Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated) (83 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated)
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‘Choose the path, Otto.  I will follow you,’ she said.

‘No,’ he replied, with a singular imbecility of manner and appearance, ‘but I meant the path was rough.  It lies, all the way, by glade and dingle, and the dingles are both deep and thorny.’

‘Lead on,’ she said.  ‘Are you not Otto the Hunter?’

They had now burst across a veil of underwood, and were come into a lawn among the forest, very green and innocent, and solemnly surrounded by trees.  Otto paused on the margin, looking about him with delight; then his glance returned to Seraphina, as she stood framed in that silvan pleasantness and looking at her husband with undecipherable eyes.  A weakness both of the body and mind fell on him like the beginnings of sleep; the cords of his activity were relaxed, his eyes clung to her.  ‘Let us rest,’ he said; and he made her sit down, and himself sat down beside her on the slope of an inconsiderable mound.

She sat with her eyes downcast, her slim hand dabbling in grass, like a maid waiting for love’s summons.  The sound of the wind in the forest swelled and sank, and drew near them with a running rush, and died away and away in the distance into fainting whispers.  Nearer hand, a bird out of the deep covert uttered broken and anxious notes.  All this seemed but a halting prelude to speech.  To Otto it seemed as if the whole frame of nature were waiting for his words; and yet his pride kept him silent.  The longer he watched that slender and pale hand plucking at the grasses, the harder and rougher grew the fight between pride and its kindly adversary.

‘Seraphina,’ he said at last, ‘it is right you should know one thing: I never . . .’  He was about to say ‘doubted you,’ but was that true?  And, if true, was it generous to speak of it?  Silence succeeded.

‘I pray you, tell it me,’ she said; ‘tell it me, in pity.’

‘I mean only this,’ he resumed, ‘that I understand all, and do not blame you.  I understand how the brave woman must look down on the weak man.  I think you were wrong in some things; but I have tried to understand it, and I do.  I do not need to forget or to forgive, Seraphina, for I have understood.’

‘I know what I have done,’ she said.  ‘I am not so weak that I can be deceived with kind speeches.  I know what I have been — I see myself.  I am not worth your anger, how much less to be forgiven!  In all this downfall and misery, I see only me and you: you, as you have been always; me, as I was — me, above all!  O yes, I see myself: and what can I think?’

‘Ah, then, let us reverse the parts!’ said Otto.  ‘It is ourselves we cannot forgive, when we deny forgiveness to another — so a friend told me last night.  On these terms, Seraphina, you see how generously
I
have forgiven myself.  But am not I to be forgiven?  Come, then, forgive yourself — and me.’

She did not answer in words, but reached out her hand to him quickly.  He took it; and as the smooth fingers settled and nestled in his, love ran to and fro between them in tender and transforming currents.

‘Seraphina,’ he cried, ‘O, forget the past!  Let me serve and help you; let me be your servant; it is enough for me to serve you and to be near you; let me be near you, dear — do not send me away.’  He hurried his pleading like the speech of a frightened child.  ‘It is not love,’ he went on; ‘I do not ask for love; my love is enough . . .’

‘Otto!’ she said, as if in pain.

He looked up into her face.  It was wrung with the very ecstasy of tenderness and anguish; on her features, and most of all in her changed eyes, there shone the very light of love.

‘Seraphina?’ he cried aloud, and with a sudden, tuneless voice, ‘Seraphina?’

‘Look round you at this glade,’ she cried, ‘and where the leaves are coming on young trees, and the flowers begin to blossom.  This is where we meet, meet for the first time; it is so much better to forget and to be born again.  O what a pit there is for sins — God’s mercy, man’s oblivion!’

‘Seraphina,’ he said, ‘let it be so, indeed; let all that was be merely the abuse of dreaming; let me begin again, a stranger.  I have dreamed, in a long dream, that I adored a girl unkind and beautiful; in all things my superior, but still cold, like ice.  And again I dreamed, and thought she changed and melted, glowed and turned to me.  And I — who had no merit but a love, slavish and unerect — lay close, and durst not move for fear of waking.’

‘Lie close,’ she said, with a deep thrill of speech.

So they spake in the spring woods; and meanwhile, in Mittwalden Rath-haus, the Republic was declared.

 

BIBLIOGRAPHICAL POSTSCRIPT TO COMPLETE THE STORY

The reader well informed in modern history will not require details as to the fate of the Republic.  The best account is to be found in the memoirs of Herr Greisengesang (7 Bände: Leipzig), by our passing acquaintance the licentiate Roederer.  Herr Roederer, with too much of an author’s licence, makes a great figure of his hero — poses him, indeed, to be the centre-piece and cloud-compeller of the whole.  But, with due allowance for this bias, the book is able and complete.

The reader is of course acquainted with the vigorous and bracing pages of Sir John (2 vols., London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown).  Sir John, who plays but a tooth-comb in the orchestra of this historical romance, blows in his own book the big bassoon.  His character is there drawn at large; and the sympathy of Landor has countersigned the admiration of the public.  One point, however, calls for explanation; the chapter on Grünewald was torn by the hand of the author in the palace gardens; how comes it, then, to figure at full length among my more modest pages, the Lion of the caravan?  That eminent literatus was a man of method; ‘Juvenal by double entry,’ he was once profanely called; and when he tore the sheets in question, it was rather, as he has since explained, in the search for some dramatic evidence of his sincerity, than with the thought of practical deletion.  At that time, indeed, he was possessed of two blotted scrolls and a fair copy in double.  But the chapter, as the reader knows, was honestly omitted from the famous ‘Memoirs on the various Courts of Europe.’  It has been mine to give it to the public.

Bibliography still helps us with a further glimpse of our characters.  I have here before me a small volume (printed for private circulation: no printer’s name; n.d.), ‘Poésies par Frédéric et Amélie.’  Mine is a presentation copy, obtained for me by Mr. Bain in the Haymarket; and the name of the first owner is written on the fly-leaf in the hand of Prince Otto himself.  The modest epigraph — ’Le rime n’est pas riche’ — may be attributed, with a good show of likelihood, to the same collaborator.  It is strikingly appropriate, and I have found the volume very dreary.  Those pieces in which I seem to trace the hand of the Princess are particularly dull and conscientious.  But the booklet had a fair success with that public for which it was designed; and I have come across some evidences of a second venture of the same sort, now unprocurable.  Here, at least, we may take leave of Otto and Seraphina — what do I say? of Frédéric and Amélie — ageing together peaceably at the court of the wife’s father, jingling French rhymes and correcting joint proofs.

Still following the book-lists, I perceive that Mr. Swinburne has dedicated a rousing lyric and some vigorous sonnets to the memory of Gondremark; that name appears twice at least in Victor Hugo’s trumpet-blasts of patriot enumeration; and I came latterly, when I supposed my task already ended, on a trace of the fallen politician and his Countess.  It is in the ‘Diary of J. Hogg Cotterill, Esq.’ (that very interesting work).  Mr. Cotterill, being at Naples, is introduced (May 27th) to ‘a Baron and Baroness Gondremark — he a man who once made a noise — she still beautiful — both witty.  She complimented me much upon my French — should never have known me to be English — had known my uncle, Sir John, in Germany — recognised in me, as a family trait, some of his
grand air
and studious courtesy — asked me to call.’  And again (May 30th), ‘visited the Baronne de Gondremark — much gratified — a most
refined
,
intelligent
woman, quite of the old school, now,
hélas
! extinct — had read my
Remarks on Sicily
— it reminds her of my uncle, but with more of grace — I feared she thought there was less energy — assured no — a softer style of presentation, more of the
literary grace
, but the same firm grasp of circumstance and force of thought — in short, just Buttonhole’s opinion.  Much encouraged.  I have a real esteem for this patrician lady.’  The acquaintance lasted some time; and when Mr. Cotterill left in the suite of Lord Protocol, and, as he is careful to inform us, in Admiral Yardarm’s flag-ship, one of his chief causes of regret is to leave ‘that most
spirituelle
and sympathetic lady, who already regards me as a younger brother.’

 

THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE

 

This famous novella was first published in 1886. It tells the story of a London lawyer named Gabriel John Utterson who investigates strange occurrences between his old friend, Dr Henry Jekyll, and the misanthropic Edward Hyde.  The story is commonly associated with the mental condition called a “split personality”, where the same person has at least two distinct personalities. In this case, the two personalities in Dr Jekyll are apparently good and evil, with completely opposite views of morality. Due to the novel’s fame, the phrase “Jekyll and Hyde” has become a part of everyday speech.  The novella was an immediate success and it is one of Stevenson’s most popular works.

 

 

Title page of the first edition

 

CONTENTS

STORY OF THE DOOR

SEARCH FOR MR. HYDE

DR. JEKYLL WAS QUITE AT EASE

THE CAREW MURDER CASE

INCIDENT OF THE LETTER

INCIDENT OF DR. LANYON

INCIDENT AT THE WINDOW

THE LAST NIGHT

DR. LANYON’S NARRATIVE

HENRY JEKYLL’S FULL STATEMENT OF THE CASE

 

 

 

STORY OF THE DOOR

 

Mr. Utterson the lawyer was a man of a rugged countenance that was never lighted by a smile; cold, scanty and embarrassed in discourse; backward in sentiment; lean, long, dusty, dreary and yet somehow lovable. At friendly meetings, and when the wine was to his taste, something eminently human beaconed from his eye; something indeed which never found its way into his talk, but which spoke not only in these silent symbols of the after-dinner face, but more often and loudly in the acts of his life. He was austere with himself; drank gin when he was alone, to mortify a taste for vintages; and though he enjoyed the theater, had not crossed the doors of one for twenty years. But he had an approved tolerance for others; sometimes wondering, almost with envy, at the high pressure of spirits involved in their misdeeds; and in any extremity inclined to help rather than to reprove. “I incline to Cain’s heresy,” he used to say quaintly: “I let my brother go to the devil in his own way.” In this character, it was frequently his fortune to be the last reputable acquaintance and the last good influence in the lives of downgoing men. And to such as these, so long as they came about his chambers, he never marked a shade of change in his demeanour.

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