Read The Dedalus Book of Decadence: (Moral Ruins) Online
Authors: Brian Stableford
“By the way,” I asked, “I suppose you only
exterminate - er - members of the club?”
The fellow smiled with a little disdain.
“Oh, it would be illegal for us to exterminate outsiders.
But of course if you would like to join.
…”
“Why, that’s never a woman going over to the tree!”
I cried.
“Oh yes, we have quite a number of intellectual women and upper-class ladies of advanced ideas in the club.
But I do not think that lady is an intellectual she is more probably a passion-wreck.”
She was indeed a very handsome woman in the prime of life, dressed with a little too much ostentation and coquetry in a sleeveless, transparent white blouse and a skirt to match.
My informant turned round to a skinny young student with hog’s-bristle hair, and made some vulgar jest about its “being a pity to waste such a good piece of flesh.”
He was a super-man, and imagined, falsely I believe, that an air of bluff cynicism, a Teutonic attempt at heartiness, was the true outward sign of inward superiority.
The young man fired, and the women raised the arm that was not shattered by the bullet.
He fired again, and she fell on her knees, this time with a scream.
“I think you had better have a shot,” said the sharp-shooter to my man.
“I’m rather bad at this.”
Indeed his hand was shaking violently.
My interlocutor bowed, and went over to take the rifle.
The skinny student took his place by my side, and began talking to me as well.
“He’s an infallible shot that Muller there,” he said, nodding at my former companion.
… “Didn’t I tell you?”
To my great relief the passion-wrecked lady fell dead.
I was getting wildly excited, rent between horror and curiosity.
“You see that man in the plumed hat?”
said the
student.
“He is coming round to say on whom the lot has fallen.
Ah, he is coming this way, and making a sign at me.
Good-day, sir,” he said, taking off his hat with a deep and jerky bow.
“I am afraid we must continue our conversation another time.”
IV
THE EPISODE OF THE BABY
As soon as I turned away, rather horrified, from the merry proceedings of the Mutual Extermination Club, I seemed to be in England, or perhaps in America.
At all events I was walking along a dusty highway in the midst of an inquisitive crowd.
In front of me half-a-dozen members of the International Police Force (their tunics and boots gave me to understand their quality) were dragging along a woman who held a baby in her arms.
A horror-struck and interested multitude surged behind, and rested only when the woman was taken into a large and disgusting edifice with iron gates.
Aided by my distinguished appearance and carriage, I succeeded after some difficulty in persuading the Chief Gaoler to let me visit the cell where the mother was lodged, previous to undergoing an execution which would doubtless be as unpleasant as prolonged.
I found a robust, apple-cheeked woman, very clean and neat, despite her forlorn condition and the rough handling the guards had used to her.
She confessed to me with tears that she had been in her day a provincial courtesan, and that she had been overcome by desire to have a child, “just to see what it was like .”
She had therefore employed all imaginable shifts to avoid being injected with Smithia, and had fled with an old
admirer to a lonely cave, where she had brought forth her child.
“And a pretty boy too,” she added, wringing her hands, “and only fourteen months old.”
She was so heart-broken that I did not like to ask her any more questions till she had recovered, for fear her answers should be unintelligible.
Finally, as I desired to learn matters that were of common knowledge to the rest of the world, and was not anxious to arouse suspicion, I represented myself as a cultured foreigner who had just been released from a
manicomio
, and was therefore naturally in a state of profound ignorance on all that appertained to Modern History.
I felt indeed that I would never have a better chance of gathering information than from conversation with this solitary woman.
It would be her pleasure, not her duty, to instruct me.
So I began by asking how the diminishing numbers of the military could keep a sufficient watch, and how it was that every one submitted so meekly to the proclamation.
She answered that the police recruited themselves yearly from the more active and noble-minded of the people, that custom had a lot to do with the submissive attitude of mankind, and that apart from that, there was a great resolve abroad to carry out the project of King Harris to fulfilment.
She went on to inform me that Smithia was tasteless, and would act even when drunk at meals, and not merely as an injection, that it acted on both sexes, and that it was otherwise innocuous.
By now most of the well-springs, reservoirs, and cisterns had been contaminated by the fluid, of which large quantities had been prepared at a very cheap price.
After gleaning sundry other details, I thanked her heartily and left the cell.
Outside in the courtyard I discovered a large concourse of people examining the baby, who was naturally enough an object of extreme wonder to the
whole country-side.
The women called it a duck, and used other pet names that were not then in fashion, but most of the men thought it was an ugly little brat at best.
The child was seated on a cushion, and despite his mother’s absence was crowing vigorously and kicking with puny force.
There was some debate as to how it should be killed.
Some were for boiling and eating it; others were for hitting it on the head with a club.
However, the official who held the cushion brought the conference to a close by inadvertently dropping the child on to the flags, and thereby breaking its neck.
V
THE FLORENTINE LEAGUE
I feel certain on reflection that the scene of the last episode must have been America, for I remember returning to Europe on a French boat which landed me at Havre, and immediately taking the train to Paris.
As I passed through Normandy, I saw hardly a soul stirring in the villages, and the small houses were all in a most dilapidated condition.
There was no more need for farms, and villagers in their loneliness were flocking to the towns.
Even the outer suburbs of Paris were mere masses of flaked and decaying plaster.
An unpleasant crash into the buffers of Saint Lazare reminded me that the engine was being driven by an amateur; indeed, we had met the Dieppe train at Rouen, sent a pilot engine ahead to clear the way, and then raced it to Paris on the upline amid enthusiastic cheers.
We won, but were badly shaken.
We left the train beside the platform, trusting to the Church Missionary Society man to put it away in the engine-shed.
These excellent philanthropists were
unwearying in their efforts to prevent needless loss of life, and such work as was still done in the world was performed almost entirely by them and by members of kindred British Protestant societies.
They wore a blue badge to distinguish themselves, and were ordered about by every one.
At the call of “Anglais, Anglais!”
some side-whiskered man would immediately run up to obey the summons, and you could send him to get food from the Store for you, and he would be only too pleased.
They would also cook hot dinners.
I walked through the Boulevard Montmartre, and at every step I took I became more profoundly miserable.
One had called Paris the pleasant city, the fairest city in the world, in the days before the Proclamation; for one found it vibrating with beauty and life.
And now assuredly it was supremely a city of pleasure, for there was no work to be done at all.
So no artist ever took any trouble now, since there was neither payment nor fame attainable; and wonderful caricatures of philanthropists scribbled on the pavement or elsewhere, or clever ribald songs shrieking out of gramophones were the only reminder of that past and beautiful Paris that I had known.
There was a fatuous and brutal expression on most of the faces, and the people seemed to be too lazy to do anything except drink and fondle.
Even the lunatics attracted but little attention.
There was a flying-machine man who was determined, as he expressed it, “that it should not be said of the human race that it never flew.”
Even the “Anglais” were tired of helping him with his machine, which he was quietly building on the Place de l’Opéra – a mass of intricate wires, bamboos, and paper boxes; and the inventor himself frequently got lost as he climbed cheerily among the rigging.
Weary of all this, I slept, alone, in one of the public beds, and early next morning I clambered up the sacred
slope of the Butte to see the sunrise.
The great silence of early morning was over the town, a deathly and unnatural stillness.
As I stood leaning over the parapet, thinking miserably, a young man came up the hill slowly yet gracefully, so that it was a pleasure to look at him.
His face was sad and noble, and as I had never thought to see nobility again, I hoped he would be a friend to me.
However, he turned himself almost roughly, and said:
“Why have you come here?”
“To look at the fallen city I loved long ago,” I replied, with careless sorrow.
“Have you then also read of the old times in books?”
he said, looking round at me with large bright eyes.
“Yes, I have read many books,” said I, trying to evade the subject.
“But will you forgive me if I ask an impertinent question?”
“Nothing coming from you, sir, could be impertinent.”
“I wanted to ask how old you are, because you seem so young.
You seem to be only seventeen.”
“You could tell me nothing more delightful,” the young man replied, with a gentle, yet strong and deep intonation.
“I am indeed one of the youngest men alive – I am twenty-two years old.
And I am looking for the last time on the city of Paris.”
“Do not say that,” I cried.
“All this may be horrible, but it cannot be as dull as Death.
Surely there must be some place in the world where we could live among beauty; some other folk besides ourselves who are still poets.
Why should one die until life becomes hopelessly ugly and deformed?”
“I am not going to kill myself, as you seem to think,” said the young man.
“I am going, and I pray and implore you to come with me, to a place after your heart and mine, that some friends have prepared.
It is a
garden, and we are a League.
I have already been there three months, and I have put on these horrible clothes for one day only, in obedience to a rule of our League, that every one should go out once a year to look at the world around.
We are thinking of abolishing this rule.”
“How pleasant and beautiful it sounds!”
“It is, and will you come with me there right now?”
“Shall I be admitted?”
“My word will admit you at once.
Come this way with me.
I have a motor at the bottom of the hill.”
During the journey I gathered much information about the League, which was called the Florentine League.
It had been formed out of the youngest “years” of the race, and its members had been chosen for their taste and elegance.
For although few parents of the day had thought it worth while to teach their children anything more recondite than their letters and tables, yet some of the boys and girls had developed a great desire for knowledge, and an exceeding great delight in Poetry, Art, Music, and all beautiful sights and sounds.
“We live,” he said, “apart from the world, like that merry company of gentlefolk who, when the plague was.
raging at Florence, left the city, and retiring to a villa in the hills, told each other those enchanting tales.
We enjoy all that Life, Nature, and Art can give us, and love has not deserted the garden, but still draws his golden bow.
It is no crippled and faded Eros of the City that dwells among us, but the golden-thighed God himself.
For we do all things with refinement, and not like those outside, seeing to it that in all our acts we keep our souls and bodies both delicate and pure.”
We came to the door of a long wall, and knocked.
White-robed attendants appeared in answer to our summons, and I was stripped, bathed, and anointed by their deft hands.
All the while a sound of singing and
subdued laughter made me eager to be in the garden.
I was then clothed in a very simple white silk garment with a gold clasp; the open door let sunshine in upon the tiles, and my friend, also clothed in silk, awaited me.
We walked out into the garden, which was especially noticeable for those flowers which have always been called old-fashioned – I mean hollyhocks, sweet william, snap-dragons, and Canterbury bells, which were laid out in regular beds.
Everywhere young men and women were together: some were walking about idly in the shade; some played at fives; some were reading to each other in the arbours.
I was shown a Grecian temple in which was a library, and dwelling-places near it.
I afterwards asked a girl called Fiore di Fiamma what books the Florentines preferred to read, and she told me that they loved the Poets best, not so much the serious and strenuous as those whose vague and fleeting fancies wrap the soul in an enchanting sorrow.