THE MOTIVE
I
I could not say at which station the
woman and her baby entered the train.
Since we had left London, I had been
struggling with Baillie’s translation of Hegel’s
“Phenomenology.” It was not a book
to read among such distracting circumstances as those
of a railway journey, but I was eagerly planning a
little dissertation of my own at that time, and my
work as a journalist gave me little leisure for quiet
study.
I looked up when the woman entered
my compartment, though I did not notice the name of
the station. I caught sight of the baby she was
carrying, and turned back to my book. I thought
the child was a freak, an abnormality; and such things
disgust me.
I returned to the study of my Hegel
and read: “For knowledge is not the divergence
of the ray, but the ray itself by which the truth comes
to us; and if this ray be removed, the bare direction
or the empty place would alone be indicated.”
I kept my eyes on the book-the
train had started again-but the next passage
conveyed no meaning to my mind, and as I attempted
to re-read it an impression was interposed between
me and the work I was studying.
I saw projected on the page before
me an image which I mistook at first for the likeness
of Richard Owen. It was the conformation of the
head that gave rise to the mistake, a head domed and
massive, white and smooth-it was a head
that had always interested me. But as I looked,
my mind already searching for the reason of this hallucination,
I saw that the lower part of the face was that of
an infant. My eyes wandered from the book, and
my gaze fluttered along the four persons seated opposite
to me, till it rested on the reality of my vision.
And even as my attention was thus irresistibly dragged
from my book, my mind clung with a feeble desperation
to its task, and I murmured under my breath like a
child repeating a mechanically learned lesson:
“Knowledge is not the divergence of the ray
but the ray itself....”
For several seconds the eyes of the
infant held mine. Its gaze was steady and clear
as that of a normal child, but what differentiated
it was the impression one received of calm intelligence.
The head was completely bald, and there was no trace
of eyebrows, but the eyes themselves were protected
by thick, short lashes.
The child turned its head, and I felt
my muscles relax. Until then I had not been conscious
that they had been stiffened. My gaze was released,
pushed aside as it were, and I found myself watching
the object of the child’s next scrutiny.
This object was a man of forty or
so, inclined to corpulence, and untidy. He bore
the evidences of failure in the process of becoming.
He wore a beard that was scanty and ragged, there
were bald patches of skin on the jaw; one inferred
that he wore that beard only to save the trouble of
shaving. He was sitting next to me, the middle
passenger of the three on my side of the carriage,
and he was absorbed in the pages of a half-penny paper-I
think he was reading the police reports-which
was interposed between him and the child in the corner
diagonally opposite to that which I occupied.
The man was hunched up, slouching,
his legs crossed, his elbows seeking support against
his body; he held his clumsily folded paper close to
his eyes. He had the appearance of being very
myopic, but he did not wear glasses.
As I watched him, he began to fidget.
He uncrossed his legs and hunched his body deeper
into the back of his seat. Presently his eyes
began to creep up the paper in front of him.
When they reached the top, he hesitated a moment,
making a survey under cover, then he dropped his hands
and stared stupidly at the infant in the corner, his
mouth slightly open, his feet pulled in under the
seat of the carriage.
As the child let him go, his head
drooped, and then he turned and looked at me with
a silly, vacuous smile. I looked away hurriedly;
this was not a man with whom I cared to share experience.
The process was repeated. The
next victim was a big, rubicund, healthy-looking man,
clean shaved, with light-blue eyes that were slightly
magnified by the glasses of his gold-mounted spectacles.
He, too, had been reading a newspaper-the
Evening Standard-until the child’s
gaze claimed his attention, and he, too, was held motionless
by that strange, appraising stare. But when he
was released, his surprise found vent in words.
“This,” I thought, “is the man accustomed
to act.”
“A very remarkable child, ma’am,”
he said, addressing the thin, ascetic-looking mother.
II
The mother’s appearance did
not convey the impression of poverty. She was,
indeed, warmly, decently, and becomingly clad.
She wore a long black coat, braided and frogged; it
had the air of belonging to an older fashion, but
the material of it was new. And her bonnet, trimmed
with jet ornaments growing on stalks that waved tremulously-that,
also, was a modern replica of an older mode.
On her hands were black thread gloves, somewhat ill-fitting.
Her face was not that of a country
woman. The thin, high-bridged nose, the fallen
cheeks, the shadows under eyes gloomy and retrospective-these
were marks of the town; above all, perhaps, that sallow
greyness of the skin which speaks of confinement....
The child looked healthy enough.
Its great bald head shone resplendently like a globe
of alabaster.
“A very remarkable child, ma’am,”
said the rubicund man who sat facing the woman.
The woman twitched her untidy-looking
black eyebrows, her head trembled slightly and set
the jet fruit of her bonnet dancing and nodding.
“Yes, sir,” she replied.
“Very remarkable,” said
the man, adjusting his spectacles and leaning forward.
His action had an air of deliberate courage; he was
justifying his fortitude after that temporary aberration.
I watched him a little nervously.
I remembered my feelings when, as a child, I had seen
some magnificent enter the lion’s den in a travelling
circus. The failure on my right was, also, absorbed
in the spectacle; he stared, open-mouthed, his eyes
blinking and shifting.
The other three occupants of the compartment,
sitting on the same side as the woman, back to the
engine, dropped papers and magazines and turned their
heads, all interest. None of these three had,
so far as I had observed, fallen under the spell of
inspection by the infant, but I noticed that the man-an
artisan apparently-who sat next to the woman
had edged away from her, and that the three passengers
opposite to me were huddled towards my end of the
compartment.
The child had abstracted its gaze,
which was now directed down the aisle of the carriage,
indefinitely focussed on some point outside the window.
It seemed remote, entirely unconcerned with any human
being.
I speak of it asexually. I was
still uncertain as to its sex. It is true that
all babies look alike to me; but I should have known
that this child was male, the conformation of the
skull alone should have told me that. It was
its dress that gave me cause to hesitate. It was
dressed absurdly, not in “long-clothes,”
but in a long frock that hid its feet and was bunched
about its body.
III
“Er-does it-er-can
it-talk?” hesitated the rubicund man,
and I grew hot at his boldness. There seemed
to be something disrespectful in speaking before the
child in this impersonal way.
“No, sir, he’s never made
a sound,” replied the woman, twitching and vibrating.
Her heavy, dark eyebrows jerked spasmodically, nervously.
“Never cried?” persisted the interrogator.
“Never once, sir.”
“Dumb, eh?” He said it as an aside, half
under his breath.
“’E’s never spoke, sir.”
“Hm!” The man cleared
his throat and braced himself with a deliberate and
obvious effort. “Is it-he-not
water on the brain-what?”
I felt that a rigour of breathless
suspense held every occupant of the compartment.
I wanted, and I know that every other person there
wanted, to say, “Look out! Don’t
go too far.” The child, however, seemed
unconscious of the insult: he still stared out
through the window, lost in profound contemplation.
“No, sir, oh no!” replied
the woman. “’E’s got more sense than
a ordinary child.” She held the infant
as if it were some priceless piece of earthenware,
not nursing it as a woman nurses a baby, but balancing
it with supreme attention in her lap.
“How old is he?”
We had been awaiting this question.
“A year and nine munse, sir.”
“Ought to have spoken before that, oughtn’t
he?”
“Never even cried, sir,”
said the woman. She regarded the child with a
look into which I read something of apprehension.
If it were apprehension it was a feeling that we all
shared. But the rubicund man was magnificent,
though, like the lion tamer of my youthful experience,
he was doubtless conscious of the aspect his temerity
wore in the eyes of beholders. He must have been
showing off.
“Have you taken opinion?”
he asked; and then, seeing the woman’s lack of
comprehension, he translated the question-badly,
for he conveyed a different meaning-thus,
“I mean, have you had a doctor for him?”
The train was slackening speed.
“Oh! yes, sir.”
“And what do they say?”
The child turned its head and looked
the rubicund man full in the eyes. Never in the
face of any man or woman have I seen such an expression
of sublime pity and contempt....
I remembered a small urchin I had
once seen at the Zoological Gardens. Urged on
by a band of other urchins, he was throwing pebbles
at a great lion that lolled, finely indifferent, on
the floor of its playground. Closer crept the
urchin; he grew splendidly bold; he threw larger and
larger pebbles, until the lion rose suddenly with a
roar, and dashed fiercely down to the bars of its
cage.
I thought of that urchin’s scared,
shrieking face now, as the rubicund man leant quickly
back into his corner.
Yet that was not all, for the infant,
satisfied, perhaps, with its victim’s ignominy,
turned and looked at me with a cynical smile.
I was, as it were, taken into its confidence.
I felt flattered, undeservedly yet enormously flattered.
I blushed, I may have simpered.
The train drew up in Great Hittenden station.
The woman gathered her priceless possession
carefully into her arms, and the rubicund man adroitly
opened the door for her.
“Good day, sir,” she said, as she got
out.
“Good day,” echoed the
rubicund man with relief, and we all drew a deep breath
of relief with him in concert, as though we had just
witnessed the safe descent of some over-daring aviator.
IV
As the train moved on, we six, who
had been fellow-passengers for some thirty or forty
minutes before the woman had entered our compartment,
we who had not till then exchanged a word, broke suddenly
into general conversation.
“Water on the brain; I don’t
care what any one says,” asserted the rubicund
man.
“My sister had one very similar,”
put in the failure, who was sitting next to me.
“It died,” he added, by way of giving point
to his instance.
“Ought not to exhibit freaks
like that in public,” said an old man opposite
to me.
“You’re right, sir,”
was the verdict of the artisan, and he spat carefully
and scraped his boot on the floor; “them things
ought to be kep’ private.”
“Mad, of course, that’s
to say imbecile,” repeated the rubicund man.
“Horrid head he’d got,”
said the failure, and shivered histrionically.
They continued to demonstrate their
contempt for the infant by many asseverations.
The reaction grew. They were all bold now, and
all wanted to speak. They spoke as the survivors
from some common peril; they were increasingly anxious
to demonstrate that they had never suffered intimidation,
and in their relief they were anxious to laugh at the
thing which had for a time subdued them. But they
never named it as a cause for fear. Their speech
was merely innuendo.
At the last, however, I caught an
echo of the true feeling.
It was the rubicund man who, most
daring during the crisis, was now bold enough to admit
curiosity.
“What’s your opinion,
sir?” he said to me. The train was running
into Wenderby; he was preparing to get out; he leaned
forward, his fingers on the handle of the door.
I was embarrassed. Why had I
been singled out by the child? I had taken no
part in the recent interjectory conversation.
Was this a consequence of the notice that had been
paid to me?
“I?” I stammered, and
then reverted to the rubicund man’s original
phrase, “It-it was certainly a very
remarkable child,” I said.
The rubicund man nodded and pursed
his lips. “Very,” he muttered as he
alighted, “Very remarkable. Well, good day
to you.”
I returned to my book, and was surprised
to find that my index finger was still marking the
place at which I had been interrupted some fifteen
minutes before. My arm felt stiff and cramped.
I read: “... and if this
ray be removed, the bare direction or the empty place
would alone be indicated.”