The Return of the Soul | Page 2

Robert Smythe Hichens
foster the
ignorance of its parents. My people were pretty well off, and I was their
only child; but my chief chances of future pleasure in life were centred
in my grandmother, my mother's mother. She was immensely rich, and
she lived here. This room in which I am writing now was her favourite
sitting-room. On that hearth, before a log fire, such as is burning at this
moment, used to sit that wonderful cat of hers--that horrible cat! Why
did I ever play my childish cards to win this house, this place?
Sometimes, lately--very lately only--I have wondered, like a fool
perhaps. Yet would Professor Black say so? I remember, as a boy of
sixteen, paying my last visit here to my grandmother. It bored me very

much to come. But she was said to be near death, and death leaves
great houses vacant for others to fill. So when my mother said that I
had better come, and my father added that he thought my grandmother
was fonder of me than of my other relations, I gave up all my boyish
plans for the holidays with apparent willingness. Though almost a child,
I was not short-sighted. I knew every boy had a future as well as a
present. I gave up my plans, and came here with a smile; but in my
heart I hated my grandmother for having power, and so bending me to
relinquish pleasure for boredom. I hated her, and I came to her and
kissed her, and saw her beautiful white Persian cat sitting before the
fire in this room, and thought of the fellow who was my bosom friend,
and with whom I longed to be, shooting, or fishing, or riding. And I
looked at the cat again. I remember it began to purr when I went near to
it. It sat quite still, with its blue eyes fixed upon the fire, but when I
approached it I heard it purr complacently. I longed to kick it. The
limitations of its ridiculous life satisfied it completely. It seemed to
reproduce in an absurd, diminished way my grandmother in her white
lace cap, with her white face and hands. She sat in her chair all day and
looked at the fire. The cat sat on the hearthrug and did the same. The
cat seemed to me the animal personification of the human being who
kept me chained from all the sports and pleasures I had promised
myself for the holidays. When I went near to the cat, and heard it
calmly purring at me, I longed to do it an injury. It seemed to me as if it
understood what my grandmother did not, and was complacently
triumphing at my voluntary imprisonment with age, and laughing to
itself at the pains men--and boys--will undergo for the sake of money.
Brute! I did not love my grandmother, and she had money. I hated the
cat utterly. It hadn't a sou!
This beautiful house is not old. My grandfather built it himself. He had
no love for the life of towns, I believe, but was passionately in touch
with nature, and, when a young man, he set out on a strange tour
through England. His object was to find a perfect view, and in front of
that view he intended to build himself a habitation. For nearly a year,
so I have been told, he wandered through Scotland and England, and at
last he came to this place in Cumberland, to this village, to this very
spot. Here his wanderings ceased. Standing on the terrace--then

uncultivated forest--that runs in front of these windows, he found at last
what he desired. He bought the forest. He bought the windings of the
river, the fields upon its banks, and on the extreme edge of the steep
gorge through which it runs he built the lovely dwelling that to-day is
mine.
This place is no ordinary place. It is characteristic in the highest degree.
The house is wonderfully situated, with the ground falling abruptly in
front of it, the river forming almost a horseshoe round it. The woods
are lovely. The garden, curiously, almost wildly, laid out, is like no
other garden I ever saw. And the house, though not old, is full of little
surprises, curiously shaped rooms, remarkable staircases, quaint
recesses. The place is a place to remember. The house is a house to fix
itself in the memory. Nothing that had once lived here could ever come
back and forget that it had been here. Not even an animal--not even an
animal.
I wish I had never gone to that dinnerparty and met the Professor.
There was a horror coming upon me then. He has hastened its steps. He
has put my fears into shape, my vague wondering
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