IN THE SILENT ROOMS
Presently Graham resumed his examination
of his apartments. Curiosity kept him moving
in spite of his fatigue. The inner room, he perceived,
was high, and its ceiling dome shaped, with an oblong
aperture in the centre, opening into a funnel in which
a wheel of broad vanes seemed to be rotating, apparently
driving the air up the shaft. The faint humming
note of its easy motion was the only clear sound in
that quiet place. As these vanes sprang up one
after the other, Graham could get transient glimpses
of the sky. He was surprised to see a star.
This drew his attention to the fact
that the bright lighting of these rooms was due to
a multitude of very faint glow lamps set about the
cornices. There were no windows. And he began
to recall that along all the vast chambers and passages
he had traversed with Howard he had observed no windows
at all. Had there been windows? There were
windows on the street indeed, but were they for light?
Or was the whole city lit day and night for evermore,
so that there was no night there?
And another thing dawned upon him.
There was no fireplace in either room. Was the
season summer, and were these merely summer apartments,
or was the whole city uniformly heated or cooled?
He became interested in these questions, began examining
the smooth texture of the walls, the simply constructed
bed, the ingenious arrangements by which the labour
of bedroom service was practically abolished.
And over everything was a curious absence of deliberate
ornament, a bare grace of form and colour, that he
found very pleasing to the eye. There were several
very comfortable chairs, a light table on silent runners
carrying several bottles of fluids and glasses, and
two plates bearing a clear substance like jelly.
Then he noticed there were no books, no newspapers,
no writing materials. “The world has changed
indeed,” he said.
He observed one entire side of the
outer room was set with rows of peculiar double cylinders
inscribed with green lettering on white that harmonized
with the decorative scheme of the room, and in the
centre of this side projected a little apparatus about
a yard square and having a white smooth face to the
room. A chair faced this. He had a transitory
idea that these cylinders might be books, or a modern
substitute for books, but at first it did not seem
so.
The lettering on the cylinders puzzled
him. At first sight it seemed like Russian.
Then he noticed a suggestion of mutilated English about
certain of the words.
“Thi Man huwdbi Kin” forced
itself on him as “The Man who would be King.”
“Phonetic spelling,” he
said. He remembered reading a story with that
title, then he recalled the story vividly, one of the
best stories in the world. But this thing before
him was not a book as he understood it. He puzzled
out the titles of two adjacent cylinders. “The
Heart of Darkness” he had never heard of before
nor “The Madonna of the Future”—no
doubt if they were indeed stories, they were by post-Victorian
authors.
He puzzled over this peculiar cylinder
for some time and replaced it. Then he turned
to the square apparatus and examined that. He
opened a sort of lid and found one of the double cylinders
within, and on the upper edge a little stud like the
stud of an electric bell. He pressed this and
a rapid clicking began and ceased. He became aware
of voices and music, and noticed a play of colour
on the smooth front face. He suddenly realised
what this might be, and stepped back to regard it.
On the flat surface was now a little
picture, very vividly coloured, and in this picture
were figures that moved. Not only did they move,
but they were conversing in clear small voices.
It was exactly like reality viewed through an inverted
opera glass and heard through a long tube. His
interest was seized at once by the situation, which
presented a man pacing up and down and vociferating
angry things to a pretty but petulant woman.
Both were in the picturesque costume that seemed so
strange to Graham. “I have worked,”
said the man, “but what have you been doing?”
“Ah!” said Graham.
He forgot everything else, and sat down in the chair.
Within five minutes he heard himself, named, heard
“when the Sleeper wakes,” used jestingly
as a proverb for remote postponement, and passed himself
by, a thing remote and incredible. But in a little
while he knew those two people like intimate friends.
At last the miniature drama came to
an end, and the square face of the apparatus was blank
again.
It was a strange world into which
he had been permitted to see, unscrupulous, pleasure
seeking, energetic, subtle, a world too of dire economic
struggle; there were allusions he did not understand,
incidents that conveyed strange suggestions of altered
moral ideals, flashes of dubious enlightenment.
The blue canvas that bulked so largely in his first
impression of the city ways appeared again and again
as the costume of the common people. He had no
doubt the story was contemporary, and its intense
realism was undeniable. And the end had been a
tragedy that oppressed him. He sat staring at
the blankness.
He started and rubbed his eyes.
He had been so absorbed in the latter-day substitute
for a novel, that he awoke to the little green and
white room with more than a touch of the surprise
of his first awakening.
He stood up, and abruptly he was back
in his own wonderland. The clearness of the kinetoscope
drama passed, and the struggle in the vast place of
streets, the ambiguous Council, the swift phases of
his waking hour, came back. These people had
spoken of the Council with suggestions of a vague
universality of power. And they had spoken of
the Sleeper; it had not really struck him vividly
at the time that he was the Sleeper. He had to
recall precisely what they had said….
He walked into the bedroom and peered
up through the quick intervals of the revolving fan.
As the fan swept round, a dim turmoil like the noise
of machinery came in rhythmic eddies. All else
was silence. Though the perpetual day still irradiated
his apartments, he perceived the little intermittent
strip of sky was now deep blue—black almost,
with a dust of little stars….
He resumed his examination of the
rooms. He could find no way of opening the padded
door, no bell nor other means of calling for attendance.
His feeling of wonder was in abeyance; but he was
curious, anxious for information. He wanted to
know exactly how he stood to these new things.
He tried to compose himself to wait until someone came
to him. Presently he became restless and eager
for information, for distraction, for fresh sensations.
He went back to the apparatus in the
other room, and had soon puzzled out the method of
replacing the cylinders by others. As he did so,
it came into his mind that it must be these little
appliances had fixed the language so that it was still
clear and understandable after two hundred years.
The haphazard cylinders he substituted displayed a
musical fantasia. At first it was beautiful,
and then it was sensuous. He presently recognised
what appeared to him to be an altered version of the
story of Tannhauser. The music was unfamiliar.
But the rendering was realistic, and with a contemporary
unfamiliarity. Tannhauser did not go to a Venusberg,
but to a Pleasure City. What was a Pleasure City?
A dream, surely, the fancy of a fantastic, voluptuous
writer.
He became interested, curious.
The story developed with a flavour of strangely twisted
sentimentality. Suddenly he did not like it.
He liked it less as it proceeded.
He had a revulsion of feeling.
These were no pictures, no idealisations, but photographed
realities. He wanted no more of the twenty-second
century Venusberg. He forgot the part played by
the model in nineteenth century art, and gave way
to an archaic indignation. He rose, angry and
half ashamed at himself for witnessing this thing even
in solitude. He pulled forward the apparatus,
and with some violence sought for a means of stopping
its action. Something snapped. A violet spark
stung and convulsed his arm and the thing was still.
When he attempted next day to replace these Tannhauser
cylinders by another pair, he found the apparatus
broken….
He struck out a path oblique to the
room and paced to and fro, struggling with intolerable
vast impressions. The things he had derived from
the cylinders and the things he had seen, conflicted,
confused him. It seemed to him the most amazing
thing of all that in his thirty years of life he had
never tried to shape a picture of these coming times.
“We were making the future,” he said,
“and hardly any of us troubled to think what
future we were making. And here it is!”
“What have they got to, what
has been done? How do I come into the midst of
it all?” The vastness of street and house he
was prepared for, the multitudes of people. But
conflicts in the city ways! And the systematised
sensuality of a class of rich men!
He thought of Bellamy, the hero of
whose Socialistic Utopia had so oddly anticipated
this actual experience. But here was no Utopia,
no Socialistic state. He had already seen enough
to realise that the ancient antithesis of luxury,
waste and sensuality on the one hand and abject poverty
on the other, still prevailed. He knew enough
of the essential factors of life to understand that
correlation. And not only were the buildings
of the city gigantic and the crowds in the street gigantic,
but the voices he had heard in the ways, the uneasiness
of Howard, the very atmosphere spoke of gigantic discontent.
What country was he in? Still England it seemed,
and yet strangely “un-English.” His
mind glanced at the rest of the world, and saw only
an enigmatical veil.
He prowled about his apartment, examining
everything as a caged animal might do. He was
very tired, with that feverish exhaustion that does
not admit of rest. He listened for long spaces
under the ventilator to catch some distant echo of
the tumults he felt must be proceeding in the city.
He began to talk to himself.
“Two hundred and three years!” he said
to himself over and over again, laughing stupidly.
“Then I am two hundred and thirty-three years
old! The oldest inhabitant. Surely they haven’t
reversed the tendency of our time and gone back to
the rule of the oldest. My claims are indisputable.
Mumble, mumble. I remember the Bulgarian atrocities
as though it was yesterday. ’Tis a great
age! Ha ha!” He was surprised at first
to hear himself laughing, and then laughed again deliberately
and louder. Then he realised that he was behaving
foolishly. “Steady,” he said.
“Steady!”
His pacing became more regular.
“This new world,” he said. “I
don’t understand it. Why? ... But
it is all why!”
“I suppose they can fly and
do all sorts of things. Let me try and remember
just how it began.”
He was surprised at first to find
how vague the memories of his first thirty years had
become. He remembered fragments, for the most
part trivial moments, things of no great importance
that he had observed. His boyhood seemed the
most accessible at first, he recalled school books
and certain lessons in mensuration. Then he revived
the more salient features of his life, memories of
the wife long since dead, her magic influence now
gone beyond corruption, of his rivals and friends and
betrayers, of the decision of this issue and that,
and then of his last years of misery, of fluctuating
resolves, and at last of his strenuous studies.
In a little while he perceived he had it all again;
dim perhaps, like metal long laid aside, but in no
way defective or injured, capable of re-polishing.
And the hue of it was a deepening misery. Was
it worth re-polishing? By a miracle he had been
lifted out of a life that had become intolerable….
He reverted to his present condition.
He wrestled with the facts in vain. It became
an inextricable tangle. He saw the sky through
the ventilator pink with dawn. An old persuasion
came out of the dark recesses of his memory.
“I must sleep,” he said. It appeared
as a delightful relief from this mental distress and
from the growing pain and heaviness of his limbs.
He went to the strange little bed, lay down and was
presently asleep….
He was destined to become very familiar
indeed with these apartments before he left them,
for he remained imprisoned for three days. During
that time no one, except Howard, entered the rooms.
The marvel of his fate mingled with and in some way
minimised the marvel of his survival. He had
awakened to mankind it seemed only to be snatched away
into this unaccountable solitude. Howard came
regularly with subtly sustaining and nutritive fluids,
and light and pleasant foods, quite strange to Graham.
He always closed the door carefully as he entered.
On matters of detail he was increasingly obliging,
but the bearing of Graham on the great issues that
were evidently being contested so closely beyond the
sound-proof walls that enclosed him, he would not elucidate.
He evaded, as politely as possible, every question
on the position of affairs in the outer world.
And in those three days Graham’s
incessant thoughts went far and wide. All that
he had seen, all this elaborate contrivance to prevent
him seeing, worked together in his mind. Almost
every possible interpretation of his position he debated—even
as it chanced, the right interpretation. Things
that presently happened to him, came to him at last
credible, by virtue of this seclusion. When at
length the moment of his release arrived, it found
him prepared….
Howard’s bearing went far to
deepen Graham’s impression of his own strange
importance; the door between its opening and closing
seemed to admit with him a breath of momentous happening.
His enquiries became more definite and searching.
Howard retreated through protests and difficulties.
The awakening was unforeseen, he repeated; it happened
to have fallen in with the trend of a social convulsion.
“To explain it I must tell you the history of
a gross and a half of years,” protested Howard.
“The thing is this,” said
Graham. “You are afraid of something I shall
do. In some way I am arbitrator—I might
be arbitrator.”
“It is not that. But you
have—I may tell you this much—the
automatic increase of your property puts great possibilities
of interference in your hands. And in certain
other ways you have influence, with your eighteenth
century notions.”
“Nineteenth century,” corrected Graham.
“With your old world notions,
anyhow, ignorant as you are of every feature of our
State.”
“Am I a fool?”
“Certainly not.”
“Do I seem to be the sort of man who would act
rashly?”
“You were never expected to
act at all. No one counted on your awakening.
No one dreamt you would ever awake. The Council
had surrounded you with antiseptic conditions.
As a matter of fact, we thought that you were dead—a
mere arrest of decay. And—but it is
too complex. We dare not suddenly—–while
you are still half awake.”
“It won’t do,” said
Graham. “Suppose it is as you say—why
am I not being crammed night and day with facts and
warnings and all the wisdom of the time to fit me
for my responsibilities? Am I any wiser now than
two days ago, if it is two days, when I awoke?”
Howard pulled his lip.
“I am beginning to feel—every
hour I feel more clearly—a system of concealment
of which you are the face. Is this Council, or
committee, or whatever they are, cooking the accounts
of my estate? Is that it?”
“That note of suspicion—” said
Howard.
“Ugh!” said Graham.
“Now, mark my words, it will be ill for those
who have put me here. It will be ill. I
am alive. Make no doubt of it, I am alive.
Every day my pulse is stronger and my mind clearer
and more vigorous. No more quiescence. I
am a man come back to life. And I want to live—”
“Live!”
Howard’s face lit with an idea.
He came towards Graham and spoke in an easy confidential
tone.
“The Council secludes you here
for your good. You are restless. Naturally—an
energetic man! You find it dull here. But
we are anxious that everything you may desire—every
desire—every sort of desire … There
may be something. Is there any sort of company?”
He paused meaningly.
“Yes,” said Graham thoughtfully.
“There is.”
“Ah! Now! We have treated you neglectfully.”
“The crowds in yonder streets of yours.”
“That,” said Howard, “I am afraid—But—”
Graham began pacing the room.
Howard stood near the door watching him. The
implication of Howard’s suggestion was only half
evident to Graham. Company? Suppose he were
to accept the proposal, demand some sort of company?
Would there be any possibilities of gathering from
the conversation of this additional person some vague
inkling of the struggle that had broken out so vividly
at his waking moment? He meditated again, and
the suggestion took colour. He turned on Howard
abruptly.
“What do you mean by company?”
Howard raised his eyes and shrugged
his shoulders. “Human beings,” he
said, with a curious smile on his heavy face.
“Our social ideas,” he said, “have
a certain increased liberality, perhaps, in comparison
with your times. If a man wishes to relieve such
a tedium as this—by feminine society, for
instance. We think it no scandal. We have
cleared our minds of formulae. There is in our
city a class, a necessary class, no longer despised—discreet—”
Graham stopped dead.
“It would pass the time,”
said Howard. “It is a thing I should perhaps
have thought of before, but, as a matter of fact, so
much is happening—”
He indicated the exterior world.
Graham hesitated. For a moment
the figure of a possible woman dominated his mind
with an intense attraction. Then he flashed into
anger.
“No!” he shouted.
He began striding rapidly up and down
the room. “Everything you say, everything
you do, convinces me—of some great issue
in which I am concerned. I do not want to pass
the time, as you call it. Yes, I know. Desire
and indulgence are life in a sense—and Death!
Extinction! In my life before I slept I had worked
out that pitiful question. I will not begin again.
There is a city, a multitude—. And meanwhile
I am here like a rabbit in a bag.”
His rage surged high. He choked
for a moment and began to wave his clenched fists.
He gave way to an anger fit, he swore archaic curses.
His gestures had the quality of physical threats.
“I do not know who your party
may be. I am in the dark, and you keep me in
the dark. But I know this, that I am secluded
here for no good purpose. For no good purpose.
I warn you, I warn you of the consequences. Once
I come at my power—”
He realised that to threaten thus
might be a danger to himself. He stopped.
Howard stood regarding him with a curious expression.
“I take it this is a message
to the Council,” said Howard.
Graham had a momentary impulse to
leap upon the man, fell or stun him. It must
have shown upon his face; at any rate Howard’s
movement was quick. In a second the noiseless
door had closed again, and the man from the nineteenth
century was alone.
For a moment he stood rigid, with
clenched hands half raised. Then he flung them
down. “What a fool I have been!” he
said, and gave way to his anger again, stamping about
the room and shouting curses…. For a long time
he kept himself in a sort of frenzy, raging at his
position, at his own folly, at the knaves who had
imprisoned him. He did this because he did not
want to look calmly at his position. He clung
to his anger—because he was afraid of fear.
Presently he found himself reasoning
with himself. This imprisonment was unaccountable,
but no doubt the legal forms—new legal forms—of
the time permitted it. It must, of course, be
legal. These people were two hundred years further
on in the march of civilisation than the Victorian
generation. It was not likely they would be less—humane.
Yet they had cleared their minds of formulae!
Was humanity a formula as well as chastity?
His imagination set to work to suggest
things that might be done to him. The attempts
of his reason to dispose of these suggestions, though
for the most part logically valid, were quite unavailing.
“Why should anything be done to me?”
“If the worst comes to the worst,”
he found himself saying at last, “I can give
up what they want. But what do they want?
And why don’t they ask me for it instead of
cooping me up?”
He returned to his former preoccupation
with the Council’s possible intentions.
He began to reconsider the details of Howard’s
behaviour, sinister glances, inexplicable hesitations.
Then, for a time, his mind circled about the idea
of escaping from these rooms; but whither could he
escape into this vast, crowded world? He would
be worse off than a Saxon yeoman suddenly dropped
into nineteenth century London. And besides, how
could anyone escape from these rooms?
“How can it benefit anyone if harm should happen
to me?”
He thought of the tumult, the great
social trouble of which he was so unaccountably the
axis. A text, irrelevant enough, and yet curiously
insistent, came floating up out of the darkness of
his memory. This also a Council had said:
“It is expedient for us that
one man should die for the people.”