There is not in all London a quieter spot, or one,
apparently, more withdrawn from the heat and bustle of life than
Newsome Terrace. It is a cul-de-sac, for at the upper end the
roadway between its two lines of square, compact little residences
is brought to an end by a high brick wall, while at the lower end,
the only access to it is through Newsome Square, that small
discreet oblong of Georgian houses, a relic of the time when
Kensington was a suburban village sundered from the metropolis by a
stretch of pastures stretching to the river. Both square and
terrace are most inconveniently situated for those whose ideal
environment includes a rank of taxicabs immediately opposite their
door, a spate of ’buses roaring down the street, and a procession
of underground trains, accessible by a station a few yards away,
shaking and rattling the cutlery and silver on their dining tables.
In consequence Newsome Terrace had come, two years ago, to be
inhabited by leisurely and retired folk or by those who wished to
pursue their work in quiet and tranquillity. Children with hoops
and scooters are phenomena rarely encountered in the Terrace and
dogs are equally uncommon.
In front of each of the couple of dozen houses of which the
Terrace is composed lies a little square of railinged garden, in
which you may often see the middle-aged or elderly mistress of the
residence
horticulturally employed. By five o’clock of a winter’s
evening the pavements will generally be empty of all passengers
except the policeman, who with felted step, at intervals throughout
the night, peers with his bull’s-eye into these small front
gardens, and never finds anything more suspicious there than an
early crocus or an aconite. For by the time it is dark the
inhabitants of the Terrace have got themselves home, where behind
drawn curtains and bolted shutters they will pass a domestic and
uninterrupted evening. No funeral (up to the time I speak of) had I
ever seen leave the Terrace, no marriage party had strewed its
pavements with confetti, and perambulators were unknown. It and its
inhabitants seemed to be quietly mellowing like bottles of sound
wine. No doubt there was stored within them the sunshine and summer
of youth long past, and now, dozing in a cool place, they waited
for the turn of the key in the cellar door, and the entry of one
who would draw them forth and see what they were
worth.
Yet, after the time of which I shall now speak, I have never
passed down its pavement without wondering whether each house, so
seemingly-tranquil, is not, like some dynamo, softly and smoothly
bringing into being vast and terrible forces, such as those I once
saw at work in the last house at the upper end of the Terrace, the
quietest, you would have said, of all the row. Had you observed it
with continuous scrutiny, for all the length of a summer day, it is
quite possible that you might have only seen issue from it in the
morning an elderly woman whom you would have rightly conjectured to
be the housekeeper,
with her basket for marketing on her arm, who returned an
hour later. Except for her the entire day might often pass without
there being either ingress or egress from the door. Occasionally a
middle-aged man, lean and wiry, came swiftly down the pavement, but
his exit was by no means a daily occurrence, and indeed when he did
emerge, he broke the almost universal usage of the Terrace, for his
appearances took place, when such there were, between nine and ten
in the evening. At that hour sometimes he would come round to my
house in Newsome Square to see if I was at home and inclined for a
talk a little later on. For the sake of air and exercise he would
then have an hour’s tramp through the lit and noisy streets, and
return about ten, still pale and unflushed, for one of those talks
which grew to have an absorbing fascination for me. More rarely
through the telephone I proposed that I should drop in on him: this
I did not often do, since I found that if he did not come out
himself, it implied that he was busy with some investigation, and
though he made me welcome, I could easily see that he burned for my
departure, so that he might get busy with his batteries and pieces
of tissue, hot on the track of discoveries that never yet had
presented themselves to the mind of man as coming within the
horizon of possibility.
My last sentence may have led the reader to guess that I am
indeed speaking of none other than that recluse and mysterious
physicist Sir James Horton, with whose death a hundred half-hewn
avenues into the dark forest from which life comes must wait
completion till another pioneer as bold
as he takes up the axe which hitherto none but himself has
been able to wield. Probably there was never a man to whom humanity
owed more, and of whom humanity knew less. He seemed utterly
independent of the race to whom (though indeed with no service of
love) he devoted himself: for years he lived aloof and apart in his
house at the end of the Terrace. Men and women were to him like
fossils to the geologist, things to be tapped and hammered and
dissected and studied with a view not only to the reconstruction of
past ages, but to construction in the future. It is known, for
instance, that he made an artificial being formed of the tissue,
still living, of animals lately killed, with the brain of an ape
and the heart of a bullock, and a sheep’s thyroid, and so forth. Of
that I can give no first-hand account; Horton, it is true, told me
something about it, and in his will directed that certain memoranda
on the subject should on his death be sent to me. But on the bulky
envelope there is the direction, “Not to be opened till January,
1925.” He spoke with some reserve and, so I think, with slight
horror at the strange things which had happened on the completion
of this creature. It evidently made him uncomfortable to talk about
it, and for that reason I fancy he put what was then a rather
remote date to the day when his record should reach my eye.
Finally, in these preliminaries, for the last five years before the
war, he had scarcely entered, for the sake of companionship, any
house other than his own and mine. Ours was a friendship dating
from school-days, which he had never suffered to drop entirely, but
I doubt if in those years he spoke
except on matters of business to half a dozen other people.
He had already retired from surgical practice in which his skill
was unapproached, and most completely now did he avoid the
slightest intercourse with his colleagues, whom he regarded as
ignorant pedants without courage or the rudiments of knowledge. Now
and then he would write an epoch-making little monograph, which he
flung to them like a bone to a starving dog, but for the most part,
utterly absorbed in his own investigations, he left them to grope
along unaided. He frankly told me that he enjoyed talking to me
about such subjects, since I was utterly unacquainted with them. It
clarified his mind to be obliged to put his theories and guesses
and confirmations with such simplicity that anyone could understand
them.
I well remember his coming in to see me on the evening of the
4th of August, 1914.
“ So the war has broken out,” he said, “and the streets are
impassable with excited crowds. Odd, isn’t it? Just as if each of
us already was not a far more murderous battlefield than any which
can be conceived between warring nations.”
“ How’s that?” said I.
“ Let me try to put it plainly, though it isn’t that I want
to talk about. Your blood is one eternal battlefield. It is full of
armies eternally marching and counter-marching. As long as the
armies friendly to you are in a superior position, you remain in
good health; if a detachment of microbes that, if suffered to
establish themselves, would give you a cold in the head, entrench
themselves in your mucous membrane, the commander-in-chief sends a
regiment
down and drives them out. He doesn’t give his orders from
your brain, mind you—those aren’t his headquarters, for your brain
knows nothing about the landing of the enemy till they have made
good their position and given you a cold.”
He paused a moment.
“ There isn’t one headquarters inside you,” he said, “there
are many. For instance, I killed a frog this morning; at least most
people would say I killed it. But had I killed it, though its head
lay in one place and its severed body in another? Not a bit: I had
only killed a piece of it. For I opened the body afterwards and
took out the heart, which I put in a sterilised chamber of suitable
temperature, so that it wouldn’t get cold or be infected by any
microbe. That was about twelve o’clock to-day. And when I came out
just now, the heart was beating still. It was alive, in fact.
That’s full of suggestions, you know. Come and see
it.”
The Terrace had been stirred into volcanic activity by the
news of war: the vendor of some late edition had penetrated into
its quietude, and there were half a dozen parlour-maids fluttering
about like black and white moths. But once inside Horton’s door
isolation as of an Arctic night seemed to close round me. He had
forgotten his latch-key, but his housekeeper, then newly come to
him, who became so regular and familiar a figure in the Terrace,
must have heard his step, for before he rang the bell she had
opened the door, and stood with his forgotten latch-key in her
hand.
“ Thanks, Mrs. Gabriel,” said he, and without a sound the
door shut behind us. Both her name and
face, as reproduced in some illustrated daily paper, seemed
familiar, rather terribly familiar, but before I had time to grope
for the association, Horton supplied it.
“ Tried for the murder of her husband six months ago,” he
said. “Odd case. The point is that she is the one and perfect
housekeeper. I once had four servants, and everything was all
mucky, as we used to say at school. Now I live in amazing comfort
and propriety with one. She does everything. She is cook, valet,
housemaid, butler, and won’t have anyone to help her. No doubt she
killed her husband, but she planned it so well that she could not
be convicted. She told me quite frankly who she was when I engaged
her.”
Of course I remembered the whole trial vividly now. Her
husband, a morose, quarrelsome fellow, tipsy as often as sober,
had, according to the defence cut his own throat while shaving;
according to the prosecution, she had done that for him. There was
the usual discrepancy of evidence as to whether the wound could
have been self-inflicted, and the prosecution tried to prove that
the face had been lathered after his throat had been cut. So
singular an exhibition of forethought and nerve had hurt rather
than helped their case, and after prolonged deliberation on the
part of the jury, she had been acquitted. Yet not less singular was
Horton’s selection of a probable murderess, however efficient, as
housekeeper.
He anticipated this reflection.
“ Apart from the wonderful comfort of having a perfectly
appointed and absolutely silent house,”
he said, “I regard Mrs. Gabriel as a sort of insurance
against my being murdered. If you had been tried for your life, you
would take very especial care not to find yourself in suspicious
proximity to a murdered body again: no more deaths in your house,
if you could help it. Come through to my laboratory, and look at my
little instance of life after death.”
Certainly it was amazing to see that little piece of tissue
still pulsating with what must be called life; it contracted and
expanded faintly indeed but perceptibly, though for nine hours now
it had been severed from the rest of the organisation. All by
itself it went on living, and if the heart could go on living with
nothing, you would say, to feed and stimulate its energy, there
must also, so reasoned Horton, reside in all the other vital organs
of the body other independent focuses of life.
“ Of course a severed organ like that,” he said, “will run
down quicker than if it had the co-operation of the others, and
presently I shall apply a gentle electric stimulus to it. If I can
keep that glass bowl under which it beats at the temperature of a
frog’s body, in sterilised air, I don’t see why it should not go on
living. Food—of course there’s the question of feeding it. Do you
see what that opens up in the way of surgery? Imagine a shop with
glass cases containing healthy organs taken from the dead. Say a
man dies of pneumonia. He should, as soon as ever the breath is out
of his body, be dissected, and though they would, of course,
destroy his lungs, as they will be full of pneumococci, his liver
and digestive organs are probably healthy. Take them out, keep them
in a sterilised atmosphere with the
temperature at 98·4, and sell the liver, let us say, to
another poor devil who has cancer there. Fit him with a new healthy
liver, eh?”
“ And insert the brain of someone who has died of heart
disease into the skull of a congenital idiot?” I
asked.
“ Yes, perhaps; but the brain’s tiresomely complicated in its
connections and the joining up of the nerves, you know. Surgery
will have to learn a lot before it fits new brains in. And the
brain has got such a lot of functions. All thinking, all inventing
seem to belong to it, though, as you have seen, the heart can get
on quite well without it. But there are other functions of the
brain I want to study first. I’ve been trying some experiments
already.”
He made some little readjustment to the flame of the spirit
lamp which kept at the right temperature the water that surrounded
the sterilised receptacle in which the frog’s heart was
beating.
“ Start with the more simple and mechanical uses of the
brain,” he said. “Primarily it is a sort of record office, a diary.
Say that I rap your knuckles with that ruler. What happens? The
nerves there send a message to the brain, of course, saying—how can
I put it most simply—saying, ‘Somebody is hurting me.’ And the eye
sends another, saying ‘I perceive a ruler hitting my knuckles,’ and
the ear sends another, saying ‘I hear the rap of it.’ But leaving
all that alone, what else happens? Why, the brain records it. It
makes a note of your knuckles having been hit.”
He had been moving about the room as he spoke, taking off his
coat and waistcoat and putting on in
their place a thin black dressing-gown, and by now he was
seated in his favourite attitude cross-legged on the hearthrug,
looking like some magician or perhaps the afrit which a magician of
black arts had caused to appear. He was thinking intently now,
passing through his fingers his string of amber beads, and talking
more to himself than to me.
“ And how does it make that note?” he went on. “Why, in the
manner in which phonograph records are made. There are millions of
minute dots, depressions, pockmarks on your brain which certainly
record what you remember, what you have enjoyed or disliked, or
done or said. The surface of the brain anyhow is large enough to
furnish writing-paper for the record of all these things, of all
your memories. If the impression of an experience has not been
acute, the dot is not sharply impressed, and the record fades: in
other words, you come to forget it. But if it has been vividly
impressed, the record is never obliterated. Mrs. Gabriel, for
instance, won’t lose the impression of how she lathered her
husband’s face after she had cut his throat. That’s to say, if she
did it.”
“ Now do you see what I’m driving at? Of course you do. There
is stored within a man’s head the complete record of all the
memorable things he has done and said: there are all his thoughts
there, and all his speeches, and, most well-marked of all, his
habitual thoughts and the things he has often said; for habit,
there is reason to believe, wears a sort of rut in the brain, so
that the life-principle, whatever it is, as it gropes and steals
about the brain, is continually stumbling into it. There’s your
record,
your gramophone plate all ready. What we want, and what I’m
trying to arrive at, is a needle which, as it traces its minute way
over these dots, will come across words or sentences which the dead
have uttered, and will reproduce them. My word, what Judgment
Books! What a resurrection!”
Here in this withdrawn situation no remotest echo of the
excitement which was seething through the streets penetrated;
through the open window there came in only the tide of the midnight
silence. But from somewhere closer at hand, through the wall surely
of the laboratory, there came a low, somewhat persistent
murmur.
“ Perhaps our needle—unhappily not yet invented—as it passed
over the record of speech in the brain, might induce even facial
expression,” he said. “Enjoyment or horror might even pass over
dead features. There might be gestures and movements even, as the
words were reproduced in our gramophone of the dead. Some people
when they want to think intensely walk about: some, there’s an
instance of it audible now, talk to themselves aloud.”
He held up his finger for silence.
“ Yes, that’s Mrs. Gabriel,” he said. “She talks to herself
by the hour together. She’s always done that, she tells me. I
shouldn’t wonder if she has plenty to talk about.”
It was that night when, first of all, the notion of intense
activity going on below the placid house-fronts of the Terrace
occurred to me. None looked more quiet than this, and yet there was
seething here a volcanic activity and intensity of living, both in
the man who sat cross-legged on the floor and behind
that voice just audible through the partition wall. But I
thought of that no more, for Horton began speaking of the
brain-gramophone again.... Were it possible to trace those
infinitesimal dots and pockmarks in the brain by some needle
exquisitely fine, it might follow that by the aid of some such
contrivance as translated the pockmarks on a gramophone record into
sound, some audible rendering of speech might be recovered from the
brain of a dead man. It was necessary, so he pointed out to me,
that this strange gramophone record should be new; it must be that
of one lately dead, for corruption and decay would soon obliterate
these infinitesimal markings. He was not of opinion that unspoken
thought could be thus recovered: the utmost he hoped for from his
pioneering work was to be able to recapture actual speech,
especially when such speech had habitually dwelt on one subject,
and thus had worn a rut on that part of the brain known as the
speech-centre.
“ Let me get, for instance,” he said, “the brain of a railway
porter, newly dead, who has been accustomed for years to call out
the name of a station, and I do not despair of hearing his voice
through my gramophone trumpet. Or again, given that Mrs. Gabriel,
in all her interminable conversations with herself, talks about one
subject, I might, in similar circumstances, recapture what she had
been constantly saying. Of course my instrument must be of a power
and delicacy still unknown, one of which the needle can trace the
minutest irregularities of surface, and of which the trumpet must
be of immense magnifying power, able to translate the
smallest whisper into a shout. But just as a microscope will
show you the details of an object invisible to the eye, so there
are instruments which act in the same way on sound. Here, for
instance, is one of remarkable magnifying power. Try it if you
like.”
He took me over to a table on which was standing an electric
battery connected with a round steel globe, out of the side of
which sprang a gramophone trumpet of curious construction. He
adjusted the battery, and directed me to click my fingers quite
gently opposite an aperture in the globe, and the noise, ordinarily
scarcely audible, resounded through the room like a
thunderclap.
“ Something of that sort might permit us to hear the record
on a brain,” he said.
After this night my visits to Horton became far more common
than they had hitherto been. Having once admitted me into the
region of his strange explorations, he seemed to welcome me there.
Partly, as he had said, it clarified his own thought to put it into
simple language, partly, as he subsequently admitted, he was
beginning to penetrate into such lonely fields of knowledge by
paths so utterly untrodden, that even he, the most aloof and
independent of mankind, wanted some human presence near him.
Despite his utter indifference to the issues of the war—for, in his
regard, issues far more crucial demanded his energies—he offered
himself as surgeon to a London hospital for operations on the
brain, and his services, naturally, were welcomed, for none brought
knowledge or skill like
his to such work. Occupied all day, he performed miracles of
healing, with bold and dexterous excisions which none but he would
have dared to attempt. He would operate, often successfully, for
lesions that seemed certainly fatal, and all the time he was
learning. He refused to accept any salary; he only asked, in cases
where he had removed pieces of brain matter, to take these away, in
order by further examination and dissection, to add to the
knowledge and manipulative skill which he devoted to the wounded.
He wrapped these morsels in sterilised lint, and took them back to
the Terrace in a box, electrically heated to maintain the normal
temperature of a man’s blood. His fragment might then, so he
reasoned, keep some sort of independent life of its own, even as
the severed heart of a frog had continued to beat for hours without
connection with the rest of the body. Then for half the night he
would continue to work on these sundered pieces of tissue scarcely
dead, which his operations during the day had given him.
Simultaneously, he was busy over the needle that must be of such
infinite delicacy.
One evening, fatigued with a long day’s work, I had just
heard with a certain tremor of uneasy anticipation the whistles of
warning which heralded an air-raid, when my telephone bell rang. My
servants, according to custom, had already betaken themselves to
the cellar, and I went to see what the summons was, determined in
any case not to go out into the streets. I recognised Horton’s
voice. “I want you at once,” he said.
“ But the warning whistles have gone,” said I, “And I don’t
like showers of shrapnel.”
“ Oh, never mind that,” said he. “You must come. I’m so
excited that I distrust the evidence of my own ears. I want a
witness. Just come.”
He did not pause for my reply, for I heard the click of his
receiver going back into its place. Clearly he assumed that I was
coming, and that I suppose had the effect of suggestion on my mind.
I told myself that I would not go, but in a couple of minutes his
certainty that I was coming, coupled with the prospect of being
interested in something else than air-raids, made me fidget in my
chair and eventually go to the street door and look out. The moon
was brilliantly bright, the square quite empty, and far away the
coughings of very distant guns. Next moment, almost against my
will, I was running down the deserted pavements of Newsome Terrace.
My ring at his bell was answered by Horton, before Mrs. Gabriel
could come to the door, and he positively dragged me
in.
“ I shan’t tell you a word of what I am doing,” he said. “I
want you to tell me what you hear. Come into the
laboratory.”
The remote guns were silent again as I sat myself, as
directed, in a chair close to the gramophone trumpet, but suddenly
through the wall I heard the familiar mutter of Mrs. Gabriel’s
voice. Horton, already busy with his battery, sprang to his
feet.
“ That won’t do,” he said. “I want absolute
silence.”
He went out of the room, and I heard him calling to her.
While he was gone I observed more closely what was on the table.
Battery, round steel globe, and gramophone trumpet were there, and
some sort of
a needle on a spiral steel spring linked up with the battery
and the glass vessel, in which I had seen the frog’s heart beat. In
it now there lay a fragment of grey matter.
Horton came back in a minute or two, and stood in the middle
of the room listening.
“ That’s better,” he said. “Now I want you to listen at the
mouth of the trumpet. I’ll answer any questions
afterwards.”
With my ear turned to the trumpet, I could see nothing of
what he was doing, and I listened till the silence became a
rustling in my ears. Then suddenly that rustling ceased, for it was
overscored by a whisper which undoubtedly came from the aperture on
which my aural attention was fixed. It was no more than the
faintest murmur, and though no words were audible, it had the
timbre of a human voice.
“ Well, do you hear anything?” asked Horton.
“ Yes, something very faint, scarcely audible.”
“ Describe it,” said he.
“ Somebody whispering.”
“ I’ll try a fresh place,” said he.
The silence descended again; the mutter of the distant guns
was still mute, and some slight creaking from my shirt front, as I
breathed, alone broke it. And then the whispering from the
gramophone trumpet began again, this time much louder than it had
been before—it was as if the speaker (still whispering) had
advanced a dozen yards—but still blurred and indistinct. More
unmistakable, too, was it that the whisper was that of a human
voice, and every now and then, whether fancifully or not,
I
thought I caught a word or two. For a moment it was silent
altogether, and then with a sudden inkling of what I was listening
to I heard something begin to sing. Though the words were still
inaudible there was melody, and the tune was “Tipperary.” From that
convolvulus-shaped trumpet there came two bars of it.
“ And what do you hear now?” cried Horton with a crack of
exultation in his voice. “Singing, singing! That’s the tune they
all sang. Fine music that from a dead man. Encore! you say? Yes,
wait a second, and he’ll sing it again for you. Confound it, I
can’t get on to the place. Ah! I’ve got it: listen
again.”
Surely that was the strangest manner of song ever yet heard
on the earth, this melody from the brain of the dead. Horror and
fascination strove within me, and I suppose the first for the
moment prevailed, for with a shudder I jumped up.
“ Stop it!” I said. “It’s terrible.”
His face, thin and eager, gleamed in the strong ray of the
lamp which he had placed close to him. His hand was on the metal
rod from which depended the spiral spring and the needle, which
just rested on that fragment of grey stuff which I had seen in the
glass vessel.
“ Yes, I’m going to stop it now,” he said, “or the germs will
be getting at my gramophone record, or the record will get cold.
See, I spray it with carbolic vapour, I put it back into its nice
warm bed. It will sing to us again. But terrible? What do you mean
by terrible?”
Indeed, when he asked that I scarcely knew
myself what I meant. I had been witness to a new marvel of
science as wonderful perhaps as any that had ever astounded the
beholder, and my nerves—these childish whimperers—had cried out at
the darkness and the profundity. But the horror diminished, the
fascination increased as he quite shortly told me the history of
this phenomenon. He had attended that day and operated upon a young
soldier in whose brain was embedded a piece of shrapnel. The boy
was in extremis , but Horton had
hoped for the possibility of saving him. To extract the shrapnel
was the only chance, and this involved the cutting away of a piece
of brain known as the speech-centre, and taking from it what was
embedded there. But the hope was not realised, and two hours later
the boy died. It was to this fragment of brain that, when Horton
returned home, he had applied the needle of his gramophone, and had
obtained the faint whisperings which had caused him to ring me up,
so that he might have a witness of this wonder. Witness I had been,
not to these whisperings alone, but to the fragment of
singing.
“ And this is but the first step on the new road,” said he.
“Who knows where it may lead, or to what new temple of knowledge it
may not be the avenue? Well, it is late: I shall do no more
to-night. What about the raid, by the way?”
To my amazement I saw that the time was verging on midnight.
Two hours had elapsed since he let me in at his door; they had
passed like a couple of minutes. Next morning some neighbours spoke
of the prolonged firing that had gone on, of which I had been
wholly unconscious.
Week after week Horton worked on this new road of research,
perfecting the sensitiveness and subtlety of the needle, and, by
vastly increasing the power of his batteries, enlarging the
magnifying power of his trumpet. Many and many an evening during
the next year did I listen to voices that were dumb in death, and
the sounds which had been blurred and unintelligible mutterings in
the earlier experiments, developed, as the delicacy of his
mechanical devices increased, into coherence and clear
articulation. It was no longer necessary to impose silence on Mrs.
Gabriel when the gramophone was at work, for now the voice we
listened to had risen to the pitch of ordinary human utterance,
while as for the faithfulness and individuality of these records,
striking testimony was given more than once by some living friend
of the dead, who, without knowing what he was about to hear,
recognised the tones of the speaker. More than once also, Mrs.
Gabriel, bringing in syphons and whisky, provided us with three
glasses, for she had heard, so she told us, three different voices
in talk. But for the present no fresh phenomenon occurred: Horton
was but perfecting the mechanism of his previous discovery and,
rather grudging the time, was scribbling at a monograph, which
presently he would toss to his colleagues, concerning the results
he had already obtained. And then, even while Horton was on the
threshold of new wonders, which he had already foreseen and spoken
of as theoretically possible, there came an evening of marvel and
of swift catastrophe.
I had dined with him that day, Mrs. Gabriel deftly serving
the meal that she had so daintily
prepared, and towards the end, as she was clearing the table
for our dessert, she stumbled, I supposed, on a loose edge of
carpet, quickly recovering herself. But instantly Horton checked
some half-finished sentence, and turned to her.
“ You’re all right, Mrs. Gabriel?” he asked
quickly.
“ Yes, sir, thank you,” said she, and went on with her
serving.
“ As I was saying,” began Horton again, but his attention
clearly wandered, and without concluding his narrative, he relapsed
into silence, till Mrs. Gabriel had given us our coffee and left
the room.
“ I’m sadly afraid my domestic felicity may be disturbed,” he
said. “Mrs. Gabriel had an epileptic fit yesterday, and she
confessed when she recovered that she had been subject to them when
a child, and since then had occasionally experienced
them.”
“ Dangerous, then?” I asked.
“ In themselves not in the least,” said he. “If she was
sitting in her chair or lying in bed when one occurred, there would
be nothing to trouble about. But if one occurred while she was
cooking my dinner or beginning to come downstairs, she might fall
into the fire or tumble down the whole flight. We’ll hope no such
deplorable calamity will happen. Now, if you’ve finished your
coffee, let us go into the laboratory. Not that I’ve got anything
very interesting in the way of new records. But I’ve introduced a
second battery with a very strong induction coil into my apparatus.
I find that if I link it up with my record, given that the record
is a—a fresh one, it stimulates certain nerve centres. It’s
odd,
isn’t it, that the same forces which so encourage the dead to
live would certainly encourage the living to die, if a man received
the full current. One has to be careful in handling it. Yes, and
what then? you ask.”
The night was very hot, and he threw the windows wide before
he settled himself cross-legged on the floor.
“ I’ll answer your question for you,” he said, “though I
believe we’ve talked of it before. Supposing I had not a fragment
of brain-tissue only, but a whole head, let us say, or best of all,
a complete corpse, I think I could expect to produce more than mere
speech through the gramophone. The dead lips themselves perhaps
might utter—God! what’s that?”
From close outside, at the bottom of the stairs leading from
the dining room which we had just quitted to the laboratory where
we now sat, there came a crash of glass followed by the fall as of
something heavy which bumped from step to step, and was finally
flung on the threshold against the door with the sound as of
knuckles rapping at it, and demanding admittance. Horton sprang up
and threw the door open, and there lay, half inside the room and
half on the landing outside, the body of Mrs. Gabriel. Round her
were splinters of broken bottles and glasses, and from a cut in her
forehead, as she lay ghastly with face upturned, the blood trickled
into her thick grey hair.
Horton was on his knees beside her, dabbing his handkerchief
on her forehead.
“ Ah! that’s not serious,” he said; “there’s
neither vein nor artery cut. I’ll just bind that up
first.”
But there’s worse yet,” he said. “There’s been some severe
blow on the head. Help me to carry her into the laboratory. Get
round to her feet and lift underneath the knees when I am ready.
There! Now put your arm right under her and carry
her.”
Her skull is broken to fragments just here,” he said. “In
the middle there is a piece completely severed from the rest, and
the edges of the cracked pieces must be pressing on her
brain.”
Not a sign of pulse,” he said. “She’s dead in the ordinary
sense of the word. But life persists in an extraordinary manner,
you may remember. She can’t be wholly dead: no one is wholly dead
in a moment, unless every organ is blown to bits. But she soon will
be dead, if we don’t relieve the pressure on the brain. That’s the
first thing to be done. While I’m busy at that, shut the window,
will you, and make up the fire. In this sort of case the vital
heat, whatever that is, leaves the body very quickly. Make the room
as hot as you can—fetch an oil-stove, and turn on the electric
radiator, and stoke up a roaring fire. The hotter the room is the
more slowly will the heat of life leave her.”
Bring me that electric lamp on the long cord,” he said. “I
haven’t got enough light. Don’t look at what I’m doing if you’re
squeamish, for if
I suppose that violent interest in what he was doing overcame
any qualm that I might have had, for I looked quite unflinching
over his shoulder as I moved the lamp about till it was in such a
place that it threw its beam directly into a dark hole at the edge
of which depended a flap of skin. Into this he put his forceps, and
as he withdrew them they grasped a piece of blood-stained
bone.
“
When next, on my journey from the coal-cellar, I looked, two
more pieces of bone lay beside the one I had seen extracted, and
presently referring to the thermometer, I saw that between the
oil-stove and the roaring fire and the electric radiator, I had
raised the room to the temperature he wanted. Soon, peering fixedly
at the seat of his operation, he felt for her pulse
again.
“
As he spoke the zeal of the unrivalled surgeon relaxed, and
with a sigh and a shrug he rose to his feet and mopped his face.
Then suddenly the fire and eagerness blazed there again. “The
gramophone!” he said. “The speech centre is close to where I’ve
been working, and it is quite uninjured. Good heavens, what a
wonderful opportunity. She served me well living, and she shall
serve me dead.
Some qualm of horror shook me.
“
But I’ve got exactly all the conditions I have long been
wanting,” said he. “And I simply can’t spare you. You must be
witness: I must have a witness. Why, man, there’s not a surgeon or
a physiologist in the kingdom who would not give an eye or an ear
to be in your place now. She’s dead. I pledge you my honour on
that, and it’s grand to be dead if you can help the
living.”
Be quick, then,” said I.
“
He turned on the battery and with the movable light close
beside him, brilliantly illuminating what he sought, he inserted
the needle of the gramophone into the jagged aperture in her skull.
For a few minutes, as he groped and explored there, there was
silence, and then quite suddenly Mrs. Gabriel’s voice, clear and
unmistakable and of the normal loudness of human speech, issued
from the trumpet.
“
often I was black and blue with bruises. But I’ll give him a
redness for the black and blue.”
I’ve got into some sort of rut,” said Horton. “She must
have laughed a lot to herself.”
I’ll try a stimulation of the motor nerve-centres,” he
said. “Watch her face.”
Her mouth’s moving,” I cried. “She can’t be
dead.”
Nonsense,” he said. “That’s only the stimulus from the
current. She’s been dead half an hour. Ah! what’s coming
now?”
I’ll turn the full current on,” he said.
Just when he’d got his razor out,” she said, “I came up
behind him, and put my hand over his face, and bent his neck back
over his chair with all my strength. And I picked up his razor and
with one slit—ha, ha, that was the way to pay him out. And I didn’t
lose my head, but I lathered his chin well, and put the razor in
his hand, and left him there, and went downstairs and cooked his
dinner for him, and then an hour afterwards, as he didn’t come
down, up I went to see what kept him. It was a nasty cut in his
neck that had kept him——”
By God!” he said. “There’s a tale for dead lips to tell.
But we’ll get more yet.”