I
From even the greatest of horrors irony is seldom absent. Some times
it enters directly into the composition of the events, while sometimes
it relates only to their fortuitous position among persons and places.
The latter sort is splendidly exemplified by a case in the ancient city
of Providence, where in the late forties Edgar Allan Poe used to sojourn
often during his unsuccessful wooing of the gifted poetess, Mrs. Whitman.
Poe generally stopped at the Mansion House in Benefit Street - the renamed
Golden Ball Inn whose roof has sheltered Washington, Jefferson, and Lafayette
- and his favourite walk led northward along the same street to Mrs. Whitman's
home and the neighbouring hillside churchyard of St. John's whose hidden
expanse of eighteenth-century gravestones had for him a peculiar fascination.
Now the irony is this. In this walk, so many times repeated, the world's
greatest master of the terrible and the bizarre was obliged to pass a particular
house on the eastern side of the street; a dingy, antiquated structure
perched on the abruptly rising side hill, with a great unkept yard dating
from a time when the region was partly open country. It does not appear
that he ever wrote or spoke of it, nor is there any evidence that he even
noticed it. And yet that house, to the two persons in possession of certain
information, equals or outranks in horror the wildest phantasy of the genius
who so often passed it unknowingly, and stands starkly leering as a symbol
of all that is unutterably hideous.
The house was - and for that matter still is - of a kind to attract
the attention of the curious. Originally a farm or semi-farm building,
it followed the average New England colonial lines of the middle eighteenth
century - the prosperous peaked-roof sort, with two stories and dormerless
attic, and with the Georgian doorway and interior paneling dictated by
the progress of taste at that time. It faced south, with one gable and
buried to the lower windows in the east ward rising hill, and the other
exposed to the foundations toward the street. Its construction, over a
century and a half ago, had followed the grading and straightening of the
road in that especial vicinity; for Benefit Street - at first called Back
Street - was laid out as a lane winding amongst the graveyards of the first
settlers, and straightened only when the removal of the bodies to the North
Burial Ground made it decently possible to cut through the old family plots.
At the start, the western wall had lain some twenty feet up a precipitous
lawn from the roadway; but a widening of the street at about the time of
the Revolution sheared off most of the intervening space, exposing the
foundations so that a brick basement wall had to be made, giving the deep
cellar a street frontage with the door and two windows above ground, close
to the new line of public travel. When the sidewalk was laid out a century
ago the last of the intervening space was removed; and Poe in his walks
must have seen only a sheer ascent of dull grey brick flush with the sidewalk
and surmounted at a height of ten feet by the antique shingled bulk of
the house proper.
The farm-like grounds extended back very deeply up the hill, al most
to Wheaton Street. The space south of the house, abutting on Benefit Street,
was of course greatly above the existing sidewalk level, forming a terrace
bounded by a high bank wall of damp, mossy stone pierced by a steep flight
of narrow steps which led inward be tween canyon-like surfaces to the upper
region of mangy lawn, rheumy brick walls, and neglected gardens whose dismantled
cement urns, rusted kettles fallen from tripods of knotty sticks, and similar
paraphernalia set off the weather beaten front door with its broken fanlight,
rotting Ionic pilasters, and wormy triangular pediment.
What I heard in my youth about the shunned house was merely that people
died there in alarmingly great numbers. That, I was told, was why the original
owners had moved out some twenty years after building the place. It was
plainly unhealthy, perhaps because of the dampness and fungous growth in
the cellar, the general sickish smell, the draughts of the hallways, or
the quality of the well and pump water. These things were bad enough, and
these were all that gained belief among the person whom I knew. Only the
notebooks of my antiquarian uncle, Dr. Elihu Whipple, revealed to me at
length the darker, vaguer surmises which formed an undercurrent of folk-
lore among old-time servants and humble folk, surmises which never travelled
far, and which were largely forgotten when Providence grew to be a metropolis
with a shifting modern population.
The general fact is, that the house was never regarded by the solid
part of the community as in any real sense "haunted." There were no widespread
tales of rattling chains, cold currents of air, extinguished lights, or
faces at the window. Extremists sometimes said the house was "unlucky,"
but that is as far as even they went. What was really beyond dispute is
that a frightful proportion of persons died there; or more accurately,
had
died there, since after some peculiar happenings over sixty years ago the
building had become deserted through the sheer impossibility of renting
it. These persons were not all cut off suddenly by any one cause; rather
did it seem that their vitality was insidiously sapped, so that each one
died the sooner from whatever tendency to weakness he may have naturally
had. And those who did not die displayed in varying degree a type of anaemia
or consumption, and sometimes a decline of the mental faculties, which
spoke ill for the salubriousness of the building. Neighbouring houses,
it must be added, seemed entirely free from the noxious quality.
This much I knew before my insistent questioning led my uncle to show
me the notes which finally embarked us both on our hideous investigation.
In my childhood the shunned house was vacant, with barren, gnarled and
terrible old trees, long, queerly pale grass and nightmarishly misshapen
weeds in the high terraced yard where birds never lingered. We boys used
to overrun the place, and I can still recall my youthful terror not only
at the morbid strangeness of this sinister vegetation, but at the eldritch
atmosphere and odour of the dilapidated house, whose unlocked front door
was often entered in quest of shudders. The small-paned windows were largely
broken, and a nameless air of desolation hung round the precarious panel
ling, shaky interior shutters, peeling wallpaper,. falling plaster, rickety
staircases, and such fragments of battered furniture as still remained.
The dust and cobwebs added their touch of the fearful; and brave indeed
was the boy who would voluntarily ascend the ladder to the attic, a vast
raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends,
and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels
which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous
and hellish shapes.
But after all, the attic was not the most terrible part of the house.
It was the dank, humid cellar which somehow exerted the strongest repulsion
on us, even though it was wholly above ground on the street side, with
only a thin door and window-pierced brick wall to separate it from the
busy sidewalk. We scarcely knew whether to haunt it in spectral fascination,
or to shun it for the sake of our souls and our sanity. For one thing,
the bad odour of the house was strongest there; and for another thing,
we did not like the white fungous growths which occasionally sprang up
in rainy summer weather from the hard earth floor. Those fungi, grotesquely
like the vegetation in the yard outside, were truly horrible in their outlines;
detest able parodies of toadstools and Indian pipes, whose like we had
never seen in any other situation. They rotted quickly, and at one stage
became slightly phosphorescent; so that nocturnal passers-by sometimes
spoke of witch-fires glowing behind the broken panes of the foetor-spreading
windows.
We never - even in our wildest Hallowe'en moods - visited this cellar
by night, but in some of our daytime visits could detect the phosphorescence,
especially when the day was dark and wet. There was also a subtler thing
we often thought we detected - a very strange thing which was, however,
merely suggestive at most. I refer to a sort of cloudy whitish pattern
on the dirt floor - a vague, shifting deposit of mould or nitre which we
sometimes thought we could trace amidst the sparse fungous growths near
the huge fireplace of the basement kitchen. Once in a while it struck us
that this patch bore an uncanny resemblance to a doubled-up human figure,
though generally no such kinship existed, and often there was no whitish
deposit whatever. .On a certain rainy afternoon when this illusion seemed
phenomenally strong, and when, in addition, I had fancied I glimpsed a
kind of thin, yellowish, shimmering exhalation rising from the nitrous
pattern toward the yawning fireplace, I spoke to my uncle about the matter.
He smiled at this odd conceit, but it seemed that his smile was tinged
with reminiscence. Later I heard that a similar notion entered into some
of the wild ancient tales of the common folk - a notion likewise alluding
to ghoulish, wolfish shapes taken by smoke from the great chimney, and
queer contours assumed by certain of the sinuous tree-roots that thrust
their way into the cellar through the loose foundation-stones.
II
Not till my adult years did my uncle set before me the notes and data which
he had collected concerning the shunned house. Dr. Whipple was a sane,
conservative physician of the old school, and for all his interest in the
place was not eager to encourage young thoughts toward the abnormal. His
own view, postulating simply a building and location of markedly unsanitary
qualities, had nothing to do with abnormality; but he realized that the
very picturesque ness which aroused his own interest would in a boy's fanciful
mind take on all manner of gruesome imaginative associations.
The doctor was a bachelor; a white-haired, clean-shaven, old- fashioned
gentleman, and a local historian of note, who had often broken a lance
with such controversial guardians of tradition as Sidney S. Rider and Thomas
W. Bicknell. He lived with one man servant in a Georgian homestead with
knocker and iron-railed steps, balanced eerily on the steep ascent of North
Court Street beside the ancient brick court and colony house where his
grandfather - a cousin of that celebrated privateersman, Capt. Whipple,
who burnt His Majesty's armed schooner Gaspee in 1772 - had voted
in the legislature on May 4, 1776, for the independence of the Rhode Island
Colony. Around him in the damp, low-ceiled library with the musty white
paneling, heavy carved overmantel and small-paned, vine- shaded windows,
were the relics and records of his ancient family, among which were many
dubious allusions to the shunned house in Benefit Street. That pest spot
lies not far. distant - for Benefit runs ledgewise just above the court
house along the precipitous hill up which the first settlement climbed.
When, in the end, my insistent pestering and maturing years evoked from
my uncle the hoarded lore I sought, there lay before me a strange enough
chronicle. Long-winded, statistical, and drearily genealogical as some
of the matter was, there ran through it a continuous thread of brooding,
tenacious horror and preternatural malevolence which impressed me even
more than it had impressed the good doctor. Separate events fitted together
uncannily, and seemingly irrelevant details held mines of hideous possibilities.
A new and burning curiosity grew in me, compared to which my boyish curiosity
was feeble and inchoate. The first revelation led to an exhaustive research,
and finally to that shuddering quest which proved so disastrous to myself
and mine. For at last my uncle insisted on joining the search I had commenced,
and after a certain night in that house he did not come away with me. I
am lonely without that gentle soul whose long years were filled only with
honour, virtue, good taste, benevolence, and learning. I have reared a
marble urn to his memory in St. John's churchyard - the place that Poe
loved - the hidden grove of giant willows on the hill, where tombs and
head stones huddle quietly between the hoary bulk of the church and the
houses and bank walls of Benefit Street.
The history of the house, opening amidst a maze of dates, revealed no
trace of the sinister either about its construction or about the prosperous
and honourable family who built it. Yet from the first a taint of calamity,
soon increased to boding significance, was apparent. My uncle's carefully
compiled record began with the building of the structure in 1763, and followed
the theme with an unusual amount of detail. The shunned house, it seems,
was first inhabited by William Harris and his wife Rhoby Dexter, with their
children, Elkanah, born in 1755, Abigail, born in 1757, William, Jr., born
in 1759, and Ruth, born in 1761. Harris was a substantial merchant and
seaman in the West India trade, connected with the firm of Obadiah Brown
and his nephews. After Brown's death in 1761, the new firm of Nicholas
Brown & Co. made him master of the brig Prudence, providence-built,
of 120 tons, thus enabling him to erect the new homestead he had desired
ever since his marriage.
The site he had chosen - a recently straightened part of the new and
fashionable Back Street, which ran along the side of the hill above crowded
Cheapside - was all that could be wished, and the building did justice
to the location. It was the best that moderate means could afford, and
Harris hastened to move in before the birth of a fifth child which the
family expected. That child, a boy, came in December; but was still-born.
Nor was any child to be born alive in that house for a century and a half.
The next April sickness occurred among the children, and Abigail and
Ruth died before the month was over. Dr. Job Ives diagnosed the trouble
as some infantile fever, though others declared it was more of a mere wasting-away
or decline. It seemed, in any event, to be contagious; for Hannah Bowen,
one of the two servants, died of it in the following June. Eli Lideason,
the other servant, constantly complained of weakness; and would have returned
to his father's farm in Rehoboth but for a sudden attachment for Mehitabel
Pierce, who was hired to succeed Hannah. He died the next year - a sad
year in deed, since it marked the death of William Harris himself, enfeebled
as he was by the climate of Martinique, where his occupation had kept him
for considerable periods during the preceding decade.
The widowed Rhoby Harris never recovered from the shock of her husband's
death, and the passing of her firstborn Elkanah two years later was the
final blow to her reason. In 1768 she fell victim to a mild form of insanity,
and was thereafter confined to the upper part of the house, her elder maiden
sister, Mercy Dexter, having moved in to take charge of the family. Mercy
was a plain, raw-boned woman of great strength, but her health visibly
declined from the time of her advent. She was greatly devoted to her unfortunate
sister, and had an especial affection for her only surviving nephew William,
who from a sturdy infant had become a sickly, spindling lad. In
this year the servant Mehitabel died, and the other servant, Pre served
Smith, left without coherent explanation - or at least, with only some
wild tales and a complaint that he disliked the smell of the place. For
a time Mercy could secure no more help, since the seven deaths and case
of madness, all occurring within five years' space, had begun to set in
motion the body of fireside rumour which later became so bizarre. Ultimately,
however, she obtained new servants from out of town; Ann White, a morose
woman from that part of North Kingstown now set off as the township of
Exeter, and a capable Boston man named Zenas Low.
It was Ann White who first gave definite shape to the sinister idle
talk. Mercy should have known better than to hire anyone from the Nooseneck
Hill country, for that remote bit of backwoods was then, as now, a seat
of the most uncomfortable superstitions. As lately as 1892 an Exeter community
exhumed a dead body and ceremoniously burnt its heart in order to prevent
certain alleged visitations injurious to the public health and peace, and
one may imagine the point of view of the same section in 1768. Ann's tongue
was perniciously active, and within a few months Mercy discharged her,
filling her place with a faithful and amiable Amazon from Newport, Maria
Robbins.
Meanwhile poor Rhoby Harris, in her madness, gave voice to dreams and
imaginings of the most hideous sort. At times her screams became insupportable,
and for long periods she would utter shrieking horrors which necessitated
her son's temporary residence with his cousin, Peleg Harris, in Presbyterian
Lane near the new college building. The boy would seem to improve after
these visits, and had Mercy been as wise as she was well-meaning, she would
have let him live permanently with Peleg. Just what Mrs. Harris cried out
in her fits of violence, tradition hesitates to say; or rather, presents
such extravagant accounts that they nullify themselves through sheer absurdity.
Certainly it sounds absurd to hear that a woman educated only in the rudiments
of French often shouted for hours in a coarse and idiomatic form of that
language, or that the same per son, alone and guarded, complained wildly
of a staring thing which bit and chewed at her. In 1772 the servant Zenas
died, and when Mrs. Harris heard of it she laughed with a shocking delight
utterly foreign to her. The next year she herself died, and was laid to
rest in the North Burial Ground beside her husband.
Upon the outbreak of trouble with Great Britain in 1775, William Harris,
despite his scant sixteen years and feeble constitution, man aged to enlist
in the Army of Observation under General Greene; and from that time on
enjoyed a steady rise in health and prestige.
In 1780, as a Captain in Rhode Island forces in New Jersey under Colonel
Angell, he met and married Phebe Hetfield of Elizabethtown, whom he brought
to Providence upon his honourable discharge in the following year.
The young soldier's return was not a thing of unmitigated happiness.
The house, it is true, was still in good condition; and the street had
been widened and changed in name from Back Street to Benefit Street. But
Mercy Dexter's once robust frame had undergone a sag and curious decay,
so that she was now a stooped and pathetic figure with hollow voice and
disconcerting pallor - qualities shared to a singular degree by the one
remaining servant Maria. In the autumn of 1782 Phebe Harris gave birth
to a still-born daughter, and on the fifteenth of the next May Mercy Dexter
took leave of a useful, austere, and virtuous life.
William Harris, at last thoroughly convinced of the radically un healthful
nature of his abode, now took steps toward quitting it and closing it forever.
Securing temporary quarters for himself and wife at the newly opened Golden
Ball Inn, he arranged for the building of a new and finer house in Westminster
Street, in the growing part of the town across the Great Bridge. There,
in 1785, his son Dutee was born; and there the family dwelt till the encroachments
of commerce drove them back across the river and over the hill to Angell
Street, in the newer East Side residence district, where the late Archer
Harris built his sumptuous but hideous French-roofed mansion in 1876. William
and Phebe both succumbed to the yellow fever epidemic in 1797, but Dutee
was brought up by his cousin Rathbone Harris, Peleg's son.
Rathbone was a practical man, and rented the Benefit Street house despite
William's wish to keep it vacant. He considered it an obligation to his
ward to make the most of all the boy's property, nor did he concern himself
with the deaths and illnesses which caused so many changes of tenants,
or the steadily growing aversion with which the house was generally regarded.
It is likely that he felt only vexation when, in 1804, the town council
ordered him to fumigate the place with sulphur, tar and gum camphor on
account of the much-discussed deaths of four persons, presumably caused
by the then diminishing fever epidemic. They said the place had a febrile
smell.
Dutee himself thought little of the house, for he grew up to be a privateersman,
and served with distinction on the Vigilant under Capt. Cahoone
in the War of 1812. He returned unharmed, married in 1814, and became a
father on that memorable night of September 23, 1815, when a great gale
drove the waters of the bay over half the town, and floated a tall sloop
well up Westminster Street so that its masts almost tapped the Harris windows
in symbolic affirmation that the new boy, Welcome, was a seaman's son.
Welcome did not survive his father, but lived to perish gloriously at
Fredericksburg in 1862. Neither he nor his son Archer knew of the shunned
house as other than a nuisance almost impossible to rent - perhaps on account
of the mustiness and sickly odour of unkempt old age. Indeed, it never
was rented after a series of deaths culminating in 1861, which the excitement
of the war tended to throw into obscurity. Carrington Harris, last of the
male line, knew it only as a deserted and somewhat picturesque center of
legend until I told him my experience. He had meant to tear it down and
build an apartment house on the site, but after my account, decided to
let it stand, install plumbing, and rent it. Nor has he yet had any difficulty
in obtaining tenants. The horror has gone.
III
It may well be imagined how powerfully I was affected by the annals of
the Harrises. In this continuous record there seemed to me to brood a persistent
evil beyond anything in nature as I had known it; an evil clearly connected
with the house and not with the family. This impression was confirmed by
my uncle's less systematic array of miscellaneous data - legends transcribed
from servant gossip, cuttings from the papers, copies of death certificates
by fellow- physicians, and the like. All of this material I cannot hope
to give, for my uncle was a tireless antiquarian and very deeply interested
in the shunned house; but I may refer to several dominant points which
earn notice by their recurrence through many reports from diverse sources.
For example, the servant gossip was practically unanimous in attributing
to the fungous and malodorous cellar of the house a vast supremacy
in evil influence. There had been servants - Ann White especially - who
would not use the cellar kitchen, and at least three well-defined legends
bore upon the queer quasi-human or diabolic outlines assumed by tree-roots
and patches of mould in that region. These latter narratives interested
me profoundly, on account of what I had seen in my boyhood, but I felt
that most of the significance had in each case been largely obscured by
additions from the common stock of local ghost lore.
Ann White, with her Exeter superstition, had promulgated the most extravagant
and at the same time most consistent tale; alleging that there must lie
buried beneath the house one of those vampires - the dead who retain their
bodily form and live on the blood or breath of the living - whose hideous
legions send their preying shapes or spirits abroad by night. To destroy
a vampire one must, the grandmothers say, exhume it and burn its heart,
or at least drive a stake through that organ; and Ann's dogged insistence
on a search under the cellar had been prominent in bringing about her discharge.
Her tales, however, commanded a wide audience, and were the more readily
accepted because the house indeed stood on land once used for burial purposes.
To me their interest depended less on this circumstance than on the peculiarly
appropriate way in which they dove-tailed with certain other things - the
complaint of the de parting servant Preserved Smith, who had preceded Ann
and never heard of her, that something "sucked his breath" at night; the
death- certificates of fever victims of 1804, issued by Dr. Chad Hopkins,
and showing the four deceased persons all unaccountably lacking in blood;
and the obscure passages of poor Rhoby Harris's ravings, where she complained
of the sharp teeth of a glassy-eyed, half-visible presence.
Free from unwarranted superstition though I am, these things produced
in me an odd sensation, which was intensified by a pair of widely separated
newspaper cuttings relating to deaths in the shunned house - one from the
Providence
Gazette and Country-Journal of April 12, 1815, and the other from the
Daily
Transcript and Chronicle of October 27, 1845 - each of which detailed
an appallingly grisly circumstance whose duplication was remarkable. It
seems that in both instances the dying person, in 1815 a gentle old lady
named Stafford and in 1845 a school-teacher of middle age named Eleazar
Durfee, became transfigured in a horrible way; glaring glassily and attempting
to bite the throat of the attending physician. Even more puzzling, though,
was the final case which put an end to the renting of the house - a series
of anaemia deaths preceded by progressive madnesses wherein the patient
would craftily attempt the lives of his relatives by incisions in the neck
or wrists.
This was in 1860 and 1861, when my uncle had just begun his medical
practice; and before leaving for the front he heard much of it from his
elder professional colleagues. The really inexplicable thing was the way
in which the victims - ignorant people, for the ill- smelling and widely
shunned house could now be rented to no others - would babble maledictions
in French, a language they could not possibly have studied to any extent.
It made one think of poor Rhoby Harris nearly a century before, and so
moved my uncle that he commenced collecting historical data on the house
after listening, some time subsequent to his return from the war, to the
first-hand account of Drs. Chase and Whitmarsh. Indeed, I could see that
my uncle had thought deeply on the subject, and that he was glad of my
own interest - an open-minded and sympathetic interest which enabled him
to discuss with me matters at which others would merely have laughed. His
fancy had not gone so far as mine, but he felt that the place was rare
in its imaginative potentialities, and worthy of note as an inspiration
in the field of the grotesque and macabre.
For my part, I was disposed to take the whole subject with pro found
seriousness, and began at once not only to review the evidence, but to
accumulate as much as I could. I talked with the elderly Archer Harris,
then owner of the house, many times before his death in 1916; and obtained
from him and his still surviving maiden sister Alice an authentic corroboration
of all the family data my uncle had collected. When, however, I asked them
what connection with France or its language the house could have, they
confessed themselves as frankly baffled and ignorant as I. Archer knew
nothing, and all that Miss Harris could say was that an old allusion her
grandfather, Dutee Harris, had heard of might have shed a little light.
The old seaman, who had survived his son Welcome's death in battle by two
years, had not himself known the legend; but recalled that his earliest
nurse, the ancient Maria Robbins, seemed darkly aware of something that
might have lent a weird significance to the French ravings of Rhoby Harris,
which she had so often heard during the last days of that hapless woman.
Maria had been at the shunned house from 1769 till the removal of the family
in 1783, and had seen Mercy Dexter die. Once she hinted to the child Dutee
of a somewhat peculiar circumstance in Mercy's last moments, but he had
soon for gotten all about it save that it was something peculiar. The grand
daughter, moreover, recalled even this much with difficulty. She and her
brother were not so much interested in the house as was Archer's son Carrington,
the present owner, with whom I talked after my experience.
Having exhausted the Harris family of all the information it could furnish,
I turned my attention to early town records and deeds with a zeal more
penetrating than that which my uncle had occasionally shown in the same
work. What I wished was a comprehensive history of the site from its very
settlement in 1636 - or even before, if any Narragansett Indian legend
could be unearthed to supply the data. I found, at the start, that the
land had been part of a long strip of the lot granted originally to John
Throckmorton; one of many similar strips beginning at the Town Street beside
the river and extending up over the hill to a line roughly corresponding
with the modern Hope Street. The Throckmorton lot had later, of course,
been much subdivided; and I became very assiduous in tracing that section
through which Back or Benefit Street was later run. It had, a rumour indeed
said, been the Throckmorton graveyard; but as I examined the records more
carefully, I found that the graves had all been transferred at an early
date to the North Burial Ground on the Pawtucket West Road.
Then suddenly I came - by a rare piece of chance, since it was not in
the main body of records and might easily have been missed - upon something
which aroused my keenest eagerness, fitting in as it did with several of
the queerest phases of the affair. It was the record of a lease in 1697,
of a small tract of ground to an Etienne Roulet and wife. At last the French
element had appeared - that, and another deeper element of horror which
the name conjured up from the darkest recesses of my weird and heterogeneous
reading - and I feverishly studied the platting of the locality as it had
been before the cutting through and partial straightening of Back Street
between 1747 and 1758. I found what I had half expected, that where the
shunned house now stood, the Roulets had laid out their graveyard behind
a one-story and attic cottage, and that no record of any transfer of. graves
existed. The document, indeed, ended in much confusion; and I was forced
to ransack both the Rhode Island Historical Society and Shepley Library
before I could find a local door which the name of Etienne Roulet would
unlock. In the end I did find something; some thing of such vague but monstrous
import that I set about at once to examine the cellar of the shunned house
itself with a new and ex cited minuteness.
The Roulets, it seemed, had come in 1696 from East Greenwich, down the
west shore of Narragansett Bay. They were Huguenots from Caude, and had
encountered much opposition before the Providence selectmen allowed them
to settle in the town. Unpopularity had dogged them in East Greenwich,
whither they had come in 1686, after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes,
and rumour said that the cause of dislike extended beyond mere racial and
national prejudice, or the land disputes which involved other French settlers
with the English in rivalries which not even Governor Andros could quell.
But their ardent Protestantism - too ardent, some whispered - and their
evident distress when virtually driven from the village had been granted
a haven; and the swarthy Etienne Roulet, less apt at agriculture than at
reading queer books and drawing queer diagrams, was given a clerical post
in the warehouse at Pardon Tillinghast's wharf, far south in Town Street.
There had, however, been a riot of
some sort later on - perhaps forty years later, after old Roulet's death
- and no one seemed to hear of the family after that.
For a century and more, it appeared, the Roulets had been well re membered
and frequently discussed as vivid incidents in the quiet life of a New
England seaport. Etienne's son Paul, a surly fellow whose erratic conduct
had probably provoked the riot which wiped out the family, was particularly
a source of speculation; and though Providence never shared the witchcraft
panics of her Puritan neighbours, it was freely intimated by old wives
that his prayers were neither uttered at the proper time nor directed toward
the proper object. All this had undoubtedly formed the basis of the legend
known by old Maria Robbins. What relation it had to the French ravings
of Rhoby Harris and other inhabitants of the shunned house, imagination
or future discovery alone could determine. I wondered how many of those
who had known the legends realized that additional link with the terrible
which my wider reading had given me; that ominous item in the annals of
morbid horror which tells of the creature Jacques Roulet, of Caude,
who in 1598 was condemned to death as a daemoniac but afterward saved from
the stake by the Paris parliament and shut in a madhouse. He had been found
covered with blood and shreds of flesh in a wood, shortly after the killing
and rending of a boy by a pair of wolves. One wolf was seen to lope away
unhurt. Surely a pretty hearthside tale, with a queer significance as to
name and place; but I decided that the Providence gossips could not have
generally known of it. Had they known, the coincidence of names would have
brought some drastic and frightened action- indeed, might not its limited
whispering have precipitated the final riot which erased the Roulets from
the town?
I now visited the accursed place with increased frequency; studying
the unwholesome vegetation of the garden, examining all the walls of the
building, and poring over every inch of the earthen cellar floor. Finally,
with Carrington Harris's permission, I fitted a key to the disused door
opening from the cellar directly upon Benefit Street, preferring to have
a more immediate access to the outside world than the dark stairs, ground
floor hall, and front door could give. There, where morbidity lurked most
thickly, I searched and poked during long afternoons when the sunlight
filtered in through the cobwebbed above-ground door which placed me only
a few feet from the placid sidewalk outside. Nothing new rewarded my efforts-only
the same depressing mustiness and faint suggestions of noxious odours and
nitrous outlines on the floor - and I fancy that many pedestrians must
have watched me curiously through the broken panes.
At length, upon a suggestion of my uncle's, I decided to try the spot
nocturnally; and one stormy midnight ran the beams of an electric torch
over the mouldy floor with its uncanny shapes and distorted, half-phosphorescent
fungi. The place had dispirited me curiously that evening, and I was almost
prepared when I saw - or thought I saw - amidst the whitish deposits a
particularly sharp definition of the "huddled form" I had suspected from
boyhood. Its clear ness was astonishing and unprecedented - and as I watched
I seemed to see again the thin, yellowish, shimmering exhalation which
had startled me on that rainy afternoon so many years before.
Above the anthropomorphic patch of mould by the fireplace it rose; a
subtle, sickish, almost luminous vapour which, as it hung trembling in
the dampness, seemed to develop vague and shocking suggestions of form,
gradually trailing off into nebulous decay and passing up into the blackness
of the great chimney with a foetor in its wake. It was truly horrible,
and the more so to me because of. what I knew of the spot. Refusing to
flee, I watched it fade - and as I watched I felt that it was in turn watching
me greedily with eyes more imaginable than visible. When I told my uncle
about it he was greatly aroused; and after a tense hour of reflection,
arrived at a definite and drastic decision. Weighing in his mind the importance
of the matter, and the significance of our relation to it, he insisted
that we both test - and if possible destroy - the horror of the house by
a joint night or nights of aggressive vigil in that musty and fungous-cursed
cellar.
IV
On Wednesday, June 25, 1919, after a proper notification of Carring ton
Harris which did not include surmises as to what we expected to find, my
uncle and I conveyed to the shunned house two camp chairs and a folding
camp cot, together with some scientific mechanism of greater weight and
intricacy. These we placed in the cellar during the day, screening the
windows with paper and planning to return in the evening for our first
vigil. We had locked the door from the cellar to the ground floor; and
having a key to the outside cellar door, we were prepared to leave our
expensive and delicate apparatus - which we had obtained secretly and at
great cost - as many days as our vigil might need to be protracted. It
was our design to sit up together till very late, and then watch singly
till dawn in two- hour stretches, myself first and then my companion; the
inactive member resting on the cot.
The natural leadership with which my uncle procured the instruments
from the laboratories of Brown University and the Cranston Street Armory,
and instinctively assumed direction of our venture, was a marvellous commentary
on the potential vitality and resilience of a man of eighty-one. Elihu
Whipple had lived according to the hygienic laws he had preached as a physician,
and but for what happened later would be here in full vigour today. Only
two persons suspect what did happen - Carrington Harris and myself. I had
to tell Harris because he owned the house and deserved to know what had
gone out of it. Then, too, we had spoken to him in advance of our quest;
and I felt after my uncle's going that he would understand and assist me
in some vitally necessary public explanations. He turned very pale, but
agreed to help me, and decided that it would now be safe to rent the house.
To declare that we were not nervous on that rainy night of watching
would be an exaggeration both gross and ridiculous. We were not, as I have
said, in any sense childishly superstitious, but scientific study and reflection
had taught us that the known universe of three dimensions embraces the
merest fraction of the whole cosmos of substance and energy. In this case
an overwhelming preponderance of evidence from numerous authentic sources
pointed to the tenacious existence of certain forces of great power and,
so far as the human point of view is concerned, exceptional malignancy.
To say that we actually believed in vampires or werewolves would be a carelessly
inclusive statement. Rather must it be said that we were not prepared to
deny the possibility of certain unfamiliar and unclassified modifications
of vital force and attenuated matter; existing very infrequently in three-dimensional
space because of its more intimate connection with other spatial units,
yet close enough to the boundary of our own to furnish us occasional manifestations
which we, for lack of a proper vantage-point, may never hope to understand.
In short, it seemed to my uncle and me that an incontrovertible array
of facts pointed to some lingering influence in the shunned house; traceable
to one or another of the ill-favoured French settlers of two centuries
before, and still operative through rare and un known laws of atomic and
electronic motion. That the family of Roulet had possessed an abnormal
affinity for outer circles of entity - dark spheres which for normal folk
hold only repulsion and terror - their recorded history seemed to prove.
Had not, then, the riots of those bygone seventeen-thirties set moving
certain kinetic patterns in the morbid brain of one or more of them - notably
the sinister Paul Roulet - which obscurely survived the bodies murdered,
and continued to function in some multiple-dimensioned space along the
original lines of force determined by a frantic hatred of the encroaching
community?
Such a thing was surely not a physical or biochemical impossibility
in the light of a newer science which includes the theories of relativity
and intra-atomic action. One might easily imagine an alien nucleus of substance
or energy, formless or otherwise, kept alive by imperceptible or immaterial
subtractions from the life-force or bodily tissue and fluids of other and
more palpably living things into which it penetrates and with whose fabric
it sometimes completely merges itself. It might be actively hostile, or
it might be dictated merely by blind motives of self-preservation. In any
case such a monster must of necessity be in our scheme of things an anomaly
and an intruder, whose extirpation forms a primary duty with every man
not an enemy to the world's life, health, and sanity.
What baffled us was our utter ignorance of the aspect in which we might
encounter the thing. No sane person had even seen it, and few had ever
felt it definitely. It might be pure energy - a form ethereal and outside
the realm of substance-or it might be partly material; some unknown and
equivocal mass of plasticity, capable of changing at will to nebulous approximations
of the solid, liquid, gaseous, or tenuously unparticled states. The anthropomorphic
patch of mould on the floor, the form of the yellowish vapour, and the
curvature of the tree-roots in some of the old tales, all argued at least
a remote and reminiscent connection with the human shape; but how representative
or permanent that similarity might be, none could say with any kind of
certainty.
We had devised two weapons to fight it; a large and specially fitted
Crookes tube operated by powerful storage batteries and pro vided with
peculiar screens and reflectors, in case it proved intangible and opposable
only by vigorously destructive ether radiations, and a pair of military
flame-throwers of the sort used in the World War, in case it proved partly
material and susceptible of mechanical destruction - for like the superstitious
Exeter rustics, we were prepared to burn the thing's heart out if heart
existed to burn. All this aggressive mechanism we set in the cellar in
positions care fully arranged with reference to the cot and chairs, and
to the spot before the fireplace where the mould had taken strange shapes.
That suggestive patch, by the way, was only faintly visible when we placed
our furniture and instruments, and when we returned that evening for the
actual vigil. For a moment I half-doubted that I had ever seen it in the
more definitely limned form - but then I thought of the legends.
Our cellar vigil began at 10 P.M., daylight saving time, and
as it continued we found no promise of pertinent developments. A weak,
filtered glow from the rain-harassed street lamps outside, and a feeble
phosphorescence from the detestable fungi within, showed the drip ping
stone of the walls, from which all traces of whitewash had vanished; the
dank, foetid and mildew-tainted hard earth floor with its obscene fungi;
the rotting remains of what had been stools, chairs and tables, and other
more shapeless furniture; the heavy planks and massive beams of the ground
floor overhead; the decrepit plank door leading to bins and chambers beneath
other parts of the house; the crumbling stone staircase with ruined wooden
hand-rail; and the crude and cavernous fireplace of blackened brick where
rusted iron fragments revealed the past presence of hooks, andirons, spit,
crane, and a door to the Dutch oven - these things, and our austere cot
and camp chairs, and the heavy and intricate destructive machinery we had
brought.
We had, as in my own former explorations, left the door to the street
unlocked; so that a direct and practical path of escape might lie open
in case of manifestations beyond our power to deal with. It was our idea
that our continued nocturnal presence would call forth whatever malign
entity lurked there; and that being prepared, we could dispose of the thing
with one or the other of our provided means as soon as we had recognised
and observed it sufficiently. How long it might require to evoke and extinguish
the thing, we had no notion. It occurred to us, too, that our venture was
far from safe, for in what strength the thing might appear no one could
tell. But we deemed the game worth the hazard, and embarked on it alone
and unhesitatingly; conscious that the seeking of outside aid would only
expose us to ridicule and perhaps defeat our entire purpose. Such was our
frame of mind as we talked - far into the night, till my uncle's growing
drowsiness made me remind him to lie down for his two-hour sleep.
Something like fear chilled me as I sat there in the small hours alone
- I say alone, for one who sits by a sleeper is indeed alone; perhaps more
alone than he can realise. My uncle breathed heavily, his deep inhalations
and exhalations accompanied by the rain outside, and punctuated by another
nerve-racking sound of distant dripping water within - for the house was
repulsively damp even in dry weather, and in this storm positively swamp-like.
I studied the loose, antique-masonry of the walls in the fungous-light
and the feeble rays which stole in from the street through the screened
windows; and once, when the noisome atmosphere of the place seemed about
to sicken me, I opened the door and looked up and down the street, feasting
my eyes on familiar sights and my nostrils on whole some air. Still nothing
occurred to reward my watching; and I yawned repeatedly, fatigue getting
the better of apprehension.
Then the stirring of my uncle in his sleep attracted my notice. He had
turned restlessly on the cot several times during the latter half of the
first hour, but now he was breathing with unusual irregularity, occasionally
heaving a sigh which held more than a few of the qualities of a choking
moan. I turned my electric flashlight on him and found his face averted,
so rising and crossing to the other side of the cot, I again flashed the
light to see if he seemed in any pain. What I saw unnerved me most surprisingly,
considering its relative triviality. It must have been merely the association
of an odd circumstance with the sinister nature of our location and mission,
for surely the circumstance was not in itself frightful or unnatural. It
was merely that my uncle's facial expression, disturbed no doubt by the
strange dreams which our situation prompted, betrayed consider able agitation,
and seemed not at all characteristic of him. His habitual expression was
one of kindly and well-bred calm, whereas now a variety of emotions seemed
struggling within him. I think, on the whole, that it was this variety
which
chiefly disturbed me. My uncle, as he gasped and tossed in increasing perturbation
and with eyes that had now started open, seemed not one man but many men,
and suggested a curious quality of alienage from himself.
All at once he commenced to mutter, and I did not like the look of his
mouth and teeth as he spoke. The words were at first indistinguishable,
and then - with a tremendous start - I recognised some thing about them
which filled me with icy fear till I recalled the breadth of my uncle's
education and the interminable translations he had made from anthropological
and antiquarian articles in the Revue des Deux Mondes. For the venerable
Elihu Whipple was muttering in French, and the few phrases I could distinguish
seemed connected with the darkest myths he had ever adapted from the famous
Paris magazine.
Suddenly a perspiration broke out on the sleeper's forehead, and he
leaped abruptly up, half awake. The jumble of French changed to a cry in
English, and the hoarse voice shouted excitedly, "My breath, my breath!"
Then the awakening became complete, and with a subsidence of facial expression
to the normal state my uncle seized my hand and began to relate a dream
whose nucleus of significance I could only surmise with a kind of awe.
He had, he said, floated off from a very ordinary series of dream- pictures
into a scene whose strangeness was related to nothing he had ever read.
It was of this world, and yet not of it - a shadowy geometrical confusion
in which could be seen elements of familiar things in most unfamiliar and
perturbing combinations. There was a suggestion of queerly disordered pictures
superimposed one upon an other; an arrangement in which the essentials
of time as well as of space seemed dissolved and mixed in the most illogical
fashion. In this kaleidoscopic vortex of phantasmal images were occasional
snap-shots, if one might use the term, of singular clearness but un accountable
heterogeneity.
Once my uncle thought he lay in a carelessly dug open pit, with a crowd
of angry faces framed by straggling locks and three-cornered hats frowning
down at him. Again he seemed to be in the interior of a house - an old
house, apparently - but the details and inhabitants were constantly changing,
and he could never be certain of the faces or the furniture, or even of
the room itself, since doors and windows seemed in just as great a state
of flux as the more presumably mobile objects. It was queer - damnably
queer - and my uncle spoke almost sheepishly, as if half expecting not
to be believed, when he declared that of the strange faces many had unmistakably
borne the features of the Harris family. And all the while there was a
personal sensation of choking, as if some pervasive presence had spread
itself through his body and sought to possess itself of his vital processes.
I shuddered at the thought of those vital processes, worn as they were
by eighty-one years of continuous functioning, in conflict with unknown
forces of which the youngest and strongest system might well be afraid;
but in another moment reflected that dreams are only dreams, and that these
uncomfortable visions could be, at most, no more than my uncle's reaction
to the investigations and expectations which had lately filled our minds
to the exclusion of all else.
Conversation, also, soon tended to dispel my sense of strangeness; and
in time I yielded to my yawns and took my turn at slumber. My uncle seemed
now very wakeful, and welcomed his period of watching even though the nightmare
had aroused him far ahead of his al lotted two hours. Sleep seized me quickly,
and I was at once haunted with dreams of the most disturbing kind. I felt,
in my visions, a cosmic and abysmal loneness; with hostility surging from
all sides upon some prison where I lay confined. I seemed bound and gagged,
and taunted by the echoing yells of distant multitudes who thirsted for
my blood. My uncle's face came to me with less pleasant associations than
in waking hours, and I recall many futile struggles and at tempts to scream.
It was not a pleasant sleep, and for a second I was not sorry for the echoing
shriek which clove through the barriers of dream and flung me to a sharp
and startled awakeness in which every actual object before my eyes stood
out with more than natural clearness and reality.
V
I had been lying with my face away from my uncle's chair, so that in this
sudden flash of awakening I saw only the door to the street, the more northerly
window, and the wall and floor and ceiling toward the north of the room,
all photographed with morbid vivid ness on my brain in a light brighter
than the glow of the fungi or the rays from the street outside. It was
not a strong or even a fairly strong light; certainly not nearly strong
enough to read an average book by. But it cast a shadow of myself and the
cot on the floor, and had a yellowish, penetrating force that hinted at
things more portent than luminosity. This I perceived with unhealthy sharpness
despite the fact that two of my other senses were violently assailed. For
on my ears rang the reverberations of that shocking scream, while my nostrils
revolted at the stench which filled the place. My mind, as alert as my
senses, recognised the gravely unusual; and almost automatically I leaped
up and turned about to grasp the destructive instruments which we had left
trained on the mouldy spot before the fireplace. As I turned, I dreaded
what I was to see; for the scream had been in my uncle's voice, and I knew
not against what menace I should have to defend him and myself.
Yet after all, the sight was worse than I had dreaded. There are horrors
beyond horrors, and this was one of those nuclei of all dreamable hideousness
which the cosmos saves to blast an accursed and unhappy few. Out of the
fungous-ridden earth steamed up a va porous corpse-light, yellow and diseased,
which bubbled and lapped to a gigantic height in vague outlines half human
and half monstrous, through which I could see the chimney and fireplace
beyond. It was all eyes - wolfish and mocking - and the rugose insect-like
head dissolved at the top to a thin stream of mist which curled putridly
about and finally vanished up the chimney. I say that I saw this thing,
but it is only in conscious retrospection that I ever definitely traced
its damnable approach to form. At the time it was to me only a seething
dimly phosphorescent cloud of fungous loathsomeness, enveloping and dissolving
to an abhorrent plasticity the one object to which all my attention was
focused. That object was my uncle - the venerable Elihu Whipple - who with
blackening and
decaying features leered and gibbered at me, and reached out drip ping
claws to rend me in the fury which this horror had brought.
It was a sense of routine which kept me from going mad. I had drilled
myself in preparation for the crucial moment, and blind training saved
me. Recognising the bubbling evil as no substance reach able by matter
or material chemistry, and therefore ignoring the flame-thrower which loomed
on my left, I threw on the current of the Crookes tube apparatus, and focussed
toward that scene of immortal blasphemousness the strongest ether radiations
which men's art can arouse from the spaces and fluids of nature. There
was a bluish haze and a frenzied sputtering, and the yellowish phosphorescence
grew dimmer to my eyes. But I saw the dimness was only that of contrast,
and that the waves from the machine had no effect whatever.
Then, in the midst of that daemoniac spectacle, I saw a fresh horror
which brought cries to my lips and sent me fumbling and staggering towards
that unlocked door to the quiet street, careless of what abnormal terrors
I loosed upon the world, or what thoughts or judgments of men I brought
down upon my head. In that dim blend of blue and yellow the form of my
uncle had commenced a nauseous liquefaction whose essence eludes all description,
and in which there played across his vanishing face such changes of identity
as only madness can conceive. He was at once a devil and a multitude, a
charnel-house and a pageant. Lit by the mixed and uncertain beams, that
gelatinous face assumed a dozen - a score - a hundred- aspects; grinning,
as it sank to the ground on a body that melted like tallow, in the caricatured
likeness of legions strange and yet not strange.
I saw the features of the Harris line, masculine and feminine, adult
and infantile, and other features old and young, coarse and re fined, familiar
and unfamiliar. For a second there flashed a degraded counterfeit of a
miniature of poor Rhoby Harris that I had seen in the School of Design
Museum, and another time I thought I caught the rawboned image of Mercy
Dexter as I recalled her from a painting in Carrington Harris's house.
It was frightful beyond conception; toward the last, when a curious blend
of servant and baby visages flickered close to the fungous floor where
a pool of greenish grease was spreading, it seemed as though the shifting
features fought against themselves, and strove to form contours like those
of my uncle's kindly face. I like to think that he existed at that moment,
and that he tried to bid me farewell. It seems to me I hiccoughed a farewell
from my own parched throat as I lurched out into the street; a thin stream
of grease following me through the door to the rain- drenched sidewalk.
The rest is shadowy and monstrous. There was no one in the soaking street,
and in all the world there was no one I dared tell. I walked aimlessly
south past College Hill and the Athenaeum, down Hopkins Street, and over
the bridge to the business section where tall buildings seemed to guard
me as modern material things guard the world from ancient and unwholesome
wonder. Then the grey dawn unfolded wetly from the east, silhouetting the
archaic hill and its venerable steeples, and beckoning me to the place
where my terrible work was still unfinished. And in the end I went, wet,
hatless, and dazed in the morning light, and entered that awful door in
Benefit Street which I had left ajar, and which still swung cryptically
in full sight of the early householders to whom I dared not speak.
The grease was gone, for the mouldy floor was porous. And in front of
the fireplace was no vestige of the giant doubled-up form in nitre. I looked
at the cot, the chairs, the instruments, my neglected hat, and the yellowed
straw hat of my uncle. Dazedness was upper most, and I could scarcely recall
what was dream and what was reality. Then thought trickled back, and I
knew that I had witnessed things more horrible than I had dreamed. Sitting
down, I tried to conjecture as nearly as sanity would let me just what
had happened, and how I might end the horror, if indeed it had been real.
Matter it seemed not to be, nor ether, nor anything else conceivable by
mortal mind. What, then, but some exotic emanation; some vampirish vapour
such as Exeter rustics tell of as lurking over certain church yards? This
I felt was the clue, and again I looked at the floor before the fireplace
where the mould and nitre had taken strange forms. In ten minutes my mind
was made up, and taking my hat I set out for home, where I bathed, ate,
and gave by telephone an order for a pick- axe, a spade, a military gas-mask,
and six carboys of sulphuric acid, all to be delivered the next morning
at the cellar door of the shunned house in Benefit Street. After that I
tried to sleep; and failing, passed the hours in reading and in the composition
of inane verses to counteract my mood.
At 11 A.M. the next day I commenced digging. It was sunny weather, and
I was glad of that. I was still alone, for as much as I feared the unknown
horror I sought, there was more fear in the thought of telling anybody.
Later I told Harris only through sheer necessity, and because he had heard
odd tales from old people which disposed him ever so little toward belief.
As I turned up the stinking black earth in front of the fireplace, my spade
causing a viscous yellow ichor to ooze from the white fungi which it severed,
I trembled at the dubious thoughts of what I might uncover. Some secrets
of inner earth are not good for mankind, and this seemed to me one of them.
My hand shook perceptibly, but still I delved; after a while standing
in the large hole I had made. With the deepening of the hole, which was
about six feet square, the evil smell increased; and I lost all doubt of
my imminent contact with the hellish thing whose emanations had cursed
the house for over a century and a half. I wondered what it would look
like - what its form and substance would be, and how big it might have
waxed through long ages of life- sucking. At length I climbed out of the
hole and dispersed the heaped-up dirt, then arranging the great carboys
of acid around and near two sides, so that when necessary I might empty
them all down the aperture in quick succession. After that I dumped earth
only along the other two sides; working more slowly and donning my gas-
mask as the smell grew. I was nearly unnerved at my proximity to a nameless
thing at the bottom of a pit.
Suddenly my spade struck something softer than earth. I shuddered and
made a motion as if to climb out of the hole, which was now as deep as
my neck. Then courage returned, and I scraped away more dirt in the light
of the electric torch I had provided. The surface I uncovered was fishy
and glassy - a kind of semi-putrid congealed jelly with suggestions of
translucency. I scraped further, and saw that it had form. There was a
rift where a part of the substance was folded over. The exposed area was
huge and roughly cylindrical; like a mammoth soft blue-white stovepipe
doubled in two, its largest part some two feet in diameter. Still more
I scraped, and then abruptly I leaped out of the hole and away from the
filthy thing; frantically unstopping and tilting the heavy carboys, and
precipitating their corrosive contents one after another down that charnel
gulf and upon this unthinkable abnormality whose titan elbow I had
seen.
The blinding maelstrom of greenish-yellow vapour which surged tempestuously
up from that hole as the floods of acid descended, will never leave my
memory. All along the hill people tell of the yellow day, when virulent
and horrible fumes arose from the factory waste dumped in the Providence
River, but I know how mistaken they are as to the source. They tell, too,
of the hideous roar which at the same time came from some disordered water-pipe
or gas main underground - but again I could correct them if I dared. It
was unspeakably shocking, and I do not see how I lived through it. I did
faint after emptying the fourth carboy, which I had to handle after the
fumes had begun to penetrate my mask; but when I recovered I saw that the
hole was emitting no fresh vapours.
The two remaining carboys I emptied down without particular result,
and after a time I felt it safe to shovel the earth back into the pit.
It was twilight before I was done, but fear had gone out of the place.
The dampness was less foetid, and all the strange fungi had withered to
a kind of harmless greyish powder which blew ashlike along the floor. One
of earth's nethermost terrors had perished forever; and if there be a hell,
it had received at last the daemon soul of an unhallowed thing. And as
I patted down the last spadeful of mould, I shed the first of many tears
with which I have paid unaffected tribute to my beloved uncle's memory.
The next spring no more pale grass and strange weeds came up in the
shunned house's terraced garden, and shortly afterward Carring ton Harris
rented the place. It it still spectral, but its strangeness fascinates
me, and I shall find mixed with my relief a queer regret when it is torn
down to make way for a tawdry shop or vulgar apartment building. The barren
old trees in the yard have begun to bear small, sweet apples, and last
year the birds nested in their gnarled boughs.