<SPAN name="2H_4_0006"></SPAN>
<h2> VI. THE OTHER PHILOSOPHER </h2>
<p>Between high hedges in Hertfordshire, hedges so high as to create a
kind of grove, two men were running. They did not run in a scampering
or feverish manner, but in the steady swing of the pendulum. Across the
great plains and uplands to the right and left of the lane, a long tide
of sunset light rolled like a sea of ruby, lighting up the long terraces
of the hills and picking out the few windows of the scattered hamlets
in startling blood-red sparks. But the lane was cut deep in the hill
and remained in an abrupt shadow. The two men running in it had an
impression not uncommonly experienced between those wild green English
walls; a sense of being led between the walls of a maze.</p>
<p>Though their pace was steady it was vigorous; their faces were heated
and their eyes fixed and bright. There was, indeed, something a little
mad in the contrast between the evening's stillness over the empty
country-side, and these two figures fleeing wildly from nothing. They
had the look of two lunatics, possibly they were.</p>
<p>"Are you all right?" said Turnbull, with civility. "Can you keep this
up?"</p>
<p>"Quite easily, thank you," replied MacIan. "I run very well."</p>
<p>"Is that a qualification in a family of warriors?" asked Turnbull.</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly. Rapid movement is essential," answered MacIan, who never
saw a joke in his life.</p>
<p>Turnbull broke out into a short laugh, and silence fell between them,
the panting silence of runners.</p>
<p>Then MacIan said: "We run better than any of those policemen. They are
too fat. Why do you make your policemen so fat?"</p>
<p>"I didn't do much towards making them fat myself," replied Turnbull,
genially, "but I flatter myself that I am now doing something towards
making them thin. You'll see they will be as lean as rakes by the time
they catch us. They will look like your friend, Cardinal Manning."</p>
<p>"But they won't catch us," said MacIan, in his literal way.</p>
<p>"No, we beat them in the great military art of running away," returned
the other. "They won't catch us unless——"</p>
<p>MacIan turned his long equine face inquiringly. "Unless what?" he
said, for Turnbull had gone silent suddenly, and seemed to be listening
intently as he ran as a horse does with his ears turned back.</p>
<p>"Unless what?" repeated the Highlander.</p>
<p>"Unless they do—what they have done. Listen." MacIan slackened his
trot, and turned his head to the trail they had left behind them. Across
two or three billows of the up and down lane came along the ground the
unmistakable throbbing of horses' hoofs.</p>
<p>"They have put the mounted police on us," said Turnbull, shortly. "Good
Lord, one would think we were a Revolution."</p>
<p>"So we are," said MacIan calmly. "What shall we do? Shall we turn on
them with our points?"</p>
<p>"It may come to that," answered Turnbull, "though if it does, I reckon
that will be the last act. We must put it off if we can." And he stared
and peered about him between the bushes. "If we could hide somewhere
the beasts might go by us," he said. "The police have their faults, but
thank God they're inefficient. Why, here's the very thing. Be quick and
quiet. Follow me."</p>
<p>He suddenly swung himself up the high bank on one side of the lane. It
was almost as high and smooth as a wall, and on the top of it the black
hedge stood out over them as an angle, almost like a thatched roof of
the lane. And the burning evening sky looked down at them through the
tangle with red eyes as of an army of goblins.</p>
<p>Turnbull hoisted himself up and broke the hedge with his body. As his
head and shoulders rose above it they turned to flame in the full glow
as if lit up by an immense firelight. His red hair and beard looked
almost scarlet, and his pale face as bright as a boy's. Something
violent, something that was at once love and hatred, surged in the
strange heart of the Gael below him. He had an unutterable sense of epic
importance, as if he were somehow lifting all humanity into a prouder
and more passionate region of the air. As he swung himself up also into
the evening light he felt as if he were rising on enormous wings.</p>
<p>Legends of the morning of the world which he had heard in childhood or
read in youth came back upon him in a cloudy splendour, purple tales
of wrath and friendship, like Roland and Oliver, or Balin and Balan,
reminding him of emotional entanglements. Men who had loved each other
and then fought each other; men who had fought each other and then loved
each other, together made a mixed but monstrous sense of momentousness.
The crimson seas of the sunset seemed to him like a bursting out of some
sacred blood, as if the heart of the world had broken.</p>
<p>Turnbull was wholly unaffected by any written or spoken poetry; his was
a powerful and prosaic mind. But even upon him there came for the moment
something out of the earth and the passionate ends of the sky. The only
evidence was in his voice, which was still practical but a shade more
quiet.</p>
<p>"Do you see that summer-house-looking thing over there?" he asked
shortly. "That will do for us very well."</p>
<p>Keeping himself free from the tangle of the hedge he strolled across
a triangle of obscure kitchen garden, and approached a dismal shed or
lodge a yard or two beyond it. It was a weather-stained hut of grey
wood, which with all its desolation retained a tag or two of trivial
ornament, which suggested that the thing had once been a sort of
summer-house, and the place probably a sort of garden.</p>
<p>"That is quite invisible from the road," said Turnbull, as he entered
it, "and it will cover us up for the night."</p>
<p>MacIan looked at him gravely for a few moments. "Sir," he said, "I ought
to say something to you. I ought to say——"</p>
<p>"Hush," said Turnbull, suddenly lifting his hand; "be still, man."</p>
<p>In the sudden silence, the drumming of the distant horses grew louder
and louder with inconceivable rapidity, and the cavalcade of police
rushed by below them in the lane, almost with the roar and rattle of an
express train.</p>
<p>"I ought to tell you," continued MacIan, still staring stolidly at the
other, "that you are a great chief, and it is good to go to war behind
you."</p>
<p>Turnbull said nothing, but turned and looked out of the foolish lattice
of the little windows, then he said, "We must have food and sleep
first."</p>
<p>When the last echo of their eluded pursuers had died in the distant
uplands, Turnbull began to unpack the provisions with the easy air of
a man at a picnic. He had just laid out the last items, put a bottle
of wine on the floor, and a tin of salmon on the window-ledge, when the
bottomless silence of that forgotten place was broken. And it was broken
by three heavy blows of a stick delivered upon the door.</p>
<p>Turnbull looked up in the act of opening a tin and stared silently at
his companion. MacIan's long, lean mouth had shut hard.</p>
<p>"Who the devil can that be?" said Turnbull.</p>
<p>"God knows," said the other. "It might be God."</p>
<p>Again the sound of the wooden stick reverberated on the wooden door. It
was a curious sound and on consideration did not resemble the ordinary
effects of knocking on a door for admittance. It was rather as if the
point of a stick were plunged again and again at the panels in an absurd
attempt to make a hole in them.</p>
<p>A wild look sprang into MacIan's eyes and he got up half stupidly, with
a kind of stagger, put his hand out and caught one of the swords. "Let
us fight at once," he cried, "it is the end of the world."</p>
<p>"You're overdone, MacIan," said Turnbull, putting him on one side. "It's
only someone playing the goat. Let me open the door."</p>
<p>But he also picked up a sword as he stepped to open it.</p>
<p>He paused one moment with his hand on the handle and then flung the door
open. Almost as he did so the ferrule of an ordinary bamboo cane came at
his eyes, so that he had actually to parry it with the naked weapon in
his hands. As the two touched, the point of the stick was dropped very
abruptly, and the man with the stick stepped hurriedly back.</p>
<p>Against the heraldic background of sprawling crimson and gold offered
him by the expiring sunset, the figure of the man with the stick showed
at first merely black and fantastic. He was a small man with two wisps
of long hair that curled up on each side, and seen in silhouette, looked
like horns. He had a bow tie so big that the two ends showed on each
side of his neck like unnatural stunted wings. He had his long black
cane still tilted in his hand like a fencing foil and half presented
at the open door. His large straw hat had fallen behind him as he leapt
backwards.</p>
<p>"With reference to your suggestion, MacIan," said Turnbull, placidly, "I
think it looks more like the Devil."</p>
<p>"Who on earth are you?" cried the stranger in a high shrill voice,
brandishing his cane defensively.</p>
<p>"Let me see," said Turnbull, looking round to MacIan with the same
blandness. "Who are we?"</p>
<p>"Come out," screamed the little man with the stick.</p>
<p>"Certainly," said Turnbull, and went outside with the sword, MacIan
following.</p>
<p>Seen more fully, with the evening light on his face, the strange man
looked a little less like a goblin. He wore a square pale-grey jacket
suit, on which the grey butterfly tie was the only indisputable touch
of affectation. Against the great sunset his figure had looked merely
small: seen in a more equal light it looked tolerably compact and
shapely. His reddish-brown hair, combed into two great curls, looked
like the long, slow curling hair of the women in some pre-Raphaelite
pictures. But within this feminine frame of hair his face was
unexpectedly impudent, like a monkey's.</p>
<p>"What are you doing here?" he said, in a sharp small voice.</p>
<p>"Well," said MacIan, in his grave childish way, "what are <i>you</i> doing
here?"</p>
<p>"I," said the man, indignantly, "I'm in my own garden."</p>
<p>"Oh," said MacIan, simply, "I apologize."</p>
<p>Turnbull was coolly curling his red moustache, and the stranger stared
from one to the other, temporarily stunned by their innocent assurance.</p>
<p>"But, may I ask," he said at last, "what the devil you are doing in my
summer-house?"</p>
<p>"Certainly," said MacIan. "We were just going to fight."</p>
<p>"To fight!" repeated the man.</p>
<p>"We had better tell this gentleman the whole business," broke in
Turnbull. Then turning to the stranger he said firmly, "I am sorry, sir,
but we have something to do that must be done. And I may as well tell
you at the beginning and to avoid waste of time or language, that we
cannot admit any interference."</p>
<p>"We were just going to take some slight refreshment when you interrupted
us..."</p>
<p>The little man had a dawning expression of understanding and stooped and
picked up the unused bottle of wine, eyeing it curiously.</p>
<p>Turnbull continued:</p>
<p>"But that refreshment was preparatory to something which I fear you will
find less comprehensible, but on which our minds are entirely fixed,
sir. We are forced to fight a duel. We are forced by honour and an
internal intellectual need. Do not, for your own sake, attempt to stop
us. I know all the excellent and ethical things that you will want to
say to us. I know all about the essential requirements of civil order:
I have written leading articles about them all my life. I know all about
the sacredness of human life; I have bored all my friends with it. Try
and understand our position. This man and I are alone in the modern
world in that we think that God is essentially important. I think He
does not exist; that is where the importance comes in for me. But this
man thinks that He does exist, and thinking that very properly thinks
Him more important than anything else. Now we wish to make a great
demonstration and assertion—something that will set the world on fire
like the first Christian persecutions. If you like, we are attempting
a mutual martyrdom. The papers have posted up every town against us.
Scotland Yard has fortified every police station with our enemies; we
are driven therefore to the edge of a lonely lane, and indirectly to
taking liberties with your summer-house in order to arrange our..."</p>
<p>"Stop!" roared the little man in the butterfly necktie. "Put me out of
my intellectual misery. Are you really the two tomfools I have read of
in all the papers? Are you the two people who wanted to spit each other
in the Police Court? Are you? Are you?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said MacIan, "it began in a Police Court."</p>
<p>The little man slung the bottle of wine twenty yards away like a stone.</p>
<p>"Come up to my place," he said. "I've got better stuff than that. I've
got the best Beaune within fifty miles of here. Come up. You're the very
men I wanted to see."</p>
<p>Even Turnbull, with his typical invulnerability, was a little taken
aback by this boisterous and almost brutal hospitality.</p>
<p>"Why...sir..." he began.</p>
<p>"Come up! Come in!" howled the little man, dancing with delight. "I'll
give you a dinner. I'll give you a bed! I'll give you a green smooth
lawn and your choice of swords and pistols. Why, you fools, I adore
fighting! It's the only good thing in God's world! I've walked about
these damned fields and longed to see somebody cut up and killed and the
blood running. Ha! Ha!"</p>
<p>And he made sudden lunges with his stick at the trunk of a neighbouring
tree so that the ferrule made fierce prints and punctures in the bark.</p>
<p>"Excuse me," said MacIan suddenly with the wide-eyed curiosity of a
child, "excuse me, but..."</p>
<p>"Well?" said the small fighter, brandishing his wooden weapon.</p>
<p>"Excuse me," repeated MacIan, "but was that what you were doing at the
door?"</p>
<p>The little man stared an instant and then said: "Yes," and Turnbull
broke into a guffaw.</p>
<p>"Come on!" cried the little man, tucking his stick under his arm and
taking quite suddenly to his heels. "Come on! Confound me, I'll see both
of you eat and then I'll see one of you die. Lord bless me, the gods
must exist after all—they have sent me one of my day-dreams! Lord! A
duel!"</p>
<p>He had gone flying along a winding path between the borders of the
kitchen garden, and in the increasing twilight he was as hard to follow
as a flying hare. But at length the path after many twists betrayed its
purpose and led abruptly up two or three steps to the door of a tiny but
very clean cottage. There was nothing about the outside to distinguish
it from other cottages, except indeed its ominous cleanliness and one
thing that was out of all the custom and tradition of all cottages
under the sun. In the middle of the little garden among the stocks and
marigolds there surged up in shapeless stone a South Sea Island idol.
There was something gross and even evil in that eyeless and alien god
among the most innocent of the English flowers.</p>
<p>"Come in!" cried the creature again. "Come in! it's better inside!"</p>
<p>Whether or no it was better inside it was at least a surprise. The
moment the two duellists had pushed open the door of that inoffensive,
whitewashed cottage they found that its interior was lined with fiery
gold. It was like stepping into a chamber in the Arabian Nights. The
door that closed behind them shut out England and all the energies of
the West. The ornaments that shone and shimmered on every side of them
were subtly mixed from many periods and lands, but were all oriental.
Cruel Assyrian bas-reliefs ran along the sides of the passage; cruel
Turkish swords and daggers glinted above and below them; the two
were separated by ages and fallen civilizations. Yet they seemed to
sympathize since they were both harmonious and both merciless. The house
seemed to consist of chamber within chamber and created that impression
as of a dream which belongs also to the Arabian Nights themselves. The
innermost room of all was like the inside of a jewel. The little man who
owned it all threw himself on a heap of scarlet and golden cushions and
struck his hands together. A negro in a white robe and turban appeared
suddenly and silently behind them.</p>
<p>"Selim," said the host, "these two gentlemen are staying with me
tonight. Send up the very best wine and dinner at once. And Selim,
one of these gentlemen will probably die tomorrow. Make arrangements,
please."</p>
<p>The negro bowed and withdrew.</p>
<p>Evan MacIan came out the next morning into the little garden to a fresh
silver day, his long face looking more austere than ever in that
cold light, his eyelids a little heavy. He carried one of the swords.
Turnbull was in the little house behind him, demolishing the end of
an early breakfast and humming a tune to himself, which could be heard
through the open window. A moment or two later he leapt to his feet and
came out into the sunlight, still munching toast, his own sword stuck
under his arm like a walking-stick.</p>
<p>Their eccentric host had vanished from sight, with a polite gesture,
some twenty minutes before. They imagined him to be occupied on
some concerns in the interior of the house, and they waited for his
emergence, stamping the garden in silence—the garden of tall, fresh
country flowers, in the midst of which the monstrous South Sea idol
lifted itself as abruptly as the prow of a ship riding on a sea of red
and white and gold.</p>
<p>It was with a start, therefore, that they came upon the man himself
already in the garden. They were all the more startled because of the
still posture in which they found him. He was on his knees in front
of the stone idol, rigid and motionless, like a saint in a trance or
ecstasy. Yet when Turnbull's tread broke a twig, he was on his feet in a
flash.</p>
<p>"Excuse me," he said with an irradiation of smiles, but yet with a kind
of bewilderment. "So sorry...family prayers...old fashioned...mother's
knee. Let us go on to the lawn behind."</p>
<p>And he ducked rapidly round the statue to an open space of grass on the
other side of it.</p>
<p>"This will do us best, Mr. MacIan," said he. Then he made a gesture
towards the heavy stone figure on the pedestal which had now its blank
and shapeless back turned towards them. "Don't you be afraid," he added,
"he can still see us."</p>
<p>MacIan turned his blue, blinking eyes, which seemed still misty with
sleep (or sleeplessness) towards the idol, but his brows drew together.</p>
<p>The little man with the long hair also had his eyes on the back view
of the god. His eyes were at once liquid and burning, and he rubbed his
hands slowly against each other.</p>
<p>"Do you know," he said, "I think he can see us better this way. I often
think that this blank thing is his real face, watching, though it cannot
be watched. He! he! Yes, I think he looks nice from behind. He looks
more cruel from behind, don't you think?"</p>
<p>"What the devil is the thing?" asked Turnbull gruffly.</p>
<p>"It is the only Thing there is," answered the other. "It is Force."</p>
<p>"Oh!" said Turnbull shortly.</p>
<p>"Yes, my friends," said the little man, with an animated countenance,
fluttering his fingers in the air, "it was no chance that led you to
this garden; surely it was the caprice of some old god, some happy,
pitiless god. Perhaps it was his will, for he loves blood; and on that
stone in front of him men have been butchered by hundreds in the fierce,
feasting islands of the South. In this cursed, craven place I have
not been permitted to kill men on his altar. Only rabbits and cats,
sometimes."</p>
<p>In the stillness MacIan made a sudden movement, unmeaning apparently,
and then remained rigid.</p>
<p>"But today, today," continued the small man in a shrill voice. "Today
his hour is come. Today his will is done on earth as it is in heaven.
Men, men, men will bleed before him today." And he bit his forefinger in
a kind of fever.</p>
<p>Still, the two duellists stood with their swords as heavily as statues,
and the silence seemed to cool the eccentric and call him back to more
rational speech.</p>
<p>"Perhaps I express myself a little too lyrically," he said with an
amicable abruptness. "My philosophy has its higher ecstasies, but
perhaps you are hardly worked up to them yet. Let us confine ourselves
to the unquestioned. You have found your way, gentlemen, by a beautiful
accident, to the house of the only man in England (probably) who will
favour and encourage your most reasonable project. From Cornwall to Cape
Wrath this county is one horrible, solid block of humanitarianism. You
will find men who will defend this or that war in a distant continent.
They will defend it on the contemptible ground of commerce or the more
contemptible ground of social good. But do not fancy that you will find
one other person who will comprehend a strong man taking the sword in
his hand and wiping out his enemy. My name is Wimpey, Morrice Wimpey. I
had a Fellowship at Magdalen. But I assure you I had to drop it, owing
to my having said something in a public lecture infringing the popular
prejudice against those great gentlemen, the assassins of the Italian
Renaissance. They let me say it at dinner and so on, and seemed to like
it. But in a public lecture...so inconsistent. Well, as I say, here is
your only refuge and temple of honour. Here you can fall back on that
naked and awful arbitration which is the only thing that balances the
stars—a still, continuous violence. <i>Vae Victis!</i> Down, down, down
with the defeated! Victory is the only ultimate fact. Carthage <i>was</i>
destroyed, the Red Indians are being exterminated: that is the single
certainty. In an hour from now that sun will still be shining and that
grass growing, and one of you will be conquered; one of you will be the
conqueror. When it has been done, nothing will alter it. Heroes, I give
you the hospitality fit for heroes. And I salute the survivor. Fall on!"</p>
<p>The two men took their swords. Then MacIan said steadily: "Mr. Turnbull,
lend me your sword a moment."</p>
<p>Turnbull, with a questioning glance, handed him the weapon. MacIan took
the second sword in his left hand and, with a violent gesture, hurled it
at the feet of little Mr. Wimpey.</p>
<p>"Fight!" he said in a loud, harsh voice. "Fight me now!"</p>
<p>Wimpey took a step backward, and bewildered words bubbled on his lips.</p>
<p>"Pick up that sword and fight me," repeated MacIan, with brows as black
as thunder.</p>
<p>The little man turned to Turnbull with a gesture, demanding judgement or
protection.</p>
<p>"Really, sir," he began, "this gentleman confuses..."</p>
<p>"You stinking little coward," roared Turnbull, suddenly releasing his
wrath. "Fight, if you're so fond of fighting! Fight, if you're so fond
of all that filthy philosophy! If winning is everything, go in and win!
If the weak must go to the wall, go to the wall! Fight, you rat! Fight,
or if you won't fight—run!"</p>
<p>And he ran at Wimpey, with blazing eyes.</p>
<p>Wimpey staggered back a few paces like a man struggling with his own
limbs. Then he felt the furious Scotchman coming at him like an express
train, doubling his size every second, with eyes as big as windows and
a sword as bright as the sun. Something broke inside him, and he found
himself running away, tumbling over his own feet in terror, and crying
out as he ran.</p>
<p>"Chase him!" shouted Turnbull as MacIan snatched up the sword and joined
in the scamper. "Chase him over a county! Chase him into the sea! Shoo!
Shoo! Shoo!"</p>
<p>The little man plunged like a rabbit among the tall flowers, the two
duellists after him. Turnbull kept at his tail with savage ecstasy,
still shooing him like a cat. But MacIan, as he ran past the South Sea
idol, paused an instant to spring upon its pedestal. For five seconds
he strained against the inert mass. Then it stirred; and he sent it over
with a great crash among the flowers, that engulfed it altogether. Then
he went bounding after the runaway.</p>
<p>In the energy of his alarm the ex-Fellow of Magdalen managed to leap
the paling of his garden. The two pursuers went over it after him like
flying birds. He fled frantically down a long lane with his two terrors
on his trail till he came to a gap in the hedge and went across a steep
meadow like the wind. The two Scotchmen, as they ran, kept up a cheery
bellowing and waved their swords. Up three slanting meadows, down four
slanting meadows on the other side, across another road, across a heath
of snapping bracken, through a wood, across another road, and to the
brink of a big pool, they pursued the flying philosopher. But when he
came to the pool his pace was so precipitate that he could not stop
it, and with a kind of lurching stagger, he fell splash into the greasy
water. Getting dripping to his feet, with the water up to his knees, the
worshipper of force and victory waded disconsolately to the other side
and drew himself on to the bank. And Turnbull sat down on the grass and
went off into reverberations of laughter. A second afterwards the most
extraordinary grimaces were seen to distort the stiff face of MacIan,
and unholy sounds came from within. He had never practised laughing, and
it hurt him very much.</p>
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