By what means the papers out of which
I have made a connected story came into my hands is
the last point which the reader will learn from these
pages. But it is necessary to prefix to my extracts
from them a statement of the form in which I possess
them.
They consist, then, partly of a series
of collections for a book of travels, such a volume
as was a common product of the forties and fifties.
Horace Marryat’s Journal of a Residence in
Jutland and the Danish Isles is a fair specimen
of the class to which I allude. These books usually
treated of some unknown district on the Continent.
They were illustrated with woodcuts or steel plates.
They gave details of hotel accommodation and of means
of communication, such as we now expect to find in
any well-regulated guide-book, and they dealt largely
in reported conversations with intelligent foreigners,
racy innkeepers, and garrulous peasants. In a
word, they were chatty.
Begun with the idea of furnishing
material for such a book, my papers as they progressed
assumed the character of a record of one single personal
experience, and this record was continued up to the
very eve, almost, of its termination.
The writer was a Mr Wraxall.
For my knowledge of him I have to depend entirely
on the evidence his writings afford, and from these
I deduce that he was a man past middle age, possessed
of some private means, and very much alone in the
world. He had, it seems, no settled abode in
England, but was a denizen of hotels and boarding-houses.
It is probable that he entertained the idea of settling
down at some future time which never came; and I think
it also likely that the Pantechnicon fire in the early
seventies must have destroyed a great deal that would
have thrown light on his antecedents, for he refers
once or twice to property of his that was warehoused
at that establishment.
It is further apparent that Mr Wraxall
had published a book, and that it treated of a holiday
he had once taken in Brittany. More than this
I cannot say about his work, because a diligent search
in bibliographical works has convinced me that it
must have appeared either anonymously or under a pseudonym.
As to his character, it is not difficult
to form some superficial opinion. He must have
been an intelligent and cultivated man. It seems
that he was near being a Fellow of his college at OxfordBrasenose,
as I judge from the Calendar. His besetting fault
was pretty clearly that of over-inquisitiveness, possibly
a good fault in a traveller, certainly a fault for
which this traveller paid dearly enough in the end.
On what proved to be his last expedition,
he was plotting another book. Scandinavia, a
region not widely known to Englishmen forty years ago,
had struck him as an interesting field. He must
have alighted on some old books of Swedish history
or memoirs, and the idea had struck him that there
was room for a book descriptive of travel in Sweden,
interspersed with episodes from the history of some
of the great Swedish families. He procured letters
of introduction, therefore, to some persons of quality
in Sweden, and set out thither in the early summer
of 1863.
Of his travels in the North there
is no need to speak, nor of his residence of some
weeks in Stockholm. I need only mention that some
savant resident there put him on the track of
an important collection of family papers belonging
to the proprietors of an ancient manor-house in Vestergothland,
and obtained for him permission to examine them.
The manor-house, or herrgard,
in question is to be called Rabaeck (pronounced something
like Roebeck), though that is not its name. It
is one of the best buildings of its kind in all the
country, and the picture of it in Dahlenberg’s
Suecia antiqua et moderna, engraved in 1694,
shows it very much as the tourist may see it today.
It was built soon after 1600, and is, roughly speaking,
very much like an English house of that period in
respect of materialred-brick with stone
facingsand style. The man who built
it was a scion of the great house of De la Gardie,
and his descendants possess it still. De la Gardie
is the name by which I will designate them when mention
of them becomes necessary.
They received Mr Wraxall with great
kindness and courtesy, and pressed him to stay in
the house as long as his researches lasted. But,
preferring to be independent, and mistrusting his powers
of conversing in Swedish, he settled himself at the
village inn, which turned out quite sufficiently comfortable,
at any rate during the summer months. This arrangement
would entail a short walk daily to and from the manor-house
of something under a mile. The house itself stood
in a park, and was protectedwe should
say grown upwith large old timber.
Near it you found the walled garden, and then entered
a close wood fringing one of the small lakes with
which the whole country is pitted. Then came the
wall of the demesne, and you climbed a steep knolla
knob of rock lightly covered with soiland
on the top of this stood the church, fenced in with
tall dark trees. It was a curious building to
English eyes. The nave and aisles were low, and
filled with pews and galleries. In the western
gallery stood the handsome old organ, gaily painted,
and with silver pipes. The ceiling was flat,
and had been adorned by a seventeenth-century artist
with a strange and hideous ‘Last Judgement’,
full of lurid flames, falling cities, burning ships,
crying souls, and brown and smiling demons. Handsome
brass coronae hung from the roof; the pulpit
was like a doll’s-house covered with little painted
wooden cherubs and saints; a stand with three hour-glasses
was hinged to the preacher’s desk. Such
sights as these may be seen in many a church in Sweden
now, but what distinguished this one was an addition
to the original building. At the eastern end
of the north aisle the builder of the manor-house had
erected a mausoleum for himself and his family.
It was a largish eight-sided building, lighted by
a series of oval windows, and it had a domed roof,
topped by a kind of pumpkin-shaped object rising into
a spire, a form in which Swedish architects greatly
delighted. The roof was of copper externally,
and was painted black, while the walls, in common
with those of the church, were staringly white.
To this mausoleum there was no access from the church.
It had a portal and steps of its own on the northern
side.
Past the churchyard the path to the
village goes, and not more than three or four minutes
bring you to the inn door.
On the first day of his stay at Rabaeck
Mr Wraxall found the church door open, and made these
notes of the interior which I have epitomized.
Into the mausoleum, however, he could not make his
way. He could by looking through the keyhole
just descry that there were fine marble effigies
and sarcophagi of copper, and a wealth of armorial
ornament, which made him very anxious to spend some
time in investigation.
The papers he had come to examine
at the manor-house proved to be of just the kind he
wanted for his book. There were family correspondence,
journals, and account-books of the earliest owners
of the estate, very carefully kept and clearly written,
full of amusing and picturesque detail. The first
De la Gardie appeared in them as a strong and capable
man. Shortly after the building of the mansion
there had been a period of distress in the district,
and the peasants had risen and attacked several chateaux
and done some damage. The owner of Rabaeck took
a leading part in supressing trouble, and there was
reference to executions of ring-leaders and severe
punishments inflicted with no sparing hand.
The portrait of this Magnus de la
Gardie was one of the best in the house, and Mr Wraxall
studied it with no little interest after his day’s
work. He gives no detailed description of it,
but I gather that the face impressed him rather by
its power than by its beauty or goodness; in fact,
he writes that Count Magnus was an almost phenomenally
ugly man.
On this day Mr Wraxall took his supper
with the family, and walked back in the late but still
bright evening.
‘I must remember,’ he
writes, ’to ask the sexton if he can let me into
the mausoleum at the church. He evidently has
access to it himself, for I saw him tonight standing
on the steps, and, as I thought, locking or unlocking
the door.’
I find that early on the following
day Mr Wraxall had some conversation with his landlord.
His setting it down at such length as he does surprised
me at first; but I soon realized that the papers I
was reading were, at least in their beginning, the
materials for the book he was meditating, and that
it was to have been one of those quasi-journalistic
productions which admit of the introduction of an admixture
of conversational matter.
His object, he says, was to find out
whether any traditions of Count Magnus de la Gardie
lingered on in the scenes of that gentleman’s
activity, and whether the popular estimate of him were
favourable or not. He found that the Count was
decidedly not a favourite. If his tenants came
late to their work on the days which they owed to him
as Lord of the Manor, they were set on the wooden
horse, or flogged and branded in the manor-house yard.
One or two cases there were of men who had occupied
lands which encroached on the lord’s domain,
and whose houses had been mysteriously burnt on a
winter’s night, with the whole family inside.
But what seemed to dwell on the innkeeper’s
mind mostfor he returned to the subject
more than oncewas that the Count had been
on the Black Pilgrimage, and had brought something
or someone back with him.
You will naturally inquire, as Mr
Wraxall did, what the Black Pilgrimage may have been.
But your curiosity on the point must remain unsatisfied
for the time being, just as his did. The landlord
was evidently unwilling to give a full answer, or
indeed any answer, on the point, and, being called
out for a moment, trotted out with obvious alacrity,
only putting his head in at the door a few minutes
afterwards to say that he was called away to Skara,
and should not be back till evening.
So Mr Wraxall had to go unsatisfied
to his day’s work at the manor-house. The
papers on which he was just then engaged soon put his
thoughts into another channel, for he had to occupy
himself with glancing over the correspondence between
Sophia Albertina in Stockholm and her married cousin
Ulrica Leonora at Rabaeck in the years 1705-10.
The letters were of exceptional interest from the
light they threw upon the culture of that period in
Sweden, as anyone can testify who has read the full
edition of them in the publications of the Swedish
Historical Manuscripts Commission.
In the afternoon he had done with
these, and after returning the boxes in which they
were kept to their places on the shelf, he proceeded,
very naturally, to take down some of the volumes nearest
to them, in order to determine which of them had best
be his principal subject of investigation next day.
The shelf he had hit upon was occupied mostly by a
collection of account-books in the writing of the first
Count Magnus. But one among them was not an account-book,
but a book of alchemical and other tracts in another
sixteenth-century hand. Not being very familiar
with alchemical literature, Mr Wraxall spends much
space which he might have spared in setting out the
names and beginnings of the various treatises:
The book of the Phoenix, book of the Thirty Words,
book of the Toad, book of Miriam, Turba philosophorum,
and so forth; and then he announces with a good deal
of circumstance his delight at finding, on a leaf
originally left blank near the middle of the book,
some writing of Count Magnus himself headed ‘Liber
nigrae peregrinationis’. It is true
that only a few lines were written, but there was quite
enough to show that the landlord had that morning
been referring to a belief at least as old as the
time of Count Magnus, and probably shared by him.
This is the English of what was written:
’If any man desires to obtain
a long life, if he would obtain a faithful messenger
and see the blood of his enemies, it is necessary that
he should first go into the city of Chorazin, and
there salute the prince....’ Here there
was an erasure of one word, not very thoroughly done,
so that Mr Wraxall felt pretty sure that he was right
in reading it as aeris (’of the air’).
But there was no more of the text copied, only a line
in Latin: Quaere reliqua hujus materiei inter
secretiora. (See the rest of this matter among
the more private things.)
It could not be denied that this threw
a rather lurid light upon the tastes and beliefs of
the Count; but to Mr Wraxall, separated from him by
nearly three centuries, the thought that he might have
added to his general forcefulness alchemy, and to
alchemy something like magic, only made him a more
picturesque figure, and when, after a rather prolonged
contemplation of his picture in the hall, Mr Wraxall
set out on his homeward way, his mind was full of
the thought of Count Magnus. He had no eyes for
his surroundings, no perception of the evening scents
of the woods or the evening light on the lake; and
when all of a sudden he pulled up short, he was astonished
to find himself already at the gate of the churchyard,
and within a few minutes of his dinner. His eyes
fell on the mausoleum.
‘Ah,’ he said, ’Count
Magnus, there you are. I should dearly like to
see you.’
‘Like many solitary men,’
he writes, ’I have a habit of talking to myself
aloud; and, unlike some of the Greek and Latin particles,
I do not expect an answer. Certainly, and perhaps
fortunately in this case, there was neither voice
nor any that regarded: only the woman who, I suppose,
was cleaning up the church, dropped some metallic
object on the floor, whose clang startled me.
Count Magnus, I think, sleeps sound enough.’
That same evening the landlord of
the inn, who had heard Mr Wraxall say that he wished
to see the clerk or deacon (as he would be called in
Sweden) of the parish, introduced him to that official
in the inn parlour. A visit to the De la Gardie
tomb-house was soon arranged for the next day, and
a little general conversation ensued.
Mr Wraxall, remembering that one function
of Scandinavian deacons is to teach candidates for
Confirmation, thought he would refresh his own memory
on a Biblical point.
‘Can you tell me,’ he said, ‘anything
about Chorazin?’
The deacon seemed startled, but readily
reminded him how that village had once been denounced.
‘To be sure,’ said Mr
Wraxall; ‘it is, I suppose, quite a ruin now?’
‘So I expect,’ replied
the deacon. ’I have heard some of our old
priests say that Antichrist is to be born there; and
there are tales’
‘Ah! what tales are those?’ Mr Wraxall
put in.
‘Tales, I was going to say,
which I have forgotten,’ said the deacon; and
soon after that he said good night.
The landlord was now alone, and at
Mr Wraxall’s mercy; and that inquirer was not
inclined to spare him.
‘Herr Nielsen,’ he said,
’I have found out something about the Black
Pilgrimage. You may as well tell me what you know.
What did the Count bring back with him?’
Swedes are habitually slow, perhaps,
in answering, or perhaps the landlord was an exception.
I am not sure; but Mr Wraxall notes that the landlord
spent at least one minute in looking at him before
he said anything at all. Then he came close up
to his guest, and with a good deal of effort he spoke:
’Mr Wraxall, I can tell you
this one little tale, and no morenot any
more. You must not ask anything when I have done.
In my grandfather’s timethat is,
ninety-two years agothere were two men
who said: “The Count is dead; we do not
care for him. We will go tonight and have a free
hunt in his wood”the long wood on
the hill that you have seen behind Rabaeck. Well,
those that heard them say this, they said: “No,
do not go; we are sure you will meet with persons
walking who should not be walking. They should
be resting, not walking.” These men laughed.
There were no forestmen to keep the wood, because
no one wished to live there. The family were
not here at the house. These men could do what
they wished.
’Very well, they go to the wood
that night. My grandfather was sitting here in
this room. It was the summer, and a light night.
With the window open, he could see out to the wood,
and hear.
’So he sat there, and two or
three men with him, and they listened. At first
they hear nothing at all; then they hear someoneyou
know how far away it isthey hear someone
scream, just as if the most inside part of his soul
was twisted out of him. All of them in the room
caught hold of each other, and they sat so for three-quarters
of an hour. Then they hear someone else, only
about three hundred ells off. They hear him laugh
out loud: it was not one of those two men that
laughed, and, indeed, they have all of them said that
it was not any man at all. After that they hear
a great door shut.
’Then, when it was just light
with the sun, they all went to the priest. They
said to him:
’"Father, put on your gown and
your ruff, and come to bury these men, Anders Bjornsen
and Hans Thorbjorn.”
’You understand that they were
sure these men were dead. So they went to the
woodmy grandfather never forgot this.
He said they were all like so many dead men themselves.
The priest, too, he was in a white fear. He said
when they came to him:
’"I heard one cry in the night,
and I heard one laugh afterwards. If I cannot
forget that, I shall not be able to sleep again.”
’So they went to the wood, and
they found these men on the edge of the wood.
Hans Thorbjorn was standing with his back against a
tree, and all the time he was pushing with his handspushing
something away from him which was not there.
So he was not dead. And they led him away, and
took him to the house at Nykjoping, and he died before
the winter; but he went on pushing with his hands.
Also Anders Bjornsen was there; but he was dead.
And I tell you this about Anders Bjornsen, that he
was once a beautiful man, but now his face was not
there, because the flesh of it was sucked away off
the bones. You understand that? My grandfather
did not forget that. And they laid him on the
bier which they brought, and they put a cloth over
his head, and the priest walked before; and they began
to sing the psalm for the dead as well as they could.
So, as they were singing the end of the first verse,
one fell down, who was carrying the head of the bier,
and the others looked back, and they saw that the
cloth had fallen off, and the eyes of Anders Bjornsen
were looking up, because there was nothing to close
over them. And this they could not bear.
Therefore the priest laid the cloth upon him, and sent
for a spade, and they buried him in that place.’
The next day Mr Wraxall records that
the deacon called for him soon after his breakfast,
and took him to the church and mausoleum. He noticed
that the key of the latter was hung on a nail just
by the pulpit, and it occurred to him that, as the
church door seemed to be left unlocked as a rule,
it would not be difficult for him to pay a second and
more private visit to the monuments if there proved
to be more of interest among them than could be digested
at first. The building, when he entered it, he
found not unimposing. The monuments, mostly large
erections of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
were dignified if luxuriant, and the epitaphs and
heraldry were copious. The central space of the
domed room was occupied by three copper sarcophagi,
covered with finely-engraved ornament. Two of
them had, as is commonly the case in Denmark and Sweden,
a large metal crucifix on the lid. The third,
that of Count Magnus, as it appeared, had, instead
of that, a full-length effigy engraved upon it, and
round the edge were several bands of similar ornament
representing various scenes. One was a battle,
with cannon belching out smoke, and walled towns,
and troops of pikemen. Another showed an execution.
In a third, among trees, was a man running at full
speed, with flying hair and outstretched hands.
After him followed a strange form; it would be hard
to say whether the artist had intended it for a man,
and was unable to give the requisite similitude, or
whether it was intentionally made as monstrous as
it looked. In view of the skill with which the
rest of the drawing was done, Mr Wraxall felt inclined
to adopt the latter idea. The figure was unduly
short, and was for the most part muffled in a hooded
garment which swept the ground. The only part
of the form which projected from that shelter was
not shaped like any hand or arm. Mr Wraxall compares
it to the tentacle of a devil-fish, and continues:
’On seeing this, I said to myself, “This,
then, which is evidently an allegorical representation
of some kinda fiend pursuing a hunted
soulmay be the origin of the story of Count
Magnus and his mysterious companion. Let us see
how the huntsman is pictured: doubtless it will
be a demon blowing his horn.’” But, as
it turned out, there was no such sensational figure,
only the semblance of a cloaked man on a hillock,
who stood leaning on a stick, and watching the hunt
with an interest which the engraver had tried to express
in his attitude.
Mr Wraxall noted the finely-worked
and massive steel padlocksthree in numberwhich
secured the sarcophagus. One of them, he saw,
was detached, and lay on the pavement. And then,
unwilling to delay the deacon longer or to waste his
own working-time, he made his way onward to the manor-house.
‘It is curious,’ he notes,
’how, on retracing a familiar path, one’s
thoughts engross one to the absolute exclusion of surrounding
objects. Tonight, for the second time, I had
entirely failed to notice where I was going (I had
planned a private visit to the tomb-house to copy the
epitaphs), when I suddenly, as it were, awoke to consciousness,
and found myself (as before) turning in at the churchyard
gate, and, I believe, singing or chanting some such
words as, “Are you awake, Count Magnus?
Are you asleep, Count Magnus?” and then something
more which I have failed to recollect. It seemed
to me that I must have been behaving in this nonsensical
way for some time.’
He found the key of the mausoleum
where he had expected to find it, and copied the greater
part of what he wanted; in fact, he stayed until the
light began to fail him.
‘I must have been wrong,’
he writes, ’in saying that one of the padlocks
of my Counts sarcophagus was unfastened; I see tonight
that two are loose. I picked both up, and laid
them carefully on the window-ledge, after trying unsuccessfully
to close them. The remaining one is still firm,
and, though I take it to be a spring lock, I cannot
guess how it is opened. Had I succeeded in undoing
it, I am almost afraid I should have taken the liberty
of opening the sarcophagus. It is strange, the
interest I feel in the personality of this, I fear,
somewhat ferocious and grim old noble.’
The day following was, as it turned
out, the last of Mr Wraxall’s stay at Rabaeck.
He received letters connected with certain investments
which made it desirable that he should return to England;
his work among the papers was practically done, and
travelling was slow. He decided, therefore, to
make his farewells, put some finishing touches to his
notes, and be off.
These finishing touches and farewells,
as it turned out, took more time than he had expected.
The hospitable family insisted on his staying to dine
with themthey dined at threeand
it was verging on half past six before he was outside
the iron gates of Rabaeck. He dwelt on every step
of his walk by the lake, determined to saturate himself,
now that he trod it for the last time, in the sentiment
of the place and hour. And when he reached the
summit of the churchyard knoll, he lingered for many
minutes, gazing at the limitless prospect of woods
near and distant, all dark beneath a sky of liquid
green. When at last he turned to go, the thought
struck him that surely he must bid farewell to Count
Magnus as well as the rest of the De la Gardies.
The church was but twenty yards away, and he knew
where the key of the mausoleum hung. It was not
long before he was standing over the great copper
coffin, and, as usual, talking to himself aloud:
’You may have been a bit of a rascal in your
time, Magnus,’ he was saying, ’but for
all that I should like to see you, or, rather’
‘Just at that instant,’
he says, ’I felt a blow on my foot. Hastily
enough I drew it back, and something fell on the pavement
with a clash. It was the third, the last of the
three padlocks which had fastened the sarcophagus.
I stooped to pick it up, andHeaven is my
witness that I am writing only the bare truthbefore
I had raised myself there was a sound of metal hinges
creaking, and I distinctly saw the lid shifting upwards.
I may have behaved like a coward, but I could not for
my life stay for one moment. I was outside that
dreadful building in less time than I can writealmost
as quickly as I could have saidthe words;
and what frightens me yet more, I could not turn the
key in the lock. As I sit here in my room noting
these facts, I ask myself (it was not twenty minutes
ago) whether that noise of creaking metal continued,
and I cannot tell whether it did or not. I only
know that there was something more than I have written
that alarmed me, but whether it was sound or sight
I am not able to remember. What is this that
I have done?’
Poor Mr Wraxall! He set out on
his journey to England on the next day, as he had
planned, and he reached England in safety; and yet,
as I gather from his changed hand and inconsequent
jottings, a broken man. One of the several small
note-books that have come to me with his papers gives,
not a key to, but a kind of inkling of, his experiences.
Much of his journey was made by canal-boat, and I
find not less than six painful attempts to enumerate
and describe his fellow-passengers. The entries
are of this kind:
24. Pastor of village
in Skane. Usual black coat and soft black hat.
25. Commercial traveller
from Stockholm going to Trollhaettan. Black
cloak, brown hat.
26. Man in long black
cloak, broad-leafed hat, very old-fashioned.
This entry is lined out, and a note
added: ’Perhaps identical with N.
Have not yet seen his face.’ On referring
to N, I find that he is a Roman priest in a cassock.
The net result of the reckoning is
always the same. Twenty-eight people appear in
the enumeration, one being always a man in a long black
cloak and broad hat, and another a ‘short figure
in dark cloak and hood’. On the other hand,
it is always noted that only twenty-six passengers
appear at meals, and that the man in the cloak is
perhaps absent, and the short figure is certainly
absent.
On reaching England, it appears that
Mr Wraxall landed at Harwich, and that he resolved
at once to put himself out of the reach of some person
or persons whom he never specifies, but whom he had
evidently come to regard as his pursuers. Accordingly
he took a vehicleit was a closed flynot
trusting the railway and drove across country to the
village of Belchamp St Paul. It was about nine
o’clock on a moonlight August night when he
neared the place. He was sitting forward, and
looking out of the window at the fields and thicketsthere
was little else to be seenracing past
him. Suddenly he came to a cross-road. At
the corner two figures were standing motionless; both
were in dark cloaks; the taller one wore a hat, the
shorter a hood. He had no time to see their faces,
nor did they make any motion that he could discern.
Yet the horse shied violently and broke into a gallop,
and Mr Wraxall sank back into his seat in something
like desperation. He had seen them before.
Arrived at Belchamp St Paul, he was
fortunate enough to find a decent furnished lodging,
and for the next twenty-four hours he lived, comparatively
speaking, in peace. His last notes were written
on this day. They are too disjointed and ejaculatory
to be given here in full, but the substance of them
is clear enough. He is expecting a visit from
his pursuershow or when he knows notand
his constant cry is ’What has he done?’
and ‘Is there no hope?’ Doctors, he knows,
would call him mad, policemen would laugh at him.
The parson is away. What can he do but lock his
door and cry to God?
People still remember last year at
Belchamp St Paul how a strange gentleman came one
evening in August years back; and how the next morning
but one he was found dead, and there was an inquest;
and the jury that viewed the body fainted, seven of
’em did, and none of ’em wouldn’t
speak to what they see, and the verdict was visitation
of God; and how the people as kep’ the ’ouse
moved out that same week, and went away from that
part. But they do not, I think, know that any
glimmer of light has ever been thrown, or could be
thrown, on the mystery. It so happened that last
year the little house came into my hands as part of
a legacy. It had stood empty since 1863, and
there seemed no prospect of letting it; so I had it
pulled down, and the papers of which I have given you
an abstract were found in a forgotten cupboard under
the window in the best bedroom.
‘OH, WHISTLE, AND I’LL COME TO YOU, MY
LAD’
’I suppose you will be getting
away pretty soon, now Full Term is over, Professor,’
said a person not in the story to the Professor of
Ontography, soon after they had sat down next to each
other at a feast in the hospitable hall of St James’s
College.
The Professor was young, neat, and precise in speech.
‘Yes,’ he said; ’my
friends have been making me take up golf this term,
and I mean to go to the East Coastin point
of fact to Burnstow(I dare say you know
it) for a week or ten days, to improve my game.
I hope to get off tomorrow.’
‘Oh, Parkins,’ said his
neighbour on the other side, ’if you are going
to Burnstow, I wish you would look at the site of
the Templars’ preceptory, and let me know if
you think it would be any good to have a dig there
in the summer.’
It was, as you might suppose, a person
of antiquarian pursuits who said this, but, since
he merely appears in this prologue, there is no need
to give his entitlements.
‘Certainly,’ said Parkins,
the Professor: ’if you will describe to
me whereabouts the site is, I will do my best to give
you an idea of the lie of the land when I get back;
or I could write to you about it, if you would tell
me where you are likely to be.’
’Don’t trouble to do that,
thanks. It’s only that I’m thinking
of taking my family in that direction in the Long,
and it occurred to me that, as very few of the English
preceptories have ever been properly planned, I might
have an opportunity of doing something useful on off-days.’
The Professor rather sniffed at the
idea that planning out a preceptory could be described
as useful. His neighbour continued:
’The siteI doubt
if there is anything showing above groundmust
be down quite close to the beach now. The sea
has encroached tremendously, as you know, all along
that bit of coast. I should think, from the map,
that it must be about three-quarters of a mile from
the Globe Inn, at the north end of the town.
Where are you going to stay?’
‘Well, at the Globe Inn,
as a matter of fact,’ said Parkins; ’I
have engaged a room there. I couldn’t get
in anywhere else; most of the lodging-houses are shut
up in winter, it seems; and, as it is, they tell me
that the only room of any size I can have is really
a double-bedded one, and that they haven’t a
corner in which to store the other bed, and so on.
But I must have a fairly large room, for I am taking
some books down, and mean to do a bit of work; and
though I don’t quite fancy having an empty bednot
to speak of twoin what I may call for the
time being my study, I suppose I can manage to rough
it for the short time I shall be there.’
‘Do you call having an extra
bed in your room roughing it, Parkins?’ said
a bluff person opposite. ’Look here, I shall
come down and occupy it for a bit; it’ll be
company for you.’
The Professor quivered, but managed
to laugh in a courteous manner.
’By all means, Rogers; there’s
nothing I should like better. But I’m afraid
you would find it rather dull; you don’t play
golf, do you?’
‘No, thank Heaven!’ said rude Mr Rogers.
’Well, you see, when I’m
not writing I shall most likely be out on the links,
and that, as I say, would be rather dull for you, I’m
afraid.’
’Oh, I don’t know!
There’s certain to be somebody I know in the
place; but, of course, if you don’t want me,
speak the word, Parkins; I shan’t be offended.
Truth, as you always tell us, is never offensive.’
Parkins was, indeed, scrupulously
polite and strictly truthful. It is to be feared
that Mr Rogers sometimes practised upon his knowledge
of these characteristics. In Parkins’s
breast there was a conflict now raging, which for
a moment or two did not allow him to answer. That
interval being over, he said:
’Well, if you want the exact
truth, Rogers, I was considering whether the room
I speak of would really be large enough to accommodate
us both comfortably; and also whether (mind, I shouldn’t
have said this if you hadn’t pressed me) you
would not constitute something in the nature of a
hindrance to my work.’
Rogers laughed loudly.
‘Well done, Parkins!’
he said. ’It’s all right. I promise
not to interrupt your work; don’t you disturb
yourself about that. No, I won’t come if
you don’t want me; but I thought I should do
so nicely to keep the ghosts off.’ Here
he might have been seen to wink and to nudge his next
neighbour. Parkins might also have been seen to
become pink. ’I beg pardon, Parkins,’
Rogers continued; ’I oughtn’t to have said
that. I forgot you didn’t like levity on
these topics.’
‘Well,’ Parkins said,
’as you have mentioned the matter, I freely own
that I do not like careless talk about what
you call ghosts. A man in my position,’
he went on, raising his voice a little, ’cannot,
I find, be too careful about appearing to sanction
the current beliefs on such subjects. As you
know, Rogers, or as you ought to know; for I think
I have never concealed my views’
‘No, you certainly have not,
old man,’ put in Rogers sotto voce.
’I hold that any
semblance, any appearance of concession to the view
that such things might exist is equivalent to a renunciation
of all that I hold most sacred. But I’m
afraid I have not succeeded in securing your attention.’
’Your undivided attention,
was what Dr Blimber actually said,’
Rogers interrupted, with every appearance of an earnest
desire for accuracy. ‘But I beg your pardon,
Parkins: I’m stopping you.’
‘No, not at all,’ said
Parkins. ’I don’t remember Blimber;
perhaps he was before my time. But I needn’t
go on. I’m sure you know what I mean.’
‘Yes, yes,’ said Rogers,
rather hastily’just so. We’ll
go into it fully at Burnstow, or somewhere.’
In repeating the above dialogue I
have tried to give the impression which it made on
me, that Parkins was something of an old womanrather
henlike, perhaps, in his little ways; totally destitute,
alas! of the sense of humour, but at the same time
dauntless and sincere in his convictions, and a man
deserving of the greatest respect. Whether or
not the reader has gathered so much, that was the
character which Parkins had.
On the following day Parkins did,
as he had hoped, succeed in getting away from his
college, and in arriving at Burnstow. He was made
welcome at the Globe Inn, was safely installed in
the large double-bedded room of which we have heard,
and was able before retiring to rest to arrange his
materials for work in apple-pie order upon a commodious
table which occupied the outer end of the room, and
was surrounded on three sides by windows looking out
seaward; that is to say, the central window looked
straight out to sea, and those on the left and right
commanded prospects along the shore to the north and
south respectively. On the south you saw the
village of Burnstow. On the north no houses were
to be seen, but only the beach and the low cliff backing
it. Immediately in front was a stripnot
considerableof rough grass, dotted with
old anchors, capstans, and so forth; then a broad
path; then the beach. Whatever may have been
the original distance between the Globe Inn and the
sea, not more than sixty yards now separated them.
The rest of the population of the
inn was, of course, a golfing one, and included few
elements that call for a special description.
The most conspicuous figure was, perhaps, that of
an ancien militaire, secretary of a London
club, and possessed of a voice of incredible strength,
and of views of a pronouncedly Protestant type.
These were apt to find utterance after his attendance
upon the ministrations of the Vicar, an estimable
man with inclinations towards a picturesque ritual,
which he gallantly kept down as far as he could out
of deference to East Anglian tradition.
Professor Parkins, one of whose principal
characteristics was pluck, spent the greater part
of the day following his arrival at Burnstow in what
he had called improving his game, in company with this
Colonel Wilson: and during the afternoonwhether
the process of improvement were to blame or not, I
am not surethe Colonel’s demeanour
assumed a colouring so lurid that even Parkins jibbed
at the thought of walking home with him from the links.
He determined, after a short and furtive look at that
bristling moustache and those incarnadined features,
that it would be wiser to allow the influences of
tea and tobacco to do what they could with the Colonel
before the dinner-hour should render a meeting inevitable.
‘I might walk home tonight along
the beach,’ he reflected’yes,
and take a lookthere will be light enough
for thatat the ruins of which Disney was
talking. I don’t exactly know where they
are, by the way; but I expect I can hardly help stumbling
on them.’
This he accomplished, I may say, in
the most literal sense, for in picking his way from
the links to the shingle beach his foot caught, partly
in a gorse-root and partly in a biggish stone, and
over he went. When he got up and surveyed his
surroundings, he found himself in a patch of somewhat
broken ground covered with small depressions and mounds.
These latter, when he came to examine them, proved
to be simply masses of flints embedded in mortar and
grown over with turf. He must, he quite rightly
concluded, be on the site of the preceptory he had
promised to look at. It seemed not unlikely to
reward the spade of the explorer; enough of the foundations
was probably left at no great depth to throw a good
deal of light on the general plan. He remembered
vaguely that the Templars, to whom this site had belonged,
were in the habit of building round churches, and
he thought a particular series of the humps or mounds
near him did appear to be arranged in something of
a circular form. Few people can resist the temptation
to try a little amateur research in a department quite
outside their own, if only for the satisfaction of
showing how successful they would have been had they
only taken it up seriously. Our Professor, however,
if he felt something of this mean desire, was also
truly anxious to oblige Mr Disney. So he paced
with care the circular area he had noticed, and wrote
down its rough dimensions in his pocket-book.
Then he proceeded to examine an oblong eminence which
lay east of the centre of the circle, and seemed to
his thinking likely to be the base of a platform or
altar. At one end of it, the northern, a patch
of the turf was goneremoved by some boy
or other creature ferae naturae. It might,
he thought, be as well to probe the soil here for
evidences of masonry, and he took out his knife and
began scraping away the earth. And now followed
another little discovery: a portion of soil fell
inward as he scraped, and disclosed a small cavity.
He lighted one match after another to help him to
see of what nature the hole was, but the wind was
too strong for them all. By tapping and scratching
the sides with his knife, however, he was able to
make out that it must be an artificial hole in masonry.
It was rectangular, and the sides, top, and bottom,
if not actually plastered, were smooth and regular.
Of course it was empty. No! As he withdrew
the knife he heard a metallic clink, and when he introduced
his hand it met with a cylindrical object lying on
the floor of the hole. Naturally enough, he picked
it up, and when he brought it into the light, now
fast fading, he could see that it, too, was of man’s
makinga metal tube about four inches long,
and evidently of some considerable age.
By the time Parkins had made sure
that there was nothing else in this odd receptacle,
it was too late and too dark for him to think of undertaking
any further search. What he had done had proved
so unexpectedly interesting that he determined to
sacrifice a little more of the daylight on the morrow
to archaeology. The object which he now had safe
in his pocket was bound to be of some slight value
at least, he felt sure.
Bleak and solemn was the view on which
he took a last look before starting homeward.
A faint yellow light in the west showed the links,
on which a few figures moving towards the club-house
were still visible, the squat martello tower, the
lights of Aldsey village, the pale ribbon of sands
intersected at intervals by black wooden groynings,
the dim and murmuring sea. The wind was bitter
from the north, but was at his back when he set out
for the Globe. He quickly rattled and clashed
through the shingle and gained the sand, upon which,
but for the groynings which had to be got over every
few yards, the going was both good and quiet.
One last look behind, to measure the distance he had
made since leaving the ruined Templars’ church,
showed him a prospect of company on his walk, in the
shape of a rather indistinct personage, who seemed
to be making great efforts to catch up with him, but
made little, if any, progress. I mean that there
was an appearance of running about his movements, but
that the distance between him and Parkins did not
seem materially to lessen. So, at least, Parkins
thought, and decided that he almost certainly did not
know him, and that it would be absurd to wait until
he came up. For all that, company, he began to
think, would really be very welcome on that lonely
shore, if only you could choose your companion.
In his unenlightened days he had read of meetings
in such places which even now would hardly bear thinking
of. He went on thinking of them, however, until
he reached home, and particularly of one which catches
most people’s fancy at some time of their childhood.
’Now I saw in my dream that Christian had gone
but a very little way when he saw a foul fiend coming
over the field to meet him.’ ‘What
should I do now,’ he thought, ’if I looked
back and caught sight of a black figure sharply defined
against the yellow sky, and saw that it had horns and
wings? I wonder whether I should stand or run
for it. Luckily, the gentleman behind is not
of that kind, and he seems to be about as far off now
as when I saw him first. Well, at this rate,
he won’t get his dinner as soon as I shall;
and, dear me! it’s within a quarter of an hour
of the time now. I must run!’
Parkins had, in fact, very little
time for dressing. When he met the Colonel at
dinner, Peaceor as much of her as that
gentleman could managereigned once more
in the military bosom; nor was she put to flight in
the hours of bridge that followed dinner, for Parkins
was a more than respectable player. When, therefore,
he retired towards twelve o’clock, he felt that
he had spent his evening in quite a satisfactory way,
and that, even for so long as a fortnight or three
weeks, life at the Globe would be supportable under
similar conditions’especially,’
thought he, ‘if I go on improving my game.’
As he went along the passages he met
the boots of the Globe, who stopped and said:
’Beg your pardon, sir, but as
I was abrushing your coat just now there was something
fell out of the pocket. I put it on your chest
of drawers, sir, in your room, sira piece
of a pipe or somethink of that, sir. Thank you,
sir. You’ll find it on your chest of drawers,
siryes, sir. Good night, sir.’
The speech served to remind Parkins
of his little discovery of that afternoon. It
was with some considerable curiosity that he turned
it over by the light of his candles. It was of
bronze, he now saw, and was shaped very much after
the manner of the modern dog-whistle; in fact it wasyes,
certainly it wasactually no more nor less
than a whistle. He put it to his lips, but it
was quite full of a fine, caked-up sand or earth,
which would not yield to knocking, but must be loosened
with a knife. Tidy as ever in his habits, Parkins
cleared out the earth on to a piece of paper, and
took the latter to the window to empty it out.
The night was clear and bright, as he saw when he
had opened the casement, and he stopped for an instant
to look at the sea and note a belated wanderer stationed
on the shore in front of the inn. Then he shut
the window, a little surprised at the late hours people
kept at Burnstow, and took his whistle to the light
again. Why, surely there were marks on it, and
not merely marks, but letters! A very little rubbing
rendered the deeply-cut inscription quite legible,
but the Professor had to confess, after some earnest
thought, that the meaning of it was as obscure to him
as the writing on the wall to Belshazzar. There
were legends both on the front and on the back of
the whistle.
‘I ought to be able to make
it out,’ he thought; ’but I suppose I am
a little rusty in my Latin. When I come to think
of it, I don’t believe I even know the word
for a whistle. The long one does seem simple enough.
It ought to mean: “Who is this who is coming?”
Well, the best way to find out is evidently to whistle
for him.’
He blew tentatively and stopped suddenly,
startled and yet pleased at the note he had elicited.
It had a quality of infinite distance in it, and,
soft as it was, he somehow felt it must be audible
for miles round. It was a sound, too, that seemed
to have the power (which many scents possess) of forming
pictures in the brain. He saw quite clearly for
a moment a vision of a wide, dark expanse at night,
with a fresh wind blowing, and in the midst a lonely
figurehow employed, he could not tell.
Perhaps he would have seen more had not the picture
been broken by the sudden surge of a gust of wind
against his casement, so sudden that it made him look
up, just in time to see the white glint of a seabird’s
wing somewhere outside the dark panes.
The sound of the whistle had so fascinated
him that he could not help trying it once more, this
time more boldly. The note was little, if at
all, louder than before, and repetition broke the illusionno
picture followed, as he had half hoped it might.
“But what is this? Goodness! what force
the wind can get up in a few minutes! What a tremendous
gust! There! I knew that window-fastening
was no use! Ah! I thought soboth
candles out. It is enough to tear the room to
pieces.”
The first thing was to get the window
shut. While you might count twenty Parkins was
struggling with the small casement, and felt almost
as if he were pushing back a sturdy burglar, so strong
was the pressure. It slackened all at once, and
the window banged to and latched itself. Now
to relight the candles and see what damage, if any,
had been done. No, nothing seemed amiss; no glass
even was broken in the casement. But the noise
had evidently roused at least one member of the household:
the Colonel was to be heard stumping in his stockinged
feet on the floor above, and growling. Quickly
as it had risen, the wind did not fall at once.
On it went, moaning and rushing past the house, at
times rising to a cry so desolate that, as Parkins
disinterestedly said, it might have made fanciful
people feel quite uncomfortable; even the unimaginative,
he thought after a quarter of an hour, might be happier
without it.
Whether it was the wind, or the excitement
of golf, or of the researches in the preceptory that
kept Parkins awake, he was not sure. Awake he
remained, in any case, long enough to fancy (as I am
afraid I often do myself under such conditions) that
he was the victim of all manner of fatal disorders:
he would lie counting the beats of his heart, convinced
that it was going to stop work every moment, and would
entertain grave suspicions of his lungs, brain, liver,
etc.suspicions which he was sure
would be dispelled by the return of daylight, but which
until then refused to be put aside. He found
a little vicarious comfort in the idea that someone
else was in the same boat. A near neighbour (in
the darkness it was not easy to tell his direction)
was tossing and rustling in his bed, too.
The next stage was that Parkins shut
his eyes and determined to give sleep every chance.
Here again over-excitement asserted itself in another
formthat of making pictures. Experto
crede, pictures do come to the closed eyes of
one trying to sleep, and are often so little to his
taste that he must open his eyes and disperse them.
Parkins’s experience on this
occasion was a very distressing one. He found
that the picture which presented itself to him was
continuous. When he opened his eyes, of course,
it went; but when he shut them once more it framed
itself afresh, and acted itself out again, neither
quicker nor slower than before. What he saw was
this:
A long stretch of shoreshingle
edged by sand, and intersected at short intervals
with black groynes running down to the watera
scene, in fact, so like that of his afternoon’s
walk that, in the absence of any landmark, it could
not be distinguished therefrom. The light was
obscure, conveying an impression of gathering storm,
late winter evening, and slight cold rain. On
this bleak stage at first no actor was visible.
Then, in the distance, a bobbing black object appeared;
a moment more, and it was a man running, jumping,
clambering over the groynes, and every few seconds
looking eagerly back. The nearer he came the more
obvious it was that he was not only anxious, but even
terribly frightened, though his face was not to be
distinguished. He was, moreover, almost at the
end of his strength. On he came; each successive
obstacle seemed to cause him more difficulty than
the last. ‘Will he get over this next one?’
thought Parkins; ‘it seems a little higher than
the others.’ Yes; half climbing, half throwing
himself, he did get over, and fell all in a heap on
the other side (the side nearest to the spectator).
There, as if really unable to get up again, he remained
crouching under the groyne, looking up in an attitude
of painful anxiety.
So far no cause whatever for the fear
of the runner had been shown; but now there began
to be seen, far up the shore, a little flicker of
something light-coloured moving to and fro with great
swiftness and irregularity. Rapidly growing larger,
it, too, declared itself as a figure in pale, fluttering
draperies, ill-defined. There was something about
its motion which made Parkins very unwilling to see
it at close quarters. It would stop, raise arms,
bow itself towards the sand, then run stooping across
the beach to the water-edge and back again; and then,
rising upright, once more continue its course forward
at a speed that was startling and terrifying.
The moment came when the pursuer was hovering about
from left to right only a few yards beyond the groyne
where the runner lay in hiding. After two or
three ineffectual castings hither and thither it came
to a stop, stood upright, with arms raised high, and
then darted straight forward towards the groyne.
It was at this point that Parkins
always failed in his resolution to keep his eyes shut.
With many misgivings as to incipient failure of eyesight,
overworked brain, excessive smoking, and so on, he
finally resigned himself to light his candle, get
out a book, and pass the night waking, rather than
be tormented by this persistent panorama, which he
saw clearly enough could only be a morbid reflection
of his walk and his thoughts on that very day.
The scraping of match on box and the
glare of light must have startled some creatures of
the nightrats or what notwhich
he heard scurry across the floor from the side of
his bed with much rustling. Dear, dear! the match
is out! Fool that it is! But the second one
burnt better, and a candle and book were duly procured,
over which Parkins pored till sleep of a wholesome
kind came upon him, and that in no long space.
For about the first time in his orderly and prudent
life he forgot to blow out the candle, and when he
was called next morning at eight there was still a
flicker in the socket and a sad mess of guttered grease
on the top of the little table.
After breakfast he was in his room,
putting the finishing touches to his golfing costumefortune
had again allotted the Colonel to him for a partnerwhen
one of the maids came in.
‘Oh, if you please,’ she
said, ’would you like any extra blankets on your
bed, sir?’
‘Ah! thank you,’ said
Parkins. ’Yes, I think I should like one.
It seems likely to turn rather colder.’
In a very short time the maid was back with the blanket.
‘Which bed should I put it on, sir?’ she
asked.
‘What? Why, that onethe
one I slept in last night,’ he said, pointing
to it.
’Oh yes! I beg your pardon,
sir, but you seemed to have tried both of ’em;
leastways, we had to make ’em both up this morning.’
‘Really? How very absurd!’
said Parkins. ’I certainly never touched
the other, except to lay some things on it. Did
it actually seem to have been slept in?’
‘Oh yes, sir!’ said the
maid. ’Why, all the things was crumpled
and throwed about all ways, if you’ll excuse
me, sirquite as if anyone ‘adn’t
passed but a very poor night, sir.’
‘Dear me,’ said Parkins.
’Well, I may have disordered it more than I
thought when I unpacked my things. I’m very
sorry to have given you the extra trouble, I’m
sure. I expect a friend of mine soon, by the waya
gentleman from Cambridgeto come and occupy
it for a night or two. That will be all right,
I suppose, won’t it?’
‘Oh yes, to be sure, sir.
Thank you, sir. It’s no trouble, I’m
sure,’ said the maid, and departed to giggle
with her colleagues.
Parkins set forth, with a stern determination
to improve his game.
I am glad to be able to report that
he succeeded so far in this enterprise that the Colonel,
who had been rather repining at the prospect of a
second day’s play in his company, became quite
chatty as the morning advanced; and his voice boomed
out over the flats, as certain also of our own minor
poets have said, ‘like some great bourdon in
a minster tower’.
‘Extraordinary wind, that, we
had last night,’ he said. ’In my old
home we should have said someone had been whistling
for it.’
‘Should you, indeed!’
said Perkins. ’Is there a superstition of
that kind still current in your part of the country?’
‘I don’t know about superstition,’
said the Colonel. ’They believe in it all
over Denmark and Norway, as well as on the Yorkshire
coast; and my experience is, mind you, that there’s
generally something at the bottom of what these country-folk
hold to, and have held to for generations. But
it’s your drive’ (or whatever it might
have been: the golfing reader will have to imagine
appropriate digressions at the proper intervals).
When conversation was resumed, Parkins
said, with a slight hesitancy:
’A propos of what you were saying
just now, Colonel, I think I ought to tell you that
my own views on such subjects are very strong.
I am, in fact, a convinced disbeliever in what is
called the “supernatural".’
‘What!’ said the Colonel,’do
you mean to tell me you don’t believe in second-sight,
or ghosts, or anything of that kind?’
‘In nothing whatever of that
kind,’ returned Parkins firmly.
‘Well,’ said the Colonel,
’but it appears to me at that rate, sir, that
you must be little better than a Sadducee.’
Parkins was on the point of answering
that, in his opinion, the Sadducees were the most
sensible persons he had ever read of in the Old Testament;
but feeling some doubt as to whether much mention of
them was to be found in that work, he preferred to
laugh the accusation off.
‘Perhaps I am,’ he said;
’butHere, give me my cleek, boy!Excuse
me one moment, Colonel.’ A short interval.
’Now, as to whistling for the wind, let me give
you my theory about it. The laws which govern
winds are really not at all perfectly knownto
fisherfolk and such, of course, not known at all.
A man or woman of eccentric habits, perhaps, or a stranger,
is seen repeatedly on the beach at some unusual hour,
and is heard whistling. Soon afterwards a violent
wind rises; a man who could read the sky perfectly
or who possessed a barometer could have foretold that
it would. The simple people of a fishing-village
have no barometers, and only a few rough rules for
prophesying weather. What more natural than that
the eccentric personage I postulated should be regarded
as having raised the wind, or that he or she should
clutch eagerly at the reputation of being able to
do so? Now, take last night’s wind:
as it happens, I myself was whistling. I blew
a whistle twice, and the wind seemed to come absolutely
in answer to my call. If anyone had seen me’
The audience had been a little restive
under this harangue, and Parkins had, I fear, fallen
somewhat into the tone of a lecturer; but at the last
sentence the Colonel stopped.
‘Whistling, were you?’
he said. ’And what sort of whistle did you
use? Play this stroke first.’ Interval.
’About that whistle you were
asking, Colonel. It’s rather a curious one.
I have it in myNo; I see I’ve left
it in my room. As a matter of fact, I found it
yesterday.’
And then Parkins narrated the manner
of his discovery of the whistle, upon hearing which
the Colonel grunted, and opined that, in Parkins’s
place, he should himself be careful about using a thing
that had belonged to a set of Papists, of whom, speaking
generally, it might be affirmed that you never knew
what they might not have been up to. From this
topic he diverged to the enormities of the Vicar,
who had given notice on the previous Sunday that Friday
would be the Feast of St Thomas the Apostle, and that
there would be service at eleven o’clock in the
church. This and other similar proceedings constituted
in the Colonel’s view a strong presumption that
the Vicar was a concealed Papist, if not a Jesuit;
and Parkins, who could not very readily follow the
Colonel in this region, did not disagree with him.
In fact, they got on so well together in the morning
that there was not talk on either side of their separating
after lunch.
Both continued to play well during
the afternoon, or at least, well enough to make them
forget everything else until the light began to fail
them. Not until then did Parkins remember that
he had meant to do some more investigating at the
preceptory; but it was of no great importance, he
reflected. One day was as good as another; he
might as well go home with the Colonel.
As they turned the corner of the house,
the Colonel was almost knocked down by a boy who rushed
into him at the very top of his speed, and then, instead
of running away, remained hanging on to him and panting.
The first words of the warrior were naturally those
of reproof and objurgation, but he very quickly discerned
that the boy was almost speechless with fright.
Inquiries were useless at first. When the boy
got his breath he began to howl, and still clung to
the Colonel’s legs. He was at last detached,
but continued to howl.
’What in the world is the matter
with you? What have you been up to? What
have you seen?’ said the two men.
‘Ow, I seen it wive at me out
of the winder,’ wailed the boy, ’and I
don’t like it.’
‘What window?’ said the
irritated Colonel. ’Come pull yourself together,
my boy.’
’The front winder it was, at the ‘otel,’
said the boy.
At this point Parkins was in favour
of sending the boy home, but the Colonel refused;
he wanted to get to the bottom of it, he said; it was
most dangerous to give a boy such a fright as this
one had had, and if it turned out that people had
been playing jokes, they should suffer for it in some
way. And by a series of questions he made out
this story: The boy had been playing about on
the grass in front of the Globe with some others;
then they had gone home to their teas, and he was just
going, when he happened to look up at the front winder
and see it a-wiving at him. It seemed to be
a figure of some sort, in white as far as he knewcouldn’t
see its face; but it wived at him, and it warn’t
a right thingnot to say not a right person.
Was there a light in the room? No, he didn’t
think to look if there was a light. Which was
the window? Was it the top one or the second
one? The seckind one it wasthe big
winder what got two little uns at the sides.
‘Very well, my boy,’ said
the Colonel, after a few more questions. ’You
run away home now. I expect it was some person
trying to give you a start. Another time, like
a brave English boy, you just throw a stonewell,
no, not that exactly, but you go and speak to the waiter,
or to Mr Simpson, the landlord, andyesand
say that I advised you to do so.’
The boy’s face expressed some
of the doubt he felt as to the likelihood of Mr Simpson’s
lending a favourable ear to his complaint, but the
Colonel did not appear to perceive this, and went on:
’And here’s a sixpenceno,
I see it’s a shillingand you be off
home, and don’t think any more about it.’
The youth hurried off with agitated
thanks, and the Colonel and Parkins went round to
the front of the Globe and reconnoitred. There
was only one window answering to the description they
had been hearing.
‘Well, that’s curious,’
said Parkins; ’it’s evidently my window
the lad was talking about. Will you come up for
a moment, Colonel Wilson? We ought to be able
to see if anyone has been taking liberties in my room.’
They were soon in the passage, and
Parkins made as if to open the door. Then he
stopped and felt in his pockets.
‘This is more serious than I
thought,’ was his next remark. ’I
remember now that before I started this morning I
locked the door. It is locked now, and, what
is more, here is the key.’ And he held it
up. ‘Now,’ he went on, ’if
the servants are in the habit of going into one’s
room during the day when one is away, I can only say
thatwell, that I don’t approve of
it at all.’ Conscious of a somewhat weak
climax, he busied himself in opening the door (which
was indeed locked) and in lighting candles. ‘No,’
he said, ‘nothing seems disturbed.’
‘Except your bed,’ put in the Colonel.
‘Excuse me, that isn’t
my bed,’ said Parkins. ’I don’t
use that one. But it does look as if someone
had been playing tricks with it.’
It certainly did: the clothes
were bundled up and twisted together in a most tortuous
confusion. Parkins pondered.
‘That must be it,’ he
said at last. ’I disordered the clothes
last night in unpacking, and they haven’t made
it since. Perhaps they came in to make it, and
that boy saw them through the window; and then they
were called away and locked the door after them.
Yes, I think that must be it.’
‘Well, ring and ask,’
said the Colonel, and this appealed to Parkins as
practical.
The maid appeared, and, to make a
long story short, deposed that she had made the bed
in the morning when the gentleman was in the room,
and hadn’t been there since. No, she hadn’t
no other key. Mr Simpson, he kep’ the keys;
he’d be able to tell the gentleman if anyone
had been up.
This was a puzzle. Investigation
showed that nothing of value had been taken, and Parkins
remembered the disposition of the small objects on
tables and so forth well enough to be pretty sure that
no pranks had been played with them. Mr and Mrs
Simpson furthermore agreed that neither of them had
given the duplicate key of the room to any person whatever
during the day. Nor could Parkins, fair-minded
man as he was, detect anything in the demeanour of
master, mistress, or maid that indicated guilt.
He was much more inclined to think that the boy had
been imposing on the Colonel.
The latter was unwontedly silent and
pensive at dinner and throughout the evening.
When he bade goodnight to Parkins, he murmured in a
gruff undertone:
‘You know where I am if you want me during the
night.’
’Why, yes, thank you, Colonel
Wilson, I think I do; but there isn’t much prospect
of my disturbing you, I hope. By the way,’
he added, ’did I show you that old whistle I
spoke of? I think not. Well, here it is.’
The Colonel turned it over gingerly
in the light of the candle.
‘Can you make anything of the
inscription?’ asked Parkins, as he took it back.
‘No, not in this light. What do you mean
to do with it?’
’Oh, well, when I get back to
Cambridge I shall submit it to some of the archaeologists
there, and see what they think of it; and very likely,
if they consider it worth having, I may present it
to one of the museums.’
‘M!’ said the Colonel.
’Well, you may be right. All I know is that,
if it were mine, I should chuck it straight into the
sea. It’s no use talking, I’m well
aware, but I expect that with you it’s a case
of live and learn. I hope so, I’m sure,
and I wish you a good night.’
He turned away, leaving Parkins in
act to speak at the bottom of the stair, and soon
each was in his own bedroom.
By some unfortunate accident, there
were neither blinds nor curtains to the windows of
the Professor’s room. The previous night
he had thought little of this, but tonight there seemed
every prospect of a bright moon rising to shine directly
on his bed, and probably wake him later on. When
he noticed this he was a good deal annoyed, but, with
an ingenuity which I can only envy, he succeeded in
rigging up, with the help of a railway-rug, some safety-pins,
and a stick and umbrella, a screen which, if it only
held together, would completely keep the moonlight
off his bed. And shortly afterwards he was comfortably
in that bed. When he had read a somewhat solid
work long enough to produce a decided wish to sleep,
he cast a drowsy glance round the room, blew out the
candle, and fell back upon the pillow.
He must have slept soundly for an
hour or more, when a sudden clatter shook him up in
a most unwelcome manner. In a moment he realized
what had happened: his carefully-constructed
screen had given way, and a very bright frosty moon
was shining directly on his face. This was highly
annoying. Could he possibly get up and reconstruct
the screen? or could he manage to sleep if he did
not?
For some minutes he lay and pondered
over all the possibilities; then he turned over sharply,
and with his eyes open lay breathlessly listening.
There had been a movement, he was sure, in the empty
bed on the opposite side of the room. Tomorrow
he would have it moved, for there must be rats or
something playing about in it. It was quiet now.
No! the commotion began again. There was a rustling
and shaking: surely more than any rat could cause.
I can figure to myself something of
the Professor’s bewilderment and horror, for
I have in a dream thirty years back seen the same thing
happen; but the reader will hardly, perhaps, imagine
how dreadful it was to him to see a figure suddenly
sit up in what he had known was an empty bed.
He was out of his own bed in one bound, and made a
dash towards the window, where lay his only weapon,
the stick with which he had propped his screen.
This was, as it turned out, the worst thing he could
have done, because the personage in the empty bed,
with a sudden smooth motion, slipped from the bed
and took up a position, with outspread arms, between
the two beds, and in front of the door. Parkins
watched it in a horrid perplexity. Somehow, the
idea of getting past it and escaping through the door
was intolerable to him; he could not have bornehe
didn’t know whyto touch it; and as
for its touching him, he would sooner dash himself
through the window than have that happen. It stood
for the moment in a band of dark shadow, and he had
not seen what its face was like. Now it began
to move, in a stooping posture, and all at once the
spectator realized, with some horror and some relief,
that it must be blind, for it seemed to feel about
it with its muffled arms in a groping and random fashion.
Turning half away from him, it became suddenly conscious
of the bed he had just left, and darted towards it,
and bent and felt over the pillows in a way which made
Parkins shudder as he had never in his life thought
it possible. In a very few moments it seemed
to know that the bed was empty, and then, moving forward
into the area of light and facing the window, it showed
for the first time what manner of thing it was.
Parkins, who very much dislikes being
questioned about it, did once describe something of
it in my hearing, and I gathered that what he chiefly
remembers about it is a horrible, an intensely horrible,
face of crumpled linen. What expression he
read upon it he could not or would not tell, but that
the fear of it went nigh to maddening him is certain.
But he was not at leisure to watch
it for long. With formidable quickness it moved
into the middle of the room, and, as it groped and
waved, one corner of its draperies swept across Parkins’s
face. He could not, though he knew how perilous
a sound washe could not keep back a cry
of disgust, and this gave the searcher an instant
clue. It leapt towards him upon the instant,
and the next moment he was half-way through the window
backwards, uttering cry upon cry at the utmost pitch
of his voice, and the linen face was thrust close
into his own. At this, almost the last possible
second, deliverance came, as you will have guessed:
the Colonel burst the door open, and was just in time
to see the dreadful group at the window. When
he reached the figures only one was left. Parkins
sank forward into the room in a faint, and before
him on the floor lay a tumbled heap of bed-clothes.
Colonel Wilson asked no questions,
but busied himself in keeping everyone else out of
the room and in getting Parkins back to his bed; and
himself, wrapped in a rug, occupied the other bed,
for the rest of the night. Early on the next
day Rogers arrived, more welcome than he would have
been a day before, and the three of them held a very
long consultation in the Professor’s room.
At the end of it the Colonel left the hotel door carrying
a small object between his finger and thumb, which
he cast as far into the sea as a very brawny arm could
send it. Later on the smoke of a burning ascended
from the back premises of the Globe.
Exactly what explanation was patched
up for the staff and visitors at the hotel I must
confess I do not recollect. The Professor was
somehow cleared of the ready suspicion of delirium
tremens, and the hotel of the reputation of a troubled
house.
There is not much question as to what
would have happened to Parkins if the Colonel had
not intervened when he did. He would either have
fallen out of the window or else lost his wits.
But it is not so evident what more the creature that
came in answer to the whistle could have done than
frighten. There seemed to be absolutely nothing
material about it save the bedclothes of which it
had made itself a body. The Colonel, who remembered
a not very dissimilar occurrence in India, was of the
opinion that if Parkins had closed with it it could
really have done very little, and that its one power
was that of frightening. The whole thing, he said,
served to confirm his opinion of the Church of Rome.
There is really nothing more to tell,
but, as you may imagine, the Professor’s views
on certain points are less clear cut than they used
to be. His nerves, too, have suffered: he
cannot even now see a surplice hanging on a door quite
unmoved, and the spectacle of a scarecrow in a field
late on a winter afternoon has cost him more than one
sleepless night.