<h1 id='ch6'>THE GREEN DOOR.<br/> A Night in Melbourne.</h1>
<p class='pindent'>A winter night in Melbourne; it had been raining all day,
the wind from the south blew chill and raw. As I wandered
down Great Bourke street I saw, drawn up in a line some
fifty men standing in the gutter. Each man had his eyes
fastened on a green baize door directly in front of them, as if
their last hope depended upon its opening. The men were
of all sorts and conditions, the sundowner from the back
blocks, the costermonger without a barrow, the new chum
who had deposited with his gracious uncle, the professional
free lunch rounder and the decayed gentleman. One
wretched creature in particular drew my attention. At one
time, some time, heaven knows how long distant, he had
been a gentleman. The fragments of a Prince Albert coat
were buttoned tightly up to his very chin. I should have
said pinned, for every button was gone. His hands blue with
the cold were clean and there was something in his very
attitude which said, ‘I am not to this manor born.’ I beckoned
to him and when he came up I said, “Come with me
my friend.” He followed at my side but spoke not a word.
Entering a private room in the Coffee House I called for a
glass of hot beef tea. While he was drinking the tea greedily
but shivering between each gulp I ordered a hot dinner.
He ate the dinner with the voracity of a starving man.
Then I handed him a cigar. I closely watched him and saw,
written on his face an unsatisfied longing. “What is it?” I
said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Opium,” came in a hoarse tremolo from his throat.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I have it,” I said drawing a half ounce bottle of laudanum
from my pocket. I had purchased it for a prospective trip.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Quick, six glasses,” he whispered.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The waiter brought the glasses. My strange companion
placed them in a line and then said, “Divide it into six
parts,” pointing to the laudanum.</p>
<p class='pindent'>I complied with his request. He seized the first glass,
drained it and closed his eyes. Taking up the <span class='it'>Herald</span> I
waited. After the lapse of five minutes I turned to my
guest, his eyes were wide open, almost staring, while the
ghost of a smile played around his mobile mouth.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What is your name,” I asked.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“John Lilburn,” he answered slowly, as if he were
struggling to recall his own name.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Where from?” I queried.</p>
<p class='pindent'>No reply, only a puzzled expression on his face. Then he
croaked out, “Time for number two.” Immediately he
swallowed the contents of the second glass and again closed
his eyes. This time the interval was not so long. A tinge
of colour stole into his thin cheeks, his hands ceased to tremble,
the creature began to look like a man.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How long have I been here?” he inquired, as if surprised
at his surroundings and the complaisant mood in which he
found himself. Then his eyes fell upon the glasses and he
nodded his head as much as to say, “I see it all now.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You came with me from in front of the green door,” I
replied.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What does the green door signify?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Supper,” he answered, “supper for all who stand in the
line at eight o’clock and are sober.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“A good Samaritan on Bourke street, a Christian in a new
quarter and in a strange guise.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That depends upon your standpoint of view,” murmured
my companion. “The man conducts, side by side, a drinking
place and the restaurant. In the restaurant, every night for
half an hour he cares for some of the finished product turned
out by his other establishment.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Has he turned you out as finished?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I never drink,” he said, a trace of hauteur coming into his
manner.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Worse,” said I, pointing to the glasses.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My last remaining friend,” was his reply, and he raised
the third glass to his lips and drank it off with the dignity
of a gentleman of the old school. He brushed back his
tangled hair with a nervous energy, his very presence grew
upon me, then he unpinned and threw back his coat exposing
his bare chest, for he wore no shirt, arose and paced
the room with a decided step which betokened a man used to
command. The homeless beggar had vanished and in his
stead stood God’s noblest work.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I beg your pardon,” he said, “but whom have I the
honor of meeting?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>I gave him my name and he bowed with courtly grace.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“We are brothers,” he said, “all men are brothers but
unfortunately our pride prevents us from acknowledging the
truth.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Then we drifted into conversation and I learned that he
belonged to an excellent family in the north of Ireland. He
had obtained his degree at Trinity College, Dublin, taken
orders and proceeded to South Australia where the Bishop
gave him a large parish in the pastoral country. Suddenly
the relator became reticent and relapsed into silence. I
divined the cause and pointed to the glasses. He hesitated
and then drank off another but with the disgust shewn when
one is compelled to take medicine. The effect of this potion
was unexpected. The parson, for such I must call him,
burst into song, at first sentimental and then comic. They
were certainly not acquired at a divinity school. He fairly
rollicked in the patter songs, so famous years ago in the
London music halls. When he drew a comparison between
a monkey and a dude, in which the monkey had the best of
it, he was irresistible and I laughed till the tears ran down
my cheeks. The reckless abandon, the rollicking gaiety,
the quip and quirk,—all were perfect. I forgot who he
was and what he was.</p>
<p class='pindent'>As the last patter song died on his lips he turned ashy
pale and began to tremble violently. I handed him another
glass but he dashed it from my hand and poured out upon
me such curses as I had never heard before. They froze my
blood and gave me a sight of the very soul of the man, reeking
with blasphemy and hatred and a savage malevolence so
vindictive that a fiend from the bottomless pit would have
turned and fled. As I darted to the door he seized me and
with the strength of a mad man hurled me into a chair, his
horrible laugh ringing out with sardonic glee, piercing the
ears and running into a mocking refrain. Turning to the
table he swallowed all the laudanum which remained. Two
minutes later he was another man. His mouth was that of
a child with the pathetic pucker always seen before an infant
bursts into tears. I forgot his violence, his obscenity,
everything, in the new character before me, I felt that the
curtain was up for the last act, when it fell there would be
darkness, the light would fail and the green door come
back.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I have never told the story,” he exclaimed, “but the time
has come when it must be told.” His voice was so low that
I was compelled to bend forward and listen as the words fell
from his lips. Then he dashed into the recital startling in
its intensity.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“In my parish was one great squatter who made his home
upon the estate, the other squatters living at Adelaide or
Melbourne. John Bond held by the good old English practice
and lived upon his estate. ‘If the land did so much for
him,’ he said, ‘then he was bound to stand by the land.’ At
my first visit I fell in love with John Bond’s daughter Helen.
Up to that moment I had been bound up in the work of the
church. Men called me an enthusiast, a dreamer. I believed
and acted upon my belief. I know that I had a mission,
tidings to impart, hope and comfort to offer. I was a
priest consecrated to the work, not an interpreter. I believed
that a priest should not marry. Twenty-four hours spent at
John Bond’s house made me a new man. I looked back on
the past as a dream. I saw myself a phantom, a church instrument,
but for the first time I felt myself a man. I had
been a slave, I became a living fire. I had dreamed of happiness
for mankind, mankind were swallowed up in Helen
Bond. She constituted the universe, my universe. I pouted
out my passion and found my love returned, what more could
priest or man demand? Half the summer I lived in a dream,
an ecstasy, a delirium. I had not saved a sovereign, for my
creed was, ‘Give all to the poor,’ that is, it had been my
creed before I met Helen. She took absolute possession of
my heart, my emotions. My first pang came when my
would-be bride told me that the dream of her life had been
Melbourne, when we married there we must live. I implored
the Bishop of Adelaide to secure for me a parish in the
great metropolis and received in reply to my letter a curt refusal,
with an admonition relative to neglected duties. Helen
was adamant, the condition was Melbourne. She suggested
that I should appeal to her father for assistance but my pride
revolted. At this juncture the news came describing the
new gold fields of Western Australia. Helen whispered in
my ear, it was but a hint. I caught at it and drove to Adelaide
and tendered my resignation. The bishop refused to accept
it and told me that I was mad and upbraided me for deserting
a sacred cause for mammon. Stung by his reproaches
I confessed my secret. I painted Helen as I saw her, her
beauty, grace, sweetness, but nothing moved the ecclesiastic.
I flung all to the winds and sailed for Perth on the next steamer.
The terrible march to Coolgardie did not abate my
ardour. At the mines I was one of the few successful.
In four months I wrung out three thousand pounds,
but at a fearful cost. The toil, the damp earth, the coarse
food and the delirium which drove me on by day and harassed
me by night, sapped the very springs of my life, ate up
my imagination, devoured my sympathies, obliterated my
faith, and planted in their stead a greed for gold behind
which I saw the smiling face of Helen. The mail brought
me no tidings, though I sent letter after letter down to the
coast. Sleep forsook me. I resorted to opiates. My luck
deserted me and this increased my fury. I was soon known
as the mad miner. I laughed at the taunts. Was not a
priceless reward before me? Helen ever beckoning me on. I
saw her face in every nugget, her form in the little smoke
clouds as they rolled away from the candle in my miner’s
cap, her smile in the water running over the ripples. I could
endure the torment no longer. With my treasure I started
for the coast. I watched it by day and slept beside it at
night. A thousand times I woke with a horrible start believing
that it was gone. How much opium I used on that
journey I shall never know. I landed at Larges Bay and
hurried into Adelaide. The green belt which girts the city,
the blue sky above, the camellias bursting into bloom made
no appeal to me. I had burned up my capacity for enjoyment.
I was no longer a man but a husk, a mere cinder, a bit of
scoria sucked up by a mighty tempest and driven forward.
At the Bank of Australia I drew up and as I did so Helen
came tripping down the steps and smiling as only Helen
could smile. I rushed forward and caught her in my arms,
the next instant I was hurled half senseless into the gutter.
The bishop, my bishop, stood towering over me in a rage.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“‘How dare you sir, how dare you affront my wife in such a
manner, you hair-brained?’ he exclaimed. He raised his
hand to strike me, but Helen interposed. ‘Your grace, my
dear, forgive him, we both know that he is not always responsible
for his actions.’”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Then they entered a carriage and drove away. When I
turned and saw my box of gold how I cursed it. Once to-night
I saw it again, pardon me if I shocked you. The box
lies in the bank vaults at Adelaide, it has been there for five
years, I shall never touch it again, never, never.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How have I lived?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“As the birds live, on the crumbs. I have begged, the
opium fiend has me, you know it, sir, but here take this,” and
he thrust into my hand a sealed paper. He lived for a week
after, I went out daily to see him at the Alfred Hospital,
St. Kilda Road.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The Lilburn wing of the new Adelaide Hospital was built
with the treasure and the Lord Bishop delivered a most eloquent
address upon the occasion of the laying of the corner
stone, but that was many years before the present bishop
arrived in the colony.</p>
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