Mr. Y
Well! It happened this way! I was a student
at Lund and wanted a loan from the bank. I had no serious debts
and my father had some money -- though not much. I had sent my
note to the second man for his signature as my security, and,
contrary to my expectations, it was returned with a refusal.
-- I sat there for a moment, benumbed by the blow, for it was
a disagreeable surprise, very disagreeable! -- The paper lay
before me on the table and the letter lay near it. At first my
eyes wandered disconsolately over the fatal lines that held my
sentence -- it was by no means my death sentence, for I could
very easily get another security, as much as I wanted for that
matter -- but, as I said, this was very unpleasant, anyhow; and
as I sit there, perfectly innocent, gradually my looks fasten
on the signature to the letter, which in the right place might,
perhaps, have been the making of my future. The signature was
an unusual piece of caligraphy -- you know that you can sit thinking
and at the same time completely cover a piece of blotting paper
with the most insignificant words. I had a pen in my hand --
so, and as it happened, it began to write -- I do not affirm
that there was anything mystical -- spiritual behind this --
for I do not believe in such things. -- It was a purely thoughtless,
mechanical process -- I sat there and time after time copied
that beautiful autograph -- of course without the least intention
of profiting in any way by so doing. By the time the letter was
scrawled all over, I had gained perfect skill in drawing the
name -- and then I forgot everything. I slept soundly and heavily
all night and when I wakened it seemed to me that I had dreamed,
but I could not remember what the dream was; only it seemed as
if a door were opened a little and as if I could see the writing-table
and note like a memory -- when I rose I felt myself driven toward
the table, just as if, after mature consideration, I had made
an irrevocable decision to sign that name to that most fateful
paper. All thoughts as to the consequences of this risk had disappeared
-- there was no doubt -- it was almost as if I had some cherished
duty to perform -- and I wrote. What can it have been? Was it
hypnotism, suggestion as it is called? If so, by whom? I slept
alone in my room. Could it have been my uncivilized self, the
savage who recognizes no contracts, who, while my consciousness
slept, came to the front with his criminal desires and his incapability
of reckoning the consequences of an action? Tell me ... what
do you think of the matter?
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