I was at sea in an open boat. Out of the pitch-black heaven

there rushed a mighty wind, and the pitch-black seas above me

rose high, and ever higher, flecked with hissing white; wherefore

I cast me face downwards in my little boat, that I might not

behold the horror of the waters; and above their ceaseless,

surging thunder there rose a long-drawn cry: "Charmian!"

I stood upon a desolate moor, and the pitiless rain lashed me,

and the fierce wind buffeted me; and, out of the gloom where

frowning earth and heaven met--there rose a long-drawn cry: "Charmian."

I started up in bed, broad awake, and listening; yet the tumult

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was all about me still--the hiss and beat of rain, and the sound

of a rushing, mighty wind--a wind that seemed to fill the earth--a

wind that screamed about me, that howled above me, and filled the

woods, near and far, with a deep booming, pierced, now and then,

by the splintering crash of snapping bough or falling tree. And

yet, somewhere in this frightful pandemonium of sound, blended in

with it, yet not of it, it seemed to me that the cry still faintly

echoed: "Charmian."

So appalling was all this to my newly-awakened senses, that I

remained, for a time, staring into the darkness as one dazed.

Presently, however, I rose, and, donning some clothes, mended the

fire which still smouldered upon the hearth, and, having filled

and lighted my pipe, sat down to listen to the awful voices of

the storm.

What brain could conceive--what pen describe that elemental

chorus, like the mighty voice of persecuted Humanity, past and

present, crying the woes and ills, the sorrows and torments,

endured of all the ages? To-night, surely, the souls of the

unnumbered dead rode within the storm, and this was the voice of

their lamentation.

From the red mire of battlefields are they come, from the flame

and ravishment of fair cities, from dim and reeking dungeons,

from the rack, the stake, and the gibbet, to pierce the heavens

once more with the voice of their agony.

Since the world was made, how many have lived and suffered, and

died, unlettered and unsung--snatched by a tyrant's whim from

life to death, in the glory of the sun, in the gloom of night, in

blood and flame, and torment? Indeed, their name is "Legion."

But there is a great and awful Book, whose leaves are countless,

yet every leaf of which is smirched with blood and fouled with

nameless sins, a record, howsoever brief and inadequate, of human

suffering, wherein as "through a glass, darkly," we may behold

horrors unimagined; where Murder stalks, and rampant Lust; where

Treachery creeps with curving back, smiling mouth, and sudden,

deadly hand; where Tyranny, fierce-eyed, and iron-lipped, grinds

the nations beneath a bloody heel. Truly, man hath no enemy like

man. And Christ is there, and Socrates, and Savonarola--and

there, too, is a cross of agony, a bowl of hemlock, and a

consuming fire.




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