Chapter I: Ups and Downs of Fortune--My Father Starts for Erewhon
Before telling the story of my father's second visit to the
remarkable country which he discovered now some thirty years since,
I should perhaps say a few words about his career between the
publication of his book in 1872, and his death in the early summer
of 1891. I shall thus touch briefly on the causes that occasioned
his failure to maintain that hold on the public which he had
apparently secured at first.
His book, as the reader may perhaps know, was published
anonymously, and my poor father used to ascribe the acclamation
with which it was received, to the fact that no one knew who it
might not have been written by. Omne ignotum pro magnifico, and
during its month of anonymity the book was a frequent topic of
appreciative comment in good literary circles. Almost coincidently
with the discovery that he was a mere nobody, people began to feel
that their admiration had been too hastily bestowed, and before
long opinion turned all the more seriously against him for this
very reason. The subscription, to which the Lord Mayor had at
first given his cordial support, was curtly announced as closed
before it had been opened a week; it had met with so little success
that I will not specify the amount eventually handed over, not
without protest, to my father; small, however, as it was, he
narrowly escaped being prosecuted for trying to obtain money under
false pretences.
The Geographical Society, which had for a few days received him
with open arms, was among the first to turn upon him--not, so far
as I can ascertain, on account of the mystery in which he had
enshrouded the exact whereabouts of Erewhon, nor yet by reason of
its being persistently alleged that he was subject to frequent
attacks of alcoholic poisoning--but through his own want of tact,
and a highly-strung nervous state, which led him to attach too much
importance to his own discoveries, and not enough to those of other
people. This, at least, was my father's version of the matter, as
I heard it from his own lips in the later years of his life.
"I was still very young," he said to me, "and my mind was more or
less unhinged by the strangeness and peril of my adventures." Be
this as it may, I fear there is no doubt that he was injudicious;
and an ounce of judgement is worth a pound of discovery.
Hence, in a surprisingly short time, he found himself dropped even
by those who had taken him up most warmly, and had done most to
find him that employment as a writer of religious tracts on which
his livelihood was then dependent. The discredit, however, into
which my father fell, had the effect of deterring any considerable
number of people from trying to rediscover Erewhon, and thus caused
it to remain as unknown to geographers in general as though it had
never been found. A few shepherds and cadets at up-country
stations had, indeed, tried to follow in my father's footsteps,
during the time when his book was still being taken seriously; but
they had most of them returned, unable to face the difficulties
that had opposed them. Some few, however, had not returned, and
though search was made for them, their bodies had not been found.
When he reached Erewhon on his second visit, my father learned that
others had attempted to visit the country more recently--probably
quite independently of his own book; and before he had himself been
in it many hours he gathered what the fate of these poor fellows
doubtless was.
Another reason that made it more easy for Erewhon to remain
unknown, was the fact that the more mountainous districts, though
repeatedly prospected for gold, had been pronounced non-auriferous,
and as there was no sheep or cattle country, save a few river-bed
flats above the upper gorges of any of the rivers, and no game to
tempt the sportsman, there was nothing to induce people to
penetrate into the fastnesses of the great snowy range. No more,
therefore, being heard of Erewhon, my father's book came to be
regarded as a mere work of fiction, and I have heard quite recently
of its having been seen on a second-hand bookstall, marked "6d.
very readable."
Though there was no truth in the stories about my father's being
subject to attacks of alcoholic poisoning, yet, during the first
few years after his return to England, his occasional fits of
ungovernable excitement gave some colour to the opinion that much
of what he said he had seen and done might be only subjectively
true. I refer more particularly to his interview with Chowbok in
the wool-shed, and his highly coloured description of the statues
on the top of the pass leading into Erewhon. These were soon set
down as forgeries of delirium, and it was maliciously urged, that
though in his book he had only admitted having taken "two or three
bottles of brandy" with him, he had probably taken at least a
dozen; and that if on the night before he reached the statues he
had "only four ounces of brandy" left, he must have been drinking
heavily for the preceding fortnight or three weeks. Those who read
the following pages will, I think, reject all idea that my father
was in a state of delirium, not without surprise that any one
should have ever entertained it.
It was Chowbok who, if he did not originate these calumnies, did
much to disseminate and gain credence for them. He remained in
England for some years, and never tired of doing what he could to
disparage my father. The cunning creature had ingratiated himself
with our leading religious societies, especially with the more
evangelical among them. Whatever doubt there might be about his
sincerity, there was none about his colour, and a coloured convert
in those days was more than Exeter Hall could resist. Chowbok saw
that there was no room for him and for my father, and declared my
poor father's story to be almost wholly false. It was true, he
said, that he and my father had explored the head-waters of the
river described in his book, but he denied that my father had gone
on without him, and he named the river as one distant by many
thousands of miles from the one it really was. He said that after
about a fortnight he had returned in company with my father, who by
that time had become incapacitated for further travel. At this
point he would shrug his shoulders, look mysterious, and thus say
"alcoholic poisoning" even more effectively than if he had uttered
the words themselves. For a man's tongue lies often in his
shoulders.
Readers of my father's book will remember that Chowbok had given a
very different version when he had returned to his employer's
station; but Time and Distance afford cover under which falsehood
can often do truth to death securely.
I never understood why my father did not bring my mother forward to
confirm his story. He may have done so while I was too young to
know anything about it. But when people have made up their minds,
they are impatient of further evidence; my mother, moreover, was of
a very retiring disposition. The Italians say:-
"Chi lontano va ammogliare
Sara ingannato, o vorra ingannare."
"If a man goes far afield for a wife, he will be deceived--or means
deceiving." The proverb is as true for women as for men, and my
mother was never quite happy in her new surroundings. Wilfully
deceived she assuredly was not, but she could not accustom herself
to English modes of thought; indeed she never even nearly mastered
our language; my father always talked with her in Erewhonian, and
so did I, for as a child she had taught me to do so, and I was as
fluent with her language as with my father's. In this respect she
often told me I could pass myself off anywhere in Erewhon as a
native; I shared also her personal appearance, for though not
wholly unlike my father, I had taken more closely after my mother.
In mind, if I may venture to say so, I believe I was more like my
father.
I may as well here inform the reader that I was born at the end of
September 1871, and was christened John, after my grandfather.
From what I have said above he will readily believe that my
earliest experiences were somewhat squalid. Memories of childhood
rush vividly upon me when I pass through a low London alley, and
catch the faint sickly smell that pervades it--half paraffin, half
black-currants, but wholly something very different. I have a
fancy that we lived in Blackmoor Street, off Drury Lane. My
father, when first I knew of his doing anything at all, supported
my mother and myself by drawing pictures with coloured chalks upon
the pavement; I used sometimes to watch him, and marvel at the
skill with which he represented fogs, floods, and fires. These
three "f's," he would say, were his three best friends, for they
were easy to do and brought in halfpence freely. The return of the
dove to the ark was his favourite subject. Such a little ark, on
such a hazy morning, and such a little pigeon--the rest of the
picture being cheap sky, and still cheaper sea; nothing, I have
often heard him say, was more popular than this with his clients.
He held it to be his masterpiece, but would add with some naivete
that he considered himself a public benefactor for carrying it out
in such perishable fashion. "At any rate," he would say, "no one
can bequeath one of my many replicas to the nation."
I never learned how much my father earned by his profession, but it
must have been something considerable, for we always had enough to
eat and drink; I imagine that he did better than many a struggling
artist with more ambitious aims. He was strictly temperate during
all the time that I knew anything about him, but he was not a
teetotaler; I never saw any of the fits of nervous excitement which
in his earlier years had done so much to wreck him. In the
evenings, and on days when the state of the pavement did not permit
him to work, he took great pains with my education, which he could
very well do, for as a boy he had been in the sixth form of one of
our foremost public schools. I found him a patient, kindly
instructor, while to my mother he was a model husband. Whatever
others may have said about him, I can never think of him without
very affectionate respect.
Things went on quietly enough, as above indicated, till I was about
fourteen, when by a freak of fortune my father became suddenly
affluent. A brother of his father's had emigrated to Australia in
1851, and had amassed great wealth. We knew of his existence, but
there had been no intercourse between him and my father, and we did
not even know that he was rich and unmarried. He died intestate
towards the end of 1885, and my father was the only relative he
had, except, of course, myself, for both my father's sisters had
died young, and without leaving children.
The solicitor through whom the news reached us was, happily, a man
of the highest integrity, and also very sensible and kind. He was
a Mr. Alfred Emery Cathie, of 15 Clifford's Inn, E.C., and my
father placed himself unreservedly in his hands. I was at once
sent to a first-rate school, and such pains had my father taken
with me that I was placed in a higher form than might have been
expected considering my age. The way in which he had taught me had
prevented my feeling any dislike for study; I therefore stuck
fairly well to my books, while not neglecting the games which are
so important a part of healthy education. Everything went well
with me, both as regards masters and school-fellows; nevertheless,
I was declared to be of a highly nervous and imaginative
temperament, and the school doctor more than once urged our
headmaster not to push me forward too rapidly--for which I have
ever since held myself his debtor.
Early in 1890, I being then home from Oxford (where I had been
entered in the preceding year), my mother died; not so much from
active illness, as from what was in reality a kind of maladie du
pays. All along she had felt herself an exile, and though she had
borne up wonderfully during my father's long struggle with
adversity, she began to break as soon as prosperity had removed the
necessity for exertion on her own part.
My father could never divest himself of the feeling that he had
wrecked her life by inducing her to share her lot with his own; to
say that he was stricken with remorse on losing her is not enough;
he had been so stricken almost from the first year of his marriage;
on her death he was haunted by the wrong he accused himself--as it
seems to me very unjustly--of having done her, for it was neither
his fault nor hers--it was Ate.
His unrest soon assumed the form of a burning desire to revisit the
country in which he and my mother had been happier together than
perhaps they ever again were. I had often heard him betray a
hankering after a return to Erewhon, disguised so that no one
should recognise him; but as long as my mother lived he would not
leave her. When death had taken her from him, he so evidently
stood in need of a complete change of scene, that even those
friends who had most strongly dissuaded him from what they deemed a
madcap enterprise, thought it better to leave him to himself. It
would have mattered little how much they tried to dissuade him, for
before long his passionate longing for the journey became so
overmastering that nothing short of restraint in prison or a
madhouse could have stayed his going; but we were not easy about
him. "He had better go," said Mr. Cathie to me, when I was at home
for the Easter vacation, "and get it over. He is not well, but he
is still in the prime of life; doubtless he will come back with
renewed health and will settle down to a quiet home life again."
This, however, was not said till it had become plain that in a few
days my father would be on his way. He had made a new will, and
left an ample power of attorney with Mr. Cathie--or, as we always
called him, Alfred--who was to supply me with whatever money I
wanted; he had put all other matters in order in case anything
should happen to prevent his ever returning, and he set out on
October 1, 1890, more composed and cheerful than I had seen him for
some time past.
I had not realised how serious the danger to my father would be if
he were recognised while he was in Erewhon, for I am ashamed to say
that I had not yet read his book. I had heard over and over again
of his flight with my mother in the balloon, and had long since
read his few opening chapters, but I had found, as a boy naturally
would, that the succeeding pages were a little dull, and soon put
the book aside. My father, indeed, repeatedly urged me not to read
it, for he said there was much in it--more especially in the
earlier chapters, which I had alone found interesting--that he
would gladly cancel if he could. "But there!" he had said with a
laugh, "what does it matter?"
He had hardly left, before I read his book from end to end, and, on
having done so, not only appreciated the risks that he would have
to run, but was struck with the wide difference between his
character as he had himself portrayed it, and the estimate I had
formed of it from personal knowledge. When, on his return, he
detailed to me his adventures, the account he gave of what he had
said and done corresponded with my own ideas concerning him; but I
doubt not the reader will see that the twenty years between his
first and second visit had modified him even more than so long an
interval might be expected to do.
I heard from him repeatedly during the first two months of his
absence, and was surprised to find that he had stayed for a week or
ten days at more than one place of call on his outward journey. On
November 26 he wrote from the port whence he was to start for
Erewhon, seemingly in good health and spirits; and on December 27,
1891, he telegraphed for a hundred pounds to be wired out to him at
this same port. This puzzled both Mr. Cathie and myself, for the
interval between November 26 and December 27 seemed too short to
admit of his having paid his visit to Erewhon and returned; as,
moreover, he had added the words, "Coming home," we rather hoped
that he had abandoned his intention of going there.
We were also surprised at his wanting so much money, for he had
taken a hundred pounds in gold, which from some fancy, he had
stowed in a small silver jewel-box that he had given my mother not
long before she died. He had also taken a hundred pounds worth of
gold nuggets, which he had intended to sell in Erewhon so as to
provide himself with money when he got there.
I should explain that these nuggets would be worth in Erewhon fully
ten times as much as they would in Europe, owing to the great
scarcity of gold in that country. The Erewhonian coinage is
entirely silver--which is abundant, and worth much what it is in
England--or copper, which is also plentiful; but what we should
call five pounds' worth of silver money would not buy more than one
of our half-sovereigns in gold.
He had put his nuggets into ten brown holland bags, and he had had
secret pockets made for the old Erewhonian dress which he had worn
when he escaped, so that he need never have more than one bag of
nuggets accessible at a time. He was not likely, therefore, to
have been robbed. His passage to the port above referred to had
been paid before he started, and it seemed impossible that a man of
his very inexpensive habits should have spent two hundred pounds in
a single month--for the nuggets would be immediately convertible in
an English colony. There was nothing, however, to be done but to
cable out the money and wait my father's arrival.
Returning for a moment to my father's old Erewhonian dress, I
should say that he had preserved it simply as a memento and without
any idea that he should again want it. It was not the court dress
that had been provided for him on the occasion of his visit to the
king and queen, but the everyday clothing that he had been ordered
to wear when he was put in prison, though his English coat,
waistcoat, and trousers had been allowed to remain in his own
possession. These, I had seen from his book, had been presented by
him to the queen (with the exception of two buttons, which he had
given to Yram as a keepsake), and had been preserved by her
displayed upon a wooden dummy. The dress in which he escaped had
been soiled during the hours that he and my mother had been in the
sea, and had also suffered from neglect during the years of his
poverty; but he wished to pass himself off as a common peasant or
working-man, so he preferred to have it set in order as might best
be done, rather than copied.
So cautious was he in the matter of dress that he took with him the
boots he had worn on leaving Erewhon, lest the foreign make of his
English boots should arouse suspicion. They were nearly new, and
when he had had them softened and well greased, he found he could
still wear them quite comfortably.
But to return. He reached home late at night one day at the
beginning of February, and a glance was enough to show that he was
an altered man. "What is the matter?" said I, shocked at his
appearance. "Did you go to Erewhon, and were you ill-treated
there?"
"I went to Erewhon," he said, "and I was not ill-treated there, but
I have been so shaken that I fear I shall quite lose my reason. Do
not ask me more now. I will tell you about it all to-morrow. Let
me have something to eat, and go to bed."
When we met at breakfast next morning, he greeted me with all his
usual warmth of affection, but he was still taciturn. "I will
begin to tell you about it," he said, "after breakfast. Where is
your dear mother? How was it that I have . . . "
Then of a sudden his memory returned, and he burst into tears.
I now saw, to my horror, that his mind was gone. When he
recovered, he said: "It has all come back again, but at times now
I am a blank, and every week am more and more so. I daresay I
shall be sensible now for several hours. We will go into the study
after breakfast, and I will talk to you as long as I can do so."
Let the reader spare me, and let me spare the reader any
description of what we both of us felt.
When we were in the study, my father said, "My dearest boy, get pen
and paper and take notes of what I tell you. It will be all
disjointed; one day I shall remember this, and another that, but
there will not be many more days on which I shall remember anything
at all. I cannot write a coherent page. You, when I am gone, can
piece what I tell you together, and tell it as I should have told
it if I had been still sound. But do not publish it yet; it might
do harm to those dear good people. Take the notes now, and arrange
them the sooner the better, for you may want to ask me questions,
and I shall not be here much longer. Let publishing wait till you
are confident that publication can do no harm; and above all, say
nothing to betray the whereabouts of Erewhon, beyond admitting
(which I fear I have already done) that it is in the Southern
hemisphere."
These instructions I have religiously obeyed. For the first days
after his return, my father had few attacks of loss of memory, and
I was in hopes that his former health of mind would return when he
found himself in his old surroundings. During these days he poured
forth the story of his adventures so fast, that if I had not had a
fancy for acquiring shorthand, I should not have been able to keep
pace with him. I repeatedly urged him not to overtax his strength,
but he was oppressed by the fear that if he did not speak at once,
he might never be able to tell me all he had to say; I had,
therefore, to submit, though seeing plainly enough that he was only
hastening the complete paralysis which he so greatly feared.
Sometimes his narrative would be coherent for pages together, and
he could answer any questions without hesitation; at others, he was
now here and now there, and if I tried to keep him to the order of
events he would say that he had forgotten intermediate incidents,
but that they would probably come back to him, and I should perhaps
be able to put them in their proper places.
After about ten days he seemed satisfied that I had got all the
facts, and that with the help of the pamphlets which he had brought
with him I should be able to make out a connected story.
"Remember," he said, "that I thought I was quite well so long as I
was in Erewhon, and do not let me appear as anything else."
When he had fully delivered himself, he seemed easier in his mind,
but before a month had passed he became completely paralysed, and
though he lingered till the beginning of June, he was seldom more
than dimly conscious of what was going on around him.
His death robbed me of one who had been a very kind and upright
elder brother rather than a father; and so strongly have I felt his
influence still present, living and working, as I believe for
better within me, that I did not hesitate to copy the epitaph which
he saw in the Musical Bank at Fairmead, and to have it
inscribed on the very simple monument which he desired should alone
mark his grave.
The foregoing was written in the summer of 1891; what I now add
should be dated December 3, 1900. If, in the course of my work, I
have misrepresented my father, as I fear I may have sometimes done,
I would ask my readers to remember that no man can tell another's
story without some involuntary misrepresentation both of facts and
characters. They will, of course, see that "Erewhon Revisited" is
written by one who has far less literary skill than the author of
"Erewhon;" but again I would ask indulgence on the score of youth,
and the fact that this is my first book. It was written nearly ten
years ago, i.e. in the months from March to August 1891, but for
reasons already given it could not then be made public. I have now
received permission, and therefore publish the following chapters,
exactly, or very nearly exactly, as they were left when I had
finished editing my father's diaries, and the notes I took down
from his own mouth--with the exception, of course, of these last
few lines, hurriedly written as I am on the point of leaving
England, of the additions I made in 1892, on returning from my own
three hours' stay in Erewhon, and of the Postscript.