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There and Back by MacDonald, George - Chapter 24

CHAPTER XXIV.


_RICHARD AND WINGFOLD_.

Barbara had more than once or twice heard Mr. Wingfold preach, but had
not once listened, or oven waked to the fact that she had not listened.
Unaccustomed in childhood to any special regard of the Sunday, she had
neither pleasant nor unpleasant associations with church-going; but she
liked a good many things better, and as she always did as she liked
except she saw reason to the contrary, she had hitherto gone to church
rather seldom. She might perhaps have sooner learned to go regularly but
for her mother's extraordinary behaviour there: certainly she could not
sit in the same pew with her reading her novel. Since Mr. Wingfold had
taken the part of the prophet Nathan, and rebuked her, she had indeed
ceased to go to church, but Barbara, as I have said, was as yet only now
and then drawn thitherward.

Mr. Wingfold was almost as different from the clergyman of Richard's
idea, as was Richard's imagined God from any believable idea of God. The
two men had never yet met, for what should bring a working-man and the
clergyman of the next parish together? But one morning--he often went for
a walk in the early morning--Richard saw before him, in the middle of a
field-path, seated on a stile and stopping his way, the back of a man in
a gray suit, evidently enjoying, like himself, the hour before sunrise.
He knew somehow that he was not a working-man, but he did not suspect
him one of the obnoxious class which lives by fooling itself and others.
Wingfold heard Richard's step, looked round, knew him at once an artisan
of some sort, and saw in him signs of purpose and character strong for
his years.

"Jolly morning!" he said.

"It is indeed, sir!" answered Richard.

"I like a walk in the morning better than at any other time of the day!"
said Wingfold.

"Well, sir, I do so too, though I can't tell why. I've often tried, but I
haven't yet found out what makes the morning so different."

"Come!" thought the clergyman; "here's something I haven't met with too
much of!"

Richard remarked to himself that, whoever the gentleman was, he was
certainly not stuck-up. They might have parted late the night before,
instead of meeting now for the first time!

"Are you a married man?" asked Wingfold.

"No, sir," answered Richard, surprised that a stranger should put the
question.

"If you had been," Wingfold went on, "I should have been surer of your
seeing what I mean when I say, that to be out before sunrise is like
looking at your best friend asleep--that is, before her sun, her thought,
namely, is up. Watching her face then, you see it come to life, grow
radiant with sunrise."

"But," rejoined Richard, "I have seen a person asleep whose face made it
quite evident that thought was awake! It was shining through!"

"Shining through, certainly," said Wingfold, "not up. I doubt indeed if
during any sleep, thought is quite in abeyance."

"Not when we are dead asleep, sir?--so dead that when we wake we don't
remember anything?"

"If thought in such a case must be _proved,_ it will have to go for
non-existent. Yet, when you reflect that sometimes you discover that you
must, a few minutes before, wide awake, have done something which you
have no recollection of having done, and which, but for the fact
remaining evident to your sight, you would not believe you had done, you
must feel doubtful as to the loss of consciousness in sleep."

"Yes; that must give us pause!"

"Hamlet!" said the clergyman to himself. "That's good! You may have read
from top to bottom of a page, perhaps," he went on, "without being able
to recall a word: would you say no thought had passed through your mind
in the process?--that the words had suggested nothing as you read them?"

"No, sir; I should be inclined to say that I forgot as fast as I read;
that, as I read, I seemed to know the thing I read, but the process of
forgetting kept pace for pace alongside the process of reading."

"I quite agree with you.--Now I wonder whether you will agree with me in
what I am going to suggest next!"

"I can't tell that, sir," said Richard--somewhat unnecessarily; but
Wingfold was pleased to find him cautious.

"I think," the parson continued, "that what I want in order to be able
afterward to recollect a thing, is to be not merely conscious of the
thing when it comes, but at the same moment conscious of myself. To
remember, I must be self-conscious as well as thing-conscious."

"There I cannot quite follow you."

"When I learn the meaning of a word, I know the word; but when I say to
myself, 'I know the word,' there comes a reflection of the word back from
the mirror of my mind, making a second impression, and after that I am at
least not so likely to forget it."

"I think I can follow you so far," said Richard.

"When, then," pursued the parson, "I think about the impression that the
word makes upon me, how it is affecting me with the knowledge of itself,
then I am what I should call self-conscious of the word--conscious not
only that I know the word, but that I know the phenomena of knowing the
word--conscious of what I am as regards my knowing of the word."

"I understand so far, sir--at least I think I do."

"Then you will allow that a word with its reflection and mental impact
thus operated upon by the mind is not so likely to be forgotten as one
understood only in the first immediate way?"

"Certainly, sir."

"Well, then--mind I am only suggesting; I am not proclaiming a fact,
still less laying down a law; I am not half sure enough about it for
that--so it is with our dreams. We see, or hear, and are conscious that
we do, in our dreams; our consciousness shines through our sleeping
features to the eyes that love us; but when we wake we have forgotten
everything. There was thought there, but not thought that could be
remembered. When, however, you have once said to yourself in a dream, 'I
think I am dreaming;' you always, I venture to suspect, remember that
experience when you wake from it!"

"I daresay you do, sir. But there are many dreams we never suspect to be
dreams while we are dreaming them, which yet we remember all the same
when we come awake!"

"Yes, surely; and many people have such memories as hold every word and
every fact presented to them. But I was not meaning to discuss the
phenomena of sleep; I only meant to support my simile that to see the
world before the sun is up, is like looking on the sleeping face of a
friend. There is thought in the sleeping face of your friend, and thought
in the twilight face of nature; but the face awake with thought, is the
world awake with sunlight."

"There I cannot go with you, sir," said Richard, who, for all the
impression Barbara had made upon him, had not yet thought of the world as
in any sense alive; it was to him but an aggregate of laws and results,
the great dissecting-room of creation, the happy hunting ground of the
goddess who calls herself Science, though she can claim to understand as
yet no single fact.

"Why?" asked Wingfold.

"Because I cannot receive the simile at all. I cannot allow expression of
thought where no thought is."

Here a certain look on the face of the young workman helped the parson
toward understanding the position he meant to take, "Ah!" he answered,
"I see I mistook you! I understand now! Sleep she or wake she, you will
not allow thought on the face of Nature! Am I right?"

"That is what I would say, sir," answered Richard.

"We must look at that!" returned Wingfold. "That would be scanned!--You
would conceive the world as a sort of machine that goes for certain
purposes--like a clock, for instance, whose duty it is to tell the time
of the day?--Do I represent you truly?"

"So far, sir. Only one machine may have many uses!"

"True! A clock may do more for us than tell the time! It may tell how
fast it is going, and wake solemn thought. But if you came upon a machine
that constantly waked in you--not thoughts only, but the most delicate
and indescribable feelings--what would you say then? Would you allow
thought there?"

"Surely not that the machine was thinking!"

"Certainly not. But would you allow thought concerned in it? Would you
allow that thought must have preceded and occasioned its existence? Would
you allow that thought therefore must yet be interested in its power to
produce thought, and might, if it chose, minister to the continuance or
enlargement of the power it had originated?"

"Perhaps I should be compelled to allow that much in regard to a clock
even!--Are we coming to the Paley-argument, sir?" said Richard.

"I think not," answered Wingfold. "My argument seems to me one of my own.
It is not drawn from design but from operation: where a thing wakes
thought and feeling, I say, must not thought and feeling be somewhere
concerned in its origin?"

"Might not the thought and feeling come by association, as in the case of
the clock suggesting the flight of time?"

"I think our associations can hardly be so multiform, or so delicate, as
to have a share in bringing to us half of the thoughts and feelings that
nature wakes in us. If they have such a share, they must have reference
either to a fore-existence, or to relations hidden in our being, over
which we have no control; and equally in such case are the thoughts and
feelings waked in us, not by us. I do not want to argue; I am only
suggesting that, if the world moves thought and feeling in those that
regard it, thought and feeling are somehow concerned in the world. Even
to wake old feelings, there must be a likeness to them in what wakes
them, else how could it wake them? In a word, feeling must have put
itself into the shape that awakes feeling. Then there is feeling in the
thing that bears that shape, although itself it does not feel. Therefore
I think it may be said that there is more thought, or, rather, more
expression of thought, in the face of the world when the sun is up, than
when he is not--as there is more thought in a face awake than in a face
asleep.--Ah, there is the sun! and there are things that ought never to
be talked about in their presence! To talk of some things even behind
their backs will keep them away!"

Richard neither understood his last words, nor knew that he did not
understand them. But he did understand that it was better to watch the
sunrise than to talk of it.

Up came the child of heaven, conquering in the truth, in the might of
essential being. It was no argument, but the presence of God that
silenced the racked heart of Job. The men stood lost in the swift changes
of his attendant colours--from red to gold, from the human to the
divine--as he ran to the horizon from beneath, and came up with a rush,
eternally silent. With a moan of delight Richard turned to his gazing
companion, when he beheld that on his face which made him turn from him
again: he had seen what was not there for human eyes! The radiance of
Wingfold's countenance, the human radiance that met the solar shine,
surpassed even that which the moon and the sky and the sleeping earth
brought out that night upon the face of Barbara! The one was the waking,
the other but the sweetly dreaming world.

Richard refused to let any emotion, primary or reflex, influence his
opinions; they must be determined by fact and severe logical outline.
Whatever was not to him definite--that is, was not by him formally
conceivable, must not be put in the category of things to be believed;
but he had not a notion how many things he accepted unquestioning, which
were yet of this order; and not being only a thing that thought, but a
thing as well that was thought, he could not help being more influenced
by such a sight than he would have chosen to be, and the fact that he was
so influenced remained. Happily, the choice whether we shall be
influenced is not given us; happily, too, the choice whether we shall
obey an influence _is_ given us.

Without a word, Richard lifted his hat to the stranger, and walked on,
leaving him where he stood, but taking with him a germ of new feeling,
which would enlarge and divide and so multiply. When he got to the next
stile, he looked back, and saw him seated as at first, but now reading.