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Doctor Therne
CHAPTER VI - THE GATE OF DARKNESS
H.Rider Haggard
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       CHAPTER VI - THE GATE OF DARKNESS
       Taking the phial from the chest I poured an ample but not an over dose
       of the poison into a medicine glass, mixing it with a little water, so
       that it might be easier to swallow. I lingered as long as I could over
       these preparations, but they came to an end too soon.
       Now there seemed to be nothing more to do except to transfer that
       little measure of white fluid from the glass to my mouth, and thus to
       open the great door at whose bolts and bars we stare blankly from the
       day of birth to the day of death. Every panel of that door is painted
       with a different picture touched to individual taste. Some are
       beautiful, and some are grim, and some are neutral-tinted and
       indefinite. My favourite picture used to be one of a boat floating on
       a misty ocean, and in the boat a man sleeping--myself, dreaming
       happily, dreaming always.
       But that picture had gone now, and in place of it was one of
       blackness, not the tumultuous gloom of a stormy night, but dead, cold,
       unfathomable blackness. Without a doubt /that/ was what lay behind the
       door--only that. So soon as ever my wine was swallowed and those
       mighty hinges began to turn I should see a wall of blackness thrusting
       itself 'twixt door and lintel. Yes, it would creep forward, now
       pausing, now advancing, until at length it wrapped me round and
       stifled out my breath like a death mask of cold clay. Then sight would
       die and sound would die and to all eternities there would be silence,
       silence while the stars grew old and crumbled, silence while they took
       form again far in the void, for ever and for ever dumb, dreadful,
       conquering silence.
       That was the only real picture, the rest were mere efforts of the
       imagination. And yet, what if some of them were also true? What if the
       finished landscape that lay beyond the doom-door was but developed
       from the faint sketch traced by the strivings of our spirit--to each
       man his own picture, but filled in, perfected, vivified a
       thousandfold, for terror or for joy perfect and inconceivable?
       The thought was fascinating, but not without its fears. It was strange
       that a man who had abandoned hopes should still be haunted by fears--
       like everything else in the world, this is unjust. For a little while,
       five or ten minutes, not more than ten, I would let my mind dwell on
       that thought, trying to dig down to its roots which doubtless drew
       their strength from the foetid slime of human superstition, trying to
       behold its topmost branches where they waved in sparkling light. No,
       that was not the theory; I must imagine those invisible branches as
       grim skeletons of whitened wood, standing stirless in that atmosphere
       of overwhelming night.
       So I sat myself in a chair, placing the medicine glass with the
       draught of bane upon the table before me, and, to make sure that I did
       not exceed the ten minutes, near to it my travelling clock. As I sat
       thus I fell into a dream or vision. I seemed to see myself standing
       upon the world, surrounded by familiar sights and sounds. There in the
       west the sun sank in splendour, and the sails of a windmill that
       turned slowly between its orb and me were now bright as gold, and now
       by contrast black as they dipped into the shadow. Near the windmill
       was a cornfield, and beyond the cornfield stood a cottage whence came
       the sound of lowing cattle and the voices of children. Down a path
       that ran through the ripening corn walked a young man and a maid,
       their arms twined about each other, while above their heads a lark
       poured out its song.
       But at my very feet this kindly earth and all that has life upon it
       vanished quite away, and there in its place, seen through a giant
       portal, was the realm of darkness that I had pictured--darkness so
       terrible, so overpowering, and so icy that my living blood froze at
       the sight of it. Presently something stirred in the darkness, for it
       trembled like shaken water. A shape came forward to the edge of the
       gateway so that the light of the setting sun fell upon it, making it
       visible. I looked and knew that it was the phantom of my lost wife
       wrapped in her last garments. There she stood, sad and eager-faced,
       with quick-moving lips, from which no echo reached my ears. There she
       stood, beating the air with her hands as though to bar that path
       against me. . . .
        
       I awoke with a start, to see standing over against me in the gloom of
       the doorway, not the figure of my wife come from the company of the
       dead with warning on her lips, but that of Stephen Strong. Yes, it was
       he, for the light of the candle that I had lit when I went to seek the
       drug fell full upon his pale face and large bald head.
       "Hullo, doctor," he said in his harsh but not unkindly voice, "having
       a nip and a nap, eh? What's your tipple? Hollands it looks, but it
       smells more like peach brandy. May I taste it? I'm a judge of
       hollands," and he lifted the glass of prussic acid and water from the
       table.
       In an instant my dazed faculties were awake, and with a swift motion I
       had knocked the glass from his hand, so that it fell upon the floor
       and was shattered.
       "Ah!" he said, "I /thought/ so. And now, young man, perhaps you will
       tell me why you were playing a trick like that?"
       "Why?" I answered bitterly. "Because my wife is dead; because my name
       is disgraced; because my career is ruined; because they have commenced
       a new action against me, and, if I live, I must become a bankrupt----"
       "And you thought that you could make all these things better by
       killing yourself. Doctor, I didn't believe that you were such a fool.
       You say you have done nothing to be ashamed of, and I believe you.
       Well, then, what does it matter what these folk think? For the rest,
       when a man finds himself in a tight place, he shouldn't knock under,
       he should fight his way through. You're in a tight place, I know, but
       I was once in a tighter, yes, I did what you have nearly done--I went
       to jail on a false charge and false evidence. But I didn't commit
       suicide. I served my time, and I think it crazed me a bit though it
       was only a month; at any rate, I was what they call a crank when I
       came out, which I wasn't when I went in. Then I set to work and showed
       up those for whom I had done time--living or dead they'll never forget
       Stephen Strong, I'll warrant--and after that I turned to and became
       the head of the Radical party and one of the richest men in
       Dunchester; why, I might have been in Parliament half a dozen times
       over if I had chosen, although I am only a draper. Now, if I have done
       all this, why can't you, who have twice my brains and education, do as
       much?
       "Nobody will employ you? I will find folk who will employ you. Action
       for damages? I'll stand the shot of that however it goes; I love a
       lawsuit, and a thousand or two won't hurt me. And now I came round
       here to ask you to supper, and I think you'll be better drinking port
       with Stephen Strong than hell-fire with another tradesman, whom I
       won't name. Before we go, however, just give me your word of honour
       that there shall be no more of this sort of thing," and he pointed to
       the broken glass, "now or afterwards, as I don't want to be mixed up
       with inquests."
       "I promise," I answered presently.
       "That will do," said Mr. Strong, as he led the way to the door.
       I need not dwell upon the further events of that evening, inasmuch as
       they were almost a repetition of those of the previous night. Mrs.
       Strong received me kindly in her faded fashion, and, after a few
       inquiries about the trial, sought refuge in her favourite topic of the
       lost Tribes. Indeed, I remember that she was rather put out because I
       had not already mastered the books and pamphlets which she had given
       me. In the end, notwithstanding the weariness of her feeble folly, I
       returned home in much better spirits.
       For the next month or two nothing of note happened to me, except
       indeed that the action for damages brought against me by Sir Thomas
       Colford was suddenly withdrawn. Although it never transpired publicly,
       I believe that the true reason of this collapse was that Sir John Bell
       flatly refused to appear in court and submit himself to further
       examination, and without Sir John Bell there was no evidence against
       me. But the withdrawal of this action did not help me professionally;
       indeed the fine practice which I was beginning to get together had
       entirely vanished away. Not a creature came near my consulting-room,
       and scarcely a creature called me in. The prosecution and the verdict
       of the jury, amounting as it did to one of "not proven" only, had
       ruined me. By now my small resources were almost exhausted, and I
       could see that very shortly the time would come when I should no
       longer know where to turn for bread for myself and my child.
       One morning as I was sitting in my consulting-room, moodily reading a
       medical textbook for want of something else to do, the front door bell
       rang. "A patient at last," I thought to myself with a glow of hope. I
       was soon undeceived, however, for the servant opened the door and
       announced Mr. Stephen Strong.
       "How do you do, doctor?" he said briskly. "You will wonder why I am
       here at such an hour. Well, it is on business. I want you to come with
       me to see two sick children."
       "Certainly," I said, and we started.
       "Who are the children and what is the matter with them?" I asked
       presently.
       "Son and daughter of a working boot-maker named Samuels. As to what is
       the matter with them, you can judge of that for yourself," he replied
       with a grim smile.
       Passing into the poorer part of the city, at length we reached a
       cobbler's shop with a few pairs of roughly-made boots on sale in the
       window. In the shop sat Mr. Samuels, a dour-looking man of about
       forty.
       "Here is the doctor, Samuels," said Strong.
       "All right," he answered, "he'll find the missus and the kids in there
       and a pretty sight they are; I can't bear to look at them, I can't."
       Passing through the shop, we went into a back room whence came a sound
       of wailing. Standing in the room was a careworn woman and in the bed
       lay two children, aged three and four respectively. I proceeded at
       once to my examination, and found that one child, a boy, was in a
       state of extreme prostration and fever, the greater part of his body
       being covered with a vivid scarlet rash. The other child, a girl, was
       suffering from a terribly red and swollen arm, the inflammation being
       most marked above the elbow. Both were cases of palpable and severe
       erysipelas, and both of the sufferers had been vaccinated within five
       days.
       "Well," said Stephen Strong, "well, what's the matter with them?"
       "Erysipelas," I answered.
       "And what caused the erysipelas? Was it the vaccination?"
       "It may have been the vaccination," I replied cautiously.
       "Come here, Samuels," called Strong. "Now, then, tell the doctor your
       story."
       "There's precious little story about it," said the poor man, keeping
       his back towards the afflicted children. "I have been pulled up three
       times and fined because I didn't have the kids vaccinated, not being
       any believer in vaccination myself ever since my sister's boy died of
       it, with his head all covered with sores. Well, I couldn't pay no more
       fines, so I told the missus that she might take them to the
       vaccination officer, and she did five or six days ago. And there,
       that's the end of their vaccination, and damn 'em to hell, say I," and
       the poor fellow pushed his way out of the room.
       It is quite unnecessary that I should follow all the details of this
       sad case. In the result, despite everything that I could do for him,
       the boy died though the girl recovered. Both had been vaccinated from
       the same tube of lymph. In the end I was able to force the authorities
       to have the contents of tubes obtained from the same source examined
       microscopically and subjected to the culture test. They were proved to
       contain the streptococcus or germ of erysipelas.
       As may be imagined this case caused a great stir and much public
       controversy, in which I took an active part. It was seized upon
       eagerly by the anti-vaccination party, and I was quoted as the
       authority for its details. In reply, the other side hinted pretty
       broadly that I was a person so discredited that my testimony on this
       or any other matter should be accepted with caution, an unjust
       aspersion which not unnaturally did much to keep me in the enemy's
       camp. Indeed it was now, when I became useful to a great and rising
       party, that at length I found friends without number, who, not content
       with giving me their present support, took up the case on account of
       which I had stood my trial, and, by their energy and the ventilation
       of its details, did much to show how greatly I had been wronged. I did
       not and do not suppose that all this friendship was disinterested,
       but, whatever its motive, it was equally welcome to a crushed and
       deserted man.
       By slow degrees, and without my making any distinct pronouncement on
       the subject, I came to be looked upon as a leading light among the
       very small and select band of anti-vaccinationist men, and as such to
       study the question exhaustively. Hearing that I was thus engaged,
       Stephen Strong offered me a handsome salary, which I suppose came out
       of his pocket, if I would consent to investigate cases in which
       vaccination was alleged to have resulted in mischief. I accepted the
       salary since, formally at any rate, it bound me to nothing but a
       course of inquiries. During a search of two years I established to my
       satisfaction that vaccination, as for the most part it was then
       performed, that is from arm to arm, is occasionally the cause of blood
       poisoning, erysipelas, abscesses, tuberculosis, and other dreadful
       ailments. These cases I published without drawing from them any
       deductions whatever, with the result that I found myself summoned to
       give evidence before the Royal Commission on Vaccination which was
       then sitting at Westminster. When I had given my evidence, which, each
       case being well established, could scarcely be shaken, some members of
       the Commission attempted to draw me into general statements as to the
       advantage or otherwise of the practice of vaccination to the
       community. To these gentlemen I replied that as my studies had been
       directed towards the effects of vaccination in individual instances
       only, the argument was one upon which I preferred not to enter.
       Had I spoken the truth, indeed, I should have confessed my inability
       to support the anti-vaccinationist case, since in my opinion few
       people who have studied this question with an open and impartial mind
       can deny that Jenner's discovery is one of the greatest boons--
       perhaps, after the introduction of antiseptics and anaesthetics, the
       very greatest--that has ever been bestowed upon suffering humanity.
       If the reader has any doubts upon the point, let him imagine a time
       when, as used to happen in the days of our forefathers, almost
       everybody suffered from smallpox at some period of their lives, those
       escaping only whose blood was so fortified by nature that the disease
       could not touch them. Let him imagine a state of affairs--and there
       are still people living whose parents could remember it--when for a
       woman not to be pitted with smallpox was to give her some claim to
       beauty, however homely might be her features. Lastly, let him imagine
       what all this means: what terror walked abroad when it was common for
       smallpox to strike a family of children, and when the parents,
       themselves the survivors of similar catastrophes, knew well that
       before it left the house it would take its tithe of those beloved
       lives. Let him look at the brasses in our old churches and among the
       numbers of children represented on them as kneeling behind their
       parents; let him note what a large proportion pray with their hands
       open. Of these, the most, I believe, were cut off by smallpox. Let him
       search the registers, and they will tell the same tale. Let him ask
       old people of what their mothers told them when they were young of the
       working of this pestilence in their youth. Finally, let him consider
       how it comes about, if vaccination is a fraud, that some nine hundred
       and ninety-nine medical men out of every thousand, not in England
       only, but in all civilised countries, place so firm a belief in its
       virtue. Are the doctors of the world all mad, or all engaged in a
       great conspiracy to suppress the truth?
       These were my real views, as they must be the views of most
       intelligent and thoughtful men; but I did not think it necessary to
       promulgate them abroad, since to do so would have been to deprive
       myself of such means of maintenance as remained to me. Indeed, in
       those days I told neither more nor less than the truth. Evil results
       occasionally followed the use of bad lymph or unclean treatment after
       the subject had been inoculated. Thus most of the cases of erysipelas
       into which I examined arose not from vaccination but from the dirty
       surroundings of the patient. Wound a million children, however
       slightly, and let flies settle on the wound or dirt accumulate in it,
       and the result will be that a certain small proportion will develop
       erysipelas quite independently of the effects of vaccination.
       In the same way, some amount of inoculated disease must follow the
       almost promiscuous use of lymph taken from human beings. The danger is
       perfectly preventable, and ought long ago to have been prevented, by
       making it illegal, under heavy penalties, to use any substance except
       that which has been developed in calves and scientifically treated
       with glycerine, when, as I believe, no hurt can possibly follow. This
       is the verdict of science and, as tens of thousands can testify, the
       common experience of mankind.
       Content of CHAPTER VI - THE GATE OF DARKNESS [H. Rider Haggard's novel: Doctor Therne]
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