Yet it is less the horror than the grace which turns the gazer's spirit
into stone. - Shelley.
I have no reason to expect that anyone will believe my story. If
it were another's tale, probably I should not feel inclined to give it
credence myself. I tell it herewith. hoping that the mere act of narration,
the mere shaping of this macabre day-mare adventure into words will in
some slight measure serve to relieve my mind of its execrable burden. There
have been times when only a hair's-breadth has intervened betwixt myself
and the seething devil-ridden world of madness; for the hideous knowledge,
the horror- blackened memories which I have carried so long, were never
meant to be borne by the human intellect.
A singular confession, no doubt, for one who has always been a connoisseur
of horrors. The deadly, the malign, and baleful things that lurk in the
labyrinth of existence have held for me a fascination no less potent than
unholy. I have sought them out and looked upon them as one who sees the
fatal eyes of the basilisk in a mirror; or as a savant who handles corrosive
poisons in his laboratory with mask. and gloves. Never did they have for
me the least hint of personal menace, since I viewed them with the most
impersonal detachment. I have investigated many clues of the spectral,
the ghastly, the bizarre, and many mazes of terror from which others would
have recoiled with caution or trepidation... But now I could wish that
there were one lure which I had not followed, one labyrinth which my curiosity
had not explored...
More incredible than all else, perhaps, is the very fact that the
thing occurred in Twentieth Century London. The sheer anachronism and fabulosity
of the happening has made me doubt the verities of time and space; and
ever since then I have been as one adrift on starless seas of confusion,
or roaming through unmapped dimensions. Never have I been quite able to
re-orient myself, to be altogether sure that I have not gone astray in
other centuries, in other lands than those declared by the chronology and
geography of the present. I have continual need of modern crowds, of glaring
lights, of laughter and clangor and tumult to reassure me; and always I
am afraid that such things are only an insubstantial barrier; that behind
them lies the realm of ancient horror and immemorial malignity of which
I have had this one abominable glimpse. And always it seems to me that
the veil will dissolve at any moment, and leave me face to face with an
ultimate Fear.
There is no need to detail the events that brought me to London.
It should be enough to say that I had endured a great grief, the death
of the only woman whom I had loved. I travelled as others have done, to
forget, to seek distraction among the novelties of foreign scenes; and
I tarried long in London. because its gray and mist-enfolded vastness,
its ever-varying throngs, its inexhaustible maze of thoroughfares and lanes
and houses, were somehow akin to oblivion itself, and offered more of refuge
from my sorrow than brighter cities had given.
I do not know how many weeks or months I lingered in London. Time
meant little to me, except as an ordeal to be undergone; and I recked not
of its disposal. It is hard to remember what I did or where I went; for
all things were blurred in a negligible monotone.
However, my meeting with the old man is clear as any present impression
— and perhaps clearer. Among the faint recollections of that period, it
is etched as with some black acid. I can not recall the name of the street
on which I saw him; but it was not far from the Strand, and was full of
a late afternoon crowd, beneath a heaven of high fog through which the
sun had not penetrated for days or weeks.
I was strolling idly along, amid hurrying faces and figures that
meant no more to me than the featureless heavens or the uniform shops.
My thoughts were idle, empty, immaterial; and in those days (since I had
been brought face to face with an all-too-real horror) I had relinquished
my search for the darker mysteries of existence. I was without forewarning,
without anticipation of anything but the daily drabness of the London streets
and people. Then, from that anonymous welter of humanity, the man stood
before me with the terrifying suddenness of an apparition; and I could
not have sworn from which direction he had come.
He was not unusual in frame or stature, apart from the erectness
with which he carried himself notwithstanding his extreme and manifest
age. Nor were his garments uncommon, aside from the fact that they too
were excessively old, and seemed to exhale an air of greater antiquity
than was warranted even by their cut and fabric. It was not these, but
the man's visage, which electrified all my drowsy faculties into a fascinated
and awe-struck attention, With the mortal pallor of his deeply wrinkled
features, like graven ivory, with his long, curling hair and beard that
were white as moon-touched vapor, with his eyes that glowed in their hollow
sockets like the coals of demon fires in underworld caverns, he would have
made a living model for Charon, the boatman who ferries the dead to Hades
across the silence of the Styx. He seemed to have stepped from an age and
land of classic mythology, into the teeming turmoil of that London street;
and the strange impression which he made upon me was in no wise modified
by his habiliments. I paid so little attention to these that I could not
remember their details afterward; though I think that their predominant
color was a black that had begun to assume the green of time, and suggested
the plumage of some sinister bird. My astonishment at the appearance of
this singular old man was increased when I saw that no one else in the
throng seemed to notice anything unusual or peculiar about him; but that
all were hastening on their way with no more, at most, than the off-hand
scrutiny which one would give to some aged beggar.
As for me, I had paused in my strolling, petrified with an instant
fascination, an immediate terror which I could not analyse or define. The
old man, too, had paused; and I saw that we were both a little withdrawn
from the current of the crowd, which passed so obviously, intent on its
own fears and allurements. Evidently realizing that he had caught my attention,
and perceiving the effect which he had upon me, the old man stepped nearer.
smiling with a hint of some horrible malevolence, some nameless antique
evil. I would have drawn back; but I was bereft of the power of movement.
Standing at my very side, and searching me with the gaze of his coal-like
orbs, he said to me in a low tone which could not have been overheard by
any of the passers-by:
'I can see that you have a taste for horror. The dark and awful secrets
of death. the equally dreadful mysteries of life, allure your interest.
If you care to come with me, I will show you something which is the quintessence
of all horror. You shall gaze on the head of Medusa with its serpent locks
— that very head which was severed by the sword of Perseus,'
I was startled beyond measure by the strange words, uttered in accents
which seemed to be heard by the mind rather than the ear. Somehow — unbelievable
as this will seem — I have never been quite sure in what language he spoke:
it may have been English, or it may have been Greek, which I know perfectly.
The words penetrated my understanding without leaving any definite sense
of their actual sound or linguistic nature. And of the voice itself, I
know only that it was such as might issue from the very lips of Charon.
It was guttural, deep, malign, with an echo of profound gulfs and sunless
grottoes.
Of course, my reason strove to dismiss the unaccountable feelings
and ideas that had surged upon me. I told myself that it was all imagination;
that the man was probably some queer sort of madman, or else was a mere
trickster, or a showman who took this method of drumming up custom. But
his aspect and his words were of necromantic strangeness; they seemed to
promise in a superlative degree the weirdness and bizarrerie which I had
sought in former time, and of which, so far, I had found little hint in
London. So I answered him quite seriously;
'Indeed, I should like to see the head of Medusa. But I always understood
that it was quite fatal to gaze upon her — that those who beheld her were
turned immediately into stone.'
'That can be avoided,' returned my interlocutor. 'I will furnish
you with a mirror: and if you are truly careful, and succeed in restraining
your curiosity, you can see her even as Perseus did. But you will have
to be very circumspect. And she is really so fascinating that few have
been able to refrain from looking at her directly. Yes, you must be very
cautious. He! he! he!' His laughter was more horrible even than his smile;
and even as he laughed, he began to pluck my sleeve, with a knotted hand
that was wholly in keeping with his face, and which might well have gripped
through untold ages the dark oars of the Stygian barge.
'Come with me — it is not far,' he said. 'And you will never have
a second opportunity. I am the owner of the Head; and I do not show it
to many. But I can see that you are one of the few who are fitted to appreciate
it.'
It is inexplicable to me that I should have accepted his invitation.
The man's personality was highly abhorrent, the feeling he aroused in me
was a mixture of irresistible fear and repugnance. In all likelihood he
was a lunatic — perhaps a dangerous maniac; or, if not actually mad, was
nurturing some ill design, some nefarious purpose to which I would lend
myself by accompanying him. It was madness to go with him, it was folly
even to listen to his words; and of course his wild claim concerning the
ownership of the fabled Gorgon's head was too ridiculous even for the formality
of disbelief. If such a thing had ever existed, even in mythic Greece,
it was certainly not to be found in present- day London, in the possession
of a doubtful-looking old man. The whole affair was more preposterous than
a dream ... but nevertheless I went with him. I was under a spell — the
spell of unknown mystery, terror, absurdity; and I could no more have refused
his offer than a dead man could have refused the conveyance of Charon to
the realms of Hades.
My house is not far away,' he assured me, repetitiously, as we left
the crowded street and plunged into a narrow, lightless alley. Perhaps
he was right; though I have no precise idea of the distance which we traversed.
The lanes and thoroughfares to which he led me were such as I could hardly
have believed to exist in that portion of London; and I was hopelessly
confused and astray in less than a minute. The houses were foul tenements,
obviously of much antiquity, interspersed with a few decaying mansions
that were doubtless even older, like remnants of some earlier city. I was
struck by the fact that we met no one, apart from rare and furtive stragglers
who seemed to avoid us. The air had grown extremely chill, and was fraught
with unwonted odors that somehow served to reinforce the sensations of
coldness and utter age. Above all was a dead, unchanging sky, with its
catafalque of oppressive and super- incumbent grayness. I could not remember
the streets through which we passed, though I was sure that I must have
traversed this section of the city before in my wanderings; and a queer
perplexity was now mingled with my feeling of dismay and bemusement. It
seemed to me that the old man was leading me into a clueless maze of unreality,
of deception and dubiety, where nothing was normal or familiar or legitimate.
The air darkened a little, as with the first encroachment of twilight,
though it still lacked an hour of sunset-time. In this premonitory dusk,
which did not deepen, but became stationary in its degree of shadow, through
which all things were oddly distorted and assumed illusory proportions,
we reached the house which was our destination.
It was one of the dilapidated mansions, and belonged to a period
which I was unable to name despite my extensive architectural knowledge.
It stood a little apart from the surrounding tenements; and more than the
dimness of the premature twilight seemed to adhere to its dark walls and
lampless windows. It impressed me with a sense of vastness; yet I have
never been quite sure concerning its exact dimensions: and I can not remember
the details of its façade apart from the high and heavy door at
the head of a flight of steps which were strangely worn as by the tread
of incalculable generations.
The door swung open without sound beneath the gnarled fingers of
the old man, who motioned me to precede him. I found myself in a long hall,
illumed by silver lamps of an antique type such as I had never before seen
in actual use. I think there were ancient tapestries and vases; and also
a mosaic floor; but the lamps are the only things which I remember clearly.
They burned with white flames that were preternaturally still and cold;
and I thought that they had always burned in this manner, unflickering,
unreplenished, throughout a frozen eternity whose days were in no wise
different from its nights.
At the end of the hall, we entered a room that was similarly litten,
and whose furniture was more than reminiscent of the classic. At the opposite
side was an open door, giving on a second chamber, which appeared to be
crowded with statuary; for I could see the outlines of still figures that
were silhouetted or partly illumined by unseen lamps
'Be seated,' said my host, indicating a luxurious couch. 'I will
show you the Head in a few minutes; but haste is unseemly, when one is
about to enter the very presence of Medusa.'
I obeyed; but my host remained standing. He was paler and older and
more erect than ever in the chill lamplight; and I sensed a sinewy, unnatural
vigor, a diabolic vitality, which was terrifyingly incongruous with his
extreme age. I shivered with more than the cold of the evening air and
the dank mansion. Of course, I still felt that the old man's invitation
was some sort of preposterous foolery or trickery. But the circumstances
among which I found myself were unexplainable and uncanny. However, I mustered
enough courage to ask a few questions.
'I am naturally surprised,' I said, 'to learn that the Gorgon's head
has survived into modern times. Unless the query is impertinent, will you
not tell me how it came into your possession?'
'He! he!' laughed the old man, with a loathsome rictus. 'That is
easily answered: I won the Head from Perseus at a game of dice, when he
was in his dotage.' 'But how is that possible?' I countered. 'Perseus lived
several thousand years ago.'
'Yes, according to your notation. But time is not altogether the
simple matter which you believe it to be. There are short-cuts between
the ages, there are deviations and overlappings among the epochs, of which
you have no idea. ... Also, I can see that you are surprised to learn that
the Head is in London... But London after all is only a name; and there
are shiftings, abbreviations, and interchanges of space as well as of time.'
I was amazed by his reasoning, but was forced to admit internally
that it did not lack a certain logic.
'I see your point,' I conceded... 'And now, of course, you will show
me the Gorgon's head?'
'In a moment. But I most warn you again to be supremely careful;
and also, you must be prepared for its exceeding and overwhelming beauty
no less than for its horror. The danger lies, as you may well imagine,
in the former quality.'
He left the room, and soon returned, carrying in his hand a metal
mirror of the same period as the lamps. The face was highly polished, with
a reflecting surface. wellnigh equal to that of glass; but the back and
handle, with their strange carvings of Laocoön-like figures that writhed
in a nameless, frozen agony, were black with the tarnish of elder centuries.
It might well have been the very mirror that was employed by Perseus.
The old man placed it in my hands.
'Come.' he said, and turned to the open door through which I had
seen the crowded statuary.
'Keep your eyes on the mirror,' he added, 'and do not look beyond
it. You will be in grave peril as soon as you enter this door.'
He preceded me, averting his face from the portal, and gazing back
across his shoulder with watchful orbs of malignant fire. My own eyes intent
on the mirror, I followed.
The room was unexpectedly large; and was lit by many lamps that depended
from chains of wrought silver. At first sight, when I had crossed the sill,
I thought that it was entirely filled with stone statues, some of them
standing erect in postures of a painful rigor, and others lying on the
floor in agonized eternal contortions. Then, moving the mirror a little,
I saw that there was a clear space through which one could walk, and a
vaster vacant space at the opposite end of the room, surrounding a sort
of altar. I could not see the whole of this altar, because the old man
was now in my line of mirrored vision. But the figures beside me, at which
I now dared to peep without the mirror's intermediation, were enough to
absorb my interest for the moment.
They were all life-size and they all offered a most singular medley
of historical periods. Yet it would seem that all of them, by the sameness
of their dark material, like a black marble, and the uniform realism and
verisimilitude of their technique, might well have been sculptured by the
same hand. There were boys and bearded men in the chitons of Greece, there
were mediaeval monks, and knights in armor, there were soldiers and scholars
and great ladies of the Renaissance, of the Restoration. there were people
of the Eighteenth, the Nineteenth, the Twentieth centuries. And in every
muscle, in every lineament of each, was stamped an incredible suffering,
an unspeakable fear. And more and more. as I studied them, a ghastly and
hideous conjecture was formulated in my mind.
The old man was at my elbow, leering and peering into my face with
a demoniac malice.
'You are admiring my collection of statuary,' he said. 'And I can
see that you are impressed by its realism... But perhaps you have already
guessed that the statues are identical with their models. These people
are the unfortunates who were not content to see Medusa only in a mirror...
I warned them ... even as I have warned you... But the temptation was too
much for them.'
I could say nothing. My thoughts were full of terror, consternation,
stupefaction. Had the old man told me the truth, did he really possess
anything so impossible and mythical as the Gorgon's head? Those statues
were too life-like, too veridical in all their features, in their poses
that preserved a lethal fear, their faces marked with a deadly but undying
torment. No human sculptor could have wrought them, could have reproduced
the physiognomies and the costumes with a fidelity so consummate and so
atrocious.
'Now,' said my host, 'having seen those who were over- powered by
the beauty of Medusa, it is time for you to behold the Gorgon herself.'
He stepped to one side, eyeing me intently; and I saw in the metal mirror
the whole of that strange altar which his body had partially intercepted
from my view. It was draped with some funereal black fabric; and lamps
were burning on each side with their tall and frozen flames. In the center,
on a broad paten of silver or electrum, there stood the veritable Head,
even as the ancient myths have depicted it, with vipers crawling and lifting
among its matted locks.
How can I delineate or even suggest that which is beyond the normal
scope of human sensation or imagining? I saw in the mirror a face of unspeakably
radiant pallor — a dead face from which there poured the luminous, blinding
glory of celestial corruption, of superhuman bale and suffering. With lidless,
intolerable eyes, with lips that were parted in an agonizing smile, she
was lovely, she was dreadful, beyond any vision ever vouchsafed to a mystic
or an artist, and the light that emanated from her features was the light
of worlds that lie too deep or too high for mortal perception. Hers was
the dread that turns the marrow into ice, and the anguish that slays like
a bolt of lightning.
Long did I gaze in the mirror with the shuddering awe of one who
beholds the veilless countenance of a final mystery. I was terrified, appalled
— and fascinated to the core of my being; for that which I saw was the
ultimate death, the ultimate beauty. I desired, yet I did not dare, to
turn and lift my eyes to the reality whose mere reflection was a fatal
splendor.
The old man had stepped closer; he was peering into the mirror and
watching me with furtive glances, by turns.
'Is she not beautiful?' he whispered. 'Could you not gaze upon her
forever?' And do you not long to behold her with- out the intermediation
of the mirror, which hardly does her justice?'
I shivered at his words, and at something which I sensed behind them.
'No! no!' I cried, vehemently. 'I admit all that you say, But I will
not gaze any longer; and I am not mad enough to let myself be turned into
a stone image.'
I thrust the mirror into his hands as I spoke and turned to leave,
impelled by an access of overmastering fright. I feard the allurement of
Medusa: and I loathed that evil ancient with a loathing that was beyond
limit or utterance.
The mirror clattered on the floor, as the old man dropped it and
sprang upon me with a tigerish agility. He seized me with his knotted hands,
and though I had sensed their sinewy vigor, I was not prepared for the
demoniacal strength with which he whirled me about and thrust me toward
the altar.
'Look! Look!' he shrieked, and his voice was that of a fiend who
urges the damned to some further pit of perdition.
I had closed my eyes instinctively, but even through my lids I felt
the searing radiance. I knew, I believed implicitly the fate which would
be mine if I beheld Medusa face to face. I struggled madly but impotently
against the grip that held me; and I concentrated all my will to keep my
lids from lighting even by the breadth of an eyelash.
Suddenly my arms were freed, and I felt the diabolic fingers on my
brow, groping swiftly to find my eyes. I knew their purpose, and knew also
that the old man must have closed his own eyes to avoid the doom he had
designed for me. I broke away, I turned, I grappled with him; and we fought
insanely, frantically, as he strove to swing me about with one arm and
tore at my shut eyelids with his other hand. Young as I am, and muscular,
I was no match for him, and I swerved slowly toward the altar, with my
head bent back till my neck was almost broken, in a vain effort to avoid
the iron fumbling of his fingers. A moment more, and he would have conquered;
but the space in which we fought was narrow, and he had now driven me back
against a row of the stone figures, some of which were recumbent on the
floor. He must have stumbled over one of these, for he fell suddenly with
a wild, despairing cry, and released me as he went down. I heard him strike
the floor with a crash that was singularly heavy — a crash as of something
harder and more massive and more ponderous than a human body.
Still standing with shut eyes, I waited; but there was no sound and
no movement from the old man. Bending toward the floor, I ventured to look
between half-open lids. He was lying at my feet, beside the figure on which
he had tripped; and I needed no second glance to recognize in all his limbs,
in all his lineaments, the same rigidity and the same horror which characterized
the other statues. Like them, he had been smitten instantaneously into
an image of dark stone. In falling, he had seen the very face of Medusa,
even as his victims had seen it. And now he would he among them forever.
Somehow, with no backward glance, I fled from the room, I found my
way from that horrible mansion, I sought to lose it from sight and memory
in half-deserted, mysterious alleys that were no legitimate part of London.
The chill of ancient death was upon me; it hung in the web of timeless
twilight along those irrecognizable ways, around those innominable houses;
and it followed me as I went. But at last, by what miracle I know not,
I came to a familiar street, where people thronged in the lamplit dusk,
and the air was no longer chill except with a falling fog.