The Broad Highway - Page 87/374

In certain old books you shall find strange mention of witches,

warlocks, succubae, spirits, daemons, and a thousand other powers

of darkness, whose pronounced vocation was the plague of poor

humanity. Within these books you may read (if you will) divers

wondrous accounts, together with many learned disquisitions

upon the same, and most minute and particular descriptions of

witch-marks and the like.

Aforetime, when a man committed some great offence against laws

human or divine, he was said to be possessed of a daemon--that is

to say, he became the medium and instrument through, and by

which, the evil was wrought; thus, when in due season he came to

be hanged, tortured, or burned, it was inflicted not so much as a

punishment upon him, the man, as to exorcise, once and for all,

the devil which possessed him.

In these material, common-sense days, we are wont to smile the

superior smile at the dark superstitions and deplorable ignorance

of our forefathers; yet life is much the same now as then, the

devil goeth up and down in the world, spirits, daemons, and the

thousand powers of darkness abide with us still, though to-day

they go by different names, for there is no man in this smug,

complacent age of ours, but carries within him a power of evil

greater or less, according to his intellect. Scratch off the

social veneer, lift but a corner of the very decent cloak of our

civilization, and behold! there stands the Primal Man in all his

old, wild savagery, and with the devil leering upon his shoulder.

Indeed, to-day as surely as in the dim past, we are all possessed

of a devil great or small, weaker or stronger as the case may be;

a demon which, though he sometimes seems to slumber, is yet

watchful and ever ready to spring up and possess us, to the

undoing of ourselves and others.

Thus, as I followed my companion through the wood, I was

conscious of a Daemon that ran beside me, leaping and gambolling

at my elbow, though I kept my eyes straight before me. Anon, his

clutching fingers were upon my arm, and fain I would have shaken

him off, but could not; while, as I watched the swing and grace

of the lithe, feminine body before me, from the little foot to

the crowning glory of her hair, she seemed a thousand times more

beautiful than I had supposed. And I had saved her tonight--from

what? There had been the fear of worse than death in her eyes

when that step had sounded outside her chamber door. Hereupon,

as I walked, I began to recall much that I had read in the old

romances of the gratitude of rescued ladies.