There was some sort of confused complaint during last August of the
ill behaviour of the children at certain Welsh watering-places. Such
reports and vague rumours are most difficult to trace to their heads
and fountains; none has better reason to know that than myself. I need
not go over the old ground here, but I am afraid that many people are
wishing by this time that they had never heard my name; again, a
considerable number of estimable persons are concerning themselves
gloomily enough, from my point of view, with my everlasting welfare.
They write me letters, some in kindly remonstrance, begging me not to
deprive poor, sick-hearted souls of what little comfort they possess
amidst their sorrows. Others send me tracts and pink leaflets with
allusions to "the daughter of a well-known canon"; others again are
violently and anonymously abusive. And then in open print, in fair book
form, Mr. Begbie has dealt with me righteously but harshly, as I cannot
but think.
Yet, it was all so entirely innocent, nay casual, on my part. A poor
linnet of prose, I did but perform my indifferent piping in the Evening
News because I wanted to do so, because I felt that the story of "The
Bowmen" ought to be told. An inventor of fantasies is a poor creature,
heaven knows, when all the world is at war; but I thought that no harm
would be done, at any rate, if I bore witness, after the fashion of the
fantastic craft, to my belief in the heroic glory of the English host
who went back from Mons fighting and triumphing.
And then, somehow or other, it was as if I had touched a button and
set in action a terrific, complicated mechanism of rumours that
pretended to be sworn truth, of gossip that posed as evidence, of wild
tarradiddles that good men most firmly believed. The supposed testimony
of that "daughter of a well-known canon" took parish magazines by
storm, and equally enjoyed the faith of dissenting divines. The
"daughter" denied all knowledge of the matter, but people still quoted
her supposed sure word; and the issues were confused with tales,
probably true, of painful hallucinations and deliriums of our
retreating soldiers, men fatigued and shattered to the very verge of
death. It all became worse than the Russian myths, and as in the fable
of the Russians, it seemed impossible to follow the streams of delusion
to their fountain-head—or heads. Who was it who said that "Miss
M. knew two officers who, etc., etc."? I suppose we shall never know
his lying, deluding name.
And so, I dare say, it will be with this strange affair of the
troublesome children of the Welsh seaside town, or rather of a group of
small towns and villages lying within a certain section or zone, which
I am not going to indicate more precisely than I can help, since I love
that country, and my recent experience with "The Bowmen" have taught me
that no tale is too idle to be believed. And, of course, to begin with,
nobody knew how this odd and malicious piece of gossip originated. So
far as I know, it was more akin to the Russian myth than to the tale of
"The Angels of Mons." That is, rumour preceded print; the thing was
talked of here and there and passed from letter to letter long before
the papers were aware of its existence. And—here it resembles
rather the Mons affair—London and Manchester, Leeds and
Birmingham were muttering vague unpleasant things while the little
villages concerned basked innocently in the sunshine of an unusual
prosperity.
In this last circumstance, as some believe, is to be sought the root
of the whole matter. It is well known that certain east coast towns
suffered from the dread of air-raids, and that a good many of their
usual visitors went westward for the first time. So there is a theory
that the east coast was mean enough to circulate reports against the
west coast out of pure malice and envy. It may be so; I do not pretend
to know. But here is a personal experience, such as it is, which
illustrated the way in which the rumour was circulated. I was lunching
one day at my Fleet Street tavern—this was early in
July—and a friend of mine, a solicitor, of Serjeants' Inn, came
in and sat at the same table. We began to talk of holidays and my
friend Eddis asked me where I was going. "To the same old place," I
said. "Manavon. You know we always go there." "Are you really?" said
the lawyer; "I thought that coast had gone off a lot. My wife has a
friend who's heard that it's not at all that it was."
I was astonished to hear this, not seeing how a little village like
Manavon could have "gone off." I had known it for ten years as having
accommodation for about twenty visitors, and I could not believe that
rows of lodging houses had sprung up since the August of 1914. Still I
put the question to Eddis: "Trippers?" I asked, knowing firstly that
trippers hate the solitudes of the country and the sea; secondly, that
there are no industrial towns within cheap and easy distance, and
thirdly, that the railways were issuing no excursion tickets during the
war.
"No, not exactly trippers," the lawyer replied. "But my wife's
friend knows a clergyman who says that the beach at Tremaen is not at
all pleasant now, and Tremaen's only a few miles from Manavon, isn't
it?"
"In what way not pleasant?" I carried on my examination. "Pierrots
and shows, and that sort of thing?" I felt that it could not be so, for
the solemn rocks of Tremaen would have turned the liveliest Pierrot to
stone. He would have frozen into a crag on the beach, and the seagulls
would carry away his song and make it a lament by lonely, booming
caverns that look on Avalon. Eddis said he had heard nothing about
showmen; but he understood that since the war the children of the whole
district had gone quite out of hand.
"Bad language, you know," he said, "and all that sort of thing,
worse than London slum children. One doesn't want one's wife and
children to hear foul talk at any time, much less on their holiday. And
they say that Castell Coch is quite impossible; no decent woman would
be seen there!"
I said: "Really, that's a great pity," and changed the subject. But
I could not make it out at all. I knew Castell Coch well—a little
bay bastioned by dunes and red sandstone cliffs, rich with greenery. A
stream of cold water runs down there to the sea; there is the ruined
Norman Castle, the ancient church and the scattered village; it is
altogether a place of peace and quiet and great beauty. The people
there, children and grown-ups alike, were not merely decent but
courteous folk: if one thanked a child for opening a gate, there would
come the inevitable response: "And welcome kindly, sir." I could not
make it out at all. I didn't believe the lawyer's tales; for the life
of me I could not see what he could be driving at. And, for the
avoidance of all unnecessary mystery, I may as well say that my wife
and child and myself went down to Manavon last August and had a most
delightful holiday. At the time we were certainly conscious of no
annoyance or unpleasantness of any kind. Afterwards, I confess, I heard
a story that puzzled and still puzzles me, and this story, if it be
received, might give its own interpretation to one or two circumstances
which seemed in themselves quite insignificant.
But all through July I came upon traces of evil rumours affecting
this most gracious corner of the earth. Some of these rumours were
repetitions of Eddis's gossip; others amplified his vague story and
made it more definite. Of course, no first-hand evidence was available.
There never is any first-hand evidence in these cases. But A knew B who
had heard from C that her second cousin's little girl had been set upon
and beaten by a pack of young Welsh savages. Then people quoted "a
doctor in large practice in a well-known town in the Midlands," to the
effect that Tremaen was a sink of juvenile depravity. They said that a
responsible medical man's evidence was final and convincing; but they
didn't bother to find out who the doctor was, or whether there was any
doctor at all—or any doctor relevant to the issue. Then the thing
began to get into the papers in a sort of oblique, by-the-way sort of
manner. People cited the case of these imaginary bad children in
support of their educational views. One side said that "these
unfortunate little ones'' would have been quite well behaved if they
had had no education at all; the opposition declared that continuation
schools would speedily reform them and make them into admirable
citizens. Then the poor Arfonshire children seemed to become involved
in quarrels about Welsh disestablishment and in the question of the
miners; and all the while they were going about behaving politely and
admirably as they always do behave. I knew all the time that it was all
nonsense, but I couldn't understand in the least what it meant, or who
was pulling the wires of rumour, or their purpose in so pulling. I
began to wonder whether the pressure and anxiety and suspense of a
terrible war had unhinged the public mind, so that it was ready to
believe any fable, to debate the reasons for happenings which had never
happened. At last, quite incredible things began to be whispered:
visitors' children had not only been beaten, they had been tortured; a
little boy had been found impaled on a stake in a lonely field near
Manavon; another child had been lured to destruction over the cliffs at
Castell Coch. A London paper sent a good man down quietly to Arfon to
investigate. He was away for a week, and at the end of that period
returned to his office and in his own phrase, "threw the whole story
down." There was not a word of truth, he said, in any of these rumours;
no vestige of a foundation for the mildest forms of all this gossip. He
had never seen such a beautiful country; he had never met pleasanter
men, women or children; there was not a single case of anyone having
been annoyed or troubled in any sort or fashion.
Yet all the while the story grew, and grew more monstrous and
incredible. I was too much occupied in watching the progress of my own
mythological monster to pay much attention. The town clerk of Tremaen,
to which the legend had at length penetrated, wrote a brief letter to
the press indignantly denying that there was the slightest foundation
for "the unsavoury rumours" which, he understood, were being
circulated; and about this time we went down to Manavon and, as I say,
enjoyed ourselves extremely. The weather was perfect: blues of paradise
in the skies, the seas all a shimmering wonder, olive greens and
emeralds, rich purples, glassy sapphires changing by the rocks; far
away a haze of magic lights and colours at the meeting of sea and sky.
Work and anxiety had harried me; I found nothing better than to rest on
the thymy banks by the shore, finding an infinite balm and refreshment
in the great sea before me, in the tiny flowers beside me. Or we would
rest all the summer afternoon on a "shelf" high on the grey cliffs and
watch the tide creaming and surging about the rocks, and listen to it
booming in the hollows and caverns below. Afterwards, as I say, there
were one or two things that struck cold. But at the time those were
nothing. You see a man in an odd white hat pass by and think little or
nothing about it. Afterwards, when you hear that a man wearing just
such a hat had committed murder in the next street five minutes before,
then you find in that hat a certain interest and significance. "Funny
children," was the phrase my little boy used; and I began to think they
were "funny" indeed.
If there be a key at all to this queer business, I think it is to be
found in a talk I had not long ago with a friend of mine named Morgan.
He is a Welshman and a dreamer, and some people say he is like a child
who has grown up and yet has not grown up like other children of men.
Though I did not know it, while I was at Manavon, he was spending his
holiday time at Castell Coch. He was a lonely man and he liked lonely
places, and when we met in the autumn he told me how, day after day, he
would carry his bread and cheese and beer in a basket to a remote
headland on that coast known as the Old Camp. Here, far above the
waters, are solemn, mighty walls, turf-grown; circumvallations rounded
and smooth with the passing of many thousand years. At one end of this
most ancient place there is a tumulus, a tower of observation, perhaps,
and underneath it slinks the green, deceiving ditch that seems to wind
into the heart of the camp, but in reality rushes down to sheer rock
and a precipice over the waters.
Here came Morgan daily, as he said, to dream of Avalon, to purge
himself from the fuming corruption of the streets.
And so, as he told me, it was with singular horror that one
afternoon as he dozed and dreamed and opened his eyes now and again to
watch the miracle and magic of the sea, as he listened to the myriad
murmurs of the waves, his meditation was broken by a sudden burst of
horrible raucous cries—and the cries of children, too, but
children of the lowest type. Morgan says that the very tones made him
shudder—"They were to the ear what slime is to the touch," and
then the words: every foulness, every filthy abomination of speech;
blasphemies that struck like blows at the sky, that sank down into the
pure, shining depths, defiling them! He was amazed. He peered over the
green wall of the fort, and there in the ditch he saw a swarm of
noisome children, horrible little stunted creatures with old men's
faces, with bloated faces, with little sunken eyes, with leering eyes.
It was worse than uncovering a brood of snakes or a nest of worms.
No; he would not describe what they were about. "Read about
Belgium," said Morgan, "and think they couldn't have been more than
five or six years old." There was no infamy, he said, that they did not
perpetrate; they spared no horror of cruelty. "I saw blood running in
streams, as they shrieked with laughter, but I could not find the mark
of it on the grass afterwards."
Morgan said he watched them and could not utter a word; it was as if
a hand held his mouth tight. But at last he found his voice and
shrieked at them, and they burst into a yell of obscene laughter and
shrieked back at him, and scattered out of sight. He could not trace
them; he supposes that they hid in the deep bracken behind the Old
Camp.
"Sometimes I can't understand my landlord at Castell Coch," Morgan
went on. "He's the village postmaster and has a little farm of his
own—a decent, pleasant, ordinary sort of chap. But now and again
he will talk oddly. I was telling him about these beastly children and
wondering who they could be when he broke into Welsh, something like
'the battle that is for age unto ages; and the People take delight in
it.' "
So far Morgan, and it was evident that he did not understand at all.
But this strange tale of his brought back an odd circumstance or two
that I recollected: a matter of our little boy straying away more than
once, and getting lost among the sand dunes and coming back screaming,
evidently frightened horribly, and babbling about "funny children." We
took no notice; did not trouble, I think, to look whether there were
any children wandering about the dunes or not. We were accustomed to
his small imaginations.
But after hearing Morgan's story I was interested and I wrote an
account of the matter to my friend, old Doctor Duthoit, of Hereford.
And he:
"They were only visible, only audible to children and the childlike.
Hence the explanation of what puzzled you at first; the rumours, how
did they arise? They arose from nursery gossip, from scraps and odds
and ends of half-articulate children's talk of horrors that they didn't
understand, of words that shamed their nurses and their mothers.
"These little people of the earth rise up and rejoice in these times
of ours. For they are glad, as the Welshman said, when they know that
men follow their ways."
No comments:
Post a Comment