THE PROGRESS AND RELAXATION OF MY SUBJECTION
I
The memory of last summer is presented
to me now as a series of pictures, some brilliant,
others vague, others again so uncertain that I cannot
be sure how far they are true memories of actual occurrences,
and how far they are interwoven with my thoughts and
dreams. I have, for instance, a recollection
of standing on Deane Hill and looking down over the
wide panorama of rural England, through a driving mist
of fine rain. This might well be counted among
true memories, were it not for the fact that clearly
associated with the picture is an image of myself grown
to enormous dimensions, a Brocken spectre that threatened
the world with titanic gestures of denouncement, and
I seem to remember that this figure was saying:
“All life runs through my fingers like a handful
of dry sand.” And yet the remembrance has
not the quality of a dream.
I was, undoubtedly, overwrought at
times. There were days when the sight of a book
filled me with physical nausea, with contempt for the
littleness, the narrow outlook, that seemed to me to
characterise every written work. I was fiercely,
but quite impotently, eager at such times to demonstrate
the futility of all the philosophy ranged on the rough
wooden shelves in my gloomy sitting-room. I would
walk up and down and gesticulate, struggling, fighting
to make clear to myself what a true philosophy should
set forth. I felt at such times that all the knowledge
I needed for so stupendous a task was present with
me in some inexplicable way, was even pressing upon
me, but that my brain was so clogged and heavy that
not one idea of all that priceless wisdom could be
expressed in clear thought. “I have never
been taught to think,” I would complain, “I
have never perfected the machinery of thought,”
and then some dictum thrown out haphazard by the Wonder-his
conception of light conversation-would
recur to me, and I would realise that however well
I had been trained, my limitations would remain, that
I was an undeveloped animal, only one stage higher
than a totem-fearing savage, a creature of small possibilities,
incapable of dealing with great problems.
Once the Wonder said to me, in a rare
moment of lucid condescension to my feeble intellect,
“You figure space as a void in three dimensions,
and time as a line that runs across it, and all other
conceptions you relegate to that measure.”
He implied that this was a cumbrous machinery which
had no relation to reality, and could define nothing.
He told me that his idea of force, for example, was
a pure abstraction, for which there was no figure
in my mental outfit.
Such pronouncements as these left
me struggling like a drowning man in deep water.
I felt that it must be possible for me to come
to the surface, but I could do nothing but flounder;
beating fiercely with limbs that were so powerful
and yet so utterly useless. I saw that my very
metaphors symbolised my feebleness; I had no terms
for my own mental condition; I was forced to resort
to some inapplicable physical analogy.
These fits of revolt against the limitations
of human thought grew more frequent as the summer
progressed. Day after day my self-sufficiency
and conceit were being crushed out of me. I was
always in the society of a boy of seven whom I was
forced to regard as immeasurably my intellectual superior.
There was no department of useful knowledge in which
I could compete with him. Compete indeed!
I might as well speak of a third-standard child competing
with Macaulay in a general knowledge paper.
“Useful knowledge,”
I have written, but the phrase needs definition.
I might have taught the Wonder many things, no doubt;
the habits of men in great cities, the aspects of
foreign countries, or the subtleties of cricket; but
when I was with him I felt-and my feelings
must have been typical-that such things
as these were of no account.
Towards the end of the summer, the
occasions upon which I was able to stimulate myself
into a condition of bearable complacency were very
rare. I often thought of Challis’s advice
to leave the Wonder alone. I should have gone
away if I had been free, but Victor Stott had a use
for me, and I was powerless to disobey him. I
feared him, but he controlled me at his will.
I feared him as I had once feared an imaginary God,
but I did not hate him.
One curious little fragment of wisdom
came to me as the result of my experience-a
useless fragment perhaps, but something that has in
one way altered my opinion of my fellow-men.
I have learnt that a measure of self-pride, of complacency,
is essential to every human being. I judge no
man any more for displaying an overweening vanity,
rather do I envy him this representative mark of his
humanity. The Wonder was completely and quite
inimitably devoid of any conceit, and the word ambition
had no meaning for him. It was inconceivable
that he should compare himself with any of his fellow-creatures,
and it was inconceivable that any honour they might
have lavished upon him would have given him one moment’s
pleasure. He was entirely alone among aliens who
were unable to comprehend him, aliens who could not
flatter him, whose opinions were valueless to him.
He had no more common ground on which to air his knowledge,
no more grounds for comparison by which to achieve
self-conceit than a man might have in a world tenanted
only by sheep. From what I have heard him say
on the subject of our slavery to preconceptions, I
think the metaphor of sheep is one which he might have
approved.
But the result of all this, so far
as I am concerned, is a feeling of admiration for
those men who are capable of such magnificent approval
for themselves, the causes they espouse, their family,
their country, and their species; it is an approval
which I fear I can never again attain in full measure.
I have seen possibilities which have
enforced a humbleness that is not good for my happiness
nor conducive to my development. Henceforward
I will espouse the cause of vanity. It is only
the vain who deprecate vanity in others.
But there were times in the early
period of my association with Victor Stott when I
rebelled vigorously against his complacent assumption
of my ignorance.
II
May was a gloriously fine month, and
we were much out of doors. Unfortunately, except
for one fortnight in August, that was all the settled
weather we had that summer.
I remember sitting one afternoon staring
at the same pond that Ginger Stott had stared at when
he told me that the boy now beside me was a “blarsted
freak.”
The Wonder had said nothing that day,
but now he began to enunciate some of his incomprehensible
commonplaces in that thin, clear voice of his.
I wrote down what I could remember of his utterances
when I went home, but now I read them over again I
am exceedingly doubtful whether I reported him correctly.
There is, however, one dictum which seems clearly
phrased, and when I recall the scene, I remember trying
to push the induction he had started. The pronouncement,
as I have it written, is as follows:
“Pure deduction from a single
premiss, unaided by previous knowledge of the functions
of the terms used in the expansion of the argument,
is an act of creation, incontrovertible, and outside
the scope of human reasoning.”
I believe he meant to say-but
my notes are horribly confused-that logic
and philosophy were only relative, being dependent
always in a greater or less degree upon the test of
a material experiment for verification.
Here, as always, I find the Wonder’s
pronouncements very elusive. In one sense I see
that what I have quoted here is a self-evident proposition,
but I have the feeling that behind it there lies some
gleam of wisdom which throws a faint light on the
profound problem of existence.
I remember that in my own feeble way
I tried to analyse this statement, and for a time
I thought I had grasped one significant aspect of it.
It seemed to me that the possibility of conceiving
a philosophy that was not dependent for verification
upon material experiment-that is to say,
upon evidence afforded by the five senses-indicates
that there is something which is not matter; but that
since the development of such a philosophy is not
possible to our minds, we must argue that our dependence
upon matter is so intimate that it is almost impossible
to conceive that we are actuated by any impulse which
does not arise out of a material complex.
At the back of my mind there seemed
to be a thought that I could not focus, I trembled
on the verge of some great revelation that never came.
Through my thoughts there ran a thread
of reverence for the intelligence that had started
my speculations. If only he could speak in terms
that I could understand.
I looked round at the Wonder.
He was, as usual, apparently lost in abstraction,
and quite unconscious of my regard.
The wind was strong on the Common,
and he sniffed once or twice and then wiped his nose.
He did not use a handkerchief.
It came to me at the moment that he
was no more than a vulgar little village boy.
III
There were few incidents to mark the
progress of that summer. I marked the course
of time by my own thoughts and feelings, especially
by my growing submission to the control of the Wonder.
It was curious to recall that I had
once thought of correcting the Wonder’s manners,
of administering, perhaps, a smacking. That was
a fault of ignorance. I had often erred in the
same way in other experiences of life, but I had not
taken the lesson to heart. I remember at school
our “head” taking us-I was in
the lower fifth then-in Latin verse.
He rebuked me for a false quantity, and I, very cocksure,
disputed the point and read my line. The head
pointed out very gravely that I had been misled by
an English analogy in my pronunciation of the word
“maritus,” and I grew very hot and
ashamed and apologetic. I feel much the same
now when I think of my early attitude towards the Wonder.
But this time, I think, I have profited by my experience.
There is, however, one incident which
in the light of subsequent events it seems worth while
to record.
One afternoon in early July, when
the sky had lifted sufficiently for us to attempt
some sort of a walk, we made our way down through the
sodden woods in the direction of Deane Hill.
As we were emerging into the lane
at the foot of the slope, I saw the Harrison idiot
lurking behind the trunk of a big beech. This
was only the third time I had seen him since I drove
him away from the farm, and on the two previous occasions
he had not come close to us.
This time he had screwed up his courage
to follow us. As we climbed the lane I saw him
slouching up the hedge-side behind us.
The Wonder took no notice, and we
continued our way in silence.
When we reached the prospect at the
end of the hill, where the ground falls away like
a cliff and you have a bird’s-eye view of two
counties, we sat down on the steps of the monument
erected in honour of those Hampdenshire men whose
lives were thrown away in the South-African war.
That view always has a soothing effect
upon me, and I gave myself up to an ecstasy of contemplation
and forgot, for a few moments, the presence of the
Wonder, and the fact that the idiot had followed us.
I was recalled to existence by the
sound of a foolish, conciliatory mumbling, and looked
round to see the leering face of the Harrison idiot
ogling the Wonder from the corner of the plinth.
The Wonder was between me and the idiot, but he was
apparently oblivious of either of us.
I was about to rise and drive the
idiot away, but the Wonder, still staring out at some
distant horizon, said quietly, “Let him be.”
I was astonished, but I sat still and awaited events.
The idiot behaved much as I have seen
a very young and nervous puppy behave.
He came within a few feet of us, gurgling
and crooning, flapping his hands and waggling his
great head; his uneasy eyes wandered from the Wonder
to me and back again, but it was plainly the Wonder
whom he wished to propitiate. Then he suddenly
backed as if he had dared too much, flopped on to
the wet grass and regarded us both with foolish, goggling
eyes. For a few seconds he lay still, and then
he began to squirm along the ground towards us, a
few inches at a time, stopping every now and again
to bleat and gurgle with that curious, crooning note
which he appeared to think would pacificate the object
of his overtures.
I stood by, as it were; ready to obey
the first hint that the presence of this horrible
creature was distasteful to the Wonder, but he gave
no sign.
The idiot had come within five or
six feet of us, wriggling himself along the wet grass,
before the Wonder looked at him. The look when
it came was one of those deliberate, intentional stares
which made one feel so contemptible and insignificant.
The idiot evidently regarded this
look as a sign of encouragement. He knelt up,
began to flap his hands and changed his crooning note
to a pleased, emphatic bleat.
“A-ba-ba,” he
blattered, and made uncouth gestures, by which I think
he meant to signify that he wanted the Wonder to come
and play with him.
Still the Wonder gave no sign, but
his gaze never wavered, and though the idiot was plainly
not intimidated, he never met that gaze for more than
a second or two. Nevertheless he came on, walking
now on his knees, and at last stretched out a hand
to touch the boy he so curiously desired for a playmate.
That broke the spell. The Wonder
drew back quickly-he never allowed one
to touch him-got up and climbed two or three
steps higher up the base of the monument. “Send
him away,” he said to me.
“That’ll do,” I
said threateningly to the idiot, and at the sound of
my voice and the gesture of my hand, he blenched,
yelped, rolled over away from me, and then got to
his feet and shambled off for several yards before
stopping to regard us once more with his pacificatory,
disgusting ogle.
“Send him away,” repeated
the Wonder, as I hesitated, and I rose to my feet
and pretended to pick up a stone.
That was enough. The idiot yelped
again and made off. This time he did not stop,
though he looked over his shoulder several times as
he lolloped away among the low gorse, to which look
I replied always with the threat of an imaginary stone.
The Wonder made no comment on the
incident as we walked home. He had shown no sign
of fear. It occurred to me that my guardianship
of him was merely a convenience, not a protection
from any danger.
IV
As time went on it became increasingly
clear to me that my chance of obtaining the Wonder’s
confidence was becoming more and more remote.
At first he had replied to my questions;
usually, it is true, by no more than an inclination
of his head, but he soon ceased to make even this
acknowledgment of my presence.
So I fell by degrees into a persistent
habit of silence, admitted my submission by obtruding
neither remark nor question upon my constant companion,
and gave up my intention of using the Wonder as a means
to gratify my curiosity concerning the problem of
existence.
Once or twice I saw Crashaw at a distance.
He undoubtedly recognised the Wonder, and I think
he would have liked to come up and rebuke him-perhaps
me, also; but probably he lacked the courage.
He would hover within sight of us for a few minutes,
scowling, and then stalk away. He gave me the
impression of being a dangerous man, a thwarted fanatic,
brooding over his defeat. If I had been Mrs. Stott,
I should have feared the intrusion of Crashaw more
than the foolish overtures of the Harrison idiot.
But there was, of course, the Wonder’s compelling
power to be reckoned with, in the case of Crashaw.
V
Challis came back in early September,
and it was he who first coaxed, and then goaded me
into rebellion.
Challis did not come too soon.
At the end of August I was seeing
visions, not pleasant, inspiriting visions, but the
indefinite, perplexing shapes of delirium.
I think it must have been in August
that I stood on Deane Hill, through an afternoon of
fine, driving rain, and had a vision of myself playing
tricks with the sands of life.
I had begun to lose my hold on reality.
Silence, contemplation, a long-continued wrestle with
the profound problems of life, were combining to break
up the intimacy of life and matter, and my brain was
not of the calibre to endure the strain.
Challis saw at once what ailed me.
He came up to the farm one morning
at twelve o’clock. The date was, I believe,
the twelfth of September. It was a brooding, heavy
morning, with half a gale of wind blowing from the
south-west, but it had not rained, and I was out with
the Wonder when Challis arrived.
He waited for me and talked to the
flattered Mrs. Berridge, remonstrated kindly with
her husband for his neglect of the farm, and incidentally
gave him a rebate on the rent.
When I came in, he insisted that I
should come to lunch with him at Challis Court.
I consented, but stipulated that I
must be back at Pym by three o’clock to accompany
the Wonder for his afternoon walk.
Challis looked at me curiously, but
allowed the stipulation.
We hardly spoke as we walked down
the hill-the habit of silence had grown
upon me, but after lunch Challis spoke out his mind.
On that occasion I hardly listened
to him, but he came up to the farm again after tea
and marched me off to dinner at the Court. I was
strangely plastic when commanded, but when he suggested
that I should give up my walks with the Wonder, go
away ... I smiled and said “Impossible,”
as though that ended the matter.
Challis, however, persisted, and I
suppose I was not too far gone to listen to him.
I remember his saying: “That problem is
not for you or me or any man living to solve by introspection.
Our work is to add knowledge little by little, data
here and there, for future evidence.”
The phrase struck me, because the
Wonder had once said “There are no data,”
when in the early days I had asked him whether he could
say definitely if there was any future existence possible
for us?
Now Challis put it to me that our
work was to find data, that every little item of real
knowledge added to the feeble store man has accumulated
in his few thousand years of life, was a step, the
greatest step any man could possibly make.
“But could we not get, not a
small but a very important item, from Victor Stott?”
Challis shook his head. “He
is too many thousands of years ahead of us,”
he said. “We can only bridge the gap by
many centuries of patient toil. If a revelation
were made to us, we should not understand it.”
So, by degrees, Challis’s influence
took possession of me and roused me to self-assertion.
One morning, half in dread, I stayed
at home and read a novel-no other reading
could hold my attention-philosophy had become
nauseating.
I expected to see the strange little
figure of the Wonder come across the Common, but he
never came, nor did I receive any reproach from Ellen
Mary. I think she had forgotten her fear of the
Harrison idiot.
Nevertheless, I did not give up my
guardianship all at once. Three times after that
morning I took the Wonder for a walk. He made
no allusion to my défalcations. Indeed he
never spoke. He relinquished me as he had taken
me up, without comment or any expression of feeling.
VI
On the twenty-ninth of September I
went down to Challis Court and stayed there for a
week. Then I returned for a few days to Wood Farm
in order to put my things together and pack my books.
I had decided to go to Cairo for the winter with Challis.
At half-past one o’clock on
Thursday, the eighth of October, I was in the sitting-room,
when I saw the figure of Mrs. Stott coming across the
Common. She came with a little stumbling run.
I could see that she was agitated even before she
reached the farmyard gate.