The duties of postman at Otford-under-the-Wold carried Amuel
Sleggins farther afield than the village, farther afield
than the last house in the lane, right up to the big bare
wold and the house where no one went, no one that is but the
three grim men who lived there and the secretive wife of
one, and, once a year when the queer green letter came,
Amuel Sleggins the postman.
The green letter always came just as the leaves were
turning, addressed to the eldest one of the three grim men,
with a wonderful Chinese stamp and the Otford postmark, and
Amuel Sleggins carried it up to the house.
He was not afraid to go, for he always took the letter,
had done so for seven years, yet whenever summer began to
draw to a close, Amuel Sleggins was ill at ease, and if
there was a touch of autumn about shivered unduly so that
all folk wondered.
And then one day a wind would blow from the East, and the
wild geese would appear, having left the sea, flying high
and crying strangely, and pass till they were no more than a
magical stick flung up by a doer of magic, twisting and
twirling away; and the leaves would turn on the trees and
the mists be white on the marshes and the sun set large and
red and autumn would step down quietly that night from the
wold; and next day the strange green letter would come from
China.
His fear of the three grim men and that secretive woman
and their lonely, secluded house, or else the cadaverous
cold of the dying season, rather braced Amuel when the time
was come and he would step out bolder upon the day that he
feared than he had perhaps for weeks. He longed on that day
for a letter for the last house in the lane, there he would
dally and talk awhile and look on church-going faces before
his long tramp over the lonely wold to end at the dreaded
door of the queer grey house called wold-hut.
When he came to the door of wold-hut he would give the
postman's knock as though he came on ordinary rounds to a
house of every day, although no path led up to it, although
the skins of weasels hung thickly from upper windows.
And scarcely had his postman's knock rung through the
dark of the house when the eldest of the three grim men
would always run to the door. O, what a face had he. There
was more slyness in it than ever his beard could hide. He
would put out a gristly hand; and into it Amuel Sleggins
would put that letter from China, and rejoice that his duty
was done, and would turn and stride away. And the fields
lit up before him, but, ominous, eager and low murmuring
arose in the wold-hut.
For seven years this was so and no harm had come to
Sleggins, seven times he had gone to wold-hut and as often
come safely away; and then he needs must marry. Perhaps
because she was young, perhaps because she was fair or
because she had shapely ankles as she came one day through
the marshes among the milkmaid flowers shoeless in spring.
Less things than these have brought men to their ends and
been the nooses with which Fate snared them running. With
marriage curiosity entered his house, and one day as they
walked with evening through the meadows, one summer evening,
she asked him of wold-hut where he only went, and what the
folks were like that no one else had seen. All this he told
her; and then she asked him of the green letter from China,
that came with autumn, and what the letter contained. He
read to her all the rules of the Inland Revenue, he told her
he did not know, that it was not right that he should know,
he lectured her on the sin of inquisitiveness, he quoted
Parson, and in the end she said that she must know. They
argued concerning this for many days, days of the ending of
summer, of shortening evenings, and as they argued autumn
grew nearer and nearer and the green letter from China.
And at last he promised that when the green letter came
he would take it as usual to the lonely house and then hide
somewhere near and creep to the window at nightfall and hear
what the grim folk said; perhaps they might read aloud the
letter from China. And before he had time to repent of that
promise a cold wind came one night and the woods turned
golden, the plover went in bands at evening over the
marshes, the year had turned, and there came the letter from
China. Never before had Amuel felt such misgivings as he
went his postman's rounds, never before had he so much
feared the day that took him up to the wold and the lonely
house, while snug by the fire his wife looked pleasurably
forward to curiosity's gratification and hoped to have news
ere nightfall that all the gossips of the village would
envy. One consolation only had Amuel as he set out with a
shiver, there was a letter that day for the last house in
the lane. Long did he tarry there to look at their cheery
faces, to hear the sound of their laughter, -- you did not
hear laughter in wold-hut, -- and when the last topic had
been utterly talked out and no excuse for lingering remained
he heaved a heavy sigh and plodded grimly away and so came
late to wold-hut.
He gave his postman's knock on the shut oak door, heard
it reverberate through the silent house, saw the grim elder
man and his gristly hand, gave up the green letter from
China, and strode away. There is a clump of trees growing
all alone in the wold, desolate, mournful, by day, by night
full of ill omen, far off from all other trees as wold-hut
from other houses. Near it stands wold-hut. Not today did
Amuel stride briskly on with all the new winds of autumn
blowing cheerily past him till he saw the village before him
and broke into song; but as soon as he was out of sight of
the house he turned and stooping behind a fold of the ground
ran back to the desolate wood. There he waited watching the
evil house, just too far to hear voices. The sun was low
already. He chose the window at which he meant to
eavesdrop, a little barred one at the back, close to the
ground. And then the pigeons came in; for a great distance
there was no other wood, so numbers shelter there, though
the clump is small and of so evil a look (if they notice
that); the first one frightened Amuel, he felt that it might
be a spirit escaped from torture in some dim parlour of the
house that he watched, his nerves were strained and he
feared foolish fears. Then he grew used to them and the sun
set then and the aspect of everything altered and he felt
strange fears again. Behind him was a hollow in the wold,
he watched it darkening; and before him he saw the house
through the trunks of the trees. He waited for them to
light their lamps so that they could not see, when he would
steal up softly and crouch by the little back window. But
though every bird was home, though the night grew chilly as
tombs, though a star was out, still there shone no yellow
light from any window. Amuel waited and shuddered. He did
not dare to move till they lit their lamps, they might be
watching. The damp and the cold so strangely affected him
that autumn evening and the remnants of sunset, the stars
and the wold and the whole vault of the sky seemed like a
hall that they had prepared for Fear. He began to feel a
dread of prodigious things, and still no light shone in the
evil house. It grew so dark that he decided to move and
make his way to the window in spite of the stillness and
though the house was dark. He rose and while standing
arrested by pains that cramped his limbs, he heard the door
swing open on the far side of the house. He had just time
to hide behind the trunk of a pine when the three grim men
approached him and the woman hobbled behind. Right to the
ominous clump of trees they came as though they loved their
blackness, passed through within a yard or two of the
postman and squatted down on their haunches in a ring in the
hollow behind the trees. They lit a fire in the hollow and
laid a kid on the fire and by the light of it Amuel saw
brought forth from an untanned pouch the letter that came
from China. The elder opened it with his gristly hand and
intoning words that Amuel did not know, drew out from it a
green powder and sprinkled it on the fire. At once a flame
arose and a wonderful savour, the flames rose higher and
flickered turning the trees all green; and Amuel saw the
gods coming to snuff the savour. While the three grim men
prostrated themselves by their fire, and the horrible woman
that was the spouse of one, he saw the gods coming gauntly
over the wold, beheld the gods of Old England hungrily
snuffing the savour, Odin, Balder, and Thor, the gods of the
ancient people, beheld them eye to eye clear and close in
the twilight, and the office of postman fell vacant in
Otford-under-the-Wold.