HIS PASSAGE THROUGH THE PRISON OF KNOWLEDGE
I
Challis led the way to the library;
Lewes, petulant and mutinous, hung in the rear.
The Wonder toddled forward, unabashed,
to enter his new world. On the threshold, however,
he paused. His comprehensive stare took in a
sweeping picture of enclosing walls of books, and beyond
was a vista of further rooms, of more walls all lined
from floor to ceiling with records of human discovery,
endeavour, doubt, and hope.
The Wonder stayed and stared.
Then he took two faltering steps into the room and
stopped again, and, finally, he looked up at Challis
with doubt and question; his gaze no longer quelling
and authoritative, but hesitating, compliant, perhaps
a little child-like.
“’Ave you read all these?” he asked.
It was a curious picture. The
tall figure of Challis, stooping, as always, slightly
forward; Challis, with his seaman’s eyes and
scholar’s head, his hands loosely clasped together
behind his back, paying such scrupulous attention
to that grotesque representative of a higher intellectuality,
clothed in the dress of a villager, a patched cricket-cap
drawn down over his globular skull, his little arms
hanging loosely at his sides; who, nevertheless, even
in this new, strange aspect of unwonted humility bore
on his face the promise of some ultimate development
which differentiated him from all other humanity,
as the face of humanity is differentiated from the
face of its prognathous ancestor.
The scene is set in a world of books,
and in the background lingers the athletic figure
and fair head of Lewes, the young Cambridge undergraduate,
the disciple of science, hardly yet across the threshold
which divides him from the knowledge of his own ignorance.
“’Ave you read all these?” asked
the Wonder.
“A greater part of them-in
effect,” replied Challis. “There is
much repetition, you understand, and much record of
experiment which becomes, in a sense, worthless when
the conclusions are either finally accepted or rejected.”
The eyes of the Wonder shifted and
their expression became abstracted; he seemed to lose
consciousness of the outer world; he wore the look
which you may see in the eyes of Jakob Schlesinger’s
portrait of the mature Hegel, a look of profound introspection
and analysis.
There was an interval of silence,
and then the Wonder unknowingly gave expression to
a quotation from Hamlet. “Words,”
he whispered reflectively, and then again “words.”
II
Challis understood him. “You
have not yet learned the meaning of words?”
he asked.
The brief period-the only
one recorded-of amazement and submission
was over. It may be that he had doubted during
those few minutes of time whether he was well advised
to enter into that world of books, whether he would
not by so doing stunt his own mental growth. It
may be that the decision of so momentous a question
should have been postponed for a year-two
years; to a time when his mind should have had further
possibilities for unlettered expansion. However
that may be, he decided now and finally. He walked
to the table and climbed up on a chair.
“Books about words,” he
commanded, and pointed at Challis and Lewes.
They brought him the latest production
of the twentieth century in many volumes, the work
of a dozen eminent authorities on the etymology of
the English language, and they seated him on eight
volumes of the Encyclopædia Britannica (India
paper edition) in order that he might reach the level
of the table.
At first they tried to show him how
his wonderful dictionary should be used, but he pushed
them on one side, neither then nor at any future time
would he consent to be taught-the process
was too tedious for him, his mind worked more fluently,
rapidly, and comprehensively than the mind of the
most gifted teacher that could have been found for
him.
So Challis and Lewes stood on one
side and watched him, and he was no more embarrassed
by their presence than if they had been in another
world, as, possibly, they were.
He began with volume one, and he read
the title page and the introduction, the list of abbreviations,
and all the preliminary matter in due order.
Challis noted that when the Wonder
began to read, he read no faster than the average
educated man, but that he acquired facility at a most
astounding rate, and that when he had been reading
for a few days his eye swept down the column, as it
were at a single glance.
Challis and Lewes watched him for,
perhaps, half an hour, and then, seeing that their
presence was of an entirely negligible value to the
Wonder, they left him and went into the farther room.
“Well?” asked Challis, “what do
you make of him?”
“Is he reading or pretending
to read?” parried Lewes. “Do you think
it possible that he could read so fast? Moreover,
remember that he has admitted that he knows few words
of the English language, yet he does not refer from
volume to volume; he does not look up the meanings
of the many unknown words which must occur even in
the introduction.”
“I know. I had noticed that.”
“Then you think he is humbugging-pretending
to read?”
“No; that solution seems to
me altogether unlikely. He could not, for one
thing, simulate that look of attention. Remember,
Lewes, the child is not yet five years old.”
“What is your explanation, then?”
“I am wondering whether the
child has not a memory beside which the memory of
a Macaulay would appear insignificant.”
Lewes did not grasp Challis’s intention.
“Even so ...” he began.
“And,” continued Challis,
“I am wondering whether, if that is the case,
he is, in effect, prepared to learn the whole dictionary
by heart, and, so to speak, collate its contents later,
in his mind.”
“Oh! Sir!” Lewes
smiled. The supposition was too outrageous to
be taken seriously. “Surely, you can’t
mean that.” There was something in Lewes’s
tone which carried a hint of contempt for so far-fetched
a hypothesis.
Challis was pacing up and down the
library, his hands clasped behind him. “Yes,
I mean it,” he said, without looking up.
“I put it forward as a serious theory, worthy
of full consideration.”
Lewes sneered. “Oh, surely not, sir,”
he said.
Challis stopped and faced him.
“Why not, Lewes; why not?” he asked, with
a kindly smile. “Think of the gap which
separates your intellectual powers from those of a
Polynesian savage. Why, after all, should it be
impossible that this child’s powers should equally
transcend our own? A freak, if you will, an abnormality,
a curious effect of nature’s, like the giant
puff-ball-but still -”
“Oh! yes, sir, I grant you the
thing is not impossible from a theoretical point of
view,” argued Lewes, “but I think you are
theorising on altogether insufficient evidence.
I am willing to admit that such a freak is theoretically
possible, but I have not yet found the indications
of such a power in the child.”
Challis resumed his pacing. “Quite,
quite,” he assented; “your method is perfectly
correct-perfectly correct. We must
wait.”
At twelve o’clock Challis brought
a glass of milk and some biscuits, and set them beside
the Wonder-he was apparently making excellent
progress with the letter “A.”
“Well, how are you getting on?” asked
Challis.
The Wonder took not the least notice
of the question, but he stretched out a little hand
and took a biscuit and ate it, without looking up from
his reading.
“I wish he’d answer questions,”
Challis remarked to Lewes, later.
“I should prescribe a sound shaking,”
returned Lewes.
Challis smiled. “Well,
see here, Lewes,” he said, “I’ll
take the responsibility; you go and experiment; go
and shake him.”
Lewes looked through the folding doors
at the picture of the Wonder, intent on his study
of the great dictionary. “Since you’ve
franked me,” he said, “I’ll do it-but
not now. I’ll wait till he gives me some
occasion.”
“Good,” replied Challis,
“my offer holds ... and, by the way, I have no
doubt that an occasion will present itself. Doesn’t
it strike you as likely, Lewes, that we shall see
a good deal of the child here?”
They stood for some minutes, watching
the picture of that intent student, framed in the
written thoughts of his predecessors.
III
The Wonder ignored an invitation to
lunch; he ignored, also, the tray that was sent in
to him. He read on steadily till a quarter to
six, by which time he was at the end of “B,”
and then he climbed down from his Encyclopædia, and
made for the door. Challis, working in the farther
room, saw him and came out to open the door.
“Are you going now?” he asked.
The child nodded.
“I will order the cart for you,
if you will wait ten minutes,” said Challis.
The child shook his head. “It’s very
necessary to have air,” he said.
Something in the tone and pronunciation
struck Challis, and awoke a long dormant memory.
The sentence spoken, suddenly conjured up a vision
of the Stotts’ cottage at Stoke, of the Stotts
at tea, of a cradle in the shadow, and of himself,
sitting in an uncomfortable armchair and swinging
his stick between his knees. When the child had
gone-walking deliberately, and evidently
regarding the mile-and-a-half walk through the twilight
wood and over the deserted Common as a trivial incident
in the day’s business-Challis set
himself to analyse that curious association.
As he strolled back across the hall
to the library, he tried to reconstruct the scene
of the cottage at Stoke, and to recall the outline
of the conversation he had had with the Stotts.
“Lewes!” he said, when
he reached the room in which his secretary was working.
“Lewes, this is curious,” and he described
the associations called up by the child’s speech.
“The curious thing is,” he continued,
“that I had gone to advise Mrs. Stott to take
a cottage at Pym, because the Stoke villagers were
hostile, in some way, and she did not care to take
the child out in the street. It is more than probable
that I used just those words, ‘It is very necessary
to have air,’ very probable. Now, what
about my memory theory? The child was only six
months old at that time.”
Lewes appeared unconvinced. “There
is nothing very unusual in the sentence,” he
said.
“Forgive me,” replied
Challis, “I don’t agree with you.
It is not phrased as a villager would phrase it, and,
as I tell you, it was not spoken with the local accent.”
“You may have spoken the sentence
to-day,” suggested Lewes.
“I may, of course, though I
don’t remember saying anything of the sort,
but that would not account for the curiously vivid
association which was conjured up.”
Lewes pursed his lips. “No,
no, no,” he said. “But that is hardly
ground for argument, is it?”
“I suppose not,” returned
Challis thoughtfully; “but when you take up
psychology, Lewes, I should much like you to specialise
on a careful inquiry into association in connection
with memory. I feel certain that if one can reproduce,
as nearly as may be, any complex sensation one has
experienced, no matter how long ago, one will stimulate
what I may call an abnormal memory of all the associations
connected with that experience. Just now I saw
the interior of that room in the Stotts’ cottage
so clearly that I had an image of a dreadful oleograph
of Disraeli hanging on the wall. But, now, I
cannot for the life of me remember whether there was
such an oleograph or not. I do not remember noticing
it at the time.”
“Yes, that’s very interesting,”
replied Lewes. “There is certainly a wide
field for research in that direction.”
“You might throw much light
on our mental processes,” replied Challis.
(It was as the outcome of this conversation
that Gregory Lewes did, two years afterwards, take
up this line of study. The only result up to the
present time is his little brochure Reflexive Associations,
which has added little to our knowledge of the subject.)
IV
Challis’s anticipation that
he and Lewes would be greatly favoured by the Wonder’s
company was fully realised.
The child put in an appearance at
half-past nine the next morning, just as the governess
cart was starting out to fetch him. When he was
admitted he went straight to the library, climbed on
to the chair, upon which the volumes of the Encyclopædia
still remained, and continued his reading where he
had left off on the previous evening.
He read steadily throughout the day
without giving utterance to speech of any kind.
Challis and Lewes went out in the
afternoon, and left the child deep in study.
They came in at six o’clock, and went to the
library. The Wonder, however, was not there.
Challis rang the bell.
“Has little Stott gone?” he asked when
Heathcote came.
“I ’aven’t seen ’im, sir,”
said Heathcote.
“Just find out if any one opened
the door for him, will you?” said Challis.
“He couldn’t possibly have opened that
door for himself.”
“No one ’asn’t let
Master Stott hout, sir,” Heathcote reported on
his return.
“Are you sure?”
“Quite sure, sir. I’ve
made full hinquiries,” said Heathcote with dignity.
“Well, we’d better find him,” said
Challis.
“The window is open,” suggested Lewes.
“He would hardly ...”
began Challis, walking over to the low sill of the
open window, but he broke off in his sentence and continued,
“By Jove, he did, though; look here!”
It was, indeed, quite obvious that
the Wonder had made his exit by the window; the tiny
prints of his feet were clearly marked in the mould
of the flower-bed; he had, moreover, disregarded all
results of early spring floriculture.
“See how he has smashed those
daffodils,” said Lewes. “What an
infernally cheeky little brute he is!”
“What interests me is the logic
of the child,” returned Challis. “I
would venture to guess that he wasted no time in trying
to attract attention. The door was closed, so
he just got out of the window. I rather admire
the spirit; there is something Napoleonic about him.
Don’t you think so?”
Lewes shrugged his shoulders.
Heathcote’s expression was quite non-committal.
“You’d better send Jessop
up to Pym, Heathcote,” said Challis. “Let
him find out whether the child is safe at home.”
Jessop reported an hour afterwards
that Master Stott had arrived home quite safely, and
Mrs. Stott was much obliged.
V
Altogether the Wonder spent five days,
or about forty hours, on his study of the dictionary,
and in the evening of his last day’s work he
left again by the open window. Challis, however,
had been keeping him under fairly close observation,
and knew that the preliminary task was finished.
“What can I give that child
to read to-day?” he asked at breakfast next
morning.
“I should reverse the arrangement;
let him sit on the Dictionary and read the Encyclopædia.”
Lewes always approached the subject of the Wonder
with a certain supercilious contempt.
“You are not convinced yet that he isn’t
humbugging?”
“No! Frankly, I’m not.”
“Well, well, we must wait for
more evidence, before we argue about it,” said
Challis, but they sat on over the breakfast-table,
waiting for the child to put in an appearance, and
their conversation hovered over the topic of his intelligence.
“Half-past ten?” Challis
ejaculated at last, with surprise. “We are
getting into slack habits, Lewes.” He rose
and rang the bell.
“Apparently the Stott infant
has had enough of it,” suggested Lewes.
“Perhaps he has exhausted the interest of dictionary
illustrations.”
“We shall see,” replied
Challis, and then to a deferentially appearing Heathcote
he said: “Has Master Stott come this morning?”
“No, sir. Leastways, no one ’asn’t
let ’im in, sir.”
“It may be that he is mentally
collating the results of the past two days’
reading,” said Challis, as he and Lewes made
their way to the library.
“Oh!” was all Lewes’s
reply, but it conveyed much of impatient contempt
for his employer’s attitude.
Challis only smiled.
When they entered the library they
found the Wonder hard at work, and he had, of his
own initiative, adopted the plan ironically suggested
by Lewes, for he had succeeded in transferring the
Dictionary volumes to the chair, and he was deep in
volume one, of the eleventh edition of the Encyclopædia
Britannica.
The library was never cleared up by
any one except Challis or his deputy, but an early
housemaid had been sent to dust, and she had left
the casement of one of the lower lights of the window
open. The means of the Wonder’s entrance
was thus clearly in evidence.
“It’s Napoleonic,” murmured Challis.
“It’s most infernal cheek,”
returned Lewes in a loud voice, “I should not
be at all surprised if that promised shaking were not
administered to-day.”
The Wonder took no notice. Challis
says that on that morning his eyes were travelling
down the page at about the rate at which one could
count the lines.
“He isn’t reading,”
said Lewes. “No one could read as fast as
that, and most certainly not a child of four and a
half.”
“If he would only answer questions
...” hesitated Challis.
“Oh! of course he won’t
do that,” said Lewes. “He’s
clever enough not to give himself away.”
The two men went over to the table
and looked down over the child’s shoulder.
He was in the middle of the article on “Aberration”-a
technical treatise on optical physics.
Lewes made a gesture. “Now
do you believe he’s humbugging?” he asked
confidently, and made no effort to modulate his voice.
Challis drew his eyebrows together.
“My boy,” he said, and laid his hand lightly
on Victor Stott’s shoulder, “can you understand
what you are reading there?”
But no answer was vouchsafed.
Challis sighed. “Come along, Lewes,”
he said; “we must waste no more time.”
Lewes wore a look of smug triumph
as they went to the farther room, but he was clever
enough to refrain from expressing his triumph in speech.
VI
Challis gave directions that the window
which the Wonder had found to be his most convenient
method of entry and exit should be kept open, except
at night; and a stool was placed under the sill inside
the room, and a low bench was fixed outside to facilitate
the child’s goings and comings. Also, a
little path was made across the flower-bed.
The Wonder gave no trouble. He
arrived at nine o’clock every morning, Sunday
included, and left at a quarter to six in the evening.
On wet days he was provided with a waterproof which
had evidently been made by his mother out of a larger
garment. This he took off when he entered the
room and left on the stool under the window.
He was given a glass of milk and a
plate of bread-and-butter at twelve o’clock;
and except for this he demanded and received no attention.
For three weeks he devoted himself
exclusively to the study of the Encyclopædia.
Lewes was puzzled.
Challis spoke little of the child
during these three weeks, but he often stood at the
entrance to the farther rooms and watched the Wonder’s
eyes travelling so rapidly yet so intently down the
page. That sight had a curious fascination for
him; he returned to his own work by an effort, and
an hour afterwards he would be back again at the door
of the larger room. Sometimes Lewes would hear
him mutter: “If he would only answer a
few questions....” There was always one
hope in Challis’s mind. He hoped that some
sort of climax might be reached when the Encyclopædia
was finished. The child must, at least, ask then
for another book. Even if he chose one for himself,
his choice might furnish some sort of a test.
So Challis waited and said little;
and Lewes was puzzled, because he was beginning to
doubt whether it were possible that the child could
sustain a pose so long. That, in itself, would
be evidence of extraordinary abnormality. Lewes
fumbled in his mind for another hypothesis.
This reading craze may be symptomatic
of some form of idiocy, he thought; “and I don’t
believe he does read,” was his illogical deduction.
Mrs. Stott usually came to meet her
son, and sometimes she would come early in the afternoon
and stand at the window watching him at his work;
but neither Challis nor Lewes ever saw the Wonder display
by any sign that he was aware of his mother’s
presence.
During those three weeks the Wonder
held himself completely detached from any intercourse
with the world of men. At the end of that period
he once more manifested his awareness of the human
factor in existence.
Challis, if he spoke little to Lewes
of the Wonder during this time, maintained a strict
observation of the child’s doings.
The Wonder began his last volume of
the Encyclopædia one Wednesday afternoon soon after
lunch, and on Thursday morning, Challis was continually
in and out of the room watching the child’s progress,
and noting his nearness to the end of the colossal
task he had undertaken.
At a quarter to twelve he took up
his old position in the doorway, and with his hands
clasped behind his back he watched the reading of the
last forty pages.
There was no slackening and no quickening
in the Wonder’s rate of progress. He read
the articles under “Z” with the same attention
he had given to the remainder of the work, and then,
arrived at the last page, he closed the volume and
took up the Index.
Challis suffered a qualm; not so much
on account of the possible postponement of the crisis
he was awaiting, as because he saw that the reading
of the Index could only be taken as a sign that the
whole study had been unintelligent. No one could
conceivably have any purpose in reading through an
index.
And at this moment Lewes joined him in the doorway.
“What volume has he got to now?” asked
Lewes.
“The Index,” returned Challis.
Lewes was no less quick in drawing his inference than
Challis had been.
“Well, that settles it, I should think,”
was Lewes’s comment.
“Wait, wait,” returned Challis.
The Wonder turned a dozen pages at
once, glanced at the new opening, made a further brief
examination of two or three headings near the end
of the volume, closed the book, and looked up.
“Have you finished?” asked Challis.
The Wonder shook his head. “All
this,” he said-he indicated with a
small and dirty hand the pile of volumes that were
massed round him-“all this ...”
he repeated, hesitated for a word, and again shook
his head with that solemn, deliberate impressiveness
which marked all his actions.
Challis came towards the child, leaned
over the table for a moment, and then sat down opposite
to him. Between the two protagonists hovered
Lewes, sceptical, inclined towards aggression.
“I am most interested,”
said Challis. “Will you try to tell me,
my boy, what you think of-all this?”
“So elementary ... inchoate
... a disjunctive ... patchwork,” replied the
Wonder. His abstracted eyes were blind to the
objective world of our reality; he seemed to be profoundly
analysing the very elements of thought.
VII
Then that almost voiceless child found
words. Heathcote’s announcement of lunch
was waved aside, the long afternoon waned, and still
that thin trickle of sound flowed on.
The Wonder spoke in odd, pedantic
phrases; he used the technicalities of every science;
he constructed his sentences in unusual ways, and often
he paused for a word and gave up the search, admitting
that his meaning could not be expressed through the
medium of any language known to him.
Occasionally Challis would interrupt
him fiercely, would even rise from his chair and pace
the room, arguing, stating a point of view, combating
some suggestion that underlay the trend of that pitiless
wisdom which in the end bore him down with its unanswerable
insistence.
During those long hours much was stated
by that small, thin voice which was utterly beyond
the comprehension of the two listeners; indeed, it
is doubtful whether even Challis understood a tithe
of the theory that was actually expressed in words.
As for Lewes, though he was at the
time non-plussed, quelled, he was in the outcome impressed
rather by the marvellous powers of memory exhibited
than by the far finer powers shown in the superhuman
logic of the synthesis.
One sees that Lewes entered upon the
interview with a mind predisposed to criticise, to
destroy. There can be no doubt that as he listened
his uninformed mind was endeavouring to analyse, to
weigh, and to oppose; and this antagonism and his
own thoughts continually interposed between him and
the thought of the speaker. Lewes’s account
of what was spoken on that afternoon is utterly worthless.
Challis’s failure to comprehend
was not, at the outset, due to his antagonistic attitude.
He began with an earnest wish to understand: he
failed only because the thing spoken was beyond the
scope of his intellectual powers. But he did,
nevertheless, understand the trend of that analysis
of progress; he did in some half-realised way apprehend
the gist of that terrible deduction of a final adjustment.
He must have apprehended, in part,
for he fiercely combated the argument, only to quaver,
at last, into a silence which permitted again that
trickle of hesitating, pedantic speech, which was yet
so overwhelming, so conclusive.
As the afternoon wore on, however,
Challis’s attitude must have changed; he must
have assumed an armour of mental resistance not unlike
the resistance of Lewes. Challis perceived, however
dimly, that life would hold no further pleasure for
him if he accepted that theory of origin, evolution,
and final adjustment; he found in this cosmogony no
place for his own idealism; and he feared to be convinced
even by that fraction of the whole argument which
he could understand.
We see that Challis, with all his
apparent devotion to science, was never more than
a dilettante. He had another stake in the world
which, at the last analysis, he valued more highly
than the acquisition of knowledge. Those means
of ease, of comfort, of liberty, of opportunity to
choose his work among various interests, were the ruling
influence of his life. With it all Challis was
an idealist, and unpractical. His genial charity,
his refinement of mind, his unthinking generosity,
indicate the bias of a character which inclined always
towards a picturesque optimism. It is not difficult
to understand that he dared not allow himself to be
convinced by Victor Stott’s appalling synthesis.
At last, when the twilight was deepening
into night, the voice ceased, the child’s story
had been told, and it had not been understood.
The Wonder never again spoke of his theory of life.
He realised from that time that no one could comprehend
him.
As he rose to go, he asked one question
that, simple as was its expression, had a deep and
wonderful significance.
“Is there none of my kind?”
he said. “Is this,” and he laid a
hand on the pile of books before him, “is this
all?”
“There is none of your kind,”
replied Challis; and the little figure born into a
world that could not understand him, that was not ready
to receive him, walked to the window and climbed out
into the darkness.
(Henry Challis is the only man who
could ever have given any account of that extraordinary
analysis of life, and he made no effort to recall the
fundamental basis of the argument, and so allowed his
memory of the essential part to fade. Moreover,
he had a marked disinclination to speak of that afternoon
or of anything that was said by Victor Stott during
those six momentous hours of expression. It is
evident that Challis’s attitude to Victor Stott
was not unlike the attitude of Captain Wallis to Victor
Stott’s father on the occasion of Hampdenshire’s
historic match with Surrey. “This man will
have to be barred,” Wallis said. “It
means the end of cricket.” Challis, in effect,
thought that if Victor Stott were encouraged, it would
mean the end of research, philosophy, all the mystery,
idealism, and joy of life. Once, and once only,
did Challis give me any idea of what he had learned
during that afternoon’s colloquy, and the substance
of what Challis then told me will be found at the
end of this volume.)