Edward Bulwer-Lytton - The Coming Race [1871] (02)
December 3, 2016 | Author: Școala Solomonară / The Solomonary School | Category: N/A
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Edward Bulwer-Lytton - The Coming Race [1871] (02)...
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DUKE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY The Glenn Negley Collection of Utopian Literature
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THE COMING RACE
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THE
COMING RACE
WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS EDINBURGH AND LONDON MDCCCLXXI
The Right of Translation
is
reserved
Digitized by the Internet Archive in
2010 with funding from
Duke
University Libraries
http://www.archive.org/details/comingraceOOIytt
U£cf«^
INSCRIBED
MAX MULLER I
N
TRIBUTE
RESPECT AND ADMIRATION
THE COMING
CHAPTER I
am
a native of
America.
My
ancestors migrated from II.
was not undistinguished
My
I.
in the United States of
,
in the reign of Charles
dence.
RACE.
;
and
my
grandfather
in the "War of Indepen-
family, therefore, enjoyed a
high social position in right of birth also
England
;
somewhat and being
opulent, they were considered disqualified
My
for the public service.
father once ran for
Congress, but was signally defeated by his
After that event he interfered
and lived much of three sons,
in his library.
and sent
little
I
in politics,
was the
eldest
at the age of sixteen to
the old country, partly to complete education, partly to
tailor.
commence A
my
my
literary
commercial
THE COMING RACE.
2
My
training in a mercantile firm at Liverpool. father died shortly after I
being
left
well
off,
and adventure,
was twenty-one
and having a
I resigned, for
of the almighty dollar,
I
—
,
and
taste for travel
a time,
pursuit
all
and became a desultory
wanderer over the face of the In the year 18
;
earth.
happening to be in
,
was invited by a professional engineer, with
whom
had made acquaintance, to
I
visit
the
mine, upon which he was
recesses of the
employed.
The reader narrative,
my
will understand, ere he close this
reason for concealing
clue to
all
the district of which I write, and will perhaps
me for refraining from any description that may tend to its discovery. Let me say, then, as briefly as possible, that I
thank
accompanied the engineer into the
interior of the
mine, and became
fascinated
its
so
strangely
gloomy wonders, and
friend's
so
interested
explorations, that I prolonged
in the neighbourhood,
and descended
some weeks, into the vaults and
in
my
by
my stay
daily, for
galleries
hol-
lowed by nature and art beneath the surface of
THE COMING RACE. The engineer was persuaded that
the earth.
richer deposits of mineral wealth than
far
had yet
been detected, would be found in a new shaft that had been
commenced under
his operations.
we came one day upon
In piercing this shaft
chasm jagged and seemingly charred as if burst asunder at
volcanic
Down
fires.
He
at the sides,
some distant period by this
tested the atmosphere
my
friend
cage,'
having
chasm
caused himself to be lowered in a first
'
by the
safety-lamp.
When
remained nearly an hour in the abyss.
he returned he was very pale, anxious, different
thoughtful
from
its
a
expression
and with an of
face,
very
ordinary character, which was
open, cheerful, and fearless.
He him
said briefly that the descent appeared to unsafe,
and
leading to
no result
;
suspending further operations in the shaft,
and,
we
returned to the more familiar parts of the mine. All the rest of that day the engineer seemed
preoccupied by some absorbing thought.
was unusually
taciturn,
and there was a
scared,
bewildered look in his eyes, as that of a
who has
seen a ghost.
At
night, as
He man
we two
— THE COMING RACE.
4
we shared
to-
of the mine, I said to
my
wtiv Bitting o o o alone in the lodging gether near the
mouth
friend,
me
"Tell 1
am
sure
Whatever
frankly what you saw in that chasm:
it
was something strange and
it be, it
has
terrible.
your mind in a state
left
of doubt.
In such a case two heads are better
than one.
Confide in me."
The engineer long endeavoured inquiries
but
;
as,
to evade
my
while he spoke, he helped him-
unconsciously out of the brandy-flask to a
self
degree to which he was wholly unaccustomed, for he
was a very temperate man,
gradually melted away. himself to animals, will
tell
himself
you
all.
He who would
should
and drink water.
When
his reserve
imitate
At
last
the
he
keep
dumb
said,
" I
the cage stopped,
found myself on a ridge of rock
I
and below me,
;
the chasm, taking a slanting direction, shot
down
to a considerable depth, the darkness of
which
my lamp could not have penetrated. But through it, to my infinite surprise, streamed upward a steady brilliant light. lire
\
Could
it
be any volcanic
in that case, surely I should
have
felt
the
THE COMING RACE. heat.
Still, if
on
was doubt,
this there
the utmost importance to our clear
it
up.
I
and found that
examined the I
5
common
it
was of
safety to
sides of the descent,
could venture to trust myself to
the irregular projections or ledges, at least for
some way.
As
I
cage and clambered down.
I left the
drew near and nearer
became wider, and at
to the light, the
last I saw, to
my
chasm
unspeak-
able amaze, a broad level road at the bottom of
the abyss, illumined as far as the eye could reach
by what seemed
artificial
gas -lamps placed at
regular intervals, as in the thoroughfare of a great city
;
as of rival
and
I
heard confusedly at a distance a
human
voices.
miners are at work in this
could have levelled those lamps "
know, of course, that no
I
could be those voices
The
hum
?
district.
Whose
What human hands
that road and marshalled
1
superstitious belief,
common
to miners,
that gnomes or fiends dwell within the bowels of the earth, began to seize me.
I
shuddered at
the thought of descending further and braving
the inhabitants of this nether valley.
could
I
Nor indeed
have done so without ropes, as from the
THE COMING RACE.
6
spot
I
had reached
to the
the sides of the rock sank
and
sheer.
culty.
"
I
Now
You
retraced I
my
bottom of the chasm
down
abrupt, smooth,
steps with
have told you
will descend again
some
diffi-
all."
V
" I ought, yet I feel as if I durst not." "
A
trusty companion halves the journey
doubles the courage.
I will
go with you.
and
"We will
provide ourselves with ropes of suitable length
and strength
—and—pardon me—you
drink more to-night.
Our hands and
be steady and firm to-morrow."
must not feet
must
CHAPTER With
the morning
braced,
my
and he was not
friend's nerves less excited
than myself.
Perhaps more
lieved in his
own
doubt of
it
:
II.
story,
for
;
and
by
were
re-
curiosity
he evidently be-
I felt considerable
not that he would have wilfully told
an untruth, but that
I
thought he must have
been under one of those hallucinations which
on our fancy or our nerves in
seize
accustomed
places,
to the formless
and
in
and sound
solitary,
un-
which we give shape
to the
dumb.
"We selected six veteran miners to watch our descent
;
and as the cage held only one
the engineer descended
first
;
at a time,
and when he had
gained the ledge at which he had before halted, the cage re-arose for me.
We
I
soon gained his
had provided ourselves with a strong
rope.
side.
coil of
THE COMING RACE. The the
light struck
my
day before on which
through
seemed
to
me
like that
from
northern
star.
my
on
sight as
it
had done
The hollow
friend's.
came sloped diagonally
it
:
it
a diffused atmospheric light, not
but soft and silvery, as from a
fire,
Quitting the cage,
we descended,
one after the other, easily enough, owing to the juts in the side,
my
which
till
friend
we reached
had previously
the
place
at
and
halted,
which was a projection just spacious enough to
From
allow us to stand abreast.
chasm widened rapidly a vast funnel, and
I
like
saw
He had
the lower
my
hum
as of feet.
my
dull
tramp
eye farther down, I
clearly beheld at a distance the outline of
large building. rock,
it
It
I
—a mingled inde-
and a
as of voices
Straining
companion had
exaggerated nothing.
heard the sounds he had heard scribable
end of
distinctly the valley,
the road, the lamps which described.
this spot the
some
could not be mere natural
was too symmetrical, with huge heavy
Egyptian-like columns, and the whole lighted as
from within. telescope,
I
had about me a small pocket-
and by the aid of
this I could distin-
THE COMING RACE. guish, near the building I
mention, two forms
which seemed human, though
At
sure.
least
could not be
I
they were living, for they moved,
We
and both vanished within the building.
now proceeded
end of the rope we
to attach the
had brought with us
to the ledge
on which we
by the aid of clamps and grappling-hooks,
stood,
with which, as well as with necessary
we
tools,
were provided.
We were almost silent like
men
afraid to speak to each other.
of the rope being thus apparently
the ledge, the other, to which
we
toiled
One end
made
firm to
fastened a frag-
of the rock, rested on the ground below, a
ment
some
distance of
fifty
feet.
and a more active man than having served on board ship
mode
of transit
was more
In a whisper
him. that
We
in our work.
when
I
I
I
was a younger
my companion, in my boyhood,
familiar to
me
and this
than to
claimed the precedence, so
gained the ground
I
might serve to
hold the rope more steady for his descent. got safely to the ground beneath, gineer
now began
to lower himself.
scarcely accomplished ten feet
of
I
and the en-
But he had the descent,
;
THE COMING RACE.
IO
when the secure,
which we had fancied
fastenings,
gave way, or rather the rock
itself
proved
crumbled beneath the strain;
treacherous and
and the unhappy man was precipitated bottom, falling just at
down with
so
my
to tlie
and bringing
feet,
his fall splinters of the rock,
one of
which, fortunately but a small one, struck and for the time
senses
stunned me.
saw
I
beside me,
my
When
recovered
my
companion an inanimate mass
While
utterly extinct.
life
I
I
was
bending over his corpse in grief and horror,
I
heard close at hand a strange sound between a snort and a hiss
;
and turning instinctively
quarter from which
came,
it
I
to the
saw emerging from
a dark fissure in the rock a vast and terrible
head, with open jaws and dull, ghastly, hungry
eyes
—the head
of a monstrous reptile resembling
that of the crocodile or alligator, but infinitely larger than the largest creature of that kind I
had ever beheld feet
and
speed.
and I
I
my
had
fled
my
down
travels.
I started to
the valley at
stopped at
flight,
left
in
last,
ashamed
and returned
the body of
my
my utmost of my panic
to the spot
friend.
my
It
on which
was gone
THE COMING RACE. doubtless the monster had already its
den and devoured
grappling-hooks
still
but they afforded
was impossible
II
drawn
into
The rope and the
it.
lay where they
me no
it
had
fallen,
chance of return
to re-attach
them
:
it
to the rock
above, and the sides of the rock were too sheer
and smooth
for
human
steps to clamber.
I
was
alone in this strange world, amidst the bowels of
the earth.
12
CHAPTER Slowly and down
cautiously
I
went
the lamplit road and
building
seemed
I
have
chasms
I
which
my
left
covered with
it
I
way
The road
itself
Alpine pass, skirting rocky the
one
through whose
Deep
link.
lay a vast valley, which pre-
unmistakable
astonished eye the
evidences of art and culture.
none
solitary
had descended formed a
below to the sented to
my
towards the large
described.
like a great
mountains of
III.
a strange
There were
fields
vegetation, similar
have seen above the earth
;
to
the colour of
not green, but rather of a dull leaden hue or
of a golden red.
There were lakes and rivulets which seemed to
have been curbed into
of pure water, others
naphtha.
At
my
artificial
banks
;
some
that shone like pools of
right hand, ravines
and
defiles
3
THE COMING RACE.
1
opened amidst the rocks, with passes between, evidently constructed resembling,
trees ferns,
by
art,
most
the
for
and bordered by gigantic
part,
with exquisite varieties of feathery foliage,
and stems were more
Others
like those of the palm-tree. like the cane-plant,
large clusters of flowers.
but
taller,
bearing
had the
Others, again,
form of enormous fungi, with short thick stems supporting a wide dome-like roof, from which either
rose
or
drooped long slender branches.
The whole scene behind, far as the
and beside me,
before,
eye could reach, was brilliant with
The world without a sun
innumerable lamps.
was bright and warm as an
Italian landscape at
noon, but the air less oppressive, the heat softer.
Nor was the scene habitation.
I
before
me
void of signs of
could distinguish at a
whether on the banks of lake or
way upon
eminences,
vegetation,
buildings that
homes of men. far
off,
forms
I
saw
rivulet, or half-
embedded
amidst
the
must surely be the
could even discover, though
that
appeared
moving amidst the landscape. gaze, I
distance,
to
me human
As
I
paused to
to the right, gliding quickly
through
THE COMING RACE.
14
the
air,
what appeared a small
It soon passed out of
shaped like wings.
sails
sight,
descending amidst the shades of a
me
Right above cavernous
forest.
was no sky, but only a
there
This
roof.
by
boat, impelled
grew higher and
roof
higher at the distance of the landscapes beyond, till it
became imperceptible,
haze formed
itself
my
Continuing
as
an atmosphere of
beneath.
walk,
I started,
—from
a bush
that resembled a great tangle of sea-weeds, in-
and plants of
terspersed with fern-like shrubs
shaped like that of the aloe or
leafage
large
prickly pear,
— a curious animal about the But
shape of a deer. a few paces,
it
as, after
any
species of deer
but
it
variety
now
had seen elk
before the Deluge.
stag,
The
to
graze
it
my
in
me
was not
like
recollection
a
some museum of a
said
to
have existed
creature seemed
enough, and, after inspecting two, began
bounding away
extant above the earth,
brought instantly to
of the
and
turned round and gazed at
inquisitively, I perceived that
plaster cast I
size
me
a
tame
moment
or
on the singular herbage
around undismayed and
careless.
15
CHAPTER I
it
now came
IV.
in full sight of the building.
Yes,
had been made by hands, and hollowed partly
out of a great rock.
I
at the first glance to
have been of the
should have supposed
form of Egyptian architecture.
It
it
earliest
was fronted
by huge columns, tapering upward from massive plinths,
and with
capitals that, as I
came
nearer,
perceived to be more
ornamental and more
fantastically graceful than
Egyptian architecture
I
As the Corinthian
allows.
leaf of the
capital
acanthus, so the
mimics the
capitals of these
columns imitated the foliage of the vegetation neighbouring them, some
And now
there
came out
—human —was ;
broad
way and
approached.
It
aloe-like,
some
fern-like.
of this building a form
human
stood
on the
looked around, beheld
me and
it
%
It
came within a few yards of me,
THE COMING RACE.
l6
and presence of
and
at the sight
able
awe and tremor
to the ground.
seized me, rooting
me
reminded
It
an indescrib-
it
my
feet
of symbolical
of Genius or Demon that are seen on images © Etruscan vases or limned on the walls of Eastern
sepulchres
—images
that borrow the outlines of
man, and are yet of another not gigantic, but
race.
It
tall,
men below
as the tallest
tall
was
the height of giants. Its
seemed
chief covering
me
to
posed of large wings folded over reaching to
its
knees
;
breast
and
its attire
was
its
the rest of
com-
to be
composed of an under tunic and leggings of some thin fibrous material.
It
of tiara that shone with right
hand a slender
polished
steel.
inspired
my
to
known it
face
my
extant races.
in outline
!
peculiar,
it
—
terror.
It
man
metal like
was the
face
from
distinct
The nearest approach is
the face of
so regular in
mysterious beauty.
more
in its
was that which
and expression
the sculptured sphinx intellectual,
and carried
ewels,
of man, but yet of a type of
our
head a kind
its
staff of bright
But the
awe and
j
wore on
like that of the red
its
calm,
Its colour
man
was
than any
THE COMING RACE.
17
other variety of our species, and yet different
from
it
—a
and a
richer
softer hue,
with large
black eyes, deep and brilliant, and brows arched
The
as a semicircle.
a
nameless something in the aspect, tranquil
though the the features,
expression,
roused
felt
that
this
and beauteous though
that
which the sight of a I
was beardless; but
face
instinct
clanger
tiger or serpent arouses.
manlike image was endowed
with forces inimical to man. a cold shudder
of
As
came over me.
knees and covered
my
face with
drew
it
I
fell
my
near,
on
hands.
my
CHAPTER A
—a of voice — me
voice accosted
musical key I could not
up.
language of which
understand a word, but I
uncovered
The stranger
to call
very quiet and very
in a
my fear.
dispel
V.
(I
my
it
face
and looked
could scarcely bring myself
him man) surveyed me with an eye
seemed to read to the very depths of
He
served to
then placed his
left
hand on
and with the
staff in his right
my
The
shoulder.
In place of
was magical. passed into
eifect of this
me
my
my
my
that
heart.
forehead,
gently touched
double contact
former terror there
a sense of contentment, of joy, of
confidence in myself and in the being before me. I rose
and spoke
ened to
me
in
my own
language.
He
list-
with apparent attention, but with a
slight surprise in his looks
as if to signify that I
;
and shook
his head,
was not understood.
He
THE COMING RACE. then took
me by
the
led
me
in silence
The entrance was open
to the building.
there was no door to hall, lighted
hand and
19
We
it.
—indeed
entered an immense
by the same kind of
lustre as in the
scene without, but diffusing a fragrant
The
floor
was
in large tesselated blocks of pre-
and partly covered with a
cious metals,
odour.
A
matlike carpeting.
and around, undulated
strain of as if
sort of
low music, above
from invisible instru-
ments, seeming to belong naturally to the place, just as the sound of to a
murmuring waters belongs
rocky landscape, or the warble of birds to
vernal groves.
A
figure, in a simpler
garb than that of
my
guide, but of similar fashion,
was standing mo-
tionless near the threshold.
My
it
twice with his
rapid
staff,
it
put
itself into
a
and gliding movement, skimming noise-
lessly over the floor.
that
and
guide touched
it
Gazing on
then saw was no living form, but a mechanical
automaton.
It
it,
I
might be two minutes
after
it
vanished through a doorless opening, half screened
by curtains at the other end of the
hall,
when
through the same opening advanced a boy of
'
THE COMING RACE.
20
about twelve years resembling
seemed to ing
me a
guide,
they
that
so
On
evidently son and father.
see-
the child uttered a cry, and lifted a staff
my
borne by
like that
At
with features closely
my
of
those
me
old,
guide, as if in menace.
word from the elder he dropped
two then conversed
for
some moments, examin-
ing
me
my
garments, and stroked
The
while they spoke.
curiosity, uttering
a
The
it.
my
sound
child touched
face with evident
like
a
but
laugh,
with an hilarity more subdued than the mirth of our laughter. opened, and
Presently the roof of the
platform descended,
a
hall
seemingly
constructed on the same principle as the
'
lifts
used in hotels and warehouses for mounting from
one story to another.
The stranger placed himself and the the platform, and motioned to
which
I
did.
and alighted
We in
me
child
on
to do the same,
ascended quickly and
safely,
the midst of a corridor with
doorways on either
side.
Through one of these doorways
I
was con-
ducted into a chamber fitted up with an Oriental splendour
;
the walls were tesselated with spars,
THE COMING RACE. and metals, and uncut jewels divans abounded unglazed, were the floor
;
and
21
apertures as for windows, but
;
made
in the chamber, opening to
as I passed along I observed that
these openings led into spacious
commanded views without.
and
cushions
;
of the
balconies,
and
illumined landscape
In cages suspended from the ceiling
there were
of strange
birds
form and bright
plumage, which at our entrance of song, modulated into tune as
A
piping bullfinches.
set is
up
a chorus
that of our
delicious fragrance,
from
censers of gold elaborately sculptured, filled the air.
Several automata, like the one I had seen,
dumb and motionless by the walls. The stranger placed me beside him on a divan, and stood
again spoke to me, and again I spoke, but without the least advance towards understanding each other.
But now I
I
began
to feel the effects of the
had received from the
rock more acutely than
me
There came over
accompanied with head and neck.
I
blow
splinters of the falling
had done
at
first.
a sense of sickly faintness,
acute, lancinating pains in the I
sank back on the
seat,
and
;
THE COMING RACE.
22
strove in vain child,
to
who had
stifle
;
taking one of
approached his it
my
lips to
by
my
my
drowsy, happy calm crept over
How
loner I
but when
I
eyes opened
around tals
—
me all
the same
remained in
woke
his
own, he
pain ceased
me
;
in the gravity
;
a
I fell asleep.
this state I
know
not,
My
I felt perfectly restored.
upon a group
more
with
forehead, breathing on
In a few moments
softly.
me
side to support
hands in both
my
the
this
hitherto seemed to eye
distrust or dislike, knelt
me
On
a groan.
of silent forms, seated
and quietude of Orien-
or less like the first stranger
mantling wings, the same fashion of
garment, the same sphinx-like
faces,
deep dark eyes and red man's colour the same type of race infinitely stronger of
—
;
with the
above
all,
race akin to man's, but
form and grander of aspect,
and inspiring the same unutterable
feeling of
dread.
Yet each countenance was mild and
tranquil,
and even kindly in
strangely enough,
it
its
seemed to
expression.
me
And,
that in this
very calm and benignity consisted the secret of the dread which the countenances inspired.
seemed as void of the
lines
They
and shadows which
THE COMING RACE. and sorrow, and passion and
care
23 sin,
upon
leave
the faces of men, as are the faces of sculptured gods, or as, in the eyes of Christian mourners,
seem the peaceful brows of the dead. I felt a
warm hand on my
shoulder
it
;
was
In his eyes there was a sort of lofty
the child's.
we
pity and tenderness, such as that with which
may
gaze on some suffering bird or butterfly.
shrank from that touch I
—
I
shrank from that eye.
was vaguely impressed with a
belief that,
he so pleased, that child could have killed easily as a
man
The
seemed pained at
child
can
kill
I
had
me
as
a bird or a butterfly.
my
repugnance,
quitted me, and placed himself beside one of the
windows.
The
others continued to converse with
each other in a low tone, and by their glances
towards
me
could perceive that I was the
I
object of their conversation.
seemed
to be urging
on the being
by
his
when
whom
gesture
I
One
some proposal
had
first
seemed about
in
affecting
to
window, placed himself between if in
protection,
me
met, and this last assent to
the child suddenly quitted his post
other forms, as
especial
it,
by the
me and
the
and spoke quickly
THE COMING RACE.
24
By some
and
eagerly.
felt
that the child I had before so dreaded
my
pleading in
or instinct I
intuition
had ceased
Ere he
behalf.
was
He
another stranger entered the room. older than the rest, though not old
;
appeared
his counte-
nance, less smoothly serene than theirs, though
equally regular in
its features,
me
seemed to
my
have more the touch of a humanity akin to
He
own.
listened quietly
dressed to him,
by
first
others of the group,
to
my
and
the
words ad-
guide, next
lastly
to
by two
by the
child
then turned towards myself, and addressed me, not by words, but by signs and gestures. I fancied that I perfectly
not mistaken.
whence
I
I
understood, and
came.
I
in the rock
my
drew forth one of
its
I
was
comprehended that he inquired extended
my arm and
towards the road which had led
chasm
These
pointed
me from
then an idea seized me.
;
the I
pocket-book and sketched on
blank leaves a rough design of the
ledge of the rock, the rope, myself clinging to it
;
then
of
head of the friend.
I
the
cavernous
reptile,
gave
the
rock
lifeless
this primitive
below,
the
form of
my
kind of hieroglyph
THE COMING RACE.
my
to
gravely, it
who,
interrogator,
handed
it
to his
after
inspecting
The being
at first encountered then said a
and the
child,
who approached and
drawing, nodded as
if
I
few words,
looked at
he comprehended
port, and, returning to the
it
next neighbour, and
thus passed round the group.
had
2$
its
my
pur-
window, expanded the
wings attached to his form, shook them once or twice,
and then launched himself into space with-
out.
I started
The
window.
buoyed on
and
up in amaze and hastened child
his wings,
was already
without
seemed that
it
effort
as swift as
of
any
air,
flap to
but which were elevated
over his head, and seemed to bear aloft
the
in
which he did not
fro as a bird does,
to the
his
him
His
own.
eagle's
;
steadily
and
was towards the rock whence
I
I
flight
observed
had de-
scended, of which the outline loomed visible in
the brilliant atmosphere. utes he returned,
In a very few min-
skimming through the opening
from which he had gone, and dropping on the floor the
rope and grappling-hooks
the descent from the chasm.
I
had
left at
Some words
in
a low tone passed between the beings present:
THE COMING RACE.
26
one of the group touched an automaton, which started forward
the last comer,
me
the hand, and led
into the
There the platform by which
corridor.
then
;
who had addressed me by gestures,
me by
took
rose,
and glided from the room
had
I
mounted awaited us; we placed ourselves on and were lowered
it
new companion,
(so
to
tation
separated
side,
and strange
flowers.
these gardens, which
other
by low
walls, or
many
road, were
already seen.
with
it,
from each
tones,
walking slowly along the
forms similar to those
Some
of the
looks,
my
had
I
passers-by, on ob-
evidently
by
and gestures addressing
to
inquiries about myself.
crowd collected round
great interest, as if I were
Yet even
Interspersed amidst
were divided from each
serving me, approached
a
beyond
by gardens bright with rich-coloured vege-
other
him
the hand,
the building into a street stretched
speak) that
buildings on either
their
me by
holding
still
me from
conducted
My
into the hall below.
us,
guide,
In a few moments
examining
some
me
with
rare wild animal.
in gratifying their curiosity they pre-
served a grave and courteous demeanour
;
and
THE COMING RACE. after a
few words from
my
guide,
27
who seemed
to
me
to deprecate obstruction in our road, they
fell
back with a stately inclination of head, and
resumed
their
Midway
ence.
own way with
in this thoroughfare
sides
passed,
we stopped
from those we had
at a building that differed
hitherto
tranquil indiffer-
inasmuch as
it
formed three
of a vast court, at the angles of
were lofty pyramidal towers
in the open
;
which space
between the sides was a circular fountain of colossal dimensions,
and throwing up a dazzling
spray of what seemed to
me
We
fire.
entered
the building through an open doorway and came into
an enormous
groups of children,
work
as at
hall, in all
which were several
apparently employed in
some great
There was a
factory.
huge engine in the wall which was in
full play,
with wheels and cylinders resembling our own steam-engines, except
that
it
was richly orna-
mented with precious stones and metals, and appeared to emanate a pale phosphorescent
mosphere of shifting
light.
Many of
were at some mysterious work on others
were seated before
at-
the children
this machinery,
tables.
I
was not
THE COMING RACE.
28
allowed to linger long enough to examine into
Not one young
the nature of their employment. voice
was heard
gaze on us. as
may
—not
one young face turned to
They were
all still
and
indifferent
be ghosts, through the midst of which
pass unnoticed the forms of the living.
Quitting this
my
hall,
guide led
me
through a
gallery richly painted in compartments, with a
barbaric mixture of gold in the colours, like pictures
The
by Louis Cranach.
on these walls appeared to
subjects described
my glance
as intended
to illustrate events in the history of the race
amidst which figures, I
had
I
was admitted.
most of them
like the
there were
same fashion of
There were also the
animals
of various
all
manlike creatures
seen, but not all in the
garb, nor all with wings. effigies
In
and
birds
wholly
strange to me, with backgrounds depicting landscapes or buildings.
knowledge of the to
So
far as
pictorial art
my
imperfect
would allow me
form an opinion, these paintings seemed very
accurate in design and very rich in colouring,
showing a perfect knowledge of perspective, but their details not arranged according to the rules
THE COMING
were, a centre
it
was vague,
confused,
scattered,
artists
so that the effect
;
they were like heterogeneous
dream of
29
acknowledged by our
of composition
wanting, as
RACE.
bewildering
fragments of a
art.
We now
came
room of moderate
into a
which was assembled what to be the family of
my
I
size,
afterwards
in
knew
guide, seated at a table
The forms thus grouped
spread as for repast.
were those of
my
two
recognised at once the difference
sons.
I
between the two were of
taller
than the males
guide's wife, his daughter,
sexes,
and
more symmetrical
though the two females
and ampler proportions
stature ;
and
their countenances, if
in outline
still
and contour, were
devoid of the softness and timidity of expression which give
charm
to
as seen
on the earth above.
wings,
the
daughter
the face of
woman
The wife wore no
wore wings longer than
those of the males.
My
guide uttered a few words, on which
all
the persons seated rose, and with that peculiar
mildness of look and manner which I have before noticed,
and which
is,
in
truth,
the
common
THE COMING RACE.
30
attribute of this formidable race, they saluted
me
according to their fashion, which consists in laying the right hand very gently on the head and uttering a soft sibilant monosyllable
valent to "
—
S.Si, equi-
Welcome."
The mistress of the house then seated me be-
from one of the "While
I
dishes.
ate (and
to me, I marvelled
though the viands were new
more
at the delicacy than the
strangeness of their flavour),
versed quietly, and, so far as polite avoidance of
any
any obtrusive scrutiny of
I
was the
beheld, as
first
my companions I
con-
could detect, with
direct reference to myself,
or
human
me
and heaped a golden platter before
side her,
my appearance.
Yet
creature of that variety of the
race to which I belong that they
had ever
and was consequently regarded by them
a most curious and abnormal phenomenon.
But
all
rudeness
the youngest
is
unknown
child
is
to this people,
taught
to
despise
vehement emotional demonstration. meal was ended,
my
guide again took
hand, and, re-entering the
gallery,
When me by
and any the the
touched a
metallic plate inscribed with strange figures,
and
THE COMING RACE. which
I rightly
I
conjectured to be of the nature
of our telegraphs. this time
3
A
we mounted
platform descended, but
to a
much
greater height
than in the former building, and found ourselves
room of moderate dimensions, and which
in a its
general character had
much
in
that might be
familiar to the associations of a visitor from the
upper world.
There were shelves on the wall
containing what appeared to be books, and indeed
were
mostly very small, like our diamond
so;
duodecimos, shaped in the fashion of our volumes,
and bound in several
fine sheets of metal.
curious
-
looking
of
pieces
There were
mechanism
scattered about, apparently models, such as might
be seen in the study of any professional mechanician.
Four automata (mechanical contriv-
ances which, with these people, answer the ordin-
ary purposes of domestic service) stood phantomlike at each angle in the wall.
In a recess was
A 'window,
a low couch, or bed with pillows.
with curtains of some fibrous material drawn aside,
opened upon a large balcony.
stepped out into the balcony
We
;
I
My
host
followed him.
were on the uppermost story of one of the
THE COMING
32
angular pyramids
RACE.
the view beyond was of a
;
wild and solemn beauty impossible to describe, the vast ranges of precipitous rock which formed the distant background, the intermediate valleys of mystic many-coloured
many
waters, flame,
them
of
serene
the
herbage, the
of
streams of roseate
like
lustre
flash
over
diffused
all
by
myriads of lamps, combined to form a whole of
which no words of mine can convey adequate description
so splendid
;
was
it,
yet so sombre
;
so lovely, yet so awful.
But
my
attention was soon diverted from these
Suddenly there
nether landscapes.
arose, as
the streets below, a burst of joyous music
a winged form soared into the space in chase of the after
others,
number
till
movements
;
another, as
another and another; others
But how describe the
fan-
of these forms in their undulating !
They appeared engaged
amusement
squadrons
then
;
the crowd grew thick and the
countless.
tastic grace
sport or
first,
;
from
now
;
now forming
scattering
;
now
in
some
into opposite
each
group
threading the other, soaring, descending, inter-
weaving, severing
;
all
in
measured time
to the
THE COMING music below, as
if
RACE.
33
in the dance of the fabled
Peri.
my
turned
I
wonder.
gaze on
my
host in a feverish
ventured to place
I
my
hand on the
large wings that lay folded on his breast,
and
in doing so a slight shock as of electricity passed
through me. and, as
if
my host smiled, gratify my curiosity,
I recoiled in fear
courteously to
slowly expanded his pinions. his
I
observed that
garment beneath then became dilated as a
bladder that slide
he
;
fills
with
into the wings,
had
launched
air.
The arms seemed
to
and in another moment
himself into
atmosphere, and hovered there,
the
luminous
still,
and with
outspread wings, as an eagle that basks in the sun.
Then, rapidly as an eagle swoops, he rushed
downwards
into the midst of one of the groups,
skimming through the midst, and again
soaring
one of which daughter,
aloft.
I
suddenly
Thereon, three forms, in
thought to recognise
my
detached themselves from the
and followed him a bird.
as
My
as
host's rest,
a bird sportively follows
eyes, dazzled
with the lights and
bewildered by the throngs, ceased to distinguish c
THE COMING RACE.
34
the gyrations and evolutions of these
playmates,
my
presently
till
The strangeness
my
operate fast on
senses
;
Though not
to wander. stitious,
of all I
re-emerged
host
from the crowd and alighted at
my
winged
side.
had seen began now to
my mind
itself
began
inclined to be super-
nor hitherto believing that
man
could be
brought into bodily communication with demons, I
felt
the terror and the wild excitement with
Gothic ages, a traveller might
which, in the
have persuaded himself that he witnessed sabbat of fiends and witches.
a
have a vague
I
having attempted with vehement
recollection of
and forms of exorcism, and loud
gesticulation,
incoherent words, to repel
my
courteous
and
indulgent host
;
of his mild endeavours to calm
and soothe me
;
of his intelligent conjecture that
my
fright
and bewilderment were occasioned by
the difference of form and
movement between us
which the wings that had excited curiosity had, in exercise,
perceptible
had sought
;
made
my
still
marvelling
more strongly
of the gentle smile with which he to dispel
my
alarm by dropping the
wings to the ground and endeavouring to show
THE COMING RACE.
me
35
that they were but a mechanical contrivance.
That sudden transformation did but increase horror,
and as extreme
by extreme wild beast.
On an
instant I
became wholly
was
electric shock,
images floating
before
insensible,
host kneeling beside forehead,
shows
itself
daring, I sprang at his throat like a
ground as by an fused
fright often
my
me
felled to the
and the
my
last con-
sight
ere
were the form of
with one hand on
and the beautiful calm
face of
I
my my his
daughter, with large, deep, inscrutable eyes intently fixed
upon
my
own.
36
CHAPTER I
remained
in tins unconscious state, as I after-
wards learned,
many
for
weeks, according to our
When
I
host and
recovered all
me, and to accosted
VI.
his
my
me
in
was
I
days, even
in a strange
amaze
my own
some
computation of time. room,
my
gathered round
family were
utter
for
my
host's
daughter
language with but a
slightly foreign accent.
How
" It
do you
1
feel
" she asked
was some moments before
I
could overcome
my surprise enough to falter out, "You know my language How Who and what are you " My host smiled and motioned to one of his ?
sons,
thin
who
1
?
then took from a table a number of
metallic
sheets
on
drawings of various figures bird, a
man, &c.
which
—a
were
traced
house, a tree,
a
THE COMING RACE. In these designs
and
me
of
it
my
in
my own
recognised
Under each
drawing.
name
I
figure
style of
was written the
my
language, and in
in another handwriting a
beneath
37
writing
word strange
to
it.
Said the host,
"
who
daughter Zee,
Thus we began belongs to
;
and
my
the College of
Sages, has been your instructress and ours too."
Zee then placed before
on which, in
sheets,
my
and then sentences, were
me
other
Rallying
another hand.
words
writing,
my
first,
Under each
inscribed.
word and each sentence strange
metallic
characters in
senses,
I
compre-
hended that thus a rude dictionary had been effected.
ing of
%
"
Had That
command.
it
is
"
been done while
I
was dream-
enough now," said Zee, in a tone Repose and take food."
38
CHAPTER A room edifice.
to myself It
was
VII.
was assigned prettily
to
and
me
in this vast
fantastically
ar-
ranged, but without any of the splendour of metal-
work
or
gems which was displayed
more
in the
public apartments.
The walls were hung with a
variegated matting
made from the
fibres of plants,
and the
stalks
floor carpeted
and
with the
same.
The bed was without
curtains, its supports of
iron resting on balls of crystal
;
the coverings, of
There
a thin white substance resembling cotton.
were sundry shelves containing books.
A
tained recess communicated with an aviary
with singing-birds, of which one resembling those
I
I
curfilled
did not recognise
have seen on earth, except
a beautiful species of dove, though this was distinguished from our doves by a
tall crest
of bluish
THE COMING RACE.
39
All these birds had been trained to sing
plumes.
and greatly exceeded the
in artful tunes,
skill of
our piping bullfinches, which can rarely achieve
more than two
tunes,
sing
I believe,
One might have supposed
those in concert.
one's
an opera in listening to the voices in
self at
There were duets and
aviary. tettes
and cannot,
and choruses,
Did
music.
I
all
want
trios,
my
and quar-
arranged as in one piece of
to silence the birds
\
I
had
but to draw a curtain over the aviary, and their
song hushed as they found themselves
left in
the
Another opening formed a window, not
dark.
glazed, but on touching a spring, a shutter as-
cended from the less
floor,
formed of some substance
transparent than glass, but
pellucid
to allow a softened
still
sufficiently
view of the scene
window was attached
without.
To
cony, or
rather hanging- garden, wherein grew
many
this
graceful plants
apartment and
its
and
brilliant flowers.
The
appurtenances had thus a
character, if strange in detail,
whole, to
a bal-
still
familiar, as a
modern notions of luxury, and would
have excited admiration
if
found attached to the
apartments of an English duchess or a fashionable
THE COMING RACE.
40
French author.
chamber;
Before
arrived this
I
was
had hospitably assigned
she
Zee's it
to
is
de-
me.
Some hours scribed in
my
my
after the
last chapter, I
couch trying to
fix
I
thoughts on conjec-
was thrown, when
my
daughter Zee entered the room.
his still
speaking
much to
whom
my
was lying alone on
and genus of the people
ture as to the nature
amongst
waking up which
my
politeness,
me
My
host,
native language, inquired, with
whether
it
would be agreeable
to converse, or if I preferred solitude.
obliged
by the opportunity
I
much honoured and
replied, that I should feel
my
host and
offered
me
to express
gratitude for the hospitality and civilities I
had received in a country stranger,
and
to learn
which
to
enough of
its
I
was a
customs and
manners not to offend through ignorance.
As couch
I spoke, I ;
ordered
but Zee,
me
had of course
much
to lie
to
down
my
risen
from
my
confusion, curtly
again,
and there was
something in her voice and eye, gentle as both were, that compelled
my
obedience.
She then
seated herself unconcernedly at the foot of
my
THE COMING RACE.
41
bed, while her father took his place on a divan a few feet distant. "
But what part of the world do you come
my
from," asked
so strange to you,
host, " that
and you
we
to us
individual specimens of nearly
all
should appear %
I
have seen
the races differ-
ing from our own, except the primeval savages
who
dwell in the most desolate and remote re-
cesses of uncultivated nature,
unacquainted with
other light than that they obtain from volcanic fires,
and contented
many
dark, as do
member
way
creeping, crawling,
But
flying things.
to grope their
certainly
in the
and even
you cannot be a
of those barbarous tribes, nor,
on the
other hand, do you seem to belong to any civilised people." I
was somewhat nettled
and replied that
I
at this last observation,
had the honour
to belong to
one of the most civilised nations of the earth
and
that, so far as light
was concerned, while
I
admired the ingenuity and disregard of expense with which
my
host
and
his fellow-citizens
had
contrived to illumine the regions unpenetrated
by the rays
of the sun, yet I could not conceive
THE COMING RACE.
42
how any who had once
beheld the orbs of heaven
could compare to their lustre the
artificial lights
invented by the necessities of man.
my
But
host said he had seen specimens of most of the races differing from his own, save the wretched
Now, was
barbarians he had mentioned.
pos-
it
he had never been on the surface of
sible that
the earth, or could he only be referring to com-
munities buried within
My
host
was
for
its entrails
\
some moments
silent
;
his
countenance showed a degree of surprise which the people of that race very rarely manifest under
any
circumstances,
But Zee was more you
see,
tradition
tion
my ;
howsoever
intelligent,
extraordinary.
and exclaimed, " So
father, that there is truth in the old
there always
commonly
is
believed in
truth in every tradiall
times and by
all
tribes."
" Zee," said
my
host, mildly, "
you belong
to
the College of Sages, and ought to be wiser than I
am
;
but, as chief of the Light-preserving
cil, it is
it is
my
duty to take nothing
proved to the evidence of
Then, turning to me, he asked
Coun-
for granted
my own me
till
senses."
several ques-
THE COMING RACE.
43
tions about the surface of the earth
venly bodies; upon which, though
him
seemed not to head
his
my
to the best of
knowledge,
and the heaI
answered
my
He
satisfy nor convince him.
how
he was pleased to
shook
changing the subject rather
quietly, and,
abruptly, asked
answers
I
call
had come down from what one world to the other.
I
answered, that under the surface of the earth there were mines containing minerals, or metals, essential to our
and industries
manner
;
wants and our progress in
and
I
then briefly explained the
in which, while exploring one of these
my
mines, I and
ill-fated friend
had obtained a
glimpse of the regions into which scended, and life
;
all arts
how
we had
de-
him
his
the descent had cost
appealing to the rope and grappling-hooks
that the
which
I
child
had brought
had been
house in
the
at first received, as a witness
of the truthfulness of
My
to
my
story.
host then proceeded to question
the habits and modes of
life
among
the upper earth, more especially sidered to be the tion which he
as to
the races on
among
those con-
most advanced in that
was pleased
me
civilisa-
to define " the art of
THE COMING RACE.
44
diffusing throughout a
community the
tranquil
happiness which belongs to a virtuous and well-
Naturally desiring to repre-
ordered household."
sent in the most favourable colours the world
from which
I
indulgently,
came,
on
I
touched but
the
slightly,
antiquated
though
and decaying
institutions of Europe, in order to expatiate on the
present grandeur and prospective pre-eminence of that glorious American Republic, in which Europe
enviously seeks sees its
its
model and tremblingly
fore-
Selecting for an example of the
doom.
social life of the
United States that city in which
progress advances at the fastest rate, I indulged in an animated description of the moral habits of
New
York.
Mortified to see,
listeners, that I
pression I
had
did not
make
by the
faces of
my
the favourable im-
anticipated, I elevated
my
theme
dwelling on the excellence of democratic institutions, their
promotion of tranquil happiness by
the government of party, and the
mode
in
which
they diffused such happiness throughout the com-
munity by
preferring, for the exercise of
and the acquisition of honours, the
power
lowliest citi-
zens in point of property, education, and charac-
THE COMING RACE. ter.
45
Fortunately recollecting the peroration of
a speech, on the purifying influences of American
democracy and world,
their destined
made by
spread over the
a certain eloquent senator (for
whose vote in the Senate a Railway Company, to
which
my two
brothers belonged, had just paid
20,000 dollars),
I
wound up by
repeating
its
glowing predictions of the magnificent future that smiled
upon mankind
freedom should
float
— when
the flag of
over an entire continent,
and two hundred millions of
intelligent citizens,
accustomed from infancy to the daily use of should apply to a cowering universe
revolvers,
the doctrine of the Patriot Monroe.
When
I
had concluded,
his head,
and
a sign to
me and
fell
while he reflected.
into a
my
host gently shook
musing study, making
his daughter to
And
after a
remain
time he
silent
said, in
a very earnest and solemn tone, "If you think, as
you
say, that
you, though a stranger, have
received kindness at the hands of I adjure
you
me and
to reveal nothing to
mine,
any other of
our people respecting the world from which you
came, unless, on consideration,
I
give you per-
THE COMING RACE.
46 mission to request "
do
on
Of course
to
this
I
my word
pledge
to
it,"
said
I,
my right hand grasp his. But he placed my hand gently his forehead and his own right hand on my
breast,
in
consent
%
somewhat amazed to
Do you
so.
which
is
;
and
I
extended
the custom amongst this race
matters of promise or verbal obligations.
all
Then turning
to his
daughter, he said, "
And
you, Zee, will not repeat to any one what the stranger has said, or
may
say, to
of a world other than our own."
me
or to you,
Zee rose and
kissed her father on the temples, saying, with
a smile, "
A
Gy's tongue
can fetter
it
fast.
lest a
And
chance word from
is
if,
wanton, but love
my
me
father,
you
fear
or yourself could
expose our community to danger, by a desire to explore a world beyond us, will not a vril,
of
wave
properly impelled, wash even the
of the
memory
what we have heard the stranger say out
the tablets of the brain "
What
is vril ?
of
\
" I asked.
Therewith Zee began to enter into an explanation of
which
I
understood very
little,
for there is
THE COMING RACE. no word in any language
synonym
exact city,
for vril.
except that
it
I
I
47
know which
should
is
an
call it electri-
comprehends in
its
manifold
branches other forces of nature, to which, in our nomenclature, differing names are as-
scientific
These
signed, such as magnetism, galvanism, &c.
people consider that in vril they have arrived at the unity in natural energic agencies, which has
many
been conjectured by
above
philosophers
ground, and which Faraday thus intimates under the more cautious term of correlation
:
" I have long held an opinion," says that trious experimentalist, " almost
conviction, in
lovers
common,
of natural
I believe,
illus-
amounting with
many
to a
other
knowledge, that the various
forms under which the forces of
made manifest have one common
matter are
origin
;
or,
in
other words, are so directly related and mutually
dependent, that they are convertible, as into one another,
it
were,
and possess equivalents of power
in their action."
These subterranean philosophers assert that by one operation of
haps
call
'
vril,
which Faraday would per-
atmospheric magnetism/ they can influ-
THE COMING RACE.
48
— in
ence the variations of temperature
words, the weather
that
;
by other
plain
operations,
akin to those ascribed to mesmerism, electro-biology,
odic force,
through
&c, but applied
vril conductors,
scientifically
they can exercise
influ-
ence over minds, and bodies animal and vegetable, to
an extent not surpassed in the romances
To
of our mystics.
the
common name
my
world,
of the
known in
it
all
such agencies they give
Zee asked
of vril.
was not known that
mind could be quickened in the
waking
state,
all
me
if,
in
the faculties
to a degree un-
by trance
or vision,
which the thoughts of one brain could be
transmitted to another, and knowledge be thus rapidly interchanged.
amongst us
and that of
the
I
I replied,
stories told of
that there were
such trance or vision,
had heard much and seen something
mode
effected, as in
these practices
in
which they were
mesmeric clairvoyance
had
fallen
much
artificially ;
but that
into disuse or
contempt, partly because of the gross impostures to
which they had been made subservient, and
partly because, even where the effects upon certain abnormal constitutions were genuinely pro-
THE COMING RACE. duced, the
effects,
when
49
examined and
fairly
analysed, were very unsatisfactory
upon
relied
any
for
— not
to be
any systematic truthfulness or
practical purpose,
and rendered very mis-
chievous to credulous persons by the superstitions
they tended to produce. swers with
my
Zee received
much benignant
attention,
an-
and said
that similar instances of abuse and credulity had
been familiar to their own
scientific
experience in
and while the
the infancy of their knowledge,
properties of vril were misapprehended, but that
she reserved further discussion on this subject till I
was more
fitted to enter into
tented herself with adding, that the agency of
vril,
while
I
it
She con-
it.
was through
had been placed
the state of trance, that I had been
made
in
ac-
quainted with the rudiments of their language;
and that she and her
father,
family, took the pains to
who, alone of the
watch the experiment,
had acquired a greater proportionate knowledge of
my
language than
because theirs,
my
I
of their
language was
comprising far
less of
much
own
simpler
complex ideas
partly because their organisation was,
D
partly
;
by
than ;
and
heredit-
THE COMING RACE.
50
ary culture,
much more
ductile
and more readily
capable of acquiring knowledge than mine. this I secretly
demurred
course of a practical
my
to
sharpen
travel, I could
in the
my
wits,
not allow
cerebral organisation could possibly be
duller than that of people lives
and having had,
life,
whether at home or in that
;
At
by lamplight.
who had
lived
However, while
I
all their
was thus
thinking, Zee quietly pointed her forefinger at
my
forehead and sent
me
to sleep.
5i
CHAPTER When
once more awoke
I
who had brought
the child
VIII. saw by
I
received,
and which,
bedside
the rope and grap-
pling-hooks to the house in which first
my I
had been
as I afterwards learned,
was the residence of the chief magistrate of the
The
tribe.
nounced son. I
I
child,
Tar-ee),
whose name was Tae
was
the
found that during
had made
still
of the country, tive ease
and
magistrate's
my
(pro-
eldest
last sleep or trance
greater advance in the language
and could converse with compara-
fluency.
This child was singularly handsome, even for the beautiful race to which he belonged, with a
countenance very manly in aspect for his years,
and with a more vivacious and energetic expression than
I
had hitherto seen
passionless faces of the men.
in the serene
He
brought
and
me
THE COMING RACE.
52
the tablet on which I had descent,
and had
rible reptile that
also sketched the
Tae put
my
head of the hor-
had scared me from
me
to
my
friend's
a few questions respecting the
and form of the monster, and the cave or
chasm from which in
of
Pointing to that part of the drawing,
corpse.
size
drawn the mode
my
it
had emerged.
His interest
answers seemed so grave as to divert him
from any curiosity as to myself or
for a while
But
antecedents.
how
seeing
I
to
great embarrassment,
was pledged
just beginning to ask
when Zee
my
my
to
my
me where
host,
he was
came from,
I
fortunately entered, and, overhearing
him, said, " Tae, give to our guest any informa-
may
tion he
desire,
but ask none from him in
To question him who he
return.
comes, or wherefore he of the law which
my
is
here,
whence he
is,
would be a breach
down
father has laid
for
this house."
" So be
heart
which
;
it,"
said Tae, pressing his
and from that moment, I
saw him
last, this
till
child,
hand
the one in
whom I to me any
with
became very intimate, never once put of the questions thus interdicted.
to his
53
CHAPTER It
was not
trances, if
some time, and
for
they are so to be
became better prepared
my
entertainers,
differences of
strange to reason, that
until,
by repeated
called,
my mind
to interchange ideas with
and more
fully to
comprehend
manners and customs, at
my I
IX.
first
too
by
my
experience to be seized
was enabled
to gather the follow-
ing details respecting the origin and history of this subterranean population,
as portion of one
great family race called the Ana.
According to the
earliest traditions, the
remote
progenitors of the race had once tenanted a world
above the surface of that in which their descendants dwelt.
Myths
of that world were
still
pre-
served in their archives, and in those myths were
legends of a vaulted
were lighted by no
dome
in
human
which the lamps hand.
But such
THE COMING RACE.
54
legends were considered by most commentators
According to these
as allegorical fables. tions the earth
itself,
traditions ascend,
at the date to
was not indeed
tradi-
which the
in its infancy,
but in the throes and travail of transition from
oue form of development to another, and subject to
one
many
violent revolutions of nature.
of such
revolutions,
that
portion
of the
upper world inhabited by the ancestors of
had
race
been
subjected
inundations,
this
not
and uncontrollable, in which
rapid, but gradual all,
to
By
save a scanty remnant, were submerged and
Whether
perished. torical
this be a record of our his-
and sacred Deluge, or of some
contended for by geologists, conjecture
;
I
earlier
one
do not pretend to
though, according to the chronology
of this people as
compared with that of Newton,
it
must have been many thousands of years before
On
the time of Noah.
the other hand, the account
of these writers does not harmonise with the opinions most in vogue
inasmuch as race
it
among
geological authorities,
places the existence of a
upon earth
human
at dates long anterior to that
assigned to the terrestrial formation adapted to
THE COMING RACE.
A
the introduction of mammalia. ill-fated race,
55
band
of the
thus invaded by the Flood, had,
during the march of the waters, taken refuge in caverns amidst the loftier rocks, and, wandering
through these hollows, they
upper world for
ever.
sight of the
lost
Indeed, the whole face of
the earth had been changed by this great revulsion
land had been turned into sea
;
into
In the bowels of the inner earth even
land.
now,
—sea
I
was informed
as a positive fact,
discovered the remains of
human
might be
habitation
habitation not in huts and caverns, but in vast
whose ruins
cities
attest the civilisation of races
which flourished before the age of Noah, and are not to be classified with those genera to which philosophy ascribes the use of
flint
and the igno-
rance of iron.
The ledge
fugitives
of
oround
—
earliest
the
had
carried with
arts
they had
arts of culture
and
them the knowpractised
above
civilisation.
Their
want must have been that
below the earth the light they had
and
of supplying lost
above
it
at no time, even in the traditional period, do
the races, of which the one
I
now
sojourned with
THE COMING
56
formed a
tribe,
RACE.
seem to have been unacquainted
with the art of extracting light from gases, or
They had been
manganese, or petroleum.
tomed
in their
former state to contend with the
rude forces of nature battle
and indeed the lengthened
;
they had fought
with their conqueror
Ocean, which had taken centuries in
had quickened
its
spread,
their skill in curbing waters into
To
dikes and channels.
preservation
accus-
in their
generations," said
my
this skill
they owed their
"For many
new
abode.
host,
with a sort of con-
tempt and horror, "these primitive forefathers are said to have degraded their rank
ened their lives by eating the
many
varieties
and
short-
flesh of animals,
of which had, like
themselves,
escaped the Deluge, and sought shelter in the hollows of the earth
be
unknown
;
other animals, supposed to
to the upper world, those hollows
themselves produced."
When what we
should term the historical age
emerged from the twilight of
tradition, the
Ana
were already established in different communities,
and had attained
to a degree of civilisation
very analogous to that which the more advanced
THE COMING RACE.
now
nations above the earth
57
They were
enjoy.
most of our mechanical inventions,
familiar with
including the application of steam as well as gas.
The communities were
in fierce competition
They had
each other.
their rich
and their poor
they had orators and conquerors
war
either for a
various
states
domain
with
;
;
they made
Though the
or an idea.
acknowledged various forms of
government, free institutions were beginning to preponderate
power
;
mocracy
;
popular assemblies increased in
republics soon to
became general
among
de-
which the most enlightened European
politicians look forward as the political
the
;
extreme goal of
advancement, and which other
subterranean
still
races,
prevailed
whom
they
despised as barbarians, the loftier family of Ana, to
which belonged
the
tribe
was
I
visiting,
looked back to as one of the crude and ignorant experiments which belong to of political science.
It
the
infancy
was the age of envy and
hate, of fierce passions, of constant social changes
more
or less violent, of strife
war between
state
and
between
state.
society lasted, however, for
some
classes, of
This phase of ages,
and was
THE COMING RACE.
58
finally
brought to a
close, at least
among the nobler
and more intellectual populations, by the gradual discovery of the latent powers stored in the
permeating
which they denominate
fluid
According to the account
I received
all-
Vril.
from Zee,
who, as an erudite professor in the College of
had studied such matters more diligently
Sages,
than any other member of fluid
is
into
the
matter,
mightiest
agency over
animate or inanimate. ;
and on
it
all
It
forms of
can destroy
yet, differently applied,
can replenish or invigorate
serve,
host's family, this
capable of being raised and disciplined
like the flash of lightning it
my
life,
heal,
and pre-
they chiefly rely for the cure of
disease, or rather for enabling the physical organi-
sation to re-establish the due equilibrium of its
natural powers, and thereby to cure this solid
itself.
By
agency they rend way through the most substances,
and open valleys
for
culture
through the rocks of their subterranean wilderness.
From
it
they extract the light which sup-
plies their lamps, finding it steadier, softer,
and
healthier than the other inflammable materials
they had formerly used.
THE COMING RACE. But the
means
59
effects of the alleged discovery of
to direct the
more
the
terrible force of vril
were chiefly remarkable in their influence upon social
iarly
As
polity.
known and
tween the
Vril
these
effects
became famil-
skilfully administered, -
discoverers
ceased,
war be-
for
they
brought the art of destruction to such perfection as to annul all superiority in numbers, discipline,
or military
skill.
of a rod directed
The
fire
lodged in the hollow
by the hand
of a child could
shatter the strongest fortress, or cleave its burn-
ing
way from
host.
If
the van to the rear of an embattled
army met army, and both had command
of this agency,
it
could be but to the annihilation
The age of war was
of each.
therefore gone, but
with the cessation of war other
upon
the
social
Man was so each whom willing,
to
state
effects
soon became
bearing
apparent.
completely at the mercy of man,
he encountered being slay
him on the
able,
if
instant, that
so all
notions of government by force gradually vanished from political systems and forms of law. It is
only by force that vast communities, dis-
persed through great distances of space, can be
THE COMING RACE.
60
kept together
;
but
now
was no longer
there
either the necessity of self-preservation or
pride of aggrandisement to
make one
the
state desire
to preponderate in population over another.
The
Vril-discoverers thus, in the course of a
few generations, peacefully of moderate
had
fallen
The
size.
was limited
split into
communities
amongst which
tribe
to 12,000 families.
occupied a territory sufficient for
tribe
I
Each all
its
wants, and at stated periods the surplus popula-
There
tion departed to seek a realm of its own.
appeared no necessity for any arbitrary selection of these emigrants
;
number who volunteered These subdivided either to
was always a
there
to depart.
petty
states,
territory or population,
—
slightly differ.
tained the
and
though
language,
if
all
we
regard
appertained
They spoke the
one vast general family.
same
sufficient
the
might
dialects
They intermarried
;
they main-
same general laws and customs
so important a
bond between these
communities was the knowledge of practice of its agencies, that the
synonymous with
civilisation
;
vril
several
and the
word A- Vril was
and
Vril-ya, signi-
THE COMING RACE.
"The
fying
was the common
Civilised Nations,"
name by which
6
the communities employing the
uses of vril distinguished themselves from such of the
Ana
as
were yet in a state of barbarism.
The government of the
tribe of Vril-ya I
am
treating of was apparently very complicated, really
very simple.
It
was based upon a
cognised in theory, though practice, all
above ground
—
little
viz.,
principle re-
carried out in
that the object of
systems of philosophical thought tends to the
attainment of unity, or the ascent through
all in-
tervening labyrinths to the simplicity of a single first
cause or principle.
Thus
in politics, even
republican writers have agreed that a benevolent
autocracy would insure the best administration,
if
there were
any guarantees
against
gradual abuse of the powers accorded
to
it.
its
for its continuance, or
This singular community elected therefore
a single supreme magistrate styled Tur his office nominally for
be induced to retain old age.
he held
but he could seldom
after the first
approach of
There was indeed in this society nothing
to induce
of office.
it
life,
;
any of
No
its
members
to covet the cares
honours, no insignia of higher rank,
THE COMING RACE.
62
were assigned to
The supreme magistrate
it.
was not distinguished from the
On
habitation or revenue. duties
and
rest
by superior
the other hand, the
awarded to him were marvellously
easy, requiring
light
no preponderant degree of There being no appre-
energy or intelligence.
hensions of war, there were no armies to maintain
;
being no government of
no police to appoint and
What we
direct.
unknown
crime was utterly
to the Vril-ya
;
instances
disputes
of civil
decided
will
by the
be described
fessional lawyers
;
and
were referred
chosen by either party,
for arbitration to friends
or
call
The
there were no courts of criminal justice. rare
was
force, there
Council
of
Sages,
which
There were no pro-
later.
and indeed
their laws
were
but amicable conventions, for there was no power to enforce laws against
in
his staff the
power
an offender who carried to
destroy his judges.
There were customs and regulations to compliance with which, for several ages, the people
had
tacitly habituated themselves
;
or
if in
any
instance an individual felt such compliance hard,
he quitted the community and went elsewhere.
THE COMING RACE. There was, in state,
much
fact,
63
quietly established
the same compact that
we
our private families, in which
amid
this
found in
is
virtually say to
any independent grown-up member of the family
whom we
receive
entertain, " Stay or go,
and
according as our habits and regulations suit or
But though there were no laws
displease you."
such as
we
call laws,
law-observing.
no race above ground
as if
it
guidance, which
much an
is
it
instinct
makes a regulation
They have a proverb, the
to the family.
pithiness of which
in this paraphrase,
lost
for
never resisted nor even
by those who belong
cavilled at
much
as
were implanted by nature. Even in every
household the head of its
so
Obedience to the rule adopted by
community has become
the
is
"
No
is
happiness
without order, no order without authority, no
The mildness
authority without unity."
government
may
among them,
civil
or
domestic,
be signalised by their idiomatic expressions
for such terms as illegal or forbidden is
of all
requested not to do
among
the
property
is
Ana
is
as
—
so-and-so."
unknown
as crime
held in common, or that
all
viz., " It
Poverty ;
not that
are equals
THE COMING RACE.
64
and
in the extent of their possessions or the size
luxury of their habitations
:
but there being no
rank or position between the grades
difference of
of wealth or the choice of occupations, each pur-
own
sues his or vying
;
some
splendid kind of in his
own way.
petition, it
envy
inclinations without creating
life
;
some a more
a modest,
like
each makes himself happy
Owing
to this absence of
com-
and the limit placed on the population, for a family to fall into distress
is difficult
there are no hazardous speculations, no emulators striving for superior wealth
each settlement
in
proportions
some,
all
and rank.
more adventurous than
doubt,
had the same
originally
land dealt out to
of
No them
others,
but
;
had ex-
tended their possessions farther into the bordering wilds, or had improved into richer fertility the
produce
commerce or
of
their
fields,
Thus,
trade.
had grown richer than
become absolutely which it
their
was always
the
tastes
poor,
necessarily,
or
power
into
some
but none had
others,
desired.
in their
entered
or
wanting anything If
they did
so,
to migrate, or at
worst to apply, without shame and with
THE COMING RACE. certainty of aid, to the rich bers of the
65
mem-
for all the
;
community considered themselves
as
brothers of one affectionate and united family.
More upon tally as
The to
my
this
head
will be treated of inciden-
narrative proceeds.
chief care of the
supreme magistrate was
communicate with certain active departments
charged with the administration of special details.
The most important and
details
was that connected with the due provision
of light.
was the
Of chief.
this
department
essential of such
my
host,
Aph-Lin,
Another department, which might
be called the foreign, communicated with the
neighbouring kindred
states, principally for the
purpose of ascertaining
all
new
inventions
;
and
such inventions and
to a third department, all
improvements in machinery were committed Connected with
trial.
College of Sages
such of the
—a
Ana
this
department was the
college especially favoured
as were
for
widowed and
by
childless,
and by the young unmarried females, amongst
whom call
Zee was the most active, and,
renown
or distinction
if
what we
was a thing acknow-
ledged by this people (which
I
shall later
show
THE COMING RACE.
66
among
not),
it is
guished.
It is
the most renowned or distin-
by the female Professors of
this
f'olWe that those studies which are deemed of least use in practical life
—
as purely speculative
philosophy, the history of remote periods, and
such sciences as entomology, conchology, &c. the more diligently cultivated.
Zee,
—
are
whose mind,
active as Aristotle's, equally embraced the largest
domains and the minutest
details of thought,
had
written two volumes on the parasite insect that dwells
amid the
hairs of a tiger's"' paw,
work was considered the
best authority on that
But the researches
interesting subject.
which
of the
sages are not confined to such subtle or elegant
They comprise various
studies.
and
portant,
others
more im-
especially the properties of vril, to
* The animal here referred to has many points of difference from the tiger of the upper world. paw, and
and
still
pools,
more receding
It is larger,
frontal.
and feeds principally on
It
and with a broader
haunts the sides of lakes
fishes,
though
any
terrestrial
way.
It is
becoming very scarce even in the wild
it is
it
does not ob-
animal of inferior strength that comes in
ject to
devoured by gigantic
reptiles.
I
districts,
apprehend that
it
its
where clearly
belongs to the tiger species, since the parasite animalcule found in
its
paw, like that found in the Asiatic
image of
itself.
tiger's, is a
miniature
THE COMING RACE.
6j
the perception of which their finer nervous organisation renders the female Professors eminently
keen.
It is
out of this college that the Tur, or
chief magistrate, selects Councillors, limited to
which novelty of
three, in the rare instances in
event or circumstance perplexes his
own judgment.
There are a few other departments of minor consequence, but
all
are carried
on so noiselessly
and quietly that the evidence of a government seems to vanish altogether, and be as regular and unobtrusive as of nature.
Machinery
is
social order to
were a law
if it
employed
to an incon-
ceivable extent in all the operations of labour
within and without doors, and
it is
the unceasing-
object of the department charged with istration to extend its efficiency.
of labourers or servants, but all to assist or control the
its
There
who
is
admin-
no
class
are required
machinery are found in
the children, from the time they leave the care of their mothers to the marriageable
ao;e,
which
they place at sixteen for the Gy-ei (the females),
twenty
for the
Ana
(the males).
are formed into bands
own
chiefs,
and
These children
sections
under their
each following the pursuits in which
THE COMING
68
he
is
most
most pleased, or
agriculture,
some
is
some
to handicrafts,
within
and some
danger to which the popu-
the
from those occasional convulearth,
and guard
foresee
to
against which tasks their utmost ingenuity
ruptions of
fire
peril
—
ir-
and water, the storms of subter-
ranean winds and escaping gases. of the
to
exposed; for the sole perils that threaten
this tribe are, first,
sions
himself
feels
to household work,
to the only services of
lation
which he
for
Some take
fitted.
RACE.
domain, and at
At
the borders
places where
all
such
might be apprehended, vigilant inspectors
are stationed with telegraphic
communication to
the hall in which chosen sages take to hold perpetual sittings.
by turns
it
These inspectors are
always selected from the elder boys approaching the age of puberty, and on the principle that at that age observation sical forces
more
is
alert
more acute and the phy-
second service of danger,
less grave, is in
struction of all creatures hostile to the culture,
or even the
these the of
The
than at any other.
the de-
life,
or the
comfort, of the Ana.
most formidable are the vast
some of which antediluvian
relics are
Of
reptiles,
preserved
THE COMING RACE. in
69
our museums, and certain gigantic winged
creatures, half bird, half reptile.
with
wild animals, corresponding to our
lesser
tigers
or
These, together
venomous
serpents,
it
left
is
younger children to hunt and destroy
;
according to the Ana, here ruthlessness
is
and the younger a will destroy.
child the
There
is
to
the
because,
wanted,
more ruthlessly he
another class of animals
in the destruction of which discrimination
is
to
be used, and against which children of intermediate age are appointed
threaten the
life
of
— animals
that do not
man, but ravage the produce
of his labour, varieties of the elk and deer species,
and a smaller creature much akin though
infinitely
more
destructive
and much more cunning in tion.
to our rabbit,
its
mode
to
of depreda-
It is the first object of these
infants, to
tame the more
crops,
appointed
intelligent of such ani-
mals into respect for enclosures signalised by conspicuous landmarks, as dogs
are
taught to
respect a larder, or even to guard the master's
property.
It is only
found untamable to destroyed.
Life
is
where such creatures are this extent that they are
never taken away for food
THE COMING RACE.
70 or
for sport,
and never spared where untam-
ably inimical to the Ana. these
bodily
services
and
Concomitantly with tasks,
education of the children goes on ceases.
mental
the till
boyhood
It is the general custom, then, to pass
through a course of instruction at the College of Sages, in which, besides
more general
studies, the
pupil receives special lessons in such vocation or direction of intellect as he himself selects.
Some,
however, prefer to pass this period of probation in travel, or to emigrate, or to settle
down
once into rural or commercial pursuits.
No
is
put upon individual inclination.
at
force
/I
CHAPTER
X.
The word Ana (pronounced broadly Arna) responds with our plural
Am),
;
An
is
Gy
(pronounced hard, as in Guy)
itself into
becomes
soft
(pronounced
The word
the singular, with man.
woman forms
men
cor-
for ;
Gy-ei for the plural, but the
in the plural, like Jy-ei.
have a proverb to the
it
G
They
effect that this difference
in pronunciation is symbolical, for that the female
sex
is soft
in the concrete, but hard to deal with
in the individual.
enjoyment of males,
for
all
The Gy-ei the rights
which certain
are in the fullest
of equality
philosophers
with above
ground contend. In childhood they perform the
offices of
work
and labour impartially with the boys; and, deed,
in
the
earlier
age
in-
appropriated to the
destruction of animals irreclaimably hostile, the
THE COMING RACE.
72
girls are frequently preferred,
stitution
more
ruthless
as being
by con-
under the influence of
In the interval between infancy
fear or hate.
and the marriageable age familiar intercourse between the sexes riageable age
it
consequences
than
marriage. the one
All
sex
is
arts
are
At the mar-
suspended.
is
renewed, never with worse
which
those
attend
and vocations
upon
allotted
to
open to the other, and the
Gy-ei arrogate to themselves a superiority in all
those
abstruse
and
mystical
reasoning, for which they say the
by a
fitted
branches
Ana
of
are un-
duller sobriety of understanding, or
the routine of their matter-of-fact occupations, just as
young
ladies in our
own world
constitute
themselves authorities in the subtlest points of theological doctrine, for which
few men, actively
engaged in worldly business, have ing or refinement of intellect. to early training in gymnastic their
sufficient learn-
Whether owing exercises or to
constitutional organisation, the Gy-ei are
usually superior to the
Ana
in physical strength
(an important element in the consideration
maintenance of female
rights).
They
and
attain to
THE COMING RACE. stature,
loftier
portions
and amid
pro-
embedded sinews and muscles
are
that,
rounder
their
hardy as those of the other assert
73
as
Indeed they
sex.
according to the original laws of
nature, females were intended to be larger than
and maintain
males,
this
the earliest formations of
dogma by life
reference to
in insects,
and
the most ancient family of the vertebrata fishes
viz.,
— in both of which the females are generally
large if
—
in
enough to make a meal of
Above
they so desire.
readier
all,
their consorts
the Gy-ei have a
and more concentred power over that
mysterious fluid or agency which contains the
element of destruction, with a larger portion of that sagacity which comprehends
Thus
tion.
selves
they can not only defend them-
against
all
but could, at any
aggressions from
moment when he
To the
the males,
least suspected
his danger, terminate the existence of
ing spouse.
dissimula-
an offendno
credit of the Gy-ei
in-
stance of their abuse of this awful superiority in
the art of destruction
The
is
on record
last that occurred in the
for several ages.
community
I
speak
of appears (according to their chronology) to have
THE COMING RACE.
74
A
been about two thousand years ago. in a
fit
of jealousy, slew her
husband
;
Gy, then,
and
this
abominable act inspired such terror among the males that they emigrated in a body and
The history runs that
the Gy-ei to themselves. the
widowed
Gy-ei, thus reduced to despair,
upon the murderess when fore
left all
fell
in her sleep (and there-
unarmed), and killed her, and then entered
into a solemn obligation
amongst themselves
to
abrogate for ever the exercise of their extreme conjugal powers, and to inculcate the same obligation for ever and ever on their female children.
By
this
conciliatory process, a
consorts succeeded in
spatched to the fugitive
persuading
many to
deputation de-
return, but those
re-
The younger,
turn were mostly the elder ones. either
who did
from too craven a doubt of their consorts,
or too high an estimate of their
rejected
all
own
overtures, and, remaining
merits,
in
other
communities, were caught up there by other mates, with off.
whom
But the
perhaps they were no better
loss of so
large a portion of the
male youth operated as a salutary warning on the Gy-ei, and confirmed
them
in the pious re-
THE COMING RACE. solution to
Indeed
75
which they had pledged themselves. popularly considered that, by
now
it is
long hereditary disuse, the Gy-ei have
both
lost
the aggressive and the defensive superiority over
Ana which
the
they once possessed, just as in
the inferior animals above the earth
by nature or
their
in
liarities
many
formation,
original
for their protection,
pecu-
intended
gradually fade
become inoperative when not needed under
altered circumstances. ever, for
any
An who
I
should be sorry, how-
induced a
Gy
to
make
the
experiment whether he or she were the stronger. the incident I have narrated, the
From
Ana
date certain alterations in the marriage customs, tending, perhaps,
the male.
somewhat
;
at the
in
wedlock
end of each third year
male or female can divorce the other and
is free
the
advantage of
They now bind themselves
only for three years either
to the
An
to
marry
again.
At
the end of ten years
has the privilege of taking a second wife,
allowing the
first
to retire if she so please.
These
regulations are for the most part a dead letter;
divorces and
polygamy
the marriage state
are extremely rare,
now seems
singularly
and
happy
THE COMING RACE.
?6
and serene among
this astonishing people
;
—the
Gy-ei, notwithstanding their boastful superiority
being
and
strength
in physical
much curbed
intellectual
into gentle
abilities,
manners by the
dread of separation or of a second wife, and the
Ana
being very
much
and
not, except
under great aggravation, liking
to
the creatures of custom,
exchange for hazardous novelties faces and
manners to which they are reconciled by
But there
is
one privilege the Gy-ei carefully
which perhaps forms the
retain,
and the desire
secret
motive of most lady asserters of
for
They claim the
rights above ground.
here usurped
and urging
habit.
by men,
their suit
woman
privilege,
of proclaiming their love ;
in other words, of being
the wooing party rather than the
w ooed. T
Such
a phenomenon as an old maid does not exist
among
the Gy-ei.
Indeed
it is
very seldom that
Gy does
not secure any
An upon whom
her heart,
if his affections
be not strongly engaged
a
elsewhere.
However
the male she courts
coy, reluctant,
may
prove at
she sets
and prudish, first,
yet her
perseverance, her ardour, her persuasive powers,
her
command
over the mystic agencies of
vril,
are
THE COMING RACE. pretty sure to run call
"the
down
fatal noose."
his
JJ
neck into what we
Their argument for the
reversal of that relationship of the sexes
the blind tyranny of
man
which
has established on the
surface of the earth, appears cogent,
and
is
ad-
vanced with a frankness which might well be
commended
to
say, that of the
impartial
They
consideration.
two the female
is
by nature of a
more loving disposition than the male
—that love
occupies a larger space in her thoughts, and
more fore
and that
essential to her happiness,
she ought to be
otherwise the male
is
the
there;
that
a shy and dubitant crea-
—that he has often the —that he ture
wooing party
is
a selfish predilection for
single state
often pretends to mis-
understand tender glances and delicate hints that, in short, he
captured.
must be
resolutely pursued
and
They add, moreover, that unless the
Gy can secure the An of her choice, and one whom she would not select out of the whole world becomes her mate, she
is
happy than she otherwise would
not only less be,
but she
is
not so good a being, that her qualities of heart are not sufficiently developed
;
whereas the
An
THE COMING RACE.
78 is
a creature that less lastingly concentrates his
affections
the self
on one object; that
Gy whom
worst,
if
he
he cannot get
he prefers he easily reconciles him-
another
to
if
is
Gy
;
and, finally, that
loved and taken care
the
at
of, it is less
necessary to the welfare of his existence that he
should love as well as he loved
;
he grows con-
tented with his creature comforts, and the
occupations
of
many
thought which he creates
for
himself.
Whatever may be
said as to this reasoning, the
system works well for the male sure that he
is
truly
;
for
being thus
and ardently loved, and that
the more coy and reluctant he shows himself, the
more the determination
to secure
him
increases,
he generally contrives to make his consent dependent on such conditions as he thinks the best calculated to insure, if not a blissful, at least a
peaceful
life.
hobbies, his
own ways,
whatever they full
Each individual An has
may
his
be,
own
he demands a promise of
in the pursuit of her object, the ;
and
own
predilections, and,
and unrestrained concession
mises
his
to them.
Gy
This,
readily pro-
as the characteristic of this extraordi-
THE COMING RACE. nary people
is
an implicit veneration
and her word once given
by
79 for truth,
never broken even
is
the giddiest Gy, the conditions stipulated for
In
are religiously observed.
ing
all their
abstract rights
fact,
notwithstand-
and powers, the Gy-ei and submissive
are the
most amiable,
wives
have ever seen even in the happiest house-
I
holds above ground.
It is
them, that " where a It will
to obey."
conciliatory,
Gy
an aphorism among
loves
it
is
her pleasure
be observed that in the rela-
tionship of the sexes I have spoken only of marriage, for
this
such
is
the moral perfection to which
community has
nection
is
would be
attained, that
as little possible
any
illicit
amongst them
conas
it
to a couple of linnets during the time
they agreed
to live in pairs.
So
CHAPTER
XI.
Nothing had more perplexed me reconcile
my
in seeking to
sense to the existence of regions
extending below the surface of the earth, and habitable all
by
beings, if dissimilar from,
still,
material points of organism, akin to those in
the upper world, than
the
contradiction
presented to the doctrine in which,
I
that though with us the sun of heat, yet the deeper
it is
every
foot,
the surface. tribe I
said,
is
—
viz.,
the great source
we go beneath
of the earth, the greater being,
is
thus
believe,
most geologists and philosophers concur
for
in
the crust
the increasing heat,
found in the ratio of a degree
commencing from
fifty feet
below
But though the domains of the
speak of were, on the higher ground, so
comparatively near to the surface, that I could
account for a temperature, therein, suitable to
THE COMING RACE. organic
life,
yet even the ravines and valleys of
that realm were
would deem
8
much
less
hot than philosophers
possible at such a depth
—
certainly
not warmer than the south of France, or at least
And
of Italy.
according to
vast tracts
received,
all
the accounts I
immeasurably deeper be-
neath the surface, and in which one mio;ht have
thought only salamanders could
exist,
were
in-
habited by innumerable races organised like ourselves.
I
for a fact
cannot pretend in any
which
is
way
towards a solution of
jecture
it.
and
irregularities,
free currents of air
the various
help
had not been
philosophers for the extreme por-
ousness of the interior earth cavities
much
She did but con-
that sufficient allowance
made by our
account
so at variance with the recog-
nised laws of science, nor could Zee
me
to
modes
and thrown
off.
was a depth
at
—the vastness
its
which served to create
and frequent winds in
of
which heat
is
—and
for
evaporated
She allowed, however, that there
which the heat was deemed
intolerable to such organised life as
to be
was known
to
the experience of the Yril-ya, though their philo-
sophers believed that even in such places F
life
of
THE COMING RACE.
82
some kind,
life
sentient, life intellectual,
would
be found abundant and thriving, could the philosophers penetrate to
"Wherever the
it.
builds," said she, " there, be sure,
Good
inhabitants.
He
loves
He
All-
places
not empty dwellings."
She added, however, that many changes in temperature and climate had been effected skill
of the Vril-ya,
by the
and that the agency of
had been successfully employed
vril
in such changes.
She described a subtle and life-giving medium called Lai,
which
I
suspect to be identical with
the ethereal oxygen of all
Dr Lewins, wherein work
the correlative forces united under the
of vril; and contended that wherever this
could be expanded, as
it
name
medium
were, sufficiently for the
various agencies of vril to have ample play, a
temperature congenial to the highest forms of could be secured.
She said
also,
that
belief of their naturalists that flowers
tation
it
life
was the
and vege-
had been produced originally (whether
developed from seeds borne from the surface of the earth in the earlier convulsions of nature, or
imported by the tribes that
first
sought refuge in
cavernous hollows) through the operations of the
THE COMING RACE. light constantly brought to bear
8$
on them, and the
gradual improvement in culture.
She said
also,
that since the vril light had superseded all other light-giving foliage
bodies,
the
had become more
had acquired
colours
of flower and
brilliant,
and vegetation
larger growth.
Leaving these matters to the consideration of those better competent to deal with them,
now
I
must
devote a few pages to the very interesting
questions connected with the language Vril-ya.
of the
84
CHAPTER The language
of the Vril-ya
ing, because it
seems to
me
XII.
is
peculiarly interest-
to exhibit with great
clearness the traces of the three
main
transitions
through which language passes in attaining to perfection of form.
One gists,
of the most illustrious of recent philolo-
Max
Miiller, in
between the strata of
down
the earth, lays
arguing for the analogy
lano-uao-e
©
©
and the
this absolute
strata of
dogma
:
"
No
language can, by any possibility, be inflectional without having passed through the agglutinative
and
No
language © © can be ag© glutinative without clinging with its roots to isolating © stratum.
the underlying stratum of isolation." Stratification
of Language'
—
'
On
the
p. 20.
Taking then the Chinese language as the best existing type of the original isolating stratum,
" as the faithful photograph of
man
in his leading-
THE COMING RACE.
85
strings trying the muscles of his mind, groping his
way, and so delighted with his
grasps that he repeats
first
them again and
we have,
in the language of theVril-ya,
ing with
its roots to
still
—
"cling-
abounds
It
which are the foundations of the
in monosyllables,
The
again,""""
the underlying stratum," the
evidences of the original isolation.
language.
successful
transition into the agglutinative
form marks an epoch that must have gradually extended through ages, the written literature of
which has only survived in a few fragments of symbolical mythology and certain pithy sentences
which have passed into popular proverbs.
With
the extant literature of the Vril-ya the inflectional
stratum
No
commences.
doubt at that time
must have operated concurrent
there
causes, in
the fusion of races by some dominant people, and the rise
of
some great
literary
phenomena by
which the form of language became arrested and
As
fixed.
the inflectional stage prevailed over
the agglutinative,
much more
it
is
surprising
to
see
how
boldly the original roots of the lan-
guage project from the surface that coDceals *
Max
Muller,
'
Stratification of Language,' p. 13.
THE COMING RACE.
86
them.
In the old fragments and proverbs of the
preceding stage the monosyllables which compose those roots vanish amidst words of enor-
mous length, comprehending whole
sentences from
which no one part can be disentangled from the
But when the
other and employed separately.
form of language became so
inflectional
vanced as to have
and grammarians,
scholars
its
far ad-
they seem to have united in extirpating
all
such
polysynthetical or polysyllabic monsters, as de-
"Words
vouring invaders of the aboriginal forms.
beyond three
syllables
became proscribed
as bar-
barous, and in proportion as the language
thus
simplified
dignity,
it
increased
and in sweetness.
compressed in sound,
By
that compression.
it
in
grew
strength,
in
Though now very
gains in clearness
a single
letter,
by
according
to its position, they contrive to express all that
with civilised nations in our upper world
it
takes
the waste, sometimes of syllables, sometimes of sentences,
or
to
express.
two instances
man),
Ana
An
:
(men)
;
the
Let
me
here
cite
one
(which I will translate letter s is
with them
a letter implying multitude, according to where
THE COMING RACE. placed
is
it
87
Sana means mankind
;
The
multitude of men.
letter,
Greeks)
the
as th
a single letter with
is
commencement
at the
times kindred, sometimes dissimilar Gloon, a town
;
houses).
man
Ata
Aur-an
ity. ;
the
is
mouths
health
community Sila, a
is
Oon, a
an assemblage of
weilbeing of a
or
and k word constantly
viz.,
is
the good of
that " the
tone in music.
the classical
word
is,
like
first
all."
principle of
Aub
is
inven-
Glaubsila, as uniting
and of musical intonation,
for poetry
ordinary conversation,
with them
;
A-glauran, which denotes their
the ideas of invention is
— as
Glata, a public calam-
;
—
political creed
;
word
Glauran, the weilbeing of the state, the
in tlieir
tion
(i. e.,
sorrow
is
good of the community
a
of a
an assemblage or union of things, some-
infers
house
compound
For instance, Gl (which with them
significations.
a single
a
prefix of certain letters
in tlieir alphabet invariably denotes
is
Ansa,
;
to
— abbreviated,
Glaubs.
Gl, but a single
in
Na, which letter,
al-
ways, when an
initial,
nistic to life or
joy or comfort, resembling in this
implies something antago-
the Aryan root Nak, expressive of perishing or
THE COMING RACE.
88
destruction.
Nax
sin or evil.
Nas
and
evil
is
darkness; Narl, death; Nana,
—an uttermost
— corruption.
In writing, they deem
irreverent to express the
name.
special
condition of sin
Supreme Being by any
He-' is symbolised
by what may
be termed the hieroglyphic of a pyramid, A.
Him
prayer they address
deem
it
and
V, symbolical of the
where
an
is
it
much
;
power
always denotes
nearly
which
Veed, an immortal
spirit
immortality
Cwm,
initial,
;
;
Koom, pronounced
I
have said
;
Yeed-ya,
like the
denotes something of hollo wness.
itself is
a cave
;
The
inverted pyramid,
as Vril, of
excellence or so
I
In conversation they generally use
not.
a periphrastic epithet, such as the All-Good. letter
In
by a name which they
too sacred to confide to a stranger,
know
it
Koom-in, a hole
;
Welsh
Koom
Zi-koom, a
valley; Koom-zi, vacancy or void; Bodh-koom,
ignorance (literally, knowledge-void). is
their
name
for the
Koom-Posh
government of the many, or
the ascendancy of the most ignorant or hollow.
Posh
is
an almost untranslatable idiom, implying,
as the reader will see later, contempt.
rendering
I
can give to
it
is
The
closest
our slang term,
THE COMING RACE. " bosh
;
"
and thus Koom-Posh may be loosely
rendered " Hollow-Bosh." or
89
But when Democracy
Koom-Posh degenerates from popular ignorance which pre-
into that popular passion or ferocity
cedes
its
decease, as
the upper world)
(to
cite illustrations
from
during the French Eeign of
Roman Re-
Terror, or for the fifty years of the
public preceding the ascendancy of Augustus, their
name strife
Ek
for that state of things is Glek-Nas.
— Glek, the universal
said, is corruption or rot
;
Nas, as
strife.
thus Glek-Nas
construed,
" the
compounds
are very expressive
universal
I before
may
strife - rot."
thus,
;
is
be
Their
Bodh being
knowledge, and Too a participle that implies the action of cautiously approaching, their
word
Philosophy
for
;
Pah
—Too-bodh
is
is
a contemptu-
ous exclamation analogous to our idiom, "stuff
and nonsense
;
Pah-bodh
"
nonsense-knowledge) false
philosophy,
metaphysical
or
is
(literally,
their
term
and applied speculative
to
stuff-and-
for futile or
a
species of
ratiocination
merly in vogue, which consisted in making quiries
tli at
for-
in-
could not be answered, and were not
worth making
;
such, for instance, as, "
Why does
THE COMING RACE.
90
an
An
or six
have ?
five toes to his feet instead of four
Did the
first
An, created by the All-
Good, have the same number of toes as his descendants
In the form by which an
?
recognised
by
An will
be
his friends in the future state of
being, will he retain
any
toes at
all,
and,
will they be material toes or spiritual toes
if so,
V
I
take these illustrations of Pah-bodh, not in irony or jest, but because the very inquiries I
name
formed the subject of controversy by the
latest
cultivators of that 'science'
— 4000 years
In the declension of nouns
I
ago.
was informed that
anciently there were eight cases (one more than in the Sanskrit
Grammar)
;
but the
effect of
time
has been to reduce these, cases, and multiply, instead of these varying terminations, explanatory prepositions.
mitted to
my
At
present, in the
Grammar
sub-
study, there were four cases to
nouns, three having varying terminations, and the fourth a differing prefix.
THE COMING RACE.
91
dual
In the elder inflectional literature the
form existed
—
it
The genitive
has long been obsolete.
case with
the dative supplies to
a
Man, instead
its
them
place
of the
:
is
also obsolete
they say the House
When
House of a Man.
used (sometimes in poetry), the genitive in the termination
is
the same as the nominative
the ablative, the preposition that marks
so is
;
it
being
a prefix or suffix at option, and generally decided
by
ear,
according to the sound of the noun.
will be observed that the prefix Hil
vocative case.
It is
It
marks the
always retained in addressing
except in the most intimate domestic
another, relations
;
its
omission would be considered rude
:
just as in our old forms of speech in addressing a
king
it
would have been deemed
disrespectful to
say " King," and reverential to say " fact, as
King."
In
they have no titles of honour, the vocative
adjuration supplies the place of a
given impartially to
all.
The
title,
and
is
prefix Hil enters
into the composition of words that imply distant
communications, as Hil-ya, to travel. In
much
the conjugation of their verbs, which
is
too lengthy a subject to enter on here, the
THE COMING RACE.
92
auxiliary verb Ya, " to go," which plays so consi-
derable part in the Sanskrit, appears and performs a kindred
office,
as if
it
were a radical in some
But
language from which both had descended.
another auxiliary of opposite signification also
accompanies
it
and shares
Thus Ya enters
stay or repose. tense,
labours
its
and Zi in the
—
to
viz., Zi,
into the future
preterite of all verbs requir-
ing auxiliaries.
Yam,
Yani-ya,
I shall
go
poo-yan,
I
I
go
—Yiam,
(literally,
have gone
I
may
I
go
go to go) Zam-
(literally, I rest
from gone).
Ya, as a termination, implies by analogy, progress,
movement,
Zi, as a terminal, de-
efflorescence.
notes fixity, sometimes in a good sense, sometimes in a bad, according to the
word with which
goodness
coupled.
Iva-zi, eternal
nal
Poo (from) enters
evil.
;
it is
Nan-zi, eter-
as a prefix to
words
that denote repugnance, or things from which
ought to be averse.
Poo-pra, disgust
falsehood, the vilest kind of evil. I
;
we
Poo-naria,
Poosh or Posh
have already confessed to be untranslatable
literally.
It
unmixed with
is
an expression of contempt not
pity.
This radical seems to have
orginated from inherent sympathy between the
THE COMING RACE.
93
and the sentiment that impelled
it,
Poo being an utterance in which the breath
is
labial
effort
exploded from the
On
mence.
with more or
lips
less
when an
the other hand, Z,
with them a sound in which the breath
vehe-
initial, is is
sucked
inward, and thus Zu, pronounced Zoo (which in their language to
one
is
letter), is
the ordinary prefix
words that signify something that
pleases, touches the
Zutze,
love
heart
as
Zummer,
lover
This indrawn
delight.
Zuzulia,
;
—
attracts,
sound of Z seems indeed naturally appropriate Thus, even in our language, mothers
to fondness.
in
say to their babies, "
Zoo darling
fessor at
;
"
Boston
and
"
of
grammar,
have heard a learned pro-
call his
married a month) I
I
defiance
Zoo
wife (he had been only
little pet."
cannot quit this subject, however, without
observing by what slight changes in the dialects
favoured by different tribes of the same race, the original signification
become confused and deformed. with
much
indignation
which, in the
way
may told me
and beauty of sounds
that
she uttered
Zee
Zummer it,
(lover)
seemed slowly
taken down to the very depths of her heart,
THE COMING RACE.
94
some not very distant communities of
was, in
the Vril-ya, vitiated into the half-hissing, half-
wholly disagreeable, sound of Subber.
nasal,
thought to myself
n before u
of
word
it
to
only wanted the introduction
render
it
into
significant of the last quality
Gy would I will
I
desire in her
an English
an amorous
Zummer.
but mention another peculiarity in this
language which gives equal force and brevity to forms of expressions.
its
A
with them, as with
is
the alphabet, and
by
itself to
is
us, the first letter of
often used as a prefix
convey a complex idea of sovereignty
or chiefdom, or presiding principle.
Iva
is
united I
goodness ;
word
For instance,
Diva, goodness and happiness
;
A -Diva
is
unerring and absolute truth.
have already noticed the value of A in A-glauran,
so,
in vril (to
present state as I
have
The
it
of
said,
civilisation),
or
A -vril,
their
denotes,
civilisation itself.
philologist will
how much Aryan
whose properties they trace
have seen from the above
the language of the Vril-ya
Indo-G ermanic
;
is
akin to the
but, like all languages,
contains words and forms in which transfers
THE COMING RACE.
95
from very opposite sources of speech have been taken.
The very
to their
supreme magistrate, indicates theft from
title
which they give
of Tur,
They say them-
a tongue akin to the Turanian. selves that this
a
title
which
is
a foreign
word borrowed from show
their historical records
to
been borne by the chief of a nation with
have
whom
the ancestors of the Vril-ya were, in very remote periods, on friendly terms, but
become
which has long
and they say that when,
extinct,
the discovery of
vril,
litical institutions,
after
they remodelled their po-
they expressly adopted a
title
taken from an extinct race and a dead language for that of their chief magistrate,
avoid
all titles
had previous Should
life
for that office
suffice to
be spared to me, I
may
my
I
But what I have already said
show
to
acquired of
will
perhaps
genuine philological students
roots in the aboriginal form,
immediate,
collect into
sojourn amongst the
that a language which, preserving so
the
to
associations.
language during
Vril-ya.
order
with which they
systematic form such knowledge as this
in
many
of the
and clearing from
but transitory,
polysynthetical
THE COMING RACE.
96
many
stage so
riule
incumbrances, has attained
to such a union of simplicity its
final inflectional forms,
and compass
must have been the
gradual work of countless ages and of
mind
that
;
it
the
and necessitated, in
races,
at the shape
examples,
many varieties
contains the evidence of fusion
between congenial arriving
in
of
continuous
which
have given
I
culture
of a
highly
thoughtful people. That, nevertheless, the literature which belongs to this
language
is
a literature of the past
;
that
the present felicitous state of society at which the
Ana have
attained forbids the progressive cul-
tivation of literature, especially in the divisions of fiction
occasion to
show
and
later.
history,
—
I
two main
shall
have
97
CHAPTER This people have a be said against peculiarities
:
religion, and,
at least
it,
firstly,
creed they profess
XIII.
it
whatever
lias
these strange
all
believe in the
that they
secondly, that they
;
may
all
the precepts which the creed inculcates.
practise
They
unite in the worship of the one divine Creator
They
and Sustainer of the universe. it is
one of the properties of the all-permeating
agency of life
believe that
and
vril,
to transmit to the well-spring of
intelligence every thought that a living
creature can conceive;
and though they do not
contend that the idea of a Deity they say that the
An
(man)
is
is
innate, yet
the only creature,
so far as their observation of nature extends, to
whom all is
the capacity
of conceiving that idea, with
the trains of thought which open out from
vouchsafed.
They hold that G
this capacity
it,
is
a
THE COMING RACE.
98
privilege that cannot have been given in vain,
and hence that prayer and thanksgiving are acceptable to the divine Creator, and necessary to
human
the complete development of the
They
ture.
and
offer their
public.
species, I
devotions both in private
Not being considered one
was not admitted
I
short,
am
of their
into the building or
temple in which the public worship
but
crea-
informed that the service
is
is
rendered;
exceedingly
and unattended with any pomp of ceremony.
It is a doctrine
with the Vril-ya, that earnest devo-
tion or complete abstraction from the actual world
cannot, with benefit to at a stretch
public,
itself,
be maintained long
by the human mind,
and that
all
attempts to do so either lead
When
to fanaticism or to hypocrisy. in private,
young
it is
when they
are alone or with their
number
in
ancient times there was a
of books written
as to the nature of the Deity,
upon speculations
and upon the forms
of belief or worship supposed to be to
they pray
children.
They say that great
especially in
Him.
But these were found
most agreeable
to lead to such
heated and angry disputations as not only to
THE COMING RACE.
99
shake the peace of the community and divide families before the
most united, but in the course
of discussing the attributes of the Deity, the existence of the Deity Himself
away,
became argued
what was worse, became invested with
or,
the passions and infirmities of the " For," said
putants.
being like an finite, so,
An
my
human
host, " since
dis-
a finite
cannot possibly define the In-
when he endeavours
to realise an idea
of the Divinity, he only reduces the Divinity into
an
An
like himself."
During; the later ages, there-
fore, all theological speculations,
though not
for-
bidden, have been so discouraged as to have fallen utterly into disuse.
The Vril-ya unite state,
more
present.
felicitous
in a conviction of a future
and more perfect than the
they have very vague notions of the
If
doctrine of rewards and punishments,
it
is
per-
haps because they have no systems of rewards
and punishments among themselves, are no crimes to punish,
ard
is
so
even that no
and
for
there
their moral stand-
An among them
is,
upon the whole, considered more virtuous than another.
If
one excels, perhaps, in one virtue,
THE COMING RACE.
100
another equally excels in some other virtue;
if
one has his prevalent fault or infirmity, so also another has
In
his.
nary mode of
life,
fact,
notions of goodness)
tinuance of
life,
their
extraordi-
there are so few temptations
to wrong, that they are
They have some
in
good (according
to their
merely because they
fanciful notions
live.
upon the con-
when once bestowed, even
in
the vegetable world, as the reader will see in the
next chapter.
IOI
CHAPTER Though,
as I
have
XIV.
said, the Vril-ya
speculations on the nature of the
discourage
all
Supreme Being,
they appear to concur in a belief by which they think to solve that great problem of the existence of evil which has so perplexed the philosophy of
He
the upper world.
They hold
has once given
with the perceptions of that
life,
life,
however faint
never destroyed
;
it
it
that wherever
be, as in a plant, the life is
passes into
new and improved
forms, though not in this planet (differing therein
from the ordinary doctrine of metempsychosis),
and that the
living thing retains the sense of
identity, so that
future,
ment
and
is
it
connects
conscious of
in the scale of joy.
its
its
past
life
with
its
progressive improve-
For they say
that, with-
out this assumption, they cannot, according to the lights of
human
reason vouchsafed to them,
THE COMING RACE.
102
discover the perfect justice which stituent quality of the All-Wise Injustice,
causes
want of benevolence fulfil
it
;
a con-
and the All-Good.
they say, can only emanate from three
want of wisdom
:
must be
to perceive
what
is just,
want of power
to
and that each of these three wants
is
to desire,
incompatible in the All- Wise, the All-Good, the All-Powerful.
But
that, while
even in this
life,
the wisdom, the benevolence, and the power of the
Supreme Being
are sufficiently apparent to
compel our recognition, the justice necessarily
re-
sulting from those attributes, absolutely requires
another
life,
not for
man
only, but for every living
thing of the inferior orders.
That, alike in the
animal and the vegetable world, we see one dividual rendered, control,
— one
—even
other
by circumstances beyond
its
compared to
its
exceedingly wretched
neighbours
in-
only exists as the prey of an-
a plant suffers from disease
till
it
perishes prematurely, while the plant next to
it
rejoices in its vitality free
from a pang.
and
That
lives out its
it is
happy
life
an erroneous analogy
from human infirmities to reply by saying that the
Supreme Being only
acts
by general
laws, thereby
THE COMING RACE. making
own secondary
his
103
causes so potent as to
the essential kindness of the First Cause
mar
and a
still
AH -Good,
of the
tempt
meaner and more ignorant conception
all
consideration of justice for the myriad
forms into which that justice
is
There
An.
He
has infused
is
no small and no great
and
suffers,
in the eyes
But once grant that
however humble, which
nothing,
and assume
life,
only due to the single product of the
of the divine Life-Giver.
lives
with a brief con-
to dismiss
feels that
can perish through the series of
ages, that all its suffering here, if continuous
the
moment
of
it
from
birth to that of its transfer to
its
another form of being, would be more brief com-
pared with eternity than the cry of the new-born is
compared
to the
whole
life
of a
man; and once
suppose that this living thing retains identity
sense
it
when
so transferred
its
sense of
without that
(for
could be aware of no future being), and
though, indeed, the fulfilment of divine justice
is
removed from the scope of our ken, yet we have a right to assume
it
to be uniform
and not varying and
and universal,
partial, as it
would be
acting only upon general secondary laws
;
if
because
THE COMING RACE.
104
such perfect justice flows of necessity from perfectness of knowledge to conceive, perfectness of love to will,
and perfectness of power to complete
However
may the
this belief of the Vril-ya
fantastic
be, it tends
systems
of
it.
perhaps to confirm politically
government which,
admitting
differing degrees of wealth, yet establishes per-
in rank, exquisite mildness in all
fect equality
relations
and
and tenderness to
intercourse,
all
community
created things which the good of the
And though
does not require them to destroy.
their notion of compensation to a tortured insect
may seem
or a cankered flower
very wild crotchet, yet, at chievous one
;
and
it
some of us a
to
least, it is
may
not a mis-
furnish matter for no
unpleasing reflection to think that within the abysses of earth, never
lit
by a ray from the
material heavens, there should have penetrated so luminous a conviction of the ineffable goodness
of the Creator
—
laws by which
so fixed an idea that the general
He
acts
partial injustice or evil,
cannot
admit of any
and therefore cannot be
comprehended without reference to over
all
space and throughout
all
their action
time.
And
THE COMING since, as I shall
RACE.
10$
have occasion to observe
later,
the intellectual conditions and social systems of this subterranean race
comprise and harmonise
and apparently antagonistic,
great,
philosophical
doctrine
and
in
varieties
speculation
which
have from time to time been started, discussed, dismissed,
and have re-appeared amongst thinkers
or dreamers in the upper world,
—
so I
may perhaps
appropriately conclude this reference to the belief of the Vril-ya, that self-conscious or sentient
once given
is
indestructible
tures as well as in
among
I
zoologist,
Louis
have only just met with,
many
had committed to paper those
years. after
I
collections
of the
now form
inferior crea-
man, by an eloquent passage
from the work of that eminent Agassiz, which
life
life
of the Vril-ya
re-
which
I
reduce into something like arrangement and :
"
bear to
The
relations
which individual animals
one another are of such a
that they ought long ago to sidered
as
sufficient
character
have been con-
proof that
no
organised
being could ever have been called into existence
by other agency than by the of a reflective mind.
direct intervention
This argues strongly in
THE COMING RACE.
106
favour of the existence in every animal of an
immaterial principle similar to that which by excellence so
its
and superior endowments places man
much above
animals
;
yet the principle un-
and whether
questionably exists,
sense, reason, or instinct,
it
it
be
called
presents in the whole
range of organised beings a series of phenomena closely linked together,
and upon
it
are based
not only the higher manifestations of the mind, but the very permanence of the specific
differ-
ences which characterise every organism.
Most
of the arguments in favour of the immortality
of
man
apply equally to the permanency of this
principle in other living beings.
that a future
life
in
May
I
not add
which man would be de-
prived of that great source of enjoyment and intellectual
and moral improvement which
results
from the contemplation of the harmonies of an organic world would involve a lamentable loss?
And may we
not look to a spiritual concert of
the combined worlds and all their inhabitants in the presence of their Creator as the highest con-
ception of paradise sect, jcvii.
p. 97-99.
?
"
—
'
Essay on
Classification,'
io7
CHAPTER Kind
me
to
as I found all in tins household, the
young daughter of siderate
my
and thoughtful
host was the most conin her kindness.
suo-crestion I laid aside the I
XV.
had descended from
At her
habiliments in which
upper earth, and
the
adopted the dress of the Vril-ya, with the exception of the artful wings which served them,
on
But
a graceful mantle.
foot, as
the Vril-ya,
when occupied
in
as
when
many
of
urban pursuits, did
not wear these wings, this exception created no
marked
difference
among which to visit the
I
between myself and the race
sojourned, and
I
was thus enabled
town without exciting unpleasant
curiosity.
Out of the household no one suspected
that I had
come from the upper world, and
I
was
but regarded as one of some inferior and barbarous tribe
whom Aph-Lin
entertained as a guest.
THE COMING RACE.
108
The
was large
city
tory round
than
it,
many an
estate
;
in proportion to the terri-
which was of no greater extent English or Hungarian nobleman's
the whole
but
of
it,
the rocks which constituted cultivated
the
to
nicest
the verge of
to
its
boundary, was except where
degree,
certain allotments of
mountain and pasture were
humanely
to
left
free
the
sustenance of
the
harmless animals they had tamed, though not
So great
domestic use.
for
is
their kindness
towards these humbler creatures, that a sum is
from
devoted
purpose of
the
colonies),
merous
for
treasury for the
deporting them to
communities willing
new
public
to
receive
other
them
Vril-ya (chiefly
whenever they become too nu-
the
their native place.
pastures allotted
They do
not,
to
them
in
however, mul-
tiply to an extent comparable to the
ratio
at
which, with us, animals bred for slaughter, increase.
It
useful to
seems a law of nature that animals not
man
gradually recede from the domains
he occupies, or even become extinct.
It is
an
old custom of the various sovereign states amidst
which the race of the Vril-ya are distributed, to
THE COMING RACE.
IO9
leave between each state a neutral and unculti-
vated border-land.
In the instance of the com-
munity
this tract, being a ridge of
I
speak
of,
savage rocks, was impassable by easily surmounted,
inhabitants
or
whether by the wings of the
Eoads through
intercommunicating
tracts
I
shall
were also cut
it
for the transit of vehicles impelled
special
but was
the air-boats, of which
speak hereafter.
lighted,
foot,
by
were
These
vril.
always
kept
and the expense thereof defrayed by a tax, to which all the communities com-
prehended in the denomination of Vril-ya con-
By
tribute in settled proportions.
these
means a
considerable commercial traffic with other states,
both near and distant, was carried on. surplus wealth of this
for
skill
The
community was
The community was
chiefly agricultural.
eminent
special
in
constructing
implements
connected with the arts of husbandry.
change for such merchandise
more of luxury than
it
necessity.
also
In ex-
obtained articles
There were few
things imported on which they set a higher price
than birds taught to pipe artful tunes in concert. These were brought from a great distance, and
HO
THE COMING RACE.
were marvellous I
for
beauty of song and plumage.
understood that extraordinary care was taken
by
their breeders
and teachers
in selection,
and
that the species had wonderfully improved during
the last few years.
among
this
I
saw no other pet animals
community except some very amusing
and sportive creatures of the Batrachian
species,
resembling frogs, but with very intelligent countenances, which the children were fond
of,
They appear
kept in their private gardens.
have no animals akin to our dogs or
though that learned
and
naturalist, Zee,
to
horses,
informed
me
that such creatures had once existed in those parts,
and might now be found in regions inhabited by other races than the Vril-ya.
She said that they
had gradually disappeared from the more ised world since the discovery of vril, results attending that discovery
with their uses.
civil-
and the
had dispensed
Machinery and the invention of
wings had superseded the horse as a beast of
burden
;
and the dog was no longer wanted
for protection or the chase, as it
either
had been when
the ancestors of the Vril-ya feared the aggressions of their
own
kind, or hunted the lesser animals for
THE COMING RACE.
Ill
Indeed, however, so far as the horse was
food.
concerned, this region was so rocky that a horse
could have been, there, of
pastime or burden.
is
use either for
The only creature they use
for the latter purpose
which
little
is
kind of large goat
a
much employed on
The nature
farms.
of the surrounding soil in these districts said to
have
wings and
first
air-boats.
may
be
suggested the invention of
The largeness
of space in
proportion to the space occupied by the city, was
occasioned
by the custom
of surrounding every
house with a separate garden. street, in
The broad main
which Aph-Lin dwelt, expanded into a
vast square, in which were placed the College of
Sages and fountain
all
of
the public offices
luminous
the
am
;
fluid
a magnificent
which
I
call
naphtha
(I
centre.
All these public edifices have a uniform
ignorant of
its real
nature) in the
character of massiveness and solidity.
minded me of the Along the upper
many
re-
architectural pictures of Martin. stories of each
ran a balcony, or
rather a terraced garden, supported filled
They
by columns,
with flowering- plants, and tenanted by kinds of tame birds.
From
the square
THE COMING RACE.
112
branched several
In
my excursions
allowed to go alone
was
broad and brilliantly
and ascending up the eminence on
lighted, side.
streets, all
my
young An
town
Aph-Lin or
Gy
is
I
was never
his daughter
In
companion.
habitual
munity the adult
;
in the
either
this
com-
seen walking with
any
were no
dif-
as familiarly as if there
ference of sex.
The persons
shops are not very numerous
retail
who
attend on a customer are
of various ages,
and exceedingly
all
;
the
children
intelligent
and
courteous, but without the least touch of impor-
tunity
or
The shopkeeper himself
cringing.
might or misdit not be
visible
;
when
visible,
he
seemed rarely employed on any matter connected with his professional business
;
and yet he had
taken to that business from special liking to
it,
his general sources of
and quite independently of fortune.
Some
of the richest citizens in the
As
kept such shops. difference of all
An
rank
is
I
community
have before
recognisable,
said,
no
and therefore
occupations hold the same equal social status.
An, of
whom
I
bought
my
sandals,
was the
THE COMING RACE. brother of the Tur,
though
his
or
113
chief magistrate
;
and
shop was not larger than that of any
bootmaker in Bond Street or Broadway, he was said to be twice as rich as the
No
in a palace.
Tur who dwelt
doubt, however, he had some
country-seat.
The Ana
of the
community
are,
on the whole,
an indolent
set of beings after the active
childhood.
Whether by temperament
sophy, they rank repose of
life.
Indeed,
human being
among
when you
age of
or philo-
the chief blessings
take
away from a
the incentives to action which are
found in cupidity or ambition,
wonder that he
it
seems to
me no
rests quiet.
In their ordinary movements they prefer the use of their feet to that of their wings.
But
for
their sports or (to indulge in a bold misuse of
terms) their public 'promenades, they employ the latter, also for
the aerial dances I have described,
as well as for visiting their country places, are mostly placed on lofty heights still
;
and,
which
when
young, they prefer their wings for travel
into the other regions of the Ana, to vehicular
conveyances. 11
THE COMING RACE.
114
Those if
fly,
who accustom
themselves to flight can
rapidly than some birds, yet from
less
twenty-five to thirty miles an hour, and keep up
But
that rate for five or six hours at a stretch.
Ana
the
generally, on reaching middle age, are
not fond of rapid movements requiring violent
Perhaps for this reason, as they hold a
exercise.
doctrine which our
approve the
—
viz.,
pores
own
physicians will doubtless
that regular transpiration through
skin
the
of
is
essential
to
health,
they habitually use the sweating-baths to which
we
give the
name
of Turkish or
Eoman,
ceeded by douches of perfumed waters.
have great faith
in
the
suc-
They
virtue
salubrious
of
certain perfumes. It
is
periods,
their
custom
perhaps
four
also,
stated
at
times
a
-
when
year
bath charged with
health, to use a
vril.*
consider that this fluid, sparingly used, sustainer of
normal
life
;
its
is
in
They a great
but used in excess, when in the
state of health, rather tends to reaction
* I once tried the effect of the vril hath. in
but rare
It
was very similar
invigorating powers to that of the baths at Gastein, the
virtues of
which are ascribed hy many physicians
but though similar, the
effect of the vril
to electricity
hath was more
lasting.
;
THE COMING RACE. and exhausted
vitality.
diseases, however,
115
For nearly
they resort to
it
all
their
as the chief
assistant to nature in throwing off the complaint.
In their
own way they
are the
most luxurious
of people, but
all
They may be
said to dwell in an atmosphere
their luxuries are
and fragrance.
of music
innocent.
Every room has
its
mechanical contrivances for melodious sounds, usually tuned
which seem
like
They
spirits.
down
to
soft
-
murmured
notes,
sweet whispers from invisible
are too accustomed to these gentle
sounds to find them a hindrance to conversation, nor,
when
But they have a
alone, to reflection.
notion that to breathe an air
filled
with continu-
ous melody and perfume has necessarily an effect at once soothing
tion
and elevating upon the forma-
of character
Though
and the habits of thought.
so temperate,
and with
total abstinence
from other animal food than milk, and from
all
intoxicating drinks, they are delicate and dainty to
an extreme in food and beverage
their
sports
gaiety.
;
and
in all
even the old exhibit a childlike
Happiness
is
the end at which they aim,
not as the excitement of a moment, but as the prevailing condition of the entire existence
;
and
THE COMING RACE.
Il6
regard for the happiness of each other
by the
is
evinced
exquisite amenity of their manners.
Their conformation of skull has marked
dif-
ferences from that of
any known races in the
upper world, though
cannot help thinking
I
it
a
development, in the course of countless ages, of the Brachycephalic type of the Lyell's
'Elements of Geology/
Age
of Stone in
C. X., p.
113, as
compared with the Dolichocephalic type of the beginning of the Age of Iron, correspondent with that
now
amongst
so prevalent
Celtic type.
It
us,
and
called the
has the same comparative mas-
siveness of forehead, not receding like the Celtic
— the same even roundness but
it is
in the frontal organs;
far loftier in the apex,
and
far less pro-
nounced in the hinder cranial hemisphere where
To speak
phrenologists place the animal organs.
common
as a phrenologist, the cranium
to the
Yril-ya has the organs of weight, number, tune,
form, that
causality,
order,
of
construction
than that of the
moral
ideality.
organs,
very largly developed
much more pronounced Those which are called
such
as
conscientiousness
and benevolence, are amazingly
full
;
amative-
THE COMING RACE.
117
ness and combativeness are both small siveness large
;
adhe-
the organ of destructiveness
;
(i.e.,
of determined clearance of intervening obstacles)
immense, but
less
than that of benevolence
;
and
their pliiloprogenitiveness takes rather the char-
acter of compassion
and tenderness
to things that
need aid or protection than of the animal love of offspring.
never met with one person deformed
I
The beauty of
or misshapen. is
their countenances
not only in symmetry of feature, but in a
smoothness of surface, which continues without line or wrinkle to the
extreme of old age, and a
serene sweetness of expression, combined with that majesty sciousness of
which seems to come from con-
power and the freedom of
physical or moral.
It
is
all terror,
that very sweetness,
combined with that majesty, which inspired in a beholder like myself, accustomed to strive with the passions of mankind, a sentiment of humiliation, of awe, of dread.
as a painter
such an expression
might give to a demi-god, a genius,
The males of the Vril-ya
an angel. beardless
It is
;
the
Gy-ei
sometimes,
develop a small moustache.
are entirely in
old
age,
THE COMING RACE.
Il8
I
was surprised
to find that the colour of their
skin was not uniformly that which I had re-
marked
in those individuals
encountered,
—some
being
whom
much
I
fairer,
had
first
and even
with blue eyes, and hair of a deep golden auburn,
though
still
of complexions
warmer
or richer in
tone than persons in the north of Europe. I
was
told that this admixture of colouring
arose from intermarriage with other
and more
distant tribes of the Vril-ya, who, whether
by the
accident of climate or early distinction of race,
were of
fairer
hues than the tribes of which this
community formed
one.
It
was considered that
the dark-red skin showed the most ancient family of
Ana
;
but they attached no sentiment of pride
to that antiquity, and,
on the contrary, believed
their present excellence of breed
came from
quent crossing with other families akin
;
fre-
differing, yet
and they encourage such intermarriages,
always provided that nations.
it
be with the Vril-ya
Nations which, not conforming their
manners and institutions to those of the
Vril-ya,
nor indeed held capable of acquiring the powers over the vril agencies which
it
had taken them
THE COMING RACE.
119
generations to attain and transmit, were regarded
with more disdain than citizens of
New York
regard the negroes. I learned
from Zee, who had more lore in
matters than any male with
whom
I
all
was brought
into familiar converse, that the superiority of the
Vril-ya was supposed to have originated in the intensity of their earlier struggles against obstacles in nature amidst the localities in first
settled.
which they had
" Wherever," said Zee, moralising,
"wherever goes on that early process in the history of civilisation, in
by which
life is
which the individual has
made a
struggle,
to put forth all his
powers to compete with his fellow, we invariably find this result
vast
—
viz.,
number must
servation only the
since in the competition a
perish, nature selects for pre-
strongest
specimens.
With
our race, therefore, even before the discovery of vril,
only the
served
;
highest
and there
is
organisations were pre-
among our
ancient books
a legend, once popularly believed, that
we were
driven from a region that seems to denote the
world you come from, in order to perfect our condition and attain to the purest elimination of
THE COMING RACE.
120
our species by the severity of the struggles our forefathers
cation
underwent
shall
become
;
and
when our edu-
that,
finally
completed,
we
are
destined to return to the upper world, and sup-
plant
all
the inferior races
now
existing therein."
Aph-Lin and Zee often conversed with me
upon the
private
political
and
in
social conditions
of that upper world, in which Zee so philosophically
assumed that the inhabitants were to be
exterminated one day or other by the advent of
They found
in
my
continued to do
all
I
the Yril-ya.
which
I
accounts,
—
in
could (without
launching into falsehoods so positive that they easily detected
by the shrewd-
listeners) to present
our powers and
would have been ness of
my
ourselves in the most nattering point of view,
perpetual subjects of
most
civilised
comparison between our
populations
and
the
meaner
subterranean races which they considered hopelessly
plunged
gradual
if
in
certain
barbarism, and extinction.
doomed
to
But they both
agreed in desiring to conceal from their com-
munity
all
lighted
by the sun;
premature opening into the regions both were
humane, and
THE COMING RACE. from
shrunk
many
millions of creatures
drew of our
life,
saddened them.
men
the
" Alas
" !
In vain
Vril-ya
and the pictures
I
I
boasted of our great
orators, generals
produce
to
said Zee, her
their
— and
equals.
grand face softening into
an angel-like compassion, " the few over the
;
so
highly coloured as they were,
—poets, philosophers,
defied
annihilating
thought of
the
121
many
this
predominance of
the surest and most
is
fatal sign of a race incorrigibly savage.
See you
not that the primary condition of mortal happiness consists in the extinction of that strife and
competition between individuals, which, no matter
what forms of government they adopt, render the
many
subordinate to the few, destroy real
liberty to the individual,
nominal liberty of the
whatever
state,
may
be the
and annul that calm
of existence, without which, felicity, mental or bodily, cannot be attained
the more
we can
assimilate
?
Our notion life
is,
that
to the existence
which our noblest ideas can conceive
to be that
of spirits on the other side of the grave, why, the
more we approximate and the more
easily
to a divine happiness here,
we
glide into the conditions
THE COMING RACE.
122
of being hereafter.
gine of the
life
we can ima-
For, surely, all
of gods, or of blessed immortals,
supposes the absence of self-made cares and contentious passions, such as avarice It
seems to us that
it
must be a
and ambition. of serene
life
tranquillity, not indeed without active occupa-
tions to the intellectual or spiritual powers, but
occupations, of whatsoever nature they be, congenial to the idiosyncrasies of each, not forced
and repugnant
—a
life
gladdened by the untram-
melled interchange of gentle affections, in which the moral atmosphere utterly kills hate and vengeance, and strife and rivalry. cal state to
which
all
Such
is
the politi-
the tribes and families of the
Vril-ya seek to attain, and towards that goal
all
You
see
our theories of government are shaped.
how
utterly opposed
is
such a progress to that of
the uncivilised nations from which you come, and
which aim at a systematic perpetuity of
and
cares,
and more ward.
and warring
troubles,
passions, aggravated
as their progress storms its
The most powerful of
all
more
way
on-
the races in our
world, beyond the pale of the Vril-ya, esteems itself
the best governed of
all political
societies,
THE COMING RACE. and
23
1
have reached in that respect the extreme
to
end at which
wisdom can
political
arrive, so that
the other nations should tend more or less to
copy
It
it.
base, the
has
Koom-Posh-
ignorant upon
the
most numerous. bliss in the
on
established,
—
the It
viz.,
broadest
its
the government of
principle of being the
has
placed the supreme
vying with each other in
all
things,
so that the evil passions are never in repose
vying
for power, for wealth, for
kind
and
the
;
eminence of some
in this rivalry it is horrible to hear
vituperation, the
slanders,
and calumnies
which even the best and mildest among them heap on each other without remorse or " this
Some
shame.'"'
years ago," said Aph-Lin, "
people,
and
their misery
I visited
and degradation
were the more appalling because they were always boasting of their felicity and grandeur as com-
pared with the rest of their species. is
no hope that
this people,
And
which evidently
sembles your own, can improve, because notions tend to further deterioration. sire to
there
all
re-
their
They
de-
enlarge their dominion more and more,
in direct antagonism to the truth that,
beyond a
THE COMING RACE.
124
very limited range,
it
is
impossible to secure to
a community the happiness which belongs to a well-ordered family
;
and the more they mature
a system by which a few individuals are heated
and swollen
to a size
above the standard slender-
ness of the millions, the
and cry
exact,
out,
common
to the
'
more they chuckle and
See by what great exceptions our race
littleness of
the magnificent results of our system "
In
fact,"
human
life
resumed Zee, " be
to
if
the
approximate
to
equality of immortals, there
we prove
!
wisdom the
of
serene
can be no more
direct flying off into the opposite direction
than
a system which aims at carrying to the utmost the inequalities and turbulences of mortals.
do
see
I
how, by any forms of religious
mortals, so acting, could
fit
Nor belief,
themselves even to
appreciate the joys of immortals to which they still
expect to be transferred by the mere act
dying.
On
the contrary, minds accustomed to
place happiness in things so
much
the reverse of
of godlike, would find the happiness of gods ex-
ceedingly dull, and would long to get back to a
world in which they could quarrel with each other."
125
CHAPTER I
have spoken
may
reader
much
so
me
expect
of the Vril Staff that
it
sioned
by
for fear of
doubt that
it
requires
the exercise of
and has springs fied,
stroys,
by which
one
it
terrible accident occa-
and
of its use ;
much
its force
—
by another
the rock,
to
skill
I
have no
and practice
in
It is hollow,
handle several stops, keys, or
in the
or directed
This I
it.
various powers.
its
my
was never allowed
I
some
my ignorance
describe
to
cannot do accurately, for handle
XVI.
so that it
by another
affects bodies,
heals
can be altered, modi-
by one process
—by one
it
it
can rend
disperse the vapour
by another
a certain influence over minds.
it
de-
— by
can exercise It
is
usually
carried in the convenient size of a walking-staff,
but
it
has slides by which
or shortened at will.
it
When
can be lengthened
used for special pur-
THE COMING RACE.
126
poses, the upper part rests in the hollow of the
palm with the I
and middle
fore
was assured, however, that
equal in
all,
fingers protruded.
power was not
its
but proportioned to the amount of
certain vril properties in the wearer in affinity, or
rapport with the purposes to be
Some
effected.
were more potent to destroy, others to &c.
;
much
also
depended on the calm and
exercise
by
—and
hereditarily
assert
power can only
of vril
be acquired by constitutional i. e.,
steadi-
They
ness of volition in the manipulator. that the full
heal,
temperament
transmitted
—
organisation
that a female infant of four years old
belonging to the Vril-ya races can accomplish feats
with the wand placed for the
her hand, which a
life
spent in
its
first
time in
practice
would
not enable the strongest and most skilled mechanician, born out of the pale of the Vril-ya, to
All these
achieve.
plicated
;
wands
are not equally
those intrusted to children are
com-
much
simpler than those borne by sages of either sex,
and constructed with a view to the in
special object
which the children are employed
have before
said, is
among
;
which, as
I
the youngest children
THE COMING RACE. the most destructive.
and mothers the usually charged. this
I
wish
machinery
its
the
is
destroying force
power
healing
is
fully
could say more in detail of
I
conductor of
singular
27
In the wands of wives
correlative
abstracted,
1
the
vril
fluid,
as exquisite as its
but
effects are
marvellous. I
should say, however, that this people have
invented certain tubes by which the
can be conducted towards the object to destroy,
to
600
put
it
modestly when
And
miles.
their
accurate, that air-boat,
meant
I
say from
mathematical
science as applied to such purpose
an
it is
fluid
throughout a distance almost indefi-
nite; at least I
500
vril
is
so nicely
on the report of some observer in
any member of the
vril
department
can estimate unerringly the nature of intervening obstacles, the height to which the projectile
instrument should be raised, and the extent to
which
it
should be charged, so as to reduce to
ashes within a space of time too short for
venture to specify
it,
me
to
a capital twice as vast as
London. Certainly these
Ana
are wonderful mechani-
THE COMING RACE.
128
ciana
—wonderful
for the adaptation of the inven-
tive faculty to practical uses. I
went with
my
host and his daughter Zee
over the great public museum, which occupies a
wing
in the College of Sages,
and
in
which are
hoarded, as curious specimens of the ignorant and
blundering experiments of ancient times, contrivances
on which we
recent achievements. lessly
thrown
tubes
for
an
and
ciple of still
aside
destroying
inflammable
pride
many
ourselves as
In one department, careas
lumber,
obsolete life
by
powder,
are
metallic
balls
on
prin-
the
our cannons and catapults, and even
more murderous than our
improve-
latest
ments.
My
host spoke of these with a smile of con-
tempt, such as an artillery
officer
might bestow
on the bows and arrows of the Chinese.
In an-
other department there were models of vehicles
and
vessels
worked by steam, and of an
balloon which might have been constructed Montgolfier.
" Such," said Zee, with
— "such meditative wisdom flings
an
air-
by
air of
were the feeble
tri-
with nature of our savage forefathers, ere
THE COMING RACE.
1
29
had even a glimmering perception of the
tliey
properties of vril
This young
" !
Gy was
a magnificent specimen of
the muscular force to which the females of her
Her
country attain. those of
have
I
all
her race
features were beautiful, like :
never in the upper world
seen a face so grand and so faultless, but
her devotion to the severer studies had given to her countenance an expression of abstract thought
which rendered
somewhat
it
pose; and such sternness
when
stern
in re-
became formidable when
observed in connection with her ample shoulders
and
lofty stature.
and
I
could
saw her lift
tall
even for a Gy,
up a cannon
lift
a pocket-pistol.
a profound terror
we came
She was
—a
terror
as easily as I
Zee inspired
me
with
which increased when
into a department of the
museum
ap-
propriated to models of contrivances worked the agency of vril
play of her vril
;
for here,
staff,
merely by a certain
she herself standing at
a distance, she put into
weighty substances.
by
movement
large
and
She seemed to endow them
with intelligence, and to make them comprehend
and obey her command. 1
She
set
complicated
THE COMING RACE.
130
pieces of machinery into
movement
or continued
movement, arrested the
it,
until,
within an incre-
dibly short time, various kinds of
raw material
were reproduced as symmetrical works of complete and perfect.
merism or
Whatever
effect
produces
art,
mes-
over
the
objects,
this
young Gy produced by the motions of her
slen-
electro-biology
and muscles of animated
nerves
der rod over the springs and wheels of
lifeless
mechanism.
When
I
mentioned to
my
my
companions
astonishment at this influence over inanimate
matter
—while owning
had
that, in our world, I
witnessed phenomena which
showed that over
certain living organisations certain other living
organisations could establish an influence genuine in
itself,
craft
but often exaggerated by credulity or
— Zee, who was more interested in such sub-
jects than her father,
bade
me
hand, and then, placing beside called
my attention
and character. the
Gy
race,
stretch forth it
my
her own, she
to certain distinctions of type
In the
first
place, the
thumb
of
(and, as I afterwards noticed, of all that
male or female) was much
larger, at
once
THE COMING RACE. longer and more massive, than species above ground.
There
great a difference as there of a
man and
palm
is
is
is
is
131
found with our
almost, in this, as
between the thumb
that of a gorilla.
Secondly, the
proportionately thicker than ours
—the —
texture of the skin infinitely finer and softer
average warmth
than
all this, is
is
greater.
its
More remarkable
a visible nerve, perceptible under
the skin, which starts from the wrist skirting the ball of the
thumb, and branching,
fork-like, at
the roots of the fore and middle fingers.
"With
your slight formation of thumb," said the philosophical
young Gy,
"
and with the absence of
the nerve which you find more or less developed in the hands of our race,
you can never achieve
other than imperfect and feeble power over the
agency of
vril
cerned, that earliest
tribes
is
;
but so far as the nerve
is
con-
not found in the hands of our
progenitors, nor in those of the ruder
without the pale of the Vril-ya.
It
has
been slowly developed in the course of generations,
commencing
in the early achievements,
and
increasing with the continuous exercise, of the vril
power; therefore, in the course of one or
132
THE COMING RACE.
two thousand
years, such a nerve
may
possibly
be engendered in those higher beings of your race,
who devote themselves which
science through all vril.
attained
is
paramount
to that
command
over
by
the subtler forces of nature permeated
But when you talk of matter
as some-
thing in itself inert and motionless, your parents
you
or tutors surely cannot have left as not to less
and
know that no form inert
of matter
every particle
:
so ignorant
is
is
motion-
constantly in
motion and constantly acted upon by agencies, of which heat
but
vril
the
the most apparent and rapid,
is
most
subtle,
wielded, the most powerful.
current launched will does
by
So
when
skilfully
that, in fact, the
hand and guided by
my
but render quicker and more potent
the action which
is
particle of matter,
may
my
and,
seem.
If a
eternally at
however
work upon every
inert
and stubborn
it
heap of metal be not capable of
originating a thought of
its
internal susceptibility to
own,
yet,
movement,
through it
its
obtains
the power to receive the thought of the intellec-
and which, when con-
tual agent at
work on
veyed with a
sufficient force of the vril
it
;
power,
it
THE COMING RACE. is
as
much compelled
to obey as if
placed by a visible bodily force. for the it,
it
1
it
were
33
dis-
animated
It is
time being by the soul thus infused into
so that one
may
almost say that
Without
reasons.
this
we
could not
and
lives
it
make our
automata supply the place of servants." I
was too much
learning of the
in
awe
young Gy
arguing with her.
I
of the thews
and the
to hazard the risk of
had read somewhere
in
my
schoolboy days that a wise man, disputing with a
Roman
emperor, suddenly drew in his horns;
and when the emperor asked him whether he had nothing further to say on question,
"Nay,
replied,
arguing against a reasoner
his
side of the is
no
who commands
ten
Csesar,
there
legions."
Though
I
had a
secret persuasion that,
what-
ever the real effects of vril upon matter,
Mr
Faraday could have proved her a very shallow philosopher as to
its
extent or
its causes, I
no doubt that Zee could have brained
all
had the
Fellows of the Royal Society, one after the other,
with a blow of her
knows that
it
is
fist.
useless
Every to
sensible
man
argue with any
THE COMING RACE.
134
ordinary female upon matters he comprehends
but to argue with a mysteries of
vril,
—
Gy
seven feet high upon the
as well argue in a desert,
and
with a simoom
Amid
the various departments to which the
vast building of the College of Sages priated,
which
that
was appro-
me most was
interested
devoted to the archaeology of the Vril-ya, and comprised a very ancient collection of portraits.
In these the pigments and groundwork employed
were of so tures
durable
retained
the earliest
much
this collection,
—
1st,
nature
that
even
pic-
be executed at dates as remote
said to
as those in
a
annals of the Chinese,
freshness of colour.
two things
In examining
especially struck
me
:
That the pictures said to be between 6000
and 7000 years old were of a much higher degree of art than any produced within the last
3000 or 4000 years; traits
within
the
resembled our
former period
me
much more
own upper world and European
types of countenance.
reminded
and, 2d, That the por-
Some
of them, indeed,
of the Italian heads which look out
from the canvas of Titian
—speaking
of ambi-
THE COMING RACE.
I35
of care or of grief, with furrows
tion or craft,
which the passions have passed with iron
in
These were the countenances of
ploughshare.
men who had
lived
in
and
struggle
conflict
before the discovery of the latent forces of vril
had changed the character of society had fought with each other
we
for
—men who
power or fame as
in the upper world fight.
The type
of face began to evince a
marked
change about a thousand years after the revolution,
more
men
becoming then, with each generation,
serene,
distinct ;
vril
and in that serenity more
terribly
from the faces of labouring and
sinful
while in proportion as the beauty and the
grandeur of the countenance fully developed, the
itself
became more
art of the painter
became
more tame and monotonous. But the greatest was that of three pre-historical tradition,
age,
curiosity in portraits
collection
belonging to
the
and, according to mythical
taken by the orders of a philosopher,
whose origin and attributes were
up with symbolical
Budh
the
or a
as
much mixed
fable as those of
Greek Prometheus.
an Indian
THE COMING RACE.
136
From
mysterious personage, at once a
this
sage and a hero,
all
the principal sections of the
Vril-ya race pretend to trace a
The
common
origin.
portraits are of the philosopher himself,
of his grandfather,
and great-grandfather.
The philosopher
are all at full length. in a long tunic
is
They attired
which seems to form a loose
suit
of scaly armour, borrowed, perhaps, from some fish or reptile,
the
in both
digits
webbed.
but the feet and hands are exposed
He
has
are
little
wonderfully long, and
or no perceptible throat,
and a low receding forehead, not of a sage's. eyes, a very
He
at all the ideal
has bright brown prominent
wide mouth and high cheek-bones,
and a muddy complexion. tion, this philosopher
age, extending over
membered
According to tradi-
had lived
many
to a patriarchal
centuries,
distinctly in middle
father as surviving,
life
and he
first
his great-
he had taken,
or caused to be taken, while yet alive
The
was taken from
his effigies in
portrait of the grandfather
re-
his grand-
and in childhood
grandfather; the portrait of the
the latter
:
—that of mummy.
had the features
and aspect of the philosopher, only much more
THE COMING RACE. exaggerated of his
:
body was singular
the breast and stomach
;
and
legs of a dull bronze
the great-grandfather
:
37
he was not dressed, and the colour
yellow, the shoulders
hue
1
was a magnificent
specimen of the Batrachian genus, a Giant Frog,
pur
et simple.
Among
the pithy sayings which, according to
tradition, the philosopher
and sententious
in rhythmical form is
notably recorded
descendants (tadpole) it
:
;
bequeathed to posterity
:
"Humble
brevity, this
yourselves,
my
the father of your race was a twat
exalt yourselves,
my
descendants, for
was the same Divine Thought which created
your
father
that
in
exalting
this fable while I
gazed on
develops itself
you."
Aph-Lin told me
the three Batrachian portraits. "
You make
credulity
a jest of
as an
my
reply
:
supposed ignorance and
uneducated Tish, but though
these horrible daubs
may
be of great antiquity,
and were intended, perhaps, cature, I
I said in
for
some rude
presume that none of your
race,
cari-
even in
the less enlightened ages, ever believed that the
great-grandson of a Frog became a sententious
THE COMING RACE.
138
philosopher
or that
;
any
section, I will not
say
of the lofty Vril-ya, but of the meanest varieties
human
of the "
we
race,
had
its
origin in a Tadpole."
Pardon me," answered Aph-Lin call
:
" in
what
the Wrangling or Philosophical Period
of History, which
was
at its height about seven
thousand years ago, there was a very distinguished naturalist,
who proved to the
satisfaction of
numer-
ous disciples such analogical and anatomical agree-
ments in structure between an to
An
and a Frog, as
show that out of the one must have developed
They had some
the other.
diseases in
common
they were both subject to the same parasitical
worms
An
in the intestines
;
and, strange to say, the
has, in his structure, a
swimming-bladder, no
longer of any use to him, but which
ment that
Nor
is
clearly proves his descent
there
any argument against
is
from a Frog.
this theory to
be found in the relative difference of there are size
still
many thousand " I
still
size, for
existent in our world Frogs of a
and stature not
been
a rudi-
inferior
to
our own, and
years ago they appear to have
larger."
understand that," said
I,
" because
Frogs
THE COMING RACE.
I39
thus enormous are, according to our eminent geologists,
who perhaps saw them
in dreams, said
have been distinguished inhabitants of the
to
upper world before the Deluge
;
and such Frogs
are exactly the creatures likely to have flourished in the lakes
and morasses of your subterranean
But pray, proceed."
regions.
" In the
Wrangling Period of History, whatever
one sage asserted another sage was sure to contradict.
the
In
was a maxim in that
fact, it
human reason
age, that
could only be sustained aloft by
being tossed to and fro in the perpetual motion of contradiction
;
and therefore another
sect of
An
philosophers maintained the doctrine that the
was not the descendant of the Frog, but that the Frog was
clearly the
improved development of
The shape of the Frog, taken
the An.
generally,
was much more symmetrical than that of the beside the beautiful conformation of limbs, its flanks
the
Ana
in that
its
An
;
lower
and shoulders, the majority of
day were almost deformed, and
certainly ill-shaped.
Again, the Frog had the
power to
on land and in water
mighty
live
alike
—
privilege, partaking of a spiritual essence
THE COMING RACE.
140
denied to the An, since the disuse of his swim-
ming - bladder
clearly proves
from a higher development of the earlier races of the
degeneration
his
species.
Ana seem
Again,
have been
to
covered with hair, and, even to a comparatively recent
date, hirsute bushes
deformed the very
faces of our ancestors, spreading wild over their
cheeks
and
chins,
as similar bushes,
But the
Tish, spread wild over yours.
the higher races of the
generations
Ana
has been to
my
poor
object of
through countless
erase
vestige
all
of
connection with hairy vertebrata, and they have
gradually
eliminated
that
debasing
capillary
excrement by the law of sexual selection; the Gy-ei naturally preferring youth or the beauty of smooth faces.
But the degree of the Frog in
the scale of the vertebrata
he has no hair at
was born
all,
is
shown
in this, that
not even on his head.
to that hairless perfection
He
which the
most beautiful of the Ana, despite the culture of incalculable ages, have not yet attained.
The
wonderful complication and delicacy of a Frog's nervous system
shown by
and
arterial
this school to be
circulation
were
more susceptible of
THE COMING RACE. enjoyment than our
141
inferior, or at least simpler,
physical frame allows us to be.
may
The examination
of a Frog's hand,
if I
accounted for
keener susceptibility to love,
and
In
to social life in general.
and amatory so.
its
use that expression,
as are the
gregarious
fact,
Ana, Frogs are
still
more
In short, these two schools raged against
each other
;
one asserting the
fected type of the
Frog
;
An
to be the per-
the other that the Frog
was the highest development of the An.
The
moralists were divided in opinion with the naturalists,
but the bulk of them sided with the Frog-
preference school. bility,
They
said,
that in moral conduct
with (viz.,
much
plausi-
in the adher-
ence to rules best adapted to the health and welfare of the individual and the community) there could be no doubt of the vast superiority of
the Frog.
All history showed the wholesale im-
morality of the gard, even
of the
human
race, the
complete disre-
by the most renowned amongst them,
laws which they acknowledged to be
essential to their
and wellbcing.
own and But the
the general happiness severest critic of the
Frog race could not detect
in their
manners a
THE COMING RACE.
I42
from the moral law
aberration
single
And
by themselves.
recognised
can be the profit of civilisation
tacitly
what, after if
superiority in
moral
conduct be not the aim for which
strives,
and the
be judged
test
by which
its
all,
it
progress should
1
" In fine, the adherents to this theory
presumed
that in some remote period the Frog race had
been the improved development of the
Human
but that, from some causes which defied rational conjecture, they
had not maintained
ginal position in the scale of nature
Ana, though of
;
organisation,
inferior
their ori-
while the had,
by
dint less of their virtues than their vices, such as ferocity
ancy,
and cunning, gradually acquired ascend-
much
as
among
the
human
race itself tribes
by
superiority in similar
vices, utterly destroyed or
reduced into insigni-
utterly barbarous have,
them
in mental
Unhappily these
disputes
ficance tribes originally excelling gifts
and
culture.
became involved with the that age
;
and
as society
religious notions of
was then administered
under the government of the Koom-Posh, who, being the most ignorant, were of course the
THE COMING RACE. most inflammable
class
—the
143
multitude took the
whole question out of the hands of the philosophers
;
political chiefs
so taken
saw that the Frog
dispute,
up by the populace, could become a most
valuable instrument of their ambition
;
and
for
not less than one thousand years war and massacre prevailed, during
which period the philo-
sophers on both sides were butchered, and the
government of the Koom-Posh
itself
was happily
brought to an end by the ascendancy of a family that
clearly
established
aboriginal tadpole,
its
descent from
and furnished despotic
to the various nations of the Ana. finally disappeared, at least
the
rulers
These despots
from our communities,
as the discovery of vril led to the tranquil institutions
under which flourish
all
the races of
the Vril-ya."
"And
do no wranglers or philosophers now
exist to revive the dispute
nise the origin of
or do they all recog-
your race in the tadpole
" Nay, such disputes," smile, " belong to the
and now only serve
When we know
;
?
said Zee, with a lofty
Pah-bodh of the dark
for the
amusement
ages,
of infants.
the elements out of which our
THE COMING RACE.
144
common
bodies are composed, elements
humblest vegetable plants, can
it
to
the
signify whether
the All-Wise combined those elements out of one
form more than another, in order to create that in
which
He
has placed the capacity to receive
the idea of Himself, and
all
the varied grandeurs
of intellect to which that idea gives birth
An
in reality
commenced
to exist as
An
The
%
with the
donation of that capacity, and, with that capacity,
the sense
to
acknowledge
that,
through the countless ages his race in
wisdom,
it
command
its
enough
may
improve
can never combine the elements at into the form of a tadpole."
"You speak it is
however
well, Zee," said
for us
Aph-Lin
;
"
and
shortlived mortals to feel a
reasonable assurance that whether the origin of
the to
An was
a tadpole or not, he
is
no more likely
become a tadpole again than the
institutions
of the Vril-ya are likely to relapse into the heav-
ing quagmire and certain strife-rot of a Posh."
Koom-
145
CHAPTER The
XVII.
Vril-ya, being excluded
from
all
sight of the
heavenly bodies, and having no other difference
between night and day than that which they
deem
it
convenient to
make
for themselves,
—do
not, of course, arrive at their divisions of time
the same process that
by the
aid of
about me, to nicety.
and
my
we do
compute
their
all details
found
I
I
it
luckily
easy,
had
time with great
work on the
science
Vril-ya,
should
I
live to
as to the
manner
in
a future
literature of the it,
but
watch, which
I reserve for
complete
;
by
they arrive at their rotation of time
;
which
and con-
tent myself here with saying, that in point of duration, their ours,
year
very slightly from
but that the divisions of their year are by
no means the same.
we
differs
call
Their day (including what
night) consists of twenty hours of our
K
THE COMING RACE.
I46
and of course
time, instead of twenty-four,
their
year comprises the correspondent increase in the
number
of days
by which
summed
it is
up.
They
subdivide the twenty hours of their day thus eight hours,"" called the " Silent Hours," for re-
pose
;
eight hours, called the " Earnest Time," for
the pursuits and occupations of hours, called the " I
may term
ties, sport,
their
Easy Time
day
life
" (with
;
and four
which what
closes), allotted to festivi-
recreation, or family converse, accord-
ing to their several tastes and inclinations. in truth, out of doors there
is
no night.
But,
They
maintain, both in the streets and in the surround-
ing country, to the limits of their territory, the
same degree of
light at all hours.
doors, they lower
to a soft twilight during the
They have a
Silent Hours. fect darkness,
extinguished.
it
and
On
Only, within
great horror of per-
their lights are never wholly
occasions
continue the duration of
of festivity
full light,
they
but equally
keep note of the distinction between night and * For the sake of convenience, &c, in
among
the Vril-ya
ever,
I
adopt the words hours, days,
any general reference
years,
—those
to
subdivisions of time
terms but loosely corresponding, how-
with such subdivisions.
THE COMING RACE.
147
by mechanical contrivances which answer
day,
They
the purpose of our clocks and watches. are very fond of music
;
and
by music that
it is
these chronometers strike the principal division of time.
At every one
their day, the sounds
of their hours, during
coming from
pieces in their public buildings, as
it
all
and caught up,
were, by those of houses or hamlets scattered
amidst the landscapes without the
an
the time-
effect
solemn.
singularly sweet,
city,
have
and yet singularly
But during the Silent Hours these
sounds are so subdued as to be only faintly heard
by a waking
They have no change
ear.
sons, and, at least
seemed to
atmosphere
the
warm
as that of
rather than dry still,
on the territory of
me
of sea-
this tribe,
very equable,
an Italian summer, and humid ;
in the forenoon usually very
but at times invaded by strong blasts from
the rocks that
But time
is
made
the borders of their domain.
the same to them for sowing or reap-
ing as in the Golden Isles of the ancient poets.
At
the same
moment you
see the
younger plants
in blade or bud, the older in ear or fruit.
All
fruit-bearing plants, however, after fruitage, either
THE COMING RACE.
I48
But
shed or change the colour of their leaves.
me most
that which interested
their divisions of time
up
in reckoning
was the ascertainment
the average duration of
amongst them.
life
of I
found on minute inquiry that this very considerably exceeded the term allotted to us on the
upper earth.
"What seventy years are to
hundred years are
Nor
to them.
is
us,
one
this the only
advantage they have over us in longevity, for as
few among us attain to the age of seventy,
so,
on
the contrary, few
among them
of one hundred
and they enjoy a general degree
;
makes
of health and vigour which blessing even to the
bute to this result stimulants
;
last. :
die before the age
temperance in food
ious occupations
itself a
Various causes contri-
the absence of
perhaps, a serenity of
life
;
all alcoholic
more
especially,
mind undisturbed by anx-
and eager
passions.
They
are
not tormented by our avarice or our ambition
they appear perfectly indifferent even to the desire of
fame
;
they are capable of great
but their love shows
itself in
ful complaisance, and, while ness,
seems rarely,
if ever,
affection,
a tender and cheer-
forming their happi-
to constitute their woe.
THE COMING RACE.
As
Gy
the
self fixes
marry where she her-
sure only to
is
I49
her choice, and as here, not less than
above ground,
it
female on
the
is
home depends
happiness of
;
chosen the mate she prefers to
so
whom
the Gy, having others, is len-
all
ient to his faults, consults his humours,
is
so
but not only
;
much more
becomes a
it
is
death with
rare before that age in
release,
survivor takes
of
of course with them, as with us,
a cause of sorrow
them
and does
The death
her best to secure his attachment. a beloved one
the
but
when
much more
afraid, the generality of
it
which
does occur the
consolation than, I
am
us do, in the certainty of
reunion in another and yet happier
life.
All these causes, then, concur to their healthful
and enjoyable longevity, though, no doubt,
much
also
sation.
must be owing
to hereditary organi-
According to their records, however, in
those earlier stages of their society
when they
lived in communities resembling ours, agitated
by
fierce competition, their lives
were consider-
ably shorter, and their maladies more numerous
and grave. tion of
life,
They themselves say that the duratoo,
has increased, and
is still
on the
THE COMING RACE.
150
increase, since their discovery of the invigorating
and medicinal properties of
applied for reme-
vril,
They have few
dial purposes.
professional
and
regular practitioners of medicine,
and these are
Gy-ei, who, especially if
widowed and
chiefly
great delight in the healing
childless, find
art,
and even undertake surgical operations in those cases required
or,
more
diversions
and
by accident,
rarely,
by
disease.
They have
their
entertain-
ments, and, during the Easy Time of their day,
they are wont to assemble in great numbers for
those winged
have already described. halls for music,
in
sports
and even
the
air
They have
I
also public
theatres, at
performed pieces that appeared to
which
which are
me somewhat
to resemble the plays of the Chinese
— dramas
that are thrown back into distant times for their
events and personages, in which are outrageously violated,
and the
scene a child, in the next so forth. position,
all classic
is
unities
hero, in one
an old man, and
These plays are of very ancient com-
and
their stories cast in remote times.
They appeared
to
me
very
dull,
on the whole,
THE COMING RACE.
151
but were relieved by startling mechanical contrivances, and a kind of farcical broad humour,
and
detached passages of great vigour and power expressed in language highly poetical, but some-
what overcharged with metaphor and fine,
they seemed to
me
very
trope.
In
much what
the
plays of Shakespeare seemed to a Parisian in the
time of Louis XV., or perhaps to an Englishman in the reign of Charles II.
The
audience, of which the Gy-ei constituted
the chief portion, appeared to enjoy greatly the representation sedate
me,
of these
dramas, which, for so
and majestic a race of females, surprised observed that
till I
all
the performers were
under the age of adolescence, and conjectured truly that the mothers their children I
and
and
sisters
came
to please
brothers.
have said that these dramas are of great
antiquity.
works
No new
sufficiently
plays, indeed
no imaginative
important to survive their im-
mediate day, appear to have been composed for several generations.
lack of
new
what may be
In
fact,
publications,
though there
is
no
and they have even
called newspapers, these are chiefly
THE COMING RACE.
152
new
devoted to mechanical science, reports of
announcements respecting various de-
inventions,
business
tails of
—
in short, to practical matters.
Sometimes a child writes a
little tale
of adventure,
or a
young Gy vents her amorous hopes
in a
poem
merit,
;
or fears
but these effusions are of very
little
and are seldom read except by children
The most
and maiden Gy-ei.
interesting works
of a purely literary character are those of ex-
and
plorations
travels into other regions of this
by
nether world, which
are
young emigrants, and
are read with great avid-
and friends they have
left
could not help expressing to Aph-Lin
my
by the
ity
generally written
relations
behind. I
surprise that a
science in
community
had made
which
which mechanical
so marvellous a progress,
intellectual
itself in realising
in
civilisation
and
had exhibited
those objects for the happiness
of the people, which the political philosophers
above ground had, after ages of struggle, pretty generally agreed to consider unattainable visions, should, nevertheless, be so wholly without a con-
temporaneous
literature, despite the excellence to
THE COMING RACE.
1
53
which culture had brought a language at once rich
and simple, vigorous and musical.
My
host replied
—
"
Do you
a literature such as you
not perceive that
mean would be wholly
incompatible with that perfection
social
or
which you do us the honour
political felicity at
to think
of
we have
arrived
We
\
have at
after centuries of struggle, settled into a
last,
form of
government with which we are content, and in which, as
we
allow no differences of rank, and no
honours are paid to administrators distinguishing
them from
others, there is
individual ambition.
No
no stimulus given to one would read works
advocating theories that involved any political or social change,
them.
If
and therefore no one writes
now and then an An
dissatisfied
with our tranquil mode of
does not attack that
part
the
ancient
of
it;
he goes away.
literature
books
was once a very
in
(and
our
to
public
large part)
speculative theories on society extinct.
himself
feels
which is
life,
he
Thus
all
judge
by
libraries,
it
relates
to
become utterly
Again, formerly there was a vast deal
written respecting the attributes and essence of
THE COMING RACE.
154
tlie
All-Good, and the arguments for and against
a future state facts,
now we
but
;
all
recognise two
that there is a Divine Being, and there
future state, and
we
all
equally agree that
is
if
a
we
wrote our fingers to the bone, we could not
throw any
light
upon the nature and conditions
of that future state, or quicken our apprehensions
and essence of that Divine
of the
attributes
Being.
Thus
become
also extinct, happily for our race; for in
the times
another
when
so
part
much was
of
has
literature
written on subjects
which no one could determine, people seemed to live in a perpetual state of quarrel tion.
and conten-
So, too, a vast part of our ancient litera-
and
ture consists of historical records of wars
revolutions during the times in large
and turbulent
when
the
Ana
lived
each seeking
societies,
You
aggrandisement at the expense of the other. see our serene
mode
been
We
for ages.
What more were
born,
Coming next
of
life
now
;
such
were
happy,
they
to that part of literature
more under the
has
have no events to chronicle.
of us can be said than that
they
it
'
they
died
which
?
is
control of the imagination, such
THE COMING RACE. as
what we
and you
1
55
call Glaubsila, or colloquially 'Glaubs,'
call poetry,
the reasons for
decline
its
amongst us are abundantly obvious.
"We
find,
by
referring to the great masterpieces
which we
in that department of literature
all still
read with pleasure, but of which none would tolerate imitations, that they consist in the por-
which we no longer experi-
traiture of passions
ence
—ambition, vengeance, unhallowed
love, the
The
renown, and suchlike.
thirst for warlike
an atmosphere impregnated
old poets lived in
with these passions, and expressed glowingly.
vividly
felt
No
what they
one can express such
passions now, for no one can feel them, or meet
with any sympathy in his readers
if
he did.
Again, the old poetry has a main element in dissection of those
complex mysteries of human
character which conduce to abnormal vices crimes, virtues.
or
lead
But our
its
to
signal
society,
and
and
extraordinary
having got
rid
of
temptations to any prominent vices and crimes,
has necessarily rendered the moral equal, that
Without
its
there are
no very
ancient food
of
average so
salient
virtues.
strong passions,
THE COMING RACE.
156
vast crimes, heroic excellences, poetry therefore is, if
not actually starved to death, reduced to a
very meagre
There
is
—description of
the poetry of
still
rocks,
and
and common household
life;
description waters,
diet.
young Gy-ei weave much
trees,
and
and our
of this insipid kind of
composition into their love verses." "
Such poetry," said
very charming
who
consider
I,
"
might surely be made
and we have
;
it
critics
amongst us
a higher kind than that which
depicts the crimes, or analyses the passions, of
man.
At
all
you mention
is
events, poetry of the insipid kind
a poetry that nowadays
commands
more readers than any other among the people have
left
I
above ground."
" Possibly
;
but then
I
suppose the writers take
great pains with the language they employ, and
devote themselves to the culture and polish of
words and rhythms as an art " Certainly they do that.
Though the
:
all
gift of
\
great poets
poetry
may
must do
be inborn,
care to
make
it
able as a block of metal does to be
made
into one
the gift requires as
of your engines."
much
avail-
THE COMING RACE.
"And
" Well,
upon such verbal
those pains
all
?
prettinesses
presume
I
their
would make them sing
song
of
instinct
as the bird does
song into verbal or
to cultivate the
but
;
artificial pret-
probably does need an inducement from
tiness,
without, and
fame
57
doubtless your poets have some incen-
bestow
tive to
1
our. poets find
—perhaps,
now and
it
in the love of
then, in the
want
of
money." " Precisely
fame
to nothing
his duration
We
wealth
we
attach
which man, in that moment of
which
the
is
if
felicitous
we
eminent praise pre
-
called
'life,'
can perform.
awake
;
:
any individual
commonfor pre-
pre-eminent praise would con-
evil passions,
other
praise, then
hate,
selected
essence of our
eminent power, and
were given,
Our
in our society
should soon lose that equality which con-
stitutes
fer
But
so.
the
moment
men would immediately
would
it
now dormant, would
arise envy,
covet
and with envy
and with hate calumny and persecution.
history tells us that most of the poets
and
most of the writers who, in the old time, were
THE COMING RACE.
I58
favoured with the assailed
greatest
were
praise,
also
by the greatest vituperation, and even, on
the whole, rendered very unhappy, partly by the
by the
attacks of jealous rivals, partly
diseased
mental constitution which an acquired sensitive-
and
ness to praise
to
blame tends
As
for the stimulus of
no
man
want
;
to engender.
in the first place,
community knows the goad
in our
poverty; and, secondly,
if
of
he did, almost every
occupation would be more lucrative than writing.
"
Our public
libraries contain all the
the past which time has preserved
;
books of
those books,
above stated, are infinitely better
for the reasons
than any can write nowadays, and they are
open to
all
read without cost.
to
We
are not
such fools as to pay for reading inferior books,
when we can read "
With
book,
if
good,
is
us,
bad,
superior books for nothing/'
novelty has an attraction is
read
when an
;
and a new
old book, though
neglected."
"Novelty,
to
barbarous
states
of
society
struggling in despair for something better, has
no doubt an attraction, denied
to us,
who
see
THE COMING RACE.
159
nothing to gain in novelties; but, after is
all,
it
observed by one of our great authors four
thousand years ago, that
who
'he
studies
old
books will always find in them something new, and he who reads new books will always find in
them something
you have
question
But
old.'
raised,
amongst us no stimulus whether
to
return
there
to
being
to painstaking
the
then
labour,
fame or in pressure of want, such as have the poetic temperament, no doubt, vent it in song, as you say the bird sings but in desire of
j
for lack of elaborate culture it fails of
ence, and, failing of itself,
an audience, dies
out,
amidst the ordinary avocations of
"But how
is
it
against that of science
"Your
do not operate
?
to our social conservation
our daily life. is
all
No fame
is
given to him
;
to
con-
and science with us too
devoted almost solely to practical
and none
The motive
the love of truth apart from
sideration of fame,
life."
"
question amazes me.
is
of
that these discouragements
to the cultivation of literature
science
an audi-
is
uses, essential
and the comforts of asked by the inventor, he enjoys an occupa-
THE COMING RACE.
l6o
and needing no wear
tion congenial to his tastes,
and tear of the ercise
mind
for his
Man must
passions.
as well as
have ex-
body; and con-
tinuous exercise, rather than violent,
is
best for
both.
Our most ingenious
are, as
a general rule, the longest lived and the
most to
free
from
disease.
many, but the
times,
when
cultivators of science
Painting
is
an amusement
what
it
was
art is not
in our various
the great painters
communities vied with each other of a golden crown, which gave
for the prize
them a
equal to that of the kings under lived.
You
will thus doubtless
our archaeological department
in former
social
whom
rank they
have observed in
how
superior in
point of art the pictures were several thousand years ago. reality,
more
Perhaps
it
is
because music
allied to science
that, of all the pleasurable
than
it is
arts,
music
which nourishes the most amongst
is,
in
to poetry,
us.
is
that Still,
even in music the absence of stimulus in praise or
fame has served
to prevent
any great superiority
of one individual over another
;
and we rather
excel in choral music, with the aid of our vast
mechanical instruments, in which we make great
THE COMING RACE.
l6l
use of the agency of water,* than in single per-
We
formers.
composer
for
have had scarcely any original
some
Our
ages.
favourite airs are
very ancient in substance, but have admitted
many
complicated variations by inferior, though
ingenious, musicians."
"Are
there no political
Ana which
by those
are animated
jected to those crimes,
societies
which the
state of
your
the Vril-ya generally, has gress to perfection
perhaps Poetry and her to be "
behind in
its
pro-
societies
sister arts still
continue
honoured and to improve
There are such
indeed of
among such
If so,
?
dis-
and in moral-
tribe, or
left
the
passions, sub-
and admitting those
parities in condition, in intellect, ity,
among
societies
1
in remote regions,
but we do not admit them within the pale of civilised
communities
them the name of Vril-ya.
* This
;
we
scarcely
even give
of Ana, and certainly not that
They
may remind
are savages, living chiefly in
the
student of Nero's invention of a
musical machine, by which water was made to perform the part of an orchestra, and on
spiracy against
which he was employed when the con-
him broke
out.
1
THE COMING RACE.
62
Koom -
that low stage of being, necessarily
to
own
its
hideous
Posh, tending dissolution
Their wretched existence
Glek-Nas.
in perpetual contest
in
is
passed
and perpetual change.
When
they do not fight with their neighbours, they fight
among
murder each
other,
and on the most
points of difference that
we
are divided into
which abuse, plunder, and sometimes
sections,
to us if
They
themselves.
we had
would be
frivolous
unintelligible
not read history, and seen that
too have passed through the same early state
of ignorance cient to set
and barbarism.
them together by the
pretend to be
all
equals,
have struggled to be
so,
and starting
tinctions
Any
trifle is suffi-
ears.
They
and the more they
by removing
afresh, the
old dis-
more glaring
and intolerable the disparity becomes, because nothing tions
in left
is
hereditary to
tion between the
the few
and
affections
soften the one
naked
many who have
who have much.
associadistinc-
nothing and
Of course the many
hate the few, but without the few they could
not
live.
the few
;
The
many
are
always
assailing
sometimes they exterminate the few
THE COMING RACE. but as soon as they have done starts out of the
many, and
so,
new few
a
harder to deal
For where
with than the old few.
and competition
are large,
is
163
societies
have something
to
the predominant fever, there must be
many
losers
and few
some gleam of
light,
way
in the dark towards
and would demand our com-
miseration for their infirmities,
and
cruelty.
that creatures of this kind,
miserable weapons as you
if,
like all savages,
own
they did not provoke their their arrogance
always
In short, they are
gainers.
savages groping their
is
destruction
by
Can you imagine
armed only with such
may see
in our
museum
of antiquities, clumsy iron tubes charged with saltpetre,
have more than once threatened with
destruction a tribe of the Vril-ya, which dwells nearest to
them, because they say they have
thirty millions
of population
may have
thousand
fifty
—
if
— and
that tribe
the latter do not
accept their notions of Soc-Sec (money-getting)
on some trading principles which they have the
impudence "
But
to call a
'
law of
civilisation
1
thirty millions of population are formid-
able odds against fifty thousand
" !
THE COMING RACE.
164
My
me
host stared at
said he, "
" Stranger,"
astonished.
you could not have heard me say that
this threatened tribe belongs to the Vril-ya it
;
and
only waits for these savages to declare war, in
order to commission some half - a children to sweep
At
away
-
dozen small
whole population."
their
these words I felt a thrill of horror, recog-
much more
nising
affinity
with "the savages"
did with the Vril-ya, and remembering
than
I
all I
had
said in praise of the glorious Ameri-
can institutions, which Aph-Lin stigmatised as
Koom-Posh. asked I
if
my
Kecovering
self-possession, I
modes of
there were
transit
by which
could safely visit this temerarious and remote
people. "
You can
either
along
throughout
all
which we are
vouch
for
by
travel with safety,
the
ground
amid
or
agency,
vril
the
the range of the communities with allied
and akin
;
but
I
cannot
your safety in barbarous nations gov-
erned by different laws from ours
;
nations, indeed,
so benighted, that there are
among them
numbers who actually
stealing
other,
air,
live
by
and one could not with safety
large
from each
in the Silent
THE COMING RACE. Hours even leave the doors of
l6$
one's
own house
open."
Here our conversation was interrupted by the entrance of Tae,
who came
to inform us that he,
having been deputed to discover and destroy the
enormous arrival,
reptile
I
my
had seen on
had been on the watch
for it ever since
eyes had deceived me, or that the creature
had made
its
way through
the cavities within the
rocks to the wild regions in which dwelt
dred
race,
—when
it
gave evidences of
by a great devastation
abouts
bordering one of the lakes. "
first
me, and had begun to suspect that
his visit to
my
which
I feel
ing.
"
amuse you
it is
(turning to me) " I thought to
accompany me
at the face of the
young
child,
said Tae,
now
As
and
hid-
might
it
to see the
destroy such unpleasant visitors."
where-
herbage
of the
sure that within that lake
So
its
"And,"
kin-
its
way we I
looked
called to
mind
the enormous size of the creature he proposed to exterminate, I felt myself shudder with fear for
him, and perhaps fear for myself,
him
in such a chase.
the destructive effects
if I
accompanied
my curiosity to witness of the boasted vril, and my
But
1
THE COMING RACE.
66
unwillingness to lower myself in the eyes of an infant
by betraying apprehensions of personal
safety, prevailed over
ingly, I
my
first
Accord-
thanked Tae for his courteous consi-
deration for
my
amusement, and professed
willingness to set out with
an
impulse.
enterprise.
him on
my
so diverting
67
1
CHAPTER As Tae and
and
myself, on quitting the town,
leaving to the left the it,
XVIII.
struck into the
main road which
fields,
led to
the strange and solemn
beauty of the landscape, lighted up, by numberless
lamps, to the verge of the horizon, fascinated
my
eyes,
and rendered
me
for
inattentive listener to the talk of
some time an
my
companion.
Along our way various operations of ture were being carried
on by machinery, the
forms of which were
new
to me,
part very graceful
for
among
;
agricul-
and
for the
most
these people art
being so cultivated for the sake of mere
utility,
exhibits itself in adorning or refining the shapes
of useful objects. so profuse
Precious metals and gems are
among them,
that they are lavished
on things devoted to purposes the most commonplace
;
and
their love of utility leads
them
to
THE COMING RACE.
l68
beautify in a
way unknown
In
all service,
to themselves.
whether in or out of doors, they
and
so ingenious,
It
their imagination
great use of automaton figures, which are
make
vril,
and quickens
its tools,
so pliant to the operations of
that they actually seem gifted with reason.
was scarcely
possible to distinguish the figures
I beheld, apparently
the rapid
guiding or superintending
movements of vast
engines, from
human
forms endowed with thought.
By
degrees, as
attention
continued to walk on,
became roused by the
remarks of the
we
my
children
The
companion.
among
this
lively
race
is
my
and acute
intelligence of
marvellously
precocious, perhaps from the habit of having in-
trusted to them, at so early an age, the toils and responsibilities of
middle age.
versing with Tae,
I felt as if
superior
and observant man of
asked him
number
if
Indeed, in contalking with some
my own
years.
I
he could form any estimate of the
of communities into which the race of
the Vril-ya
is
subdivided.
" Not exactly," he said, " because they multiply, of course, every year as the surplus of each
THE COMING RACE. community
is
drafted
169
But
off.
I
heard
my
father say that, according to the last report, there
were a million and a half of communities speaking our language, and adopting our institutions
and forms of
life
and government
;
but, I believe,
with some differences, about which you had better ask Zee.
She knows more than most of the
Ana
An An
do.
cares less for things that do
not concern him than a
Gy
does
;
the Gy-ei are
inquisitive creatures."
"Does each community
restrict itself to the
same number of families or amount that "
you do
No
;
of population
" ?
some have much smaller populations,
some have larger
— varying
according to the
extent of the country they appropriate, or to the
degree of excellence to which they have brought their machinery.
limit
Each community
according to
circumstances,
sets its
own
taking
care
always that there shall never arise any class of poor by the pressure of population upon the productive powers of the domain shall be too large for a
;
and that no
state
government resembling
that of a single well-ordered family.
I
imagine
THE COMING RACE.
170
that no Vril
community exceeds
households.
But, as a general rule, the smaller
thirty thousand
the community, provided there be hands enough to do justice to the capacities of the territory
occupies, the richer each individual
sum
larger the
ury, quil
—above
all,
the happier and the more tran-
the whole political body, and the more
is
which
of
tribes
all
be the highest
in
is
to four
civilisation,
;
every other its
tribe,
industry in
sought
for, at
its
It limits
its
machinery excels that of
and there
is
no product of
any department which
race.
itself
utmost perfection
extraordinary prices,
munity of our state their
;
develop-
but every inch of
territory is cultivated to the
of garden ground
state
and which
its fullest
perhaps the smallest.
thousand families
The
Vril-ya acknowledge
the
has brought the vril force to
ment,
and the
is,
contributed to the general treas-
perfect the products of its industry.
to
it
is
not
by each com-
All our tribes
model, considering that
make
this
we should
reach the highest state of civilisation allowed to mortals
if
we
could unite the greatest degree of
happiness with the highest degree of intellectual
THE COMING RACE. achievement
;
and
it is
171
clear that the smaller the
society the less difficult that will be. large for
Ours
is
too
it."
me
This reply set
thinking.
self of that little state of
thousand free
citizens,
I
reminded my-
Athens, with only twenty
and which
to this
day our
mightiest nations regard as the supreme guide
and model
then Athens permitted petual
But
in all departments of intellect.
change,
fierce
and was
rivalry
certainly
and
per-
not happy.
Housing myself from the reverie into which these reflections
had plunged me,
I
brought back our
talk to the subjects connected with emigration.
" But," said tain
I,
"
when,
I
suppose yearly, a cer-
number among you agree
to quit
home and
found a new community elsewhere, they must necessarily be very few,
and scarcely
sufficient,
even with the help of the machines they take with them, to clear the ground, and build towns,
and form a
civilised state
luxuries in which they
"
You
mistake.
are in constant
and
settle
with the comforts and
had been reared."
All the tribes of the Vril-ya
communication with each
other,
amongst themselves each year what
THE COMING RACE.
172
proportion of one
community
with the
will unite
emigrants of another, so as to form a state of sufficient size
;
and the place
for emigration
is
agreed upon at least a year before, and pioneers sent from each state to level rocks, and waters,
and construct houses
when
so that
;
embank the
emigrants at last go, they find a city already
made, and a country around cleared.
Our hardy
it
at least partially
makes us
as children
life
take cheerfully to travel and adventure. to emigrate myself
"Do
when
to
mean
of age."
the emigrants always select places hitherto
uninhabited and barren "
I
As yet
" \
generally, because
it is
our rule never
destroy except where necessary to our well-
being.
Of
course,
we cannot
already occupied by the Vril-ya
in
settle ;
and
if
lands
we
take
the cultivated lands of the other races of Ana,
must
utterly destroy the previous
Sometimes, as that
it is,
we
inhabitants.
take waste spots, and find
a troublesome, quarrelsome race
of Ana,
especially if under the administration of
;
Koom-
vicinity,
and picks
then, of course, as
menacing
Posh or Glek-Nas, resents our a quarrel with us
we
THE COMING RACE.
we
our welfare,
destroy
it
:
there
173
no coming to
is
terms of peace with a race so idiotic that
it
is
always changing the form of government which represents
Koom-Posh," said the
it.
"
phatically,
bad enough,
is
though at the back of a heart
;
its
still
head, and
child,
it
has brains,
is
not without
but in Glek-Nas the brain and heart of
the creatures disappear, and they become claws,
"
and
You
am " I
Allow
express yourself strongly. I myself,
and
am
I
no longer," answered Tae, so far
"
me
to
proud to say
became a Koom-Posh
community
before
the it
?
—
like those settle-
tribe sends forth
unlike your settlements, that
the state from which
to see
"
settlement of emigrants
ments which your
wonder
What was
from your home.
condition of your native
A
jaws,
the citizen of a Koom-Posh."
you here
"
all
belly."
inform you that it,
em-
it
came.
it
—but
so far
was dependent on It
shook
off that
yoke, and, crowned with eternal glory, became a
Koom-Posh." " Eternal
Posh lasted
glory ?
!
how long has
the
Koom-
THE COMING RACE.
174
"About 100
years."
"The length community. years your "
of an An's
much
In
Koom-Posh
Nay, the oldest
life
—a
very young
than another 100
less
will be a Glek-Nas."
states in the
from, have such faith in
its
world
I
come
duration, that they
are all gradually shaping their institutions so as to melt into ours, ticians say that,
and
most thoughtful
their
whether they
poli-
like it or not, the
inevitable tendency of these old states
towards
is
Koom-Posh-erie." "
The old
states
" ?
" Yes, the old states."
"
With populations very small
the area of productive land "
On
in proportion to
1
the contrary, with populations very large
in proportion to that area." " I see
!
old states indeed
drivelling if they don't
population as
very old
very old
!
we do ours
!
—
pack
off
that
—very old
states
Pray, Tish, do you think
men
become
so old as to
it
surplus !
—
very,
wise for
to try to turn head-over-heels as very
young children do
?
they attempted such
And
if
antics,,
you asked them why
should you not laugh
THE COMING RACE.
175
they answered that by imitating very young
if
children
they could become very young
dren themselves
Ancient history abounds with
\
instances of this
years
ago— and
a great
sort
many thousand
every instance
in
state that played at
into Glek-Nas.
a very old
Koom-Posh soon tumbled
Then, in horror of
its
cried out for a master, as an old
it
chil-
dotage cries out for a nurse sion of masters or nurses,
own
man
self,
in his
and
after a succes-
more or
less long, that
;
very old state died out of history.
A
state attempting
like a very
Koom-Posh- erie
is
very old
man who
pulls down the house to which he has been accustomed, but he has so exhausted
old
his vigour in pulling
the in '
way
down, that
of rebuilding
which himself and
How
the
"My
wind blows
to
is
all
he can do in
run up a crazy hut,
his successors !
How
whine
out,
the walls shake
!
" '
make all excuse for your unenlightened prejudices, which every schoolboy dear Tae,
I
educated in a Koom-Posh could easily controvert,
though he might not be so precociously learned in ancient history as
you appear
"I learned! not a
bit
of
it.
to be."
But would a
THE COMING
176
RACE.
schoolboy, educated in your Koom-Posh, ask his great
-
great - grandfather
mother
uppermost
—
say,
on
to stand
'
and
\
if
or great - great - grand-
his or her
head with the
feet
the poor old folks hesitated
What do you
fear
?
— see how
I
do
!
'
it
" Tae, I disdain to argue with a child of your age. I repeat, I
make allowances
culture which a "
I,
in
my
for
Koom-Posh
your want of that
alone can bestow."
turn," answered Tae, with an air of
the suave but lofty good breeding which characterises his race, "
you
not only
as not educated
entreat
you
make allowances
among
to vouchsafe
amiable a I
—Tish
the Vril-ya, but I
me your pardon
sufficient respect to the habits
and opinions of
commonly called Tish by nvy host and
so
;
I
was
his family,
and indeed a pet name,
signifying a small barbarian it
for in-
!
ou^ht before to have observed that
as being a polite
for
literally
the children apply
endearingly to the tame species of Frog which
they keep in their gardens.
We
had now reached the banks of a
Tae here paused
made
to point out to
in fields skirting
it.
"
me
lake,
and
the ravages
The enemy
certainly
THE COMING RACE.
177
" Observe
within these waters," said Tae.
lies
what
shoals of fish are
Even
margin. ones,
who
the great fishes with the small
are their habitual prey
shun them,
ally
crowded together at the
forget their instincts in the
all
common
presence of a
must belong
certainly
and who gener-
This reptile
destroyer.
to the class of Krek-a,
which are more devouring than any are said to be
among
other,
the few surviving species of
the world's dreadest inhabitants before the
The appetite of a Krek
were created. able life
—
;
feeds alike
it
is
Ana
insati-
upon vegetable and animal
but for the swift- footed creatures of the
elk species it
too slow in
is
favourite dainty
unawares lessly
and
;
is
an
movements.
its
An when
can catch him
it
and hence the Ana destroy
whenever
it
it
enters their dominion.
heard that when our forefathers
Its
first
relentI
have
cleared this
country, these monsters, and others like them,
abounded,
many
and, vril
being
then undiscovered,
of our race were devoured.
sible to
exterminate them wholly
It till
was imposthat discov-
ery which constitutes the power and sustains the
But
civilisation of our race.
M
after the
uses of
THE COMING RACE.
178
vril
became familiar to
us, all creatures inimical
to us were soon annihilated.
or so, one of these
enormous creatures wanders
from the unreclaimed and savage yond, and within
my memory
young Gy who was bathing
Had
once a-year
Still,
districts
be-
one seized upon a in this very lake.
she been on land and armed with her
would not have dared even
show
to
staff, it
itself;
for,
like all savage creatures, the reptile has a marvel-
lous instinct, which warns
How
the vril wand.
against the bearer of
it
they teach their young to
avoid him, though seen for the
the monster will not
So long as
but we must
now decoy
"Will not that be
"Not
at
stir it
is
one
you may ask Zee
of those mysteries which explain, for I cannot/''
time,
first
from
its
I
to
stand here,
lurking-place
forth."
difficult
V
Seat yourself yonder on that
all.
crag (about one hundred yards from the bank),
while
a distance.
In a short time the
reptile in this instinct does
but resemble our wild birds
I retire to
* The
and animals, which will not come in reach of a man armed with a gun.
AVhen the
electric wires
were
them
in their flight,
and
struck against
first
fell
put up, partridges
down wounded.
No
younger generations of partridges meet with a similar accident.
THE COMING RACE.
1
79
reptile will catch sight or scent of you, and, per-
ceiving that you are
no
forth to devour you.
As soon
of the water, "
it
becomes
Do you mean
vril-bearer, will
my me
to tell
as
come
fairly out
it is
prey."
that I
am
to be the
decoy to that horrible monster which could engulf
me within The
its
jaws in a second
child laughed.
beg
I
!
to decline."
" Fear nothing," said he
;
" only sit still."
Instead of obeying this command, I
bound, and was about to take fairly to
when Tae touched me
lightly
my heels,
on the shoulder,
and, fixing his eyes steadily on mine, I to the spot.
made a
All power of volition
was rooted
left
me.
missive to the infant's gesture, I followed
Sub-
him
to
the crag he had indicated, and seated myself there in silence.
Most readers have seen something of
the effects of electro-biology, whether genuine or spurious.
No
professor of that doubtful craft
had
ever been able to influence a thought or a move-
ment of mine, but
I
was a mere machine
of this terrible child.
at the will
Meanwhile he expanded
his wings, soared aloft,
and alighted amidst a
copse at the brow of a
hill at
some
distance.
1
THE COMING RACE.
80
I
was alone
;
my
and turning
eyes with an
indescribable sensation of horror towards the lake, I
kept them fixed on
might be ten or
its
water, spell-bound.
ages, before the still surface,
began to
lamplight,
At
centre.
me
fifteen minutes, to
it
It
seemed
gleaming under the
be agitated towards the
the same time the shoals of fish near
the margin evinced their sense of the enemy's
approach by splash and leap and bubbling I
could detect their hurried flight hither and
thither,
some even casting themselves
long, dark, undulous furrow
of the reptile emerged fangs,
and
its
mous
feet
dull
land, a
jaw
tail.
on
jaws bristling with
;
—now
And now its
enor-
either side as in armour,
corrugated skin of a
its
and now
hundred
Another
would have brought
sat.
the vast head
sat motionless.
showing
was on the
feet
I
venomous yellow
to the
till
were on the strand
breast, scaled
in the centre
its
A
dull eyes fixing themselves hungrily
on the spot where its fore
—
ashore.
came moving along
the waters, nearer and nearer,
I
circle.
its
feet or
whole length
more from the
stride of those ghastly it
to the spot
where
There was but a moment between
me
THE COMING RACE. and
l8l
grim form of death, when what seemed
this
a flash of lightning shot through the
air,
smote,
and, for a space in time briefer than that in
which a man can draw
his
breath, enveloped
and then, as the
the monster;
there lay before
me
flash vanished,
a blackened, charred, smoul-
dering mass, a something gigantic, but of which
even the outlines of form were burned away, and rapidly crumbling into dust and ashes.
I re-
mained
with
a
new
still
seated, still speechless, ice-cold
sensation of dread
:
what had been horror
was now awe. I
me
the child's
felt
—the
hand on
was broken
spell
—
my
I rose
head up.
— "
fear left
You
see
with what ease the Vril-ya destroy their enemies," said Tae
;
and then, moving towards the bank, he
contemplated the smouldering ster,
and
said quietly, " I
a Krek; what suffering
while
!
it
lived "
mon-
have destroyed larger
none with so much pleasure.
creatures, but it is
relics of the
it
must have
Yes,
inflicted
Then he took up the poor fishes
that had flung themselves ashore, and restored
them mercifully
to their native element.
182
CHAPTER As we walked back
XIX.
to the town,
Tae took a new
and circuitous way, in order to show to use a familiar term, I will call the
me '
what,
Station/
from which emigrants or travellers to other communities commence their journeys.
I
had, on a
former occasion, expressed a wish to see their vehicles.
These
I
found to be of two kinds, one
for land -journeys,
former were of
all
one for aerial voyages: the sizes
and forms, some not
larger than an ordinary carriage,
some movable
houses of one story and containing several rooms, furnished according to the ideas of comfort or
luxury which are entertained by the Vril-ya. aerial vehicles
The
were of light substances, not the
least resembling our balloons,
but rather our boats
and pleasure- vessels, with helm and rudder, with large wings
as paddles,
and a central machine
THE COMING RACE. worked by
1
83
All the vehicles both for land
vril.
worked by that potent and
or air were indeed
mysterious agency. I
saw a convoy
on
set out
journey, but
its
had few passengers, containing
it
chiefly articles of
merchandise, and was bound to a neighbouring
community
Vril-ya there
change.
all
the
tribes
of
the
considerable commercial inter-
is
may
I
among
for
;
here observe, that their
money
currency does not consist of the precious metals,
which are too common among them
The smaller
purpose.
for
that
coins in ordinary use are
manufactured from a peculiar
fossil shell,
the
comparatively scarce remnant of some very early deluge, or other convulsion of nature, species has
an
flat as
become
oyster,
extinct.
It is minute,
and takes a jewel-like
This coinage circulates
among
all
and
polish.
the tribes of the
Their larger transactions are carried
Vril-ya.
on much
by which a
like ours,
metallic plates
by
bills
of exchange,
and thin
which answer the purpose of our
bank-notes.
Let
me
taxation
take this occasion of adding that the
amoug
the tribe I became acquainted
1
THE COMING RACE.
84
with was very considerable, compared with the
amount
But
of population.
any one grumbled
at
purposes of universal
it,
I
never heard that
was devoted
for it
utility,
to
and indeed neces-
The
sary to the civilisation of the tribe.
cost of
lighting so large a range of country, of providing for emigration, of maintaining the public build-
ings at which the various operations of national intellect
of an
were carried on, from the
first
education
infant to the departments in which the
College of Sages were perpetually trying
experiments in mechanical science
:
all
new
these in-
volved the necessity for considerable state funds.
To
these I
must add an item that struck me
very singular.
I
labour required
by the
have said that state
is
all
the
human
carried on
children up to the marriageable age.
as
For
by this
labour the state pays, and at a rate immeasur-
ably higher than our remuneration to labour even in the United States.
According to their theory,
every child, male or female, on attaining the marriageable age, labour, should
and there terminating the period
of
have acquired enough for an inde-
pendent competence during
life.
As, no matter
THE COMING RACE. what the disparity of fortune children
must equally
1
85
in the parents, all the
serve, so all are equally
paid according to their several ages or the nature
Where
of their work.
the parents or
choose to retain a child in their
must pay into the public fund the state pays to the children
sum
is
own
in the
it
friends
service,
same
ratio as
employs; and this
handed over to the child when the period
of service expires.
This practice serves, no doubt,
to render the notion of social
and agreeable
and
;
if it
may
equality familiar
be said that
children form a democracy, no less truly
be said that
all
The exquisite ners
they
among
all it
the
may
the adults form an aristocracy.
and refinement of man-
politeness
the Vril-ya, the generosity of their
sentiments, the absolute leisure they enjoy for
following out their
own
private
pursuits,
the
amenities of their domestic intercourse, in which
they seem as members of one noble order that
can have no deed,
all
distrust
of each other's
word
or
combine to make the Vril-ya the most
perfect nobility
which a
political disciple of Plato
or Sidney could conceive for the ideal of an aristocratic republic.
1
86
CHAPTER From I
XX.
the date of the expedition with Tae which
have just narrated, the child paid
visits.
He had taken
me
frequent
a liking to me, which I cor-
Indeed, as he was not yet twelve
dially returned.
years old, and had not
commenced the
course
of scientific studies with which childhood closes in that country,
my
intellect
his than to that of the elder
especially of the Gy-ei,
was
less inferior to
members
and most
especially of the
The children
accomplished Zee.
of his race,
of the Vril-ya,
having upon their minds the weight of so active duties
and grave
generally mirthful
;
responsibilities, are not
but Tae, with
had much of the playful good
all his -
society
He
felt
that sort of pleasure
which a boy of a similar age
wisdom,
humour one
often finds the characteristic of elderly genius.
many
men in
of
my
in the upper
THE COMING RACE.
1
87
world has in the company of a pet dog or
monkey.
It
ways
the
mine
to
amused him
of his people, as
make
self to
and teach me
amuses a nephew of
it
walk on his hind legs
his poodle
jump through
or
to try
a hoop.
such experiments, but
the success of the poodle.
my-
I willingly lent
I
I
never achieved
was very much
terested at first in the attempt to ply the
in-
wings
which the youngest of the Vril-ya use as nimbly
and
my
easily as ours efforts
do their legs and arms
;
but
were attended with contusions serious
enough to make
me abandon them
These wings, as
I before
said,
in despair. are very large,
reaching to the knee, and in repose thrown back so as to form a very graceful mantle.
They
are
composed from the feathers of a gigantic bird that abounds in the rocky heights of the country
—the
colour mostly white, but sometimes with
reddish streaks.
They
are
fastened round the
shoulders with light but strong springs of steel and,
when expanded,
the arms slide through loops
for that purpose, forming, as it were, a stout central
membrane.
lining
As the arms
are raised, a tubular
beneath the vest or tunic becomes, by
1
THE COMING RACE.
88
mechanical
contrivance,
inflated
and serving
to
balloon-like
apparatus are highly charged with vril the body
is
thus wafted upward,
come singularly lightened of it
in-
buoy the whole form
The wings and the
as on bladders.
air,
by the movement
creased or diminished at will of the arms,
with
its
it
;
and when
seems to be-
weight.
I
found
easy enough to soar from the ground; indeed,
when sible
the wings were spread
was scarcely pos-
not to soar, but then came the difficulty and
the danger.
I utterly failed in
though
direct the pinions,
my own
I
the power to use and
am
considered
among
race unusually alert and ready in bodily
exercises,
and
could only
am
a very practised swimmer.
I
make the most confused and blundering I
efforts at flight.
was the servant of the wings
the wings were not
yond
it
my control
;
my
servants
— they were be-
and when by a violent
strain of
muscle, and, I must fairly own, in that abnormal strength which
is
given by excessive fright,
I
curbed their gyrations and brought them near to the body,
it
seemed as
if I
lost the
sustaining
power stored in them and the connecting bladders, as
when
air is let
out of a balloon, and found
THE COMING RACE.
1
89
myself precipitated again to earth ; saved, indeed,
by some spasmodic
from the bruises and the
to pieces, but not saved
stun of a heavy fall. severed in
commands
my
I
ceived
of the scientific Zee,
last
my
would, however, have per-
attempts, but for the advice or the
my
olently accompanied
on the
from being dashed
flutterings,
who had benev-
flutterings,
occasion, flying just
form as
it
wings, and preserved
fell
me
and indeed,
under me,
re-
on her own expanded from breaking
my
head
on the roof of the pyramid from which we had ascended. " I see," she said, " that your trials are in vain,
not from the fault of the wings and their appur-
any imperfectness and mal-
tenances, nor from
formation of your
own
corpuscular system, but
from irremediable, because organic, defect in your
power of
volition.
Learn that the connection be-
tween the will and the agencies of that
fluid
which has been subjected to the control of the Vril-ya
was never
established
coverers, never achieved it
by a
by the
first
dis-
single generation
;
has gone on increasing, like other properties of
race, in proportion as
it
has been uniformly trans-
THE COMING RACE.
190
mitted from parent to child, so that, at has become an instinct
;
and an infant
race, wills to fly as intuitively
He
as he wills to walk.
with which
of our
and unconsciously
much
it
think sufficiently of this
An
thus plies his invented
or artificial wings with as plies those
last, it
safety as a bird
born.
is
when
I
I
did not
allowed you to
try an experiment which allured me, for I longed
have in you a companion.
to
the experiment now.
Herewith
me."
to
softened, I
and
had been in
Now
I felt
my
that I
Your
abandon
becoming dear
and face
seriously alarmed than
previous
am
life is
Gy's voice
the
more
I shall
flights.
on the subject of wings,
I
ought not to omit mention of a custom anions the Gy-ei which seems to
tender in the sentiment
it
me
very pretty and
implies.
A Gy
wears
—she
joins
wings habitually while yet a virgin the
Ana
in their aerial sports
— she
adventures
alone and afar into the wilder regions of the sunless
world
:
in the boldness
and height of her
soarings, not less than in the grace of her
ments, she excels the opposite sex.
move-
But from the
day of marriage, she wears wings no more, she
THE COMING RACE.
own
suspends them with her
191
willing
hand over
the nuptial couch, never to be resumed unless
the marriage tie be severed
Now when Zee's voice and
by divorce
or death.
and eyes thus softened
at that softening I prophetically recoiled
shuddered
—Tae, who had accompanied us
but who, child-like, had been
flights,
and
in our
much more
my awkwardness than sympathising or aware of my danger, hovered over
amused with in
my
fears
us, poised
amidst the
still
radiant
air,
serene
and
motionless on his outspread wings, and hearing the endearing words of the aloud.
use of wings, you Zee, for
young Gy, laughed
Said he, " If the Tish cannot learn the
may
still
be his companion,
you can suspend your own."
192
CHAPTER I
had
for
XXI.
some time observed
in
my host's highly
informed and powerfully proportioned daughter kindly and
that
sentiment
protective
whether above the earth or below
which,
an all-wise
it,
Providence has bestowed upon the feminine division of the
human
had ascribed a
human
it
But
race.
until very lately I
to that affection for
'
pets
female at every age shares with a
now became
which
'
human
painfully aware that the
child.
I
feeling
with which Zee deigned to regard
was
different
Tae.
But
from that which
this conviction
had inspired in
I
gave
me
me none
of that
complacent gratification which the vanity of
man
ordinarily conceives from a flattering appreciation
of his personal merits on the part of the fair sex
on the contrary, of
all
it
inspired
me
with
the Gy-ei in the community,
fear.
if
;
Yet
Zee were
THE COMING RACE.
1
93
perhaps the wisest and the strongest, she was, by
common
and she was
repute, the gentlest,
tainly the most popularly beloved.
The
cer-
desire
to aid, to succour, to protect, to comfort, to bless,
seemed
to
Though
pervade her whole being.
the complicated miseries that originate in penury
and
unknown
guilt are
Vril-ya,
to the social system of the
no sage had yet discovered in
still,
an agency which could banish sorrow from
vril life
and wherever amongst her people sorrow found its
way, there Zee followed in the mission of
Did some
comforter.
sister
the love she sighed for?
and brought
all
Gy
fail
to
secure
Zee sought her out,
the resources of her lore, and
all
the consolations of her sympathy, to bear upon a grief that so needs the solace of a confidant.
In the rare cases,
when grave
illness seized
childhood or youth, and the
cases,
less
upon rare,
when, in the hardy and adventurous probation of infants,
some
accident, attended with pain
and
injury occurred, Zee forsook her studies and her sports,
and became the healer and the nurse.
Her
favourite flights were towards the extreme boundaries of the
domain where children were stationed
N
THE COMING
194
RACE.
on guard against outbreaks of warring forces in nature, or the invasions of devouring animals, so
that she might
warn them of any
knowledge detected or foresaw, or be
any harm had cise of
which her
peril
at
hand
if
Nay, even in the exer-
befallen.
her scientific acquirements there was a
concurrent benevolence of purpose and
will.
Did
she learn any novelty in invention that would
be useful to the practitioner of some special art or craft it.
she hastened to communicate and explain
?
Was some
veteran sage of the College per-
plexed and wearied with the
study aid,
?
toil
of an abstruse
she would patiently devote herself to his
work out
details for him, sustain his spirits
with her hopeful smile, quicken his wit with her
luminous suggestion, be to him, as
own good and
genius
inspirer.
made
The same tenderness she exhibited
home some
and tend and cherish
sick it
which
I
mother would tend
child.
I sat in the balcony, or
my window
opened,
have often known
and wounded animal,
as a
and cherish her stricken
when
were, his
visible as the strengthener
to the inferior creatures.
her bring
it
I
Many
a time
hanging garden, on have watched her
THE COMING rising in the air
RACE.
1
95
on her radiant wings, and in a
few moments groups of infants below, catching sight of her,
would soar upward with joyous
sounds of greeting clustering and sporting around ;
her, so that she delight.
When
seemed a very centre of innocent I
have walked with her amidst
the rocks and valleys without the city, the elk-
her from
come
deer would scent
or see
bounding up, eager
for the caress of her hand, or
follow her footsteps,
till
afar,
dismissed by some musical
whisper that the creature had learned to comprehend. to
It is the fashion
wear on
among
the virgin Gy-ei
their foreheads a circlet, or coronet,
with gems resembling opals, arranged in four points or rays like stars.
ordinary use, but
if
These are lustreless in
touched by the
vril
wand
they take a clear lambent flame, which illuminates, yet not burns. their festivities,
This serves as an ornament in
and
as a lamp,
if,
in their
wan-
derings beyond their artificial lights, they have to traverse the dark. I
There are times, when
have seen Zee's thoughtful majesty of face
lighted
up by
this
crowning halo, that
I
could
scarcely believe her to be a creature of mortal
THE COMING RACE.
196
birth,
and bent
among
of a being
my
once did
my
head before her as the vision
heart feel for this lofty type of the
womanhood
noblest
among
Is it that,
a sentiment of
the race I belong
so far influences his passions that
him her be in
But never
the celestial orders.
special
charm of woman
human
to,
man's pride
woman
if
he
of
loses to
feels
her to
things eminently superior to himself?
all
But by what strange infatuation could less
love.
this peer-
daughter of a race which, in the supremacy
powers and the
its
ranked ians,
all
felicity of its conditions,
other races in the category of barbar-
have deigned to honour
ference
%
In personal
me
with her pre-
though
qualifications,
I
passed for good-looking amongst the people I
my
came from, the handsomest
of
men
insignificant
mio-ht
seemed
have
country-
and
homely beside the grand and serene type of beauty which characterised the aspect of
the
Vril-ya.
That
novelty,
the
myself and those to
very difference
whom
between
Zee was accustomed,
might serve to bias her fancy was probable enough, and as the reader will see
later,
such
THE COMING RACE.
197
a cause might suffice to account for the predilection with which I
was distinguished by a young and very
infe-
But whoever
will
G-y scarcely out of her childhood, respects to Zee.
rior in all
those
consider
tender
which
characteristics
I
have just ascribed to the daughter of Aph-Lin,
may
readily conceive that the
attraction to her
was
main cause
of
my
in her instinctive desire to
cherish, to comfort, to protect, and, in protecting,
to sustain I
and
to exalt.
Thus,
when
I
look back,
account for the only weakness unworthy of her
which bowed the daughter of the
lofty nature,
Vril-ya to a woman's affection for one so inferior to herself as
cause what
was her
it
father's guest.
But be the
may, the consciousness that
inspired such affection thrilled
me
I
with awe
had
—
moral awe of her very perfections, of her mysterious
powers, of the inseparable
between her race and awe,
I
must confess
distinctions
my own and with that to my shame, there com;
bined the more material and ignoble dread of the perils to which her preference would expose
me.
Could
H it
be supposed for a
moment
that the
THE COMING RACE.
198
parents and friends of this exalted being could
view without indignation and disgust the possibility of
an alliance between herself and a Tish
1
Her they could not punish, her they could not confine nor restrain. political
force
do they acknowledge any law of
life
amongst themselves end
tually put an vril inflicted
Under
my
Neither in domestic nor in
but they could
;
to her infatuation
by
effec-
a flash of
upon me.
these anxious circumstances, fortunately,
conscience and sense of honour were free
from reproach.
became
my
duty,
if
Zee's preference continued manifest, to intimate
it
It
clearly
to
my
is
ever to be preserved by a well-bred
host, with, of course, all the delicacy
which
man
confiding to another any degree of favour
which one of the tinguish him.
fair
sex
Thus, at
may all
condescend to
in
by dis-
events, I should be
freed from responsibility or suspicion of volun-
tary participation in the sentiments of Zee the superior
wisdom of
my
In this resolve
I
and
host might probably
suggest some sage extrication from
dilemma.
;
my
perilous
obeyed the ordinary
THE COMING RACE. instinct of civilised
though he
be, still
generally prefers it is
his inclinations, his interests,
wrong
one.
99
and moral man, who, erring
course in those cases where
elect the
1
the right
obviously against
and
his safety to
200
CHAPTER As
Aph-Lin had not
the reader has seen,
my
voured
XXII. fa-
general and unrestricted intercourse
with his countrywoman.
Though
relying on
my
promise to abstain from giving any information as to the world I
had
promise of those to
left,
and
whom had
request, not to question me,
still
more on the
been put the same
which Zee had ex-
acted from Tae, yet he did not feel sure that, I
were allowed to mix with the strangers whose
curiosity the sight of sufficiently
When I
if
I
me had
guard myself against their
went
out, therefore, it
was always accompanied
host's
aroused, I could
family,
or
my
was never alone
either
child
-
inquiries.
by one
friend
Tae.
of
my Bra,
Aph-Lin's wife, seldom stirred beyond the gardens which surrounded the house, and was fond of reading the ancient literature,
which contained
THE COMING RACE.
201
something of romance and adventure not to be
found in the writings of recent ages, and presented pictures of a
life
unfamiliar to her experience and
interesting to her imagination
a
life
;
pictures, indeed, of
more resembling that which we lead every
day above ground, coloured by our sorrows,
and
passions,
and much
to her
sins,
what the Tales of But
the Genii or the Arabian Nights are to us.
her love of reading did not prevent Bra from the discharge of her duties as mistress of the largest
household in the
She went daily the round
city.
of the chambers, and saw that the automata
and
other mechanical contrivances were in order, that
the numerous
whether in
children
his private or public capacity,
carefully tended.
were
Bra also inspected the accounts
of the whole estate,
and
it
was her great delight
husband
in the business connected
office as chief
administrator of the Light-
to assist her
with his
employed by Aph-Lin,
ing Department, so that her avocations necessarily kept her
much
within doors.
The two sons
were both completing their education at the College of Sages
;
and the
elder,
who had
a strong
passion for mechanics, and especially for works
THE COMING RACE.
202
connected with the machinery of timepieces and automata, had decided in devoting himself to these
and was now occupied
pursuits,
structing a shop, or warehouse, at
ventions could
which
and
be exhibited
in conhis in-
The
sold.
younger son preferred farming and rural occupations
;
and when not attending the
which he
chiefly studied the theories of agricul-
was much absorbed by
ture,
College, at
his practical appli-
cation of that science to his father's lands. will be seen
ranks
is
by
how
this
established
It
completely equality of
among
this people
—a shop-
keeper being of exactly the same grade in
esti-
Aph-Lin
mation as the large landed proprietor.
was the wealthiest member of the community, and
his
eldest son preferred keeping a shop
any other avocation; nor was to
show any want This young
in
examining
were
new
when
I
my
of his
own
been
much
interested
watch, the works of which
him,
made him
he returned the
thought
of elevated notions on his part.
man had
to
this choice
to
and was
a present of
gift
with
construction,
greatly pleased it.
interest,
Shortly
by
after,
a watch
marking both the time
THE COMING RACE. as
my
in
watch and the time as kept among
the Vril-ya.
been
have that watch
I
still,
and
much admired by many among
eminent watchmakers It is of gold,
and
203
in ten months,
gone wrong since
I
when
I
and has never
it.
These young brothers
my
usual companions in
had
being thus occupied,
the Vril-ya
only requires to be
it
:
among
wound up once
that family,
Paris.
with diamond hands and figures,
the hours
in striking
has
the most
London and
of
plays a favourite tune
it
it
went abroad, were
my host or
Now, agreeably with the honourable
his daughter.
conclusions I had
come
to, I
began to excuse my-
self
from Zee's invitations to go out alone with
her,
and seized an occasion when that learned
was delivering a
lecture at the
College of Sages
me
his country-seat.
to
ask Aph-Lin to show
As
this
was
at
Gy
some
little
distance,
and
Lin was not fond of walking, while creetly relinquished all
I
as
Aph-
had
attempts at flying,
dis-
we
proceeded to our destination in one of the aerial boats belonging to
years old,
My
in
my
host.
his employ,
A
child of eight
was our conductor.
host and myself reclined on cushions, and
I
COMING RACE.
TI I E
204
found the movement very easy and
luxu-
rious.
" Aph-Lin," said
"
I,
displeased with me,
you I
if
travel for a short time,
communities of your
will not, I
trust,
be
ask your permission to
and
visit other tribes or
illustrious race.
also a strong desire to see those nations
I
have
which do
not adopt your institutions, and which you consider as savages.
to notice
I
" It
would
what are the
have is
interest
distinctions
whom we
and the races world
It
me
greatly
between them
consider civilised in the
left."
utterly impossible that
"
hence alone," said Aph-Lin.
you should go
Even among
the
Vril-ya you would be exposed to great dangers.
Certain peculiarities of formation and colour, and the extraordinary
phenomenon
upon your cheeks and species of
An
of hirsute bushes
chin, denoting in
distinct alike
from our race and
any known race of barbarians yet attract,
extant,
would
of course, the special attention of the
College of Sages in whatever
ya you
you a
visited,
and
it
community
of Vril-
would depend upon the
individual temper of some individual sage whether
THE COMING RACE.
205
you would be received, as you have been
you would not be
hospitably, or whether
dissected
when
for
the Tur
at once
Know
purposes.
scientific
here,
that
took you to his house, and
first
while you were there put to sleep by Tae in order to
recover
from your previous pain or
summoned by
the sages
fatigue,
the.
Tur were
divided in opinion whether you were a harmless or an obnoxious
were examined, and they
scious state your teeth clearly
showed that you were not only gramin-
ivorous, but carnivorous.
your
During your uncon-
animal.
size are
Carnivorous animals of
always destroyed, as being of dan-
gerous and savage nature.
Our
teeth,
as
you
have doubtless observed,* are not those of the creatures
who devour
flesh.
It
is,
indeed, main-
tained by Zee and other philosophers, that
remote ages, the
Ana
did prey upon living beings
of the brute species, their teeth fitted for that
as, in
must have been
But, even
purpose.
if
so,
they
have been modified by hereditary transmission,
and suited *
I
to the food
never had observed
enou"h
to
it
;
on which we now exist and,
if I
had,
have distinguished the difference.
am
not physiologist
THE COMING RACE.
206
nor arc even the barbarians,
who adopt
the tur-
bulent and ferocious institutions of Glek-Nas, devourers of flesh like beasts of prey. " In the course of this dispute it
to dissect
you
ments
but Tae begged you
;
Tur being, by
at variance with
the good of the
whose business
distance.
or not
admit.
it
is
is,
It
was
at
proved to be for
clearly
to take
I
it,
sent to me,
man
of the
strangers from a
option to decide whether
you were a stranger
Had
and the
novel experi-
as the richest
my
off,
our custom of sparing
community it
all
afford hospitality to
to
state,
averse to
office,
except where
life,
was proposed
whom
I
could safely
declined to receive you, you would
have been handed over to the College of Sages,
and what might there have befallen you like to conjecture.
Apart from
I
do not
this danger,
you
might chance to encounter some child of four years old, just put in possession of his vril staff;
and who, and
you so
in alarm
at
your strange appearance,
in the impulse of the to a cinder.
when he
first
checked his hand.
moment, might reduce
Tae himself was about
saw you, had Therefore
I
to
do
his father not
say you cannot
THE COMING RACE.
but with Zee you would be safe
travel alone,
and
I
207
have no doubt that she would accompany
you on a tour round the neighbouring communities of Vril-ya (to the
savage states,
No
!)
:
I will
ask her."
Now, was
to
my
as
main
from Zee,
escape
" Nay, pray do
You have
said
object in proposing to travel
not
I
!
enough
me from it and a young Gy of ;
I
I
hastily exclaimed,
relinquish
my
design.
as to its dangers to deter
can scarcely think
right that
it
the personal attractions of your
lovely daughter should travel into other regions
without a better protector than a Tish of insignificant strength
and
Aph-Lin emitted the
grown "
soft sibilant
sound which
the nearest approach to laughter that a
is
An
Pardon
my
stature."
full-
permits to himself, ere he replied
my
discourteous but
momentary
:
indul-
gence of mirth at any observation seriously made
by
my
guest.
idea of Zee,
I
who
could not but be amused at the is
so fond of protecting others
that children call her
'
the guardian,'
needino- a
protector herself against any dangers arising from
the audacious admiration of males.
Know
that
THE COMING RACE.
2o8
our Gy-ei, while unmarried, are accustomed to travel alone
there
some
among
An who may
Ana they
the
made
other tribes, to see please
find at home.
if
they find
them more than Zee has
already
three such journeys, but hitherto her heart
has been untouched."
Here the opportunity which afforded to me,
and
I
voice, "
with faltering
promise to pardon me, gives "
you
offence
Say only the
could I be
or,
you
looking down, and
said,
my
Will you, if
w hat T
I
am
kind host,
about to say
%
truth,
so, it
and
cannot be offended
I
would be not
for
;
me, but for
to pardon."
" Well, then, assist
me
to quit you, and,
wonders, and enjoy more of the
of the
felicity,
which
me return to my own." reasons why I cannot do that
belong to your people, I fear
there are
much
more
as I should have liked to witness
"
sought was
I
let
at all events, not without permission of the Tur,
and
he, probably,
would not grant
not destitute of intelligence I
do not think
destructive
so)
;
it.
You
are
you may (though
have concealed the degree of
powers possessed by your people
THE COMING RACE. you might, and
upon us some danger
in short, bring
the
if
Tur entertains that
clearly be his
2
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