The Return Of The Soul, by 
Robert S. Hichens 
 
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Title: The Return Of The Soul 1896 
Author: Robert S. Hichens 
Release Date: November 8, 2007 [EBook #23419] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
RETURN OF THE SOUL *** 
 
Produced by David Widger 
 
THE RETURN OF THE SOUL 
By Robert S. Hichens 
1896
"I have been here before, But when, or how, I cannot tell!" 
Rossetti. 
 
I. 
Tuesday Night, November 3rd. 
Theories! What is the good of theories? They are the scourges that lash 
our minds in modern days, lash them into confusion, perplexity, despair. 
I have never been troubled by them before. Why should I be troubled 
by them now? And the absurdity of Professor Black's is surely obvious. 
A child would laugh at it. Yes, a child! I have never been a diary writer. 
I have never been able to understand the amusement of sitting down 
late at night and scrawling minutely in some hidden book every paltry 
incident of one's paltry days. People say it is so interesting to read the 
entries years afterwards. To read, as a man, the menu that I ate through 
as a boy, the love-story that I was actor in, the tragedy that I brought 
about, the debt that I have never paid--how could it profit me? To keep 
a diary has always seemed to me merely an addition to the ills of life. 
Yet now I have a hidden book, like the rest of the world, and I am 
scrawling in it to-day. Yes, but for a reason. 
I want to make things clear to myself, and I find, as others, that my 
mind works more easily with the assistance of the pen. The actual 
tracing of words on paper dispels the clouds that cluster round my 
thoughts. I shall recall events to set my mind at ease, to prove to myself 
how absurd a man who could believe in Professor Black would be. 
"Little Dry-as-dust" I used to call him 'Dry'? He is full of wild romance, 
rubbish that a school-girl would be ashamed to believe in. Yet he is 
abnormally clever; his record proves that. Still, clever men are the first 
to be led astray, they say. It is the searcher who follows the wandering 
light. What he says can't be true. When I have filled these pages, and 
read what I have written dispassionately, as one of the outside public 
might read, I shall have done, once for all, with the ridiculous fancies 
that are beginning to make my life a burden. To put my thoughts in
order will make a music. The evil spirit within me will sleep, will die. I 
shall be cured. It must be so--it shall be so. 
To go back to the beginning. Ah! what a long time ago that seems! As a 
child I was cruel. Most boys are cruel, I think. My school companions 
were a merciless set--merciless to one another, to their masters when 
they had a chance, to animals, to birds. The desire to torture was in 
nearly all of them. They loved to bully, and if they bullied only mildly, 
it was from fear, not from love. They did not wish their boomerang to 
return and slay them. If a boy were deformed, they twitted him. If a 
master were kind, or gentle, or shy, they made his life as intolerable as 
they could. If an animal or a bird came into their power, they had no 
pity. I was like the rest; indeed, I think that I was worse. Cruelty is 
horrible. I have enough imagination to do more than know that--to feel 
it. 
Some say that it is lack of imagination which makes men and women 
brutes. May it not be power of imagination? The interest of torturing is 
lessened, is almost lost, if we can not be the tortured as well as the 
torturer. 
As a child I was cruel by nature, by instinct. I was a handsome, 
well-bred, gentlemanlike, gentle-looking little brute. My parents adored 
me, and I was good to them. They were so kind to me that I was almost 
fond of them. Why not? It seemed to me as politic to be fond of them 
as of anyone else. I did what I pleased, but I did not always let them 
know it; so I pleased them. The wise child will take care to    
    
		
	
	
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