IN THE QUEEN’S DUNGEONS
Well, I arranged all that; and I had
the man sent to his home. I had a great desire
to rack the executioner; not because he was a good,
painstaking and paingiving official, for
surely it was not to his discredit that he performed
his functions well but to pay him back
for wantonly cuffing and otherwise distressing that
young woman. The priests told me about this,
and were generously hot to have him punished.
Something of this disagreeable sort was turning up
every now and then. I mean, episodes that showed
that not all priests were frauds and self-seekers,
but that many, even the great majority, of these that
were down on the ground among the common people, were
sincere and right-hearted, and devoted to the alleviation
of human troubles and sufferings. Well, it was
a thing which could not be helped, so I seldom fretted
about it, and never many minutes at a time; it has
never been my way to bother much about things which
you can’t cure. But I did not like it,
for it was just the sort of thing to keep people reconciled
to an Established Church. We must have
a religion it goes without saying but
my idea is, to have it cut up into forty free sects,
so that they will police each other, as had been the
case in the United States in my time. Concentration
of power in a political machine is bad; and an Established
Church is only a political machine; it was invented
for that; it is nursed, cradled, preserved for that;
it is an enemy to human liberty, and does no good
which it could not better do in a split-up and scattered
condition. That wasn’t law; it wasn’t
gospel: it was only an opinion my
opinion, and I was only a man, one man: so it
wasn’t worth any more than the pope’s or
any less, for that matter.
Well, I couldn’t rack the executioner,
neither would I overlook the just complaint of the
priests. The man must be punished somehow or
other, so I degraded him from his office and made him
leader of the band the new one that was
to be started. He begged hard, and said he couldn’t
play a plausible excuse, but too thin;
there wasn’t a musician in the country that could.
The queen was a good deal outraged,
next morning when she found she was going to have
neither Hugo’s life nor his property. But
I told her she must bear this cross; that while by
law and custom she certainly was entitled to both
the man’s life and his property, there were
extenuating circumstances, and so in Arthur the king’s
name I had pardoned him. The deer was ravaging
the man’s fields, and he had killed it in sudden
passion, and not for gain; and he had carried it into
the royal forest in the hope that that might make
detection of the misdoer impossible. Confound
her, I couldn’t make her see that sudden passion
is an extenuating circumstance in the killing of venison or
of a person so I gave it up and let her
sulk it out. I did think I was going to
make her see it by remarking that her own sudden passion
in the case of the page modified that crime.
“Crime!” she exclaimed.
“How thou talkest! Crime, forsooth!
Man, I am going to pay for him!”
Oh, it was no use to waste sense on
her. Training training is everything;
training is all there is to a person.
We speak of nature; it is folly; there is no such
thing as nature; what we call by that misleading name
is merely heredity and training. We have no thoughts
of our own, no opinions of our own; they are transmitted
to us, trained into us. All that is original
in us, and therefore fairly creditable or discreditable
to us, can be covered up and hidden by the point of
a cambric needle, all the rest being atoms contributed
by, and inherited from, a procession of ancestors
that stretches back a billion years to the Adam-clam
or grasshopper or monkey from whom our race has been
so tediously and ostentatiously and unprofitably developed.
And as for me, all that I think about in this plodding
sad pilgrimage, this pathetic drift between the eternities,
is to look out and humbly live a pure and high and
blameless life, and save that one microscopic atom
in me that is truly me: the rest may land
in Sheol and welcome for all I care.
No, confound her, her intellect was
good, she had brains enough, but her training made
her an ass that is, from a many-centuries-later
point of view. To kill the page was no crime it
was her right; and upon her right she stood, serenely
and unconscious of offense. She was a result
of generations of training in the unexamined and unassailed
belief that the law which permitted her to kill a subject
when she chose was a perfectly right and righteous
one.
Well, we must give even Satan his
due. She deserved a compliment for one thing;
and I tried to pay it, but the words stuck in my throat.
She had a right to kill the boy, but she was in no
wise obliged to pay for him. That was law for
some other people, but not for her. She knew
quite well that she was doing a large and generous
thing to pay for that lad, and that I ought in common
fairness to come out with something handsome about
it, but I couldn’t my mouth refused.
I couldn’t help seeing, in my fancy, that poor
old grandma with the broken heart, and that fair young
creature lying butchered, his little silken pomps and
vanities laced with his golden blood. How could
she pay for him! Whom could she pay?
And so, well knowing that this woman, trained as
she had been, deserved praise, even adulation, I was
yet not able to utter it, trained as I had been.
The best I could do was to fish up a compliment from
outside, so to speak and the pity of it
was, that it was true:
“Madame, your people will adore you for this.”
Quite true, but I meant to hang her
for it some day if I lived. Some of those laws
were too bad, altogether too bad. A master might
kill his slave for nothing for mere spite,
malice, or to pass the time just as we
have seen that the crowned head could do it with his
slave, that is to say, anybody. A gentleman could
kill a free commoner, and pay for him cash
or garden-truck. A noble could kill a noble without
expense, as far as the law was concerned, but reprisals
in kind were to be expected. Anybody could
kill somebody, except the commoner and the slave;
these had no privileges. If they killed, it
was murder, and the law wouldn’t stand murder.
It made short work of the experimenter and
of his family, too, if he murdered somebody who belonged
up among the ornamental ranks. If a commoner
gave a noble even so much as a Damiens-scratch which
didn’t kill or even hurt, he got Damiens’
dose for it just the same; they pulled him to rags
and tatters with horses, and all the world came to
see the show, and crack jokes, and have a good time;
and some of the performances of the best people present
were as tough, and as properly unprintable, as any
that have been printed by the pleasant Casanova in
his chapter about the dismemberment of Louis XV’s
poor awkward enemy.
I had had enough of this grisly place
by this time, and wanted to leave, but I couldn’t,
because I had something on my mind that my conscience
kept prodding me about, and wouldn’t let me forget.
If I had the remaking of man, he wouldn’t have
any conscience. It is one of the most disagreeable
things connected with a person; and although it certainly
does a great deal of good, it cannot be said to pay,
in the long run; it would be much better to have less
good and more comfort. Still, this is only my
opinion, and I am only one man; others, with less
experience, may think differently. They have
a right to their view. I only stand to this:
I have noticed my conscience for many years, and I
know it is more trouble and bother to me than anything
else I started with. I suppose that in the beginning
I prized it, because we prize anything that is ours;
and yet how foolish it was to think so. If we
look at it in another way, we see how absurd it is:
if I had an anvil in me would I prize it? Of
course not. And yet when you come to think,
there is no real difference between a conscience and
an anvil I mean for comfort. I have
noticed it a thousand times. And you could dissolve
an anvil with acids, when you couldn’t stand
it any longer; but there isn’t any way that you
can work off a conscience at least so it
will stay worked off; not that I know of, anyway.
There was something I wanted to do
before leaving, but it was a disagreeable matter,
and I hated to go at it. Well, it bothered me
all the morning. I could have mentioned it to
the old king, but what would be the use? he
was but an extinct volcano; he had been active in
his time, but his fire was out, this good while, he
was only a stately ash-pile now; gentle enough, and
kindly enough for my purpose, without doubt, but not
usable. He was nothing, this so-called king:
the queen was the only power there. And she was
a Vesuvius. As a favor, she might consent to
warm a flock of sparrows for you, but then she might
take that very opportunity to turn herself loose and
bury a city. However, I reflected that as often
as any other way, when you are expecting the worst,
you get something that is not so bad, after all.
So I braced up and placed my matter
before her royal Highness. I said I had been
having a general jail-delivery at Camelot and among
neighboring castles, and with her permission I would
like to examine her collection, her bric-a-brac that
is to say, her prisoners. She resisted; but
I was expecting that. But she finally consented.
I was expecting that, too, but not so soon.
That about ended my discomfort. She called her
guards and torches, and we went down into the dungeons.
These were down under the castle’s foundations,
and mainly were small cells hollowed out of the living
rock. Some of these cells had no light at all.
In one of them was a woman, in foul rags, who sat
on the ground, and would not answer a question or
speak a word, but only looked up at us once or twice,
through a cobweb of tangled hair, as if to see what
casual thing it might be that was disturbing with
sound and light the meaningless dull dream that was
become her life; after that, she sat bowed, with her
dirt-caked fingers idly interlocked in her lap, and
gave no further sign. This poor rack of bones
was a woman of middle age, apparently; but only apparently;
she had been there nine years, and was eighteen when
she entered. She was a commoner, and had been
sent here on her bridal night by Sir Breuse Sance Pite,
a neighboring lord whose vassal her father was, and
to which said lord she had refused what has since
been called lé droit du seigneur, and, moreover,
had opposed violence to violence and spilt half a
gill of his almost sacred blood. The young husband
had interfered at that point, believing the bride’s
life in danger, and had flung the noble out into the
midst of the humble and trembling wedding guests,
in the parlor, and left him there astonished at this
strange treatment, and implacably embittered against
both bride and groom. The said lord being cramped
for dungeon-room had asked the queen to accommodate
his two criminals, and here in her bastile they had
been ever since; hither, indeed, they had come before
their crime was an hour old, and had never seen each
other since. Here they were, kenneled like toads
in the same rock; they had passed nine pitch dark
years within fifty feet of each other, yet neither
knew whether the other was alive or not. All
the first years, their only question had been asked
with beseechings and tears that might have moved stones,
in time, perhaps, but hearts are not stones:
“Is he alive?” “Is she alive?”
But they had never got an answer; and at last that
question was not asked any more or any
other.
I wanted to see the man, after hearing
all this. He was thirty-four years old, and
looked sixty. He sat upon a squared block of
stone, with his head bent down, his forearms resting
on his knees, his long hair hanging like a fringe
before his face, and he was muttering to himself.
He raised his chin and looked us slowly over, in
a listless dull way, blinking with the distress of
the torchlight, then dropped his head and fell to
muttering again and took no further notice of us.
There were some pathetically suggestive dumb witnesses
present. On his wrists and ankles were cicatrices,
old smooth scars, and fastened to the stone on which
he sat was a chain with manacles and fetters attached;
but this apparatus lay idle on the ground, and was
thick with rust. Chains cease to be needed after
the spirit has gone out of a prisoner.
I could not rouse the man; so I said
we would take him to her, and see to the
bride who was the fairest thing in the earth to him,
once roses, pearls, and dew made flesh,
for him; a wonder-work, the master-work of nature:
with eyes like no other eyes, and voice like no other
voice, and a freshness, and lithe young grace, and
beauty, that belonged properly to the creatures of
dreams as he thought and to
no other. The sight of her would set his stagnant
blood leaping; the sight of her
But it was a disappointment.
They sat together on the ground and looked dimly
wondering into each other’s faces a while, with
a sort of weak animal curiosity; then forgot each
other’s presence, and dropped their eyes, and
you saw that they were away again and wandering in
some far land of dreams and shadows that we know nothing
about.
I had them taken out and sent to their
friends. The queen did not like it much.
Not that she felt any personal interest in the matter,
but she thought it disrespectful to Sir Breuse Sance
Pite. However, I assured her that if he
found he couldn’t stand it I would fix him so
that he could.
I set forty-seven prisoners loose
out of those awful rat-holes, and left only one in
captivity. He was a lord, and had killed another
lord, a sort of kinsman of the queen. That other
lord had ambushed him to assassinate him, but this
fellow had got the best of him and cut his throat.
However, it was not for that that I left him jailed,
but for maliciously destroying the only public well
in one of his wretched villages. The queen was
bound to hang him for killing her kinsman, but I would
not allow it: it was no crime to kill an assassin.
But I said I was willing to let her hang him for
destroying the well; so she concluded to put up with
that, as it was better than nothing.
Dear me, for what trifling offenses
the most of those forty-seven men and women were shut
up there! Indeed, some were there for no distinct
offense at all, but only to gratify somebody’s
spite; and not always the queen’s by any means,
but a friend’s. The newest prisoner’s
crime was a mere remark which he had made. He
said he believed that men were about all alike, and
one man as good as another, barring clothes.
He said he believed that if you were to strip the
nation naked and send a stranger through the crowd,
he couldn’t tell the king from a quack doctor,
nor a duke from a hotel clerk. Apparently here
was a man whose brains had not been reduced to an
ineffectual mush by idiotic training. I set him
loose and sent him to the Factory.
Some of the cells carved in the living
rock were just behind the face of the precipice, and
in each of these an arrow-slit had been pierced outward
to the daylight, and so the captive had a thin ray
from the blessed sun for his comfort. The case
of one of these poor fellows was particularly hard.
From his dusky swallow’s hole high up in that
vast wall of native rock he could peer out through
the arrow-slit and see his own home off yonder in the
valley; and for twenty-two years he had watched it,
with heartache and longing, through that crack.
He could see the lights shine there at night, and
in the daytime he could see figures go in and come
out his wife and children, some of them,
no doubt, though he could not make out at that distance.
In the course of years he noted festivities there,
and tried to rejoice, and wondered if they were weddings
or what they might be. And he noted funerals;
and they wrung his heart. He could make out the
coffin, but he could not determine its size, and so
could not tell whether it was wife or child.
He could see the procession form, with priests and
mourners, and move solemnly away, bearing the secret
with them. He had left behind him five children
and a wife; and in nineteen years he had seen five
funerals issue, and none of them humble enough in
pomp to denote a servant. So he had lost five
of his treasures; there must still be one remaining one
now infinitely, unspeakably precious, but
which one? wife, or child? That was the
question that tortured him, by night and by day, asleep
and awake. Well, to have an interest, of some
sort, and half a ray of light, when you are in a dungeon,
is a great support to the body and preserver of the
intellect. This man was in pretty good condition
yet. By the time he had finished telling me his
distressful tale, I was in the same state of mind that
you would have been in yourself, if you have got average
human curiosity; that is to say, I was as burning
up as he was to find out which member of the family
it was that was left. So I took him over home
myself; and an amazing kind of a surprise party it
was, too typhoons and cyclones of frantic
joy, and whole Niagaras of happy tears; and by George!
we found the aforetime young matron graying toward
the imminent verge of her half century, and the babies
all men and women, and some of them married and experimenting
familywise themselves for not a soul of
the tribe was dead! Conceive of the ingenious
devilishness of that queen: she had a special
hatred for this prisoner, and she had invented
all those funerals herself, to scorch his heart with;
and the sublimest stroke of genius of the whole thing
was leaving the family-invoice a funeral short,
so as to let him wear his poor old soul out guessing.
But for me, he never would have got
out. Morgan lé Fay hated him with her whole
heart, and she never would have softened toward him.
And yet his crime was committed more in thoughtlessness
than deliberate depravity. He had said she had
red hair. Well, she had; but that was no way
to speak of it. When red-headed people are above
a certain social grade their hair is auburn.
Consider it: among these forty-seven
captives there were five whose names, offenses, and
dates of incarceration were no longer known!
One woman and four men all bent, and wrinkled,
and mind-extinguished patriarchs. They themselves
had long ago forgotten these details; at any rate
they had mere vague theories about them, nothing definite
and nothing that they repeated twice in the same way.
The succession of priests whose office it had been
to pray daily with the captives and remind them that
God had put them there, for some wise purpose or other,
and teach them that patience, humbleness, and submission
to oppression was what He loved to see in parties
of a subordinate rank, had traditions about these poor
old human ruins, but nothing more. These traditions
went but little way, for they concerned the length
of the incarceration only, and not the names of the
offenses. And even by the help of tradition
the only thing that could be proven was that none of
the five had seen daylight for thirty-five years:
how much longer this privation has lasted was not
guessable. The king and the queen knew nothing
about these poor creatures, except that they were
heirlooms, assets inherited, along with the throne,
from the former firm. Nothing of their history
had been transmitted with their persons, and so the
inheriting owners had considered them of no value,
and had felt no interest in them. I said to the
queen:
“Then why in the world didn’t you set
them free?”
The question was a puzzler.
She didn’t know why she hadn’t,
the thing had never come up in her mind. So
here she was, forecasting the veritable history of
future prisoners of the Castle d’If, without
knowing it. It seemed plain to me now, that with
her training, those inherited prisoners were merely
property nothing more, nothing less.
Well, when we inherit property, it does not occur
to us to throw it away, even when we do not value it.
When I brought my procession of human
bats up into the open world and the glare of the afternoon
sun previously blindfolding them, in charity
for eyes so long untortured by light they
were a spectacle to look at. Skeletons, scarecrows,
goblins, pathetic frights, every one; legitimatest
possible children of Monarchy by the Grace of God
and the Established Church. I muttered absently:
“I wish I could photograph them!”
You have seen that kind of people
who will never let on that they don’t know the
meaning of a new big word. The more ignorant
they are, the more pitifully certain they are to pretend
you haven’t shot over their heads. The
queen was just one of that sort, and was always making
the stupidest blunders by reason of it. She
hesitated a moment; then her face brightened up with
sudden comprehension, and she said she would do it
for me.
I thought to myself: She? why
what can she know about photography? But it was
a poor time to be thinking. When I looked around,
she was moving on the procession with an axe!
Well, she certainly was a curious
one, was Morgan lé Fay. I have seen a good
many kinds of women in my time, but she laid over them
all for variety. And how sharply characteristic
of her this episode was. She had no more idea
than a horse of how to photograph a procession; but
being in doubt, it was just like her to try to do
it with an axe.