THE DOOM OF LONDON.
I.—THE SELF-CONCEIT
OF THE 20TH CENTURY.
I TRUST I am thankful my life has
been spared until I have seen that most brilliant epoch of
the world's history — the middle of the 20th century.
It would be useless for any man to disparage the vast
achievements of the past fifty years, and if I venture to
call attention to the fact, now apparently forgotten, that
the people of the 19th century succeeded in accomplishing
many notable things, it must not be imagined that I intend
thereby to discount in any measure the marvellous inventions
of the present age. Men have always been somewhat prone to
look with a certain condescension upon those who lived fifty
or a hundred years before them. This seems to me the
especial weakness of the present age; a feeling of national
self-conceit, which, when it exists, should at least be kept
as much in the background as possible. It will astonish many
to know that such also was a failing of the people of the
19th century. They imagined themselves living in an age of
progress, and while I am not foolish enough to attempt to
prove that they did anything really worth recording, yet it
must be admitted by any unprejudiced man of research that
their inventions were at least stepping-stones to those of
to-day. Although the telephone and telegraph, and all other
electrical appliances, are now to be found only in our
national museums, or in the private collections of those few
men who take any interest in the doings of the last
century, nevertheless, the study of the now obsolete science
of electricity led up to the recent
discovery of vibratory ether which does the work of the world so
satisfactorily. The people of the 19th century were not fools, and
although I am well aware that this statement will be received with scorn
where it attracts any attention whatever, yet who can say that the
progress of the next half-century may not be as great as that of the one
now ended, and that the people of the next century may not look upon us
with the same contempt which we feel toward those who lived fifty years
ago?
Being an old man, I am, perhaps, a laggard who dwells in the past rather
than the present; still, it seems to me that such an article as that which
appeared recently in Blackwood from the talented pen of Prof.
Mowberry, of Oxford University, is utterly unjustifiable. Under the title
of "Did the People of London Deserve their Fate?" he endeavours
to show that the simultaneous blotting out of millions of human beings was
a beneficial event, the good results of which we still enjoy. According to
him, Londoners were so dull-witted and stupid, so incapable of improvement,
so sodden in the vice of mere money-gathering, that nothing but their total
extinction would have sufficed, and that, instead of being an appalling
catastrophe, the doom of London was an unmixed blessing. In spite of the
unanimous approval with which this article has been received by the press,
I still maintain that such writing is uncalled for, and that there is
something to be said for the London of the 19th century.
II.—WHY LONDON,
WARNED, WAS
UNPREPARED.
The indignation I felt in first reading the article
alluded to still remains with me, and it has caused
me to write these words, giving some account of what
I must still regard, in spite of the sneers of the
present age, as the most terrible disaster that ever
overtook a portion of the human race. I shall not
endeavour to place before those who read, any record of
the achievements pertaining to the time in question. But
I would like to say a few words about the alleged
stupidity of the people of London in making no
preparations for a disaster regarding which they had
continual and ever-recurring warning. They have been
compared with the inhabitants of Pompeii making merry
at the foot of a volcano. In the first place, fogs were
so common in London, especially in winter, that no
particular attention was paid to them. They were merely
looked upon as inconvenient annoyances, interrupting traffic and prejudicial to health, but I
doubt if anyone thought it possible for a fog to become
one vast smothering mattress pressed down upon a whole
metropolis, extinguishing life as if the city suffered
from hopeless hydrophobia. I have read that victims
bitten by mad dogs were formerly put out of their
sufferings in that way, although I doubt much if such
things were ever actually done, notwithstanding the
charges of savage barbarity now made against the people
of the 19th century.
Probably, the inhabitants of Pompeii were so accustomed
to the eruptions of Vesuvius that they gave no thought
to the possibility of their city being destroyed by a
storm of ashes and an overflow of lava. Rain frequently
descended upon London, and if a rainfall continued long
enough it would certainly have flooded the metropolis,
but no precautions were taken against a flood from the
clouds. Why, then, should the people have been expected
to prepare for a catastrophe from fog, such as there had
never been any experience of in the world's history? The
people of London were far from being the sluggish dolts
present-day writers would have us believe.
III.—THE COINCIDENCE
THAT CAME AT
LAST.
As fog has now been abolished both on sea and land, and
as few of the present generation have even seen one, it
may not be out of place to give a few lines on the
subject of fogs in general, and the London fogs in
particular, which through local peculiarities differed
from all others. A fog was simply watery vapour rising
from the marshy surface of the land or from the sea, or
condensed into a cloud from the saturated atmosphere. In
my day, fogs were a great danger at sea, for people then
travelled by means of steamships that sailed upon the
surface of the ocean.
London at the end of the 19th century consumed vast
quantities of a soft bituminous coal for the purpose
of heating rooms
and of preparing food. In the morning and during the
day, clouds of black smoke were poured forth from
thousands of chimneys. When a mass of white vapour
arose in the night these clouds of smoke fell upon
the fog, pressing it down, filtering slowly through
it, and adding to its density. The sun would have
absorbed the fog but for the layer of smoke that
lay thick above the vapour and prevented the rays
reaching it. Once this condition of things prevailed,
nothing could clear London but a breeze of wind from
any direction. London frequently had a seven days'
fog, and sometimes a seven days' calm, but these two
conditions never coincided until the last year of the
last century. The coincidence, as everyone knows,
meant death — death so wholesale that no war
the earth has ever seen left such slaughter behind it.
To understand the situation, one has only to imagine
the fog as taking the place of the ashes at Pompeii,
and the coal-smoke as being the lava that covered it.
The result to the inhabitants in both cases was
exactly the same.
IV.—THE AMERICAN
WHO WANTED TO
SELL.
I was at the time confidential clerk to the house
of Fulton, Brixton & Co., a firm in Cannon Street,
dealing largely in chemicals and chemical apparatus.
Fulton I never knew; he died long before my time. Sir
John Brixton was my chief, knighted, I believe, for
services to his party, or because he was an official
in the City during some royal progress through it; I
have forgotten which. My small room was next to his
large one, and my chief duty was to see that no one
had an interview with Sir John unless he was an
important man or had important business. Sir John was a
difficult man to see, and a difficult man
to deal with when he was seen. He had little respect
for most men's feelings, and none at all for mine. If
I allowed a man to enter his room who should have been
dealt with by one of the minor members of the company,
Sir John made no effort to conceal his opinion of me.
One day, in the autumn of the last year of the century,
an American was shown into my room. Nothing would do
but he must have an interview with Sir John Brixton. I
told him that it was impossible, as Sir John was
extremely busy, but that if he explained his business
to me I would lay it before Sir John at the first
favourable opportunity. The American demurred at this,
but finally accepted the inevitable. He was the inventor,
he said, of a machine that would revolutionize life in
London, and he wanted Fulton, Brixton & Co. to
become agents for it. The machine, which he had in a
small handbag with him, was of white metal, and it was
so constructed that by turning an index it gave out
greater or less volumes of oxygen gas. The gas, I
understood, was stored in the interior in liquid form
under great pressure, and would last, if I remember
rightly, for six months without recharging. There was
also a rubber tube with a mouthpiece attached to it, and
the American said that if a man took a few whiffs a day,
he would experience beneficial results. Now, I knew
there was not the slightest use in showing the machine
to Sir John, because we dealt in old-established British
apparatus, and never in any of the new-fangled Yankee
contraptions. Besides, Sir John had a prejudice against
Americans, and I felt sure this man would exasperate
him, as he was a most cadaverous specimen of the race,
with high nasal tones, and a most deplorable
pronunciation, much given to phrases savouring of slang;
and he exhibited also a certain
nervous familiarity of demeanour towards people to whom he
was all but a complete stranger. It was impossible for me
to allow such a man to enter the presence of Sir John
Brixton, and when he returned some days later I explained
to him, I hope with courtesy, that the head of the house
regretted very much his inability to consider his proposal
regarding the machine. The ardour of the American seemed
in no way dampened by this rebuff. He said I could not
have explained the possibilities of the apparatus properly
to Sir John; he characterized it as a great invention, and
said it meant a fortune to whoever obtained the agency for
it. He hinted that other noted London houses were anxious
to secure it, but for some reason not stated he preferred
to deal with us. He left some printed pamphlets referring
to the invention, and said he would call again.
V.—THE AMERICAN
SEES SIR
JOHN.
Many a time I have since thought of that persistent
American, and wondered whether he left London before
the disaster, or was one of the unidentified thousands
who were buried in unmarked graves. Little did Sir John
think when he expelled him with some asperity from his
presence, that he was turning away an offer of life, and
that the heated words he used were, in reality, a sentence
of death upon himself. For my own part, I regret that I
lost my temper, and told the American his business methods
did not commend themselves to me. Perhaps he did not feel
the sting of this; indeed, I feel certain he did not, for,
unknowingly, he saved my life. Be that as it may, he showed
no resentment, but immediately asked me out to drink with
him, an offer I was compelled to refuse. But I am getting
ahead of my story. Indeed, being unaccustomed
to writing, it is difficult for me to set down events in
their proper sequence. The American called upon me several
times after I told him our house could not deal with him.
He got into the habit of dropping in upon me unannounced,
which I did not at all like, but I gave no instructions
regarding his intrusions, because I had no idea of the
extremes to which he was evidently prepared to go. One day,
as he sat near my desk reading a paper, I was temporarily
called from the room. When I returned I thought he had gone,
taking his machine with him, but a moment later I was shocked
to hear his high nasal tones in Sir John's room alternating
with the deep notes of my chief's voice, which apparently
exercised no such dread upon the American as upon those who
were more accustomed to them. I at once entered the room,
and was about to explain to Sir John that the American was
there through no connivance of mine, when my chief asked me
to be silent, and, turning to his visitor, gruffly requested
him to proceed with his interesting narration. The inventor
needed no second invitation, but went on with his glib talk,
while Sir John's frown grew deeper, and his face became redder
under his fringe of white hair. When the American had finished,
Sir John roughly bade him begone, and take his accursed machine
with him. He said it was an insult for a person with one foot
in the grave to bring a so-called health invention to a robust
man who never had a day's illness, I do not know why he listened
so long to the American, when he had made up his mind from the
first not to deal with him, unless it was to punish me for
inadvertently allowing the stranger to enter. The interview
distressed me exceedingly, as I stood there helpless, knowing
Sir John was becoming more and more angry with every word the
foreigner uttered, but, at last, I succeeded in drawing the
inventor and his work into my own room and closing the door.
I sincerely hoped I would never see the American again, and my
wish was gratified. He insisted
on setting his machine going, and placing it on a shelf in my
room. He asked me to slip it into Sir John's room some foggy
day and note the effect. The man said he would call again, but
he never did.
VI.—HOW THE SMOKE
HELD DOWN THE
FOG.
It was on a Friday that the fog came down upon us. The
weather was very fine up to the middle of November that
autumn. The fog did not seem to have anything unusual
about it. I have seen many worse fogs than that appeared
to be. As day followed day, however, the atmosphere became
denser and darker, caused, I suppose, by the increasing
volume of coal-smoke poured out upon it. The peculiarity
about those seven days was the intense stillness of the
air. We were, although we did not know it, under an
air-proof canopy, and were slowly but surely exhausting
the life-giving oxygen around us, and replacing it by
poisonous carbonic acid gas. Scientific men have since
showed that a simple mathematical calculation might have
told us exactly when the last atom of oxygen would have
been consumed; but it is easy to be wise after the event.
The body of the greatest mathematician in England was
found in the Strand. He came that morning from Cambridge.
During the fog there was always a marked increase in the
death rate, and on this occasion the increase was no
greater than usual until the sixth day. The newspapers
on the morning of the seventh were full of startling
statistics, but at the time of going to press the full
significance of the alarming figures was not realized. The
editorials of the morning papers on the seventh
day contained no warning of the calamity that was so
speedily to follow their appearance. I lived then at
Ealing, a Western suburb of London, and came every
morning to Cannon Street by a certain train. I had
up to the sixth day experienced no inconvenience from
the fog, and this was largely due, I am convinced, to
the unnoticed operations of the American machine.
On the fifth and sixth days Sir John did not come to
the City, but he was in his office on the seventh. The
door between his room and mine was closed. Shortly after
ten o'clock I heard a cry in his room, followed by a
heavy fall. I opened the door, and saw Sir John lying face
downwards on the floor. Hastening towards him, I felt for
the first time the deadly effect of the deoxygenized
atmosphere, and before I reached him I fell first on one
knee and then headlong. I realized that my senses were
leaving me, and instinctively crawled back to my own
room, where the oppression was at once lifted, and I
stood again upon my feet, gasping. I closed the door
of Sir John's room, thinking it filled with poisonous
fumes, as, indeed, it was. I called loudly for help, but
there was no answer. On opening the door to the main
office I met again what I thought was the noxious vapour.
Speedily as I closed the door, I was impressed by the
intense silence of the usually busy office, and saw that
some of the clerks were motionless on the floor, and
others sat with their heads on their desks as if asleep.
Even at this awful moment I did not realize that what
I saw was common to all London, and not, as I imagined,
a local disaster, caused by the breaking of some carboys
in our cellar. (It was filled with chemicals of every
kind, of whose properties I was ignorant, dealing as I
did with the accountant, and not the scientific side of
our business.) I opened the only window in my room, and
again shouted for help. The street was silent and dark
in the ominously still fog, and what now froze me with
horror was meeting the same deadly, stifling atmosphere
that was in the rooms. In falling I brought down the
window, and shut out the poisonous air. Again I revived,
and slowly the true state of things began to dawn upon me.
I was in an oasis of oxygen. I at once surmised that the
machine on my shelf was responsible for the existence of
this oasis in a vast desert of deadly gas. I took down the
American's machine, fearful in moving it that I might stop
its working. Taking the mouthpiece between my lips I again
entered Sir John's room, this time without feeling any ill
effects. My poor master was long beyond human help. There
was evidently no one alive in the building except myself.
Out in the street all was silent and dark. The gas was
extinguished, but here and there in shops the incandescent
lights were still weirdly burning, depending, as they did,
on accumulators, and not on direct engine power. I turned
automatically towards Cannon Street Station, knowing my way
to it even if blindfolded, stumbling over bodies prone on
the pavement, and in crossing the street I ran against a
motionless 'bus, spectral in the fog, with dead horses lying
in front, and their reins dangling from the nerveless hand
of a dead driver. The ghostlike passengers, equally silent,
sat bolt upright, or hung over the edge boards in attitudes
horribly grotesque.
VII.—THE TRAIN
WITH ITS TRAIL OF THE
DEAD.
If a man's reasoning faculties were alert at such a t
ime (I confess mine were dormant), he would have known
there could be no trains at Cannon Street Station, for
if there was not enough oxygen in the air to keep a man
alive, or a gas-jet alight, there would certainly not be
enough to enable an engine fire to burn, even if the
engineer retained sufficient energy to attend to his
task.
At times instinct is better than reason, and it
proved so in this case. The railway from Ealing in those
days came under the City in a deep tunnel. It would
appear that in this underground passage the carbonic acid
gas would first find a resting-place on account of its
weight; but such was not the fact. I imagine that a current
through the tunnel brought from the outlying districts a
supply of comparatively pure air that, for some minutes
after the general disaster, maintained human life. Be this
as it may, the long platforms of Cannon Street Underground
Station presented a fearful spectacle. A train stood at the
down platform. The electric lights burned fitfully. This
platform was crowded with
men, who fought each other like demons, apparently for no
reason, because the train was already packed as full as
it could hold. Hundreds were dead under foot, and every
now and then a blast of foul air came along the tunnel,
whereupon hundreds more would relax their grips, and
succumb. Over their bodies the survivors fought, with
continually thinning ranks. It seemed to me that most of
those in the standing train were dead. Sometimes a desperate
body of fighters climbed over those lying in heaps and,
throwing open a carriage door, hauled out passengers already
in, and took their places, gasping. Those in the train offered
no resistance, and lay motionless where they were flung, or
rolled helplessly under the wheels of the train. I made my way
along the wall as well as I could to the engine, wondering why
the train did not go. The engineer lay on the floor of his cab,
and the fires were out.
Custom is a curious thing. The struggling mob, fighting
wildly for places in the carriages, were so accustomed
to trains arriving and departing that it apparently
occurred to none of them that the engineer was human and
subject to the same atmospheric conditions as themselves.
I placed the mouthpiece between his purple lips, and,
holding my own breath like a submerged man, succeeded in
reviving him. He said that if I gave him the machine he
would take out the train as far as the steam already in the
boiler would carry it. I refused to do this, but stepped
on the engine with him, saying it would keep life in both
of us until we got out into better air. In a surly manner
he agreed to this and started the train, but he did not
play fair. Each time he refused to give up the machine until
I was in a fainting condition with holding in my breath, and,
finally, he felled me to the floor of the cab. I imagine
that the machine rolled off the train as I fell and that he
jumped after it. The remarkable thing is that neither of us
needed the machine, for I remember that just after we
started I noticed through the open iron door that the
engine fire suddenly became aglow again, although at
the time I was in too
great a state of bewilderment and horror to understand
what it meant. A western gale had sprung up — an
hour too late. Even before we left Cannon Street those
who still survived were comparatively safe, for one
hundred and sixty-seven persons were rescued from that
fearful heap of dead on the platforms, although many
died within a day or two after, and others never
recovered their reason. When I regained my senses after
the blow dealt by the engineer, I found myself alone,
and the train speeding across the Thames near Kew. I
tried to stop the engine, but did not succeed. However,
in experimenting, I managed to turn on the air brake,
which in some degree checked the train, and lessened the
impact when the crash came at Richmond terminus. I sprang
off on the platform before the engine reached the
terminal buffers, and saw passing me like a nightmare the
ghastly trainload of the dead. Most of the doors were
swinging open, and every compartment was jammed full,
although, as I afterwards learned, at each curve of the
permanent way, or extra lurch of the train, bodies had
fallen out all along the line. The smash at Richmond made
no difference to the passengers. Besides myself, only two
persons were taken alive from the train, and one of these,
his clothes torn from his back in the struggle was sent to
an asylum, where he was never able to tell who he was;
neither, as far as I know, did anyone ever claim him.
[THE END.]