THE MONOPLANE
The Flying Stages of London were collected
together in an irregular crescent on the southern
side of the river. They formed three groups of
two each and retained the names of ancient suburban
hills or villages. They were named in order,
Roehampton, Wimbledon Park, Streatham, Norwood, Blackheath,
and Shooter’s Hill. They were uniform structures
rising high above the general roof surfaces.
Each was about four thousand yards long and a thousand
broad, and constructed of the compound of aluminum
and iron that had replaced iron in architecture.
Their higher tiers formed an openwork of girders through
which lifts and staircases ascended. The upper
surface was a uniform expanse, with portions—the
starting carriers—that could be raised
and were then able to run on very slightly inclined
rails to the end of the fabric.
Graham went to the flying stages by
the public ways. He was accompanied by Asano,
his Japanese attendant. Lincoln was called away
by Ostrog, who was busy with his administrative concerns.
A strong guard of the Wind-Vane police awaited the
Master outside the Wind-Vane offices, and they cleared
a space for him on the upper moving platform.
His passage to the flying stages was unexpected, nevertheless
a considerable crowd gathered and followed him to
his destination. As he went along, he could hear
the people shouting his name, and saw numberless men
and women and children in blue come swarming up the
staircases in the central path, gesticulating and
shouting. He could not hear what they shouted.
He was struck again by the evident existence of a
vulgar dialect among the poor of the city. When
at last he descended, his guards were immediately
surrounded by a dense excited crowd. Afterwards
it occurred to him that some had attempted to reach
him with petitions. His guards cleared a passage
for him with difficulty.
He found a monoplane in charge of
an aeronaut awaiting him on the westward stage.
Seen close this mechanism was no longer small.
As it lay on its launching carrier upon the wide expanse
of the flying stage, its aluminum body skeleton was
as big as the hull of a twenty-ton yacht. Its
lateral supporting sails braced and stayed with metal
nerves almost like the nerves of a bee’s wing,
and made of some sort of glassy artificial membrane,
cast their shadow over many hundreds of square yards.
The chairs for the engineer and his passenger hung
free to swing by a complex tackle, within the protecting
ribs of the frame and well abaft the middle.
The passenger’s chair was protected by a wind-guard
and guarded about with metallic rods carrying air
cushions. It could, if desired, be completely
closed in, but Graham was anxious for novel experiences,
and desired that it should be left open. The
aeronaut sat behind a glass that sheltered his face.
The passenger could secure himself firmly in his seat,
and this was almost unavoidable on landing, or he could
move along by means of a little rail and rod to a
locker at the stem of the machine, where his personal
luggage, his wraps and restoratives were placed, and
which also with the seats, served as a makeweight to
the parts of the central engine that projected to
the propeller at the stern.
The flying stage about him was empty
save for Asano and their suite of attendants.
Directed by the aeronaut he placed himself in his seat.
Asano stepped through the bars of the hull, and stood
below on the stage waving his hand. He seemed
to slide along the stage to the right and vanish.
The engine was humming loudly, the
propeller spinning, and for a second the stage and
the buildings beyond were gliding swiftly and horizontally
past Graham’s eye; then these things seemed to
tilt up abruptly. He gripped the little rods
on either side of him instinctively. He felt
himself moving upward, heard the air whistle over the
top of the wind screen. The propeller screw moved
round with powerful rhythmic impulses—one,
two, three, pause; one, two, three—which
the engineer controlled very delicately. The
machine began a quivering vibration that continued
throughout the flight, and the roof areas seemed running
away to starboard very quickly and growing rapidly
smaller. He looked from the face of the engineer
through the ribs of the machine. Looking sideways,
there was nothing very startling in what he saw—a
rapid funicular railway might have given the same
sensations. He recognised the Council House and
the Highgate Ridge. And then he looked straight
down between his feet.
For a moment physical terror possessed
him, a passionate sense of insecurity. He held
tight. For a second or so he could not lift his
eyes. Some hundred feet or more sheer below him
was one of the big wind-vanes of south-west London,
and beyond it the southernmost flying stage crowded
with little black dots. These things seemed to
be falling away from him. For a second he had
an impulse to pursue the earth. He set his teeth,
he lifted his eyes by a muscular effort, and the moment
of panic passed.
He remained for a space with his teeth
set hard, his eyes staring into the sky. Throb,
throb, throb—beat, went the engine; throb,
throb, throb—beat. He gripped his
bars tightly, glanced at the aeronaut, and saw a smile
upon his sun-tanned face. He smiled in return—perhaps
a little artificially. “A little strange
at first,” he shouted before he recalled his
dignity. But he dared not look down again for
some time. He stared over the aeronaut’s
head to where a rim of vague blue horizon crept up
the sky. For a little while he could not banish
the thought of possible accidents from his mind.
Throb, throb, throb—beat; suppose some
trivial screw went wrong in that supporting engine!
Suppose—! He made a grim effort to dismiss
all such suppositions. After a while they did
at least abandon the foreground of his thoughts.
And up he went steadily, higher and higher into the
clear air.
Once the mental shock of moving unsupported
through the air was over, his sensations ceased to
be unpleasant, became very speedily pleasurable.
He had been warned of air sickness. But he found
the pulsating movement of the monoplane as it drove
up the faint south-west breeze was very little in
excess of the pitching of a boat head on to broad
rollers in a moderate gale, and he was constitutionally
a good sailor. And the keenness of the more rarefied
air into which they ascended produced a sense of lightness
and exhilaration. He looked up and saw the blue
sky above fretted with cirrus clouds. His eye
came cautiously down through the ribs and bars to
a shining flight of white birds that hung in the lower
sky. For a space he watched these. Then
going lower and less apprehensively, he saw the slender
figure of the Wind-Vane keeper’s crow’s
nest shining golden in the sunlight and growing smaller
every moment. As his eye fell with more confidence
now, there came a blue line of hills, and then London,
already to leeward, an intricate space of roofing.
Its near edge came sharp and clear, and banished his
last apprehensions in a shock of surprise. For
the boundary of London was like a wall, like a cliff,
a steep fall of three or four hundred feet, a frontage
broken only by terraces here and there, a complex
decorative façade.
That gradual passage of town into
country through an extensive sponge of suburbs, which
was so characteristic a feature of the great cities
of the nineteenth century, existed no longer.
Nothing remained of it here but a waste of ruins,
variegated and dense with thickets of the heterogeneous
growths that had once adorned the gardens of the belt,
interspersed among levelled brown patches of sown
ground, and verdant stretches of winter greens.
The latter even spread among the vestiges of houses.
But for the most part the reefs and skerries of ruins,
the wreckage of suburban villas, stood among their
streets and roads, queer islands amidst the levelled
expanses of green and brown, abandoned indeed by the
inhabitants years since, but too substantial, it seemed,
to be cleared out of the way of the wholesale horticultural
mechanisms of the time.
The vegetation of this waste undulated
and frothed amidst the countless cells of crumbling
house walls, and broke along the foot of the city wall
in a surf of bramble and holly and ivy and teazle and
tall grasses. Here and there gaudy pleasure palaces
towered amidst the puny remains of Victorian times,
and cable ways slanted to them from the city.
That winter day they seemed deserted. Deserted,
too, were the artificial gardens among the ruins.
The city limits were indeed as sharply defined as
in the ancient days when the gates were shut at nightfall
and the robber foeman prowled to the very walls.
A huge semi-circular throat poured out a vigorous
traffic upon the Eadhamite Bath Road. So the first
prospect of the world beyond the city flashed on Graham,
and dwindled. And when at last he could look
vertically downward again, he saw below him the vegetable
fields of the Thames valley—innumerable
minute oblongs of ruddy brown, intersected by shining
threads, the sewage ditches.
His exhilaration increased rapidly,
became a sort of intoxication. He found himself
drawing deep breaths of air, laughing aloud, desiring
to shout. After a time that desire became too
strong for him, and he shouted. They curved about
towards the south. They drove with a slight list
to leeward, and with a slow alternation of movement,
first a short, sharp ascent and then a long downward
glide that was very swift and pleasing. During
these downward glides the propeller was inactive altogether.
These ascents gave Graham a glorious sense of successful
effort; the descents through the rarefied air were
beyond all experience. He wanted never to leave
the upper air again.
For a time he was intent upon the
landscape that ran swiftly northward beneath him.
Its minute, clear detail pleased him exceedingly.
He was impressed by the ruin of the houses that had
once dotted the country, by the vast treeless expanse
of country from which all farms and villages had gone,
save for crumbling ruins. He had known the thing
was so, but seeing it so was an altogether different
matter. He tried to make out familiar places
within the hollow basin of the world below, but at
first he could distinguish no data now that the Thames
valley was left behind. Soon, however, they were
driving over a sharp chalk hill that he recognised
as the Guildford Hog’s Back, because of the familiar
outline of the gorge at its eastward end, and because
of the ruins of the town that rose steeply on either
lip of this gorge. And from that he made out
other points, Leith Hill, the sandy wastes of Aldershot,
and so forth. Save where the broad Eadhamite
Portsmouth Road, thickly dotted with rushing shapes,
followed the course of the old railway, the gorge of
the wey was choked with thickets.
The whole expanse of the Downs escarpment,
so far as the grey haze permitted him to see, was
set with wind-wheels to which the largest of the city
was but a younger brother. They stirred with a
stately motion before the south-west wind. And
here and there were patches dotted with the sheep
of the British Food Trust, and here and there a mounted
shepherd made a spot of black. Then rushing under
the stern of the monoplane came the Wealden Heights,
the line of Hindhead, Pitch Hill, and Leith Hill,
with a second row of wind-wheels that seemed striving
to rob the downland whirlers of their share of breeze.
The purple heather was speckled with yellow gorse,
and on the further side a drove of black oxen stampeded
before a couple of mounted men. Swiftly these
swept behind, and dwindled and lost colour, and became
scarce moving specks that were swallowed up in haze.
And when these had vanished in the
distance Graham heard a peewit wailing close at hand.
He perceived he was now above the South Downs, and
staring over his shoulder saw the battlements of Portsmouth
Landing Stage towering over the ridge of Portsdown
Hill. In another moment there came into sight
a spread of shipping like floating cities, the little
white cliffs of the Needles dwarfed and sunlit, and
the grey and glittering waters of the narrow sea.
They seemed to leap the Solent in a moment, and in
a few seconds the Isle of Wight was running past, and
then beneath him spread a wider and wider extent of
sea, here purple with the shadow of a cloud, here
grey, here a burnished mirror, and here a spread of
cloudy greenish blue. The Isle of Wight grew
smaller and smaller. In a few more minutes a
strip of grey haze detached itself from other strips
that were clouds, descended out of the sky and became
a coast-line—sunlit and pleasant—the
coast of northern France. It rose, it took colour,
became definite and detailed, and the counterpart
of the Downland of England was speeding by below.
In a little time, as it seemed, Paris
came above the horizon, and hung there for a space,
and sank out of sight again as the monoplane circled
about to the north. But he perceived the Eiffel
Tower still standing, and beside it a huge dome surmounted
by a pin-point Colossus. And he perceived, too,
though he did not understand it at the time, a slanting
drift of smoke. The aeronaut said something about
“trouble in the under-ways,” that Graham
did not heed. But he marked the minarets and
towers and slender masses that streamed skyward above
the city wind-vanes, and knew that in the matter of
grace at least Paris still kept in front of her larger
rival. And even as he looked a pale blue shape
ascended very swiftly from the city like a dead leaf
driving up before a gale. It curved round and
soared towards them, growing rapidly larger and larger.
The aeronaut was saying something. “What?”
said Graham, loth to take his eyes from this.
“London aeroplane, Sire,” bawled the aeronaut,
pointing.
They rose and curved about northward
as it drew nearer. Nearer it came and nearer,
larger and larger. The throb, throb, throb—beat,
of the monoplane’s flight, that had seemed so
potent, and so swift, suddenly appeared slow by comparison
with this tremendous rush. How great the monster
seemed, how swift and steady! It passed quite
closely beneath them, driving along silently, a vast
spread of wire-netted translucent wings, a thing alive.
Graham had a momentary glimpse of the rows and rows
of wrapped-up passengers, slung in their little cradles
behind wind-screens, of a white-clothed engineer crawling
against the gale along a ladder way, of spouting engines
beating together, of the whirling wind screw, and
of a wide waste of wing. He exulted in the sight.
And in an instant the thing had passed.
It rose slightly and their own little
wings swayed in the rush of its flight. It fell
and grew smaller. Scarcely had they moved, as
it seemed, before it was again only a flat blue thing
that dwindled in the sky. This was the aeroplane
that went to and fro between London and Paris.
In fair weather and in peaceful times it came and
went four times a day.
They beat across the Channel, slowly
as it seemed now to Graham’s enlarged ideas,
and Beachy Head rose greyly to the left of them.
“Land,” called the aeronaut,
his voice small against the whistling of the air over
the wind-screen.
“Not yet,” bawled Graham,
laughing. “Not land yet. I want to
learn more of this machine.”
“I meant—” said the aeronaut.
“I want to learn more of this machine,”
repeated Graham.
“I’m coming to you,”
he said, and had flung himself free of his chair and
taken a step along the guarded rail between them.
He stopped for a moment, and his colour changed and
his hands tightened. Another step and he was
clinging close to the aeronaut. He felt a weight
on his shoulder, the pressure of the air. His
hat was a whirling speck behind. The wind came
in gusts over his wind-screen and blew his hair in
streamers past his cheek. The aeronaut made some
hasty adjustments for the shifting of the centres
of gravity and pressure.
“I want to have these things
explained,” said Graham. “What do
you do when you move that engine forward?”
The aeronaut hesitated. Then
he answered, “They are complex, Sire.”
“I don’t mind,” shouted Graham.
“I don’t mind.”
There was a moment’s pause. “Aeronautics
is the secret—the privilege—”
“I know. But I’m
the Master, and I mean to know.” He laughed,
full of this novel realisation of power that was his
gift from the upper air.
The monoplane curved about, and the
keen fresh wind cut across Graham’s face and
his garment lugged at his body as the stem pointed
round to the west. The two men looked into each
other’s eyes.
“Sire, there are rules—”
“Not where I am concerned,” said Graham,
“You seem to forget.”
The aeronaut scrutinised his face
“No,” he said. “I do not forget,
Sire. But in all the earth—no man
who is not a sworn aeronaut—has ever a
chance. They come as passengers—”
“I have heard something of the
sort. But I’m not going to argue these
points. Do you know why I have slept two hundred
years? To fly!”
“Sire,” said the aeronaut,
“the rules—if I break the rules—”
Graham waved the penalties aside.
“Then if you will watch me—”
“No,” said Graham, swaying
and gripping tight as the machine lifted its nose
again for an ascent. “That’s not my
game. I want to do it myself. Do it myself
if I smash for it! No! I will. See I
am going to clamber by this—to come and
share your seat. Steady! I mean to fly of
my own accord if I smash at the end of it. I
will have something to pay for my sleep. Of all
other things—. In my past it was my dream
to fly. Now—keep your balance.”
“A dozen spies are watching me, Sire!”
Graham’s temper was at end.
Perhaps he chose it should be. He swore.
He swung himself round the intervening mass of levers
and the monoplane swayed.
“Am I Master of the earth?”
he said. “Or is your Society? Now.
Take your hands off those levers, and hold my wrists.
Yes—so. And now, how do we turn her
nose down to the glide?”
“Sire,” said the aeronaut.
“What is it?”
“You will protect me?”
“Lord! Yes! If I have to burn London.
Now!”
And with that promise Graham bought
his first lesson in aerial navigation. “It’s
clearly to your advantage, this journey,” he
said with a loud laugh—for the air was
like strong wine—“to teach me quickly
and well. Do I pull this? Ah! So!
Hullo!”
“Back, Sire! Back!”
“Back—right.
One—two—three—good
God! Ah! Up she goes! But this is living!”
And now the machine began to dance
the strangest figures in the air. Now it would
sweep round a spiral of scarcely a hundred yards diameter,
now rush up into the air and swoop down again, steeply,
swiftly, falling like a hawk, to recover in a rushing
loop that swept it high again. In one of these
descents it seemed driving straight at the drifting
park of balloons in the southeast, and only curved
about and cleared them by a sudden recovery of dexterity.
The extraordinary swiftness and smoothness of the
motion, the extraordinary effect of the rarefied air
upon his constitution, threw Graham into a careless
fury.
But at last a queer incident came
to sober him, to send him flying down once more to
the crowded life below with all its dark insoluble
riddles. As he swooped, came a tap and something
flying past, and a drop like a drop of rain.
Then as he went on down he saw something like a white
rag whirling down in his wake. “What was
that?” he asked. “I did not see.”
The aeronaut glanced, and then clutched
at the lever to recover, for they were sweeping down.
When the monoplane was rising again he drew a deep
breath and replied, “That,” and he indicated
the white thing still fluttering down, “was
a swan.”
“I never saw it,” said Graham.
The aeronaut made no answer, and Graham
saw little drops upon his forehead.
They drove horizontally while Graham
clambered back to the passenger’s place out
of the lash of the wind. And then came a swift
rush down, with the wind-screw whirling to check their
fall, and the flying stage growing broad and dark
before them. The sun, sinking over the chalk hills
in the west, fell with them, and left the sky a blaze
of gold.
Soon men could be seen as little specks.
He heard a noise coming up to meet him, a noise like
the sound of waves upon a pebbly beach, and saw that
the roofs about the flying stage were dense with his
people rejoicing over his safe return. A black
mass was crushed together under the stage, a darkness
stippled with innumerable faces, and quivering with
the minute oscillation of waved white handkerchiefs
and waving hands.