You can wear those white robes yet and pass through
that gate of steel!"
Then I left him.
A week after I found his cottage deserted, and on asking at the
works was told that he had "gone north," no one exactly knew
whither.
Two years afterwards, I was staying for a few days with my
friend Dr. Munro in Glasgow. He was a busy man, and could not spare
much time for going about with me, so I spent my days in excursions
to the Trossachs and Loch Katrine and down the Clyde. On the second
last evening of my stay I came back somewhat later than I had
arranged, but found that my host was late too. The maid told me
that he had been sent for to the hospital-a case of accident at the
gas-works, and the dinner was postponed an hour; so telling her I
would stroll down to find her master and walk back with him, I went
out. At the hospital I found him washing his hands preparatory to
starting for home. Casually, I asked him what his case was.
"Oh, the usual thing! A rotten rope and men's lives of no
account. Two men were working in a gasometer, when the rope that
held their scaffolding broke. It must have occurred just before the
dinner hour, for no one noticed their absence till the men had
returned. There was about seven feet of water in the gasometer, so
they had a hard fight for it, poor fellows. However, one of them
was alive, just alive, but we have had a hard job to pull him
through. It seems that he owes his life to his mate, for I have
never heard of greater heroism. They swam together while their
strength lasted, but at the end they were so done up that even the
lights above, and the men slung with ropes, coming down to help
them, could not keep them up. But one of them stood on the bottom
and held up his comrade over his head, and those few breaths made
all the difference between life and death. They were a shocking
sight when they were taken out, for that water is like a purple dye
with the gas and the tar. The man upstairs looked as if he had been
washed in blood. Ugh!"
"And the other?"
"Oh, he's worse still. But he must have been a very noble
fellow. That struggle under the water must have been fearful; one
can see that by the way the blood has been drawn from the
extremities. It makes the idea of the Stigmata possible to look at
him. Resolution like this could, you would think, do anything in
the world. Ay! it might almost unbar the gates of Heaven. Look
here, old man, it is not a very pleasant sight, especially just
before dinner, but you are a writer, and this is an odd case. Here
is something you would not like to miss, for in all human
probability you will never see anything like it again." While he
was speaking he had brought me into the mortuary of the
hospital.
On the bier lay a body covered with a white sheet, which was
wrapped close round it.
"Looks like a chrysalis, don't it? I say, Jack, if there be
anything in the old myth that a soul is typified by a butterfly,
well, then the one that this chrysalis sent forth was a very noble
specimen and took all the sunlight on its wings. See here!" He
uncovered the face. Horrible, indeed, it looked, as though stained
with blood. But I knew him at once, Jacob Settle! My friend pulled
the winding sheet further down.
The hands were crossed on the purple breast as they had been
reverently placed by some tenderhearted person. As I saw them my
heart throbbed with a great exultation, for the memory of his
harrowing dream rushed across my mind. There was no stain now on
those poor, brave hands, for they were blanched white as snow.
And somehow as I looked I felt that the evil dream was all over.
That noble soul had won a way through the gate at last. The white
robe had now no stain from the hands that had put it on.
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