FROM THE CROW’S NEST
And so after strange delays and through
an avenue of doubt and battle, this man from the nineteenth
century came at last to his position at the head of
that complex world.
At first when he rose from the long
deep sleep that followed his rescue and the surrender
of the Council, he did not recognise his surroundings.
By an effort he gained a clue in his mind, and all
that had happened came back to him, at first with
a quality of insincerity like a story heard, like
something read out of a book. And even before
his memories were clear, the exultation of his escape,
the wonder of his prominence were back in his mind.
He was owner of the world; Master of the Earth.
This new great age was in the completest sense his.
He no longer hoped to discover his experiences a dream;
he became anxious now to convince himself that they
were real.
An obsequious valet assisted him to
dress under the direction of a dignified chief attendant,
a little man whose face proclaimed him Japanese, albeit
he spoke English like an Englishman. From the
latter he learnt something of the state of affairs.
Already the revolution was an accepted fact; already
business was being resumed throughout the city.
Abroad the downfall of the Council had been received
for the most part with delight. Nowhere was the
Council popular, and the thousand cities of Western
America, after two hundred years still jealous of New
York, London, and the East, had risen almost unanimously
two days before at the news of Graham’s imprisonment.
Paris was fighting within itself. The rest of
the world hung in suspense.
While he was breaking his fast, the
sound of a telephone bell jetted from a corner, and
his chief attendant called his attention to the voice
of Ostrog making polite enquiries. Graham interrupted
his refreshment to reply. Very shortly Lincoln
arrived, and Graham at once expressed a strong desire
to talk to people and to be shown more of the new life
that was opening before him. Lincoln informed
him that in three hours’ time a representative
gathering of officials and their wives would be held
in the state apartments of the wind-vane Chief.
Graham’s desire to traverse the ways of the
city was, however, at present impossible, because of
the enormous excitement of the people. It was,
however, quite possible for him to take a bird’s-eye
view of the city from the crow’s nest of the
wind-vane keeper. To this accordingly Graham was
conducted by his attendant. Lincoln; with a graceful
compliment to the attendant, apologised for not accompanying
them, on account of the present pressure of administrative
work.
Higher even than the most gigantic,
wind-wheels hung this crow’s nest, a clear thousand
feet above the roofs, a little disc-shaped speck on
a spear of metallic filigree, cable stayed. To
its summit Graham was drawn in a little wire-hung
cradle. Halfway down the frail-seeming stem was
a light gallery about which hung a cluster of tubes—minute
they looked from above—rotating slowly
on the ring of its outer rail. These were the
specula, en rapport with the wind-vane keeper’s
mirrors, in one of which Ostrog had shown him the
coming of his rule. His Japanese attendant ascended
before him and they spent nearly an hour asking and
answering questions.
It was a day full of the promise and
quality of spring. The touch of the wind warmed.
The sky was an intense blue and the vast expanse of
London shone dazzling under the morning sun.
The air was clear of smoke and haze, sweet as the
air of a mountain glen.
Save for the irregular oval of ruins
about the House of the Council and the black flag
of the surrender that fluttered there, the mighty city
seen from above showed few signs of the swift revolution
that had, to his imagination, in one night and one
day, changed the destinies of the world. A multitude
of people still swarmed over these ruins, and the huge
openwork stagings in the distance from which started
in times of peace the service of aeroplanes to the
various great cities of Europe and America, were also
black with the victors. Across a narrow way of
planking raised on trestles that crossed the ruins
a crowd of workmen were busy restoring the connection
between the cables and wires of the Council House
and the rest of the city, preparatory to the transfer
thither of Ostrog’s headquarters from the Wind-Vane
buildings.
For the rest the luminous expanse
was undisturbed. So vast was its serenity in
comparison with the areas of disturbance, that presently
Graham, looking beyond them, could almost forget the
thousands of men lying out of sight in the artificial
glare within the quasi-subterranean labyrinth, dead
or dying of the overnight wounds, forget the improvised
wards with the hosts of surgeons, nurses, and bearers
feverishly busy, forget, indeed, all the wonder, consternation
and novelty under the electric lights. Down there
in the hidden ways of the anthill he knew that the
revolution triumphed, that black everywhere carried
the day, black favours, black banners, black festoons
across the streets. And out here, under the fresh
sunlight, beyond the crater of the fight, as if nothing
had happened to the earth, the forest of wind vanes
that had grown from one or two while the Council had
ruled, roared peacefully upon their incessant duty.
Far away, spiked, jagged and indented
by the wind vanes, the Surrey Hills rose blue and
faint; to the north and nearer, the sharp contours
of Highgate and Muswell Hill were similarly jagged.
And all over the countryside, he knew, on every crest
and hill, where once the hedges had interlaced, and
cottages, churches, inns, and farm houses had nestled
among their trees, wind-wheels similar to those he
saw and bearing like them vast advertisements, gaunt
and distinctive symbols of the new age, cast their
whirling shadows and stored incessantly the energy
that flowed away incessantly through all the arteries
of the city. And underneath these wandered the
countless flocks and herds of the British Food Trust,
his property, with their lonely guards and keepers.
Not a familiar outline anywhere broke
the cluster of gigantic shapes below. St. Paul’s
he knew survived, and many of the old buildings in
Westminster, embedded out of sight, arched over and
covered in among the giant growths of this great age.
The Thames, too, made no fall and gleam of silver
to break the wilderness of the city; the thirsty water
mains drank up every drop of its waters before they
reached the walls. Its bed and estuary, scoured
and sunken, was now a canal of sea water, and a race
of grimy bargemen brought the heavy materials of trade
from the Pool thereby beneath the very feet of the
workers. Faint and dim in the eastward between
earth and sky hung the clustering masts of the colossal
shipping in the Pool. For all the heavy traffic,
for which there was no need of haste, came in gigantic
sailing ships from the ends of the earth, and the
heavy goods for which there was urgency in mechanical
ships of a smaller swifter sort.
And to the south over the hills came
vast aqueducts with sea water for the sewers, and
in three separate directions ran pallid lines—the
roads, stippled with moving grey specks. On the
first occasion that offered he was determined to go
out and see these roads. That would come after
the flying ship he was presently to try. His
attendant officer described them as a pair of gently
curving surfaces a hundred yards wide, each one for
the traffic going in one direction, and made of a substance
called Eadhamite—an artificial substance,
so far as he could gather, resembling toughened glass.
Along this shot a strange traffic of narrow rubber-shod
vehicles, great single wheels, two and four wheeled
vehicles, sweeping along at velocities of from one
to six miles a minute. Railroads had vanished;
a few embankments remained as rust-crowned trenches
here and there. Some few formed the cores of
Eadhamite ways.
Among the first things to strike his
attention had been the great fleets of advertisement
balloons and kites that receded in irregular vistas
northward and southward along the lines of the aeroplane
journeys. No great aeroplanes were to be seen.
Their passages had ceased, and only one little-seeming
monoplane circled high in the blue distance above the
Surrey Hills, an unimpressive soaring speck.
A thing Graham had already learnt,
and which he found very hard to imagine, was that
nearly all the towns in the country, and almost all
the villages, had disappeared. Here and there
only, he understood, some gigantic hotel-like edifice
stood amid square miles of some single cultivation
and preserved the name of a town—as Bournemouth,
Wareham, or Swanage. Yet the officer had speedily
convinced him how inevitable such a change had been.
The old order had dotted the country with farmhouses,
and every two or three miles was the ruling landlord’s
estate, and the place of the inn and cobbler, the
grocer’s shop and church—the village.
Every eight miles or so was the country town, where
lawyer, corn merchant, wool-stapler, saddler, veterinary
surgeon, doctor, draper, milliner and so forth lived.
Every eight miles—simply because that eight
mile marketing journey, four there and back, was as
much as was comfortable for the farmer. But directly
the railways came into play, and after them the light
railways, and all the swift new motor cars that had
replaced waggons and horses, and so soon as the high
roads began to be made of wood, and rubber, and Eadhamite,
and all sorts of elastic durable substances—the
necessity of having such frequent market towns disappeared.
And the big towns grew. They drew the worker with
the gravitational force of seemingly endless work,
the employer with their suggestion of an infinite
ocean of labour.
And as the standard of comfort rose,
as the complexity of the mechanism of living increased,
life in the country had become more and more costly,
or narrow and impossible. The disappearance of
vicar and squire, the extinction of the general practitioner
by the city specialist; had robbed the village of
its last touch of culture. After telephone, kinematograph
and phonograph had replaced newspaper, book, schoolmaster,
and letter, to live outside the range of the electric
cables was to live an isolated savage. In the
country were neither means of being clothed nor fed
(according to the refined conceptions of the time),
no efficient doctors for an emergency, no company
and no pursuits.
Moreover, mechanical appliances in
agriculture made one engineer the equivalent of thirty
labourers. So, inverting the condition of the
city clerk in the days when London was scarce inhabitable
because of the coaly foulness of its air, the labourers
now came to the city and its life and delights at
night to leave it again in the morning. The city
had swallowed up humanity; man had entered upon a
new stage in his development. First had come
the nomad, the hunter, then had followed the agriculturist
of the agricultural state, whose towns and cities and
ports were but the headquarters and markets of the
countryside. And now, logical consequence of
an epoch of invention, was this huge new aggregation
of men.
Such things as these, simple statements
of fact though they were to contemporary men, strained
Graham’s imagination to picture. And when
he glanced “over beyond there” at the
strange things that existed on the Continent, it failed
him altogether.
He had a vision of city beyond city;
cities on great plains, cities beside great rivers,
vast cities along the sea margin, cities girdled by
snowy mountains. Over a great part of the earth
the English tongue was spoken; taken together with
its Spanish American and Hindoo and Negro and “Pidgin”
dialects, it was the everyday-language of two-thirds
of humanity. On the Continent, save as remote
and curious survivals, three other languages alone
held sway—German, which reached to Antioch
and Genoa and jostled Spanish-English at Cadiz; a
Gallicised Russian which met the Indian English in
Persia and Kurdistan and the “Pidgin” English
in Pekin; and French still clear and brilliant, the
language of lucidity, which shared the Mediterranean
with the Indian English and German and reached through
a negro dialect to the Congo.
And everywhere now through the city-set
earth, save in the administered “black belt”
territories of the tropics, the same cosmopolitan social
organisation prevailed, and everywhere from Pole to
Equator his property and his responsibilities extended.
The whole world was civilised; the whole world dwelt
in cities; the whole world was his property….
Out of the dim south-west, glittering
and strange, voluptuous, and in some way terrible,
shone those Pleasure Cities of which the kinematograph-phonograph
and the old man in the street had spoken. Strange
places reminiscent of the legendary Sybaris, cities
of art and beauty, mercenary art and mercenary beauty,
sterile wonderful cities of motion and music, whither
repaired all who profited by the fierce, inglorious,
economic struggle that went on in the glaring labyrinth
below.
Fierce he knew it was. How fierce
he could judge from the fact that these latter-day
people referred back to the England of the nineteenth
century as the figure of an idyllic easy-going life.
He turned his eyes to the scene immediately before
him again, trying to conceive the big factories of
that intricate maze….