May 8.
What a lovely day! I have spent all the morning lying
on the grass in front of my house, under the enormous plantain tree which
covers and shades and shelters the whole of it. I like this part of the
country; I am fond of living here because I am attached to it by deep roots,
the profound and delicate roots which attach a man to the soil on which
his ancestors were born and died, to their traditions, their usages, their
food, the local expressions, the peculiar language of the peasants, the
smell of the soil, the hamlets, and to the atmosphere itself. I love the
house in which I grew up. From my windows I can see the Seine, which flows
by the side of my garden, on the other side of the road, almost through
my grounds, the great and wide Seine, which goes to Rouen and Havre, and
which is covered with boats passing to and fro.
On the left, down yonder, lies Rouen, populous Rouen with
its blue roofs massing under pointed, Gothic towers. Innumerable are they,
delicate or broad, dominated by the spire of the cathedral, full of bells
which sound through the blue air on fine mornings, sending their sweet
and distant Iron clang to me, their metallic sounds, now stronger and now
weaker, according as the wind is strong or light.
What a delicious morning it was! About eleven o'clock,
a long line of boats drawn by a steam-tug, as big a fly, and which scarcely
puffed while emitting its thick smoke, passed my gate.
After two English schooners, whose red flags fluttered
toward the sky, there came a magnificent Brazilian three-master; it was
perfectly white and wonderfully clean and shining. I saluted it, I hardly
know why, except that the sight of the vessel gave me great pleasure.
May 12. I have had a slight feverish attack for the last
few days, and I feel ill, or rather I feel low-spirited.
Whence come those mysterious influences which change our
happiness into discouragement, and our self-confidence into diffidence?
One might almost say that the air, the invisible air, is full of unknowable
Forces, whose mysterious presence we have to endure. I wake up in the best
of spirits, with an inclination to sing in my heart. Why? I go down by
the side of the water, and suddenly, after walking a short distance, I
return home wretched, as If some misfortune were awaiting me there. Why?
Is it a cold shiver which, passing over my skin, has upset my nerves and
given me a fit of low spirits? Is it the form of the clouds, or the tints
of the sky, or the colors of the surrounding objects which are so changeable,
which have troubled my thoughts as they passed before my eyes? Who can
tell? Everything that surrounds us, everything that we see without looking
at it, everything that we touch without knowing it, everything that we
handle without feeling it, everything that we meet without clearly distinguishing
it, has a rapid, surprising, and inexplicable effect upon us and upon our
organs, and through them on our ideas and on our being itself.
How profound that mystery of the Invisible is! We cannot
fathom it with our miserable senses: our eyes are unable to perceive what
is either too small or too great, too near to or too far from us; we can
see neither the inhabitants of a star nor of a drop of water; our ears
deceive us, for they transmit to us the vibrations of the air in sonorous
notes. Our senses are fairies who work the miracle of changing that movement
into noise, and by that metamorphosis give birth to music, which makes
the mute agitation of nature a harmony. So with our sense of smell, which
is weaker than that of a dog, and so with our sense of taste, which can
scarcely distinguish the age of a wine!
Oh! If we only had other organs which could work other
miracles in our favor, what a number of fresh things we might discover
around us!
May 16. I am ill, decidedly! I was so well last month!
I am feverish, horribly feverish, or rather I am in a state of feverish
enervation, which makes my mind suffer as much as my body. I have without
ceasing the horrible sensation of some danger threatening me, the apprehension
of some coming misfortune or of approaching death, a presentiment which
is no doubt, an attack of some illness still unnamed, which germinates
in the flesh and in the blood.
May 18. I have just come from consulting my medical man,
for I can no longer get any sleep. He found that my pulse was high, my
eyes dilated, my nerves highly strung, but no alarming symptoms. I must
have a course of shower baths and of bromide of potassium.
May 25. No change! My state is really very peculiar. As
the evening comes on, an incomprehensible feeling of disquietude seizes
me, just as if night concealed some terrible menace toward me. I dine quickly,
and then try to read, but I do not understand the words, and can scarcely
distinguish the letters. Then I walk up and down my drawing-room, oppressed
by a feeling of confused and irresistible fear, a fear of sleep and a fear
of my bed.
About ten o'clock I go up to my room. As soon as I have
entered I lock and bolt the door. I am frightened--of what? Up till the
present time I have been frightened of nothing. I open my cupboards, and
look under my bed; I listen--I listen--to what? How strange it is that
a simple feeling of discomfort, of impeded or heightened circulation, perhaps
the irritation of a nervous center, a slight congestion, a small disturbance
in the imperfect and delicate functions of our living machinery, can turn
the most light-hearted of men into a melancholy one, and make a coward
of the bravest? Then, I go to bed, and I wait for sleep as a man might
wait for the executioner. I wait for its coming with dread, and my heart
beats and my legs tremble, while my whole body shivers beneath the warmth
of the bedclothes, until the moment when I suddenly fall asleep, as a man
throws himself into a pool of stagnant water in order to drown. I do not
feel this perfidious sleep coming over me as I used to, but a sleep which
is close to me and watching me, which is going to seize me by the head,
to close my eyes and annihilate me.
I sleep--a long time--two or three hours perhaps--then
a dream--no--a nightmare lays hold on me. I feel that I am in bed and asleep--I
feel it and I know it--and I feel also that somebody is coming close to
me, is looking at me, touching me, is getting on to my bed, is kneeling
on my chest, is taking my neck between his hands and squeezing it--squeezing
it with all his might in order to strangle me.
I struggle, bound by that terrible powerlessness which
paralyzes us in our dreams; I try to cry out--but I cannot; I want to move--I
cannot; I try, with the most violent efforts and out of breath, to turn
over and throw off this being which is crushing and suffocating me--I cannot!
And then suddenly I wake up, shaken and bathed in perspiration;
I light a candle and find that I am alone, and after that crisis, which
occurs every night, I at length fall asleep and slumber tranquilly till
morning.
June 2. My state has grown worse. What is the matter with
me? The bromide does me no good, and the shower-baths have no effect whatever.
Sometimes, in order to tire myself out, though I am fatigued enough already,
I go for a walk in the forest of Roumare. I used to think at first that
the fresh light and soft air, impregnated with the odor of herbs and leaves,
would instill new life into my veins and impart fresh energy to my heart.
One day I turned into a broad ride in the wood, and then I diverged toward
La Bouille, through a narrow path, between two rows of exceedingly tall
trees, which placed a thick, green, almost black roof between the sky and
me.
A sudden shiver ran through me, not a cold shiver, but
a shiver of agony, and so I hastened my steps, uneasy at being alone in
the wood, frightened stupidly and without reason, at the profound solitude.
Suddenly it seemed as if I were being followed, that somebody was walking
at my heels, close, quite close to me, near enough to touch me.
I turned round suddenly, but I was alone. I saw nothing
behind me except the straight, broad ride, empty and bordered by high trees,
horribly empty; on the other side also it extended until it was lost in
the distance, and looked just the same--terrible.
I closed my eyes. Why? And then I began to turn round
on one heel very quickly, just like a top. I nearly fell down, and opened
my eyes; the trees were dancing round me and the earth heaved; I was obliged
to sit down. Then, ah! I no longer remembered how I had come! What a strange
idea! What a strange, strange idea! I did not the least know. I started
off to the right, and got back into the avenue which had led me into the
middle of the forest.
June 3. I have had a terrible night. I shall go away for
a few weeks, for no doubt a journey will set me up again.
July 2. I have come back, quite cured, and have had a
most delightful trip into the bargain. I have been to Mont Saint-Michel,
which I had not seen before.
What a sight, when one arrives as I did, at Avranches
toward the end of the day! The town stands on a hill, and I was taken into
the public garden at the extremity of the town. I uttered a cry of astonishment.
An extraordinarily large bay lay extended before me, as far as my eyes
could reach, between two hills which were lost to sight in the mist; and
in the middle of this immense yellow bay, under a clear, golden sky, a
peculiar hill rose up, somber and pointed in the midst of the sand. The
sun had just disappeared, and under the still flaming sky stood out the
outline of that fantastic rock which bears on its summit a picturesque
monument.
At daybreak I went to it. The tide was low, as it had
been the night before, and I saw that wonderful abbey rise up before me
as I approached it. After several hours' walking, I reached the enormous
mass of rock which supports the little town, dominated by the great church.
Having climbed the steep and narrow street, I entered the most wonderful
Gothic building that has ever been erected to God on earth, large as a
town, and full of low rooms which seem buried beneath vaulted roofs, and
of lofty galleries supported by delicate columns.
I entered this gigantic granite jewel, which is as light
in its effect as a bit of lace and is covered with towers, with slender
belfries to which spiral staircases ascend. The flying buttresses raise
strange heads that bristle with chimeras. with devils, with fantastic animals,
with monstrous flowers, are joined together by finely carved arches, to
the blue sky by day, and to the black sky by night.
When I had reached the summit. I said to the monk who
accompanied me: "Father, how happy you must be here!" And he replied: "It
is very windy, Monsieur"; and so we began to talk while watching the rising
tide, which ran over the sand and covered it with a steel cuirass.
And then the monk told me stories, all the old stories
belonging to the place--legends, nothing but legends.
One of them struck me forcibly. The country people, those
belonging to the Mornet, declare that at night one can hear talking going
on in the sand, and also that two goats bleat, one with a strong, the other
with a weak voice. Incredulous people declare that it is nothing but the
screaming of the sea birds, which occasionally resembles bleatings, and
occasionally human lamentations; but belated fishermen swear that they
have met an old shepherd, whose cloak covered head they can never see,
wandering on the sand, between two tides, round the little town placed
so far out of the world. They declare he is guiding and walking before
a he-goat with a man's face and a she-goat with a woman's face, both with
white hair, who talk incessantly, quarreling in a strange language, and
then suddenly cease talking in order to bleat with all their might.
"Do you believe it?" I asked the monk. "I scarcely know,"
he replied; and I continued: "If there are other beings besides ourselves
on this earth, how comes it that we have not known it for so long a time,
or why have you not seen them? How is it that I have not seen them?"
He replied: "Do we see the hundred-thousandth part of
what exists? Look here; there is the wind, which is the strongest force
in nature. It knocks down men, and blows down buildings, uproots trees,
raises the sea into mountains of water, destroys cliffs and casts great
ships on to the breakers; it kills, it whistles, it sighs, it roars. But
have you ever seen it, and can you see it? Yet it exists for all that."
I was silent before this simple reasoning. That man was
a philosopher, or perhaps a fool; I could not say which exactly, so I held
my tongue. What he had said had often been in my own thoughts.
July 3. I have slept badly; certainly there is some feverish
influence here, for my coachman is suffering in the same way as I am. When
I went back home yesterday, I noticed his singular paleness, and I asked
him: "What is the matter with you, Jean?"
"The matter is that I never get any rest, and my nights
devour my days. Since your departure, Monsieur, there has been a spell
over me."
However, the other servants are all well, but I am very
frightened of having another attack, myself.
July 4. I am decidedly taken again; for my old nightmares
have returned. Last night I felt somebody leaning on me who was sucking
my life from between my lips with his mouth. Yes, he was sucking it out
of my neck like a leech would have done. Then he got up, satiated, and
I woke up, so beaten, crushed, and annihilated that I could not move. If
this continues for a few days, I shall certainly go away again.
July 5. Have I lost my reason? What has happened? What
I saw last night is so strange that my head wanders when I think of it!
As I do now every evening, I had locked my door; then,
being thirsty, I drank half a glass of water, and I accidentally noticed
that the water-bottle was full up to the cut-glass stopper.
Then I went to bed and fell into one of my terrible sleeps,
from which I was aroused in about two hours by a still more terrible shock.
Picture to yourself a sleeping man who is being murdered,
who wakes up with a knife in his chest, a gurgling in his throat, is covered
with blood, can no longer breathe, is going to die and does not understand
anything at all about it--there you have it.
Having recovered my senses, I was thirsty again, so I
lighted a candle and went to the table on which my water-bottle was. I
lifted it up and tilted it over my glass, but nothing came out. It was
empty! It was completely empty! At first I could not understand it at all;
then suddenly I was seized by such a terrible feeling that I had to sit
down, or rather fall into a chair! Then I sprang up with a bound to look
about me; then I sat down again, overcome by astonishment and fear, in
front of the transparent crystal bottle! I looked at it with fixed eyes,
trying to solve the puzzle, and my hands trembled! Some body had drunk
the water, but who? I? I without any doubt. It could surely only be I?
In that case I was a somnambulist--was living, without knowing it, that
double, mysterious life which makes us doubt whether there are not two
beings in us--whether a strange, unknowable, and invisible being does not,
during our moments of mental and physical torpor, animate the inert body,
forcing it to a more willing obedience than it yields to ourselves.
Oh! Who will understand my horrible agony? Who will understand
the emotion of a man sound in mind, wide-awake, full of sense, who looks
in horror at the disappearance of a little water while he was asleep, through
the glass of a water-bottle! And I remained sitting until it was daylight,
without venturing to go to bed again.
July 6. I am going mad. Again all the contents of my water-bottle
have been drunk during the night; or rather I have drunk it!
But is it I? Is it I? Who could it be? Who? Oh! God! Am
I going mad? Who will save me?
July 10. I have just been through some surprising ordeals.
Undoubtedly I must be mad! And yet!
On July 6, before going to bed, I put some wine, milk,
water, bread, and strawberries on my table. Somebody drank--I drank--all
the water and a little of the milk, but neither the wine, nor the bread,
nor the strawberries were touched.
On the seventh of July I renewed the same experiment,
with the same results, and on July 8 I left out the water and the milk
and nothing was touched.
Lastly, on July 9 I put only water and milk on my table,
taking care to wrap up the bottles in white muslin and to tie down the
stoppers. Then I rubbed my lips, my beard, and my hands with pencil lead,
and went to bed.
Deep slumber seized me, soon followed by a terrible awakening.
I had not moved, and my sheets were not marked. I rushed to the table.
The muslin round the bottles remained intact; I undid the string, trembling
with fear. All the water had been drunk, and so had the milk! Ah! Great
God! I must start for Paris immediately.
July 12. Paris. I must have lost my head during the last
few days! I must be the plaything of my enervated imagination, unless I
am really a somnambulist, or I have been brought under the power of one
of those influences--hypnotic suggestion, for example--which are known
to exist, but have hitherto been inexplicable. In any case, my mental state
bordered on madness, and twenty-four hours of Paris sufficed to restore
me to my equilibrium.
Yesterday after doing some business and paying some visits,
which instilled fresh and invigorating mental air into me, I wound up my
evening at the Théâtre Français. A drama by Alexander
Dumas the Younger was being acted, and his brilliant and powerful play
completed my cure. Certainly solitude is dangerous for active minds. We
need men who can think and can talk, around us. When we are alone for a
long time, we people space with phantoms.
I returned along the boulevards to my hotel in excellent
spirits. Amid the jostling of the crowd I thought, not without irony, of
my terrors and surmises of the previous week, because I believed, yes,
I believed, that an invisible being lived beneath my roof. How weak our
mind is; how quickly it is terrified and unbalanced as soon as we are confronted
with a small, incomprehensible fact. Instead of dismissing the problem
with: "We do not understand because we cannot find the cause," we immediately
imagine terrible mysteries and supernatural powers.
July 14. Fête of the Republic. I walked through
the streets, and the crackers and flags amused me like a child. Still,
it is very foolish to make merry on a set date, by Government decree. People
are like a flock of sheep, now steadily patient, now in ferocious revolt.
Say to it: "Amuse yourself," and it amuses itself. Say to it: "Go and fight
with your neighbor," and it goes and fights. Say to it: "Vote for the Emperor,"
and it votes for the Emperor; then say to it: "Vote for the Republic,"
and it votes for the Republic.
Those who direct it are stupid, too; but instead of obeying
men they obey principles, a course which can only be foolish, ineffective,
and false, for the very reason that principles are ideas which are considered
as certain and unchangeable, whereas in this world one is certain of nothing,
since light is an illusion and noise is deception.
July 16. I saw some things yesterday that troubled me
very much.
I was dining at my cousin's, Madame Sablé, whose
husband is colonel of the Seventy-sixth Chasseurs at Limoges. There were
two young women there, one of whom had married a medical man, Dr. Parent,
who devotes himself a great deal to nervous diseases and to the extraordinary
manifestations which just now experiments in hypnotism and suggestion are
producing.
He related to us at some length the enormous results obtained
by English scientists and the doctors of the medical school at Nancy, and
the facts which he adduced appeared to me so strange, that I declared that
I was altogether incredulous.
"We are," he declared, "on the point of discovering one
of the most important secrets of nature, I mean to say, one of its most
important secrets on this earth, for assuredly there are some up in the
stars, yonder, of a different kind of importance. Ever since man has thought,
since he has been able to express and write down his thoughts, he has felt
himself close to a mystery which is impenetrable to his coarse and imperfect
senses, and he endeavors to supplement the feeble penetration of his organs
by the efforts of his intellect. As long as that intellect remained in
its elementary stage, this intercourse with invisible spirits assumed forms
which were commonplace though terrifying. Thence sprang the popular belief
in the supernatural, the legends of wandering spirits, of fairies, of gnomes,
of ghosts, I might even say the conception of God, for our ideas of the
Workman-Creator, from whatever religion they may have come down to us,
are certainly the most mediocre, the stupidest, and the most unacceptable
inventions that ever sprang from the frightened brain of any human creature.
Nothing is truer than what Voltaire says: 'If God made man in His own image,
man has certainly paid Him back again.'
"But for rather more than a century, men seem to have
had a presentiment of something new. Mesmer and some others have put us
on an unexpected track, and within the last two or three years especially,
we have arrived at results really surprising."
My cousin, who is also very incredulous, smiled, and Dr.
Parent said to her: "Would you like me to try and send you to sleep, Madame?"
"Yes, certainly."
She sat down in an easy-chair, and he began to look at
her fixedly, as if to fascinate her. I suddenly felt myself somewhat discomposed;
my heart beat rapidly and I had a choking feeling in my throat. I saw that
Madame Sablé's eyes were growing heavy, her mouth twitched, and
her bosom heaved, and at the end of ten minutes she was asleep.
"Go behind her," the doctor said to me; so I took a seat
behind her. He put a visiting-card into her hands, and said to her: "This
is a looking-glass; what do you see in it?"
She replied: "I see my cousin."
"What is he doing?"
"He is twisting his mustache."
"And now?"
"He is taking a photograph out of his pocket."
"Whose photograph is it?"
"His own."
That was true, for the photograph had been given me that
same evening at the hotel.
"What is his attitude in this portrait?"
"He is standing up with his hat in his hand."
She saw these things in that card, in that piece of white
pasteboard, as if she had seen them in a looking-glass.
The young women were frightened, and exclaimed: "That
is quite enough! Quite, quite enough!"
But the doctor said to her authoritatively: "You will
get up at eight o'clock to-morrow morning; then you will go and call on
your cousin at his hotel and ask him to lend you the five thousand francs
which your husband asks of you, and which he will ask for when he sets
out on his coming journey."
Then he woke her up.
On returning to my hotel, I thought over this curious
séance and I was assailed by doubts, not as to my cousin's absolute
and undoubted good faith, for I had known her as well as if she had been
my own sister ever since she was a child, but as to a possible trick on
the doctor's part. Had not he, perhaps, kept a glass hidden in his hand,
which he showed to the young woman in her sleep at the same time as he
did the card? Professional conjurers do things which are just as singular.
However, I went to bed, and this morning, at about half
past eight, I was awakened by my footman, who said to me: "Madame Sablé
has asked to see you immediately, Monsieur." I dressed hastily and went
to her.
She sat down in some agitation, with her eyes on the floor,
and without raising her veil said to me: "My dear cousin, I am going to
ask a great favor of you."
"What is it, cousin?"
"I do not like to tell you, and yet I must. I am in absolute
want of five thousand francs."
"What, you?"
"Yes, I, or rather my husband, who has asked me to procure
them for him."
I was so stupefied that I hesitated to answer. I asked
myself whether she had not really been making fun of me with Dr. Parent,
if it were not merely a very well-acted farce which had been got up beforehand.
On looking at her attentively, however, my doubts disappeared. She was
trembling with grief, so painful was this step to her, and I was sure that
her throat was full of sobs.
I knew that she was very rich and so I continued: "What!
Has not your husband five thousand francs at his disposal? Come, think.
Are you sure that he commissioned you to ask me for them?"
She hesitated for a few seconds, as if she were making
a great effort to search her memory, and then she replied: "Yes--yes, I
am quite sure of it."
"He has written to you?"
She hesitated again and reflected, and I guessed the torture
of her thoughts. She did not know. She only knew that she was to borrow
five thousand francs of me for her husband. So she told a lie.
"Yes, he has written to me."
"When, pray? You did not mention it to me yesterday."
"I received his letter this morning."
"Can you show it to me?"
"No; no--no--it contained private matters, things too
personal to ourselves. I burned it."
"So your husband runs into debt?"
She hesitated again, and then murmured: "I do not know."
Thereupon I said bluntly: "I have not five thousand francs
at my disposal at this moment, my dear cousin."
She uttered a cry, as if she were in pair; and said: "Oh!
oh! I beseech you, I beseech you to get them for me."
She got excited and clasped her hands as if she were praying
to me! I heard her voice change its tone; she wept and sobbed, harassed
and dominated by the irresistible order that she had received.
"Oh! oh! I beg you to--if you knew what I am suffering--I
want them to-day."
I had pity on her: "You shall have them by and by, I swear
to you."
"Oh! thank you! thank you! How kind you are."
I continued: "Do you remember what took place at your
house last night?"
"Yes."
"Do you remember that Dr. Parent sent you to sleep?"
"Yes."
"Oh! Very well then; he ordered you to come to me this
morning to borrow five thousand francs, and at this moment you are obeying
that suggestion."
She considered for a few moments, and then replied: "But
as it is my husband who wants them--"
For a whole hour I tried to convince her, but could not
succeed, and when she had gone I went to the doctor. He was just going
out, and he listened to me with a smile, and said: "Do you believe now?"
"Yes, I cannot help it."
"Let us go to your cousin's."
She was already resting on a couch, overcome with fatigue.
The doctor felt her pulse, looked at her for some time with one hand raised
toward her eyes, which she closed by degrees under the irresistible power
of this magnetic influence. When she was asleep, he said:
"Your husband does not require the five thousand francs
any longer! You must, therefore, forget that you asked your cousin to lend
them to you, and, if he speaks to you about it, you will not understand
him."
Then he woke her up, and I took out a pocket-book and
said: "Here is what you asked me for this morning, my dear cousin." But
she was so surprised, that I did not venture to persist; nevertheless,
I tried to recall the circumstance to her, but she denied it vigorously,
thought that I was making fun of her, and in the end, very nearly lost
her temper.
There! I have just come back, and I have not been able
to eat any lunch, for this experiment has altogether upset me.
July 19. Many people to whom I have told the adventure
have laughed at me. I no longer know what to think. The wise man says:
Perhaps?
July 21. I dined at Bougival, and then I spent the evening
at a boatmen's ball. Decidedly everything depends on place and surroundings.
It would be the height of folly to believe in the supernatural on the Ile
de la Grenouillière. But on the top of Mont Saint-Michel or in India,
we are terribly under the influence of our surroundings. I shall return
home next week.
July 30. I came back to my own house yesterday. Everything
is going on well.
August 2. Nothing fresh; it is splendid weather, and I
spend my days in watching the Seine flow past.
August 4. Quarrels among my servants. They declare that
the glasses are broken in the cupboards at night. The footman accuses the
cook, she accuses the needlewoman, and the latter accuses the other two.
Who is the culprit? It would take a clever person to tell.
August 6. This time, I am not mad. I have seen--I have
seen--I have seen!--I can doubt no longer--I have seen it!
I was walking at two o'clock among my rose-trees, in the
full sunlight--in the walk bordered by autumn roses which are beginning
to fall. As I stopped to look at a Géant de Bataille, which had
three splendid blooms, I distinctly saw the stalk of one of the roses bend
close to me, as if an invisible hand had bent it, and then break, as if
that hand had picked it! Then the flower raised itself, following the curve
which a hand would have described in carrying it toward a mouth, and remained
suspended in the transparent air, alone and motionless, a terrible red
spot, three yards from my eyes. In desperation I rushed at it to take it!
I found nothing; it had disappeared. Then I was seized with furious rage
against myself, for it is not wholesome for a reasonable and serious man
to have such hallucinations.
But was it a hallucination? I turned to look for the stalk,
and I found it immediately under the bush, freshly broken, between the
two other roses which remained on the branch. I returned home, then, with
a much disturbed mind; for I am certain now, certain as I am of the alternation
of day and night, that there exists close to me an invisible being who
lives on milk and on water, who can touch objects, take them and change
their places; who is, consequently, endowed with a material nature, although
imperceptible to sense, and who lives as I do, under my roof --
August 7. I slept tranquilly. He drank the water out of
my decanter, but did not disturb my sleep.
I ask myself whether I am mad. As I was walking just now
in the sun by the riverside, doubts as to my own sanity arose in me; not
vague doubts such as I have had hitherto, but precise and absolute doubts.
I have seen mad people, and I have known some who were quite intelligent,
lucid, even clear-sighted in every concern of life, except on one point.
They could speak clearly, readily, profoundly on everything; till their
thoughts were caught in the breakers of their delusions and went to pieces
there, were dispersed and swamped in that furious and terrible sea of fogs
and squalls which is called madness.
I certainly should think that I was mad, absolutely mad,
if I were not conscious that I knew my state, if I could not fathom it
and analyze it with the most complete lucidity. I should, in fact, be a
reasonable man laboring under a hallucination. Some unknown disturbance
must have been excited in my brain, one of those disturbances which physiologists
of the present day try to note and to fix precisely, and that disturbance
must have caused a profound gulf in my mind and in the order and logic
of my ideas. Similar phenomena occur in dreams, and lead us through the
most unlikely phantasmagoria, without causing us any surprise, because
our verifying apparatus and our sense of control have gone to sleep, while
our imaginative faculty wakes and works. Was it not possible that one of
the imperceptible keys of the cerebral finger-board had been paralyzed
in me? Some men lose the recollection of proper names, or of verbs, or
of numbers, or merely of dates, in consequence of an accident. The localization
of all the avenues of thought has been accomplished nowadays; what, then,
would there be surprising in the fact that my faculty of controlling the
unreality of certain hallucinations should be destroyed for the time being?
I thought of all this as I walked by the side of the water.
The sun was shining brightly on the river and made earth delightful, while
it filled me with love for life, for the swallows, whose swift agility
is always delightful in my eyes, for the plants by the riverside, whose
rustling is a pleasure to my ears.
By degrees, however, an inexplicable feeling of discomfort
seized me. It seemed to me as if some unknown force were numbing and stopping
me, were preventing me from going further and were calling me back. I felt
that painful wish to return which comes on you when you have left a beloved
invalid at home, and are seized by a presentiment that he is worse.
I, therefore, returned despite of myself, feeling certain
that I should find some bad news awaiting me, a letter or a telegram. There
was nothing, however, and I was surprised and uneasy, more so than if I
had had another fantastic vision.
August 8. I spent a terrible evening, yesterday. He does
not show himself any more, but I feel that He is near me, watching me,
looking at me, penetrating me, dominating me, and more terrible to me when
He hides himself thus than if He were to manifest his constant and invisible
presence by supernatural phenomena. However, I slept.
August 9. Nothing, but I am afraid.
August 10. Nothing; but what will happen to-morrow?
August 11. Still nothing. I cannot stop at home with this
fear hanging over me and these thoughts in my mind; I shall go away.
August 12. Ten o'clock at night. All day long I have been
trying to get away, and have not been able. I contemplated a simple and
easy act of liberty, a carriage ride to Rouen--and I have not been able
to do it. What is the reason?
August 13. When one is attacked by certain maladies, the
springs of our physical being seem broken, our energies destroyed, our
muscles relaxed, our bones to be as soft as our flesh, and our blood as
liquid as water. I am experiencing the same in my moral being, in a strange
and distressing manner. I have no longer any strength, any courage, any
self-control, nor even any power to set my own will in motion. I have no
power left to will anything, but some one does it for me and I obey.
August 14. I am lost! Somebody possesses my soul and governs
it! Somebody orders all my acts, all my movements, all my thoughts. I am
no longer master of myself, nothing except an enslaved and terrified spectator
of the things which I do. I wish to go out; I cannot. He does not wish
to; and so I remain, trembling and distracted in the armchair in which
he keeps me sitting. I merely wish to get up and to rouse myself, so as
to think that I am still master of myself: I cannot! I am riveted to my
chair, and my chair adheres to the floor in such a manner that no force
of mine can move us.
Then suddenly, I must, I must go to the foot of my garden
to pick some strawberries and eat them--and I go there. I pick the strawberries
and I eat them! Oh! my God! my God! Is there a God? If there be one, deliver
me! save me! succor me! Pardon! Pity! Mercy! Save me! Oh! what sufferings!
what torture! what horror!
August 15. Certainly this is the way in which my poor
cousin was possessed and swayed, when she came to borrow five thousand
francs of me. She was under the power of a strange will which had entered
into her, like another soul, a parasitic and ruling soul. Is the world
coming to an end?
But who is he, this invisible being that rules me, this
unknowable being, this rover of a supernatural race?
Invisible beings exist, then! how is it, then, that since
the beginning of the world they have never manifested themselves in such
a manner as they do to me? I have never read anything that resembles what
goes on in my house. Oh! If I could only leave it, if I could only go away
and flee, and never return, I should be saved; but I cannot.
August 16. I managed to escape to-day for two hours, like
a prisoner who finds the door of his dungeon accidentally open. I suddenly
felt that I was free and that He was far away, and so I gave orders to
put the horses in as quickly as possible, and I drove to Rouen. Oh! how
delightful to be able to say to my coachman: "Go to Rouen!"
I made him pull up before the library, and I begged them
to lend me Dr. Herrmann Herestauss's treatise on the unknown inhabitants
of the ancient and modern world.
Then, as I was getting into my carriage, I intended to
say: "To the railway station!" but instead of this I shouted--I did not
speak; but I shouted--in such a loud voice that all the passers-by turned
round: "Home!" and I fell back on to the cushion of my carriage, overcome
by mental agony. He had found me out and regained possession of me.
August 17. Oh! What a night! what a night! And yet it
seems to me that I ought to rejoice. I read until one o'clock in the morning!
Herestauss, Doctor of Philosophy and Theogony, wrote the history and the
manifestation of all those invisible beings which hover around man, or
of whom he dreams. He describes their origin, their domains, their power;
but none of them resembles the one which haunts me. One might say that
man, ever since he has thought, has had a foreboding and a fear of a new
being, stronger than himself, his successor in this world, and that, feeling
him near, and not being able to foretell the nature of the unseen one,
he has, in his terror, created the whole race of hidden beings, vague phantoms
born of fear.
Having, therefore, read until one o'clock in the morning,
I went and sat down at the open window, in order to cool my forehead and
my thoughts in the calm night air. It was very pleasant and warm! How I
should have enjoyed such a night formerly!
There was no moon, but the stars darted out their rays
in the dark heavens. Who inhabits those worlds? What forms, what living
beings, what animals are there yonder? Do those who are thinkers in those
distant worlds know more than we do? What can they do more than we? What
do they see which we do not? Will not one of them, some day or other, traversing
space, appear on our earth to conquer it, just as formerly the Norsemen
crossed the sea in order to subjugate nations feebler than themselves?
We are so weak, so powerless, so ignorant, so small--we
who live on this particle of mud which revolves in liquid air.
I fell asleep, dreaming thus in the cool night air, and
then, having slept for about three quarters of an hour, I opened my eyes
without moving, awakened by an indescribably confused and strange sensation.
At first I saw nothing, and then suddenly it appeared to me as if a page
of the book, which had remained open on my table, turned over of its own
accord. Not a breath of air had come in at my window, and I was surprised
and waited. In about four minutes, I saw, I saw--yes I saw with my own
eyes--another page lift itself up and fall down on the others, as if a
finger had turned it over. My armchair was empty, appeared empty, but I
knew that He was there, He, and sitting in my place, and that He was reading.
With a furious bound, the bound of an enraged wild beast that wishes to
disembowel its tamer, I crossed my room to seize him, to strangle him,
to kill him! But before I could reach it, my chair fell over as if somebody
had run away from me. My table rocked, my lamp fell and went out, and my
window closed as if some thief had been surprised and had fled out into
the night, shutting it behind him.
So He had run away; He had been afraid; He, afraid of
me!
So to-morrow, or later--some day or other, I should be
able to hold him in my clutches and crush him against the ground! Do not
dogs occasionally bite and strangle their masters?
August 18. I have been thinking the whole day long. Oh!
yes, I will obey Him, follow His impulses, fulfill all His wishes, show
myself humble, submissive, a coward. He is the stronger; but an hour will
come.
August 19. I know, I know, I know all! I have just read
the following in the Revue du Monde Scientifique: "A curious piece of news
comes to us from Rio de Janeiro. Madness, an epidemic of madness, which
may be compared to that contagious madness which attacked the people of
Europe in the Middle Ages, is at this moment raging in the Province of
San-Paulo. The frightened inhabitants are leaving their houses, deserting
their villages, abandoning their land, saying that they are pursued, possessed,
governed like human cattle by invisible, though tangible beings, by a species
of vampire, which feeds on their life while they are asleep, and which,
besides, drinks water and milk without appearing to touch any other nourishment.
"Professor Don Pedro Henriques, accompanied by several
medical savants, has gone to the Province of San-Paulo, in order to study
the origin and the manifestations of this surprising madness on the spot,
and to propose such measures to the Emperor as may appear to him to be
most fitted to restore the mad population to reason."
Ah! Ah! I remember now that fine Brazilian three-master
which passed in front of my windows as it was going up the Seine, on the
eighth of last May! I thought it looked so pretty, so white and bright!
That Being was on board of her, coming from there, where its race sprang
from. And it saw me! It saw my house, which was also white, and He sprang
from the ship on to the land. Oh! Good heavens!
Now I know, I can divine. The reign of man is over, and
he has come. He whom disquieted priests exorcised, whom sorcerers evoked
on dark nights, without seeing him appear, He to whom the imaginations
of the transient masters of the world lent all the monstrous or graceful
forms of gnomes, spirits, genii, fairies, and familiar spirits. After the
coarse conceptions of primitive fear, men more enlightened gave him a truer
form. Mesmer divined him, and ten years ago physicians accurately discovered
the nature of his power, even before He exercised it himself. They played
with that weapon of their new Lord, the sway of a mysterious will over
the human soul, which had become enslaved. They called it mesmerism, hypnotism,
suggestion, I know not what? I have seen them diverting themselves like
rash children with this horrible power! Woe to us! Woe to man! He has come,
the--the--what does He call himself--the--I fancy that he is shouting out
his name to me and I do not hear him--the--yes--He is shouting it out--I
am listening--I cannot--repeat--it--Horla--I have heard--the Horla--it
is He--the Horla--He has come! --
Ah I the vulture has eaten the pigeon, the wolf has eaten
the lamb; the lion has devoured the sharp-horned buffalo; man has killed
the lion with an arrow, with a spear, with gunpowder; but the Horla will
make of man what man has made of the horse and of the ox: his chattel,
his slave, and his food, by the mere power of his will. Woe to us!
But, nevertheless, sometimes the animal rebels and kills
the man who has subjugated it. I should also like--I shall be able to--but
I must know Him, touch Him, see Him! Learned men say that eyes of animals,
as they differ from ours, do not distinguish as ours do. And my eye cannot
distinguish this newcomer who is oppressing me.
Why? Oh! Now I remember the words of the monk at Mont
Saint-Michel: "Can we see the hundred-thousandth part of what exists? Listen;
there is the wind which is the strongest force in nature; it knocks men
down, blows down buildings, uproots trees, raises the sea into mountains
of water, destroys cliffs, and casts great ships on to the breakers; it
kills, it whistles, it sighs, it roars,--have you ever seen it, and can
you see it? It exists for all that, however!"
And I went on thinking: my eyes are so weak, so imperfect,
that they do not even distinguish hard bodies, if they are as transparent
as glass! If a glass without quicksilver behind it were to bar my way,
I should run into it, just like a bird which has flown into a room breaks
its head against the windowpanes. A thousand things, moreover, deceive
a man and lead him astray. How then is it surprising that he cannot perceive
a new body which is penetrated and pervaded by the light?
A new being! Why not? It was assuredly bound to come!
Why should we be the last? We do not distinguish it, like all the others
created before us? The reason is, that its nature is more delicate, its
body finer and more finished than ours. Our makeup is so weak, so awkwardly
conceived; our body is encumbered with organs that are always tired, always
being strained like locks that are too complicated; it lives like a plant
and like an animal nourishing itself with difficulty on air, herbs, and
flesh; it is a brute machine which is a prey to maladies, to malformations,
to decay; it is broken-winded, badly regulated, simple and eccentric, ingeniously
yet badly made, a coarse and yet a delicate mechanism, in brief, the outline
of a being which might become intelligent and great.
There are only a few--so few--stages of development in
this world, from the oyster up to man. Why should there not be one more,
when once that period is accomplished which separates the successive products
one from the other?
Why not one more? Why not, also, other trees with immense,
splendid flowers, perfuming whole regions? Why not other elements beside
fire, air, earth, and water? There are four, only four, nursing fathers
of various beings! What a pity! Why should not there be forty, four hundred,
four thousand! How poor everything is, how mean and wretched--grudgingly
given, poorly invented, clumsily made! Ah! the elephant and the hippopotamus,
what power! And the camel, what suppleness!
But the butterfly, you will say, a flying flower! I dream
of one that should be as large as a hundred worlds, with wings whose shape,
beauty, colors, and motion I cannot even express. But I see it--it flutters
from star to star, refreshing them and perfuming them with the light and
harmonious breath of its flight! And the people up there gaze at it as
it passes in an ecstasy of delight!
What is the matter with me? It is He, the Horla who haunts
me, and who makes me think of these foolish things! He is within me, He
is becoming my soul; I shall kill him!
August 20. I shall kill Him. I have seen Him! Yesterday
I sat down at my table and pretended to write very assiduously. I knew
quite well that He would come prowling round me, quite close to me, so
close that I might perhaps be able to touch him, to seize him. And then--then
I should have the strength of desperation; I should have my hands, my knees,
my chest, my forehead, my teeth to strangle him, to crush him, to bite
him, to tear him to pieces. And I watched for him with all my overexcited
nerves.
I had lighted my two lamps and the eight wax candles on
my mantelpiece, as if, by this light I should discover Him.
My bed, my old oak bed with its columns, was opposite
to me; on my right was the fireplace; on my left the door, which was carefully
closed, after I had left it open for some time, in order to attract Him;
behind me was a very high wardrobe with a looking-glass in it, which served
me to dress by every day, and in which I was in the habit of inspecting
myself from head to foot every time I passed it.
So I pretended to be writing in order to deceive Him,
for He also was watching me, and suddenly I felt, I was certain, that He
was reading over my shoulder, that He was there, almost touching my ear.
I got up so quickly, with my hands extended, that I almost
fell. Horror! It was as bright as at midday, but I did not see myself in
the glass! It was empty, clear, profound, full of light! But my figure
was not reflected in it--and I, I was opposite to it! I saw the large,
clear glass from top to bottom, and I looked at it with unsteady eyes.
I did not dare advance; I did not venture to make a movement; feeling certain,
nevertheless, that He was there, but that He would escape me again, He
whose imperceptible body had absorbed my reflection.
How frightened I was! And then suddenly I began to see
myself through a mist in the depths of the looking-glass, in a mist as
it were, or through a veil of water; and it seemed to me as if this water
were flowing slowly from left to right, and making my figure clearer every
moment. It was like the end of an eclipse. Whatever hid me did not appear
to possess any clearly defined outlines, but was a sort of opaque transparency,
which gradually grew clearer.
At last I was able to distinguish myself completely, as
I do every day when I look at myself.
I had seen Him! And the horror of it remained with me,
and makes me shudder even now.
August 21. How could I kill Him, since I could not get
hold of Him? Poison? But He would see me mix it with the water; and then,
would our poisons have any effect on His impalpable body? No--no--no doubt
about the matter. Then?--then?
August 22. I sent for a blacksmith from Rouen and ordered
iron shutters of him for my room, such as some private hotels in Paris
have on the ground floor, for fear of thieves, and he is going to make
me a similar door as well. I have made myself out a coward, but I do not
care about that!
September 10. Rouen, Hôtel Continental. It is done;
it is done--but is He dead? My mind is thoroughly upset by what I have
seen.
Well then, yesterday, the locksmith having put on the
iron shutters and door, I left everything open until midnight, although
it was getting cold.
Suddenly I felt that He was there, and joy, mad joy took
possession of me. I got up softly, and I walked to the right and left for
some time, so that He might not guess anything; then I took off my boots
and put on my slippers carelessly; then I fastened the iron shutters and
going back to the door quickly I double-locked it with a padlock, putting
the key into my pocket.
Suddenly I noticed that He was moving restlessly round
me, that in his turn He was frightened and was ordering me to let Him out.
I nearly yielded, though I did not quite, but putting my back to the door,
I half opened it, just enough to allow me to go out backward, and as I
am very tall, my head touched the lintel. I was sure that He had not been
able to escape, and I shut Him up quite alone, quite alone. What happiness!
I had Him fast. Then I ran downstairs into the drawing-room which was under
my bedroom. I took the two lamps and poured all the oil on to the carpet,
the furniture, everywhere; then I set fire to it and made my escape, after
having carefully double locked the door.
I went and hid myself at the bottom of the garden, in
a clump of laurel bushes. How long it was! how long it was! Everything
was dark, silent, motionless, not a breath of air and not a star, but heavy
banks of clouds which one could not see, but which weighed, oh! so heavily
on my soul.
I looked at my house and waited. How long it was! I already
began to think that the fire had gone out of its own accord, or that He
had extinguished it, when one of the lower windows gave way under the violence
of the flames, and a long, soft, caressing sheet of red flame mounted up
the white wall, and kissed it as high as the roof. The light fell on to
the trees, the branches, and the leaves, and a shiver of fear pervaded
them also! The birds awoke; a dog began to howl, and it seemed to me as
if the day were breaking! Almost immediately two other windows flew into
fragments, and I saw that the whole of the lower part of my house was nothing
but a terrible furnace. But a cry, a horrible, shrill, heart-rending cry,
a woman's cry, sounded through the night, and two garret windows were opened!
I had forgotten the servants! I saw the terror-struck faces, and the frantic
waving of their arms!
Then, overwhelmed with horror, I ran off to the village,
shouting: "Help! help! fire! fire!" Meeting some people who were already
coming on to the scene, I went back with them to see!
By this time the house was nothing but a horrible and
magnificent funeral pile, a monstrous pyre which lit up the whole country,
a pyre where men were burning, and where He was burning also, He, He, my
prisoner, that new Being, the new Master, the Horla!
Suddenly the whole roof fell in between the walls, and
a volcano of flames darted up to the sky. Through all the windows which
opened on to that furnace, I saw the flames darting, and I reflected that
He was there, in that kiln, dead.
Dead? Perhaps? His body? Was not his body, which was transparent,
indestructible by such means as would kill ours?
If He were not dead? Perhaps time alone has power over
that Invisible and Redoubtable Being. Why this transparent, unrecognizable
body, this body belonging to a spirit, if it also had to fear ills, infirmities,
and premature destruction?
Premature destruction? All human terror springs from that!
After man the Horla. After him who can die every day, at any hour, at any
moment, by any accident, He came, He who was only to die at his own proper
hour and minute, because He had touched the limits of his existence!
No--no--there is no doubt about it--He is not dead. Then--then--I
suppose I must kill myself!
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FINIS