The Last Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 624 pages of information about The Last Man.
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The Last Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 624 pages of information about The Last Man.
from the sight of these things.  Our children, freed from the bondage of winter, bounded before us; pursuing the deer, or rousing the pheasants and partridges from their coverts.  Idris leant on my arm; her sadness yielded to the present sense of pleasure.  We met other families on the Long Walk, enjoying like ourselves the return of the genial season.  At once, I seemed to awake; I cast off the clinging sloth of the past months; earth assumed a new appearance, and my view of the future was suddenly made clear.  I exclaimed, “I have now found out the secret!”

“What secret?”

In answer to this question, I described our gloomy winter-life, our sordid cares, our menial labours:—­“This northern country,” I said, “is no place for our diminished race.  When mankind were few, it was not here that they battled with the powerful agents of nature, and were enabled to cover the globe with offspring.  We must seek some natural Paradise, some garden of the earth, where our simple wants may be easily supplied, and the enjoyment of a delicious climate compensate for the social pleasures we have lost.  If we survive this coming summer, I will not spend the ensuing winter in England; neither I nor any of us.”

I spoke without much heed, and the very conclusion of what I said brought with it other thoughts.  Should we, any of us, survive the coming summer?  I saw the brow of Idris clouded; I again felt, that we were enchained to the car of fate, over whose coursers we had no control.  We could no longer say, This we will do, and this we will leave undone.  A mightier power than the human was at hand to destroy our plans or to achieve the work we avoided.  It were madness to calculate upon another winter.  This was our last.  The coming summer was the extreme end of our vista; and, when we arrived there, instead of a continuation of the long road, a gulph yawned, into which we must of force be precipitated.  The last blessing of humanity was wrested from us; we might no longer hope.  Can the madman, as he clanks his chains, hope?  Can the wretch, led to the scaffold, who when he lays his head on the block, marks the double shadow of himself and the executioner, whose uplifted arm bears the axe, hope?  Can the ship-wrecked mariner, who spent with swimming, hears close behind the splashing waters divided by a shark which pursues him through the Atlantic, hope?  Such hope as theirs, we also may entertain!

Old fable tells us, that this gentle spirit sprung from the box of Pandora, else crammed with evils; but these were unseen and null, while all admired the inspiriting loveliness of young Hope; each man’s heart became her home; she was enthroned sovereign of our lives, here and here-after; she was deified and worshipped, declared incorruptible and everlasting.  But like all other gifts of the Creator to Man, she is mortal; her life has attained its last hour.  We have watched over her; nursed her flickering existence; now she has fallen at once from youth to decrepitude, from health to immedicinable disease; even as we spend ourselves in struggles for her recovery, she dies; to all nations the voice goes forth, Hope is dead!  We are but mourners in the funeral train, and what immortal essence or perishable creation will refuse to make one in the sad procession that attends to its grave the dead comforter of humanity?

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The Last Man from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.