to tell him."
"Venture!" said the young man; "then is your master a prince?"
"I don't know what he is," the other answered. Equally astonished,
each looked for a moment at the other. Then construing the stranger's
silence as an order, the
apprentice left him alone in the
closet.
Have you never launched into the immensity of time and space as you
read the
geological writings of Cuvier? Carried by his fancy, have you
hung as if suspended by a magician's wand over the illimitable abyss
of the past? When the
fossil bones of animals belonging to
civilizations before the Flood are turned up in bed after bed and
layer upon layer of the quarries of Montmartre or among the schists of
the Ural range, the soul receives with
dismay a
glimpse of millions of
peoples forgotten by
feeble human memory and unrecognized by permanent
divinetradition, peoples whose ashes cover our globe with two feet of
earth that yields bread to us and flowers.
Is not Cuvier the great poet of our era? Byron has given admirable
expression to certain moral conflicts, but our
immortalnaturalist has
reconstructed past worlds from a few bleached bones; has rebuilt
cities, like Cadmus, with monsters' teeth; has
animated forests with
all the secrets of zoology gleaned from a piece of coal; has
discovered a giant population from the footprints of a
mammoth. These
forms stand erect, grow large, and fill regions commensurate with
their giant size. He treats figures like a poet; a
naught set beside a
seven by him produces awe.
He can call up nothingness before you without the phrases of a
charlatan. He searches a lump of gypsum, finds an
impression in it,
says to you, "Behold!" All at once
marble takes an animal shape, the
dead come to life, the history of the world is laid open before you.
After
countless dynasties of giant creatures, races of fish and clans
of mollusks, the race of man appears at last as the
degenerate copy of
a splendid model, which the Creator has
perchance destroyed.
Emboldened by his gaze into the past, this petty race, children of
yesterday, can overstep chaos, can raise a psalm without end, and
outline for themselves the story of the Universe in an Apocalypse that
reveals the past. After the
tremendous resurrection that took place at
the voice of this man, the little drop in the
nameless Infinite,
common to all spheres, that is ours to use, and that we call Time,
seems to us a pitiable moment of life. We ask ourselves the purpose of
our triumphs, our hatreds, our loves, overwhelmed as we are by the
destruction of so many past
universes, and whether it is worth while
to accept the pain of life in order that
hereafter we may become an
intangible speck. Then we remain as if dead, completely torn away from
the present till the valet de chambre comes in and says, "Madame la
comtesse answers that she is expecting monsieur."
All the wonders which had brought the known world before the young
man's mind
wrought in his soul much the same feeling of dejection that
besets the
philosopher investigating unknown creatures. He longed more
than ever for death as he flung himself back in a curule chair and let
his eyes
wander across the
illusions composing a panorama of the past.
The pictures seemed to light up, the Virgin's heads smiled on him, the
statues seemed alive. Everything danced and swayed around him, with a
motion due to the gloom and the
tormenting fever that racked his
brain; each monstrosity grimaced at him, while the
portraits on the
canvas closed their eyes for a little
relief. Every shape seemed to
tremble and start, and to leave its place
gravely or flippantly,
gracefully or
awkwardly, according to its fashion,
character, and
surroundings.
A
mysterious Sabbath began, rivaling the
fantastic scenes witnessed by
Faust upon the Brocken. But these optical
illusions, produced by
weariness, over
strained eyesight, or the accidents of
twilight, could
not alarm the stranger. The terrors of life had no power over a soul
grown familiar with the terrors of death. He even gave himself up,
half amused by its bizarre eccentricities, to the influence of this
moral galvanism; its
phenomena, closely connected with his last
thoughts,
assured him that he was still alive. The silence about him
was so deep that he embarked once more in dreams that grew gradually
darker and darker as if by magic, as the light slowly faded. A last
struggling ray from the sun lit up rosy answering lights. He raised
his head and saw a
skeleton dimly
visible, with its skull bent
doubtfully to one side, as if to say, "The dead will none of thee as
yet."
He passed his hand over his
forehead to shake off the drowsiness, and
felt a cold
breath of air as an unknown furry something swept past his
cheeks. He shivered. A muffled
clatter of the windows followed; it was
a bat, he fancied, that had given him this
chilly sepulchral caress.
He could yet dimly see for a moment the shapes that surrounded him, by
the vague light in the west; then all these inanimate objects were
blotted out in uniform darkness. Night and the hour of death had
suddenly come. Thenceforward, for a while, he lost
consciousness of
the things about him; he was either buried in deep
meditation or sleep
overcame him, brought on by
weariness or by the
stress of those many
thoughts that lacerated his heart.
Suddenly he thought that an awful voice called him by name; it was
like some
feverishnightmare, when at a step the
dreamer falls
headlong over into an abyss, and he trembled. He closed his eyes,
dazzled by bright rays from a red
circle of light that shone out from
the shadows. In the midst of the
circle stood a little old man who
turned the light of the lamp upon him, yet he had not heard him enter,
nor move, nor speak. There was something
magical about the
apparition.
The boldest man, awakened in such a sort, would have felt alarmed at
the sight of this figure, which might have issued from some
sarcophagus hard by.
A
curiouslyyouthful look in the unmoving eyes of the spectre forbade
the idea of anything supernatural; but for all that, in the brief
space between his dreaming and waking life, the young man's judgment
remained philosophically suspended, as Descartes advises. He was, in
spite of himself, under the influence of an unaccountable
hallucination, a
mystery that our pride rejects, and that our
imperfect science
vainly tries to resolve.
Imagine a short old man, thin and spare, in a long black
velvet gown
girded round him by a thick silk cord. His long white hair escaped on
either side of his face from under a black
velvet cap which closely
fitted his head and made a
formalsetting for his
countenance. His
gown enveloped his body like a winding sheet, so that all that was
left
visible was a narrow bleached human face. But for the wasted arm,
thin as a draper's wand, which held aloft the lamp that cast all its
light upon him, the face would have seemed to hang in mid air. A gray
pointed beard concealed the chin of this
fantastical appearance, and
gave him the look of one of those Jewish types which serve artists as
models for Moses. His lips were so thin and colorless that it needed a
close
inspection to find the lines of his mouth at all in the pallid
face. His great wrinkled brow and hollow bloodless cheeks, the
inexorably stern expression of his small green eyes that no longer
possessed eyebrows or lashes, might have convinced the stranger that
Gerard Dow's "Money Changer" had come down from his frame. The
craftiness of an inquisitor, revealed in those curving wrinkles and
creases that wound about his temples, indicated a
profound knowledge
of life. There was no deceiving this man, who seemed to possess a
power of detecting the secrets of the wariest heart.
The
wisdom and the moral codes of every people seemed gathered up in
his
passive face, just as all the productions of the globe had been
heaped up in his dusty showrooms. He seemed to possess the tranquil
luminous
vision of some god before whom all things are open, or the
haughty power of a man who knows all things.
With two strokes of the brush a
painter could have so altered the
expression of this face, that what had been a
serenerepresentation of
the Eternal Father should change to the sneering mask of a
Mephistopheles; for though
sovereign power was revealed by the
forehead, mocking folds lurked about the mouth. He must have
sacrificed all the joys of earth, as he had crushed all human sorrows
beneath his
potent will. The man at the brink of death shivered at the
thought of the life led by this spirit, so
solitary and
remote from
our world; joyless, since he had no one
illusion left; painless,
because pleasure had ceased to exist for him. There he stood,
motionless and
serene as a star in a bright mist. His lamp lit up the
obscure
closet, just as his green eyes, with their quiet malevolence,
seemed to shed a light on the moral world.
This was the strange
spectacle that startled the young man's returning
sight, as he shook off the
dreamy fancies and thoughts of death that
had lulled him. An
instant of
dismay, a
momentary return to
belief in
nursery tales, may be
forgiven him,
seeing that his senses were
obscured. Much thought had wearied his mind, and his nerves were
exhausted with the
strain of the
tremendous drama within him, and by
the scenes that had heaped on him all the
horrid pleasures that a