XXVII.
THE NEW ACCELERATOR.
Certainly, if ever a man found a guinea
when he was looking for a pin, it is my good friend
Professor Gibberne. I have heard before of investigators
overshooting the mark, but never quite to the extent
that he has done. He has really, this time at
any rate, without any touch of exaggeration in the
phrase, found something to revolutionise human life.
And that when he was simply seeking an all-round nervous
stimulant to bring languid people up to the stresses
of these pushful days. I have tasted the stuff
now several times, and I cannot do better than describe
the effect the thing had on me. That there are
astonishing experiences in store for all in search
of new sensations will become apparent enough.
Professor Gibberne, as many people
know, is my neighbour in Folkestone. Unless my
memory plays me a trick, his portrait at various ages
has already appeared in The Strand Magazine—think
late in 1899 but I am unable to look it up because
I have lent that volume to someone who has never sent
it back. The reader may, perhaps, recall the high
forehead and the singularly long black eyebrows that
give such a Mephistophelean touch to his face.
He occupies one of those pleasant little detached houses
in the mixed style that make the western end of the
Upper Sandgate Road so interesting. His is the
one with the Flemish gables and the Moorish portico,
and it is in the little room with the mullioned bay
window that he works when he is down here, and in
which of an evening we have so often smoked and talked
together. He is a mighty jester, but, besides,
he likes to talk to me about his work; he is one of
those men who find a help and stimulus in talking,
and so I have been able to follow the conception of
the New Accelerator right up from a very early stage.
Of course, the greater portion of his experimental
work is not done in Folkestone, but in Gower Street,
in the fine new laboratory next to the hospital that
he has been the first to use.
As every one knows, or at least as
all intelligent people know, the special department
in which Gibberne has gained so great and deserved
a reputation among physiologists is the action of
drugs upon the nervous system. Upon soporifics,
sedatives, and anaesthetics he is, I am told, unequalled.
He is also a chemist of considerable eminence, and
I suppose in the subtle and complex jungle of riddles
that centres about the ganglion cell and the axis
fibre there are little cleared places of his making,
little glades of illumination, that, until he sees
fit to publish his results, are still inaccessible
to every other living man. And in the last few
years he has been particularly assiduous upon this
question of nervous stimulants, and already, before
the discovery of the New Accelerator, very successful
with them. Medical science has to thank him for
at least three distinct and absolutely safe invigorators
of unrivalled value to practising men. In cases
of exhaustion the preparation known as Gibberne’s
B Syrup has, I suppose, saved more lives already than
any lifeboat round the coast.
“But none of these little things
begin to satisfy me yet,” he told me nearly
a year ago. “Either they increase the central
energy without affecting the nerves, or they simply
increase the available energy by lowering the nervous
conductivity; and all of them are unequal and local
in their operation. One wakes up the heart and
viscera and leaves the brain stupefied, one gets at
the brain champagne fashion, and does nothing good
for the solar plexus, and what I want—and
what, if it’s an earthly possibility, I mean
to have—is a stimulant that stimulates all
round, that wakes you up for a time from the crown
of your head to the tip of your great toe, and makes
you go two—or even three—to everybody
else’s one. Eh? That’s the thing
I’m after.”
“It would tire a man,” I said.
“Not a doubt of it. And
you’d eat double or treble—and all
that. But just think what the thing would mean.
Imagine yourself with a little phial like this”—he
held up a little bottle of green glass and marked his
points with it—“and in this precious
phial is the power to think twice as fast, move twice
as quickly, do twice as much work in a given time as
you could otherwise do.”
“But is such a thing possible?”
“I believe so. If it isn’t,
I’ve wasted my time for a year. These various
preparations of the hypophosphites, for example, seem
to show that something of the sort… Even if
it was only one and a half times as fast it would
do.”
“It would do,” I said.
“If you were a statesman in
a corner, for example, time rushing up against you,
something urgent to be done, eh?”
“He could dose his private secretary,”
I said.
“And gain—double
time. And think if you, for example, wanted
to finish a book.”
“Usually,” I said, “I wish I’d
never begun ’em.”
“Or a doctor, driven to death,
wants to sit down and think out a case. Or a
barrister—or a man cramming for an examination.”
“Worth a guinea a drop,”
said I, “and more—to men like that.”
“And in a duel, again,”
said Gibberne, “where it all depends on your
quickness in pulling the trigger.”
“Or in fencing,” I echoed.
“You see,” said Gibberne,
“if I get it as an all-round thing, it will
really do you no harm at all—except perhaps
to an infinitesimal degree it brings you nearer old
age. You will just have lived twice to other
people’s once—”
“I suppose,” I meditated, “in a
duel—it would be fair?”
“That’s a question for the seconds,”
said Gibberne.
I harked back further. “And
you really think such a thing is possible?”
I said.
“As possible,” said Gibberne,
and glanced at something that went throbbing by the
window, “as a motor-bus. As a matter of
fact—”
He paused and smiled at me deeply,
and tapped slowly on the edge of his desk with the
green phial. “I think I know the stuff…
Already I’ve got something coming.”
The nervous smile upon his face betrayed the gravity
of his revelation. He rarely talked of his actual
experimental work unless things were very near the
end. “And it may be, it may be—I
shouldn’t be surprised—it may even
do the thing at a greater rate than twice.”
“It will be rather a big thing,” I hazarded.
“It will be, I think, rather a big thing.”
But I don’t think he quite knew
what a big thing it was to be, for all that.
I remember we had several talks about
the stuff after that. “The New Accelerator”
he called it, and his tone about it grew more confident
on each occasion. Sometimes he talked nervously
of unexpected physiological results its use might
have, and then he would get a little unhappy; at others
he was frankly mercenary, and we debated long and anxiously
how the preparation might be turned to commercial
account. “It’s a good thing,”
said Gibberne, “a tremendous thing. I know
I’m giving the world something, and I think
it only reasonable we should expect the world to pay.
The dignity of science is all very well, but I think
somehow I must have the monopoly of the stuff for,
say, ten years. I don’t see why all
the fun in life should go to the dealers in ham.”
My own interest in the coming drug
certainly did not wane in the time. I have always
had a queer little twist towards metaphysics in my
mind. I have always been given to paradoxes about
space and time, and it seemed to me that Gibberne
was really preparing no less than the absolute acceleration
of life. Suppose a man repeatedly dosed with such
a preparation: he would live an active and record
life indeed, but he would be an adult at eleven, middle-aged
at twenty-five, and by thirty well on the road to
senile decay. It seemed to me that so far Gibberne
was only going to do for any one who took his drug
exactly what Nature has done for the Jews and Orientals,
who are men in their teens and aged by fifty, and
quicker in thought and act than we are all the time.
The marvel of drugs has always been great to my mind;
you can madden a man, calm a man, make him incredibly
strong and alert or a helpless log, quicken this passion
and allay that, all by means of drugs, and here was
a new miracle to be added to this strange armoury
of phials the doctors use! But Gibberne was far
too eager upon his technical points to enter very keenly
into my aspect of the question.
It was the 7th or 8th of August when
he told me the distillation that would decide his
failure or success for a time was going forward as
we talked, and it was on the 10th that he told me
the thing was done and the New Accelerator a tangible
reality in the world. I met him as I was going
up the Sandgate Hill towards Folkestone—I
think I was going to get my hair cut, and he came
hurrying down to meet me—I suppose he was
coming to my house to tell me at once of his success.
I remember that his eyes were unusually bright and
his face flushed, and I noted even then the swift
alacrity of his step.
“It’s done,” he
cried, and gripped my hand, speaking very fast; “it’s
more than done. Come up to my house and see.”
“Really?”
“Really!” he shouted. “Incredibly!
Come up and see.”
“And it does—twice?”
“It does more, much more.
It scares me. Come up and see the stuff.
Taste it! Try it! It’s the most amazing
stuff on earth.” He gripped my arm and;
walking at such a pace that he forced me into a trot,
went shouting with me up the hill. A whole char-à-banc-ful
of people turned and stared at us in unison after
the manner of people in chars-à-banc. It
was one of those hot, clear days that Folkestone sees
so much of, every colour incredibly bright and every
outline hard. There was a breeze, of course,
but not so much breeze as sufficed under these conditions
to keep me cool and dry. I panted for mercy.
“I’m not walking fast,
am I?” cried Gibberne, and slackened his pace
to a quick march.
“You’ve been taking some of this stuff,”
I puffed.
“No,” he said. “At
the utmost a drop of water that stood in a beaker from
which I had washed out the last traces of the stuff.
I took some last night, you know. But that is
ancient history now.”
“And it goes twice?” I
said, nearing his doorway in a grateful perspiration.
“It goes a thousand times, many
thousand times!” cried Gibberne, with a dramatic
gesture, flinging open his Early English carved oak
gate.
“Phew!” said I, and followed him to the
door.
“I don’t know how many
times it goes,” he said, with his latch-key in
his hand.
“And you——”
“It throws all sorts of light
on nervous physiology, it kicks the theory of vision
into a perfectly new shape! ... Heaven knows how
many thousand times. We’ll try all that
after——The thing is to try the stuff
now.”
“Try the stuff?” I said, as we went along
the passage.
“Rather,” said Gibberne,
turning on me in his study. “There it is
in that little green phial there! Unless you
happen to be afraid?”
I am a careful man by nature, and
only theoretically adventurous. I was
afraid. But on the other hand, there is pride.
“Well,” I haggled. “You say
you’ve tried it?”
“I’ve tried it,”
he said, “and I don’t look hurt by it,
do I? I don’t even look livery, and I feel——”
I sat down. “Give me the
potion,” I said. “If the worst comes
to the worst it will save having my hair cut, and
that, I think, is one of the most hateful duties of
a civilised man. How do you take the mixture?”
“With water,” said Gibberne, whacking
down a carafe.
He stood up in front of his desk and
regarded me in his easy-chair; his manner was suddenly
affected by a touch of the Harley Street specialist.
“It’s rum stuff, you know,” he said.
I made a gesture with my hand.
“I must warn you, in the first
place, as soon as you’ve got it down to shut
your eyes, and open them very cautiously in a minute
or so’s time. One still sees. The
sense of vision is a question of length of vibration,
and not of multitude of impacts; but there’s
a kind of shock to the retina, a nasty giddy confusion
just at the time if the eyes are open. Keep ’em
shut.”
“Shut,” I said. “Good!”
“And the next thing is, keep
still. Don’t begin to whack about.
You may fetch something a nasty rap if you do.
Remember you will be going several thousand times
faster than you ever did before, heart, lungs, muscles,
brain—everything—and you will
hit hard without knowing it. You won’t
know it, you know. You’ll feel just as you
do now. Only everything in the world will seem
to be going ever so many thousand times slower than
it ever went before. That’s what makes
it so deuced queer.”
“Lor,” I said. “And you mean——”
“You’ll see,” said
he, and took up a little measure. He glanced at
the material on his desk. “Glasses,”
he said, “water. All here. Mustn’t
take too much for the first attempt.”
The little phial glucked out its precious
contents. “Don’t forget what I told
you,” he said, turning the contents of the measure
into a glass in the manner of an Italian waiter measuring
whisky. “Sit with the eyes tightly shut
and in absolute stillness for two minutes,” he
said. “Then you will hear me speak.”
He added an inch or so of water to
the little dose in each glass.
“By-the-by,” he said,
“don’t put your glass down. Keep it
in your hand and rest your hand on your knee.
Yes—so. And now——”
He raised his glass.
“The New Accelerator,” I said.
“The New Accelerator,”
he answered, and we touched glasses and drank, and
instantly I closed my eyes.
You know that blank non-existence
into which one drops when one has taken “gas.”
For an indefinite interval it was like that. Then
I heard Gibberne telling me to wake up, and I stirred
and opened my eyes. There he stood as he had
been standing, glass still in hand. It was empty,
that was all the difference.
“Well?” said I.
“Nothing out of the way?”
“Nothing. A slight feeling of exhilaration,
perhaps. Nothing more.”
“Sounds?”
“Things are still,” I
said. “By Jove! yes! They are
still. Except the sort of faint pat, patter,
like rain falling on different things. What is
it?”
“Analysed sounds,” I think
he said, but I am not sure. He glanced at the
window. “Have you ever seen a curtain before
a window fixed in that way before?”
I followed his eyes, and there was
the end of the curtain, frozen, as it were, corner
high, in the act of flapping briskly in the breeze.
“No,” said I; “that’s odd.”
“And here,” he said, and
opened the hand that held the glass. Naturally
I winced, expecting the glass to smash. But so
far from smashing, it did not even seem to stir; it
hung in mid-air—motionless. “Roughly
speaking,” said Gibberne, “an object in
these latitudes falls 16 feet in the first second.
This glass is falling 16 feet in a second now.
Only, you see, it hasn’t been falling yet for
the hundredth part of a second. That gives you
some idea of the pace of my Accelerator.”
And he waved his hand round and round,
over and under the slowly sinking glass. Finally
he took it by the bottom, pulled it down and placed
it very carefully on the table. “Eh?”
he said to me, and laughed.
“That seems all right,”
I said, and began very gingerly to raise myself from
my chair. I felt perfectly well, very light and
comfortable, and quite confident in my mind.
I was going fast all over. My heart, for example,
was beating a thousand times a second, but that caused
me no discomfort at all. I looked out of the
window. An immovable cyclist, head down and with
a frozen puff of dust behind his driving-wheel, scorched
to overtake a galloping char-à-banc that did
not stir. I gaped in amazement at this incredible
spectacle. “Gibberne,” I cried, “how
long will this confounded stuff last?”
“Heaven knows!” he answered.
“Last time I took it I went to bed and slept
it off. I tell you, I was frightened. It
must have lasted some minutes, I think—it
seemed like hours. But after a bit it slows down
rather suddenly, I believe.”
I was proud to observe that I did
not feel frightened—I suppose because there
were two of us. “Why shouldn’t we
go out?” I asked.
“Why not?”
“They’ll see us.”
“Not they. Goodness, no!
Why, we shall be going a thousand times faster than
the quickest conjuring trick that was ever done.
Come along! Which way shall we go? Window,
or door?”
And out by the window we went.
Assuredly of all the strange experiences
that I have ever had, or imagined, or read of other
people having or imagining, that little raid I made
with Gibberne on the Folkestone Leas, under the influence
of the New Accelerator, was the strangest and maddest
of all. We went out by his gate into the road,
and there we made a minute examination of the statuesque
passing traffic. The tops of the wheels and some
of the legs of the horses of this char-à-banc,
the end of the whip-lash and the lower jaw of the
conductor—who was just beginning to yawn—were
perceptibly in motion, but all the rest of the lumbering
conveyance seemed still. And quite noiseless
except for a faint rattling that came from one man’s
throat. And as parts of this frozen edifice there
were a driver, you know, and a conductor, and eleven
people! The effect as we walked about the thing
began by being madly queer and ended by being—disagreeable.
There they were, people like ourselves and yet not
like ourselves, frozen in careless attitudes, caught
in mid-gesture. A girl and a man smiled at one
another, a leering smile that threatened to last for
evermore; a woman in a floppy capelline rested her
arm on the rail and stared at Gibberne’s house
with the unwinking stare of eternity; a man stroked
his moustache like a figure of wax, and another stretched
a tiresome stiff hand with extended fingers towards
his loosened hat. We stared at them, we laughed
at them, we made faces at them, and then a sort of
disgust of them came upon us, and we turned away and
walked round in front of the cyclist towards the Leas.
“Goodness!” cried Gibberne, suddenly;
“look there!”
He pointed, and there at the tip of
his finger and sliding down the air with wings flapping
slowly and at the speed of an exceptionally languid
snail—was a bee.
And so we came out upon the Leas.
There the thing seemed madder than ever. The
band was playing in the upper stand, though all the
sound it made for us was a low-pitched, wheezy rattle,
a sort of prolonged last sigh that passed at times
into a sound like the slow, muffled ticking of some
monstrous clock. Frozen people stood erect, strange,
silent, self-conscious-looking dummies hung unstably
in mid-stride, promenading upon the grass. I
passed close to a little poodle dog suspended in the
act of leaping, and watched the slow movement of his
legs as he sank to earth. “Lord, look here!”
cried Gibberne, and we halted for a moment before
a magnificent person in white faint—striped
flannels, white shoes, and a Panama hat, who turned
back to wink at two gaily dressed ladies he had passed.
A wink, studied with such leisurely deliberation as
we could afford, is an unattractive thing. It
loses any quality of alert gaiety, and one remarks
that the winking eye does not completely close, that
under its drooping lid appears the lower edge of an
eyeball and a little line of white. “Heaven
give me memory,” said I, “and I will never
wink again.”
“Or smile,” said Gibberne,
with his eye on the lady’s answering teeth.
“It’s infernally hot, somehow,”
said I, “Let’s go slower.”
“Oh, come along!” said Gibberne.
We picked our way among the bath-chairs
in the path. Many of the people sitting in the
chairs seemed almost natural in their passive poses,
but the contorted scarlet of the bandsmen was not
a restful thing to see. A purple-faced little
gentleman was frozen in the midst of a violent struggle
to refold his newspaper against the wind; there were
many evidences that all these people in their sluggish
way were exposed to a considerable breeze, a breeze
that had no existence so far as our sensations went.
We came out and walked a little way from the crowd,
and turned and regarded it. To see all that multitude
changed to a picture, smitten rigid, as it were, into
the semblance of realistic wax, was impossibly wonderful.
It was absurd, of course; but it filled me with an
irrational, an exultant sense of superior advantage.
Consider the wonder of it! All that I had said,
and thought, and done since the stuff had begun to
work in my veins had happened, so far as those people,
so far as the world in general went, in the twinkling
of an eye. “The New Accelerator——”
I began, but Gibberne interrupted me.
“There’s that infernal old woman!”
he said.
“What old woman?”
“Lives next door to me,”
said Gibberne. “Has a lapdog that yaps.
Gods! The temptation is strong!”
There is something very boyish and
impulsive about Gibberne at times. Before I could
expostulate with him he had dashed forward, snatched
the unfortunate animal out of visible existence, and
was running violently with it towards the cliff of
the Leas. It was most extraordinary. The
little brute, you know, didn’t bark or wriggle
or make the slightest sign of vitality. It kept
quite stiffly in an attitude of somnolent repose, and
Gibberne held it by the neck. It was like running
about with a dog of wood. “Gibberne,”
I cried, “put it down!” Then I said something
else. “If you run like that, Gibberne,”
I cried, “you’ll set your clothes on fire.
Your linen trousers are going brown as it is!”
He clapped his hand on his thigh and
stood hesitating on the verge. “Gibberne,”
I cried, coming up, “put it down. This heat
is too much! It’s our running so!
Two or three miles a second! Friction of the air!”
“What?” he said, glancing at the dog.
“Friction of the air,”
I shouted. “Friction of the air. Going
too fast. Like meteorites and things. Too
hot. And, Gibberne! Gibberne! I’m
all over pricking and a sort of perspiration.
You can see people stirring slightly. I believe
the stuff’s working off! Put that dog down.”
“Eh?” he said.
“It’s working off,”
I repeated. “We’re too hot and the
stuff’s working off! I’m wet through.”
He stared at me, then at the band,
the wheezy rattle of whose performance was certainly
going faster. Then with a tremendous sweep of
the arm he hurled the dog away from him and it went
spinning upward, still inanimate, and hung at last
over the grouped parasols of a knot of chattering people.
Gibberne was gripping my elbow. “By Jove!”
he cried, “I believe it is! A sort of hot
pricking and—yes. That man’s
moving his pocket-handkerchief! Perceptibly.
We must get out of this sharp.”
But we could not get out of it sharply
enough. Luckily, perhaps! For we might have
run, and if we had run we should, I believe, have burst
into flames. Almost certainly we should have
burst into flames! You know we had neither of
us thought of that… But before we could even
begin to run the action of the drug had ceased.
It was the business of a minute fraction of a second.
The effect of the New Accelerator passed like the
drawing of a curtain, vanished in the movement of a
hand. I heard Gibberne’s voice in infinite
alarm. “Sit down,” he said, and flop,
down upon the turf at the edge of the Leas I sat—scorching
as I sat. There is a patch of burnt grass there
still where I sat down. The whole stagnation
seemed to wake up as I did so, the disarticulated vibration
of the band rushed together into a blast of music,
the promenaders put their feet down and walked their
ways, the papers and flags began flapping, smiles passed
into words, the winker finished his wink and went on
his way complacently, and all the seated people moved
and spoke.
The whole world had come alive again,
was going as fast as we were, or rather we were going
no faster than the rest of the world. It was like
slowing down as one comes into a railway station.
Everything seemed to spin round for a second or two,
I had the most transient feeling of nausea, and that
was all. And the little dog, which had seemed
to hang for a moment when the force of Gibberne’s
arm was expended, fell with a swift acceleration clean
through a lady’s parasol!
That was the saving of us. Unless
it was for one corpulent old gentleman in a bath-chair,
who certainly did start at the sight of us, and afterwards
regarded us at intervals with a darkly suspicious eye,
and, finally, I believe, said something to his nurse
about us, I doubt if a solitary person remarked our
sudden appearance among them. Plop! We must
have appeared abruptly. We ceased to smoulder
almost at once, though the turf beneath me was uncomfortably
hot. The attention of every one— including
even the Amusements’ Association band, which
on this occasion, for the only time in its history,
got out of tune—was arrested by the amazing
fact, and the still more amazing yapping and uproar
caused by the fact, that a respectable, over-fed lapdog
sleeping quietly to the east of the bandstand should
suddenly fall through the parasol of a lady on the
west—in a slightly singed condition due
to the extreme velocity of its movements through the
air. In these absurd days, too, when we are all
trying to be as psychic, and silly, and superstitious
as possible! People got up and trod on other
people, chairs were overturned, the Leas policeman
ran. How the matter settled itself I do not know—we
were much too anxious to disentangle ourselves from
the affair and get out of range of the eye of the
old gentleman in the bath-chair to make minute inquiries.
As soon as we were sufficiently cool and sufficiently
recovered from our giddiness and nausea and confusion
of mind to do so we stood up, and skirting the crowd,
directed our steps back along the road below the Metropole
towards Gibberne’s house. But amidst the
din I heard very distinctly the gentleman who had
been sitting beside the lady of the ruptured sunshade
using quite unjustifiable threats and language to one
of those chair-attendants who have “Inspector”
written on their caps: “If you didn’t
throw the dog,” he said, “who did?”
The sudden return of movement and
familiar noises, and our natural anxiety about ourselves
(our clothes were still dreadfully hot, and the fronts
of the thighs of Gibberne’s white trousers were
scorched a drabbish brown), prevented the minute observations
I should have liked to make on all these things.
Indeed, I really made no observations of any scientific
value on that return. The bee, of course, had
gone. I looked for that cyclist, but he was already
out of sight as we came into the Upper Sandgate Road
or hidden from us by traffic; the char-à-banc,
however, with its people now all alive and stirring,
was clattering along at a spanking pace almost abreast
of the nearer church.
We noted, however, that the window-sill
on which we had stepped in getting out of the house
was slightly singed, and that the impressions of our
feet on the gravel of the path were unusually deep.
So it was I had my first experience
of the New Accelerator. Practically we had been
running about and saying and doing all sorts of things
in the space of a second or so of time. We had
lived half an hour while the band had played, perhaps,
two bars. But the effect it had upon us was that
the whole world had stopped for our convenient inspection.
Considering all things, and particularly considering
our rashness in venturing out of the house, the experience
might certainly have been much more disagreeable than
it was. It showed, no doubt, that Gibberne has
still much to learn before his preparation is a manageable
convenience, but its practicability it certainly demonstrated
beyond all cavil.
Since that adventure he has been steadily
bringing its use under control, and I have several
times, and without the slightest bad result, taken
measured doses under his direction; though I must confess
I have not yet ventured abroad again while under its
influence. I may mention, for example, that this
story has been written at one sitting and without
interruption, except for the nibbling of some chocolate,
by its means. I began at 6.25, and my watch is
now very nearly at the minute past the half-hour.
The convenience of securing a long, uninterrupted spell
of work in the midst of a day full of engagements
cannot be exaggerated. Gibberne is now working
at the quantitative handling of his preparation, with
especial reference to its distinctive effects upon
different types of constitution. He then hopes
to find a Retarder, with which to dilute its present
rather excessive potency. The Retarder will, of
course, have the reverse effect to the Accelerator;
used alone it should enable the patient to spread
a few seconds over many hours of ordinary time, and
so to maintain an apathetic inaction, a glacier-like
absence of alacrity, amidst the most animated or irritating
surroundings. The two things together must necessarily
work an entire revolution in civilised existence.
It is the beginning of our escape from that Time Garment
of which Carlyle speaks. While this Accelerator
will enable us to concentrate ourselves with tremendous
impact upon any moment or occasion that demands our
utmost sense and vigour, the Retarder will enable
us to pass in passive tranquillity through infinite
hardship and tedium. Perhaps I am a little optimistic
about the Retarder, which has indeed still to be discovered,
but about the Accelerator there is no possible sort
of doubt whatever. Its appearance upon the market
in a convenient, controllable, and assimilable form
is a matter of the next few months. It will be
obtainable of all chemists and druggists, in small
green bottles, at a high but, considering its extraordinary
qualities, by no means excessive price. Gibberne’s
Nervous Accelerator it will be called, and he hopes
to be able to supply it in three strengths: one
in 200, one in 900, and one in 2000, distinguished
by yellow, pink, and white labels respectively.
No doubt its use renders a great number
of very extraordinary things possible; for, of course,
the most remarkable and, possibly, even criminal proceedings
may be effected with impunity by thus dodging, as it
were, into the interstices of time. Like all
potent preparations, it will be liable to abuse.
We have, however, discussed this aspect of the question
very thoroughly, and we have decided that this is purely
a matter of medical jurisprudence and altogether outside
our province. We shall manufacture and sell the
Accelerator, and as for the consequences—we
shall see.