The recollection of my meeting with
Sarakoff remains vividly in my mind. I was shown
into a large bare room, heated by an immense stove
like an iron pagoda. The floor was of light yellow
polished wood; the walls were white-washed, and covered
with pencil marks. A big table covered with papers
and books stood at one end. At the other, through
an open doorway, there was a glimpse of a laboratory.
Sarakoff stood in the centre of the room, his hands
deep in his pockets, his pipe sending up clouds of
smoke, his tall muscular frame tilted back. His
eyes were fixed on an extraordinary object that crawled
slowly over the polished floor. It was a gigantic
tortoise a specimen of Testudo elephantopus a
huge cumbersome brute. Its ancient, scaly head
was thrust out and its eyes gleamed with a kind of
sharp intelligence. The surface of its vast and
massive shell was covered over with scribbles in white
chalk notes made by Sarakoff who was in
the habit of jotting down figures and formulae on
anything near at hand.
As there was only one chair in the
room, Sarakoff eventually thrust me into it, while
he sat down on the great beast whom he called
Belshazzar and told me over and over again
how glad he was to see me. And this warmth of
his was pleasant to me.
“Are you experimenting on Belshazzar?”
I asked at length.
He nodded, and smiled enigmatically.
“He is two hundred years old,” he said.
“I want to get at his secret.”
That was the first positive proof
I got of the line of research Sarakoff was intent
upon, although, reading between the lines of his many
publications, I had guessed something of it.
In every way, Sarakoff was a complete
contrast to me. Tall, lean, black-bearded and
deep-voiced, careless of public opinion and prodigal
in ideas, he was just my antithesis. He was possessed
of immense energy. His tousled black hair, moustaches
and beard seemed to bristle with it; it shone in his
pale blue eyes. He was full of sudden violence,
flinging test-tubes across the laboratory, shouting
strange songs, striding about snapping his fingers.
There was no repose in him. At first I was a
little afraid of him, but the feeling wore off.
He spoke English fluently, because when a boy he had
been at school in London.
I will not enter upon a detailed account
of our conversation that first morning in Russia,
when the snow lay thick on the roofs of the city, and
the ferns of frost sparkled on the window-panes of
the laboratory. Briefly, we found ourselves at
one over many problems of human research, and I congratulated
myself on the fact that in communicating the account
of the miracle at St. Dane’s Hospital to Sarakoff
alone, I had done wisely. He was wonderfully
enthusiastic.
“That discovery of yours has
furnished the key to the great riddle I had set myself,”
he exclaimed, striding to and fro. “We will
astonish the world, my friend. It is only a question
of time.”
“But what is the riddle you speak of?”
I asked.
“I will tell you soon.
Have patience!” he cried. He came towards
me impulsively and shook my hand. “We shall
find it beyond a doubt, and we will call it the Sarakoff-Harden
Bacillus! What do you think of that?”
I was somewhat mystified. He
sat down again on the back of the tortoise, smoking
in his ferocious manner and smiling and nodding to
himself. I though it best to let him disclose
his plans in his own way, and kept back the many eager
questions that rose to my lips.
“It seems to me,” said
Sarakoff suddenly, “that England would be the
best place to try the experiment. There’s
a telegraph everywhere, reporters in every village,
and enough newspapers to carpet every square inch
of the land. In a word, it’s a first-class
place to watch the results of an experiment.”
“On a large scale?”
“On a gigantic scale an experiment,
ultimately, on the world.”
I was puzzled and was anxious to draw him into fuller
details.
“It would begin in England?” I asked carelessly.
He nodded.
“But it would spread. You
remember how the last big outbreak of influenza, which
started in this country, spread like wildfire until
the waves, passing east and west, met on the other
side of the globe? That was a big experiment.”
“Of nature,” I added.
He did not reply.
“An experiment of nature, you
mean?” I urged. At the time of the last
big outburst of influenza which began in Russia, Sarakoff
must have been a student. Did he know anything
about the origin of the mysterious and fatal visitation?
“Yes, of nature,” he replied
at last, but not in a tone that satisfied me.
His manner intrigued me so much that I felt inclined
to pursue the subject, but at that moment we were
interrupted in a singular way.
The door burst open, and into the
room rushed a motley crowd of men. Most of them
were young students, but here and there I saw older
men, and at the head of the mob was a white-bearded
individual, wearing an astrachan cap, who brandished
a copy of some Russian periodical in his hand.
Belshazzar drew in his head with a
hiss that I could hear even above the clamour of this
intrusion.
A furious colloquy began, which I
could not understand, since it was in Russian.
Sarakoff stood facing the angry crowd coolly enough,
but that he was inwardly roused to a dangerous degree,
I could tell from his gestures. The copy of the
periodical was much in evidence. Fists were shaken
freely. The aged, white-bearded leader worked
himself up into a frenzy and finally jumped on the
periodical, stamping it under his feet until he was
out of breath.
Then this excited band trooped out
of the room and left us in peace.
“What is it?” I asked when their steps
had died away.
Sarakoff shrugged his shoulders and
then laughed. He picked up the battered periodical
and pointed to an article in it.
“I published a manifesto this
morning that is all,” he remarked
airily.
“What sort of manifesto?”
“On the origin of death.”
He sat down on Belshazzar’s broad back and twisted
his moustaches. “You see, Harden, I believe
that in a few more years death will only exist as
an uncertain element, appearing rarely, as an unnatural
and exceptional incident. Life will be limitless;
and the length of years attained by Belshazzar will
seem as nothing.”
It is curious how the spirit of a
new discovery broods over the world like a capricious
being, animating one investigator here, another there;
partially revealing itself in this continent, disclosing
another of its secrets in that, until all the fragments
when fitted together make up the whole wonder.
It seems that my discovery, coupled with the results
of his own unpublished researches, had led Sarakoff
to make that odd manifesto. Our combined work,
although carried out independently, had given the
firm groundwork of an amazing theory which Sarakoff
had been maturing in his excited brain for many long
years.
Sarakoff translated the manifesto
to me. It was a trifle bombastic, and its composition
appeared to me vague. No wonder it had roused
hostility among his colleagues, I thought, as Sarakoff
walked about, declaiming with outstretched arm.
Put as briefly as possible, Sarakoff held all disease
as due to germs of one sort or another; and decay of
bodily tissue he regarded in the same light.
In such a theory I stood beside him.
He continued to translate from the
soiled and torn periodical, waving his arm majestically.
“We have only to eliminate all
germs from the world to banish disease and decay and
death. Such an end can be attained in one
way alone; a way which is known only to me, thanks
to a magnificent series of profound investigations.
I announce, therefore, that the disappearance of death
from this planet can be anticipated with the utmost
confidence. Let us make preparations. Let
us consider our laws. Let us examine our resources.
Let us, in short, begin the reconstruction of society.”
“Good heavens!” I exclaimed, and sat staring
at him.
He twirled his moustaches and observed me with shining
eyes.
“What do you think of it?”
I shrugged my shoulders helplessly.
“Surely it is far fetched?”
“Not a bit of it. Now listen
to me carefully. I’ll give you, step by
step, the whole matter.” He walked up and
down for some minutes and then suddenly stopped beside
me and thumped me on the back. “There’s
not a flaw in it!” he cried. “It’s
magnificent. My dear fellow, death is only a
failure in human perfection. There’s nothing
mysterious in it. Religion has made a ridiculous
fuss about it. There’s nothing more mysterious
in it than there is in a badly-oiled engine wearing
out. Now listen. I’m going to begin....”
I listened, fascinated.