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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75172 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ _The Nature of
+ a Crime_
+
+ BY
+ JOSEPH CONRAD
+ AND
+ FORD MADOX FORD
+ (F. M. HUEFFER)
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ 1924
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+
+ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
+
+ PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
+ AT
+ THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
+
+ _First Edition_
+
+
+
+
+ _The Nature of
+ a Crime_
+
+
+
+
+BOOKS BY JOSEPH CONRAD
+
+ ALMAYER’S FOLLY
+ AN OUTCAST OF THE ISLANDS
+ THE NIGGER OF THE “NARCISSUS”
+ TALES OF UNREST
+ LORD JIM: A ROMANCE
+ YOUTH: A NARRATIVE
+ TYPHOON
+ FALK, AND OTHER STORIES
+ NOSTROMO: A TALE OF THE SEABOARD
+ THE MIRROR OF THE SEA
+ THE SECRET AGENT
+ A SET OF SIX
+ UNDER WESTERN EYES
+ A PERSONAL RECORD
+ ’TWIXT LAND AND SEA
+ CHANCE
+ WITHIN THE TIDES
+ VICTORY
+ THE SHADOW-LINE
+ THE ARROW OF GOLD
+ THE RESCUE
+ NOTES ON LIFE AND LETTERS
+ THE ROVER
+
+_With Ford Madox Ford_ (_Hueffer_)
+
+ ROMANCE: A NOVEL
+ THE INHERITORS: AN EXTRAVAGANT STORY
+ THE NATURE OF A CRIME
+
+
+
+
+PREFACES
+
+
+I
+
+For years my consciousness of this small piece of collaboration has
+been very vague, almost impalpable, like fleeting visits from a ghost.
+If I ever thought of it, and I must confess that I can hardly remember
+ever doing it on purpose till it was brought definitely to my notice
+by my Collaborator, I always regarded it as something in the nature
+of a fragment. I was surprised and even shocked to discover that it
+was rounded. But I need not have been. Rounded as it is in form, using
+the word form in its simplest sense--printed form--it remains yet a
+fragment from its very nature and also from necessity. It could never
+have become anything else. And even as a fragment it is but a fragment
+of something else that might have been--of a mere intention.
+
+But, as it stands, what impresses me most is the amount this fragment
+contains of the crudely materialistic atmosphere of the time of its
+origin, the time when the _English Review_ was founded. It emerges from
+the depths of a past as distant from us now as the square-skirted, long
+frock-coats in which unscrupulous, cultivated, high-minded _jouisseurs_
+like ours here attended to their strange business activities and
+cultivated the little blue flower of sentiment. No doubt our man was
+conceived for purposes of irony; but our conception of him, I fear, is
+too fantastic.
+
+Yet the most fantastic thing of all, it seems to me, is that we two
+who had so often discussed soberly the limits and methods of literary
+composition should have believed for a moment that a piece of work in
+the nature of an analytical confession (produced _in articulo mortis_
+as it were) could have been developed and achieved in collaboration!
+
+What optimism! But it did not last long. I seem to remember a moment
+when I burst into earnest entreaties that all these people should be
+thrown overboard without more ado. This, I believe, _is_ the real
+nature of the crime. Overboard. The neatness and dispatch with which it
+is done in Chapter VIII was wholly the act of my Collaborator’s good
+nature in the face of my panic.
+
+After signing these few prefatory words I will pass the pen to him in
+the hope that he may be moved to contradict me on every point of fact,
+impression, and appreciation. I said “the hope.” Yes, eager hope. For
+it would be delightful to catch the echo of the desperate, earnest and
+funny quarrels which enlivened those old days. The pity of it is that
+there comes a time when all the fun of one’s life must be looked for in
+the past.
+
+ J. C.
+
+
+II
+
+No, I find nothing to contradict, for, the existence of this story
+having been recalled to my mind by a friend, the details of its birth
+and its attendant circumstances remain for me completely forgotten, a
+dark, blind-spot on the brain. I cannot remember the houses in which
+the writing took place, the view from the windows, the pen, the table
+cloth. At a given point in my life I forgot, literally, all the books
+I had ever written; but, if nowadays I re-read one of them, though I
+possess next to none and have re-read few, nearly all the phrases come
+back startlingly to my memory and I see glimpses of Kent, of Sussex, of
+Carcassonne--of New York, even; and fragments of furniture, mirrors,
+who knows what? So that, if I didn’t happen to retain, almost by a
+miracle, for me, of retention, the marked up copy of “Romance” from
+which was made the analysis lately published in a certain periodical,
+I am certain that I could have identified the phrases exactly as they
+there stand. Looking at the book now I can hear our voices as we read
+one passage or another aloud for purposes of correction. Moreover
+I could say: This passage was written in Kent and hammered over in
+Sussex; this, written in Sussex and worked on in Kent; or this again
+was written in the downstairs café and hammered in the sitting room on
+the first-floor, of an hotel that faces the sea on the Belgian coast.
+
+But of “The Nature of a Crime” no phrase at all suggests either the
+tones of a voice or the colour of a day. When an old friend, last
+year, on a Parisian Boulevard said: “Isn’t there a story by yourself
+and Collaborator buried in the So & So?” I repudiated the idea with a
+great deal of heat. Eventually I had to admit the, as it were, dead
+fact. And, having admitted that to myself, and my Collaborator having
+corroborated it, I was at once possessed by a sort of morbid craving to
+get the story re-published in a definitive and acknowledged form. One
+may care infinitely little for the fate of one’s work and yet be almost
+hypochondriacally anxious as to the form its publication shall take--if
+the publication is likely to occur posthumously. I became at once
+dreadfully afraid that some philologist of that Posterity for which one
+writes, might, in the course of his hyena occupations, disinter these
+poor bones and, attributing sentence one to writer A and sentence two
+to B, maul at least one of our memories. With the nature of _those_
+crimes one is only too well acquainted. Besides, though one may never
+read comments one desires to get them over. It is indeed agreeable to
+hear a storm rage in the distance and rumble eventually away.
+
+Let me, however, since my Collaborator wishes it and in the name of
+Fun that is to-day hardly an echo, differ from him for a shade as to
+the nature of those passages of time. I protest against the word:
+quarrels. There were not any. And I should like to make the note that
+our collaboration was almost purely oral. We wrote and read aloud the
+one to the other. Possibly in the end we even wrote _to_ read aloud the
+one to the other: for it strikes me very forcibly that “The Nature of a
+Crime” is for the most part prose meant for recitation, or of that type.
+
+Anyhow, as the memory comes back to me overwhelmingly, I would read
+on and read on. One begins with a fine propulsion. Sometimes that
+would last to the end. But, as often as not, by a real telepathy, with
+my eyes on the page and my voice going on I would grow aware of an
+exaggerated stillness on the part of my Collaborator in the shadows.
+It was an extraordinary kind of stillness: not of death: not of an ice
+age. Yes, it was the stillness of a prisoner on the rack determined
+to conceal an agony. I would read on, my voice gradually sticking to
+my jaws. When it became unbearable I would glance up. On the other
+side of the hearth I would have a glimpse of a terribly sick man,
+of a convulsed face, of fingers contorted. Guido Fawkes beneath the
+_peine forte et dure_ looked like that. You are to remember that we
+were very serious about writing. I would read on. After a long time it
+would come: “Oh!... Oh, oh!... Oh my God.... My dear Ford.... My dear
+faller....” (That in those days was the fashionable pronunciation of
+“fellow”.)
+
+For myself, I would listen always with admiration. Always with an
+admiration that I have never since recaptured. And if there were
+admirablenesses that did not seem to me to fit in with the given
+scene I could at least, at the end of the reading, say with perfect
+sincerity: “Wonderful! _How_ you do things!...” before beginning on:
+“But don’t you perhaps think....”
+
+And I really do not believe that either my Collaborator or myself
+ever made an objection which was not jointly sustained. That is not
+quarrels. When I last looked through the bound proofs of _Romance_
+I was struck with the fact that whereas my Collaborator eliminated
+almost every word of action and eighty percent of the conversations by
+myself, I supplied almost all the descriptive passages of the really
+collaborated parts--and such softer sentiment as was called for. And
+my Collaborator let them get through.
+
+All this took place long ago; most of it in another century during
+another reign; whilst an earlier but not less haughty and proud
+generation were passing away.
+
+ F. M. F.
+
+
+
+
+_The Nature of a Crime_
+
+
+
+
+_The Nature of a Crime_
+
+
+I
+
+You are, I suppose, by now in Rome. It is very curious how present
+to me are both Rome and yourself. There is a certain hill--you, and
+that is the curious part of it, will never go there--yet, yesterday,
+late in the evening, I stood upon its summit and you came walking
+from a place below. It is always midday there: the seven pillars of
+the Forum stand on high, their capitals linked together, and form one
+angle of a square. At their bases there lie some detritus, a broken
+marble lion, and I think but I am not certain, the bronze she-wolf
+suckling the two bronze children. Your dress brushed the herbs: it was
+grey and tenuous: I suppose you do not know how you look when you are
+unconscious of being looked at? But I looked at you for a long time--at
+my You.
+
+I saw your husband yesterday at the club and he said that you would
+not be returning till the end of April. When I got back to my chambers
+I found a certain letter. I will tell you about it afterwards--but I
+forbid you to look at the end of what I am writing now. There is a
+piece of news coming: I would break it to you if I could--but there
+is no way of breaking the utterly unexpected. Only, if you read this
+through you will gather from the tenor, from the tone of my thoughts,
+a little inkling, a small preparation for my disclosure. Yes: it is a
+“disclosure.”
+
+... Briefly, then, it was this letter--a business letter--that set me
+thinking: that made that hill rise before me. Yes, I stood upon it
+and there before me lay Rome--beneath a haze, in the immense sea of
+plains. I have often thought of going to Rome--of going with you, in a
+leisurely autumn of your life and mine. Now--since I have received that
+letter--I know that I shall never see any other Rome than that from an
+imagined hilltop. And when, in the wonderful light and shadelessness
+of that noon, last evening, you came from a grove of silver poplars,
+I looked at you--_my_ you--for a very long while. You had, I think,
+a parasol behind your head, you moved slowly, you looked up at the
+capitals of those seven pillars.... And I thought that I should
+never--since you will not return before the end of April--never see you
+again. I shall never see again the you that every other man sees....
+
+You understand everything so well that already you must understand the
+nature of my disclosure. It is, of course, no disclosure to tell you
+that I love you. A very great reverence is due to youth--and a very
+great latitude is due to the dead. For I am dead: I have only lived
+through you for how many years now! And I shall never speak with you
+again. Some sort of burial will have been given to me before the end
+of April. I am a spirit. I have ended my relations with the world.
+I have balanced all my books, my will is made. Only I have nothing
+to leave--save to you, to whom I leave all that is now mine in the
+world--my memory.
+
+It is very curious--the world now. I walked slowly down here from
+Gordon Square. I walked slowly--for all my work is done. On the way I
+met Graydon Bankes, the K. C. It would have astonished him if he could
+have known how unreal he looked to me. He is six feet high, and upon
+his left cheek there is a brown mole. I found it difficult to imagine
+why he existed. And all sorts of mists hurried past him. It was just
+outside the Natural History Museum. He said that his Seaford Railway
+Bill would come before Committee in June. And I wondered: what is
+June?... I laughed and thought: why June will never come!
+
+June will never come. Imagine that for a moment. We have discussed the
+ethics of suicide. You see why June will never come!
+
+You remember that ring I always wear? The one with a bulging, greenish
+stone. Once or twice you have asked me what stone it was. You thought,
+I know, that it was in bad taste and I told you I wore it for the sake
+of associations. I know you thought--but no: there has never been any
+woman but you.
+
+You must have felt a long time ago that there was not, that there could
+not have been another woman. The associations of the ring are not
+with the past of a finished affection, or hate, or passion, with all
+these forms of unrest that have a term in life: they looked forward to
+where there is no end--whether there is rest in it God alone knows.
+If it were not bad taste to use big words in extremities I would say
+there was Eternity in the ring--Eternity which is the negation of all
+that life may contain of losses and disappointments. Perhaps you have
+noticed that there was one note in our confidence that never responded
+to your touch. It was that note of universal negation contained within
+the glass film of the ring. It is not you who brought the ring into my
+life: I had it made years ago. It was in my nature always to anticipate
+a touch on my shoulder, to which the only answer could be an act of
+defiance. And the ring is my weapon. I shall raise it to my teeth, bite
+through the glass: inside there is poison.
+
+I haven’t concealed anything from you. Have I? And, with the great
+wisdom for which I love you, you have tolerated these other things. You
+would have tolerated this too, you who have met so many sinners and
+have never sinned....
+
+Ah, my dear one--that is why I have so loved you. From our two poles we
+have met upon one common ground of scepticism--so that I am not certain
+whether it was you or I who first said: “Believe nothing: be harsh to
+no one.” But at least we have suffered. One does not drag around with
+one such a cannon-ball as I have done all these years without thinking
+some wise thoughts. And well I know that in your dreary and terrible
+life you have gained your great wisdom. You have been envied; you too
+have thought: Is any prospect fair to those among its trees? And I
+have been envied for my gifts, for my talents, for my wealth, for my
+official position, for the letters after my name, for my great and
+empty house, for my taste in pictures--for my ... for my opportunities.
+
+Great criminals and the very patient learn one common lesson: Believe
+in nothing, be harsh to no one!
+
+But you cannot understand how immensely leisurely I feel. It is one
+o’clock at night. I cannot possibly be arrested before eleven to-morrow
+morning. I have ten hours in which, without the shadow of a doubt, I
+can write to you: I can put down my thoughts desultorily and lazily. I
+have half a score of hours in which to speak to you.
+
+The stress of every secret emotion makes for sincerity in the end.
+Silence is like a dam. When the flood is at its highest the dam
+gives way. I am not conceited enough to think that I can sweep you
+along, terrified, in the rush of my confidences. I have not the
+elemental force. Perhaps it is just that form of “greatness” that I
+have lacked all my life--that profound quality which the Italians
+call _terribilita_. There is nothing overpowering or terrible in the
+confession of a love too great to be kept within the bounds of the
+banality which is the safeguard of our daily life. Men have been nerved
+to crime for the sake of a love that was theirs. The call of every
+great passion is to unlawfulness. But your love was not mine, and my
+love for you was vitiated by that conventional reverence which, as to
+nine parts in ten, is genuine, but as to the last tenth a solemn sham
+behind which hide all the timidities of a humanity no longer in its
+youth. I have been of my time--altogether of my time--lacking courage
+for a swoop, as a bird respects a ragged and nerveless scarecrow.
+Altogether a man of my time. Observe, I do not say “our time.” You are
+of all time--you are the loved Woman of the first cry that broke the
+silence and of the last song that shall mark the end of this ingenious
+world to which love and suffering have been given, but which has in the
+course of ages invented for itself all the virtues and all the crimes.
+And being of this world and of my time I have set myself to deal
+ingeniously with my suffering and my love.
+
+Now everything is over--even regrets. Nothing remains of finite things
+but a few days of life and my confession to make to you--to you alone
+of all the world.
+
+It is difficult. How am I to begin? Would you believe it--every time I
+left your presence it was with the desire, with the necessity to forget
+you. Would you believe it?
+
+This is the great secret--the heart of my confession. The distance did
+not count. No walls could make me safe. No solitude could defend me;
+and having no faith in the consolations of eternity I suffered too
+cruelly from your absence.
+
+If there had been kingdoms to conquer, a crusade to preach--but no.
+I should not have had the courage to go beyond the sound of your
+voice. You might have called to me any time! You never did. Never.
+And now it is too late. Moreover, I am a man of my time, the time is
+not of great deeds but of colossal speculations. The moments when I
+was not with you had to be got through somehow. I dared not face them
+empty-handed lest from sheer distress I should go mad and begin to
+execrate you. Action? What form of action could remove me far enough
+from you whose every thought was referred to your existence? And as you
+were to me a soul of truth and serenity I tried to forget you in lies
+and excitement. My only refuge from the tyranny of my desire was in
+abasement. Perhaps I was mad. I gambled. I gambled first with my own
+money and then with money that was not mine. You know my connection
+with the great Burden fortune. I was trustee under my friend’s,
+Alexander Burden’s will. I gambled with a determined recklessness,
+with closed eyes. You understand now the origin of my houses, of my
+collections, of my reputation, of my taste for magnificence--which
+you deigned sometimes to mock indulgently with an exquisite flattery
+as at something not quite worthy of me. It was like a break-neck ride
+on a wild horse, and now the fall has come. It was sudden. I am alive
+but my back is broken. Edward Burden is going to be married. I must
+pay back what I have borrowed from the Trust. I cannot. Therefore I am
+dead. (A mouse has just come out from beneath one of the deed-boxes.
+It looks up at me. It may have been eating some of the papers in the
+large cupboard. To-morrow morning I shall tell Saunders to get a cat.
+I have never seen a mouse here before. I have never been here so
+late before. At times of pressure, as you know, I have always taken
+my papers home. So that these late hours have been, as it were, the
+prerogative of the mouse. No. I shall not get a cat. To that extent
+I am still a part of the world: I am master of the fate of mice!) I
+have, then, ten hours, less the time it has taken me to chronicle the
+mouse, in which to talk to you. It is strange, when I look back on it,
+that in all the years we have known each other--seven years, three
+months and two days--I have never had so long as ten hours in which I
+might talk to you. The longest time was when we came back from Paris
+together, when your husband was in such a state that he could neither
+see nor hear. (I’ve seen him, by-the-bye, every day since you have been
+gone. He’s really keeping away from it wonderfully well; in fact, I
+should say that he has not once actually succumbed. I fancy, really,
+that your absence is good for him in a way: it creates a new set of
+circumstances, and a change is said to be an excellent aid in the
+breaking of a habit. He has, I mean, to occupy himself with some of the
+things, innumerable as they are, that you do for him. I find that he
+has even had his pass-book from the bank and has compared it with his
+counterfoils. I haven’t, on account of this improvement, yet been round
+to his chemist’s. But I shall certainly tell them that they _must_
+surreptitiously decrease the strength of it.) That was the longest
+time we have ever really talked together. And, when I think that in
+all these years I haven’t once so much as held your hand for a moment
+longer than the strictest of etiquette demanded! And I loved you within
+the first month.
+
+I wonder why that is. Fancy, perhaps. Habit perhaps--a kind of
+idealism, a kind of delicacy, a fastidiousness. As you know very well
+it is not on account of any moral scruples....
+
+I break off to look through what I have already written to you. There
+is, first, the question of why I never told you my secret: then,
+the question of what my secret really is; I have started so many
+questions and have not followed one of them out to the very end. But
+all questions resolve themselves into the one question of our dear and
+inestimable relationship.
+
+I think it has been one of the great charms of our relationship that
+all our talks have been just talks. We have discussed everything under
+the sun, but we have never discussed anything _au fond_. We have
+strayed into all sorts of byways and have never got anywhere. I try to
+remember how many evenings in the last five years we have not spent
+together. I think they must be less than a hundred in number. You know
+how, occasionally, your husband would wake out of his stupors--or
+walk _in_ his stupor and deliver one of his astonishingly brilliant
+disquisitions. But remember how, always, whether he talked of free
+love or the improvement in the breed of carriage-horses, he always
+thrashed his subject out to the bitter end. It was not living with a
+man: it was assisting at a performance. And, when he was sunk into
+his drugs or when he was merely literary, or when he was away, how
+lazily we talked. I think no two minds were ever so fitted one into
+another as yours and mine. It is not of course that we agree on all
+subjects--or perhaps upon any. In the whole matter of conduct we are so
+absolutely different--you are always for circumspection, for a careful
+preparation of the ground, for patience; and I am always ready to act,
+and afterwards draw the moral from my own actions. But somehow, in the
+end, it has all worked out in our being in perfect agreement. Later I
+will tell you why that is.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let me return to my mouse. For you will observe that the whole question
+revolves, really, around that little allegorical mite. It is an omen:
+it is a symbol. It is a little herald of the Providence that I do not
+believe in--of the Providence you so implicitly seek to obey. For
+instinctively you believe in Providence--in God, if you will. I as
+instinctively disbelieve. Intellectually of course you disbelieve in a
+God. You say that it is impossible for Reason to accept an Overlord; I
+that Reason forces one to accept an Overlord; that Reason forces one
+to believe in an Omnipotent Ruler--only I am unable to believe. We, my
+dear, are in ourselves evidence of a design in creation. For we are the
+last word of creation. It has taken all the efforts, all the birthpangs
+of all the ages to evolve--you and me. And, being evolved, we are
+intellectually so perfectly and so divinely fashioned to dovetail
+together. And, physically too, are we not divinely meant the one for
+the other? Do we not react to the same causes: should not we survive
+the same hardships or succumb to the same stresses? Since you have
+been away I have gone looking for people--men, women, children, even
+animals--that could hold my attention for a minute. There has not been
+one. And what purer evidence of design could you ask for than that?
+
+I have made this pact with the Providence that I argue for, with the
+Providence in whose existence I cannot believe--that if, from under
+the castle of black metal boxes, the mouse reappear and challenge
+death--then there is no future state. And, since I can find no
+expression save in you, if we are not reunited I shall no longer exist.
+So my mouse is the sign, the arbitrament, a symbol of an eternal life
+or the herald of nothingness.
+
+I will make to you the confession that since this fancy, this profound
+truth, has entered my mind, I have not raised my eyes from the paper. I
+dread--I suppose it is dread--to look across the ring of light that my
+lamp casts. But now I will do so. I will let my eyes travel across the
+bundles of dusty papers on my desk. Do you know I have left them just
+as they were on the day when you came to ask me to take your railway
+tickets? I will let my eyes travel across that rampart of blue and
+white dockets.... The mouse is not there.
+
+But that is not an end of it. I am not a man to be ungenerous in my
+dealings with the Omnipotent: I snatch no verdict.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Last night it was very late and I grew tired, so I broke off my
+letter. Perhaps I was really afraid of seeing that mouse again. Those
+minute superstitions are curious things. I noticed, when I looked at
+the enumeration of these pages to-night, I began to write upon the
+thirteenth sheet--and that gives me a vague dissatisfaction. I read,
+by-the-bye, a paragraph in a newspaper: it dealt with half-mad authors.
+One of these, the writer said, was Zola; he was stated to be half mad
+because he added together the numbers on the backs of cabs passing him
+in the street. Personally, I do that again and again--and I know very
+well that I do it in order to dull my mind. It is a sort of narcotic.
+Johnson, we know, touched his street-posts in a certain order: that,
+too, was to escape from miserable thoughts. And we all know how, as
+children, we have obeyed mysterious promptings to step upon the lines
+between the paving-stones in the street.... But the children have
+their futures: it is well that they should propitiate the mysterious
+Omnipotent One. In their day, too, Johnson and Zola had their futures.
+It was well that Johnson should “touch” against the evil chance; that
+Zola should rest his mind against new problems. In me it is mere
+imbecility. For I have no future.
+
+Do you find it difficult to believe that? You know the Burdens, of
+course. But I think you do not know that, for the last nine years,
+I have administered the Burden estates all by myself. The original
+trustees were old Lady Burden and I; but nine years ago Lady Burden
+gave me a power of attorney and since then I have acted alone. It was
+just before then that I had bought the houses in Gordon Square--the one
+I live in, the one you live in, and the seven others. Well, rightly
+speaking, those houses have been bought with Burden money, and all my
+pictures, all my prints, all my books, my furniture, my reputation as
+a connoisseur, my governorship of the two charities--all the me that
+people envy--have been bought with the Burden money. I assure you that
+at times I have found it a pleasurable excitement.... You see, I have
+wanted you sometimes so terribly--so terribly that the juggling with
+the Burden accounts has been as engrossing a narcotic as to Zola was
+the adding up of the numbers upon the backs of cabs. Mere ordinary work
+would never have held my thoughts.
+
+Under old Burden’s will young Edward Burden comes of age when he
+reaches the age of twenty-five or when he marries with my consent.
+Well, he will reach the age of twenty-five and he will marry on April
+5. On that day the solicitors of his future wife will make their
+scrutiny of my accounts. It is regarded, you understand, as a mere
+formality. But it amuses me to think of the faces of Coke and Coke
+when they come to certain figures! It was an outlaw of some sort, was
+it not, who danced and sang beneath the gallows? I wonder, now, what
+sort of traitor, outlaw, or stealthy politician I should have made in
+the Middle Ages. It is certain that, save for this one particular of
+property, I should be in very truth illustrious. No doubt the state
+shall come at last in which there shall no more be any property. I was
+born before my time.
+
+For it is certain that I am illustrious save in that one respect.
+To-day young Edward Burden came here to the office to introduce me
+to his _fiancée_. You observe that I have robbed her. The Burden
+property is really crippled. They came, this bright young couple, to
+get a cheque from me with which to purchase a motor-car. They are to
+try several cars in the next three weeks. On the day before the wedding
+they are to choose one that will suit them best--and on the wedding-day
+in the evening they are to start for Italy. They will be coming towards
+you.... Then no doubt, too, a telegram will reach them, to say that
+in all probability motor-cars will be things not for them for several
+years to come. What a crumbling of their lives!
+
+It was odd how I felt towards _her_. You know his pompous, high
+forehead, the shine all over him, the grave, weighty manner. He held
+his hat--a wonderful shiny, “good” hat--before his mouth, for all
+the world as if he had been in church. He made, even, a speech in
+introducing Miss Averies to me. You see, in a sense, he was in a
+temple. My office enshrined a deity, a divinity: the law, property,
+the rights of man as maintained by an august constitution. I am for
+him such a wonderfully “safe” man. My dear one, you cannot imagine how
+I feel towards him: a little like a deity, a little like an avenging
+Providence. I imagine that the real Deity must feel towards some of His
+worshippers much as I feel towards this phœnix of the divines.
+
+The Deity is after all the supreme Artist--and the supreme quality of
+Art is surprise.
+
+Imagine then the feeling of the Deity towards some of those who most
+confidently enter His temple. Just imagine His attitude towards
+those who deal in the obvious platitudes that “honesty is the best
+policy,” or “genius the capacity for taking pains.” So for days the
+world appears to them. Then suddenly: honesty no longer pays; the
+creature, amassing with his infinite pains, data for his Great Work,
+is discovered to have produced a work of an Infinite Dulness. That is
+the all-suffering Deity manifesting Himself to His worshippers. For
+assuredly a day comes when two added to two no longer results in four.
+That day will come on April 5 for Edward Burden.
+
+After all he has done nothing to make two and two become four. He has
+not even checked his accounts: well: for some years now I have been
+doing as much as that. But with his _fiancée_ it is different. She is
+a fair, slight girl with eyes that dilate under all sorts of emotion.
+In my office she appears not a confident worshipper but a rather
+frightened fawn led before an Anthropomorphic Deity. And, strangely
+enough, though young Burden who trusts me inspires me with a sardonic
+dislike, I felt myself saying to this poor little thing that faced me:
+“Why: I have wronged you!” And I regretted it.
+
+She, you see, has after all given something towards a right to enjoy
+the Burden estates and the Burden wealth; she has given her fragile
+beauty, her amiability, her worship, no doubt, of the intolerable
+Edward. And all this payment in the proper coin: so she has in a sense
+a right....
+
+Good-night, dear one, I think you have it in your power--you _might_
+have it in your power--to atone to this little creature. To-morrow I
+will tell you why and how.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+I wrote last night that you have something in your power. If you wished
+it you could make me live on. I am confident that you will not wish
+it: for you will understand that capriciously or intolerably I am
+tired of living this life. I desire you so terribly that now, even the
+excitement of fooling Burden no longer hypnotizes me into an acceptance
+of life without you. Frankly, I am tired out. If I had to go on living
+any longer I should have to ask you to be mine in one form or other.
+With that and with my ability--for of course I have great ability--I
+could go on fooling Burden for ever. I could restore: I could make
+sounder than ever it was that preposterous “going concern” the Burden
+Estate. Unless I like to let them, I think that the wife’s solicitors
+will not discover what I have done. For, frankly, I have put myself out
+in this matter in order to be amusing to myself and ingenious. I have
+forged whole builder’s estimates for repairs that were never executed:
+I have invented whole hosts of defaulting tenants. It has not been
+latterly for money that I have done this: it has been simply for the
+sheer amusement of looking at Edward Burden and saying to myself:
+
+“Ah: you trust me, my sleek friend. Well....”
+
+But indeed I fancy that I am rich enough to be able to restore to
+them all that I have taken. And, looking at Edward Burden’s little
+_fiancée_, I was almost tempted to set upon that weary course of
+juggling. But I am at the end of my tether. I cannot live without you
+longer. And I do not wish to ask you. Later I will tell you. Or No--I
+will tell you now.
+
+You see, my dear thing, it is a question of going one better. It
+would be easy enough to deceive your husband: it would be easier
+still to go away together. I think that neither you nor I have ever
+had any conscientious scruples. But, analysing the matter down to its
+very depths, I think we arrive at this, that without the motives for
+self-restraint that other people have we are anxious to show more
+self-restraint than they. We are doing certain work not for payment
+but for sheer love of work. Do I make myself clear? For myself I have
+a great pride in your image. I can say to myself: “Here is a woman, my
+complement. She has no respect for the law. She does not value what a
+respect for the law would bring her. Yet she remains purer than the
+purest of the makers of law.” And I think it is the converse of that
+feeling that you have for me.
+
+If you desire me to live on, I will live on: I am so swayed by you
+that if you desire me to break away from this ideal of you, the breath
+of a command will send me round to your side.
+
+I am ready to give my life for this Ideal: nay more, I am ready to
+sacrifice you to it, since I know that life for you will remain a very
+bitter thing. I know, a little, what renunciation means.
+
+And I am asking you to bear it--for the sake of my ideal of you. For,
+assuredly, unless I can have you I must die--and I know that you will
+not ask me to have you. And I love you: and bless you for it.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+I have just come in from _Tristan and Isolde_.
+
+I had to hurry and be there for the first notes because you--my
+you--would, I felt, be sitting beside me as you have so often. That,
+of course, is passion--the passion that makes us unaccountable in our
+actions.
+
+I found you naturally: but I found, too, something else. It has always
+a little puzzled me why we return to Tristan. There are passages in
+that thing as intolerable as anything in any of the Germanic master’s
+scores. But we are held--simply by the idea of the love-philtre:
+it’s that alone that interests us. We do not care about the initial
+amenities of Tristan and the prima donna: we do not believe in Mark’s
+psychologising: but, from the moment when those two dismal marionettes
+have drained unconsideringly the impossible cup, they become suddenly
+alive, and we see two human beings under the grip of a passion--acting
+as irrationally as I did when I promised my cabman five shillings to
+get me to the theatre in time for the opening bars.
+
+It is, you see, the love-philtre that performs this miracle. It
+interests--it is real to us--because every human being knows what it
+is to act, irrationally, under the stress of some passion or other. We
+are drawn along irresistibly: we commit the predestined follies or the
+predestined heroisms: the other side of our being acts in contravention
+of all our rules of conduct or of intellect. Here, in Tristan, we see
+such madness justified with a concrete substance, a herb, a root. We
+see a vision of a state of mind in which morality no longer exists:
+we are given a respite, a rest: an interval in which no standard of
+conduct oppresses us. It is an idea of an appeal more universal than
+any other in which the tired imagination of humanity takes refuge.
+
+The thought that somewhere in the world there should be something that
+I could give to you, or you to me, that would leave us free to do
+what we wish without the drag of the thought of what we owe, to each
+other, to the world! And after all, what greater gift could one give to
+another? It would be the essential freedom. For assuredly, the philtre
+could do no more than put it in a man’s power to do what he would do if
+he were let loose. He would not bring out more than he had in him: but
+he would fully and finally express himself.
+
+Something unexpected has changed the current of my thoughts. Nothing
+can change their complexion, which is governed not by what others do
+but by the action which I must face presently. And I don’t know why I
+should use the word unexpected, unless because at the moment I was very
+far from expecting that sort of perplexity. The correct thing to say
+would be that something natural has happened.
+
+Perfectly natural. Asceticism is the last thing that one could expect
+from the Burdens. Alexander Burden, the father, was an exuberant
+millionaire, in no vulgar way, of course; he was exuberant with
+restraint, not for show, with a magnificence which was for private
+satisfaction mainly. I am talking here of the ascetic temperament which
+is based on renunciation, not of mere simplicity of tastes, which
+is simply scorn for certain orders of sensations. There have been
+millionaires who have lived simply. There have been millionaires who
+have lived sordidly--but miserliness is one of the supreme forms of
+sensualism.
+
+Poor Burden had a magnificent physique. The reserved abilities of
+generations of impoverished Burdens, starved for want of opportunities,
+matured in his immense success--and all their starved appetites too.
+But all the reserve quality of obscure Burdens has been exhausted in
+him. There was nothing to come to his son--who at most could have been
+a great match and is to-day looked upon in that light, I suppose, by
+the relations of his future wife. I don’t know in what light that young
+man looks upon himself. His time of trial is coming.
+
+Yesterday at eight in the evening he came to see me. I thought at first
+he wanted some money urgently. But very soon I reflected that he need
+not have looked so embarrassed in that case. And presently I discovered
+that it was not money that he was in need of. He looked as though
+he had come, with that characteristic gravity of his--so unlike his
+father--to seek absolution at my hands. But that intention he judged
+more decorous, I suppose, to present to me as a case of conscience.
+
+Of course it was the case of a girl--not his _fiancée_. At first I
+thought he was in an ugly scrape. Nothing of the kind. The excellent
+creature who had accepted his protection for some two years past--how
+dull they must have seemed to her--was perhaps for that reason
+perfectly resigned to forego that advantage. At the same time, she was
+not too proud to accept a certain provision, compensation--whatever you
+like to call it. I had never heard of anything so proper in my life. He
+need not have explained the matter to me at all. But evidently he had
+made up his mind to indulge in the luxury of a conscience.
+
+To indulge that sort of conscience leads one almost as far as indulged
+passion, only, I cannot help thinking, on a more sordid road. A luxury
+snatched from the fire is in a way purified, but to find this one he
+had gone apparently to the bottom of his heart. I don’t charge him with
+a particularly odious degree of corruption, but I perceived clearly
+that what he wanted really was to project the sinful effect of that
+irregular connection--let us call it--into his regulated, reformed,
+I may say lawfully blessed state--for the sake of retrospective
+enjoyment, I suppose. This rather subtle, if unholy, appetite, he
+was pleased to call the voice of his conscience. I listened to his
+dialectic exercises till the great word that was sure to come out
+sooner or later was pronounced.
+
+“It seems,” he said, with every appearance of distress, “that from a
+strictly moral point of view I ought to make a clean breast of it to
+Annie.”
+
+I listened to him--and, by Heaven, listening to him I _do_ feel
+like the Godhead of whom I have already written to you. You know,
+positively he said that at the very moment of his “fall” he had thought
+of what _I_ should think of him. And I said:
+
+“My good Edward, you are the most debauched person I have ever met.”
+
+His face fell, his soft lips dropped right down into a horseshoe. He
+had come to me as one of those bland optimists _would_ go to his deity.
+He expected to be able to say: “I have sinned,” and to be able to hear
+the Deity say: “That’s all right, your very frank confession does you
+infinite credit.” His deity was, in fact, to find him some way out of
+his moral hole. I was to find him some genial excuse; to make him feel
+good in his excellent digestion once more. That was, absolutely, his
+point of view, for at my brutal pronouncement he stuttered:
+
+“But--but surely ... the faults of youth ... and surely there are
+plenty of others?...”
+
+I shook my head at him and panic was dropping out of his eyes: “Can’t
+I marry Annie honourably?” he quavered. I took a sinister delight in
+turning the knife inside him. I was going to let him go anyhow: the
+sort of cat that I am always lets its mice go. (That mouse, by-the-bye,
+has never again put in an appearance.)
+
+“My dear fellow,” I said, “does not your delicacy let you see the hole
+you put me into? It’s to my interest that you should not marry Miss
+Averies and you ask me to advise you on the point.”
+
+His mouth dropped open: positively he had never considered that when he
+married I lost the confounded three hundred a year for administering
+the Burden Trust. I sat and smiled at him to give him plenty of time to
+let his mind agonize over his position.
+
+“Oh, hang it,” he said.... And his silly eyes rolled round my room
+looking for that Providence that he felt ought to intervene in his
+behalf. When they rested on me again I said:
+
+“There, go away. Of course it’s a fault of your youth. Of course
+every man that’s fit to call himself a man has seduced a clergyman’s
+daughter.”
+
+He said:
+
+“Oh, but there was not anything common about it.”
+
+“No,” I answered, “you had an uncommonly good time of it with your
+moral scruples. I envy you the capacity. You’ll have a duller one with
+Miss Averies, you know.”
+
+That was too much for him to take in, so he smoothed his hat.
+
+“When you said I was ... debauched ... you were only laughing at me.
+That was hardly fair. I’m tremendously in earnest.”
+
+“You’re only play-acting compared with me,” I answered. He had the air
+of buttoning his coat after putting a cheque into his breast pocket.
+He had got, you see, the cheque he expected: my applause of his
+successful seduction, my envy of his good fortune. That was what he had
+come for--and he got it. He went away with it pretty bare-facedly, but
+he stopped at the threshold to let drop:
+
+“Of course if I had known you would be offended by my having recourse
+to Annie’s solicitors for the settlement....”
+
+I told him I was laughing at him about that too.
+
+“It was the correct thing to do, you know,” were the words he shut the
+door upon. The ass....
+
+The phrase of his--that he had thought of me at the moment of his
+fall--gives you at once the measure of his respect for me. But it gave
+me much more. It gave me my cue: it put it into my head to say he was
+debauched. And, indeed, that is debauchery. For it is the introduction
+of one’s morals into the management of one’s appetites that makes
+an indulgence of them debauchery. Had my friend Edward regarded his
+seduction as the thing he so much desired me to tell him it was; a
+thing of youth, high spirits--a thing we all do--had he so regarded
+it I could not really have called it debauchery. But--and this is
+the profound truth--the measure of debauchery is the amount of joy
+we get from the indulgence of our appetites. And the measure of joy
+we get is the amount of excitement: if it brings into play not only
+all our physical but all our moral nature then we have the crucial
+point beyond which no man can go. It isn’t, in fact, the professional
+seducer, the artist in seduction that gets pleasure from the pursuit
+of his avocation, any more than it is the professional musician who
+gets thrills from the performance of music. You cannot figure to
+yourself the violinist, as he fiddles the most complicated passage of
+a concerto, when he really surmounts the difficulty by dint of using
+all his knowledge and all his skill--you cannot imagine him thinking of
+his adviser, his mother, his God and all the other things that my young
+friend says he thought about. And it is the same with the professional
+seducer. He may do all that he knows to bring his object about--but
+that is not debauchery. It is, by comparison, a joyless occupation:
+it is drinking when you are thirsty. Putting it in terms of the most
+threadbare allegory--you cannot imagine that Adam got out of the fall
+the pleasure that Edward Burden got out of his bite of the apple.
+
+But Edward Burden, whilst he shilly-shallied with “Shall I?” and
+“Sha’n’t I?” could deliciously introduce into the matter _all_ his
+human relationships. He could think of me, of his mother, of the fact
+that potentially he was casting to the winds the very cause for his
+existence. For assuredly, if Edward Burden have a cause for existence
+it is that he should not, morally or physically, do anything that would
+unfit him to make a good marriage. So he had, along with what physical
+pleasure there might be, the immense excitement of staking his all
+along with the tremendous elation of the debate within himself that
+went before. For he was actually staking his all upon the chance that
+he could both take what he desired and afterwards reconcile it with
+his conscience to make a good match. Well, he has staked and won. That
+is the true debauchery. That, in a sense, is the compensating joy that
+Puritanism gets.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+I have just come in. Again you will not guess from where. From choosing
+a motor-car with Burden and his _fiancée_. It seems incredible that
+I should be called upon to preside at these preparations for my own
+execution. I looked at hundreds of these shiny engines, with the
+monstrously inflated white wheels, and gave a half-amused--but I can
+assure you a half-interested--attention to my own case. For one of
+these will one day--and soon now--be arrested in a long rush, by my
+extinction. In it there will be seated the two young people who went
+with me through the garages. They will sit in some sort of cushioned
+ease--the cushions will be green, or red, or blue in shiny leather.
+I think, however, that they will not be green--because Miss Averies
+let slip to me, in a little flutter of shy confidence, the words: “Oh,
+don’t let’s have green, because it’s an unlucky colour.” Edward Burden,
+of course, suppressed her with a hurried whisper as if, in thus giving
+herself away to me, she must be committing a sin against the house of
+Burden.
+
+That, naturally, is the Burden tradition: a Burden’s wife must possess
+frailties: but she must feign perfection even to a trusted adviser of
+the family. She must not confess to superstitions. It was amusing, the
+small incident, because it was the very first attempt that little Miss
+Averies has ever made to get near me. God knows what Edward may have
+made me appear to her: but I fancy that, whatever Edward may have said,
+she had pierced through that particular veil: she realizes, with her
+intuition, that I am dangerous. She is alarmed and possibly fascinated
+because she feels that I am not “straight”--that I might, in fact, be
+a woman or a poet. Burden, of course, has never got beyond seeing that
+I dress better than he does and choose a dinner better than his uncle
+Darlington.
+
+I came, of course, out of the motor-car ordeal with flying colours--on
+these lines. I lived, in fact, up to my character for being orthodox in
+the matter of comfort. I even suggested two little mirrors, like those
+which were so comforting to us all when we sat in hansom cabs. That
+struck Burden as being the height of ingenuity--and I know it proved to
+Miss Averies, most finally, that I am dangerous, since no woman ever
+looks in those little mirrors without some small motive of coquetry. It
+was just after that that she said to me:
+
+“Don’t you think that the little measures on the tops of the new
+canisters are extravagant for China tea?”
+
+That, of course, admitted me to the peculiar intimacy that women allow
+to other women, or to poets, or to dangerous men. Edward, I know,
+dislikes the drinking of China tea because it is against the principle
+of supporting the British flag. But Miss Averies in her unequal battle
+with this youth of the classical features slightly vulgarized, called
+me in to show a sign of sympathy--to give at least the flicker of the
+other side--of the woman, the poet, or the pessimist among men. She
+asked me, in fact, not to take up the cudgels to the extent of saying
+that China tea is the thing to drink--that would have been treason to
+Edward--but she desired that her instinct should be acknowledged to the
+extent of saying that the measures of canisters should be contrived to
+suit the one kind of tea as well as the other. In his blind sort of
+way Edward caught the challenge in the remark and his straight brows
+lowered a very little.
+
+“If you don’t have more than three pounds of China tea in the house in
+a year it won’t matter about the measures,” he said. “We never use more
+at Shackleton.”
+
+“But it makes the tea too strong, Edward.”
+
+“Then you need not fill the measure,” he answered.
+
+“Oh, I wish,” she said to me, “that you’d tell Edward not to make me
+make tea at all. I dread it. The servants do it so much better.”
+
+“So,” I asked, “Edward has arranged everything down to the last detail?”
+
+Edward looked to me for approval and applause.
+
+“You see, Annie has had so little experience, and I’ve had to look
+after my mother’s house for years.” His air said: “Yes! You’ll see our
+establishment will be run on the very best lines! Don’t you admire the
+way I’m taming her already?”
+
+I gave him, of course, a significant glance. Heaven knows why: for it
+is absolutely true that I am tired of appearing reliable--to Edward
+Burden or any one else in the world. What I want to do is simply to
+say to Edward Burden: “No, I don’t at all admire your dragging down a
+little bundle of ideals and sentiments to your own fatted calf’s level.”
+
+I suppose I have in me something of the poet. I can imagine that if
+I had to love or to marry this little Averies girl I should try to
+find out what was her tiny vanity and I should minister to it. In some
+way I should discover from her that she considered herself charming,
+or discreet, or tasteful, or frivolous, beyond all her fellows.
+And, having discovered it, I should bend all my energies to giving
+her opportunities for displaying her charm, her discreetness or her
+coquetry. With a woman of larger and finer mould--with you!--I should
+no doubt bring into play my own idealism. I should invest her with the
+attributes that I consider the most desirable in the world. But in
+either case I cannot figure myself dragging her down to my own social
+or material necessities.
+
+That is what Edward Burden is doing for little Miss Averies. I don’t
+mean to say that he does not idealize her--but he sees her transfigured
+as the dispenser of his special brand of tea or the mother of the sort
+of child that he was. And that seems to me a very valid reason why
+women, if they were wise, should trust their fortunes cold-bloodedly
+and of set reason to the class of dangerous men that now allure them
+and that they flee from.
+
+They flee from them, I am convinced, because they fear for their
+worldly material fortunes. They fear, that is to say, that the poet is
+not a stable man of business: they recognise that he is a gambler--and
+it seems to them that it is folly to trust to a gambler for life-long
+protection. In that they are perhaps right. But I think that no woman
+doubts her power to retain a man’s affection--so that it is not to
+the reputation for matrimonial instability that the poet owes his
+disfavour. A woman lives, in short, to play with this particular fire,
+since to herself she says: “Here is a man who has broken the hearts
+of many women. I will essay the adventure of taming him.” And, if she
+considers the adventure a dangerous one, that renders the contest only
+the more alluring, since at heart every woman, like every poet, is a
+gambler. In that perhaps she is right.
+
+But it seems to me that women make a great mistake in the value of the
+stakes they are ready to pay in order to enter this game. They will
+stake, that is to say, their relatively great coin--their sentimental
+lives; but they hoard with closed fingers the threepenny bit which is
+merely the material future.
+
+They prefer, that is to say, to be rendered the mere presiding geniuses
+of well-loaded boards. It is better to be a lady--which you will
+remember philologically means a “loaf-cutter”--than to be an Ideal.
+
+And in this they are obviously wrong. If a woman can achieve the
+obvious miracle of making a dangerous man stable in his affections she
+may well be confident that she can persuade him to turn his serious
+attention to the task of keeping a roof over her head. Certainly,
+I know, if I were a woman which of the two types of men I would
+choose. Upon the lowest basis it is better for all purposes of human
+contracts to be married to a good liar than to a bad one. For a lie
+is a figurative truth--and it is the poet who is the master of these
+illusions. Even in the matter of marital relations it is probable
+that the poet is as faithful as the Edward Burdens of this world--only
+the Edward Burdens are more skilful at concealing from the rest of
+the world their pleasant vices. I doubt whether they are as skilful
+at concealing them from the woman concerned--from the woman, with her
+intuition, her power to seize fine shades of coolness and her awakened
+self-interest. Imagine the wife of Edward Burden saying to him, “You
+have deceived me!” Imagine then the excellent youth, crimsoning,
+stuttering. He has been taught all his life that truth must prevail
+though the skies fall--and he stammers: “Yes: I have betrayed you.” And
+that is tragedy, though in the psychological sense--and that is the
+important one--Edward Burden may have been as faithful as the ravens,
+who live for fifteen decades with the same mate. He will, in short,
+blunder into a tragic, false position. And he will make the tragedy
+only the more tragic in that all the intellectual powers he may possess
+will be in the direction of perpetuating the dismal position. He will
+not be able to argue that he has not been unfaithful--but he will be
+able to find a hundred arguments for the miserable woman prolonging
+her life with him. Position, money, the interests of the children, the
+feelings of her family and of his--all these considerations will make
+him eloquent to urge her to prolong her misery. And probably she will
+prolong it.
+
+This, of course, is due to the excellent Edward’s lack of an
+instinctive sympathy. The poet, with a truer vision, will in the same
+case, be able to face his Miss Averies’ saying: “You have deceived
+me!” with a different assurance. Supposing the deflection to have been
+of the momentary kind he will be able to deny with a good conscience
+since he will be aware of himself and his feelings. He will at least
+be able to put the case in its just light. Or, if the deflection be
+really temperamental, really permanent, he will be unable--it being
+his business to look at the deeper verities--to lie himself out of the
+matter. He will break, strictly and sharply. Or, if he do not, it may
+be taken as a sign that his Miss Averies is still of value to him--that
+she, in fact, is still the woman that it is his desire to have for his
+companion. This is true, of course, only in the large sense, since
+obviously there are poets whose reverence for position, the interest of
+children or the feelings of their friends and relatives, may outweigh
+their hatred of a false position. These, however, are poets in the
+sense that they write verse: I am speaking of those who live the
+poet’s life; to such, a false position is too intolerable to be long
+maintained.
+
+But this again is only one of innumerable side-issues: let me return
+to my main contention that a dinner of herbs with a dangerous man is
+better than having to consume the flesh of stalled oxen with Edward
+Burden. Perhaps that is only a way of saying that you would have done
+better to entrust yourself to me than to---- (But no, your husband
+is a better man than Edward Burden. He has at least had the courage
+to revert to his passion. I went this afternoon to your chemists and
+formally notified them that if they supplied him with more than the
+exactly prescribed quantity of that stuff, I, as holding your power of
+attorney, should do all that the law allows me to do against them.)
+
+Even to the dullest of men, marrying is for the most part an
+imaginative act. I mean marrying as a step in life sanctioned by law,
+custom and that general consent of mankind which is the hall-mark of
+every irrational institution. By irrational I do not mean wrong or
+stupid. Marriage is august by the magnitude of the issues it involves,
+balancing peace and strife on the fine point of a natural impulse
+refined by the need of a tangible ideal. I am not speaking here of
+mere domestic peace or strife which for most people that count are a
+question of manners and a mode of life. And I am thinking of the peace
+mostly--the peace of the soul which yearns for some sort of certitude
+in this earth, the peace of the heart which yearns for conquest, the
+peace of the senses that dreads deception, the peace of the imaginative
+faculty which in its restless quest of a high place of rest is spurred
+on by these great desires and that great fear.
+
+And even Edward Burden’s imagination is moved by these very desires and
+that very fear--or else he would not have dreamt of marrying. I repeat,
+marriage is an imaginative institution. It’s true that his imagination
+is a poor thing but it is genuine nevertheless. The faculty of which
+I speak is of one kind in all of us. Not to every one is given that
+depth of feeling, that faculty of absolute trust which _will not_ be
+deceived, and the exulting masterfulness of the senses which are the
+mark of a fearless lover. Fearless lovers are rare, if obstinate, and
+sensual fools are countless as grains of sand by the seashore. I can
+imagine that correct young man perfectly capable of setting himself
+deliberately to worry a distracted girl into surrender.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+I don’t know why, to-night in particular, the fact that I am a dead man
+occurs to me very insistently. I had forgotten this for two whole days.
+If any one very dear to you has ever been _in extremis_ at a distance
+and you have journeyed to be at the last bedside, you will know how
+possible this is--how for hours at a time the mind will go wandering
+away from the main fact that is drawing you onwards, till suddenly it
+comes back: someone is dying at a distance. And I suppose one’s I is
+the nearest friend that one has--and my I is dying at a distance. At
+the end of a certain number of days is the deathbed towards which I am
+hurrying--it is a fact which I cannot grasp. But one aspect grows more
+clear to me every time I return to this subject.
+
+You remember that, when we have discussed suicide, we have agreed that
+to the man of action death is a solution: to the man of thoughts it
+is none. For the man of action expresses himself in action, and death
+is the negation of action: the man of thought sees the world only in
+thoughts, and over thought death exercises no solution of continuity.
+If one dies one’s actions cease, one’s problem continues. For that
+reason it is only in so far as I am a man of action that I shall be
+dying. You understand what I mean--for I do not mean that it is my
+actions that have killed me. It is simply because I have taken refuge
+from my thoughts in action, and because after April 5 that refuge will
+be closed to me, that I take refuge in a final action which, properly
+speaking, is neither action nor refuge.
+
+And perhaps I am no man of action at all, since the action in which I
+have taken refuge is properly speaking no action at all, but merely
+the expression of a frame of mind. I have gambled, that is to say I
+have not speculated. For the speculator acts for gain: the gambler in
+order to interest himself. I have gambled--to escape from you: I have
+tried to escape from my thoughts of you into divining the undivinable
+future. For that is what gambling is. You try for a rise: you try for a
+fall--and the rise or the fall may depend on the momentary madness of a
+dozen men who declare a war, or upon the rain from heaven which causes
+so many more stalks of wheat to arise upon so many million square
+inches of earth. The point is that you make yourself dependent upon
+caprice--upon the caprice of the weather or upon the movement in the
+minds of men more insane than yourself.
+
+To-day I have entered upon what is the biggest gamble of my whole
+life. Certain men who believe in me--they are not Edward Burdens,
+nevertheless they believe in me--have proposed to me to form a corner
+in a certain article which is indispensable to the daily life of the
+City. I do not tell you what it is because you will assuredly witness
+the effects of this inspiration.
+
+You will say that, when this is accomplished, it will be utterly
+uninteresting. And that is literally true: when it is done it will
+be uninteresting. But in the multiplicity of things that will have
+to be done before the whole thing is done--in the waiting for things
+to take effect, in the failures perhaps more than in the successes,
+since the failures will imply new devising--in all the meticulous
+thought-readings that will be necessary, the interest will lie, and in
+the men with whom one is brought into contact, the men with whom one
+struggles, the men whom one must bribe or trick.
+
+And you will say: How can I who am to die in fourteen days embark upon
+an enterprise that will last many months or many years? That, I think,
+is very simple.
+
+It is my protest against being called a man of action, the
+misconception that I have had to resent all my life. And this is a
+thought: not an action: a thought made up of an almost infinite number
+of erring calculations. You have probably forgotten that I have founded
+two towns, upon the south coast: originated four railways in tropical
+climates and one in the west of England: and opened up heaven knows how
+many mines of one kind or another--and upon my soul I had forgotten
+these things too until I began to cast about in my mind. And now I go
+to my death unmindful of these glories in so far as they are concrete.
+In that sense my death is utter: it is a solution. But, in so far as
+they are my refuges from you they remain problems to which, if my
+ghost is to escape you, I must return again and again.
+
+In dying I surrender to you and thus, for the inner self of myself,
+death is no ending but the commencement of who knows what tortures. It
+is only in the latent hope that death is the negation of consciousness
+that I shall take my life. For death, though it can very certainly end
+no problem, may at least make us unconscious of how, eventually, the
+problem solves itself. That, you see, is really the crux of the whole
+thing--that is why the man of action will take refuge in death: the
+man of thought, never. But I, I am the man of neither the one nor the
+other: I am the man of love, which partakes of action and of thought,
+but which is neither.
+
+The lover is, perhaps, the eternal doubter--simply because there is no
+certain panacea for love. Travel may cure it--but travel may cause to
+arise homesickness, which of all forms of love is the most terrible. To
+mix with many other men may cure it--but again, to the man who really
+loves, it may be a cause for still more terrible unrest, since seeing
+other men and women may set one always comparing the beloved object
+with the same thing. And, indeed, the form that it takes with me--for
+with me love takes the form of a desire to discuss--the form which
+it takes with me renders each thing that I see, each man with whom I
+speak, the more torturing, since always I desire to adjust my thoughts
+of them by your thoughts. I went down the other day--before I had
+begun to write these letters to you and before I knew death impended
+so nearly over me--to the sea at P--. I was trying to get rid of you.
+I sat in the moonlight and saw the smacks come home, visible for a
+minute in the track of the moon and then no more than their lights in
+the darkness. The fishermen talked of death by drowning mostly: the
+passage of the boats across that trail of light suggested reflections,
+no doubt trite. But, without you to set my thoughts by, I could get no
+more forward: I went round and round in a ring from the corpses fished
+up in the nets to the track of the moon. And since walking up and down
+on the parade brought me no nearer to you, I did not even care to move:
+I neither meditated nor walked, neither thought nor acted. And that is
+real torture.
+
+It was the next morning that I heard that young Burden desired that his
+_fiancée’s_ solicitors should scrutinise the accounts of the Burden
+Trust--and Death loomed up before me.
+
+You will ask: why Death? Why not some alternative? Flight or prison?
+Well: prison would be an unendurable travelling through Time, flight,
+an equally unendurable travelling through Time with Space added. Both
+these things are familiar: Death alone, in spite of all the experience
+that humanity has had of Death, is the utterly unfamiliar. For a
+gambler it is a _coup_ alluring beyond belief--as we know neither what
+we stake nor what we stand to win. I, personally, stand to win a great
+deal, since Life holds nothing for me and I stake only my life--and
+what I seek is only forgetfulness of you, or some sort of eventual and
+incomprehensible union with you. For the union with you that I seek is
+a queer sort of thing; hardly at all, I think, a union of the body, but
+a sort of consciousness of our thoughts proceeding onwards together.
+That we may find in the unending Afterwards. Or we may find the Herb
+Oblivion.
+
+Either of these things I desire. For, in so far as we can dogmatise
+about Death we may lay it down that Death is the negation of Action
+but is powerless against Thought. I do not desire Action: and at the
+same time I do not fear Thought. For it is not my thoughts of you that
+I fear: left alone with them I can say: “What is she more than any
+other material object?” It is my feelings that wear out my brain--my
+feelings that make me know that you are more than every material object
+living or still, and more than every faith dead or surviving. For
+feeling is neither Thought nor Action: it is the very stuff of Life
+itself. And, if Death be the negation of Life it may well be the end of
+consciousness.
+
+The worst that Death can do to me is to deliver me up for ever to
+unsatisfied longings for you. Well, that is all that Life has done,
+that is all that Life can do, for me.
+
+But Life can do so much more that is worse. Believe me when I say that
+I dread imprisonment--and believe me when I say that I do not dread
+disgrace. For you know very well that it is true when I say that I
+positively chuckle at the thought of the shock my fall would give
+to all these unawakened intelligences of this world. You know how I
+despise Edward Burden for trusting in me; you know how I have always
+despised other people who trusted in established reputations. I don’t
+mean to say that I should not have liked to keep the game up, certainly
+I should, since in gambling it is more desirable to win than to lose.
+And it is more amusing to fool fools than to give them eye-openers. But
+I think that, in gambling, it is only a shade less desirable, _per se_,
+to lose than to win. The main point is the sensation of either; and the
+only valid objection to losing is that, if one loses too often one has
+at last no longer the wherewithal to gamble. Similarly, to give people
+eye-openers is, _per se_, nearly as desirable as to fool them. It is
+not quite so desirable, since the game itself _is_ the fooling. But
+the great objection in _my_ case is that the eye-opener would once and
+for all put an end to the chance of my ever fooling them again. That,
+however, is a very small matter and what I dread is not that. If people
+no longer trusted in me I could no doubt still find an outlet for my
+energies with those who sought to take advantage of my abilities,
+trusting to themselves to wrest from me a sufficient share of the
+plunder that they so ardently desire, that I so really have no use for.
+
+No, I seek in Death a refuge from exposure not because exposure
+would cripple my energies: it would probably help them: and not
+because exposure would mean disgrace; I should probably find ironical
+satisfaction in it--but simply because it would mean imprisonment.
+That I dread beyond belief: I clench my fingers when, in conversation,
+I hear the words: “A long sentence.” For that would mean my being
+delivered up for a long time--for ever--to you. I write “for ever”
+advisedly and after reflection, since a long subjection, without
+relief, to that strain would leave upon my brain a wound that must
+prove ineffaceable. For to be alone and to think--those are my terrors.
+
+One reads that men who have been condemned for long years to solitary
+imprisonment go mad. But I think that even that sad gift from
+Omnipotent Fate would not be mine. As I figure the world to myself,
+Fate is terrible only to those who surrender to her. If I surrendered,
+to the extent of living to go to prison, then assuredly the future must
+be uniformly heavy, uniformly doomed, in my eyes. For I would as soon
+be mad as anything else I can think of. But I should not go mad. Men go
+mad because of the opportunities they miss: because the world changes
+outside their prison walls, or because their children starve. But I
+have no opportunities to miss or take: the changes of the world to me
+are nothing, and there is no soul between whom and starvation I could
+stand.
+
+Whilst I am about making this final disposition of my properties--let
+me tell you finally what I have done in regard to your husband himself.
+It is a fact--and this I have been keeping up my sleeve as a final
+surprise for you--that he is almost cured....
+
+But I have just received an incomprehensible note from Edward Burden.
+He asks me for some particulars as to his confounded estate and whether
+I can lend him some thousands of pounds at short notice. Heaven knows
+what new scrape this is that he’s in. Of course this may precipitate my
+crash. But whatever happens, I shall find time to write my final words
+to you--and nothing else really matters....
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+I haven’t yet discovered what Edward Burden is doing. I have found him
+a good round sum upon mortgage--the irony of the position being that
+the money is actually his whilst the mortgage does not actually exist.
+He says that what he is doing with the money will please me. I suppose
+that means that he’s embarking upon some sort of speculation which he
+imagines that I would favour. It is odd that he should think that I
+find gratification in his imitating myself.
+
+But why should I concern myself with this thing at all? Nothing in the
+world can ever please or displease me any more. For I have taken my
+resolve: this is my last night upon earth. When I lay down this pen
+again, I shall never take up any pen more. For I have said all that I
+can say to you. I am utterly tired out. To-night I shall make up into
+a parcel all these letters--I must sit through the night because it is
+only to-morrow morning that I shall be able to register the parcel to
+you--and registering it will be my last act upon the habitable globe.
+For biting through the glass in the ring will be not an action, but the
+commencement of a new train of thought. Or perhaps only my final action
+will come to an end when you read these words in Rome. Or will that be
+only thought--the part of me that lives--pleading to you to give your
+thoughts for company. I feel too tired to think the matter out!
+
+Let me, then, finish with this earth: I told you, when I finished
+writing last night, that Robert is almost cured. I would not have
+told you this for the sake of arrogating to myself the position of a
+saviour. But I imagine that you would like the cure to go on and, in
+the case of some accident after my death, it might go all to pieces
+once more. Quite simply then: I have been doing two things. In the
+first place I have persuaded your chemists to reduce very gradually the
+strength of chloral, so that the bottles contain nearly half water. And
+Robert perceives no difference. Now of course it is very important that
+he shall not know of the trick that is being so beneficently played on
+him--so that, in case he should go away or for one reason or another
+change his chemists, it must be carefully seen to that instead of pure
+chloral he obtains the exactly diluted mixture. In this way he may be
+brought gradually to drinking almost pure water.
+
+But that alone would hardly be satisfactory: a comparatively
+involuntary cure is of little value in comparison with an effort of the
+will. You may, conceivably, expel nature with a fork, but nothing but
+a passion will expel a passion. The only point to be proved is whether
+there exists in your husband any other passion for the sake of which he
+might abandon his passion for the clearness of vision which he always
+says his chloral gives him. He has not, of course, the incentives usual
+to men: you cannot, in fact, “get” him along ordinary lines.... But
+apart from his physical craving for the drug he _has_ that passion
+for clearness of intellect that he says the drug gives him--and it is
+through that, that at last, I have managed to hit his pride.
+
+For I have put it to him very strongly that one view of life is just
+as good as another--no better, no worse, but just the same. And I have
+put it to him that his use of chloral simply limits for him the number
+of views of life that he might conceivably have. And, when you come to
+think of all the rhapsodies of his that we have listened to, I think
+that that piece of special pleading is sufficiently justified. I do
+indeed honestly believe that, for what it is worth, he is on the road
+to salvation. He means to make a struggle--to attempt the great feat of
+once more seeing life with the eyes that Fate originally gave to him.
+
+This is my legacy to _you_: if you ask me why I have presented you
+with this man’s new identity--since it _will_ mean a new identity--I
+must answer that I simply don’t know. Why have we kept him alive all
+these years? I have done it no doubt because I had nothing to give
+you. But you? If you have loved me you must have wished him--I won’t
+say dead--but no more there. Yet you have tried too--and I suppose
+this answer to the riddle is simply the answer to the whole riddle
+of our life. We have tried to play a supremely difficult game simply
+because it sanctified our love. For, after all, sanctification arises
+from difficulties. Well, we have made our way very strait and we have
+so narrowed the door of entrance that it has vanished altogether. We
+have never had _any_ hope of a solution that could have satisfied us.
+If we had cared to break the rules of the game, I suppose we could
+have done it easily enough--and we could have done it the more easily
+since neither you nor I ever subscribed to those rules. If we have
+not it was, I think, simply because we sought the difficulty which
+sanctifies.... Has it been a very imbecile proceeding? I am most
+uncertain. For it is not a thing to be very proud of--to be able to say
+that for a whole lifetime, one has abstained from that which one most
+desired. On the other hand, we have won a curious and difficult game.
+Well--there it is--and there is your legacy. I do not think that there
+is anything else for me to write about. You will see that, in my will,
+I have left everything I possess to--Edward Burden. This is not because
+I wish to make him reparation, and it’s not because I wish to avoid
+scandal: it is simply because it may show him--one very simple thing.
+It will show him how very nearly I might have made things come right.
+I have been balancing my accounts very carefully, and I find that,
+reckoning things reasonably against myself, Edward Burden will have a
+five-pound note with which to buy himself a mourning-ring.
+
+The being forced to attend to my accounts will make him gasp a
+good deal. It will certainly shake his belief in all accepted
+reputations--for he will look on the faces of many men each “as
+solid as the Bank of England,” and he will think: “I wonder if you
+are like----?” His whole world will crumble--not because I have been
+dishonest, since he is coldblooded enough to believe that all men
+may be dishonest. But he will tremble because I have been able to
+be so wildly dishonest and yet to be so successfully respectable.
+He won’t even dare to “expose” me, since, if he did that, half of
+the shares which he will inherit from me would suffer an eclipse of
+disreputability, would tumble to nothingness in value--and would damage
+his poor pocket. He will have to have my estate set down at a high
+figure; he will have to be congratulated on his fortunate inheritance,
+and he will have, sedulously, to compound my felony.
+
+You will wonder how I can be capable of this final cruelty--the most
+cruel thing that, perhaps, ever one man did to another. I will tell
+you why it is: it is because I hate all the Edward Burdens of the
+world--because, being the eternal Haves of the world, they have made
+their idiotic rules of the game. And you and I suffer: you and I, the
+eternal Have Nots. And we suffer, not because their rules bind us, but
+because, being the finer spirits, we are forced to set ourselves rules
+that are still more strict in order that, in all things, we may be the
+truly gallant.
+
+But why do I write: “You will wonder how I can be capable of this.” You
+will have understood--you who understand everything.
+
+_Eight in the morning._--Well: now we part. I am going to register the
+parcel containing all these letters to you. We part: and it is as if
+you were dropping back--the lost Eurydice of the world--into an utter
+blackness. For, in a minute, you will be no more than part of my past.
+Well then: good-night.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+You will have got the telegram I sent you long before you got the
+parcel of letters: you will have got the note I wrote you by the same
+post as the letters themselves. If I have taken these three days to
+myself before again writing to you it has been because I have needed to
+recover my power of thinking. Now, in a way, I have recovered it--and
+it is only fair to say that I have devoted all my thoughts to how the
+new situation affects you--and you in your relations to me.
+
+It places me in your hands--let that be written first and foremost. You
+have to decree my life or my death. For I take it that now we can never
+get back again into our old position: I have spoken, you have heard me
+speak. The singular unity, the silence of our old life is done with
+for good. There is perhaps no reason why this should not be so: silence
+is no necessary part of our relationship. But it has seemed to make a
+rather exquisite bond between us.
+
+It must, if I am to continue to live--it must be replaced by some other
+bond. In our silence we have seemed to speak in all sorts of strange
+ways: we have perhaps read each other’s thoughts. I have seen words
+form themselves upon your lips. But now you must--there is no way out
+of it--you _must_ write to me. You must write to me fully: all your
+thoughts. You must, as I have done, find the means of speech--or I can
+no longer live....
+
+I am reprieved!
+
+I don’t know if, in my note to you, I explained exactly what had
+happened. It was in this way. I was anxious to be done with my world
+very early and, as soon as eight o’clock struck, I set out for the
+post-office at the corner to register that parcel of letters for you.
+Till the task was accomplished--the last I was to perform on earth--I
+noticed nothing: I was simply in a hurry. But, having given the little
+fagot into the hands of a sleepy girl, I said to myself suddenly:
+“Now I _am_ dead!” I began suddenly as they say of young children, to
+“notice.” A weight that I had never felt before seemed to fall away
+from me. I noticed, precisely, that the girl clerk was sleepy, that, as
+she reached up one hand to take the parcel over the brass caging, she
+placed the other over her mouth to hide a yawn.
+
+And out on the pavement it was most curious what had befallen the
+world. It had lost all interest: but it had become fascinating, vivid.
+I had not, you see, any senses left, but my eyesight and hearing.
+Vivid: that is the word. I watched a newsboy throw his papers down an
+area, and it appeared wonderfully interesting to discover that _that_
+was how one’s papers got into the house. I watched a milkman go up
+some doorsteps to put a can of milk beside a boot-scraper and I was
+wonderfully interested to see a black cat follow him. They were the
+clearest moments I have ever spent upon the earth--those when I was
+dead. They were so clear because nothing else weighed on my attention
+but just those little things. It was an extraordinary, a luxuriant
+feeling. That, I imagine, must have been how Adam and Eve felt before
+they had eaten of the fruit of knowledge.
+
+Supposing I had tacitly arranged with myself that I would die in the
+street, I think I should still have walked home simply to dally longer
+with that delightful feeling of sheer curiosity. For it was sheer
+curiosity to see how this world, which I had never looked at, really
+performed before utterly unbiassed eyes.
+
+That was why, when I got home, I sent away the messenger that brought
+to me Edward Burden’s letter; there was to be no answer. Whatever
+Burden’s query might be I was not going to commit myself to any other
+act. My last was that of sending off the parcel to you.
+
+My opening Burden’s letter when the messenger had gone was simply a
+part of my general curiosity. I wanted to see how a Burden letter would
+look when it no longer had any bearings at all for me. It was as if I
+were going to read a letter from that dear Edward to a man I did not
+know upon a subject of which I had never heard.
+
+And then I was reprieved!
+
+The good Edward, imagining that I was seriously hurt at his
+having proposed to allow his wife’s solicitors to superintend my
+stewardship--the good Edward in his concern had positively insisted
+that all the deeds should be returned to me absolutely unchecked. He
+said that he had had a hard fight for it and that the few thousands he
+had borrowed from me had represented his settlement, which he had thus
+paid in specie....
+
+It chimed in wonderfully with his character, when I come to think of
+it. Of course he was disciplining Miss Averies’ representatives just as
+he had disciplined herself in the matter of China tea of which I have
+written to you. And he had imagined that I was seriously hurt! Can you
+figure to yourself such an imbecile?
+
+But, if you permit me to continue to live, you will be saving the poor
+fool from the great shock I had prepared for him--the avalanche of
+discovery, the earthquake of uncertainty. For he says in that so kind
+way of his that, having thus shown his entire confidence in me--in
+the fact, that is, that Providence is on the side of all Burdens--he
+will choose a time in the future, convenient for me, when he will go
+thoroughly with me into his accounts. And inasmuch as his wedding-tour
+will take him all round the world I have at least a year in which
+to set things straight. And of course I can put off his scrutiny
+indefinitely or deceive him for ever.
+
+I did not think all these things at once. In fact, when I had read
+his letter, so strong within me was the feeling that it was only a
+mental phenomenon, a thing that had no relation with me--the feeling of
+finality was so strong upon me that I actually found myself sitting in
+that chair before I realized what had occurred.
+
+What had occurred was that I had become utterly and for good your
+property.
+
+In that sense only am I reprieved. As far as Edward Burden is concerned
+I am entirely saved. I stand before you and ask you to turn your thumb
+up or down. For, having spoken as I have to you, I have given you a
+right over me. Now that the pressing necessity for my death is over I
+have to ask you whether I shall plunge into new adventures that will
+lead me to death or whether I am to find some medium in which we may
+lead a life of our own, in some way together. I was about to take my
+life to avoid prison: now prison is no more a part of my scheme of
+existence. But I must now have some means of working towards you or
+I must run some new and wild risk to push you out of my thoughts. I
+don’t, as you know, ask you to be my secret mistress, I don’t ask you
+to elope with me. But I say that you _must_ belong to me as much in
+thought as I have, in this parcel of letters, been revealed and given
+over to you. Otherwise, I must once more gamble--and having tasted of
+gambling in the shadow of death, I must gamble for ever in that way. I
+must, I mean, feel that I am coming towards you or committing crimes
+that I may forget you.
+
+My dear, I am a very tired man. If you know what it was to long for
+you as I have longed for you all these years, you would wonder that I
+did not, sitting in that chair, put the ring up to my teeth, in spite
+of Burden’s letter, and end it. I have an irresistible longing for
+rest--or perhaps it is only your support. To think that I must face
+for ever--or for as long as it lasts--this troublesome excitement
+of avoiding thoughts of you--that was almost unbearable. I resisted
+because I had written these letters to you. I love you and I know you
+love me--yet without them I would have inflicted upon you the wound of
+my death. Having written them I cannot face the cruelty to you. I mean
+that, if I had died without your knowing why, it would have been only
+a death grievous to you--still it is the duty of humanity and of you
+with humanity to bear and to forget deaths. But now that you must know,
+I could not face the cruelty of filling you with the pain of unmerited
+remorse. For I know that you would have felt remorse, and it would have
+been unmerited since I gave you no chance or any time to stretch out
+your hands to me. Now I give it you and wait for your verdict.
+
+For the definite alternatives are these: I will put Burden’s estate
+absolutely clear within the year and work out, in order to make safe
+money, the new and comparatively sober scheme of which I have written
+to you: that I will do if you will consent to be mine to the extent of
+sharing our thoughts alone. Or, if you will not, I will continue to
+gamble more wildly than ever with the Burden money. And that in the
+end means death and a refuge from you.
+
+So then, I stand reprieved--and the final verdict is in your hands.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+A Note on “Romance”
+
+
+Writing to his Collaborator in a letter published in the _Transatlantic
+Review_ for January, 1924, Mr. Conrad makes the following ascription of
+passages in the work above named:
+
+ First Part, yours; Second Part, mainly yours, with a little by me on
+ points of seamanship and suchlike small matters; Third Part, about 60
+ percent mine with important touches by you; Fourth Part, mine with
+ here and there an important sentence by you; Fifth Part practically
+ all yours, including the famous sentence at which we both exclaimed:
+ “This is Genius,” (Do you remember what it is?) with perhaps half a
+ dozen lines by me....
+
+Mr. Conrad’s recollections--except for the generosity of his two
+“importants”--tally well enough with those of his Collaborator if
+conception alone is concerned. When it comes however to the writing the
+truth is that Parts One, Two, Three and Five are a singular mosaic of
+passages written alternately by one or other of the collaborators. The
+matchless Fourth Part is both in conception and writing entirely the
+work of Mr. Conrad.
+
+Below will be found the analysis of “Romance.” Any student of
+literature with an ear for prose will hardly need these underlinings,
+for Mr. Conrad’s definitenesses of statement stand out amongst his
+Collaborator’s more English keyings down so that when one of his half
+sentences bursts into the no doubt suaver prose of the other it is as
+if the page comes to life and speaks.
+
+Every collaboration is a contest of temperaments if it be at all
+thoroughly carried out; and this collaboration was carried out so
+thoroughly that, even when the book came to the proof stage, the
+original publishers, half way through the printing, sent the MS. back
+to the authors. They were still making innumerable corrections.
+
+Originally conceived, in the attempt to convey realistically a real
+story of adventure recorded in a State Trial, as the thin tale of a
+very old man--and this before the question of collaboration arose--the
+book contains of its first version only the two opening sentences--and
+the single other sentence: “And, looking back, we see Romance!” In
+between lay to say the least of it almost unbelievable labours--a
+contest of attrition lasting over several years. For insofar as this
+collaboration was a contest of wills it was a very friendly one; yet
+it was the continual attempt on the part of the one collaborator to
+key up and of the other to key down. And so exhausting was the contest
+that in the course of the years two definite breakdowns occurred. In
+the first the robuster writer let the book called “The Inheritors” just
+go and it remains a monument as it were of silverpoint, delicacies
+and allusiveness. The second breakdown is recorded in the Fourth Part
+of “Romance,” sketches for which were written over and over--and then
+over--again, until the weaker brother, in absolute exhaustion, in
+turn let it go at that. So, to mark those breaking points, you have
+the silverpoint of “The Inheritors” set against the, let us say,
+oil-painting of this matchless Fourth Part.
+
+“The Nature of a Crime” should have become a novel treating of the
+eternal subject of the undetected criminal--a theme which every writer
+for once or twice in his life at least contemplates in a world in which
+the fortunate are so very often the merely not found out. The courage
+of few writers carries them even beyond the contemplation; in this case
+the joint courages of the authors went as far as what you may read.
+
+The passage from the Fifth Part of “Romance” printed below contains the
+“famous sentence” as to which Mr. Conrad writes: “We both exclaimed:
+‘This is genius’.”
+
+Joseph Conrad in Italics; F. M. Hueffer in Roman type.
+
+ _Part One: Chapter One._
+
+ _To yesterday and to-day I say my polite “vaya usted con dios.”
+ What are these days to me?_ But that far-off day of my romance,
+ when from between _the blue and white bales in Don Ramon’s darkened
+ storeroom, at Kingston_, I saw the door open before the figure of _an
+ old man with the tired, long, white face_, that day I am not likely
+ to forget. I remember _the chilly smell of the typical West Indian
+ store_, the indescribable _smell of damp gloom, of locos, of pimento,
+ of olive oil, of new sugar, of new rum; the glassy double sheen of
+ Ramon’s great spectacles, the piercing eyes in the mahogany face_,
+ while the tap, tap, tap of a cane on the flags went on behind the
+ inner door; _the click of the latch; the stream of light_. The door,
+ petulantly thrust inwards, struck against some barrels. I remember
+ the rattling of the bolts on that door, and _the tall figure_ that
+ appeared there, _snuff-box in hand. In that land of white clothes
+ that precise, ancient, Castilian in black was something to remember.
+ The black cane that had made the tap, tap, tap dangled by a silken
+ cord from the hand whose delicate blue-veined, wrinkled wrist ran
+ back into a foam of lawn ruffles._ The other hand paused in the act
+ of conveying a pinch of snuff to the nostrils of the _hooked nose
+ that had, on the skin stretched tight over the bridge, the polish of
+ old ivory; the elbow pressing the black cocked hat against the side;
+ the legs, one bent, the other bowing a little back_--this was the
+ attitude of Seraphina’s father.
+
+ Having imperiously thrust the door of the inner room open, he
+ remained immovable, with no intention of entering, and called in
+ a harsh, aged voice: “Señor Ramon! Señor Ramon!” and then twice:
+ “Seraphina--Seraphina!” turning his head back.
+
+ _Then for the first time I saw Seraphina, looking over her father’s
+ shoulder._ I remember her face of that day; _her eyes were grey--the
+ grey of black, not of blue. For a moment they looked me straight
+ in the face, reflectively, unconcerned, and then travelled to the
+ spectacles of old Ramon._
+
+ This glance--remember I was young on that day--had been enough to set
+ me wondering what they were thinking of me; what they could have seen
+ of me.
+
+ “But there he is your Señor Ramon,” she said to her father, _as if
+ she were chiding him for a petulance in calling_; “your sight is not
+ very good, my poor little father--there he is, your Ramon.”
+
+ _The warm reflection of the light behind her, gilding the curve of
+ her face from ear to chin, lost itself in the shadows of black lace
+ falling from dark hair that was not quite black. She spoke as if the
+ words clung to her lips; as if she had to put them forth delicately
+ for fear of damaging the frail things._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Part One: Chapter Five._
+
+ _Macdonald cleared his throat, with a sound resembling the coughing
+ of a defective pump, and a mere trickle of a voice_ asked:
+
+ “_Hwhat evidence have ye of identitee?_”
+
+ _I hadn’t any at all and began to finger my buttonholes as
+ shame-faced as a pauper before a Board. The certitude dawned upon me
+ suddenly that Carlos, even if he would consent to swear to me, would
+ prejudice my chances._
+
+ I cannot help thinking that _I came very near to being cast adrift
+ upon the streets of Kingston. To my asseverations Macdonald returned
+ nothing but a series of minute “humphs.” I don’t know what overcame
+ his scruples; he had shown no signs of yielding, but suddenly turning
+ on his heel_ made a motion with one of his flabby white hands. I
+ understood it to mean that I was to follow him aft.
+
+ The decks were covered with a jabbering turmoil of negroes with
+ muscular arms and brawny shoulders. All their shining faces seemed to
+ be momentarily gashed open to show rows of white, and were spotted
+ with inlaid eyeballs. The sounds coming from them were a bewildering
+ noise. They were hauling baggage about aimlessly. _A large soft
+ bundle of bedding nearly took me off my legs._ There wasn’t room for
+ emotion. Macdonald laid about him with the handle of the umbrella a
+ few inches from the deck; but the passage that he made for himself
+ closed behind him.
+
+ _Suddenly, in the pushing and hurrying, I came upon a little clear
+ space beside a pile of boxes. Stooping over them was the angular
+ figure of Nichols, the second mate. He looked up at me, screwing his
+ yellow eyes together._
+
+ _“Going ashore,” he asked, “long of that Puffing Billy?”_
+
+ “What business is it of yours?” I mumbled sulkily.
+
+ _Sudden and intense threatening came into his_ yellow _eyes_.
+
+ _“Don’t you ever come to_ you know where,” _he said; “I don’t want no
+ spies on what I do. There’s a man there’ll crack your little backbone
+ if he catches you. Don’t yeh come now. Never.”_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Part Four: Chapter One._
+
+ In my anxiety to keep clear of the schooner which, for all I know to
+ this day, may not have been there at all, I had come too close to
+ the sand, so close that I heard soft, rapid footfalls stop short in
+ the fog. A voice seemed to be asking me in a whisper:
+
+ “Where, oh, where?”
+
+ Another cried out irresistibly, “I see it.”
+
+ It was a subdued cry, as if hushed in awe.
+
+ My arm swung to and fro; the turn of my wrist went on imparting the
+ propelling motion of the oar. All the rest of my body was gripped
+ helplessly in the dead expectation of the end, as if in the benumbing
+ seconds of a fall from a towering height. And it was swift, too.
+ I felt a draught at the back of my neck--a breath of wind. And
+ instantly, as if a battering ram had been let swing past me at many
+ layers of stretched gauze, I beheld, through a tattered deep hole
+ in the fog, a roaring vision of flames, borne down and swimming up
+ again; a dance of purple gleams on the strip of unveiled water, and
+ three coal black figures in the light.
+
+ One of them stood high on lank black legs, with long black arms
+ thrown up stiffly above the black shape of a hat. The two others
+ crouched low on the very edge of the water, peering as if from an
+ ambush.
+
+ The clearness of this vision was contained by a thick and a fiery
+ atmosphere, into which a soft white rush and swirl of fog fell like
+ a sudden whirl of snow. It closed down and overwhelmed at once the
+ tall flutter of the flames, the black figures, the purple gleams
+ playing round my oar. The hot glare had struck my eyeballs once, and
+ that melted away again into the old, fiery stain on the mended fabric
+ of the fog. But the attitudes of the crouching men left no room
+ for doubt that we had been seen. I expected a sudden uplifting of
+ voices on the shore, answered by cries from the sea, and I screamed
+ excitedly at Castro to lay hold of his oar.
+
+ He did not stir, and after my shouts, which must have fallen on the
+ scared ears with a weird and unearthly note, a profound silence
+ attended us--the silence of a superstitious fear: And, instead of
+ howls, I heard, before the boat had travelled its own short length,
+ a voice that seemed to be the voice of fear itself asking, “Did
+ you hear that?” and a trembling mutter of an invocation to all the
+ saints. Then a strangled throat trying to pronounce firmly, “The soul
+ of the dead Inglez. Crying for pain.”
+
+ Admiral Rowley’s seamen, so miserably thrown away in the
+ ill-conceived attack on the bay, were making a ghostly escort to our
+ escape. Those dead boats’-crews were supposed to haunt the fatal
+ spot, after the manner of spectres that linger in remorse, regret,
+ or revenge, about the gates of departure. I had blundered; the fog,
+ breaking apart, had betrayed us. But my obscure and vanquished
+ country-men held possession of the outlet by memory of their courage.
+ In this critical moment it was they, I may say, who stood by us.
+
+ We, on our part, must have been disclosed, dark, indistinct, utterly
+ inexplicable; completely unexpected; an apparition of stealthy
+ shades. The painful voice in the fog said:
+
+ “Let them be. Answer not. They shall pass on, for none of them died
+ on the shore--all in the water. Yes, all in the water.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Part Five: Chapter One._
+
+ “_Why have I been brought here your worship?_” I asked with a great
+ deal of firmness.
+
+ _There were two figures in black, the one beside, the other behind a
+ large black table. I was placed in front of them between two dirty
+ soldiers, in the centre of a large, gaunt room, with bare, dirty
+ walls, and the arms of Spain above the judge’s seat._
+
+ _“You are before the Juez de la Primera Instancia,” said the man in
+ black beside the table. He wore a large and shadowy tricorn. “Be
+ silent, and respect the procedure.”_
+
+ It was, without doubt, excellent advice. _He whispered some words in
+ the ear of the Judge of the First Instance. It was plain enough to
+ me that the judge was quite an inferior official, who merely decided
+ whether there was any case against the accused_; he had, even to his
+ clerk, an air of timidity, of doubt.
+
+ _I said: “But I insist on knowing....”_
+
+ _The clerk said: “In good time....” And then_, in the same tone of
+ disinterested official routine, _he spoke to the Lugareño, who, from
+ beside the door_, rolled very frightened eyes _from the judges and
+ the clerk to myself and the soldiers_--“Advance.”
+
+ _The judge, in a hurried, perfunctory voice, put questions to the
+ Lugareño; the clerk scratched with a large quill on a sheet of paper._
+
+ “_Where do you come from?_”
+
+ “_The town of Rio Medio, excellency._”
+
+ “_Of what occupation?_”
+
+ “_Excellency--a few goats._...”
+
+ “_Why are you here?_”
+
+ “_My daughter, excellency, married Pepe of the posada in the
+ Calle._...”
+
+ _The judge said, “Yes, yes,”_ with an unsanguine impatience. The
+ Lugareño’s dirty hands jumped nervously on the large rim of his limp
+ hat.
+
+ “_You lodge a complaint against the señor there._”
+
+ _The clerk pointed the end of his quill towards me._
+
+ _“I? God forbid, excellency,” the Lugareño bleated._ “The Alguazil
+ of the Criminal Court instructed me to be watchful....”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Part Five: The End._
+
+ _A long time after a harsh voice said_:
+
+ “_Your excellency, we retire, of course, from the prosecution._”
+
+ _A different one directed_:
+
+ “_Gentlemen of the jury you will return a verdict of ‘Not
+ Guilty’._...”
+
+ _Down below they were cheering uproariously because my life was
+ saved. But it was I that had to face my saved life. I sat there, my
+ head bowed into my hands. The old judge was speaking to me in a tone
+ of lofty compassion_:
+
+ “_You have suffered much, as it seems, but suffering is the lot of us
+ men. Rejoice now that your character is cleared; that here in this
+ public place you have received the verdict of your country-men that
+ restores you to the liberties of our country and the affection of
+ your kindred. I rejoice with you who am a very old man at the end of
+ my life._...”
+
+ _It was rather tremendous, his deep voice, his weighted words.
+ Suffering is the lot of us men.... The formidable legal array, the
+ great powers of a nation, had stood up to teach me that, and they had
+ taught me that--suffering is the lot of us men!_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _It takes long enough to realise that someone is dead at a distance.
+ I had done that. But how long, how long it needs to know that the
+ life of your heart has come back from the dead._ For years afterwards
+ I could not bear to have her out of my sight.
+
+ Of our first meeting in London all I can remember is a speechlessness
+ that was like the awed hesitation of our overtried souls before the
+ greatness of a change from the verge of despair to the opening of a
+ supreme joy. The whole world, the whole of life, with her return had
+ changed all around me; it enveloped me, it enfolded me so lightly as
+ not to be felt, so suddenly as not to be believed in, so completely
+ that that whole meeting was an embrace, so softly that at last it
+ lapsed into a sense of rest that was like the fall of a beneficent
+ and welcome death.
+
+ _For suffering is the lot of man_, but not inevitable failure or
+ worthless despair which is without end--suffering, the mark of
+ manhood, which bears within its pain a hope of felicity like a jewel
+ set in iron....
+
+ Her first words were:
+
+ “You broke our compact. You went away from me whilst I was sleeping.”
+ Only the deepness of her reproach revealed the depth of her love, and
+ the suffering she too had endured to reach a union that was to be
+ without end--and to forgive.
+
+ _And, looking back, we see Romance--that subtle thing that is
+ mirage--that is life. It is the goodness of the years we have lived
+ through, of the old time when we did this or that, when we dwelt here
+ or there. Looking back it seems a wonderful enough thing that I who
+ am this and she who is that, commencing so far away a life that after
+ such sufferings borne together and apart, ended so tranquilly there
+ in a world so stable--that she and I should have passed through so
+ much, good chance and evil chance, sad hours and joyful, all lived
+ down and swept away into the little heap of dust that is life. That,
+ too, is Romance._
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
+
+
+ Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
+
+ Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
+
+ Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75172 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75172 ***</div>
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+
+<div class="titlepage">
+<h1><i>The Nature of<br>
+a Crime</i></h1>
+
+<p>BY<br>
+<span class="xlarge">JOSEPH CONRAD</span><br>
+AND<br>
+<span class="xlarge">FORD MADOX FORD</span><br>
+(F. M. HUEFFER)</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/title_page_illo.jpg" alt="publisher's logo"></div>
+
+<p>GARDEN CITY <span class="gap"> NEW YORK</span><br>
+<span class="large">DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY</span><br>
+1924</p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="center">COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY<br>
+DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY<br>
+<br>
+ALL RIGHTS RESERVED<br>
+<br>
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES<br>
+AT<br>
+THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.<br>
+<br>
+<i>First Edition</i></p>
+</div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<p class="ph2"><i>The Nature of<br>
+a Crime</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poetry">
+<div class="bbox">
+<p class="ph1">BOOKS BY JOSEPH CONRAD</p>
+
+<hr class="full">
+
+<p>ALMAYER’S FOLLY<br>
+AN OUTCAST OF THE ISLANDS<br>
+THE NIGGER OF THE “NARCISSUS”<br>
+TALES OF UNREST<br>
+LORD JIM: A ROMANCE<br>
+YOUTH: A NARRATIVE<br>
+TYPHOON<br>
+FALK, AND OTHER STORIES<br>
+NOSTROMO: A TALE OF THE SEABOARD<br>
+THE MIRROR OF THE SEA<br>
+THE SECRET AGENT<br>
+A SET OF SIX<br>
+UNDER WESTERN EYES<br>
+A PERSONAL RECORD<br>
+’TWIXT LAND AND SEA<br>
+CHANCE<br>
+WITHIN THE TIDES<br>
+VICTORY<br>
+THE SHADOW-LINE<br>
+THE ARROW OF GOLD<br>
+THE RESCUE<br>
+NOTES ON LIFE AND LETTERS<br>
+THE ROVER</p>
+
+<p><span class="large"><i>With Ford Madox Ford</i> (<i>Hueffer</i>)</span></p>
+
+<p>ROMANCE: A NOVEL<br>
+THE INHERITORS: AN EXTRAVAGANT STORY<br>
+THE NATURE OF A CRIME</p>
+</div></div></div></div>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[v]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">PREFACES</h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>For years my consciousness of this
+small piece of collaboration has been
+very vague, almost impalpable, like
+fleeting visits from a ghost. If I ever
+thought of it, and I must confess that I
+can hardly remember ever doing it on
+purpose till it was brought definitely to
+my notice by my Collaborator, I always
+regarded it as something in the nature
+of a fragment. I was surprised and
+even shocked to discover that it was
+rounded. But I need not have been.
+Rounded as it is in form, using the word
+form in its simplest sense—printed form—it
+remains yet a fragment from its
+very nature and also from necessity.
+It could never have become anything<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">[vi]</span>
+else. And even as a fragment it is but
+a fragment of something else that might
+have been—of a mere intention.</p>
+
+<p>But, as it stands, what impresses me
+most is the amount this fragment contains
+of the crudely materialistic atmosphere
+of the time of its origin, the time
+when the <i>English Review</i> was founded.
+It emerges from the depths of a past as
+distant from us now as the square-skirted,
+long frock-coats in which unscrupulous,
+cultivated, high-minded
+<i>jouisseurs</i> like ours here attended to
+their strange business activities and
+cultivated the little blue flower of
+sentiment. No doubt our man was
+conceived for purposes of irony; but
+our conception of him, I fear, is too
+fantastic.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the most fantastic thing of all,
+it seems to me, is that we two who had
+so often discussed soberly the limits and
+methods of literary composition should
+have believed for a moment that a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span>
+piece of work in the nature of an analytical
+confession (produced <i>in articulo
+mortis</i> as it were) could have been
+developed and achieved in collaboration!</p>
+
+<p>What optimism! But it did not last
+long. I seem to remember a moment
+when I burst into earnest entreaties
+that all these people should be thrown
+overboard without more ado. This, I
+believe, <i>is</i> the real nature of the crime.
+Overboard. The neatness and dispatch
+with which it is done in Chapter
+VIII was wholly the act of my Collaborator’s
+good nature in the face of
+my panic.</p>
+
+<p>After signing these few prefatory
+words I will pass the pen to him in the
+hope that he may be moved to contradict
+me on every point of fact, impression,
+and appreciation. I said “the
+hope.” Yes, eager hope. For it would
+be delightful to catch the echo of the
+desperate, earnest and funny quarrels<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span>
+which enlivened those old days. The
+pity of it is that there comes a time
+when all the fun of one’s life must be
+looked for in the past.</p>
+
+<p class="right">J. C.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span></p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>No, I find nothing to contradict, for,
+the existence of this story having been
+recalled to my mind by a friend, the
+details of its birth and its attendant
+circumstances remain for me completely
+forgotten, a dark, blind-spot
+on the brain. I cannot remember the
+houses in which the writing took place,
+the view from the windows, the pen,
+the table cloth. At a given point in my
+life I forgot, literally, all the books I
+had ever written; but, if nowadays I
+re-read one of them, though I possess
+next to none and have re-read few,
+nearly all the phrases come back
+startlingly to my memory and I see
+glimpses of Kent, of Sussex, of Carcassonne—of
+New York, even; and fragments
+of furniture, mirrors, who knows<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[x]</span>
+what? So that, if I didn’t happen to
+retain, almost by a miracle, for me,
+of retention, the marked up copy of
+“Romance” from which was made the
+analysis lately published in a certain
+periodical, I am certain that I could
+have identified the phrases exactly as
+they there stand. Looking at the book
+now I can hear our voices as we read
+one passage or another aloud for purposes
+of correction. Moreover I could
+say: This passage was written in Kent
+and hammered over in Sussex; this,
+written in Sussex and worked on in
+Kent; or this again was written in the
+downstairs café and hammered in the
+sitting room on the first-floor, of an
+hotel that faces the sea on the Belgian
+coast.</p>
+
+<p>But of “The Nature of a Crime” no
+phrase at all suggests either the tones
+of a voice or the colour of a day. When
+an old friend, last year, on a Parisian
+Boulevard said: “Isn’t there a story<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">[xi]</span>
+by yourself and Collaborator buried in
+the So &amp; So?” I repudiated the idea
+with a great deal of heat. Eventually
+I had to admit the, as it were, dead
+fact. And, having admitted that to
+myself, and my Collaborator having
+corroborated it, I was at once possessed
+by a sort of morbid craving to get the
+story re-published in a definitive and
+acknowledged form. One may care
+infinitely little for the fate of one’s
+work and yet be almost hypochondriacally
+anxious as to the form its publication
+shall take—if the publication is
+likely to occur posthumously. I became
+at once dreadfully afraid that
+some philologist of that Posterity for
+which one writes, might, in the course
+of his hyena occupations, disinter
+these poor bones and, attributing sentence
+one to writer A and sentence two
+to B, maul at least one of our memories.
+With the nature of <i>those</i> crimes one
+is only too well acquainted. Besides,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">[xii]</span>
+though one may never read comments
+one desires to get them over. It is
+indeed agreeable to hear a storm rage
+in the distance and rumble eventually
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Let me, however, since my Collaborator
+wishes it and in the name of Fun
+that is to-day hardly an echo, differ
+from him for a shade as to the nature
+of those passages of time. I protest
+against the word: quarrels. There were
+not any. And I should like to make
+the note that our collaboration was
+almost purely oral. We wrote and read
+aloud the one to the other. Possibly
+in the end we even wrote <i>to</i> read aloud
+the one to the other: for it strikes me
+very forcibly that “The Nature of a
+Crime” is for the most part prose
+meant for recitation, or of that type.</p>
+
+<p>Anyhow, as the memory comes back
+to me overwhelmingly, I would read
+on and read on. One begins with a
+fine propulsion. Sometimes that would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">[xiii]</span>
+last to the end. But, as often as not,
+by a real telepathy, with my eyes on
+the page and my voice going on I would
+grow aware of an exaggerated stillness
+on the part of my Collaborator in the
+shadows. It was an extraordinary kind
+of stillness: not of death: not of an ice
+age. Yes, it was the stillness of a
+prisoner on the rack determined to
+conceal an agony. I would read on,
+my voice gradually sticking to my jaws.
+When it became unbearable I would
+glance up. On the other side of the
+hearth I would have a glimpse of a
+terribly sick man, of a convulsed face,
+of fingers contorted. Guido Fawkes
+beneath the <i>peine forte et dure</i> looked
+like that. You are to remember that
+we were very serious about writing. I
+would read on. After a long time it
+would come: “Oh!... Oh,
+oh!... Oh my God....
+My dear Ford.... My dear
+faller....” (That in those days<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">[xiv]</span>
+was the fashionable pronunciation of
+“fellow”.)</p>
+
+<p>For myself, I would listen always
+with admiration. Always with an admiration
+that I have never since recaptured.
+And if there were admirablenesses
+that did not seem to me to fit in
+with the given scene I could at least, at
+the end of the reading, say with perfect
+sincerity: “Wonderful! <i>How</i> you do
+things!...” before beginning on:
+“But don’t you perhaps think....”</p>
+
+<p>And I really do not believe that
+either my Collaborator or myself ever
+made an objection which was not
+jointly sustained. That is not quarrels.
+When I last looked through the bound
+proofs of <i>Romance</i> I was struck with the
+fact that whereas my Collaborator
+eliminated almost every word of action
+and eighty percent of the conversations
+by myself, I supplied almost all the
+descriptive passages of the really collaborated
+parts—and such softer sentiment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">[xv]</span>
+as was called for. And my
+Collaborator let them get through.</p>
+
+<p>All this took place long ago; most of
+it in another century during another
+reign; whilst an earlier but not less
+haughty and proud generation were
+passing away.</p>
+
+<p class="right">F. M. F.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<p class="ph3"><i>The Nature of<br>
+a Crime</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
+<p class="ph3"><i>The Nature of<br>
+a Crime</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">I</h2>
+
+<p class="drop-cap">YOU are, I suppose, by now in
+Rome. It is very curious how
+present to me are both Rome and yourself.
+There is a certain hill—you, and
+that is the curious part of it, will
+never go there—yet, yesterday, late in
+the evening, I stood upon its summit
+and you came walking from a place
+below. It is always midday there:
+the seven pillars of the Forum stand
+on high, their capitals linked together,
+and form one angle of a square. At
+their bases there lie some detritus, a
+broken marble lion, and I think but I
+am not certain, the bronze she-wolf
+suckling the two bronze children.
+Your dress brushed the herbs: it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
+grey and tenuous: I suppose you do not
+know how you look when you are unconscious
+of being looked at? But I
+looked at you for a long time—at my
+You.</p>
+
+<p>I saw your husband yesterday at the
+club and he said that you would not
+be returning till the end of April.
+When I got back to my chambers I
+found a certain letter. I will tell you
+about it afterwards—but I forbid you
+to look at the end of what I am writing
+now. There is a piece of news coming:
+I would break it to you if I could—but
+there is no way of breaking the utterly
+unexpected. Only, if you read this
+through you will gather from the tenor,
+from the tone of my thoughts, a little
+inkling, a small preparation for my disclosure.
+Yes: it is a “disclosure.”</p>
+
+<p>... Briefly, then, it was this
+letter—a business letter—that set me
+thinking: that made that hill rise before
+me. Yes, I stood upon it and there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
+before me lay Rome—beneath a haze,
+in the immense sea of plains. I have
+often thought of going to Rome—of
+going with you, in a leisurely autumn of
+your life and mine. Now—since I have
+received that letter—I know that I
+shall never see any other Rome than
+that from an imagined hilltop. And
+when, in the wonderful light and shadelessness
+of that noon, last evening, you
+came from a grove of silver poplars, I
+looked at you—<i>my</i> you—for a very
+long while. You had, I think, a parasol
+behind your head, you moved slowly,
+you looked up at the capitals of those
+seven pillars.... And I thought
+that I should never—since you will not
+return before the end of April—never
+see you again. I shall never see
+again the you that every other man
+sees....</p>
+
+<p>You understand everything so well
+that already you must understand the
+nature of my disclosure. It is, of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
+course, no disclosure to tell you that I
+love you. A very great reverence is
+due to youth—and a very great latitude
+is due to the dead. For I am dead: I
+have only lived through you for how
+many years now! And I shall never
+speak with you again. Some sort of
+burial will have been given to me before
+the end of April. I am a spirit. I
+have ended my relations with the world.
+I have balanced all my books, my will is
+made. Only I have nothing to leave—save
+to you, to whom I leave all that is
+now mine in the world—my memory.</p>
+
+<p>It is very curious—the world now.
+I walked slowly down here from Gordon
+Square. I walked slowly—for all my
+work is done. On the way I met Graydon
+Bankes, the K. C. It would have
+astonished him if he could have known
+how unreal he looked to me. He is six
+feet high, and upon his left cheek there
+is a brown mole. I found it difficult to
+imagine why he existed. And all sorts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
+of mists hurried past him. It was just
+outside the Natural History Museum.
+He said that his Seaford Railway Bill
+would come before Committee in June.
+And I wondered: what is June?...
+I laughed and thought: why June will
+never come!</p>
+
+<p>June will never come. Imagine that
+for a moment. We have discussed the
+ethics of suicide. You see why June
+will never come!</p>
+
+<p>You remember that ring I always
+wear? The one with a bulging, greenish
+stone. Once or twice you have
+asked me what stone it was. You
+thought, I know, that it was in bad
+taste and I told you I wore it for the
+sake of associations. I know you
+thought—but no: there has never
+been any woman but you.</p>
+
+<p>You must have felt a long time ago
+that there was not, that there could not
+have been another woman. The associations
+of the ring are not with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
+past of a finished affection, or hate, or
+passion, with all these forms of unrest
+that have a term in life: they looked forward
+to where there is no end—whether
+there is rest in it God alone knows. If
+it were not bad taste to use big words in
+extremities I would say there was Eternity
+in the ring—Eternity which is the
+negation of all that life may contain of
+losses and disappointments. Perhaps
+you have noticed that there was one
+note in our confidence that never responded
+to your touch. It was that
+note of universal negation contained
+within the glass film of the ring. It is
+not you who brought the ring into my
+life: I had it made years ago. It was
+in my nature always to anticipate a
+touch on my shoulder, to which the
+only answer could be an act of defiance.
+And the ring is my weapon. I shall
+raise it to my teeth, bite through the
+glass: inside there is poison.</p>
+
+<p>I haven’t concealed anything from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
+you. Have I? And, with the great
+wisdom for which I love you, you have
+tolerated these other things. You
+would have tolerated this too, you who
+have met so many sinners and have
+never sinned....</p>
+
+<p>Ah, my dear one—that is why I have
+so loved you. From our two poles we
+have met upon one common ground of
+scepticism—so that I am not certain
+whether it was you or I who first said:
+“Believe nothing: be harsh to no one.”
+But at least we have suffered. One
+does not drag around with one such a
+cannon-ball as I have done all these
+years without thinking some wise
+thoughts. And well I know that in
+your dreary and terrible life you have
+gained your great wisdom. You have
+been envied; you too have thought:
+Is any prospect fair to those among its
+trees? And I have been envied for my
+gifts, for my talents, for my wealth, for
+my official position, for the letters after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
+my name, for my great and empty
+house, for my taste in pictures—for my
+... for my opportunities.</p>
+
+<p>Great criminals and the very patient
+learn one common lesson: Believe in
+nothing, be harsh to no one!</p>
+
+<p>But you cannot understand how
+immensely leisurely I feel. It is one
+o’clock at night. I cannot possibly be
+arrested before eleven to-morrow morning.
+I have ten hours in which, without
+the shadow of a doubt, I can write
+to you: I can put down my thoughts
+desultorily and lazily. I have half a
+score of hours in which to speak to you.</p>
+
+<p>The stress of every secret emotion
+makes for sincerity in the end. Silence
+is like a dam. When the flood is at
+its highest the dam gives way. I am
+not conceited enough to think that I
+can sweep you along, terrified, in the
+rush of my confidences. I have not the
+elemental force. Perhaps it is just that
+form of “greatness” that I have lacked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
+all my life—that profound quality
+which the Italians call <i>terribilita</i>. There
+is nothing overpowering or terrible in
+the confession of a love too great to be
+kept within the bounds of the banality
+which is the safeguard of our daily life.
+Men have been nerved to crime for the
+sake of a love that was theirs. The call
+of every great passion is to unlawfulness.
+But your love was not mine, and my
+love for you was vitiated by that conventional
+reverence which, as to nine
+parts in ten, is genuine, but as to the
+last tenth a solemn sham behind which
+hide all the timidities of a humanity no
+longer in its youth. I have been of my
+time—altogether of my time—lacking
+courage for a swoop, as a bird respects a
+ragged and nerveless scarecrow. Altogether
+a man of my time. Observe,
+I do not say “our time.” You are of
+all time—you are the loved Woman
+of the first cry that broke the silence
+and of the last song that shall mark the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
+end of this ingenious world to which
+love and suffering have been given, but
+which has in the course of ages invented
+for itself all the virtues and all the
+crimes. And being of this world and of
+my time I have set myself to deal ingeniously
+with my suffering and my love.</p>
+
+<p>Now everything is over—even regrets.
+Nothing remains of finite things but a
+few days of life and my confession to
+make to you—to you alone of all the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>It is difficult. How am I to begin?
+Would you believe it—every time I left
+your presence it was with the desire,
+with the necessity to forget you.
+Would you believe it?</p>
+
+<p>This is the great secret—the heart
+of my confession. The distance did
+not count. No walls could make me
+safe. No solitude could defend me;
+and having no faith in the consolations
+of eternity I suffered too cruelly from
+your absence.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>If there had been kingdoms to conquer,
+a crusade to preach—but no. I
+should not have had the courage to go
+beyond the sound of your voice. You
+might have called to me any time!
+You never did. Never. And now it
+is too late. Moreover, I am a man of
+my time, the time is not of great deeds
+but of colossal speculations. The moments
+when I was not with you had
+to be got through somehow. I dared
+not face them empty-handed lest from
+sheer distress I should go mad and begin
+to execrate you. Action? What form
+of action could remove me far enough
+from you whose every thought was referred
+to your existence? And as you
+were to me a soul of truth and serenity
+I tried to forget you in lies and excitement.
+My only refuge from the tyranny
+of my desire was in abasement.
+Perhaps I was mad. I gambled. I
+gambled first with my own money and
+then with money that was not mine.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
+You know my connection with the great
+Burden fortune. I was trustee under
+my friend’s, Alexander Burden’s will.
+I gambled with a determined recklessness,
+with closed eyes. You understand
+now the origin of my houses, of
+my collections, of my reputation, of
+my taste for magnificence—which you
+deigned sometimes to mock indulgently
+with an exquisite flattery as at something
+not quite worthy of me. It was
+like a break-neck ride on a wild horse,
+and now the fall has come. It was
+sudden. I am alive but my back is
+broken. Edward Burden is going to
+be married. I must pay back what I
+have borrowed from the Trust. I cannot.
+Therefore I am dead. (A mouse
+has just come out from beneath one of
+the deed-boxes. It looks up at me.
+It may have been eating some of the
+papers in the large cupboard. To-morrow
+morning I shall tell Saunders to
+get a cat. I have never seen a mouse<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
+here before. I have never been here so
+late before. At times of pressure, as
+you know, I have always taken my
+papers home. So that these late hours
+have been, as it were, the prerogative
+of the mouse. No. I shall not get a
+cat. To that extent I am still a part
+of the world: I am master of the fate of
+mice!) I have, then, ten hours, less the
+time it has taken me to chronicle the
+mouse, in which to talk to you. It is
+strange, when I look back on it, that in
+all the years we have known each other—seven
+years, three months and two
+days—I have never had so long as ten
+hours in which I might talk to you. The
+longest time was when we came back
+from Paris together, when your husband
+was in such a state that he could neither
+see nor hear. (I’ve seen him, by-the-bye,
+every day since you have been gone.
+He’s really keeping away from it wonderfully
+well; in fact, I should say that he
+has not once actually succumbed. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
+fancy, really, that your absence is good
+for him in a way: it creates a new set of
+circumstances, and a change is said to
+be an excellent aid in the breaking of a
+habit. He has, I mean, to occupy himself
+with some of the things, innumerable
+as they are, that you do for him.
+I find that he has even had his pass-book
+from the bank and has compared
+it with his counterfoils. I haven’t, on
+account of this improvement, yet been
+round to his chemist’s. But I shall certainly
+tell them that they <i>must</i> surreptitiously
+decrease the strength of it.)
+That was the longest time we have ever
+really talked together. And, when I
+think that in all these years I haven’t
+once so much as held your hand for a
+moment longer than the strictest of
+etiquette demanded! And I loved you
+within the first month.</p>
+
+<p>I wonder why that is. Fancy, perhaps.
+Habit perhaps—a kind of idealism,
+a kind of delicacy, a fastidiousness.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
+As you know very well it is not on account
+of any moral scruples....</p>
+
+<p>I break off to look through what I
+have already written to you. There
+is, first, the question of why I never told
+you my secret: then, the question of
+what my secret really is; I have started
+so many questions and have not followed
+one of them out to the very end.
+But all questions resolve themselves
+into the one question of our dear and
+inestimable relationship.</p>
+
+<p>I think it has been one of the great
+charms of our relationship that all our
+talks have been just talks. We have
+discussed everything under the sun,
+but we have never discussed anything
+<i>au fond</i>. We have strayed into all sorts
+of byways and have never got anywhere.
+I try to remember how many evenings
+in the last five years we have not spent
+together. I think they must be less than
+a hundred in number. You know how,
+occasionally, your husband would wake<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
+out of his stupors—or walk <i>in</i> his stupor
+and deliver one of his astonishingly
+brilliant disquisitions. But remember
+how, always, whether he talked of free
+love or the improvement in the breed
+of carriage-horses, he always thrashed
+his subject out to the bitter end. It
+was not living with a man: it was
+assisting at a performance. And, when
+he was sunk into his drugs or when he
+was merely literary, or when he was
+away, how lazily we talked. I think
+no two minds were ever so fitted one
+into another as yours and mine. It is
+not of course that we agree on all subjects—or
+perhaps upon any. In the
+whole matter of conduct we are so
+absolutely different—you are always for
+circumspection, for a careful preparation
+of the ground, for patience; and
+I am always ready to act, and afterwards
+draw the moral from my own
+actions. But somehow, in the end, it
+has all worked out in our being in perfect<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
+agreement. Later I will tell you
+why that is.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Let me return to my mouse. For
+you will observe that the whole question
+revolves, really, around that little
+allegorical mite. It is an omen: it is a
+symbol. It is a little herald of the
+Providence that I do not believe in—of
+the Providence you so implicitly seek
+to obey. For instinctively you believe
+in Providence—in God, if you will. I
+as instinctively disbelieve. Intellectually
+of course you disbelieve in a God.
+You say that it is impossible for Reason
+to accept an Overlord; I that Reason
+forces one to accept an Overlord; that
+Reason forces one to believe in an Omnipotent
+Ruler—only I am unable to
+believe. We, my dear, are in ourselves
+evidence of a design in creation. For
+we are the last word of creation. It has
+taken all the efforts, all the birthpangs
+of all the ages to evolve—you and me.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
+And, being evolved, we are intellectually
+so perfectly and so divinely fashioned to
+dovetail together. And, physically too,
+are we not divinely meant the one for
+the other? Do we not react to the
+same causes: should not we survive the
+same hardships or succumb to the same
+stresses? Since you have been away I
+have gone looking for people—men,
+women, children, even animals—that
+could hold my attention for a minute.
+There has not been one. And what
+purer evidence of design could you ask
+for than that?</p>
+
+<p>I have made this pact with the Providence
+that I argue for, with the Providence
+in whose existence I cannot
+believe—that if, from under the castle of
+black metal boxes, the mouse reappear
+and challenge death—then there is no
+future state. And, since I can find no
+expression save in you, if we are not
+reunited I shall no longer exist. So
+my mouse is the sign, the arbitrament,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
+a symbol of an eternal life or the herald
+of nothingness.</p>
+
+<p>I will make to you the confession that
+since this fancy, this profound truth,
+has entered my mind, I have not raised
+my eyes from the paper. I dread—I
+suppose it is dread—to look across the
+ring of light that my lamp casts. But
+now I will do so. I will let my eyes
+travel across the bundles of dusty
+papers on my desk. Do you know I
+have left them just as they were on the
+day when you came to ask me to take
+your railway tickets? I will let my eyes
+travel across that rampart of blue and
+white dockets.... The mouse is
+not there.</p>
+
+<p>But that is not an end of it. I am
+not a man to be ungenerous in my dealings
+with the Omnipotent: I snatch no
+verdict.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">II</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>Last night it was very late and I grew
+tired, so I broke off my letter. Perhaps
+I was really afraid of seeing that mouse
+again. Those minute superstitions are
+curious things. I noticed, when I
+looked at the enumeration of these
+pages to-night, I began to write upon the
+thirteenth sheet—and that gives me a
+vague dissatisfaction. I read, by-the-bye,
+a paragraph in a newspaper: it
+dealt with half-mad authors. One of
+these, the writer said, was Zola; he was
+stated to be half mad because he added
+together the numbers on the backs of
+cabs passing him in the street. Personally,
+I do that again and again—and I
+know very well that I do it in order to
+dull my mind. It is a sort of narcotic.
+Johnson, we know, touched his street-posts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
+in a certain order: that, too, was
+to escape from miserable thoughts.
+And we all know how, as children, we
+have obeyed mysterious promptings to
+step upon the lines between the paving-stones
+in the street.... But the
+children have their futures: it is well
+that they should propitiate the mysterious
+Omnipotent One. In their day,
+too, Johnson and Zola had their futures.
+It was well that Johnson should
+“touch” against the evil chance; that
+Zola should rest his mind against new
+problems. In me it is mere imbecility.
+For I have no future.</p>
+
+<p>Do you find it difficult to believe
+that? You know the Burdens, of
+course. But I think you do not know
+that, for the last nine years, I have administered
+the Burden estates all by
+myself. The original trustees were old
+Lady Burden and I; but nine years ago
+Lady Burden gave me a power of attorney
+and since then I have acted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
+alone. It was just before then that I
+had bought the houses in Gordon
+Square—the one I live in, the one you
+live in, and the seven others. Well,
+rightly speaking, those houses have
+been bought with Burden money, and
+all my pictures, all my prints, all my
+books, my furniture, my reputation as
+a connoisseur, my governorship of the
+two charities—all the me that people
+envy—have been bought with the Burden
+money. I assure you that at times
+I have found it a pleasurable excitement....
+You see, I have wanted
+you sometimes so terribly—so terribly
+that the juggling with the Burden accounts
+has been as engrossing a narcotic
+as to Zola was the adding up of the
+numbers upon the backs of cabs. Mere
+ordinary work would never have held
+my thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Under old Burden’s will young Edward
+Burden comes of age when he
+reaches the age of twenty-five or when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
+he marries with my consent. Well, he
+will reach the age of twenty-five and he
+will marry on April 5. On that day the
+solicitors of his future wife will make
+their scrutiny of my accounts. It is
+regarded, you understand, as a mere
+formality. But it amuses me to think
+of the faces of Coke and Coke when they
+come to certain figures! It was an
+outlaw of some sort, was it not, who
+danced and sang beneath the gallows?
+I wonder, now, what sort of traitor, outlaw,
+or stealthy politician I should have
+made in the Middle Ages. It is certain
+that, save for this one particular of property,
+I should be in very truth illustrious.
+No doubt the state shall come at
+last in which there shall no more be any
+property. I was born before my time.</p>
+
+<p>For it is certain that I am illustrious
+save in that one respect. To-day young
+Edward Burden came here to the office
+to introduce me to his <i>fiancée</i>. You
+observe that I have robbed her. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
+Burden property is really crippled.
+They came, this bright young couple,
+to get a cheque from me with which to
+purchase a motor-car. They are to try
+several cars in the next three weeks.
+On the day before the wedding they
+are to choose one that will suit them
+best—and on the wedding-day in the
+evening they are to start for Italy.
+They will be coming towards you....
+Then no doubt, too, a telegram will
+reach them, to say that in all probability
+motor-cars will be things not for
+them for several years to come. What
+a crumbling of their lives!</p>
+
+<p>It was odd how I felt towards <i>her</i>.
+You know his pompous, high forehead,
+the shine all over him, the grave,
+weighty manner. He held his hat—a
+wonderful shiny, “good” hat—before
+his mouth, for all the world as if he had
+been in church. He made, even, a
+speech in introducing Miss Averies to
+me. You see, in a sense, he was in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
+temple. My office enshrined a deity,
+a divinity: the law, property, the rights
+of man as maintained by an august
+constitution. I am for him such a wonderfully
+“safe” man. My dear one, you
+cannot imagine how I feel towards him:
+a little like a deity, a little like an avenging
+Providence. I imagine that the
+real Deity must feel towards some of
+His worshippers much as I feel towards
+this phœnix of the divines.</p>
+
+<p>The Deity is after all the supreme
+Artist—and the supreme quality of Art
+is surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Imagine then the feeling of the Deity
+towards some of those who most confidently
+enter His temple. Just imagine
+His attitude towards those who deal in
+the obvious platitudes that “honesty is
+the best policy,” or “genius the capacity
+for taking pains.” So for days the
+world appears to them. Then suddenly:
+honesty no longer pays; the
+creature, amassing with his infinite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
+pains, data for his Great Work, is
+discovered to have produced a work of
+an Infinite Dulness. That is the all-suffering
+Deity manifesting Himself to
+His worshippers. For assuredly a day
+comes when two added to two no longer
+results in four. That day will come on
+April 5 for Edward Burden.</p>
+
+<p>After all he has done nothing to make
+two and two become four. He has not
+even checked his accounts: well: for
+some years now I have been doing as
+much as that. But with his <i>fiancée</i> it
+is different. She is a fair, slight girl
+with eyes that dilate under all sorts of
+emotion. In my office she appears not
+a confident worshipper but a rather
+frightened fawn led before an Anthropomorphic
+Deity. And, strangely
+enough, though young Burden who
+trusts me inspires me with a sardonic
+dislike, I felt myself saying to this poor
+little thing that faced me: “Why: I have
+wronged you!” And I regretted it.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>She, you see, has after all given something
+towards a right to enjoy the Burden
+estates and the Burden wealth; she
+has given her fragile beauty, her amiability,
+her worship, no doubt, of the
+intolerable Edward. And all this payment
+in the proper coin: so she has in a
+sense a right....</p>
+
+<p>Good-night, dear one, I think you
+have it in your power—you <i>might</i> have
+it in your power—to atone to this little
+creature. To-morrow I will tell you
+why and how.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">III</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>I wrote last night that you have
+something in your power. If you
+wished it you could make me live on.
+I am confident that you will not wish
+it: for you will understand that capriciously
+or intolerably I am tired of living
+this life. I desire you so terribly that
+now, even the excitement of fooling
+Burden no longer hypnotizes me into
+an acceptance of life without you.
+Frankly, I am tired out. If I had to go
+on living any longer I should have to
+ask you to be mine in one form or other.
+With that and with my ability—for of
+course I have great ability—I could go
+on fooling Burden for ever. I could restore:
+I could make sounder than ever
+it was that preposterous “going concern”
+the Burden Estate. Unless I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
+like to let them, I think that the wife’s
+solicitors will not discover what I have
+done. For, frankly, I have put myself
+out in this matter in order to be amusing
+to myself and ingenious. I have
+forged whole builder’s estimates for repairs
+that were never executed: I have
+invented whole hosts of defaulting tenants.
+It has not been latterly for money
+that I have done this: it has been simply
+for the sheer amusement of looking at
+Edward Burden and saying to myself:</p>
+
+<p>“Ah: you trust me, my sleek friend.
+Well....”</p>
+
+<p>But indeed I fancy that I am rich
+enough to be able to restore to them all
+that I have taken. And, looking at
+Edward Burden’s little <i>fiancée</i>, I was
+almost tempted to set upon that weary
+course of juggling. But I am at the
+end of my tether. I cannot live without
+you longer. And I do not wish to
+ask you. Later I will tell you. Or
+No—I will tell you now.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>You see, my dear thing, it is a question
+of going one better. It would be
+easy enough to deceive your husband:
+it would be easier still to go away together.
+I think that neither you nor I
+have ever had any conscientious scruples.
+But, analysing the matter down
+to its very depths, I think we arrive at
+this, that without the motives for self-restraint
+that other people have we
+are anxious to show more self-restraint
+than they. We are doing certain work
+not for payment but for sheer love of
+work. Do I make myself clear? For myself
+I have a great pride in your image.
+I can say to myself: “Here is a woman,
+my complement. She has no respect
+for the law. She does not value what a
+respect for the law would bring her.
+Yet she remains purer than the purest
+of the makers of law.” And I think it
+is the converse of that feeling that you
+have for me.</p>
+
+<p>If you desire me to live on, I will live<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
+on: I am so swayed by you that if you
+desire me to break away from this ideal
+of you, the breath of a command will
+send me round to your side.</p>
+
+<p>I am ready to give my life for this
+Ideal: nay more, I am ready to sacrifice
+you to it, since I know that life for
+you will remain a very bitter thing. I
+know, a little, what renunciation means.</p>
+
+<p>And I am asking you to bear it—for
+the sake of my ideal of you. For, assuredly,
+unless I can have you I must
+die—and I know that you will not ask
+me to have you. And I love you:
+and bless you for it.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">IV</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>I have just come in from <i>Tristan
+and Isolde</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I had to hurry and be there for the
+first notes because you—my you—would,
+I felt, be sitting beside me as
+you have so often. That, of course, is
+passion—the passion that makes us
+unaccountable in our actions.</p>
+
+<p>I found you naturally: but I found,
+too, something else. It has always a
+little puzzled me why we return to
+Tristan. There are passages in that
+thing as intolerable as anything in any
+of the Germanic master’s scores. But
+we are held—simply by the idea of the
+love-philtre: it’s that alone that interests
+us. We do not care about the
+initial amenities of Tristan and the
+prima donna: we do not believe in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
+Mark’s psychologising: but, from the
+moment when those two dismal marionettes
+have drained unconsideringly the
+impossible cup, they become suddenly
+alive, and we see two human beings
+under the grip of a passion—acting as
+irrationally as I did when I promised
+my cabman five shillings to get me to
+the theatre in time for the opening bars.</p>
+
+<p>It is, you see, the love-philtre that
+performs this miracle. It interests—it
+is real to us—because every human
+being knows what it is to act, irrationally,
+under the stress of some passion or
+other. We are drawn along irresistibly:
+we commit the predestined follies or
+the predestined heroisms: the other side
+of our being acts in contravention of
+all our rules of conduct or of intellect.
+Here, in Tristan, we see such madness
+justified with a concrete substance, a
+herb, a root. We see a vision of a state
+of mind in which morality no longer
+exists: we are given a respite, a rest: an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
+interval in which no standard of conduct
+oppresses us. It is an idea of an
+appeal more universal than any other
+in which the tired imagination of humanity
+takes refuge.</p>
+
+<p>The thought that somewhere in the
+world there should be something that
+I could give to you, or you to me, that
+would leave us free to do what we wish
+without the drag of the thought of what
+we owe, to each other, to the world!
+And after all, what greater gift could
+one give to another? It would be the
+essential freedom. For assuredly, the
+philtre could do no more than put it in
+a man’s power to do what he would do
+if he were let loose. He would not bring
+out more than he had in him: but he
+would fully and finally express himself.</p>
+
+<p>Something unexpected has changed
+the current of my thoughts. Nothing
+can change their complexion, which is
+governed not by what others do but by
+the action which I must face presently.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
+And I don’t know why I should use the
+word unexpected, unless because at the
+moment I was very far from expecting
+that sort of perplexity. The correct
+thing to say would be that something
+natural has happened.</p>
+
+<p>Perfectly natural. Asceticism is the
+last thing that one could expect from
+the Burdens. Alexander Burden, the
+father, was an exuberant millionaire,
+in no vulgar way, of course; he was
+exuberant with restraint, not for show,
+with a magnificence which was for private
+satisfaction mainly. I am talking
+here of the ascetic temperament which
+is based on renunciation, not of mere
+simplicity of tastes, which is simply
+scorn for certain orders of sensations.
+There have been millionaires who have
+lived simply. There have been millionaires
+who have lived sordidly—but miserliness
+is one of the supreme forms of
+sensualism.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Burden had a magnificent physique.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
+The reserved abilities of generations
+of impoverished Burdens, starved
+for want of opportunities, matured
+in his immense success—and all their
+starved appetites too. But all the reserve
+quality of obscure Burdens has
+been exhausted in him. There was
+nothing to come to his son—who at
+most could have been a great match
+and is to-day looked upon in that light,
+I suppose, by the relations of his future
+wife. I don’t know in what light that
+young man looks upon himself. His
+time of trial is coming.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday at eight in the evening he
+came to see me. I thought at first he
+wanted some money urgently. But
+very soon I reflected that he need not
+have looked so embarrassed in that case.
+And presently I discovered that it was
+not money that he was in need of. He
+looked as though he had come, with
+that characteristic gravity of his—so
+unlike his father—to seek absolution<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
+at my hands. But that intention he
+judged more decorous, I suppose, to
+present to me as a case of conscience.</p>
+
+<p>Of course it was the case of a girl—not
+his <i>fiancée</i>. At first I thought he
+was in an ugly scrape. Nothing of the
+kind. The excellent creature who had
+accepted his protection for some two
+years past—how dull they must have
+seemed to her—was perhaps for that
+reason perfectly resigned to forego that
+advantage. At the same time, she was
+not too proud to accept a certain provision,
+compensation—whatever you
+like to call it. I had never heard of anything
+so proper in my life. He need
+not have explained the matter to me at
+all. But evidently he had made up his
+mind to indulge in the luxury of a conscience.</p>
+
+<p>To indulge that sort of conscience
+leads one almost as far as indulged
+passion, only, I cannot help thinking, on
+a more sordid road. A luxury snatched<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
+from the fire is in a way purified, but to
+find this one he had gone apparently to
+the bottom of his heart. I don’t charge
+him with a particularly odious degree of
+corruption, but I perceived clearly that
+what he wanted really was to project
+the sinful effect of that irregular connection—let
+us call it—into his regulated,
+reformed, I may say lawfully
+blessed state—for the sake of retrospective
+enjoyment, I suppose. This rather
+subtle, if unholy, appetite, he was
+pleased to call the voice of his conscience.
+I listened to his dialectic exercises
+till the great word that was sure
+to come out sooner or later was pronounced.</p>
+
+<p>“It seems,” he said, with every appearance
+of distress, “that from a
+strictly moral point of view I ought to
+make a clean breast of it to Annie.”</p>
+
+<p>I listened to him—and, by Heaven,
+listening to him I <i>do</i> feel like the Godhead
+of whom I have already written<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
+to you. You know, positively he said
+that at the very moment of his “fall”
+he had thought of what <i>I</i> should think
+of him. And I said:</p>
+
+<p>“My good Edward, you are the most
+debauched person I have ever met.”</p>
+
+<p>His face fell, his soft lips dropped
+right down into a horseshoe. He had
+come to me as one of those bland
+optimists <i>would</i> go to his deity. He
+expected to be able to say: “I have
+sinned,” and to be able to hear the
+Deity say: “That’s all right, your very
+frank confession does you infinite
+credit.” His deity was, in fact, to
+find him some way out of his moral
+hole. I was to find him some genial
+excuse; to make him feel good in his excellent
+digestion once more. That was,
+absolutely, his point of view, for at my
+brutal pronouncement he stuttered:</p>
+
+<p>“But—but surely ... the faults
+of youth ... and surely there are
+plenty of others?...”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>I shook my head at him and panic
+was dropping out of his eyes: “Can’t
+I marry Annie honourably?” he quavered.
+I took a sinister delight in turning
+the knife inside him. I was going
+to let him go anyhow: the sort of cat
+that I am always lets its mice go.
+(That mouse, by-the-bye, has never
+again put in an appearance.)</p>
+
+<p>“My dear fellow,” I said, “does not
+your delicacy let you see the hole you
+put me into? It’s to my interest that
+you should not marry Miss Averies and
+you ask me to advise you on the point.”</p>
+
+<p>His mouth dropped open: positively
+he had never considered that when he
+married I lost the confounded three
+hundred a year for administering the
+Burden Trust. I sat and smiled at
+him to give him plenty of time to let his
+mind agonize over his position.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, hang it,” he said....
+And his silly eyes rolled round my room
+looking for that Providence that he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
+felt ought to intervene in his behalf.
+When they rested on me again I said:</p>
+
+<p>“There, go away. Of course it’s a
+fault of your youth. Of course every
+man that’s fit to call himself a man has
+seduced a clergyman’s daughter.”</p>
+
+<p>He said:</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but there was not anything
+common about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” I answered, “you had an uncommonly
+good time of it with your
+moral scruples. I envy you the capacity.
+You’ll have a duller one with Miss
+Averies, you know.”</p>
+
+<p>That was too much for him to take
+in, so he smoothed his hat.</p>
+
+<p>“When you said I was ... debauched
+... you were only laughing
+at me. That was hardly fair. I’m
+tremendously in earnest.”</p>
+
+<p>“You’re only play-acting compared
+with me,” I answered. He had the air
+of buttoning his coat after putting a
+cheque into his breast pocket. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
+had got, you see, the cheque he expected:
+my applause of his successful seduction,
+my envy of his good fortune. That
+was what he had come for—and he got
+it. He went away with it pretty bare-facedly,
+but he stopped at the threshold
+to let drop:</p>
+
+<p>“Of course if I had known you would
+be offended by my having recourse
+to Annie’s solicitors for the settlement....”</p>
+
+<p>I told him I was laughing at him
+about that too.</p>
+
+<p>“It was the correct thing to do, you
+know,” were the words he shut the door
+upon. The ass....</p>
+
+<p>The phrase of his—that he had
+thought of me at the moment of his fall—gives
+you at once the measure of his
+respect for me. But it gave me much
+more. It gave me my cue: it put it
+into my head to say he was debauched.
+And, indeed, that is debauchery. For
+it is the introduction of one’s morals<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
+into the management of one’s appetites
+that makes an indulgence of them debauchery.
+Had my friend Edward regarded
+his seduction as the thing he
+so much desired me to tell him it was; a
+thing of youth, high spirits—a thing we
+all do—had he so regarded it I could not
+really have called it debauchery. But—and
+this is the profound truth—the
+measure of debauchery is the amount of
+joy we get from the indulgence of our
+appetites. And the measure of joy we
+get is the amount of excitement: if it
+brings into play not only all our physical
+but all our moral nature then we have
+the crucial point beyond which no man
+can go. It isn’t, in fact, the professional
+seducer, the artist in seduction
+that gets pleasure from the pursuit of
+his avocation, any more than it is the
+professional musician who gets thrills
+from the performance of music. You
+cannot figure to yourself the violinist,
+as he fiddles the most complicated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
+passage of a concerto, when he really
+surmounts the difficulty by dint of using
+all his knowledge and all his skill—you
+cannot imagine him thinking of his
+adviser, his mother, his God and all the
+other things that my young friend says
+he thought about. And it is the same
+with the professional seducer. He may
+do all that he knows to bring his object
+about—but that is not debauchery. It
+is, by comparison, a joyless occupation:
+it is drinking when you are thirsty. Putting
+it in terms of the most threadbare
+allegory—you cannot imagine that
+Adam got out of the fall the pleasure
+that Edward Burden got out of his bite
+of the apple.</p>
+
+<p>But Edward Burden, whilst he shilly-shallied
+with “Shall I?” and “Sha’n’t
+I?” could deliciously introduce into
+the matter <i>all</i> his human relationships.
+He could think of me, of his mother, of
+the fact that potentially he was casting
+to the winds the very cause for his existence.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
+For assuredly, if Edward Burden
+have a cause for existence it is that
+he should not, morally or physically, do
+anything that would unfit him to make
+a good marriage. So he had, along with
+what physical pleasure there might be,
+the immense excitement of staking his
+all along with the tremendous elation of
+the debate within himself that went
+before. For he was actually staking his
+all upon the chance that he could both
+take what he desired and afterwards
+reconcile it with his conscience to make
+a good match. Well, he has staked and
+won. That is the true debauchery.
+That, in a sense, is the compensating
+joy that Puritanism gets.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">V</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>I have just come in. Again you will
+not guess from where. From choosing
+a motor-car with Burden and his
+<i>fiancée</i>. It seems incredible that I
+should be called upon to preside at
+these preparations for my own execution.
+I looked at hundreds of these
+shiny engines, with the monstrously
+inflated white wheels, and gave a half-amused—but
+I can assure you a half-interested—attention
+to my own case.
+For one of these will one day—and soon
+now—be arrested in a long rush, by my
+extinction. In it there will be seated
+the two young people who went with
+me through the garages. They will
+sit in some sort of cushioned ease—the
+cushions will be green, or red, or blue in
+shiny leather. I think, however, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
+they will not be green—because Miss
+Averies let slip to me, in a little flutter
+of shy confidence, the words: “Oh,
+don’t let’s have green, because it’s an
+unlucky colour.” Edward Burden, of
+course, suppressed her with a hurried
+whisper as if, in thus giving herself
+away to me, she must be committing a
+sin against the house of Burden.</p>
+
+<p>That, naturally, is the Burden tradition:
+a Burden’s wife must possess
+frailties: but she must feign perfection
+even to a trusted adviser of the family.
+She must not confess to superstitions.
+It was amusing, the small incident, because
+it was the very first attempt that
+little Miss Averies has ever made to get
+near me. God knows what Edward
+may have made me appear to her: but
+I fancy that, whatever Edward may
+have said, she had pierced through
+that particular veil: she realizes, with
+her intuition, that I am dangerous.
+She is alarmed and possibly fascinated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
+because she feels that I am not
+“straight”—that I might, in fact, be
+a woman or a poet. Burden, of course,
+has never got beyond seeing that I
+dress better than he does and choose a
+dinner better than his uncle Darlington.</p>
+
+<p>I came, of course, out of the motor-car
+ordeal with flying colours—on these
+lines. I lived, in fact, up to my character
+for being orthodox in the matter
+of comfort. I even suggested two little
+mirrors, like those which were so comforting
+to us all when we sat in hansom
+cabs. That struck Burden as being
+the height of ingenuity—and I know it
+proved to Miss Averies, most finally,
+that I am dangerous, since no woman
+ever looks in those little mirrors without
+some small motive of coquetry. It
+was just after that that she said to me:</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t you think that the little
+measures on the tops of the new canisters
+are extravagant for China tea?”</p>
+
+<p>That, of course, admitted me to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
+peculiar intimacy that women allow to
+other women, or to poets, or to dangerous
+men. Edward, I know, dislikes the
+drinking of China tea because it is
+against the principle of supporting the
+British flag. But Miss Averies in her
+unequal battle with this youth of the
+classical features slightly vulgarized,
+called me in to show a sign of sympathy—to
+give at least the flicker of the
+other side—of the woman, the poet, or
+the pessimist among men. She asked
+me, in fact, not to take up the cudgels
+to the extent of saying that China tea
+is the thing to drink—that would have
+been treason to Edward—but she desired
+that her instinct should be acknowledged
+to the extent of saying that the
+measures of canisters should be contrived
+to suit the one kind of tea as well
+as the other. In his blind sort of way
+Edward caught the challenge in the
+remark and his straight brows lowered
+a very little.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>“If you don’t have more than three
+pounds of China tea in the house in a
+year it won’t matter about the measures,”
+he said. “We never use more
+at Shackleton.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it makes the tea too strong,
+Edward.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then you need not fill the measure,”
+he answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I wish,” she said to me, “that
+you’d tell Edward not to make me make
+tea at all. I dread it. The servants
+do it so much better.”</p>
+
+<p>“So,” I asked, “Edward has arranged
+everything down to the last detail?”</p>
+
+<p>Edward looked to me for approval
+and applause.</p>
+
+<p>“You see, Annie has had so little
+experience, and I’ve had to look after
+my mother’s house for years.” His air
+said: “Yes! You’ll see our establishment
+will be run on the very best lines!
+Don’t you admire the way I’m taming
+her already?”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>I gave him, of course, a significant
+glance. Heaven knows why: for it is
+absolutely true that I am tired of appearing
+reliable—to Edward Burden or
+any one else in the world. What I want
+to do is simply to say to Edward Burden:
+“No, I don’t at all admire your
+dragging down a little bundle of ideals
+and sentiments to your own fatted
+calf’s level.”</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I have in me something
+of the poet. I can imagine that if I
+had to love or to marry this little Averies
+girl I should try to find out what was
+her tiny vanity and I should minister
+to it. In some way I should discover
+from her that she considered herself
+charming, or discreet, or tasteful, or
+frivolous, beyond all her fellows. And,
+having discovered it, I should bend all
+my energies to giving her opportunities
+for displaying her charm, her discreetness
+or her coquetry. With a woman
+of larger and finer mould—with you!—I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
+should no doubt bring into play my
+own idealism. I should invest her with
+the attributes that I consider the most
+desirable in the world. But in either
+case I cannot figure myself dragging
+her down to my own social or material
+necessities.</p>
+
+<p>That is what Edward Burden is doing
+for little Miss Averies. I don’t mean
+to say that he does not idealize her—but
+he sees her transfigured as the dispenser
+of his special brand of tea or the
+mother of the sort of child that he was.
+And that seems to me a very valid reason
+why women, if they were wise,
+should trust their fortunes cold-bloodedly
+and of set reason to the class
+of dangerous men that now allure them
+and that they flee from.</p>
+
+<p>They flee from them, I am convinced,
+because they fear for their worldly material
+fortunes. They fear, that is to
+say, that the poet is not a stable man of
+business: they recognise that he is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
+gambler—and it seems to them that it
+is folly to trust to a gambler for life-long
+protection. In that they are perhaps
+right. But I think that no woman
+doubts her power to retain a man’s
+affection—so that it is not to the
+reputation for matrimonial instability
+that the poet owes his disfavour. A
+woman lives, in short, to play with this
+particular fire, since to herself she says:
+“Here is a man who has broken the
+hearts of many women. I will essay
+the adventure of taming him.” And,
+if she considers the adventure a dangerous
+one, that renders the contest
+only the more alluring, since at heart
+every woman, like every poet, is a
+gambler. In that perhaps she is
+right.</p>
+
+<p>But it seems to me that women make
+a great mistake in the value of the
+stakes they are ready to pay in order to
+enter this game. They will stake, that
+is to say, their relatively great coin—their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
+sentimental lives; but they hoard
+with closed fingers the threepenny bit
+which is merely the material future.</p>
+
+<p>They prefer, that is to say, to be
+rendered the mere presiding geniuses of
+well-loaded boards. It is better to
+be a lady—which you will remember
+philologically means a “loaf-cutter”—than
+to be an Ideal.</p>
+
+<p>And in this they are obviously wrong.
+If a woman can achieve the obvious
+miracle of making a dangerous man
+stable in his affections she may well be
+confident that she can persuade him to
+turn his serious attention to the task
+of keeping a roof over her head. Certainly,
+I know, if I were a woman
+which of the two types of men I would
+choose. Upon the lowest basis it is
+better for all purposes of human contracts
+to be married to a good liar than
+to a bad one. For a lie is a figurative
+truth—and it is the poet who is the master
+of these illusions. Even in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
+matter of marital relations it is probable
+that the poet is as faithful as the
+Edward Burdens of this world—only
+the Edward Burdens are more skilful
+at concealing from the rest of the world
+their pleasant vices. I doubt whether
+they are as skilful at concealing them
+from the woman concerned—from the
+woman, with her intuition, her power
+to seize fine shades of coolness and her
+awakened self-interest. Imagine the
+wife of Edward Burden saying to him,
+“You have deceived me!” Imagine
+then the excellent youth, crimsoning,
+stuttering. He has been taught all his
+life that truth must prevail though the
+skies fall—and he stammers: “Yes: I
+have betrayed you.” And that is tragedy,
+though in the psychological sense—and
+that is the important one—Edward
+Burden may have been as faithful
+as the ravens, who live for fifteen
+decades with the same mate. He will,
+in short, blunder into a tragic, false<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
+position. And he will make the tragedy
+only the more tragic in that all the
+intellectual powers he may possess
+will be in the direction of perpetuating
+the dismal position. He will not be
+able to argue that he has not been
+unfaithful—but he will be able to find
+a hundred arguments for the miserable
+woman prolonging her life with him.
+Position, money, the interests of the children,
+the feelings of her family and of his—all
+these considerations will make him
+eloquent to urge her to prolong her misery.
+And probably she will prolong it.</p>
+
+<p>This, of course, is due to the excellent
+Edward’s lack of an instinctive sympathy.
+The poet, with a truer vision,
+will in the same case, be able to face his
+Miss Averies’ saying: “You have deceived me!”
+with a different assurance.
+Supposing the deflection to have been
+of the momentary kind he will be able
+to deny with a good conscience since he
+will be aware of himself and his feelings.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
+He will at least be able to put the case
+in its just light. Or, if the deflection
+be really temperamental, really permanent,
+he will be unable—it being his
+business to look at the deeper verities—to
+lie himself out of the matter. He
+will break, strictly and sharply. Or, if
+he do not, it may be taken as a sign that
+his Miss Averies is still of value to him—that
+she, in fact, is still the woman
+that it is his desire to have for his companion.
+This is true, of course, only in
+the large sense, since obviously there are
+poets whose reverence for position, the
+interest of children or the feelings of
+their friends and relatives, may outweigh
+their hatred of a false position.
+These, however, are poets in the sense
+that they write verse: I am speaking of
+those who live the poet’s life; to such, a
+false position is too intolerable to be
+long maintained.</p>
+
+<p>But this again is only one of innumerable
+side-issues: let me return to my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
+main contention that a dinner of herbs
+with a dangerous man is better than
+having to consume the flesh of stalled
+oxen with Edward Burden. Perhaps
+that is only a way of saying that you
+would have done better to entrust yourself
+to me than to—— (But no, your
+husband is a better man than Edward
+Burden. He has at least had the courage
+to revert to his passion. I went
+this afternoon to your chemists and
+formally notified them that if they supplied
+him with more than the exactly
+prescribed quantity of that stuff, I, as
+holding your power of attorney, should
+do all that the law allows me to do
+against them.)</p>
+
+<p>Even to the dullest of men, marrying
+is for the most part an imaginative act.
+I mean marrying as a step in life
+sanctioned by law, custom and that
+general consent of mankind which is the
+hall-mark of every irrational institution.
+By irrational I do not mean wrong or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
+stupid. Marriage is august by the
+magnitude of the issues it involves,
+balancing peace and strife on the fine
+point of a natural impulse refined by
+the need of a tangible ideal. I am not
+speaking here of mere domestic peace or
+strife which for most people that count
+are a question of manners and a mode
+of life. And I am thinking of the peace
+mostly—the peace of the soul which
+yearns for some sort of certitude in this
+earth, the peace of the heart which yearns
+for conquest, the peace of the senses
+that dreads deception, the peace of the
+imaginative faculty which in its restless
+quest of a high place of rest is spurred on
+by these great desires and that great fear.</p>
+
+<p>And even Edward Burden’s imagination
+is moved by these very desires and
+that very fear—or else he would not
+have dreamt of marrying. I repeat,
+marriage is an imaginative institution.
+It’s true that his imagination is a poor
+thing but it is genuine nevertheless.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
+The faculty of which I speak is of one
+kind in all of us. Not to every one
+is given that depth of feeling, that
+faculty of absolute trust which <i>will not</i>
+be deceived, and the exulting masterfulness
+of the senses which are the mark
+of a fearless lover. Fearless lovers are
+rare, if obstinate, and sensual fools are
+countless as grains of sand by the seashore.
+I can imagine that correct
+young man perfectly capable of setting
+himself deliberately to worry a distracted
+girl into surrender.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">VI</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>I don’t know why, to-night in particular,
+the fact that I am a dead man
+occurs to me very insistently. I had
+forgotten this for two whole days. If
+any one very dear to you has ever been
+<i>in extremis</i> at a distance and you have
+journeyed to be at the last bedside, you
+will know how possible this is—how for
+hours at a time the mind will go wandering
+away from the main fact that is
+drawing you onwards, till suddenly it
+comes back: someone is dying at a
+distance. And I suppose one’s I is the
+nearest friend that one has—and my I
+is dying at a distance. At the end of a
+certain number of days is the deathbed
+towards which I am hurrying—it is a
+fact which I cannot grasp. But one
+aspect grows more clear to me every
+time I return to this subject.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>You remember that, when we have
+discussed suicide, we have agreed that
+to the man of action death is a solution:
+to the man of thoughts it is none. For
+the man of action expresses himself in
+action, and death is the negation of action:
+the man of thought sees the world
+only in thoughts, and over thought
+death exercises no solution of continuity.
+If one dies one’s actions cease,
+one’s problem continues. For that
+reason it is only in so far as I am a man
+of action that I shall be dying. You
+understand what I mean—for I do not
+mean that it is my actions that have
+killed me. It is simply because I have
+taken refuge from my thoughts in
+action, and because after April 5 that
+refuge will be closed to me, that I
+take refuge in a final action which,
+properly speaking, is neither action nor
+refuge.</p>
+
+<p>And perhaps I am no man of action
+at all, since the action in which I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
+taken refuge is properly speaking no
+action at all, but merely the expression
+of a frame of mind. I have gambled,
+that is to say I have not speculated.
+For the speculator acts for gain: the
+gambler in order to interest himself.
+I have gambled—to escape from you:
+I have tried to escape from my thoughts
+of you into divining the undivinable
+future. For that is what gambling is.
+You try for a rise: you try for a fall—and
+the rise or the fall may depend on
+the momentary madness of a dozen men
+who declare a war, or upon the rain
+from heaven which causes so many
+more stalks of wheat to arise upon so
+many million square inches of earth.
+The point is that you make yourself
+dependent upon caprice—upon the caprice
+of the weather or upon the movement
+in the minds of men more insane
+than yourself.</p>
+
+<p>To-day I have entered upon what is
+the biggest gamble of my whole life.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
+Certain men who believe in me—they
+are not Edward Burdens, nevertheless
+they believe in me—have proposed to
+me to form a corner in a certain article
+which is indispensable to the daily life
+of the City. I do not tell you what it
+is because you will assuredly witness
+the effects of this inspiration.</p>
+
+<p>You will say that, when this is accomplished,
+it will be utterly uninteresting.
+And that is literally true:
+when it is done it will be uninteresting.
+But in the multiplicity of things that
+will have to be done before the whole
+thing is done—in the waiting for things
+to take effect, in the failures perhaps
+more than in the successes, since the
+failures will imply new devising—in all
+the meticulous thought-readings that
+will be necessary, the interest will lie,
+and in the men with whom one is
+brought into contact, the men with
+whom one struggles, the men whom one
+must bribe or trick.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>And you will say: How can I who am
+to die in fourteen days embark upon an
+enterprise that will last many months
+or many years? That, I think, is very
+simple.</p>
+
+<p>It is my protest against being called
+a man of action, the misconception that
+I have had to resent all my life. And
+this is a thought: not an action: a
+thought made up of an almost infinite
+number of erring calculations. You
+have probably forgotten that I have
+founded two towns, upon the south
+coast: originated four railways in tropical
+climates and one in the west of
+England: and opened up heaven knows
+how many mines of one kind or another—and
+upon my soul I had forgotten
+these things too until I began to cast
+about in my mind. And now I go to
+my death unmindful of these glories
+in so far as they are concrete. In
+that sense my death is utter: it is a
+solution. But, in so far as they are my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
+refuges from you they remain problems
+to which, if my ghost is to escape you,
+I must return again and again.</p>
+
+<p>In dying I surrender to you and thus,
+for the inner self of myself, death is no
+ending but the commencement of who
+knows what tortures. It is only in
+the latent hope that death is the negation
+of consciousness that I shall take
+my life. For death, though it can very
+certainly end no problem, may at least
+make us unconscious of how, eventually,
+the problem solves itself. That,
+you see, is really the crux of the whole
+thing—that is why the man of action
+will take refuge in death: the man of
+thought, never. But I, I am the man
+of neither the one nor the other: I am
+the man of love, which partakes of
+action and of thought, but which is
+neither.</p>
+
+<p>The lover is, perhaps, the eternal
+doubter—simply because there is no
+certain panacea for love. Travel may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
+cure it—but travel may cause to arise
+homesickness, which of all forms of love
+is the most terrible. To mix with many
+other men may cure it—but again, to
+the man who really loves, it may be a
+cause for still more terrible unrest, since
+seeing other men and women may set
+one always comparing the beloved
+object with the same thing. And, indeed,
+the form that it takes with me—for
+with me love takes the form of a desire
+to discuss—the form which it takes
+with me renders each thing that I see,
+each man with whom I speak, the more
+torturing, since always I desire to adjust
+my thoughts of them by your
+thoughts. I went down the other day—before
+I had begun to write these
+letters to you and before I knew death
+impended so nearly over me—to the sea
+at P—. I was trying to get rid of you.
+I sat in the moonlight and saw the
+smacks come home, visible for a minute
+in the track of the moon and then no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
+more than their lights in the darkness.
+The fishermen talked of death by drowning
+mostly: the passage of the boats
+across that trail of light suggested reflections,
+no doubt trite. But, without
+you to set my thoughts by, I could get
+no more forward: I went round and
+round in a ring from the corpses fished
+up in the nets to the track of the moon.
+And since walking up and down on the
+parade brought me no nearer to you, I
+did not even care to move: I neither
+meditated nor walked, neither thought
+nor acted. And that is real torture.</p>
+
+<p>It was the next morning that I heard
+that young Burden desired that his
+<i>fiancée’s</i> solicitors should scrutinise the
+accounts of the Burden Trust—and
+Death loomed up before me.</p>
+
+<p>You will ask: why Death? Why not
+some alternative? Flight or prison?
+Well: prison would be an unendurable
+travelling through Time, flight, an
+equally unendurable travelling through<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
+Time with Space added. Both these
+things are familiar: Death alone, in spite
+of all the experience that humanity has
+had of Death, is the utterly unfamiliar.
+For a gambler it is a <i>coup</i> alluring beyond
+belief—as we know neither what
+we stake nor what we stand to win. I,
+personally, stand to win a great deal,
+since Life holds nothing for me and I
+stake only my life—and what I seek
+is only forgetfulness of you, or some sort
+of eventual and incomprehensible union
+with you. For the union with you that
+I seek is a queer sort of thing; hardly
+at all, I think, a union of the body, but
+a sort of consciousness of our thoughts
+proceeding onwards together. That we
+may find in the unending Afterwards.
+Or we may find the Herb Oblivion.</p>
+
+<p>Either of these things I desire. For,
+in so far as we can dogmatise about
+Death we may lay it down that Death
+is the negation of Action but is powerless
+against Thought. I do not desire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
+Action: and at the same time I do not
+fear Thought. For it is not my
+thoughts of you that I fear: left alone
+with them I can say: “What is she
+more than any other material object?”
+It is my feelings that wear out my brain—my
+feelings that make me know that
+you are more than every material object
+living or still, and more than every
+faith dead or surviving. For feeling
+is neither Thought nor Action: it is the
+very stuff of Life itself. And, if Death
+be the negation of Life it may well be
+the end of consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>The worst that Death can do to me is
+to deliver me up for ever to unsatisfied
+longings for you. Well, that is all
+that Life has done, that is all that Life
+can do, for me.</p>
+
+<p>But Life can do so much more that is
+worse. Believe me when I say that I
+dread imprisonment—and believe me
+when I say that I do not dread disgrace.
+For you know very well that it is true<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
+when I say that I positively chuckle at
+the thought of the shock my fall would
+give to all these unawakened intelligences
+of this world. You know how I
+despise Edward Burden for trusting in
+me; you know how I have always despised
+other people who trusted in
+established reputations. I don’t mean
+to say that I should not have liked to
+keep the game up, certainly I should,
+since in gambling it is more desirable
+to win than to lose. And it is more
+amusing to fool fools than to give them
+eye-openers. But I think that, in
+gambling, it is only a shade less desirable,
+<i>per se</i>, to lose than to win. The
+main point is the sensation of either;
+and the only valid objection to losing is
+that, if one loses too often one has at last
+no longer the wherewithal to gamble.
+Similarly, to give people eye-openers is,
+<i>per se</i>, nearly as desirable as to fool
+them. It is not quite so desirable,
+since the game itself <i>is</i> the fooling.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
+But the great objection in <i>my</i> case
+is that the eye-opener would once and
+for all put an end to the chance of
+my ever fooling them again. That,
+however, is a very small matter and
+what I dread is not that. If people no
+longer trusted in me I could no doubt
+still find an outlet for my energies with
+those who sought to take advantage of
+my abilities, trusting to themselves to
+wrest from me a sufficient share of the
+plunder that they so ardently desire,
+that I so really have no use for.</p>
+
+<p>No, I seek in Death a refuge from
+exposure not because exposure would
+cripple my energies: it would probably
+help them: and not because exposure
+would mean disgrace; I should probably
+find ironical satisfaction in it—but
+simply because it would mean
+imprisonment. That I dread beyond
+belief: I clench my fingers when, in conversation,
+I hear the words: “A long
+sentence.” For that would mean my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
+being delivered up for a long time—for
+ever—to you. I write “for ever”
+advisedly and after reflection, since a
+long subjection, without relief, to that
+strain would leave upon my brain a
+wound that must prove ineffaceable.
+For to be alone and to think—those
+are my terrors.</p>
+
+<p>One reads that men who have been
+condemned for long years to solitary
+imprisonment go mad. But I think
+that even that sad gift from Omnipotent
+Fate would not be mine. As I figure
+the world to myself, Fate is terrible
+only to those who surrender to her. If
+I surrendered, to the extent of living
+to go to prison, then assuredly the
+future must be uniformly heavy, uniformly
+doomed, in my eyes. For I
+would as soon be mad as anything else
+I can think of. But I should not go
+mad. Men go mad because of the
+opportunities they miss: because the
+world changes outside their prison<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
+walls, or because their children starve.
+But I have no opportunities to miss or
+take: the changes of the world to me
+are nothing, and there is no soul between
+whom and starvation I could
+stand.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst I am about making this final
+disposition of my properties—let me
+tell you finally what I have done in regard
+to your husband himself. It is a
+fact—and this I have been keeping up
+my sleeve as a final surprise for you—that
+he is almost cured....</p>
+
+<p>But I have just received an incomprehensible
+note from Edward Burden.
+He asks me for some particulars as to
+his confounded estate and whether I
+can lend him some thousands of pounds
+at short notice. Heaven knows what
+new scrape this is that he’s in. Of
+course this may precipitate my crash.
+But whatever happens, I shall find
+time to write my final words to you—and
+nothing else really matters....</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">VII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>I haven’t yet discovered what Edward
+Burden is doing. I have found
+him a good round sum upon mortgage—the
+irony of the position being that the
+money is actually his whilst the mortgage
+does not actually exist. He says
+that what he is doing with the money
+will please me. I suppose that means
+that he’s embarking upon some sort of
+speculation which he imagines that I
+would favour. It is odd that he should
+think that I find gratification in his
+imitating myself.</p>
+
+<p>But why should I concern myself
+with this thing at all? Nothing in the
+world can ever please or displease me
+any more. For I have taken my resolve:
+this is my last night upon earth.
+When I lay down this pen again, I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
+shall never take up any pen more.
+For I have said all that I can say to
+you. I am utterly tired out. To-night
+I shall make up into a parcel all these
+letters—I must sit through the night because
+it is only to-morrow morning that
+I shall be able to register the parcel to
+you—and registering it will be my
+last act upon the habitable globe. For
+biting through the glass in the ring will
+be not an action, but the commencement
+of a new train of thought. Or
+perhaps only my final action will come
+to an end when you read these words in
+Rome. Or will that be only thought—the
+part of me that lives—pleading to
+you to give your thoughts for company.
+I feel too tired to think the matter out!</p>
+
+<p>Let me, then, finish with this earth:
+I told you, when I finished writing last
+night, that Robert is almost cured. I
+would not have told you this for the
+sake of arrogating to myself the position
+of a saviour. But I imagine that you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
+would like the cure to go on and, in the
+case of some accident after my death, it
+might go all to pieces once more. Quite
+simply then: I have been doing two
+things. In the first place I have persuaded
+your chemists to reduce very
+gradually the strength of chloral, so
+that the bottles contain nearly half
+water. And Robert perceives no difference.
+Now of course it is very important
+that he shall not know of the trick
+that is being so beneficently played on
+him—so that, in case he should go away
+or for one reason or another change his
+chemists, it must be carefully seen to
+that instead of pure chloral he obtains
+the exactly diluted mixture. In this
+way he may be brought gradually to
+drinking almost pure water.</p>
+
+<p>But that alone would hardly be satisfactory:
+a comparatively involuntary
+cure is of little value in comparison
+with an effort of the will. You may,
+conceivably, expel nature with a fork,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
+but nothing but a passion will expel a
+passion. The only point to be proved
+is whether there exists in your husband
+any other passion for the sake of which
+he might abandon his passion for the
+clearness of vision which he always says
+his chloral gives him. He has not, of
+course, the incentives usual to men:
+you cannot, in fact, “get” him along
+ordinary lines.... But apart
+from his physical craving for the drug
+he <i>has</i> that passion for clearness of intellect
+that he says the drug gives him—and
+it is through that, that at last, I
+have managed to hit his pride.</p>
+
+<p>For I have put it to him very strongly
+that one view of life is just as good as
+another—no better, no worse, but just
+the same. And I have put it to him
+that his use of chloral simply limits for
+him the number of views of life that
+he might conceivably have. And, when
+you come to think of all the rhapsodies
+of his that we have listened to, I think<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
+that that piece of special pleading is
+sufficiently justified. I do indeed honestly
+believe that, for what it is worth,
+he is on the road to salvation. He
+means to make a struggle—to attempt
+the great feat of once more seeing life
+with the eyes that Fate originally gave
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>This is my legacy to <i>you</i>: if you ask
+me why I have presented you with this
+man’s new identity—since it <i>will</i> mean
+a new identity—I must answer that I
+simply don’t know. Why have we kept
+him alive all these years? I have done
+it no doubt because I had nothing to
+give you. But you? If you have
+loved me you must have wished him—I
+won’t say dead—but no more there.
+Yet you have tried too—and I suppose
+this answer to the riddle is simply the
+answer to the whole riddle of our life.
+We have tried to play a supremely
+difficult game simply because it sanctified
+our love. For, after all, sanctification<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
+arises from difficulties. Well, we
+have made our way very strait and we
+have so narrowed the door of entrance
+that it has vanished altogether. We
+have never had <i>any</i> hope of a solution
+that could have satisfied us. If we had
+cared to break the rules of the game, I
+suppose we could have done it easily
+enough—and we could have done it the
+more easily since neither you nor I ever
+subscribed to those rules. If we have
+not it was, I think, simply because we
+sought the difficulty which sanctifies....
+Has it been a very imbecile
+proceeding? I am most uncertain.
+For it is not a thing to be very proud of—to
+be able to say that for a whole lifetime,
+one has abstained from that
+which one most desired. On the other
+hand, we have won a curious and
+difficult game. Well—there it is—and
+there is your legacy. I do not think
+that there is anything else for me to
+write about. You will see that, in my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
+will, I have left everything I possess to—Edward
+Burden. This is not because
+I wish to make him reparation,
+and it’s not because I wish to avoid
+scandal: it is simply because it may
+show him—one very simple thing. It
+will show him how very nearly I might
+have made things come right. I have
+been balancing my accounts very carefully,
+and I find that, reckoning things
+reasonably against myself, Edward
+Burden will have a five-pound note with
+which to buy himself a mourning-ring.</p>
+
+<p>The being forced to attend to my
+accounts will make him gasp a good deal.
+It will certainly shake his belief in all
+accepted reputations—for he will look
+on the faces of many men each “as
+solid as the Bank of England,” and he
+will think: “I wonder if you are
+like——?” His whole world will crumble—not
+because I have been dishonest,
+since he is coldblooded enough to believe
+that all men may be dishonest.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
+But he will tremble because I have been
+able to be so wildly dishonest and yet
+to be so successfully respectable. He
+won’t even dare to “expose” me, since,
+if he did that, half of the shares which
+he will inherit from me would suffer an
+eclipse of disreputability, would tumble
+to nothingness in value—and would
+damage his poor pocket. He will have
+to have my estate set down at a high
+figure; he will have to be congratulated
+on his fortunate inheritance, and he will
+have, sedulously, to compound my
+felony.</p>
+
+<p>You will wonder how I can be capable
+of this final cruelty—the most cruel
+thing that, perhaps, ever one man did to
+another. I will tell you why it is: it is
+because I hate all the Edward Burdens
+of the world—because, being the eternal
+Haves of the world, they have made
+their idiotic rules of the game. And
+you and I suffer: you and I, the eternal
+Have Nots. And we suffer, not because<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
+their rules bind us, but because, being
+the finer spirits, we are forced to set
+ourselves rules that are still more strict
+in order that, in all things, we may be
+the truly gallant.</p>
+
+<p>But why do I write: “You will wonder
+how I can be capable of this.” You
+will have understood—you who understand
+everything.</p>
+
+<p><i>Eight in the morning.</i>—Well: now we
+part. I am going to register the parcel
+containing all these letters to you. We
+part: and it is as if you were dropping
+back—the lost Eurydice of the world—into
+an utter blackness. For, in a
+minute, you will be no more than part
+of my past. Well then: good-night.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">VIII</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p>You will have got the telegram I
+sent you long before you got the parcel
+of letters: you will have got the note I
+wrote you by the same post as the letters
+themselves. If I have taken these
+three days to myself before again writing
+to you it has been because I have
+needed to recover my power of thinking.
+Now, in a way, I have recovered
+it—and it is only fair to say that I have
+devoted all my thoughts to how the
+new situation affects you—and you in
+your relations to me.</p>
+
+<p>It places me in your hands—let that
+be written first and foremost. You
+have to decree my life or my death.
+For I take it that now we can never get
+back again into our old position: I have
+spoken, you have heard me speak. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
+singular unity, the silence of our old life
+is done with for good. There is perhaps
+no reason why this should not be so:
+silence is no necessary part of our relationship.
+But it has seemed to make
+a rather exquisite bond between us.</p>
+
+<p>It must, if I am to continue to live—it
+must be replaced by some other
+bond. In our silence we have seemed
+to speak in all sorts of strange ways:
+we have perhaps read each other’s
+thoughts. I have seen words form
+themselves upon your lips. But now
+you must—there is no way out of it—you
+<i>must</i> write to me. You must
+write to me fully: all your thoughts.
+You must, as I have done, find the
+means of speech—or I can no longer
+live....</p>
+
+<p>I am reprieved!</p>
+
+<p>I don’t know if, in my note to you, I
+explained exactly what had happened.
+It was in this way. I was anxious to
+be done with my world very early and,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
+as soon as eight o’clock struck, I set out
+for the post-office at the corner to
+register that parcel of letters for you.
+Till the task was accomplished—the
+last I was to perform on earth—I
+noticed nothing: I was simply in a
+hurry. But, having given the little
+fagot into the hands of a sleepy girl, I
+said to myself suddenly: “Now I <i>am</i>
+dead!” I began suddenly as they say
+of young children, to “notice.” A
+weight that I had never felt before
+seemed to fall away from me. I
+noticed, precisely, that the girl clerk
+was sleepy, that, as she reached up one
+hand to take the parcel over the brass
+caging, she placed the other over her
+mouth to hide a yawn.</p>
+
+<p>And out on the pavement it was most
+curious what had befallen the world.
+It had lost all interest: but it had become
+fascinating, vivid. I had not, you
+see, any senses left, but my eyesight
+and hearing. Vivid: that is the word.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
+I watched a newsboy throw his papers
+down an area, and it appeared wonderfully
+interesting to discover that <i>that</i>
+was how one’s papers got into the
+house. I watched a milkman go up
+some doorsteps to put a can of milk
+beside a boot-scraper and I was wonderfully
+interested to see a black cat
+follow him. They were the clearest
+moments I have ever spent upon the
+earth—those when I was dead. They
+were so clear because nothing else
+weighed on my attention but just
+those little things. It was an extraordinary,
+a luxuriant feeling. That, I
+imagine, must have been how Adam
+and Eve felt before they had eaten of
+the fruit of knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>Supposing I had tacitly arranged
+with myself that I would die in the
+street, I think I should still have walked
+home simply to dally longer with that
+delightful feeling of sheer curiosity.
+For it was sheer curiosity to see how<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
+this world, which I had never looked at,
+really performed before utterly unbiassed
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>That was why, when I got home, I
+sent away the messenger that brought to
+me Edward Burden’s letter; there was
+to be no answer. Whatever Burden’s
+query might be I was not going to commit
+myself to any other act. My last
+was that of sending off the parcel to
+you.</p>
+
+<p>My opening Burden’s letter when
+the messenger had gone was simply a
+part of my general curiosity. I wanted
+to see how a Burden letter would look
+when it no longer had any bearings at
+all for me. It was as if I were going to
+read a letter from that dear Edward
+to a man I did not know upon a subject
+of which I had never heard.</p>
+
+<p>And then I was reprieved!</p>
+
+<p>The good Edward, imagining that I
+was seriously hurt at his having proposed
+to allow his wife’s solicitors to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
+superintend my stewardship—the good
+Edward in his concern had positively
+insisted that all the deeds should be
+returned to me absolutely unchecked.
+He said that he had had a hard fight
+for it and that the few thousands he
+had borrowed from me had represented
+his settlement, which he had thus paid
+in specie....</p>
+
+<p>It chimed in wonderfully with his
+character, when I come to think of it.
+Of course he was disciplining Miss
+Averies’ representatives just as he had
+disciplined herself in the matter of
+China tea of which I have written to
+you. And he had imagined that I was
+seriously hurt! Can you figure to yourself
+such an imbecile?</p>
+
+<p>But, if you permit me to continue to
+live, you will be saving the poor fool
+from the great shock I had prepared
+for him—the avalanche of discovery,
+the earthquake of uncertainty. For
+he says in that so kind way of his that,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
+having thus shown his entire confidence
+in me—in the fact, that is, that Providence
+is on the side of all Burdens—he
+will choose a time in the future, convenient
+for me, when he will go thoroughly
+with me into his accounts. And
+inasmuch as his wedding-tour will take
+him all round the world I have at least
+a year in which to set things straight.
+And of course I can put off his scrutiny
+indefinitely or deceive him for
+ever.</p>
+
+<p>I did not think all these things at
+once. In fact, when I had read his
+letter, so strong within me was the
+feeling that it was only a mental phenomenon,
+a thing that had no relation
+with me—the feeling of finality was so
+strong upon me that I actually found
+myself sitting in that chair before I
+realized what had occurred.</p>
+
+<p>What had occurred was that I had
+become utterly and for good your property.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>In that sense only am I reprieved.
+As far as Edward Burden is concerned
+I am entirely saved. I stand before
+you and ask you to turn your thumb up
+or down. For, having spoken as I
+have to you, I have given you a right
+over me. Now that the pressing necessity
+for my death is over I have to ask
+you whether I shall plunge into new adventures
+that will lead me to death or
+whether I am to find some medium in
+which we may lead a life of our own, in
+some way together. I was about to
+take my life to avoid prison: now prison
+is no more a part of my scheme of existence.
+But I must now have some
+means of working towards you or I
+must run some new and wild risk to
+push you out of my thoughts. I don’t,
+as you know, ask you to be my secret
+mistress, I don’t ask you to elope with
+me. But I say that you <i>must</i> belong
+to me as much in thought as I have, in
+this parcel of letters, been revealed and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
+given over to you. Otherwise, I must
+once more gamble—and having tasted
+of gambling in the shadow of death,
+I must gamble for ever in that way. I
+must, I mean, feel that I am coming towards
+you or committing crimes that
+I may forget you.</p>
+
+<p>My dear, I am a very tired man. If
+you know what it was to long for you
+as I have longed for you all these years,
+you would wonder that I did not, sitting
+in that chair, put the ring up to my
+teeth, in spite of Burden’s letter, and
+end it. I have an irresistible longing for
+rest—or perhaps it is only your support.
+To think that I must face for
+ever—or for as long as it lasts—this
+troublesome excitement of avoiding
+thoughts of you—that was almost unbearable.
+I resisted because I had
+written these letters to you. I love you
+and I know you love me—yet without
+them I would have inflicted upon you
+the wound of my death. Having<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
+written them I cannot face the cruelty
+to you. I mean that, if I had died without
+your knowing why, it would have
+been only a death grievous to you—still
+it is the duty of humanity and of
+you with humanity to bear and to forget
+deaths. But now that you must
+know, I could not face the cruelty of
+filling you with the pain of unmerited
+remorse. For I know that you would
+have felt remorse, and it would have
+been unmerited since I gave you no
+chance or any time to stretch out your
+hands to me. Now I give it you and
+wait for your verdict.</p>
+
+<p>For the definite alternatives are these:
+I will put Burden’s estate absolutely
+clear within the year and work out, in
+order to make safe money, the new and
+comparatively sober scheme of which
+I have written to you: that I will do if
+you will consent to be mine to the extent
+of sharing our thoughts alone. Or,
+if you will not, I will continue to gamble<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
+more wildly than ever with the Burden
+money. And that in the end means
+death and a refuge from you.</p>
+
+<p>So then, I stand reprieved—and the
+final verdict is in your hands.</p>
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
+
+<h2 class="nobreak">APPENDIX</h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3>A Note on “Romance”</h3>
+
+
+<p>Writing to his Collaborator in a letter published
+in the <i>Transatlantic Review</i> for January,
+1924, Mr. Conrad makes the following ascription
+of passages in the work above named:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p>First Part, yours; Second Part, mainly yours, with a
+little by me on points of seamanship and suchlike small
+matters; Third Part, about 60 percent mine with important
+touches by you; Fourth Part, mine with here and there
+an important sentence by you; Fifth Part practically all
+yours, including the famous sentence at which we both
+exclaimed: “This is Genius,” (Do you remember what it
+is?) with perhaps half a dozen lines by me....</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Conrad’s recollections—except for the
+generosity of his two “importants”—tally well
+enough with those of his Collaborator if conception
+alone is concerned. When it comes
+however to the writing the truth is that Parts
+One, Two, Three and Five are a singular mosaic
+of passages written alternately by one or other
+of the collaborators. The matchless Fourth
+Part is both in conception and writing entirely
+the work of Mr. Conrad.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>Below will be found the analysis of “Romance.”
+Any student of literature with an
+ear for prose will hardly need these underlinings,
+for Mr. Conrad’s definitenesses of
+statement stand out amongst his Collaborator’s
+more English keyings down so that when one
+of his half sentences bursts into the no doubt
+suaver prose of the other it is as if the page
+comes to life and speaks.</p>
+
+<p>Every collaboration is a contest of temperaments
+if it be at all thoroughly carried out; and
+this collaboration was carried out so thoroughly
+that, even when the book came to the proof
+stage, the original publishers, half way through
+the printing, sent the MS. back to the authors.
+They were still making innumerable corrections.</p>
+
+<p>Originally conceived, in the attempt to
+convey realistically a real story of adventure
+recorded in a State Trial, as the thin tale of a
+very old man—and this before the question of
+collaboration arose—the book contains of its
+first version only the two opening sentences—and
+the single other sentence: “And, looking
+back, we see Romance!” In between lay to
+say the least of it almost unbelievable labours—a
+contest of attrition lasting over several years.
+For insofar as this collaboration was a contest
+of wills it was a very friendly one; yet it was
+the continual attempt on the part of the one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
+collaborator to key up and of the other to key
+down. And so exhausting was the contest that
+in the course of the years two definite breakdowns
+occurred. In the first the robuster
+writer let the book called “The Inheritors”
+just go and it remains a monument as it were
+of silverpoint, delicacies and allusiveness. The
+second breakdown is recorded in the Fourth
+Part of “Romance,” sketches for which were
+written over and over—and then over—again,
+until the weaker brother, in absolute exhaustion,
+in turn let it go at that. So, to mark
+those breaking points, you have the silverpoint
+of “The Inheritors” set against the, let
+us say, oil-painting of this matchless Fourth
+Part.</p>
+
+<p>“The Nature of a Crime” should have become
+a novel treating of the eternal subject
+of the undetected criminal—a theme which
+every writer for once or twice in his life at least
+contemplates in a world in which the fortunate
+are so very often the merely not found out.
+The courage of few writers carries them even
+beyond the contemplation; in this case the joint
+courages of the authors went as far as what
+you may read.</p>
+
+<p>The passage from the Fifth Part of “Romance”
+printed below contains the “famous
+sentence” as to which Mr. Conrad writes:
+“We both exclaimed: ‘This is genius’.”</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>Joseph Conrad in Italics; F. M. Hueffer in
+Roman type.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<p><i>Part One: Chapter One.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>To yesterday and to-day I say my polite “vaya
+usted con dios.” What are these days to me?</i>
+But that far-off day of my romance, when from
+between <i>the blue and white bales in Don Ramon’s
+darkened storeroom, at Kingston</i>, I saw the door
+open before the figure of <i>an old man with the
+tired, long, white face</i>, that day I am not likely
+to forget. I remember <i>the chilly smell of the
+typical West Indian store</i>, the indescribable
+<i>smell of damp gloom, of locos, of pimento, of olive
+oil, of new sugar, of new rum; the glassy double
+sheen of Ramon’s great spectacles, the piercing
+eyes in the mahogany face</i>, while the tap, tap,
+tap of a cane on the flags went on behind the
+inner door; <i>the click of the latch; the stream of
+light</i>. The door, petulantly thrust inwards,
+struck against some barrels. I remember the
+rattling of the bolts on that door, and <i>the tall
+figure</i> that appeared there, <i>snuff-box in hand.
+In that land of white clothes that precise, ancient,
+Castilian in black was something to remember.
+The black cane that had made the tap, tap, tap
+dangled by a silken cord from the hand whose
+delicate blue-veined, wrinkled wrist ran back into
+a foam of lawn ruffles.</i> The other hand paused<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
+in the act of conveying a pinch of snuff to the
+nostrils of the <i>hooked nose that had, on the skin
+stretched tight over the bridge, the polish of old
+ivory; the elbow pressing the black cocked hat
+against the side; the legs, one bent, the other bowing
+a little back</i>—this was the attitude of Seraphina’s
+father.</p>
+
+<p>Having imperiously thrust the door of the
+inner room open, he remained immovable, with
+no intention of entering, and called in a harsh,
+aged voice: “Señor Ramon! Señor Ramon!”
+and then twice: “Seraphina—Seraphina!”
+turning his head back.</p>
+
+<p><i>Then for the first time I saw Seraphina, looking
+over her father’s shoulder.</i> I remember her face
+of that day; <i>her eyes were grey—the grey of
+black, not of blue. For a moment they looked me
+straight in the face, reflectively, unconcerned, and
+then travelled to the spectacles of old Ramon.</i></p>
+
+<p>This glance—remember I was young on that
+day—had been enough to set me wondering
+what they were thinking of me; what they
+could have seen of me.</p>
+
+<p>“But there he is your Señor Ramon,” she
+said to her father, <i>as if she were chiding him for
+a petulance in calling</i>; “your sight is not very
+good, my poor little father—there he is, your
+Ramon.”</p>
+
+<p><i>The warm reflection of the light behind her,
+gilding the curve of her face from ear to chin,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
+lost itself in the shadows of black lace falling from
+dark hair that was not quite black. She spoke
+as if the words clung to her lips; as if she had to
+put them forth delicately for fear of damaging the
+frail things.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p><i>Part One: Chapter Five.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Macdonald cleared his throat, with a sound
+resembling the coughing of a defective pump, and
+a mere trickle of a voice</i> asked:</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Hwhat evidence have ye of identitee?</i>”</p>
+
+<p><i>I hadn’t any at all and began to finger my
+buttonholes as shame-faced as a pauper before a
+Board. The certitude dawned upon me suddenly
+that Carlos, even if he would consent to swear to
+me, would prejudice my chances.</i></p>
+
+<p>I cannot help thinking that <i>I came very near
+to being cast adrift upon the streets of Kingston.
+To my asseverations Macdonald returned nothing
+but a series of minute “humphs.” I don’t
+know what overcame his scruples; he had shown
+no signs of yielding, but suddenly turning on his
+heel</i> made a motion with one of his flabby white
+hands. I understood it to mean that I was to
+follow him aft.</p>
+
+<p>The decks were covered with a jabbering
+turmoil of negroes with muscular arms and
+brawny shoulders. All their shining faces
+seemed to be momentarily gashed open to show<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
+rows of white, and were spotted with inlaid
+eyeballs. The sounds coming from them were
+a bewildering noise. They were hauling baggage
+about aimlessly. <i>A large soft bundle of
+bedding nearly took me off my legs.</i> There
+wasn’t room for emotion. Macdonald laid
+about him with the handle of the umbrella a
+few inches from the deck; but the passage that
+he made for himself closed behind him.</p>
+
+<p><i>Suddenly, in the pushing and hurrying, I
+came upon a little clear space beside a pile of
+boxes. Stooping over them was the angular
+figure of Nichols, the second mate. He looked
+up at me, screwing his yellow eyes together.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>“Going ashore,” he asked, “long of that Puffing
+Billy?”</i></p>
+
+<p>“What business is it of yours?” I mumbled
+sulkily.</p>
+
+<p><i>Sudden and intense threatening came into his</i>
+yellow <i>eyes</i>.</p>
+
+<p><i>“Don’t you ever come to</i> you know where,”
+<i>he said; “I don’t want no spies on what I do.
+There’s a man there’ll crack your little backbone
+if he catches you. Don’t yeh come now. Never.”</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p><i>Part Four: Chapter One.</i></p>
+
+<p>In my anxiety to keep clear of the schooner
+which, for all I know to this day, may not have
+been there at all, I had come too close to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
+sand, so close that I heard soft, rapid footfalls
+stop short in the fog. A voice seemed to be
+asking me in a whisper:</p>
+
+<p>“Where, oh, where?”</p>
+
+<p>Another cried out irresistibly, “I see it.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a subdued cry, as if hushed in awe.</p>
+
+<p>My arm swung to and fro; the turn of my
+wrist went on imparting the propelling motion
+of the oar. All the rest of my body was gripped
+helplessly in the dead expectation of the end,
+as if in the benumbing seconds of a fall from a
+towering height. And it was swift, too. I felt
+a draught at the back of my neck—a breath of
+wind. And instantly, as if a battering ram had
+been let swing past me at many layers of
+stretched gauze, I beheld, through a tattered
+deep hole in the fog, a roaring vision of flames,
+borne down and swimming up again; a dance of
+purple gleams on the strip of unveiled water,
+and three coal black figures in the light.</p>
+
+<p>One of them stood high on lank black legs,
+with long black arms thrown up stiffly above
+the black shape of a hat. The two others
+crouched low on the very edge of the water,
+peering as if from an ambush.</p>
+
+<p>The clearness of this vision was contained
+by a thick and a fiery atmosphere, into which a
+soft white rush and swirl of fog fell like a sudden
+whirl of snow. It closed down and overwhelmed
+at once the tall flutter of the flames,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
+the black figures, the purple gleams playing
+round my oar. The hot glare had struck my
+eyeballs once, and that melted away again into
+the old, fiery stain on the mended fabric of the
+fog. But the attitudes of the crouching men
+left no room for doubt that we had been seen.
+I expected a sudden uplifting of voices on the
+shore, answered by cries from the sea, and I
+screamed excitedly at Castro to lay hold of his
+oar.</p>
+
+<p>He did not stir, and after my shouts, which
+must have fallen on the scared ears with a
+weird and unearthly note, a profound silence
+attended us—the silence of a superstitious
+fear: And, instead of howls, I heard, before the
+boat had travelled its own short length, a voice
+that seemed to be the voice of fear itself asking,
+“Did you hear that?” and a trembling mutter
+of an invocation to all the saints. Then a
+strangled throat trying to pronounce firmly,
+“The soul of the dead Inglez. Crying for
+pain.”</p>
+
+<p>Admiral Rowley’s seamen, so miserably
+thrown away in the ill-conceived attack on the
+bay, were making a ghostly escort to our escape.
+Those dead boats’-crews were supposed to
+haunt the fatal spot, after the manner of
+spectres that linger in remorse, regret, or
+revenge, about the gates of departure. I had
+blundered; the fog, breaking apart, had betrayed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
+us. But my obscure and vanquished
+country-men held possession of the outlet by
+memory of their courage. In this critical
+moment it was they, I may say, who stood by
+us.</p>
+
+<p>We, on our part, must have been disclosed,
+dark, indistinct, utterly inexplicable; completely
+unexpected; an apparition of stealthy shades.
+The painful voice in the fog said:</p>
+
+<p>“Let them be. Answer not. They shall
+pass on, for none of them died on the shore—all
+in the water. Yes, all in the water.”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p><i>Part Five: Chapter One.</i></p>
+
+<p>“<i>Why have I been brought here your worship?</i>”
+I asked with a great deal of firmness.</p>
+
+<p><i>There were two figures in black, the one beside,
+the other behind a large black table. I was placed
+in front of them between two dirty soldiers, in
+the centre of a large, gaunt room, with bare, dirty
+walls, and the arms of Spain above the judge’s
+seat.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>“You are before the Juez de la Primera
+Instancia,” said the man in black beside the
+table. He wore a large and shadowy tricorn.
+“Be silent, and respect the procedure.”</i></p>
+
+<p>It was, without doubt, excellent advice.
+<i>He whispered some words in the ear of the Judge
+of the First Instance. It was plain enough to me<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
+that the judge was quite an inferior official, who
+merely decided whether there was any case against
+the accused</i>; he had, even to his clerk, an air of
+timidity, of doubt.</p>
+
+<p><i>I said: “But I insist on knowing....”</i></p>
+
+<p><i>The clerk said: “In good time....”
+And then</i>, in the same tone of disinterested
+official routine, <i>he spoke to the Lugareño, who,
+from beside the door</i>, rolled very frightened eyes
+<i>from the judges and the clerk to myself and the
+soldiers</i>—“Advance.”</p>
+
+<p><i>The judge, in a hurried, perfunctory voice, put
+questions to the Lugareño; the clerk scratched
+with a large quill on a sheet of paper.</i></p>
+
+<p>“<i>Where do you come from?</i>”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>The town of Rio Medio, excellency.</i>”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Of what occupation?</i>”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Excellency—a few goats.</i>...”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Why are you here?</i>”</p>
+
+<p>“<i>My daughter, excellency, married Pepe of the
+posada in the Calle.</i>...”</p>
+
+<p><i>The judge said, “Yes, yes,”</i> with an unsanguine
+impatience. The Lugareño’s dirty
+hands jumped nervously on the large rim of his
+limp hat.</p>
+
+<p>“<i>You lodge a complaint against the señor
+there.</i>”</p>
+
+<p><i>The clerk pointed the end of his quill towards
+me.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>“I? God forbid, excellency,” the Lugareño<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
+bleated.</i> “The Alguazil of the Criminal Court
+instructed me to be watchful....”</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p><i>Part Five: The End.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>A long time after a harsh voice said</i>:</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Your excellency, we retire, of course, from the
+prosecution.</i>”</p>
+
+<p><i>A different one directed</i>:</p>
+
+<p>“<i>Gentlemen of the jury you will return a verdict
+of ‘Not Guilty’.</i>...”</p>
+
+<p><i>Down below they were cheering uproariously
+because my life was saved. But it was I that
+had to face my saved life. I sat there, my head
+bowed into my hands. The old judge was speaking
+to me in a tone of lofty compassion</i>:</p>
+
+<p>“<i>You have suffered much, as it seems, but
+suffering is the lot of us men. Rejoice now that
+your character is cleared; that here in this public
+place you have received the verdict of your country-men
+that restores you to the liberties of our country
+and the affection of your kindred. I rejoice with
+you who am a very old man at the end of my
+life.</i>...”</p>
+
+<p><i>It was rather tremendous, his deep voice, his
+weighted words. Suffering is the lot of us men....
+The formidable legal array, the great
+powers of a nation, had stood up to teach me that,
+and they had taught me that—suffering is the
+lot of us men!</i></p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span><i>It takes long enough to realise that someone is dead
+at a distance. I had done that. But how long, how
+long it needs to know that the life of your heart has
+come back from the dead.</i> For years afterwards
+I could not bear to have her out of my sight.</p>
+
+<p>Of our first meeting in London all I can
+remember is a speechlessness that was like the
+awed hesitation of our overtried souls before
+the greatness of a change from the verge of
+despair to the opening of a supreme joy. The
+whole world, the whole of life, with her return
+had changed all around me; it enveloped me, it
+enfolded me so lightly as not to be felt, so suddenly
+as not to be believed in, so completely
+that that whole meeting was an embrace, so
+softly that at last it lapsed into a sense of rest
+that was like the fall of a beneficent and welcome
+death.</p>
+
+<p><i>For suffering is the lot of man</i>, but not inevitable
+failure or worthless despair which is without
+end—suffering, the mark of manhood,
+which bears within its pain a hope of felicity
+like a jewel set in iron....</p>
+
+<p>Her first words were:</p>
+
+<p>“You broke our compact. You went away
+from me whilst I was sleeping.” Only the
+deepness of her reproach revealed the depth
+of her love, and the suffering she too had endured
+to reach a union that was to be without
+end—and to forgive.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span><i>And, looking back, we see Romance—that
+subtle thing that is mirage—that is life. It is
+the goodness of the years we have lived through,
+of the old time when we did this or that, when we
+dwelt here or there. Looking back it seems a
+wonderful enough thing that I who am this and
+she who is that, commencing so far away a life that
+after such sufferings borne together and apart,
+ended so tranquilly there in a world so stable—that
+she and I should have passed through so
+much, good chance and evil chance, sad hours
+and joyful, all lived down and swept away into
+the little heap of dust that is life. That, too, is
+Romance.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="transnote">
+<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
+
+<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
+
+<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
+
+<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75172 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75172 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75172)