But at Shortlands the life-long struggle was coming to a close. The

father was ill and was going to die. He had bad internal pains, which

took away all his attentive life, and left him with only a vestige of

his consciousness. More and more a silence came over him, he was less

and less acutely aware of his surroundings. The pain seemed to absorb

his activity. He knew it was there, he knew it would come again. It was

like something lurking in the darkness within him. And he had not the

power, or the will, to seek it out and to know it. There it remained in

the darkness, the great pain, tearing him at times, and then being

silent. And when it tore him he crouched in silent subjection under it,

and when it left him alone again, he refused to know of it. It was

within the darkness, let it remain unknown. So he never admitted it,

except in a secret corner of himself, where all his never-revealed

fears and secrets were accumulated. For the rest, he had a pain, it

went away, it made no difference. It even stimulated him, excited him.

But it gradually absorbed his life. Gradually it drew away all his

potentiality, it bled him into the dark, it weaned him of life and drew

him away into the darkness. And in this twilight of his life little

remained visible to him. The business, his work, that was gone

entirely. His public interests had disappeared as if they had never

been. Even his family had become extraneous to him, he could only

remember, in some slight non-essential part of himself, that such and

such were his children. But it was historical fact, not vital to him.

He had to make an effort to know their relation to him. Even his wife

barely existed. She indeed was like the darkness, like the pain within

him. By some strange association, the darkness that contained the pain

and the darkness that contained his wife were identical. All his

thoughts and understandings became blurred and fused, and now his wife

and the consuming pain were the same dark secret power against him,

that he never faced. He never drove the dread out of its lair within

him. He only knew that there was a dark place, and something inhabiting

this darkness which issued from time to time and rent him. But he dared

not penetrate and drive the beast into the open. He had rather ignore

its existence. Only, in his vague way, the dread was his wife, the

destroyer, and it was the pain, the destruction, a darkness which was

one and both.




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