The incidents recorded in the two last chapters had occupied about
two hours, so that it was nearly midnight before my father could
begin to retrace his steps and make towards the camp that he had
left that morning. This was necessary, for he could not go any
further in a costume that he now knew to be forbidden. At this
hour no ranger was likely to meet him before he reached the
statues, and by making a push for it he could return in time to
cross the limits of the preserves before the Professors' permit had
expired. If challenged, he must brazen it out that he was one or
other of the persons therein named.
Fatigued though he was, he reached the statues as near as he could
guess, at about three in the morning. What little wind there had
been was warm, so that the tracks, which the Professors must have
seen shortly after he had made them, had disappeared. The statues
looked very weird in the moonlight but they were not chanting.
While ascending, he pieced together the information he had picked
up from the Professors. Plainly, the Sunchild, or child of the
sun, was none other than himself, and the new name of Coldharbour
was doubtless intended to commemorate the fact that this was the
first town he had reached in Erewhon. Plainly, also, he was
supposed to be of superhuman origin--his flight in the balloon
having been not unnaturally believed to be miraculous. The
Erewhonians had for centuries been effacing all knowledge of their
former culture; archaeologists, indeed, could still glean a little
from museums, and from volumes hard to come by, and still harder to
understand; but archaeologists were few, and even though they had
made researches (which they may or may not have done), their
labours had never reached the masses. What wonder, then, that the
mushroom spawn of myth, ever present in an atmosphere highly
charged with ignorance, had germinated in a soil so favourably
prepared for its reception?
He saw it all now. It was twenty years next Sunday since he and my
mother had eloped. That was the meaning of XIX. xii. 29. They had
made a new era, dating from the day of his return to the palace of
the sun with a bride who was doubtless to unite the Erewhonian
nature with that of the sun. The New Year, then, would date from
Sunday, December 7, which would therefore become XX. i. 1. The
Thursday, now nearly if not quite over, being only two days distant
from the end of a month of thirty-one days, which was also the last
of the year, would be XIX. xii. 29, as on the Professors' permit.
I should like to explain here what will appear more clearly on a
later page--I mean, that the Erewhonians, according to their new
system, do not believe the sun to be a god except as regards this
world and his other planets. My father had told them a little
about astronomy, and had assured them that all the fixed stars were
suns like our own, with planets revolving round them, which were
probably tenanted by intelligent living beings, however unlike they
might be to ourselves. From this they evolved the theory that the
sun was the ruler of this planetary system, and that he must be
personified, as they had personified the air-god, the gods of time
and space, hope, justice, and the other deities mentioned in my
father's book. They retain their old belief in the actual
existence of these gods, but they now make them all subordinate to
the sun. The nearest approach they make to our own conception of
God is to say that He is the ruler over all the suns throughout the
universe--the suns being to Him much as our planets and their
denizens are to our own sun. They deny that He takes more interest
in one sun and its system than in another. All the suns with their
attendant planets are supposed to be equally His children, and He
deputes to each sun the supervision and protection of its own
system. Hence they say that though we may pray to the air-god,
&c., and even to the sun, we must not pray to God. We may be
thankful to Him for watching over the suns, but we must not go
further.
Going back to my father's reflections, he perceived that the
Erewhonians had not only adopted our calendar, as he had repeatedly
explained it to the Nosnibors, but had taken our week as well, and
were making Sunday a high day, just as we do. Next Sunday, in
commemoration of the twentieth year after his ascent, they were
about to dedicate a temple to him; in this there was to be a
picture showing himself and his earthly bride on their heavenward
journey, in a chariot drawn by four black and white horses--which,
however, Professor Hanky had positively affirmed to have been only
storks.
Here I interrupted my father. "But were there," I said, "any
storks?"
"Yes," he answered. "As soon as I heard Hanky's words I remembered
that a flight of some four or five of the large storks so common in
Erewhon during the summer months had been wheeling high aloft in
one of those aerial dances that so much delight them. I had quite
forgotten it, but it came back to me at once that these creatures,
attracted doubtless by what they took to be an unknown kind of
bird, swooped down towards the balloon and circled round it like so
many satellites to a heavenly body. I was fearful lest they should
strike at it with their long and formidable beaks, in which case
all would have been soon over; either they were afraid, or they had
satisfied their curiosity--at any rate, they let us alone; but they
kept with us till we were well away from the capital. Strange, how
completely this incident had escaped me."
I return to my father's thoughts as he made his way back to his old
camp.
As for the reversed position of Professor Panky's clothes, he
remembered having given his own old ones to the Queen, and having
thought that she might have got a better dummy on which to display
them than the headless scarecrow, which, however, he supposed was
all her ladies-in-waiting could lay their hands on at the moment.
If that dummy had never been replaced, it was perhaps not very
strange that the King could not at the first glance tell back from
front, and if he did not guess right at first, there was little
chance of his changing, for his first ideas were apt to be his
last. But he must find out more about this.
Then how about the watch? Had their views about machinery also
changed? Or was there an exception made about any machine that he
had himself carried?
Yram too. She must have been married not long after she and he had
parted. So she was now wife to the Mayor, and was evidently able
to have things pretty much her own way in Sunch'ston, as he
supposed he must now call it. Thank heaven she was prosperous! It
was interesting to know that she was at heart a sceptic, as was
also her light-haired son, now Head Ranger. And that son? Just
twenty years of age! Born seven months after marriage! Then the
Mayor doubtless had light hair too; but why did not those wretches
say in which month Yram was married? If she had married soon after
he had left, this was why he had not been sent for or written to.
Pray heaven it was so. As for current gossip, people would talk,
and if the lad was well begotten, what could it matter to them
whose son he was? "But," thought my father, "I am glad I did not
meet him on my way down. I had rather have been killed by some one
else."
Hanky and Panky again. He remembered Bridgeford as the town where
the Colleges of Unreason had been most rife; he had visited it, but
he had forgotten that it was called "The city of the people who are
above suspicion." Its Professors were evidently going to muster in
great force on Sunday; if two of them had robbed him, he could
forgive them, for the information he had gleaned from them had
furnished him with a pied a terre. Moreover, he had got as much
Erewhonian money as he should want, for he had resolved to retrace
his steps immediately after seeing the temple dedicated to himself.
He knew the danger he should run in returning over the preserves
without a permit, but his curiosity was so great that he resolved
to risk it.
Soon after he had passed the statues he began to descend, and it
being now broad day, he did so by leaps and bounds, for the ground
was not precipitous. He reached his old camp soon after five--
this, at any rate, was the hour at which he set his watch on
finding that it had run down during his absence. There was now no
reason why he should not take it with him, so he put it in his
pocket. The parrots had attacked his saddle-bags, saddle, and
bridle, as they were sure to do, but they had not got inside the
bags. He took out his English clothes and put them on--stowing his
bags of gold in various pockets, but keeping his Erewhonian money
in the one that was most accessible. He put his Erewhonian dress
back into the saddle-bags, intending to keep it as a curiosity; he
also refreshed the dye upon his hands, face, and hair; he lit
himself a fire, made tea, cooked and ate two brace of quails, which
he had plucked while walking so as to save time, and then flung
himself on to the ground to snatch an hour's very necessary rest.
When he woke he found he had slept two hours, not one, which was
perhaps as well, and by eight he began to reascend the pass.
He reached the statues about noon, for he allowed himself not a
moment's rest. This time there was a stiffish wind, and they were
chanting lustily. He passed them with all speed, and had nearly
reached the place where he had caught the quails, when he saw a man
in a dress which he guessed at once to be a ranger's, but which,
strangely enough, seeing that he was in the King's employ, was not
reversed. My father's heart beat fast; he got out his permit and
held it open in his hand, then with a smiling face he went towards
the Ranger, who was standing his ground.
"I believe you are the Head Ranger," said my father, who saw that
he was still smooth-faced and had light hair. "I am Professor
Panky, and here is my permit. My brother Professor has been
prevented from coming with me, and, as you see, I am alone."
My father had professed to pass himself off as Panky, for he had
rather gathered that Hanky was the better known man of the two.
While the youth was scrutinising the permit, evidently with
suspicion, my father took stock of him, and saw his own past self
in him too plainly--knowing all he knew--to doubt whose son he was.
He had the greatest difficulty in hiding his emotion, for the lad
was indeed one of whom any father might be proud. He longed to be
able to embrace him and claim him for what he was, but this, as he
well knew, might not be. The tears again welled into his eyes when
he told me of the struggle with himself that he had then had.
"Don't be jealous, my dearest boy," he said to me. "I love you
quite as dearly as I love him, or better, but he was sprung upon me
so suddenly, and dazzled me with his comely debonair face, so full
of youth, and health, and frankness. Did you see him, he would go
straight to your heart, for he is wonderfully like you in spite of
your taking so much after your poor mother."
I was not jealous; on the contrary, I longed to see this youth, and
find in him such a brother as I had often wished to have. But let
me return to my father's story.
The young man, after examining the permit, declared it to be in
form, and returned it to my father, but he eyed him with polite
disfavour.
"I suppose," he said, "you have come up, as so many are doing, from
Bridgeford and all over the country, to the dedication on Sunday."
"Yes," said my father. "Bless me!" he added, "what a wind you have
up here! How it makes one's eyes water, to be sure;" but he spoke
with a cluck in his throat which no wind that blows can cause.
"Have you met any suspicious characters between here and the
statues?" asked the youth. "I came across the ashes of a fire
lower down; there had been three men sitting for some time round
it, and they had all been eating quails. Here are some of the
bones and feathers, which I shall keep. They had not been gone
more than a couple of hours, for the ashes were still warm; they
are getting bolder and bolder--who would have thought they would
dare to light a fire? I suppose you have not met any one; but if
you have seen a single person, let me know."
My father said quite truly that he had met no one. He then
laughingly asked how the youth had been able to discover as much as
he had.
"There were three well-marked forms, and three separate lots of
quail bones hidden in the ashes. One man had done all the
plucking. This is strange, but I dare say I shall get at it
later."
After a little further conversation the Ranger said he was now
going down to Sunch'ston, and, though somewhat curtly, proposed
that he and my father should walk together.
"By all means," answered my father.
"Before they had gone more than a few hundred yards his companion
said, "If you will come with me a little to the left, I can show
you the Blue Pool."
To avoid the precipitous ground over which the stream here fell,
they had diverged to the right, where they had found a smoother
descent; returning now to the stream, which was about to enter on a
level stretch for some distance, they found themselves on the brink
of a rocky basin, of no great size, but very blue, and evidently
deep.
"This," said the Ranger, "is where our orders tell us to fling any
foreign devil who comes over from the other side. I have only been
Head Ranger about nine months, and have not yet had to face this
horrid duty; but," and here he smiled, "when I first caught sight
of you I thought I should have to make a beginning. I was very
glad when I saw you had a permit."
"And how many skeletons do you suppose are lying at the bottom of
this pool?"
"I believe not more than seven or eight in all. There were three
or four about eighteen years ago, and about the same number of late
years; one man was flung here only about three months before I was
appointed. I have the full list, with dates, down in my office,
but the rangers never let people in Sunch'ston know when they have
Blue-Pooled any one; it would unsettle men's minds, and some of
them would be coming up here in the dark to drag the pool, and see
whether they could find anything on the body."
My father was glad to turn away from this most repulsive place.
After a time he said, "And what do you good people hereabouts think
of next Sunday's grand doings?"
Bearing in mind what he had gleaned from the Professors about the
Ranger's opinions, my father gave a slightly ironical turn to his
pronunciation of the words "grand doings." The youth glanced at
him with a quick penetrative look, and laughed as he said, "The
doings will be grand enough."
"What a fine temple they have built," said my father. "I have not
yet seen the picture, but they say the four black and white horses
are magnificently painted. I saw the Sunchild ascend, but I saw no
horses in the sky, nor anything like horses."
The youth was much interested. "Did you really see him ascend?" he
asked; "and what, pray, do you think it all was?"
"Whatever it was, there were no horses."
"But there must have been, for, as you of course know, they have
lately found some droppings from one of them, which have been
miraculously preserved, and they are going to show them next Sunday
in a gold reliquary."
"I know," said my father, who, however, was learning the fact for
the first time. "I have not yet seen this precious relic, but I
think they might have found something less unpleasant."
"Perhaps they would if they could," replied the youth, laughing,
"but there was nothing else that the horses could leave. It is
only a number of curiously rounded stones, and not at all like what
they say it is."
"Well, well," continued my father, "but relic or no relic, there
are many who, while they fully recognise the value of the
Sunchild's teaching, dislike these cock and bull stories as
blasphemy against God's most blessed gift of reason. There are
many in Bridgeford who hate this story of the horses."
The youth was now quite reassured. "So there are here, sir," he
said warmly, "and who hate the Sunchild too. If there is such a
hell as he used to talk about to my mother, we doubt not but that
he will be cast into its deepest fires. See how he has turned us
all upside down. But we dare not say what we think. There is no
courage left in Erewhon."
Then waxing calmer he said, "It is you Bridgeford people and your
Musical Banks that have done it all. The Musical Bank Managers saw
that the people were falling away from them. Finding that the
vulgar believed this foreign devil Higgs--for he gave this name to
my mother when he was in prison--finding that--But you know all
this as well as I do. How can you Bridgeford Professors pretend to
believe about these horses, and about the Sunchild's being son to
the sun, when all the time you know there is no truth in it?"
"My son--for considering the difference in our ages I may be
allowed to call you so--we at Bridgeford are much like you at
Sunch'ston; we dare not always say what we think. Nor would it be
wise to do so, when we should not be listened to. This fire must
burn itself out, for it has got such hold that nothing can either
stay or turn it. Even though Higgs himself were to return and tell
it from the house-tops that he was a mortal--ay, and a very common
one--he would be killed, but not believed."
"Let him come; let him show himself, speak out and die, if the
people choose to kill him. In that case I would forgive him,
accept him for my father, as silly people sometimes say he is, and
honour him to my dying day."
"Would that be a bargain?" said my father, smiling in spite of
emotion so strong that he could hardly bring the words out of his
mouth.
"Yes, it would," said the youth doggedly.
"Then let me shake hands with you on his behalf, and let us change
the conversation."
He took my father's hand, doubtfully and somewhat disdainfully, but
he did not refuse it.