"The Terror"
by Guy de Maupassant
You say you cannot possibly understand it, and
I believe you. You think I am losing my mind? Perhaps I am, but for other
reasons than those you imagine, my dear friend.
Yes, I am going to be married, and will tell
you what has led me to take that step.
I may add that I know very little of the girl
who is going to become my wife to-morrow; I have only seen her four or five
times. I know that there is nothing unpleasing about her, and that is enough
for my purpose. She is small, fair, and stout; so, of course, the day after
to-morrow I shall ardently wish for a tall, dark, thin woman.
She is not rich, and belongs to the middle
classes. She is a girl such as you may find by the gross, well adapted for
matrimony, without any apparent faults, and with no particularly striking
qualities. People say of her:
"Mlle. Lajolle is a very nice girl,"
and tomorrow they will say: "What a very nice woman Madame Raymon
is." She belongs, in a word, to that immense number of girls whom one is
glad to have for one's wife, till the moment comes when one discovers that one
happens to prefer all other women to that particular woman whom one has
married.
"Well," you will say to me,
"what on earth did you get married for?"
I hardly like to tell you the strange and
seemingly improbable reason that urged me on to this senseless act; the fact,
however, is that I am afraid of being alone.
I don't know how to tell you or to make you
understand me, but my state of mind is so wretched that you will pity me and
despise me.
I do not want to be alone any longer at night.
I want to feel that there is some one close to me, touching me, a being who can
speak and say something, no matter what it be.
I wish to be able to awaken somebody by my
side, so that I may be able to ask some sudden question, a stupid question
even, if I feel inclined, so that I may hear a human voice, and feel that there
is some waking soul close to me, some one whose reason is at work; so that when
I hastily light the candle I may see some human face by my
side--because--because --I am ashamed to confess it--because I am afraid of
being alone.
Oh, you don't understand me yet.
I am not afraid of any danger; if a man were to
come into the room, I should kill him without trembling. I am not afraid of
ghosts, nor do I believe in the supernatural. I am not afraid of dead people,
for I believe in the total annihilation of every being that disappears from the
face of this earth.
Well--yes, well, it must be told: I am afraid
of myself, afraid of that horrible sensation of incomprehensible fear.
You may laugh, if you like. It is terrible, and
I cannot get over it. I am afraid of the walls, of the furniture, of the
familiar objects; which are animated, as far as I am concerned, by a kind of
animal life. Above all, I am afraid of my own dreadful thoughts, of my reason,
which seems as if it were about to leave me, driven away by a mysterious and
invisible agony.
At first I feel a vague uneasiness in my mind,
which causes a cold shiver to run all over me. I look round, and of course
nothing is to be seen, and I wish that there were something there, no matter
what, as long as it were something tangible. I am frightened merely because I
cannot understand my own terror.
If I speak, I am afraid of my own voice. If I
walk, I am afraid of I know not what, behind the door, behind the curtains, in
the cupboard, or under my bed, and yet all the time I know there is nothing
anywhere, and I turn round suddenly because I am afraid of what is behind me,
although there is nothing there, and I know it.
I become agitated. I feel that my fear
increases, and so I shut myself up in my own room, get into bed, and hide under
the clothes; and there, cowering down, rolled into a ball, I close my eyes in
despair, and remain thus for an indefinite time, remembering that my candle is
alight on the table by my bedside, and that I ought to put it out, and yet--I
dare not do it.
It is very terrible, is it not, to be like
that?
Formerly I felt nothing of all that. I came
home quite calm, and went up and down my apartment without anything disturbing
my peace of mind. Had any one told me that I should be attacked by a
malady--for I can call it nothing else--of most improbable fear, such a stupid
and terrible malady as it is, I should have laughed outright. I was certainly
never afraid of opening the door in the dark. I went to bed slowly, without
locking it, and never got up in the middle of the night to make sure that
everything was firmly closed.
It began last year in a very strange manner on
a damp autumn evening. When my servant had left the room, after I had dined, I
asked myself what I was going to do. I walked up and down my room for some
time, feeling tired without any reason for it, unable to work, and even without
energy to read. A fine rain was falling, and I felt unhappy, a prey to one of
those fits of despondency, without any apparent cause, which make us feel
inclined to cry, or to talk, no matter to whom, so as to shake off our
depressing thoughts.
I felt that I was alone, and my rooms seemed to
me to be more empty than they had ever been before. I was in the midst of
infinite and overwhelming solitude. What was I to do? I sat down, but a kind of
nervous impatience seemed to affect my legs, so I got up and began to walk
about again. I was, perhaps, rather feverish, for my hands, which I had clasped
behind me, as one often does when walking slowly, almost seemed to burn one
another. Then suddenly a cold shiver ran down my back, and I thought the damp
air might have penetrated into my rooms, so I lit the fire for the first time
that year, and sat down again and looked at the flames. But soon I felt that I
could not possibly remain quiet, and so I got up again and determined to go
out, to pull myself together, and to find a friend to bear me company.
I could not find anyone, so I walked to the
boulevard ro try and meet some acquaintance or other there.
It was wretched everywhere, and the wet
pavement glistened in the gaslight, while the oppressive warmth of the almost
impalpable rain lay heavily over the streets and seemed to obscure the light of
the lamps.
I went on slowly, saying to myself: "I
shall not find a soul to talk to."
I glanced into several cafes, from the
Madeleine as far as the Faubourg Poissoniere, and saw many unhappy-looking
individuals sitting at the tables who did not seem even to have enough energy
left to finish the refreshments they had ordered.
For a long time I wandered aimlessly up and
down, and about midnight I started for home. I was very calm and very tired. My
janitor opened the door at once, which was quite unusual for him, and I thought
that another lodger had probably just come in.
When I go out I always double-lock the door of
my room, and I found it merely closed, which surprised me; but I supposed that
some letters had been brought up for me in the course of the evening.
I went in, and found my fire still burning so
that it lighted up the room a little, and, while in the act of taking up a
candle, I noticed somebody sitting in my armchair by the fire, warming his
feet, with his back toward me.
I was not in the slightest degree frightened. I
thought, very naturally, that some friend or other had come to see me. No doubt
the porter, to whom I had said I was going out, had lent him his own key. In a
moment I remembered all the circumstances of my return, how the street door had
been opened immediately, and that my own door was only latched and not locked.
I could see nothing of my friend but his head,
and he had evidently gone to sleep while waiting for me, so I went up to him to
rouse him. I saw him quite distinctly; his right arm was hanging down and his
legs were crossed; the position of his head, which was somewhat inclined to the
left of the armchair, seemed to indicate that he was asleep. "Who can it
be?" I asked myself. I could not see clearly, as the room was rather dark,
so I put out my hand to touch him on the shoulder, and it came in contact with
the back of the chair. There was nobody there; the seat was empty.
I fairly jumped with fright. For a moment I
drew back as if confronted by some terrible danger; then I turned round again,
impelled by an imperious standing upright, panting with fear, so upset that I
could not collect my thoughts, and ready to faint.
But I am a cool man, and soon recovered myself.
I thought: "It is a mere hallucination, that is all," and I
immediately began to reflect on this phenomenon. Thoughts fly quickly at such
moments.
I had been suffering from an hallucination,
that was an incontestable fact. My mind had been perfectly lucid and had acted
regularly and logically, so there was nothing the matter with the brain. It was
only my eyes that had been deceived; they had had a vision, one of those
visions which lead simple folk to believe in miracles. It was a nervous seizure
of the optical apparatus, nothing more; the eyes were rather congested,
perhaps.
I lit my candle, and when I stooped down to the
fire in doing so I noticed that I was trembling, and I raised myself up with a
jump, as if somebody had touched me from behind.
I was certainly not by any means calm.
I walked up and down a little, and hummed a
tune or two. Then I double- locked the door and felt rather reassured; now, at
any rate, nobody could come in.
I sat down again and thought over my adventure
for a long time; then I went to bed and blew out my light.
For some minutes all went well; I lay quietly
on my back, but presently an irresistible desire seized me to look round the
room, and I turned over on my side.
My fire was nearly out, and the few glowing
embers threw a faint light on the floor by the chair, where I fancied I saw the
man sitting again.
I quickly struck a match, but I had been
mistaken; there was nothing there. I got up, however, and hid the chair behind
my bed, and tried to get to sleep, as the room was now dark; but I had not
forgotten myself for more than five minutes, when in my dream I saw all the
scene which I had previously witnessed as clearly as if it were reality. I woke
up with a start, and having lit the candle, sat up in bed, without venturing
even to try to go to sleep again.
Twice, however, sleep overcame me for a few
moments in spite of myself, and twice I saw the same thing again, till I
fancied I was going mad. When day broke, however, I thought that I was cured, and
slept peacefully till noon.
It was all past and over. I had been feverish,
had had the nightmare. I know not what. I had been ill, in fact, but yet
thought I was a great fool.
I enjoyed myself thoroughly that evening. I
dined at a restaurant and afterward went to the theatre, and then started for
home. But as I got near the house I was once more seized by a strange feeling
of uneasiness. I was afraid of seeing him again. I was not afraid of him, not
afraid of his presence, in which I did not believe; but I was afraid of being
deceived again. I was afraid of some fresh hallucination, afraid lest fear
should take possession of me.
For more than an hour I wandered up and down
the pavement; then, feeling that I was really too foolish, I returned home. I
breathed so hard that I could hardly get upstairs, and remained standing
outside my door for more than ten minutes; then suddenly I had a courageous
impulse and my will asserted itself. I inserted my key into the lock, and went
into the apartment with a candle in my hand. I kicked open my bedroom door,
which was partly open, and cast a frightened glance toward the fireplace. There
was nothing there. A-h! What a relief and what a delight! What a deliverance! I
walked up and down briskly and boldly, but I was not altogether reassured, and
kept turning round with a jump; the very shadows in the corners disquieted me.
I slept badly, and was constantly disturbed by
imaginary noises, but did not see him; no, that was all over.
Since that time I have been afraid of being
alone at night. I feel that the spectre is there, close to me, around me; but
it has not appeared to me again.
And supposing it did, what would it matter,
since I do not believe in it, and know that it is nothing?
However, it still worries me, because I am
constantly thinking of it. His right arm hanging down and his head inclined to
the left like a man who was asleep--I don't want to think about it!
Why, however, am I so persistently possessed
with this idea? His feet were close to the fire!
He haunts me; it is very stupid, but who and
what is he? I know that he does not exist except in my cowardly imagination, in
my fears, and in my agony. There--enough of that!
Yes, it is all very well for me to reason with
myself, to stiffen my backbone, so to say; but I cannot remain at home because
I know he is there. I know I shall not see him again; he will not show himself
again; that is all over. But he is there, all the same, in my thoughts. He
remains invisible, but that does not prevent his being there. He is behind the
doors, in the closed cupboard, in the wardrobe, under the bed, in every dark
corner. If I open the door or the cupboard, if I take the candle to look under
the bed and throw a light on the dark places he is there no longer, but I feel
that he is behind me. I turn round, certain that I shall not see him, that I
shall never see him again; but for all that, he is behind me.
It is very stupid, it is dreadful; but what am
I to do? I cannot help it.
But if there were two of us in the place I feel
certain that he would not be there any longer, for he is there just because I
am alone, simply and solely because I am alone!
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