g on the
nds of the South Pacific. The day before I had reached Port Moresby and had seen my specimens safely stored on board the Southern Queen. As I sat
ullen, alien, implacable, filled with the threat of latent, malefic forces waiting to be unleashed. It seemed an emanation out of the untamed, sinister heart of P
inst her spell. While I struggled I saw a tall figure striding down the pier; a Kapa-Kapa boy followed swinging a new valise. There was some
e of my oldest friends and, as well, a mind of the first water whose power and ach
ed only a few weeks before, Edith, the daughter of Professor William Frazier, younger by at least a decade than he but at one with him in his ideals and as much in love, if it were possible, as Throckmartin. By virtue of her father's training a wonderful assistant, by virtue of her own sweet, sound heart a-I use the
ity, a weird flower of civilization that blossomed ages before the seeds of Egypt were sown; of whose arts we know little enough and of whose sc
in to Port Moresby, and what was
saw what was that difference that had so moved me. He knew, of course by my silence and involuntary shrinking the shock my
e purser. "Know 'im well, sir? Seem
came to me. The old Throckmartin was on the eve of his venture just turned forty, lithe, erect, muscular; his controlling expression one of
m that in its climax had remoulded, deep from within, his face, setting on it seal of wedded ecstasy and despair; as though inde
r how could rapture and horror, He
closest embrace lay o
the hope was an inexplicable shrinking that I would meet Throckmartin at lunch. He did not come down, and I was sensible of deliverance within my disappoi
k to my deck-chair. The Southern Queen was rolling t
was much phosphorescence. Fitfully before the ship and at her sides arose those stranger little swirls of
. He paused uncertainly, looked up at the sky with a curiously
alled. "Come!
his wa
o time in preliminaries. "W
s body gr
answered. "I need a few things-need
d broken through the clouds. Almost on the horizon, you could see the faint luminescence of it upon the smooth sea. The d
ghted a cigarette with a hand that tremble
rself in another world, alien, unfamiliar, a world of terror, whose unknown joy is its greate
s time much nearer. Not a mile away was the patch of light that it threw upon the waves. Back of it, to the rim of the sea
pulsed a thrill of horror-but horror tinged with an unfamiliar, an infernal joy.
was now less than half a mile away. From it the ship fled-almost as though pursued. Down
, and if ever the words were a pr
r the first
curtains or as the waters of the Red Sea were held back to let the hosts of Israel through. On each side of the stream was the black shadow cast by the
alescent mistiness that sped with the suggestion of some winged creature in arrowed flight. Dimly there crept into my mind memory of the Dyak legend of the winged messenger of Buddha-the Akla bird whose fe
sistent tinklings-like pizzicati on violins of gl
up against that barrier as a bird against the bars of its cage. It whirled with shimmering plumes, with swirls of lacy light, with spirals of living vapour. It held w
etween it and us. Within the mistiness was a core, a nucleus of intenser light-veined, opaline, effulgent, inten
moons. One was of a pearly pink, one of a delicate nacreous blue, one of lambent saffron, one of the emerald you see in the shallow water
ces; it made the heart beat jubilantly-and checked it dolorously. It closed the th
gn to this world. The ear took the cry and translated with conscious labour into the sounds of earth. And even as it com
and utter ecstasy-there they were side by side, not resisting each other; unholy inhuman companions blending into a look that none of God's creatures should wear-and de
a roaring squall. As the moon vanished what I had seen vanished with it-blotted out as an image on a magic lantern; the tinkling ce
e of the gulf wherein the men of the Louisades says lurks the fishe
passed an a
t aside a waiting terror of the unknown. "Now I know! Come with me to my cabin, old friend.
p's first officer. Throckmartin composed his
much of a sto
e. "Probably all th
ugh with a new thought. He gripp
ather-for"-he hesitated-"for
e more," repl
and I think I never heard such re
"Thank God?" he repeate
d to his cabin. I started to foll
," he said,
dly. "He's not used to it. I
rried on. For I knew now that Throckmartin was ill indeed-bu