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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<HTML>
+<HEAD>
+
+<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+
+<TITLE>
+The Parasite
+</TITLE>
+
+<STYLE TYPE="text/css">
+BODY { color: Black;
+ background: White;
+ margin-right: 5%;
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ font-size: medium;
+ font-family: "Times New Roman", serif;
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+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Parasite, by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Parasite
+
+Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+Release Date: March 19, 2008 [EBook #355]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PARASITE ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+THE PARASITE
+</H1>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+A Story
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY
+</H3>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+A. CONAN DOYLE
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+AUTHOR OF "THE REFUGEES" "MICAH CLARKE" ETC.
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+1894
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+CONTENTS
+</H2>
+
+<TABLE ALIGN="center" WIDTH="100%">
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="25%">
+<A HREF="#chap01">CHAPTER I</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="25%">
+<A HREF="#chap02">CHAPTER II</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="25%">
+<A HREF="#chap03">CHAPTER III</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="25%">
+<A HREF="#chap04">CHAPTER IV</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+</TABLE>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+THE PARASITE
+</H1>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+I
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+March 24. The spring is fairly with us now. Outside my laboratory
+window the great chestnut-tree is all covered with the big, glutinous,
+gummy buds, some of which have already begun to break into little green
+shuttlecocks. As you walk down the lanes you are conscious of the
+rich, silent forces of nature working all around you. The wet earth
+smells fruitful and luscious. Green shoots are peeping out everywhere.
+The twigs are stiff with their sap; and the moist, heavy English air is
+laden with a faintly resinous perfume. Buds in the hedges, lambs
+beneath them&mdash;everywhere the work of reproduction going forward!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I can see it without, and I can feel it within. We also have our
+spring when the little arterioles dilate, the lymph flows in a brisker
+stream, the glands work harder, winnowing and straining. Every year
+nature readjusts the whole machine. I can feel the ferment in my blood
+at this very moment, and as the cool sunshine pours through my window I
+could dance about in it like a gnat. So I should, only that Charles
+Sadler would rush upstairs to know what was the matter. Besides, I
+must remember that I am Professor Gilroy. An old professor may afford
+to be natural, but when fortune has given one of the first chairs in
+the university to a man of four-and-thirty he must try and act the part
+consistently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What a fellow Wilson is! If I could only throw the same enthusiasm
+into physiology that he does into psychology, I should become a Claude
+Bernard at the least. His whole life and soul and energy work to one
+end. He drops to sleep collating his results of the past day, and he
+wakes to plan his researches for the coming one. And yet, outside the
+narrow circle who follow his proceedings, he gets so little credit for
+it. Physiology is a recognized science. If I add even a brick to the
+edifice, every one sees and applauds it. But Wilson is trying to dig
+the foundations for a science of the future. His work is underground
+and does not show. Yet he goes on uncomplainingly, corresponding with
+a hundred semi-maniacs in the hope of finding one reliable witness,
+sifting a hundred lies on the chance of gaining one little speck of
+truth, collating old books, devouring new ones, experimenting,
+lecturing, trying to light up in others the fiery interest which is
+consuming him. I am filled with wonder and admiration when I think of
+him, and yet, when he asks me to associate myself with his researches,
+I am compelled to tell him that, in their present state, they offer
+little attraction to a man who is devoted to exact science. If he
+could show me something positive and objective, I might then be tempted
+to approach the question from its physiological side. So long as half
+his subjects are tainted with charlatanerie and the other half with
+hysteria we physiologists must content ourselves with the body and
+leave the mind to our descendants.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No doubt I am a materialist. Agatha says that I am a rank one. I tell
+her that is an excellent reason for shortening our engagement, since I
+am in such urgent need of her spirituality. And yet I may claim to be
+a curious example of the effect of education upon temperament, for by
+nature I am, unless I deceive myself, a highly psychic man. I was a
+nervous, sensitive boy, a dreamer, a somnambulist, full of impressions
+and intuitions. My black hair, my dark eyes, my thin, olive face, my
+tapering fingers, are all characteristic of my real temperament, and
+cause experts like Wilson to claim me as their own. But my brain is
+soaked with exact knowledge. I have trained myself to deal only with
+fact and with proof. Surmise and fancy have no place in my scheme of
+thought. Show me what I can see with my microscope, cut with my
+scalpel, weigh in my balance, and I will devote a lifetime to its
+investigation. But when you ask me to study feelings, impressions,
+suggestions, you ask me to do what is distasteful and even
+demoralizing. A departure from pure reason affects me like an evil
+smell or a musical discord.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Which is a very sufficient reason why I am a little loath to go to
+Professor Wilson's tonight. Still I feel that I could hardly get out
+of the invitation without positive rudeness; and, now that Mrs. Marden
+and Agatha are going, of course I would not if I could. But I had
+rather meet them anywhere else. I know that Wilson would draw me into
+this nebulous semi-science of his if he could. In his enthusiasm he is
+perfectly impervious to hints or remonstrances. Nothing short of a
+positive quarrel will make him realize my aversion to the whole
+business. I have no doubt that he has some new mesmerist or
+clairvoyant or medium or trickster of some sort whom he is going to
+exhibit to us, for even his entertainments bear upon his hobby. Well,
+it will be a treat for Agatha, at any rate. She is interested in it,
+as woman usually is in whatever is vague and mystical and indefinite.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+10.50 P. M. This diary-keeping of mine is, I fancy, the outcome of
+that scientific habit of mind about which I wrote this morning. I like
+to register impressions while they are fresh. Once a day at least I
+endeavor to define my own mental position. It is a useful piece of
+self-analysis, and has, I fancy, a steadying effect upon the character.
+Frankly, I must confess that my own needs what stiffening I can give
+it. I fear that, after all, much of my neurotic temperament survives,
+and that I am far from that cool, calm precision which characterizes
+Murdoch or Pratt-Haldane. Otherwise, why should the tomfoolery which I
+have witnessed this evening have set my nerves thrilling so that even
+now I am all unstrung? My only comfort is that neither Wilson nor Miss
+Penclosa nor even Agatha could have possibly known my weakness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And what in the world was there to excite me? Nothing, or so little
+that it will seem ludicrous when I set it down.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Mardens got to Wilson's before me. In fact, I was one of the last
+to arrive and found the room crowded. I had hardly time to say a word
+to Mrs. Marden and to Agatha, who was looking charming in white and
+pink, with glittering wheat-ears in her hair, when Wilson came
+twitching at my sleeve.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You want something positive, Gilroy," said he, drawing me apart into a
+corner. "My dear fellow, I have a phenomenon&mdash;a phenomenon!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I should have been more impressed had I not heard the same before. His
+sanguine spirit turns every fire-fly into a star.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No possible question about the bona fides this time," said he, in
+answer, perhaps, to some little gleam of amusement in my eyes. "My
+wife has known her for many years. They both come from Trinidad, you
+know. Miss Penclosa has only been in England a month or two, and knows
+no one outside the university circle, but I assure you that the things
+she has told us suffice in themselves to establish clairvoyance upon an
+absolutely scientific basis. There is nothing like her, amateur or
+professional. Come and be introduced!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I like none of these mystery-mongers, but the amateur least of all.
+With the paid performer you may pounce upon him and expose him the
+instant that you have seen through his trick. He is there to deceive
+you, and you are there to find him out. But what are you to do with
+the friend of your host's wife? Are you to turn on a light suddenly
+and expose her slapping a surreptitious banjo? Or are you to hurl
+cochineal over her evening frock when she steals round with her
+phosphorus bottle and her supernatural platitude? There would be a
+scene, and you would be looked upon as a brute. So you have your
+choice of being that or a dupe. I was in no very good humor as I
+followed Wilson to the lady.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Any one less like my idea of a West Indian could not be imagined. She
+was a small, frail creature, well over forty, I should say, with a
+pale, peaky face, and hair of a very light shade of chestnut. Her
+presence was insignificant and her manner retiring. In any group of
+ten women she would have been the last whom one would have picked out.
+Her eyes were perhaps her most remarkable, and also, I am compelled to
+say, her least pleasant, feature. They were gray in color,&mdash;gray with
+a shade of green,&mdash;and their expression struck me as being decidedly
+furtive. I wonder if furtive is the word, or should I have said
+fierce? On second thoughts, feline would have expressed it better. A
+crutch leaning against the wall told me what was painfully evident when
+she rose: that one of her legs was crippled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So I was introduced to Miss Penclosa, and it did not escape me that as
+my name was mentioned she glanced across at Agatha. Wilson had
+evidently been talking. And presently, no doubt, thought I, she will
+inform me by occult means that I am engaged to a young lady with
+wheat-ears in her hair. I wondered how much more Wilson had been
+telling her about me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Professor Gilroy is a terrible sceptic," said he; "I hope, Miss
+Penclosa, that you will be able to convert him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She looked keenly up at me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Professor Gilroy is quite right to be sceptical if he has not seen any
+thing convincing," said she. "I should have thought," she added, "that
+you would yourself have been an excellent subject."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For what, may I ask?" said I.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, for mesmerism, for example."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My experience has been that mesmerists go for their subjects to those
+who are mentally unsound. All their results are vitiated, as it seems
+to me, by the fact that they are dealing with abnormal organisms."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Which of these ladies would you say possessed a normal organism?" she
+asked. "I should like you to select the one who seems to you to have
+the best balanced mind. Should we say the girl in pink and
+white?&mdash;Miss Agatha Marden, I think the name is."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I should attach weight to any results from her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have never tried how far she is impressionable. Of course some
+people respond much more rapidly than others. May I ask how far your
+scepticism extends? I suppose that you admit the mesmeric sleep and
+the power of suggestion."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I admit nothing, Miss Penclosa."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dear me, I thought science had got further than that. Of course I
+know nothing about the scientific side of it. I only know what I can
+do. You see the girl in red, for example, over near the Japanese jar.
+I shall will that she come across to us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She bent forward as she spoke and dropped her fan upon the floor. The
+girl whisked round and came straight toward us, with an enquiring look
+upon her face, as if some one had called her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you think of that, Gilroy?" cried Wilson, in a kind of ecstasy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I did not dare to tell him what I thought of it. To me it was the most
+barefaced, shameless piece of imposture that I had ever witnessed. The
+collusion and the signal had really been too obvious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Professor Gilroy is not satisfied," said she, glancing up at me with
+her strange little eyes. "My poor fan is to get the credit of that
+experiment. Well, we must try something else. Miss Marden, would you
+have any objection to my putting you off?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I should love it!" cried Agatha.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By this time all the company had gathered round us in a circle, the
+shirt-fronted men, and the white-throated women, some awed, some
+critical, as though it were something between a religious ceremony and
+a conjurer's entertainment. A red velvet arm-chair had been pushed
+into the centre, and Agatha lay back in it, a little flushed and
+trembling slightly from excitement. I could see it from the vibration
+of the wheat-ears. Miss Penclosa rose from her seat and stood over
+her, leaning upon her crutch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And there was a change in the woman. She no longer seemed small or
+insignificant. Twenty years were gone from her age. Her eyes were
+shining, a tinge of color had come into her sallow cheeks, her whole
+figure had expanded. So I have seen a dull-eyed, listless lad change
+in an instant into briskness and life when given a task of which he
+felt himself master. She looked down at Agatha with an expression
+which I resented from the bottom of my soul&mdash;the expression with which
+a Roman empress might have looked at her kneeling slave. Then with a
+quick, commanding gesture she tossed up her arms and swept them slowly
+down in front of her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I was watching Agatha narrowly. During three passes she seemed to be
+simply amused. At the fourth I observed a slight glazing of her eyes,
+accompanied by some dilation of her pupils. At the sixth there was a
+momentary rigor. At the seventh her lids began to droop. At the tenth
+her eyes were closed, and her breathing was slower and fuller than
+usual. I tried as I watched to preserve my scientific calm, but a
+foolish, causeless agitation convulsed me. I trust that I hid it, but
+I felt as a child feels in the dark. I could not have believed that I
+was still open to such weakness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She is in the trance," said Miss Penclosa.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She is sleeping!" I cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wake her, then!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I pulled her by the arm and shouted in her ear. She might have been
+dead for all the impression that I could make. Her body was there on
+the velvet chair. Her organs were acting&mdash;her heart, her lungs. But
+her soul! It had slipped from beyond our ken. Whither had it gone?
+What power had dispossessed it? I was puzzled and disconcerted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So much for the mesmeric sleep," said Miss Penclosa. "As regards
+suggestion, whatever I may suggest Miss Marden will infallibly do,
+whether it be now or after she has awakened from her trance. Do you
+demand proof of it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Certainly," said I.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You shall have it." I saw a smile pass over her face, as though an
+amusing thought had struck her. She stooped and whispered earnestly
+into her subject's ear. Agatha, who had been so deaf to me, nodded her
+head as she listened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Awake!" cried Miss Penclosa, with a sharp tap of her crutch upon the
+floor. The eyes opened, the glazing cleared slowly away, and the soul
+looked out once more after its strange eclipse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We went away early. Agatha was none the worse for her strange
+excursion, but I was nervous and unstrung, unable to listen to or
+answer the stream of comments which Wilson was pouring out for my
+benefit. As I bade her good-night Miss Penclosa slipped a piece of
+paper into my hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pray forgive me," said she, "if I take means to overcome your
+scepticism. Open this note at ten o'clock to-morrow morning. It is a
+little private test."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I can't imagine what she means, but there is the note, and it shall be
+opened as she directs. My head is aching, and I have written enough
+for to-night. To-morrow I dare say that what seems so inexplicable
+will take quite another complexion. I shall not surrender my
+convictions without a struggle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+March 25. I am amazed, confounded. It is clear that I must reconsider
+my opinion upon this matter. But first let me place on record what has
+occurred.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I had finished breakfast, and was looking over some diagrams with which
+my lecture is to be illustrated, when my housekeeper entered to tell me
+that Agatha was in my study and wished to see me immediately. I
+glanced at the clock and saw with sun rise that it was only half-past
+nine.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When I entered the room, she was standing on the hearth-rug facing me.
+Something in her pose chilled me and checked the words which were
+rising to my lips. Her veil was half down, but I could see that she
+was pale and that her expression was constrained.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Austin," she said, "I have come to tell you that our engagement is at
+an end."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I staggered. I believe that I literally did stagger. I know that I
+found myself leaning against the bookcase for support.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;" I stammered. "This is very sudden, Agatha."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Austin, I have come here to tell you that our engagement is at an
+end."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But surely," I cried, "you will give me some reason! This is unlike
+you, Agatha. Tell me how I have been unfortunate enough to offend you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is all over, Austin."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But why? You must be under some delusion, Agatha. Perhaps you have
+been told some falsehood about me. Or you may have misunderstood
+something that I have said to you. Only let me know what it is, and a
+word may set it all right."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We must consider it all at an end."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you left me last night without a hint at any disagreement. What
+could have occurred in the interval to change you so? It must have
+been something that happened last night. You have been thinking it
+over and you have disapproved of my conduct. Was it the mesmerism?
+Did you blame me for letting that woman exercise her power over you?
+You know that at the least sign I should have interfered."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is useless, Austin. All is over:"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her voice was cold and measured; her manner strangely formal and hard.
+It seemed to me that she was absolutely resolved not to be drawn into
+any argument or explanation. As for me, I was shaking with agitation,
+and I turned my face aside, so ashamed was I that she should see my
+want of control.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must know what this means to me!" I cried. "It is the blasting of
+all my hopes and the ruin of my life! You surely will not inflict such
+a punishment upon me unheard. You will let me know what is the matter.
+Consider how impossible it would be for me, under any circumstances, to
+treat you so. For God's sake, Agatha, let me know what I have done!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She walked past me without a word and opened the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is quite useless, Austin," said she. "You must consider our
+engagement at an end." An instant later she was gone, and, before I
+could recover myself sufficiently to follow her, I heard the hall-door
+close behind her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I rushed into my room to change my coat, with the idea of hurrying
+round to Mrs. Marden's to learn from her what the cause of my
+misfortune might be. So shaken was I that I could hardly lace my
+boots. Never shall I forget those horrible ten minutes. I had just
+pulled on my overcoat when the clock upon the mantel-piece struck ten.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ten! I associated the idea with Miss Penclosa's note. It was lying
+before me on the table, and I tore it open. It was scribbled in pencil
+in a peculiarly angular handwriting.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+"MY DEAR PROFESSOR GILROY [it said]: Pray excuse the personal nature
+of the test which I am giving you. Professor Wilson happened to
+mention the relations between you and my subject of this evening, and
+it struck me that nothing could be more convincing to you than if I
+were to suggest to Miss Marden that she should call upon you at
+half-past nine to-morrow morning and suspend your engagement for half
+an hour or so. Science is so exacting that it is difficult to give a
+satisfying test, but I am convinced that this at least will be an
+action which she would be most unlikely to do of her own free will.
+Forget any thing that she may have said, as she has really nothing
+whatever to do with it, and will certainly not recollect any thing
+about it. I write this note to shorten your anxiety, and to beg you to
+forgive me for the momentary unhappiness which my suggestion must have
+caused you.<BR>
+<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 7em">"Yours faithfully;</SPAN><BR>
+<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 15em">"HELEN PENCLOSA.</SPAN><BR>
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Really, when I had read the note, I was too relieved to be angry. It
+was a liberty. Certainly it was a very great liberty indeed on the
+part of a lady whom I had only met once. But, after all, I had
+challenged her by my scepticism. It may have been, as she said, a
+little difficult to devise a test which would satisfy me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And she had done that. There could be no question at all upon the
+point. For me hypnotic suggestion was finally established. It took
+its place from now onward as one of the facts of life. That Agatha,
+who of all women of my acquaintance has the best balanced mind, had
+been reduced to a condition of automatism appeared to be certain. A
+person at a distance had worked her as an engineer on the shore might
+guide a Brennan torpedo. A second soul had stepped in, as it were, had
+pushed her own aside, and had seized her nervous mechanism, saying: "I
+will work this for half an hour." And Agatha must have been
+unconscious as she came and as she returned. Could she make her way in
+safety through the streets in such a state? I put on my hat and
+hurried round to see if all was well with her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yes. She was at home. I was shown into the drawing-room and found her
+sitting with a book upon her lap.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are an early visitor, Austin," said she, smiling.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you have been an even earlier one," I answered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She looked puzzled. "What do you mean?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have not been out to-day?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, certainly not."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Agatha," said I seriously, "would you mind telling me exactly what you
+have done this morning?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She laughed at my earnestness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've got on your professional look, Austin. See what comes of being
+engaged to a man of science. However, I will tell you, though I can't
+imagine what you want to know for. I got up at eight. I breakfasted
+at half-past. I came into this room at ten minutes past nine and began
+to read the 'Memoirs of Mme. de Remusat.' In a few minutes I did the
+French lady the bad compliment of dropping to sleep over her pages, and
+I did you, sir, the very flattering one of dreaming about you. It is
+only a few minutes since I woke up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And found yourself where you had been before?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, where else should I find myself?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Would you mind telling me, Agatha, what it was that you dreamed about
+me? It really is not mere curiosity on my part."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I merely had a vague impression that you came into it. I cannot
+recall any thing definite."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you have not been out to-day, Agatha, how is it that your shoes are
+dusty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A pained look came over her face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Really, Austin, I do not know what is the matter with you this
+morning. One would almost think that you doubted my word. If my boots
+are dusty, it must be, of course, that I have put on a pair which the
+maid had not cleaned."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was perfectly evident that she knew nothing whatever about the
+matter, and I reflected that, after all, perhaps it was better that I
+should not enlighten her. It might frighten her, and could serve no
+good purpose that I could see. I said no more about it, therefore, and
+left shortly afterward to give my lecture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But I am immensely impressed. My horizon of scientific possibilities
+has suddenly been enormously extended. I no longer wonder at Wilson's
+demonic energy and enthusiasm. Who would not work hard who had a vast
+virgin field ready to his hand? Why, I have known the novel shape of a
+nucleolus, or a trifling peculiarity of striped muscular fibre seen
+under a 300-diameter lens, fill me with exultation. How petty do such
+researches seem when compared with this one which strikes at the very
+roots of life and the nature of the soul! I had always looked upon
+spirit as a product of matter. The brain, I thought, secreted the
+mind, as the liver does the bile. But how can this be when I see mind
+working from a distance and playing upon matter as a musician might
+upon a violin? The body does not give rise to the soul, then, but is
+rather the rough instrument by which the spirit manifests itself. The
+windmill does not give rise to the wind, but only indicates it. It was
+opposed to my whole habit of thought, and yet it was undeniably
+possible and worthy of investigation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And why should I not investigate it? I see that under yesterday's date
+I said: "If I could see something positive and objective, I might be
+tempted to approach it from the physiological aspect." Well, I have
+got my test. I shall be as good as my word. The investigation would,
+I am sure, be of immense interest. Some of my colleagues might look
+askance at it, for science is full of unreasoning prejudices, but if
+Wilson has the courage of his convictions, I can afford to have it
+also. I shall go to him to-morrow morning&mdash;to him and to Miss
+Penclosa. If she can show us so much, it is probable that she can show
+us more.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+II
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+March 26. Wilson was, as I had anticipated, very exultant over my
+conversion, and Miss Penclosa was also demurely pleased at the result
+of her experiment. Strange what a silent, colorless creature she is
+save only when she exercises her power! Even talking about it gives
+her color and life. She seems to take a singular interest in me. I
+cannot help observing how her eyes follow me about the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We had the most interesting conversation about her own powers. It is
+just as well to put her views on record, though they cannot, of course,
+claim any scientific weight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are on the very fringe of the subject," said she, when I had
+expressed wonder at the remarkable instance of suggestion which she had
+shown me. "I had no direct influence upon Miss Marden when she came
+round to you. I was not even thinking of her that morning. What I did
+was to set her mind as I might set the alarum of a clock so that at the
+hour named it would go off of its own accord. If six months instead of
+twelve hours had been suggested, it would have been the same."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And if the suggestion had been to assassinate me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She would most inevitably have done so."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But this is a terrible power!" I cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is, as you say, a terrible power," she answered gravely, "and the
+more you know of it the more terrible will it seem to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"May I ask," said I, "what you meant when you said that this matter of
+suggestion is only at the fringe of it? What do you consider the
+essential?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I had rather not tell you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I was surprised at the decision of her answer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You understand," said I, "that it is not out of curiosity I ask, but
+in the hope that I may find some scientific explanation for the facts
+with which you furnish me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Frankly, Professor Gilroy," said she, "I am not at all interested in
+science, nor do I care whether it can or cannot classify these powers."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I was hoping&mdash;&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah, that is quite another thing. If you make it a personal matter,"
+said she, with the pleasantest of smiles, "I shall be only too happy to
+tell you any thing you wish to know. Let me see; what was it you asked
+me? Oh, about the further powers. Professor Wilson won't believe in
+them, but they are quite true all the same. For example, it is
+possible for an operator to gain complete command over his subject&mdash;
+presuming that the latter is a good one. Without any previous
+suggestion he may make him do whatever he likes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Without the subject's knowledge?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That depends. If the force were strongly exerted, he would know no
+more about it than Miss Marden did when she came round and frightened
+you so. Or, if the influence was less powerful, he might be conscious
+of what he was doing, but be quite unable to prevent himself from doing
+it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Would he have lost his own will power, then?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It would be over-ridden by another stronger one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you ever exercised this power yourself?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Several times."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is your own will so strong, then?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, it does not entirely depend upon that. Many have strong wills
+which are not detachable from themselves. The thing is to have the
+gift of projecting it into another person and superseding his own. I
+find that the power varies with my own strength and health."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Practically, you send your soul into another person's body."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, you might put it that way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And what does your own body do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It merely feels lethargic."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, but is there no danger to your own health?" I asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There might be a little. You have to be careful never to let your own
+consciousness absolutely go; otherwise, you might experience some
+difficulty in finding your way back again. You must always preserve
+the connection, as it were. I am afraid I express myself very badly,
+Professor Gilroy, but of course I don't know how to put these things in
+a scientific way. I am just giving you my own experiences and my own
+explanations."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Well, I read this over now at my leisure, and I marvel at myself! Is
+this Austin Gilroy, the man who has won his way to the front by his
+hard reasoning power and by his devotion to fact? Here I am gravely
+retailing the gossip of a woman who tells me how her soul may be
+projected from her body, and how, while she lies in a lethargy, she can
+control the actions of people at a distance. Do I accept it?
+Certainly not. She must prove and re-prove before I yield a point.
+But if I am still a sceptic, I have at least ceased to be a scoffer.
+We are to have a sitting this evening, and she is to try if she can
+produce any mesmeric effect upon me. If she can, it will make an
+excellent starting-point for our investigation. No one can accuse me,
+at any rate, of complicity. If she cannot, we must try and find some
+subject who will be like Caesar's wife. Wilson is perfectly impervious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+10 P. M. I believe that I am on the threshold of an epoch-making
+investigation. To have the power of examining these phenomena from
+inside&mdash;to have an organism which will respond, and at the same time a
+brain which will appreciate and criticise&mdash;that is surely a unique
+advantage. I am quite sure that Wilson would give five years of his
+life to be as susceptible as I have proved myself to be.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no one present except Wilson and his wife. I was seated with
+my head leaning back, and Miss Penclosa, standing in front and a little
+to the left, used the same long, sweeping strokes as with Agatha. At
+each of them a warm current of air seemed to strike me, and to suffuse
+a thrill and glow all through me from head to foot. My eyes were fixed
+upon Miss Penclosa's face, but as I gazed the features seemed to blur
+and to fade away. I was conscious only of her own eyes looking down at
+me, gray, deep, inscrutable. Larger they grew and larger, until they
+changed suddenly into two mountain lakes toward which I seemed to be
+falling with horrible rapidity. I shuddered, and as I did so some
+deeper stratum of thought told me that the shudder represented the
+rigor which I had observed in Agatha. An instant later I struck the
+surface of the lakes, now joined into one, and down I went beneath the
+water with a fulness in my head and a buzzing in my ears. Down I went,
+down, down, and then with a swoop up again until I could see the light
+streaming brightly through the green water. I was almost at the
+surface when the word "Awake!" rang through my head, and, with a start,
+I found myself back in the arm-chair, with Miss Penclosa leaning on her
+crutch, and Wilson, his note book in his hand, peeping over her
+shoulder. No heaviness or weariness was left behind. On the contrary,
+though it is only an hour or so since the experiment, I feel so wakeful
+that I am more inclined for my study than my bedroom. I see quite a
+vista of interesting experiments extending before us, and am all
+impatience to begin upon them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+March 27. A blank day, as Miss Penclosa goes with Wilson and his wife
+to the Suttons'. Have begun Binet and Ferre's "Animal Magnetism."
+What strange, deep waters these are! Results, results, results&mdash;and
+the cause an absolute mystery. It is stimulating to the imagination,
+but I must be on my guard against that. Let us have no inferences nor
+deductions, and nothing but solid facts. I KNOW that the mesmeric
+trance is true; I KNOW that mesmeric suggestion is true; I KNOW that I
+am myself sensitive to this force. That is my present position. I
+have a large new note-book which shall be devoted entirely to
+scientific detail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Long talk with Agatha and Mrs. Marden in the evening about our
+marriage. We think that the summer vac. (the beginning of it) would
+be the best time for the wedding. Why should we delay? I grudge even
+those few months. Still, as Mrs. Marden says, there are a good many
+things to be arranged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+March 28. Mesmerized again by Miss Penclosa. Experience much the same
+as before, save that insensibility came on more quickly. See Note-book
+A for temperature of room, barometric pressure, pulse, and respiration
+as taken by Professor Wilson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+March 29. Mesmerized again. Details in Note-book A.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+March 30. Sunday, and a blank day. I grudge any interruption of our
+experiments. At present they merely embrace the physical signs which
+go with slight, with complete, and with extreme insensibility.
+Afterward we hope to pass on to the phenomena of suggestion and of
+lucidity. Professors have demonstrated these things upon women at
+Nancy and at the Salpetriere. It will be more convincing when a woman
+demonstrates it upon a professor, with a second professor as a witness.
+And that I should be the subject&mdash;I, the sceptic, the materialist! At
+least, I have shown that my devotion to science is greater than to my
+own personal consistency. The eating of our own words is the greatest
+sacrifice which truth ever requires of us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+My neighbor, Charles Sadler, the handsome young demonstrator of
+anatomy, came in this evening to return a volume of Virchow's
+"Archives" which I had lent him. I call him young, but, as a matter of
+fact, he is a year older than I am.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I understand, Gilroy," said he, "that you are being experimented upon
+by Miss Penclosa."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well," he went on, when I had acknowledged it, "if I were you, I
+should not let it go any further. You will think me very impertinent,
+no doubt, but, none the less, I feel it to be my duty to advise you to
+have no more to do with her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of course I asked him why.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am so placed that I cannot enter into particulars as freely as I
+could wish," said he. "Miss Penclosa is the friend of my friend, and
+my position is a delicate one. I can only say this: that I have myself
+been the subject of some of the woman's experiments, and that they have
+left a most unpleasant impression upon my mind."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He could hardly expect me to be satisfied with that, and I tried hard
+to get something more definite out of him, but without success. Is it
+conceivable that he could be jealous at my having superseded him? Or
+is he one of those men of science who feel personally injured when
+facts run counter to their preconceived opinions? He cannot seriously
+suppose that because he has some vague grievance I am, therefore, to
+abandon a series of experiments which promise to be so fruitful of
+results. He appeared to be annoyed at the light way in which I treated
+his shadowy warnings, and we parted with some little coldness on both
+sides.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+March 31. Mesmerized by Miss P.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 1. Mesmerized by Miss P. (Note-book A.)
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 2. Mesmerized by Miss P. (Sphygmographic chart taken by
+Professor Wilson.)
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 3. It is possible that this course of mesmerism may be a little
+trying to the general constitution. Agatha says that I am thinner and
+darker under the eyes. I am conscious of a nervous irritability which
+I had not observed in myself before. The least noise, for example,
+makes me start, and the stupidity of a student causes me exasperation
+instead of amusement. Agatha wishes me to stop, but I tell her that
+every course of study is trying, and that one can never attain a result
+with out paying some price for it. When she sees the sensation which
+my forthcoming paper on "The Relation between Mind and Matter" may
+make, she will understand that it is worth a little nervous wear and
+tear. I should not be surprised if I got my F. R. S. over it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mesmerized again in the evening. The effect is produced more rapidly
+now, and the subjective visions are less marked. I keep full notes of
+each sitting. Wilson is leaving for town for a week or ten days, but
+we shall not interrupt the experiments, which depend for their value as
+much upon my sensations as on his observations.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 4. I must be carefully on my guard. A complication has crept
+into our experiments which I had not reckoned upon. In my eagerness
+for scientific facts I have been foolishly blind to the human relations
+between Miss Penclosa and myself. I can write here what I would not
+breathe to a living soul. The unhappy woman appears to have formed an
+attachment for me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I should not say such a thing, even in the privacy of my own intimate
+journal, if it had not come to such a pass that it is impossible to
+ignore it. For some time,&mdash;that is, for the last week,&mdash;there have
+been signs which I have brushed aside and refused to think of. Her
+brightness when I come, her dejection when I go, her eagerness that I
+should come often, the expression of her eyes, the tone of her voice&mdash;I
+tried to think that they meant nothing, and were, perhaps, only her
+ardent West Indian manner. But last night, as I awoke from the
+mesmeric sleep, I put out my hand, unconsciously, involuntarily, and
+clasped hers. When I came fully to myself, we were sitting with them
+locked, she looking up at me with an expectant smile. And the horrible
+thing was that I felt impelled to say what she expected me to say.
+What a false wretch I should have been! How I should have loathed
+myself to-day had I yielded to the temptation of that moment! But,
+thank God, I was strong enough to spring up and hurry from the room. I
+was rude, I fear, but I could not, no, I COULD not, trust myself
+another moment. I, a gentleman, a man of honor, engaged to one of the
+sweetest girls in England&mdash;and yet in a moment of reasonless passion I
+nearly professed love for this woman whom I hardly know. She is far
+older than myself and a cripple. It is monstrous, odious; and yet the
+impulse was so strong that, had I stayed another minute in her
+presence, I should have committed myself. What was it? I have to
+teach others the workings of our organism, and what do I know of it
+myself? Was it the sudden upcropping of some lower stratum in my
+nature&mdash;a brutal primitive instinct suddenly asserting itself? I could
+almost believe the tales of obsession by evil spirits, so overmastering
+was the feeling.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Well, the incident places me in a most unfortunate position. On the
+one hand, I am very loath to abandon a series of experiments which have
+already gone so far, and which promise such brilliant results. On the
+other, if this unhappy woman has conceived a passion for me&mdash;&mdash; But
+surely even now I must have made some hideous mistake. She, with her
+age and her deformity! It is impossible. And then she knew about
+Agatha. She understood how I was placed. She only smiled out of
+amusement, perhaps, when in my dazed state I seized her hand. It was
+my half-mesmerized brain which gave it a meaning, and sprang with such
+bestial swiftness to meet it. I wish I could persuade myself that it
+was indeed so. On the whole, perhaps, my wisest plan would be to
+postpone our other experiments until Wilson's return. I have written a
+note to Miss Penclosa, therefore, making no allusion to last night, but
+saying that a press of work would cause me to interrupt our sittings
+for a few days. She has answered, formally enough, to say that if I
+should change my mind I should find her at home at the usual hour.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+10 P. M. Well, well, what a thing of straw I am! I am coming to know
+myself better of late, and the more I know the lower I fall in my own
+estimation. Surely I was not always so weak as this. At four o'clock
+I should have smiled had any one told me that I should go to Miss
+Penclosa's to-night, and yet, at eight, I was at Wilson's door as
+usual. I don't know how it occurred. The influence of habit, I
+suppose. Perhaps there is a mesmeric craze as there is an opium craze,
+and I am a victim to it. I only know that as I worked in my study I
+became more and more uneasy. I fidgeted. I worried. I could not
+concentrate my mind upon the papers in front of me. And then, at last,
+almost before I knew what I was doing, I seized my hat and hurried
+round to keep my usual appointment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We had an interesting evening. Mrs. Wilson was present during most of
+the time, which prevented the embarrassment which one at least of us
+must have felt. Miss Penclosa's manner was quite the same as usual,
+and she expressed no surprise at my having come in spite of my note.
+There was nothing in her bearing to show that yesterday's incident had
+made any impression upon her, and so I am inclined to hope that I
+overrated it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 6 (evening). No, no, no, I did not overrate it. I can no longer
+attempt to conceal from myself that this woman has conceived a passion
+for me. It is monstrous, but it is true. Again, tonight, I awoke from
+the mesmeric trance to find my hand in hers, and to suffer that odious
+feeling which urges me to throw away my honor, my career, every thing,
+for the sake of this creature who, as I can plainly see when I am away
+from her influence, possesses no single charm upon earth. But when I
+am near her, I do not feel this. She rouses something in me, something
+evil, something I had rather not think of. She paralyzes my better
+nature, too, at the moment when she stimulates my worse. Decidedly it
+is not good for me to be near her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Last night was worse than before. Instead of flying I actually sat for
+some time with my hand in hers talking over the most intimate subjects
+with her. We spoke of Agatha, among other things. What could I have
+been dreaming of? Miss Penclosa said that she was conventional, and I
+agreed with her. She spoke once or twice in a disparaging way of her,
+and I did not protest. What a creature I have been!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Weak as I have proved myself to be, I am still strong enough to bring
+this sort of thing to an end. It shall not happen again. I have sense
+enough to fly when I cannot fight. From this Sunday night onward I
+shall never sit with Miss Penclosa again. Never! Let the experiments
+go, let the research come to an end; any thing is better than facing
+this monstrous temptation which drags me so low. I have said nothing
+to Miss Penclosa, but I shall simply stay away. She can tell the
+reason without any words of mine.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 7. Have stayed away as I said. It is a pity to ruin such an
+interesting investigation, but it would be a greater pity still to ruin
+my life, and I KNOW that I cannot trust myself with that woman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+11 P. M. God help me! What is the matter with me? Am I going mad?
+Let me try and be calm and reason with myself. First of all I shall
+set down exactly what occurred.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was nearly eight when I wrote the lines with which this day begins.
+Feeling strangely restless and uneasy, I left my rooms and walked round
+to spend the evening with Agatha and her mother. They both remarked
+that I was pale and haggard. About nine Professor Pratt-Haldane came
+in, and we played a game of whist. I tried hard to concentrate my
+attention upon the cards, but the feeling of restlessness grew and grew
+until I found it impossible to struggle against it. I simply COULD not
+sit still at the table. At last, in the very middle of a hand, I threw
+my cards down and, with some sort of an incoherent apology about having
+an appointment, I rushed from the room. As if in a dream I have a
+vague recollection of tearing through the hall, snatching my hat from
+the stand, and slamming the door behind me. As in a dream, too, I have
+the impression of the double line of gas-lamps, and my bespattered
+boots tell me that I must have run down the middle of the road. It was
+all misty and strange and unnatural. I came to Wilson's house; I saw
+Mrs. Wilson and I saw Miss Penclosa. I hardly recall what we talked
+about, but I do remember that Miss P. shook the head of her crutch at
+me in a playful way, and accused me of being late and of losing
+interest in our experiments. There was no mesmerism, but I stayed some
+time and have only just returned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+My brain is quite clear again now, and I can think over what has
+occurred. It is absurd to suppose that it is merely weakness and force
+of habit. I tried to explain it in that way the other night, but it
+will no longer suffice. It is something much deeper and more terrible
+than that. Why, when I was at the Mardens' whist-table, I was dragged
+away as if the noose of a rope had been cast round me. I can no longer
+disguise it from myself. The woman has her grip upon me. I am in her
+clutch. But I must keep my head and reason it out and see what is best
+to be done.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But what a blind fool I have been! In my enthusiasm over my research I
+have walked straight into the pit, although it lay gaping before me.
+Did she not herself warn me? Did she not tell me, as I can read in my
+own journal, that when she has acquired power over a subject she can
+make him do her will? And she has acquired that power over me. I am
+for the moment at the beck and call of this creature with the crutch.
+I must come when she wills it. I must do as she wills. Worst of all,
+I must feel as she wills. I loathe her and fear her, yet, while I am
+under the spell, she can doubtless make me love her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There is some consolation in the thought, then, that those odious
+impulses for which I have blamed myself do not really come from me at
+all. They are all transferred from her, little as I could have guessed
+it at the time. I feel cleaner and lighter for the thought.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 8. Yes, now, in broad daylight, writing coolly and with time for
+reflection, I am compelled to confirm every thing which I wrote in my
+journal last night. I am in a horrible position, but, above all, I
+must not lose my head. I must pit my intellect against her powers.
+After all, I am no silly puppet, to dance at the end of a string. I
+have energy, brains, courage. For all her devil's tricks I may beat
+her yet. May! I MUST, or what is to become of me?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Let me try to reason it out! This woman, by her own explanation, can
+dominate my nervous organism. She can project herself into my body and
+take command of it. She has a parasite soul; yes, she is a parasite, a
+monstrous parasite. She creeps into my frame as the hermit crab does
+into the whelk's shell. I am powerless What can I do? I am dealing
+with forces of which I know nothing. And I can tell no one of my
+trouble. They would set me down as a madman. Certainly, if it got
+noised abroad, the university would say that they had no need of a
+devil-ridden professor. And Agatha! No, no, I must face it alone.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+III
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+I read over my notes of what the woman said when she spoke about her
+powers. There is one point which fills me with dismay. She implies
+that when the influence is slight the subject knows what he is doing,
+but cannot control himself, whereas when it is strongly exerted he is
+absolutely unconscious. Now, I have always known what I did, though
+less so last night than on the previous occasions. That seems to mean
+that she has never yet exerted her full powers upon me. Was ever a man
+so placed before?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yes, perhaps there was, and very near me, too. Charles Sadler must
+know something of this! His vague words of warning take a meaning now.
+Oh, if I had only listened to him then, before I helped by these
+repeated sittings to forge the links of the chain which binds me! But
+I will see him to-day. I will apologize to him for having treated his
+warning so lightly. I will see if he can advise me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+4 P. M. No, he cannot. I have talked with him, and he showed such
+surprise at the first words in which I tried to express my unspeakable
+secret that I went no further. As far as I can gather (by hints and
+inferences rather than by any statement), his own experience was
+limited to some words or looks such as I have myself endured. His
+abandonment of Miss Penclosa is in itself a sign that he was never
+really in her toils. Oh, if he only knew his escape! He has to thank
+his phlegmatic Saxon temperament for it. I am black and Celtic, and
+this hag's clutch is deep in my nerves. Shall I ever get it out?
+Shall I ever be the same man that I was just one short fortnight ago?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Let me consider what I had better do. I cannot leave the university in
+the middle of the term. If I were free, my course would be obvious. I
+should start at once and travel in Persia. But would she allow me to
+start? And could her influence not reach me in Persia, and bring me
+back to within touch of her crutch? I can only find out the limits of
+this hellish power by my own bitter experience. I will fight and fight
+and fight&mdash;and what can I do more?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I know very well that about eight o'clock to-night that craving for her
+society, that irresistible restlessness, will come upon me. How shall
+I overcome it? What shall I do? I must make it impossible for me to
+leave the room. I shall lock the door and throw the key out of the
+window. But, then, what am I to do in the morning? Never mind about
+the morning. I must at all costs break this chain which holds me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 9. Victory! I have done splendidly! At seven o'clock last
+night I took a hasty dinner, and then locked myself up in my bedroom
+and dropped the key into the garden. I chose a cheery novel, and lay
+in bed for three hours trying to read it, but really in a horrible
+state of trepidation, expecting every instant that I should become
+conscious of the impulse. Nothing of the sort occurred, however, and I
+awoke this morning with the feeling that a black nightmare had been
+lifted off me. Perhaps the creature realized what I had done, and
+understood that it was useless to try to influence me. At any rate, I
+have beaten her once, and if I can do it once, I can do it again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was most awkward about the key in the morning. Luckily, there was
+an under-gardener below, and I asked him to throw it up. No doubt he
+thought I had just dropped it. I will have doors and windows screwed
+up and six stout men to hold me down in my bed before I will surrender
+myself to be hag-ridden in this way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I had a note from Mrs. Marden this afternoon asking me to go round and
+see her. I intended to do so in any case, but had not excepted to find
+bad news waiting for me. It seems that the Armstrongs, from whom
+Agatha has expectations, are due home from Adelaide in the Aurora, and
+that they have written to Mrs. Marden and her to meet them in town.
+They will probably be away for a month or six weeks, and, as the Aurora
+is due on Wednesday, they must go at once&mdash;to-morrow, if they are ready
+in time. My consolation is that when we meet again there will be no
+more parting between Agatha and me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I want you to do one thing, Agatha," said I, when we were alone
+together. "If you should happen to meet Miss Penclosa, either in town
+or here, you must promise me never again to allow her to mesmerize you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Agatha opened her eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, it was only the other day that you were saying how interesting it
+all was, and how determined you were to finish your experiments."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know, but I have changed my mind since then."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you won't have it any more?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am so glad, Austin. You can't think how pale and worn you have been
+lately. It was really our principal objection to going to London now
+that we did not wish to leave you when you were so pulled down. And
+your manner has been so strange occasionally&mdash;especially that night
+when you left poor Professor Pratt-Haldane to play dummy. I am
+convinced that these experiments are very bad for your nerves."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think so, too, dear."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And for Miss Penclosa's nerves as well. You have heard that she is
+ill?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mrs. Wilson told us so last night. She described it as a nervous
+fever. Professor Wilson is coming back this week, and of course Mrs.
+Wilson is very anxious that Miss Penclosa should be well again then,
+for he has quite a programme of experiments which he is anxious to
+carry out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I was glad to have Agatha's promise, for it was enough that this woman
+should have one of us in her clutch. On the other hand, I was
+disturbed to hear about Miss Penclosa's illness. It rather discounts
+the victory which I appeared to win last night. I remember that she
+said that loss of health interfered with her power. That may be why I
+was able to hold my own so easily. Well, well, I must take the same
+precautions to-night and see what comes of it. I am childishly
+frightened when I think of her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 10. All went very well last night. I was amused at the
+gardener's face when I had again to hail him this morning and to ask
+him to throw up my key. I shall get a name among the servants if this
+sort of thing goes on. But the great point is that I stayed in my room
+without the slightest inclination to leave it. I do believe that I am
+shaking myself clear of this incredible bond&mdash;or is it only that the
+woman's power is in abeyance until she recovers her strength? I can
+but pray for the best.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Mardens left this morning, and the brightness seems to have gone
+out of the spring sunshine. And yet it is very beautiful also as it
+gleams on the green chestnuts opposite my windows, and gives a touch of
+gayety to the heavy, lichen-mottled walls of the old colleges. How
+sweet and gentle and soothing is Nature! Who would think that there
+lurked in her also such vile forces, such odious possibilities! For of
+course I understand that this dreadful thing which has sprung out at me
+is neither supernatural nor even preternatural. No, it is a natural
+force which this woman can use and society is ignorant of. The mere
+fact that it ebbs with her strength shows how entirely it is subject to
+physical laws. If I had time, I might probe it to the bottom and lay
+my hands upon its antidote. But you cannot tame the tiger when you are
+beneath his claws. You can but try to writhe away from him. Ah, when
+I look in the glass and see my own dark eyes and clear-cut Spanish
+face, I long for a vitriol splash or a bout of the small-pox. One or
+the other might have saved me from this calamity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am inclined to think that I may have trouble to-night. There are two
+things which make me fear so. One is that I met Mrs. Wilson in the
+street, and that she tells me that Miss Penclosa is better, though
+still weak. I find myself wishing in my heart that the illness had
+been her last. The other is that Professor Wilson comes back in a day
+or two, and his presence would act as a constraint upon her. I should
+not fear our interviews if a third person were present. For both these
+reasons I have a presentiment of trouble to-night, and I shall take the
+same precautions as before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 10. No, thank God, all went well last night. I really could not
+face the gardener again. I locked my door and thrust the key
+underneath it, so that I had to ask the maid to let me out in the
+morning. But the precaution was really not needed, for I never had any
+inclination to go out at all. Three evenings in succession at home! I
+am surely near the end of my troubles, for Wilson will be home again
+either today or tomorrow. Shall I tell him of what I have gone through
+or not? I am convinced that I should not have the slightest sympathy
+from him. He would look upon me as an interesting case, and read a
+paper about me at the next meeting of the Psychical Society, in which
+he would gravely discuss the possibility of my being a deliberate liar,
+and weigh it against the chances of my being in an early stage of
+lunacy. No, I shall get no comfort out of Wilson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am feeling wonderfully fit and well. I don't think I ever lectured
+with greater spirit. Oh, if I could only get this shadow off my life,
+how happy I should be! Young, fairly wealthy, in the front rank of my
+profession, engaged to a beautiful and charming girl&mdash;have I not every
+thing which a man could ask for? Only one thing to trouble me, but
+what a thing it is!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Midnight. I shall go mad. Yes, that will be the end of it. I shall
+go mad. I am not far from it now. My head throbs as I rest it on my
+hot hand. I am quivering all over like a scared horse. Oh, what a
+night I have had! And yet I have some cause to be satisfied also.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the risk of becoming the laughing-stock of my own servant, I again
+slipped my key under the door, imprisoning myself for the night. Then,
+finding it too early to go to bed, I lay down with my clothes on and
+began to read one of Dumas's novels. Suddenly I was gripped&mdash;gripped
+and dragged from the couch. It is only thus that I can describe the
+overpowering nature of the force which pounced upon me. I clawed at
+the coverlet. I clung to the wood-work. I believe that I screamed out
+in my frenzy. It was all useless, hopeless. I MUST go. There was no
+way out of it. It was only at the outset that I resisted. The force
+soon became too overmastering for that. I thank goodness that there
+were no watchers there to interfere with me. I could not have answered
+for myself if there had been. And, besides the determination to get
+out, there came to me, also, the keenest and coolest judgment in
+choosing my means. I lit a candle and endeavored, kneeling in front of
+the door, to pull the key through with the feather-end of a quill pen.
+It was just too short and pushed it further away. Then with quiet
+persistence I got a paper-knife out of one of the drawers, and with
+that I managed to draw the key back. I opened the door, stepped into
+my study, took a photograph of myself from the bureau, wrote something
+across it, placed it in the inside pocket of my coat, and then started
+off for Wilson's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was all wonderfully clear, and yet disassociated from the rest of my
+life, as the incidents of even the most vivid dream might be. A
+peculiar double consciousness possessed me. There was the predominant
+alien will, which was bent upon drawing me to the side of its owner,
+and there was the feebler protesting personality, which I recognized as
+being myself, tugging feebly at the overmastering impulse as a led
+terrier might at its chain. I can remember recognizing these two
+conflicting forces, but I recall nothing of my walk, nor of how I was
+admitted to the house.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Very vivid, however, is my recollection of how I met Miss Penclosa.
+She was reclining on the sofa in the little boudoir in which our
+experiments had usually been carried out. Her head was rested on her
+hand, and a tiger-skin rug had been partly drawn over her. She looked
+up expectantly as I entered, and, as the lamp-light fell upon her face,
+I could see that she was very pale and thin, with dark hollows under
+her eyes. She smiled at me, and pointed to a stool beside her. It was
+with her left hand that she pointed, and I, running eagerly forward,
+seized it,&mdash;I loathe myself as I think of it,&mdash;and pressed it
+passionately to my lips. Then, seating myself upon the stool, and
+still retaining her hand, I gave her the photograph which I had brought
+with me, and talked and talked and talked&mdash;of my love for her, of my
+grief over her illness, of my joy at her recovery, of the misery it was
+to me to be absent a single evening from her side. She lay quietly
+looking down at me with imperious eyes and her provocative smile. Once
+I remember that she passed her hand over my hair as one caresses a dog;
+and it gave me pleasure&mdash;the caress. I thrilled under it. I was her
+slave, body and soul, and for the moment I rejoiced in my slavery.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then came the blessed change. Never tell me that there is not a
+Providence! I was on the brink of perdition. My feet were on the
+edge. Was it a coincidence that at that very instant help should come?
+No, no, no; there is a Providence, and its hand has drawn me back.
+There is something in the universe stronger than this devil woman with
+her tricks. Ah, what a balm to my heart it is to think so!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As I looked up at her I was conscious of a change in her. Her face,
+which had been pale before, was now ghastly. Her eyes were dull, and
+the lids drooped heavily over them. Above all, the look of serene
+confidence had gone from her features. Her mouth had weakened. Her
+forehead had puckered. She was frightened and undecided. And as I
+watched the change my own spirit fluttered and struggled, trying hard
+to tear itself from the grip which held it&mdash;a grip which, from moment
+to moment, grew less secure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Austin," she whispered, "I have tried to do too much. I was not
+strong enough. I have not recovered yet from my illness. But I could
+not live longer without seeing you. You won't leave me, Austin? This
+is only a passing weakness. If you will only give me five minutes, I
+shall be myself again. Give me the small decanter from the table in
+the window."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But I had regained my soul. With her waning strength the influence had
+cleared away from me and left me free. And I was aggressive&mdash;bitterly,
+fiercely aggressive. For once at least I could make this woman
+understand what my real feelings toward her were. My soul was filled
+with a hatred as bestial as the love against which it was a reaction.
+It was the savage, murderous passion of the revolted serf. I could
+have taken the crutch from her side and beaten her face in with it.
+She threw her hands up, as if to avoid a blow, and cowered away from me
+into the corner of the settee.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The brandy!" she gasped. "The brandy!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I took the decanter and poured it over the roots of a palm in the
+window. Then I snatched the photograph from her hand and tore it into
+a hundred pieces.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You vile woman," I said, "if I did my duty to society, you would never
+leave this room alive!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I love you, Austin; I love you!" she wailed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," I cried, "and Charles Sadler before. And how many others before
+that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Charles Sadler!" she gasped. "He has spoken to you? So, Charles
+Sadler, Charles Sadler!" Her voice came through her white lips like a
+snake's hiss.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I know you, and others shall know you, too. You shameless
+creature! You knew how I stood. And yet you used your vile power to
+bring me to your side. You may, perhaps, do so again, but at least you
+will remember that you have heard me say that I love Miss Marden from
+the bottom of my soul, and that I loathe you, abhor you!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The very sight of you and the sound of your voice fill me with horror
+and disgust. The thought of you is repulsive. That is how I feel
+toward you, and if it pleases you by your tricks to draw me again to
+your side as you have done to-night, you will at least, I should think,
+have little satisfaction in trying to make a lover out of a man who has
+told you his real opinion of you. You may put what words you will into
+my mouth, but you cannot help remembering&mdash;&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I stopped, for the woman's head had fallen back, and she had fainted.
+She could not bear to hear what I had to say to her! What a glow of
+satisfaction it gives me to think that, come what may, in the future
+she can never misunderstand my true feelings toward her. But what will
+occur in the future? What will she do next? I dare not think of it.
+Oh, if only I could hope that she will leave me alone! But when I
+think of what I said to her&mdash;&mdash; Never mind; I have been stronger than
+she for once.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 11. I hardly slept last night, and found myself in the morning
+so unstrung and feverish that I was compelled to ask Pratt-Haldane to
+do my lecture for me. It is the first that I have ever missed. I rose
+at mid-day, but my head is aching, my hands quivering, and my nerves in
+a pitiable state.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Who should come round this evening but Wilson. He has just come back
+from London, where he has lectured, read papers, convened meetings,
+exposed a medium, conducted a series of experiments on thought
+transference, entertained Professor Richet of Paris, spent hours gazing
+into a crystal, and obtained some evidence as to the passage of matter
+through matter. All this he poured into my ears in a single gust.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you!" he cried at last. "You are not looking well. And Miss
+Penclosa is quite prostrated to-day. How about the experiments?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have abandoned them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tut, tut! Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The subject seems to me to be a dangerous one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Out came his big brown note-book.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This is of great interest," said he. "What are your grounds for
+saying that it is a dangerous one? Please give your facts in
+chronological order, with approximate dates and names of reliable
+witnesses with their permanent addresses."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"First of all," I asked, "would you tell me whether you have collected
+any cases where the mesmerist has gained a command over the subject and
+has used it for evil purposes?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dozens!" he cried exultantly. "Crime by suggestion&mdash;&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't mean suggestion. I mean where a sudden impulse comes from a
+person at a distance&mdash;an uncontrollable impulse."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Obsession!" he shrieked, in an ecstasy of delight. "It is the rarest
+condition. We have eight cases, five well attested. You don't mean to
+say&mdash;&mdash;" His exultation made him hardly articulate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, I don't," said I. "Good-evening! You will excuse me, but I am
+not very well to-night." And so at last I got rid of him, still
+brandishing his pencil and his note-book. My troubles may be bad to
+hear, but at least it is better to hug them to myself than to have
+myself exhibited by Wilson, like a freak at a fair. He has lost sight
+of human beings. Every thing to him is a case and a phenomenon. I
+will die before I speak to him again upon the matter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 12. Yesterday was a blessed day of quiet, and I enjoyed an
+uneventful night. Wilson's presence is a great consolation. What can
+the woman do now? Surely, when she has heard me say what I have said,
+she will conceive the same disgust for me which I have for her. She
+could not, no, she COULD not, desire to have a lover who had insulted
+her so. No, I believe I am free from her love&mdash;but how about her hate?
+Might she not use these powers of hers for revenge? Tut! why should I
+frighten myself over shadows? She will forget about me, and I shall
+forget about her, and all will be well.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 13. My nerves have quite recovered their tone. I really believe
+that I have conquered the creature. But I must confess to living in
+some suspense. She is well again, for I hear that she was driving with
+Mrs. Wilson in the High Street in the afternoon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 14. I do wish I could get away from the place altogether. I
+shall fly to Agatha's side the very day that the term closes. I
+suppose it is pitiably weak of me, but this woman gets upon my nerves
+most terribly. I have seen her again, and I have spoken with her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was just after lunch, and I was smoking a cigarette in my study,
+when I heard the step of my servant Murray in the passage. I was
+languidly conscious that a second step was audible behind, and had
+hardly troubled myself to speculate who it might be, when suddenly a
+slight noise brought me out of my chair with my skin creeping with
+apprehension. I had never particularly observed before what sort of
+sound the tapping of a crutch was, but my quivering nerves told me that
+I heard it now in the sharp wooden clack which alternated with the
+muffled thud of the foot fall. Another instant and my servant had
+shown her in.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I did not attempt the usual conventions of society, nor did she. I
+simply stood with the smouldering cigarette in my hand, and gazed at
+her. She in her turn looked silently at me, and at her look I
+remembered how in these very pages I had tried to define the expression
+of her eyes, whether they were furtive or fierce. To-day they were
+fierce&mdash;coldly and inexorably so.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well," said she at last, "are you still of the same mind as when I saw
+you last?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have always been of the same mind."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let us understand each other, Professor Gilroy," said she slowly. "I
+am not a very safe person to trifle with, as you should realize by now.
+It was you who asked me to enter into a series of experiments with you,
+it was you who won my affections, it was you who professed your love
+for me, it was you who brought me your own photograph with words of
+affection upon it, and, finally, it was you who on the very same
+evening thought fit to insult me most outrageously, addressing me as no
+man has ever dared to speak to me yet. Tell me that those words came
+from you in a moment of passion and I am prepared to forget and to
+forgive them. You did not mean what you said, Austin? You do not
+really hate me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I might have pitied this deformed woman&mdash;such a longing for love broke
+suddenly through the menace of her eyes. But then I thought of what I
+had gone through, and my heart set like flint.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If ever you heard me speak of love," said I, "you know very well that
+it was your voice which spoke, and not mine. The only words of truth
+which I have ever been able to say to you are those which you heard
+when last we met."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know. Some one has set you against me. It was he!" She tapped with
+her crutch upon the floor. "Well, you know very well that I could
+bring you this instant crouching like a spaniel to my feet. You will
+not find me again in my hour of weakness, when you can insult me with
+impunity. Have a care what you are doing, Professor Gilroy. You stand
+in a terrible position. You have not yet realized the hold which I
+have upon you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I shrugged my shoulders and turned away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well," said she, after a pause, "if you despise my love, I must see
+what can be done with fear. You smile, but the day will come when you
+will come screaming to me for pardon. Yes, you will grovel on the
+ground before me, proud as you are, and you will curse the day that
+ever you turned me from your best friend into your most bitter enemy.
+Have a care, Professor Gilroy!" I saw a white hand shaking in the air,
+and a face which was scarcely human, so convulsed was it with passion.
+An instant later she was gone, and I heard the quick hobble and tap
+receding down the passage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But she has left a weight upon my heart. Vague presentiments of coming
+misfortune lie heavy upon me. I try in vain to persuade myself that
+these are only words of empty anger. I can remember those relentless
+eyes too clearly to think so. What shall I do&mdash;ah, what shall I do? I
+am no longer master of my own soul. At any moment this loathsome
+parasite may creep into me, and then&mdash;&mdash; I must tell some one my
+hideous secret&mdash;I must tell it or go mad. If I had some one to
+sympathize and advise! Wilson is out of the question. Charles Sadler
+would understand me only so far as his own experience carries him.
+Pratt-Haldane! He is a well-balanced man, a man of great common-sense
+and resource. I will go to him. I will tell him every thing. God
+grant that he may be able to advise me!
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+IV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+6.45 P. M. No, it is useless. There is no human help for me; I must
+fight this out single-handed. Two courses lie before me. I might
+become this woman's lover. Or I must endure such persecutions as she
+can inflict upon me. Even if none come, I shall live in a hell of
+apprehension. But she may torture me, she may drive me mad, she may
+kill me: I will never, never, never give in. What can she inflict
+which would be worse than the loss of Agatha, and the knowledge that I
+am a perjured liar, and have forfeited the name of gentleman?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Pratt-Haldane was most amiable, and listened with all politeness to my
+story. But when I looked at his heavy set features, his slow eyes, and
+the ponderous study furniture which surrounded him, I could hardly tell
+him what I had come to say. It was all so substantial, so material.
+And, besides, what would I myself have said a short month ago if one of
+my colleagues had come to me with a story of demonic possession?
+Perhaps. I should have been less patient than he was. As it was, he
+took notes of my statement, asked me how much tea I drank, how many
+hours I slept, whether I had been overworking much, had I had sudden
+pains in the head, evil dreams, singing in the ears, flashes before the
+eyes&mdash;all questions which pointed to his belief that brain congestion
+was at the bottom of my trouble. Finally he dismissed me with a great
+many platitudes about open-air exercise, and avoidance of nervous
+excitement. His prescription, which was for chloral and bromide, I
+rolled up and threw into the gutter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No, I can look for no help from any human being. If I consult any
+more, they may put their heads together and I may find myself in an
+asylum. I can but grip my courage with both hands, and pray that an
+honest man may not be abandoned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 10. It is the sweetest spring within the memory of man. So
+green, so mild, so beautiful! Ah, what a contrast between nature
+without and my own soul so torn with doubt and terror! It has been an
+uneventful day, but I know that I am on the edge of an abyss. I know
+it, and yet I go on with the routine of my life. The one bright spot
+is that Agatha is happy and well and out of all danger. If this
+creature had a hand on each of us, what might she not do?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 16. The woman is ingenious in her torments. She knows how fond
+I am of my work, and how highly my lectures are thought of. So it is
+from that point that she now attacks me. It will end, I can see, in my
+losing my professorship, but I will fight to the finish. She shall not
+drive me out of it without a struggle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I was not conscious of any change during my lecture this morning save
+that for a minute or two I had a dizziness and swimminess which rapidly
+passed away. On the contrary, I congratulated myself upon having made
+my subject (the functions of the red corpuscles) both interesting and
+clear. I was surprised, therefore, when a student came into my
+laboratory immediately after the lecture, and complained of being
+puzzled by the discrepancy between my statements and those in the text
+books. He showed me his note-book, in which I was reported as having
+in one portion of the lecture championed the most outrageous and
+unscientific heresies. Of course I denied it, and declared that he had
+misunderstood me, but on comparing his notes with those of his
+companions, it became clear that he was right, and that I really had
+made some most preposterous statements. Of course I shall explain it
+away as being the result of a moment of aberration, but I feel only too
+sure that it will be the first of a series. It is but a month now to
+the end of the session, and I pray that I may be able to hold out until
+then.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 26. Ten days have elapsed since I have had the heart to make any
+entry in my journal. Why should I record my own humiliation and
+degradation? I had vowed never to open it again. And yet the force of
+habit is strong, and here I find myself taking up once more the record
+of my own dreadful experiences&mdash;in much the same spirit in which a
+suicide has been known to take notes of the effects of the poison which
+killed him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Well, the crash which I had foreseen has come&mdash;and that no further back
+than yesterday. The university authorities have taken my lectureship
+from me. It has been done in the most delicate way, purporting to be a
+temporary measure to relieve me from the effects of overwork, and to
+give me the opportunity of recovering my health. None the less, it has
+been done, and I am no longer Professor Gilroy. The laboratory is
+still in my charge, but I have little doubt that that also will soon go.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fact is that my lectures had become the laughing-stock of the
+university. My class was crowded with students who came to see and
+hear what the eccentric professor would do or say next. I cannot go
+into the detail of my humiliation. Oh, that devilish woman! There is
+no depth of buffoonery and imbecility to which she has not forced me.
+I would begin my lecture clearly and well, but always with the sense of
+a coming eclipse. Then as I felt the influence I would struggle
+against it, striving with clenched hands and beads of sweat upon my
+brow to get the better of it, while the students, hearing my incoherent
+words and watching my contortions, would roar with laughter at the
+antics of their professor. And then, when she had once fairly mastered
+me, out would come the most outrageous things&mdash;silly jokes, sentiments
+as though I were proposing a toast, snatches of ballads, personal abuse
+even against some member of my class. And then in a moment my brain
+would clear again, and my lecture would proceed decorously to the end.
+No wonder that my conduct has been the talk of the colleges. No wonder
+that the University Senate has been compelled to take official notice
+of such a scandal. Oh, that devilish woman!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the most dreadful part of it all is my own loneliness. Here I sit
+in a commonplace English bow-window, looking out upon a commonplace
+English street with its garish 'buses and its lounging policeman, and
+behind me there hangs a shadow which is out of all keeping with the age
+and place. In the home of knowledge I am weighed down and tortured by
+a power of which science knows nothing. No magistrate would listen to
+me. No paper would discuss my case. No doctor would believe my
+symptoms. My own most intimate friends would only look upon it as a
+sign of brain derangement. I am out of all touch with my kind. Oh,
+that devilish woman! Let her have a care! She may push me too far.
+When the law cannot help a man, he may make a law for himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She met me in the High Street yesterday evening and spoke to me. It
+was as well for her, perhaps, that it was not between the hedges of a
+lonely country road. She asked me with her cold smile whether I had
+been chastened yet. I did not deign to answer her. "We must try
+another turn of the screw;" said she. Have a care, my lady, have a
+care! I had her at my mercy once. Perhaps another chance may come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 28. The suspension of my lectureship has had the effect also of
+taking away her means of annoying me, and so I have enjoyed two blessed
+days of peace. After all, there is no reason to despair. Sympathy
+pours in to me from all sides, and every one agrees that it is my
+devotion to science and the arduous nature of my researches which have
+shaken my nervous system. I have had the kindest message from the
+council advising me to travel abroad, and expressing the confident hope
+that I may be able to resume all my duties by the beginning of the
+summer term. Nothing could be more flattering than their allusions to
+my career and to my services to the university. It is only in
+misfortune that one can test one's own popularity. This creature may
+weary of tormenting me, and then all may yet be well. May God grant it!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+April 29. Our sleepy little town has had a small sensation. The only
+knowledge of crime which we ever have is when a rowdy undergraduate
+breaks a few lamps or comes to blows with a policeman. Last night,
+however, there was an attempt made to break-into the branch of the Bank
+of England, and we are all in a flutter in consequence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Parkenson, the manager, is an intimate friend of mine, and I found him
+very much excited when I walked round there after breakfast. Had the
+thieves broken into the counting-house, they would still have had the
+safes to reckon with, so that the defence was considerably stronger
+than the attack. Indeed, the latter does not appear to have ever been
+very formidable. Two of the lower windows have marks as if a chisel or
+some such instrument had been pushed under them to force them open.
+The police should have a good clue, for the wood-work had been done
+with green paint only the day before, and from the smears it is evident
+that some of it has found its way on to the criminal's hands or clothes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+4.30 P. M. Ah, that accursed woman! That thrice accursed woman!
+Never mind! She shall not beat me! No, she shall not! But, oh, the
+she-devil! She has taken my professorship. Now she would take my
+honor. Is there nothing I can do against her, nothing save&mdash;&mdash; Ah,
+but, hard pushed as I am, I cannot bring myself to think of that!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was about an hour ago that I went into my bedroom, and was brushing
+my hair before the glass, when suddenly my eyes lit upon something
+which left me so sick and cold that I sat down upon the edge of the bed
+and began to cry. It is many a long year since I shed tears, but all
+my nerve was gone, and I could but sob and sob in impotent grief and
+anger. There was my house jacket, the coat I usually wear after
+dinner, hanging on its peg by the wardrobe, with the right sleeve
+thickly crusted from wrist to elbow with daubs of green paint.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So this was what she meant by another turn of the screw! She had made
+a public imbecile of me. Now she would brand me as a criminal. This
+time she has failed. But how about the next? I dare not think of
+it&mdash;and of Agatha and my poor old mother! I wish that I were dead!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yes, this is the other turn of the screw. And this is also what she
+meant, no doubt, when she said that I had not realized yet the power
+she has over me. I look back at my account of my conversation with
+her, and I see how she declared that with a slight exertion of her will
+her subject would be conscious, and with a stronger one unconscious.
+Last night I was unconscious. I could have sworn that I slept soundly
+in my bed without so much as a dream. And yet those stains tell me
+that I dressed, made my way out, attempted to open the bank windows,
+and returned. Was I observed? Is it possible that some one saw me do
+it and followed me home? Ah, what a hell my life has become! I have
+no peace, no rest. But my patience is nearing its end.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+10 P. M. I have cleaned my coat with turpentine. I do not think that
+any one could have seen me. It was with my screw-driver that I made
+the marks. I found it all crusted with paint, and I have cleaned it.
+My head aches as if it would burst, and I have taken five grains of
+antipyrine. If it were not for Agatha, I should have taken fifty and
+had an end of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+May 3. Three quiet days. This hell fiend is like a cat with a mouse.
+She lets me loose only to pounce upon me again. I am never so
+frightened as when every thing is still. My physical state is
+deplorable&mdash;perpetual hiccough and ptosis of the left eyelid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I have heard from the Mardens that they will be back the day after
+to-morrow. I do not know whether I am glad or sorry. They were safe
+in London. Once here they may be drawn into the miserable network in
+which I am myself struggling. And I must tell them of it. I cannot
+marry Agatha so long as I know that I am not responsible for my own
+actions. Yes, I must tell them, even if it brings every thing to an
+end between us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To-night is the university ball, and I must go. God knows I never felt
+less in the humor for festivity, but I must not have it said that I am
+unfit to appear in public. If I am seen there, and have speech with
+some of the elders of the university it will go a long way toward
+showing them that it would be unjust to take my chair away from me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+10 P. M. I have been to the ball. Charles Sadler and I went together,
+but I have come away before him. I shall wait up for him, however,
+for, indeed, I fear to go to sleep these nights. He is a cheery,
+practical fellow, and a chat with him will steady my nerves. On the
+whole, the evening was a great success. I talked to every one who has
+influence, and I think that I made them realize that my chair is not
+vacant quite yet. The creature was at the ball&mdash;unable to dance, of
+course, but sitting with Mrs. Wilson. Again and again her eyes rested
+upon me. They were almost the last things I saw before I left the
+room. Once, as I sat sideways to her, I watched her, and saw that her
+gaze was following some one else. It was Sadler, who was dancing at
+the time with the second Miss Thurston. To judge by her expression, it
+is well for him that he is not in her grip as I am. He does not know
+the escape he has had. I think I hear his step in the street now, and
+I will go down and let him in. If he will&mdash;&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+May 4. Why did I break off in this way last night? I never went down
+stairs, after all&mdash;at least, I have no recollection of doing so. But,
+on the other hand, I cannot remember going to bed. One of my hands is
+greatly swollen this morning, and yet I have no remembrance of injuring
+it yesterday. Otherwise, I am feeling all the better for last night's
+festivity. But I cannot understand how it is that I did not meet
+Charles Sadler when I so fully intended to do so. Is it possible&mdash;&mdash;
+My God, it is only too probable! Has she been leading me some devil's
+dance again? I will go down to Sadler and ask him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mid-day. The thing has come to a crisis. My life is not worth living.
+But, if I am to die, then she shall come also. I will not leave her
+behind, to drive some other man mad as she has me. No, I have come to
+the limit of my endurance. She has made me as desperate and dangerous
+a man as walks the earth. God knows I have never had the heart to hurt
+a fly, and yet, if I had my hands now upon that woman, she should never
+leave this room alive. I shall see her this very day, and she shall
+learn what she has to expect from me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I went to Sadler and found him, to my surprise, in bed. As I entered
+he sat up and turned a face toward me which sickened me as I looked at
+it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, Sadler, what has happened?" I cried, but my heart turned cold as
+I said it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gilroy," he answered, mumbling with his swollen lips, "I have for some
+weeks been under the impression that you are a madman. Now I know it,
+and that you are a dangerous one as well. If it were not that I am
+unwilling to make a scandal in the college, you would now be in the
+hands of the police."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you mean&mdash;&mdash;" I cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I mean that as I opened the door last night you rushed out upon me,
+struck me with both your fists in the face, knocked me down, kicked me
+furiously in the side, and left me lying almost unconscious in the
+street. Look at your own hand bearing witness against you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yes, there it was, puffed up, with sponge-like knuckles, as after some
+terrific blow. What could I do? Though he put me down as a madman, I
+must tell him all. I sat by his bed and went over all my troubles from
+the beginning. I poured them out with quivering hands and burning
+words which might have carried conviction to the most sceptical. "She
+hates you and she hates me!" I cried. "She revenged herself last night
+on both of us at once. She saw me leave the ball, and she must have
+seen you also. She knew how long it would take you to reach home.
+Then she had but to use her wicked will. Ah, your bruised face is a
+small thing beside my bruised soul!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was struck by my story. That was evident. "Yes, yes, she watched
+me out of the room," he muttered. "She is capable of it. But is it
+possible that she has really reduced you to this? What do you intend
+to do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To stop it!" I cried. "I am perfectly desperate; I shall give her
+fair warning to-day, and the next time will be the last."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do nothing rash," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Rash!" I cried. "The only rash thing is that I should postpone it
+another hour." With that I rushed to my room, and here I am on the eve
+of what may be the great crisis of my life. I shall start at once. I
+have gained one thing to-day, for I have made one man, at least,
+realize the truth of this monstrous experience of mine. And, if the
+worst should happen, this diary remains as a proof of the goad that has
+driven me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Evening. When I came to Wilson's, I was shown up, and found that he
+was sitting with Miss Penclosa. For half an hour I had to endure his
+fussy talk about his recent research into the exact nature of the
+spiritualistic rap, while the creature and I sat in silence looking
+across the room at each other. I read a sinister amusement in her
+eyes, and she must have seen hatred and menace in mine. I had almost
+despaired of having speech with her when he was called from the room,
+and we were left for a few moments together.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, Professor Gilroy&mdash;or is it Mr. Gilroy?" said she, with that
+bitter smile of hers. "How is your friend Mr. Charles Sadler after the
+ball?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You fiend!" I cried. "You have come to the end of your tricks now. I
+will have no more of them. Listen to what I say." I strode across and
+shook her roughly by the shoulder "As sure as there is a God in heaven,
+I swear that if you try another of your deviltries upon me I will have
+your life for it. Come what may, I will have your life. I have come
+to the end of what a man can endure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Accounts are not quite settled between us," said she, with a passion
+that equalled my own. "I can love, and I can hate. You had your
+choice. You chose to spurn the first; now you must test the other. It
+will take a little more to break your spirit, I see, but broken it
+shall be. Miss Marden comes back to-morrow, as I understand."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What has that to do with you?" I cried. "It is a pollution that you
+should dare even to think of her. If I thought that you would harm
+her&mdash;&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was frightened, I could see, though she tried to brazen it out.
+She read the black thought in my mind, and cowered away from me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She is fortunate in having such a champion," said she. "He actually
+dares to threaten a lonely woman. I must really congratulate Miss
+Marden upon her protector."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The words were bitter, but the voice and manner were more acid still.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is no use talking," said I. "I only came here to tell you,&mdash;and
+to tell you most solemnly,&mdash;that your next outrage upon me will be your
+last." With that, as I heard Wilson's step upon the stair, I walked
+from the room. Ay, she may look venomous and deadly, but, for all
+that, she is beginning to see now that she has as much to fear from me
+as I can have from her. Murder! It has an ugly sound. But you don't
+talk of murdering a snake or of murdering a tiger. Let her have a care
+now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+May 5. I met Agatha and her mother at the station at eleven o'clock.
+She is looking so bright, so happy, so beautiful. And she was so
+overjoyed to see me. What have I done to deserve such love? I went
+back home with them, and we lunched together. All the troubles seem in
+a moment to have been shredded back from my life. She tells me that I
+am looking pale and worried and ill. The dear child puts it down to my
+loneliness and the perfunctory attentions of a housekeeper. I pray
+that she may never know the truth! May the shadow, if shadow there
+must be, lie ever black across my life and leave hers in the sunshine.
+I have just come back from them, feeling a new man. With her by my
+side I think that I could show a bold face to any thing which life
+might send.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+5 P. M. Now, let me try to be accurate. Let me try to say exactly how
+it occurred. It is fresh in my mind, and I can set it down correctly,
+though it is not likely that the time will ever come when I shall
+forget the doings of to-day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I had returned from the Mardens' after lunch, and was cutting some
+microscopic sections in my freezing microtome, when in an instant I
+lost consciousness in the sudden hateful fashion which has become only
+too familiar to me of late.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When my senses came back to me I was sitting in a small chamber, very
+different from the one in which I had been working. It was cosey and
+bright, with chintz-covered settees, colored hangings, and a thousand
+pretty little trifles upon the wall. A small ornamental clock ticked
+in front of me, and the hands pointed to half-past three. It was all
+quite familiar to me, and yet I stared about for a moment in a
+half-dazed way until my eyes fell upon a cabinet photograph of myself
+upon the top of the piano. On the other side stood one of Mrs. Marden.
+Then, of course, I remembered where I was. It was Agatha's boudoir.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But how came I there, and what did I want? A horrible sinking came to
+my heart. Had I been sent here on some devilish errand? Had that
+errand already been done? Surely it must; otherwise, why should I be
+allowed to come back to consciousness? Oh, the agony of that moment!
+What had I done? I sprang to my feet in my despair, and as I did so a
+small glass bottle fell from my knees on to the carpet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was unbroken, and I picked it up. Outside was written "Sulphuric
+Acid. Fort." When I drew the round glass stopper, a thick fume rose
+slowly up, and a pungent, choking smell pervaded the room. I
+recognized it as one which I kept for chemical testing in my chambers.
+But why had I brought a bottle of vitriol into Agatha's chamber? Was
+it not this thick, reeking liquid with which jealous women had been
+known to mar the beauty of their rivals? My heart stood still as I
+held the bottle to the light. Thank God, it was full! No mischief had
+been done as yet. But had Agatha come in a minute sooner, was it not
+certain that the hellish parasite within me would have dashed the stuff
+into her&mdash;&mdash; Ah, it will not bear to be thought of! But it must have
+been for that. Why else should I have brought it? At the thought of
+what I might have done my worn nerves broke down, and I sat shivering
+and twitching, the pitiable wreck of a man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was the sound of Agatha's voice and the rustle of her dress which
+restored me. I looked up, and saw her blue eyes, so full of tenderness
+and pity, gazing down at me.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We must take you away to the country, Austin," she said. "You want
+rest and quiet. You look wretchedly ill."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, it is nothing!" said I, trying to smile. "It was only a momentary
+weakness. I am all right again now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am so sorry to keep you waiting. Poor boy, you must have been here
+quite half an hour! The vicar was in the drawing-room, and, as I knew
+that you did not care for him, I thought it better that Jane should
+show you up here. I thought the man would never go!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thank God he stayed! Thank God he stayed!" I cried hysterically.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, what is the matter with you, Austin?" she asked, holding my arm
+as I staggered up from the chair. "Why are you glad that the vicar
+stayed? And what is this little bottle in your hand?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothing," I cried, thrusting it into my pocket. "But I must go. I
+have something important to do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How stern you look, Austin! I have never seen your face like that.
+You are angry?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I am angry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But not with me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, no, my darling! You would not understand."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you have not told me why you came."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I came to ask you whether you would always love me&mdash;no matter what I
+did, or what shadow might fall on my name. Would you believe in me and
+trust me however black appearances might be against me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You know that I would, Austin."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I know that you would. What I do I shall do for you. I am
+driven to it. There is no other way out, my darling!" I kissed her
+and rushed from the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The time for indecision was at an end. As long as the creature
+threatened my own prospects and my honor there might be a question as
+to what I should do. But now, when Agatha&mdash;my innocent Agatha&mdash;was
+endangered, my duty lay before me like a turnpike road. I had no
+weapon, but I never paused for that. What weapon should I need, when I
+felt every muscle quivering with the strength of a frenzied man? I ran
+through the streets, so set upon what I had to do that I was only dimly
+conscious of the faces of friends whom I met&mdash;dimly conscious also
+that Professor Wilson met me, running with equal precipitance in the
+opposite direction. Breathless but resolute I reached the house and
+rang the bell. A white cheeked maid opened the door, and turned whiter
+yet when she saw the face that looked in at her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Show me up at once to Miss Penclosa," I demanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sir," she gasped, "Miss Penclosa died this afternoon at half-past
+three!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Parasite, by Arthur Conan Doyle
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+</pre>
+
+</BODY>
+
+</HTML>
+
diff --git a/355.txt b/355.txt
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+++ b/355.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,2217 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Parasite, by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Parasite
+
+Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+Release Date: March 19, 2008 [EBook #355]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE PARASITE ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PARASITE
+
+A Story
+
+
+BY
+
+A. CONAN DOYLE
+
+
+AUTHOR OF "THE REFUGEES" "MICAH CLARKE" ETC.
+
+
+
+
+1894
+
+
+
+
+THE PARASITE
+
+I
+
+March 24. The spring is fairly with us now. Outside my laboratory
+window the great chestnut-tree is all covered with the big, glutinous,
+gummy buds, some of which have already begun to break into little green
+shuttlecocks. As you walk down the lanes you are conscious of the
+rich, silent forces of nature working all around you. The wet earth
+smells fruitful and luscious. Green shoots are peeping out everywhere.
+The twigs are stiff with their sap; and the moist, heavy English air is
+laden with a faintly resinous perfume. Buds in the hedges, lambs
+beneath them--everywhere the work of reproduction going forward!
+
+I can see it without, and I can feel it within. We also have our
+spring when the little arterioles dilate, the lymph flows in a brisker
+stream, the glands work harder, winnowing and straining. Every year
+nature readjusts the whole machine. I can feel the ferment in my blood
+at this very moment, and as the cool sunshine pours through my window I
+could dance about in it like a gnat. So I should, only that Charles
+Sadler would rush upstairs to know what was the matter. Besides, I
+must remember that I am Professor Gilroy. An old professor may afford
+to be natural, but when fortune has given one of the first chairs in
+the university to a man of four-and-thirty he must try and act the part
+consistently.
+
+What a fellow Wilson is! If I could only throw the same enthusiasm
+into physiology that he does into psychology, I should become a Claude
+Bernard at the least. His whole life and soul and energy work to one
+end. He drops to sleep collating his results of the past day, and he
+wakes to plan his researches for the coming one. And yet, outside the
+narrow circle who follow his proceedings, he gets so little credit for
+it. Physiology is a recognized science. If I add even a brick to the
+edifice, every one sees and applauds it. But Wilson is trying to dig
+the foundations for a science of the future. His work is underground
+and does not show. Yet he goes on uncomplainingly, corresponding with
+a hundred semi-maniacs in the hope of finding one reliable witness,
+sifting a hundred lies on the chance of gaining one little speck of
+truth, collating old books, devouring new ones, experimenting,
+lecturing, trying to light up in others the fiery interest which is
+consuming him. I am filled with wonder and admiration when I think of
+him, and yet, when he asks me to associate myself with his researches,
+I am compelled to tell him that, in their present state, they offer
+little attraction to a man who is devoted to exact science. If he
+could show me something positive and objective, I might then be tempted
+to approach the question from its physiological side. So long as half
+his subjects are tainted with charlatanerie and the other half with
+hysteria we physiologists must content ourselves with the body and
+leave the mind to our descendants.
+
+No doubt I am a materialist. Agatha says that I am a rank one. I tell
+her that is an excellent reason for shortening our engagement, since I
+am in such urgent need of her spirituality. And yet I may claim to be
+a curious example of the effect of education upon temperament, for by
+nature I am, unless I deceive myself, a highly psychic man. I was a
+nervous, sensitive boy, a dreamer, a somnambulist, full of impressions
+and intuitions. My black hair, my dark eyes, my thin, olive face, my
+tapering fingers, are all characteristic of my real temperament, and
+cause experts like Wilson to claim me as their own. But my brain is
+soaked with exact knowledge. I have trained myself to deal only with
+fact and with proof. Surmise and fancy have no place in my scheme of
+thought. Show me what I can see with my microscope, cut with my
+scalpel, weigh in my balance, and I will devote a lifetime to its
+investigation. But when you ask me to study feelings, impressions,
+suggestions, you ask me to do what is distasteful and even
+demoralizing. A departure from pure reason affects me like an evil
+smell or a musical discord.
+
+Which is a very sufficient reason why I am a little loath to go to
+Professor Wilson's tonight. Still I feel that I could hardly get out
+of the invitation without positive rudeness; and, now that Mrs. Marden
+and Agatha are going, of course I would not if I could. But I had
+rather meet them anywhere else. I know that Wilson would draw me into
+this nebulous semi-science of his if he could. In his enthusiasm he is
+perfectly impervious to hints or remonstrances. Nothing short of a
+positive quarrel will make him realize my aversion to the whole
+business. I have no doubt that he has some new mesmerist or
+clairvoyant or medium or trickster of some sort whom he is going to
+exhibit to us, for even his entertainments bear upon his hobby. Well,
+it will be a treat for Agatha, at any rate. She is interested in it,
+as woman usually is in whatever is vague and mystical and indefinite.
+
+10.50 P. M. This diary-keeping of mine is, I fancy, the outcome of
+that scientific habit of mind about which I wrote this morning. I like
+to register impressions while they are fresh. Once a day at least I
+endeavor to define my own mental position. It is a useful piece of
+self-analysis, and has, I fancy, a steadying effect upon the character.
+Frankly, I must confess that my own needs what stiffening I can give
+it. I fear that, after all, much of my neurotic temperament survives,
+and that I am far from that cool, calm precision which characterizes
+Murdoch or Pratt-Haldane. Otherwise, why should the tomfoolery which I
+have witnessed this evening have set my nerves thrilling so that even
+now I am all unstrung? My only comfort is that neither Wilson nor Miss
+Penclosa nor even Agatha could have possibly known my weakness.
+
+And what in the world was there to excite me? Nothing, or so little
+that it will seem ludicrous when I set it down.
+
+The Mardens got to Wilson's before me. In fact, I was one of the last
+to arrive and found the room crowded. I had hardly time to say a word
+to Mrs. Marden and to Agatha, who was looking charming in white and
+pink, with glittering wheat-ears in her hair, when Wilson came
+twitching at my sleeve.
+
+"You want something positive, Gilroy," said he, drawing me apart into a
+corner. "My dear fellow, I have a phenomenon--a phenomenon!"
+
+I should have been more impressed had I not heard the same before. His
+sanguine spirit turns every fire-fly into a star.
+
+"No possible question about the bona fides this time," said he, in
+answer, perhaps, to some little gleam of amusement in my eyes. "My
+wife has known her for many years. They both come from Trinidad, you
+know. Miss Penclosa has only been in England a month or two, and knows
+no one outside the university circle, but I assure you that the things
+she has told us suffice in themselves to establish clairvoyance upon an
+absolutely scientific basis. There is nothing like her, amateur or
+professional. Come and be introduced!"
+
+I like none of these mystery-mongers, but the amateur least of all.
+With the paid performer you may pounce upon him and expose him the
+instant that you have seen through his trick. He is there to deceive
+you, and you are there to find him out. But what are you to do with
+the friend of your host's wife? Are you to turn on a light suddenly
+and expose her slapping a surreptitious banjo? Or are you to hurl
+cochineal over her evening frock when she steals round with her
+phosphorus bottle and her supernatural platitude? There would be a
+scene, and you would be looked upon as a brute. So you have your
+choice of being that or a dupe. I was in no very good humor as I
+followed Wilson to the lady.
+
+Any one less like my idea of a West Indian could not be imagined. She
+was a small, frail creature, well over forty, I should say, with a
+pale, peaky face, and hair of a very light shade of chestnut. Her
+presence was insignificant and her manner retiring. In any group of
+ten women she would have been the last whom one would have picked out.
+Her eyes were perhaps her most remarkable, and also, I am compelled to
+say, her least pleasant, feature. They were gray in color,--gray with
+a shade of green,--and their expression struck me as being decidedly
+furtive. I wonder if furtive is the word, or should I have said
+fierce? On second thoughts, feline would have expressed it better. A
+crutch leaning against the wall told me what was painfully evident when
+she rose: that one of her legs was crippled.
+
+So I was introduced to Miss Penclosa, and it did not escape me that as
+my name was mentioned she glanced across at Agatha. Wilson had
+evidently been talking. And presently, no doubt, thought I, she will
+inform me by occult means that I am engaged to a young lady with
+wheat-ears in her hair. I wondered how much more Wilson had been
+telling her about me.
+
+"Professor Gilroy is a terrible sceptic," said he; "I hope, Miss
+Penclosa, that you will be able to convert him."
+
+She looked keenly up at me.
+
+"Professor Gilroy is quite right to be sceptical if he has not seen any
+thing convincing," said she. "I should have thought," she added, "that
+you would yourself have been an excellent subject."
+
+"For what, may I ask?" said I.
+
+"Well, for mesmerism, for example."
+
+"My experience has been that mesmerists go for their subjects to those
+who are mentally unsound. All their results are vitiated, as it seems
+to me, by the fact that they are dealing with abnormal organisms."
+
+"Which of these ladies would you say possessed a normal organism?" she
+asked. "I should like you to select the one who seems to you to have
+the best balanced mind. Should we say the girl in pink and
+white?--Miss Agatha Marden, I think the name is."
+
+"Yes, I should attach weight to any results from her."
+
+"I have never tried how far she is impressionable. Of course some
+people respond much more rapidly than others. May I ask how far your
+scepticism extends? I suppose that you admit the mesmeric sleep and
+the power of suggestion."
+
+"I admit nothing, Miss Penclosa."
+
+"Dear me, I thought science had got further than that. Of course I
+know nothing about the scientific side of it. I only know what I can
+do. You see the girl in red, for example, over near the Japanese jar.
+I shall will that she come across to us."
+
+She bent forward as she spoke and dropped her fan upon the floor. The
+girl whisked round and came straight toward us, with an enquiring look
+upon her face, as if some one had called her.
+
+"What do you think of that, Gilroy?" cried Wilson, in a kind of ecstasy.
+
+I did not dare to tell him what I thought of it. To me it was the most
+barefaced, shameless piece of imposture that I had ever witnessed. The
+collusion and the signal had really been too obvious.
+
+"Professor Gilroy is not satisfied," said she, glancing up at me with
+her strange little eyes. "My poor fan is to get the credit of that
+experiment. Well, we must try something else. Miss Marden, would you
+have any objection to my putting you off?"
+
+"Oh, I should love it!" cried Agatha.
+
+By this time all the company had gathered round us in a circle, the
+shirt-fronted men, and the white-throated women, some awed, some
+critical, as though it were something between a religious ceremony and
+a conjurer's entertainment. A red velvet arm-chair had been pushed
+into the centre, and Agatha lay back in it, a little flushed and
+trembling slightly from excitement. I could see it from the vibration
+of the wheat-ears. Miss Penclosa rose from her seat and stood over
+her, leaning upon her crutch.
+
+And there was a change in the woman. She no longer seemed small or
+insignificant. Twenty years were gone from her age. Her eyes were
+shining, a tinge of color had come into her sallow cheeks, her whole
+figure had expanded. So I have seen a dull-eyed, listless lad change
+in an instant into briskness and life when given a task of which he
+felt himself master. She looked down at Agatha with an expression
+which I resented from the bottom of my soul--the expression with which
+a Roman empress might have looked at her kneeling slave. Then with a
+quick, commanding gesture she tossed up her arms and swept them slowly
+down in front of her.
+
+I was watching Agatha narrowly. During three passes she seemed to be
+simply amused. At the fourth I observed a slight glazing of her eyes,
+accompanied by some dilation of her pupils. At the sixth there was a
+momentary rigor. At the seventh her lids began to droop. At the tenth
+her eyes were closed, and her breathing was slower and fuller than
+usual. I tried as I watched to preserve my scientific calm, but a
+foolish, causeless agitation convulsed me. I trust that I hid it, but
+I felt as a child feels in the dark. I could not have believed that I
+was still open to such weakness.
+
+"She is in the trance," said Miss Penclosa.
+
+"She is sleeping!" I cried.
+
+"Wake her, then!"
+
+I pulled her by the arm and shouted in her ear. She might have been
+dead for all the impression that I could make. Her body was there on
+the velvet chair. Her organs were acting--her heart, her lungs. But
+her soul! It had slipped from beyond our ken. Whither had it gone?
+What power had dispossessed it? I was puzzled and disconcerted.
+
+"So much for the mesmeric sleep," said Miss Penclosa. "As regards
+suggestion, whatever I may suggest Miss Marden will infallibly do,
+whether it be now or after she has awakened from her trance. Do you
+demand proof of it?"
+
+"Certainly," said I.
+
+"You shall have it." I saw a smile pass over her face, as though an
+amusing thought had struck her. She stooped and whispered earnestly
+into her subject's ear. Agatha, who had been so deaf to me, nodded her
+head as she listened.
+
+"Awake!" cried Miss Penclosa, with a sharp tap of her crutch upon the
+floor. The eyes opened, the glazing cleared slowly away, and the soul
+looked out once more after its strange eclipse.
+
+We went away early. Agatha was none the worse for her strange
+excursion, but I was nervous and unstrung, unable to listen to or
+answer the stream of comments which Wilson was pouring out for my
+benefit. As I bade her good-night Miss Penclosa slipped a piece of
+paper into my hand.
+
+"Pray forgive me," said she, "if I take means to overcome your
+scepticism. Open this note at ten o'clock to-morrow morning. It is a
+little private test."
+
+I can't imagine what she means, but there is the note, and it shall be
+opened as she directs. My head is aching, and I have written enough
+for to-night. To-morrow I dare say that what seems so inexplicable
+will take quite another complexion. I shall not surrender my
+convictions without a struggle.
+
+March 25. I am amazed, confounded. It is clear that I must reconsider
+my opinion upon this matter. But first let me place on record what has
+occurred.
+
+I had finished breakfast, and was looking over some diagrams with which
+my lecture is to be illustrated, when my housekeeper entered to tell me
+that Agatha was in my study and wished to see me immediately. I
+glanced at the clock and saw with sun rise that it was only half-past
+nine.
+
+When I entered the room, she was standing on the hearth-rug facing me.
+Something in her pose chilled me and checked the words which were
+rising to my lips. Her veil was half down, but I could see that she
+was pale and that her expression was constrained.
+
+"Austin," she said, "I have come to tell you that our engagement is at
+an end."
+
+I staggered. I believe that I literally did stagger. I know that I
+found myself leaning against the bookcase for support.
+
+"But--but----" I stammered. "This is very sudden, Agatha."
+
+"Yes, Austin, I have come here to tell you that our engagement is at an
+end."
+
+"But surely," I cried, "you will give me some reason! This is unlike
+you, Agatha. Tell me how I have been unfortunate enough to offend you."
+
+"It is all over, Austin."
+
+"But why? You must be under some delusion, Agatha. Perhaps you have
+been told some falsehood about me. Or you may have misunderstood
+something that I have said to you. Only let me know what it is, and a
+word may set it all right."
+
+"We must consider it all at an end."
+
+"But you left me last night without a hint at any disagreement. What
+could have occurred in the interval to change you so? It must have
+been something that happened last night. You have been thinking it
+over and you have disapproved of my conduct. Was it the mesmerism?
+Did you blame me for letting that woman exercise her power over you?
+You know that at the least sign I should have interfered."
+
+"It is useless, Austin. All is over:"
+
+Her voice was cold and measured; her manner strangely formal and hard.
+It seemed to me that she was absolutely resolved not to be drawn into
+any argument or explanation. As for me, I was shaking with agitation,
+and I turned my face aside, so ashamed was I that she should see my
+want of control.
+
+"You must know what this means to me!" I cried. "It is the blasting of
+all my hopes and the ruin of my life! You surely will not inflict such
+a punishment upon me unheard. You will let me know what is the matter.
+Consider how impossible it would be for me, under any circumstances, to
+treat you so. For God's sake, Agatha, let me know what I have done!"
+
+She walked past me without a word and opened the door.
+
+"It is quite useless, Austin," said she. "You must consider our
+engagement at an end." An instant later she was gone, and, before I
+could recover myself sufficiently to follow her, I heard the hall-door
+close behind her.
+
+I rushed into my room to change my coat, with the idea of hurrying
+round to Mrs. Marden's to learn from her what the cause of my
+misfortune might be. So shaken was I that I could hardly lace my
+boots. Never shall I forget those horrible ten minutes. I had just
+pulled on my overcoat when the clock upon the mantel-piece struck ten.
+
+Ten! I associated the idea with Miss Penclosa's note. It was lying
+before me on the table, and I tore it open. It was scribbled in pencil
+in a peculiarly angular handwriting.
+
+"MY DEAR PROFESSOR GILROY [it said]: Pray excuse the personal nature
+of the test which I am giving you. Professor Wilson happened to
+mention the relations between you and my subject of this evening, and
+it struck me that nothing could be more convincing to you than if I
+were to suggest to Miss Marden that she should call upon you at
+half-past nine to-morrow morning and suspend your engagement for half
+an hour or so. Science is so exacting that it is difficult to give a
+satisfying test, but I am convinced that this at least will be an
+action which she would be most unlikely to do of her own free will.
+Forget any thing that she may have said, as she has really nothing
+whatever to do with it, and will certainly not recollect any thing
+about it. I write this note to shorten your anxiety, and to beg you to
+forgive me for the momentary unhappiness which my suggestion must have
+caused you.
+ "Yours faithfully;
+ "HELEN PENCLOSA.
+
+
+Really, when I had read the note, I was too relieved to be angry. It
+was a liberty. Certainly it was a very great liberty indeed on the
+part of a lady whom I had only met once. But, after all, I had
+challenged her by my scepticism. It may have been, as she said, a
+little difficult to devise a test which would satisfy me.
+
+And she had done that. There could be no question at all upon the
+point. For me hypnotic suggestion was finally established. It took
+its place from now onward as one of the facts of life. That Agatha,
+who of all women of my acquaintance has the best balanced mind, had
+been reduced to a condition of automatism appeared to be certain. A
+person at a distance had worked her as an engineer on the shore might
+guide a Brennan torpedo. A second soul had stepped in, as it were, had
+pushed her own aside, and had seized her nervous mechanism, saying: "I
+will work this for half an hour." And Agatha must have been
+unconscious as she came and as she returned. Could she make her way in
+safety through the streets in such a state? I put on my hat and
+hurried round to see if all was well with her.
+
+Yes. She was at home. I was shown into the drawing-room and found her
+sitting with a book upon her lap.
+
+"You are an early visitor, Austin," said she, smiling.
+
+"And you have been an even earlier one," I answered.
+
+She looked puzzled. "What do you mean?" she asked.
+
+"You have not been out to-day?"
+
+"No, certainly not."
+
+"Agatha," said I seriously, "would you mind telling me exactly what you
+have done this morning?"
+
+She laughed at my earnestness.
+
+"You've got on your professional look, Austin. See what comes of being
+engaged to a man of science. However, I will tell you, though I can't
+imagine what you want to know for. I got up at eight. I breakfasted
+at half-past. I came into this room at ten minutes past nine and began
+to read the 'Memoirs of Mme. de Remusat.' In a few minutes I did the
+French lady the bad compliment of dropping to sleep over her pages, and
+I did you, sir, the very flattering one of dreaming about you. It is
+only a few minutes since I woke up."
+
+"And found yourself where you had been before?"
+
+"Why, where else should I find myself?"
+
+"Would you mind telling me, Agatha, what it was that you dreamed about
+me? It really is not mere curiosity on my part."
+
+"I merely had a vague impression that you came into it. I cannot
+recall any thing definite."
+
+"If you have not been out to-day, Agatha, how is it that your shoes are
+dusty?"
+
+A pained look came over her face.
+
+"Really, Austin, I do not know what is the matter with you this
+morning. One would almost think that you doubted my word. If my boots
+are dusty, it must be, of course, that I have put on a pair which the
+maid had not cleaned."
+
+It was perfectly evident that she knew nothing whatever about the
+matter, and I reflected that, after all, perhaps it was better that I
+should not enlighten her. It might frighten her, and could serve no
+good purpose that I could see. I said no more about it, therefore, and
+left shortly afterward to give my lecture.
+
+But I am immensely impressed. My horizon of scientific possibilities
+has suddenly been enormously extended. I no longer wonder at Wilson's
+demonic energy and enthusiasm. Who would not work hard who had a vast
+virgin field ready to his hand? Why, I have known the novel shape of a
+nucleolus, or a trifling peculiarity of striped muscular fibre seen
+under a 300-diameter lens, fill me with exultation. How petty do such
+researches seem when compared with this one which strikes at the very
+roots of life and the nature of the soul! I had always looked upon
+spirit as a product of matter. The brain, I thought, secreted the
+mind, as the liver does the bile. But how can this be when I see mind
+working from a distance and playing upon matter as a musician might
+upon a violin? The body does not give rise to the soul, then, but is
+rather the rough instrument by which the spirit manifests itself. The
+windmill does not give rise to the wind, but only indicates it. It was
+opposed to my whole habit of thought, and yet it was undeniably
+possible and worthy of investigation.
+
+And why should I not investigate it? I see that under yesterday's date
+I said: "If I could see something positive and objective, I might be
+tempted to approach it from the physiological aspect." Well, I have
+got my test. I shall be as good as my word. The investigation would,
+I am sure, be of immense interest. Some of my colleagues might look
+askance at it, for science is full of unreasoning prejudices, but if
+Wilson has the courage of his convictions, I can afford to have it
+also. I shall go to him to-morrow morning--to him and to Miss
+Penclosa. If she can show us so much, it is probable that she can show
+us more.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+March 26. Wilson was, as I had anticipated, very exultant over my
+conversion, and Miss Penclosa was also demurely pleased at the result
+of her experiment. Strange what a silent, colorless creature she is
+save only when she exercises her power! Even talking about it gives
+her color and life. She seems to take a singular interest in me. I
+cannot help observing how her eyes follow me about the room.
+
+We had the most interesting conversation about her own powers. It is
+just as well to put her views on record, though they cannot, of course,
+claim any scientific weight.
+
+"You are on the very fringe of the subject," said she, when I had
+expressed wonder at the remarkable instance of suggestion which she had
+shown me. "I had no direct influence upon Miss Marden when she came
+round to you. I was not even thinking of her that morning. What I did
+was to set her mind as I might set the alarum of a clock so that at the
+hour named it would go off of its own accord. If six months instead of
+twelve hours had been suggested, it would have been the same."
+
+"And if the suggestion had been to assassinate me?"
+
+"She would most inevitably have done so."
+
+"But this is a terrible power!" I cried.
+
+"It is, as you say, a terrible power," she answered gravely, "and the
+more you know of it the more terrible will it seem to you."
+
+"May I ask," said I, "what you meant when you said that this matter of
+suggestion is only at the fringe of it? What do you consider the
+essential?"
+
+"I had rather not tell you."
+
+I was surprised at the decision of her answer.
+
+"You understand," said I, "that it is not out of curiosity I ask, but
+in the hope that I may find some scientific explanation for the facts
+with which you furnish me."
+
+"Frankly, Professor Gilroy," said she, "I am not at all interested in
+science, nor do I care whether it can or cannot classify these powers."
+
+"But I was hoping----"
+
+"Ah, that is quite another thing. If you make it a personal matter,"
+said she, with the pleasantest of smiles, "I shall be only too happy to
+tell you any thing you wish to know. Let me see; what was it you asked
+me? Oh, about the further powers. Professor Wilson won't believe in
+them, but they are quite true all the same. For example, it is
+possible for an operator to gain complete command over his subject--
+presuming that the latter is a good one. Without any previous
+suggestion he may make him do whatever he likes."
+
+"Without the subject's knowledge?"
+
+"That depends. If the force were strongly exerted, he would know no
+more about it than Miss Marden did when she came round and frightened
+you so. Or, if the influence was less powerful, he might be conscious
+of what he was doing, but be quite unable to prevent himself from doing
+it."
+
+"Would he have lost his own will power, then?"
+
+"It would be over-ridden by another stronger one."
+
+"Have you ever exercised this power yourself?"
+
+"Several times."
+
+"Is your own will so strong, then?"
+
+"Well, it does not entirely depend upon that. Many have strong wills
+which are not detachable from themselves. The thing is to have the
+gift of projecting it into another person and superseding his own. I
+find that the power varies with my own strength and health."
+
+"Practically, you send your soul into another person's body."
+
+"Well, you might put it that way."
+
+"And what does your own body do?"
+
+"It merely feels lethargic."
+
+"Well, but is there no danger to your own health?" I asked.
+
+"There might be a little. You have to be careful never to let your own
+consciousness absolutely go; otherwise, you might experience some
+difficulty in finding your way back again. You must always preserve
+the connection, as it were. I am afraid I express myself very badly,
+Professor Gilroy, but of course I don't know how to put these things in
+a scientific way. I am just giving you my own experiences and my own
+explanations."
+
+Well, I read this over now at my leisure, and I marvel at myself! Is
+this Austin Gilroy, the man who has won his way to the front by his
+hard reasoning power and by his devotion to fact? Here I am gravely
+retailing the gossip of a woman who tells me how her soul may be
+projected from her body, and how, while she lies in a lethargy, she can
+control the actions of people at a distance. Do I accept it?
+Certainly not. She must prove and re-prove before I yield a point.
+But if I am still a sceptic, I have at least ceased to be a scoffer.
+We are to have a sitting this evening, and she is to try if she can
+produce any mesmeric effect upon me. If she can, it will make an
+excellent starting-point for our investigation. No one can accuse me,
+at any rate, of complicity. If she cannot, we must try and find some
+subject who will be like Caesar's wife. Wilson is perfectly impervious.
+
+10 P. M. I believe that I am on the threshold of an epoch-making
+investigation. To have the power of examining these phenomena from
+inside--to have an organism which will respond, and at the same time a
+brain which will appreciate and criticise--that is surely a unique
+advantage. I am quite sure that Wilson would give five years of his
+life to be as susceptible as I have proved myself to be.
+
+There was no one present except Wilson and his wife. I was seated with
+my head leaning back, and Miss Penclosa, standing in front and a little
+to the left, used the same long, sweeping strokes as with Agatha. At
+each of them a warm current of air seemed to strike me, and to suffuse
+a thrill and glow all through me from head to foot. My eyes were fixed
+upon Miss Penclosa's face, but as I gazed the features seemed to blur
+and to fade away. I was conscious only of her own eyes looking down at
+me, gray, deep, inscrutable. Larger they grew and larger, until they
+changed suddenly into two mountain lakes toward which I seemed to be
+falling with horrible rapidity. I shuddered, and as I did so some
+deeper stratum of thought told me that the shudder represented the
+rigor which I had observed in Agatha. An instant later I struck the
+surface of the lakes, now joined into one, and down I went beneath the
+water with a fulness in my head and a buzzing in my ears. Down I went,
+down, down, and then with a swoop up again until I could see the light
+streaming brightly through the green water. I was almost at the
+surface when the word "Awake!" rang through my head, and, with a start,
+I found myself back in the arm-chair, with Miss Penclosa leaning on her
+crutch, and Wilson, his note book in his hand, peeping over her
+shoulder. No heaviness or weariness was left behind. On the contrary,
+though it is only an hour or so since the experiment, I feel so wakeful
+that I am more inclined for my study than my bedroom. I see quite a
+vista of interesting experiments extending before us, and am all
+impatience to begin upon them.
+
+March 27. A blank day, as Miss Penclosa goes with Wilson and his wife
+to the Suttons'. Have begun Binet and Ferre's "Animal Magnetism."
+What strange, deep waters these are! Results, results, results--and
+the cause an absolute mystery. It is stimulating to the imagination,
+but I must be on my guard against that. Let us have no inferences nor
+deductions, and nothing but solid facts. I KNOW that the mesmeric
+trance is true; I KNOW that mesmeric suggestion is true; I KNOW that I
+am myself sensitive to this force. That is my present position. I
+have a large new note-book which shall be devoted entirely to
+scientific detail.
+
+Long talk with Agatha and Mrs. Marden in the evening about our
+marriage. We think that the summer vac. (the beginning of it) would
+be the best time for the wedding. Why should we delay? I grudge even
+those few months. Still, as Mrs. Marden says, there are a good many
+things to be arranged.
+
+March 28. Mesmerized again by Miss Penclosa. Experience much the same
+as before, save that insensibility came on more quickly. See Note-book
+A for temperature of room, barometric pressure, pulse, and respiration
+as taken by Professor Wilson.
+
+March 29. Mesmerized again. Details in Note-book A.
+
+March 30. Sunday, and a blank day. I grudge any interruption of our
+experiments. At present they merely embrace the physical signs which
+go with slight, with complete, and with extreme insensibility.
+Afterward we hope to pass on to the phenomena of suggestion and of
+lucidity. Professors have demonstrated these things upon women at
+Nancy and at the Salpetriere. It will be more convincing when a woman
+demonstrates it upon a professor, with a second professor as a witness.
+And that I should be the subject--I, the sceptic, the materialist! At
+least, I have shown that my devotion to science is greater than to my
+own personal consistency. The eating of our own words is the greatest
+sacrifice which truth ever requires of us.
+
+My neighbor, Charles Sadler, the handsome young demonstrator of
+anatomy, came in this evening to return a volume of Virchow's
+"Archives" which I had lent him. I call him young, but, as a matter of
+fact, he is a year older than I am.
+
+"I understand, Gilroy," said he, "that you are being experimented upon
+by Miss Penclosa."
+
+"Well," he went on, when I had acknowledged it, "if I were you, I
+should not let it go any further. You will think me very impertinent,
+no doubt, but, none the less, I feel it to be my duty to advise you to
+have no more to do with her."
+
+Of course I asked him why.
+
+"I am so placed that I cannot enter into particulars as freely as I
+could wish," said he. "Miss Penclosa is the friend of my friend, and
+my position is a delicate one. I can only say this: that I have myself
+been the subject of some of the woman's experiments, and that they have
+left a most unpleasant impression upon my mind."
+
+He could hardly expect me to be satisfied with that, and I tried hard
+to get something more definite out of him, but without success. Is it
+conceivable that he could be jealous at my having superseded him? Or
+is he one of those men of science who feel personally injured when
+facts run counter to their preconceived opinions? He cannot seriously
+suppose that because he has some vague grievance I am, therefore, to
+abandon a series of experiments which promise to be so fruitful of
+results. He appeared to be annoyed at the light way in which I treated
+his shadowy warnings, and we parted with some little coldness on both
+sides.
+
+March 31. Mesmerized by Miss P.
+
+April 1. Mesmerized by Miss P. (Note-book A.)
+
+April 2. Mesmerized by Miss P. (Sphygmographic chart taken by
+Professor Wilson.)
+
+April 3. It is possible that this course of mesmerism may be a little
+trying to the general constitution. Agatha says that I am thinner and
+darker under the eyes. I am conscious of a nervous irritability which
+I had not observed in myself before. The least noise, for example,
+makes me start, and the stupidity of a student causes me exasperation
+instead of amusement. Agatha wishes me to stop, but I tell her that
+every course of study is trying, and that one can never attain a result
+with out paying some price for it. When she sees the sensation which
+my forthcoming paper on "The Relation between Mind and Matter" may
+make, she will understand that it is worth a little nervous wear and
+tear. I should not be surprised if I got my F. R. S. over it.
+
+Mesmerized again in the evening. The effect is produced more rapidly
+now, and the subjective visions are less marked. I keep full notes of
+each sitting. Wilson is leaving for town for a week or ten days, but
+we shall not interrupt the experiments, which depend for their value as
+much upon my sensations as on his observations.
+
+April 4. I must be carefully on my guard. A complication has crept
+into our experiments which I had not reckoned upon. In my eagerness
+for scientific facts I have been foolishly blind to the human relations
+between Miss Penclosa and myself. I can write here what I would not
+breathe to a living soul. The unhappy woman appears to have formed an
+attachment for me.
+
+I should not say such a thing, even in the privacy of my own intimate
+journal, if it had not come to such a pass that it is impossible to
+ignore it. For some time,--that is, for the last week,--there have
+been signs which I have brushed aside and refused to think of. Her
+brightness when I come, her dejection when I go, her eagerness that I
+should come often, the expression of her eyes, the tone of her voice--I
+tried to think that they meant nothing, and were, perhaps, only her
+ardent West Indian manner. But last night, as I awoke from the
+mesmeric sleep, I put out my hand, unconsciously, involuntarily, and
+clasped hers. When I came fully to myself, we were sitting with them
+locked, she looking up at me with an expectant smile. And the horrible
+thing was that I felt impelled to say what she expected me to say.
+What a false wretch I should have been! How I should have loathed
+myself to-day had I yielded to the temptation of that moment! But,
+thank God, I was strong enough to spring up and hurry from the room. I
+was rude, I fear, but I could not, no, I COULD not, trust myself
+another moment. I, a gentleman, a man of honor, engaged to one of the
+sweetest girls in England--and yet in a moment of reasonless passion I
+nearly professed love for this woman whom I hardly know. She is far
+older than myself and a cripple. It is monstrous, odious; and yet the
+impulse was so strong that, had I stayed another minute in her
+presence, I should have committed myself. What was it? I have to
+teach others the workings of our organism, and what do I know of it
+myself? Was it the sudden upcropping of some lower stratum in my
+nature--a brutal primitive instinct suddenly asserting itself? I could
+almost believe the tales of obsession by evil spirits, so overmastering
+was the feeling.
+
+Well, the incident places me in a most unfortunate position. On the
+one hand, I am very loath to abandon a series of experiments which have
+already gone so far, and which promise such brilliant results. On the
+other, if this unhappy woman has conceived a passion for me---- But
+surely even now I must have made some hideous mistake. She, with her
+age and her deformity! It is impossible. And then she knew about
+Agatha. She understood how I was placed. She only smiled out of
+amusement, perhaps, when in my dazed state I seized her hand. It was
+my half-mesmerized brain which gave it a meaning, and sprang with such
+bestial swiftness to meet it. I wish I could persuade myself that it
+was indeed so. On the whole, perhaps, my wisest plan would be to
+postpone our other experiments until Wilson's return. I have written a
+note to Miss Penclosa, therefore, making no allusion to last night, but
+saying that a press of work would cause me to interrupt our sittings
+for a few days. She has answered, formally enough, to say that if I
+should change my mind I should find her at home at the usual hour.
+
+10 P. M. Well, well, what a thing of straw I am! I am coming to know
+myself better of late, and the more I know the lower I fall in my own
+estimation. Surely I was not always so weak as this. At four o'clock
+I should have smiled had any one told me that I should go to Miss
+Penclosa's to-night, and yet, at eight, I was at Wilson's door as
+usual. I don't know how it occurred. The influence of habit, I
+suppose. Perhaps there is a mesmeric craze as there is an opium craze,
+and I am a victim to it. I only know that as I worked in my study I
+became more and more uneasy. I fidgeted. I worried. I could not
+concentrate my mind upon the papers in front of me. And then, at last,
+almost before I knew what I was doing, I seized my hat and hurried
+round to keep my usual appointment.
+
+We had an interesting evening. Mrs. Wilson was present during most of
+the time, which prevented the embarrassment which one at least of us
+must have felt. Miss Penclosa's manner was quite the same as usual,
+and she expressed no surprise at my having come in spite of my note.
+There was nothing in her bearing to show that yesterday's incident had
+made any impression upon her, and so I am inclined to hope that I
+overrated it.
+
+April 6 (evening). No, no, no, I did not overrate it. I can no longer
+attempt to conceal from myself that this woman has conceived a passion
+for me. It is monstrous, but it is true. Again, tonight, I awoke from
+the mesmeric trance to find my hand in hers, and to suffer that odious
+feeling which urges me to throw away my honor, my career, every thing,
+for the sake of this creature who, as I can plainly see when I am away
+from her influence, possesses no single charm upon earth. But when I
+am near her, I do not feel this. She rouses something in me, something
+evil, something I had rather not think of. She paralyzes my better
+nature, too, at the moment when she stimulates my worse. Decidedly it
+is not good for me to be near her.
+
+Last night was worse than before. Instead of flying I actually sat for
+some time with my hand in hers talking over the most intimate subjects
+with her. We spoke of Agatha, among other things. What could I have
+been dreaming of? Miss Penclosa said that she was conventional, and I
+agreed with her. She spoke once or twice in a disparaging way of her,
+and I did not protest. What a creature I have been!
+
+Weak as I have proved myself to be, I am still strong enough to bring
+this sort of thing to an end. It shall not happen again. I have sense
+enough to fly when I cannot fight. From this Sunday night onward I
+shall never sit with Miss Penclosa again. Never! Let the experiments
+go, let the research come to an end; any thing is better than facing
+this monstrous temptation which drags me so low. I have said nothing
+to Miss Penclosa, but I shall simply stay away. She can tell the
+reason without any words of mine.
+
+April 7. Have stayed away as I said. It is a pity to ruin such an
+interesting investigation, but it would be a greater pity still to ruin
+my life, and I KNOW that I cannot trust myself with that woman.
+
+11 P. M. God help me! What is the matter with me? Am I going mad?
+Let me try and be calm and reason with myself. First of all I shall
+set down exactly what occurred.
+
+It was nearly eight when I wrote the lines with which this day begins.
+Feeling strangely restless and uneasy, I left my rooms and walked round
+to spend the evening with Agatha and her mother. They both remarked
+that I was pale and haggard. About nine Professor Pratt-Haldane came
+in, and we played a game of whist. I tried hard to concentrate my
+attention upon the cards, but the feeling of restlessness grew and grew
+until I found it impossible to struggle against it. I simply COULD not
+sit still at the table. At last, in the very middle of a hand, I threw
+my cards down and, with some sort of an incoherent apology about having
+an appointment, I rushed from the room. As if in a dream I have a
+vague recollection of tearing through the hall, snatching my hat from
+the stand, and slamming the door behind me. As in a dream, too, I have
+the impression of the double line of gas-lamps, and my bespattered
+boots tell me that I must have run down the middle of the road. It was
+all misty and strange and unnatural. I came to Wilson's house; I saw
+Mrs. Wilson and I saw Miss Penclosa. I hardly recall what we talked
+about, but I do remember that Miss P. shook the head of her crutch at
+me in a playful way, and accused me of being late and of losing
+interest in our experiments. There was no mesmerism, but I stayed some
+time and have only just returned.
+
+My brain is quite clear again now, and I can think over what has
+occurred. It is absurd to suppose that it is merely weakness and force
+of habit. I tried to explain it in that way the other night, but it
+will no longer suffice. It is something much deeper and more terrible
+than that. Why, when I was at the Mardens' whist-table, I was dragged
+away as if the noose of a rope had been cast round me. I can no longer
+disguise it from myself. The woman has her grip upon me. I am in her
+clutch. But I must keep my head and reason it out and see what is best
+to be done.
+
+But what a blind fool I have been! In my enthusiasm over my research I
+have walked straight into the pit, although it lay gaping before me.
+Did she not herself warn me? Did she not tell me, as I can read in my
+own journal, that when she has acquired power over a subject she can
+make him do her will? And she has acquired that power over me. I am
+for the moment at the beck and call of this creature with the crutch.
+I must come when she wills it. I must do as she wills. Worst of all,
+I must feel as she wills. I loathe her and fear her, yet, while I am
+under the spell, she can doubtless make me love her.
+
+There is some consolation in the thought, then, that those odious
+impulses for which I have blamed myself do not really come from me at
+all. They are all transferred from her, little as I could have guessed
+it at the time. I feel cleaner and lighter for the thought.
+
+April 8. Yes, now, in broad daylight, writing coolly and with time for
+reflection, I am compelled to confirm every thing which I wrote in my
+journal last night. I am in a horrible position, but, above all, I
+must not lose my head. I must pit my intellect against her powers.
+After all, I am no silly puppet, to dance at the end of a string. I
+have energy, brains, courage. For all her devil's tricks I may beat
+her yet. May! I MUST, or what is to become of me?
+
+Let me try to reason it out! This woman, by her own explanation, can
+dominate my nervous organism. She can project herself into my body and
+take command of it. She has a parasite soul; yes, she is a parasite, a
+monstrous parasite. She creeps into my frame as the hermit crab does
+into the whelk's shell. I am powerless What can I do? I am dealing
+with forces of which I know nothing. And I can tell no one of my
+trouble. They would set me down as a madman. Certainly, if it got
+noised abroad, the university would say that they had no need of a
+devil-ridden professor. And Agatha! No, no, I must face it alone.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+I read over my notes of what the woman said when she spoke about her
+powers. There is one point which fills me with dismay. She implies
+that when the influence is slight the subject knows what he is doing,
+but cannot control himself, whereas when it is strongly exerted he is
+absolutely unconscious. Now, I have always known what I did, though
+less so last night than on the previous occasions. That seems to mean
+that she has never yet exerted her full powers upon me. Was ever a man
+so placed before?
+
+Yes, perhaps there was, and very near me, too. Charles Sadler must
+know something of this! His vague words of warning take a meaning now.
+Oh, if I had only listened to him then, before I helped by these
+repeated sittings to forge the links of the chain which binds me! But
+I will see him to-day. I will apologize to him for having treated his
+warning so lightly. I will see if he can advise me.
+
+4 P. M. No, he cannot. I have talked with him, and he showed such
+surprise at the first words in which I tried to express my unspeakable
+secret that I went no further. As far as I can gather (by hints and
+inferences rather than by any statement), his own experience was
+limited to some words or looks such as I have myself endured. His
+abandonment of Miss Penclosa is in itself a sign that he was never
+really in her toils. Oh, if he only knew his escape! He has to thank
+his phlegmatic Saxon temperament for it. I am black and Celtic, and
+this hag's clutch is deep in my nerves. Shall I ever get it out?
+Shall I ever be the same man that I was just one short fortnight ago?
+
+Let me consider what I had better do. I cannot leave the university in
+the middle of the term. If I were free, my course would be obvious. I
+should start at once and travel in Persia. But would she allow me to
+start? And could her influence not reach me in Persia, and bring me
+back to within touch of her crutch? I can only find out the limits of
+this hellish power by my own bitter experience. I will fight and fight
+and fight--and what can I do more?
+
+I know very well that about eight o'clock to-night that craving for her
+society, that irresistible restlessness, will come upon me. How shall
+I overcome it? What shall I do? I must make it impossible for me to
+leave the room. I shall lock the door and throw the key out of the
+window. But, then, what am I to do in the morning? Never mind about
+the morning. I must at all costs break this chain which holds me.
+
+April 9. Victory! I have done splendidly! At seven o'clock last
+night I took a hasty dinner, and then locked myself up in my bedroom
+and dropped the key into the garden. I chose a cheery novel, and lay
+in bed for three hours trying to read it, but really in a horrible
+state of trepidation, expecting every instant that I should become
+conscious of the impulse. Nothing of the sort occurred, however, and I
+awoke this morning with the feeling that a black nightmare had been
+lifted off me. Perhaps the creature realized what I had done, and
+understood that it was useless to try to influence me. At any rate, I
+have beaten her once, and if I can do it once, I can do it again.
+
+It was most awkward about the key in the morning. Luckily, there was
+an under-gardener below, and I asked him to throw it up. No doubt he
+thought I had just dropped it. I will have doors and windows screwed
+up and six stout men to hold me down in my bed before I will surrender
+myself to be hag-ridden in this way.
+
+I had a note from Mrs. Marden this afternoon asking me to go round and
+see her. I intended to do so in any case, but had not excepted to find
+bad news waiting for me. It seems that the Armstrongs, from whom
+Agatha has expectations, are due home from Adelaide in the Aurora, and
+that they have written to Mrs. Marden and her to meet them in town.
+They will probably be away for a month or six weeks, and, as the Aurora
+is due on Wednesday, they must go at once--to-morrow, if they are ready
+in time. My consolation is that when we meet again there will be no
+more parting between Agatha and me.
+
+"I want you to do one thing, Agatha," said I, when we were alone
+together. "If you should happen to meet Miss Penclosa, either in town
+or here, you must promise me never again to allow her to mesmerize you."
+
+Agatha opened her eyes.
+
+"Why, it was only the other day that you were saying how interesting it
+all was, and how determined you were to finish your experiments."
+
+"I know, but I have changed my mind since then."
+
+"And you won't have it any more?"
+
+"No."
+
+"I am so glad, Austin. You can't think how pale and worn you have been
+lately. It was really our principal objection to going to London now
+that we did not wish to leave you when you were so pulled down. And
+your manner has been so strange occasionally--especially that night
+when you left poor Professor Pratt-Haldane to play dummy. I am
+convinced that these experiments are very bad for your nerves."
+
+"I think so, too, dear."
+
+"And for Miss Penclosa's nerves as well. You have heard that she is
+ill?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Mrs. Wilson told us so last night. She described it as a nervous
+fever. Professor Wilson is coming back this week, and of course Mrs.
+Wilson is very anxious that Miss Penclosa should be well again then,
+for he has quite a programme of experiments which he is anxious to
+carry out."
+
+I was glad to have Agatha's promise, for it was enough that this woman
+should have one of us in her clutch. On the other hand, I was
+disturbed to hear about Miss Penclosa's illness. It rather discounts
+the victory which I appeared to win last night. I remember that she
+said that loss of health interfered with her power. That may be why I
+was able to hold my own so easily. Well, well, I must take the same
+precautions to-night and see what comes of it. I am childishly
+frightened when I think of her.
+
+April 10. All went very well last night. I was amused at the
+gardener's face when I had again to hail him this morning and to ask
+him to throw up my key. I shall get a name among the servants if this
+sort of thing goes on. But the great point is that I stayed in my room
+without the slightest inclination to leave it. I do believe that I am
+shaking myself clear of this incredible bond--or is it only that the
+woman's power is in abeyance until she recovers her strength? I can
+but pray for the best.
+
+The Mardens left this morning, and the brightness seems to have gone
+out of the spring sunshine. And yet it is very beautiful also as it
+gleams on the green chestnuts opposite my windows, and gives a touch of
+gayety to the heavy, lichen-mottled walls of the old colleges. How
+sweet and gentle and soothing is Nature! Who would think that there
+lurked in her also such vile forces, such odious possibilities! For of
+course I understand that this dreadful thing which has sprung out at me
+is neither supernatural nor even preternatural. No, it is a natural
+force which this woman can use and society is ignorant of. The mere
+fact that it ebbs with her strength shows how entirely it is subject to
+physical laws. If I had time, I might probe it to the bottom and lay
+my hands upon its antidote. But you cannot tame the tiger when you are
+beneath his claws. You can but try to writhe away from him. Ah, when
+I look in the glass and see my own dark eyes and clear-cut Spanish
+face, I long for a vitriol splash or a bout of the small-pox. One or
+the other might have saved me from this calamity.
+
+I am inclined to think that I may have trouble to-night. There are two
+things which make me fear so. One is that I met Mrs. Wilson in the
+street, and that she tells me that Miss Penclosa is better, though
+still weak. I find myself wishing in my heart that the illness had
+been her last. The other is that Professor Wilson comes back in a day
+or two, and his presence would act as a constraint upon her. I should
+not fear our interviews if a third person were present. For both these
+reasons I have a presentiment of trouble to-night, and I shall take the
+same precautions as before.
+
+April 10. No, thank God, all went well last night. I really could not
+face the gardener again. I locked my door and thrust the key
+underneath it, so that I had to ask the maid to let me out in the
+morning. But the precaution was really not needed, for I never had any
+inclination to go out at all. Three evenings in succession at home! I
+am surely near the end of my troubles, for Wilson will be home again
+either today or tomorrow. Shall I tell him of what I have gone through
+or not? I am convinced that I should not have the slightest sympathy
+from him. He would look upon me as an interesting case, and read a
+paper about me at the next meeting of the Psychical Society, in which
+he would gravely discuss the possibility of my being a deliberate liar,
+and weigh it against the chances of my being in an early stage of
+lunacy. No, I shall get no comfort out of Wilson.
+
+I am feeling wonderfully fit and well. I don't think I ever lectured
+with greater spirit. Oh, if I could only get this shadow off my life,
+how happy I should be! Young, fairly wealthy, in the front rank of my
+profession, engaged to a beautiful and charming girl--have I not every
+thing which a man could ask for? Only one thing to trouble me, but
+what a thing it is!
+
+Midnight. I shall go mad. Yes, that will be the end of it. I shall
+go mad. I am not far from it now. My head throbs as I rest it on my
+hot hand. I am quivering all over like a scared horse. Oh, what a
+night I have had! And yet I have some cause to be satisfied also.
+
+At the risk of becoming the laughing-stock of my own servant, I again
+slipped my key under the door, imprisoning myself for the night. Then,
+finding it too early to go to bed, I lay down with my clothes on and
+began to read one of Dumas's novels. Suddenly I was gripped--gripped
+and dragged from the couch. It is only thus that I can describe the
+overpowering nature of the force which pounced upon me. I clawed at
+the coverlet. I clung to the wood-work. I believe that I screamed out
+in my frenzy. It was all useless, hopeless. I MUST go. There was no
+way out of it. It was only at the outset that I resisted. The force
+soon became too overmastering for that. I thank goodness that there
+were no watchers there to interfere with me. I could not have answered
+for myself if there had been. And, besides the determination to get
+out, there came to me, also, the keenest and coolest judgment in
+choosing my means. I lit a candle and endeavored, kneeling in front of
+the door, to pull the key through with the feather-end of a quill pen.
+It was just too short and pushed it further away. Then with quiet
+persistence I got a paper-knife out of one of the drawers, and with
+that I managed to draw the key back. I opened the door, stepped into
+my study, took a photograph of myself from the bureau, wrote something
+across it, placed it in the inside pocket of my coat, and then started
+off for Wilson's.
+
+It was all wonderfully clear, and yet disassociated from the rest of my
+life, as the incidents of even the most vivid dream might be. A
+peculiar double consciousness possessed me. There was the predominant
+alien will, which was bent upon drawing me to the side of its owner,
+and there was the feebler protesting personality, which I recognized as
+being myself, tugging feebly at the overmastering impulse as a led
+terrier might at its chain. I can remember recognizing these two
+conflicting forces, but I recall nothing of my walk, nor of how I was
+admitted to the house.
+
+Very vivid, however, is my recollection of how I met Miss Penclosa.
+She was reclining on the sofa in the little boudoir in which our
+experiments had usually been carried out. Her head was rested on her
+hand, and a tiger-skin rug had been partly drawn over her. She looked
+up expectantly as I entered, and, as the lamp-light fell upon her face,
+I could see that she was very pale and thin, with dark hollows under
+her eyes. She smiled at me, and pointed to a stool beside her. It was
+with her left hand that she pointed, and I, running eagerly forward,
+seized it,--I loathe myself as I think of it,--and pressed it
+passionately to my lips. Then, seating myself upon the stool, and
+still retaining her hand, I gave her the photograph which I had brought
+with me, and talked and talked and talked--of my love for her, of my
+grief over her illness, of my joy at her recovery, of the misery it was
+to me to be absent a single evening from her side. She lay quietly
+looking down at me with imperious eyes and her provocative smile. Once
+I remember that she passed her hand over my hair as one caresses a dog;
+and it gave me pleasure--the caress. I thrilled under it. I was her
+slave, body and soul, and for the moment I rejoiced in my slavery.
+
+And then came the blessed change. Never tell me that there is not a
+Providence! I was on the brink of perdition. My feet were on the
+edge. Was it a coincidence that at that very instant help should come?
+No, no, no; there is a Providence, and its hand has drawn me back.
+There is something in the universe stronger than this devil woman with
+her tricks. Ah, what a balm to my heart it is to think so!
+
+As I looked up at her I was conscious of a change in her. Her face,
+which had been pale before, was now ghastly. Her eyes were dull, and
+the lids drooped heavily over them. Above all, the look of serene
+confidence had gone from her features. Her mouth had weakened. Her
+forehead had puckered. She was frightened and undecided. And as I
+watched the change my own spirit fluttered and struggled, trying hard
+to tear itself from the grip which held it--a grip which, from moment
+to moment, grew less secure.
+
+"Austin," she whispered, "I have tried to do too much. I was not
+strong enough. I have not recovered yet from my illness. But I could
+not live longer without seeing you. You won't leave me, Austin? This
+is only a passing weakness. If you will only give me five minutes, I
+shall be myself again. Give me the small decanter from the table in
+the window."
+
+But I had regained my soul. With her waning strength the influence had
+cleared away from me and left me free. And I was aggressive--bitterly,
+fiercely aggressive. For once at least I could make this woman
+understand what my real feelings toward her were. My soul was filled
+with a hatred as bestial as the love against which it was a reaction.
+It was the savage, murderous passion of the revolted serf. I could
+have taken the crutch from her side and beaten her face in with it.
+She threw her hands up, as if to avoid a blow, and cowered away from me
+into the corner of the settee.
+
+"The brandy!" she gasped. "The brandy!"
+
+I took the decanter and poured it over the roots of a palm in the
+window. Then I snatched the photograph from her hand and tore it into
+a hundred pieces.
+
+"You vile woman," I said, "if I did my duty to society, you would never
+leave this room alive!"
+
+"I love you, Austin; I love you!" she wailed.
+
+"Yes," I cried, "and Charles Sadler before. And how many others before
+that?"
+
+"Charles Sadler!" she gasped. "He has spoken to you? So, Charles
+Sadler, Charles Sadler!" Her voice came through her white lips like a
+snake's hiss.
+
+"Yes, I know you, and others shall know you, too. You shameless
+creature! You knew how I stood. And yet you used your vile power to
+bring me to your side. You may, perhaps, do so again, but at least you
+will remember that you have heard me say that I love Miss Marden from
+the bottom of my soul, and that I loathe you, abhor you!
+
+"The very sight of you and the sound of your voice fill me with horror
+and disgust. The thought of you is repulsive. That is how I feel
+toward you, and if it pleases you by your tricks to draw me again to
+your side as you have done to-night, you will at least, I should think,
+have little satisfaction in trying to make a lover out of a man who has
+told you his real opinion of you. You may put what words you will into
+my mouth, but you cannot help remembering----"
+
+I stopped, for the woman's head had fallen back, and she had fainted.
+She could not bear to hear what I had to say to her! What a glow of
+satisfaction it gives me to think that, come what may, in the future
+she can never misunderstand my true feelings toward her. But what will
+occur in the future? What will she do next? I dare not think of it.
+Oh, if only I could hope that she will leave me alone! But when I
+think of what I said to her---- Never mind; I have been stronger than
+she for once.
+
+April 11. I hardly slept last night, and found myself in the morning
+so unstrung and feverish that I was compelled to ask Pratt-Haldane to
+do my lecture for me. It is the first that I have ever missed. I rose
+at mid-day, but my head is aching, my hands quivering, and my nerves in
+a pitiable state.
+
+Who should come round this evening but Wilson. He has just come back
+from London, where he has lectured, read papers, convened meetings,
+exposed a medium, conducted a series of experiments on thought
+transference, entertained Professor Richet of Paris, spent hours gazing
+into a crystal, and obtained some evidence as to the passage of matter
+through matter. All this he poured into my ears in a single gust.
+
+"But you!" he cried at last. "You are not looking well. And Miss
+Penclosa is quite prostrated to-day. How about the experiments?"
+
+"I have abandoned them."
+
+"Tut, tut! Why?"
+
+"The subject seems to me to be a dangerous one."
+
+Out came his big brown note-book.
+
+"This is of great interest," said he. "What are your grounds for
+saying that it is a dangerous one? Please give your facts in
+chronological order, with approximate dates and names of reliable
+witnesses with their permanent addresses."
+
+"First of all," I asked, "would you tell me whether you have collected
+any cases where the mesmerist has gained a command over the subject and
+has used it for evil purposes?"
+
+"Dozens!" he cried exultantly. "Crime by suggestion----"
+
+"I don't mean suggestion. I mean where a sudden impulse comes from a
+person at a distance--an uncontrollable impulse."
+
+"Obsession!" he shrieked, in an ecstasy of delight. "It is the rarest
+condition. We have eight cases, five well attested. You don't mean to
+say----" His exultation made him hardly articulate.
+
+"No, I don't," said I. "Good-evening! You will excuse me, but I am
+not very well to-night." And so at last I got rid of him, still
+brandishing his pencil and his note-book. My troubles may be bad to
+hear, but at least it is better to hug them to myself than to have
+myself exhibited by Wilson, like a freak at a fair. He has lost sight
+of human beings. Every thing to him is a case and a phenomenon. I
+will die before I speak to him again upon the matter.
+
+April 12. Yesterday was a blessed day of quiet, and I enjoyed an
+uneventful night. Wilson's presence is a great consolation. What can
+the woman do now? Surely, when she has heard me say what I have said,
+she will conceive the same disgust for me which I have for her. She
+could not, no, she COULD not, desire to have a lover who had insulted
+her so. No, I believe I am free from her love--but how about her hate?
+Might she not use these powers of hers for revenge? Tut! why should I
+frighten myself over shadows? She will forget about me, and I shall
+forget about her, and all will be well.
+
+April 13. My nerves have quite recovered their tone. I really believe
+that I have conquered the creature. But I must confess to living in
+some suspense. She is well again, for I hear that she was driving with
+Mrs. Wilson in the High Street in the afternoon.
+
+April 14. I do wish I could get away from the place altogether. I
+shall fly to Agatha's side the very day that the term closes. I
+suppose it is pitiably weak of me, but this woman gets upon my nerves
+most terribly. I have seen her again, and I have spoken with her.
+
+It was just after lunch, and I was smoking a cigarette in my study,
+when I heard the step of my servant Murray in the passage. I was
+languidly conscious that a second step was audible behind, and had
+hardly troubled myself to speculate who it might be, when suddenly a
+slight noise brought me out of my chair with my skin creeping with
+apprehension. I had never particularly observed before what sort of
+sound the tapping of a crutch was, but my quivering nerves told me that
+I heard it now in the sharp wooden clack which alternated with the
+muffled thud of the foot fall. Another instant and my servant had
+shown her in.
+
+I did not attempt the usual conventions of society, nor did she. I
+simply stood with the smouldering cigarette in my hand, and gazed at
+her. She in her turn looked silently at me, and at her look I
+remembered how in these very pages I had tried to define the expression
+of her eyes, whether they were furtive or fierce. To-day they were
+fierce--coldly and inexorably so.
+
+"Well," said she at last, "are you still of the same mind as when I saw
+you last?"
+
+"I have always been of the same mind."
+
+"Let us understand each other, Professor Gilroy," said she slowly. "I
+am not a very safe person to trifle with, as you should realize by now.
+It was you who asked me to enter into a series of experiments with you,
+it was you who won my affections, it was you who professed your love
+for me, it was you who brought me your own photograph with words of
+affection upon it, and, finally, it was you who on the very same
+evening thought fit to insult me most outrageously, addressing me as no
+man has ever dared to speak to me yet. Tell me that those words came
+from you in a moment of passion and I am prepared to forget and to
+forgive them. You did not mean what you said, Austin? You do not
+really hate me?"
+
+I might have pitied this deformed woman--such a longing for love broke
+suddenly through the menace of her eyes. But then I thought of what I
+had gone through, and my heart set like flint.
+
+"If ever you heard me speak of love," said I, "you know very well that
+it was your voice which spoke, and not mine. The only words of truth
+which I have ever been able to say to you are those which you heard
+when last we met."
+
+"I know. Some one has set you against me. It was he!" She tapped with
+her crutch upon the floor. "Well, you know very well that I could
+bring you this instant crouching like a spaniel to my feet. You will
+not find me again in my hour of weakness, when you can insult me with
+impunity. Have a care what you are doing, Professor Gilroy. You stand
+in a terrible position. You have not yet realized the hold which I
+have upon you."
+
+I shrugged my shoulders and turned away.
+
+"Well," said she, after a pause, "if you despise my love, I must see
+what can be done with fear. You smile, but the day will come when you
+will come screaming to me for pardon. Yes, you will grovel on the
+ground before me, proud as you are, and you will curse the day that
+ever you turned me from your best friend into your most bitter enemy.
+Have a care, Professor Gilroy!" I saw a white hand shaking in the air,
+and a face which was scarcely human, so convulsed was it with passion.
+An instant later she was gone, and I heard the quick hobble and tap
+receding down the passage.
+
+But she has left a weight upon my heart. Vague presentiments of coming
+misfortune lie heavy upon me. I try in vain to persuade myself that
+these are only words of empty anger. I can remember those relentless
+eyes too clearly to think so. What shall I do--ah, what shall I do? I
+am no longer master of my own soul. At any moment this loathsome
+parasite may creep into me, and then---- I must tell some one my
+hideous secret--I must tell it or go mad. If I had some one to
+sympathize and advise! Wilson is out of the question. Charles Sadler
+would understand me only so far as his own experience carries him.
+Pratt-Haldane! He is a well-balanced man, a man of great common-sense
+and resource. I will go to him. I will tell him every thing. God
+grant that he may be able to advise me!
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+6.45 P. M. No, it is useless. There is no human help for me; I must
+fight this out single-handed. Two courses lie before me. I might
+become this woman's lover. Or I must endure such persecutions as she
+can inflict upon me. Even if none come, I shall live in a hell of
+apprehension. But she may torture me, she may drive me mad, she may
+kill me: I will never, never, never give in. What can she inflict
+which would be worse than the loss of Agatha, and the knowledge that I
+am a perjured liar, and have forfeited the name of gentleman?
+
+Pratt-Haldane was most amiable, and listened with all politeness to my
+story. But when I looked at his heavy set features, his slow eyes, and
+the ponderous study furniture which surrounded him, I could hardly tell
+him what I had come to say. It was all so substantial, so material.
+And, besides, what would I myself have said a short month ago if one of
+my colleagues had come to me with a story of demonic possession?
+Perhaps. I should have been less patient than he was. As it was, he
+took notes of my statement, asked me how much tea I drank, how many
+hours I slept, whether I had been overworking much, had I had sudden
+pains in the head, evil dreams, singing in the ears, flashes before the
+eyes--all questions which pointed to his belief that brain congestion
+was at the bottom of my trouble. Finally he dismissed me with a great
+many platitudes about open-air exercise, and avoidance of nervous
+excitement. His prescription, which was for chloral and bromide, I
+rolled up and threw into the gutter.
+
+No, I can look for no help from any human being. If I consult any
+more, they may put their heads together and I may find myself in an
+asylum. I can but grip my courage with both hands, and pray that an
+honest man may not be abandoned.
+
+April 10. It is the sweetest spring within the memory of man. So
+green, so mild, so beautiful! Ah, what a contrast between nature
+without and my own soul so torn with doubt and terror! It has been an
+uneventful day, but I know that I am on the edge of an abyss. I know
+it, and yet I go on with the routine of my life. The one bright spot
+is that Agatha is happy and well and out of all danger. If this
+creature had a hand on each of us, what might she not do?
+
+April 16. The woman is ingenious in her torments. She knows how fond
+I am of my work, and how highly my lectures are thought of. So it is
+from that point that she now attacks me. It will end, I can see, in my
+losing my professorship, but I will fight to the finish. She shall not
+drive me out of it without a struggle.
+
+I was not conscious of any change during my lecture this morning save
+that for a minute or two I had a dizziness and swimminess which rapidly
+passed away. On the contrary, I congratulated myself upon having made
+my subject (the functions of the red corpuscles) both interesting and
+clear. I was surprised, therefore, when a student came into my
+laboratory immediately after the lecture, and complained of being
+puzzled by the discrepancy between my statements and those in the text
+books. He showed me his note-book, in which I was reported as having
+in one portion of the lecture championed the most outrageous and
+unscientific heresies. Of course I denied it, and declared that he had
+misunderstood me, but on comparing his notes with those of his
+companions, it became clear that he was right, and that I really had
+made some most preposterous statements. Of course I shall explain it
+away as being the result of a moment of aberration, but I feel only too
+sure that it will be the first of a series. It is but a month now to
+the end of the session, and I pray that I may be able to hold out until
+then.
+
+April 26. Ten days have elapsed since I have had the heart to make any
+entry in my journal. Why should I record my own humiliation and
+degradation? I had vowed never to open it again. And yet the force of
+habit is strong, and here I find myself taking up once more the record
+of my own dreadful experiences--in much the same spirit in which a
+suicide has been known to take notes of the effects of the poison which
+killed him.
+
+Well, the crash which I had foreseen has come--and that no further back
+than yesterday. The university authorities have taken my lectureship
+from me. It has been done in the most delicate way, purporting to be a
+temporary measure to relieve me from the effects of overwork, and to
+give me the opportunity of recovering my health. None the less, it has
+been done, and I am no longer Professor Gilroy. The laboratory is
+still in my charge, but I have little doubt that that also will soon go.
+
+The fact is that my lectures had become the laughing-stock of the
+university. My class was crowded with students who came to see and
+hear what the eccentric professor would do or say next. I cannot go
+into the detail of my humiliation. Oh, that devilish woman! There is
+no depth of buffoonery and imbecility to which she has not forced me.
+I would begin my lecture clearly and well, but always with the sense of
+a coming eclipse. Then as I felt the influence I would struggle
+against it, striving with clenched hands and beads of sweat upon my
+brow to get the better of it, while the students, hearing my incoherent
+words and watching my contortions, would roar with laughter at the
+antics of their professor. And then, when she had once fairly mastered
+me, out would come the most outrageous things--silly jokes, sentiments
+as though I were proposing a toast, snatches of ballads, personal abuse
+even against some member of my class. And then in a moment my brain
+would clear again, and my lecture would proceed decorously to the end.
+No wonder that my conduct has been the talk of the colleges. No wonder
+that the University Senate has been compelled to take official notice
+of such a scandal. Oh, that devilish woman!
+
+And the most dreadful part of it all is my own loneliness. Here I sit
+in a commonplace English bow-window, looking out upon a commonplace
+English street with its garish 'buses and its lounging policeman, and
+behind me there hangs a shadow which is out of all keeping with the age
+and place. In the home of knowledge I am weighed down and tortured by
+a power of which science knows nothing. No magistrate would listen to
+me. No paper would discuss my case. No doctor would believe my
+symptoms. My own most intimate friends would only look upon it as a
+sign of brain derangement. I am out of all touch with my kind. Oh,
+that devilish woman! Let her have a care! She may push me too far.
+When the law cannot help a man, he may make a law for himself.
+
+She met me in the High Street yesterday evening and spoke to me. It
+was as well for her, perhaps, that it was not between the hedges of a
+lonely country road. She asked me with her cold smile whether I had
+been chastened yet. I did not deign to answer her. "We must try
+another turn of the screw;" said she. Have a care, my lady, have a
+care! I had her at my mercy once. Perhaps another chance may come.
+
+April 28. The suspension of my lectureship has had the effect also of
+taking away her means of annoying me, and so I have enjoyed two blessed
+days of peace. After all, there is no reason to despair. Sympathy
+pours in to me from all sides, and every one agrees that it is my
+devotion to science and the arduous nature of my researches which have
+shaken my nervous system. I have had the kindest message from the
+council advising me to travel abroad, and expressing the confident hope
+that I may be able to resume all my duties by the beginning of the
+summer term. Nothing could be more flattering than their allusions to
+my career and to my services to the university. It is only in
+misfortune that one can test one's own popularity. This creature may
+weary of tormenting me, and then all may yet be well. May God grant it!
+
+April 29. Our sleepy little town has had a small sensation. The only
+knowledge of crime which we ever have is when a rowdy undergraduate
+breaks a few lamps or comes to blows with a policeman. Last night,
+however, there was an attempt made to break-into the branch of the Bank
+of England, and we are all in a flutter in consequence.
+
+Parkenson, the manager, is an intimate friend of mine, and I found him
+very much excited when I walked round there after breakfast. Had the
+thieves broken into the counting-house, they would still have had the
+safes to reckon with, so that the defence was considerably stronger
+than the attack. Indeed, the latter does not appear to have ever been
+very formidable. Two of the lower windows have marks as if a chisel or
+some such instrument had been pushed under them to force them open.
+The police should have a good clue, for the wood-work had been done
+with green paint only the day before, and from the smears it is evident
+that some of it has found its way on to the criminal's hands or clothes.
+
+4.30 P. M. Ah, that accursed woman! That thrice accursed woman!
+Never mind! She shall not beat me! No, she shall not! But, oh, the
+she-devil! She has taken my professorship. Now she would take my
+honor. Is there nothing I can do against her, nothing save---- Ah,
+but, hard pushed as I am, I cannot bring myself to think of that!
+
+It was about an hour ago that I went into my bedroom, and was brushing
+my hair before the glass, when suddenly my eyes lit upon something
+which left me so sick and cold that I sat down upon the edge of the bed
+and began to cry. It is many a long year since I shed tears, but all
+my nerve was gone, and I could but sob and sob in impotent grief and
+anger. There was my house jacket, the coat I usually wear after
+dinner, hanging on its peg by the wardrobe, with the right sleeve
+thickly crusted from wrist to elbow with daubs of green paint.
+
+So this was what she meant by another turn of the screw! She had made
+a public imbecile of me. Now she would brand me as a criminal. This
+time she has failed. But how about the next? I dare not think of
+it--and of Agatha and my poor old mother! I wish that I were dead!
+
+Yes, this is the other turn of the screw. And this is also what she
+meant, no doubt, when she said that I had not realized yet the power
+she has over me. I look back at my account of my conversation with
+her, and I see how she declared that with a slight exertion of her will
+her subject would be conscious, and with a stronger one unconscious.
+Last night I was unconscious. I could have sworn that I slept soundly
+in my bed without so much as a dream. And yet those stains tell me
+that I dressed, made my way out, attempted to open the bank windows,
+and returned. Was I observed? Is it possible that some one saw me do
+it and followed me home? Ah, what a hell my life has become! I have
+no peace, no rest. But my patience is nearing its end.
+
+10 P. M. I have cleaned my coat with turpentine. I do not think that
+any one could have seen me. It was with my screw-driver that I made
+the marks. I found it all crusted with paint, and I have cleaned it.
+My head aches as if it would burst, and I have taken five grains of
+antipyrine. If it were not for Agatha, I should have taken fifty and
+had an end of it.
+
+May 3. Three quiet days. This hell fiend is like a cat with a mouse.
+She lets me loose only to pounce upon me again. I am never so
+frightened as when every thing is still. My physical state is
+deplorable--perpetual hiccough and ptosis of the left eyelid.
+
+I have heard from the Mardens that they will be back the day after
+to-morrow. I do not know whether I am glad or sorry. They were safe
+in London. Once here they may be drawn into the miserable network in
+which I am myself struggling. And I must tell them of it. I cannot
+marry Agatha so long as I know that I am not responsible for my own
+actions. Yes, I must tell them, even if it brings every thing to an
+end between us.
+
+To-night is the university ball, and I must go. God knows I never felt
+less in the humor for festivity, but I must not have it said that I am
+unfit to appear in public. If I am seen there, and have speech with
+some of the elders of the university it will go a long way toward
+showing them that it would be unjust to take my chair away from me.
+
+10 P. M. I have been to the ball. Charles Sadler and I went together,
+but I have come away before him. I shall wait up for him, however,
+for, indeed, I fear to go to sleep these nights. He is a cheery,
+practical fellow, and a chat with him will steady my nerves. On the
+whole, the evening was a great success. I talked to every one who has
+influence, and I think that I made them realize that my chair is not
+vacant quite yet. The creature was at the ball--unable to dance, of
+course, but sitting with Mrs. Wilson. Again and again her eyes rested
+upon me. They were almost the last things I saw before I left the
+room. Once, as I sat sideways to her, I watched her, and saw that her
+gaze was following some one else. It was Sadler, who was dancing at
+the time with the second Miss Thurston. To judge by her expression, it
+is well for him that he is not in her grip as I am. He does not know
+the escape he has had. I think I hear his step in the street now, and
+I will go down and let him in. If he will----
+
+May 4. Why did I break off in this way last night? I never went down
+stairs, after all--at least, I have no recollection of doing so. But,
+on the other hand, I cannot remember going to bed. One of my hands is
+greatly swollen this morning, and yet I have no remembrance of injuring
+it yesterday. Otherwise, I am feeling all the better for last night's
+festivity. But I cannot understand how it is that I did not meet
+Charles Sadler when I so fully intended to do so. Is it possible----
+My God, it is only too probable! Has she been leading me some devil's
+dance again? I will go down to Sadler and ask him.
+
+Mid-day. The thing has come to a crisis. My life is not worth living.
+But, if I am to die, then she shall come also. I will not leave her
+behind, to drive some other man mad as she has me. No, I have come to
+the limit of my endurance. She has made me as desperate and dangerous
+a man as walks the earth. God knows I have never had the heart to hurt
+a fly, and yet, if I had my hands now upon that woman, she should never
+leave this room alive. I shall see her this very day, and she shall
+learn what she has to expect from me.
+
+I went to Sadler and found him, to my surprise, in bed. As I entered
+he sat up and turned a face toward me which sickened me as I looked at
+it.
+
+"Why, Sadler, what has happened?" I cried, but my heart turned cold as
+I said it.
+
+"Gilroy," he answered, mumbling with his swollen lips, "I have for some
+weeks been under the impression that you are a madman. Now I know it,
+and that you are a dangerous one as well. If it were not that I am
+unwilling to make a scandal in the college, you would now be in the
+hands of the police."
+
+"Do you mean----" I cried.
+
+"I mean that as I opened the door last night you rushed out upon me,
+struck me with both your fists in the face, knocked me down, kicked me
+furiously in the side, and left me lying almost unconscious in the
+street. Look at your own hand bearing witness against you."
+
+Yes, there it was, puffed up, with sponge-like knuckles, as after some
+terrific blow. What could I do? Though he put me down as a madman, I
+must tell him all. I sat by his bed and went over all my troubles from
+the beginning. I poured them out with quivering hands and burning
+words which might have carried conviction to the most sceptical. "She
+hates you and she hates me!" I cried. "She revenged herself last night
+on both of us at once. She saw me leave the ball, and she must have
+seen you also. She knew how long it would take you to reach home.
+Then she had but to use her wicked will. Ah, your bruised face is a
+small thing beside my bruised soul!"
+
+He was struck by my story. That was evident. "Yes, yes, she watched
+me out of the room," he muttered. "She is capable of it. But is it
+possible that she has really reduced you to this? What do you intend
+to do?"
+
+"To stop it!" I cried. "I am perfectly desperate; I shall give her
+fair warning to-day, and the next time will be the last."
+
+"Do nothing rash," said he.
+
+"Rash!" I cried. "The only rash thing is that I should postpone it
+another hour." With that I rushed to my room, and here I am on the eve
+of what may be the great crisis of my life. I shall start at once. I
+have gained one thing to-day, for I have made one man, at least,
+realize the truth of this monstrous experience of mine. And, if the
+worst should happen, this diary remains as a proof of the goad that has
+driven me.
+
+Evening. When I came to Wilson's, I was shown up, and found that he
+was sitting with Miss Penclosa. For half an hour I had to endure his
+fussy talk about his recent research into the exact nature of the
+spiritualistic rap, while the creature and I sat in silence looking
+across the room at each other. I read a sinister amusement in her
+eyes, and she must have seen hatred and menace in mine. I had almost
+despaired of having speech with her when he was called from the room,
+and we were left for a few moments together.
+
+"Well, Professor Gilroy--or is it Mr. Gilroy?" said she, with that
+bitter smile of hers. "How is your friend Mr. Charles Sadler after the
+ball?"
+
+"You fiend!" I cried. "You have come to the end of your tricks now. I
+will have no more of them. Listen to what I say." I strode across and
+shook her roughly by the shoulder "As sure as there is a God in heaven,
+I swear that if you try another of your deviltries upon me I will have
+your life for it. Come what may, I will have your life. I have come
+to the end of what a man can endure."
+
+"Accounts are not quite settled between us," said she, with a passion
+that equalled my own. "I can love, and I can hate. You had your
+choice. You chose to spurn the first; now you must test the other. It
+will take a little more to break your spirit, I see, but broken it
+shall be. Miss Marden comes back to-morrow, as I understand."
+
+"What has that to do with you?" I cried. "It is a pollution that you
+should dare even to think of her. If I thought that you would harm
+her----"
+
+She was frightened, I could see, though she tried to brazen it out.
+She read the black thought in my mind, and cowered away from me.
+
+"She is fortunate in having such a champion," said she. "He actually
+dares to threaten a lonely woman. I must really congratulate Miss
+Marden upon her protector."
+
+The words were bitter, but the voice and manner were more acid still.
+
+"There is no use talking," said I. "I only came here to tell you,--and
+to tell you most solemnly,--that your next outrage upon me will be your
+last." With that, as I heard Wilson's step upon the stair, I walked
+from the room. Ay, she may look venomous and deadly, but, for all
+that, she is beginning to see now that she has as much to fear from me
+as I can have from her. Murder! It has an ugly sound. But you don't
+talk of murdering a snake or of murdering a tiger. Let her have a care
+now.
+
+May 5. I met Agatha and her mother at the station at eleven o'clock.
+She is looking so bright, so happy, so beautiful. And she was so
+overjoyed to see me. What have I done to deserve such love? I went
+back home with them, and we lunched together. All the troubles seem in
+a moment to have been shredded back from my life. She tells me that I
+am looking pale and worried and ill. The dear child puts it down to my
+loneliness and the perfunctory attentions of a housekeeper. I pray
+that she may never know the truth! May the shadow, if shadow there
+must be, lie ever black across my life and leave hers in the sunshine.
+I have just come back from them, feeling a new man. With her by my
+side I think that I could show a bold face to any thing which life
+might send.
+
+5 P. M. Now, let me try to be accurate. Let me try to say exactly how
+it occurred. It is fresh in my mind, and I can set it down correctly,
+though it is not likely that the time will ever come when I shall
+forget the doings of to-day.
+
+I had returned from the Mardens' after lunch, and was cutting some
+microscopic sections in my freezing microtome, when in an instant I
+lost consciousness in the sudden hateful fashion which has become only
+too familiar to me of late.
+
+When my senses came back to me I was sitting in a small chamber, very
+different from the one in which I had been working. It was cosey and
+bright, with chintz-covered settees, colored hangings, and a thousand
+pretty little trifles upon the wall. A small ornamental clock ticked
+in front of me, and the hands pointed to half-past three. It was all
+quite familiar to me, and yet I stared about for a moment in a
+half-dazed way until my eyes fell upon a cabinet photograph of myself
+upon the top of the piano. On the other side stood one of Mrs. Marden.
+Then, of course, I remembered where I was. It was Agatha's boudoir.
+
+But how came I there, and what did I want? A horrible sinking came to
+my heart. Had I been sent here on some devilish errand? Had that
+errand already been done? Surely it must; otherwise, why should I be
+allowed to come back to consciousness? Oh, the agony of that moment!
+What had I done? I sprang to my feet in my despair, and as I did so a
+small glass bottle fell from my knees on to the carpet.
+
+It was unbroken, and I picked it up. Outside was written "Sulphuric
+Acid. Fort." When I drew the round glass stopper, a thick fume rose
+slowly up, and a pungent, choking smell pervaded the room. I
+recognized it as one which I kept for chemical testing in my chambers.
+But why had I brought a bottle of vitriol into Agatha's chamber? Was
+it not this thick, reeking liquid with which jealous women had been
+known to mar the beauty of their rivals? My heart stood still as I
+held the bottle to the light. Thank God, it was full! No mischief had
+been done as yet. But had Agatha come in a minute sooner, was it not
+certain that the hellish parasite within me would have dashed the stuff
+into her---- Ah, it will not bear to be thought of! But it must have
+been for that. Why else should I have brought it? At the thought of
+what I might have done my worn nerves broke down, and I sat shivering
+and twitching, the pitiable wreck of a man.
+
+It was the sound of Agatha's voice and the rustle of her dress which
+restored me. I looked up, and saw her blue eyes, so full of tenderness
+and pity, gazing down at me.
+
+"We must take you away to the country, Austin," she said. "You want
+rest and quiet. You look wretchedly ill."
+
+"Oh, it is nothing!" said I, trying to smile. "It was only a momentary
+weakness. I am all right again now."
+
+"I am so sorry to keep you waiting. Poor boy, you must have been here
+quite half an hour! The vicar was in the drawing-room, and, as I knew
+that you did not care for him, I thought it better that Jane should
+show you up here. I thought the man would never go!"
+
+"Thank God he stayed! Thank God he stayed!" I cried hysterically.
+
+"Why, what is the matter with you, Austin?" she asked, holding my arm
+as I staggered up from the chair. "Why are you glad that the vicar
+stayed? And what is this little bottle in your hand?"
+
+"Nothing," I cried, thrusting it into my pocket. "But I must go. I
+have something important to do."
+
+"How stern you look, Austin! I have never seen your face like that.
+You are angry?"
+
+"Yes, I am angry."
+
+"But not with me?"
+
+"No, no, my darling! You would not understand."
+
+"But you have not told me why you came."
+
+"I came to ask you whether you would always love me--no matter what I
+did, or what shadow might fall on my name. Would you believe in me and
+trust me however black appearances might be against me?"
+
+"You know that I would, Austin."
+
+"Yes, I know that you would. What I do I shall do for you. I am
+driven to it. There is no other way out, my darling!" I kissed her
+and rushed from the room.
+
+The time for indecision was at an end. As long as the creature
+threatened my own prospects and my honor there might be a question as
+to what I should do. But now, when Agatha--my innocent Agatha--was
+endangered, my duty lay before me like a turnpike road. I had no
+weapon, but I never paused for that. What weapon should I need, when I
+felt every muscle quivering with the strength of a frenzied man? I ran
+through the streets, so set upon what I had to do that I was only dimly
+conscious of the faces of friends whom I met--dimly conscious also
+that Professor Wilson met me, running with equal precipitance in the
+opposite direction. Breathless but resolute I reached the house and
+rang the bell. A white cheeked maid opened the door, and turned whiter
+yet when she saw the face that looked in at her.
+
+"Show me up at once to Miss Penclosa," I demanded.
+
+"Sir," she gasped, "Miss Penclosa died this afternoon at half-past
+three!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Parasite, by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Parasite, by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
+The contents were first copyrighted over 100 years ago but Doyle
+died in 1930, which puts his works in the questionable period of
+whether this work, which was already in Public Domain works from
+the "life plus 50 years copyright" is now out of circulation for
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+The Parasite
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+by Arthur Conan Doyle
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+November, 1995 [Etext #355]
+[Date last updated: April 9, 2005]
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+Scanned with OmniPage Professional OCR software
+donated by Caere Corporation.
+
+
+
+
+THE PARASITE
+A Story
+
+BY
+A. CONAN DOYLE
+AUTHOR OF
+"THE REFUGEES" "MICAH CLARKE" ETC.
+
+1894
+
+
+
+
+
+THE PARASITE
+
+I
+
+March 24. The spring is fairly with us now. Outside
+my laboratory window the great chestnut-tree is all
+covered with the big, glutinous, gummy buds, some of
+which have already begun to break into little green
+shuttlecocks. As you walk down the lanes you are
+conscious of the rich, silent forces of nature working
+all around you. The wet earth smells fruitful and
+luscious. Green shoots are peeping out everywhere.
+The twigs are stiff with their sap; and the moist,
+heavy English air is laden with a faintly resinous
+perfume. Buds in the hedges, lambs beneath them--
+everywhere the work of reproduction going forward!
+
+I can see it without, and I can feel it within. We
+also have our spring when the little arterioles dilate,
+the lymph flows in a brisker stream, the glands work
+harder, winnowing and straining. Every year nature
+readjusts the whole machine. I can feel the ferment in
+my blood at this very moment, and as the cool sunshine
+pours through my window I could dance about in it
+like a gnat. So I should, only that Charles Sadler
+would rush upstairs to know what was the matter.
+Besides, I must remember that I am Professor Gilroy.
+An old professor may afford to be natural, but when
+fortune has given one of the first chairs in the
+university to a man of four-and-thirty he must try and
+act the part consistently.
+
+What a fellow Wilson is! If I could only throw the
+same enthusiasm into physiology that he does into
+psychology, I should become a Claude Bernard at the
+least. His whole life and soul and energy work to one
+end. He drops to sleep collating his results of the
+past day, and he wakes to plan his researches for the
+coming one. And yet, outside the narrow circle who
+follow his proceedings, he gets so little credit for
+it. Physiology is a recognized science. If I add even
+a brick to the edifice, every one sees and applauds it.
+But Wilson is trying to dig the foundations for a
+science of the future. His work is underground and
+does not show. Yet he goes on uncomplainingly,
+corresponding with a hundred semi-maniacs in the hope
+of finding one reliable witness, sifting a hundred lies
+on the chance of gaining one little speck of truth,
+collating old books, devouring new ones, experimenting,
+lecturing, trying to light up in others the fiery
+interest which is consuming him. I am filled with
+wonder and admiration when I think of him, and yet,
+when he asks me to associate myself with his
+researches, I am compelled to tell him that, in their
+present state, they offer little attraction to a man
+who is devoted to exact science. If he could show me
+something positive and objective, I might then be
+tempted to approach the question from its physiological
+side. So long as half his subjects are tainted
+with charlatanerie and the other half with hysteria we
+physiologists must content ourselves with the body and
+leave the mind to our descendants.
+
+No doubt I am a materialist. Agatha says that I am a
+rank one. I tell her that is an excellent reason for
+shortening our engagement, since I am in such urgent
+need of her spirituality. And yet I may claim to be a
+curious example of the effect of education upon
+temperament, for by nature I am, unless I deceive
+myself, a highly psychic man. I was a nervous,
+sensitive boy, a dreamer, a somnambulist, full of
+impressions and intuitions. My black hair, my dark
+eyes, my thin, olive face, my tapering fingers, are all
+characteristic of my real temperament, and cause
+experts like Wilson to claim me as their own. But my
+brain is soaked with exact knowledge. I have trained
+myself to deal only with fact and with proof. Surmise
+and fancy have no place in my scheme of thought. Show
+me what I can see with my microscope, cut with my
+scalpel, weigh in my balance, and I will devote a
+lifetime to its investigation. But when you ask me to
+study feelings, impressions, suggestions, you ask me to
+do what is distasteful and even demoralizing. A
+departure from pure reason affects me like an evil
+smell or a musical discord.
+
+Which is a very sufficient reason why I am a little
+loath to go to Professor Wilson's tonight. Still I
+feel that I could hardly get out of the invitation
+without positive rudeness; and, now that Mrs. Marden
+and Agatha are going, of course I would not if I could.
+But I had rather meet them anywhere else. I know that
+Wilson would draw me into this nebulous semi-science of
+his if he could. In his enthusiasm he is perfectly
+impervious to hints or remonstrances. Nothing short of
+a positive quarrel will make him realize my aversion to
+the whole business. I have no doubt that he has some
+new mesmerist or clairvoyant or medium or trickster of
+some sort whom he is going to exhibit to us, for even
+his entertainments bear upon his hobby. Well, it will
+be a treat for Agatha, at any rate. She is interested
+in it, as woman usually is in whatever is vague and
+mystical and indefinite.
+
+10.50 P. M. This diary-keeping of mine is, I fancy,
+the outcome of that scientific habit of mind about
+which I wrote this morning. I like to register
+impressions while they are fresh. Once a day at least
+I endeavor to define my own mental position. It is a
+useful piece of self-analysis, and has, I fancy, a
+steadying effect upon the character. Frankly, I must
+confess that my own needs what stiffening I can give
+it. I fear that, after all, much of my neurotic
+temperament survives, and that I am far from that cool,
+calm precision which characterizes Murdoch or Pratt-
+Haldane. Otherwise, why should the tomfoolery which I
+have witnessed this evening have set my nerves
+thrilling so that even now I am all unstrung? My only
+comfort is that neither Wilson nor Miss Penclosa nor
+even Agatha could have possibly known my weakness.
+
+And what in the world was there to excite me? Nothing,
+or so little that it will seem ludicrous when I set it
+down.
+
+The Mardens got to Wilson's before me. In fact, I was
+one of the last to arrive and found the room crowded.
+I had hardly time to say a word to Mrs. Marden and to
+Agatha, who was looking charming in white and pink,
+with glittering wheat-ears in her hair, when Wilson
+came twitching at my sleeve.
+
+"You want something positive, Gilroy," said he, drawing
+me apart into a corner. "My dear fellow, I have a
+phenomenon--a phenomenon!"
+
+I should have been more impressed had I not heard the
+same before. His sanguine spirit turns every fire-fly
+into a star.
+
+"No possible question about the bona fides this time,"
+said he, in answer, perhaps, to some little gleam of
+amusement in my eyes. "My wife has known her for many
+years. They both come from Trinidad, you know. Miss
+Penclosa has only been in England a month or two, and
+knows no one outside the university circle, but I
+assure you that the things she has told us suffice in
+themselves to establish clairvoyance upon an absolutely
+scientific basis. There is nothing like her, amateur
+or professional. Come and be introduced!"
+
+I like none of these mystery-mongers, but the amateur
+least of all. With the paid performer you may pounce
+upon him and expose him the instant that you have seen
+through his trick. He is there to deceive you, and you
+are there to find him out. But what are you to do with
+the friend of your host's wife? Are you to turn on a
+light suddenly and expose her slapping a surreptitious
+banjo? Or are you to hurl cochineal over her evening
+frock when she steals round with her phosphorus bottle
+and her supernatural platitude? There would be a
+scene, and you would be looked upon as a brute. So you
+have your choice of being that or a dupe. I was in no
+very good humor as I followed Wilson to the lady.
+
+Any one less like my idea of a West Indian could not be
+imagined. She was a small, frail creature, well over
+forty, I should say, with a pale, peaky face, and hair
+of a very light shade of chestnut. Her presence was
+insignificant and her manner retiring. In any group of
+ten women she would have been the last whom one would
+have picked out. Her eyes were perhaps her most
+remarkable, and also, I am compelled to say, her least
+pleasant, feature. They were gray in color,--gray with
+a shade of green,--and their expression struck me as
+being decidedly furtive. I wonder if furtive is the
+word, or should I have said fierce? On second
+thoughts, feline would have expressed it better. A
+crutch leaning against the wall told me what was
+painfully evident when she rose: that one of her legs
+was crippled.
+
+So I was introduced to Miss Penclosa, and it did not
+escape me that as my name was mentioned she glanced
+across at Agatha. Wilson had evidently been talking.
+And presently, no doubt, thought I, she will inform me
+by occult means that I am engaged to a young lady with
+wheat-ears in her hair. I wondered how much more
+Wilson had been telling her about me.
+
+"Professor Gilroy is a terrible sceptic," said he; "I
+hope, Miss Penclosa, that you will be able to convert
+him."
+
+She looked keenly up at me.
+
+"Professor Gilroy is quite right to be sceptical if he
+has not seen any thing convincing," said she. "I
+should have thought," she added, "that you would
+yourself have been an excellent subject."
+
+"For what, may I ask?" said I.
+
+"Well, for mesmerism, for example."
+
+"My experience has been that mesmerists go for their
+subjects to those who are mentally unsound. All their
+results are vitiated, as it seems to me, by the fact
+that they are dealing with abnormal organisms."
+
+"Which of these ladies would you say possessed a normal
+organism?" she asked. "I should like you to select the
+one who seems to you to have the best balanced mind.
+Should we say the girl in pink and white?--Miss Agatha
+Marden, I think the name is."
+
+"Yes, I should attach weight to any results from her."
+
+"I have never tried how far she is impressionable. Of
+course some people respond much more rapidly than
+others. May I ask how far your scepticism extends? I
+suppose that you admit the mesmeric sleep and the power
+of suggestion."
+
+"I admit nothing, Miss Penclosa."
+
+"Dear me, I thought science had got further than that.
+Of course I know nothing about the scientific side of
+it. I only know what I can do. You see the girl in
+red, for example, over near the Japanese jar. I shall
+will that she come across to us."
+
+She bent forward as she spoke and dropped her fan upon
+the floor. The girl whisked round and came straight
+toward us, with an enquiring look upon her face, as if
+some one had called her.
+
+"What do you think of that, Gilroy?" cried Wilson, in a
+kind of ecstasy.
+
+I did not dare to tell him what I thought of it. To me
+it was the most barefaced, shameless piece of imposture
+that I had ever witnessed. The collusion and the
+signal had really been too obvious.
+
+"Professor Gilroy is not satisfied," said she, glancing
+up at me with her strange little eyes. "My poor fan is
+to get the credit of that experiment. Well, we must
+try something else. Miss Marden, would you have any
+objection to my putting you off?"
+
+"Oh, I should love it!" cried Agatha.
+
+By this time all the company had gathered round us in a
+circle, the shirt-fronted men, and the white-throated
+women, some awed, some critical, as though it were
+something between a religious ceremony and a conjurer's
+entertainment. A red velvet arm-chair had been pushed
+into the centre, and Agatha lay back in it, a little
+flushed and trembling slightly from excitement. I
+could see it from the vibration of the wheat-ears.
+Miss Penclosa rose from her seat and stood over her,
+leaning upon her crutch.
+
+And there was a change in the woman. She no longer
+seemed small or insignificant. Twenty years were gone
+from her age. Her eyes were shining, a tinge of color
+had come into her sallow cheeks, her whole figure had
+expanded. So I have seen a dull-eyed, listless lad
+change in an instant into briskness and life when given
+a task of which he felt himself master. She looked
+down at Agatha with an expression which I resented from
+the bottom of my soul--the expression with which a
+Roman empress might have looked at her kneeling slave.
+Then with a quick, commanding gesture she tossed up her
+arms and swept them slowly down in front of her.
+
+I was watching Agatha narrowly. During three passes
+she seemed to be simply amused. At the fourth I
+observed a slight glazing of her eyes, accompanied by
+some dilation of her pupils. At the sixth there was a
+momentary rigor. At the seventh her lids began to
+droop. At the tenth her eyes were closed, and her
+breathing was slower and fuller than usual. I tried as
+I watched to preserve my scientific calm, but a
+foolish, causeless agitation convulsed me. I trust
+that I hid it, but I felt as a child feels in the dark.
+I could not have believed that I was still open to such
+weakness.
+
+"She is in the trance," said Miss Penclosa.
+
+"She is sleeping!" I cried.
+
+"Wake her, then!"
+
+I pulled her by the arm and shouted in her ear. She
+might have been dead for all the impression that I
+could make. Her body was there on the velvet chair.
+Her organs were acting--her heart, her lungs. But her
+soul! It had slipped from beyond our ken. Whither had
+it gone? What power had dispossessed it? I was
+puzzled and disconcerted.
+
+"So much for the mesmeric sleep," said Miss Penclosa.
+"As regards suggestion, whatever I may suggest Miss
+Marden will infallibly do, whether it be now or after
+she has awakened from her trance. Do you demand proof
+of it?"
+
+"Certainly," said I.
+
+"You shall have it." I saw a smile pass over her face,
+as though an amusing thought had struck her. She
+stooped and whispered earnestly into her subject's ear.
+Agatha, who had been so deaf to me, nodded her head as
+she listened.
+
+"Awake!" cried Miss Penclosa, with a sharp tap of her
+crutch upon the floor. The eyes opened, the glazing
+cleared slowly away, and the soul looked out once more
+after its strange eclipse.
+
+We went away early. Agatha was none the worse for her
+strange excursion, but I was nervous and unstrung,
+unable to listen to or answer the stream of comments
+which Wilson was pouring out for my benefit. As I bade
+her good-night Miss Penclosa slipped a piece of paper
+into my hand.
+
+"Pray forgive me," said she, "if I take means to
+overcome your scepticism. Open this note at ten
+o'clock to-morrow morning. It is a little private
+test."
+
+I can't imagine what she means, but there is the note,
+and it shall be opened as she directs. My head is
+aching, and I have written enough for to-night. To-
+morrow I dare say that what seems so inexplicable will
+take quite another complexion. I shall not surrender
+my convictions without a struggle.
+
+March 25. I am amazed, confounded. It is clear that I
+must reconsider my opinion upon this matter. But first
+let me place on record what has occurred.
+
+I had finished breakfast, and was looking over some
+diagrams with which my lecture is to be illustrated,
+when my housekeeper entered to tell me that Agatha was
+in my study and wished to see me immediately. I
+glanced at the clock and saw with sun rise that it was only
+half-past nine.
+
+When I entered the room, she was standing on the
+hearth-rug facing me. Something in her pose chilled me
+and checked the words which were rising to my lips.
+Her veil was half down, but I could see that she was
+pale and that her expression was constrained.
+
+"Austin," she said, "I have come to tell you that our
+engagement is at an end."
+
+I staggered. I believe that I literally did stagger.
+I know that I found myself leaning against the bookcase
+for support.
+
+"But--but----" I stammered. "This is very sudden,
+Agatha."
+
+"Yes, Austin, I have come here to tell you that our
+engagement is at an end."
+
+"But surely," I cried, "you will give me some reason!
+This is unlike you, Agatha. Tell me how I have been
+unfortunate enough to offend you."
+
+"It is all over, Austin."
+
+"But why? You must be under some delusion, Agatha.
+Perhaps you have been told some falsehood about me. Or
+you may have misunderstood something that I have said
+to you. Only let me know what it is, and a word may
+set it all right."
+
+"We must consider it all at an end."
+
+"But you left me last night without a hint at any
+disagreement. What could have occurred in the interval
+to change you so? It must have been something that
+happened last night. You have been thinking it over
+and you have disapproved of my conduct. Was it the
+mesmerism? Did you blame me for letting that woman
+exercise her power over you? You know that at the
+least sign I should have interfered."
+
+"It is useless, Austin. All is over:"
+
+Her voice was cold and measured; her manner strangely
+formal and hard. It seemed to me that she was
+absolutely resolved not to be drawn into any argument
+or explanation. As for me, I was shaking with
+agitation, and I turned my face aside, so ashamed was I
+that she should see my want of control.
+
+"You must know what this means to me!" I cried. "It is
+the blasting of all my hopes and the ruin of my life!
+You surely will not inflict such a punishment upon me
+unheard. You will let me know what is the matter.
+Consider how impossible it would be for me, under any
+circumstances, to treat you so. For God's sake,
+Agatha, let me know what I have done!"
+
+She walked past me without a word and opened the door.
+
+"It is quite useless, Austin," said she. "You must
+consider our engagement at an end." An instant later
+she was gone, and, before I could recover myself
+sufficiently to follow her, I heard the hall-door close
+behind her.
+
+I rushed into my room to change my coat, with the idea
+of hurrying round to Mrs. Marden's to learn from her
+what the cause of my misfortune might be. So shaken
+was I that I could hardly lace my boots. Never shall I
+forget those horrible ten minutes. I had just pulled
+on my overcoat when the clock upon the mantel-piece
+struck ten.
+
+Ten! I associated the idea with Miss Penclosa's note.
+It was lying before me on the table, and I tore it
+open. It was scribbled in pencil in a peculiarly
+angular handwriting.
+
+"MY DEAR PROFESSOR GILROY [it said]: Pray excuse the
+personal nature of the test which I am giving you.
+Professor Wilson happened to mention the relations
+between you and my subject of this evening, and it
+struck me that nothing could be more convincing to you
+than if I were to suggest to Miss Marden that she
+should call upon you at half-past nine to-morrow
+morning and suspend your engagement for half an hour or
+so. Science is so exacting that it is difficult to
+give a satisfying test, but I am convinced that this at
+least will be an action which she would be most
+unlikely to do of her own free will. Forget any thing
+that she may have said, as she has really nothing
+whatever to do with it, and will certainly not
+recollect any thing about it. I write this note to
+shorten your anxiety, and to beg you to forgive me for
+the momentary unhappiness which my suggestion must have
+caused you.
+ "Yours faithfully;
+ "HELEN PENCLOSA.
+
+
+Really, when I had read the note, I was too relieved to
+be angry. It was a liberty. Certainly it was a very
+great liberty indeed on the part of a lady whom I had
+only met once. But, after all, I had challenged her by
+my scepticism. It may have been, as she said, a little
+difficult to devise a test which would satisfy me.
+
+And she had done that. There could be no question at
+all upon the point. For me hypnotic suggestion was
+finally established. It took its place from now onward
+as one of the facts of life. That Agatha, who of all
+women of my acquaintance has the best balanced mind,
+had been reduced to a condition of automatism appeared
+to be certain. A person at a distance had worked her
+as an engineer on the shore might guide a Brennan
+torpedo. A second soul had stepped in, as it were, had
+pushed her own aside, and had seized her nervous
+mechanism, saying: "I will work this for half an
+hour." And Agatha must have been unconscious as she
+came and as she returned. Could she make her way in
+safety through the streets in such a state? I put on
+my hat and hurried round to see if all was well with
+her.
+
+Yes. She was at home. I was shown into the drawing-
+room and found her sitting with a book upon her lap.
+
+"You are an early visitor, Austin," said she, smiling.
+
+"And you have been an even earlier one," I answered.
+
+She looked puzzled. "What do you mean?" she asked.
+
+"You have not been out to-day?"
+
+"No, certainly not."
+
+"Agatha," said I seriously, "would you mind telling me
+exactly what you have done this morning?"
+
+She laughed at my earnestness.
+
+"You've got on your professional look, Austin. See
+what comes of being engaged to a man of science.
+However, I will tell you, though I can't imagine what
+you want to know for. I got up at eight. I
+breakfasted at half-past. I came into this room at ten
+minutes past nine and began to read the `Memoirs of
+Mme. de Remusat.' In a few minutes I did the French
+lady the bad compliment of dropping to sleep over her
+pages, and I did you, sir, the very flattering one of
+dreaming about you. It is only a few minutes since I
+woke up."
+
+"And found yourself where you had been before?"
+
+"Why, where else should I find myself?"
+
+"Would you mind telling me, Agatha, what it was that
+you dreamed about me? It really is not mere curiosity
+on my part."
+
+"I merely had a vague impression that you came into it.
+I cannot recall any thing definite."
+
+"If you have not been out to-day, Agatha, how is it
+that your shoes are dusty?"
+
+A pained look came over her face.
+
+"Really, Austin, I do not know what is the matter with
+you this morning. One would almost think that you
+doubted my word. If my boots are dusty, it must be, of
+course, that I have put on a pair which the maid had
+not cleaned."
+
+It was perfectly evident that she knew nothing whatever
+about the matter, and I reflected that, after all,
+perhaps it was better that I should not enlighten her.
+It might frighten her, and could serve no good purpose
+that I could see. I said no more about it, therefore,
+and left shortly afterward to give my lecture.
+
+But I am immensely impressed. My horizon of scientific
+possibilities has suddenly been enormously extended. I
+no longer wonder at Wilson's demonic energy and
+enthusiasm. Who would not work hard who had a vast
+virgin field ready to his hand? Why, I have known the
+novel shape of a nucleolus, or a trifling peculiarity
+of striped muscular fibre seen under a 300-diameter
+lens, fill me with exultation. How petty do such
+researches seem when compared with this one which
+strikes at the very roots of life and the nature of the
+soul! I had always looked upon spirit as a product of
+matter. The brain, I thought, secreted the mind, as
+the liver does the bile. But how can this be when I
+see mind working from a distance and playing upon
+matter as a musician might upon a violin? The body
+does not give rise to the soul, then, but is rather the
+rough instrument by which the spirit manifests itself.
+The windmill does not give rise to the wind, but only
+indicates it. It was opposed to my whole habit of
+thought, and yet it was undeniably possible and worthy
+of investigation.
+
+And why should I not investigate it? I see that under
+yesterday's date I said: "If I could see something
+positive and objective, I might be tempted to approach
+it from the physiological aspect." Well, I have got my
+test. I shall be as good as my word. The
+investigation would, I am sure, be of immense interest.
+Some of my colleagues might look askance at it, for
+science is full of unreasoning prejudices, but if
+Wilson has the courage of his convictions, I can afford
+to have it also. I shall go to him to-morrow morning--
+to him and to Miss Penclosa. If she can show us so
+much, it is probable that she can show us more.
+
+
+
+II
+
+March 26. Wilson was, as I had anticipated, very
+exultant over my conversion, and Miss Penclosa was also
+demurely pleased at the result of her experiment.
+Strange what a silent, colorless creature she is save
+only when she exercises her power! Even talking about
+it gives her color and life. She seems to take a
+singular interest in me. I cannot help observing how
+her eyes follow me about the room.
+
+We had the most interesting conversation about her own
+powers. It is just as well to put her views on record,
+though they cannot, of course, claim any scientific
+weight.
+
+"You are on the very fringe of the subject," said she,
+when I had expressed wonder at the remarkable instance
+of suggestion which she had shown me. "I had no direct
+influence upon Miss Marden when she came round to you.
+I was not even thinking of her that morning. What I
+did was to set her mind as I might set the alarum of a
+clock so that at the hour named it would go off of its
+own accord. If six months instead of twelve hours had
+been suggested, it would have been the same."
+
+"And if the suggestion had been to assassinate me?"
+
+"She would most inevitably have done so."
+
+"But this is a terrible power!" I cried.
+
+"It is, as you say, a terrible power," she answered
+gravely, "and the more you know of it the more terrible
+will it seem to you."
+
+"May I ask," said I, "what you meant when you said that
+this matter of suggestion is only at the fringe of it?
+What do you consider the essential?"
+
+"I had rather not tell you."
+
+I was surprised at the decision of her answer.
+
+"You understand," said I, "that it is not out of
+curiosity I ask, but in the hope that I may find some
+scientific explanation for the facts with which you
+furnish me."
+
+"Frankly, Professor Gilroy," said she, "I am not at all
+interested in science, nor do I care whether it can or
+cannot classify these powers."
+
+"But I was hoping----"
+
+"Ah, that is quite another thing. If you make it a
+personal matter," said she, with the pleasantest of
+smiles, "I shall be only too happy to tell you any
+thing you wish to know. Let me see; what was it you
+asked me? Oh, about the further powers. Professor
+Wilson won't believe in them, but they are quite true
+all the same. For example, it is possible for an
+operator to gain complete command over his subject--
+presuming that the latter is a good one. Without any
+previous suggestion he may make him do whatever he
+likes."
+
+"Without the subject's knowledge?"
+
+"That depends. If the force were strongly exerted, he
+would know no more about it than Miss Marden did when
+she came round and frightened you so. Or, if the
+influence was less powerful, he might be conscious of
+what he was doing, but be quite unable to prevent
+himself from doing it."
+
+"Would he have lost his own will power, then?"
+
+"It would be over-ridden by another stronger one."
+
+"Have you ever exercised this power yourself?"
+
+"Several times."
+
+"Is your own will so strong, then?"
+
+"Well, it does not entirely depend upon that. Many
+have strong wills which are not detachable from
+themselves. The thing is to have the gift of
+projecting it into another person and superseding his
+own. I find that the power varies with my own strength
+and health."
+
+"Practically, you send your soul into another person's
+body."
+
+"Well, you might put it that way."
+
+"And what does your own body do?"
+
+"It merely feels lethargic."
+
+"Well, but is there no danger to your own health?" I
+asked.
+
+"There might be a little. You have to be careful never
+to let your own consciousness absolutely go; otherwise,
+you might experience some difficulty in finding your
+way back again. You must always preserve the
+connection, as it were. I am afraid I express myself
+very badly, Professor Gilroy, but of course I don't
+know how to put these things in a scientific way. I am
+just giving you my own experiences and my own
+explanations."
+
+Well, I read this over now at my leisure, and I marvel
+at myself! Is this Austin Gilroy, the man who has won
+his way to the front by his hard reasoning power and by
+his devotion to fact? Here I am gravely retailing the
+gossip of a woman who tells me how her soul may be
+projected from her body, and how, while she lies in a
+lethargy, she can control the actions of people at a
+distance. Do I accept it? Certainly not. She must
+prove and re-prove before I yield a point. But if I am
+still a sceptic, I have at least ceased to be a
+scoffer. We are to have a sitting this evening, and
+she is to try if she can produce any mesmeric effect
+upon me. If she can, it will make an excellent
+starting-point for our investigation. No one can
+accuse me, at any rate, of complicity. If she cannot,
+we must try and find some subject who will be like
+Caesar's wife. Wilson is perfectly impervious.
+
+10 P. M. I believe that I am on the threshold of an
+epoch-making investigation. To have the power of
+examining these phenomena from inside--to have an
+organism which will respond, and at the same time a
+brain which will appreciate and criticise--that is
+surely a unique advantage. I am quite sure that Wilson
+would give five years of his life to be as susceptible
+as I have proved myself to be.
+
+There was no one present except Wilson and his wife. I
+was seated with my head leaning back, and Miss
+Penclosa, standing in front and a little to the left,
+used the same long, sweeping strokes as with Agatha.
+At each of them a warm current of air seemed to strike
+me, and to suffuse a thrill and glow all through me
+from head to foot. My eyes were fixed upon Miss
+Penclosa's face, but as I gazed the features seemed to
+blur and to fade away. I was conscious only of her own
+eyes looking down at me, gray, deep, inscrutable.
+Larger they grew and larger, until they changed
+suddenly into two mountain lakes toward which I seemed
+to be falling with horrible rapidity. I shuddered, and
+as I did so some deeper stratum of thought told me that
+the shudder represented the rigor which I had observed
+in Agatha. An instant later I struck the surface of
+the lakes, now joined into one, and down I went beneath
+the water with a fulness in my head and a buzzing in my
+ears. Down I went, down, down, and then with a swoop
+up again until I could see the light streaming brightly
+through the green water. I was almost at the surface
+when the word "Awake!" rang through my head, and, with
+a start, I found myself back in the arm-chair, with
+Miss Penclosa leaning on her crutch, and Wilson, his
+note book in his hand, peeping over her shoulder. No
+heaviness or weariness was left behind. On the
+contrary, though it is only an hour or so since the
+experiment, I feel so wakeful that I am more inclined
+for my study than my bedroom. I see quite a vista of
+interesting experiments extending before us, and am all
+impatience to begin upon them.
+
+March 27. A blank day, as Miss Penclosa goes with
+Wilson and his wife to the Suttons'. Have begun Binet
+and Ferre's "Animal Magnetism." What strange, deep
+waters these are! Results, results, results--and the
+cause an absolute mystery. It is stimulating to the
+imagination, but I must be on my guard against that.
+Let us have no inferences nor deductions, and nothing
+but solid facts. I KNOW that the mesmeric trance is
+true; I KNOW that mesmeric suggestion is true; I KNOW
+that I am myself sensitive to this force. That is my
+present position. I have a large new note-book which
+shall be devoted entirely to scientific detail.
+
+Long talk with Agatha and Mrs. Marden in the evening
+about our marriage. We think that the summer vac.
+(the beginning of it) would be the best time for the
+wedding. Why should we delay? I grudge even those few
+months. Still, as Mrs. Marden says, there are a good
+many things to be arranged.
+
+March 28. Mesmerized again by Miss Penclosa.
+Experience much the same as before, save that
+insensibility came on more quickly. See Note-book A
+for temperature of room, barometric pressure, pulse,
+and respiration as taken by Professor Wilson.
+
+March 29. Mesmerized again. Details in Note-book A.
+
+March 30. Sunday, and a blank day. I grudge any
+interruption of our experiments. At present they
+merely embrace the physical signs which go with slight,
+with complete, and with extreme insensibility.
+Afterward we hope to pass on to the phenomena of
+suggestion and of lucidity. Professors have
+demonstrated these things upon women at Nancy and at
+the Salpetriere. It will be more convincing when a
+woman demonstrates it upon a professor, with a second
+professor as a witness. And that I should be the
+subject--I, the sceptic, the materialist! At least, I
+have shown that my devotion to science is greater than
+to my own personal consistency. The eating of our own
+words is the greatest sacrifice which truth ever
+requires of us.
+
+My neighbor, Charles Sadler, the handsome young
+demonstrator of anatomy, came in this evening to return
+a volume of Virchow's "Archives" which I had lent him.
+I call him young, but, as a matter of fact, he is a
+year older than I am.
+
+"I understand, Gilroy," said he, "that you are being
+experimented upon by Miss Penclosa."
+
+"Well," he went on, when I had acknowledged it, "if I
+were you, I should not let it go any further. You will
+think me very impertinent, no doubt, but, none the
+less, I feel it to be my duty to advise you to have no
+more to do with her."
+
+Of course I asked him why.
+
+"I am so placed that I cannot enter into particulars as
+freely as I could wish," said he. "Miss Penclosa is
+the friend of my friend, and my position is a delicate
+one. I can only say this: that I have myself been the
+subject of some of the woman's experiments, and that
+they have left a most unpleasant impression upon my
+mind."
+
+He could hardly expect me to be satisfied with that,
+and I tried hard to get something more definite out of
+him, but without success. Is it conceivable that he
+could be jealous at my having superseded him? Or is he
+one of those men of science who feel personally injured
+when facts run counter to their preconceived opinions?
+He cannot seriously suppose that because he has some
+vague grievance I am, therefore, to abandon a series of
+experiments which promise to be so fruitful of results.
+He appeared to be annoyed at the light way in which I
+treated his shadowy warnings, and we parted with some
+little coldness on both sides.
+
+March 31. Mesmerized by Miss P.
+
+April 1. Mesmerized by Miss P. (Note-book A.)
+
+April 2. Mesmerized by Miss P. (Sphygmographic chart
+taken by Professor Wilson.)
+
+April 3. It is possible that this course of mesmerism
+may be a little trying to the general constitution.
+Agatha says that I am thinner and darker under the
+eyes. I am conscious of a nervous irritability which I
+had not observed in myself before. The least noise,
+for example, makes me start, and the stupidity of a
+student causes me exasperation instead of amusement.
+Agatha wishes me to stop, but I tell her that every
+course of study is trying, and that one can never
+attain a result with out paying some price for it.
+When she sees the sensation which my forthcoming paper
+on "The Relation between Mind and Matter" may make, she
+will understand that it is worth a little nervous wear
+and tear. I should not be surprised if I got my F. R.
+S. over it.
+
+Mesmerized again in the evening. The effect is
+produced more rapidly now, and the subjective visions
+are less marked. I keep full notes of each sitting.
+Wilson is leaving for town for a week or ten days, but
+we shall not interrupt the experiments, which depend
+for their value as much upon my sensations as on his
+observations.
+
+April 4. I must be carefully on my guard. A
+complication has crept into our experiments which I had
+not reckoned upon. In my eagerness for scientific
+facts I have been foolishly blind to the human
+relations between Miss Penclosa and myself. I can
+write here what I would not breathe to a living soul.
+The unhappy woman appears to have formed an attachment
+for me.
+
+I should not say such a thing, even in the privacy of
+my own intimate journal, if it had not come to such a
+pass that it is impossible to ignore it. For some
+time,--that is, for the last week,--there have been
+signs which I have brushed aside and refused to think
+of. Her brightness when I come, her dejection when I
+go, her eagerness that I should come often, the
+expression of her eyes, the tone of her voice--I tried
+to think that they meant nothing, and were, perhaps,
+only her ardent West Indian manner. But last night, as
+I awoke from the mesmeric sleep, I put out my hand,
+unconsciously, involuntarily, and clasped hers. When I
+came fully to myself, we were sitting with them locked,
+she looking up at me with an expectant smile. And the
+horrible thing was that I felt impelled to say what she
+expected me to say. What a false wretch I should have
+been! How I should have loathed myself to-day had I
+yielded to the temptation of that moment! But, thank
+God, I was strong enough to spring up and hurry from
+the room. I was rude, I fear, but I could not, no, I
+COULD not, trust myself another moment. I, a
+gentleman, a man of honor, engaged to one of the
+sweetest girls in England--and yet in a moment of
+reasonless passion I nearly professed love for this
+woman whom I hardly know. She is far older than myself
+and a cripple. It is monstrous, odious; and yet the
+impulse was so strong that, had I stayed another minute
+in her presence, I should have committed myself. What
+was it? I have to teach others the workings of our
+organism, and what do I know of it myself? Was it the
+sudden upcropping of some lower stratum in my nature--a
+brutal primitive instinct suddenly asserting itself? I
+could almost believe the tales of obsession by evil
+spirits, so overmastering was the feeling.
+
+Well, the incident places me in a most unfortunate
+position. On the one hand, I am very loath to abandon
+a series of experiments which have already gone so far,
+and which promise such brilliant results. On the
+other, if this unhappy woman has conceived a passion
+for me---- But surely even now I must have made some
+hideous mistake. She, with her age and her deformity!
+It is impossible. And then she knew about Agatha. She
+understood how I was placed. She only smiled out of
+amusement, perhaps, when in my dazed state I seized her
+hand. It was my half-mesmerized brain which gave it a
+meaning, and sprang with such bestial swiftness to meet
+it. I wish I could persuade myself that it was indeed
+so. On the whole, perhaps, my wisest plan would be to
+postpone our other experiments until Wilson's return.
+I have written a note to Miss Penclosa, therefore,
+making no allusion to last night, but saying that a
+press of work would cause me to interrupt our sittings
+for a few days. She has answered, formally enough, to
+say that if I should change my mind I should find her
+at home at the usual hour.
+
+10 P. M. Well, well, what a thing of straw I am! I am
+coming to know myself better of late, and the more I
+know the lower I fall in my own estimation. Surely I
+was not always so weak as this. At four o'clock I
+should have smiled had any one told me that I should go
+to Miss Penclosa's to-night, and yet, at eight, I was
+at Wilson's door as usual. I don't know how it
+occurred. The influence of habit, I suppose. Perhaps
+there is a mesmeric craze as there is an opium craze,
+and I am a victim to it. I only know that as I worked
+in my study I became more and more uneasy. I fidgeted.
+I worried. I could not concentrate my mind upon the
+papers in front of me. And then, at last, almost
+before I knew what I was doing, I seized my hat and
+hurried round to keep my usual appointment.
+
+We had an interesting evening. Mrs. Wilson was present
+during most of the time, which prevented the
+embarrassment which one at least of us must have felt.
+Miss Penclosa's manner was quite the same as usual, and
+she expressed no surprise at my having come in spite of
+my note. There was nothing in her bearing to show that
+yesterday's incident had made any impression upon her,
+and so I am inclined to hope that I overrated it.
+
+April 6 (evening). No, no, no, I did not overrate it.
+I can no longer attempt to conceal from myself that
+this woman has conceived a passion for me. It is
+monstrous, but it is true. Again, tonight, I awoke
+from the mesmeric trance to find my hand in hers, and
+to suffer that odious feeling which urges me to throw
+away my honor, my career, every thing, for the sake of
+this creature who, as I can plainly see when I am away
+from her influence, possesses no single charm upon
+earth. But when I am near her, I do not feel this.
+She rouses something in me, something evil, something I
+had rather not think of. She paralyzes my better
+nature, too, at the moment when she stimulates my
+worse. Decidedly it is not good for me to be near her.
+
+Last night was worse than before. Instead of flying I
+actually sat for some time with my hand in hers talking
+over the most intimate subjects with her. We spoke of
+Agatha, among other things. What could I have been
+dreaming of? Miss Penclosa said that she was
+conventional, and I agreed with her. She spoke once or
+twice in a disparaging way of her, and I did not
+protest. What a creature I have been!
+
+Weak as I have proved myself to be, I am still strong
+enough to bring this sort of thing to an end. It shall
+not happen again. I have sense enough to fly when I
+cannot fight. From this Sunday night onward I shall
+never sit with Miss Penclosa again. Never! Let the
+experiments go, let the research come to an end; any
+thing is better than facing this monstrous temptation
+which drags me so low. I have said nothing to Miss
+Penclosa, but I shall simply stay away. She can tell
+the reason without any words of mine.
+
+April 7. Have stayed away as I said. It is a pity to
+ruin such an interesting investigation, but it would be
+a greater pity still to ruin my life, and I KNOW that I
+cannot trust myself with that woman.
+
+11 P. M. God help me! What is the matter with me? Am
+I going mad? Let me try and be calm and reason with
+myself. First of all I shall set down exactly what
+occurred.
+
+It was nearly eight when I wrote the lines with which
+this day begins. Feeling strangely restless and uneasy,
+I left my rooms and walked round to spend the evening
+with Agatha and her mother. They both remarked that I
+was pale and haggard. About nine Professor Pratt-
+Haldane came in, and we played a game of whist. I
+tried hard to concentrate my attention upon the cards,
+but the feeling of restlessness grew and grew until I
+found it impossible to struggle against it. I simply
+COULD not sit still at the table. At last, in the very
+middle of a hand, I threw my cards down and, with some
+sort of an incoherent apology about having an
+appointment, I rushed from the room. As if in a dream
+I have a vague recollection of tearing through the
+hall, snatching my hat from the stand, and slamming the
+door behind me. As in a dream, too, I have the
+impression of the double line of gas-lamps, and my
+bespattered boots tell me that I must have run down the
+middle of the road. It was all misty and strange and
+unnatural. I came to Wilson's house; I saw Mrs. Wilson
+and I saw Miss Penclosa. I hardly recall what we
+talked about, but I do remember that Miss P. shook the
+head of her crutch at me in a playful way, and accused
+me of being late and of losing interest in our
+experiments. There was no mesmerism, but I stayed some
+time and have only just returned.
+
+My brain is quite clear again now, and I can think over
+what has occurred. It is absurd to suppose that it is
+merely weakness and force of habit. I tried to explain
+it in that way the other night, but it will no longer
+suffice. It is something much deeper and more terrible
+than that. Why, when I was at the Mardens' whist-
+table, I was dragged away as if the noose of a rope had
+been cast round me. I can no longer disguise it from
+myself. The woman has her grip upon me. I am in her
+clutch. But I must keep my head and reason it out and
+see what is best to be done.
+
+But what a blind fool I have been! In my enthusiasm
+over my research I have walked straight into the pit,
+although it lay gaping before me. Did she not herself
+warn me? Did she not tell me, as I can read in my own
+journal, that when she has acquired power over a
+subject she can make him do her will? And she has
+acquired that power over me. I am for the moment at
+the beck and call of this creature with the crutch. I
+must come when she wills it. I must do as she wills.
+Worst of all, I must feel as she wills. I loathe her
+and fear her, yet, while I am under the spell, she can
+doubtless make me love her.
+
+There is some consolation in the thought, then, that
+those odious impulses for which I have blamed myself do
+not really come from me at all. They are all
+transferred from her, little as I could have guessed it
+at the time. I feel cleaner and lighter for the
+thought.
+
+April 8. Yes, now, in broad daylight, writing coolly
+and with time for reflection, I am compelled to confirm
+every thing which I wrote in my journal last night. I
+am in a horrible position, but, above all, I must not
+lose my head. I must pit my intellect against her
+powers. After all, I am no silly puppet, to dance at
+the end of a string. I have energy, brains, courage.
+For all her devil's tricks I may beat her yet. May! I
+MUST, or what is to become of me?
+
+Let me try to reason it out! This woman, by her own
+explanation, can dominate my nervous organism. She can
+project herself into my body and take command of it.
+She has a parasite soul; yes, she is a parasite, a
+monstrous parasite. She creeps into my frame as the
+hermit crab does into the whelk's shell. I am
+powerless What can I do? I am dealing with forces of
+which I know nothing. And I can tell no one of my
+trouble. They would set me down as a madman.
+Certainly, if it got noised abroad, the university
+would say that they had no need of a devil-ridden
+professor. And Agatha! No, no, I must face it alone.
+
+
+III
+
+I read over my notes of what the woman said when she
+spoke about her powers. There is one point which fills
+me with dismay. She implies that when the influence is
+slight the subject knows what he is doing, but cannot
+control himself, whereas when it is strongly exerted he
+is absolutely unconscious. Now, I have always known
+what I did, though less so last night than on the
+previous occasions. That seems to mean that she has
+never yet exerted her full powers upon me. Was ever a
+man so placed before?
+
+Yes, perhaps there was, and very near me, too. Charles
+Sadler must know something of this! His vague words of
+warning take a meaning now. Oh, if I had only listened
+to him then, before I helped by these repeated sittings
+to forge the links of the chain which binds me! But I
+will see him to-day. I will apologize to him for
+having treated his warning so lightly. I will see if
+he can advise me.
+
+4 P. M. No, he cannot. I have talked with him, and he
+showed such surprise at the first words in which I
+tried to express my unspeakable secret that I went no
+further. As far as I can gather (by hints and
+inferences rather than by any statement), his own
+experience was limited to some words or looks such as I
+have myself endured. His abandonment of Miss Penclosa
+is in itself a sign that he was never really in her
+toils. Oh, if he only knew his escape! He has to
+thank his phlegmatic Saxon temperament for it. I am
+black and Celtic, and this hag's clutch is deep in my
+nerves. Shall I ever get it out? Shall I ever be the
+same man that I was just one short fortnight ago?
+
+Let me consider what I had better do. I cannot leave
+the university in the middle of the term. If I were
+free, my course would be obvious. I should start at
+once and travel in Persia. But would she allow me to
+start? And could her influence not reach me in Persia,
+and bring me back to within touch of her crutch? I can
+only find out the limits of this hellish power by my
+own bitter experience. I will fight and fight and
+fight--and what can I do more?
+
+I know very well that about eight o'clock to-night that
+craving for her society, that irresistible
+restlessness, will come upon me. How shall I overcome
+it? What shall I do? I must make it impossible for me
+to leave the room. I shall lock the door and throw the
+key out of the window. But, then, what am I to do in
+the morning? Never mind about the morning. I must at
+all costs break this chain which holds me.
+
+April 9. Victory! I have done splendidly! At seven
+o'clock last night I took a hasty dinner, and then
+locked myself up in my bedroom and dropped the key into
+the garden. I chose a cheery novel, and lay in bed for
+three hours trying to read it, but really in a horrible
+state of trepidation, expecting every instant that I
+should become conscious of the impulse. Nothing of the
+sort occurred, however, and I awoke this morning with
+the feeling that a black nightmare had been lifted off
+me. Perhaps the creature realized what I had done, and
+understood that it was useless to try to influence me.
+At any rate, I have beaten her once, and if I can do it
+once, I can do it again.
+
+It was most awkward about the key in the morning.
+Luckily, there was an under-gardener below, and I asked
+him to throw it up. No doubt he thought I had just
+dropped it. I will have doors and windows screwed up
+and six stout men to hold me down in my bed before I
+will surrender myself to be hag-ridden in this way.
+
+I had a note from Mrs. Marden this afternoon asking me
+to go round and see her. I intended to do so in any
+case, but had not excepted to find bad news waiting for
+me. It seems that the Armstrongs, from whom Agatha has
+expectations, are due home from Adelaide in the Aurora,
+and that they have written to Mrs. Marden and her to
+meet them in town. They will probably be away for a
+month or six weeks, and, as the Aurora is due on
+Wednesday, they must go at once--to-morrow, if they are
+ready in time. My consolation is that when we meet
+again there will be no more parting between Agatha and
+me.
+
+"I want you to do one thing, Agatha," said I, when we
+were alone together. "If you should happen to meet
+Miss Penclosa, either in town or here, you must promise
+me never again to allow her to mesmerize you."
+
+Agatha opened her eyes.
+
+"Why, it was only the other day that you were saying
+how interesting it all was, and how determined you were
+to finish your experiments."
+
+"I know, but I have changed my mind since then."
+
+"And you won't have it any more?"
+
+"No."
+
+"I am so glad, Austin. You can't think how pale and
+worn you have been lately. It was really our principal
+objection to going to London now that we did not wish
+to leave you when you were so pulled down. And your
+manner has been so strange occasionally--especially
+that night when you left poor Professor Pratt-Haldane
+to play dummy. I am convinced that these experiments
+are very bad for your nerves."
+
+"I think so, too, dear."
+
+"And for Miss Penclosa's nerves as well. You have
+heard that she is ill?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Mrs. Wilson told us so last night. She described it
+as a nervous fever. Professor Wilson is coming back this
+week, and of course Mrs. Wilson is very anxious that
+Miss Penclosa should be well again then, for he has
+quite a programme of experiments which he is anxious to
+carry out."
+
+I was glad to have Agatha's promise, for it was enough
+that this woman should have one of us in her clutch.
+On the other hand, I was disturbed to hear about Miss
+Penclosa's illness. It rather discounts the victory
+which I appeared to win last night. I remember that
+she said that loss of health interfered with her power.
+That may be why I was able to hold my own so easily.
+Well, well, I must take the same precautions to-night
+and see what comes of it. I am childishly frightened
+when I think of her.
+
+April 10. All went very well last night. I was amused
+at the gardener's face when I had again to hail him
+this morning and to ask him to throw up my key. I
+shall get a name among the servants if this sort of
+thing goes on. But the great point is that I stayed in
+my room without the slightest inclination to leave it.
+I do believe that I am shaking myself clear of this
+incredible bond--or is it only that the woman's power
+is in abeyance until she recovers her strength? I can
+but pray for the best.
+
+The Mardens left this morning, and the brightness seems
+to have gone out of the spring sunshine. And yet it is
+very beautiful also as it gleams on the green chestnuts
+opposite my windows, and gives a touch of gayety to the
+heavy, lichen-mottled walls of the old colleges. How
+sweet and gentle and soothing is Nature! Who would
+think that there lurked in her also such vile forces,
+such odious possibilities! For of course I understand
+that this dreadful thing which has sprung out at me is
+neither supernatural nor even preternatural. No, it is
+a natural force which this woman can use and society is
+ignorant of. The mere fact that it ebbs with her
+strength shows how entirely it is subject to physical
+laws. If I had time, I might probe it to the bottom
+and lay my hands upon its antidote. But you cannot
+tame the tiger when you are beneath his claws. You can
+but try to writhe away from him. Ah, when I look in
+the glass and see my own dark eyes and clear-cut
+Spanish face, I long for a vitriol splash or a bout of
+the small-pox. One or the other might have saved me
+from this calamity.
+
+I am inclined to think that I may have trouble to-
+night. There are two things which make me fear so.
+One is that I met Mrs. Wilson in the street, and that
+she tells me that Miss Penclosa is better, though still
+weak. I find myself wishing in my heart that the
+illness had been her last. The other is that Professor
+Wilson comes back in a day or two, and his presence
+would act as a constraint upon her. I should not fear
+our interviews if a third person were present. For
+both these reasons I have a presentiment of trouble to-
+night, and I shall take the same precautions as before.
+
+April 10. No, thank God, all went well last night. I
+really could not face the gardener again. I locked my
+door and thrust the key underneath it, so that I had to
+ask the maid to let me out in the morning. But the
+precaution was really not needed, for I never had any
+inclination to go out at all. Three evenings in
+succession at home! I am surely near the end of my
+troubles, for Wilson will be home again either today or
+tomorrow. Shall I tell him of what I have gone through
+or not? I am convinced that I should not have the
+slightest sympathy from him. He would look upon me as
+an interesting case, and read a paper about me at the
+next meeting of the Psychical Society, in which he
+would gravely discuss the possibility of my being a
+deliberate liar, and weigh it against the chances of my
+being in an early stage of lunacy. No, I shall get no
+comfort out of Wilson.
+
+I am feeling wonderfully fit and well. I don't think I
+ever lectured with greater spirit. Oh, if I could only
+get this shadow off my life, how happy I should be!
+Young, fairly wealthy, in the front rank of my
+profession, engaged to a beautiful and charming girl--
+have I not every thing which a man could ask for? Only
+one thing to trouble me, but what a thing it is!
+
+Midnight. I shall go mad. Yes, that will be the end
+of it. I shall go mad. I am not far from it now. My
+head throbs as I rest it on my hot hand. I am
+quivering all over like a scared horse. Oh, what a
+night I have had! And yet I have some cause to be
+satisfied also.
+
+At the risk of becoming the laughing-stock of my own
+servant, I again slipped my key under the door,
+imprisoning myself for the night. Then, finding it too
+early to go to bed, I lay down with my clothes on and
+began to read one of Dumas's novels. Suddenly I was
+gripped--gripped and dragged from the couch. It is
+only thus that I can describe the overpowering nature
+of the force which pounced upon me. I clawed at the
+coverlet. I clung to the wood-work. I believe that I
+screamed out in my frenzy. It was all useless,
+hopeless. I MUST go. There was no way out of it. It
+was only at the outset that I resisted. The force soon
+became too overmastering for that. I thank goodness
+that there were no watchers there to interfere with me.
+I could not have answered for myself if there had been.
+And, besides the determination to get out, there came
+to me, also, the keenest and coolest judgment in
+choosing my means. I lit a candle and endeavored,
+kneeling in front of the door, to pull the key through
+with the feather-end of a quill pen. It was just too
+short and pushed it further away. Then with quiet
+persistence I got a paper-knife out of one of the
+drawers, and with that I managed to draw the key back.
+I opened the door, stepped into my study, took a
+photograph of myself from the bureau, wrote something
+across it, placed it in the inside pocket of my coat,
+and then started off for Wilson's.
+
+It was all wonderfully clear, and yet disassociated
+from the rest of my life, as the incidents of even the
+most vivid dream might be. A peculiar double
+consciousness possessed me. There was the predominant
+alien will, which was bent upon drawing me to the side
+of its owner, and there was the feebler protesting
+personality, which I recognized as being myself,
+tugging feebly at the overmastering impulse as a led
+terrier might at its chain. I can remember recognizing
+these two conflicting forces, but I recall nothing of
+my walk, nor of how I was admitted to the house.
+
+Very vivid, however, is my recollection of how I met
+Miss Penclosa. She was reclining on the sofa in the
+little boudoir in which our experiments had usually
+been carried out. Her head was rested on her hand, and
+a tiger-skin rug had been partly drawn over her. She
+looked up expectantly as I entered, and, as the lamp-
+light fell upon her face, I could see that she was very
+pale and thin, with dark hollows under her eyes. She
+smiled at me, and pointed to a stool beside her. It
+was with her left hand that she pointed, and I, running
+eagerly forward, seized it,--I loathe myself as I think
+of it,--and pressed it passionately to my lips. Then,
+seating myself upon the stool, and still retaining her
+hand, I gave her the photograph which I had brought
+with me, and talked and talked and talked--of my love
+for her, of my grief over her illness, of my joy at her
+recovery, of the misery it was to me to be absent a
+single evening from her side. She lay quietly looking
+down at me with imperious eyes and her provocative
+smile. Once I remember that she passed her hand over
+my hair as one caresses a dog; and it gave me
+pleasure--the caress. I thrilled under it. I was her
+slave, body and soul, and for the moment I rejoiced in
+my slavery.
+
+And then came the blessed change. Never tell me that
+there is not a Providence! I was on the brink of
+perdition. My feet were on the edge. Was it a
+coincidence that at that very instant help should come?
+No, no, no; there is a Providence, and its hand has
+drawn me back. There is something in the universe
+stronger than this devil woman with her tricks. Ah,
+what a balm to my heart it is to think so!
+
+As I looked up at her I was conscious of a change in
+her. Her face, which had been pale before, was now
+ghastly. Her eyes were dull, and the lids drooped
+heavily over them. Above all, the look of serene
+confidence had gone from her features. Her mouth had
+weakened. Her forehead had puckered. She was
+frightened and undecided. And as I watched the change
+my own spirit fluttered and struggled, trying hard to
+tear itself from the grip which held it--a grip which,
+from moment to moment, grew less secure.
+
+"Austin," she whispered, "I have tried to do too much.
+I was not strong enough. I have not recovered yet from
+my illness. But I could not live longer without seeing
+you. You won't leave me, Austin? This is only a
+passing weakness. If you will only give me five
+minutes, I shall be myself again. Give me the small
+decanter from the table in the window."
+
+But I had regained my soul. With her waning strength
+the influence had cleared away from me and left me
+free. And I was aggressive--bitterly, fiercely
+aggressive. For once at least I could make this woman
+understand what my real feelings toward her were. My
+soul was filled with a hatred as bestial as the love
+against which it was a reaction. It was the savage,
+murderous passion of the revolted serf. I could have
+taken the crutch from her side and beaten her face in
+with it. She threw her hands up, as if to avoid a
+blow, and cowered away from me into the corner of the
+settee.
+
+"The brandy!" she gasped. "The brandy!"
+
+I took the decanter and poured it over the roots of a
+palm in the window. Then I snatched the photograph
+from her hand and tore it into a hundred pieces.
+
+"You vile woman," I said, "if I did my duty to society,
+you would never leave this room alive!"
+
+"I love you, Austin; I love you!" she wailed.
+
+"Yes," I cried, "and Charles Sadler before. And how
+many others before that?"
+
+"Charles Sadler!" she gasped. "He has spoken to you?
+So, Charles Sadler, Charles Sadler!" Her voice came
+through her white lips like a snake's hiss.
+
+"Yes, I know you, and others shall know you, too. You
+shameless creature! You knew how I stood. And yet you
+used your vile power to bring me to your side. You
+may, perhaps, do so again, but at least you will
+remember that you have heard me say that I love Miss
+Marden from the bottom of my soul, and that I loathe
+you, abhor you!
+
+"The very sight of you and the sound of your voice fill
+me with horror and disgust. The thought of you is
+repulsive. That is how I feel toward you, and if it
+pleases you by your tricks to draw me again to your
+side as you have done to-night, you will at least, I
+should think, have little satisfaction in trying to
+make a lover out of a man who has told you his real
+opinion of you. You may put what words you will into
+my mouth, but you cannot help remembering----"
+
+I stopped, for the woman's head had fallen back, and
+she had fainted. She could not bear to hear what I had
+to say to her! What a glow of satisfaction it gives me
+to think that, come what may, in the future she can
+never misunderstand my true feelings toward her. But
+what will occur in the future? What will she do next?
+I dare not think of it. Oh, if only I could hope that
+she will leave me alone! But when I think of what I
+said to her---- Never mind; I have been stronger than
+she for once.
+
+April 11. I hardly slept last night, and found myself
+in the morning so unstrung and feverish that I was
+compelled to ask Pratt-Haldane to do my lecture for me.
+It is the first that I have ever missed. I rose at
+mid-day, but my head is aching, my hands quivering, and
+my nerves in a pitiable state.
+
+Who should come round this evening but Wilson. He has
+just come back from London, where he has lectured, read
+papers, convened meetings, exposed a medium, conducted
+a series of experiments on thought transference,
+entertained Professor Richet of Paris, spent hours
+gazing into a crystal, and obtained some evidence as to
+the passage of matter through matter. All this he
+poured into my ears in a single gust.
+
+"But you!" he cried at last. "You are not looking
+well. And Miss Penclosa is quite prostrated to-day.
+How about the experiments?"
+
+"I have abandoned them."
+
+"Tut, tut! Why?"
+
+"The subject seems to me to be a dangerous one."
+
+Out came his big brown note-book.
+
+"This is of great interest," said he. "What are your
+grounds for saying that it is a dangerous one? Please
+give your facts in chronological order, with
+approximate dates and names of reliable witnesses with
+their permanent addresses."
+
+"First of all," I asked, "would you tell me whether you
+have collected any cases where the mesmerist has gained
+a command over the subject and has used it for evil
+purposes?"
+
+"Dozens!" he cried exultantly. "Crime by
+suggestion----"
+
+"I don't mean suggestion. I mean where a sudden
+impulse comes from a person at a distance--an
+uncontrollable impulse."
+
+"Obsession!" he shrieked, in an ecstasy of delight.
+"It is the rarest condition. We have eight cases, five
+well attested. You don't mean to say----" His
+exultation made him hardly articulate.
+
+"No, I don't," said I. "Good-evening! You will excuse
+me, but I am not very well to-night." And so at last
+I got rid of him, still brandishing his pencil and his
+note-book. My troubles may be bad to hear, but at
+least it is better to hug them to myself than to have
+myself exhibited by Wilson, like a freak at a fair. He
+has lost sight of human beings. Every thing to him is
+a case and a phenomenon. I will die before I speak to
+him again upon the matter.
+
+April 12. Yesterday was a blessed day of quiet, and I
+enjoyed an uneventful night. Wilson's presence is a
+great consolation. What can the woman do now? Surely,
+when she has heard me say what I have said, she will
+conceive the same disgust for me which I have for her.
+She could not, no, she COULD not, desire to have a
+lover who had insulted her so. No, I believe I am free
+from her love--but how about her hate? Might she not
+use these powers of hers for revenge? Tut! why should
+I frighten myself over shadows? She will forget about
+me, and I shall forget about her, and all will be well.
+
+April 13. My nerves have quite recovered their tone.
+I really believe that I have conquered the creature.
+But I must confess to living in some suspense. She is
+well again, for I hear that she was driving with Mrs.
+Wilson in the High Street in the afternoon.
+
+April 14. I do wish I could get away from the place
+altogether. I shall fly to Agatha's side the very day
+that the term closes. I suppose it is pitiably weak of
+me, but this woman gets upon my nerves most terribly.
+I have seen her again, and I have spoken with her.
+
+It was just after lunch, and I was smoking a cigarette
+in my study, when I heard the step of my servant Murray
+in the passage. I was languidly conscious that a
+second step was audible behind, and had hardly troubled
+myself to speculate who it might be, when suddenly a
+slight noise brought me out of my chair with my skin
+creeping with apprehension. I had never particularly
+observed before what sort of sound the tapping of a
+crutch was, but my quivering nerves told me that I
+heard it now in the sharp wooden clack which alternated
+with the muffled thud of the foot fall. Another
+instant and my servant had shown her in.
+
+I did not attempt the usual conventions of society, nor
+did she. I simply stood with the smouldering cigarette
+in my hand, and gazed at her. She in her turn looked
+silently at me, and at her look I remembered how in
+these very pages I had tried to define the expression
+of her eyes, whether they were furtive or fierce. To-
+day they were fierce--coldly and inexorably so.
+
+"Well," said she at last, "are you still of the same
+mind as when I saw you last?"
+
+"I have always been of the same mind."
+
+"Let us understand each other, Professor Gilroy," said
+she slowly. "I am not a very safe person to trifle
+with, as you should realize by now. It was you who
+asked me to enter into a series of experiments with
+you, it was you who won my affections, it was you who
+professed your love for me, it was you who brought me
+your own photograph with words of affection upon it,
+and, finally, it was you who on the very same evening
+thought fit to insult me most outrageously, addressing
+me as no man has ever dared to speak to me yet. Tell
+me that those words came from you in a moment of
+passion and I am prepared to forget and to forgive
+them. You did not mean what you said, Austin? You do
+not really hate me?"
+
+I might have pitied this deformed woman--such a longing
+for love broke suddenly through the menace of her eyes.
+But then I thought of what I had gone through, and my
+heart set like flint.
+
+"If ever you heard me speak of love," said I, "you know
+very well that it was your voice which spoke, and not
+mine. The only words of truth which I have ever been
+able to say to you are those which you heard when last
+we met."
+
+"I know. Some one has set you against me. It was he!"
+She tapped with her crutch upon the floor. "Well, you
+know very well that I could bring you this instant
+crouching like a spaniel to my feet. You will not find
+me again in my hour of weakness, when you can insult me
+with impunity. Have a care what you are doing,
+Professor Gilroy. You stand in a terrible position.
+You have not yet realized the hold which I have upon
+you."
+
+I shrugged my shoulders and turned away.
+
+"Well," said she, after a pause, "if you despise my
+love, I must see what can be done with fear. You
+smile, but the day will come when you will come
+screaming to me for pardon. Yes, you will grovel on
+the ground before me, proud as you are, and you will
+curse the day that ever you turned me from your best
+friend into your most bitter enemy. Have a care,
+Professor Gilroy!" I saw a white hand shaking in the
+air, and a face which was scarcely human, so convulsed
+was it with passion. An instant later she was gone,
+and I heard the quick hobble and tap receding down the
+passage.
+
+But she has left a weight upon my heart. Vague
+presentiments of coming misfortune lie heavy upon me.
+I try in vain to persuade myself that these are only
+words of empty anger. I can remember those relentless
+eyes too clearly to think so. What shall I do--ah,
+what shall I do? I am no longer master of my own soul.
+At any moment this loathsome parasite may creep into
+me, and then---- I must tell some one my hideous
+secret--I must tell it or go mad. If I had some one to
+sympathize and advise! Wilson is out of the question.
+Charles Sadler would understand me only so far as his
+own experience carries him. Pratt-Haldane! He is a
+well-balanced man, a man of great common-sense and
+resource. I will go to him. I will tell him every
+thing. God grant that he may be able to advise me!
+
+
+IV
+
+6.45 P. M. No, it is useless. There is no human help
+for me; I must fight this out single-handed. Two
+courses lie before me. I might become this woman's
+lover. Or I must endure such persecutions as she can
+inflict upon me. Even if none come, I shall live in a
+hell of apprehension. But she may torture me, she may
+drive me mad, she may kill me: I will never, never,
+never give in. What can she inflict which would be
+worse than the loss of Agatha, and the knowledge that I
+am a perjured liar, and have forfeited the name of
+gentleman?
+
+Pratt-Haldane was most amiable, and listened with all
+politeness to my story. But when I looked at his heavy
+set features, his slow eyes, and the ponderous study
+furniture which surrounded him, I could hardly tell him
+what I had come to say. It was all so substantial, so
+material. And, besides, what would I myself have said
+a short month ago if one of my colleagues had come to
+me with a story of demonic possession? Perhaps. I
+should have been less patient than he was. As it was,
+he took notes of my statement, asked me how much tea I
+drank, how many hours I slept, whether I had been
+overworking much, had I had sudden pains in the head,
+evil dreams, singing in the ears, flashes before the
+eyes--all questions which pointed to his belief that
+brain congestion was at the bottom of my trouble.
+Finally he dismissed me with a great many platitudes
+about open-air exercise, and avoidance of nervous
+excitement. His prescription, which was for chloral
+and bromide, I rolled up and threw into the gutter.
+
+No, I can look for no help from any human being. If I
+consult any more, they may put their heads together and
+I may find myself in an asylum. I can but grip my
+courage with both hands, and pray that an honest man
+may not be abandoned.
+
+April 10. It is the sweetest spring within the memory
+of man. So green, so mild, so beautiful! Ah, what a
+contrast between nature without and my own soul so torn
+with doubt and terror! It has been an uneventful day,
+but I know that I am on the edge of an abyss. I know
+it, and yet I go on with the routine of my life. The
+one bright spot is that Agatha is happy and well and
+out of all danger. If this creature had a hand on each
+of us, what might she not do?
+
+April 16. The woman is ingenious in her torments. She
+knows how fond I am of my work, and how highly my
+lectures are thought of. So it is from that point that
+she now attacks me. It will end, I can see, in my
+losing my professorship, but I will fight to the
+finish. She shall not drive me out of it without a
+struggle.
+
+I was not conscious of any change during my lecture
+this morning save that for a minute or two I had a
+dizziness and swimminess which rapidly passed away. On
+the contrary, I congratulated myself upon having made
+my subject (the functions of the red corpuscles) both
+interesting and clear. I was surprised, therefore,
+when a student came into my laboratory immediately
+after the lecture, and complained of being puzzled by
+the discrepancy between my statements and those in the
+text books. He showed me his note-book, in which I was
+reported as having in one portion of the lecture
+championed the most outrageous and unscientific
+heresies. Of course I denied it, and declared that he
+had misunderstood me, but on comparing his notes with
+those of his companions, it became clear that he was
+right, and that I really had made some most
+preposterous statements. Of course I shall explain it
+away as being the result of a moment of aberration, but
+I feel only too sure that it will be the first of a
+series. It is but a month now to the end of the
+session, and I pray that I may be able to hold out
+until then.
+
+April 26. Ten days have elapsed since I have had the
+heart to make any entry in my journal. Why should I
+record my own humiliation and degradation? I had vowed
+never to open it again. And yet the force of habit is
+strong, and here I find myself taking up once more the
+record of my own dreadful experiences--in much the same
+spirit in which a suicide has been known to take notes
+of the effects of the poison which killed him.
+
+Well, the crash which I had foreseen has come--and that
+no further back than yesterday. The university
+authorities have taken my lectureship from me. It has
+been done in the most delicate way, purporting to be a
+temporary measure to relieve me from the effects of
+overwork, and to give me the opportunity of recovering
+my health. None the less, it has been done, and I am
+no longer Professor Gilroy. The laboratory is still in
+my charge, but I have little doubt that that also will
+soon go.
+
+The fact is that my lectures had become the laughing-
+stock of the university. My class was crowded with
+students who came to see and hear what the eccentric
+professor would do or say next. I cannot go into the
+detail of my humiliation. Oh, that devilish woman!
+There is no depth of buffoonery and imbecility to which
+she has not forced me. I would begin my lecture
+clearly and well, but always with the sense of a coming
+eclipse. Then as I felt the influence I would struggle
+against it, striving with clenched hands and beads of
+sweat upon my brow to get the better of it, while the
+students, hearing my incoherent words and watching my
+contortions, would roar with laughter at the antics of
+their professor. And then, when she had once fairly
+mastered me, out would come the most outrageous
+things--silly jokes, sentiments as though I were
+proposing a toast, snatches of ballads, personal abuse
+even against some member of my class. And then in a
+moment my brain would clear again, and my lecture would
+proceed decorously to the end. No wonder that my
+conduct has been the talk of the colleges. No wonder
+that the University Senate has been compelled to take
+official notice of such a scandal. Oh, that devilish
+woman!
+
+And the most dreadful part of it all is my own
+loneliness. Here I sit in a commonplace English bow-
+window, looking out upon a commonplace English street
+with its garish 'buses and its lounging policeman, and
+behind me there hangs a shadow which is out of all
+keeping with the age and place. In the home of
+knowledge I am weighed down and tortured by a power of
+which science knows nothing. No magistrate would
+listen to me. No paper would discuss my case. No
+doctor would believe my symptoms. My own most intimate
+friends would only look upon it as a sign of brain
+derangement. I am out of all touch with my kind. Oh,
+that devilish woman! Let her have a care! She may
+push me too far. When the law cannot help a man, he
+may make a law for himself.
+
+She met me in the High Street yesterday evening and
+spoke to me. It was as well for her, perhaps, that it
+was not between the hedges of a lonely country road.
+She asked me with her cold smile whether I had been
+chastened yet. I did not deign to answer her. "We
+must try another turn of the screw;" said she. Have a
+care, my lady, have a care! I had her at my mercy
+once. Perhaps another chance may come.
+
+April 28. The suspension of my lectureship has had the
+effect also of taking away her means of annoying me,
+and so I have enjoyed two blessed days of peace. After
+all, there is no reason to despair. Sympathy pours in
+to me from all sides, and every one agrees that it is
+my devotion to science and the arduous nature of my
+researches which have shaken my nervous system. I have
+had the kindest message from the council advising me to
+travel abroad, and expressing the confident hope that I
+may be able to resume all my duties by the beginning of
+the summer term. Nothing could be more flattering than
+their allusions to my career and to my services to the
+university. It is only in misfortune that one can test
+one's own popularity. This creature may weary of
+tormenting me, and then all may yet be well. May God
+grant it!
+
+April 29. Our sleepy little town has had a small
+sensation. The only knowledge of crime which we ever
+have is when a rowdy undergraduate breaks a few lamps
+or comes to blows with a policeman. Last night,
+however, there was an attempt made to break-into the
+branch of the Bank of England, and we are all in a
+flutter in consequence.
+
+Parkenson, the manager, is an intimate friend of mine,
+and I found him very much excited when I walked round
+there after breakfast. Had the thieves broken into the
+counting-house, they would still have had the safes to
+reckon with, so that the defence was considerably
+stronger than the attack. Indeed, the latter does not
+appear to have ever been very formidable. Two of the
+lower windows have marks as if a chisel or some such
+instrument had been pushed under them to force them
+open. The police should have a good clue, for the
+wood-work had been done with green paint only the day
+before, and from the smears it is evident that some of
+it has found its way on to the criminal's hands or
+clothes.
+
+4.30 P. M. Ah, that accursed woman! That thrice
+accursed woman! Never mind! She shall not beat me!
+No, she shall not! But, oh, the she-devil! She has
+taken my professorship. Now she would take my honor.
+Is there nothing I can do against her, nothing save----
+Ah, but, hard pushed as I am, I cannot bring myself to
+think of that!
+
+It was about an hour ago that I went into my bedroom,
+and was brushing my hair before the glass, when
+suddenly my eyes lit upon something which left me so
+sick and cold that I sat down upon the edge of the bed
+and began to cry. It is many a long year since I shed
+tears, but all my nerve was gone, and I could but sob
+and sob in impotent grief and anger. There was my
+house jacket, the coat I usually wear after dinner,
+hanging on its peg by the wardrobe, with the right
+sleeve thickly crusted from wrist to elbow with daubs
+of green paint.
+
+So this was what she meant by another turn of the
+screw! She had made a public imbecile of me. Now she
+would brand me as a criminal. This time she has
+failed. But how about the next? I dare not think of
+it--and of Agatha and my poor old mother! I wish that
+I were dead!
+
+Yes, this is the other turn of the screw. And this is
+also what she meant, no doubt, when she said that I had
+not realized yet the power she has over me. I look
+back at my account of my conversation with her, and I
+see how she declared that with a slight exertion of her
+will her subject would be conscious, and with a
+stronger one unconscious. Last night I was
+unconscious. I could have sworn that I slept soundly
+in my bed without so much as a dream. And yet those
+stains tell me that I dressed, made my way out,
+attempted to open the bank windows, and returned. Was
+I observed? Is it possible that some one saw me do it
+and followed me home? Ah, what a hell my life has
+become! I have no peace, no rest. But my patience is
+nearing its end.
+
+10 P. M. I have cleaned my coat with turpentine. I do
+not think that any one could have seen me. It was with
+my screw-driver that I made the marks. I found it all
+crusted with paint, and I have cleaned it. My head
+aches as if it would burst, and I have taken five
+grains of antipyrine. If it were not for Agatha, I
+should have taken fifty and had an end of it.
+
+May 3. Three quiet days. This hell fiend is like a
+cat with a mouse. She lets me loose only to pounce
+upon me again. I am never so frightened as when every
+thing is still. My physical state is deplorable--
+perpetual hiccough and ptosis of the left eyelid.
+
+I have heard from the Mardens that they will be back
+the day after to-morrow. I do not know whether I am
+glad or sorry. They were safe in London. Once here
+they may be drawn into the miserable network in which I
+am myself struggling. And I must tell them of it. I
+cannot marry Agatha so long as I know that I am not
+responsible for my own actions. Yes, I must tell them,
+even if it brings every thing to an end between us.
+
+To-night is the university ball, and I must go. God
+knows I never felt less in the humor for festivity, but
+I must not have it said that I am unfit to appear in
+public. If I am seen there, and have speech with some
+of the elders of the university it will go a long way
+toward showing them that it would be unjust to take my
+chair away from me.
+
+10 P. M. I have been to the ball. Charles Sadler and
+I went together, but I have come away before him. I
+shall wait up for him, however, for, indeed, I fear to
+go to sleep these nights. He is a cheery, practical
+fellow, and a chat with him will steady my nerves. On
+the whole, the evening was a great success. I talked
+to every one who has influence, and I think that I made
+them realize that my chair is not vacant quite yet.
+The creature was at the ball--unable to dance, of
+course, but sitting with Mrs. Wilson. Again and again
+her eyes rested upon me. They were almost the last
+things I saw before I left the room. Once, as I sat
+sideways to her, I watched her, and saw that her gaze
+was following some one else. It was Sadler, who was
+dancing at the time with the second Miss Thurston. To
+judge by her expression, it is well for him that he is
+not in her grip as I am. He does not know the escape
+he has had. I think I hear his step in the street now,
+and I will go down and let him in. If he will----
+
+May 4. Why did I break off in this way last night? I
+never went down stairs, after all--at least, I have no
+recollection of doing so. But, on the other hand, I
+cannot remember going to bed. One of my hands is
+greatly swollen this morning, and yet I have no
+remembrance of injuring it yesterday. Otherwise, I am
+feeling all the better for last night's festivity. But
+I cannot understand how it is that I did not meet
+Charles Sadler when I so fully intended to do so. Is
+it possible---- My God, it is only too probable! Has
+she been leading me some devil's dance again? I will
+go down to Sadler and ask him.
+
+Mid-day. The thing has come to a crisis. My life is
+not worth living. But, if I am to die, then she shall
+come also. I will not leave her behind, to drive some
+other man mad as she has me. No, I have come to the
+limit of my endurance. She has made me as desperate
+and dangerous a man as walks the earth. God knows I
+have never had the heart to hurt a fly, and yet, if I
+had my hands now upon that woman, she should never
+leave this room alive. I shall see her this very day,
+and she shall learn what she has to expect from me.
+
+I went to Sadler and found him, to my surprise, in bed.
+As I entered he sat up and turned a face toward me
+which sickened me as I looked at it.
+
+"Why, Sadler, what has happened?" I cried, but my heart
+turned cold as I said it.
+
+"Gilroy," he answered, mumbling with his swollen lips,
+"I have for some weeks been under the impression that
+you are a madman. Now I know it, and that you are a
+dangerous one as well. If it were not that I am
+unwilling to make a scandal in the college, you would
+now be in the hands of the police."
+
+"Do you mean----" I cried.
+
+"I mean that as I opened the door last night you rushed
+out upon me, struck me with both your fists in the
+face, knocked me down, kicked me furiously in the side,
+and left me lying almost unconscious in the street.
+Look at your own hand bearing witness against you."
+
+Yes, there it was, puffed up, with sponge-like
+knuckles, as after some terrific blow. What could I
+do? Though he put me down as a madman, I must tell him
+all. I sat by his bed and went over all my troubles
+from the beginning. I poured them out with quivering
+hands and burning words which might have carried
+conviction to the most sceptical. "She
+hates you and she hates me!" I cried. "She revenged
+herself last night on both of us at once. She saw me
+leave the ball, and she must have seen you also. She
+knew how long it would take you to reach home. Then
+she had but to use her wicked will. Ah, your bruised
+face is a small thing beside my bruised soul!"
+
+He was struck by my story. That was evident. "Yes,
+yes, she watched me out of the room," he muttered.
+"She is capable of it. But is it possible that she has
+really reduced you to this? What do you intend to do?"
+
+"To stop it!" I cried. "I am perfectly desperate; I
+shall give her fair warning to-day, and the next time
+will be the last."
+
+"Do nothing rash," said he.
+
+"Rash!" I cried. "The only rash thing is that I should
+postpone it another hour." With that I rushed to my
+room, and here I am on the eve of what may be the great
+crisis of my life. I shall start at once. I have
+gained one thing to-day, for I have made one man, at
+least, realize the truth of this monstrous experience
+of mine. And, if the worst should happen, this diary
+remains as a proof of the goad that has driven me.
+
+Evening. When I came to Wilson's, I was shown up, and
+found that he was sitting with Miss Penclosa. For half
+an hour I had to endure his fussy talk about his recent
+research into the exact nature of the spiritualistic
+rap, while the creature and I sat in silence looking
+across the room at each other. I read a sinister
+amusement in her eyes, and she must have seen hatred
+and menace in mine. I had almost despaired of having
+speech with her when he was called from the room, and
+we were left for a few moments together.
+
+"Well, Professor Gilroy--or is it Mr. Gilroy?" said
+she, with that bitter smile of hers. "How is your
+friend Mr. Charles Sadler after the ball?"
+
+"You fiend!" I cried. "You have come to the end of
+your tricks now. I will have no more of them. Listen
+to what I say." I strode across and shook her roughly
+by the shoulder "As sure as there is a God in heaven, I
+swear that if you try another of your deviltries upon
+me I will have your life for it. Come what may, I will
+have your life. I have come to the end of what a man
+can endure."
+
+"Accounts are not quite settled between us," said she,
+with a passion that equalled my own. "I can love, and
+I can hate. You had your choice. You chose to spurn
+the first; now you must test the other. It will take a
+little more to break your spirit, I see, but broken it
+shall be. Miss Marden comes back to-morrow, as I
+understand."
+
+"What has that to do with you?" I cried. "It is a
+pollution that you should dare even to think of her.
+If I thought that you would harm her----"
+
+She was frightened, I could see, though she tried to
+brazen it out. She read the black thought in my mind,
+and cowered away from me.
+
+"She is fortunate in having such a champion," said she.
+"He actually dares to threaten a lonely woman. I must
+really congratulate Miss Marden upon her protector."
+
+The words were bitter, but the voice and manner were
+more acid still.
+
+"There is no use talking," said I. "I only came here
+to tell you,--and to tell you most solemnly,--that your
+next outrage upon me will be your last." With that, as
+I heard Wilson's step upon the stair, I walked from the
+room. Ay, she may look venomous and deadly, but, for
+all that, she is beginning to see now that she has as
+much to fear from me as I can have from her. Murder!
+It has an ugly sound. But you don't talk of murdering
+a snake or of murdering a tiger. Let her have a care
+now.
+
+May 5. I met Agatha and her mother at the station at
+eleven o'clock. She is looking so bright, so happy, so
+beautiful. And she was so overjoyed to see me. What
+have I done to deserve such love? I went back home
+with them, and we lunched together. All the troubles
+seem in a moment to have been shredded back from my
+life. She tells me that I am looking pale and worried
+and ill. The dear child puts it down to my loneliness
+and the perfunctory attentions of a housekeeper. I
+pray that she may never know the truth! May the
+shadow, if shadow there must be, lie ever black across
+my life and leave hers in the sunshine. I have just
+come back from them, feeling a new man. With her by my
+side I think that I could show a bold face to any thing
+which life might send.
+
+5 P. M. Now, let me try to be accurate. Let me try to
+say exactly how it occurred. It is fresh in my mind,
+and I can set it down correctly, though it is not
+likely that the time will ever come when I shall forget
+the doings of to-day.
+
+I had returned from the Mardens' after lunch, and was
+cutting some microscopic sections in my freezing
+microtome, when in an instant I lost consciousness in
+the sudden hateful fashion which has become only too
+familiar to me of late.
+
+When my senses came back to me I was sitting in a small
+chamber, very different from the one in which I had
+been working. It was cosey and bright, with chintz-
+covered settees, colored hangings, and a thousand
+pretty little trifles upon the wall. A small
+ornamental clock ticked in front of me, and the hands
+pointed to half-past three. It was all quite familiar
+to me, and yet I stared about for a moment in a half-
+dazed way until my eyes fell upon a cabinet photograph
+of myself upon the top of the piano. On the other side
+stood one of Mrs. Marden. Then, of course, I
+remembered where I was. It was Agatha's boudoir.
+
+But how came I there, and what did I want? A horrible
+sinking came to my heart. Had I been sent here on some
+devilish errand? Had that errand already been done?
+Surely it must; otherwise, why should I be allowed to
+come back to consciousness? Oh, the agony of that
+moment! What had I done? I sprang to my feet in my
+despair, and as I did so a small glass bottle fell from
+my knees on to the carpet.
+
+It was unbroken, and I picked it up. Outside was
+written "Sulphuric Acid. Fort." When I drew the round
+glass stopper, a thick fume rose slowly up, and a
+pungent, choking smell pervaded the room. I recognized
+it as one which I kept for chemical testing in my
+chambers. But why had I brought a bottle of vitriol
+into Agatha's chamber? Was it not this thick, reeking
+liquid with which jealous women had been known to mar
+the beauty of their rivals? My heart stood still as I
+held the bottle to the light. Thank God, it was full!
+No mischief had been done as yet. But had Agatha come
+in a minute sooner, was it not certain that the hellish
+parasite within me would have dashed the stuff into
+her---- Ah, it will not bear to be thought of! But it
+must have been for that. Why else should I have
+brought it? At the thought of what I might have done
+my worn nerves broke down, and I sat shivering and
+twitching, the pitiable wreck of a man.
+
+It was the sound of Agatha's voice and the rustle of
+her dress which restored me. I looked up, and saw her
+blue eyes, so full of tenderness and pity, gazing down
+at me.
+
+"We must take you away to the country, Austin," she
+said. "You want rest and quiet. You look wretchedly
+ill."
+
+"Oh, it is nothing!" said I, trying to smile. "It was
+only a momentary weakness. I am all right again now."
+
+"I am so sorry to keep you waiting. Poor boy, you must
+have been here quite half an hour! The vicar was in
+the drawing-room, and, as I knew that you did not care
+for him, I thought it better that Jane should show you
+up here. I thought the man would never go!"
+
+"Thank God he stayed! Thank God he stayed!" I cried
+hysterically.
+
+"Why, what is the matter with you, Austin?" she asked,
+holding my arm as I staggered up from the chair. "Why
+are you glad that the vicar stayed? And what is this
+little bottle in your hand?"
+
+"Nothing," I cried, thrusting it into my pocket. "But
+I must go. I have something important to do."
+
+"How stern you look, Austin! I have never seen your
+face like that. You are angry?"
+
+"Yes, I am angry."
+
+"But not with me?"
+
+"No, no, my darling! You would not understand."
+
+"But you have not told me why you came."
+
+"I came to ask you whether you would always love me--no
+matter what I did, or what shadow might fall on my
+name. Would you believe in me and trust me however
+black appearances might be against me?"
+
+"You know that I would, Austin."
+
+"Yes, I know that you would. What I do I shall do for
+you. I am driven to it. There is no other way out, my
+darling!" I kissed her and rushed from the room.
+
+The time for indecision was at an end. As long as the
+creature threatened my own prospects and my honor there
+might be a question as to what I should do. But now,
+when Agatha--my innocent Agatha--was endangered, my
+duty lay before me like a turnpike road. I had no
+weapon, but I never paused for that. What weapon
+should I need, when I felt every muscle quivering with
+the strength of a frenzied man? I ran through the
+streets, so set upon what I had to do that I was only
+dimly conscious of the faces of friends whom I met--
+dimly conscious also that Professor Wilson met me,
+running with equal precipitance in the opposite
+direction. Breathless but resolute I reached the house
+and rang the bell. A white cheeked maid opened the
+door, and turned whiter yet when she saw the face that
+looked in at her.
+
+"Show me up at once to Miss Penclosa," I demanded.
+
+"Sir," she gasped, "Miss Penclosa died this afternoon
+at half-past three!"
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Parasite, by Arthur Conan Doyle
+
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