"Why do you say this?" I inquired, for Marlow had stopped abruptly and

kept silent in the shadow of the bookcase.

"I say this because that man whom chance had thrown in Flora's way was

both: lawless and proud. Whether he knew anything about it or not it

does not matter. Very likely not. One may fling a glove in the face of

nature and in the face of one's own moral endurance quite innocently,

with a simplicity which wears the aspect of perfectly Satanic conceit.

However, as I have said it does not matter. It's a transgression all the

same and has got to be paid for in the usual way. But never mind that. I

paused because, like Anthony, I find a difficulty, a sort of dread in

coming to grips with old de Barral.

You remember I had a glimpse of him once. He was not an imposing

personality: tall, thin, straight, stiff, faded, moving with short steps

and with a gliding motion, speaking in an even low voice. When the sea

was rough he wasn't much seen on deck--at least not walking. He caught

hold of things then and dragged himself along as far as the after

skylight where he would sit for hours. Our, then young, friend offered

once to assist him and this service was the first beginning of a sort of

friendship. He clung hard to one--Powell says, with no figurative

intention. Powell was always on the lookout to assist, and to assist

mainly Mrs. Anthony, because he clung so jolly hard to her that Powell

was afraid of her being dragged down notwithstanding that she very soon

became very sure-footed in all sorts of weather. And Powell was the only

one ready to assist at hand because Anthony (by that time) seemed to be

afraid to come near them; the unforgiving Franklin always looked

wrathfully the other way; the boatswain, if up there, acted likewise but

sheepishly; and any hands that happened to be on the poop (a feeling

spreads mysteriously all over a ship) shunned him as though he had been

the devil.

We know how he arrived on board. For my part I know so little of prisons

that I haven't the faintest notion how one leaves them. It seems as

abominable an operation as the other, the shutting up with its mental

suggestions of bang, snap, crash and the empty silence outside--where an

instant before you were--you were--and now no longer are. Perfectly

devilish. And the release! I don't know which is worse. How do they do

it? Pull the string, door flies open, man flies through: Out you go!

Adios! And in the space where a second before you were not, in the

silent space there is a figure going away, limping. Why limping? I

don't know. That's how I see it. One has a notion of a maiming,

crippling process; of the individual coming back damaged in some subtle

way. I admit it is a fantastic hallucination, but I can't help it. Of

course I know that the proceedings of the best machine-made humanity are

employed with judicious care and so on. I am absurd, no doubt, but still

. . . Oh yes it's idiotic. When I pass one of these places . . . did you

notice that there is something infernal about the aspect of every

individual stone or brick of them, something malicious as if matter were

enjoying its revenge of the contemptuous spirit of man. Did you notice?

You didn't? Eh? Well I am perhaps a little mad on that point. When I

pass one of these places I must avert my eyes. I couldn't have gone to

meet de Barral. I should have shrunk from the ordeal. You'll notice

that it looks as if Anthony (a brave man indubitably) had shirked it too.

Little Fyne's flight of fancy picturing three people in the fatal four

wheeler--you remember?--went wide of the truth. There were only two

people in the four wheeler. Flora did not shrink. Women can stand

anything. The dear creatures have no imagination when it comes to solid

facts of life. In sentimental regions--I won't say. It's another thing

altogether. There they shrink from or rush to embrace ghosts of their

own creation just the same as any fool-man would.




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