The room was not
cold; I had lit the oven burners of the little gas cooking
stove. I was not cold; but my feet were chilled
in a quite extraordinary manner, as if they had been
packed in ice. At last I took off my slippers with a
view of poking my toes into the oven of the stove, and
feeling my feet with my hand, I perceived that, in
fact, they were not cold at all! But the sensation
remained; there, I suppose, you have an odd case of
a transference of something that was happening in
the brain to the extremities. My feet were quite
warm to the palm of my hand, but to my sense they
were frozen. But what a testimony to the fitness of
the American idiom, "cold feet," as signifying a depressed
and desponding mood! But, somehow or
other, the tale was finished and the "notion" was at
last out of my head. I have gone into all this detail
about "A Fragment of Life" because I have been assured
in many quarters that it is the best thing that
I have ever done, and students of the crooked ways
of literature may be interested to hear of the abominable
labours of doing it.
"The White People" belongs to the same year as[xv]
the first chapter of "A Fragment of Life," 1899, which
was also the year of "Hieroglyphics." The fact was
I was in high literary spirits, just then. I had been
harassed and worried for a whole year in the office
of Literature, a weekly paper published by The Times,
and getting free again, I felt like a prisoner released
from chains; ready to dance in letters to any extent.
Forthwith I thought of "A Great Romance," a highly
elaborate and elaborated piece of work, full of the
strangest and rarest things. I have forgotten how
it was that this design broke down; but I found by
experiment that the great romance was to go on that
brave shelf of the unwritten books, the shelf where
all the splendid books are to be found in their golden
bindings. "The White People" is a small piece of
salvage from the wreck. Oddly enough, as is insinuated
in the Prologue, the mainspring of the story
is to be sought in a medical textbook. In the Prologue
reference is made to a review article by Dr. Coryn.
But I have since found out that Dr. Coryn was merely
quoting from a scientific treatise that case of the lady
whose fingers became violently inflamed because she
saw a heavy window sash descend on the fingers of her
child. With this instance, of course, are to be considered
all cases of stigmata, both ancient and modern:
and then the question is obvious enough: what limits
can we place to the powers of the imagination? Has
not the imagination the potentiality at least of performing
any miracle, however marvelous, however incredible,
according to our ordinary standards? As
to the decoration of the story, that is a mingling which
I venture to think somewhat ingenious of odds and
ends of folk lore and witch lore with pure inventions[xvi]
of my own. Some years later I was amused to receive
a letter from a gentleman who was, if I remember, a
schoolmaster somewhere in Malaya. This gentleman,
an earnest student of folklore, was writing an article
on some singular things he had observed amongst
the Malayans, and chiefly a kind of were-wolf state
into which some of them were able to conjure themselves.
He had found, as he said, startling resemblances
between the magic ritual of Malaya and some
of the ceremonies and practices hinted at in "The
White People." He presumed that all this was not
fancy but fact; that is that I was describing practices
actually in use among superstitious people on the
Welsh border; he was going to quote from me in the
article for the Journal of the Folk Lore Society, or
whatever it was called, and he just wanted to let me
know. I wrote in a hurry to the folklore journal to
bid them beware: for the instances selected by the
student were all fictions of my own brain!
"The Great God Pan" and "The Inmost Light"
are tales of an earlier date, going back to 1890, '91,
'92. I have written a good deal about them in "Far
Off Things," and in a preface to an edition of "The
Great God Pan," published by Messrs. Simpkin,
Marshall in 1916, I have described at length the origins
of the book. But I must quote anew some extracts
from the reviews which welcomed "The Great
God Pan" to my extraordinary entertainment, hilarity
and refreshment. Here are a few of the best:
"It is not Mr. Machen's fault but his misfortune,
that one shakes with laughter rather than with dread
over the contemplation of his psychological bogey."—Observer.[xvii]
"His horror, we regret to say, leaves us quite
cold ... and our flesh obstinately refuses to creep."—Chronicle.
"His bogies don't scare."—Sketch.
"We are afraid he only succeeds in being ridiculous."—Manchester
Guardian.
"Gruesome, ghastly and dull."—Lady's Pictorial.
"Incoherent nightmare of sex ... which would
soon lead to insanity if unrestrained ... innocuous
from its absurdity."—Westminster Gazette.
And so on, and so on. Several papers, I remember,
declared that "The Great God Pan" was simply a
stupid and incompetent rehash of Huysmans' "Là-Bas"
and "À Rebours." I had not read these books so I
got them both. Thereon, I perceived that my critics
had not read them either.
[1]
A Fragment of Life
[3]
I
Edward Darnell awoke from a dream of
an ancient wood, and of a clear well rising into
grey film and vapour beneath a misty, glimmering
heat; and as his eyes opened he saw the sunlight
bright in the room, sparkling on the varnish of the new
furniture. He turned and found his wife's place vacant,
and with some confusion and wonder of the
dream still lingering in his mind, he rose also, and began
hurriedly to set about his dressing, for he had
overslept a little, and the 'bus passed the corner at
9.15. He was a tall, thin man, dark-haired and dark-eyed,
and in spite of the routine of the City, the counting
of coupons, and all the mechanical drudgery that
had lasted for ten years, there still remained about
him the curious hint of a wild grace, as if he had
been born a creature of the antique wood, and had
seen the fountain rising from the green moss and the
grey rocks.
The breakfast was laid in the room on the ground
floor, the back room with the French windows looking
on the garden, and before he sat down to his fried
bacon he kissed his wife seriously and dutifully. She
had brown hair and brown eyes, and though her lovely
face was grave and quiet, one would have said that
she might have awaited her husband under the old
trees, and bathed in the pool hollowed out of the
rocks.
They had a good deal to talk over while the coffee[4]
was poured out and the bacon eaten, and Darnell's
egg brought in by the stupid, staring servant-girl of
the dusty face.
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