A NOVEL IN A NUTSHELL
A Dream of Red Hands
by Bram Stoker
(1847-1912)
The first opinion given to me regarding Jacob Settle was a simple
descriptive statement, "He's a down-in-the-mouth chap"; but I found
that it embodied the thoughts and ideas of all his fellow-workmen.
There was in the phrase a certain easy tolerance, an absence of positive
feeling of any kind, rather than any complete opinion, which marked
pretty accurately the man's place in public esteem. Still, there was
some dissimilarity between this and his appearance which unconsciously
set me thinking, and by degrees, as I saw more of the place and the
workmen, I came to have a special interest in him. He was, I found,
for ever doing kindnesses, not involving money expenses beyond his
humble means, but in the manifold ways of forethought and forbearance
and self-repression which are of the truer charities of life. Women and
children trusted him implicitly, though, strangely enough, he rather
shunned them, except when anyone was sick, and then he made his
appearance to help if he could, timidly and awkwardly. He led a very
solitary life, keeping house by himself in a tiny cottage, or, rather, hut,
of one room, far on the edge of the moorland. His existence seemed so
sad and solitary that I wished to cheer it up, and for the purpose took
the occasion when we had both been sitting up with a child injured by
me through accident to offer to lend him books. He gladly accepted,
and as we parted in the grey of the dawn I felt that something of mutual
confidence had been established between us.
The books were always most carefully and punctually returned, and
in time Jacob Settle and I became quite friends. Once or twice as
I crossed the moorland on Sundays I looked in on him; but on such
occasions he was shy and ill at ease, so that I felt diffident about calling
to see him. He would never under any circumstances come into my own
lodgings.
One Sunday afternoon, I was coming back from a long walk beyond
the moor, and as I passed Settle's cottage stopped at the door to say
"How do you do?" to him. As the door was shut, I thought that he was out,
and merely knocked for form's sake, or through habit, not expecting to
get any answer. To my surprise, I heard a feeble voice from within,
though what was said I could not hear. I entered at once, and found
Jacob lying half-dressed upon his bed. He was as pale as death, and
the sweat was simply rolling off his face. His hands were unconsciously
gripping the bed-clothes as a drowning man holds on to whatever he
may grasp. As I came in he half arose, with a wild, hunted look in his
eyes, which were wide open and staring, as though something of horror
had come before him but when he recognised me he sank back on the
couch with a smothered sob of relief and closed his eyes. I stood by him
for a while, quite a minute or two, while he gasped. Then he opened
his eyes and looked at me, but with such a despairing, woful expression
that, as I am a living man, I would have rather seen that frozen look of
horror. I sat down beside him and asked after his health. For a while
he would not answer me except to say that he was not ill but then,
after scrutinising me closely, he half arose on his elbow and said
"He half arose, with a wild, hunted look in his eyes."
"I thank you kindly, Sir, but I 'm simply telling you the truth.
I am not ill, as men call it, though God knows whether there be not
worse sicknesses than doctors know of. I 'll tell you, as you are so kind,
but I trust that you won't even mention such a thing to a living soul,
for it might work me more and greater woe. I am suffering from
a bad dream."
"A bad dream!" I said, hoping to cheer him; "but dreams pass
away with the light even with
waking." There I stopped, for
before he spoke I saw the answer in
his desolate look round the little
place.
"No! no! that 's all well for
people that live in comfort and with
those they love round them. It is a
thousand times worse for those who live
alone and have to do so. What
cheer is there for me, waking here in
the silence of the night, with the
wide moor around me full of voices
and full of faces that make my waking
a worse dream than my sleep? Ah,
young Sir, you have no past that can
send its legions to people the darkness
and the empty space, and I
pray the good God that you may never have! As he spoke, there
was such an almost irresistible gravity of conviction in his manner
that I abandoned my remonstrance about his solitary life. I felt that I
was in the presence of some secret influence which I could not fathom.
To my relief, for I knew not what to say, he went on
Two nights past have I dreamed it. It was hard enough the first
night, but I came through it. Last night the expectation was in itself
almost worse than the dream until the dream came, and then it swept
away every remembrance of lesser pain. I stayed awake till just before
the dawn, and then it came again, and ever since I have been in such an
agony as I am sure the dying feel, and with it all the dread of to-night."
Before he had got to the end of the sentence my mind was made up, and
I felt that I could speak to him more cheerfully.
"Try and get to sleep early to-night in fact, before the evening has
passed away. The sleep will refresh you, and I promise you there will
not be any bad dreams after to-night." He shook his head hopelessly,
so I sat a little longer and then left him.
When I got home I made my arrangements for the night, for I had
made up my mind to share Jacob Settle's lonely vigil in his cottage on
the moor. I judged that if he got to sleep before sunset he would wake
well before midnight, and so, just as the bells of the city were striking
eleven, I stood opposite his door armed with a bag, in which were my
supper, an extra large flask, a couple of candles, and a book. The
moonlight was bright, and flooded the whole moor, till it was almost as
light as day but ever and anon black clouds drove across the sky, and
made a darkness which by comparison seemed almost tangible. I opened
the door softly, and entered without waking Jacob, who lay asleep with
his white face upward, he was still, and again bathed in sweat. I tried
to imagine what visions were passing before those closed eyes which
could bring with them the misery and woe which were stamped on the
face, but fancy failed me, and I waited for the awakening. It came
suddenly, and in a fashion which touched me to the quick, for the hollow
groan that broke from the man's white lips as he half arose and sank
back was manifestly the realisation or completion of some train of
thought which had gone before.
"If this be dreaming," said I to myself, then it must be based on
some very terrible reality. "What can have been that unhappy fact that
he spoke of?"
While I thus spoke, he realised that I was with him. It struck me
as strange that he had no period of that doubt as to whether dream or
reality surrounded him which commonly marks an unexpected environment
of waking men. With a positive cry of joy, he seized my hand and held
it in his two wet, trembling hands, as a frightened child clings on to
someone whom it loves. I tried to soothe him
"There, there! it is all right! I have come to stay with you to-night,
and together we will try to fight this evil dream." He let go my hand
suddenly, and sank back on his bed and covered his eyes with his hands.
"Fight it? the evil dream! Ah no, Sir, no! No mortal power can
fight that dream, for it comes from God and is burned in here;" and
he beat upon his forehead. Then he went on
"It is the same dream, ever the same, and yet it grows in its power
to torture me every time it comes."
"What is the dream?" I asked, thinking that the speaking of it
might give him some relief but he shrank away from me, and after a long
pause said
"No, I had better not tell it. It may not come again." There was
manifestly something to conceal from me something that lay behind the
dream, so I answered
"All right. I hope you have seen the last of it. But if it should come
again, you will tell me, will you not? I ask, not out of curiosity, but
because I think it may relieve you to speak." He answered with what
I thought was almost an undue amount of solemnity
"If it comes again, I shall tell you all."
Then I tried to get his mind away from the subject to more mundane
things, so I produced supper, and made him share it with me, including the
contents of the flask. After a little he braced up, and when I lit my
cigar, having given him another, we smoked a full hour, and talked of
many things. Little by little the comfort of his body stole over his mind,
and I could see sleep laying her gentle hands on his eyelids. He felt it,
too, and told me that now he felt all right, and I might safely leave him;
but I told him that, right or wrong, I was going to see in the daylight.
So I lit my other candle, and began to read as he fell asleep.
By degrees I got interested in my book, so interested that presently
I was startled by its dropping out of my hands. I looked and saw that
Jacob was still asleep, and I was rejoiced to see that there was on his
face a look of unwonted happiness, while his lips seemed to move with
unspoken words. Then I turned to my work again, and again woke, but
this time to feel chilled to my very marrow by hearing the voice from
the bed beside me
"Not with those red hands! Never! never!" On looking at him,
I found that he was still asleep. He woke, however, in an instant, and
did not seem surprised to see me; there was again that strange apathy as
to his surroundings. Then I said
"Settle, tell me your dream. You may speak freely, for I shall hold
your confidence sacred. While we both live I shall never mention what
you may choose to tell me."
"I said I would but I had better tell you first what goes before the
dream, that you may understand. I was a schoolmaster when I was
a very young man; it was only a parish school in a little village in the
West Country. No need to mention any names. Better not. I was
engaged to be married to a young girl whom I loved and almost
reverenced. It was the old story. While we were waiting for the time
when we could afford to set up house together, another man came along.
He was nearly as young as I was, and handsome, and a gentleman, with all
a gentleman's attractive ways for a woman of our class. He would go
fishing, and she would meet him while I was at my work in school.
I reasoned with her and implored her to give him up. I offered to get
married at once and go away and begin the world in a strange country;
but she would not listen to anything I could say, and I could see that
he was infatuated with him. Then I took it on myself to meet the
man and ask him to deal well with the girl, for I thought he might mean
honestly by her, so that there might be no talk or chance of talk on the
part of others. I went where I should meet him with none by, and we
met!" Here Jacob Settle had to pause, for something seemed to rise
in his throat, and he almost gasped for breath. Then he went on
"Sir, as God is above us, there was no selfish thought in my heart
that day; I loved my pretty Mabel too well to be content with a part of
her love, and I had thought of my own unhappiness too often not to
have come to realise that whatever might come to her, my hope was
gone. He was insolent to me you, Sir, who are a gentleman, cannot
know, perhaps, how galling can be the insolence of one who is above
you in station but I bore with that. I implored him to deal well
with the girl, for what might be only a pastime of an idle hour with him
might be the breaking of her heart. For I never had a thought of her
truth, or that the worst of harm could come to her it was only the
unhappiness of her heart I feared. But when I asked him when he
intended to marry her his laughter galled me so that I lost my temper
and told him that I would not stand by and see her life made unhappy.
Then he grew angry too, and in his anger said such cruel thing of her
that then and there I swore he should not live to do her harm. God
knows how it came about, for in such moments of passion it is hard to
remember the steps from a word to a blow, but I found myself standing
over his dead body, with my hands crimson with the blood that welled
from his torn throat. We were alone, and he was a stranger, with none
of his kin to seek for him, and murder does not always out not all at
once. His bones may be whitening still, for all I know, in the pool of
the river where I left him. No one suspected his absence, or why it
was, except my poor Mabel, and she dared not speak. But it was all in
vain, for when I came back again after an absence of months for
I could not live in the place I learned that her shame had come and
that she had died in it. Hitherto I had been borne up by the thought
that my ill deed had saved her future, but now, when I learned that
I had been too late, and that my poor love was smirched with
that man's sin, I fled away with the sense of my useless guilt upon me
more heavily than I could bear. Ah! Sir, you that have not done such
a sin don't know what it is to carry it with you. You may think that
custom makes it easy to you, but it is not so. It grows and grows with
every hour, till it becomes intolerable: and with it growing too the
feeling that you must for ever stand outside Heaven. You don't know
what that means, and I pray God that you never may. Ordinary men,
to whom all things are possible, don't often, if ever, think of Heaven.
It is a name, and nothing more, and they are content to wait and let
things be; but to those who are deemed to be shut out for ever you cannot
think what it means; you cannot guess or measure the terrible endless
longing to see the gate opened, and to be able to join the white figures
within.
"I found myself standing over his dead body."
"And this bring me to my dream. It seemed that the portal was before
me, with great gates of massive steel with bars of the thickness of a mast,
rising to the very clouds, and so close that between them was just a glimpse
of a crystal grotto, on whose shining wall were figured many white-clad
forms with faces radiant with joy when I stood before the gate my
heart and my soul were so full of rapture and longing that I forgot.
And there stood at the gate two mighty angels with sweeping wings,
and oh! so stern of countenance. They held each in one hand a flaming
sword, and in the other the latchet, which moved to and fro at their
lightest touch. Nearer were figure all draped in black, with heads
covered so that only the eyes were seen, and they handed to each who
came white garments such as the angels wear. A low murmur came
that told that all should put on their own robes and without soil,
or the angel would not pass them in, but would mite them down
with the flaming swords. I was eager to don my own garment and
hurriedly threw it over me and stepped swiftly to the gate; but it
moved not and the angels, loosing the latchet, pointed to my dress.
I looked down, and was aghast for the whole robe was smeared with
blood. My hands were red; they glittered with the blood that dripped
from them as on that day by the river bank. And then the angels
raised their flaming swords to smite me down and the horror was
complete I awoke. Again and again, and again that awful dream
come to me. I never learn from the experience, I never remember,
but at the beginning the hope is ever there to make the end more
appalling; and I know that the dream does not come out of the common
darkness where the dreams abide, but that it is sent from God as a
punishment! Never, never shall I be able to pass the gate, for the soil
on the angel garments must ever come from these bloody hands!"
I listened as in a spell as Jacob Settle spoke. There was something
so far away in the tone of his voice something so dreamy and mystic
in the eyes that looked as if through me at some spirit beyond something
so lofty in his very diction and in such marked contrast to his
work-worn clothes and his poor surroundings that I wondered if the whole thing
were not a dream.
We were both silent for a long time. I kept looking at the man
before me in growing wonderment. Now that his confession had been
made his soul, which had been crushed to the very earth, seemed to leap
back again to uprightness with some resilient force. I suppose I ought
to have been horrified with his story, but, strange to say I was not.
It certainly is not pleasant to be made the recipient of the confidence of
a murderer but this poor fellow seemed to have had not only so much
provocation but so much self-denying purpose in his deed of blood that
I did not feel called upon to pass judgment upon him. My purpose was
to comfort, so I spoke out with what calmness I could, for my heart was
beating fast and heavily
"You need not despair, Jacob Settle. God is very good, and His
mercy is great. Live on and work on in the hope that some day you
may feel that you have atoned for the past." Here I paused, for I could
see that sleep, natural sleep this time, was creeping upon him. "Go to
sleep," I said; "I shall watch with you here, and we shall have no more
evil dreams to-night."
He made an effort to pull himself together, and answered
"I don't know how to thank you for your goodness to me this night,
but I think you had best leave me now. I 'll try and sleep this out;
I feel a weight off my mind since I have told you all. If there 's
anything of the man left in me, I must try and fight out life alone."
"I 'll go to-night, as you wish it," I said; "but take my advice, and
do not live in such a solitary way. Go among men and women; live
among them. Share their joys and sorrows, and it will help you to
forget. This solitude will make you melancholy mad."
"I will!" he answered, half unconsciously, for sleep was
overmastering him.
I turned to go, and he looked after me. When I had touched the
latch I dropped it, and. coming back to the bed, held out my hand. He
grasped it with both his as he rose to a sitting posture, and I said my
good-night, trying to cheer him
"Heart, man, heart! There is work in the world for you to do,
Jacob Settle. You can wear those white robes yet and pass through
that gate of steel!" Then I left him.
A week after I found his cottage deserted, and on asking at the works
was told that he had gone north" no one knew exactly whither.
Two years afterwards, I was staying for a few days with my friend
Dr. Munro in Glasgow. He was a busy man, and could not spare much
time for going about with me, so I
spent my day in excursions to the
Trossachs and Loch Katrine and down
the Clyde. On the second last evening
of my my I came back somewhat
later than I had arranged, but found
that my host was late too. The maid
told me that he had been sent for to
the hospital a case of accident at the
gas-works, and the dinner was postponed
an hour; so, telling her I would
stroll down to find her master and
walk back with him, I went out. At
the hospital I found him washing his
hands preparatory to starting for home.
Casually, I asked him what his case was.
"Oh, the usual thing! A rotten
rope and men s live of no account.
Two men were working in a gasometer,
when the rope that held their scaffolding
broke. It must have occurred just
before the dinner hour, for no one
noticed their absence till the men had
returned. There was about seven feet
of water in the gasometer, so they had
a hard fight for it, poor fellows. However,
one of them was alive, just alive,
but we have had a hard job to pull
him through. It seems that he owes
his life to his mate, for I have never
heard of greater heroism. They swam
together while their strength lasted,
but at the end they were so done up
that even the lights above, and the
men slung with ropes, coming down to
help them, could not keep them up.
But one of them stood on the bottom
and held up his comrade over his head,
and those few breaths made all the
difference between life and death.
They were a shocking sight when they
were taken out, for that water is like
a purple dye with the gas and the tar.
The man upstairs looked as if he had
been washed in blood. Ugh!"
"And the other?"
"Oh, he's worse still. But he
must have been a very noble fellow.
That struggle under the water must
have been fearful; one can see that
by the way the blood has been drawn
from the extremities. It make the
idea of the Stigmata possible to look
at him. Resolution like his could, you
would think, do anything in the world.
Ay! it might almost unbar the gates
of Heaven. Look here, old man, it is
not a very pleasant sight, especially
just before dinner, but you are a
writer, and this is an odd case. Here
is something you would not like to
miss, for in all human probability you
will never see anything like it again." While he was speaking he had
brought me into the mortuary of the hospital.
On the bier lay a body covered with a white sheet, which was wrapped
close round it.
"Looks like a chrysalis, don't it? I say, Jack, if there be anything
in the old myth that the soul is typified by a butterfly, well, then the
one that this chrysalis sent forth was a very noble specimen and took all
the sunlight on its wings. See here!" He uncovered the face. Horrible,
indeed, it looked, as though stained with blood. But I knew him at
once, Jacob Settle! My friend pulled the winding sheet further down.
The hands were crossed on the purple breast as they had been
reverently placed by some tender-hearted person. As I saw them, my
heart throbbed with a great exultation, for the memory of his harrowing
dream rushed across my mind. There was no stain now on those poor,
brave hands, for they were blanched white as snow.
And somehow as I looked I felt that the evil dream was all over.
That noble soul had won a way through the gate at last. The white
robe had now no stain from the hands that had put it on.
(THE END)