Curated by Brandon W.
Chapter 14
MINA
HARKER'S JOURNAL
23
September.--Jonathan is better after a bad night. I am so glad that he has
plenty of work to do, for that keeps his mind off the terrible things, and oh,
I am rejoiced that he is not now weighed down with the responsibility of his
new position. I knew he would be true to himself, and now how proud I am to see
my Jonathan rising to the height of his advancement and keeping pace in all
ways with the duties that come upon him. He will be away all day till late, for
he said he could not lunch at home. My household work is done, so I shall take
his foreign journal, and lock myself up in my room and read it.
24
September.--I hadn't the heart to write last night, that terrible record of
Jonathan's upset me so. Poor dear! How he must have suffered, whether it be true
or only imagination. I wonder if there is any truth in it at all. Did he get
his brain fever, and then write all those terrible things, or had he some
cause for it all? I suppose I shall never know, for I dare not open the subject
to him. And yet that man we saw yesterday! He seemed quite certain of him, poor
fellow! I suppose it was the funeral upset him and sent his mind back on some
train of thought.
He believes
it all himself. I remember how on our wedding day he said "Unless some
solemn duty come upon me to go back to the bitter hours, asleep or awake, mad
or sane . . ." There seems to be through it all some thread of continuity.
That fearful Count was coming to London. If it should be, and he came to
London, with its teeming
millions . . . There may be a solemn duty, and if
it come we must not shrink from it. I shall be prepared. I shall get my
typewriter this very hour and begin transcribing. Then we shall be ready for
other eyes if required. And if it be wanted, then, perhaps, if I am ready, poor
Jonathan may not be upset, for I can speak for him and never let him be
troubled or worried with it at all. If ever Jonathan quite gets over the
nervousness he may want to tell me of it all, and I can ask him questions and
find out things, and see how I may comfort him.
LETTER, VAN
HELSING TO MRS. HARKER
24 September
(Confidence)
"Dear
Madam,
"I pray
you to pardon my writing, in that I am so far friend as that I sent to you sad
news of Miss Lucy Westenra's death. By the kindness of Lord Godalming, I am
empowered to read her letters and papers, for I am deeply concerned about
certain matters vitally important. In them I find some letters from you, which
show how great friends you were and how you love her. Oh, Madam Mina, by that
love, I implore you, help me. It is for others' good that I ask, to redress
great wrong, and to lift much and terrible troubles, that may be more great
than you can know. May it be that I see you? You can trust me. I am friend of
Dr. John Seward and of Lord Godalming (that was Arthur of Miss Lucy). I must
keep it private for the present from all. I should come to Exeter to see you at once if you tell me I am privilege to come,
and where and when. I implore your pardon, Madam. I have read your letters to
poor Lucy, and know how good you are and how your husband suffer. So I pray
you, if it may be, enlighten him not, least it may harm. Again your pardon, and
forgive me.
"VAN
HELSING"
TELEGRAM, MRS. HARKER TO VAN HELSING
25
September.--Come today by quarter past ten train if you can catch it. Can see
you any time you call. "WILHELMINA HARKER"
MINA
HARKER'S JOURNAL
25
September.--I cannot help feeling terribly excited as the time draws near for
the visit of Dr. Van
Helsing, for somehow I expect that it will throw
some light upon Jonathan's sad experience, and as he attended poor dear Lucy in
her last illness, he can tell me all about her. That is the reason of his
coming. It is concerning Lucy and her sleepwalking, and not about Jonathan.
Then I shall never know the real truth now! How silly I am. That awful journal
gets hold of my imagination and tinges everything with something of its own
color. Of course it is about Lucy. That habit came back to the poor dear, and
that awful night on the cliff must have made her ill. I had almost forgotten in
my own affairs how ill she was afterwards. She must have told him of her
sleep-walking adventure on the cliff, and that I knew all about it, and now he
wants me to tell him what I know, so that he may understand. I hope I did right
in not saying anything of it to Mrs. Westenra. I should never forgive myself if
any act of mine, were it even a negative one, brought harm on poor dear Lucy. I
hope too, Dr. Van Helsing will not blame me. I have had so much trouble and
anxiety of late that I feel I cannot bear more just at present.
I suppose a
cry does us all good at times, clears the air as other rain does. Perhaps it
was reading the journal yesterday that upset me, and then Jonathan went away
this morning to stay away from me a whole day and night, the first time we have
been parted since our marriage. I do hope the dear fellow will take care of
himself, and that nothing will occur to upset him. It is two o'clock, and the
doctor will be here soon now. I shall say nothing of Jonathan's journal unless
he asks me. I am so glad I have typewritten out my own journal, so that, in
case he asks about Lucy, I can hand it to him. It will save much questioning.
Later.--He
has come and gone. Oh, what a strange meeting, and how it all makes my head
whirl round. I feel like one in a dream. Can it be all possible, or even a part
of it? If I had not read Jonathan's journal first, I should never have accepted
even a possibility. Poor, poor, dear Jonathan! How he must have suffered.
Please the good God, all this may not upset him again. I shall try to save him
from it. But it may be even a consolation and a help to him, terrible though it
be and awful in its consequences, to know for certain that his eyes and ears
and brain did not deceive him, and that it is all true. It may be that it is
the doubt which haunts him, that when the doubt is removed, no matter which,
waking or dreaming, may prove the truth, he will be more satisfied and better
able to bear the shock. Dr. Van Helsing must be a good man as well as a clever
one if he is Arthur's friend and Dr. Seward's, and if they brought him all the
way from Holland to look after Lucy. I feel from having seen him that he is
good and kind and of a noble nature. When he comes tomorrow I shall ask him
about Jonathan. And then, please God, all this sorrow and anxiety may lead to a
good end. I used to think I would like to practice interviewing. Jonathan's
friend on "The Exeter News" told him that memory is everything in
such work, that you must be able to put down exactly almost every word spoken,
even if you had to refine some of it afterwards. Here was a rare interview. I
shall try to record it verbatim.
It was
half-past two o'clock when the knock came. I took my courage a deux mains and waited. In a few minutes Mary opened the door, and
announced "Dr. Van Helsing".
I rose and
bowed, and he came towards me, a man of medium weight, strongly built,
with his shoulders set back over a broad, deep chest and a neck well balanced
on the trunk as the head is on the neck. The poise of the head strikes me at
once as indicative of thought and power. The head is noble, well-sized, broad,
and large behind the ears. The face, cleanshaven, shows a hard, square chin, a
large resolute, mobile mouth, a good-sized nose, rather straight, but with
quick, sensitive nostrils, that seem to broaden as the big bushy brows come
down and the mouth tightens. The forehead is broad and fine, rising at first
almost straight and then sloping back above two bumps or ridges wide apart,
such a forehead that the reddish hair cannot possibly tumble over it, but falls
naturally back and to the sides. Big, dark blue eyes are set widely apart, and
are quick and tender or stern with the man's moods. He said to me,
"Mrs.
Harker, is it not?" I bowed assent.
"That
was Miss Mina Murray?" Again I assented.
"It is
Mina Murray that I came to see that was friend of that poor dear child Lucy
Westenra. Madam Mina, it is on account of the dead that I come."
"Sir,"
I said, "you could have no better claim on me than that you were a friend
and helper of Lucy Westenra."And I held out my hand. He took it and said
tenderly,
"Oh,
Madam Mina, I know that the friend of that poor little girl must be good, but I
had yet to learn . . ." He finished his speech with a courtly bow. I asked
him what it was that he wanted to see me about, so he at once began.
"I have
read your letters to Miss Lucy. Forgive me, but I had to begin to inquire
somewhere, and there was none to ask. I know that you were with her at Whitby. She sometimes kept a diary, you need not look surprised,
Madam Mina. It was begun after you had left, and was an imitation of you, and
in that diary she traces by inference certain things to a sleep-walking in
which she puts down that you saved her. In great perplexity then I come to you,
and ask you out of your so much kindness to tell me all of it that you can
remember."
"I can
tell you, I think, Dr. Van Helsing, all about it."
"Ah,
then you have good memory for facts, for details? It is not always so with
young ladies."
"No,
doctor, but I wrote it all down at the time. I can show it to you if you
like."
"Oh,
Madam Mina, I well be grateful. You will do me much favor."
I could not
resist the temptation of mystifying him a bit, I suppose it is some taste of
the original apple that remains still in our mouths, so I handed him the shorthand diary. He took it with a grateful bow, and said, "May
I read it?"
"If you
wish," I answered as demurely as I could. He opened it, and for an instant
his face fell. Then he stood up and bowed.
"Oh,
you so clever woman!" he said. "I knew long that Mr. Jonathan was a
man of much thankfulness, but see, his wife have all the good things. And will
you not so much honor me and so help me as to read it for me? Alas! I know not
the shorthand."
By this time
my little joke was over, and I was almost ashamed. So I took the typewritten
copy from my work
basket and handed it to him.
"Forgive
me," I said. "I could not help it, but I had been thinking that it
was of dear Lucy that you wished to ask, and so that you might not have time to
wait, not on my account, but because I know your time must be precious, I have
written it out on the typewriter for you."
He took it
and his eyes glistened. "You are so good," he said. "And may I
read it now? I may want to ask you some things when I have read."
"By all
means," I said. "read it over whilst I order lunch, and then you can
ask me questions whilst we eat."
He bowed and
settled himself in a chair with his back to the light, and became so absorbed
in the papers, whilst I went to see after lunch chiefly in order that he might
not be disturbed. When I came back, I found him walking hurriedly up and down
the room, his face all ablaze with excitement. He rushed up to me and took me
by both hands.
"Oh,
Madam Mina," he said, "how can I say what I owe to you? This paper is
as sunshine. It opens the gate to me. I am dazed, I am dazzled, with so much
light, and yet clouds roll in behind the light every time. But that you do not,
cannot comprehend. Oh, but I am grateful to you, you so clever woman.
Madame," he said this very solemnly, "if ever Abraham Van Helsing can
do anything for you or yours, I trust you will let me know. It will be pleasure
and delight if I may serve you as a friend, as a friend, but all I have ever
learned, all I can ever do, shall be for you and those you love. There are
darknesses in life, and there are lights. You are one of the lights. You will
have a happy life and a good life, and your husband will be blessed in
you."
"But,
doctor, you praise me too much, and you do not know me."
"Not
know you, I, who am old, and who have studied all my life men and women, I who
have made my specialty the brain and all that belongs to him and all that
follow from him! And I have read your diary that you have so goodly written for
me, and which breathes out truth in every line. I, who have read your so sweet
letter to poor Lucy of your marriage and your trust, not know you! Oh, Madam
Mina, good women tell all their lives, and by day and by hour and by minute,
such things that angels can read. And we men who wish to know have in us
something of angels' eyes. Your husband is noble nature, and you are noble too,
for you trust, and trust cannot be where there is mean nature. And your
husband, tell me of him. Is he quite well? Is all that fever gone, and is he
strong and hearty?"
I saw here
an opening to ask him about Jonathan, so I said,"He was almost recovered,
but he has been greatly upset by Mr. Hawkins death."
He
interrupted, "Oh, yes. I know. I know. I have read your last two
letters."
I went on,
"I suppose this upset him, for when we were in town on Thursday last he
had a sort of shock."
"A
shock, and after brain fever so soon! That is not good. What kind of shock was
it?"
"He
thought he saw some one who recalled something terrible, something which led to
his brain fever." And here the whole thing seemed to overwhelm me in a
rush. The pity for Jonathan, the horror which he experienced, the whole fearful
mystery of his diary, and the fear that has been brooding over me ever since,
all came in a tumult. I suppose I was hysterical, for I threw myself on my
knees and held up my hands to him, and implored him to make my husband well
again. He took my hands and raised me up, and made me sit on the sofa, and sat
by me. He held my hand in his, and said to me with, oh, such infinite
sweetness,
"My
life is a barren and lonely one, and so full of work that I have not had much
time for friendships, but since I have been summoned to here by my friend John
Seward I have known so many good people and seen such nobility that I feel more
than ever, and it has grown with my advancing years, the loneliness of my life.
Believe me, then, that I come here full of respect for you, and you have given
me hope, hope, not in what I am seeking of, but that there are good women still
left to make life happy, good women, whose lives and whose truths may make good
lesson for the children that are to be. I am glad, glad, that I may here be of
some use to you. For if your husband suffer, he suffer within the range of my
study and experience. I promise you that I will gladly do all for him that I
can, all to make his life strong and manly, and your life a happy one. Now you
must eat. You are over-wrought and perhaps over-anxious. Husband Jonathan would
not like to see you so pale, and what he like not where he love, is not to his
good. Therefore for his sake you must eat and smile. You have told me about
Lucy, and so now we shall not speak of it, lest it distress. I shall stay in
Exeter tonight, for I want to think much over what you have told me, and when I
have thought I will ask you questions, if I may. And then too, you will tell me
of husband Jonathan's trouble so far as you can, but not yet. You must eat now,
afterwards you shall tell me all."
After lunch,
when we went back to the drawing
room, he said to me, "And now tell me all
about him."
When it came
to speaking to this great learned man, I began to fear that he would think me a
weak fool, and Jonathan a madman, that journal is all so strange, and I
hesitated to go on. But he was so sweet and kind, and he had promised to help,
and I trusted him, so I said,
"Dr.
Van Helsing, what I have to tell you is so queer that you must not laugh at me
or at my husband. I have been since yesterday in a sort of fever of doubt. You
must be kind to me, and not think me foolish that I have even half believed
some very strange things."
He reassured
me by his manner as well as his words when he said, "Oh, my dear, if you
only know how strange is the matter regarding which I am here, it is you who
would laugh. I have learned not to think little of any one's belief, no matter
how strange it may be. I have tried to keep an open mind, and it is not the
ordinary things of life that could close it, but the strange things, the
extraordinary things, the things that make one doubt if they be mad or
sane."
"Thank
you, thank you a thousand times! You have taken a weight off my mind. If you
will let me, I shall give you a paper to read. It is long, but I have
typewritten it out. It will tell you my trouble and Jonathan's. It is the copy
of his journal when abroad, and all that happened. I dare not say anything of
it. You will read for yourself and judge. And then when I see you, perhaps, you
will be very kind and tell me what you think."
"I
promise," he said as I gave him the papers. "I shall in the morning,
as soon as I can, come to see you and your husband, if I may."
So he took
the papers with him and went away, and I sit here thinking, thinking I don't
know what.
LETTER (by
hand), VAN HELSING TO MRS. HARKER
25
September, 6 o'clock
"Dear
Madam Mina,
"I have
read your husband's so wonderful diary. You may sleep without doubt. Strange
and terrible as it is, it is true! I will pledge my life on it. It may be worse
for others, but for him and you there is no dread. He is a noble fellow, and
let me tell you from experience of men, that one who would do as he did in
going down that wall and to that room, aye, and going a second time, is not one
to be injured in permanence by a shock. His brain and his heart are all right,
this I swear, before I have even seen him, so be at rest. I shall have much to
ask him of other things. I am blessed that today I come to see you, for I have
learn all at once so much that again I am dazzled, dazzled more than ever, and
I must think.
"Yours
the most faithful,
"Abraham
Van Helsing."
LETTER, MRS.
HARKER TO VAN HELSING
25
September, 6:30 p. m.
"My
dear Dr. Van Helsing,
"A
thousand thanks for your kind letter, which has taken a great weight off my
mind.
And yet, if it be true, what terrible things there are in the world, and
what an awful thing if that man, that monster, be really in London! I fear to
think. I have this moment, whilst writing, had a wire from Jonathan, saying
that he leaves by the 6:25 tonight from Launceston and will be here at 10:18,so that I shall have no fear
tonight. Will you, therefore, instead of lunching with us, please come to
breakfast at eight o'clock, if this be not too early for you? You can get away,
if you are in a hurry, by the 10:30 train, which will bring you to Paddington
by 2:35. Do not answer this, as I shall take it that, if I do not hear, you
will come to breakfast.
"Believe
me,
"Your
faithful and grateful friend,
"Mina
Harker."
JONATHAN
HARKER'S JOURNAL
26
September.--I thought never to write in this diary again, but the time has
come. When I got home last night Mina had supper ready, and when we had supped she
told me of Van Helsing's visit, and of her having given him the two diaries
copied out, and of how anxious she has been about me. She showed me in the
doctor's letter that all I wrote down was true. It seems to have made a new man
of me. It was the doubt as to the reality of the whole thing that knocked me
over. I felt impotent, and in the dark, and distrustful. But, now that I know,
I am not afraid, even of the Count. He has succeeded after all, then, in his
design in getting to London, and it was he I saw. He has got younger, and how?
Van Helsing is the man to unmask him and hunt him out, if he is anything like
what Mina says. We sat late, and talked it over. Mina is dressing, and I shall
call at the hotel in a few minutes and bring him over.
He was, I
think, surprised to see me. When I came into the room where he was, and
introduced myself, he took me by the shoulder, and turned my face round to the
light, and said, after a sharp scrutiny,
"But
Madam Mina told me you were ill, that you had had a shock."
It was so
funny to hear my wife called `Madam Mina' by this kindly, strong-faced old man.
I smiled, and said, "I was ill, I have had a shock, but you have cured me
already."
"And
how?"
"By
your letter to Mina last night. I was in doubt, and then everything took a hue
of unreality, and I did not know what to trust, even the evidence of my own
senses. Not knowing what to trust, I did not know what to do, and so had only
to keep on working in what had hitherto been the groove of my life. The groove
ceased to avail me, and I mistrusted myself. Doctor, you don't know what it is
to doubt everything, even yourself. No, you don't, you couldn't with eyebrows
like yours."
He seemed
pleased, and laughed as he said, "So! You are a physiognomist. I learn more here with each hour. I am with so much
pleasure coming to you to breakfast, and, oh, sir, you will pardon praise from
an old man, but you are blessed in your wife."
I would
listen to him go on praising Mina for a day, so I simply nodded and stood
silent.
"She is
one of God's women, fashioned by His own hand to show us men and other women
that there is a heaven where we can enter, and that its light can be here on
earth. So true, so sweet, so noble, so little an egoist, and that, let me tell
you, is much in this age, so sceptical and selfish. And you, sir. . . I have
read all the letters to poor Miss Lucy, and some of them speak of you, so I
know you since some days from the knowing of others, but I have seen your true
self since last night. You will give me your hand, will you not? And let us be
friends for all our lives."
We shook
hands, and he was so earnest and so kind that it made me quite choky.
"And
now," he said, "may I ask you for some more help? I have a great task
to do, and at the beginning it is to know. You can help me here. Can you tell
me what went before your going to Transylvania? Later on I may ask more help, and of a different kind,
but at first this will do."
"Look
here, Sir," I said, "does what you have to do concern the
Count?"
"It
does," he said solemnly."
"Then I
am with you heart and soul. As you go by the 10:30 train, you will not have time
to read them, but I shall get the bundle of papers. You can take them with you
and read them in the train."
After
breakfast I saw him to the station. When we were parting he said, "Perhaps
you will come to town if I send for you, and take Madam Mina too."
"We
shall both come when you will," I said.
I had got
him the morning papers and the London papers of the previous night, and while
we were talking at the carriage window, waiting for the train to start, he was
turning them over. His eyes suddenly seemed to catch something in one of them,
"The Westminster Gazette", I knew it by the color, and he grew quite
white. He read something intently, groaning to himself, "Mein Gott! Mein Gott! So soon! So soon!" I do not think he
remembered me at the moment. Just then the whistle blew, and the train moved
off. This recalled him to himself, and he leaned out of the window and waved
his hand, calling out, "Love to Madam Mina. I shall write so soon as ever
I can."
DR. SEWARD'S
DIARY
26
September.--Truly there is no such thing as finality. Not a week since I said
"Finis," and yet here I am starting fresh again, or rather
going on with the record. Until this afternoon I had no cause to think of what
is done. Renfield had become, to all intents, as sane as he ever was. He was
already well ahead with his fly business, and he had just started in the spider
line also, so he had not been of any trouble to me. I had a letter from Arthur,
written on Sunday, and from it I gather that he is bearing up wonderfully well.
Quincey Morris is with him, and that is much of a help, for he himself is a
bubbling well of good spirits. Quincey wrote me a line too, and from him I hear
that Arthur is beginning to recover something of his old buoyancy, so as to
them all my mind is at rest. As for myself, I was settling down to my work with
the enthusiasm which I used to have for it, so that I might fairly have said
that the wound which poor Lucy left on me was becoming cicatrised.
Everything
is, however, now reopened, and what is to be the end God only knows. I have an
idea that Van Helsing thinks he knows, too, but he will only let out enough at
a time to whet curiosity. He went to Exeter yesterday, and stayed there all
night. Today he came back, and almost bounded into the room at about half-past
five o'clock, and thrust last night's "Westminster Gazette" into my
hand.
"What
do you think of that?" he asked as he stood back and folded his arms.
I looked
over the paper, for I really did not know what he meant, but he took it from me
and pointed out a paragraph about children being decoyed away at Hampstead. It did not convey much to me, until I reached a passage
where it described small puncture wounds on their throats. An idea struck me,
and I looked up.
"Well?"
he said.
"It is
like poor Lucy's."
"And
what do you make of it?"
"Simply
that there is some cause in common. Whatever it was that injured her has
injured them." I did not quite understand his answer.
"That
is true indirectly, but not directly."
"How do
you mean, Professor?" I asked. I was a little inclined to take his
seriousness lightly, for, after all, four days of rest and freedom from
burning, harrowing, anxiety does help to restore one's spirits, but when I saw
his face, it sobered me. Never, even in the midst of our despair about poor
Lucy, had he looked more stern.
"Tell
me!" I said. "I can hazard no opinion. I do not know what to think,
and I have no data on which to found a conjecture."
"Do you
mean to tell me, friend John, that you have no suspicion as to what poor Lucy
died of, not after all the hints given, not only by events, but by me?"
"Of
nervous prostration following a great loss or waste of blood."
"And
how was the blood lost or wasted?" I shook my head.
He stepped
over and sat down beside me, and went on, "You are a clever man, friend
John. You reason well, and your wit is bold, but you are too prejudiced. You do
not let your eyes see nor your ears hear, and that which is outside your daily
life is not of account to you. Do you not think that there are things which you
cannot understand, and yet which are, that some people see things that others
cannot? But there are things old and new which must not be contemplated by
men's eyes, because they know, or think they know, some things which other men
have told them. Ah, it is the fault of our science that it wants to explain
all, and if it explain not, then it says there is nothing to explain. But yet we
see around us every day the growth of new beliefs, which think themselves new,
and which are yet but the old, which pretend to be young, like the fine ladies
at the opera. I suppose now you do not believe in corporeal
transference. No? Nor in materialization. No? Nor in astral bodies. No? Nor in the reading of thought. No? Nor in hypnotism . . ."
"Yes,"
I said. "Charcot has proved that pretty well."
He smiled as
he went on, "Then you are satisfied as to it. Yes? And of course then you
understand how it act, and can follow the mind of the great Charcot, alas that he is no more, into the very soul of the
patient that he influence. No? Then, friend John, am I to take it that you
simply accept fact, and are satisfied to let from premise to conclusion be a
blank? No? Then tell me, for I am a student of the brain, how you accept
hypnotism and reject the thought reading. Let me tell you, my friend, that
there are things done today in electrical science which would have been deemed
unholy by the very man who discovered electricity, who would themselves not so
long before been burned as wizards. There are always mysteries in life. Why was
it that Methuselah lived nine hundred years, and `Old Parrone hundred and
sixty-nine, and yet that poor Lucy, with four men's blood in her poor veins,
could not live even one day? For, had she live one more day, we could save her.
Do you know all the mystery of life and death? Do you know the altogether of
comparative anatomy and can say wherefore the qualities of brutes are in some
men, and not in others? Can you tell me why, when other spiders die small and
soon, that one great spider lived for centuries in the tower of the old Spanish
church and grew and grew, till, on descending, he could drink the oil of all
the church lamps? Can you tell me why in the Pampas, ay and elsewhere, there
are bats that come out at night and open the veins of cattle and
horses and suck dry their veins, how in some
islands of the Western seas there are bats which hang on the trees all day, and
those who have seen describe as like giant nuts or pods, and that when the
sailors sleep on the deck, because that it is hot, flit down on them and then,
and then in the morning are found dead men, white as even Miss Lucy was?"
"Good
God, Professor!" I said, starting up. "Do you mean to tell me that
Lucy was bitten by such a bat, and that such a thing is here in London in the
nineteenth century?"
He waved his
hand for silence, and went on, "Can you tell me why the tortoise lives
more long than generations of men, why the elephant goes on and on till he have
sees dynasties, and why the parrot never die only of bite of cat of dog or
other complaint? Can you tell me why men believe in all ages and places that
there are men and women who cannot die? We all know, because science has
vouched for the fact, that there have been toads shut up in rocks for thousands
of years, shut in one so small hole that only hold him since the youth of the
world. Can you tell me how the Indian fakir can make himself to die and have been buried, and his
grave sealed and corn sowed on it, and the corn reaped and be cut and sown and
reaped and cut again, and then men come and take away the unbroken seal and
that there lie the Indian fakir, not dead, but that rise up and walk amongst
them as before?"
Here I
interrupted him. I was getting bewildered. He so crowded on my mind his list of
nature's eccentricities and possible impossibilities that my imagination was
getting fired. I had a dim idea that he was teaching me some lesson, as long
ago he used to do in his study at Amsterdam. But he used them to tell me the
thing, so that I could have the object of thought in mind all the time. But now
I was without his help, yet I wanted to follow him, so I said,
"Professor,
let me be your pet student again. Tell me the thesis, so that I may apply your
knowledge as you go on. At present I am going in my mind from point to point as
a madman, and not a sane one, follows an idea. I feel like a novice lumbering
through a bog in a midst, jumping from one tussock to another in the mere blind
effort to move on without knowing where I am going."
"That
is a good image," he said. "Well, I shall tell you. My thesis is
this, I want you to believe."
"To
believe what?"
"To
believe in things that you cannot. Let me illustrate. I heard once of an
American who so defined faith, `that
faculty which enables us to believe things which we know to be untrue.' For one, I follow that man. He meant that we shall have
an open mind, and not let a little bit of truth check the rush of the big
truth, like a small rock does a railway truck. We get the small truth first.
Good! We keep him, and we value him, but all the same we must not let him think
himself all the truth in the universe."
"Then
you want me not to let some previous conviction inure the receptivity of my
mind with regard to some strange matter. Do I read your lesson aright?"
"Ah,
you are my favorite pupil still. It is worth to teach you. Now that you are
willing to understand, you have taken the first step to understand. You think
then that those so small holes in the children's throats were made by the same
that made the holes in Miss Lucy?"
"I
suppose so."
He stood up
and said solemnly, "Then you are wrong. Oh, would it were so! But alas!
No. It is worse, far, far worse."
"In
God's name, Professor Van Helsing, what do you mean?" I cried.
He threw
himself with a despairing gesture into a chair, and placed his elbows on the
table, covering his face with his hands as he spoke.
"They
were made by Miss Lucy!"
Commentary:
In the beginning we find Mina going over her husband's letters and showing considerable concern for his wellbeing. Then after receiving a letter from Dr. Van Helsing she agrees to meet with him at her home in Exeter. This meeting is extremely important for two reasons. First, she is able to completely confirm that what her husband wrote about in Count Dracula’s castle is true. The importance of this cannot be stressed enough. Earlier in the chapter Mina writes herself that the hardest thing for Jonathan to deal with must be his conflicted feelings about whether what he saw in Transylvania was true, whether he could trust his senses in spite of the incredible conclusion that vampires not only exist but also that one has come to live amongst them. This will not have the effect of calming Jonathan as well as Mina. Secondly, we find Mina and Van Helsing’s meeting important because during it we are given an image of Mina as a remarkable woman. Throughout their meeting, and in the subsequent meeting with Jonathan, Van Helsing is overflowing with praise for Mina, finding her to be intelligent, caring, and loyal. This is important for the reader's understanding of Mina as we come see her in that light.
In the beginning we find Mina going over her husband's letters and showing considerable concern for his wellbeing. Then after receiving a letter from Dr. Van Helsing she agrees to meet with him at her home in Exeter. This meeting is extremely important for two reasons. First, she is able to completely confirm that what her husband wrote about in Count Dracula’s castle is true. The importance of this cannot be stressed enough. Earlier in the chapter Mina writes herself that the hardest thing for Jonathan to deal with must be his conflicted feelings about whether what he saw in Transylvania was true, whether he could trust his senses in spite of the incredible conclusion that vampires not only exist but also that one has come to live amongst them. This will not have the effect of calming Jonathan as well as Mina. Secondly, we find Mina and Van Helsing’s meeting important because during it we are given an image of Mina as a remarkable woman. Throughout their meeting, and in the subsequent meeting with Jonathan, Van Helsing is overflowing with praise for Mina, finding her to be intelligent, caring, and loyal. This is important for the reader's understanding of Mina as we come see her in that light.
This chapter also explores the
idea of known vs. unknown, ancient vs. modern. Throughout the chapter we find
characters doubting themselves and their senses. This is especially true of the
exchange between Seward and Van Helsing at the end of the chapter when the
doctor lectures Seward as to the importance of believing in things that may
seem impossible, ridiculous, or unexplainable. The effect is that not only
Seward, but also the reader must examine their beliefs and understand of what
can and cannot be.
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