![]() |
Glyn Hughes' SQUASHED WRITERS ALL THE BOOKS YOU THINK YOU OUGHT TO HAVE READ In their own words... but magically Squashed into half-hour short stories... |
The
Squashed version of
Melmoth the
Wanderer
by
Charles Robert Maturin
1820
I. The Portrait
John Melmoth, student at Trinity College, Dublin, having
journeyed to County Wicklow for attendance at the deathbed of his
miserly uncle, finds the old man, even in his last moments,
tortured by avarice:
"I want a glass of wine," groaned the old man; "it
would keep me alive a little longer."
John Melmoth offered to get some for him. The dying man clutched
the blankets around him, and looked strangely at his nephew.
"Take this key," he said. "There is wine in that
closet."
John knew that no one but his uncle had entered the closet for
sixty years-his uncle who had spent his life in greedily heaping
treasure upon treasure, and who, now, on his miserable death-bed,
grudged the clergyman's fee for the last sacrament.
When John stepped into the closet, his eyes were instantly
riveted by a portrait that hung on the wall. There was nothing
remarkable about costume or countenance, but the eyes, John felt,
were such as one feels they wish they had never seen. In the
words of Southey, "they gleamed with demon light." John
held the candle to the portrait, and could distinguish the words
on the border: "Jno. Melmoth, anno 1646." He gazed in
stupid horror until recalled by his uncle's cough.
"You have seen the portrait?" whispered old Melmoth.
"Yes."
"Well, you will see him again-he is still alive."
Later in the night, when the miser was at the point of death,
John saw a figure enter the room, deliberately look round, and
retire. The face of the figure was the face of the portrait!
After a moment of terror, John sprang up to pursue, but the
shrieks of his uncle recalled him. The agony was nearly ended; in
a few minutes old Melmoth was dead.
In the will, which made John a wealthy man, there was an
instruction to him to destroy the portrait in the closet, and
also to destroy a manuscript that he would find in the mahogany
chest under the portrait; he was to read the manuscript if he
pleased.
On a cold and gloomy evening John entered the closet, found the
manuscript, and with a feeling of superstitious awe, began to
read it. The task was a hard one, for the manuscript was
discoloured and mutilated, and much was quite indecipherable.
John was able to gather, however, that it was the narrative of an
Englishman, named Stanton, who had travelled in Spain in the
seventeenth century. On one night of storm, Stanton had seen
carried past him the bodies of two lovers who had been killed by
lightning. As he watched, a man had stepped forward, had looked
calmly at the bodies, and had burst into a horrible demoniac
laugh. Stanton saw the man several times, always in circumstances
of horror; he learnt that his name was Melmoth. This being
exercised a kind of fascination over Stanton, who searched for
him far and wide. Ultimately, Stanton was confined in a madhouse
by relatives who wanted to secure his property; and from the
madhouse he was offered, but refused, release by Melmoth as a
result of some bargain, the nature of which was not revealed.
After reading this story, John Melmoth raised his eyes, and he
started involuntarily as they encountered those of the portrait.
With a shudder, he tore the portrait from its frame, and rushed
into his room, where he flung its fragments on the fire.
The mansion was close by the iron-bound coast of Wicklow, in
Ireland, and on the next night John was summoned forth by the
news that a vessel was in distress. He saw immediately that the
ship was doomed. She lay beating upon a rock, against which the
tempest hurled breakers that dashed their foam to a height of
thirty feet.
In the midst of the tumult John descried, standing a little above
him on the rock, a figure that showed neither sympathy nor
terror, uttered no sound, offered no help. A few minutes
afterwards he distinctly heard the words, "Let them
perish!"
Just then a tremendous wave dashing over the vessel extorted a
cry of horror from the spectators. When the cry had ceased,
Melmoth heard a laugh that chilled his blood. It was from the
figure that stood above him. He recalled Stanton's narrative. In
a blind fury of eagerness, he began to climb the rock; but a
stone gave way in his grasp, and he was hurled into the roaring
deep below.
It was several days before he recovered his senses, and he then
learned that he had been rescued by the one survivor of the
wreck, a Spaniard, who had clutched at John and dragged him
ashore with him. As soon as John had recovered somewhat, he
hastened to thank his deliverer, who was lodged in the mansion.
Having expressed his gratitude, Melmoth was about to retire, when
the Spaniard detained him.
"Señor," he said, "I understand your name
is"-he gasped-"Melmoth?"
"It is."
"Had you," said the Spaniard rapidly, "a relative
who was, about one hundred and forty years ago, said to be in
Spain?"
"I believe-I fear-I had."
"Are you his descendant? Are you the repository of that
terrible secret which-?" He gave way to uncontrollable
agitation. Gradually he recovered himself, and went on. "It
is singular that accident should have placed me within the reach
of the only being from whom I could expect either sympathy or
relief in the extraordinary circumstances in which I am
placed-circumstances which I did not believe I should ever
disclose to mortal man, but which I shall disclose to you."
II. The Spaniard's Story
I am, as you know, a native of Spain; but you are yet to learn
that I am a descendant of one of its noblest houses-the house of
Monçada. While I was yet unborn, my mother vowed that I should
be devoted to religion. As the time drew near when I was to
forsake the world and retire to a monastery, I revolted in horror
at the career before me, and refused to take the vows. But my
family were completely under the influence of a cunning and
arrogant priest, who threatened God's curse upon me if I
disobeyed; and ultimately, with a despairing heart, I consented.
"The horror with which I had anticipated monastic life was
nothing to my disgust and misery at the realisation of its evils.
The narrowness and littleness of it, the hypocrisies, all filled
me with revolt; and it was only by brooding over possibilities of
escape that I could avoid utter despair. At length a ray of hope
came to me. My younger brother, a lad of spirit, who had
quarrelled with the priest who dominated our family, succeeded
with great difficulty in communicating with me, and promised that
a civil process should be undertaken for the reclamation of my
vows.
"But presently my hopes were destroyed by the news that my
civil process had failed. Of the desolation of mind into which
this failure plunged me, I can give no account-despair has no
diary. I remember that I used to walk for hours in the garden,
where alone I could avoid the neighbourhood of the other monks.
It happened that the fountain of the garden was out of repair,
and the workmen engaged upon it had had to excavate a passage
under the garden wall. But as this was guarded by day and
securely locked by night, it offered but a tantalising image of
escape and freedom.
"One evening, as I sat gloomily by the door of the passage,
I heard my name whispered. I answered eagerly, and a paper was
thrust under the door. I knew the handwriting-it was that of my
brother Juan. From it I learned that Juan was still planning my
escape, and had found a confederate within the monastery-a
parricide who had turned monk to evade his punishment.
"Juan had bribed him heavily, yet I feared to trust him
until he confided to me that he himself also intended to escape.
At length our plans were completed; my companion had secured the
key of a door in the chapel that led through the vaults to a
trap-door opening into the garden. A rope ladder flung by Juan
over the wall would give us liberty.
"At the darkest hour of the night we passed through the
door, and crawled through the dreadful passages beneath the
monastery. I reached the top of the ladder-a lantern flashed in
my eyes. I dropped down into my brother's arms.
"We hurried away to where a carriage was waiting. I sprang
into it.
"'He is safe,' cried Juan, following me.
"'But are you?' answered a voice behind him. He staggered
and fell back. I leapt down beside him. I was bathed in his
blood. He was dead. One moment of wild, fearful agony, and I lost
consciousness.
"When I came to myself, I was lying in an apartment not
unlike my cell, but without a crucifix. Beside me stood my
companion in flight.
"'Where am I?' I asked.
"'You are in the prison of the Inquisition,' he replied,
with a mocking laugh.
"He had betrayed me! He had been all the while in league
with the superior.
"I was tried again and again by the Inquisition-, charged
not only with the crime of escaping from the convent and breaking
my religious vows, but with the murder of my brother. My spirits
sank with each appearance before the judges. I foresaw myself
doomed to die at the stake.
"One night, and for several nights afterwards, a visitor
presented himself to me. He came and went apparently without help
or hindrance-as if he had had a master-key to all the recesses of
the prison. And yet he seemed no agent of the Inquisition-indeed,
he denounced it with caustic satire and withering severity. But
what struck me most of all was the preternatural glare of his
eyes. I felt that I had never beheld such eyes blazing in a
mortal face. It was strange, too, that he constantly referred to
events that must have happened long before his birth as if he had
actually witnessed them.
"On the night before my final trial, I awoke from a hideous
dream of burning alive to behold the stranger standing beside me.
With an impulse I could not resist, I flung myself before him and
begged him to save me. He promised to do so-on one awful and
incommunicable condition. My horror brought me courage; I
refused, and he left me.
"Next day I was sentenced to death at the stake. But before
my fearful doom could be accomplished, I was free-and by that
very agency of fire that was to have destroyed me. The prison of
the Inquisition was burned to the ground, and in the confusion I
escaped.
"When my strength was exhausted by running through the
deserted streets, I leaned against a door; it gave way, and I
found myself within the house. Concealed, I heard two voices-an
old man's and a young man's. The old man was confessing to the
young one-his son-that he was a Jew, and entreating the son to
adopt the faith of Israel.
"I knew I was in the presence of a pretended convert-one of
those Jews who profess to become Catholics through fear of the
Inquisition. I had become possessed of a valuable secret, and
instantly acted upon it. I burst out upon them, and threatened
that unless the old man gave me hiding I should betray him. At
first he was panic-stricken, then, hastily promising me
protection, he conducted me within the house. In an inner room he
raised a portion of the floor; we descended and went along a dark
passage, at the end of which my guide opened a door, through
which I passed. He closed it behind me, and withdrew.
"I was in an underground chamber, the walls of which were
lined with skeletons, bottles containing strange misshapen
creatures, and other hideous objects. I shuddered as I looked
round.
"'Why fearest thou these?' asked a voice.' Surely the
implements of the healing art should cause no terror.'
"I turned and beheld a man immensely old seated at a table.
His eyes, although faded with years, looked keenly at me.
"'Thou hast escaped from the clutches of the Inquisition?'
he asked me.
"'Yes,' I answered.
"'And when in its prison,' he continued, leaning forward
eagerly, 'didst thou face a tempter who offered thee deliverance
at a dreadful price?'
"'It was so,' I answered, wondering.
"'My prayer, then, is granted,' he said. 'Christian youth,
thou art safe here. None save mine own Jewish people know of my
existence. And I have employment for thee.'
"He showed me a huge manuscript.
"'This,' he said, 'is written in characters that the
officers of the Inquisition understand not. But the time has come
for transcribing it, and my own eyes, old with age, are unequal
to the labour. Yet it was necessary that the work should be done
by one who has learnt the dread secret.'
"A glance at the manuscript showed me that the language was
Spanish, but the characters Greek. I began to read it, nor did I
raise my eyes until the reading was ended."
III. The Romance of Immalee
"The manuscript told how a Spanish merchant had set forth
for the East Indies, taking his wife and son with him, and
leaving an infant daughter behind. He prospered, and decided to
settle in the East; he sent for his daughter, who came with her
nurse. But their ship was wrecked; the child and the nurse alone
escaped, and were stranded on an uninhabited island near the
mouth of the Hooghly. The nurse died; but the child survived, and
grew up a wild and beautiful daughter of nature, dwelling in
lonely innocence, and revered as a goddess by the natives who
watched her from afar.
"To the Island, when Immalee (so she called herself) was
growing into pure and lovely womanhood, there came a
stranger-pale-faced, wholly different from the dark-skinned
people she had seen from the shores of the island. She welcomed
him with innocent joy. He came often; he told her of the outer
world, of its wickedness and its miseries. She, too untutored to
realise the sinister bitterness of his tone, listened with rapt
attention and sympathy. She loved him. She told him that he was
her all, that she would cling to him wheresoever he went. He
looked at her with stern sorrow; he left her abruptly, nor did he
ever visit the island again.
"Immalee was rescued, her origin was discovered, and she
became Isidora de Aliaga, the carefully nurtured daughter of
prosperous and devout Spanish parents. The island and the
stranger were memories of the past. Yet one day, in the streets
of Madrid, she beheld once more the well-remembered eyes. Soon
afterwards she was visited by the stranger. How he entered and
left her home when he came to her-and again he came often-she
could not tell. She feared him, and yet she loved him.
"At length her father, who had been on another voyage,
announced that he was returning, and bringing with him a suitable
husband for his newly-found daughter. Isidora, in panic, besought
the stranger to save her. He was unwilling. At last, in response
to her tears, he consented. They were wedded, so Isidora
believed, by a hermit in a ruined monastery. She returned home,
and he renewed his visits, promising to reveal their marriage in
the fullness of time.
"Meanwhile, tales had reached her father's ears of a
malignant being who was permitted to wander over the earth and
tempt men in dire extremity with release from their troubles as
the result of their concluding an unspeakable bargain. This being
himself appeared to the father, and warned him that his daughter
was in danger.
"He returned, and pressed on with preparations for the
bridal ceremony. Isidora entreated her husband to rescue her. He
promised, and went away. A masked ball was given in celebration
of the nuptials. At the hour of twelve Isidora felt a touch upon
her shoulder. It was her husband. They hastened away, but not
unperceived. Her brother called on the pair to stop, and drew his
sword. In an instant he lay bleeding and lifeless. The family and
the guests crowded round in horror. The stranger waved them back
with his arm. They stood motionless, as if rooted to the ground.
"'Isidora, fly with me!' he said. She looked at him, looked
at the body of her brother, and sank in a swoon. The stranger
passed out amid the powerless onlookers.
"Isidora, the confessed bride of an unhallowed being, was
taken before the Inquisition, and sentenced to life-long
imprisonment. But she did not survive long; and ere she died, her
husband appeared to her, and offered her freedom, happiness, and
love-at a dreadful price she would not pay. Such was the history
of the ill-fated love of Immalee for a being to whom mortal love
was a boon forbidden."
IV. The Fate of Melmoth
When Monçada had completed the tale of Immalee, he announced his
intention of describing how he had left the house of the Jewish
doctor, and what was his purpose in coming to Ireland. A time was
fixed for the continuation of the recital.
The night when Monçada prepared to resume his story was a dark
and stormy one. The two men drew close to the fire.
"Hush!" suddenly said Monçada.
John Melmoth listened, and half rose from his chair.
"We are watched!" he exclaimed.
At that moment the door opened, and a figure appeared at it. The
figure advanced slowly to the centre of the room. Monçada
crossed himself, and attempted to pray. John Melmoth, nailed to
his chair, gazed upon the form that stood before him-it was
indeed Melmoth the Wanderer. But the eyes were dim; those beacons
lit by an infernal fire were no longer visible.
"Mortals," said the Wanderer, in strange and solemn
accents, "you are here to talk of my destiny. That distiny
is accomplished. Your ancestor has come home," he continued,
turning to John Melmoth. "If my crimes have exceeded those
of mortality, so will my punishment. And the time for that
punishment is come.
"It is a hundred and fifty years since I first probed
forbidden secrets. I have now to pay the penalty. None can
participate in my destiny but with his own consent. None has
consented. It has been reported of me, as you know, that I
obtained from the enemy of souls a range of existence beyond the
period of mortality-a power to pass over space with the swiftness
of thought-to encounter perils unharmed, to penetrate into
dungeons, whose bolts were as flax and tow at my touch. It has
been said that this power was accorded to me that I might be
enabled to tempt wretches at their fearful hour of extremity with
the promise of deliverance and immunity on condition of their
exchanging situations with me.
"No one has ever changed destinies with Melmoth the
Wanderer. I have traversed the world in search, and no one to
gain that world would lose his own soul!" He paused.
"Let me, if possible, obtain an hour's repose. Ay,
repose-sleep!" he repeated, answering the astonishment of
his hearers' looks. "My existence is still human!"
And a ghastly and derisive smile wandered over his features as he
spoke. John Melmoth and Monçada quitted the apartment, and the
Wanderer, sinking back in his chair slept profoundly.
The two men did not dare to approach the door until noon next
day. The Wanderer started up, and they saw with horror the change
that had come over him. The lines of extreme age were visible in
every feature.
"My hour is come," he said. "Leave me alone.
Whatever noises you may hear in the course of the awful night
that is approaching, come not near, at peril of your lives. Be
warned! Retire!"
They passed that day in intense anxiety, and at night had no
thought of repose. At midnight sounds of indescribable horror
began to issue from the Wanderer's apartment, shrieks of
supplication, yells of blasphemy- they could not tell which. The
sounds suddenly ceased. The two men hastened into the room. It
was empty.
A small door leading to a back staircase was open, and near it
they discovered the trace of footsteps of a person who had been
walking in damp sand or clay. They traced the footsteps down the
stairs, through the garden, and across a field to a rock that
overlooked the sea.
Through the furze that clothed this rock, there was a kind of
track as if a person had dragged his way, or been dragged,
through it. The two men gained the summit of the rock; the wide,
waste, engulfing ocean was beneath. On a crag below, something
hung as floating to the blast. Melmoth clambered down and caught
it. It was the handkerchief which the Wanderer had worn about his
neck the preceding night. That was the last trace of the
Wanderer.
Melmoth and Monçada exchanged looks of silent horror, and
returned slowly home.