The Sleeper Awakes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 285 pages of information about The Sleeper Awakes.

The Sleeper Awakes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 285 pages of information about The Sleeper Awakes.

Graham walked to the door, tried it, found it securely fastened in some way he never came to understand, turned about, paced the room restlessly, made the circuit of the room, and sat down.  He remained sitting for some time with folded arms and knitted brow, biting his finger nails and trying to piece together the kaleidoscopic impressions of this first hour of awakened life; the vast mechanical spaces, the endless series of chambers and passages, the great struggle that roared and splashed through these strange ways, the little group of remote unsympathetic men beneath the colossal Atlas, Howard’s mysterious behaviour.  There was an inkling of some vast inheritance already in his mind—­a vast inheritance perhaps misapplied—­of some unprecedented importance and opportunity.  What had he to do?  And this room’s secluded silence was eloquent of imprisonment!

It came into Graham’s mind with irresistible conviction that this series of magnificent impressions was a dream.  He tried to shut his eyes and succeeded, but that time-honoured device led to no awakening.

Presently he began to touch and examine all the unfamiliar appointments of the two small rooms in which he found himself.

In a long oval panel of mirror he saw himself and stopped astonished.  He was clad in a graceful costume of purple and bluish white, with a little greyshot beard trimmed to a point, and his hair, its blackness streaked now with bands of grey, arranged over his forehead in an unfamiliar but pleasing manner.  He seemed a man of five-and-forty perhaps.  For a moment he did not perceive this was himself.

A flash of laughter came with the recognition.  “To call on old Warming like this!” he exclaimed, “and make him take me out to lunch!”

Then he thought of meeting first one and then another of the few familiar acquaintances of his early manhood, and in the midst of his amusement realised that every soul with whom he might jest had died many score of years ago.  The thought smote him abruptly and keenly; he stopped short, the expression of his face changed to a white consternation.

The tumultuous memory of the moving platforms and the huge facade of that wonderful street reasserted itself.  The shouting multitudes came back clear and vivid, and those remote, inaudible, unfriendly councillors in white.  He felt himself a little figure, very small and ineffectual, pitifully conspicuous.  And all about him, the world was—­strange.

CHAPTER VII

IN THE SILENT ROOMS

Presently Graham resumed his examination of his apartments.  Curiosity kept him moving in spite of his fatigue.  The inner room, he perceived, was high, and its ceiling dome shaped, with an oblong aperture in the centre, opening into a funnel in which a wheel of broad vanes seemed to be rotating, apparently driving the air up the shaft.  The faint humming note of its easy motion was the only clear sound in that quiet place.  As these vanes sprang up one after the other, Graham could get transient glimpses of the sky.  He was surprised to see a star.

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The Sleeper Awakes from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.