It
was curious—that sense of dull uneasiness that came over him so
suddenly, so stealthily at first he scarcely noticed it, but with such
marked increase after a time that he presently got up and left the
theatre. His seat was on the gangway of the dress circle, and he slipped
out awkwardly in the middle of what seemed to be the best and jolliest
song of the piece. The full house was shaking with laughter; so
infectious was the gaiety that even strangers turned to one another as
much as to say: ‘Now, isn’t that funny—?’
It was curious, too, the way the feeling first got into him at
all, here in the full swing of laughter, music, light-heartedness, for
it came as a vague suggestion: ‘I’ve forgotten something—
something I meant to do—something of importance. What in the world was
it, now?’ And he thought hard, searching vainly through his mind; then
dismissed it as the dancing caught his attention. It came back a little
later again, during a passage of long-winded talk that bored him and set
his attention free once more, but came more strongly this time,
insisting on an answer. What could it have been that he had overlooked,
left undone, omitted to see to? It went on nibbling at the subconscious
part of him. Several times this happened, this dismissal and return,
till at last the thing declared itself more plainly—and he felt
bothered, troubled, distinctly uneasy.
He was wanted somewhere. There was somewhere else he ought to be.
That describes it best, perhaps. Some engagement of moment had
entirely slipped his memory—an engagement that involved another
person, too. But where, what, with whom? And at length, this vague
uneasiness amounted to positive discomfort, so that he felt unable to
enjoy the piece— and left abruptly. Like a man to whom comes suddenly
the horrible idea that the match he lit his cigarette with and flung
into the waste-paper basket on leaving was not really out— a sort of
panic distress—he jumped into a taxi-cab and hurried to his flat: to
find everything in order, of course; no smoke, no fire, no smell of
burning.
But his evening was spoilt. He sat smoking in his armchair at
home—this business man of forty, practical in mind, of character some
called stolid—cursing himself for an imaginative fool. It was now too
late to go back to the theatre; the club bored him; he spent an hour
with the evening papers, dipping into books, sipping a long cool drink;
doing odds and ends about the flat; ‘I’ll go to bed early for a
change,’ he laughed, but really all the time fighting—yes,
deliberately fighting— this strange attack of uneasiness that so
insidiously grew upwards, outwards from the buried depths of him that
sought so strenuously to deny it. It never occurred to him that he was
ill. He was not ill. His
health was thunderingly good. He was robust as a coal-heaver.
The flat was roomy, high up on the top floor, yet in a busy part
of town, so that the roar of traffic mounted round it like a sea.
Through the open windows came the fresh night air of June. He had never
noticed before how sweet the London night air could be, and that not all
the smoke and dust could smother a certain touch of wild fragrance that
tinctured it with perfume—yes, almost perfume—as of the country. He
swallowed a draught of it as he stood there, staring out across the
tangled world of roofs and chimney-pots. He saw the procession of the
clouds; he saw the stars; he saw the moonlight falling in a shower of
silver spears upon the slates and wires and steeples. And something in
him quickened—something that had never stirred before.
He turned with a horrid start, for the uneasiness had of a sudden
leaped within him like an animal. There was some one in the flat.
Instantly, with action, even this slight action, the fancy
vanished; but, all the same, he switched on the electric lights and made
a search. For it seemed to him that some one had crept up close behind
him while he stood there watching the Night—some one, moreover, whose
silent presence fingered with unerring touch both this new thing that
had quickened in his hear and that
sense of original deep uneasiness. He was amazed at himself, angry;
indignant that he could be thus foolishly upset over nothing, yet at the
same time profoundly distressed at this vehement growth of a new thing
in his well-ordered personality. Growth? He dismissed the word the
moment it occurred to him. But it had occurred to him. It stayed. While
he searched the empty flat, the long passages, the gloomy bedroom at the
end, the little hail where he kept his overcoats and golf sticks—it
stayed. Growth! It was oddly disquieting. Growth, to him,
involved—though he neither acknowledged nor recognised the truth
perhaps-some kind of undesirable changeableness, instability,
unbalance.
Yet, singular as it all was, he realised that the uneasiness and
the sudden appreciation of Beauty that was so new to him had both
entered by the same door into his being. When he came back to the front
room he noticed that he was perspiring. There were little drops of
moisture on his forehead. And down his spine ran positively
chills—little, faint quivers of cold. He was shivering.
He lit his big meerschaum pipe, and left the lights all burning.
The feeling that there was something he had overlooked, forgotten, left
undone, had vanished. Whatever the original cause of this absurd
uneasiness might be—he called it absurd on purpose, because he now
realised in the depths of him that it was really more vital then he
cared about—it was much nearer to discovery than before. It dodged
about just below the threshold of discovery. It was as dose as that. Any
moment he would know what it was: he would remember. Yes, he would remember. Meanwhile, he was in the right place. No desire to go
elsewhere afflicted him, as in the theatre. Here was the place, here in
the flat.
And then it was, with a kind of sudden burst and rush—it seemed
to him the only way to phrase it—memory gave up her dead.
At first he only caught her peeping round the corner at him,
drawing aside a corner of an enormous curtain, as it were; striving for
more complete entrance as though the mass of it were difficult to move.
But he understood; he knew; he recognised. It was enough for that. An
entrance into his being—heart, mind, soul—was being attempted, and
the entrance, because of his stolid temperament, was difficult of
accomplishment. There was effort, strain. Something in him had first to
be opened up, widened, made soft and ready as by an operation, before
full entrance could be effected. This much he grasped, though for the
life of him he could not have put it into words. Also, he knew who
it was that sought an entrance. Deliberately from himself he
withheld the name. But he knew, as surely as though Straughan stood in
the room and faced him with a knife, saying, ‘Let me in, let me in. I
wish you to know I’m here. I’m clearing a way...! You recall our
promise...?’
He rose from his chair and went to the open window again, the
strange fear slowly passing. The cool air fanned his cheeks. Beauty,
till now, had scarcely ever brushed the surface of his soul. He had
never troubled his head about it. It passed him by, indifferent; and he
had ever loathed the mouthy prating of it on others’ lips. He was
practical; beauty was for dreamers, for women, for men who had means and
leisure. He had not exactly scorned it; rather it had never touched his
life, to sweeten, cheer, uplift. Artists for him were like
monks—another sex almost, useless beings who never helped the world go
round. He was for action always, work, activity, achievement—as he saw
them. He remembered Straughan vaguely—Straughan, the ever impecunious,
friend of his youth, always talking of colour, sound—mysterious,
ineffective things. He even forgot what they had quarrelled about, if
they had quarrelled at all
even; or why they had gone apart all these years ago. And, certainly, he
had forgotten any promise. Memory, as yet, only peeped round the corner
of that huge curtain at him, tentatively, suggestively yet—he was
obliged to admit it—somewhat winningly. He was conscious of this
gentle, sweet seductiveness that now replaced his fear.
And, as he stood now at the open window, peering over huge
London, Beauty came close and smote him between the eyes. She came
blindingly, with her train of stars and douds and perfumes. Night,
mysterious, myriad-eyed, and flaming across her sea of haunted shadows,
invaded his heart and shook him with her immemorial wonder and delight.
He found no words, of course, to dothe the new, unwonted sensations. He
only knew that all his former dread, uneasiness, distress, and with them
this idea of ‘growth’ that had seemed so repugnant to him, were
merged, swept up, and gathered magnificently home into a wave of Beauty
that enveloped him. ‘See it ... and understand,’ ran a secret inner
whisper across his mind. He saw. He understood....
He went back and turned the lights out. Then he took his place
again at that open window, drinking in the night. He saw a new world; a
species of intoxication held him. He sighed ... as his thoughts
blundered for expression among words and sentences that knew him not.
But the delight was there, the wonder, the mystery. He watched, with
heart alternately tightening and expanding, the transfiguring play of
moon and shadow over the sea of buildings. He saw the dance of the
hurrying clouds, the open patches into outer space, the veiling and
unveiling of that ancient silvery face; and he caught strange whispers
of the hierophantic, sacerdotal Power that had echoed down the world
since Time began and dropped strange magic phrases into every poet’s
heart since first ‘God dawned on Chaos’—the Beauty of the
Night....
A long time passed—it may have been one hour, it may have been
three—when at length he turned away and went slowly to his bedroom. A
deep peace lay over him. Something quite new and blessed had crept into
his life and thought. He could not quite understand it all. He only knew
that it uplifted. There was no longer the least sign of affliction or
distress. Even the inevitable reaction that, of course, set in could not
destroy that.
And then, as he lay in bed, nearing the borderland of sleep,
suddenly and without any obvious suggestion to bring it, he remembered
another thing. He remembered the promise. Memory got past the big
curtain for an instant, and showed her face. She looked into his eyes.
It must have been a dozen years ago when Straughan and he had made that
foolish, solemn promise that whoever died first should show himself, if
possible, to the other.
He had utterly forgotten it—till now. But Straughan had not
forgotten it. The letter came three weeks later, from India. That very
evening Straughan had died—at nine o’clock. And he had come
back—in the Beauty that he loved.