“OH, of course they’re
not show ghosts—a collector wouldn’t
think anything of them … Don’t let me
raise your hopes … their one merit is their numerical
strength: the exceptional fact of their being
two. But, as against this, I’m bound
to admit that at any moment I could probably have
exorcised them both by asking my doctor for a prescription,
or my oculist for a pair of spectacles. Only,
as I never could make up my mind whether to go to
the doctor or the oculist—whether I was
afflicted by an optical or a digestive delusion—I
left them to pursue their interesting double life,
though at times they made mine exceedingly comfortable
...
“Yes—uncomfortable;
and you know how I hate to be uncomfortable!
But it was part of my stupid pride, when the thing
began, not to admit that I could be disturbed by the
trifling matter of seeing two—
“And then I’d no reason,
really, to suppose I was ill. As far as I knew
I was simply bored—horribly bored.
But it was part of my boredom—I remember—that
I was feeling so uncommonly well, and didn’t
know how on earth to work off my surplus energy.
I had come back from a long journey—down
in South America and Mexico—and had settled
down for the winter near New York, with an old aunt
who had known Washington Irving and corresponded with
N. P. Willis. She lived, not far from Irvington,
in a damp Gothic villa, overhung by Norway spruces,
and looking exactly like a memorial emblem done in
hair. Her personal appearance was in keeping with
this image, and her own hair—of which there
was little left—might have been sacrificed
to the manufacture of the emblem.
“I had just reached the end
of an agitated year, with considerable arrears to
make up in money and emotion; and theoretically it
seemed as though my aunt’s mild hospitality
would be as beneficial to my nerves as to my purse.
But the deuce of it was that as soon as I felt myself
safe and sheltered my energy began to revive; and how
was I to work it off inside of a memorial emblem?
I had, at that time, the agreeable illusion that sustained
intellectual effort could engage a man’s whole
activity; and I decided to write a great book—I
forget about what. My aunt, impressed by my plan,
gave up to me her Gothic library, filled with classics
in black cloth and daguerrotypes of faded celebrities;
and I sat down at my desk to make myself a place among
their number. And to facilitate my task she lent
me a cousin to copy my manuscript.
“The cousin was a nice girl,
and I had an idea that a nice girl was just what I
needed to restore my faith in human nature, and principally
in myself. She was neither beautiful nor intelligent—poor
Alice Nowell!—but it interested me to see
any woman content to be so uninteresting, and I wanted
to find out the secret of her content. In doing
this I handled it rather rashly, and put it out of
joint—oh, just for a moment! There’s
no fatuity in telling you this, for the poor girl
had never seen any one but cousins …
“Well, I was sorry for what
I’d done, of course, and confoundedly bothered
as to how I should put it straight. She was staying
in the house, and one evening, after my aunt had gone
to bed, she came down to the library to fetch a book
she’d mislaid, like any artless heroine on the
shelves behind us. She was pink-nosed and flustered,
and it suddenly occurred to me that her hair, though
it was fairly thick and pretty, would look exactly
like my aunt’s when she grew older. I was
glad I had noticed this, for it made it easier for
me to do what was right; and when I had found the
book she hadn’t lost I told her I was leaving
for Europe that week.
“Europe was terribly far off
in those days, and Alice knew at once what I meant.
She didn’t take it in the least as I’d
expected—it would have been easier if she
had. She held her book very tight, and turned
away a moment to wind up the lamp on my desk—it
had a ground glass shade with vine leaves, and glass
drops around the edge, I remember. Then she came
back, held out her hand, and said: ‘Good-bye.’
And as she said it she looked straight at me and kissed
me. I had never felt anything as fresh and shy
and brave as her kiss. It was worse than any
reproach, and it made me ashamed to deserve a reproach
from her. I said to myself: ’I’ll
marry her, and when my aunt dies she’ll leave
us this house, and I’ll sit here at the desk
and go on with my book; and Alice will sit over there
with her embroidery and look at me as she’s
looking now. And life will go on like that for
any number of years.’ The prospect frightened
me a little, but at the time it didn’t frighten
me as much as doing anything to hurt her; and ten
minutes later she had my seal ring on my finger, and
my promise that when I went abroad she should go with
me.
“You’ll wonder why I’m
enlarging on this familiar incident. It’s
because the evening on which it took place was the
very evening on which I first saw the queer sight
I’ve spoken of. Being at that time an ardent
believer in a necessary sequence between cause and
effect I naturally tried to trace some kind of link
between what had just happened to me in my aunt’s
library, and what was to happen a few hours later
on the same night; and so the coincidence between the
two events always remained in my mind.
“I went up to bed with rather
a heavy heart, for I was bowed under the weight of
the first good action I had ever consciously committed;
and young as I was, I saw the gravity of my situation.
Don’t imagine from this that I had hitherto been
an instrument of destruction. I had been merely
a harmless young man, who had followed his bent and
declined all collaboration with Providence. Now
I had suddenly undertaken to promote the moral order
of the world, and I felt a good deal like the trustful
spectator who has given his gold watch to the conjurer,
and doesn’t know in what shape he’ll get
it back when the trick is over … Still, a glow
of self-righteousness tempered my fears, and I said
to myself as I undressed that when I’d got used
to being good it probably wouldn’t make me as
nervous as it did at the start. And by the time
I was in bed, and had blown out my candle, I felt
that I really was getting used to it, and that,
as far as I’d got, it was not unlike sinking
down into one of my aunt’s very softest wool
mattresses.
“I closed my eyes on this image,
and when I opened them it must have been a good deal
later, for my room had grown cold, and the night was
intensely still. I was waked suddenly by the feeling
we all know—the feeling that there was
something near me that hadn’t been there when
I fell asleep. I sat up and strained my eyes into
the darkness. The room was pitch black, and at
first I saw nothing; but gradually a vague glimmer
at the foot of the bed turned into two eyes staring
back at me. I couldn’t see the face attached
to them—on account of the darkness, I imagined—but
as I looked the eyes grew more and more distinct:
they gave out a light of their own.
“The sensation of being thus
gazed at was far from pleasant, and you might suppose
that my first impulse would have been to jump out of
bed and hurl myself on the invisible figure attached
to the eyes. But it wasn’t—my
impulse was simply to lie still … I can’t
say whether this was due to an immediate sense of
the uncanny nature of the apparition—to
the certainty that if I did jump out of bed I should
hurl myself on nothing—or merely to the
benumbing effect of the eyes themselves. They
were the very worst eyes I’ve ever seen:
a man’s eyes—but what a man!
My first thought was that he must be frightfully old.
The orbits were sunk, and the thick red-lined lids
hung over the eyeballs like blinds of which the cords
are broken. One lid drooped a little lower than
the other, with the effect of a crooked leer; and
between these pulpy folds of flesh, with their scant
bristle of lashes, the eyes themselves, small glassy
disks with an agate-like rim about the pupils, looked
like sea-pebbles in the grip of a starfish.
“But the age of the eyes was
not the most unpleasant thing about them. What
turned me sick was their expression of vicious security.
I don’t know how else to describe the fact that
they seemed to belong to a man who had done a lot
of harm in his life, but had always kept just inside
the danger lines. They were not the eyes of a
coward, but of some one much too clever to take risks;
and my gorge rose at their look of base astuteness.
Yet even that wasn’t the worst; for as we continued
to scan each other I saw in them a tinge of faint
derision, and felt myself to be its object.
“At that I was seized by an
impulse of rage that jerked me out of bed and pitched
me straight on the unseen figure at its foot.
But of course there wasn’t any figure there,
and my fists struck at emptiness. Ashamed and
cold, I groped about for a match and lit the candles.
The room looked just as usual—as I had known
it would; and I crawled back to bed, and blew out
the lights.
“As soon as the room was dark
again the eyes reappeared; and I now applied myself
to explaining them on scientific principles. At
first I thought the illusion might have been caused
by the glow of the last embers in the chimney; but
the fire-place was on the other side of my bed, and
so placed that the fire could not possibly be reflected
in my toilet glass, which was the only mirror in the
room. Then it occurred to me that I might have
been tricked by the reflection of the embers in some
polished bit of wood or metal; and though I couldn’t
discover any object of the sort in my line of vision,
I got up again, groped my way to the hearth, and covered
what was left of the fire. But as soon as I was
back in bed the eyes were back at its foot.
“They were an hallucination,
then: that was plain. But the fact that
they were not due to any external dupery didn’t
make them a bit pleasanter to see. For if they
were a projection of my inner consciousness, what
the deuce was the matter with that organ? I had
gone deeply enough into the mystery of morbid pathological
states to picture the conditions under which an exploring
mind might lay itself open to such a midnight admonition;
but I couldn’t fit it to my present case.
I had never felt more normal, mentally and physically;
and the only unusual fact in my situation—that
of having assured the happiness of an amiable girl—did
not seem of a kind to summon unclean spirits about
my pillow. But there were the eyes still looking
at me …
“I shut mine, and tried to evoke
a vision of Alice Nowell’s. They were not
remarkable eyes, but they were as wholesome as fresh
water, and if she had had more imagination—or
longer lashes—their expression might have
been interesting. As it was, they did not prove
very efficacious, and in a few moments I perceived
that they had mysteriously changed into the eyes at
the foot of the bed. It exasperated me more to
feel these glaring at me through my shut lids than
to see them, and I opened my eyes again and looked
straight into their hateful stare …
“And so it went on all night.
I can’t tell you what that night was, nor how
long it lasted. Have you ever lain in bed, hopelessly
wide awake, and tried to keep your eyes shut, knowing
that if you opened ’em you’d see something
you dreaded and loathed? It sounds easy, but
it’s devilish hard. Those eyes hung there
and drew me. I had the vertige de l’abime,
and their red lids were the edge of my abyss. ...
I had known nervous hours before: hours when I’d
felt the wind of danger in my neck; but never this
kind of strain. It wasn’t that the eyes
were so awful; they hadn’t the majesty of the
powers of darkness. But they had—how
shall I say?—a physical effect that was
the equivalent of a bad smell: their look left
a smear like a snail’s. And I didn’t
see what business they had with me, anyhow—and
I stared and stared, trying to find out …
“I don’t know what effect
they were trying to produce; but the effect they did
produce was that of making me pack my portmanteau
and bolt to town early the next morning. I left
a note for my aunt, explaining that I was ill and
had gone to see my doctor; and as a matter of fact
I did feel uncommonly ill—the night seemed
to have pumped all the blood out of me. But when
I reached town I didn’t go to the doctor’s.
I went to a friend’s rooms, and threw myself
on a bed, and slept for ten heavenly hours. When
I woke it was the middle of the night, and I turned
cold at the thought of what might be waiting for me.
I sat up, shaking, and stared into the darkness; but
there wasn’t a break in its blessed surface,
and when I saw that the eyes were not there I dropped
back into another long sleep.
“I had left no word for Alice
when I fled, because I meant to go back the next morning.
But the next morning I was too exhausted to stir.
As the day went on the exhaustion increased, instead
of wearing off like the lassitude left by an ordinary
night of insomnia: the effect of the eyes seemed
to be cumulative, and the thought of seeing them again
grew intolerable. For two days I struggled with
my dread; but on the third evening I pulled myself
together and decided to go back the next morning.
I felt a good deal happier as soon as I’d decided,
for I knew that my abrupt disappearance, and the strangeness
of my not writing, must have been very painful for
poor Alice. That night I went to bed with an easy
mind, and fell asleep at once; but in the middle of
the night I woke, and there were the eyes …
“Well, I simply couldn’t
face them; and instead of going back to my aunt’s
I bundled a few things into a trunk and jumped onto
the first steamer for England. I was so dead
tired when I got on board that I crawled straight
into my berth, and slept most of the way over; and
I can’t tell you the bliss it was to wake from
those long stretches of dreamless sleep and look fearlessly
into the darkness, knowing that I shouldn’t
see the eyes …
“I stayed abroad for a year,
and then I stayed for another; and during that time
I never had a glimpse of them. That was enough
reason for prolonging my stay if I’d been on
a desert island. Another was, of course, that
I had perfectly come to see, on the voyage over, the
folly, complete impossibility, of my marrying Alice
Nowell. The fact that I had been so slow in making
this discovery annoyed me, and made me want to avoid
explanations. The bliss of escaping at one stroke
from the eyes, and from this other embarrassment,
gave my freedom an extraordinary zest; and the longer
I savoured it the better I liked its taste.
“The eyes had burned such a
hole in my consciousness that for a long time I went
on puzzling over the nature of the apparition, and
wondering nervously if it would ever come back.
But as time passed I lost this dread, and retained
only the precision of the image. Then that faded
in its turn.
“The second year found me settled
in Rome, where I was planning, I believe, to write
another great book—a definitive work on
Etruscan influences in Italian art. At any rate,
I’d found some pretext of the kind for taking
a sunny apartment in the Piazza di Spagna and dabbling
about indefinitely in the Forum; and there, one morning,
a charming youth came to me. As he stood there
in the warm light, slender and smooth and hyacinthine,
he might have stepped from a ruined altar—one
to Antinous, say—but he’d come instead
from New York, with a letter (of all people) from
Alice Nowell. The letter—the first
I’d had from her since our break—was
simply a line introducing her young cousin, Gilbert
Noyes, and appealing to me to befriend him. It
appeared, poor lad, that he ‘had talent,’
and ‘wanted to write’; and, an obdurate
family having insisted that his calligraphy should
take the form of double entry, Alice had intervened
to win him six months’ respite, during which
he was to travel on a meagre pittance, and somehow
prove his ultimate ability to increase it by his pen.
The quaint conditions of the test struck me first:
it seemed about as conclusive as a mediaeval ‘ordeal.’
Then I was touched by her having sent him to me.
I had always wanted to do her some service, to justify
myself in my own eyes rather than hers; and here was
a beautiful embodiment of my chance.
“Well, I imagine it’s
safe to lay down the general principle that predestined
geniuses don’t, as a rule, appear before one
in the spring sunshine of the Forum looking like one
of its banished gods. At any rate, poor Noyes
wasn’t a predestined genius. But he was
beautiful to see, and charming as a comrade too.
It was only when he began to talk literature that
my heart failed me. I knew all the symptoms so
well—the things he had ‘in him,’
and the things outside him that impinged! There’s
the real test, after all. It was always—punctually,
inevitably, with the inexorableness of a mechanical
law—it was always the wrong thing
that struck him. I grew to find a certain grim
fascination in deciding in advance exactly which wrong
thing he’d select; and I acquired an astonishing
skill at the game …
“The worst of it was that his
betise wasn’t of the too obvious sort.
Ladies who met him at picnics thought him intellectual;
and even at dinners he passed for clever. I,
who had him under the microscope, fancied now and
then that he might develop some kind of a slim talent,
something that he could make ‘do’ and be
happy on; and wasn’t that, after all, what I
was concerned with? He was so charming—he
continued to be so charming—that he called
forth all my charity in support of this argument;
and for the first few months I really believed there
was a chance for him …
“Those months were delightful.
Noyes was constantly with me, and the more I saw of
him the better I liked him. His stupidity was
a natural grace—it was as beautiful, really,
as his eye-lashes. And he was so gay, so affectionate,
and so happy with me, that telling him the truth would
have been about as pleasant as slitting the throat
of some artless animal. At first I used to wonder
what had put into that radiant head the detestable
delusion that it held a brain. Then I began to
see that it was simply protective mimicry—an
instinctive ruse to get away from family life and an
office desk. Not that Gilbert didn’t—dear
lad!—believe in himself. There wasn’t
a trace of hypocrisy in his composition. He was
sure that his ‘call’ was irresistible,
while to me it was the saving grace of his situation
that it wasn’t, and that a little money,
a little leisure, a little pleasure would have turned
him into an inoffensive idler. Unluckily, however,
there was no hope of money, and with the grim alternative
of the office desk before him he couldn’t postpone
his attempt at literature. The stuff he turned
out was deplorable, and I see now that I knew it from
the first. Still, the absurdity of deciding a
man’s whole future on a first trial seemed to
justify me in withholding my verdict, and perhaps
even in encouraging him a little, on the ground that
the human plant generally needs warmth to flower.
“At any rate, I proceeded on
that principle, and carried it to the point of getting
his term of probation extended. When I left Rome
he went with me, and we idled away a delicious summer
between Capri and Venice. I said to myself:
’If he has anything in him, it will come out
now; and it did. He was never more enchanting
and enchanted. There were moments of our pilgrimage
when beauty born of murmuring sound seemed actually
to pass into his face—but only to issue
forth in a shallow flood of the palest ink …
“Well the time came to turn
off the tap; and I knew there was no hand but mine
to do it. We were back in Rome, and I had taken
him to stay with me, not wanting him to be alone in
his dismal pension when he had to face the
necessity of renouncing his ambition. I hadn’t,
of course, relied solely on my own judgment in deciding
to advise him to drop literature. I had sent
his stuff to various people—editors and
critics—and they had always sent it back
with the same chilling lack of comment. Really
there was nothing on earth to say about it—
“I confess I never felt more
shabbily than I did on the day when I decided to have
it out with Gilbert. It was well enough to tell
myself that it was my duty to knock the poor boy’s
hopes into splinters—but I’d like
to know what act of gratuitous cruelty hasn’t
been justified on that plea? I’ve always
shrunk from usurping the functions of Providence,
and when I have to exercise them I decidedly prefer
that it shouldn’t be on an errand of destruction.
Besides, in the last issue, who was I to decide, even
after a year’s trial, if poor Gilbert had it
in him or not?
“The more I looked at the part
I’d resolved to play, the less I liked it; and
I liked it still less when Gilbert sat opposite me,
with his head thrown back in the lamplight, just as
Phil’s is now … I’d been going
over his last manuscript, and he knew it, and he knew
that his future hung on my verdict—we’d
tacitly agreed to that. The manuscript lay between
us, on my table—a novel, his first novel,
if you please!—and he reached over and laid
his hand on it, and looked up at me with all his life
in the look.
“I stood up and cleared my throat,
trying to keep my eyes away from his face and on the
manuscript.
“‘The fact is, my dear Gilbert,’
I began—
“I saw him turn pale, but he was up and facing
me in an instant.
“’Oh, look here, don’t
take on so, my dear fellow! I’m not so
awfully cut up as all that!’ His hands were on
my shoulders, and he was laughing down on me from
his full height, with a kind of mortally-stricken
gaiety that drove the knife into my side.
“He was too beautifully brave
for me to keep up any humbug about my duty. And
it came over me suddenly how I should hurt others in
hurting him: myself first, since sending him home
meant losing him; but more particularly poor Alice
Nowell, to whom I had so uneasily longed to prove
my good faith and my immense desire to serve her.
It really seemed like failing her twice to fail Gilbert—
“But my intuition was like one
of those lightning flashes that encircle the whole
horizon, and in the same instant I saw what I might
be letting myself in for if I didn’t tell the
truth. I said to myself: ’I shall
have him for life’—and I’d never
yet seen any one, man or woman, whom I was quite sure
of wanting on those terms. Well, this impulse
of egotism decided me. I was ashamed of it, and
to get away from it I took a leap that landed me straight
in Gilbert’s arms.
“‘The thing’s all
right, and you’re all wrong!’ I shouted
up at him; and as he hugged me, and I laughed and
shook in his incredulous clutch, I had for a minute
the sense of self-complacency that is supposed to
attend the footsteps of the just. Hang it all,
making people happy has its charms—
“Gilbert, of course, was for
celebrating his emancipation in some spectacular manner;
but I sent him away alone to explode his emotions,
and went to bed to sleep off mine. As I undressed
I began to wonder what their after-taste would be—so
many of the finest don’t keep! Still, I
wasn’t sorry, and I meant to empty the bottle,
even if it did turn a trifle flat.
“After I got into bed I lay
for a long time smiling at the memory of his eyes—his
blissful eyes… Then I fell asleep, and when
I woke the room was deathly cold, and I sat up with
a jerk—and there were the other eyes
...
“It was three years since I’d
seen them, but I’d thought of them so often
that I fancied they could never take me unawares again.
Now, with their red sneer on me, I knew that I had
never really believed they would come back, and that
I was as defenceless as ever against them …
As before, it was the insane irrelevance of their coming
that made it so horrible. What the deuce were
they after, to leap out at me at such a time?
I had lived more or less carelessly in the years since
I’d seen them, though my worst indiscretions
were not dark enough to invite the searchings of their
infernal glare; but at this particular moment I was
really in what might have been called a state of grace;
and I can’t tell you how the fact added to their
horror …
“But it’s not enough to
say they were as bad as before: they were worse.
Worse by just so much as I’d learned of life
in the interval; by all the damnable implications
my wider experience read into them. I saw now
what I hadn’t seen before: that they were
eyes which had grown hideous gradually, which had
built up their baseness coral-wise, bit by bit, out
of a series of small turpitudes slowly accumulated
through the industrious years. Yes—it
came to me that what made them so bad was that they’d
grown bad so slowly …
“There they hung in the darkness,
their swollen lids dropped across the little watery
bulbs rolling loose in the orbits, and the puff of
fat flesh making a muddy shadow underneath—and
as their filmy stare moved with my movements, there
came over me a sense of their tacit complicity, of
a deep hidden understanding between us that was worse
than the first shock of their strangeness. Not
that I understood them; but that they made it so clear
that some day I should … Yes, that was the
worst part of it, decidedly; and it was the feeling
that became stronger each time they came back to me
...
“For they got into the damnable
habit of coming back. They reminded me of vampires
with a taste for young flesh, they seemed so to gloat
over the taste of a good conscience. Every night
for a month they came to claim their morsel of mine:
since I’d made Gilbert happy they simply wouldn’t
loosen their fangs. The coincidence almost made
me hate him, poor lad, fortuitous as I felt it to be.
I puzzled over it a good deal, but couldn’t
find any hint of an explanation except in the chance
of his association with Alice Nowell. But then
the eyes had let up on me the moment I had abandoned
her, so they could hardly be the emissaries of a woman
scorned, even if one could have pictured poor Alice
charging such spirits to avenge her. That set
me thinking, and I began to wonder if they would let
up on me if I abandoned Gilbert. The temptation
was insidious, and I had to stiffen myself against
it; but really, dear boy! he was too charming to be
sacrificed to such demons. And so, after all,
I never found out what they wanted …”