And a little past three o'clock in the morning he awoke to a mood of indescribable desolation.He awoke with a start to an agony of remorse and self-reproach.
9
For a time he lay quite still staring at the darkness, then he groaned and turned over.Then, suddenly, like one who fancies he hears a strange noise, he sat up in bed and listened."Oh, God!" he said at last.
And then: "Oh! The DIRTINESS of life! The dirty muddle of life!
"What are we doing with life? What are we all doing with life?
"It isn't only this poor Milly business.This only brings it to a head.Of course she wants money...."His thoughts came on again.
"But the ugliness!
"Why did I begin it?"
He put his hands upon his knees and pressed his eyes against the backs of his hands and so remained very still, a blankness beneath his own question.
After a long interval his mind moved again.
And now it was as if he looked upon his whole existence, he seemed to see in a large, clear, cold comprehensiveness, all the wasted days, the fruitless activities, the futilities, the perpetual postponements that had followed his coming to London.He saw it all as a joyless indulgence, as a confusion of playthings and undisciplined desires, as a succession of days that began amiably and weakly, that became steadily more crowded with ignoble and trivial occupations, that had sunken now to indignity and uncleanness.He was overwhelmed by that persuasion, which only freshly soiled youth can feel in its extreme intensity, that life was slipping away from him, that the sands were running out, that in a little while his existence would be irretrievably lost.
By some trick of the imagination he saw life as an interminable Bond Street, lit up by night lamps, desolate, full of rubbish, full of the very best rubbish, trappings, temptations, and down it all he drove, as the damned drive, wearily, inexplicably.
WHAT ARE WE UP TO WITH LIFE! WHAT ARE WE MAKING OF LIFE!
But hadn't he intended to make something tremendous of life? Hadn't he come to London trailing a glory?...
He began to remember it as a project.It was the project of a great World-State sustained by an aristocracy of noble men.He was to have been one of those men, too fine and far-reaching for the dull manoeuvers of such politics as rule the world to-day.The project seemed still large, still whitely noble, but now it was unlit and dead, and in the foreground he sat in the flat of Mrs.Skelmersdale, feeling dissipated and fumbling with his white tie.And she was looking tired."God!" he said."How did I get there?"And then suddenly he reached out his arms in the darkness and prayed aloud to the silences.
"Oh, God! Give me back my visions! Give me back my visions!"He could have imagined he heard a voice calling upon him to come out into life, to escape from the body of this death.But it was his own voice that called to him....
10
The need for action became so urgent in him, that he got right out of his bed and sat on the edge of it.Something had to be done at once.He did not know what it was but he felt that there could be no more sleep, no more rest, no dressing nor eating nor going forth before he came to decisions.Christian before his pilgrimage began was not more certain of this need of flight from the life of routine and vanities.
What was to be done?
In the first place he must get away and think about it all, think himself clear of all these--these immediacies, these associations and relations and holds and habits.He must get back to his vision, get back to the God in his vision.And to do that he must go alone.
He was clear he must go alone.It was useless to go to Prothero, one weak man going to a weaker.Prothero he was convinced could help him not at all, and the strange thing is that this conviction had come to him and had established itself incontestably because of that figure at the street corner, which had for just one moment resembled Prothero.By some fantastic intuition Benham knew that Prothero would not only participate but excuse.And he knew that he himself could endure no excuses.He must cut clear of any possibility of qualification.This thing had to be stopped.He must get away, he must get free, he must get clean.In the extravagance of his reaction Benham felt that he could endure nothing but solitary places and to sleep under the open sky.
He wanted to get right away from London and everybody and lie in the quiet darkness and stare up at the stars.
His plans grew so definite that presently he was in his dressing-gown and turning out the maps in the lower drawer of his study bureau.He would go down into Surrey with a knapsack, wander along the North Downs until the Guildford gap was reached, strike across the Weald country to the South Downs and then beat eastward.The very thought of it brought a coolness to his mind.He knew that over those southern hills one could be as lonely as in the wilderness and as free to talk to God.And there he would settle something.He would make a plan for his life and end this torment.
When Merkle came in to him in the morning he was fast asleep.
The familiar curtain rings awakened Benham.He turned his head over, stared for a moment and then remembered.
"Merkle," he said, "I am going for a walking tour.I am going off this morning.Haven't I a rucksack?""You ‘ave a sort of canvas bag, sir, with pockets to it," said Merkle."Will you be needing the VERY ‘eavy boots with ‘obnails--Swiss, I fancy, sir--or your ordinary shooting boots?""And when may I expect you back, sir?" asked Merkle as the moment for departure drew near.
"God knows," said Benham, "I don't."
"Then will there be any address for forwarding letters, sir?"Benham hadn't thought of that.For a moment he regarded Merkle's scrupulous respect with a transient perplexity.
"I'll let you know, Merkle," he said."I'll let you know."For some days at least, notes, telephone messages, engagements, all this fuss and clamour about nothing, should clamour for him in vain....
11