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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Intermere, by William Alexander Taylor
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Intermere
-
-Author: William Alexander Taylor
-
-Release Date: October 2, 2016 [EBook #53193]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK INTERMERE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Ralph and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
-images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note:
-
- Italic text is denoted by _underscores_.
- Punctuation and possible typographical errors have been changed.
- Archaic and variable spelling have been preserved.
- The Table of Contents has been added by the transcriber.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- Page
-
- CHAPTER I
- The tourist lost in mid-ocean is mysteriously introduced
- into Intermere, and meets the first citizen and other chief
- officials. 10
-
- CHAPTER II
- Xamas, the first citizen, explains the polity and principles
- governing the Commonwealth and promoting the interests of all
- the people of Intermere. 30
-
- CHAPTER III
- Maros places Anderton in communication with his mother, and
- dissipates his superstitious ideas and otherwise enlightens him
- as to the possibilities of science. 54
-
- CHAPTER IV
- A trip by air and land and water through the provinces, cities,
- hamlets and gardens, with matchless beauty and enjoyment on
- every hand. 73
-
- CHAPTER V
- The philosophy of life, and the faculty of its enjoyment as
- personified in the persons and vocations of the entertainers. 95
-
- CHAPTER VI
- The secret of Intermere partially revealed to Anderton, and
- when he least expects it he is restored to his home and kindred,
- much to his regret. 119
-
- CHAPTER VII
- Le envoi. 148
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- INTERMERE.
-
- _BY
- WILLIAM
- ALEXANDER
- TAYLOR,_
-
- COLUMBUS, OHIO.
-
- 1901 - - - 1902
-
- THE XX. CENTURY PUB. CO.
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT BY
- WM. A. TAYLOR,
- 1901.
-
-
-
-
- THIS IS THE STRANGE AND REMARKABLE STORY, IN SUBSTANCE, AND LARGELY IN
- DETAIL, AS NARRATED BY GILES HENRY ANDERTON, JOURNALIST AND AMERICAN
- TOURIST.
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
- THE TOURIST LOST IN MID-OCEAN IS MYSTERIOUSLY INTRODUCED INTO
- INTERMERE, AND MEETS THE FIRST CITIZEN AND OTHER CHIEF OFFICIALS.
-
-
-
-
-I.
-
-THE MISTLETOE.
-
-
-The Mistletoe, staunch, trim and buoyant, steamed across the equator
-under the glare of a midday sun from a fleckless sky, and began to
-ascend toward the antarctic circle.
-
-Three days later we came in sight of a great bank of fog or mist, which
-stood like a gray wall of stone across the entire horizon, plunged into
-it and the sun disappeared--disappeared forever to all except one of
-the gay and careless crew and passengers.
-
-For days, as was shown by the ship's chronometers, we steamed slowly on
-our course, surrounded by an inky midnight, instinct with an oppressive
-and fearsome calm. As we approached the fortieth parallel of south
-latitude a remarkable change set in. The deathly calm was suddenly
-broken by the rush of mighty and boisterous winds, sweeping now from
-one point of the compass, and then suddenly veering to another,
-churning up the waters and spinning the Mistletoe round and round like
-a top.
-
-In the midst of the terror and confusion, heightened by the unheeded
-commands of the officers, a glittering sheeny bolt, like a coruscating
-column of steel, dropped straight from the zenith, striking the
-gyrating Mistletoe amidships.
-
-There was a deafening report, the air was filled with serpentine lines
-of flame, followed simultaneously by the dull explosion of the boilers,
-the hissing of escaping steam, the groaning of cordage and machinery,
-the lurching of the vessel as the water poured in apparently from a
-score of openings, a shuddering vibration of all its parts, and then,
-amid cries and prayers and imprecations, the wrecked vessel shot like
-a plummet to the bottom.
-
-I felt myself being dragged down to the immeasurable watery depths,
-confused with roaring sounds and oppressed with terrors indescribable
-and horrible. The descent seemed miles and miles. Then I felt myself
-slowly rising toward the surface, followed by legions of submarine
-monsters of grotesque shapes and terrifying aspects.
-
-With accelerated motion I approached the surface and, shooting like a
-cork above the now calm sea, fortunately fell upon a piece of floating
-wreckage. Looking upward as I lay upon it, I saw the blue sky and
-the brilliant stars far overhead. The fierce winds and inky darkness
-and blackness of the night were disappearing beyond the northeastern
-horizon.
-
-I tried to concentrate my scattered thoughts and piece out the awful
-catastrophe that had befallen the ship and my companions, but the
-effort was too great a strain and I ceased to think--perhaps I ceased
-to exist.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I seemed to be passing through a vague twilight of sentient existence.
-Thought was rudimentary with me, if, indeed, there were any thoughts.
-They were mere sensations, perhaps, or impressions imperfectly shaped,
-but I remember them now as being so delightful, that I prayed, in
-a feeble way, that I might never be awakened from them. And then
-gradually the senses of sight, hearing, and full physical and mental
-existence returned to me.
-
-At length I was able to determine that I lay on something like a
-hammock on the deck of a smoothly gliding vessel. Turning my head first
-to the right and then to the left, I imagined that I was indeed in
-Paradise, only the reality before me was so infinitely more beautiful
-than the most vivid poetic descriptions I had ever read of the longed
-for heaven of endless peace and happiness. But this could not be the
-Paradise of the disembodied souls, for I realized I was there in all my
-physical personal being.
-
-I was sailing through a smooth, shimmering sea, thickly studded with
-matchlessly beautiful islands. They lay in charming profusion and
-picturesque irregularity of contour on the right and the left, each a
-distinct type of beauty and perfection. I could make out houses and
-gardens and farms and people on each of them.
-
-Looking to the right I saw what appeared to be a mainland with majestic
-and softly modulated mountains and broad valleys, running from the
-distance down to the sands of the seashore. Above the mountains shone
-the unobscured sun, but not the burning orb I had known of old in the
-lower latitudes. It kissed me with a tenderness that was entrancing,
-filling my weakened frame with new life.
-
-The breezes toyed with my tangled and unkempt locks, fanned my brow
-and whispered such things to me as did the zephyrs when I stood upon
-the threshold of guileless boyhood.
-
-Finally I was able to frame a consecutive thought, in the interrogative
-form, and it was this:
-
-"Where am I? Is this the Heaven my mother taught me to seek?"
-
-I had as yet seen no one aboard the ship, or whatever it was, although
-I had heard the hum of what seemed to be conversation from some point
-beyond the line of vision. Again I silently repeated my mental question.
-
-As if in response to my unuttered query, a being, or a man, of striking
-and pleasing appearance came to my side and laying his hand softly
-on my forehead, addressed me in a tongue at once familiar but wholly
-unknown, as paradoxical as that may sound.
-
-I remained silent and he again addressed me.
-
-I did not feel disconcerted or awed by his appearance and said: "I
-speak French and German imperfectly; English with some fluency."
-
-His rejoinder was in English: "You speak English, but are not an
-Englishman except by partial descent. You are an American. Not a native
-of the eastern portion of the continent, but from west of the range of
-mountains which separate the Atlantic seaboard from the great central
-valley of the continent. You are from the tributary Ohio valley, and
-are, therefore, better fitted to comprehend what you will be permitted
-to see and hear, than the average habitant of the eastern seashore,
-especially of its great cities."
-
-You can possibly imagine, in a faint way, my unbounded surprise to be
-thus addressed by one who was more than a stranger to me.
-
-"You asked yourself two questions. I will answer the first: You are in
-Intermere."
-
-"And where is Intermere?"
-
-"It lies at your feet and expands on every hand about you. Let that
-suffice.
-
-"No, this is not the Heaven to which your mother taught you to aspire.
-It is a part of your own planet, inhabited by beings sprung from the
-same parent stock as yourself, but differing from all other nations
-and peoples; a people who are many steps nearer to the higher and
-better life, and is, by comparison, the Paradise or Eden that masks the
-gateway of the true Heaven, in a sphere beyond in the great Universe."
-
-He motioned to some one, and two persons appeared with refreshments.
-
-"Partake," he said, "and renew your exhausted physical and mental
-powers."
-
-The proffered refreshments and cordials seemed to be the acme of the
-gustatorial dreams of my former life: the suggestion of other things,
-yet unlike them. After I had partaken, a new life thrilled every nerve
-and fibre of my physical being and pulsated through every mental
-faculty.
-
-I arose from my recumbent position and was conducted forward upon the
-softly carpeted deck and presented to a score of others who received me
-with every token of marked respect, unkempt and bedraggled as I was.
-They were men of unusual physique, a composite of the highest types of
-the human race I had ever seen or read of. Each possessed a distinctive
-mien and personality, as individuals, yet presenting a harmonious
-whole, taken collectively.
-
-Xamas, as I afterward learned to know him, when I saw him presiding as
-First Citizen over this wonderful people, said to his fellows:
-
-"This is Giles Henry Anderton, a citizen of the interior of the great
-Republic of North America. I have fathomed him and know that he is
-worthy our respect and considerate treatment. He has dreamed longingly
-of the things whereof we know, and which he has never even recognized
-as a possibility. It will be our mission to show him the grand
-possibilities of human life before we restore him to his kindred and
-friends.
-
-"Not understanding that Nature had lain all treasures worth possessing
-in lavish profusion at his feet in his own land, and guided by merely
-commercial instincts, he sought for paltry gold in distant lands and
-seas, and, escaping the vortex of death, has been placed in our hands
-for some great purpose. He will be addressed in the English tongue
-until it is determined whether he is to be admitted to ours."
-
-This was spoken in a language absolutely unknown to me, and not a word
-of which I was capable of framing, and yet I understood it as fully as
-though spoken in English. So great was my amazement that he should know
-my nativity, my name, my hopes, my ambitions and my purposes, I could
-scarcely reply to the salutations extended to me.
-
-"Do not be surprised," said Xamas, reading my inmost thoughts, "at what
-I say, nor need you ask how I became possessed of your history. All
-that will be made plain to you hereafter."
-
-Turning to one who stood near, he said: "Conduct Mr. Anderton to my
-apartments and see that he has proper 'tendance and is supplied with
-suitable clothing."
-
-With that I was conducted below to a charming suite of apartments lying
-amidships, bathed, was massaged and shaven by an attendant, as lofty
-of mien as Xamas himself, and furnished with clothing suitable to the
-company with which I was to mingle, not more unlike the workmanship
-of my American tailor than his would be unlike the handiwork of his
-French, English or German fellow-craftsmen, and yet so unlike all of
-them as to fit perfectly into the ensemble of the habiliments of my new
-friends.
-
-The ship, or Merocar, as I subsequently learned was its general
-designation, was a marvellous affair, unlike any water craft I had
-ever seen. Its length was fully one hundred and fifty feet, and its
-greatest breadth thirty, gently sloping both to stem and stern, where
-it rounded in perfect curves. The upper, or proper deck, extended over
-all. The lower deck was a succession of suites and apartments, richly
-but artistically furnished, opening from either side into a wide and
-roomy aisle. All the work was so light, both the woods, and the metals,
-that it seemed fragile and unsafe, but its great strength was shown by
-the fact that none of its parts yielded to the weight or pressure upon
-it.
-
-There was not a mast, a spar nor a sail on board. The light and richly
-wrought hammocks swung on lithe and polished frames, apparently
-intended to sustain the weight of fifty pounds, yet capable of
-sustaining five or ten times as much. They were unprotected by
-awnings. Sunlight rather than shade was apparently the desideratum.
-
-In some unaccountable way the long and lithe Merocar was propelled
-at any desired rate of speed, and was turned, as on a pivot, at the
-will of the man who acted as captain, pilot and engineer. There was
-no steam, no furnace belching black volumes of smoke, no whirr of
-machinery, no strain or creaking as the craft shot, sometimes swiftly,
-sometimes slowly, through the rippling water. Even motion was not
-perceptible to the physical senses.
-
-The captain-pilot-engineer did not tug at a wheel in his railed-in
-apartment, elevated a few feet above the center of the upper deck. He
-placed his hand upon the table before him and it shot forward with
-incredible speed; he touched another point and it stood still, without
-jar or vibration. A movement of the hand, and the prow of the Merocar
-swept gracefully from north to east in less than its length, to pass
-between two beautiful islets or round some sharp promontory. Hundreds
-of other Merocars, differing in size and form, were visible.
-
-How they were propelled was so incomprehensible to me that I attributed
-it to supernatural agencies. I learned that it was a simpler process
-than the utilization of oars, or sails, or steam, which the progenitors
-of these mariners had abandoned before the days of Tyre and Sidon and
-Memphis and Thebes.
-
-Rejoining the company, I endeavored to carry on a conversation with
-them, but I fear I made little headway, so deeply was I absorbed in the
-wonderful panorama that lay before me.
-
-Raising my eyes from the shimmering, island-studded and beauty-bestrewn
-sea to the blue above, I uttered an ejaculation of surprise at what I
-beheld. There I saw "the airy navies" of which Tennyson had written
-under the spell of an inspiration which must have been wafted from
-this unknown land, but marred by the hostile environments of his own.
-
-Every quarter of the heavens disclosed graceful barques sailing hither
-and thither, passing and repassing each other, gathering in groups,
-filled with people, many of them holding mute communications with
-my companions, as though friend were talking with friend, without
-utterance, sign or gesture.
-
-"I am beyond the confines of earth," I said to Xamas. "This is a higher
-and spiritual sphere, and I am not Giles Henry Anderton, but his
-disembodied spirit."
-
-"You are at fault. You are within the mundane sphere, but with a
-people infinitely in advance of yours--a people who, by evolutionary
-processes, have unlocked a large proportion of the secrets of Nature
-and the Universe, and turned them to ennobling ends, not to selfish
-purposes. These facts will come to you in time, and you will be
-convinced.
-
-"See," he continued, "the city is slowly coming into view across the
-horizon."
-
-My glance followed to the point indicated, and I saw a city of
-ineffable magnificence, softly rising from the bosom of the deep, as
-though obedient to the wand of a master magician.
-
-Soon I could see that it swept around the broad semicircle of the bay,
-many miles in extent and artistically perfect in contour, the land
-rising gently from the strand into a grand and massive elevation, cut
-into great squares and circles, and crowned with noble buildings, great
-and small, in a style of architecture which embraced all the beauties
-and none of the blemishes of European and American creations. It was
-the full and perfect flower of the crude buds of other lands.
-
-For a time my companions remained silent as I contemplated the
-entrancing scene and drank in its beauties. Then Xamas interrupted me:
-
-"Yesterday the allied armies of the Western Nations entered the capital
-of China, and are now bivouacked in the Forbidden City, from which the
-Empress, Emperor and Court have fled."
-
-I shook my head incredulously:
-
-"When I sailed from New York six months ago there was no thought of
-war between any of the Western Nations and the Chinese Empire. Russia
-may have invaded one of its provinces by way of reprisal. That is a
-possibility."
-
-"Great events focus and transpire within six months. What I tell you is
-true. The hostile standards of England, Russia, Germany, France, Japan,
-and your own Republic, which has departed from its wise traditions,
-flout the Yellow Dragon in the precincts of his own citadel and temple.
-Is not this true, Maros?" turning to one who looked the prophet and
-seer.
-
-"Aye, indeed, and the best loved of this man's kindred fell in the
-assault. He will know if I am permitted to name him."
-
-"Shall he be permitted?"
-
-"Freely."
-
-"Albert Marshall, a sergeant of Marines, your playmate and foster
-brother, the next beloved of your mother, the son of her deceased
-sister; your mother reared him as her own son, and she knows, as
-yet, nothing of the disaster which has befallen you nor the loss of
-her foster son. He was of your own age, and like you tall, athletic
-and vigorous, with fair hair and complexion and blue eyes, the very
-counterpart of yourself--a man fit for a higher destiny than butchery."
-
-"O Albert! O unhappy, stricken mother!" I cried in agony.
-
-"Revered sir, I believe your words. They are absolutely convincing.
-Tell me how you came into possession of this strange information."
-
-"In time; but be patient. Lament not for the dead; sorrow not for the
-living. We must presently debark. Come to my garden tomorrow. It lies
-within the shadow of the Temple of Thought, Memory and Hope. My home
-is unpretentious, but you will be welcome. There is need that you
-should come. Tomorrow your mother will be apprised of the death of your
-kinsman; almost simultaneously will come rumors of your shipwreck. She
-must be assured of your safety within twenty-four hours, if you hope to
-meet her again."
-
-"But how can I com----"
-
-"Peace, patience; sufficient unto tomorrow is the labor and issue
-thereof."
-
-The Merocar gently ran into its slip, and we debarked, Xamas carrying
-me to his home in a vehicle of strange design and mysterious power of
-propulsion.
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
- XAMAS, THE FIRST CITIZEN, EXPLAINS THE POLITY AND PRINCIPLES GOVERNING
- THE COMMONWEALTH AND PROMOTING THE INTERESTS OF ALL THE PEOPLE OF
- INTERMERE.
-
-
-
-
-II.
-
-THE FIRST CITIZEN.
-
-
-I shall so far anticipate as to say that the city in which I found
-myself was known as the Greater City, in contradistinction of the
-Lesser City, lying at the opposite end of the inland sea or mere.
-
-This body of water extends in an oval shape or form north and south,
-its length being approximately four hundred miles, and its greatest
-width at the latitudinal center two hundred miles, gradually narrowing
-toward the opposite extremes, where it gently expands into rounded
-bays, forming the extended water fronts of both cities.
-
-The Greater City was clearly the original seat of the present
-civilization, from which it extended southward along both shores until
-it met at the southern apex and became the Lesser City. I was able,
-however, to distinguish but little, if any, difference between the two.
-
-The twelve hundred miles of shore line is studded with farms, gardens,
-towns, villages, hamlets, private residences and public edifices,
-extending over highland and plain, as far as I was permitted to see,
-toward the outer boundaries, the location and character of which I can
-not even conjecture.
-
-Many rivers, limpid and sparkling, coming through level and spreading
-valleys, and from almost every point, contribute their waters to the
-mere.
-
-The current of the mere is phenomenal--not violent, but distinctively
-marked. Twice within every twenty-four hours it sweeps entirely
-around the oval, affecting one-half of the mere as it moves. With the
-early hours of the morning and evening it sweeps from north to south
-throughout the eastern, and with noon and midnight through the western
-half of the sea.
-
-This current may be described as anti- or trans-tidal; that is, the
-general water level falls or is lowered on the side where the current
-runs, and rises correspondingly in the opposite half.
-
-The effect is this: From 6 a. m. to 12 noon and from 6 p. m. to
-midnight, throughout the eastern half, the tide runs in from those
-rivers falling in from the east, and correspondingly rises and moves
-inland in those falling in from the west, and then the current flows
-north on the western side from 12 noon to 6 p. m. and from midnight to
-6 a. m., so that for half the time the rivers on either side ebb or
-flow into the sea, and for the other twelve hours rise and flow to the
-interior, east or west as the case may be.
-
-The effect of this is singular indeed, or it was to me. The rivers
-appear to run inland from the sea a part of the time, and then run from
-the landward into the sea for twelve hours, or an equal period, while
-the sea itself appears to be a subdivided river forever flowing in an
-elongated circle along the opposite shores.
-
-The description of the Egyptian high priest, carefully guarded by his
-successors for nine thousand years, then revealed to Solon, and by
-Solon narrated to Plato, and by Plato transmitted to the modern world,
-must have had its basis here. Is not this the Atlantis which enthralled
-the Egyptian sage, philosopher and priest more than ten cycles ago?
-
-To the Egyptian the ever-flowing rivers returned to their common source
-through valleys and landscapes of ravishing beauty, renewing themselves
-forever. They laved the feet of cities, irrigated the endless
-succession of farms, gardens and residential demesnes, and mirrored the
-mountains, clothed with perpetual verdure and crowned with the stately
-monuments of genius, wisdom, art, civilization, learning and human
-progress, a century of centuries agone.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have spoken of the singular vehicle in which, with Xamas, I left
-the pier and ascended the gentle slope into the city. It might be
-likened, faintly however, to the best types of our automobiles. But the
-comparison would be much like that between the ox-cart and the landau.
-
-It more resembled a double-seated chair set upon several small elastic
-wheels, scarcely visible beneath the rich trappings which dropped
-almost to the smooth street, as scrupulously clean as a ballroom floor.
-
-Xamas pushed a tiny lever, almost hidden in the rich upholstery of the
-arm-rest, and it moved swiftly and noiselessly forward without jar or
-oscillation. A delicate and a deftly concealed spring guided it along
-the graceful curves of the streets, or sent it at a right angle when
-the streets crossed at tangents.
-
-An adjustment lowered the speed to a strolling pace; another movement
-gave a high speed, while the reversal of the lever brought us to a
-standstill that I might silently admire some stately architectural pile
-or revel in the contemplation of some lovely private home.
-
-As we journeyed Xamas said: "Ask with all frankness such questions as
-you desire. Wisdom is the child of patience, so be neither impatient,
-if the answer is not immediate, or if it is at first incomprehensible.
-It will be some time before your understanding can grasp all that you
-see or all that you hear.
-
-"Your people undertake the impossible feat of putting a gallon of grain
-into a pint vase. Result: The vase is crushed and broken and the grain
-is spilled and lost. The human mind is the vase; Knowledge is the
-grain, from which Wisdom will germinate. The vase expands by a process
-too subtle for your comprehension. To crowd it beyond its capacity
-with the idea of expanding its receptiveness is a dangerous and fatal
-folly. That is why mental dwarfs multiply and mental giants diminish in
-proportion to the increase of your people. Two things are uppermost in
-your mind:
-
-"First, you believe you are in a supernatural sphere and surrounded by
-a supernatural people. In this you are absolutely at fault. Accept this
-assurance without reservation. You will tarry with us long enough to
-fully comprehend that fact. You will see nothing during your stay that
-can not be accounted for on natural and scientific grounds.
-
-"Second, you are consumed with curiosity to know how I propel this
-Medocar and make it obey my every wish, so to speak. The full
-explanation of that I shall delegate to another, who will acquaint you
-with our mechanisms and the principle that moves them.
-
-"When you have patiently and intelligently listened to him you will
-know that we have achieved what your wisest and deepest and least
-appreciated thinkers have but vaguely dreamed of and hoped for during
-long and intermittent periods. But here we are at my residence. Let us
-enter and I will introduce you to my family and friends."
-
-The Medocar halted with the last word in front of a two-storied,
-many-gabled house with broad verandas, situated in the center of
-spacious grounds, beautified with trees and shrubs and flowers and
-bubbling fountains.
-
-Ushering me into a spacious reception hall, he presented me to his wife
-and children--grown-up sons and daughters--and then to a number of
-men and women who had called to greet him, some on social affairs and
-some on matters of public business, concluding with: "Mr. Anderton is
-a castaway from the other side of the world, who is entitled to our
-sympathy and care."
-
-If my newly made acquaintances were curious as to my being, personality
-and history, they had masterful control of their feelings. In all
-things they treated me with the most refined courtesy and gentle
-consideration. They did not embarrass me with expressions of pity or
-consolatory suggestions.
-
-They addressed me in my own language, made me feel that I was welcome
-to their society. Each extended an invitation to me to visit them at
-their homes, some of them in distant provinces, and these invitations
-were gratefully accepted. There could be no mistaking the deep
-sincerity they implied.
-
-After an hour's pleasant conversation on many and varied subjects with
-my host and his guests, Xamas led me to a suite of apartments intended
-for my use, and said:
-
-"Attendants will provide you with refreshments and ascertain your
-every want. Rest and fully recuperate. Later in the day I shall explain
-to you the polity of our Commonwealth, in which I perceive you are
-deeply interested."
-
-What a remarkable man! He seemed to read my inmost thoughts.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As the sun was hanging like a softly beaming lamp above a cone-like
-mountain beyond the western line of the Greater City, Xamas and I were
-alone upon an open veranda, overgrown with clambering vines of many
-kinds in full bloom, radiant with exquisite colors and shades. He
-abruptly said to me:
-
-"This Commonwealth is a pure democracy. Titles and offices confer no
-merely meretricious distinctions. They temporarily impose additional
-responsibilities, duties and burdens; the chief distinction of the
-citizen is conferred by labor, for labor is honorable and praiseworthy
-above all things else. The second is justice. When and where all men
-labor and all men are just, there can be no wrong, no sin, no evil.
-Where there is labor and not justice, the strong enjoy, the weak suffer
-and endure, opulence flourishes for the few, pain and poverty afflict
-the many. Where there is neither labor nor justice, where might makes
-right, barbarism in its worst form curses the land.
-
-"The ascent from the third condition to the first is a highway leading
-through the second, where labor is oppressed and justice is a stranger,
-until at last justice and labor join hands and produce a happy and a
-great people. I touch only on the three cardinal points. The process of
-ascent is slow and purely evolutionary--an evolution that constantly
-conforms itself to ever-changing environments.
-
-"Your own so-called Declaration of Independence, which so many of your
-people do not care to comprehend, was drawn from the keystone of our
-own national arch--Human Equality, the climax of human civilization
-and happiness.
-
-"Thousands of years before the feet of the more modern Europeans trode
-the soil of your continent we had reached this point, and discovered
-that we had but reached the initial period of our usefulness and higher
-destiny.
-
-"It required centuries to expel first the animal instincts, and then
-the barbarian nature from our race, not by savage repression and
-ruthless aggression and slaughter, but by the study and application of
-the laws of Nature and the Universe, which at last ultimated in the
-principle and entity of Brotherhood and the equality of all men--not
-equality of stature, mental equipment or material endowment, but the
-equality of common rights and common opportunities. Labor and Justice
-maintain and preserve this equality and Brotherhood.
-
-"Thousands of years before Magna Charta we had founded our
-Commonwealth on the great principles of human equality and the right of
-life, liberty and the pursuit of rational happiness, and my ancestors,
-comprehending the profound laws of Nature unknown to yours, wafted
-to them these precious seed, trusting that they would fall on genial
-and generous soil, and the inspiration thus transmitted through the
-agency of our progenitors was inscribed by yours upon rescript of your
-national autonomy.
-
-"Its growth, once so promising, has become painful and pitiable. The
-upas of human greed and selfishness withers it, and the prophecy
-of bloom and fruitage is unfulfilled. The animal instinct and the
-barbarous appetite which reaches after the gaud and tinsel of excessive
-wealth and accumulation, the two aggressive forms of selfishness
-combined in one, hold civilization and human progress in check, and may
-in your case, as in a thousand others, lead back to the fen and morass
-of primal barbarism.
-
-"No, this is not the Paradise of Socialism, as you call it," said he,
-interpreting the thread of my thought. "That is but an idle dream, the
-recrudescence of primal, undeveloped and undesirable conditions, which
-occasionally flashes through irresolute minds, unfitted to solve the
-great problem of human existence and happiness.
-
-"This is the land of absolute individuality as well as absolute
-equality. Every man who reaches maturity becomes the individual owner
-of property in one or more of its forms, the foundation being the soil
-for residence or productive purposes, or both, at his option. All lands
-are subject to individual ownership, within clearly defined limits, the
-public domain being held in reserve to meet new demands of increasing
-population. It is the common property of all until it passes into
-individual ownership, to be used for agricultural or other purposes,
-under fixed rules, a specific proportion of the product, or its
-equivalent, being turned into the common treasury, to prosecute public
-improvements and for other public purposes.
-
-"This stands in lieu of taxation in other countries, and it is only
-on rare occasions that it is necessary to supplement it with a direct
-tax on the people, except as to the municipal and provincial taxes for
-local purposes, in which case each man of mature age, or twenty-five
-years, pays the one hundredth part of his earnings monthly into the
-treasury, the sum thus paid being evenly divided between the treasuries
-of the province and municipal division. When a surplus equal to the
-previous year's expenditures accumulates this tax is remitted for the
-ensuing year.
-
-"A man may own a home and a separate farm or garden, or business or
-manufacturing site; nor may he engage in more than one business or
-employment, except the public service, at the same time. He may change
-from one line of business to another, but may not buy or sell real
-estate for mere speculation. He may not acquire property other than his
-earnings until he reaches maturity, and designs to marry and become the
-head of a family. If his intent fail, or remains unfulfilled for three
-years, the home thus acquired becomes public property, and may be sold
-to another who assumes the marital relation, and the proceeds divided
-equally between the municipal treasury or bank and the former owner.
-
-"Residences may be exchanged, as may farms, gardens, business sites
-and factories, including the line of business or manufacturing, but
-neither may be alienated by the owner, except with the approval of
-the Custodian of the Municipality upon a satisfactory showing of the
-reasons therefor.
-
-"All persons of both sexes must take up an occupation at the age of
-twenty, and continue therein, or in some other occupation, until sixty
-years of age, unless incapacitated, and deposit in the municipal bank
-or treasury at least one-twentieth of their monthly earnings. At sixty
-they may retire from active life, and their accumulations are subject
-to their wants and demands under salutary rules. The residue, along
-with their other personal property, is distributed pro rata among their
-direct descendants, and if there be none, in is turned into the general
-treasury of the Commonwealth.
-
-"Women are entitled to their earnings, but may not own real estate,
-the policy being that men shall be the home-makers and women the
-home-keepers. The wife is entitled to the prevailing wage from her
-husband for attending to his household affairs, in addition to the
-other provisions for household matters and economies which he must
-make.
-
-"Under our system there is neither opulence nor poverty in the
-land. Great wealth has no existence with us, and therefore has no
-allurements. Charity is not a gaunt pack-horse, overloaded with
-offerings which come after the eleventh hour. The equality of
-opportunity closes every inlet to the wolves of Hunger and Poverty
-which ravage other lands amid the riotous revelry of the unjustly
-opulent. We have had, at intervals, persons who rebelled, through
-recurrent heredity perhaps, against our admirable system, and to them
-we administer lex dernier--they are transported to some other land, by
-methods known only to ourselves, there to mingle with a new people,
-with but a faint conception of their nativity. They constitute those
-mysterious beings found in all other countries, whose origin is forever
-hidden, and as a rule they are excellent and strangely wise citizens,
-for they are permitted to carry with them much of the knowledge, with
-some of the wisdom, of their ancestry."
-
-I shall abbreviate much that Xamas gave in great detail. From him
-I learned that every male is entitled to participate in all public
-affairs, including the right of franchise. All are eligible to office.
-The Commonwealth is composed of twenty-four provinces, each province
-being composed of twelve municipal divisions.
-
-The elective officers are, in their order: 1. First Citizen of the
-Commonwealth. 2. Chief Citizen of the Province. 3. Custodian of the
-Municipality.
-
-The First Citizen is the executive head of the Commonwealth, serves
-but a single year, and is not eligible to re-election. The Chief
-Citizens, or executives of the provinces, constitute his Board of
-Counselors to determine all matters affecting the public welfare and to
-select the various Curators of the divisional interests of the entire
-Commonwealth. They meet to perform these duties twice each year,
-alternating between the Greater and Lesser Cities.
-
-The Chief Citizens are the executive heads of the Provinces, the
-Custodians of the Municipalities constituting their respective Boards
-of Counsellors. They, too, meet twice each year to consider and
-determine matters of provincial interest, and to decide all questions
-of difference which may come up from the Municipalities. Their tenure
-of office is two years, and they are not eligible to re-election.
-
-The Custodians are the sole heads of the Municipalities, and decide all
-questions arising therein, and appeal lies from their decisions to the
-Provincial Board of Counsellors, who determine the question finally.
-They hold the office three years, and may not be re-elected. The above
-officials appoint all the necessary clerical and other assistants
-necessary to carry out the duties imposed on them.
-
-None of the elective officers receive salaries, but are allowed out of
-their respective treasuries 20 media per day for all necessary expenses.
-
-The media is equivalent to 20 cents American currency, and is the
-unit of exchange. It is divided into four equal parts, the coin being
-designated quatro, while a third coin, equivalent to 5 media, is
-denominated cinque, so that the three coins are quatro, silver; media,
-gold; and cinque, gold and platinum in equal parts, of nearly equal
-size and weight, representing five, twenty, and one hundred cents of
-our currency, and nearly the size of an American quarter-dollar.
-
-Twenty media is the wage of the master artisan, and 15 media the wage
-of all other males. Females receive a wage of from 8 to 15 media. The
-master artisan's wage is the compensation of all official assistants
-in whatever capacity, as well as the expense allowance of the actual
-officials.
-
-In addition to the above officials of the Commonwealth there are:
-Curator of Revenues; Curator of Works and Polity; Curator of Learning
-and Progress; Curator of Scientific Research and Application, and
-Curator of Useful Mechanical Devices. Their duties are suggested by
-their titles. They receive the expense allowance, no salaries, are
-chosen for terms of seven years, ineligible to a second term, by the
-First Citizen and his Counsellors, and appoint their own subordinates
-and assistants.
-
-There is a Curator of Revenue appointed by the Chief Citizen of each
-Province to care for the provincial, and by the Municipal Custodian to
-care for the Municipal revenues.
-
-The marriageable age of men is from 25 to 30, and women from 20 to
-25. The offspring of the marriage relation varies from two to six,
-seldom less than two, or more than six, the average being four, hence
-population increases slowly, while the great majority live from 80 to
-100 years, retaining both physical and mental faculties to the last.
-
-"There is no mercenary incentive to hold office," said Xamas, "and it
-is absolutely open to all, and men leave it, not with regret, but with
-the consciousness of having performed a necessary duty and service.
-Three months hence I will leave the chief office of the State, and
-resume my occupation as mechanical engineer under one with whom I have
-been for a score or more of years. He is now my Secretary, but that is
-nothing unusual. It is a leading part of our history.
-
-"But it is time for rest. You have an important engagement with Maros,
-our Curator of Scientific Research and Application, tomorrow morning,
-and he exacts promptitude."
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
- MAROS PLACES ANDERTON IN COMMUNICATION WITH HIS MOTHER, AND DISSIPATES
- HIS SUPERSTITIOUS IDEAS AND OTHERWISE ENLIGHTENS HIM AS TO THE
- POSSIBILITIES OF SCIENCE.
-
-
-
-
-III.
-
-A DAY WITH MAROS.
-
-
-I called on Maros, the Curator of Scientific Research and Application,
-as per appointment, and found him surrounded with everything calculated
-to contribute to the enjoyments of earthly existence. His residence
-differed in many respects from that of Xamas. All its appointments
-and environments were in the most exquisite taste. But this may be
-said, once for all, of every private residence and public edifice in
-Intermere. The taste of architects and occupants differed, but all were
-on lines of beauty, comfort and convenience.
-
-There is no luxury in Intermere, as we use the term. Luxury is a
-merely comparative term in the rest of the world, distinguishing
-those who have much from those who have little or nothing. Here every
-rational taste is gratified in all particulars. The people have clearly
-discovered the hidden springs of Nature's kindly intentions toward man,
-and utilize them at individual and collective will.
-
-"You are prompt," said Maros, seating me in his study. "Let us proceed
-with the matter in which you are interested."
-
-He placed before me a perfectly drawn map of a section of the United
-States, embracing the place of my nativity, and asked me to point out
-the exact vicinity of my mother's home. I found it readily.
-
-"The point you now occupy is the lineal opposite. Turn to the point, or
-direction, you have designated, and direct your concentrated thought
-there. If a responsive impression comes to you, communicate its purport
-to me."
-
-I sat in silent thought a few moments, Maros closely regarding me.
-
-"I am impressed that my mother is prostrated with grief; that she has
-just learned of the death of my kinsman; that rumors of the loss of
-the Mistletoe have reached her, being first cabled from Singapore to
-New York, and from thence transmitted to the press, and that she is
-impressed with the belief that I, too, am dead. I fear that she will
-not survive the double shock."
-
-"Frame such a thought as you would wish impressed upon your mother's
-consciousness and faith, and tell me what follows."
-
-This is the thought I framed: "Mother, I am alive and well in an
-unknown land, surrounded by kind friends, and will ere long return to
-you."
-
-Later to Maros: "I am convinced. My mother has partially recovered from
-the shock. My death would have been the fatal blow. She smiles with
-pious resignation, through the tempest of her grief, and extends her
-arms as if to embrace me. This, however, is wholly an impression; I
-do not see or hear her, but we seem to stand face to face, and both
-realize it."
-
-"Give yourself no further concern, nor seek further communication with
-her until you meet her in person. She knows you are alive and will
-return to her. Nothing she will hear will change that belief."
-
-"Tell me by what divine or celestial power I am thus enabled to project
-my thoughts across unknown seas and continents, and receive responsive
-thoughts. Only supernatural agencies could accomplish this."
-
-"You have what you call the telephone?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You communicate alike with friends and strangers hundreds of miles
-distant in an ordinary tone of voice?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Is that supernatural?"
-
-"No; it is the result of scientific achievement and natural phenomena."
-
-"Would one, coming out of the depths of absolute ignorance of
-scientific achievement, as you call it, regard it as a supernatural
-agency?"
-
-"He undoubtedly would."
-
-"What would you think of his conclusion?"
-
-"That it was the result of superstition."
-
-"And yet you who have just stepped out of the dawn into the full day;
-you who have transmitted uttered thoughts to remote distances through
-a coarse steel or copper wire and received other uttered thoughts in
-return, regard with superstitious awe, as supernatural, what you have
-just experienced. Wherein do you differ from the untutored barbarian?"
-
-I sat in silence.
-
-"The telephone wire is to the thread of sentient thought which may span
-the universe itself, what the horseback mail-rider is to your modern
-methods of communication--what the earliest dawn is to the full day."
-
-Maros explained at full length how he became possessed of the knowledge
-of my identity, family connections and my misfortunes, summing up:
-
-"When you were found in the remote and outer ocean and brought within
-the precincts of Intermere, you were physically unconscious, but still
-possessing partially dormant mental faculties; that is, you continued
-to think feebly and intermittently. We traced your two intermittent
-lines of thought to your mother in America, and to, or rather toward,
-your kinsman at some unknown point. Tracing again to your parent we
-learned that Marshall had accompanied the American expedition to
-China from Manila. Following this clew, we ascertained that he had
-been killed, and that that fact would reach his home in due course,
-as well as the fact that information of the loss of your ship would
-reach America almost simultaneously. What your mother now regards
-as premonitions of impending evil or misfortunes were communications
-with her consciousness, far more refined and perfect than the
-subsequent cable communications, but quite as natural, and in no sense
-supernatural."
-
-"This is indeed amazing!" I exclaimed.
-
-He further said that this was an individual case and purely the
-result of my condition. "We do not seek, as a rule, knowledge of
-individualities in the outside world, but confine our inquiries
-to matters of general moment. We know of the steps of progress,
-retrogression, of savagery and butchery and wrong and oppression which
-dominate an embryotic civilization. Amuse yourself for a time with the
-pictures and tapestries, and I will give you a record of the outer
-world's important matters of yesterday."
-
-He opened a cabinet, and assumed the mien of expectant inquiry and
-meditation. Soon his hands began to move with rhythmic rapidity over
-the curiously inlaid center of the flat surface of the open cabinet.
-At the end of ten or fifteen minutes his manipulations ceased, a
-compartment above noiselessly opened, and eight beautifully printed
-pages, four by six inches, bound in the form of a booklet, fell upon
-the table.
-
-It was printed in characters more graceful than our own Roman letters,
-from which they might have been evolved, or the Roman Alphabet might
-have deteriorated from what appeared before me. The English language
-was not used, and yet I could readily read and comprehend the lines.
-The pages before me comprised a compendium of yesterday's doings of the
-entire world, and included a note of my own case.
-
-They told of all the military operations in China, in the Philippines,
-in South Africa, in the far East and in the remote West; of labor
-troubles in the mining districts of America; the strike of the textile
-operatives on our Atlantic border; the unrest of the Finns and Slavs;
-of plots and counterplots, and political assassination and revolution,
-attempted or accomplished, and the full catalogue of such happenings,
-with now and then a flash of loftier civilization.
-
-"What you read is being reproduced in every divisional municipality of
-the Commonwealth, with such a number of instantaneous duplications as
-may be required for the perusal and study of all who desire to compare
-tinseled and ornamented barbarism with true civilization.
-
-"Selfishness, oppression, slaughter, pride, conquest, greed, vanity,
-self-adulation and base passions make up ninety-nine one-hundredths
-of this record. What a commentary on such humanity! To it love,
-brotherhood and mutual helpfulness are too trivial for serious
-consideration.
-
-"The nations and their rulers, differing somewhat as to degree, stand
-for organized and dominant wrong, based primarily on selfishness--the
-exact reverse of the conditions that should exist."
-
-"This," said I, still contemplating the pages, "compares with our
-newspapers."
-
-"As two objects may compare with each other as to bulk or form,
-but in no other respect. This is to promote wisdom. The newspaper
-to feed vicious or depraved appetite, as well as to convey useful
-information. This is the cold, colorless, passionless record of facts
-and information, from which knowledge and wisdom may be deduced to
-some extent. Your newspaper is the opposite, taken in its entirety. It
-consists of the inextricable mingling together of the good and the bad,
-of the useful and the useless, and the elevating and the degrading,
-the latter always in the ascendant.
-
-"It foments discord instead of promoting profitable discussion, which
-is the bridle-path leading into the highway of wisdom. It is built upon
-the cornerstone of selfishness, the other name of commercialism, and is
-thoroughly imbued with the spirit of greed.
-
-"It caters to the public demand regardless of the spirit or the
-depravity behind it. 'Quatro! Quatro! Quatro!' is the burden of
-its cry, and for quatro it is willing to lead the world forward or
-backward, as the case may be. It has been growing in stature and
-retrograding in usefulness for fifty years throughout the world, in all
-save increasing facilities, and avidity for pandering to the worst and
-most uncivilized propensities of mankind, and it will probably continue
-to grow worse for a century to come.
-
-"Fifty years ago it was blindly controversial, but there was enough of
-reason in its discussions to give hope for the future. Now it is a
-mere mental and moral refuse car, and its so-called religious form is
-devoted only to a more refined class of refuse, if that expression is
-allowable.
-
-"As a whole, it represents classes and not the whole community;
-prejudices, and not principles; it advocates selfish, not general
-interests; it panders to petty jealousies; it indulges in tittle-tattle
-in mere wantonness, and has no aim save the grossly materialistic."
-
-I winced under his fierce arraignment and invective, for I am a
-newspaper man myself.
-
-"I know that I have touched you in a sensitive spot, but I speak of
-the newspaper in a general sense. There are worthy exceptions, despite
-all the untoward environments; but, unfortunately, their influence
-is limited. Your masses read and re-read accounts of how two beings
-beat each other out of human semblance on a wager, and pass, unread
-and unnoticed, the best thoughts of your greatest scientists and
-profoundest thinkers. It is not the canaille who do this alone, but
-your statesmen and rulers, men of large affairs and men of the learned
-professions."
-
-I turned the conversation, saying:
-
-"It is incomprehensible to me how you produced this record of events in
-so short a time and without apparent mechanical or physical effort."
-
-"Doubtless, but not more incomprehensible to you than your linotype
-machines and perfecting press would have been to Gutenberg. And your
-discoveries and inventions would be no more incomprehensible to him
-than would his types and crude multiplying press be to the papyrus
-writers, scriveners and hieroglyphants of the earlier world.
-
-"The transition from the work of the papyrians to the achievements of
-the Intermereans is the result of that evolution known as scientific
-research into Nature's beneficence, in which mechanical invention is
-a mere incident, and its application to a high, unselfish and noble
-purpose, instead of selfish, base and ignoble ends.
-
-"We had outstripped your present ideals ages before the Chinese began
-block printing, or Gutenberg fashioned his types and press. Both
-these, as well as your own advanced mechanism, as well as your every
-other great achievement in science and research, were the result of
-the thought-seed sown or diffused from this land, but which fell on
-absolutely barren soil, or only grew in puny or defective forms, far
-short of ripening or maturity.
-
-"Your Franklin comprehended the supreme and all-pervading power and
-genius of the Universe, the knowledge of and the power to utilize which
-makes man godlike, but the dense ignorance and gross materialism of his
-day prevented him from enlightening his people.
-
-"Your Morse conceived and executed the scheme of telegraphic signals
-cycles after we had discarded it.
-
-"Your nameless and unknown discoverers, whose weak but apprehending
-genius was utilized by Bell, gave you the telephone ages after it had
-been supplanted here by our more nearly perfect system of intelligent
-communication with the entire terrestrial world, and we are now
-exploring, with it, the adjacent systems of the Universe with promising
-results.
-
-"Your Edison and other electrical discoverers are more than a cycle
-behind us, and have as yet but touched the outer surface of the great
-secret. To them and to others the current of the Universe is a constant
-menace and a danger. To us it as gentle and as harmless as the flowers
-that bloom by the wayside, and responds to our every wish and use with
-absolute tractability.
-
-"The fault of the rest of the world is that all great discoveries,
-all the unlockings of Nature's treasure-house, are turned to selfish
-ends, to the aggrandizement of the few, and the detriment, if not the
-oppression, of the many; hence civil commotions, wars, tyrannies, the
-insolence of opulence, and the failure to carry forward the process of
-civilization and the elevation of the race by the unselfish application
-of attained wisdom. The barbarian spirit of Self is dominant.
-
-"You were about to ask if you might carry this record home. No. You
-will be permitted to inspect it and others similar during your sojourn,
-and carry their remembrance with you, and thus be enabled to compare
-them with your own current records of contemporaneous dates; but that
-is all.
-
-"The Western nations have opened their own gates and invited eventual
-destruction by this apparently temporary invasion of the East. This
-war, if it may be so called, will be of short duration, followed
-by the oppression inseparable from selfish greed, commercialism and
-the love of conquest and arbitrary power which compels the unwilling
-obedience of peoples.
-
-"But the 400,000,000 Chinese and affiliated races, are more insidiously
-dangerous than you know. They will cultivate the seed now being sown,
-and prepare the dragon's harvest of blood. In the remoter provinces
-they will soon breed soldiers and captains, who will eclipse the bloody
-and destructive achievements of Genghis Khan and Tamerlane, profiting
-by your present superior knowledge of mechanism and the arts of war,
-which they will appropriate and assimilate, and turn to terrible final
-account.
-
-"The commercial greed of the West will be the enemy of the Western
-peoples themselves. It will fit and arm the aroused avengers for their
-world-wide invasion and conflict. Selfish capitalists will do this
-in spite of all inhibitions, under the plea of creating prosperous
-conditions and extending commerce, and their people and their posterity
-will perish by the enginery which selfish commercial greed placed in
-the hands of their enemies."
-
-Maros presented me to another official, and politely dismissed me to
-visit the places of interest in the city. Upon my return to America
-I compared the contemporaneous history of the world with the daily
-records I had been permitted to inspect, the remembrance of which
-I vividly retained, and found every fact therein to be absolutely
-correct.
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
- A TRIP BY AIR AND LAND AND WATER THROUGH THE PROVINCES, CITIES,
- HAMLETS AND GARDENS, WITH MATCHLESS BEAUTY AND ENJOYMENT ON
- EVERY HAND.
-
-
-
-
-IV.
-
-A TOUR OF SIGHT-SEEING.
-
-
-What a wonderful land is Intermere, and what a wonderful people live
-and enjoy life in it to the full!
-
-Twenty days of visiting ten of the interior provinces, bordering
-on the mere, was more like a dream of happiness, sight-seeing and
-indescribable enjoyment to me than a reality. For reasons not explained
-to me I was not carried into the fourteen remaining provinces, which
-evidently lay in all directions toward the exterior borders of the
-land. I rather suspect that this was because it might have enabled me
-to form some definite idea of the geographical location of Intermere.
-
-What I saw and experienced I still retain as a beautiful and
-ineffaceable memory, but it is a picture I can not wholly reproduce or
-describe in anything like complete details. I can at best only give the
-impressions I still retain.
-
-The delightful journey was under the direction of Karmas, the Custodian
-of Works and Polity, accompanied by other chief officers, and the
-officials of the provinces, the title and character of which had
-already been given me by Xamas.
-
-They have three modes of travel: by Medocar, by Aerocar, and by
-Merocar. By the first you travel on land; by the second through the
-air; by the third on the water. While these vehicles of transportation
-are divided into three general classes as designated, they comprise
-thousands of beautiful and curious designs, upon which individual names
-are bestowed, as we bestow names upon our horses and our ships.
-
-There is no preference as to the mode and method of journeying. Each of
-them seems absolutely perfect. There is no physical sense of motion in
-either, as we realize it.
-
-They glide over the broad, smooth and perfectly kept roadways,
-through the depths of the ether, or along the waters, with the same
-imperceptible motion, and can be put to a rate of speed that makes our
-limited railway trains seem like lumbering farm wagons. All resistance
-of the elements seems absolutely overcome.
-
-The power of propulsion was wholly incomprehensible at first, and
-later I was only able to learn as to its principle, and left wholly to
-conjecture as to its application.
-
-Roadways, or, perhaps more properly, boulevards, interlace the
-whole country. They are the perfection of road-building--smooth,
-even-crowned, and free from dust, water or other offensive substance.
-The surface is like a newly asphalted street, but hard and impervious,
-with no depressions, cracks or flaws. The engineering could hardly be
-improved on. Accepting the statements made to me that the most of these
-highways have been in use for centuries, with few if any repairs, they
-may be looked on as not only permanent but indestructible.
-
-The purpose of each of them is self-evident. Every rod of it is for use
-and to meet some requirement that presents itself. They are bordered,
-wherever they extend, with beautiful homes, monuments and temples,
-commemorative of some great achievement in civilization and progress.
-
-The residential grounds, farms and gardens are marvels of exquisite
-taste without an exception, so far as I was able to note, modeled after
-countless designs, which give the earth's surface a versatility of
-beauty that is enchanting.
-
-There are farms and gardens everywhere except in a limited number of
-the compact squares of cities, small and perfectly kept, and productive
-in a sense and to a degree absolutely incredible to the dwellers of any
-other land.
-
-As to these roadways: They are of the uniform width of two hundred
-feet wherever you find them, whether skirting sea, lake or river,
-penetrating valleys or clambering around and around the ascent of the
-mountains from base to apex, where some monument or temple, or both,
-are perched, overlooking hundreds of square miles.
-
-As already stated, they are everywhere as smooth and kept as clean as
-a tiled floor, with a sense or quality of elasticity, and seemingly
-indestructible. I would have regarded them as natural phenomena had
-I not seen a mountain being terraced and a roadway being graded and
-finished without any of the paraphernalia of our own methods of
-engineering and construction.
-
-Earth and rock seemed to melt and become mobile under the influence of
-some unseen power, and gangs of men, following with levelers of light
-machinery, modulated the grades and contours of the crumbled rock and
-soil. Others followed these, compounding, expanding and laying down
-a plastic and rapidly hardening envelope, thus finishing the surface
-like the roads over which we were gliding, some of which, I was told,
-had been in use for many centuries without the slightest change of
-condition.
-
-I expressed a doubt as to their longevity.
-
-Karmas smiled and said:
-
-"You judge by experience. In your cities you import material from some
-distant country or island, and by mechanical manipulation and chemical
-combination and processes fit it to be laid down as a pavement. When
-finished it looks almost as smooth and beautiful as yonder landway
-being newly constructed to accommodate the expanding population of the
-district. But the resemblance ends here.
-
-"Your chemists and engineers and constructors have only the crudest
-ideas of landway or terraneous works. The asphalt is a suggestion, but
-the builder's compound turns it in the direction of deterioration.
-Instead of going forward, they go backward. They know little of the
-character of the materials they seek to utilize, and nothing of the
-true principles of chemical combination.
-
-"Our material is at hand, as it is at hand everywhere, containing the
-elements which need only to be properly combined and assimilated to
-become practically indestructible.
-
-"You take a clay, and by machinery, crude perhaps, reduce it to dust,
-then moisten it back into pliable clay, fashion it, subject it to
-an intense but unrefined heat, and you have what will retain its
-form and consistence for centuries, and resist the elemental attacks
-longer even than granite. This is but the dawn of possibilities. The
-semi-barbarous, thousands of years ago, went further and made them
-flexible as well as durable. Their discoveries were long ago forgotten.
-
-"Your people never go beyond the point of discovery. They stop short
-of the possibilities. They lose these possibilities in material and
-commercial utilization. Ego stands between the discoverer and the
-world, and progress ends.
-
-"While the rest of the world has thus, again and again, stood still on
-the threshold, or moved backward or forward intermittently, for obvious
-and selfish reasons, we have steadily moved forward in scientific
-discovery and research, and the application of great principles.
-
-"The example is before you. Without any of your crude and cumbersome
-machinery, the mountain is being terraced and fitted for the abode
-of man, the elemental constituents are being disintegrated, properly
-disposed, rearranged and the surface recombined in a new form and
-proportion by natural laws, and remote generations will find yonder
-landway as our workmen will leave it. They could level the mountain as
-readily as they terrace it, distributing it over the adjacent plain,
-leaving it a level and fertile glebe, instead of a towering height of
-rock and sand overspread with soil.
-
-"All that you see or will see is the result of knowledge and wisdom
-turned to noble and unselfish ends for the common betterment and
-elevation of the race.
-
-"Your progenitors learned to dig the hard and soft ores from the earth
-and produce iron, then took a step forward and converted it into
-steel, of greater strength and durability, capable of light forms and
-high polish, and there you have stopped at the very beginning. You
-are incapable of saving your own handiwork from disintegration. The
-elements corrode your finest steel products, and they flake away to
-the original conditions of the crude ore, losing a large proportion of
-their original virtues and constituents. We have, on the contrary, gone
-forward to the ultimate.
-
-"You have denuded your lands of forests to use as a cumbersome material
-for building, and furniture and other purposes, the wood, which decays
-and is soon destroyed. You have, without understanding the process,
-macerated and reduced woods to a pulp and fashioned it into paper,
-which in several forms you utilize, but you have stopped at the
-beginning of the journey.
-
-"We have carried it forward, and a large proportion of the material
-used in the construction of our houses and furniture and bridges and
-cars are the product of our forests in a new and better and more
-enduring form--light and capable of the most graceful fashioning.
-This is used in combination with the metals in all departments of our
-economies."
-
-I had already noticed the fact that but little of the woodwork was in
-the natural form, and that while it was incredulously light, it was
-incredibly strong. The same was true of the wrought metals, all of
-which differed from our own forms.
-
-In my examinations of the bridges across streams, both large and small,
-I noted the fact that they were constructed in about equal parts of
-wood, or a substance I took therefor, and metal, differing greatly from
-the metals we use, yet not wholly unlike them. Both materials were of
-tubular construction, appearing almost fragile in their lightness,
-but strong and firm, and showing none of the ravages of time and the
-elements.
-
-So far as I was able to judge no paints were used, but everything was
-perfectly polished. The bridges were light, airy constructions, swung
-from lofty and graceful piers, a span of a thousand feet appearing to
-be as firm and strong as one of fifty.
-
-I also noticed that in their construction of cars, furniture, houses,
-and the like, the woods and metals were indiscriminately used, more for
-beauty and ornamentation, perhaps, than for strengthening purposes or
-utility. Lightness and gracefulness were in evidence everywhere. There
-were panels and inlays of wood in its natural state, highly wrought and
-polished, as hard and impervious as the metals.
-
-"You seem to be able to make everything indestructible," I said to
-Karmas.
-
-"It is your privilege to draw your own conclusions," was his reply.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The people I met and mingled with, both men and women, were superb
-specimens of the human race, full of life, full of hope, full of high
-ambitions, and capable of infinite enjoyments.
-
-Games, sports and social amenities were the order of their daily
-life, albeit every one of them engaged in some laborious or business
-occupation during a part of each day. I learned that under their system
-of economy less than four hours out of the twenty-four were necessary
-for the comfort, sustenance and requirements of each adult, so that
-labor did not degenerate into slavery. Every fifth day was a holiday,
-during which no labor was performed, except such as was necessary for
-the enjoyments of the day.
-
-Manufacturing and business of different kinds were diffused in
-proportion to the population. There were no great factories or business
-houses, but innumerable small ones. No manufacturer employed more
-than ten persons, usually but five, and two or three employes were
-sufficient for the business houses.
-
-The remarkable discoveries and inventions of the land revolutionized
-all our ideas of manual labor and mechanics. Heavy and bulky machinery
-is entirely unknown.
-
-There were no smoking furnaces, no clangor of machinery. The factory
-was as neat and practically as noiseless as the private home. Useful
-and necessary devices and machinery were turned out as quietly as a
-housewife disposes of her routine labors. Science had apparently solved
-the rough and knotty problem of labor and production.
-
-Nowhere did I see a furnace; in fact, fire was visible nowhere; and yet
-I could see its offices performed everywhere. I asked Karmas to explain
-the phenomena.
-
-"That," he replied, "will be explained to you by Remo, Custodian of
-Useful Mechanical Devices. That is his official sphere."
-
-Another incredible phenomenon presented itself during the journey. We
-passed through one province early in that journey, and my attention was
-called to the fact that the farmers were sowing their cereals, which,
-by the way, greatly resemble our own, but in a much higher state of
-cultivation and infinitely more nutritious.
-
-Ten days later we repassed the same spot, and they were harvesting the
-ripened grain.
-
-"In my country," I said to Karmas, "from eight to ten months, dependent
-upon the season, elapses between the sowing and the harvesting of
-wheat. Here the period is reduced to from eight to ten days. I can not
-understand the discrepancy."
-
-"But it is an absolute mystery to you?"
-
-"It is."
-
-"And yet your own people have approached the twilight of its solution.
-By selection of seeds and combination of soils, and other perfectly
-natural processes, they have been able to change the nature of
-vegetation and produce new vegetable being. The period for the growth
-and maturing of nearly all your grains and vegetables has been
-perceptibly shortened, and entirely new forms produced, within the past
-century, and largely within the period of your own lifetime.
-
-"Your floriculturists and horticulturists have carried the evolution
-the furthest, and yet they do not even faintly comprehend the real
-principle which produces results. We understand and intelligently apply
-it. Hence with us but ten days elapse between seedtime and harvest, and
-shorter periods in the production of our common vegetables.
-
-"We are able to produce flowers of all shapes and colors at will, and
-with the absolute certainty of the operation of fixed and immutable
-laws, while your florists, groping in the dark, occasionally stumble on
-a result, knowing nothing of the law that produces it, and give their
-fellows a nine-days' wonder.
-
-"Yesterday you asked me why all the farms were so diminutive--'merely a
-ten-acre field,' as you expressed it. The explanation is before you.
-Each of these small farms is capable of producing food for one thousand
-persons with their constantly duplicated crops. There is room for a
-million such farms in the Commonwealth, without impinging upon the
-residential demesnes or cities.
-
-"There is no need to put these farms to the full test of their
-productiveness. The twentieth part suffices. We have a population of
-50,000,000, increasing at the rate of scarcely one per cent each year,
-and two-thirds of the Commonwealth is public domain, for the benefit
-of the countless generations yet unborn. Each year and each day brings
-their immediate needs, and they are met with plenteous fullness."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Karmas later gave me a fuller idea of the general polity of the
-Commonwealth.
-
-All men become voters at 25, if they are married, and participate
-in the choice of officers. All are eligible to office. On the day
-fixed for the election of public officials the voter calls up the
-office of the Municipal Custodian and registers his choice in the
-ballot-receiver, which automatically records, and at the end of the
-balloting announces the result. If for provincial officers, it is
-instantaneously transmitted to the capital of the province, and if for
-Commonwealth officers to the Greater City. In your land this would open
-the door to fraud, but in Intermere there is neither fraud nor chicane.
-
-There are no armies, no warships, no police, no peace or distress
-officers, and no courts and no lawyers. Sometimes citizens may differ,
-as they differ in other lands, as to their respective rights or
-obligations. In such case they repair to the Municipal Custodian and
-state the respective sides of their case. The Custodian decides at
-once, and that ends forever the controversy, unless one or the other
-appeals to the Chief Citizen of the Province and his Counselors, who
-consider the original statements submitted to the Custodian and render
-the final judgment. It is seldom an appeal is taken, and seldom that an
-original decision is revised.
-
-The educational period continues from birth to 20 years of age, in what
-may be called a common school, held in the temples, which all enter at
-the age of ten.
-
-The spheres of the two sexes are clearly marked, and both live within
-them, that of the female being regarded as the highest and most sacred.
-The men make the homes and the women care for and beautify them, and
-receive the homage universally accorded them.
-
-Neither sex looks upon necessary labor as a drudgery or in any manner
-degrading. They all receive a like education, and the superior mental
-equipment invariably asserts itself in some appropriate direction.
-
-Almost invariably the children of the household marry in the order of
-their birth, being absolutely free to choose their mates. There are no
-marriages for convenience and no second marriages. All are the result
-of affection and natural affinity.
-
-The last child to marry inherits the homestead at the death of the
-father. The surviving mother becomes the Preferred Guest of her child
-during the remainder of her life, and is treated as such. If the
-father survives, he retains his position as head of the household.
-The personal estate of a deceased parent is divided equally among the
-children.
-
-"In short," said Karmas, "We aim to dispose the burdens and distribute
-the enjoyments of life equally and justly among all.
-
-"Tomorrow we will be accompanied by Alpaz, the Curator of Learning and
-Progress, who will answer the other questions in your mind."
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
- THE PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE, AND THE FACULTY OF ITS ENJOYMENT AS
- PERSONIFIED IN THE PERSONS AND VOCATIONS OF THE ENTERTAINERS.
-
-
-
-
-V.
-
-SOME OF THE PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE.
-
-
-The environments of life have much to do with its philosophy. This
-thought impressed itself forcibly on me in Intermere.
-
-The environments of its people contribute much, if not most, to their
-philosophy, or the faculty of life's enjoyments.
-
-They are pleasantly housed, handsomely habilitated, physically and
-intellectually employed, sans the driving spur of necessity or greed,
-with profound and earnest aspirations beyond their present stage of
-existence. This is not confined to the few, but animates and elevates
-all.
-
-Learning, in a loftier sense than we understand the term; art, music
-and all the senses of physical and mental enjoyment, and the promotion
-of all of them, are pitched in a high and harmonious key.
-
-Personal adornment and physical beauty in both sexes have no tinge
-of vanity, and awake no envy in others. Intermerean dress and its
-adjuncts are as closely looked after as their wonderful mechanism and
-its mysterious soul or motor-spirit, which enables them to travel with
-celerity and safety by land or air or sea, or that subtler principle
-by which men and women, separated by distance, talk to each other by
-thought instead of speech, and would render the clumsy deception of our
-own diplomats and other hypocrites an impossibility.
-
-The clothing of the Intermereans, wrought from native materials not
-wholly unlike, except an to quality, those utilized by other peoples,
-is of a texture and finish beyond the conception of the outer world,
-and of such colors and combinations of tints as to breathe, as it
-were, both art and aptitude.
-
-The garments of both sexes more nearly resemble those in Europe and
-America than any others, and yet they are very unlike in striking
-points. Speaking of this similitude, I may say that the polity and
-institutions, and mental and physical characteristics of the people
-who live under them, more nearly resemble those of America than of any
-other nation or people.
-
-But at that, how wide and deep and apparently impassable is the
-gulf that separates them. Ours is but the faint promise; theirs the
-fulfillment of the completed prophecy.
-
-Did we start on the journey? Have we halted just beyond the first
-milestone? Will the journey be resumed? Will our remoter generations
-reach the Ultima Thule? What splendid hope or what illimitable despair
-and misery depend upon the Sphinx's answer to these questions!
-
-While Intermere is not sown with diamonds and pearls and precious
-stones and metals, they were to be seen in profusion everywhere, not
-as matters of garish display, but of artistic taste. I doubt not that
-the Intermereans, through their successful study of Nature, possess
-the Philosopher's Stone, capable of combining and transmuting every
-substance into the riches for which men die and women sacrifice more
-than life, and nations crush nations, and peoples destroy peoples,
-gathering the Dead Sea fruits that turn to bitter ashes on their lips.
-
-These people place no more commercial value upon these than they do
-upon the tints of the rainbow, or the purple haze that hangs like a
-halo above the mountain tops. To them they are but artistic types of
-beauty that add to life's true enjoyments.
-
-In mingling socially with the men and women--they do not speak of them
-as ladies and gentlemen--of Intermere, I was struck with their ease
-and delicate frankness of entertainment. They were very human indeed in
-every way. There was no affectation in speech or manner. They were good
-listeners as well as good talkers, fond of art and the lofty literature
-in which they were naturally at home; anxious to learn something about
-the outside world from their visitor, and yet not inquisitive, never
-asking an embarrassing question.
-
-Their literary and social entertainments, many of which I attended,
-while altogether new and strange to me, were none the less thoroughly
-enjoyable. Their social games were unique--to me--and in all respects
-I was struck with their great superiority, and forcibly impressed with
-the belief that their lives were indeed worth living.
-
-Their conceptions of art were of the highest and most exalted
-character. Their tastes were not only refined but sublimated, and
-I felt abashed at my own inability to follow them rapidly, or fully
-comprehend them on the moment.
-
-The women were splendid types of physical beauty as well as mental
-endowment; the men were trained athletes, and the devotees of physical
-as well as mental culture, and I watched with keen zest their prowess
-in the athletic games everywhere indulged in. I did not see a physical,
-mental or moral derelict in the land. All were robust and perfectly
-formed.
-
-There were no classes. Laborers and officials met on an equal footing.
-There were no telltale differences in dress to indicate sets, circles,
-position or titles among the men. The same was true of the women.
-Mental superiority or maturity was discernible to me and recognized on
-every hand, not to be envied or decried, but to serve as the guide to
-other feet.
-
-And all this was easily reconcilable to me. All were coequal laborers.
-All were coequal sharers of the common benefits of their governmental
-system, and they all had a common incentive--to ennoble and dignify
-the race by ennobling and dignifying themselves individually, but
-contributing alike to the common stock of blessings.
-
-Never before did I fully realize the meaning of the Divine Master when
-He said: "Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so
-to them." Before me and around me was the literal fulfillment of the
-injunction in the form of the model government for mankind, founded
-upon the highest attribute of Divinity.
-
-But there was neither cant nor affected solemnity in the never-ending
-performance of this duty. It had become absolutely and essentially a
-part of their nature, and was at once the cornerstone and the Temple of
-their Religion; but their ideas of Religion were widely different from
-ours. They never expounded, but lived it.
-
-Delightful people accompanied us if we traveled in Aerocars;
-delightful people met us with Medocars when we came to terra firma,
-and accompanied us through the bewildering lanes and mazes of beauty
-by land; and delightful people met us with fairy-like Merocars when
-we sought to thread the enchanting islands of the strange pulsating,
-moving sea.
-
-Thus day by day I was carried from province to province, from city to
-city, from valley to valley and from mountain to mountain; relays of
-entertainers met us at every stopping-point to take the places of those
-who had accompanied us thither. Nothing could have seemed more unreal;
-nothing could have been more exquisitely enjoyable.
-
-Now we wound through gardens smiling with beauty and redolent with
-balm and fragrance; anon we were in orchards plucking the ripened
-fruit; then in the harvest fields of the husbandman, and next in shops,
-factory or store; I wondering at all I saw, and my conductors kindly
-wondering at me, no doubt, but of that they gave no significance or
-sign.
-
-Almost literally speaking there is no night in Intermere. With the
-twilight myriads of lights flash out everywhere along the streets,
-highways, lanes, and from residences, temples and monuments, more
-luminous than our electric lamps, diffusing a mellow and pleasing light
-everywhere. But one sees no wires, as with us, to feed the lamps of
-many sizes and shades of light, each one of which, so far as we can see
-and realize, is independent of all others and everything.
-
-Merry parties make moonlight and starlight trips by Aerocar. I enjoyed
-one of them, and there are no words adequate to the description of what
-I saw and enjoyed. With the moon and stars above and the millions
-of lights below, with music, song and laughter ringing through the
-ethereal depths, I was in a new world, and one beyond ordinary human
-conceptions, much less description. The Aerocars themselves were
-studded with countless lights of all the colors and shades, and shone
-like trailing meteors at every angle of inclination, singly here,
-grouped there, and in processions beyond.
-
-It may be said in this connection that while the Intermereans eat
-the flesh of both domestic and wild animals and fowls, resembling in
-general features our own, and fish, they subsist chiefly on a vegetable
-diet, especially between the age of infancy and twenty years, and after
-sixty.
-
-One of the mysteries confronting me was that of cookery. They used no
-fire, nor any of our ordinary cooking utensils, and yet they served hot
-meals and drinks, prepared in what may be called, for lack of a better
-name, chafing dishes and urns, and yet there was no sense of heat or
-fire, except when in close contact with the utensils.
-
-In a chafing dish they broiled or roasted or baked; in an adjoining urn
-they brewed a delightful hot drink resembling coffee, while in another
-near by they made the most delicious ices.
-
-The housewife maintained neither dining-room nor kitchen. Meals were
-prepared and served wherever most convenient, on veranda or in the
-house proper. The table was spread in beautiful style with exquisite
-furnishment, and presided over by the housewife. A woman assistant,
-or more than one, according to the requirements of the occasion, had
-charge of a suitable sideboard, where the entire meal was prepared, and
-from which it was served to the company as desired. There were no odors
-from the cooking, and nothing to suggest the kitchen or scullery.
-
-This is so unlike our methods that its appropriateness can not be
-realized short of the actual experience. The culinary utensils are
-rather ornamental than otherwise, and the preparation of the dishes
-occupies an incredibly short period of time.
-
-On our various journeys by land and sea and air, I found that a full
-stock of provisions was carried, along with the culinary paraphernalia,
-and were served regularly and with as much care and taste as in any
-residence. Ices and confections were made as readily in mid-air as on
-land or sea, by some mysterious and never-failing process.
-
-One day as we rested in a charming suburb of the Lesser City, Alpaz,
-the Curator of Learning and Progress, appeared in a splendidly
-appointed Aerocar, accompanied by his entire family and attended by
-a fleet of Aerocars carrying his assistants, provincial officials
-and men and women, who made up his entourage. It proved to be a most
-delightful company.
-
-After sailing overhead for hundreds of miles we descended to an island,
-along the beach of which lay a complement of Merocars, to accommodate
-the entire party, as well as some of the insular citizens who begged to
-accompany us.
-
-Then ensued a voyage the memory of which still lingers with me.
-Such dreamlike beauty I never expect to see this side the gates of
-eternity. It changed with every moment, and never palled nor paled.
-Through this maze of land and water and bewildering enchantment we
-journeyed, listening to conversation and music, till finally touching
-the mainland, we found the Chief Citizen of the Province, and his
-attendants and officials, with Medocars, in which the entire party
-was carried to his capital, which crowned a grand elevation some two
-hundred miles inland.
-
-Here we were entertained in magnificent simplicity for a day, and here
-Alpaz discoursed to me on the many matters in which I was interested,
-and which fell within the sphere of his Curatorship. I cannot recount
-them all, but shall endeavor to bring out the main points.
-
-"You would learn something of our educational system?" he said, as
-though I had plied him with a question.
-
-"It is quite simple. It involves no complexities. We follow only the
-path of nature. From birth to the age of ten the infant is in the
-exclusive control and tutorship of the mother. She alone is entirely
-capable of moulding the infantile mind, and setting its feet aright in
-the pathway of manhood and womanhood.
-
-"In your land, as in others, all too often she delegates this great
-duty to alien and unfit hands, and reaps the bitter harvest of sorrow
-in the afternoon of motherhood.
-
-"At the age of ten, when the mother has fitted the mind for stronger
-impressions, the child enters the broader field of learning. Our
-temples, which you meet everywhere, are our schoolhouses, our altars of
-Learning and Knowledge, the cherubim of Wisdom.
-
-"These temples are the abode of Knowledge and Wisdom, handed down in
-the records of the ages, showing each successive step taken and to what
-it led. Here they are taught by the older men and women, who having
-retired from the activities of life, with a competence assured them,
-matured in thought, filled with knowledge and possessed of wisdom,
-perform their final labor, a labor of love for the younger generation.
-
-"At the age of fifteen every boy and every girl develops the line of
-effort to which they incline in the respective spheres of the sexes,
-and thereafter, to the age of twenty for females and twenty-five for
-males, they are instructed along these lines by their tutors, in the
-meantime devoting a part of their time to some useful occupation. The
-result is men and women in every way fitted to fulfill their destiny.
-
-"No; we have no clergy, no ministers as you term them, to teach either
-the old or the young in what you name religion. We have no churches.
-Reverence for the Supreme Principle of the Universe is instilled into
-every mind, from infancy up, and all our people live these teachings.
-They do not listen to them one day in seven and neglect to follow all
-or the majority of them for six.
-
-"We know nothing, except as lamentable facts, of the various so-called
-religious divisions which convulse the rest of the world--Confucianism,
-Hindooism, Mohammedanism, Buddhism, Taoism, Shintoism, Judaism,
-Polytheism and Christianity, and the many warring or antagonistic
-sects into which they divided and subdivided.
-
-"We know only loving reverence for the Supreme Principle of the
-Universe, filial love and piety, and justice to all creatures. This
-is the soul and essence of your religion, Christianity, and the basic
-principle of all others. We prefer the last analysis to the inchoate
-mass of contending creeds, that have drenched the earth with blood
-for time out of mind, and filled it with doubt and misery; and even
-now, in the twilight of your Nineteenth Century, and in the name of
-the Child of Nazareth, promulgates Christianization and evangelization
-at the cannon's mouth and with the sword and torch, of peoples whose
-only offense is that they believe that their God requires thus and so
-at their hands as a prerequisite to their entrance into His heavenly
-kingdom.
-
-"By gentler and educatory teachings, untainted by the corroding canker
-of selfishness, they might be turned in the right direction and their
-generations be led into the light, provided that your educational
-system moved on a loftier plane than theirs; but blood and violence,
-and all the carnal lusts that follow like jackals in their wake, can
-only eventuate in driving them into lower depths.
-
-"The spiritual instructors of the outer world, past and present, are
-and have been, in the main, sincere and earnest, but with a limited
-idea of the spiritualism they essay to teach. Powerful prelacies have
-grown up in all the religious divisions, ambitious of temporal power,
-and untold evils have resulted, not from the system of religion, but
-from the love of power and authority, non-spiritual in its nature, and
-as a result the spirit or principle of religion has suffered undeserved
-obloquy.
-
-"To us the ideal God of your religious people is strangely
-contradictory and irreconcilable. He is portrayed not as a spiritual
-being, but as a common mortal in many of the essentials. Their
-conception of Deity is that He rules as a king in heaven, before whom
-the redeemed and the saints forever prostrate themselves in adoration
-or sing praises by voice, and adulate Him with harp and lute and other
-musical instruments, confessing hourly their unworthiness to come into
-His presence.
-
-"This is an earthly, barbarous conception of the Supreme Power of the
-Universe. It was probably of Chinese or Oriental origin in the days of
-supreme despotism, when every subject must prostrate himself in the
-dust in the presence of majesty.
-
-"This idea was transmitted to Christendom in the West when royalty
-proclaimed itself the symbol of Godhood and religion. The subject was
-taught that the monarch was the direct representative of God, and his
-court was modeled after the court of the King of kings, where homage
-and adoration and humiliation were the endless order of all future life.
-
-"We have an entirely different conception of the Supreme Principle,
-and do not regard it in the light of a ruler or king, in the mortal
-sense, but the embodiment of justice and love, that neither exacts nor
-receives adoration of those who pass to the world beyond, the returning
-children of the great and enduring Principle which exists everywhere,
-strengthened and broadened by a previous state or states of existence,
-wherein they were clothed about with mortal and perishable habiliments.
-
-"We look forward to the passage from this world to a better one beyond
-with joyous expectation, and with no sense of terror or apprehension,
-and there come us no pangs of dissolution. We have sought diligently to
-live up to the law of love in this life, and have the fullest assurance
-that our efforts will meet the approval of the Supreme Principle,
-whose beneficences invite and permit us to enter the broader fields
-and more perfect worlds of a higher existence.
-
-"Death, or the exchange of worlds, has neither terrors for those who
-go, nor the stings of affliction for those who tarry. It is but the
-inevitable and necessary parting of friends and relatives for a little
-period, and we know that the shores of reunion lie just beyond the
-filmy veil of the future.
-
-"The end or change is never hastened nor retarded by the violation
-of Nature's sacred laws. There are but few partings or deaths in the
-earlier periods of life. They go with joyful alacrity, as to a feast,
-at four or five score, and their memory, works and examples cheer and
-sustain those who remain.
-
-"No; we have no physicians. If, perchance, some law of Nature is
-violated and mortal ailment ensues, it needs no specialist to discover
-that fact, or recommend the proper method of rectifying it. That is a
-part of the education of all. Literally, we neither know nor care to
-know what physic is. We live simply and in accordance with Nature's
-laws, and disease, such as prevails in your land and others, is unknown
-in this, and has been for ages. Science and scientific discovery, as we
-utilize and employ them, have freed us from disease and made death but
-the exchange of lives. We know more than we care to tell of the life
-beyond."
-
-He ceased abruptly after saying:
-
-"Tomorrow you will be the guest of Remo, the Curator of Useful
-Mechanical Devices. You may learn much from him."
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
- THE SECRET OF INTERMERE PARTIALLY REVEALED TO ANDERTON, AND WHEN HE
- LEAST EXPECTS IT HE IS RESTORED TO HIS HOME AND KINDRED, MUCH TO HIS
- REGRET.
-
-
-
-
-VI.
-
-THE SECRET OF INTERMERE.
-
-
-The secret of Intermere--its great mechanical secret--was revealed to
-me, but, alas! only in part. It was as if the sun be pointed out to a
-child who is told that it shines and is a prime factor in the growth of
-all forms of life, animal and vegetable.
-
-The child realizes that the orb of day shines, but remains wholly in
-the dark as to the processes of its rays; why it inspires animals and
-vegetation with life and growth, and produces the prismatic colors of
-the rainbow.
-
-So with me. I know the fountain-head or cause that gave momentum to all
-the mechanism of the land, shortened the period between germination
-and maturity in vegetation, banished fire while retaining warmth,
-turned the night into a season of beauty equaling the full day, kept
-every street and highway free from debris, prevented foul emanations,
-with their contaminations, and did countless other things which our
-own scientists demonstrate are desirable and necessary, but still
-unattainable. But of the details, of the why and the wherefore, of the
-effects and the processes by which so many different results emanated
-from the same apparent cause, I learned nothing.
-
-One morning, after a season of delicious, invigorating slumber, as
-I walked in the spacious grounds of my host, the Chief Citizen of
-the Province--grounds sweeter and fairer than the fabled Gardens of
-Gulistan--I saw a fleet of Aerocars approaching, led by one of the most
-magnificent, and by far the largest, that I had yet seen. It could not
-have been less than one hundred feet in length and twenty in breadth
-at the midway point, and yet it seemed to float as lightly as a feather
-in the aerial depths.
-
-When almost directly overhead the fleet halted, and remained
-stationary, as though firmly anchored to some immovable substance, and
-then the leading craft slowly sank to the earth at my feet, as lightly
-as you have seen a bird alight.
-
-It was the Aerocar of Remo, containing a score of people. I had not
-hitherto met Remo, the Curator of Useful Mechanical Devices. However,
-he needed no introduction to me or I to him. The recognition was mutual.
-
-He came forward and greeted me cordially, and later presented me to his
-fellow voyagers, and said:
-
-"I know you are anxious to learn something of the motive principle of
-our mechanisms. That I shall impart to you, at least partially. Our
-journey will begin to suit your convenience. We will breakfast en
-route."
-
-I hastened to say my adieux to the Chief Citizen, Alpaz, and the
-members of the household, and then entered the Aerocar, taking a seat
-near Remo. At a signal to the pilot, the craft rose as lightly and
-majestically as it had descended.
-
-I looked about me at the passengers, hampers of provisions, culinary
-utensils and table equipment, and estimated that the Aerocar was
-carrying not less than four thousand pounds of dead weight.
-
-"You are wondering how so much bulk and weight ascend without apparent
-cause."
-
-I assented to the proposition.
-
-"When you are at home and see an inflated balloon ascend, carrying a
-man weighing one hundred and fifty pounds, with seventy-five pounds of
-sand ballast, you can understand how it ascends?"
-
-"Readily."
-
-"By mechanical contrivance of immense comparative bulk, aided by
-chemical product, the power of gravitation is sufficiently overcome
-or neutralized that a disproportionately small amount of weight is
-carried into the upper air. We ascend for the same general reason, the
-resultant of a greater, a different and a fixed principle.
-
-"Our pilot, by means of the mechanical and other power at his command,
-neutralized the attraction of gravitation, and without the aid of any
-other appliance arose, carrying a weight of more than four thousand of
-your pounds avoirdupois. It has ascended in a direct or perpendicular
-line, despite the breeze, which would otherwise have carried us at a
-western angle. I will have the pilot produce an equilibrium, stopping
-all movement."
-
-A signal was given the pilot, and, after a slight manipulation, it
-stood still.
-
-"Now we will descend, first perpendicularly and then at an angle of
-forty-five degrees."
-
-One signal and one manipulation, and the Aerocar described the first
-motion. A second signal and manipulation, and it described the other.
-
-"Now we will ascend, first by the reverse angle and then by the
-perpendicular."
-
-Again the signals and again the manipulations, and again the exact
-movements through space.
-
-"If your flying machine and airship builders could do that, what would
-your people think?"
-
-"That the world had been revolutionized."
-
-"But the world will not be thus revolutionized until science is freed
-of gross materialism and human aspiration becomes something higher
-than selfish greed, commercialism, war, conquest, opulence, and the
-despotisms they engender. You must expel all the gods with whom you
-most closely commune, before you may commune with the true God or
-Supreme Principle of the Universe."
-
-In the meantime the Curator's Aerocar had rejoined its consorts, and we
-floated away to the northeast, where a great semicircle of mountains
-were dimly outlined, and then descended upon a city looking like a
-pearl in a semicircular valley, bisected by a broad river, spanned with
-bridges at short intervals as far as the vision reached.
-
-With my watch I had timed the voyage. It had lasted two hours and
-thirty minutes.
-
-"How far have we traveled?" I inquired of Remo.
-
-"One thousand of your miles."
-
-"That is four hundred miles to the hour; six and two-thirds miles each
-minute."
-
-"The speed might easily have been doubled."
-
-My amazement was unbounded, but I did not doubt Remo's statement then.
-Later, I recognized it as an easy possibility.
-
-Remo detained me until the rest of the company had left the Aerocar,
-and then said abruptly: "You would learn the secret of the motive
-principle that moves our mechanical devices and performs other offices
-which seem to you miraculous. It is this: It is the electric current
-which we take direct from the atmosphere at will--electricity, which
-is the life-giving, life-preserving and life-promoting principle, the
-superior and fountain of all law affecting the material Universe and
-intervening space. To command that is to command everything.
-
-"This is the capital of my Curatorship. Here all my predecessors have
-served the Commonwealth; hither all my successors will come. Here every
-mechanical device is tested, approved or rejected, and from hence their
-production is directed, as a public right, in every municipal division
-of the Commonwealth.
-
-"Nearly every monument you have seen, as you have doubtless noticed,
-is dedicated to some Chosen Son of Wisdom, and some of them date back
-tens of centuries. Whoever makes a great discovery, such as taking the
-electric current direct, or dividing its capabilities into useful and
-necessary directions, or perfects some great mechanism, securing the
-full beneficence of the current, brings it here and dedicates it to the
-Commonwealth and its sons and daughters. Its benefits are common to all.
-
-"His reward is that he is elected by universal acclaim as the Chosen
-Son of Wisdom, a monument commemorative of his achievement is erected
-at once, and he is installed in a home furnished out of the public
-revenues, receives a stipend of fifty or five cinque media daily, and
-is the honored guest on all public and private occasions.
-
-"I shall show you many of our devices; some of them will be
-self-explanatory, some will, to a degree, be explained, others left to
-your conjecture, and for obvious reasons."
-
-With this he led me through a large number of what we would look upon
-as diminutive manufacturing establishments. In the first one visited he
-exhibited to me two crystalline elongated globes, the size of an egg
-each, connected by a small tube or cylinder of the same material two or
-three inches in length.
-
-The globes were filled with a whitish substance, or granulation, the
-upper intensely white, the lower somewhat shaded. The upper one was
-fitted with a movable disk, and could be opened by touching a lever.
-A cluster of rather coarse wires, apparently an amalgam of several
-metals, rose above the granulated contents. A double coil of wires, of
-a different material or combination, running in opposite directions,
-filled the connecting cylinder, while a cluster of almost imperceptibly
-fine wires, of still a different material or combination, projected
-from the bottom of the lower globe.
-
-These globes resembled glass, and were, to all appearances, extremely
-fragile. Remo dashed it upon the hard floor, as though he would
-destroy it. It rebounded, and he caught it as an urchin would catch a
-rebounding ball.
-
-"I did this," he said, "to show you that these appliances are not
-amenable to accident. This is the accumulator or receiver of the
-current."
-
-He touched the lever and opened a small aperture directly over the
-cluster of wires in the upper globe.
-
-"Hold your hand below the lower portion," he said.
-
-I complied, and instantly my hand was moved away with such resistless
-force that I was turned completely around and sent across the room.
-Remo smiled at my undisguised consternation, and said:
-
-"You will not be harmed. What you experienced was the flow of the
-electric current, but it has not harmed you. It is physically
-harmless. You would call this a twenty-horse-power motor in your
-country, although it looks like a toy. Take it and handle it as I
-direct. You may handle it with perfect safety. Place it horizontally
-near that fly-wheel and push the lever."
-
-He pointed to a fly-wheel scarcely a foot in diameter, with seven
-radiating flanges set slightly at an angle. I did, and opened the
-aperture. In less time than it takes to tell it the wheel was revolving
-at a rate of speed so high that it seemed like a solid motionless and
-polished mirror.
-
-"Close the aperture, go to the side in which direction it is revolving,
-and again open it to the current."
-
-I did so, and instantly the wheel was motionless.
-
-He pointed to a huge block of granite, which rested on a metal
-framework a dozen inches above the floor, and said: "Banish all
-nervousness, invert the accumulator, and hold it under the center of
-the block, which weighs five of your tons."
-
-I did so, and it slowly rose toward the ceiling.
-
-"Close the aperture slowly, and finally close it entirely."
-
-This I did, and it settled back to its original place.
-
-"There," said Remo, "you have the direct current and its direct
-application to machinery and inert bodies. You know enough about
-mechanics to understand what that means. The ascent and flight and
-movements and descent of the Aerocar; the running of the Medocar and
-the sailing of the Merocar, are not such a profound mystery to you as
-they were yesterday."
-
-He conducted me into another factory and exhibited a number of
-accumulators, each filled with apparently the same granulated
-substance, but of different colors and admixture of colors. Remo opened
-the apertures of a long line of them upon a wire rack, and they flashed
-into brilliant lamps of every hue and color and shade--a light that was
-as steady as that of the stars. He closed them one by one, showing the
-absolute independence of each.
-
-"Our lamps, with which we beautify the night, are no longer a mystery
-to you--that is, not an absolute mystery."
-
-In another factory he exhibited more accumulators with varicolored
-materials in the globes. He opened one and directed its power toward an
-ingot of metal. It melted like wax. Turning its force upon a fragment
-of rock, it was transformed into the ordinary dust of our roadways.
-With another he turned a vessel of water into a solid block of ice.
-
-"Our topographical construction, our culinary economy and the absence
-of fire are now plainer than they were."
-
-"But how do you achieve all these different results with apparently the
-same means?"
-
-"The first device shown you is the primary; the others are subsequent
-discoveries. By the primary medium we were able to produce or secure
-the electric current in the form of dynamic power, eminently tractable
-and harmless with ordinary prudence. New combinations of the medium
-gave us all the other results, at intervals, subsequent to the original
-discovery. And the field is not exhausted."
-
-Remo explained that the crystalline substance in the upper globe of
-the accumulator induced or gathered the electric current, giving it
-controllable direction as well as defined volume, while that in the
-lower determined its significance or divisional use.
-
-In the minuter accumulators, for the lamps only, did the current
-present itself in the form of light, spark or flame. All the colors,
-from pure white to deep purple, with their prismatic variations, were
-the direct result of their differing chemical combinations in the lower
-globe, each of the silk-like wires throwing off countless rays of
-unvarying intensity and steadiness, but gave off no electric phenomena
-or effects.
-
-The heat accumulators gave moderate or intense heat, according to the
-chemical combinations through which the primary current passed, but
-there was neither glow nor light-flash. So, too, the cold accumulators
-gave off varying degrees of cold, for the same reason.
-
-In none of them was there either the electric shock or its effects,
-and all were tractable and free from danger in what we may term the
-electrical sense. The dynamic force of the primary and the intense heat
-or cold of the divisional currents, common prudence avoids. Still it
-would be easily possible, by chemical combination, to produce a current
-destructive of life and capable of annihilating nations, without hope
-or possibility of escape.
-
-"Your own scientists know," said Remo, "that with the direct current
-all that you have seen, and infinitely more, is but the result of a
-simple process, capable of infinite multiplication."
-
-"But what are the constituents of the medium in the accumulator, and
-what are the formulas of the various combinations?"
-
-"If you knew that you would know as much as we."
-
-This was the nearest a jest I had heard in Intermere, but I knew from
-the character of Remo's speech that the rest of the secret would remain
-hidden from me.
-
-As we sat at his table later he said:
-
-"You have been nearer to our secret than any one else in the outer
-world, and we shall see whether the seeds will grow into the tree of
-Knowledge and produce the fruits of Wisdom. Neither your people nor any
-other people could be trusted with this secret in their present moral
-condition. A few learned men dependent upon the rulers in one nation,
-knowing it, could and would plot the destruction and exploitation of
-all others. The sacrifice of human life and the accumulation of human
-woe and misery would be appalling.
-
-"If your leaders, with the suddenly awakened hunger for conquest and
-dominion, could literally command the thunderbolts and control the
-elements as against the rest of the world, they would sack Christendom
-in the name of Liberty, Humanity and the Babe of Bethlehem, but in the
-spirit of Mammon, Greed and selfish love of power and riches.
-
-"You will make some progress in discoveries along scientific and
-mechanical lines, but no real good to the race can result until these
-discoveries are turned to a nobler purpose than that of seizing
-commercial supremacy, subjugating alien and unwilling peoples,
-slaughtering those who resist, exploiting those who lay down their
-arms, gathering wealth regardless of justice and the rights of mankind
-and building up an artificial race in the form of a ruling class, who
-base their right to exclusive privileges on wealth and the perversion
-of every principle of justice and the Christianity they profess.
-
-"You have been wondering why, with our great knowledge and
-achievements, we do not go forth and dominate the world. What would
-it profit us? Could we find anything that would contribute to our
-enjoyments, our hopes, our aspirations? No.
-
-"Even we are not proof against the paralyzing touch of deterioration.
-We pay more heed to the world's history than do the nations and
-peoples who made that history, during the centuries. History is but
-the lighthouse which warns against the reefs and rocks where
-countless argosies have been lost. The mariners who sail the ships
-of state dash recklessly upon the rocks of destruction, despite the
-friendly warnings of the dead and engulfed who have gone before."
-
-Turning to lighter themes, Remo spoke of the various economies of
-the Commonwealth, and explained how the obstacles which confront our
-civilization are overcome. Garbage and all debris, for instance, are
-disposed of by instantaneous reduction to original conditions, and
-then a recombination and distribution upon the grounds, farms and
-gardens. The sewage question, the standing menace of all dense and
-even sparse populations, is solved by the same process of purification
-and recombination. This work is constantly performed under the eye of
-the municipal authorities, and under fixed rules and service. Thus the
-absolute cleanliness which prevailed everywhere was readily explained.
-
-In answer to my query why Intermere had so long escaped discovery from
-navigators, he said, interrogatively:
-
-"Would it not be possible, with our superior knowledge and wisdom, to
-put their reckoning at fault whenever they came within a fixed sphere
-of proximity?"
-
-To my question as to the equability of the seasons, the absence of
-storms, and the regularity of the descent of moisture in the form of
-gentle rains, he said:
-
-"Do not imagine that our scientific knowledge stops with the mere
-discovery of the direct electric current or our mechanical devices."
-
-Nothing further could I elicit from him or any other Intermerean on
-these or kindred subjects. The Book of Knowledge had been opened and
-apparently closed.
-
-After two days' stay in Remo's capital the Aerocars took up a goodly
-entourage, and we moved softly and swiftly to the Greater City.
-
-There Xamas and all his officials awaited us, along with every
-Intermerean of both sexes I had met in my journeys, as well as every
-Municipal Custodian of the realm, and in addition the Chief Citizens of
-the fourteen Provinces I had not visited.
-
-A reception fete was given me in the chief temple of the city, hoary
-with age and instinct with wisdom. There were songs and music by the
-young and happy, and apropos discourses by the older. I essayed the
-role of orator, thanked my entertainers for their many courtesies and
-the happy hours they had conferred upon a wanderer in a strange land.
-The afternoon and evening were a season of unalloyed happiness.
-
-As I dropped into slumber in the house of Xamas I soliloquized: "This
-kindness and these honors seem significant. Perhaps the Intermereans
-intend to adopt me into all their knowledge and wisdom. Perhaps"----
-
- * * * * *
-
-I felt that I was tossing on the swell of the ocean. Then there was a
-sensation of physical pain, as if from long exposure to the elements.
-
-So keen was this sensation that I awoke fully, started up and looked
-around me. It was a grayish dawn, purpling in lines near the horizon.
-Towering above me I saw the outlines of a great ship, lying at anchor
-and lazily nodding as the swells swept into the harbor.
-
-I found myself in one of the individual Merocars, intended for a single
-passenger, but the compartments containing the accumulatory motors had
-been removed and the marks of removal deftly concealed.
-
-It was one of the most finished Merocars of its class with the
-exception of the motor, constructed entirely of prepared wood,
-resembling a piece of wicker work, but impervious to the sea, and
-floated like a cork or a feather.
-
-I was trying to determine where I was and how I came to be in my
-present situation. Then came to me this in the Language of Silence:
-
-"You have been safely delivered to those who will restore you to your
-land and home. Discretion is always commendable."
-
-I knew whence this thought came, and soon the increasing light showed
-me that I was in the harbor of Singapore, lashed with a silken cord to
-the forechains of an East Indian merchantman.
-
-To my infinite regret I found that I was clad in the same clothes I
-wore when the Mistletoe went to the bottom. The same trinkets and a few
-coins and the other accessories were still in the pockets.
-
-But the handsome and natty garments of Intermere were gone. I was back
-in the world just as I left it, how long ago I could not tell, for
-the memories of Intermere seemed to cover a decade at least, and I
-estimated that those who lived to one hundred enjoyed a thousand years
-of life.
-
-The lookout on the ship finally discovered me, and shortly after I and
-my curious boat were lifted to the deck and became the center of a
-gaping crowd.
-
-As I could not account for myself reasonably, I became merely evasive
-and did not account for myself at all, and left the crew and passengers
-equally divided as to whether I was a lunatic of a cunning knave.
-
-Among those on board was one whose presence suggested Intermere.
-I listened and observed, and learned that he was the Secretary of
-a native Rajah on board the ship. He inspected me with curious
-disappointment. The Merocar he seemed to worship both with eyes and
-soul.
-
-"Sell it to him, for you need money."
-
-That was Maros; I could not be mistaken.
-
-The Secretary motioned me to a distant part of the deck and said
-abruptly:
-
-"I will give you five thousand rupees for the--for the"----
-
-"Merocar."
-
-He started as though shocked by a bolt of lightning.
-
-"I dare not talk--I cannot remember--but I dare not talk. Will you sell
-it me for five thousand rupees, Sahib? It is all I have, but I will
-give it freely."
-
-"It is yours."
-
-He went below and soon returned with the amount in bills of exchange
-upon the bank at Hong Kong.
-
-He carried his purchase to his stateroom, amid the laughter of
-passengers and sailors, who did not conceal their merriment that any
-man would pay such a price for a wicker basket, and my cunning and
-hypnotic knavery were thoroughly established.
-
-I remained a few days in Singapore, converting my bills partly into
-cash and partly into exchange on London and New York.
-
-Sailing later to Hong Kong, I there fell in with an American military
-officer whom I knew, and who gave me the full particulars of Albert
-Marshall's death. With him I made arrangements for the shipment of my
-cousin's remains to his old home, via San Francisco.
-
-Two days later I sailed for London, and within six weeks reached New
-York, and the home of my childhood. I shall not describe the meeting
-with my mother, nor speak of what was said in relation to the strange
-and brief communications which passed between us months before.
-
-
-
-
-VII.
-
-LE ENVOI.
-
-
- I HAVE READ THE FOREGOING. IT IS A FAITHFUL REPRODUCTION OF WHAT I WAS
- ABLE TO COMMUNICATE TOUCHING MY EXPERIENCES. AND YET THE PICTURE DRAWN
- IS FAINT, HAZY AND FAR AWAY. COMPARED WITH THE BEAUTIFUL REALITY, IT
- IS "AS MOONLIGHT UNTO SUNLIGHT, AS WATER UNTO WINE." G. H. A.
-
- Glenford, 1901.
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Intermere, by William Alexander Taylor
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