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<h1> THE RETURN OF THE SOUL </h1>
<h2> By Robert S. Hichens </h2>
<h2> I. </h2>
<h3> <i>Tuesday Night, November 3rd</i>. </h3>
<p>Theories! What is the good of theories? They are the scourges that lash
our minds in modern days, lash them into confusion, perplexity, despair. I
have never been troubled by them before. Why should I be troubled by them
now? And the absurdity of Professor Black's is surely obvious. A child
would laugh at it. Yes, a child! I have never been a diary writer. I have
never been able to understand the amusement of sitting down late at night
and scrawling minutely in some hidden book every paltry incident of one's
paltry days. People say it is so interesting to read the entries years
afterwards. To read, as a man, the <i>menu</i> that I ate through as a
boy, the love-story that I was actor in, the tragedy that I brought about,
the debt that I have never paid—how could it profit me? To keep a
diary has always seemed to me merely an addition to the ills of life. Yet
now I have a hidden book, like the rest of the world, and I am scrawling
in it to-day. Yes, but for a reason.</p>
<p>I want to make things clear to myself, and I find, as others, that my mind
works more easily with the assistance of the pen. The actual tracing of
words on paper dispels the clouds that cluster round my thoughts. I shall
recall events to set my mind at ease, to prove to myself how absurd a man
who could believe in Professor Black would be. "Little Dry-as-dust" I used
to call him 'Dry'? He is full of wild romance, rubbish that a school-girl
would be ashamed to believe in. Yet he is abnormally clever; his record
proves that. Still, clever men are the first to be led astray, they say.
It is the searcher who follows the wandering light. What he says can't be
true. When I have filled these pages, and read what I have written
dispassionately, as one of the outside public might read, I shall have
done, once for all, with the ridiculous fancies that are beginning to make
my life a burden. To put my thoughts in order will make a music. The evil
spirit within me will sleep, will die. I shall be cured. It must be so—it
shall be so.</p>
<p>To go back to the beginning. Ah! what a long time ago that seems! As a
child I was cruel. Most boys are cruel, I think. My school companions were
a merciless set—merciless to one another, to their masters when they
had a chance, to animals, to birds. The desire to torture was in nearly
all of them. They loved to bully, and if they bullied only mildly, it was
from fear, not from love. They did not wish their boomerang to return and
slay them. If a boy were deformed, they twitted him. If a master were
kind, or gentle, or shy, they made his life as intolerable as they could.
If an animal or a bird came into their power, they had no pity. I was like
the rest; indeed, I think that I was worse. Cruelty is horrible. I have
enough imagination to do more than know that—to feel it.</p>
<p>Some say that it is lack of imagination which makes men and women brutes.
May it not be power of imagination? The interest of torturing is lessened,
is almost lost, if we can not be the tortured as well as the torturer.</p>
<p>As a child I was cruel by nature, by instinct. I was a handsome,
well-bred, gentlemanlike, gentle-looking little brute. My parents adored
me, and I was good to them. They were so kind to me that I was almost fond
of them. Why not? It seemed to me as politic to be fond of them as of
anyone else. I did what I pleased, but I did not always let them know it;
so I pleased them. The wise child will take care to foster the ignorance
of its parents. My people were pretty well off, and I was their only
child; but my chief chances of future pleasure in life were centred in my
grandmother, my mother's mother. She was immensely rich, and she lived
here. This room in which I am writing now was her favourite sitting-room.
On that hearth, before a log fire, such as is burning at this moment, used
to sit that wonderful cat of hers—that horrible cat! Why did I ever
play my childish cards to win this house, this place? Sometimes, lately—very
lately only—I have wondered, like a fool perhaps. Yet would
Professor Black say so? I remember, as a boy of sixteen, paying my last
visit here to my grandmother. It bored me very much to come. But she was
said to be near death, and death leaves great houses vacant for others to
fill. So when my mother said that I had better come, and my father added
that he thought my grandmother was fonder of me than of my other
relations, I gave up all my boyish plans for the holidays with apparent
willingness. Though almost a child, I was not short-sighted. I knew every
boy had a future as well as a present. I gave up my plans, and came here
with a smile; but in my heart I hated my grandmother for having power, and
so bending me to relinquish pleasure for boredom. I hated her, and I came
to her and kissed her, and saw her beautiful white Persian cat sitting
before the fire in this room, and thought of the fellow who was my bosom
friend, and with whom I longed to be, shooting, or fishing, or riding. And
I looked at the cat again. I remember it began to purr when I went near to
it. It sat quite still, with its blue eyes fixed upon the fire, but when I
approached it I heard it purr complacently. I longed to kick it. The
limitations of its ridiculous life satisfied it completely. It seemed to
reproduce in an absurd, diminished way my grandmother in her white lace
cap, with her white face and hands. She sat in her chair all day and
looked at the fire. The cat sat on the hearthrug and did the same. The cat
seemed to me the animal personification of the human being who kept me
chained from all the sports and pleasures I had promised myself for the
holidays. When I went near to the cat, and heard it calmly purring at me,
I longed to do it an injury. It seemed to me as if it understood what my
grandmother did not, and was complacently triumphing at my voluntary
imprisonment with age, and laughing to itself at the pains men—and
boys—will undergo for the sake of money. Brute! I did not love my
grandmother, and she had money. I hated the cat utterly. It hadn't a <i>sou!</i></p>
<p>This beautiful house is not old. My grandfather built it himself. He had
no love for the life of towns, I believe, but was passionately in touch
with nature, and, when a young man, he set out on a strange tour through
England. His object was to find a perfect view, and in front of that view
he intended to build himself a habitation. For nearly a year, so I have
been told, he wandered through Scotland and England, and at last he came
to this place in Cumberland, to this village, to this very spot. Here his
wanderings ceased. Standing on the terrace—then uncultivated forest—that
runs in front of these windows, he found at last what he desired. He
bought the forest. He bought the windings of the river, the fields upon
its banks, and on the extreme edge of the steep gorge through which it
runs he built the lovely dwelling that to-day is mine.</p>
<p>This place is no ordinary place. It is characteristic in the highest
degree. The house is wonderfully situated, with the ground falling
abruptly in front of it, the river forming almost a horseshoe round it.
The woods are lovely. The garden, curiously, almost wildly, laid out, is
like no other garden I ever saw. And the house, though not old, is full of
little surprises, curiously shaped rooms, remarkable staircases, quaint
recesses. The place is a place to remember. The house is a house to fix
itself in the memory. Nothing that had once lived here could ever come
back and forget that it had been here. Not even an animal—not even
an animal.</p>
<p>I wish I had never gone to that dinnerparty and met the Professor. There
was a horror coming upon me then. He has hastened its steps. He has put my
fears into shape, my vague wondering into words. Why cannot men leave life
alone? Why will they catch it by the throat and wring its secrets from it?
To respect reserve is one of the first instincts of the gentleman; and
life is full of reserve.</p>
<p>It is getting very late. I thought I heard a step in the house just now. I
wonder—I wonder if <i>she</i> is asleep. I wish I knew. Day after
day passed by. My grandmother seemed to be failing, but almost
imperceptibly. She evidently loved to have me near to her. Like most old
dying people, in her mind she frantically clutched at life, that could
give to her nothing more; and I believe she grew to regard me as the
personification of all that was leaving her. My vitality warmed her. She
extended her hands to my flaming hearthfire. She seemed trying to live in
my life, and at length became afraid to let me out of her sight. One day
she said to me, in her quavering, ugly voice—old voices are so ugly,
like hideous echoes:</p>
<p>"Ronald, I could never die while you were in the room. So long as you are
with me, where I can touch you, I shall live."</p>
<p>And she put out her white, corrugated hand, and fondled my warm boy's
hand.</p>
<p>How I longed to push her hand away, and get out into the sunlight and the
air, and hear young voices, the voices of the morning, not of the
twilight, and be away from wrinkled Death, that seemed sitting on the
doorstep of that house huddled up like a beggar, waiting for the door to
be opened!</p>
<p>I was bored till I grew malignant. I confess it. And, feeling malignant, I
began to long more and more passionately to vent myself on someone or
something. I looked at the cat, which, as usual, was sitting before the
fire.</p>
<p>Animals have intuitions as keen as those of a woman, keener than those of
a man. They inherit an instinct of fear of those who hate them from a long
line of ancestors who have suffered at the hands of cruel men. They can
tell by a look, by a motion, by the tone of a voice, whether to expect
from anyone kindness or malignity. The cat had purred complacently on the
first day of my arrival, and had hunched up her white, furry back towards
my hand, and had smiled with her calm, light-blue eyes. Now, when I
approached her, she seemed to gather herself together and to make herself
small. She shrank from me. There was—as I fancied—a dawning
comprehension, a dawning terror in her blue eyes. She always sat very
close to my grandmother now, as if she sought protection, and she watched
me as if she were watching for an intention which she apprehended to grow
in my mind.</p>
<p>And the intention came.</p>
<p>For, as the days went on, and my grandmother still lived, I began to grow
desperate. My holiday time was over now, but my parents wrote telling me
to stay where I was, and not to think of returning to school. My
grandmother had caused a letter to be sent to them in which she said that
she could not part from me, and added that my parents would never have
cause to regret interrupting my education for a time. "He will be paid in
full for every moment he loses," she wrote, referring to me.</p>
<p>It seemed a strange taste in her to care so much for a boy, but she had
never loved women, and I was handsome, and she liked handsome faces. The
brutality in my nature was not written upon my features. I had smiling,
frank brown eyes, a lithe young figure, a gay boy's voice. My movements
were quick, and I have always been told that my gestures were never
awkward, my demeanour was never unfinished, as is the case so often with
lads at school. Outwardly I was attractive; and the old woman, who had
married two husbands merely for their looks, delighted in feeling that she
had the power to retain me by her side at an age when most boys avoid old
people as if they were the pestilence.</p>
<p>And then I pretended to love her, and obeyed all her insufferably tiresome
behests. But I longed to wreak vengeance upon her all the same. My dearest
friend, the fellow with whom I was to have spent my holidays, was leaving
at the end of this term which I was missing. He wrote to me furious
letters, urging me to come back, and reproaching me for my selfishness and
lack of affection.</p>
<p>Each time I received one I looked at the cat, and the cat shrank nearer to
my grandmother's chair.</p>
<p>It never purred now, and nothing would induce it to leave the room where
she sat. One day the servant said to me:</p>
<p>"I believe the poor dumb thing knows my mistress can't last very much
longer, sir. The way that cat looks up at her goes to my heart. Ah! them
beasts understand things as well as we do, I believe."</p>
<p>I think the cat understood quite well. It did watch my grandmother in a
very strange way, gazing up into her face, as if to mark the changing
contours, the increasing lines, the down-droop of the features, that
bespoke the gradual soft approach of death. It listened to the sound of
her voice; and as, each day, the voice grew more vague, more weak and
toneless, an anxiety that made me exult dawned and deepened in its blue
eyes. Or so I thought.</p>
<p>I had a great deal of morbid imagination at that age, and loved to weave a
web of fancies, mostly horrible, around almost everything that entered
into my life. It pleased me to believe that the cat understood each new
intention that came into my mind, read me silently from its place near the
fire, tracked my thoughts, and was terror-stricken as they concentrated
themselves round a definite resolve, which hardened and toughened day by
day.</p>
<p>It pleased me to believe, do I say? I did really believe, and do believe
now, that the cat understood all, and grew haggard with fear as my
grandmother failed visibly. For it knew what the end would mean for it.</p>
<p>That first day of my arrival, when I saw my grandmother in her white cap,
with her white face and hands, and the big white cat sitting near to her,
I had thought there was a similarity between them. That similarity struck
me more forcibly, grew upon me, as my time in the house grew longer, until
the latter seemed almost a reproduction of the former, and after each
letter from my friend my hate for the two increased. But my hate for my
grandmother was impotent, and would always be so. I could never repay her
for the <i>ennui</i>, the furious, forced inactivity which made my life a
burden, and spurred my bad passions while they lulled me in a terrible,
enforced repose. I could repay her favourite, the thing she had always
cherished, her feline confidant, who lived in safety under the shadow of
her protection. I could wreak my fury on that when the protection was
withdrawn, as it must be at last. It seemed to my brutal, imaginative,
unfinished boy's mind that the murder of her pet must hurt and wound my
grandmother even after she was dead. I would make her suffer then, when
she was impotent to wreak a vengeance upon me. I would kill the cat.</p>
<p>The creature knew my resolve the day I made it, and had even, I should
say, anticipated it.</p>
<p>As I sat day after day beside my grandmother's armchair in the dim room,
with the blinds drawn to shut out the summer sunlight, and talked to her
in a subdued and reverent voice, agreeing with all the old banalities she
uttered, all the preposterous opinions she propounded, all the commands
she laid upon me, I gazed beyond her at the cat, and the creature was
haggard with apprehension.</p>
<p>It knew, as I knew, that its day was coming. Sometimes I bent down and
took it up on my lap to please my grandmother, and praised its beauty and
its gentleness to her And all the time I felt its warm, furry body
trembling with horror between my hands. This pleased me, and I pretended
that I was never happy unless it was on my knees. I kept it there for
hours, stroking it so tenderly, smoothing its thick white coat, which was
always in the most perfect order, talking to it, caressing it.</p>
<p>And sometimes I took its head between my two hands, turned its face to
mine, and stared into its large blue eyes. Then I could read all its
agony, all its torture of apprehension: and in spite of my friend's
letters, and the dulness of my days, I was almost happy.</p>
<p>The summer was deepening, the glow of the roses flushed the garden ways,
the skies were clear above Scawfell, when the end at last drew near. My
grandmother's face was now scarcely recognizable. The eyes were sunk deep
in her head. All expression seemed to fade gradually away. Her cheeks were
no longer fine ivory white; a dull, sickening, yellow pallor overspread
them. She seldom looked at me now, but rested entombed in her great
armchair, her shrunken limbs seeming to tend downwards, as if she were
inclined to slide to the floor and die there. Her lips were thin and dry,
and moved perpetually in a silent chattering, as if her mind were talking
and her voice were already dead. The tide of life was retreating from her
body. I could almost see it visibly ebb away. The failing waves made no
sound upon the shore. Death is uncanny, like all silent things.</p>
<p>Her maid wished her to stay entirely in bed, but she would get up,
muttering that she was well; and the doctor said it was useless to hinder
her. She had no specific disease. Only the years were taking their last
toll of her. So she was placed in her chair each day by the fire, and sat
there till evening, muttering with those dry lips. The stiff folds of her
silken skirts formed an angle, and there the cat crouched hour after hour,
a silent, white, waiting thing.</p>
<p>And the waves ebbed and ebbed away, and I waited too.</p>
<p>One afternoon, as I sat by my grandmother, the servant entered with a
letter for me just arrived by the post. I took it up. It was from
Willoughby, my school-friend. He said the term was over, that he had left
school, and his father had decided to send him out to America to start in
business in New York, instead of entering him at Oxford as he had hoped.
He bade me good-bye, and said he supposed we should not meet again for
years; "but," he added, "no doubt you won't care a straw, so long as you
get the confounded money you're after. You've taught me one of the lessons
of life, young Ronald—never to believe in friendship."</p>
<p>As I read the letter I set my teeth. All that was good in my nature
centred round Willoughby. He was a really fine fellow. I honestly and
truly loved him. His news gave me a bitter shock, and turned my heart to
iron and to fire. Perhaps I should never see him again; even if I did,
time would have changed him, seared him—my friend, in his wonderful
youth, with the morning in his eyes, would be no more. I hated myself in
that moment for having stayed; I hated still more her who had kept me. For
the moment I was carried out of myself. I crushed the letter up in my
burning hand. I turned fiercely round upon that yellow, enigmatic, dying
figure in the great chair. All the fury, locked within my heart for so
long, rose to the surface, and drove self-interest away. I turned upon my
grandmother with blazing eyes and trembling limbs. I opened my mouth to
utter a torrent of reproachful words, when—what was it?—what
slight change had stolen into the wrinkled, yellow face? I bent over her.
The eyes gazed at me, but so horribly! She sat so low in her chair; she
looked so fearful, so very strange. I put my fingers on her eyelids; I
drew them down over the eyeballs: they did not open again. I felt her
withered hands: they were ice. Then I knew, and I felt myself smiling. I
leaned over the dead woman. There, on the far side of her, crouched the
cat. Its white fur was all bristling; its blue eyes were dilated; on its
jaws there were flecks of foam.</p>
<p>I leaned over the dead woman and took it in my arms.</p>
<hr />
<p>That was nearly twenty years ago, and yet to-night the memory of that
moment, and what followed it, bring a fear to my heart which I must
combat. I have read of men who lived for long spaces of time haunted by
demons created by their imagination, and I have laughed at them and pitied
them. Surely I am not going to join in their folly, in their madness, led
to the gates of terror by my own fancies, half-confirmed, apparently, by
the chance utterances of a conceited Professor—a man of fads,
although a man of science.</p>
<p>That was twenty years ago. After to-night let me forget it. After
to-night, do I say? Hark! the birds are twittering in the dew outside. The
pale, early sun-shafts strike over the moors. And I am tired. To-morrow
night I will finish this wrestle with my own folly; I will give the <i>coup
de gr�ce</i> to my imagination.. But no more now. My brain is not calm,
and I will not write in excitement.</p>
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