A slow transition.
A dreary time followed. Sometimes
the patient would lie awake half the night, howling
with misery, and accusing Donal of heartless cruelty.
He knew as well as he what would ease his pain and
give him sleep, but not a finger would he move to
save him! He was taking the meanest of revenges!
What did it matter to him what became of his soul!
Surely it was worse to hate as he made him hate than
to swallow any amount of narcotics!
“I tell you, Grant,” he
said once, “I was never so cruel to those I
treated worst. There’s nothing in the Persian
hells, which beat all the rest, to come up to what
I go through for want of my comfort. Promise
to give it me, and I will tell you where to find some.”
As often as Donal refused he would
break out in a torrent of curses, then lie still for
a space.
“How do you think you will do
without it,” Donal once rejoined, “when
you find yourself bodiless in the other world?”
“I’m not there yet!
When that comes, it will be under new conditions,
if not unconditioned altogether. We’ll take
the world we have. So, my dear boy, just go and
get me what I want. There are the keys!”
“I dare not.”
“You wish to kill me!”
“I wouldn’t keep you alive
to eat opium. I have other work than that.
Not a finger would I move to save a life for such a
life. But I would willingly risk my own to make
you able to do without it. There would be some
good in that!”
“Oh, damn your preaching!”
But the force of the habit abated
a little. Now and then it seemed to return as
strong as ever, but the fit went off again. His
sufferings plainly decreased.
The doctor, having little yet of a
practice, was able to be with him several hours every
day, so that Donal could lie down. As he grew
better, Davie, or mistress Brookes, or lady Arctura
would sit with him. But Donal was never farther
off than the next room. The earl’s madness
was the worst of any, a moral madness: it could
not fail to affect the brain, but had not yet put
him beyond his own control. Repeatedly had Donal
been on the verge of using force to restrain him, but
had not yet found himself absolutely compelled to
do so: fearless of him, he postponed it always
to the very last, and the last had not yet arrived.
The gentle ministrations of his niece
by and by seemed to touch him. He was growing
to love her a little, He would smile when she came
into the room, and ask her how she did. Once
he sat looking at her for some time then
said,
“I hope I did not hurt you much.”
“When?” she asked.
“Then,” he answered.
“Oh, no; you did not hurt me much!”
“Another time, I was very cruel
to your aunt: do you think she will forgive me!”
“Yes, I do.”
“Then you have forgiven me?”
“Of course I have.”
“Then of course God will forgive me too!”
“He will if you leave off, you know,
uncle.”
“That’s more than I can promise.”
“If you try, he will help you.”
“How can he? It is a second nature now!”
“He is your first nature.
He can help you too by taking away the body and its
nature together.”
“You’re a fine comforter!
God will help me to be good by taking away my life!
A nice encouragement to try! Hadn’t I better
kill myself and save him the trouble!”
“It’s not the dying, uncle!
no amount of dying would ever make one good.
It might only make it less difficult to be good.”
“But I might after all refuse
to be good! I feel sure I should! He had
better let me alone!”
“God can do more than that to
compel us to be good a great deal more
than that! Indeed, uncle, we must repent.”
He said no more for some minutes;
then suddenly spoke again.
“I suppose you mean to marry
that rascal of a tutor!” he said.
She started up, and called Donal.
But to her relief he did not answer: he was fast
asleep.
“He would not thank you for
the suggestion, I fear,” she said, sitting down
again. “He is far above me!”
“Is there no chance for Forgue then?”
“Not the smallest. I would rather have
died where you left me than ”
“If you love me, don’t
mention that!” he cried. “I was not
myself indeed I was not! I don’t
know now that is, I can’t believe
sometimes I ever did it.”
“Uncle, have you asked God to forgive you!”
“I have a thousand times.”
“Then I will never speak of it again.”
In general, however, he was sullen,
cantankerous, abusive. They were all compassionate
to him, treating him like a spoiled, but not the less
in reality a sickly child. Arctura thought her
grandmother could not have brought him up well; more
might surely have been made of him. But Arctura
had him after a lifetime fertile in cause of self-reproach,
had him in the net of sore sickness, at the mercy
of the spirit of God. He was a bad old child this
much only the wiser for being old, that he had found
the ways of transgressors hard.
One night Donal, hearing him restless,
got up from the chair where he watched by him most
nights, and saw him staring, but not seeing: his
eyes showed that they regarded nothing material.
After a moment he gave a great sigh, and his jaw fell.
Donal thought he was dead. But presently he came
to himself like one escaping from torture: a terrible
dream was behind him, pulling at the skirts of his
consciousness.
“I’ve seen her!”
he said. “She’s waiting for me to
take me but where I do not know. She
did not look angry, but then she seldom looked angry
when I was worst to her! Grant, I beg of
you, don’t lose sight of Davie. Make a
man of him, and his mother will thank you. She
was a good woman, his mother, though I did what I
could to spoil her! It was no use! I never
could! and that was how she kept her hold
of me. If I had succeeded, there would have been
an end of her power, and a genuine heir to the earldom!
What a damned fool I was to let it out! Who would
have been the worse!”
“He’s a heartless, unnatural
rascal, though,” he resumed, “and has made
of me the fool I deserved to be made! His mother
must see it was not my fault! I would have set
things right if I could! But it was too late!
And you tell me she has had a hand in letting the truth
out leaving her letters about! That’s
some comfort! She was always fair, and will be
the less hard on me. If I could see a chance of
God being half as good to me as my poor wife.
She was my wife! I will say it in spite of all
the priests in the stupid universe! She was my
wife, and deserved to be my wife; and if I had her
now, I would marry her, because she would be foolish
enough to like it, though I would not do it all the
time she was alive, let her beg ever so! Where
was the use of giving in, when I kept her in hand
so easily that way? That was it! It was not
that I wanted to do her any wrong. But you should
keep the lead. A man mustn’t play out his
last trump and lose the lead. But then you never
know about dying! If I had known my poor wife
was going to die, I would have done whatever she wanted.
We had merry times together! It was those cursed
drugs that wiled the soul out of me, and then the devil
went in and took its place! There was curara
in that last medicine, I’ll swear! Look
you here now, Grant: if there were any way
of persuading God to give me a fresh lease of life!
You say he hears prayer: why shouldn’t
you ask him? I would make you any promise you
pleased give you any security you wanted,
hereafter to live a godly, righteous, and sober life.”
“But,” said Donal, “suppose
God, reading your heart, saw that you would go on
as bad as ever, and that to leave you any longer would
only be to make it the more difficult for him to do
anything with you afterwards?”
“He might give me a chance!
It is hard to expect a poor fellow to be as good as
he is himself!”
“The poor fellow was made in
his image!” suggested Donal.
“Very poorly made then!”
said the earl with a sneer. “We might as
well have been made in some other body’s image!”
Donal thought with himself.
“Did you ever know a good woman, my lord?”
he asked.
“Know a good woman? Hundreds
of them! The other sort was more to my
taste! but there was my own mother! She was rather
hard on my father now and then, but she was a good
woman.”
“Suppose you had been in her image, what then?”
“You would have had some respect for me!”
“Then she was nearer the image of God than you?”
“Thousands of miles!”
“Did you ever know a bad woman?”
“Know a bad woman? Hundreds
that would take your heart’s blood as you slept
to make a philtre with!”
“Then you saw a difference between such a woman
and your mother?”
“The one was of heaven, the
other of hell that was all the little difference!”
“Did you ever know a bad woman grow better?”
“No, never. Stop!
let me see. I did once know a woman she
was a married woman too that made it all
the worse all the better I mean: she
took poison in good earnest, and died died,
sir died, I say when she came
to herself, and knew what she had done! That was
the only woman I ever knew that grew better.
How long she might have gone on better if she hadn’t
taken the poison, I can’t tell. That fixed
her good, you see!”
“If she had gone on, she might have got as good
as your mother?”
“Oh, hang it! no; I did not say that!”
“I mean, with God teaching her
all the time for ten thousand years, say and
she always doing what he told her!”
“Oh, well! I don’t
know anything about that. I don’t know what
God had to do with my mother being so good! She
was none of your canting sort!”
“There is an old story,”
said Donal, “of a man who was the very image
of God, and ever so much better than the best of women.”
“He couldn’t have been much of a man then!”
“Were you ever afraid, my lord?”
“Yes, several times many a time.”
“That man never knew what fear was.”
“By Jove!”
“His mother was good, and he
was better: your mother was good, and you are
worse! Whose fault is that?”
“My own; I’m not ashamed to confess it!”
“Would to God you were!”
said Donal: “you shame your mother in being
worse than she was. You were made in the image
of God, but you don’t look like him now any
more than you look like your mother. I have a
father and mother, my lord, as like God as they can
look!”
“Of course! of course!
In their position there are no such temptations as
in ours!”
“I am sure of one thing, my
lord that you will never be at any peace
until you begin to show the image in which you were
made. By that time you will care for nothing
so much as that he should have his way with you and
the whole world.”
“It will be long before I come to that!”
“Probably; but you will never
have a moment’s peace till you begin. It
is no use talking though. God has not made you
miserable enough yet.”
“I am more miserable than you can think.”
“Why don’t you cry to him to deliver you?”
“I would kill myself if it weren’t for
one thing.”
“It is from yourself he would deliver you.”
“I would, but that I want to put off seeing
my wife as long as I can.”
“I thought you wanted to see her!”
“I long for her sometimes more than tongue can
tell.”
“And you don’t want to see her?”
“Not yet; not just yet.
I should like to be a little better to do
something or other I don’t know what first.
I doubt if she would touch me now with
that small, firm hand she would catch hold of me with
when I hurt her. By Jove, if she had been a man,
she would have made her mark in the world! She
had a will and a way with her! If it hadn’t
been that she loved me me, do you hear,
you dog! though there’s nobody left
to care a worm-eaten nut about me, it makes me proud
as Lucifer merely to think of it! I don’t
care if there’s never another to love me to
all eternity! I have been loved as never man was
loved! All for my own sake, mind you! In
the way of money I was no great catch; and for the
rank, she never got any good of that, nor would if
she had lived till I was earl; she had a conscience which
I never had and would never have consented
to be called countess. ’It will be no worse
than passing for my wife now,’ I would say.
’What’s either but an appearance?
What’s any thing of all the damned humbug but
appearance? One appearance is as good as another
appearance!’ She would only smile smile
fit to make a mule sad! And then when her baby
was dying, and she wanted me to take her for a minute,
and I wouldn’t! She laid her down, and
got what she wanted herself, and when she went to
take the child again, the absurd little thing was was gone dead,
I mean gone dead, never to cry any more! There
it lay motionless, like a lump of white clay.
She looked at me and never in
this world smiled again! nor
cried either all I could do to make her!”
The wretched man burst into tears,
and the heart of Donal gave a leap for joy. Common
as tears are, fall as they may for the foolishest
things, they may yet be such as to cause joy in paradise.
The man himself may not know why he weeps, and his
tears yet indicate his turning on his road. The
earl was as far from a good man as man well could
be; there were millions of spiritual miles betwixt
him and the image of God; he had wept it was hard
to say at what not at his own cruelty,
not at his wife’s suffering, not in pity of the
little soul that went away at last out of no human
embrace; himself least of all could have told why
he wept; yet was that weeping some sign of contact
between his human soul and the great human soul of
God; it was the beginning of a possible communion
with the Father of all! Surely God saw this,
and knew the heart he had made saw the flax
smoking yet! He who will not let us out until
we have paid the uttermost farthing, rejoices over
the offer of the first golden grain.
Donal dropped on his knees and prayed:
“O Father of us all!”
he said, “in whose hands are these unruly hearts
of ours, we cannot manage ourselves; we ruin our own
selves; but in thee is our help found!”
Prayer went from him; he rose from his knees.
“Go on; go on; don’t stop!”
cried the earl. “He may hear you who
can tell!”
Donal went down on his knees again.
“O God!” he said, “thou
knowest us, whether we speak to thee or not; take
from this man his hardness of heart. Make him
love thee.”
There he stopped again. He could say no more.
“I can’t pray, my lord,”
he said, rising. “I don’t know why.
It seems as if nothing I said meant anything.
I will pray for you when I am alone.”
“Are there so many devils about
me that an honest fellow can’t pray in my company?”
cried the earl. “I will pray myself, in
spite of the whole swarm of them, big and little! O
God, save me! I don’t want to be damned.
I will be good if thou wilt make me. I don’t
care about it myself, but thou canst do as thou pleasest.
It would be a fine thing if a rascal like me were
to escape the devil through thy goodness after all.
I’m worth nothing, but there’s my wife!
Pray, pray, Lord God, let me one day see my wife again! For
Christ’s sake ain’t that the
way, Grant? Amen.”
Donal had dropped on his knees once
more when the earl began to pray. He uttered
a hearty Amen. The earl turned sharply towards
him, and saw he was weeping. He put out his hand
to him, and said,
“You’ll stand my friend, Grant?”