H g wells omnibus, p.203

H G Wells Omnibus, page 203

 

H G Wells Omnibus
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  Would the rise of the ground to the ribs of rock never come?

  A figure, black and erect, stood in front of her suddenly, and beyond appeared a group of black, straight antagonists. She staggered on towards them, gripping her rifle with some muddled idea of defence, and in another moment she was brushing against the branches of a stunted fir, which shed thick lumps of snow upon her feet. What trees were these? Had she ever passed any trees? No! There were no trees on her way to Trafford….

  She began whimpering like a tormented child. But even as she wept she turned her sledge about to follow the edge of the wood. She was too much downhill, she thought and she must bear up again.

  She left the trees behind, made an angle uphill to the right, and was presently among trees again. Again she left them and again came back to them. She screamed with anger at them and twitched her sledge away. She wiped at the snowstorm with her arm as though she would wipe it away. She wanted to stamp on the universe….

  And she ached, she ached….

  Something caught her eye ahead, something that gleamed; it was exactly like a long, bare rather pinkish bone standing erect on the ground. Just because it was strange and queer she ran forward to it. Then as she came nearer she perceived it was a streak of barked trunk; a branch had been torn off a pine tree and the bark stripped down to the root. And then her foot hit against a freshly hewn stump, and then came another, poking its pinkish wounds above the snow. And there were chips! This filled her with wonder. Some one had been cutting wood! There must be Indians or trappers near, she thought, and then realized the wood-cutter could be none other than herself.

  She turned to the right and saw the rocks rising steeply close at hand. “Oh Rag!” she cried, and fired her rifle in the air.

  Ten seconds, twenty seconds, and then so loud and near it amazed her, came his answering shot. It sounded like the hillside bursting.

  In another moment she had discovered the trail she had made overnight and that morning by dragging firewood. It was now a shallow soft white trench. Instantly her despair and fatigue had gone from her. Should she take a load of wood with her? she asked herself, in addition to the weight behind her, and had a better idea. She would unload and pile her stuff here, and bring him down on the sledge closer to the wood. She looked about and saw two rocks that diverged with a space between. She flashed schemes. She would trample the snow hard and flat, put her sledge on it, pile boughs and make a canopy of blanket overhead and behind. Then a fire in front.

  She saw her camp admirable. She tossed her provisions down and ran up the broad windings of her pine-tree trail to Trafford, with the unloaded sledge bumping behind her. She ran as lightly as though she had done nothing that day.

  She found him markedly recovered, weak and quiet, with snow drifting over his feet, his rifle across his knees, and his pipe alight. “Back already,” he said, “but——”

  He hesitated. “No grub?”

  She knelt over him, gave his rough unshaven cheek a swift kiss, and very rapidly explained her plan.

  § 8

  In three days’ time they were back at the hut, and the last two days they wore blue spectacles because of the mid-day glare of the sunlit snow.

  It amazed Marjorie to discover as she lay awake in the camp on the edge of the ravine close to the hut to which she had lugged Trafford during the second day, that she was deeply happy. It was preposterous that she should be so, but those days of almost despairful stress were irradiated now by a new courage. She was doing this thing, against all Labrador and the snow-driving wind that blew from the polar wilderness, she was winning. It was a great discovery to her that hardship and effort almost to the breaking-point could ensue in so deep a satisfaction. She lay and thought how deep and rich life had become for her, as though in all this effort and struggle some unsuspected veil had been torn away. She perceived again, but now with no sense of desolation, that same infinite fragility of life which she had first perceived when she had watched the Aurora Borealis flickering up the sky. Beneath that realization and carrying it, as a river flood may carry scum, was a sense of herself as something deeper, greater, more enduring than mountain or wilderness or sky, or any of those monstrous forms of nature that had dwarfed her physical self to nothingness.

  She had a persuasion of self detachment and illumination, and withal of self-discovery. She saw her life of time and space for what it was. Away in London the children, with the coldest of noses and the gayest of spirits, would be scampering about their bedrooms in the mild morning sunlight of a London winter; Elsie, the parlourmaid, would be whisking dexterous about the dining-room, the bacon would be cooking and the coffee-mill at work, the letters of the morning delivery perhaps just pattering into the letter-box, and all the bright little household she had made, with all the furniture she had arranged, all the characteristic decoration she had given it, all the clever convenient arrangements, would be getting itself into action for another day—and it wasn’t herself! It was the extremest of her superficiality.

  She had come out of all that, and even so it seemed she had come out of herself; this weary woman lying awake on the balsam boughs with a brain cleared by underfeeding and this continuous arduous bath of toil in snow-washed, frost cleansed, starry air, this, too, was no more than a momentarily clarified window for her unknown and indefinable reality. What was that reality? what was she herself? She became interested in framing an answer to that, and slipped down from the peace of soul she had attained. Her serenity gave way to a reiteration of this question, reiterations increasing and at last oppressing like the snowflakes of a storm, perpetual whirling repetitions that at last confused her and hid the sky….

  She fell asleep….

  § 9

  With their return to the hut, Marjorie had found herself encountering a new set of urgencies. In their absence that wretched little wolverine had found great plenty and happiness in the tent and store-shed; its traces were manifest nearly everywhere, and it had particularly assailed the candles, after a destructive time among the frozen caribou beef. It had clambered up on the packages of sardines and jumped thence on to a sloping pole that it could claw along into the frame of the roof. She rearranged the packages, but that was no good. She could not leave Trafford in order to track the brute down, and for a night or so she could not think of any way of checking its depredations. It came each night…. Trafford kept her close at home. She had expected that when he was back in his bunk, secure and warm, he would heal rapidly, but instead he suddenly developed all the symptoms of a severe feverish cold, and his scars, which had seemed healing, became flushed and ugly-looking. Moreover, there was something wrong with his leg, an ominous ache that troubled her mind. Every woman, she decided, ought to know how to set a bone. He was unable to sleep by reason of these miseries, though very desirous of doing so. He became distressingly weak and inert, he ceased to care for food, and presently he began ta talk to himself with a complete disregard of her presence. Hourly she regretted her ignorance of medicine that left her with no conceivable remedy for all the aching and gnawing that worried and weakened him, except bathing with antiseptics and a liberal use of quinine.

  And his face became strange to her, for over his flushed and sunken cheeks, under the raw spaces of the scar a blond beard bristled and grew. Presently, Trafford was a bearded man.

  Incidentally, however, she killed the wolverine by means of a trap of her own contrivance, a loaded rifle with a bait of what was nearly her last candles, rigged to the trigger.

  But this loss of the candles brought home to them the steady lengthening of the nights. Scarcely seven hours of day remained now in the black, cold grip of the darkness. And through those seventeen hours of chill aggression they had no light but the red glow of the stove. She had to close the door of the hut and bar every chink and cranny against the icy air, that became at last a murderous, freezing wind. Not only did she line the hut with every scrap of skin and paper she could obtain, but she went out with the spade toiling for three laborious afternoons in piling and beating snow against the outer frame. And now it was that Trafford talked at last, talked with something of the persistence of delirium, and she sat and listened hour by hour, silently, for he gave no heed to her or to anything she might say. He talked, it seemed, to God….

  § 10

  Darkness about a sullen glow of red, and a voice speaking.

  The voice of a man, fevered and in pain, wounded and amidst hardship and danger, struggling with the unrelenting riddle of his being. Ever and again when a flame leapt she would see his face, haggard, bearded, changed, and yet infinitely familiar.

  His voice varied, now high and clear, now mumbling, now vexed and expostulating, now rich with deep feeling, now fagged and slow; his matter varied, too; now he talked like one who is inspired, and now like one lost and confused, stupidly repeating phrases, going back upon a misleading argument, painfully, laboriously beginning over and over again. Marjorie sat before the stove watching it burn and sink, replenishing it, preparing food, and outside the bitter wind moaned and blew the powdery snow before it, and the shortening interludes of pallid, diffused daylight which pass for days in such weather, came and went. Intense cold had come now with leaden snowy days and starless nights.

  Sometimes his speech filled her mind, seemed to fill all her world; sometimes she ceased to listen, following thoughts of her own. Sometimes she dozed; sometimes she awakened from sleep to find him talking. But slowly she realized a thread in his discourse, a progress and development.

  Sometimes he talked of his early researches, and then he would trace computations with his hands as if he were using a blackboard, and became distressed to remember what he had written. Sometimes he would be under the claws of the lynx again, and fighting for his eyes. “Ugh!” he said, “keep those hind legs still. Keep your hind legs still! Knife? Knife? Ah! got it. Gu—u—u, you Beast!”

  But the gist of his speech was determined by the purpose of his journey to Labrador. At last he was reviewing his life and hers, and all that their life might signify, even as he determined to do. She began to perceive that whatever else drifted into his mind and talk, this recurred and grew, that he returned to the conclusion he had reached, and not to the beginning of the matter, and went on from that….

  “You see,” he said, “our lives are nothing—nothing in themselves. I know that; I’ve never had any doubts of that. We individuals just pick up a mixed lot of things out of the powers that begat us, and lay them down again presently a little altered, that’s all—heredities, traditions, the finger nails of my grandfather, a great-aunt’s lips, the faith of a sect, the ideas of one’s time. We live and then we die, and the threads run, dispersing this way and that. To make other people again. Whatever’s immortal isn’t that, our looks or our habits, our thoughts or our memories—just the shapes, these are, of one immortal stuff…. One immortal stuff.”…

  The voice died away as if he was baffled. Then it resumed.

  “But we ought to partake of immortality; that’s my point. We ought to partake of immortality.

  “I mean we’re like the little elements in a magnet; ought not to lie higgledy-piggledy, ought to point the same way, be polarized——Something microcosmic, you know, ought to be found in a man.

  “Analogies run away with one. Suppose the bar isn’t magnetized yet! Suppose purpose has to come; suppose the immortal stuff isn’t yet, isn’t being but struggling to be. Struggling to be…. Gods! that morning! When the child was born! And afterwards she was there—with a smile on her lips, and a little flushed and proud—as if nothing had happened so very much out of the way. Nothing so wonderful. And we had another life besides our own!…”

  Afterwards he came back to that. “That was a good image,” he said, “something trying to exist, which isn’t substance, doesn’t belong to space or time, something stifled and enclosed, struggling to get through. Just confused birth cries, eyes that hardly see, deaf ears, poor little thrusting hands. A thing altogether blind at first, a twitching and thrusting of protoplasm under the waters, and then the plants creeping up the beaches, the insects and reptiles on the margins of the rivers, beasts with a flicker of light in their eyes answering the sun. And at last, out of the long interplay of desire and fear, an ape, an ape that stared and wondered, and scratched queer pictures on a bone….”

  He lapsed into silent thought for a time, and Marjorie glanced at his dim face in the shadows.

  “I say nothing of ultimates,” he said at last.

  He repeated that twice before his thoughts would flow again.

  “This is as much as I see, in time as I know it and space as I know it—something struggling to exist. It’s true to the end of my limits. What can I say beyond that? It struggles to exist, becomes conscious, becomes now conscious of itself. That is where I come in, as a part of it. Above the beast in me is that—the desire to know better, to know—beautifully, and to transmit my knowledge. That’s all there is in life for me beyond food and shelter and tidying up. This Being—opening its eyes, listening, trying to comprehend. Every good thing in man is that;—looking and making pictures, listening and making songs, making philosophies and sciences, trying new powers, bridge and engine, spark and gun. At the bottom of my soul, that. We began with bone-scratching. We’re still—near it. I am just a part of this beginning—mixed with other things. Every book, every art, every religion is that, the attempt to understand and express—mixed with other things. Nothing else matters, nothing whatever. I tell you——Nothing whatever!

  “I’ve always believed that. All my life I’ve believed that.

  “Only I’ve forgotten.”

  “Every man with any brains believes that at the bottom of his heart. Only he gets busy and forgets. He goes shooting lynxes and breaks his leg. Odd, instinctive, brutal thing to do—to go tracking down a lynx to kill it! I grant you that, Marjorie. I grant you that.”

  “Grant me what?” she cried, startled beyond measure to hear herself addressed.

  “Grant you that it is rather absurd to go hunting a lynx. And what big paws it has—disproportionately big! I wonder if that’s an adaptation to snow. Tremendous paws they are…. But the real thing, I was saying, the real thing is to get knowledge, and express it. All things lead up to that. Civilization, social order, just for that. Except for that, all the life of man, all his affairs, his laws and police, his morals and manners—nonsense, nonsense, nonsense. Lynx hunts! Just ways of getting themselves mauled and clawed perhaps—into a state of understanding. Who knows?…”

  His voice became low and clear.

  “Understanding spreading like a dawn….

  “Logic and language, clumsy implements, but rising to our needs, rising to our needs, thought clarified, enriched, reaching out to every man alive—some day—presently—touching every man alive, harmonizing acts and plans, drawing men into gigantic co-operations, tremendous co-operations….

  “Until man shall stand upon this earth as upon a footstool and reach out his hand among the stars….

  “And then I went into the rubber market, and spent seven years of my life driving shares up and down and into a net!… Queer game indeed! Stupid ass Behrens was—at bottom….

  “There’s a flaw in it somewhere….”

  He came back to that several times before he seemed able to go on from it.

  “There is a collective mind,” he said, “a growing general consciousness—growing clearer. Something put me away from that, but I know it. My work, my thinking, was a part of it. That’s why I was so mad about Behrens.”

  “Behrens?”

  “Of course. He’d got a twist, a wrong twist. It makes me angry now. It will take years, it will eat up some brilliant man to clean up after Behrens——”

  “Yes, but the point is”—his voice became acute—“why did I go making money and let Behrens in? Why generally and in all sorts of things does Behrens come in?…”

  He was silent for a long time, and then he began to answer himself. “Of course,” he said, “I said it—or somebody said it—about this collective mind being mixed with other things. It’s something arising out of life—not the common stuff of life. An exhalation…. It’s like the little tongues of fire that came at Pentecost…. Queer how one comes drifting back to these images. Perhaps I shall die a Christian yet…. The other Christians won’t like me if I do. What was I saying?… It’s what I reach up to, what I desire shall pervade me, not what I am. Just as far as I give myself purely to knowledge, to making feeling and thought clear in my mind and words, to the understanding and expression of the realities and relations of life, just so far do I achieve Salvation…. Salvation!…

  “I wonder, is Salvation the same for every one? Perhaps for one man Salvation is research and thought, and for another expression in art, and for another nursing lepers. Provided he does it in the spirit. He has to do it in the spirit….”

  There came a silence as though some difficulty baffled him, and he was feeling back to get his argument again.

  “This flame that arises out of life, that redeems life from purposeless triviality, isn’t life. Let me get hold of that. That’s a point. That’s a very important point.”

  Something had come to him.

  “I’ve never talked of this to Marjorie. I’ve lived with her nine years and more, and never talked of religion. Not once. That’s so queer of us. Any other couple in any other time would have talked religion no end…. People ought to.”

  Then he stuck out an argumentative hand. “You see, Marjorie is life,” he said.

  “She took me.”

  He spoke slowly, as though he traced things carefully. “Before I met her I suppose I wasn’t half alive. No! Yet I don’t remember I felt particularly incomplete. Women were interesting, of course; they excited me at times, that girl at Yonkers!—H’m. I stuck to my work. It was fine work, I forget half of it now, the half-concealed intimations I mean—queer how one forgets!—but I know I felt my way to wide, deep things. It was like exploring caves—monstrous, limitless caves. Such caves!… Very still—underground. Wonderful and beautiful…. They’re lying there now for other men to seek. Other men will find them…. Then she came, as though she was taking possession. The beauty of her, oh! the life and bright eagerness, and the incompatibility! That’s the riddle! I’ve loved her always. When she came to my arms it seemed to me the crown of life. Caves indeed! Old caves! Nothing else seemed to matter. But something did. All sorts of things did. I found that out soon enough. And when that first child was born. That for a time was supreme…. Yes—she’s the quintessence of life, the dear greed of her, the appetite, the clever appetite for things. She grabs. She’s so damned clever! The light in her eyes! Her quick sure hands!… Only my work was crowded out of my life and ended, and she didn’t seem to feel it, she didn’t seem to mind it. There was a sort of disregard. Disregard. As though all that didn’t really matter….”

 

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