My brother told me afterwards that
more than once during the summer vacation he had seriously
considered with himself the propriety of changing
his rooms at Magdalen Hall. He had thought that
it might thus be possible for him to get rid at once
of the memory of the apparition, and of the fear of
any reappearance of it. He could either have moved
into another set of rooms in the Hall itself, or else
gone into lodgings in the towna usual
proceeding, I am told, for gentlemen near the end
of their course at Oxford. Would to God that he
had indeed done so! but with the supineness which
has, I fear, my dear Edward, been too frequently a
characteristic of our family, he shrank from the trouble
such a course would involve, and the opening of the
autumn term found him still in his old rooms.
You will forgive me for entering here on a very brief
description of your father’s sitting-room.
It is, I think, necessary for the proper understanding
of the incidents that follow. It was not a large
room, though probably the finest in the small buildings
of Magdalen Hall, and panelled from floor to ceiling
with oak which successive generations had obscured
by numerous coats of paint. On one side were
two windows having an aspect on to New College Lane,
and fitted with deep cushioned seats in the recesses.
Outside these windows there were boxes of flowers,
the brightness of which formed in the summer term
a pretty contrast to the grey and crumbling stone,
and afforded pleasure at once to the inmate and to
passers-by. Along nearly the whole length of
the wall opposite to the windows, some tenant in years
long past had had mahogany book-shelves placed, reaching
to a height of perhaps five feet from the floor.
They were handsomely made in the style of the eighteenth
century and pleased my brother’s taste.
He had always exhibited a partiality for books, and
the fine library at Worth Maltravers had no doubt
contributed to foster his tastes in that direction.
At the time of which I write he had formed a small
collection for himself at Oxford, paying particular
attention to the bindings, and acquiring many excellent
specimens of that art, principally I think, from Messrs.
Payne & Foss, the celebrated London booksellers.
Towards the end of the autumn term,
having occasion one cold day to take down a volume
of Plato from its shelf, he found to his surprise that
the book was quite warm. A closer examination
easily explained to him the reasonnamely,
that the flue of a chimney, passing behind one end
of the bookcase, sensibly heated not only the wall
itself, but also the books in the shelves. Although
he had been in his rooms now near three years, he
had never before observed this fact; partly, no doubt,
because the books in these shelves were seldom handled,
being more for show as specimens of bindings than
for practical use. He was somewhat annoyed at
this discovery, fearing lest such a heat, which in
moderation is beneficial to books, might through its
excess warp the leather or otherwise injure the bindings.
Mr. Gaskell was sitting with him at the time of the
discovery, and indeed it was for his use that my brother
had taken down the volume of Plato. He strongly
advised that the bookcase should be moved, and suggested
that it would be better to place it across that end
of the room where the pianoforte then stood. They
examined it and found that it would easily admit of
removal, being, in fact, only the frame of a bookcase,
and showing at the back the painted panelling of the
wall. Mr. Gaskell noted it as curious that all
the shelves were fixed and immovable except one at
the end, which had been fitted with the ordinary arrangement
allowing its position to be altered at will.
My brother thought that the change would improve the
appearance of his rooms, besides being advantageous
for the books, and gave instructions to the college
upholsterer to have the necessary work carried out
at once.
The two young men had resumed their
musical studies, and had often played the “Areopagita”
and other music of Graziani since their return to
Oxford in the Autumn. They remarked, however,
that the chair no longer creaked during the Gagliardaand,
in fact, that no unusual occurrence whatever attended
its performance. At times they were almost tempted
to doubt the accuracy of their own remembrances, and
to consider as entirely mythical the mystery which
had so much disturbed them in the summer term.
My brother had also pointed out to Mr. Gaskell my discovery
that the coat of arms on the outside of the music-book
was identical with that which his fancy portrayed
on the musicians’ gallery. He readily admitted
that he must at some time have noticed and afterwards
forgotten the blazon on the book, and that an unconscious
reminiscence of it had no doubt inspired his imagination
in this instance. He rebuked my brother for having
agitated me unnecessarily by telling me at all of
so idle a tale; and was pleased to write a few lines
to me at Worth Maltravers, felicitating me on my shrewdness
of perception, but speaking banteringly of the whole
matter.
On the evening of the 14th of November
my brother and his friend were sitting talking in
the former’s room. The position of the bookcase
had been changed on the morning of that day, and Mr.
Gaskell had come round to see how the books looked
when placed at the end instead of at the side of the
room. He had applauded the new arrangement, and
the young men sat long over the fire, with a bottle
of college port and a dish of medlars which I had
sent my brother from our famous tree in the Upper
Croft at Worth Maltravers. Later on they fell
to music, and played a variety of pieces, performing
also the “Areopagita” suite.
Mr. Gaskell before he left complimented John on the
improvement which the alteration in the place of the
bookcase had made in his room, saying, “Not only
do the books in their present place very much enhance
the general appearance of the room, but the change
seems to me to have affected also a marked acoustical
improvement. The oak panelling now exposed on
the side of the room has given a resonant property
to the wall which is peculiarly responsive to the
tones of your violin. While you were playing
the Gagliarda to-night, I could almost have
imagined that someone in an adjacent room was playing
the same air with a sordino, so distinct was
the echo.”
Shortly after this he left.
My brother partly undressed himself
in his bedroom, which adjoined, and then returning
to his sitting-room, pulled the large wicker chair
in front of the fire, and sat there looking at the
glowing coals, and thinking perhaps of Miss Constance
Temple. The night promised to be very cold, and
the wind whistled down the chimney, increasing the
comfortable sensation of the clear fire. He sat
watching the ruddy reflection of the firelight dancing
on the panelled wall, when he noticed that a picture
placed where the end of the bookcase formerly stood
was not truly hung, and needed adjustment. A
picture hung askew was particularly offensive to his
eyes, and he got up at once to alter it. He remembered
as he went up to it that at this precise spot four
months ago he had lost sight of the man’s figure
which he saw rise from the wicker chair, and at the
memory felt an involuntary shudder. This reminiscence
probably influenced his fancy also in another direction;
for it seemed to him that very faintly, as though
played far off, and with the sordino, he could
hear the air of the Gagliarda. He put one
hand behind the picture to steady it, and as he did
so his finger struck a very slight projection in the
wall. He pulled the picture a little to one side,
and saw that what he had touched was the back of a
small hinge sunk in the wall, and almost obliterated
with many coats of paint. His curiosity was excited,
and he took a candle from the table and examined the
wall carefully. Inspection soon showed him another
hinge a little further up, and by degrees he perceived
that one of the panels had been made at some time
in the past to open, and serve probably as the door
of a cupboard. At this point he assured me that
a feverish anxiety to re-open this cupboard door took
possession of him, and that the intense excitement
filled his mind which we experience on the eve of a
discovery which we fancy may produce important results.
He loosened the paint in the cracks with a penknife,
and attempted to press open the door; but his instrument
was not adequate to such a purpose, and all his efforts
remained ineffective. His excitement had now reached
an overmastering pitch; for he anticipated, though
he knew not why, some strange discovery to be made
in this sealed cupboard. He looked round the room
for some weapon with which to force the door, and at
length with his penknife cut away sufficient wood
at the joint to enable him to insert the end of the
poker in the hole. The clock in the New College
Tower struck one at the exact moment when with a sharp
effort he thus forced open the door. It appeared
never to have had a fastening, but merely to have
been stuck fast by the accumulation of paint.
As he bent it slowly back upon the rusted hinges his
heart beat so fast that he could scarcely catch his
breath, though he was conscious all the while of a
ludicrous aspect of his position, knowing that it was
most probable that the cavity within would be found
empty. The cupboard was small but very deep,
and in the obscure light seemed at first to contain
nothing except a small heap of dust and cobwebs.
His sense of disappointment was keen as he thrust
his hand into it, but changed again in a moment to
breathless interest on feeling something solid in what
he had imagined to be only an accumulation of mould
and dirt. He snatched up a candle, and holding
this in one hand, with the other pulled out an object
from the cupboard and put it on the table, covered
as it was with the curious drapery of black and clinging
cobwebs which I have seen adhering to bottles of old
wine. It lay there between the dish of medlars
and the decanter, veiled indeed with thick dust as
with a mantle, but revealing beneath it the shape
and contour of a violin.