The day has been fearfully hot.
Unconscious of surroundings, every nerve seemingly
relaxed, a young man is riding along the road toward
the station. Passing a wooded strip, there is
a blinding flash. With much effort, Oswald frees
himself from the limb of a tree, which in falling
broke the neck of his horse. Bewildered with pain
and drenched to the skin, he is staggering around
in the mud, when a light wagon, drawn by a fine team,
comes to a sudden halt at the fallen tree. The
driver turns his conveyance around and assists the
soaked victim of the storm to a seat. Retracing
the way to another road, after a roundabout journey
they stop in front of a large mansion surrounded by
a grove.
The injured man is assisted to a room.
A servant soon brings dry clothing and kindles a fire.
Oswald begins to meditate upon his
mishap. “Close call,” murmurs he,
“and just as I had completed that grand air-castle!
At the very moment when the acclaim was the loudest
and the star of Langdon seemed brightest, that blinding
flash! That terrible shock, too, and such an
oppressive feeling, until the limb was removed from
my breast! What does it mean? How like and
yet unlike my last night’s dream! I feel
so cold, too.” He stirs the fire, which
is burning cheerily, and sits down in the cushioned
chair, the blood flowing from his mouth.
Oswald soon recovers from the hemorrhage,
and is aroused from his languor by the entrance of
a fine-looking man whose general appearance indicates
a life of about fifty years.
Seeing the pale face, and noting its
strong outlines, yet refined expression, he stands
for a moment in silent admiration.
“How do you feel now?”
“Much better, thank you,” is the feeble
reply.
Perceiving his guest’s weakness,
he rings a bell, and upon the prompt appearance of
a servant, gives orders which are soon complied with
by the bringing of refreshments.
Oswald learns that his kind host bears
the name of Donald Randolph, and is the owner of the
beautiful country-seat known as “Northfield”;
that he has a family consisting of a son and daughter;
that the son is away on a trip to India, the daughter
visiting in London, but expected home on the following
day.
Wishing to know more of the girl,
her age, whether single or married, educated or otherwise,
with the numerous further items of information naturally
desired by a young man of twenty-five, about the daughter
of an aristocratic, highly connected, wealthy English
gentleman, Oswald, however, has the tact and good
breeding not to demand a “bill of particulars.”
There being a brief pause here, as
if both feel that an important though delicate subject
is under consideration, Sir Donald becomes the inquisitor,
learning much about Oswald’s past life without
asking many questions. Sir Donald manifests such
kindly, unfeigned interest, so much sympathy with
Oswald’s plans for the future, heartily approving
of his highest aspirations, that the young man confides
unreservedly, and tells it well.
Oswald’s father was the younger
son of Herbert Langdon, and for many years had been
rector of an important parish. His parents had
placed Oswald under a tutor, who had prepared him
for Oxford. He had finished a course at this
institution, and was taking a pleasure trip on horseback
when the accident befell him. He now aspires to
be a barrister, though until within a few years his
secret ambition had been to be a great military leader.
He had read of “St. Crispin,” “Balaklava,”
the “Battle of the Nile,” “Trafalgar,”
and “Waterloo,” but the military spirit
is subservient to that of commerce and diplomacy.
With much sage assurance he said:
“Massed armies, long-range ordnance,
impregnable forts, steel-armored battle-ships, and
deadly, explosive coast marine mines are simply bellicose
forms of pacific, neutral notes commanding the ’peace
of Europe.’ The jealousy of nations will
not permit wars of conquest for colonial extension,
and the mouths of frowning cannon are imperious pledges
of international comity. Weak dynasties will find
tranquillity in the fears of more august powers.
Even the unspeakable Moslem will be unmolested in
his massacres, to insure regular clipping of Turkish
bonds in money markets of European capitals.”
Here Sir Donald suggested that possibly
this pacific, commercial tendency had its perils,
and through unforeseen complications might cause war.
“The enervating influences of
wealth, the extreme conservatism thereby fostered,
and the resulting disposition to accept any compromise
rather than interfere with the free course of trade,
may create conditions breeding hostilities. May
not such extreme aversion to commercial disturbance,
and disposition to think lightly of national honor,
compared with financial security, be bids for attack
from more hardy, martial peoples, having little respect
for the prerogatives of traffic or the hypocritical
refinements of diplomatic craft? Are not such
conditions, with the luxurious licentiousness so natural
thereto, combined with the stolid indifference and
poverty of the masses, most potent factors in the
decline and fall of nations?”
Struck by the force of these suggestions,
Oswald is silent.
Seeing that this interesting young
man is pondering upon these possibilities and resulting
changes in the maps of the world, Sir Donald watches
him with much admiration. He thinks, I may not
live to behold much of this, but would like to see
a cast of his horoscope.
After a brief pause, Oswald replies:
“Serious contingencies may grow
out of these tendencies of the times. These may
require diplomacy and forbearance among the powers.
Barbarous peoples would be at a great disadvantage
in a conflict with any of the greater nations of the
earth. Personal prowess, resistless in the whirlwind
of the charge, is of little avail against modern artillery
or long-range ordnance. The destructive power
of modern military equipment will make adjustment
of international differences by arbitration imperative.”
He hedges at this point with the suggestion:
“Still, some crazy autocrat
or frenzied people at any time may bring on far-reaching
conflicts, and barbarous hordes will become menaces
to civilization if taught the art of modern warfare.”
After a few minutes’ further
conversation of a general character, Sir Donald bids
Oswald good-night.
Being weary, Oswald soon after retired.
On the waters of a beautiful lake,
under a cloudless sky, Oswald is swiftly sailing.
The breeze seconding his own skill, the boat seems
instinct with life. From the wooded bank, around
a distant curve, emerges a small sail with two persons
aboard. Nearing the middle of the lake, he sees
a struggle, a splash, then a female form sinking in
the water. With its remaining occupant the boat
speeds swiftly away, disappearing beyond a jutting
wooded point. Oswald’s sail reaches the
spot, and he rescues the insensible form of a young
woman. She revives and becomes his loving friend.
Soon a hateful, sinister face haunts them. Many
snares they unconsciously escape. There is a tangle
in the web of events. They stand upon the banks
of a river, near a large city. The girl clings
to him despairingly. Their foe appears, and both
are struck from the bank into the river. Regaining
the shore, Oswald flees. Through terrible mazes
he is driven over the earth, with the face of the
drowned girl before his eyes, the shadow of the gallows
looming grim and black at every turn.
With a groan Oswald awakes. The
pain in his side and breast is severe, but the dream
seems much more real. He can not easily believe
it to be simply a chimera of an overwrought brain.