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<h2> CHAPTER VI. THE SOLE SURVIVOR </h2>
<p>A few weeks later I landed in England, I, who no longer desired to set
foot on any land again.</p>
<p>At nine-and-twenty I was gaunt and gray; my nerves were shattered, my
heart was broken; and my face showed it without let or hindrance from the
spirit that was broken too. Pride, will, courage, and endurance, all these
had expired in my long and lonely battle with the sea. They had kept me
alive-for this. And now they left me naked to mine enemies.</p>
<p>For every hand seemed raised against me, though in reality it was the hand
of fellowship that the world stretched out, and the other was the reading
of a jaundiced eye. I could not help it: there was a poison in my veins
that made me all ingratitude and perversity. The world welcomed me back,
and I returned the compliment by sulking like the recaptured runaway I was
at heart. The world showed a sudden interest in me; so I took no further
interest in the world, but, on the contrary, resented its attentions with
unreasonable warmth and obduracy; and my would-be friends I regarded as my
very worst enemies. The majority, I feel sure, meant but well and kindly
by the poor survivor. But the survivor could not forget that his name was
still in the newspapers, nor blink the fact that he was an unworthy hero
of the passing hour. And he suffered enough from brazenly meddlesome and
self-seeking folk, from impudent and inquisitive intruders, to justify
some suspicion of old acquaintances suddenly styling themselves old
friends, and of distant connections newly and unduly eager to claim
relationship. Many I misjudged, and have long known it. On the whole,
however, I wonder at that attitude of mine as little as I approve of it.</p>
<p>If I had distinguished myself in any other way, it would have been a
different thing. It was the fussy, sentimental, inconsiderate interest in
one thrown into purely accidental and necessarily painful prominence—the
vulgarization of an unspeakable tragedy—that my soul abhorred. I
confess that I regarded it from my own unique and selfish point of view.
What was a thrilling matter to the world was a torturing memory to me. The
quintessence of the torture was, moreover, my own secret. It was not the
loss of the Lady Jermyn that I could not bear to speak about; it was my
own loss; but the one involved the other. My loss apart, however, it was
plain enough to dwell upon experiences so terrible and yet so recent as
those which I had lived to tell. I did what I considered my duty to the
public, but I certainly did no more. My reticence was rebuked in the
papers that made the most of me, but would fain have made more. And yet I
do not think that I was anything but docile with those who had a manifest
right to question me; to the owners, and to other interested persons, with
whom I was confronted on one pretext or another, I told my tale as fully
and as freely as I have told it here, though each telling hurt more than
the last. That was necessary and unavoidable; it was the private
intrusions which I resented with all the spleen the sea had left me in
exchange for the qualities it had taken away.</p>
<p>Relatives I had as few as misanthropist could desire; but from
self-congratulation on the fact, on first landing, I soon came to keen
regret. They at least would have sheltered me from spies and busybodies;
they at least would have secured the peace and privacy of one who was no
hero in fact or spirit, whose noblest deed was a piece of self
preservation which he wished undone with all his heart.</p>
<p>Self-consciousness no doubt multiplied my flattering assailants. I have
said that my nerves were shattered. I may have imagined much and
exaggerated the rest. Yet what truth there was in my suspicions you shall
duly see. I felt sure that I was followed in the street, and my every
movement dogged by those to whom I would not condescend to turn and look.
Meanwhile, I had not the courage to go near my club, and the Temple was a
place where I was accosted in every court, effusively congratulated on the
marvellous preservation of my stale spoilt life, and invited right and
left to spin my yarn over a quiet pipe! Well, perhaps such invitations
were not so common as they have grown in my memory; nor must you confuse
my then feelings on all these matters with those which I entertain as I
write. I have grown older, and, I hope, something kindlier and wiser since
then. Yet to this day I cannot blame myself for abandoning my chambers and
avoiding my club.</p>
<p>For a temporary asylum I pitched upon a small, quiet, empty, private hotel
which I knew of in Charterhouse Square. Instantly the room next mine
became occupied.</p>
<p>All the first night I imagined I heard voices talking about me in that
room next door. It was becoming a disease with me. Either I was being
dogged, watched, followed, day and night, indoors and out, or I was the
victim of a very ominous hallucination. That night I never closed an eye
nor lowered my light. In the morning I took a four-wheel cab and drove
straight to Harley Street; and, upon my soul, as I stood on the
specialist's door-step, I could have sworn I saw the occupant of the room
next mine dash by me in a hansom!</p>
<p>"Ah!" said the specialist; "so you cannot sleep; you hear voices; you
fancy you are being followed in the street. You don't think these fancies
spring entirely from the imagination? Not entirely—just so. And you
keep looking behind you, as though somebody were at your elbow; and you
prefer to sit with your back close to the wall. Just so—just so.
Distressing symptoms, to be sure, but—but hardly to be wondered at
in a man who has come through your nervous strain." A keen professional
light glittered in his eyes. "And almost commonplace," he added, smiling,
"compared with the hallucinations you must have suffered from on that
hen-coop! Ah, my dear sir, the psychological interest of your case is very
great!"</p>
<p>"It may be," said I, brusquely. "But I come to you to get that hen-coop
out of my head, not to be reminded of it. Everybody asks me about the
damned thing, and you follow everybody else. I wish it and I were at the
bottom of the sea together!"</p>
<p>This speech had the effect of really interesting the doctor in my present
condition, which was indeed one of chronic irritation and extreme
excitability, alternating with fits of the very blackest despair. Instead
of offending my gentleman I had put him on his mettle, and for half an
hour he honored me with the most exhaustive inquisition ever elicited from
a medical man. His panacea was somewhat in the nature of an anti-climax,
but at least it had the merits of simplicity and of common sense. A change
of air—perfect quiet—say a cottage in the country—not
too near the sea. And he shook my hand kindly when I left.</p>
<p>"Keep up your heart, my dear sir," said he. "Keep up your courage and your
heart."</p>
<p>"My heart!" I cried. "It's at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean."</p>
<p>He was the first to whom I had said as much. He was a stranger. What did
it matter? And, oh, it was so true—so true.</p>
<p>Every day and all day I was thinking of my love; every hour and all hours
she was before me with her sunny hair and young, young face. Her wistful
eyes were gazing into mine continually. Their wistfulness I had never
realized at the time; but now I did; and I saw it for what it seemed
always to have been, the soft, sad, yearning look of one fated to die
young. So young—so young! And I might live to be an old man,
mourning her.</p>
<p>That I should never love again I knew full well. This time there was no
mistake. I have implied, I believe, that it was for another woman I fled
originally to the diggings. Well, that one was still unmarried, and when
the papers were full of me she wrote me a letter which I now believe to
have been merely kind. At the time I was all uncharitableness; but words
of mine would fail to tell you how cold this letter left me; it was as a
candle lighted in the full blaze of the sun.</p>
<p>With all my bitterness, however, you must not suppose that I had quite
lost the feelings which had inspired me at sunset on the lonely ocean,
while my mind still held good. I had been too near my Maker ever to lose
those feelings altogether. They were with me in the better moments of
these my worst days. I trusted His wisdom still. There was a reason for
everything; there were reasons for all this. I alone had been saved out of
all those souls who sailed from Melbourne in the Lady Jermyn. Why should I
have been the favored one; I with my broken heart and now lonely life?
Some great inscrutable reason there must be; at my worst I did not deny
that. But neither did I puzzle my sick brain with the reason. I just
waited for it to be revealed to me, if it were God's will ever to reveal
it. And that I conceive to be the one spirit in which a man may
contemplate, with equal sanity and reverence, the mysteries and the
miseries of his life.</p>
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