<h2><SPAN name="THE_APPLE" id="THE_APPLE">THE APPLE</SPAN></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">“I must</span> get rid of it,” said the man in the
corner of the carriage, abruptly breaking the
silence.</p>
<p>Mr. Hinchcliff looked up, hearing imperfectly.
He had been lost in the rapt contemplation of the
college cap tied by a string to his portmanteau
handles—the outward and visible sign of his newly-gained
pedagogic position—in the rapt appreciation
of the college cap and the pleasant anticipations it
excited. For Mr. Hinchcliff had just matriculated
at London University, and was going to be junior
assistant at the Holmwood Grammar School—a
very enviable position. He stared across the carriage
at his fellow-traveller.</p>
<p>“Why not give it away?” said this person.
“Give it away! Why not?”</p>
<p>He was a tall, dark, sunburnt man with a pale
face. His arms were folded tightly, and his feet
were on the seat in front of him. He was pulling
at a lank black moustache. He stared hard at his
toes.</p>
<p>“Why not?” he said.</p>
<p>Mr. Hinchcliff coughed.</p>
<p>The stranger lifted his eyes—they were curious,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
dark-grey eyes—and stared blankly at Mr. Hinchcliff
for the best part of a minute, perhaps. His
expression grew to interest.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said slowly. “Why not? And end
it.”</p>
<p>“I don’t quite follow you, I’m afraid,” said Mr.
Hinchcliff, with another cough.</p>
<p>“You don’t quite follow me?” said the stranger
quite mechanically, his singular eyes wandering from
Mr. Hinchcliff to the bag with its ostentatiously
displayed cap, and back to Mr. Hinchcliff’s downy
face.</p>
<p>“You’re so abrupt, you know,” apologised Mr
Hinchcliff.</p>
<p>“Why shouldn’t I?” said the stranger, following
his thoughts. “You are a student?” he said, addressing
Mr. Hinchcliff.</p>
<p>“I am—by Correspondence—of the London
University,” said Mr. Hinchcliff, with irrepressible
pride, and feeling nervously at his tie.</p>
<p>“In pursuit of knowledge,” said the stranger, and
suddenly took his feet off the seat, put his fist on
his knees, and stared at Mr. Hinchcliff as though he
had never seen a student before. “Yes,” he said,
and flung out an index finger. Then he rose, took
a bag from the hat-rack, and unlocked it. Quite
silently he drew out something round and wrapped
in a quantity of silver-paper, and unfolded this carefully.
He held it out towards Mr. Hinchcliff—a
small, very smooth, golden-yellow fruit.</p>
<p>Mr. Hinchcliff’s eyes and mouth were open. He
did not offer to take this object—if he was intended
to take it.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“That,” said this fantastic stranger, speaking very
slowly, “is the Apple of the Tree of Knowledge.
Look at it—small, and bright, and wonderful—Knowledge—and
I am going to give it to you.”</p>
<p>Mr. Hinchcliff’s mind worked painfully for a
minute, and then the sufficient explanation, “Mad!”
flashed across his brain, and illuminated the whole
situation. One humoured madmen. He put his
head a little on one side.</p>
<p>“The Apple of the Tree of Knowledge, eigh!”
said Mr. Hinchcliff, regarding it with a finely
assumed air of interest, and then looking at the
interlocutor. “But don’t you want to eat it yourself?
And besides—how did you come by it?”</p>
<p>“It never fades. I have had it now three months.
And it is ever bright and smooth and ripe and
desirable, as you see it.” He laid his hand on his
knee and regarded the fruit musingly. Then he
began to wrap it again in the papers, as though
he had abandoned his intention of giving it away.</p>
<p>“But how did you come by it?” said Mr. Hinchcliff,
who had his argumentative side. “And how
do you know that it <em>is</em> the Fruit of the Tree?”</p>
<p>“I bought this fruit,” said the stranger, “three
months ago—for a drink of water and a crust of
bread. The man who gave it to me—because I
kept the life in him—was an Armenian. Armenia!
that wonderful country, the first of all countries,
where the ark of the Flood remains to this day,
buried in the glaciers of Mount Ararat. This man,
I say, fleeing with others from the Kurds who had
come upon them, went up into desolate places among
the mountains—places beyond the common knowledge<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
of men. And fleeing from imminent pursuit,
they came to a slope high among the mountain-peaks,
green with a grass like knife-blades, that cut
and slashed most pitilessly at anyone who went into
it. The Kurds were close behind, and there was
nothing for it but to plunge in, and the worst of it
was that the paths they made through it at the price
of their blood served for the Kurds to follow. Every
one of the fugitives was killed save this Armenian
and another. He heard the screams and cries of
his friends, and the swish of the grass about those
who were pursuing them—it was tall grass rising
overhead. And then a shouting and answers, and
when presently he paused, everything was still. He
pushed out again, not understanding, cut and bleeding,
until he came out on a steep slope of rocks
below a precipice, and then he saw the grass was all
on fire, and the smoke of it rose like a veil between
him and his enemies.”</p>
<p>The stranger paused. “Yes?” said Mr. Hinchcliff.
“Yes?”</p>
<p>“There he was, all torn and bloody from the
knife-blades of the grass, the rocks blazing under
the afternoon sun—the sky molten brass—and the
smoke of the fire driving towards him. He dared
not stay there. Death he did not mind, but torture!
Far away beyond the smoke he heard shouts and
cries. Women screaming. So he went clambering
up a gorge in the rocks—everywhere were bushes
with dry branches that stuck out like thorns among
the leaves—until he clambered over the brow of a
ridge that hid him. And then he met his companion,
a shepherd, who had also escaped. And, counting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
cold and famine and thirst as nothing against the
Kurds, they went on into the heights, and among
the snow and ice. They wandered three whole
days.</p>
<p>“The third day came the vision. I suppose
hungry men often do see visions, but then there is
this fruit.” He lifted the wrapped globe in his
hand. “And I have heard it, too, from other
mountaineers who have known something of the
legend. It was in the evening time, when the stars
were increasing, that they came down a slope of
polished rock into a huge dark valley all set about
with strange, contorted trees, and in these trees
hung little globes like glow-worm spheres, strange
round yellow lights.</p>
<p>“Suddenly this valley was lit far away, many
miles away, far down it, with a golden flame marching
slowly athwart it, that made the stunted trees
against it black as night, and turned the slopes all
about them and their figures to the likeness of fiery
gold. And at the vision they, knowing the legends
of the mountains, instantly knew that it was Eden
they saw, or the sentinel of Eden, and they fell
upon their faces like men struck dead.</p>
<p>“When they dared to look again the valley was
dark for a space, and then the light came again—returning,
a burning amber.</p>
<p>“At that the shepherd sprang to his feet, and
with a shout began to run down towards the light,
but the other man was too fearful to follow him.
He stood stunned, amazed, and terrified, watching his
companion recede towards the marching glare. And
hardly had the shepherd set out when there came<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>
a noise like thunder, the beating of invisible wings
hurrying up the valley, and a great and terrible fear;
and at that the man who gave me the fruit turned—if
he might still escape. And hurrying headlong up
the slope again, with that tumult sweeping after him,
he stumbled against one of these stunted bushes,
and a ripe fruit came off it into his hand. This
fruit. Forthwith, the wings and the thunder rolled
all about him. He fell and fainted, and when he
came to his senses, he was back among the blackened
ruins of his own village, and I and the others were
attending to the wounded. A vision? But the
golden fruit of the tree was still clutched in his hand.
There were others there who knew the legend, knew
what that strange fruit might be.” He paused.
“And this is it,” he said.</p>
<p>It was a most extraordinary story to be told in
a third-class carriage on a Sussex railway. It was
as if the real was a mere veil to the fantastic, and
here was the fantastic poking through. “Is it?”
was all Mr. Hinchcliff could say.</p>
<p>“The legend,” said the stranger, “tells that those
thickets of dwarfed trees growing about the garden
sprang from the apple that Adam carried in his
hand when he and Eve were driven forth. He felt
something in his hand, saw the half-eaten apple, and
flung it petulantly aside. And there they grow, in
that desolate valley, girdled round with the everlasting
snows, and there the fiery swords keep ward
against the Judgment Day.”</p>
<p>“But I thought these things were”—Mr. Hinchcliff
paused—“fables—parables rather. Do you
mean to tell me that there in Armenia”—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The stranger answered the unfinished question
with the fruit in his open hand.</p>
<p>“But you don’t know,” said Mr. Hinchcliff, “that
that <em>is</em> the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. The man
may have had—a sort of mirage, say. Suppose”—</p>
<p>“Look at it,” said the stranger.</p>
<p>It was certainly a strange-looking globe, not really
an apple, Mr. Hinchcliff saw, and a curious glowing
golden colour, almost as though light itself was
wrought into its substance. As he looked at it, he
began to see more vividly the desolate valley among
the mountains, the guarding swords of fire, the strange
antiquities of the story he had just heard. He rubbed
a knuckle into his eye. “But”—said he.</p>
<p>“It has kept like that, smooth and full, three
months. Longer than that it is now by some days.
No drying, no withering, no decay.”</p>
<p>“And you yourself,” said Mr. Hinchcliff, “really
believe that”—</p>
<p>“Is the Forbidden Fruit.”</p>
<p>There was no mistaking the earnestness of the
man’s manner and his perfect sanity. “The Fruit
of Knowledge,” he said.</p>
<p>“Suppose it was?” said Mr. Hinchcliff, after a
pause, still staring at it. “But after all,” said Mr.
Hinchcliff, “it’s not my kind of knowledge—not the
sort of knowledge. I mean, Adam and Eve have
eaten it already.”</p>
<p>“We inherit their sins—not their knowledge,”
said the stranger. “That would make it all clear
and bright again. We should see into everything,
through everything, into the deepest meaning of
everything”—</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Why don’t you eat it, then?” said Mr. Hinchcliff,
with an inspiration.</p>
<p>“I took it intending to eat it,” said the stranger.
“Man has fallen. Merely to eat again could
scarcely”—</p>
<p>“Knowledge is power,” said Mr. Hinchcliff.</p>
<p>“But is it happiness? I am older than you—more
than twice as old. Time after time I
have held this in my hand, and my heart has failed
me at the thought of all that one might know,
that terrible lucidity— Suppose suddenly all the
world became pitilessly clear?”</p>
<p>“That, I think, would be a great advantage,” said
Mr. Hinchcliff, “on the whole.”</p>
<p>“Suppose you saw into the hearts and minds of
everyone about you, into their most secret recesses—people
you loved, whose love you valued?”</p>
<p>“You’d soon find out the humbugs,” said Mr.
Hinchcliff, greatly struck by the idea.</p>
<p>“And worse—to know yourself, bare of your
most intimate illusions. To see yourself in your
place. All that your lusts and weaknesses prevented
your doing. No merciful perspective.”</p>
<p>“That might be an excellent thing too. ‘Know
thyself,’ you know.”</p>
<p>“You are young,” said the stranger.</p>
<p>“If you don’t care to eat it, and it bothers you,
why don’t you throw it away?”</p>
<p>“There again, perhaps, you will not understand
me. To me, how could one throw away a thing
like that, glowing, wonderful? Once one has it, one
is bound. But, on the other hand, to <em>give</em> it away!
To give it away to someone who thirsted after knowledge,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
who found no terror in the thought of that
clear perception”—</p>
<p>“Of course,” said Mr. Hinchcliff thoughtfully, “it
might be some sort of poisonous fruit.”</p>
<p>And then his eye caught something motionless,
the end of a white board black-lettered outside the
carriage window. “—<span class="f8">MWOOD</span>,” he saw. He started
convulsively. “Gracious!” said Mr. Hinchcliff.
“Holmwood!”—and the practical present blotted
out the mystic realisations that had been stealing
upon him.</p>
<p>In another moment he was opening the carriage-door,
portmanteau in hand. The guard was already
fluttering his green flag. Mr. Hinchcliff jumped out.
“Here!” said a voice behind him, and he saw the
dark eyes of the stranger shining and the golden
fruit, bright and bare, held out of the open carriage-door.
He took it instinctively, the train was already
moving.</p>
<p>“<em>No!</em>” shouted the stranger, and made a snatch
at it as if to take it back.</p>
<p>“Stand away,” cried a country porter, thrusting
forward to close the door. The stranger shouted
something Mr. Hinchcliff did not catch, head and
arm thrust excitedly out of the window, and then
the shadow of the bridge fell on him, and in a trice
he was hidden. Mr. Hinchcliff stood astonished,
staring at the end of the last waggon receding round
the bend, and with the wonderful fruit in his hand.
For the fraction of a minute his mind was confused,
and then he became aware that two or three people
on the platform were regarding him with interest.
Was he not the new Grammar School master making<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
his début? It occurred to him that, so far as they
could tell, the fruit might very well be the naïve
refreshment of an orange. He flushed at the thought,
and thrust the fruit into his side pocket, where it
bulged undesirably. But there was no help for it,
so he went towards them, awkwardly concealing his
sense of awkwardness, to ask the way to the Grammar
School, and the means of getting his portmanteau
and the two tin boxes which lay up the platform
thither. Of all the odd and fantastic yarns to tell
a fellow!</p>
<p>His luggage could be taken on a truck for sixpence,
he found, and he could precede it on foot.
He fancied an ironical note in the voices. He was
painfully aware of his contour.</p>
<p>The curious earnestness of the man in the
train, and the glamour of the story he told, had,
for a time, diverted the current of Mr. Hinchcliff’s
thoughts. It drove like a mist before his immediate
concerns. Fires that went to and fro! But
the preoccupation of his new position, and the
impression he was to produce upon Holmwood
generally, and the school people in particular, returned
upon him with reinvigorating power before
he left the station and cleared his mental atmosphere.
But it is extraordinary what an inconvenient thing
the addition of a soft and rather brightly-golden
fruit, not three inches in diameter, may prove to a
sensitive youth on his best appearance. In the
pocket of his black jacket it bulged dreadfully, spoilt
the lines altogether. He passed a little old lady in
black, and he felt her eye drop upon the excrescence
at once. He was wearing one glove and carrying<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
the other, together with his stick, so that to bear the
fruit openly was impossible. In one place, where
the road into the town seemed suitably secluded,
he took his encumbrance out of his pocket and tried
it in his hat. It was just too large, the hat wobbled
ludicrously, and just as he was taking it out again, a
butcher’s boy came driving round the corner.</p>
<p>“Confound it!” said Mr. Hinchcliff.</p>
<p>He would have eaten the thing, and attained
omniscience there and then, but it would seem so
silly to go into the town sucking a juicy fruit—and
it certainly felt juicy. If one of the boys should come
by, it might do him a serious injury with his discipline
so to be seen. And the juice might make
his face sticky and get upon his cuffs—or it might
be an acid juice as potent as lemon, and take all
the colour out of his clothes.</p>
<p>Then round a bend in the lane came two pleasant
sunlit girlish figures. They were walking slowly
towards the town and chattering—at any moment
they might look round and see a hot-faced young
man behind them carrying a kind of phosphorescent
yellow tomato! They would be sure to laugh.</p>
<p>“<em>Hang!</em>” said Mr. Hinchcliff, and with a swift
jerk sent the encumbrance flying over the stone wall
of an orchard that there abutted on the road. As it
vanished, he felt a faint twinge of loss that lasted
scarcely a moment. He adjusted the stick and
glove in his hand, and walked on, erect and self-conscious,
to pass the girls.</p>
<hr class="l3" />
<p>But in the darkness of the night Mr. Hinchcliff
had a dream, and saw the valley, and the flaming<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
swords, and the contorted trees, and knew that it
really was the Apple of the Tree of Knowledge that
he had thrown regardlessly away. And he awoke
very unhappy.</p>
<p>In the morning his regret had passed, but afterwards
it returned and troubled him; never, however,
when he was happy or busily occupied. At last,
one moonlight night about eleven, when all Holmwood
was quiet, his regrets returned with redoubled
force, and therewith an impulse to adventure. He
slipped out of the house and over the playground
wall, went through the silent town to Station Lane,
and climbed into the orchard where he had thrown
the fruit. But nothing was to be found of it there
among the dewy grass and the faint intangible globes
of dandelion down.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />