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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. EXTRACTED FROM THE DIARY OF THE REV. JAMES NORTH. </h2>
<p>October 21st.—I am safe for another six months if I am careful, for
my last bout lasted longer than I expected. I suppose one of these days I
shall have a paroxysm that will kill me. I shall not regret it.</p>
<p>I wonder if this familiar of mine—I begin to detest the expression—will
accuse me of endeavouring to make a case for myself if I say that I
believe my madness to be a disease? I do believe it. I honestly can no
more help getting drunk than a lunatic can help screaming and gibbering.
It would be different with me, perhaps, were I a contented man, happily
married, with children about me, and family cares to distract me. But as I
am—a lonely, gloomy being, debarred from love, devoured by spleen,
and tortured with repressed desires—I become a living torment to
myself. I think of happier men, with fair wives and clinging children, of
men who are loved and who love, of Frere for instance—and a hideous
wild beast seems to stir within me, a monster, whose cravings cannot be
satisfied, can only be drowned in stupefying brandy.</p>
<p>Penitent and shattered, I vow to lead a new life; to forswear spirits, to
drink nothing but water. Indeed, the sight and smell of brandy make me
ill. All goes well for some weeks, when I grow nervous, discontented,
moody. I smoke, and am soothed. But moderation is not to be thought of;
little by little I increase the dose of tobacco. Five pipes a day become
six or seven. Then I count up to ten and twelve, then drop to three or
four, then mount to eleven at a leap; then lose count altogether. Much
smoking excites the brain. I feel clear, bright, gay. My tongue is parched
in the morning, however, and I use liquor to literally "moisten my clay".
I drink wine or beer in moderation, and all goes well. My limbs regain
their suppleness, my hands their coolness, my brain its placidity. I begin
to feel that I have a will. I am confident, calm, and hopeful. To this
condition succeeds one of the most frightful melancholy. I remain plunged,
for an hour together, in a stupor of despair. The earth, air, sea, all
appear barren, colourless. Life is a burden. I long to sleep, and sleeping
struggle to awake, because of the awful dreams which flap about me in the
darkness. At night I cry, "Would to God it were morning!" In the morning,
"Would to God it were evening!" I loathe myself, and all around me. I am
nerveless, passionless, bowed down with a burden like the burden of Saul.
I know well what will restore me to life and ease—restore me, but to
cast me back again into a deeper fit of despair. I drink. One glass—my
blood is warmed, my heart leaps, my hand no longer shakes. Three glasses—I
rise with hope in my soul, the evil spirit flies from me. I continue—pleasing
images flock to my brain, the fields break into flower, the birds into
song, the sea gleams sapphire, the warm heaven laughs. Great God! what man
could withstand a temptation like this?</p>
<p>By an effort, I shake off the desire to drink deeper, and fix my thoughts
on my duties, on my books, on the wretched prisoners. I succeed perhaps
for a time; but my blood, heated by the wine which is at once my poison
and my life, boils in my veins. I drink again, and dream. I feel all the
animal within me stirring. In the day my thoughts wander to all monstrous
imaginings. The most familiar objects suggest to me loathsome thoughts.
Obscene and filthy images surround me. My nature seems changed. By day I
feel myself a wolf in sheep's clothing; a man possessed by a devil, who is
ready at any moment to break out and tear him to pieces. At night I become
a satyr. While in this torment I at once hate and fear myself. One fair
face is ever before me, gleaming through my hot dreams like a flying moon
in the sultry midnight of a tropic storm. I dare not trust myself in the
presence of those whom I love and respect, lest my wild thoughts should
find vent in wilder words. I lose my humanity. I am a beast. Out of this
depth there is but one way of escape. Downwards. I must drench the monster
I have awakened until he sleeps again. I drink and become oblivious. In
these last paroxysms there is nothing for me but brandy. I shut myself up
alone and pour down my gullet huge draughts of spirit. It mounts to my
brain. I am a man again! and as I regain my manhood, I topple over—dead
drunk.</p>
<p>But the awakening! Let me not paint it. The delirium, the fever, the
self-loathing, the prostration, the despair. I view in the looking-glass a
haggard face, with red eyes. I look down upon shaking hands, flaccid
muscles, and shrunken limbs. I speculate if I shall ever be one of those
grotesque and melancholy beings, with bleared eyes and running noses,
swollen bellies and shrunken legs! Ugh!—it is too likely.</p>
<p>October 22nd.—Have spent the day with Mrs. Frere. She is evidently
eager to leave the place—as eager as I am. Frere rejoices in his
murderous power, and laughs at her expostulations. I suppose men get tired
of their wives. In my present frame of mind I am at a loss to understand
how a man could refuse a wife anything.</p>
<p>I do not think she can possibly care for him. I am not a selfish
sentimentalist, as are the majority of seducers. I would take no woman
away from a husband for mere liking. Yet I think there are cases in which
a man who loved would be justified in making a woman happy at the risk of
his own—soul, I suppose.</p>
<p>Making her happy! Ay, that's the point. Would she be happy? There are few
men who can endure to be "cut", slighted, pointed at, and women suffer
more than men in these regards. I, a grizzled man of forty, am not such an
arrant ass as to suppose that a year of guilty delirium can compensate to
a gently-nurtured woman for the loss of that social dignity which
constitutes her best happiness. I am not such an idiot as to forget that
there may come a time when the woman I love may cease to love me, and
having no tie of self-respect, social position, or family duty, to bind
her, may inflict upon her seducer that agony which he has taught her to
inflict upon her husband. Apart from the question of the sin of breaking
the seventh commandment, I doubt if the worst husband and the most unhappy
home are not better, in this social condition of ours, than the most
devoted lover. A strange subject this for a clergyman to speculate upon!
If this diary should ever fall into the hands of a real God-fearing,
honest booby, who never was tempted to sin by finding that at middle-age
he loved the wife of another, how he would condemn me! And rightly, of
course.</p>
<p>November 4th.—In one of the turnkey's rooms in the new gaol is to be
seen an article of harness, which at first creates surprise to the mind of
the beholder, who considers what animal of the brute creation exists of so
diminutive a size as to admit of its use. On inquiry, it will be found to
be a bridle, perfect in head-band, throat-lash, etc., for a human being.
There is attached to this bridle a round piece of cross wood, of almost
four inches in length, and one and a half in diameter. This again, is
secured to a broad strap of leather to cross the mouth. In the wood there
is a small hole, and, when used, the wood is inserted in the mouth, the
small hole being the only breathing space. This being secured with the
various straps and buckles, a more complete bridle could not be well
imagined.</p>
<p>I was in the gaol last evening at eight o'clock. I had been to see Rufus
Dawes, and returning, paused for a moment to speak to Hailey. Gimblett,
who robbed Mr. Vane of two hundred pounds, was present, he was at that
time a turnkey, holding a third-class pass, and in receipt of two
shillings per diem. Everything was quite still. I could not help remarking
how quiet the gaol was, when Gimblett said, "There's someone speaking. I
know who that is." And forthwith took from its pegs one of the bridles
just described, and a pair of handcuffs.</p>
<p>I followed him to one of the cells, which he opened, and therein was a man
lying on his straw mat, undressed, and to all appearance fast asleep.
Gimblett ordered him to get up and dress himself. He did so, and came into
the yard, where Gimblett inserted the iron-wood gag in his mouth. The
sound produced by his breathing through it (which appeared to be done with
great difficulty) resembled a low, indistinct whistle. Gimblett led him to
the lamp-post in the yard, and I saw that the victim of his wanton tyranny
was the poor blind wretch Mooney. Gimblett placed him with his back
against the lamp-post, and his arms being taken round, were secured by
handcuffs round the post. I was told that the old man was to remain in
this condition for three hours. I went at once to the Commandant. He
invited me into his drawing-room—an invitation which I had the good
sense to refuse—but refused to listen to any plea for mercy. "The
old impostor is always making his blindness an excuse for disobedience,"
said he.—And this is her husband.</p>
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