 I knew a man once who had made a great case of death, saying that he esteemed a country according to its regard for the conception of death, and according to the respect which it paid to that conception. He also said that he considered individuals by much the same standard, but that he did not judge them so strictly in the matter, because said he, great masses of men are more permanently concerned with great issues, whereas private citizens are disturbed by little particular things which interfere with their little particular lives, and so distract them from the general end. This was upon a river called the Baton in Vendee, and at the time I did not understand what he meant, because as yet I had no experience of these things. But this man, to whom I spoke, had had three kinds of experience. First he had himself been, very probably, the occasion of death in others, for he had been a soldier in a war of conquest, where the Europeans were few and the barbarians many. Secondly, he had been himself very often wounded, and more than once, all but killed. Thirdly, he was at the time he told me this thing, an old man, who must in any case soon come to that experience or catastrophe of which he spoke. He was an innkeeper, the father of two daughters, and his inn was by the side of the river, but the road ran between. His face was more anxiously earnest than is commonly the face of a French peasant, as though he had suffered more than do ordinarily their very prosperous, very virile, and self-governing race of men. He had also about him what many men show who have come sharply against the great realities, that is a sort of diffidence in talking of ordinary things. I could see that in the matters of his household he allowed himself to be led by women. Meanwhile, he continued to talk to me over the table upon this business of death, and as he talked he showed that desire to persuade, which is in itself the strongest motive of interest in any human discourse. He said to me that those who affected to despise the consideration of death knew nothing of it, that they had never seen it close and might be compared to men who spoke of battles when they had only read books about battles, or who spoke of seasickness, though they had never seen the sea. This last metaphor he used with some pride, for he had crossed the Mediterranean from province to Avriga some five or six times, and had upon each occasion suffered horribly, for of course his garrison had been upon the edge of the desert, and he had been a soldier beyond the Atlas. He told me that those who affected to neglect or despise death were worse than children talking of grown-up things, and were more like prigs talking of physical things of which they knew nothing. I told him then that there were many such men, especially in the town of Geneva. This he said he could well believe, though he had never traveled there and had hardly heard the name of the place. But he knew it for some foreign town. He told me also that there were men about in his own part of the world who pretended that since death was an accident like any other and moreover one as certain as hunger or as sleep, it was not to be considered. These he said were the worst debaters upon his favorite subject. Now as he talked in this fashion I confess that I was very bored. I had desire to go on to Angoulime upon my bicycle, and I was at that age when all human beings think themselves immortal. I had desire to get off the main high road into the hills upon the left to the east of it, and I was at an age when the cessation of mundane experience is not a conceivable thing. Moreover this innkeeper had been pointed out to me as a man who could give me very useful information upon the nature of the roads I had to travel, and it had never occurred to me that he would switch me off after dinner upon a hobby of his own. Today, after a whiter travel, I know well that all innkeepers have hobbies, and that an abstract or mystical hobby of this sort is among the best with which to pass an evening. But no matter, I am talking of then and not now. He kept me, therefore, uninterested as I was, and continued. People who put death away from them, who do not neglect or despise it, but who stop thinking about it, annoy me very much. We have in this village a chemist of such a kind. He will have it that five minutes afterwards a man thinks no more about it. Having gone so far the innkeeper, clenching his hands and fixing me with a brilliant glance, from his old eyes, said, with such men I will have nothing to do. Indeed, that his chief subject should be treated in such a fashion was odious to him, and rightly, for the half-dozen things worth strict consideration, there is no doubt that his hobby was the chief, and to have one's hobby vulgarly despised is intolerable. The innkeeper then went on to tell me that so far as he could make out it was a man's business to consider this subject of death continually, to wonder upon it, and if he could, to extract its meaning. Of the men I had met so far in life, only the Scotch and certain of the western French went on in this metaphysical manner. Thus a Breton, a Basque, and a man in Echelfechon, I hope I spell it right, and another in Jedburg, had already each of them sent me to my bed confused upon the matter of free will. So this western innkeeper refused to leave his thesis. It was incredible to him that a sentient being who perpetually accumulated experience, who grew riper and riper, more and more full of such knowledge as was native to himself and complementary to his nature, should, at the very crisis of his success in all things intellectual and emotional, cease suddenly. It was further an object to him of vast curiosity, why such a being, since the future was essential to it, should find that future veiled. He presented to me a picture of men perpetually passing through a field of vision, out of the dark and into the dark. He showed me these men not growing and falling as fruits do, so the modern vulgar conception goes, but alive throughout their transit, pouring like an unbroken river from one sharp limit of the horizon, where they entered into life, to that other sharp limit where they poured out from life, not through decay, but through a sudden catastrophe. I, said he, shall die. I do suppose, with the full consciousness of my being and with a great fear in my eyes, and though many die decrepit and senile, that is not the normal death of men, for men have in them something of a self-creative power, which pushes them on to the further realization of themselves, right up to the edge of their doom. I put his words in English after a great many years, but they were something of this kind, for he was a metaphysical sort of man. It was now near midnight, and I could bear with such discussions no longer. My fatigue was great, and the hour at which I had to rise next day was early. It was therefore in but a drowsy state that I heard him continue his discourse. He told me a long story of how he had seen one day a company of young men of the new army, the conscripts, go marching past his house along the river through a driving snow. He said that first he heard them singing, long before he saw them, and then they came out like ghosts for a moment through the drift, and then in the half-light of the winter dawn they clearly appeared, all in step for once, swinging forward, muffled in their dark blue coats, and still singing to the lift of their feet. That then, on their way to the seaport, they passed again into the blinding scurry of the snow, that they seemed like ghosts again for a moment behind the veil of it, and that, long after they had disappeared, their singing could still be heard. By this time I was most confused as to what lesson he would convey, and sleep had nearly overcome me. But I remember his telling me that such a sight stood to him at the moment, and did still stand, for the passage of the French armies perpetually on into the dark century after century, destroyed for the most part upon fields of battle. He told me that he felt like one who had seen the retreat from Moscow, and he would, I am sure, had I not determined to leave him, and to take at least some little sleep. Have asked me what fate there was for those single private soldiers, each real, each existent, while the army which they made up, and whose destruction men spoke, was but a number, a notion, a name. He would have pestered me, if my mind had still been active, as to what their secret destinies were, who lay each man alone twisted round the guns, after the failure to hold the bridge of the Barracena. He might have gone deeper. But I was too tired to listen to him any more. This human debate of ours, and very one-sided it was, is now resolved. For in the interval since it was engaged, the innkeeper himself has died. of all the simple actions in the world. There is no case of coming to an end, but it has about it something of an effort and a jerk, as though nature abhorred it, and as though it be true that some achieve a quiet and perfect end to one thing or another, as for instance to life. Yet this achievement is not arrived at. It is not. It is not. It is. It is. It is. It is. It is. It is. This achievement is not arrived at, safe through the utmost toil, and consequence upon the most persevering and exquisite art. Now you can say that this may be true of sentient things but not of things inanimate. It is true even of things inanimate. Look down some straight railway line for a vanishing point, to the perspective. You will never find it. or tried to mark the moment when a small target becomes invisible. There is no gradation. A moment it was there, and you missed it, possibly because the authorities were not going in for journalism in that day, and had not chosen a dead com with the light full on the canvas. A moment it was there, and then, as you streamed on, it was gone. The same is true of a lark in the air. You see it, and then you do not see it. You only hear its song. The same is true of that song. You hear it, and then suddenly you do not hear it. It is true of a human voice, which is familiar in your ear, living and inhabiting the rooms of your house. There comes a day when it ceases altogether. And how positive, how definite, and hard is that coming to an end. It does not leave an echo behind it, but a sharp edge of emptiness, and very often, as one sits behind the fire, the memory of that voice suddenly returning gives to the silence about a person, force as it were, of obsession and of control. So much happens when even one of all our million voices comes to an end. It is necessary, it is august, and it is reasonable that the great story of our lives also should be accomplished, and should reach a term, and yet there is something in that hidden duality of ours which makes the prospect of so natural a conclusion terrible. And it is the better judgment of mankind, and the mature conclusion of civilizations, in their age, that there is not only a conclusion here, but something of an adventure also. It may be so. Those who saw us mankind, and are the principal benefactors of it, I mean the poets and the musicians, have attempted always to ease the prospect of coming to an end, whether it were the coming to an end of the things we love, or of that daily habit and conversation which is our life, and is the atmosphere wherein we love them. Indeed, this is a clear test whereby you may distinguish the great artists from the main hucksters and charlatans, that the first approach, and reveal what is dreadful with calm, and as it were with a purpose to use it for good, while the vulgar catch-penny fellows must liven up their bad dishes, as with cheap sauce, of the horrible caring nothing, so that their shrieks sell whether we are the better for them, or no. The great poets, I say, bring us easily, or grandly, to the gate, is in that ode to a nightingale, where it is thought good, in an immortal phrase, to pass painlessly at midnight, or in the glorious line which Ronsard uses, like a salute with the sword, hailing, la profitable mort. The noblest, or the most perfect of English elegies, leaves as sort of savor after the reading of it, no terror at all, nor even too much regret. But the landscape of England in evening, when the smoke of the cottages mixes with autumn vapours among the elms, and even that gloomy, modern ode to the west wind, unfinished and untouched with despair, though it will speak of, that outer place for Lorne, which is like an infinite grey sea surrounds, with everlasting calm the land of human sounds. It also returns to the sacramental earth of one's childhood where it says, For now the night completed tells her tale of rest and dissolution gathering round, her mist in such persuasion of that ground, of home consents to falter and grow pale, and the stars are put out and the trees fail, nor anything remains but that which drones enormous through the dark. And again in another place where it prays that one may at the last be fed with beauty, as the flowers are fed, that fill their falling time with generous breath. Let me again a natural end of death, and on the mighty beast as on a bed lay decently at last a drowsy head, content to lapse insolvenance and fade, in dreaming once again the dream of all things made. The most careful philosophy, the most heavenly music, the best choice of poetic or prosaic phrase, prepare man properly for man's perpetual loss of this and of that, and introduces us proudly to the similar and greater business of departure from them all, from whatever of them all remains at the close. To be introduced, to be prepared, to be armored, all these are excellent things. But there is a question no foresight can answer, nor any comprehension resolve. It is right to gather upon that question the varied affections or perceptions of varying men. I knew a man once in the Turanese, a gloomy man, but very rich, who cared little for the things he knew. This man took no pleasure in his fruitful orchards and his carefully plowed fields and his harvests. He took pleasure in pine trees. He was a man of groves and of the dark. For him that thing should come to an end was but a part of the universal rhythm, a part pleasing to the general harmony, and making in the music of the world about him a solemn and a conclusive chord. This man would study the sky at night and take from it a larger and larger draught of infinitude, finding in this exercise not a mere satisfaction, but an object and goal for the mind. And he had so wandered for a while under the night he seemed for the moment who have reached the object of his being. And I knew another man in the wheel who worked with his hands, and was always kind, and knew his trade well. He smiled when he talked of size, and he could thatch. He could fish also, and he knew about grafting, and about the seasons of plants and birds, and the way of seed. He had a face full of weather. He fatigued his body. He watched his land. He would not talk much of mysteries. He would rather hum songs. He loved new friends and old. He had lived with one wife for fifty years, and he had five children who were a policeman, a schoolmistress, a son at home, and two who were sailors. This man said that what a man did and the life in which he did it was like the farmwork upon a summer's day. He said one works a little and rests, and works a little again, and one drinks, and there is a perpetual talk with those about one. Then, he would say, the shadows lengthen at evening, the wind falls, the birds get back home. And as for ourselves, we are sleepy before it is dark. And also I knew a third man who lived in a town and was clerical and didn't know work for he had money of his own. This man said that all we do, and the time in which we do it, is rather a night than a day. He said that when we came to an end we vanished, we end our works, but that we vanished into a broadening light. Which of these three knew best the nature of man and his works, and which knew best of what nature was the end? Why so glum, my lad, or my lass, as the case may be? Why so heavy at heart? Did you not know that you also must come to an end? Why that woman, Evitaplis, who sold such southern wine for the dissipation of the Picardian mist, her time is over and gone, and the wine has been drunk long ago, and the singers in her house have departed, and the wind of the sea moans in and fills their halls. The lords, who died in Ronsvelis, have been dead, and these thousand years and more, and the loud song about them grew very faint and dwindled and is silent now. There is nothing at all remains. It is certain that the hills decay and that the rivers, as the dusty years proceed, run feebly and lose themselves at last in desert sands, and in its eons the very firmament grows old. But evil also is perishable, and bad men meet their judge. Be comforted. Now of all endings of all comings to an end, none is so hesitating as the ending of a book, which the publisher will have so long and the writer so short, and the public, God bless the public, will have it whatever is given. Books however much they're lingering, books also, must come to an end. It is a boron to their nature as to the life of man. They must be sharply cut off, let it be done at once and fixed as by a spell, and the power of a word. The word The End of Section 32 The End of On Nothing and Kindred Subjects by Hilaer Bellach