XV.
THE PLATTNER STORY.
Whether the story of Gottfried Plattner
is to be credited or not is a pretty question in the
value of evidence. On the one hand, we have seven
witnesses—to be perfectly exact, we have
six and a half pairs of eyes, and one undeniable fact;
and on the other we have—what is it?—prejudice,
common-sense, the inertia of opinion. Never were
there seven more honest-seeming witnesses; never was
there a more undeniable fact than the inversion of
Gottfried Plattner’s anatomical structure, and—never
was there a more preposterous story than the one they
have to tell! The most preposterous part of the
story is the worthy Gottfried’s contribution
(for I count him as one of the seven). Heaven
forbid that I should be led into giving countenance
to superstition by a passion for impartiality, and
so come to share the fate of Eusapia’s patrons!
Frankly, I believe there is something crooked about
this business of Gottfried Plattner; but what that
crooked factor is, I will admit as frankly, I do not
know. I have been surprised at the credit accorded
to the story in the most unexpected and authoritative
quarters. The fairest way to the reader, however,
will be for me to tell it without further comment.
Gottfried Plattner is, in spite of
his name, a freeborn Englishman. His father was
an Alsatian who came to England in the ’sixties,
married a respectable English girl of unexceptionable
antecedents, and died, after a wholesome and uneventful
life (devoted, I understand, chiefly to the laying
of parquet flooring), in 1887. Gottfried’s
age is seven-and-twenty. He is, by virtue of
his heritage of three languages, Modern Languages
Master in a small private school in the south of England.
To the casual observer he is singularly like any other
Modern Languages Master in any other small private
school. His costume is neither very costly nor
very fashionable, but, on the other hand, it is not
markedly cheap or shabby; his complexion, like his
height and his bearing, is inconspicuous. You
would notice, perhaps, that, like the majority of people,
his face was not absolutely symmetrical, his right
eye a little larger than the left, and his jaw a trifle
heavier on the right side. If you, as an ordinary
careless person, were to bare his chest and feel his
heart beating, you would probably find it quite like
the heart of anyone else. But here you and the
trained observer would part company. If you found
his heart quite ordinary, the trained observer would
find it quite otherwise. And once the thing was
pointed out to you, you too would perceive the peculiarity
easily enough. It is that Gottfried’s heart
beats on the right side of his body.
Now, that is not the only singularity
of Gottfried’s structure, although it is the
only one that would appeal to the untrained mind.
Careful sounding of Gottfried’s internal arrangements
by a well-known surgeon seems to point to the fact
that all the other unsymmetrical parts of his body
are similarly misplaced. The right lobe of his
liver is on the left side, the left on his right;
while his lungs, too, are similarly contraposed.
What is still more singular, unless Gottfried is a
consummate actor, we must believe that his right hand
has recently become his left. Since the occurrences
we are about to consider (as impartially as possible),
he has found the utmost difficulty in writing, except
from right to left across the paper with his left
hand. He cannot throw with his right hand, he
is perplexed at meal-times between knife and fork,
and his ideas of the rule of the road—he
is a cyclist—are still a dangerous confusion.
And there is not a scrap of evidence to show that before
these occurrences Gottfried was at all left-handed.
There is yet another wonderful fact
in this preposterous business. Gottfried produces
three photographs of himself. You have him at
the age of five or six, thrusting fat legs at you
from under a plaid frock, and scowling. In that
photograph his left eye is a little larger than his
right, and his jaw is a trifle heavier on the left
side. This is the reverse of his present living
condition. The photograph of Gottfried at fourteen
seems to contradict these facts, but that is because
it is one of those cheap “Gem” photographs
that were then in vogue, taken direct upon metal,
and therefore reversing things just as a looking-glass
would. The third photograph represents him at
one-and-twenty, and confirms the record of the others.
There seems here evidence of the strongest confirmatory
character that Gottfried has exchanged his left side
for his right. Yet how a human being can be so
changed, short of a fantastic and pointless miracle,
it is exceedingly hard to suggest.
In one way, of course, these facts
might be explicable on the supposition that Plattner
has undertaken an elaborate mystification, on the strength
of his heart’s displacement. Photographs
may be faked, and left-handedness imitated. But
the character of the man does not lend itself to any
such theory. He is quiet, practical, unobtrusive,
and thoroughly sane, from the Nordau standpoint.
He likes beer, and smokes moderately, takes walking
exercise daily, and has a healthily high estimate of
the value of his teaching. He has a good but
untrained tenor voice, and takes a pleasure in singing
airs of a popular and cheerful character. He is
fond, but not morbidly fond, of reading,—chiefly
fiction pervaded with a vaguely pious optimism,—sleeps
well, and rarely dreams. He is, in fact, the very
last person to evolve a fantastic fable. Indeed,
so far from forcing this story upon the world, he
has been singularly reticent on the matter. He
meets enquirers with a certain engaging—bashfulness
is almost the word, that disarms the most suspicious.
He seems genuinely ashamed that anything so unusual
has occurred to him.
It is to be regretted that Plattner’s
aversion to the idea of post-mortem dissection may
postpone, perhaps for ever, the positive proof that
his entire body has had its left and right sides transposed.
Upon that fact mainly the credibility of his story
hangs. There is no way of taking a man and moving
him about in space as ordinary people understand space,
that will result in our changing his sides. Whatever
you do, his right is still his right, his left his
left. You can do that with a perfectly thin and
flat thing, of course. If you were to cut a figure
out of paper, any figure with a right and left side,
you could change its sides simply by lifting it up
and turning it over. But with a solid it is different.
Mathematical theorists tell us that the only way in
which the right and left sides of a solid body can
be changed is by taking that body clean out of space
as we know it,—taking it out of ordinary
existence, that is, and turning it somewhere outside
space. This is a little abstruse, no doubt, but
anyone with any knowledge of mathematical theory will
assure the reader of its truth. To put the thing
in technical language, the curious inversion of Plattner’s
right and left sides is proof that he has moved out
of our space into what is called the Fourth Dimension,
and that he has returned again to our world.
Unless we choose to consider ourselves the victims
of an elaborate and motiveless fabrication, we are
almost bound to believe that this has occurred.
So much for the tangible facts.
We come now to the account of the phenomena that attended
his temporary disappearance from the world. It
appears that in the Sussexville Proprietary School,
Plattner not only discharged the duties of Modern
Languages Master, but also taught chemistry, commercial
geography, bookkeeping, shorthand, drawing, and any
other additional subject to which the changing fancies
of the boys’ parents might direct attention.
He knew little or nothing of these various subjects,
but in secondary as distinguished from Board or elementary
schools, knowledge in the teacher is, very properly,
by no means so necessary as high moral character and
gentlemanly tone. In chemistry he was particularly
deficient, knowing, he says, nothing beyond the Three
Gases (whatever the three gases may be). As, however,
his pupils began by knowing nothing, and derived all
their information from him, this caused him (or anyone)
but little inconvenience for several terms. Then
a little boy named Whibble joined the school, who
had been educated (it seems) by some mischievous relative
into an inquiring habit of mind. This little boy
followed Plattner’s lessons with marked and sustained
interest, and in order to exhibit his zeal on the
subject, brought, at various times, substances for
Plattner to analyse. Plattner, flattered by this
evidence of his power of awakening interest, and trusting
to the boy’s ignorance, analysed these, and
even, made general statements as to their composition.
Indeed, he was so far stimulated by his pupil as to
obtain a work upon analytical chemistry, and study
it during his supervision of the evening’s preparation.
He was surprised to find chemistry quite an interesting
subject.
So far the story is absolutely commonplace.
But now the greenish powder comes upon the scene.
The source of that greenish powder seems, unfortunately,
lost. Master Whibble tells a tortuous story of
finding it done up in a packet in a disused limekiln
near the Downs. It would have been an excellent
thing for Plattner, and possibly for Master Whibble’s
family, if a match could have been applied to that
powder there and then. The young gentleman certainly
did not bring it to school in a packet, but in a common
eight-ounce graduated medicine bottle, plugged with
masticated newspaper. He gave it to Plattner
at the end of the afternoon school. Four boys
had been detained after school prayers in order to
complete some neglected tasks, and Plattner was supervising
these in the small class-room in which the chemical
teaching was conducted. The appliances for the
practical teaching of chemistry in the Sussexville
Proprietary School, as in most small schools in this
country, are characterised by a severe simplicity.
They are kept in a small cupboard standing in a recess,
and having about the same capacity as a common travelling
trunk. Plattner, being bored with his passive
superintendence, seems to have welcomed the intervention
of Whibble with his green powder as an agreeable diversion,
and, unlocking this cupboard, proceeded at once with
his analytical experiments. Whibble sat, luckily
for himself, at a safe distance, regarding him.
The four malefactors, feigning a profound absorption
in their work, watched him furtively with the keenest
interest. For even within the limits of the Three
Gases, Plattner’s practical chemistry was, I
understand, temerarious.
They are practically unanimous in
their account of Plattner’s proceedings.
He poured a little of the green powder into a test-tube,
and tried the substance with water, hydrochloric acid,
nitric acid, and sulphuric acid in succession.
Getting no result, he emptied out a little heap—nearly
half the bottleful, in fact—upon a slate
and tried a match. He held the medicine bottle
in his left hand. The stuff began to smoke and
melt, and then exploded with deafening violence and
a blinding flash.
The five boys, seeing the flash and
being prepared for catastrophes, ducked below their
desks, and were none of them seriously hurt. The
window was blown out into the playground, and the
blackboard on its easel was upset. The slate
was smashed to atoms. Some plaster fell from the
ceiling. No other damage was done to the school
edifice or appliances, and the boys at first, seeing
nothing of Plattner, fancied he was knocked down and
lying out of their sight below the desks. They
jumped out of their places to go to his assistance,
and were amazed to find the space empty. Being
still confused by the sudden violence of the report,
they hurried to the open door, under the impression
that he must have been hurt, and have rushed out of
the room. But Carson, the foremost, nearly collided
in the doorway with the principal, Mr. Lidgett.
Mr. Lidgett is a corpulent, excitable
man with one eye. The boys describe him as stumbling
into the room mouthing some of those tempered expletives
irritable schoolmasters accustom themselves to use—lest
worse befall. “Wretched mumchancer!”
he said. “Where’s Mr. Plattner?”
The boys are agreed on the very words. (“Wobbler,”
“snivelling puppy,” and “mumchancer”
are, it seems, among the ordinary small change of Mr.
Lidgett’s scholastic commerce.)
Where’s Mr. Plattner? That
was a question that was to be repeated many times
in the next few days. It really seemed as though
that frantic hyperbole, “blown to atoms,”
had for once realised itself. There was not a
visible particle of Plattner to be seen; not a drop
of blood nor a stitch of clothing to be found.
Apparently he had been blown clean out of existence
and left not a wrack behind. Not so much as would
cover a sixpenny piece, to quote a proverbial expression!
The evidence of his absolute disappearance as a consequence
of that explosion is indubitable.
It is not necessary to enlarge here
upon the commotion excited in the Sussexville Proprietary
School, and in Sussexville and elsewhere, by this
event. It is quite possible, indeed, that some
of the readers of these pages may recall the hearing
of some remote and dying version of that excitement
during the last summer holidays. Lidgett, it would
seem, did everything in his power to suppress and
minimise the story. He instituted a penalty of
twenty-five lines for any mention of Plattner’s
name among the boys, and stated in the schoolroom
that he was clearly aware of his assistant’s
whereabouts. He was afraid, he explains, that
the possibility of an explosion happening, in spite
of the elaborate precautions taken to minimise the
practical teaching of chemistry, might injure the reputation
of the school; and so might any mysterious quality
in Plattner’s departure. Indeed, he did
everything in his power to make the occurrence seem
as ordinary as possible. In particular, he cross-examined
the five eye-witnesses of the occurrence so searchingly
that they began to doubt the plain evidence of their
senses. But, in spite of these efforts, the tale,
in a magnified and distorted state, made a nine days’
wonder in the district, and several parents withdrew
their sons on colourable pretexts. Not the least
remarkable point in the matter is the fact that a large
number of people in the neighbourhood dreamed singularly
vivid dreams of Plattner during the period of excitement
before his return, and that these dreams had a curious
uniformity. In almost all of them Plattner was
seen, sometimes singly, sometimes in company, wandering
about through a coruscating iridescence. In all
cases his face was pale and distressed, and in some
he gesticulated towards the dreamer. One or two
of the boys, evidently under the influence of nightmare,
fancied that Plattner approached them with remarkable
swiftness, and seemed to look closely into their very
eyes. Others fled with Plattner from the pursuit
of vague and extraordinary creatures of a globular
shape. But all these fancies were forgotten in
inquiries and speculations when on the Wednesday next
but one after the Monday of the explosion, Plattner
returned.
The circumstances of his return were
as singular as those of his departure. So far
as Mr. Lidgett’s somewhat choleric outline can
be filled in from Plattner’s hesitating statements,
it would appear that on Wednesday evening, towards
the hour of sunset, the former gentleman, having dismissed
evening preparation, was engaged in his garden, picking
and eating strawberries, a fruit of which he is inordinately
fond. It is a large old-fashioned garden, secured
from observation, fortunately, by a high and ivy-covered
red-brick wall. Just as he was stooping over a
particularly prolific plant, there was a flash in the
air and a heavy thud, and before he could look round,
some heavy body struck him violently from behind.
He was pitched forward, crushing the strawberries he
held in his hand, and that so roughly, that his silk
hat—Mr. Lidgett adheres to the older ideas
of scholastic costume—was driven violently
down upon his forehead, and almost over one eye.
This heavy missile, which slid over him sideways and
collapsed into a sitting posture among the strawberry
plants, proved to be our long-lost Mr. Gottfried Plattner,
in an extremely dishevelled condition. He was
collarless and hatless, his linen was dirty, and there
was blood upon his hands. Mr. Lidgett was so indignant
and surprised that he remained on all-fours, and with
his hat jammed down on his eye, while he expostulated
vehemently with Plattner for his disrespectful and
unaccountable conduct.
This scarcely idyllic scene completes
what I may call the exterior version of the Plattner
story—its exoteric aspect. It is quite
unnecessary to enter here into all the details of
his dismissal by Mr. Lidgett. Such details, with
the full names and dates and references, will be found
in the larger report of these occurrences that was
laid before the Society for the Investigation of Abnormal
Phenomena. The singular transposition of Plattner’s
right and left sides was scarcely observed for the
first day or so, and then first in connection with
his disposition to write from right to left across
the blackboard. He concealed rather than ostended
this curious confirmatory circumstance, as he considered
it would unfavourably affect his prospects in a new
situation. The displacement of his heart was
discovered some months after, when he was having a
tooth extracted under anaesthetics. He then,
very unwillingly, allowed a cursory surgical examination
to be made of himself, with a view to a brief account
in the Journal of Anatomy. That exhausts
the statement of the material facts; and we may now
go on to consider Plattner’s account of the matter.
But first let us clearly differentiate
between the preceding portion of this story and what
is to follow. All I have told thus far is established
by such evidence as even a criminal lawyer would approve.
Every one of the witnesses is still alive; the reader,
if he have the leisure, may hunt the lads out to-morrow,
or even brave the terrors of the redoubtable Lidgett,
and cross-examine and trap and test to his heart’s
content; Gottfried Plattner himself, and his twisted
heart and his three photographs, are producible.
It may be taken as proved that he did disappear for
nine days as the consequence of an explosion; that
he returned almost as violently, under circumstances
in their nature annoying to Mr. Lidgett, whatever the
details of those circumstances may be; and that he
returned inverted, just as a reflection returns from
a mirror. From the last fact, as I have already
stated, it follows almost inevitably that Plattner,
during those nine days, must have been in some state
of existence altogether out of space. The evidence
to these statements is, indeed, far stronger than that
upon which most murderers are hanged. But for
his own particular account of where he had been, with
its confused explanations and wellnigh self-contradictory
details, we have only Mr. Gottfried Plattner’s
word. I do not wish to discredit that, but I
must point out—what so many writers upon
obscure psychic phenomena fail to do—that
we are passing here from the practically undeniable
to that kind of matter which any reasonable man is
entitled to believe or reject as he thinks proper.
The previous statements render it plausible; its discordance
with common experience tilts it towards the incredible.
I would prefer not to sway the beam of the reader’s
judgment either way, but simply to tell the story as
Plattner told it me.
He gave me his narrative, I may state,
at my house at Chislehurst, and so soon as he had
left me that evening, I went into my study and wrote
down everything as I remembered it. Subsequently
he was good enough to read over a type-written copy,
so that its substantial correctness is undeniable.
He states that at the moment of the
explosion he distinctly thought he was killed.
He felt lifted off his feet and driven forcibly backward.
It is a curious fact for psychologists that he thought
clearly during his backward flight, and wondered whether
he should hit the chemistry cupboard or the blackboard
easel. His heels struck ground, and he staggered
and fell heavily into a sitting position on something
soft and firm. For a moment the concussion stunned
him. He became aware at once of a vivid scent
of singed hair, and he seemed to hear the voice of
Lidgett asking for him. You will understand that
for a time his mind was greatly confused.
At first he was under the impression
that he was still standing in the class-room.
He perceived quite distinctly the surprise of the boys
and the entry of Mr. Lidgett. He is quite positive
upon that score. He did not hear their remarks;
but that he ascribed to the deafening effect of the
experiment. Things about him seemed curiously
dark and faint, but his mind explained that on the
obvious but mistaken idea that the explosion had engendered
a huge volume of dark smoke. Through the dimness
the figures of Lidgett and the boys moved, as faint
and silent as ghosts. Plattner’s face still
tingled with the stinging heat of the flash. He,
was, he says, “all muddled.” His
first definite thoughts seem to have been of his personal
safety. He thought he was perhaps blinded and
deafened. He felt his limbs and face in a gingerly
manner. Then his perceptions grew clearer, and
he was astonished to miss the old familiar desks and
other schoolroom furniture about him. Only dim,
uncertain, grey shapes stood in the place of these.
Then came a thing that made him shout aloud, and awoke
his stunned faculties to instant activity. Two
of the boys, gesticulating, walked one after the other
clean through him! Neither manifested the
slightest consciousness of his presence. It is
difficult to imagine the sensation he felt. They
came against him, he says, with no more force than
a wisp of mist.
Plattner’s first thought after
that was that he was dead. Having been brought
up with thoroughly sound views in these matters, however,
he was a little surprised to find his body still about
him. His second conclusion was that he was not
dead, but that the others were: that the explosion
had destroyed the Sussexville Proprietary School and
every soul in it except himself. But that, too,
was scarcely satisfactory. He was thrown back
upon astonished observation.
Everything about him was profoundly
dark: at first it seemed to have an altogether
ebony blackness. Overhead was a black firmament.
The only touch of light in the scene was a faint greenish
glow at the edge of the sky in one direction, which
threw into prominence a horizon of undulating black
hills. This, I say, was his impression at first.
As his eye grew accustomed to the darkness, he began
to distinguish a faint quality of differentiating
greenish colour in the circumambient night. Against
this background the furniture and occupants of the
class-room, it seems, stood out like phosphorescent
spectres, faint and impalpable. He extended his
hand, and thrust it without an effort through the wall
of the room by the fireplace.
He describes himself as making a strenuous
effort to attract attention. He shouted to Lidgett,
and tried to seize the boys as they went to and fro.
He only desisted from these attempts when Mrs. Lidgett,
whom he (as an Assistant Master) naturally disliked,
entered the room. He says the sensation of being
in the world, and yet not a part of it, was an extraordinarily
disagreeable one. He compared his feelings, not
inaptly, to those of a cat watching a mouse through
a window. Whenever he made a motion to communicate
with the dim, familiar world about him, he found an
invisible, incomprehensible barrier preventing intercourse.
He then turned his attention to his
solid environment. He found the medicine bottle
still unbroken in his hand, with the remainder of the
green powder therein. He put this in his pocket,
and began to feel about him. Apparently he was
sitting on a boulder of rock covered with a velvety
moss. The dark country about him he was unable
to see, the faint, misty picture of the schoolroom
blotting it out, but he had a feeling (due perhaps
to a cold wind) that he was near the crest of a hill,
and that a steep valley fell away beneath his feet.
The green glow along the edge of the sky seemed to
be growing in extent and intensity. He stood up,
rubbing his eyes.
It would seem that he made a few steps,
going steeply downhill, and then stumbled, nearly
fell, and sat down again upon a jagged mass of rock
to watch the dawn. He became aware that the world
about him was absolutely silent. It was as still
as it was dark, and though there was a cold wind blowing
up the hill-face, the rustle of grass, the soughing
of the boughs that should have accompanied it, were
absent. He could hear, therefore, if he could
not see, that the hillside upon which he stood was
rocky and desolate. The green grew brighter every
moment, and as it did so a faint, transparent blood-red
mingled with, but did not mitigate, the blackness of
the sky overhead and the rocky desolations about him.
Having regard to what follows, I am inclined to think
that that redness may have been an optical effect
due to contrast. Something black fluttered momentarily
against the livid yellow-green of the lower sky, and
then the thin and penetrating voice of a bell rose
out of the black gulf below him. An oppressive
expectation grew with the growing light.
It is probable that an hour or more
elapsed while he sat there, the strange green light
growing brighter every moment, and spreading slowly,
in flamboyant fingers, upward towards the zenith.
As it grew, the spectral vision of our world
became relatively or absolutely fainter. Probably
both, for the time must have been about that of our
earthly sunset. So far as his vision of our world
went, Plattner, by his few steps downhill, had passed
through the floor of the class-room, and was now, it
seemed, sitting in mid-air in the larger schoolroom
downstairs. He saw the boarders distinctly, but
much more faintly than he had seen Lidgett. They
were preparing their evening tasks, and he noticed
with interest that several were cheating with their
Euclid riders by means of a crib, a compilation whose
existence he had hitherto never suspected. As
the time passed, they faded steadily, as steadily
as the light of the green dawn increased.
Looking down into the valley, he saw
that the light had crept far down its rocky sides,
and that the profound blackness of the abyss was now
broken by a minute green glow, like the light of a
glow-worm. And almost immediately the limb of
a huge heavenly body of blazing green rose over the
basaltic undulations of the distant hills, and the
monstrous hill-masses about him came out gaunt and
desolate, in green light and deep, ruddy black shadows.
He became aware of a vast number of ball-shaped objects
drifting as thistledown drifts over the high ground.
There were none of these nearer to him than the opposite
side of the gorge. The bell below twanged quicker
and quicker, with something like impatient insistence,
and several lights moved hither and thither. The
boys at work at their desks were now almost imperceptibly
faint.
This extinction of our world, when
the green sun of this other universe rose, is a curious
point upon which Plattner insists. During the
Other-World night it is difficult to move about, on
account of the vividness with which the things of
this world are visible. It becomes a riddle to
explain why, if this is the case, we in this world
catch no glimpse of the Other-World. It is due,
perhaps, to the comparatively vivid illumination of
this world of ours. Plattner describes the midday
of the Other-World, at its brightest, as not being
nearly so bright as this world at full moon, while
its night is profoundly black. Consequently,
the amount of light, even in an ordinary dark room,
is sufficient to render the things of the Other-World
invisible, on the same principle that faint phosphorescence
is only visible in the profoundest darkness.
I have tried, since he told me his story, to see something
of the Other-World by sitting for a long space in a
photographer’s dark room at night. I have
certainly seen indistinctly the form of greenish slopes
and rocks, but only, I must admit, very indistinctly
indeed. The reader may possibly be more successful.
Plattner tells me that since his return he has dreamt
and seen and recognised places in the Other-World,
but this is probably due to his memory of these scenes.
It seems quite possible that people with unusually
keen eyesight may occasionally catch a glimpse of this
strange Other-World about us.
However, this is a digression.
As the green sun rose, a long street of black buildings
became perceptible, though only darkly and indistinctly,
in the gorge, and after some hesitation, Plattner began
to clamber down the precipitous descent towards them.
The descent was long and exceedingly tedious, being
so not only by the extraordinary steepness, but also
by reason of the looseness of the boulders with which
the whole face of the hill was strewn. The noise
of his descent—now and then his heels struck
fire from the rocks—seemed now the only
sound in the universe, for the beating of the bell
had ceased. As he drew nearer, he perceived that
the various edifices had a singular resemblance to
tombs and mausoleums and monuments, saving only that
they were all uniformly black instead of being white,
as most sepulchres are. And then he saw, crowding
out of the largest building, very much as people disperse
from church, a number of pallid, rounded, pale-green
figures. These dispersed in several directions
about the broad street of the place, some going through
side alleys and reappearing upon the steepness of
the hill, others entering some of the small black
buildings which lined the way.
At the sight of these things drifting
up towards him, Plattner stopped, staring. They
were not walking, they were indeed limbless, and they
had the appearance of human heads, beneath which a
tadpole-like body swung. He was too astonished
at their strangeness, too full, indeed, of strangeness,
to be seriously alarmed by them. They drove towards
him, in front of the chill wind that was blowing uphill,
much as soap-bubbles drive before a draught.
And as he looked at the nearest of those approaching,
he saw it was indeed a human head, albeit with singularly
large eyes, and wearing such an expression of distress
and anguish as he had never seen before upon mortal
countenance. He was surprised to find that it
did not turn to regard him, but seemed to be watching
and following some unseen moving thing. For a
moment he was puzzled, and then it occurred to him
that this creature was watching with its enormous
eyes something that was happening in the world he
had just left. Nearer it came, and nearer, and
he was too astonished to cry out. It made a very
faint fretting sound as it came close to him.
Then it struck his face with a gentle pat—its
touch was very cold—and drove past him,
and upward towards the crest of the hill.
An extraordinary conviction flashed
across Plattner’s mind that this head had a
strong likeness to Lidgett. Then he turned his
attention to the other heads that were now swarming
thickly up the hill-side. None made the slightest
sign of recognition. One or two, indeed, came
close to his head and almost followed the example
of the first, but he dodged convulsively out of the
way. Upon most of them he saw the same expression
of unavailing regret he had seen upon the first, and
heard the same faint sounds of wretchedness from them.
One or two wept, and one rolling swiftly uphill wore
an expression of diabolical rage. But others were
cold, and several had a look of gratified interest
in their eyes. One, at least, was almost in an
ecstasy of happiness. Plattner does not remember
that he recognised any more likenesses in those he
saw at this time.
For several hours, perhaps, Plattner
watched these strange things dispersing themselves
over the hills, and not till long after they had ceased
to issue from the clustering black buildings in the
gorge, did he resume his downward climb. The
darkness about him increased so much that he had a
difficulty in stepping true. Overhead the sky
was now a bright, pale green. He felt neither
hunger nor thirst. Later, when he did, he found
a chilly stream running down the centre of the gorge,
and the rare moss upon the boulders, when he tried
it at last in desperation, was good to eat.
He groped about among the tombs that
ran down the gorge, seeking vaguely for some clue
to these inexplicable things. After a long time
he came to the entrance of the big mausoleum-like
building from which the heads had issued. In
this he found a group of green lights burning upon
a kind of basaltic altar, and a bell-rope from a belfry
overhead hanging down into the centre of the place.
Round the wall ran a lettering of fire in a character
unknown to him. While he was still wondering at
the purport of these things, he heard the receding
tramp of heavy feet echoing far down the street.
He ran out into the darkness again, but he could see
nothing. He had a mind to pull the bell-rope,
and finally decided to follow the footsteps.
But, although he ran far, he never overtook them; and
his shouting was of no avail. The gorge seemed
to extend an interminable distance. It was as
dark as earthly starlight throughout its length, while
the ghastly green day lay along the upper edge of its
precipices. There were none of the heads, now,
below. They were all, it seemed, busily occupied
along the upper slopes. Looking up, he saw them
drifting hither and thither, some hovering stationary,
some flying swiftly through the air. It reminded
him, he said, of “big snowflakes”; only
these were black and pale green.
In pursuing the firm, undeviating
footsteps that he never overtook, in groping into
new regions of this endless devil’s dyke, in
clambering up and down the pitiless heights, in wandering
about the summits, and in watching the drifting faces,
Plattner states that he spent the better part of seven
or eight days. He did not keep count, he says.
Though once or twice he found eyes watching him, he
had word with no living soul. He slept among
the rocks on the hillside. In the gorge things
earthly were invisible, because, from the earthly
standpoint, it was far underground. On the altitudes,
so soon as the earthly day began, the world became
visible to him. He found himself sometimes stumbling
over the dark green rocks, or arresting himself on
a precipitous brink, while all about him the green
branches of the Sussexville lanes were swaying; or,
again, he seemed to be walking through the Sussexville
streets, or watching unseen the private business of
some household. And then it was he discovered,
that to almost every human being in our world there
pertained some of these drifting heads; that everyone
in the world is watched intermittently by these helpless
disembodiments.
What are they—these Watchers
of the Living? Plattner never learned. But
two, that presently found and followed him, were like
his childhood’s memory of his father and mother.
Now and then other faces turned their eyes upon him:
eyes like those of dead people who had swayed him,
or injured him, or helped him in his youth and manhood.
Whenever they looked at him, Plattner was overcome
with a strange sense of responsibility. To his
mother he ventured to speak; but she made no answer.
She looked sadly, steadfastly, and tenderly—a
little reproachfully, too, it seemed—into
his eyes.
He simply tells this story: he
does not endeavour to explain. We are left to
surmise who these Watchers of the Living may be, or,
if they are indeed the Dead, why they should so closely
and passionately watch a world they have left for
ever. It may be—indeed to my mind it
seems just—that, when our life has closed,
when evil or good is no longer a choice for us, we
may still have to witness the working out of the train
of consequences we have laid. If human souls
continue after death, then surely human interests
continue after death. But that is merely my own
guess at the meaning of the things seen. Plattner
offers no interpretation, for none was given him.
It is well the reader should understand this clearly.
Day after day, with his head reeling, he wandered
about this strange lit world outside the world, weary
and, towards the end, weak and hungry. By day—by
our earthly day, that is—the ghostly vision
of the old familiar scenery of Sussexville, all about
him, irked and worried him. He could not see
where to put his feet, and ever and again with a chilly
touch one of these Watching Souls would come against
his face. And after dark the multitude of these
Watchers about him, and their intent distress, confused
his mind beyond describing. A great longing to
return to the earthly life that was so near and yet
so remote consumed him. The unearthliness of things
about him produced a positively painful mental distress.
He was worried beyond describing by his own particular
followers. He would shout at them to desist from
staring at him, scold at them, hurry away from them.
They were always mute and intent. Run as he might
over the uneven ground, they followed his destinies.
On the ninth day, towards evening,
Plattner heard the invisible footsteps approaching,
far away down the gorge. He was then wandering
over the broad crest of the same hill upon which he
had fallen in his entry into this strange Other-World
of his. He turned to hurry down into the gorge,
feeling his way hastily, and was arrested by the sight
of the thing that was happening in a room in a back
street near the school. Both of the people in
the room he knew by sight. The windows were open,
the blinds up, and the setting sun shone clearly into
it, so that it came out quite brightly at first, a
vivid oblong of room, lying like a magic-lantern picture
upon the black landscape and the livid green dawn.
In addition to the sunlight, a candle had just been
lit in the room.
On the bed lay a lank man, his ghastly
white face terrible upon the tumbled pillow.
His clenched hands were raised above his head.
A little table beside the bed carried a few medicine
bottles, some toast and water, and an empty glass.
Every now and then the lank man’s lips fell apart,
to indicate a word he could not articulate. But
the woman did not notice that he wanted anything,
because she was busy turning out papers from an old-fashioned
bureau in the opposite corner of the room. At
first the picture was very vivid indeed, but as the
green dawn behind it grew brighter and brighter, so
it became fainter and more and more transparent.
As the echoing footsteps paced nearer
and nearer, those footsteps that sound so loud in
that Other-World and come so silently in this, Plattner
perceived about him a great multitude of dim faces
gathering together out of the darkness and watching
the two people in the room. Never before had
he seen so many of the Watchers of the Living.
A multitude had eyes only for the sufferer in the
room, another multitude, in infinite anguish, watched
the woman as she hunted with greedy eyes for something
she could not find. They crowded about Plattner,
they came across his sight and buffeted his face,
the noise of their unavailing regrets was all about
him. He saw clearly only now and then. At
other times the picture quivered dimly, through the
veil of green reflections upon their movements.
In the room it must have been very still, and Plattner
says the candle flame streamed up into a perfectly
vertical line of smoke, but in his ears each footfall
and its echoes beat like a clap of thunder. And
the faces! Two, more particularly near the woman’s:
one a woman’s also, white and clear-featured,
a face which might have once been cold and hard, but
which was now softened by the touch of a wisdom strange
to earth. The other might have been the woman’s
father. Both were evidently absorbed in the contemplation
of some act of hateful meanness, so it seemed, which
they could no longer guard against and prevent.
Behind were others, teachers, it may be, who had taught
ill, friends whose influence had failed. And
over the man, too—a multitude, but none
that seemed to be parents or teachers! Faces
that might once have been coarse, now purged to strength
by sorrow! And in the forefront one face, a girlish
one, neither angry nor remorseful, but merely patient
and weary, and, as it seemed to Plattner, waiting
for relief. His powers of description fail him
at the memory of this multitude of ghastly countenances.
They gathered on the stroke of the bell. He saw
them all in the space of a second. It would seem
that he was so worked on by his excitement that, quite
involuntarily, his restless fingers took the bottle
of green powder out of his pocket and held it before
him. But he does not remember that.
Abruptly the footsteps ceased.
He waited for the next, and there was silence, and
then suddenly, cutting through the unexpected stillness
like a keen, thin blade, came the first stroke of
the bell. At that the multitudinous faces swayed
to and fro, and a louder crying began all about him.
The woman did not hear; she was burning something now
in the candle flame. At the second stroke everything
grew dim, and a breath of wind, icy cold, blew through
the host of watchers. They swirled about him like
an eddy of dead leaves in the spring, and at the third
stroke something was extended through them to the
bed. You have heard of a beam of light. This
was like a beam of darkness, and looking again at it,
Plattner saw that it was a shadowy arm and hand.
The green sun was now topping the
black desolations of the horizon, and the vision of
the room was very faint. Plattner could see that
the white of the bed struggled, and was convulsed;
and that the woman looked round over her shoulder
at it, startled.
The cloud of watchers lifted high
like a puff of green dust before the wind, and swept
swiftly downward towards the temple in the gorge.
Then suddenly Plattner understood the meaning of the
shadowy black arm that stretched across his shoulder
and clutched its prey. He did not dare turn his
head to see the Shadow behind the arm. With a
violent effort, and covering his eyes, he set himself
to run, made, perhaps, twenty strides, then slipped
on a boulder, and fell. He fell forward on his
hands; and the bottle smashed and exploded as he touched
the ground.
In another moment he found himself,
stunned and bleeding, sitting face to face with Lidgett
in the old walled garden behind the school.
* * * *
*
There the story of Plattner’s
experiences ends. I have resisted, I believe
successfully, the natural disposition of a writer of
fiction to dress up incidents of this sort. I
have told the thing as far as possible in the order
in which Plattner told it to me. I have carefully
avoided any attempt at style, effect, or construction.
It would have been easy, for instance, to have worked
the scene of the death-bed into a kind of plot in
which Plattner might have been involved. But,
quite apart from the objectionableness of falsifying
a most extraordinary true story, any such trite devices
would spoil, to my mind, the peculiar effect of this
dark world, with its livid green illumination and
its drifting Watchers of the Living, which, unseen
and unapproachable to us, is yet lying all about us.
It remains to add that a death did
actually occur in Vincent Terrace, just beyond the
school garden, and, so far as can be proved, at the
moment of Plattner’s return. Deceased was
a rate-collector and insurance agent. His widow,
who was much younger than himself, married last month
a Mr. Whymper, a veterinary surgeon of Allbeeding.
As the portion of this story given here has in various
forms circulated orally in Sussexville, she has consented
to my use of her name, on condition that I make it
distinctly known that she emphatically contradicts
every detail of Plattner’s account of her husband’s
last moments. She burnt no will, she says, although
Plattner never accused her of doing so; her husband
made but one will, and that just after their marriage.
Certainly, from a man who had never seen it, Plattner’s
account of the furniture of the room was curiously
accurate.
One other thing, even at the risk
of an irksome repetition, I must insist upon, lest
I seem to favour the credulous, superstitious view.
Plattner’s absence from the world for nine days
is, I think, proved. But that does not prove
his story. It is quite conceivable that even outside
space hallucinations may be possible. That, at
least, the reader must bear distinctly in mind.