."
-
-
- Chapter V
- THE DEAD WORLD
-
- I remember that we all sat gasping in our chairs, with that
- sweet, wet south-western breeze, fresh from the sea, flapping the
- muslin curtains and cooling our flushed faces. I wonder how long
- we sat! None of us afterwards could agree at all on that point.
- We were bewildered, stunned, semi-conscious. We had all braced
- our courage for death, but this fearful and sudden new
- fact--that we must continue to live after we had survived the
- race to which we belonged--struck us with the shock of a
- physical blow and left us prostrate. Then gradually the
- suspended mechanism began to move once more; the shuttles of
- memory worked; ideas weaved themselves together in our minds. We
- saw, with vivid, merciless clearness, the relations between the
- past, the present, and the future--the lives that we had led and
- the lives which we would have to live. Our eyes turned in silent
- horror upon those of our companions and found the same answering
- look in theirs. Instead of the joy which men might have been
- expected to feel who had so narrowly escaped an imminent death,
- a terrible wave of darkest depression submerged us. Everything
- on earth that we loved had been washed away into the great,
- infinite, unknown ocean, and here were we marooned upon this
- desert island of a world, without companions, hopes, or
- aspirations. A few years' skulking like jackals among the graves
- of the human race and then our belated and lonely end would come.
-
- "It's dreadful, George, dreadful!" the lady cried in an agony of
- sobs. "If we had only passed with the others! Oh, why did you save
- us? I feel as if it is we that are dead and everyone else alive."
-
- Challenger's great eyebrows were drawn down in concentrated
- thought, while his huge, hairy paw closed upon the outstretched
- hand of his wife. I had observed that she always held out her
- arms to him in trouble as a child would to its mother.
-
- "Without being a fatalist to the point of nonresistance," said
- he, "I have always found that the highest wisdom lies in an
- acquiescence with the actual." He spoke slowly, and there was a
- vibration of feeling in his sonorous voice.
-
- "I do _not_ acquiesce," said Summerlee firmly.
-
- "I don't see that it matters a row of pins whether you acquiesce
- or whether you don't," remarked Lord John. "You've got to take
- it, whether you take it fightin' or take it lyin' down, so
- what's the odds whether you acquiesce or not?
-
- I can't remember that anyone asked our permission before the
- thing began, and nobody's likely to ask it now. So what
- difference can it make what we may think of it?"
-
- "It is just all the difference between happiness and misery,"
- said Challenger with an abstracted face, still patting his
- wife's hand. "You can swim with the tide and have peace in mind
- and soul, or you can thrust against it and be bruised and weary.
- This business is beyond us, so let us accept it as it stands and
- say no more."
-
- "But what in the world are we to do with our lives?" I asked,
- appealing in desperation to the blue, empty heaven.
-
- "What am I to do, for example? There are no newspapers, so
- there's an end of my vocation."
-
- "And there's nothin' left to shoot, and no more soldierin', so
- there's an end of mine," said Lord John.
-
- "And there are no students, so there's an end of mine," cried Summerlee.
-
- "But I have my husband and my house, so I can thank heaven that
- there is no end of mine," said the lady.
-
- "Nor is there an end of mine," remarked Challenger, "for science
- is not dead, and this catastrophe in itself will offer us many
- most absorbing problems for investigation."
-
- He had now flung open the windows and we were gazing out upon
- the silent and motionless landscape.
-
- "Let me consider," he continued. "It was about three, or a
- little after, yesterday afternoon that the world finally entered
- the poison belt to the extent of being completely submerged. It
- is now nine o'clock. The question is, at what hour did we pass
- out from it?"
-
- "The air was very bad at daybreak," said I.
-
- "Later than that," said Mrs. Challenger. "As late as eight
- o'clock I distinctly felt the same choking at my throat which
- came at the outset."
-
- "Then we shall say that it passed just after eight o'clock. For
- seventeen hours the world has been soaked in the poisonous
- ether. For that length of time the Great Gardener has sterilized
- the human mold which had grown over the surface of His fruit. Is
- it possible that the work is incompletely done--that others may
- have survived besides ourselves?"
-
- "That's what I was wonderin'" said Lord John. "Why should we be
- the only pebbles on the beach?"
-
- "It is absurd to suppose that anyone besides ourselves can
- possibly have survived," said Summerlee with conviction.
- "Consider that the poison was so virulent that even a man who is
- as strong as an ox and has not a nerve in his body, like Malone
- here, could hardly get up the stairs before he fell unconscious.
- Is it likely that anyone could stand seventeen minutes of it,
- far less hours?"
-
- "Unless someone saw it coming and made preparation, same as old
- friend Challenger did."
-
- "That, I think, is hardly probable," said Challenger, projecting
- his beard and sinking his eyelids. "The combination of
- observation, inference, and anticipatory imagination which
- enabled me to foresee the danger is what one can hardly expect
- twice in the same generation."
-
- "Then your conclusion is that everyone is certainly dead?"
-
- "There can be little doubt of that. We have to remember,
- however, that the poison worked from below upwards and would
- possibly be less virulent in the higher strata of the
- atmosphere. It is strange, indeed, that it should be so; but it
- presents one of those features which will afford us in the
- future a fascinating field for study. One could imagine,
- therefore, that if one had to search for survivors one would
- turn one's eyes with best hopes of success to some Tibetan
- village or some Alpine farm, many thousands of feet above the
- sea level."
-
- "Well, considerin' that there are no railroads and no steamers
- you might as well talk about survivors in the moon," said Lord
- John. "But what I'm askin' myself is whether it's really over or
- whether it's only half-time."
-
- Summerlee craned his neck to look round the horizon. "It seems
- clear and fine," said he in a very dubious voice; "but so
- it did yesterday. I am by no means assured that it is all over."
-
- Challenger shrugged his shoulders.
-
- "We must come back once more to our fatalism," said he. "If the
- world has undergone this experience before, which is not outside
- the range of possibility; it was certainly a very long time ago.
- Therefore, we may reasonably hope that it will be very long
- before it occurs again. "
-
- "That's all very well," said Lord John, "but if you get an
- earthquake shock you are mighty likely to have a second one
- right on the top of it. I think we'd be wise to stretch our legs
- and have a breath of air while we have the chance. Since our
- oxygen is exhausted we may just as well be caught outside as in."
-
- It was strange the absolute lethargy which had come upon us as
- a reaction after our tremendous emotions of the last twenty-four
- hours. It was both mental and physical, a deep-lying feeling that
- nothing mattered and that everything was a weariness and a
- profitless exertion. Even Challenger had succumbed to it, and
- sat in his chair, with his great head leaning upon his hands and
- his thoughts far away, until Lord John and I, catching him by
- each arm, fairly lifted him on to his feet, receiving only the
- glare and growl of an angry mastiff for our trouble. However,
- once we had got out of our narrow haven of refuge into the wider
- atmosphere of everyday life, our normal energy came gradually
- back to us once more.
-
- But what were we to begin to do in that graveyard of a world?
- Could ever men have been faced with such a question since the
- dawn of time? It is true that our own physical needs, and even
- our luxuries, were assured for the future. All the stores of
- food, all the vintages of wine, all the treasures of art were
- ours for the taking. But what were we to _do_? Some few tasks
- appealed to us at once, since they lay ready to our hands. We
- descended into the kitchen and laid the two domestics upon their
- respective beds. They seemed to have died without suffering, one
- in the chair by the fire, the other upon the scullery floor. Then
- we carried in poor Austin from the yard. His muscles were set as
- hard as a board in the most exaggerated rigor mortis, while the
- contraction of the fibres had drawn his mouth into a hard
- sardonic grin. This symptom was prevalent among all who had died
- from the poison. Wherever we went we were confronted by those
- grinning faces, which seemed to mock at our dreadful position,
- smiling silently and grimly at the ill-fated survivors of their race.
-
- "Look here," said Lord John, who had paced restlessly about the
- dining-room whilst we partook of some food, "I don't know how
- you fellows feel about it, but for my part, I simply _can't_ sit
- here and do nothin'."
-
- "Perhaps," Challenger answered, "you would have the kindness to
- suggest what you think we ought to do."
-
- "Get a move on us and see all that has happened."
-
- "That is what I should myself propose."
-
- "But not in this little country village. We can see from the
- window all that this place can teach us."
-
- "Where should we go, then?"
-
- "To London!"
-
- "That's all very well," grumbled Summerlee. "You may be equal to
- a forty-mile walk, but I'm not so sure about Challenger, with
- his stumpy legs, and I am perfectly sure about myself."
- Challenger was very much annoyed.
-
- "If you could see your way, sir, to confining your remarks to
- your own physical peculiarities, you would find that you had an
- ample field for comment," he cried.
-
- "I had no intention to offend you, my dear Challenger," cried
- our tactless friend, "You can't be held responsible for your own
- physique. If nature has given you a short, heavy body you cannot
- possibly help having stumpy legs."
-
- Challenger was too furious to answer. He could only growl and
- blink and bristle. Lord John hastened to intervene before the
- dispute became more violent.
-
- "You talk of walking. Why should we walk?" said he.
-
- "Do you suggest taking a train?" asked Challenger, still simmering.
-
- "What's the matter with the motor-car? Why should we not go in that?"
-
- "I am not an expert," said Challenger, pulling at his beard
- reflectively. "At the same time, you are right in supposing that
- the human intellect in its higher manifestations should be
- sufficiently flexible to turn itself to anything. Your idea is an
- excellent one, Lord John. I myself will drive you all to London."
-
- "You will do nothing of the kind," said Summerlee with decision.
-
- "No, indeed, George!" cried his wife. "You only tried once, and
- you remember how you crashed through the gate of the garage."
-
- "It was a momentary want of concentration," said Challenger
- complacently. "You can consider the matter settled. I will
- certainly drive you all to London."
-
- The situation was relieved by Lord John.
-
- "What's the car?" he asked.
-
- "A twenty-horsepower Humber."
-
- "Why, I've driven one for years," said he. "By George!" he
- added. "I never thought I'd live to take the whole human race in
- one load. There's just room for five, as I remember it. Get your
- things on, and I'll be ready at the door by ten o'clock."
-
- Sure enough, at the hour named, the car came purring and
- crackling from the yard with Lord John at the wheel. I took my
- seat beside him, while the lady, a useful little buffer state, was
- squeezed in between the two men of wrath at the back. Then Lord
- John released his brakes, slid his lever rapidly from first to
- third, and we sped off upon the strangest drive that ever human
- beings have taken since man first came upon the earth.
-
- You are to picture the loveliness of nature upon that August
- day, the freshness of the morning air, the golden glare of the
- summer sunshine, the cloudless sky, the luxuriant green of the
- Sussex woods, and the deep purple of heather-clad downs. As you
- looked round upon the many-coloured beauty of the scene all
- thought of a vast catastrophe would have passed from your mind
- had it not been for one sinister sign--the solemn, all-embracing
- silence. There is a gentle hum of life which pervades a
- closely-settled country, so deep and constant that one ceases to
- observe it, as the dweller by the sea loses all sense of the constant
- murmur of the waves. The twitter of birds, the buzz of insects,
- the far-off echo of voices, the lowing of cattle, the distant
- barking of dogs, roar of trains, and rattle of carts--all these
- form one low, unremitting note, striking unheeded upon the ear.
- We missed it now. This deadly silence was appalling. So solemn
- was it, so impressive, that the buzz and rattle of our motor-car
- seemed an unwarrantable intrusion, an indecent disregard of this
- reverent stillness which lay like a pall over and round the
- ruins of humanity. It was this grim hush, and the tall clouds of
- smoke which rose here and there over the country-side from
- smoldering buildings, which cast a chill into our hearts as we
- gazed round at the glorious panorama of the Weald.
-
- And then there were the dead! At first those endless groups of
- drawn and grinning faces filled us with a shuddering horror. So
- vivid and mordant was the impression that I can live over again
- that slow descent of the station hill, the passing by the
- nurse-girl with the two babes, the sight of the old horse on his
- knees between the shafts, the cabman twisted across his seat,
- and the young man inside with his hand upon the open door in the
- very act of springing out. Lower down were six reapers all in a
- litter, their limbs crossing, their dead, unwinking eyes gazing
- upwards at the glare of heaven. These things I see as in a
- photograph. But soon, by the merciful provision of nature, the
- over-excited nerve ceased to respond. The very vastness of the
- horror took away from its personal appeal. Individuals merged
- into groups, groups into crowds, crowds into a universal
- phenomenon which one soon accepted as the inevitable detail of
- every scene. Only here and there, where some particularly brutal
- or grotesque incident caught the attention, did the mind come back
- with a sudden shock to the personal and human meaning of it all.
-
- Above all, there was the fate of the children. That, I remember,
- filled us with the strongest sense of intolerable injustice. We
- could have wept--Mrs. Challenger did weep--when we passed a
- great council school and saw the long trail of tiny figures
- scattered down the road which led from it. They had been
- dismissed by their terrified teachers and were speeding for
- their homes when the poison caught them in its net. Great
- numbers of people were at the open windows of the houses. In
- Tunbridge Wells there was hardly one which had not its staring,
- smiling face. At the last instant the need of air, that very
- craving for oxygen which we alone had been able to satisfy, had
- sent them flying to the window. The sidewalks too were littered
- with men and women, hatless and bonnetless, who had rushed out
- of the houses. Many of them had fallen in the roadway. It was a
- lucky thing that in Lord John we had found an expert driver, for
- it was no easy matter to pick one's way. Passing through the
- villages or towns we could only go at a walking pace, and once,
- I remember, opposite the school at Tonbridge, we had to halt some
- time while we carried aside the bodies which blocked our path.
-
-
- A few small, definite pictures stand out in my memory from amid
- that long panorama of death upon the Sussex and Kentish high
- roads. One was that of a great, glittering motor-car standing
- outside the inn at the village of Southborough. It bore, as I
- should guess, some pleasure party upon their return from
- Brighton or from Eastbourne. There were three gaily dressed
- women, all young and beautiful, one of them with a Peking
- spaniel upon her lap. With them were a rakish-looking elderly
- man and a young aristocrat, his eyeglass still in his eye, his
- cigarette burned down to the stub between the fingers of his
- begloved hand. Death must have come on them in an instant and
- fixed them as they sat. Save that the elderly man had at the
- last moment torn out his collar in an effort to breathe, they
- might all have been asleep. On one side of the car a waiter with
- some broken glasses beside a tray was huddled near the step. On
- the other, two very ragged tramps, a man and a woman, lay where
- they had fallen, the man with his long, thin arm still
- outstretched, even as he had asked for alms in his lifetime. One
- instant of time had put aristocrat, waiter, tramp, and dog upon
- one common footing of inert and dissolving protoplasm.
-
- I remember another singular picture, some miles on the London
- side of Sevenoaks. There is a large convent upon the left, with
- a long, green slope in front of it. Upon this slope were
- assembled a great number of school children, all kneeling at
- prayer. In front of them was a fringe of nuns, and higher up the
- slope, facing towards them, a single figure whom we took to be
- the Mother Superior. Unlike the pleasure-seekers in the motor-car,
- these people seemed to have had warning of their danger and
- to have died beautifully together, the teachers and the taught,
- assembled for their last common lesson.
-
- My mind is still stunned by that terrific experience, and I
- grope vainly for means of expression by which I can reproduce
- the emotions which we felt. Perhaps it is best and wisest not to
- try, but merely to indicate the facts. Even Summerlee and
- Challenger were crushed, and we heard nothing of our companions
- behind us save an occasional whimper from the lady. As to Lord
- John, he was too intent upon his wheel and the difficult task of
- threading his way along such roads to have time or inclination
- for conversation. One phrase he used with such wearisome
- iteration that it stuck in my memory and at last almost made me
- laugh as a comment upon the day of doom.
-
- "Pretty doin's! What!"
-
- That was his ejaculation as each fresh tremendous combination of
- death and disaster displayed itself before us. "Pretty doin's!
- What!" he cried, as we descended the station hill at
- Rotherfield, and it was still "Pretty doin's! What!" as we
- picked our way through a wilderness of death in the High Street
- of Lewisham and the Old Kent Road.
-
- It was here that we received a sudden and amazing shock. Out of
- the window of a humble corner house there appeared a fluttering
- handkerchief waving at the end of a long, thin human arm. Never
- had the sight of unexpected death caused our hearts to stop and
- then throb so wildly as did this amazing indication of life.
- Lord John ran the motor to the curb, and in an instant we had
- rushed through the open door of the house and up the staircase
- to the second-floor front room from which the signal proceeded.
-
- A very old lady sat in a chair by the open window, and close to
- her, laid across a second chair, was a cylinder of oxygen,
- smaller but of the same shape as those which had saved our own
- lives. She turned her thin, drawn, bespectacled face toward us
- as we crowded in at the doorway.
-
- "I feared that I was abandoned here forever," said she, "for I
- am an invalid and cannot stir."
-
- "Well, madam," Challenger answered, "it is a lucky chance that
- we happened to pass."
-
- "I have one all-important question to ask you," said she.
- "Gentlemen, I beg that you will be frank with me. What effect will
- these events have upon London and North-Western Railway shares?"
-
- We should have laughed had it not been for the tragic eagerness
- with which she listened for our answer. Mrs. Burston, for that
- was her name, was an aged widow, whose whole income depended
- upon a small holding of this stock. Her life had been regulated
- by the rise and fall of the dividend, and she could form no
- conception of existence save as it was affected by the quotation
- of her shares. In vain we pointed out to her that all the money
- in the world was hers for the taking and was useless when taken.
- Her old mind would not adapt itself to the new idea, and she
- wept loudly over her vanished stock. "It was all I had," she
- wailed. "If that is gone I may as well go too."
-
- Amid her lamentations we found out how this frail old plant had
- lived where the whole great forest had fallen. She was a
- confirmed invalid and an asthmatic. Oxygen had been prescribed
- for her malady, and a tube was in her room at the moment of the
- crisis. She had naturally inhaled some as had been her habit
- when there was a difficulty with her breathing. It had given her
- relief, and by doling out her supply she had managed to survive
- the night. Finally she had fallen asleep and been awakened by
- the buzz of our motor-car. As it was impossible to take her on
- with us, we saw that she had all necessaries of life and promised
- to communicate with her in a couple of days at the latest. So we
- left her, still weeping bitterly over her vanished stock.
-
- As we approached the Thames the block in the streets became
- thicker and the obstacles more bewildering. It was with
- difficulty that we made our way across London Bridge. The
- approaches to it upon the Middlesex side were choked from end to
- end with frozen traffic which made all further advance in that
- direction impossible. A ship was blazing brightly alongside one
- of the wharves near the bridge, and the air was full of drifting
- smuts and of a heavy acrid smell of burning. There was a cloud
- of dense smoke somewhere near the Houses of Parliament, but it
- was impossible from where we were to see what was on fire.
-
- "I don't know how it strikes you," Lord John remarked as he
- brought his engine to a standstill, "but it seems to me the
- country is more cheerful than the town. Dead London is gettin'
- on my nerves. I'm for a cast round and then gettin' back to
- Rotherfield."
-
- "I confess that I do not see what we can hope for here," said
- Professor Summerlee.
-
- "At the same time," said Challenger, his great voice booming
- strangely amid the silence, "it is difficult for us to conceive
- that out of seven millions of people there is only this one old
- woman who by some peculiarity of constitution or some accident
- of occupation has managed to survive this catastrophe."
-
- "If there should be others, how can we hope to find them,
- George?" asked the lady. "And yet I agree with you that we
- cannot go back until we have tried."
-
- Getting out of the car and leaving it by the curb, we walked
- with some difficulty along the crowded pavement of King William
- Street and entered the open door of a large insurance office. It
- was a corner house, and we chose it as commanding a view in
- every direction. Ascending the stair, we passed through what I
- suppose to have been the board-room, for eight elderly men were
- seated round a long table in the centre of it. The high window
- was open and we all stepped out upon the balcony. From it we
- could see the crowded city streets radiating in every direction,
- while below us the road was black from side to side with the
- tops of the motionless taxis. All, or nearly all, had their
- heads pointed outwards, showing how the terrified men of the
- city had at the last moment made a vain endeavor to rejoin their
- families in the suburbs or the country. Here and there amid the
- humbler cabs towered the great brass-spangled motor-car of some
- wealthy magnate, wedged hopelessly among the dammed stream of
- arrested traffic. Just beneath us there was such a one of great
- size and luxurious appearance, with its owner, a fat old man,
- leaning out, half his gross body through the window, and his
- podgy hand, gleaming with diamonds, outstretched as he urged his
- chauffeur to make a last effort to break through the press.
-
- A dozen motor-buses towered up like islands in this flood, the
- passengers who crowded the roofs lying all huddled together and
- across eash others' laps like a child's toys in a nursery. On a
- broad lamp pedestal in the centre of the roadway, a burly
- policeman was standing, leaning his back against the post in so
- natural an attitude that it was hard to realize that he was not
- alive, while at his feet there lay a ragged newsboy with his
- bundle of papers on the ground beside him. A paper-cart had got
- blocked in the crowd, and we could read in large letters, black
- upon yellow, "Scene at Lord's. County Match Interrupted." This
- must have been the earliest edition, for there were other
- placards bearing the legend, "Is It the End? Great Scientist's
- Warning." And another, "Is Challenger Justified? Ominous Rumours."
-
- Challenger pointed the latter placard out to his wife, as it
- thrust itself like a banner above the throng. I could see him
- throw out his chest and stroke his beard as he looked at it. It
- pleased and flattered that complex mind to think that London had
- died with his name and his words still present in their
- thoughts. His feelings were so evident that they aroused the
- sardonic comment of his colleague.
-
- "In the limelight to the last, Challenger," he remarked.
-
- "So it would appear," he answered complacently. "Well," he added
- as he looked down the long vista of the radiating streets, all
- silent and all choked up with death, "I really see no purpose to
- be served by our staying any longer in London. I suggest that we
- return at once to Rotherfield and then take counsel as to how we
- shall most profitably employ the years which lie before us."
-
- Only one other picture shall I give of the scenes which we
- carried back in our memories from the dead city. It is a glimpse
- which we had of the interior of the old church of St. Mary's,
- which is at the very point where our car was awaiting us.
- Picking our way among the prostrate figures upon the steps, we
- pushed open the swing door and entered. It was a wonderful
- sight. The church was crammed from end to end with kneeling
- figures in every posture of supplication and abasement. At the
- last dreadful moment, brought suddenly face to face with the
- realities of life, those terrific realities which hang over us
- even while we follow the shadows, the terrified people had
- rushed into those old city churches which for generations had
- hardly ever held a congregation. There they huddled as close as
- they could kneel, many of them in their agitation still wearing
- their hats, while above them in the pulpit a young man in lay
- dress had apparently been addressing them when he and they had
- been overwhelmed by the same fate. He lay now, like Punch in his
- booth, with his head and two limp arms hanging over the ledge of
- the pulpit. It was a nightmare, the grey, dusty church, the rows
- of agonized figures, the dimness and silence of it all. We moved
- about with hushed whispers, walking upon our tip-toes.
-
- And then suddenly I had an idea. At one corner of the church,
- near the door, stood the ancient font, and behind it a deep
- recess in which there hung the ropes for the bell-ringers. Why
- should we not send a message out over London which would attract
- to us anyone who might still be alive? I ran across, and pulling
- at the list-covered rope, I was surprised to find how difficult
- it was to swing the bell. Lord John had followed me.
-
- "By George, young fellah!" said he, pulling off his coat. "You've
- hit on a dooced good notion. Give me a grip and we'll soon have
- a move on it."
-
-
- But, even then, so heavy was the bell that it was not until
- Challenger and Summerlee had added their weight to ours that we
- heard the roaring and clanging above our heads which told us
- that the great clapper was ringing out its music. Far over dead
- London resounded our message of comradeship and hope to any
- fellow-man surviving. It cheered our own hearts, that strong,
- metallic call, and we turned the more earnestly to our work,
- dragged two feet off the earth with each upward jerk of the
- rope, but all straining together on the downward heave,
- Challenger the lowest of all, bending all his great strength to
- the task and flopping up and down like a monstrous bull-frog,
- croaking with every pull. It was at that moment that an artist
- might have taken a picture of the four adventurers, the comrades
- of many strange perils in the past, whom fate had now chosen for
- so supreme an experience. For half an hour we worked, the sweat
- dropping from our faces, our arms and backs aching with the
- exertion. Then we went out into the portico of the church and
- looked eagerly up and down the silent, crowded streets. Not a
- sound, not a motion, in answer to our summons.
-
- "It's no use. No one is left," I cried.
-
- "We can do nothing more," said Mrs. Challenger. "For God's sake,
- George, let us get back to Rotherfield. Another hour of this
- dreadful, silent city would drive me mad."
-
- We got into the car without another word. Lord John backed her
- round and turned her to the south. To us the chapter seemed
- closed. Little did we foresee the strange new chapter which was
- to open.
-
-
- Chapter VI
- THE GREAT AWAKENING
-
- And now I come to the end of this extraordinary incident, so
- overshadowing in its importance, not only in our own small,
- individual lives, but in the general history of the human race.
- As I said when I began my narrative, when that history comes to
- be written, this occurrence will surely stand out among all other
- events like a mountain towering among its foothills. Our generation
- has been reserved for a very special fate since it has been chosen
- to experience so wonderful a thing. How long its effect may
- last--how long mankind may preserve the humility and reverence
- which this great shock has taught it--can only be shown by the
- future. I think it is safe to say that things can never be quite
- the same again. Never can one realize how powerless and ignorant
- one is, and how one is upheld by an unseen hand, until for an
- instant that hand has seemed to close and to crush. Death has
- been imminent upon us. We know that at any moment it may be
- again. That grim presence shadows our lives, but who can deny
- that in that shadow the sense of duty, the feeling of sobriety
- and responsibility, the appreciation of the gravity and of the
- objects of life, the earnest desire to develop and improve, have
- grown and become real with us to a degree that has leavened our
- whole society from end to end? It is something beyond sects and
- beyond dogmas. It is rather an alteration of perspective, a
- shifting of our sense of proportion, a vivid realization that we
- are insignificant and evanescent creatures, existing on sufferance
- and at the mercy of the first chill wind from the unknown. But if
- the world has grown graver with this knowledge it is not, I think,
- a sadder place in consequence. Surely we are agreed that the
- more sober and restrained pleasures of the present are deeper as
- well as wiser than the noisy, foolish hustle which passed so
- often for enjoyment in the days of old--days so recent and yet
- already so inconceivable. Those empty lives which were wasted in
- aimless visiting and being visited, in the worry of great and
- unnecessary households, in the arranging and eating of elaborate
- and tedious meals, have now found rest and health in the reading,
- the music, the gentle family communion which comes from a simpler
- and saner division of their time. With greater health and greater
- pleasure they are richer than before, even after they have paid
- those increased contributions to the common fund which have so
- raised the standard of life in these islands.
-
- There is some clash of opinion as to the exact hour of the great
- awakening. It is generally agreed that, apart from the difference
- of clocks, there may have been local causes which influenced the
- action of the poison. Certainly, in each separate district the
- resurrection was practically simultaneous. There are numerous
- witnesses that Big Ben pointed to ten minutes past six at the
- moment. The Astronomer Royal has fixed the Greenwich time at
- twelve past six. On the other hand, Laird Johnson, a very
- capable East Anglia observer, has recorded six-twenty as the
- hour. In the Hebrides it was as late as seven. In our own case
- there can be no doubt whatever, for I was seated in Challenger's
- study with his carefully tested chronometer in front of me at
- the moment. The hour was a quarter-past six.
-
-
- An enormous depression was weighing upon my spirits. The cumulative
- effect of all the dreadful sights which we had seen upon our
- journey was heavy upon my soul. With my abounding animal health
- and great physical energy any kind of mental clouding was a rare
- event. I had the Irish faculty of seeing some gleam of humor in
- every darkness. But now the obscurity was appalling and
- unrelieved. The others were downstairs making their plans for
- the future. I sat by the open window, my chin resting upon my hand
- and my mind absorbed in the misery of our situation. Could we
- continue to live? That was the question which I had begun to ask
- myself. Was it possible to exist upon a dead world? Just as in
- physics the greater body draws to itself the lesser, would we not
- feel an overpowering attraction from that vast body of humanity
- which had passed into the unknown? How would the end come? Would
- it be from a return of the poison? Or would the earth be
- uninhabitable from the mephitic products of universal decay? Or,
- finally, might our awful situation prey upon and unbalance our
- minds? A group of insane folk upon a dead world! My mind was
- brooding upon this last dreadful idea when some slight noise
- caused me to look down upon the road beneath me. The old cab
- horse was coming up the hill!
-
- I was conscious at the same instant of the twittering of birds,
- of someone coughing in the yard below, and of a background of
- movement in the landscape. And yet I remember that it was that
- absurd, emaciated, superannuated cab-horse which held my gaze.
- Slowly and wheezily it was climbing the slope. Then my eye
- traveled to the driver sitting hunched up upon the box and
- finally to the young man who was leaning out of the window
- in some excitement and shouting a direction. They were all
- indubitably, aggressively alive!
-
- Everybody was alive once more! Had it all been a delusion? Was
- it conceivable that this whole poison belt incident had been an
- elaborate dream? For an instant my startled brain was really
- ready to believe it. Then I looked down, and there was the
- rising blister on my hand where it was frayed by the rope of
- the city bell. It had really been so, then. And yet here was
- the world resuscitated--here was life come back in an instant
- full tide to the planet. Now, as my eyes wandered all over the
- great landscape, I saw it in every direction--and moving, to my
- amazement, in the very same groove in which it had halted. There
- were the golfers. Was it possible that they were going on with
- their game? Yes, there was a fellow driving off from a tee, and
- that other group upon the green were surely putting for the hole.
- The reapers were slowly trooping back to their work. The
- nurse-girl slapped one of her charges and then began to push
- the perambulator up the hill. Everyone had unconcernedly taken
- up the thread at the very point where they had dropped it.
-
- I rushed downstairs, but the hall door was open, and I heard the
- voices of my companions, loud in astonishment and congratulation,
- in the yard. How we all shook hands and laughed as we came
- together, and how Mrs. Challenger kissed us all in her emotion,
- before she finally threw herself into the bear-hug of her husband.
-
- "But they could not have been asleep!" cried Lord John. "Dash
- it all, Challenger, you don't mean to believe that those folk
- were asleep with their staring eyes and stiff limbs and that
- awful death grin on their faces!"
-
- "It can only have been the condition that is called catalepsy,"
- said Challenger. "It has been a rare phenomenon in the past and
- has constantly been mistaken for death. While it endures, the
- temperature falls, the respiration disappears, the heartbeat
- is indistinguishable--in fact, it _is_ death, save that it is
- evanescent. Even the most comprehensive mind"--here he closed
- his eyes and simpered--"could hardly conceive a universal
- outbreak of it in this fashion."
-
- "You may label it catalepsy," remarked Summerlee, "but, after
- all, that is only a name, and we know as little of the result
- as we do of the poison which has caused it. The most we can say
- is that the vitiated ether has produced a temporary death."
-
- Austin was seated all in a heap on the step of the car. It was
- his coughing which I had heard from above. He had been holding
- his head in silence, but now he was muttering to himself and
- running his eyes over the car.
-
- "Young fat-head!" he grumbled. "Can't leave things alone!"
-
- "What's the matter, Austin?"
-
- "Lubricators left running, sir. Someone has been fooling with
- the car. I expect it's that young garden boy, sir."
-
- Lord John looked guilty.
-
- "I don't know what's amiss with me," continued Austin, staggering
- to his feet. "I expect I came over queer when I was hosing her
- down. I seem to remember flopping over by the step. But I'll
- swear I never left those lubricator taps on."
-
- In a condensed narrative the astonished Austin was told what
- had happened to himself and the world. The mystery of the
- dripping lubricators was also explained to him. He listened with
- an air of deep distrust when told how an amateur had driven his
- car and with absorbed interest to the few sentences in which
- our experiences of the sleeping city were recorded. I can
- remember his comment when the story was concluded.
-
- "Was you outside the Bank of England, sir?"
-
- "Yes, Austin."
-
- "With all them millions inside and everybody asleep?"
-
- "That was so."
-
- "And I not there!" he groaned, and turned dismally once more
- to the hosing of his car.
-
- There was a sudden grinding of wheels upon gravel. The old cab
- had actually pulled up at Challenger's door. I saw the young
- occupant step out from it. An instant later the maid, who looked
- as tousled and bewildered as if she had that instant been aroused
- from the deepest sleep, appeared with a card upon a tray.
- Challenger snorted ferociously as he looked at it, and his
- thick black hair seemed to bristle up in his wrath.
-
- "A pressman!" he growled. Then with a deprecating smile: "After
- all, it is natural that the whole world should hasten to know
- what I think of such an episode."
-
- "That can hardly be his errand," said Summerlee, "for he was on
- the road in his cab before ever the crisis came."
-
- I looked at the card: "James Baxter, London Correspondent,
- _New York Monitor_."
-
- "You'll see him?" said I.
-
- "Not I."
-
- "Oh, George! You should be kinder and more considerate to
- others. Surely you have learned something from what we
- have undergone."
-
- He tut-tutted and shook his big, obstinate head.
-
- "A poisonous breed! Eh, Malone? The worst weed in modern
- civilization, the ready tool of the quack and the hindrance
- of the self-respecting man! When did they ever say a good
- word for me?"
-
- "When did you ever say a good word to them?" I answered. "Come,
- sir, this is a stranger who has made a journey to see you. I am
- sure that you won't be rude to him."
-
- "Well, well," he grumbled, "you come with me and do the talking.
- I protest in advance against any such outrageous invasion of my
- private life." Muttering and mumbling, he came rolling after me
- like an angry and rather ill-conditioned mastiff.
-
- The dapper young American pulled out his notebook and plunged
- instantly into his subject.
-
- "I came down, sir," said he, "because our people in America would
- very much like to hear more about this danger which is, in your
- opinion, pressing upon the world."
-
- "I know of no danger which is now pressing upon the world,"
- Challenger answered gruffly.
-
- The pressman looked at him in mild surprise.
-
- "I meant, sir, the chances that the world might run into a belt of poisonous
- ether."
-
- "I do not now apprehend any such danger," said Challenger.
-
- The pressman looked even more perplexed.
-
- "You are Professor Challenger, are you not?" he asked.
-
- "Yes, sir; that is my name."
-
- "I cannot understand, then, how you can say that there is no such
- danger. I am alluding to your own letter, published above your
- name in the London _Times_ of this morning."
-
- It was Challenger's turn to look surprised.
-
- "This morning?" said he. "No London _Times_ was published this morning."
-
- "Surely, sir," said the American in mild remonstrance, "you must
- admit that the London _Times_ is a daily paper." He drew out a
- copy from his inside pocket. "Here is the letter to which I refer."
-
- Challenger chuckled and rubbed his hands.
-
- "I begin to understand," said he. "So you read this letter
- this morning?"
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- "And came at once to interview me?"
-
- "Yes, sir."
-
- "Did you observe anything unusual upon the journey down?"
-
- "Well, to tell the truth, your people seemed more lively and
- generally human than I have ever seen them. The baggage man
- set out to tell me a funny story, and that's a new experience
- for me in this country."
-
- "Nothing else?"
-
- "Why, no, sir, not that I can recall."
-
- "Well, now, what hour did you leave Victoria?"
-
- The American smiled.
-
- "I came here to interview you, Professor, but it seems to be a
- case of `Is this nigger fishing, or is this fish niggering?'
- You're doing most of the work."
-
- "It happens to interest me. Do you recall the hour?"
-
- "Sure. It was half-past twelve."
-
- "And you arrived?"
-
- "At a quarter-past two."
-
- "And you hired a cab?"
-
- "That was so."
-
- "How far do you suppose it is to the station?"
-
- "Well, I should reckon the best part of two miles."
-
- "So how long do you think it took you?"
-
- "Well, half an hour, maybe, with that asthmatic in front."
-
- "So it should be three o'clock?"
-
- "Yes, or a trifle after it."
-
- "Look at your watch."
-
- The American did so and then stared at us in astonishment.
-
- "Say!" he cried. "It's run down. That horse has broken every
- record, sure. The sun is pretty low, now that I come to look at
- it. Well, there's something here I don't understand."
-
- "Have you no remembrance of anything remarkable as you came up
- the hill?"
-
- "Well, I seem to recollect that I was mighty sleepy once.
-
- It comes back to me that I wanted to say something to the driver
- and that I couldn't make him heed me. I guess it was the heat,
- but I felt swimmy for a moment. That's all."
-
- "So it is with the whole human race," said Challenger to me.
- "They have all felt swimmy for a moment. None of them have as
- yet any comprehension of what has occurred. Each will go on with
- his interrupted job as Austin has snatched up his hose-pipe or
- the golfer continued his game. Your editor, Malone, will
- continue the issue of his papers, and very much amazed he will
- be at finding that an issue is missing. Yes, my young friend,"
- he added to the American reporter, with a sudden mood of amused
- geniality, "it may interest you to know that the world has swum
- through the poisonous current which swirls like the Gulf Stream
- through the ocean of ether. You will also kindly note for your
- own future convenience that to-day is not Friday, August the
- twenty-seventh, but Saturday, August the twenty-eighth, and that
- you sat senseless in your cab for twenty-eight hours upon the
- Rotherfield hill."
-
- And "right here," as my American colleague would say, I may
- bring this narrative to an end. It is, as you are probably
- aware, only a fuller and more detailed version of the account
- which appeared in the Monday edition of the _Daily Gazette_--an
- account which has been universally admitted to be the greatest
- journalistic scoop of all time, which sold no fewer than
- three-and-a-half million copies of the paper. Framed upon the
- wall of my sanctum I retain those magnificent headlines:--
-
-
- TWENTY-EIGHT HOURS' WORLD COMA
- UNPRECEDENTED EXPERIENCE
- CHALLENGER JUSTIFIED
- OUR CORRESPONDENT ESCAPES
- ENTHRALLING NARRATIVE
- THE OXYGEN ROOM
- WEIRD MOTOR DRIVE
- DEAD LONDON
- REPLACING THE MISSING PAGE
- GREAT FIRES AND LOSS OF LIFE
- WILL IT RECUR?
-
-
- Underneath this glorious scroll came nine and a half columns of
- narrative, in which appeared the first, last, and only account
- of the history of the planet, so far as one observer could draw
- it, during one long day of its existence. Challenger and
- Summerlee have treated the matter in a joint scientific paper,
- but to me alone was left the popular account. Surely I can sing
- "Nunc dimittis." What is left but anti-climax in the life of a
- journalist after that!
-
- But let me not end on sensational headlines and a merely
- personal triumph. Rather let me quote the sonorous passages in
- which the greatest of daily papers ended its admirable leader
- upon the subject--a leader which might well be filed for
- reference by every thoughtful man.
-
- "It has been a well-worn truism," said the _Times_, "that our
- human race are a feeble folk before the infinite latent forces
- which surround us. From the prophets of old and from the
- philosophers of our own time the same message and warning have
- reached us. But, like all oft-repeated truths, it has in time
- lost something of its actuality and cogency. A lesson, an actual
- experience, was needed to bring it home. It is from that
- salutory but terrible ordeal that we have just emerged, with
- minds which are still stunned by the suddenness of the blow and
- with spirits which are chastened by the realization of our own
- limitations and impotence. The world has paid a fearful price
- for its schooling. Hardly yet have we learned the full tale of
- disaster, but the destruction by fire of New York, of Orleans,
- and of Brighton constitutes in itself one of the greatest
- tragedies in the history of our race. When the account of the
- railway and shipping accidents has been completed, it will
- furnish grim reading, although there is evidence to show that in
- the vast majority of cases the drivers of trains and engineers
- of steamers succeeded in shutting off their motive power before
- succumbing to the poison. But the material damage, enormous as
- it is both in life and in property, is not the consideration
- which will be uppermost in our minds to-day. All this may in time
- be forgotten. But what will not be forgotten, and what will and
- should continue to obsess our imaginations, is this revelation
- of the possibilities of the universe, this destruction of our
- ignorant self-complacency, and this demonstration of how narrow
- is the path of our material existence and what abysses may lie
- upon either side of it. Solemnity and humility are at the base
- of all our emotions to-day. May they be the foundations upon which
- a more earnest and reverent race may build a more worthy temple."
-
-
- [End.]
-