The rest of the small
party staying with my friend Geoffrey Aldwych in the charming old house
which he had lately bought at a little village north of Sheringham on
the Norfolk coast had drifted away soon after dinner to bridge and
billiards, and Mrs. Aldwych and myself had for the time been left alone
in the drawing-room, seated one on each side of a small round table
which we had very patiently and unsuccessfully been trying to turn. But
such pressure, psychical or physical, as we had put upon it, though of
the friendliest and most encouraging nature, had not overcome in the
smallest degree the very slight inertia which so small an object might
have been supposed to possess, and it had remained as fixed as the most
constant of the stars. No tremor even had passed through its slight and
spindle-like legs. In consequence we had, after a really considerable
period of patient endeavour, left it to its wooden repose, and proceeded
to theorise about psychical matters instead, with no stupid table to
contradict in practice all our ideas on the subject.
This I had added with a certain
bitterness born of failure, for if we could not move so insignificant an
object, we might as well give up all idea of moving anything. But hardly
were the words out of my mouth when there came from the abandoned table
a single peremptory rap, loud and rather startling.
“What’s that?” I asked.
“Only a rap,” said she. “I
thought something would happen before long.”
“And do you really think that is a
spirit rapping?” I asked.
“Oh dear no. I don’t think it has
anything whatever to do with spirits.”
“More perhaps with the very dry
weather we have been having. Furniture often cracks like that in the
summer.”
Now this, in point of fact, was not
quite the case. Neither in summer nor in winter have I ever heard
furniture crack as the table had cracked, for the sound, whatever it
was, did not at all resemble the husky creak of contracting wood. It was
a loud sharp crack like the smart concussion of one hard object with
another.
“No, I don’t think it had much to
do with dry weather either,” said she, smiling. “I think, if you
wish to know, that it was the direct result of our attempt to turn the
table. Does that sound nonsense?”
“At present, yes,” said I,
“though I have no doubt that if you tried you could make it sound
sense. There is, I notice, a certain plausibility about you and your
theories—”
“Now you are being merely
personal,” she observed.
“For the good motive, to goad you
into explanations and enlargements. Please go on.”
“Let us stroll outside, then,” said
she, “and sit in the garden, if you are sure you prefer my
plausibilities to bridge. It is deliciously warm, and—”
“And the darkness will be more
suitable for the propagation of psychical phenomena. As at séances,”
said I.
“Oh, there is nothing psychical about
my plausibilities,” said she. “The phenomena I mean are purely
physical, according to my theory.”
So we wandered out into the transparent
half light of multitudinous stars. The last crimson feather of sunset,
which had hovered long in the West, had been blown away with the breath
of the night wind, and the moon, which would presently rise, had not yet
cut the dim horizon of the sea, which lay very quiet, breathing gently
in its sleep with stir of whispering ripples. Across the dark velvet of
the close-cropped lawn, which stretched seawards from the house, blew a
little breeze full of the savour of salt and the freshness of night,
with, every now and then, a hint so subtly conveyed as to be scarcely
perceptible of its travel across the sleeping fragrance of drowsy
garden-beds, over which the white moths hovered seeking their
night-honey. The house itself, with its two bartlemented towers of
Elizabethan times, gleamed with many windows, and we passed out of sight
of it, and into the shadow of a box-hedge, clipped into shapes and
monstrous fantasies, and found chairs by the striped tent at the top of
the sheltered bowling-alley.
“And this is all very plausible,”
said I. “Theories, if you please, at length, and, if possible, a full
length illustration also.”
“By
which you mean a ghost-story, or something to that effect?”
“Precisely: and, without presuming to
dictate, if possible, firsthand.”
“Oddly enough, I can supply that
also,” said she. “So first I will tell you my general theory, and
follow it by a story that seems to bear it out. It happened to me, and
it happened here.”
“I am sure it will fill the bill,”
said I.
She paused a moment while I lit a
cigarette, and then began in her very clear, pleasant voice. She has the
most lucid voice I know, and to me sitting there in the deep-dyed dusk,
the words seemed the very incarnation of clarity, for they dropped into
the still quiet of the darkness, undisturbed by impressions conveyed to
other senses.
“We are only just
beginning to conjecture,” she said, “how inextricable is the
interweaving between mind, soul, life — call it what you will — and
the purely material part of the created world. That such interweaving
existed has, of course, been known for centuries; doctors, for instance,
knew that a cheerful optimistic spirit on the part of their patients
conduced towards recovery; that fear, the mere emotion, had a definite
effect on the beat of the heart, that anger produced chemical changes in
the blood, that anxiety led to indigestion, that under the influence of
strong passion a man can do things which in his normal state he is
physically incapable of performing. Here we have mind, in a simple and
familiar manner, producing changes and effects in tissue, in that which
is purely material. By an extension of this — though, indeed, it is
scarcely an extension — we may expect to find that mind can have an
effect, not only on what we call living tissue, but on dead things, on
pieces of wood or stone. At least it is hard to see why that should not
be so.”
“Table-turning, for instance?” I
asked.
“That is one instance of how some
force, out of that innumerable cohort of obscure mysterious forces with
which we human beings are garrisoned, can pass, as it is constantly
doing, into material things. The laws of its passing we do not know;
sometimes we wish it to pass and it does not. Just now, for instance,
when you and I tried to turn the table, there was some impediment in the
path, though I put down that rap which followed as an effect of our
efforts. But nothing seems more natural to my mind than that these
forces should be transmissible to inanimate things. Of the manner of its
passing we know next to nothing, any more than we know the manner of the
actual process by which fear accelerates the beating of the heart, but
as surely as a Marconi message leaps along the air by no visible or
tangible bridge, so through some subtle gateway of the body these forces
can march from the citadel of the spirit into material forms, whether
that material is a living part of ourselves or that which we choose to
call inanimate nature.”
She paused a moment.
“Under certain circumstances,” she
went on, “it seems that the force which has passed from us into
inanimate things can manifest its presence there. The force that passes
into a table can show itself in movements or in noises coming from the
table. The table has been charged with physical energy. Often and often
I have seen a table or a chair move apparently of its own accord, but
only when some outpouring of force, animal magnetism — call it what
you will — has been received by it. A parallel phenomenon to my mind
is exhibited in what we know as haunted houses, houses in which, as a
rule, some crime or act of extreme emotion or passion has been
committed, and in which some echo or re-enactment of the deed is
periodically made visible or audible. A murder has been committed, let
us say, and the room where it took place is haunted. The figure of the
murdered, or less commonly of the murderer, is seen there by sensitives,
and cries are heard, or steps run to and fro. The atmosphere has somehow
been charged with the scene, and the scene in whole or part repeats
itself, though under what laws we do not know, just as a phonograph will
repeat, when properly handled, what has been said into it.”
“This is all theory,” I remarked.
“But it appears to me to cover a
curious set of facts, which is all we ask of a theory. Otherwise, we
must frankly state our disbelief in haunted houses altogether, or
suppose that the spirit of the murdered, poor, wretch, is bound under
certain circumstances to re-enact the horror of its body’s tragedy. It
was not enough that its body was killed there, its soul has to be
dragged back and live through it all again with such vividness that its
anguish becomes visible or audible to the eyes or ears of the sensitive.
That to me is unthinkable, whereas my theory is not. Do I make it at all
clear?”
“It is clear enough,” said I,
“but I want support for it, the full-sized illustration.”
“I promised you that, a ghost-story
of my own experience.”
Mrs. Aldwych paused again, and then
began the story which was to illustrate her theory.
“It is just a year,” she said,
“since Jack bought this house from old Mrs. Denison. We had both
heard, both he and I, that it was supposed to be haunted, but neither of
us knew any particulars of the haunt whatever. A month ago I heard what
I believe to have been the ghost, and, when Mrs. Denison was staying
with us last week, I asked her exactly what it was, and found it tallied
completely with my experience. I will tell you my experience first, and
give her account of the haunt afterwards.
“A month ago Jack was away for a few
days and I remained here alone. One Sunday evening I, in my usual health
and spirits, as far as I am aware, both of which are serenely excellent,
went up to bed about eleven. My room is on the first floor, just at the
foot of the staircase that leads to the floor above. There are four more
rooms on my passage, all of which that night were empty, and at the far
end of it a door leads into the landing at the top of the front
staircase. On the other side of that, as you know, are more bedrooms,
all of which that night were also unoccupied; I, in fact, was the only
sleeper on the first floor.
“The head of my bed is close behind
my door, and there is an electric light over it. This is controlled by a
switch at the bed-head, and another switch there turns on a light in the
passage just outside my room. That was Jack’s plan: if by chance you
want to leave your room when the house is dark, you can light up the
passage before you go out, and not grope blindly for a switch outside.
“Usually I sleep solidly: it is very
rarely indeed that I wake, when once I have gone to sleep, before I am
called. But that night I woke, which was rare; what was rarer was that I
woke in a state of shuddering and unaccountable terror; I tried to
localise my panic, to run it to earth and reason it away, but without
any success. Terror of something I could not guess at stared me in the
face, white, shaking terror. So, as there was no use in lying quaking in
the dark, I lit my lamp, and, with the view of composing this strange
disorder of my fear, began to read again in the book I had brought up
with me. The volume happened to be ‘The Green Carnation,’ a work one
would have thought to be full of tonic to twittering nerves. But it
failed of success, even as my reasoning had done, and after reading a
few pages, and finding that the heart-hammer in my throat grew no
quieter, and that the grip of terror was in no way relaxed, I put out my
light and lay down again. I looked at my watch, however, before doing
this, and remember that the time was ten minutes to two.
“Still matters did not mend: terror,
that was slowly becoming a little more definite, terror of some dark and
violent deed that was momently drawing nearer to me held me in its vice.
Something was coming, the advent of which was perceived by the
sub-conscious sense, and was already conveyed to my conscious mind. And
then the clock struck two jingling chimes, and the stable-clock outside
clanged the hour more sonorously.
“I still lay there, abject and
palpitating. Then I heard a sound just outside my room on the stairs
that lead, as I have said, to the second story, a sound which was
perfectly commonplace and unmistakable. Feet feeling their way in the
dark were coming downstairs to my passage: I could hear also the groping
hand slip and slide along the bannisters. The footfalls came along the
few yards of passage between the bottom of the stairs and my door, and
then against my door itself came the brush of drapery, and on the panels
the blind groping of fingers. The handle rattled as they passed over it,
and my terror nearly rose to screaming point.
“Then a sensible hope struck me. The
midnight wanderer might be one of the servants, ill or in want of
something, and yet —why the shuffling feet and the groping hand? But
on the instant of the dawning of that hope (for I knew that it was of
the step and that which was moving in the dark passage of which I was
afraid) I turned on both the light at my bed-head, and the light of the
passage outside, and, opening the door, looked out. The passage was
quite bright from end to end, but it was perfectly empty. Yet as I
looked, seeing nothing of the walker, I still heard. Down the bright
boards I heard the shuffle growing fainter as it receded, until, judging
by the ear, it turned into the gallery at the end and died away. And
with it there died also all my sense of terror. It was It of which I had
been afraid: now It and my terror had passed. And I went back to bed and
slept till morning.”
Again Mrs. Aldwych
paused, and I was silent. Somehow it was in the extreme simplicity of
her experience that the horror lay. She went on almost immediately.
“Now for the sequel,” she said,
“of what I choose to call the explanation. Mrs. Denison, as I told
you, came down to stay with us not long ago, and I mentioned that we had
heard, though only vaguely, that the house was supposed to be haunted,
and asked for an account of it. This is what she told me:
“‘In the year 1610 the heiress to
the property was a girl Helen Denison, who was engaged to be married to
young Lord Southern. In case therefore of her having children, the
property would pass away from Denisons. In case of her death, childless,
it would pass to her first cousin. A week before the marriage took
place, he and a brother of his entered the house, riding here from
thirty miles away, after dark, and made their way to her room on the
second story. There they gagged her and attempted to kill her, but she
escaped from them, groped her way along this passage, and into the room
at the end of the gallery. They followed her there, and killed her. The
facts were known by the younger brother turning king’s evidence.’
“Now Mrs. Denison told me that the
ghost had never been seen, but that it was occasionally heard coming
downstairs or going along the passage. She told me that it was never
heard except between the hours of two and three in the morning, the hour
during which the murder took place.”
“And since then have you heard it
again?” I asked.
“Yes, more than once. But it has
never frightened me again. I feared, as we all do, what was unknown.”
“I feel that I should fear the known,
if I knew it was that,” said I.
“I don’t think you would for long.
Whatever theory you adopt about it, the sounds of the steps and the
groping hand, I cannot see that there is anything to shock or frighten
one. My own theory you know—”
“Please apply it to what you
heard,” I asked.
“Simply enough. The poor girl felt
her way along this passage in the despair of her agonised terror,
hearing no doubt the soft footsteps of her murderers gaining on her, as
she groped along her lost way. The waves of that terrible brainstorm
raging within her, impressed themselves in some subtle yet physical
manner on the place. It would only be by those people whom we call
sensitives that the wrinkles, so to speak, made by those breaking waves
on the sands would be perceived, and by them not always. But they are
there, even as when a Marconi apparatus is working the waves are there,
though they can only be perceived by a receiver that is in tune. If you
believe in brain-waves at all, the explanation is not so difficult.”
“Then the brain-wave is permanent?”
“Every wave of whatever kind leaves
its mark, does it not? If you disbelieve the whole thing, shall I give
you a room on the route of that poor murdered harmless walker?”
I got up.
“I am very comfortable, thanks, where
I am,” I said.