Again we make acknowledgment to the
“Laudable” Vigilas and quote at large
from the luminous pages of The Later Cosmos.
Now the reader, scenting more learned discourse, may
meditate upon skipping this chapter; nay, will probably
do so. Yet, to my thinking, he will act more
wisely in buckling down to it, seeing that it contains
matter of moment for the perfect understanding of
the narrative proper. The studying of guide-posts
is not an amusing occupation, but it is infinitely
less tedious than to wander around all day in a fog
and perhaps miss one’s destination altogether.
“It is, indeed, a small world
as we know it to-day. Our philosophers, reconstructing,
as best they may, the science of the ancients from
the treatises, few and sadly incomplete, that have
come down to us, affirm that the earth is an orb and
that another continent (perhaps more than one) lies
beyond the rim of the eastern horizon. It may
be so, but the issue is not of practical importance,
seeing that there are none who care to make adventure
of the great salty gulf that lies between. And
so the sea keeps its mysteries.
“On the other hand, we count
it inadvisable to wander far afield. To the north,
to the west, and to the south stretches the unbroken
forest, and in a few hours a man’s legs may
easily carry him out of hailing of the voice of his
kind. The waterways form the only regular channels
for social and commercial intercourse, and the busybody
and gad-about are not regarded with favor by honest
people.
“It appears highly probable
that the human race was virtually annihilated over
the general area of the ancient United States of America;
it persisted only in a few particularly favored localities
and through accidental circumstances of which we know
nothing definite. In our own day, the northern,
central, and southern group of colonies maintain a
system of infrequent intercommunication, and beyond
that certain knowledge does not extend. It is
possible that mankind may exist in a degraded state,
in many inaccessible corners of this vast continent
of ours, but this is only a possibility, concerning
which the theories of the learned are no more susceptible
of proof than are the idle speculations of the vulgar.
“For convenience, we will accept
the popular classification of the human race as it
exists to-day the Painted Men, the House
People, and the Doomsmen. To take them up in
that order.
“The Painted Men, otherwise
the Wood Folk, are the descendants of the Indians
of old, but the strain is largely mingled with that
of the negro race, and, with hardly an exception,
it is the weaker qualities both of body and of mind
that have been emphasized in the hybrid. From
their Indian forebears they have preserved the custom
of painting their face with crude and hideous pigments
upon all occasions of ceremony; hence their popular
designation the ‘Painted Men.’
“The House People are conveniently
subdivided into two classes the townsmen,
or House People proper, and the stockade dwellers,
colloquially, the Stockaders.
“The House People of the walled
towns represent as nearly as may be the middle classes
of the ancient civilization. Originally, the family
was the political and social unit, just as with the
patriarchs of Holy Writ, but within the last generation
the community idea has been growing rapidly, and there
are perhaps a score of towns and villages scattered
along the banks of the Greater and Lesser rivers.
“The Stockaders, reversing the
procedure of their kinsmen of the towns, live apart
from one another, each proprietor depending wholly
upon his own resources for sustenance and defence.
Some of the larger estates contain several hundred
acres enclosed by a strong timber stockade and otherwise
defended against the assaults of enemies. The
head of the family, or clan, as it might more properly
be termed, is lord paramount within his own borders,
even possessing the rights of life and death.
But this last authority is rarely called in exercise,
since these folk of the free country-side are naturally
wholesome, honest, generous-hearted men, content to
lead a simple life and coveting no man’s honor
or goods. On the other hand, it must be admitted
that the stockade dweller is both provincial of habit
and prejudiced of mind. He looks down upon the
townsman as a huckster in private and a shuffler in
public life, and this feeling of contemptuous enmity
is fully returned by the cit, who regards the free
proprietor in the light of a boor and a bully.
Moreover, it rankles in the Houseman’s breast
that no Stockader pays a farthing of head-money to
the treasure-chest of the Doomsmen. Now and then
some well-to-do proprietor may suffer loss from cattle
thieving and rick burning, but as often as not the
marauders pay full price for all they get. And
this leads us to a consideration of the Doomsman himself,
that foul excrescence upon our modern body politic.
Fortunately, history here speaks clearly, and we have
only to listen to her voice.
“It was a natural procedure,
upon the coming of the Terror, to throw open the doors
of the jails and other punitive institutions, thereby
giving the wretched inmates an equal chance for life.
The great mass of these degraded beings gravitated
inevitably towards the cities, seeking plunder and
opportunities for bestial dissipation that even the
dread presence of the Terror could not restrain.
Without hope and without fear, they rushed to the
vulture’s feast; here was wine and gold and
soft raiment; let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we
die.
“It was the ancient city of
New York that received the vast bulk of this army
of human rats; naturally so, since it was the supreme
treasure-house of the western world. In such overwhelming
numbers did these vermin come that the civil and military
administrations were literally swarmed over.
Between two days the outlaws were in complete possession,
and the small remnant of the decent residents retired
precipitately, preferring to meet death under the open
sky rather than in company with their new masters.
“The years went on, but the
changes that they brought were few. The descendants
of the ancient criminals remained in the ruined city,
at first of necessity, afterwards by choice, finding
there fuel and shelter in abundance besides large
stores of non-perishable food supplies. When,
in the next generation, these provisions became exhausted
it was inevitable that the refugees should fix covetous
eyes upon the threshing-floors and herd-stalls of
their rural neighbors. But although the outlaws
had continued to gain in numbers, their natural increase
was not proportionate to the growing power of their
adversaries. Little by little the Doomsmen began
to lose ground; already they had been defeated several
times in pitched battle, and it looked as though the
hornet’s-nest would soon be smoked out.
“It was at this critical juncture
that the infamous personality of Dom Gillian made
itself of commanding account, and thenceforth the balance
began to incline the other way. It was but the
weight of one man’s hand in the scale-pan, yet
there are still many of us who remember how heavy
that hand could be.
“Infamous is the adjective deliberately
applied, and with reason. Dominus Gillian,
to give him his full name, was a renegade, the unworthy
son of a distinguished Stockader family. Admittedly
a man of fine intellect and force, it is equally unquestionable
that he was entirely devoid of moral sense. He
possessed a genius for organization, and he succeeded
in consolidating the unruly Doomsmen into a compact
and disciplined body of outlaws. Murder and rapine
were quickly reduced to exact sciences, and, unfortunately,
the House People could not be made to see the necessity
of united action; the townsman and the stockade dweller
preferred to contend with each other rather than against
the common enemy. As a consequence, the freebooters
had a clear road before them, and so was established
that intolerable tyranny under which the land still
groans. All this occurred upward of sixty years
ago.
“It only remains to add that
Dominus, or, more colloquially, Dom Gillian,
still lives, albeit he must be verging upon ninety
years of age. For many years he has not been
seen in the field, and it is even asserted that he
no longer takes active part in the councils of the
Doomsmen. Be that as it may, his will still remains
dominant to animate and direct the malign powers created
by his wicked genius. And the evil that men do,
doth it not live after them?
“Such is the world, or, rather,
one infinitesimal portion of the cosmos, in the year
2015, according to the ancient calendar, or 90 since
the Terror.”