“AND now, Prendick, I will explain,”
said Doctor Moreau, so soon as we had eaten and drunk.
“I must confess that you are the most dictatorial
guest I ever entertained. I warn you that this
is the last I shall do to oblige you. The next
thing you threaten to commit suicide about, I shan’t
do,—even at some personal inconvenience.”
He sat in my deck chair, a cigar half
consumed in his white, dexterous-looking fingers.
The light of the swinging lamp fell on his white
hair; he stared through the little window out at the
starlight. I sat as far away from him as possible,
the table between us and the revolvers to hand.
Montgomery was not present. I did not care to
be with the two of them in such a little room.
“You admit that the vivisected
human being, as you called it, is, after all, only
the puma?” said Moreau. He had made me
visit that horror in the inner room, to assure myself
of its inhumanity.
“It is the puma,” I said,
“still alive, but so cut and mutilated as I
pray I may never see living flesh again. Of all
vile—”
“Never mind that,” said
Moreau; “at least, spare me those youthful horrors.
Montgomery used to be just the same. You admit
that it is the puma. Now be quiet, while I reel
off my physiological lecture to you.”
And forthwith, beginning in the tone
of a man supremely bored, but presently warming a
little, he explained his work to me. He was very
simple and convincing. Now and then there was
a touch of sarcasm in his voice. Presently I
found myself hot with shame at our mutual positions.
The creatures I had seen were not
men, had never been men. They were animals, humanised
animals,—triumphs of vivisection.
“You forget all that a skilled
vivisector can do with living things,” said
Moreau. “For my own part, I’m puzzled
why the things I have done here have not been done
before. Small efforts, of course, have been
made,—amputation, tongue-cutting, excisions.
Of course you know a squint may be induced or cured
by surgery? Then in the case of excisions you
have all kinds of secondary changes, pigmentary disturbances,
modifications of the passions, alterations in the
secretion of fatty tissue. I have no doubt you
have heard of these things?”
“Of course,” said I. “But these
foul creatures of yours—”
“All in good time,” said
he, waving his hand at me; “I am only beginning.
Those are trivial cases of alteration. Surgery
can do better things than that. There is building
up as well as breaking down and changing. You
have heard, perhaps, of a common surgical operation
resorted to in cases where the nose has been destroyed:
a flap of skin is cut from the forehead, turned down
on the nose, and heals in the new position. This
is a kind of grafting in a new position of part of
an animal upon itself. Grafting of freshly obtained
material from another animal is also possible,—the
case of teeth, for example. The grafting of skin
and bone is done to facilitate healing: the surgeon
places in the middle of the wound pieces of skin snipped
from another animal, or fragments of bone from a victim
freshly killed. Hunter’s cock-spur—possibly
you have heard of that—flourished on the
bull’s neck; and the rhinoceros rats of the Algerian
zouaves are also to be thought of,—monsters
manufactured by transferring a slip from the tail
of an ordinary rat to its snout, and allowing it to
heal in that position.”
“Monsters manufactured!”
said I. “Then you mean to tell me—”
“Yes. These creatures
you have seen are animals carven and wrought into
new shapes. To that, to the study of the plasticity
of living forms, my life has been devoted. I
have studied for years, gaining in knowledge as I
go. I see you look horrified, and yet I am telling
you nothing new. It all lay in the surface of
practical anatomy years ago, but no one had the temerity
to touch it. It is not simply the outward form
of an animal which I can change. The physiology,
the chemical rhythm of the creature, may also be made
to undergo an enduring modification,—of
which vaccination and other methods of inoculation
with living or dead matter are examples that will,
no doubt, be familiar to you. A similar operation
is the transfusion of blood,—with which
subject, indeed, I began. These are all familiar
cases. Less so, and probably far more extensive,
were the operations of those mediaeval practitioners
who made dwarfs and beggar-cripples, show-monsters,—some
vestiges of whose art still remain in the preliminary
manipulation of the young mountebank or contortionist.
Victor Hugo gives an account of them in ’L’Homme
qui Rit.’—But perhaps my meaning grows
plain now. You begin to see that it is a possible
thing to transplant tissue from one part of an animal
to another, or from one animal to another; to alter
its chemical reactions and methods of growth; to modify
the articulations of its limbs; and, indeed, to change
it in its most intimate structure.
“And yet this extraordinary
branch of knowledge has never been sought as an end,
and systematically, by modern investigators until I
took it up! Some such things have been hit upon
in the last resort of surgery; most of the kindred
evidence that will recur to your mind has been demonstrated
as it were by accident,—by tyrants, by criminals,
by the breeders of horses and dogs, by all kinds of
untrained clumsy-handed men working for their own
immediate ends. I was the first man to take up
this question armed with antiseptic surgery, and with
a really scientific knowledge of the laws of growth.
Yet one would imagine it must have been practised in
secret before. Such creatures as the Siamese
Twins—And in the vaults of the Inquisition.
No doubt their chief aim was artistic torture, but
some at least of the inquisitors must have had a touch
of scientific curiosity.”
“But,” said I, “these things—these
animals talk!”
He said that was so, and proceeded
to point out that the possibility of vivisection does
not stop at a mere physical metamorphosis. A
pig may be educated. The mental structure is
even less determinate than the bodily. In our
growing science of hypnotism we find the promise of
a possibility of superseding old inherent instincts
by new suggestions, grafting upon or replacing the
inherited fixed ideas. Very much indeed of what
we call moral education, he said, is such an artificial
modification and perversion of instinct; pugnacity
is trained into courageous self-sacrifice, and suppressed
sexuality into religious emotion. And the great
difference between man and monkey is in the larynx,
he continued,—in the incapacity to frame
delicately different sound-symbols by which thought
could be sustained. In this I failed to agree
with him, but with a certain incivility he declined
to notice my objection. He repeated that the
thing was so, and continued his account of his work.
I asked him why he had taken the human
form as a model. There seemed to me then, and
there still seems to me now, a strange wickedness
for that choice.
He confessed that he had chosen that
form by chance. “I might just as well
have worked to form sheep into llamas and llamas into
sheep. I suppose there is something in the human
form that appeals to the artistic turn of mind more
powerfully than any animal shape can. But I’ve
not confined myself to man-making. Once or twice—”
He was silent, for a minute perhaps. “These
years! How they have slipped by! And here
I have wasted a day saving your life, and am now wasting
an hour explaining myself!”
“But,” said I, “I
still do not understand. Where is your justification
for inflicting all this pain? The only thing
that could excuse vivisection to me would be some
application—”
“Precisely,” said he.
“But, you see, I am differently constituted.
We are on different platforms. You are a materialist.”
“I am not a materialist,” I began
hotly.
“In my view—in my
view. For it is just this question of pain that
parts us. So long as visible or audible pain
turns you sick; so long as your own pains drive you;
so long as pain underlies your propositions about
sin,—so long, I tell you, you are an animal,
thinking a little less obscurely what an animal feels.
This pain—”
I gave an impatient shrug at such sophistry.
“Oh, but it is such a little
thing! A mind truly opened to what science has
to teach must see that it is a little thing.
It may be that save in this little planet, this speck
of cosmic dust, invisible long before the nearest
star could be attained—it may be, I say,
that nowhere else does this thing called pain occur.
But the laws we feel our way towards—Why,
even on this earth, even among living things, what
pain is there?”
As he spoke he drew a little penknife
from his pocket, opened the smaller blade, and moved
his chair so that I could see his thigh. Then,
choosing the place deliberately, he drove the blade
into his leg and withdrew it.
“No doubt,” he said, “you
have seen that before. It does not hurt a pin-prick.
But what does it show? The capacity for pain
is not needed in the muscle, and it is not placed
there,—is but little needed in the skin,
and only here and there over the thigh is a spot capable
of feeling pain. Pain is simply our intrinsic
medical adviser to warn us and stimulate us.
Not all living flesh is painful; nor is all nerve,
not even all sensory nerve. There’s no
taint of pain, real pain, in the sensations of the
optic nerve. If you wound the optic nerve, you
merely see flashes of light,—just as disease
of the auditory nerve merely means a humming in our
ears. Plants do not feel pain, nor the lower
animals; it’s possible that such animals as
the starfish and crayfish do not feel pain at all.
Then with men, the more intelligent they become,
the more intelligently they will see after their own
welfare, and the less they will need the goad to keep
them out of danger. I never yet heard of a useless
thing that was not ground out of existence by evolution
sooner or later. Did you? And pain gets
needless.
“Then I am a religious man,
Prendick, as every sane man must be. It may be,
I fancy, that I have seen more of the ways of this
world’s Maker than you,—for I have
sought his laws, in my way, all my life, while
you, I understand, have been collecting butterflies.
And I tell you, pleasure and pain have nothing to do
with heaven or hell. Pleasure and pain—bah!
What is your theologian’s ecstasy but Mahomet’s
houri in the dark? This store which men and women
set on pleasure and pain, Prendick, is the mark of
the beast upon them,—the mark of the beast
from which they came! Pain, pain and pleasure,
they are for us only so long as we wriggle in the dust.
“You see, I went on with this
research just the way it led me. That is the
only way I ever heard of true research going.
I asked a question, devised some method of obtaining
an answer, and got a fresh question. Was this
possible or that possible? You cannot imagine
what this means to an investigator, what an intellectual
passion grows upon him! You cannot imagine the
strange, colourless delight of these intellectual desires!
The thing before you is no longer an animal, a fellow-creature,
but a problem! Sympathetic pain,—all
I know of it I remember as a thing I used to suffer
from years ago. I wanted—it was the
one thing I wanted—to find out the extreme
limit of plasticity in a living shape.”
“But,” said I, “the thing is an
abomination—”
“To this day I have never troubled
about the ethics of the matter,” he continued.
“The study of Nature makes a man at last as
remorseless as Nature. I have gone on, not heeding
anything but the question I was pursuing; and the
material has—dripped into the huts yonder.
It is nearly eleven years since we came here, I and
Montgomery and six Kanakas. I remember the green
stillness of the island and the empty ocean about
us, as though it was yesterday. The place seemed
waiting for me.
“The stores were landed and
the house was built. The Kanakas founded some
huts near the ravine. I went to work here upon
what I had brought with me. There were some
disagreeable things happened at first. I began
with a sheep, and killed it after a day and a half
by a slip of the scalpel. I took another sheep,
and made a thing of pain and fear and left it bound
up to heal. It looked quite human to me when
I had finished it; but when I went to it I was discontented
with it. It remembered me, and was terrified
beyond imagination; and it had no more than the wits
of a sheep. The more I looked at it the clumsier
it seemed, until at last I put the monster out of its
misery. These animals without courage, these
fear-haunted, pain-driven things, without a spark
of pugnacious energy to face torment,—they
are no good for man-making.
“Then I took a gorilla I had;
and upon that, working with infinite care and mastering
difficulty after difficulty, I made my first man.
All the week, night and day, I moulded him. With
him it was chiefly the brain that needed moulding;
much had to be added, much changed. I thought
him a fair specimen of the negroid type when I had
finished him, and he lay bandaged, bound, and motionless
before me. It was only when his life was assured
that I left him and came into this room again, and
found Montgomery much as you are. He had heard
some of the cries as the thing grew human,—cries
like those that disturbed you so. I didn’t
take him completely into my confidence at first.
And the Kanakas too, had realised something of it.
They were scared out of their wits by the sight of
me. I got Montgomery over to me—in
a way; but I and he had the hardest job to prevent
the Kanakas deserting. Finally they did; and
so we lost the yacht. I spent many days educating
the brute,—altogether I had him for three
or four months. I taught him the rudiments of
English; gave him ideas of counting; even made the
thing read the alphabet. But at that he was slow,
though I’ve met with idiots slower. He
began with a clean sheet, mentally; had no memories
left in his mind of what he had been. When his
scars were quite healed, and he was no longer anything
but painful and stiff, and able to converse a little,
I took him yonder and introduced him to the Kanakas
as an interesting stowaway.
“They were horribly afraid of
him at first, somehow,—which offended me
rather, for I was conceited about him; but his ways
seemed so mild, and he was so abject, that after a
time they received him and took his education in hand.
He was quick to learn, very imitative and adaptive,
and built himself a hovel rather better, it seemed
to me, than their own shanties. There was one
among the boys a bit of a missionary, and he taught
the thing to read, or at least to pick out letters,
and gave him some rudimentary ideas of morality; but
it seems the beast’s habits were not all that
is desirable.
“I rested from work for some
days after this, and was in a mind to write an account
of the whole affair to wake up English physiology.
Then I came upon the creature squatting up in a tree
and gibbering at two of the Kanakas who had been teasing
him. I threatened him, told him the inhumanity
of such a proceeding, aroused his sense of shame,
and came home resolved to do better before I took my
work back to England. I have been doing better.
But somehow the things drift back again: the
stubborn beast-flesh grows day by day back again.
But I mean to do better things still. I mean
to conquer that. This puma—
“But that’s the story.
All the Kanaka boys are dead now; one fell overboard
of the launch, and one died of a wounded heel that
he poisoned in some way with plant-juice. Three
went away in the yacht, and I suppose and hope were
drowned. The other one—was killed.
Well, I have replaced them. Montgomery went
on much as you are disposed to do at first, and then—
“What became of the other one?”
said I, sharply,—“the other Kanaka
who was killed?”
“The fact is, after I had made
a number of human creatures I made a Thing—”
He hesitated.
“Yes?” said I.
“It was killed.”
“I don’t understand,” said I; “do
you mean to say—”
“It killed the Kanaka—yes.
It killed several other things that it caught.
We chased it for a couple of days. It only got
loose by accident—I never meant it to get
away. It wasn’t finished. It was
purely an experiment. It was a limbless thing,
with a horrible face, that writhed along the ground
in a serpentine fashion. It was immensely strong,
and in infuriating pain. It lurked in the woods
for some days, until we hunted it; and then it wriggled
into the northern part of the island, and we divided
the party to close in upon it. Montgomery insisted
upon coming with me. The man had a rifle; and
when his body was found, one of the barrels was curved
into the shape of an S and very nearly bitten through.
Montgomery shot the thing. After that I stuck
to the ideal of humanity—except for little
things.”
He became silent. I sat in silence watching
his face.
“So for twenty years altogether—counting
nine years in England—I have been going
on; and there is still something in everything I do
that defeats me, makes me dissatisfied, challenges
me to further effort. Sometimes I rise above
my level, sometimes I fall below it; but always I
fall short of the things I dream. The human shape
I can get now, almost with ease, so that it is lithe
and graceful, or thick and strong; but often there
is trouble with the hands and the claws,—painful
things, that I dare not shape too freely. But
it is in the subtle grafting and reshaping one must
needs do to the brain that my trouble lies. The
intelligence is often oddly low, with unaccountable
blank ends, unexpected gaps. And least satisfactory
of all is something that I cannot touch, somewhere—I
cannot determine where—in the seat of the
emotions. Cravings, instincts, desires that harm
humanity, a strange hidden reservoir to burst forth
suddenly and inundate the whole being of the creature
with anger, hate, or fear. These creatures of
mine seemed strange and uncanny to you so soon as
you began to observe them; but to me, just after I
make them, they seem to be indisputably human beings.
It’s afterwards, as I observe them, that the
persuasion fades. First one animal trait, then
another, creeps to the surface and stares out at me.
But I will conquer yet! Each time I dip a living
creature into the bath of burning pain, I say, ’This
time I will burn out all the animal; this time I will
make a rational creature of my own!’ After all,
what is ten years? Men have been a hundred thousand
in the making.” He thought darkly.
“But I am drawing near the fastness. This
puma of mine—” After a silence, “And
they revert. As soon as my hand is taken from
them the beast begins to creep back, begins to assert
itself again.” Another long silence.
“Then you take the things you make into those
dens?” said I.
“They go. I turn them
out when I begin to feel the beast in them, and presently
they wander there. They all dread this house
and me. There is a kind of travesty of humanity
over there. Montgomery knows about it, for he
interferes in their affairs. He has trained one
or two of them to our service. He’s ashamed
of it, but I believe he half likes some of those beasts.
It’s his business, not mine. They only
sicken me with a sense of failure. I take no
interest in them. I fancy they follow in the
lines the Kanaka missionary marked out, and have a
kind of mockery of a rational life, poor beasts!
There’s something they call the Law. Sing
hymns about ‘all thine.’ They build
themselves their dens, gather fruit, and pull herbs—marry
even. But I can see through it all, see into
their very souls, and see there nothing but the souls
of beasts, beasts that perish, anger and the lusts
to live and gratify themselves.—Yet they’re
odd; complex, like everything else alive. There
is a kind of upward striving in them, part vanity,
part waste sexual emotion, part waste curiosity.
It only mocks me. I have some hope of this puma.
I have worked hard at her head and brain—
“And now,” said he, standing
up after a long gap of silence, during which we had
each pursued our own thoughts, “what do you think?
Are you in fear of me still?”
I looked at him, and saw but a white-faced,
white-haired man, with calm eyes. Save for his
serenity, the touch almost of beauty that resulted
from his set tranquillity and his magnificent build,
he might have passed muster among a hundred other
comfortable old gentlemen. Then I shivered.
By way of answer to his second question, I handed
him a revolver with either hand.
“Keep them,” he said,
and snatched at a yawn. He stood up, stared at
me for a moment, and smiled. “You have
had two eventful days,” said he. “I
should advise some sleep. I’m glad it’s
all clear. Good-night.” He thought
me over for a moment, then went out by the inner door.
I immediately turned the key in the
outer one. I sat down again; sat for a time
in a kind of stagnant mood, so weary, emotionally,
mentally, and physically, that I could not think beyond
the point at which he had left me. The black
window stared at me like an eye. At last with
an effort I put out the light and got into the hammock.
Very soon I was asleep.