XXI.
THE MAN WHO COULD WORK MIRACLES.
A PANTOUM IN PROSE.
It is doubtful whether the gift was
innate. For my own part, I think it came to him
suddenly. Indeed, until he was thirty he was a
sceptic, and did not believe in miraculous powers.
And here, since it is the most convenient place, I
must mention that he was a little man, and had eyes
of a hot brown, very erect red hair, a moustache with
ends that he twisted up, and freckles. His name
was George McWhirter Fotheringay—not the
sort of name by any means to lead to any expectation
of miracles—and he was clerk at Gomshott’s.
He was greatly addicted to assertive argument.
It was while he was asserting the impossibility of
miracles that he had his first intimation of his extraordinary
powers. This particular argument was being held
in the bar of the Long Dragon, and Toddy Beamish was
conducting the opposition by a monotonous but effective
“So you say,” that drove Mr. Fotheringay
to the very limit of his patience.
There were present, besides these
two, a very dusty cyclist, landlord Cox, and Miss
Maybridge, the perfectly respectable and rather portly
barmaid of the Dragon. Miss Maybridge was standing
with her back to Mr. Fotheringay, washing glasses;
the others were watching him, more or less amused by
the present ineffectiveness of the assertive method.
Goaded by the Torres Vedras tactics of Mr. Beamish,
Mr. Fotheringay determined to make an unusual rhetorical
effort. “Looky here, Mr. Beamish,”
said Mr. Fotheringay. “Let us clearly understand
what a miracle is. It’s something contrariwise
to the course of nature, done by power of will, something
what couldn’t happen without being specially
willed.”
“So you say,” said Mr. Beamish,
repulsing him.
Mr. Fotheringay appealed to the cyclist,
who had hitherto been a silent auditor, and received
his assent—given with a hesitating cough
and a glance at Mr. Beamish. The landlord would
express no opinion, and Mr. Fotheringay, returning
to Mr. Beamish, received the unexpected concession
of a qualified assent to his definition of a miracle.
“For instance,” said Mr.
Fotheringay, greatly encouraged. “Here would
be a miracle. That lamp, in the natural course
of nature, couldn’t burn like that upsy-down,
could it, Beamish?”
“You say it couldn’t,” said
Beamish.
“And you?” said Fotheringay. “You
don’t mean to say—eh?”
“No,” said Beamish reluctantly. “No,
it couldn’t.”
“Very well,” said Mr.
Fotheringay. “Then here comes someone, as
it might be me, along here, and stands as it might
be here, and says to that lamp, as I might do, collecting
all my will—Turn upsy-down without breaking,
and go on burning steady, and—Hullo!”
It was enough to make anyone say “Hullo!”
The impossible, the incredible, was visible to them
all. The lamp hung inverted in the air, burning
quietly with its flame pointing down. It was as
solid, as indisputable as ever a lamp was, the prosaic
common lamp of the Long Dragon bar.
Mr. Fotheringay stood with an extended
forefinger and the knitted brows of one anticipating
a catastrophic smash. The cyclist, who was sitting
next the lamp, ducked and jumped across the bar.
Everybody jumped, more or less. Miss Maybridge
turned and screamed. For nearly three seconds
the lamp remained still. A faint cry of mental
distress came from Mr. Fotheringay. “I
can’t keep it up,” he said, “any
longer.” He staggered back, and the inverted
lamp suddenly flared, fell against the corner of the
bar, bounced aside, smashed upon the floor, and went
out.
It was lucky it had a metal receiver,
or the whole place would have been in a blaze.
Mr. Cox was the first to speak, and his remark, shorn
of needless excrescences, was to the effect that Fotheringay
was a fool. Fotheringay was beyond disputing
even so fundamental a proposition as that! He
was astonished beyond measure at the thing that had
occurred. The subsequent conversation threw absolutely
no light on the matter so far as Fotheringay was concerned;
the general opinion not only followed Mr. Cox very
closely but very vehemently. Everyone accused
Fotheringay of a silly trick, and presented him to
himself as a foolish destroyer of comfort and security.
His mind was in a tornado of perplexity, he was himself
inclined to agree with them, and he made a remarkably
ineffectual opposition to the proposal of his departure.
He went home flushed and heated, coat-collar
crumpled, eyes smarting, and ears red. He watched
each of the ten street lamps nervously as he passed
it. It was only when he found himself alone in
his little bedroom in Church Row that he was able
to grapple seriously with his memories of the occurrence,
and ask, “What on earth happened?”
He had removed his coat and boots,
and was sitting on the bed with his hands in his pockets
repeating the text of his defence for the seventeenth
time, “I didn’t want the confounded thing
to upset,” when it occurred to him that at the
precise moment he had said the commanding words he
had inadvertently willed the thing he said, and that
when he had seen the lamp in the air he had felt that
it depended on him to maintain it there without being
clear how this was to be done. He had not a particularly
complex mind, or he might have stuck for a time at
that “inadvertently willed,” embracing,
as it does, the abstrusest problems of voluntary action;
but as it was, the idea came to him with a quite acceptable
haziness. And from that, following, as I must
admit, no clear logical path, he came to the test
of experiment.
He pointed resolutely to his candle
and collected his mind, though he felt he did a foolish
thing. “Be raised up,” he said.
But in a second that feeling vanished. The candle
was raised, hung in the air one giddy moment, and
as Mr. Fotheringay gasped, fell with a smash on his
toilet-table, leaving him in darkness save for the
expiring glow of its wick.
For a time Mr. Fotheringay sat in
the darkness, perfectly still. “It did
happen, after all,” he said. “And
’ow I’m to explain it I don’t
know.” He sighed heavily, and began feeling
in his pockets for a match. He could find none,
and he rose and groped about the toilet-table.
“I wish I had a match,” he said. He
resorted to his coat, and there was none there, and
then it dawned upon him that miracles were possible
even with matches. He extended a hand and scowled
at it in the dark. “Let there be a match
in that hand,” he said. He felt some light
object fall across his palm and his fingers closed
upon a match.
After several ineffectual attempts
to light this, he discovered it was a safety match.
He threw it down, and then it occurred to him that
he might have willed it lit. He did, and perceived
it burning in the midst of his toilet-table mat.
He caught it up hastily, and it went out. His
perception of possibilities enlarged, and he felt
for and replaced the candle in its candlestick.
“Here! you be lit,” said Mr. Fotheringay,
and forthwith the candle was flaring, and he saw a
little black hole in the toilet-cover, with a wisp
of smoke rising from it. For a time he stared
from this to the little flame and back, and then looked
up and met his own gaze in the looking-glass.
By this help he communed with himself in silence for
a time.
“How about miracles now?”
said Mr. Fotheringay at last, addressing his reflection.
The subsequent meditations of Mr.
Fotheringay were of a severe but confused description.
So far, he could see it was a case of pure willing
with him. The nature of his experiences so far
disinclined him for any further experiments, at least
until he had reconsidered them. But he lifted
a sheet of paper, and turned a glass of water pink
and then green, and he created a snail, which he miraculously
annihilated, and got himself a miraculous new tooth-brush.
Somewhere in the small hours he had reached the fact
that his will-power must be of a particularly rare
and pungent quality, a fact of which he had indeed
had inklings before, but no certain assurance.
The scare and perplexity of his first discovery was
now qualified by pride in this evidence of singularity
and by vague intimations of advantage. He became
aware that the church clock was striking one, and
as it did not occur to him that his daily duties at
Gomshott’s might be miraculously dispensed with,
he resumed undressing, in order to get to bed without
further delay. As he struggled to get his shirt
over his head, he was struck with a brilliant idea.
“Let me be in bed,” he said, and found
himself so. “Undressed,” he stipulated;
and, finding the sheets cold, added hastily, “and
in my nightshirt—ho, in a nice soft woollen
nightshirt. Ah!” he said with immense enjoyment.
“And now let me be comfortably asleep…”
He awoke at his usual hour and was
pensive all through breakfast-time, wondering whether
his over-night experience might not be a particularly
vivid dream. At length his mind turned again to
cautious experiments. For instance, he had three
eggs for breakfast; two his landlady had supplied,
good, but shoppy, and one was a delicious fresh goose-egg,
laid, cooked, and served by his extraordinary will.
He hurried off to Gomshott’s in a state of profound
but carefully concealed excitement, and only remembered
the shell of the third egg when his landlady spoke
of it that night. All day he could do no work
because of this astonishing new self-knowledge, but
this caused him no inconvenience, because he made up
for it miraculously in his last ten minutes.
As the day wore on his state of mind
passed from wonder to elation, albeit the circumstances
of his dismissal from the Long Dragon were still disagreeable
to recall, and a garbled account of the matter that
had reached his colleagues led to some badinage.
It was evident he must be careful how he lifted frangible
articles, but in other ways his gift promised more
and more as he turned it over in his mind. He
intended among other things to increase his personal
property by unostentatious acts of creation.
He called into existence a pair of very splendid diamond
studs, and hastily annihilated them again as young
Gomshott came across the counting-house to his desk.
He was afraid young Gomshott might wonder how he had
come by them. He saw quite clearly the gift required
caution and watchfulness in its exercise, but so far
as he could judge the difficulties attending its mastery
would be no greater than those he had already faced
in the study of cycling. It was that analogy,
perhaps, quite as much as the feeling that he would
be unwelcome in the Long Dragon, that drove him out
after supper into the lane beyond the gasworks, to
rehearse a few miracles in private.
There was possibly a certain want
of originality in his attempts, for, apart from his
will-power, Mr. Fotheringay was not a very exceptional
man. The miracle of Moses’ rod came to
his mind, but the night was dark and unfavourable
to the proper control of large miraculous snakes.
Then he recollected the story of “Tannhäuser”
that he had read on the back of the Philharmonic programme.
That seemed to him singularly attractive and harmless.
He stuck his walking-stick—a very nice Poona-Penang
lawyer— into the turf that edged the footpath,
and commanded the dry wood to blossom. The air
was immediately full of the scent of roses, and by
means of a match he saw for himself that this beautiful
miracle was indeed accomplished. His satisfaction
was ended by advancing footsteps. Afraid of a
premature discovery of his powers, he addressed the
blossoming stick hastily: “Go back.”
What he meant was “Change back;” but of
course he was confused. The stick receded at
a considerable velocity, and incontinently came a
cry of anger and a bad word from the approaching person.
“Who are you throwing brambles at, you fool?”
cried a voice. “That got me on the shin.”
“I’m sorry, old chap,”
said Mr. Fotheringay, and then, realising the awkward
nature of the explanation, caught nervously at his
moustache. He saw Winch, one of the three Immering
constables, advancing.
“What d’yer mean by it?”
asked the constable. “Hullo! it’s
you, is it? The gent that broke the lamp at the
Long Dragon!”
“I don’t mean anything
by it,” said Mr. Fotheringay. “Nothing
at all.”
“What d’yer do it for then?”
“Oh, bother!” said Mr. Fotheringay.
“Bother indeed! D’yer know that stick
hurt? What d’yer do it for, eh?”
For the moment Mr. Fotheringay could
not think what he had done it for. His silence
seemed to irritate Mr. Winch. “You’ve
been assaulting the police, young man, this time.
That’s what you done.”
“Look here, Mr. Winch,”
said Mr. Fotheringay, annoyed and confused, “I’m
sorry, very. The fact is——”
“Well?”
He could think of no way but the truth.
“I was working a miracle.” He tried
to speak in an off-hand way, but try as he would he
couldn’t.
“Working a—! ’Ere,
don’t you talk rot. Working a miracle, indeed!
Miracle! Well, that’s downright funny!
Why, you’s the chap that don’t believe
in miracles… Fact is, this is another of your
silly conjuring tricks—that’s what
this is. Now, I tell you—”
But Mr. Fotheringay never heard what
Mr. Winch was going to tell him. He realised
he had given himself away, flung his valuable secret
to all the winds of heaven. A violent gust of
irritation swept him to action. He turned on
the constable swiftly and fiercely. “Here,”
he said, “I’ve had enough of this, I have!
I’ll show you a silly conjuring trick, I will!
Go to Hades! Go, now!”
He was alone!
Mr. Fotheringay performed no more
miracles that night, nor did he trouble to see what
had become of his flowering stick. He returned
to the town, scared and very quiet, and went to his
bedroom. “Lord!” he said, “it’s
a powerful gift—an extremely powerful gift.
I didn’t hardly mean as much as that. Not
really… I wonder what Hades is like!”
He sat on the bed taking off his boots.
Struck by a happy thought he transferred the constable
to San Francisco, and without any more interference
with normal causation went soberly to bed. In
the night he dreamt of the anger of Winch.
The next day Mr. Fotheringay heard
two interesting items of news. Someone had planted
a most beautiful climbing rose against the elder Mr.
Gomshott’s private house in the Lullaborough
Road, and the river as far as Rawling’s Mill
was to be dragged for Constable Winch.
Mr. Fotheringay was abstracted and
thoughtful all that day, and performed no miracles
except certain provisions for Winch, and the miracle
of completing his day’s work with punctual perfection
in spite of all the bee-swarm of thoughts that hummed
through his mind. And the extraordinary abstraction
and meekness of his manner was remarked by several
people, and made a matter for jesting. For the
most part he was thinking of Winch.
On Sunday evening he went to chapel,
and oddly enough, Mr. Maydig, who took a certain interest
in occult matters, preached about “things that
are not lawful.” Mr. Fotheringay was not
a regular chapelgoer, but the system of assertive
scepticism, to which I have already alluded, was now
very much shaken. The tenor of the sermon threw
an entirely new light on these novel gifts, and he
suddenly decided to consult Mr. Maydig immediately
after the service. So soon as that was determined,
he found himself wondering why he had not done so
before.
Mr. Maydig, a lean, excitable man
with quite remarkably long wrists and neck, was gratified
at a request for a private conversation from a young
man whose carelessness in religious matters was a subject
for general remark in the town. After a few necessary
delays, he conducted him to the study of the manse,
which was contiguous to the chapel, seated him comfortably,
and, standing in front of a cheerful fire—his
legs threw a Rhodian arch of shadow on the opposite
wall—requested Mr. Fotheringay to state
his business.
At first Mr. Fotheringay was a little
abashed, and found some difficulty in opening the
matter. “You will scarcely believe me, Mr.
Maydig, I am afraid”—and so forth
for some time. He tried a question at last, and
asked Mr. Maydig his opinion of miracles.
Mr. Maydig was still saying “Well”
in an extremely judicial tone, when Mr. Fotheringay
interrupted again: “You don’t believe,
I suppose, that some common sort of person—like
myself, for instance—as it might be sitting
here now, might have some sort of twist inside him
that made him able to do things by his will.”
“It’s possible,”
said Mr. Maydig. “Something of the sort,
perhaps, is possible.”
“If I might make free with something
here, I think I might show you by a sort of experiment,”
said Mr. Fotheringay. “Now, take that tobacco-jar
on the table, for instance. What I want to know
is whether what I am going to do with it is a miracle
or not. Just half a minute, Mr. Maydig, please.”
He knitted his brows, pointed to the
tobacco-jar and said: “Be a bowl of vi’lets.”
The tobacco-jar did as it was ordered.
Mr. Maydig started violently at the
change, and stood looking from the thaumaturgist to
the bowl of flowers. He said nothing. Presently
he ventured to lean over the table and smell the violets;
they were fresh-picked and very fine ones. Then
he stared at Mr. Fotheringay again.
“How did you do that?” he asked.
Mr. Fotheringay pulled his moustache.
“Just told it—and there you are.
Is that a miracle, or is it black art, or what is
it? And what do you think’s the matter
with me? That’s what I want to ask.”
“It’s a most extraordinary occurrence.”
“And this day last week I knew
no more that I could do things like that than you
did. It came quite sudden. It’s something
odd about my will, I suppose, and that’s as
far as I can see.”
“Is that—the only
thing. Could you do other things besides that?”
“Lord, yes!” said Mr.
Fotheringay. “Just anything.”
He thought, and suddenly recalled a conjuring entertainment
he had seen. “Here!” he pointed,
“change into a bowl of fish—no, not
that—change into a glass bowl full of water
with goldfish swimming in it. That’s better!
You see that, Mr. Maydig?”
“It’s astonishing.
It’s incredible. You are either a most extraordinary…
But no——”
“I could change it into anything,”
said Mr. Fotheringay. “Just anything.
Here! be a pigeon, will you?”
In another moment a blue pigeon was
fluttering round the room and making Mr. Maydig duck
every time it came near him. “Stop there,
will you?” said Mr. Fotheringay; and the pigeon
hung motionless in the air. “I could change
it back to a bowl of flowers,” he said, and after
replacing the pigeon on the table worked that miracle.
“I expect you will want your pipe in a bit,”
he said, and restored the tobacco-jar.
Mr. Maydig had followed all these
later changes in a sort of ejaculatory silence.
He stared at Mr. Fotheringay and in a very gingerly
manner picked up the tobacco-jar, examined it, replaced
it on the table. “Well!” was the
only expression of his feelings.
“Now, after that it’s
easier to explain what I came about,” said Mr.
Fotheringay; and proceeded to a lengthy and involved
narrative of his strange experiences, beginning with
the affair of the lamp in the Long Dragon and complicated
by persistent allusions to Winch. As he went on,
the transient pride Mr. Maydig’s consternation
had caused passed away; he became the very ordinary
Mr. Fotheringay of everyday intercourse again.
Mr. Maydig listened intently, the tobacco-jar in his
hand, and his bearing changed also with the course
of the narrative. Presently, while Mr. Fotheringay
was dealing with the miracle of the third egg, the
minister interrupted with a fluttering, extended hand.
“It is possible,” he said.
“It is credible. It is amazing, of course,
but it reconciles a number of amazing difficulties.
The power to work miracles is a gift—a
peculiar quality like genius or second sight; hitherto
it has come very rarely and to exceptional people.
But in this case…I have always wondered at the miracles
of Mahomet, and at Yogi’s miracles, and the
miracles of Madame Blavatsky. But, of course—Yes,
it is simply a gift! It carries out so beautifully
the arguments of that great thinker”—
Mr. Maydig’s voice sank—“his
Grace the Duke of Argyll. Here we plumb some
profounder law—deeper than the ordinary
laws of nature. Yes—yes. Go on.
Go on!”
Mr. Fotheringay proceeded to tell
of his misadventure with Winch, and Mr. Maydig, no
longer overawed or scared, began to jerk his limbs
about and interject astonishment. “It’s
this what troubled me most,” proceeded Mr. Fotheringay;
“it’s this I’m most mijitly in want
of advice for; of course he’s at San Francisco—wherever
San Francisco may be—but of course it’s
awkward for both of us, as you’ll see, Mr. Maydig.
I don’t see how he can understand what has happened,
and I daresay he’s scared and exasperated something
tremendous, and trying to get at me. I daresay
he keeps on starting off to come here. I send
him back, by a miracle, every few hours, when I think
of it. And, of course, that’s a thing he
won’t be able to understand, and it’s
bound to annoy him; and, of course, if he takes a
ticket every time it will cost him a lot of money.
I done the best I could for him, but, of course, it’s
difficult for him to put himself in my place.
I thought afterwards that his clothes might have got
scorched, you know—if Hades is all it’s
supposed to be—before I shifted him.
In that case I suppose they’d have locked him
up in San Francisco. Of course I willed him a
new suit of clothes on him directly I thought of it.
But, you see, I’m already in a deuce of a tangle——”
Mr. Maydig looked serious. “I
see you are in a tangle. Yes, it’s a difficult
position. How you are to end it…”
He became diffuse and inconclusive.
“However, we’ll leave
Winch for a little and discuss the larger question.
I don’t think this is a case of the black art
or anything of the sort. I don’t think
there is any taint of criminality about it at all,
Mr. Fotheringay—none whatever, unless you
are suppressing material facts. No, it’s
miracles—pure miracles—miracles,
if I may say so, of the very highest class.”
He began to pace the hearthrug and
gesticulate, while Mr. Fotheringay sat with his arm
on the table and his head on his arm, looking worried.
“I don’t see how I’m to manage about
Winch,” he said.
“A gift of working miracles—apparently
a very powerful gift,” said Mr. Maydig, “will
find a way about Winch—never fear.
My dear sir, you are a most important man—a
man of the most astonishing possibilities. As
evidence, for example! And in other ways, the
things you may do…”
“Yes, I’ve thought
of a thing or two,” said Mr. Fotheringay.
“But— some of the things came a bit
twisty. You saw that fish at first? Wrong
sort of bowl and wrong sort of fish. And I thought
I’d ask someone.”
“A proper course,” said
Mr. Maydig, “a very proper course—altogether
the proper course.” He stopped and looked
at Mr. Fotheringay. “It’s practically
an unlimited gift. Let us test your powers, for
instance. If they really are ...
If they really are all they seem to be.”
And so, incredible as it may seem,
in the study of the little house behind the Congregational
Chapel, on the evening of Sunday, Nov. 10, 1896, Mr.
Fotheringay, egged on and inspired by Mr. Maydig, began
to work miracles. The reader’s attention
is specially and definitely called to the date.
He will object, probably has already objected, that
certain points in this story are improbable, that
if any things of the sort already described had indeed
occurred, they would have been in all the papers at
that time. The details immediately following
he will find particularly hard to accept, because
among other things they involve the conclusion that
he or she, the reader in question, must have been
killed in a violent and unprecedented manner more
than a year ago. Now a miracle is nothing if not
improbable, and as a matter of fact the reader was
killed in a violent and unprecedented manner in 1896.
In the subsequent course of this story that will become
perfectly clear and credible, as every right-minded
and reasonable reader will admit. But this is
not the place for the end of the story, being but
little beyond the hither side of the middle. And
at first the miracles worked by Mr. Fotheringay were
timid little miracles—little things with
the cups and parlour fitments, as feeble as the miracles
of Theosophists, and, feeble as they were, they were
received with awe by his collaborator. He would
have preferred to settle the Winch business out of
hand, but Mr. Maydig would not let him. But after
they had worked a dozen of these domestic trivialities,
their sense of power grew, their imagination began
to show signs of stimulation, and their ambition enlarged.
Their first larger enterprise was due to hunger and
the negligence of Mrs. Minchin, Mr. Maydig’s
housekeeper. The meal to which the minister conducted
Mr. Fotheringay was certainly ill-laid and uninviting
as refreshment for two industrious miracle-workers;
but they were seated, and Mr. Maydig was descanting
in sorrow rather than in anger upon his housekeeper’s
shortcomings, before it occurred to Mr. Fotheringay
that an opportunity lay before him. “Don’t
you think, Mr. Maydig,” he said, “if it
isn’t a liberty, I——”
“My dear Mr. Fotheringay! Of course!
No—I didn’t think.”
Mr. Fotheringay waved his hand.
“What shall we have?” he said, in a large,
inclusive spirit, and, at Mr. Maydig’s order,
revised the supper very thoroughly. “As
for me,” he said, eyeing Mr. Maydig’s selection,
“I am always particularly fond of a tankard
of stout and a nice Welsh rarebit, and I’ll
order that. I ain’t much given to Burgundy,”
and forthwith stout and Welsh rarebit promptly appeared
at his command. They sat long at their supper,
talking like equals, as Mr. Fotheringay presently perceived,
with a glow of surprise and gratification, of all
the miracles they would presently do. “And,
by-the-by, Mr. Maydig,” said Mr. Fotheringay,
“I might perhaps be able to help you—in
a domestic way.”
“Don’t quite follow,”
said Mr. Maydig, pouring out a glass of miraculous
old Burgundy.
Mr. Fotheringay helped himself to
a second Welsh rarebit out of vacancy, and took a
mouthful. “I was thinking,” he said,
“I might be able (chum, chum) to work
(chum, chum) a miracle with Mrs. Minchin (chum,
chum)—make her a better woman.”
Mr. Maydig put down the glass and looked doubtful.
“She’s——She
strongly objects to interference, you know, Mr. Fotheringay.
And—as a matter of fact—it’s
well past eleven and she’s probably in bed and
asleep. Do you think, on the whole——”
Mr. Fotheringay considered these objections.
“I don’t see that it shouldn’t be
done in her sleep.”
For a time Mr. Maydig opposed the
idea, and then he yielded. Mr. Fotheringay issued
his orders, and a little less at their ease, perhaps,
the two gentlemen proceeded with their repast.
Mr. Maydig was enlarging on the changes he might expect
in his housekeeper next day, with an optimism, that
seemed even to Mr. Fotheringay’s supper senses
a little forced and hectic, when a series of confused
noises from upstairs began. Their eyes exchanged
interrogations, and Mr. Maydig left the room hastily.
Mr. Fotheringay heard him calling up to his housekeeper
and then his footsteps going softly up to her.
In a minute or so the minister returned,
his step light, his face radiant. “Wonderful!”
he said, “and touching! Most touching!”
He began pacing the hearthrug.
“A repentance—a most touching repentance—
through the crack of the door. Poor woman!
A most wonderful change! She had got up.
She must have got up at once. She had got up out
of her sleep to smash a private bottle of brandy in
her box. And to confess it too!... But this
gives us—it opens—a most amazing
vista of possibilities. If we can work this miraculous
change in her...”
“The thing’s unlimited
seemingly,” said Mr. Fotheringay. “And
about Mr. Winch——”
“Altogether unlimited.”
And from the hearthrug Mr. Maydig, waving the Winch
difficulty aside, unfolded a series of wonderful proposals—
proposals he invented as he went along.
Now what those proposals were does
not concern the essentials of this story. Suffice
it that they were designed in a spirit of infinite
benevolence, the sort of benevolence that used to be
called post-prandial. Suffice it, too, that the
problem of Winch remained unsolved. Nor is it
necessary to describe how far that series got to its
fulfilment. There were astonishing changes.
The small hours found Mr. Maydig and Mr. Fotheringay
careering across the chilly market square under the
still moon, in a sort of ecstasy of thaumaturgy, Mr.
Maydig all flap and gesture, Mr. Fotheringay short
and bristling, and no longer abashed at his greatness.
They had reformed every drunkard in the Parliamentary
division, changed all the beer and alcohol to water
(Mr. Maydig had overruled Mr. Fotheringay on this
point); they had, further, greatly improved the railway
communication of the place, drained Flinder’s
swamp, improved the soil of One Tree Hill, and cured
the vicar’s wart. And they were going to
see what could be done with the injured pier at South
Bridge. “The place,” gasped Mr. Maydig,
“won’t be the same place to-morrow.
How surprised and thankful everyone will be!”
And just at that moment the church clock struck three.
“I say,” said Mr. Fotheringay,
“that’s three o’clock! I must
be getting back. I’ve got to be at business
by eight. And besides, Mrs. Wimms——”
“We’re only beginning,”
said Mr. Maydig, full of the sweetness of unlimited
power. “We’re only beginning.
Think of all the good we’re doing. When
people wake——”
“But——,” said Mr. Fotheringay.
Mr. Maydig gripped his arm suddenly.
His eyes were bright and wild. “My dear
chap,” he said, “there’s no hurry.
Look”—he pointed to the moon at the
zenith—“Joshua!”
“Joshua?” said Mr. Fotheringay.
“Joshua,” said Mr. Maydig. “Why
not? Stop it.”
Mr. Fotheringay looked at the moon.
“That’s a bit tall,” he said, after
a pause.
“Why not?” said Mr. Maydig.
“Of course it doesn’t stop. You stop
the rotation of the earth, you know. Time stops.
It isn’t as if we were doing harm.”
“H’m!” said Mr. Fotheringay.
“Well,” he sighed, “I’ll try.
Here!”
He buttoned up his jacket and addressed
himself to the habitable globe, with as good an assumption
of confidence as lay in his power. “Jest
stop rotating, will you?” said Mr. Fotheringay.
Incontinently he was flying head over
heels through the air at the rate of dozens of miles
a minute. In spite of the innumerable circles
he was describing per second, he thought; for thought
is wonderful—sometimes as sluggish as flowing
pitch, sometimes as instantaneous as light. He
thought in a second, and willed. “Let me
come down safe and sound. Whatever else happens,
let me down safe and sound.”
He willed it only just in time, for
his clothes, heated by his rapid flight through the
air, were already beginning to singe. He came
down with a forcible, but by no means injurious, bump
in what appeared to be a mound of fresh-turned earth.
A large mass of metal and masonry, extraordinarily
like the clock-tower in the middle of the market square,
hit the earth near him, ricochetted over him, and
flew into stonework, bricks, and cement, like a bursting
bomb. A hurtling cow hit one of the larger blocks
and smashed like an egg. There was a crash that
made all the most violent crashes of his past life
seem like the sound of falling dust, and this was
followed by a descending series of lesser crashes.
A vast wind roared throughout earth and heaven, so
that he could scarcely lift his head to look.
For a while he was too breathless and astonished even
to see where he was or what had happened. And
his first movement was to feel his head and reassure
himself that his streaming hair was still his own.
“Lord!” gasped Mr. Fotheringay,
scarce able to speak for the gale, “I’ve
had a squeak! What’s gone wrong? Storms
and thunder. And only a minute ago a fine night.
It’s Maydig set me on to this sort of thing.
What a wind! If I go on fooling in this
way I’m bound to have a thundering accident!...
“Where’s Maydig?
“What a confounded mess everything’s in!”
He looked about him so far as his
flapping jacket would permit. The appearance
of things was really extremely strange. “The
sky’s all right anyhow,” said Mr. Fotheringay.
“And that’s about all that is all right.
And even there it looks like a terrific gale coming
up. But there’s the moon overhead.
Just as it was just now. Bright as midday.
But as for the rest——Where’s
the village? Where’s—where’s
anything? And what on earth set this wind a-blowing?
I didn’t order no wind.”
Mr. Fotheringay struggled to get to
his feet in vain, and after one failure, remained
on all fours, holding on. He surveyed the moonlit
world to leeward, with the tails of his jacket streaming
over his head. “There’s something
seriously wrong,” said Mr. Fotheringay.
“And what it is— goodness knows.”
Far and wide nothing was visible in
the white glare through the haze of dust that drove
before a screaming gale but tumbled masses of earth
and heaps of inchoate ruins, no trees, no houses,
no familiar shapes, only a wilderness of disorder,
vanishing at last into the darkness beneath the whirling
columns and streamers, the lightnings and thunderings
of a swiftly rising storm. Near him in the livid
glare was something that might once have been an elm-tree,
a smashed mass of splinters, shivered from boughs
to base, and further a twisted mass of iron girders—only
too evidently the viaduct—rose out of the
piled confusion.
You see, when Mr. Fotheringay had
arrested the rotation of the solid globe, he had made
no stipulation concerning the trifling movables upon
its surface. And the earth spins so fast that
the surface at its equator is travelling at rather
more than a thousand miles an hour, and in these latitudes
at more than half that pace. So that the village,
and Mr. Maydig, and Mr. Fotheringay, and everybody
and everything had been jerked violently forward at
about nine miles per second—that is to say,
much more violently than if they had been fired out
of a cannon. And every human being, every living
creature, every house, and every tree—all
the world as we know it—had been so jerked
and smashed and utterly destroyed. That was all.
These things Mr. Fotheringay did not,
of course, fully appreciate. But he perceived
that his miracle had miscarried, and with that a great
disgust of miracles came upon him. He was in
darkness now, for the clouds had swept together and
blotted out his momentary glimpse of the moon, and
the air was full of fitful struggling tortured wraiths
of hail. A great roaring of wind and waters filled
earth and sky, and peering under his hand through
the dust and sleet to windward, he saw by the play
of the lightnings a vast wall of water pouring towards
him.
“Maydig!” screamed Mr.
Fotheringay’s feeble voice amid the elemental
uproar. “Here
“Stop!” cried Mr. Fotheringay
to the advancing water. “Oh, for goodness’
sake, stop!
“Just a moment,” said
Mr. Fotheringay to the lightnings and thunder.
“Stop jest a moment while I collect my thoughts…
And now what shall I do?” he said. “What
shall I do? Lord! I wish Maydig was
about.”
“I know,” said Mr. Fotheringay.
“And for goodness’ sake let’s have
it right this time.”
He remained on all fours, leaning
against the wind, very intent to have everything right.
“Ah!” he said. “Let
nothing what I’m going to order happen until
I say ’Off
I wish I’d
thought of that before!”
He lifted his little voice against
the whirlwind, shouting louder and louder in the vain
desire to hear himself speak. “Now then!—here
goes! Mind about that what I said just now.
In the first place, when all I’ve got to say
is done, let me lose my miraculous power, let my will
become just like anybody else’s will, and all
these dangerous miracles be stopped. I don’t
like them. I’d rather I didn’t work
’em. Ever so much. That’s the
first thing. And the second is—let
me be back just before the miracles begin; let everything
be just as it was before that blessed lamp turned
up. It’s a big job, but it’s the last.
Have you got it? No more miracles, everything
as it was—me back in the Long Dragon just
before I drank my half-pint. That’s it!
Yes.”
He dug his fingers into the mould,
closed his eyes, and said “Off!”
Everything became perfectly still.
He perceived that he was standing erect.
“So you say,” said a voice.
He opened his eyes. He was in
the bar of the Long Dragon, arguing about miracles
with Toddy Beamish. He had a vague sense of some
great thing forgotten that instantaneously passed.
You see that, except for the loss of his miraculous
powers, everything was back as it had been, his mind
and memory therefore were now just as they had been
at the time when this story began. So that he
knew absolutely nothing of all that is told here—
knows nothing of all that is told here to this day.
And among other things, of course, he still did not
believe in miracles.
“I tell you that miracles, properly
speaking, can’t possibly happen,” he said,
“whatever you like to hold. And I’m
prepared to prove it up to the hilt.”
“That’s what you
think,” said Toddy Beamish, and “Prove
it if you can.”
“Looky here, Mr. Beamish,”
said Mr. Fotheringay. “Let us clearly understand
what a miracle is. It’s something contrariwise
to the course of nature done by power of Will…”