When the Sleeper Wakes

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Authors: H.G. Wells
Tags: Fiction
heaved a huge sigh, and said something in an undertone. He walked slantingways across the room and turned, blowing out his cheeks again. “Ugh!” he grunted, a man relieved.
    Graham stood regarding him.
    “You must understand,” began Howard abruptly, avoiding Graham’s eyes, “that our social order is very complex. A half explanation, a bare unqualified statement would give you false impressions. As a matter of fact—it is a case of compound interest partly—your small fortune, and the fortune of your cousin Warming which was left to you—and certain other beginnings— have become very considerable. And in other ways that will be hard for you to understand, you have become a person of significance—of very considerable significance—involved in the world’s affairs.”
    He stopped.
    “Yes?” said Graham.
    “We have grave social troubles.”
    “Yes?”
    “Things have come to such a pass that, in fact, it is advisable to seclude you here.”
    “Keep me prisoner!” exclaimed Graham.
    “Well—to ask you to keep in seclusion.”
    Graham turned on him. “This is strange!” he said.
    “No harm will be done you.”
    “No harm!”
    “But you must be kept here—”
    “While I learn my position, I presume.”
    “Precisely.”
    “Very well then. Begin. Why
harm
?”
    “Not now.”
    “Why not?”
    “It is too long a story, Sire.”
    “All the more reason I should begin at once. You say I am a person of importance. What was that shouting I heard? Why is a great multitude shouting and excited because my trance is over, and who are the men in white in that huge council chamber?”
    “All in good time, Sire,” said Howard. “But not crudely, not crudely. This is one of those flimsy times when no man has a settled mind. Your awakening. No one expected your awakening. The Council is consulting.”
    “What council?”
    “The Council you saw.”
    Graham made a petulant movement. “This is not right,” he said. “I should be told what is happening.”
    “You must wait. Really you must wait.”
    Graham sat down abruptly. “I suppose since I have waited so long to resume life,” he said, “that I must wait a little longer.”
    “That is better,” said Howard. “Yes, that is much better. And I must leave you alone. For a space. While I attend the discussion in the Council. . . . I am sorry.”
    He went towards the noiseless door, hesitated and vanished.
    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 graceful manner. He seemed a man of five-and-forty perhaps. For a moment he did not

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