By
H.G. WLLS
Chapter XX
§1.
It was the Christmas party at Heighton
that was one of the turning-points in Perkins’
life. The Duchess had sent him a three-page wire
in the hyperbolical style of her class, conveying a
vague impression that she and the Duke had arranged
to commit suicide together if Perkins didn’t
“chuck” any previous engagement he had
made. And Perkins had felt in a slipshod sort
of way—for at this period he was incapable
of ordered thought—he might as well be at
Heighton as anywhere….
The enormous house was almost full.
There must have been upwards of fifty people sitting
down to every meal. Many of these were members
of the family. Perkins was able to recognise
them by their unconvoluted ears—the well-known
Grifford ear, transmitted from one generation to another.
For the rest there were the usual lot from the Front
Benches and the Embassies. Evesham was there,
clutching at the lapels of his coat; and the Prescotts—he
with his massive mask of a face, and she with her
quick, hawk-like ways, talking about two things at
a time; old Tommy Strickland, with his monocle and
his dropped g’s, telling you what he had once
said to Mr. Disraeli; Boubou Seaforth and his American
wife; John Pirram, ardent and elegant, spouting old
French lyrics; and a score of others.
Perkins had got used to them by now.
He no longer wondered what they were “up to,”
for he knew they were up to nothing whatever.
He reflected, while he was dressing for dinner on
Christmas night, how odd it was he had ever thought
of Using them. He might as well have hoped to
Use the Dresden shepherds and shepherdesses that grinned
out in the last stages of refinement at him from the
glazed cabinets in the drawing-rooms…. Or the
Labour Members themselves….
True there was Evesham. He had
shown an exquisitely open mind about the whole thing.
He had at once grasped the underlying principles,
thrown out some amazingly luminous suggestions.
Oh yes, Evesham was a statesman, right enough.
But had even he ever really believed in the
idea of a Provisional Government of England by the
Female Foundlings?
To Perkins the whole thing had seemed
so simple, so imminent—a thing that needed
only a little general good-will to bring it about.
And now…. Suppose his Bill had passed
its Second Reading, suppose it had become Law, would
this poor old England be by way of functioning decently—after
all? Foundlings were sometimes naughty….
What was the matter with the whole
human race? He remembered again those words of
Scragson’s that had had such a depressing effect
on him at the Cambridge Union—“Look
here, you know! It’s all a huge nasty mess,
and we’re trying to swab it up with a pocket
handkerchief.” Well, he’d given up
trying to do that….
§2.
During dinner his eyes wandered furtively
up and down the endless ornate table, and he felt
he had been, in a sort of way, right in thinking these
people were the handiest instrument to prise open
the national conscience with. The shining red
faces of the men, the shining white necks and arms
of the women, the fearless eyes, the general free-and-easiness
and spaciousness, the look of late hours counteracted
by fresh air and exercise and the best things to eat
and drink—what mightn’t be made of
these people, if they’d only Submit?
Perkins looked behind them, at the
solemn young footmen passing and repassing, noiselessly,
in blue and white liveries. They had Submitted.
And it was just because they had been able to that
they were no good.
“Damn!” said Perkins, under his breath.
§3.
One of the big conifers from the park
had been erected in the hall, and this, after dinner,
was found to be all lighted up with electric bulbs
and hung with packages in tissue paper.
The Duchess stood, a bright, feral
figure, distributing these packages to the guests.
Perkins’ name was called out in due course and
the package addressed to him was slipped into his
hand. He retired with it into a corner.
Inside the tissue-paper was a small morocco leather
case. Inside that was a set of diamond and sapphire
sleeve-links—large ones.
He stood looking at them, blinking a little.
He supposed he must put them on.
But something in him, some intractably tough bit of
his old self, rose up protesting—frantically.
If he couldn’t Use these people,
at least they weren’t going to Use him!
“No, damn it!” he said
under his breath, and, thrusting the case into his
pocket, slipped away unobserved.
§4.
He flung himself into a chair in his
bedroom and puffed a blast of air from his lungs….
Yes, it had been a narrow escape. He knew that
if he had put those beastly blue and white things
on he would have been a lost soul….
“You’ve got to pull yourself
together, d’you hear?” he said to himself.
“You’ve got to do a lot of clear, steady,
merciless thinking—now, to-night.
You’ve got to persuade yourself somehow that,
Foundlings or no Foundlings, this regeneration of mankind
business may still be set going—and by
you.”
He paced up and down the room, fuming.
How recapture the generous certitudes that had one
by one been slipping away from him? He found
himself staring vacantly at the row of books on the
little shelf by his bed. One of them seemed suddenly
to detach itself—he could almost have sworn
afterwards that he didn’t reach out for it, but
that it hopped down into his hand….
“Sitting Up For The Dawn”!
It was one of that sociological series by which H.G.
Wlls had first touched his soul to finer issues when
he was at the ’Varsity.
He opened it with tremulous fingers.
Could it re-exert its old sway over him now?
The page he had opened it at was headed
“General Cessation Day,” and he began
to read….
“The re-casting of the calendar
on a decimal basis seems a simple enough matter at
first sight. But even here there are details that
will have to be thrashed out….
“Mr. Edgar Dibbs, in his able
pamphlet ’Ten to the Rescue,’[1] advocates
a twenty-hour day, and has drawn up an ingenious scheme
for accelerating the motion of this planet by four
in every twenty-four hours, so that the alternations
of light and darkness shall be re-adjusted to the
new reckoning. I think such re-adjustment would
be indispensable (though I know there is a formidable
body of opinion against me). But I am far from
being convinced of the feasibility of Mr. Dibbs’
scheme. I believe the twenty-four hour day has
come to stay—anomalous though it certainly
will seem in the ten-day week, the fifty-day month,
and the thousand-day year. I should like to have
incorporated Mr. Dibbs’ scheme in my vision of
the Dawn. But, as I have said, the scope of this
vision is purely practical….
[Footnote 1: Published by the
Young Self-Helpers’ Press, Ipswich.]
“Mr. Albert Baker, in a paper2
read before the South Brixton Hebdomadals, pleads
that the first seven days of the decimal week should
retain their old names, the other three to be called
provisionally Huxleyday, Marxday, and Tolstoiday.
But, for reasons which I have set forth elsewhere,[3]
I believe that the nomenclature which I had originally
suggested4—Aday, Bday, and so on to Jday—would
be really the simplest way out of the difficulty.
Any fanciful way of naming the days would be bad, as
too sharply differentiating one day from another.
What we must strive for in the Dawn is that every
day shall be as nearly as possible like every other
day. We must help the human units—these
little pink slobbering creatures of the Future whose
cradle we are rocking—to progress not in
harsh jerks, but with a beautiful unconscious rhythm….
[Footnote 2: “Are We Going Too Fast?”]
[Footnote 3: “A Midwife
For The Millennium.” H.G. Wlls.]
[Footnote 4: “How To Be
Happy Though Yet Unborn.” H.G. Wlls.]
“There must be nothing corresponding
to our Sunday. Sunday is a canker that must be
cut ruthlessly out of the social organism. At
present the whole community gets ‘slack’
on Saturday because of the paralysis that is about
to fall on it. And then ’Black Monday’!—that
day when the human brain tries to readjust itself—tries
to realise that the shutters are down, and the streets
are swept, and the stove-pipe hats are back in their
band-boxes….
“Yet of course there must be
holidays. We can no more do without holidays
than without sleep. For every man there must be
certain stated intervals of repose—of recreation
in the original sense of the word. My views on
the worthlessness of classical education are perhaps
pretty well known to you, but I don’t underrate
the great service that my friend Professor Ezra K.
Higgins has rendered by his discovery5 that the
word recreation originally signified a re-creating—i.e.,[6]
a time for the nerve-tissues to renew themselves in.
The problem before us is how to secure for the human
units in the Dawn—these giants of whom
we are but the foetuses—the holidays necessary
for their full capacity for usefulness to the State,
without at the same time disorganising the whole community—and
them.
[Footnote 5: “Words About Words.”
By Ezra K. Higgins, Professor of
Etymology, Abraham Z. Stubbins University,
Padua, Pa., U.S.A. (2
vols.).]
[Footnote 6: “Id est”—“That
is.”]
“The solution is really very
simple. The community will be divided into ten
sections—Section A, Section B, and so on
to Section J. And to every section one day of the
decimal week will be assigned as a ‘Cessation
Day.’ Thus, those people who fall under
Section A will rest on Aday, those who fall under
Section B will rest on Bday, and so on. On every
day of the year one-tenth of the population will be
resting, but the other nine-tenths will be at work.
The joyous hum and clang of labour will never cease
in the municipal workshops….
“You figure the smokeless blue
sky above London dotted all over with airships in
which the holiday-making tenth are re-creating themselves
for the labour of next week—looking down
a little wistfully, perhaps, at the workshops from
which they are temporarily banished. And here
I scent a difficulty. So attractive a thing will
labour be in the Dawn that a man will be tempted not
to knock off work when his Cessation Day comes round,
and will prefer to work for no wage rather than not
at all. So that perhaps there will have to be
a law making Cessation Day compulsory, and the Overseers
will be empowered to punish infringement of this law
by forbidding the culprit to work for ten days after
the first offence, twenty after the second, and so
on. But I don’t suppose there will often
be need to put this law in motion. The children
of the Dawn, remember, will not be the puny self-ridden
creatures that we are. They will not say, ’Is
this what I want to do?’ but ’Shall I,
by doing this, be (a) harming or (b) benefiting—no
matter in how infinitesimal a degree—the
Future of the Race?’
“Sunday must go. And, as
I have hinted, the progress of mankind will be steady
proportionately to its own automatism. Yet I think
there would be no harm in having one—just
one—day in the year set aside as a day
of universal rest—a day for the searching
of hearts. Heaven—I mean the Future—forbid
that I should be hide-bound by dry-as-dust logic,
in dealing with problems of flesh and blood. The
sociologists of the past thought the grey matter of
their own brains all-sufficing. They forgot that
flesh is pink and blood is red. That is why they
could not convert people….
“The five-hundredth and last
day of each year shall be a General Cessation Day.
It will correspond somewhat to our present Christmas
Day. But with what a difference! It will
not be, as with us, a mere opportunity for relatives
to make up the quarrels they have picked with each
other during the past year, and to eat and drink things
that will make them ill well into next year.
Holly and mistletoe there will be in the Municipal
Eating Rooms, but the men and women who sit down there
to General Cessation High-Tea will be glowing not with
a facile affection for their kith and kin, but with
communal anxiety for the welfare of the great-great-grand-children
of people they have never met and are never likely
to meet.
“The great event of the day
will be the performance of the ceremony of ‘Making
Way.’
“In the Dawn, death will not
be the haphazard affair that it is under the present
anarchic conditions. Men will not be stumbling
out of the world at odd moments and for reasons over
which they have no control. There will always,
of course, be a percentage of deaths by misadventure.
But there will be no deaths by disease. Nor, on
the other hand, will people die of old age. Every
child will start life knowing that (barring misadventure)
he has a certain fixed period of life before him—so
much and no more, but not a moment less.
“It is impossible to foretell
to what average age the children of the Dawn will
retain the use of all their faculties—be
fully vigorous mentally and physically. We only
know they will be ‘going strong’ at ages
when we have long ceased to be any use to the State.
Let us, for sake of argument, say that on the average
their facilities will have begun to decay at the age
of ninety—a trifle over thirty-two, by the
new reckoning. That, then, will be the period
of life fixed for all citizens. Every man on
fulfilling that period will avail himself of the Municipal
Lethal Chamber. He will ’make way’....
“I thought at one time that
it would be best for every man to ’make way’
on the actual day when he reaches the age-limit.
But I see now that this would savour of private enterprise.
Moreover, it would rule out that element of sentiment
which, in relation to such a thing as death, we must
do nothing to mar. The children and friends of
a man on the brink of death would instinctively wish
to gather round him. How could they accompany
him to the lethal chamber, if it were an ordinary
working-day, with every moment of the time mapped out
for them?
“On General Cessation Day, therefore,
the gates of the lethal chambers will stand open for
all those who shall in the course of the past year
have reached the age-limit. You figure the wide
streets filled all day long with little solemn processions—solemn
and yet not in the least unhappy…. You figure
the old man walking with a firm step in the midst
of his progeny, looking around him with a clear eye
at this dear world which is about to lose him.
He will not be thinking of himself. He will not
be wishing the way to the lethal chamber was longer.
He will be filled with joy at the thought that he
is about to die for the good of the race—to
‘make way’ for the beautiful young breed
of men and women who, in simple, artistic, antiseptic
garments, are disporting themselves so gladly on this
day of days. They pause to salute him as he passes.
And presently he sees, radiant in the sunlight, the
pleasant white-tiled dome of the lethal chamber.
You figure him at the gate, shaking hands all round,
and speaking perhaps a few well-chosen words about
the Future….”
§5.
It was enough. The old broom
hadn’t lost its snap. It had swept clean
the chambers of Perkins’ soul—swished
away the whole accumulation of nasty little cobwebs
and malignant germs. Gone were the mean doubts
that had formed in him, the lethargy, the cheap cynicism.
Perkins was himself again.
He saw now how very stupid it was
of him to have despaired just because his own particular
panacea wasn’t given a chance. That Provisional
Government plan of his had been good, but it was only
one of an infinite number of possible paths to the
Dawn. He would try others—scores of
others….
He must get right away out of here—to-night.
He must have his car brought round from the garage—now—to
a side door….
But first he sat down to the writing-table,
and wrote quickly:
Dear Duchess,
I regret I am called away
on urgent political business….
Yours
faithfully J. Perkins….
He took the morocco leather case out
of his pocket and enclosed it, with the note, in a
large envelope.
Then he pressed the electric button
by his bedside, almost feeling that this was a signal
for the Dawn to rise without more ado….