Looking Forward: The Strange Experience of the Rev.
Fergus McCheyne
Rev. Hugh Pedley, B.A., D.D.
Toronto: Briggs, 1913
294 pages
Toronto: Briggs, 1913
294 pages
The cover has it that Looking Forward is "A NOVEL FOR THE TIMES," which it most certainly was, but only to those of certain Canadian Christian denominations. The proposed union of the country's Presbyterian, Methodist, and Congregationalist churches, then a matter of considerable debate, is its impetus. Discussions of sacerdotalism and the episcopate do feature.
Before the eyes glaze over, I rush to add that Looking Forward is also a work of science fiction, imaging a Canada in which hydroplane racing is a popular sport and airships like the Winnipeg Express whisk passengers from Montreal to the Manitoba capitol in under thirty-six hours.
As the subtitle suggests, the novel's hero is Fergus McCheyne. The only son of Presbyterian pastor Rev Robert McCheyne, the young man was born and raised in Cairntable, his father's rural parish, located somewhere in easternmost Ontario (read: Glengarry County). There he was molded by his parents' faith and condemnation of everything not Presbyterian.Old McGill, 1900 |
Just a small town boy, his own faith is shaken when, during his studies at McGill, he encounters students of other denominations and finds they aren't such bad fellows after all. He is shaken further when invited to attend the closing exercises of "a well-known Ladies' School" – I'm guessing Trafalgar School for Girls – where he is "confronted by the unforgettable face of Florence Atherton," daughter of the Methodist minister whose parish overlaps that of his father.
Fergus does his best to hide his interest in Florence, but a mother knows:
Fergus's letter remains unopened, hidden away in a secret compartment in Manthorpe's desk until discovered a quarter-century later by a young woman named who – wait for it – just happens to be the daughter of Florence Atherton! Now "a very sweet-faced matronly woman," Florence is married to Hugh Falconer, whom Fergus had mentored whilst the former was a senior student at McGill's Presbyterian College.
Being a gentleman of propriety, Falconer hands the letter to Rev Manthorpe's surviving brother, who in turn shares its incredible contents. The very next morning, the two men set off for the cavern in the company of Mackenzie, a medical doctor who had been another of Fergus's friends. They expect the worst, of course, but are not so fatalistic that they don't carry a capsule containing the restorative mixture.
The trio follow the letter's directions to the cavern and the hibernating man. “This is very strange,”
says Dr Mackenzie, “ there are no signs of life, no pulsation,
no respiration; and yet there is no sign of death.
There is not the slightest evidence of decomposition.
There is no odour of death. There is no shrinkage
of the tissues. The skin has all the firmness and
smoothness of health. I don’t know what to make
of it.”
Fergus does his best to hide his interest in Florence, but a mother knows:
“The Methodist minister’s daughter! Oh, Fergie, what would you be doing with the likes of her? You know how your father feels, and how I feel, about these Methodists. What have we in common with them? They are all wrong in their doctrines, and what little religion they have is all sentiment and shouting.”
Frustrated, our hero finds release in attempting to solve the mystery of hibernation, a subject that has long fascinated. Evenings in which he might been courting Florence are instead spent in the spare room of his rented flat, leading to this rather chilling passage:
For his experiments he managed to smuggle in mice, kittens, and little dogs. He found it much easier to smuggle them out.
Fergus McCheyne is not the villain of this novel. Indeed, there is no villain, though things do get dark.
After many a dead dog, the experiments result in a breakthrough. Not only does Fergus find a way to induce hibernation, he creates a serum to revive the pups. It follows that the amateur scientist's next trial subject be human, but who? No monster, the young man chooses to experiment on himself. Fergus is well-aware that no one in their right mind would willingly take part and so devises a machine with battery and "automatic syringe" to inject the reviving fluid. All is to take place in a remote cavern of considerable size that our hero, a keen canoeist, had discovered on a solo expedition.
The experiment begins in late May 1902. It is meant to last no more than a week. Lest anything go amiss, Fergus has taken the precaution of leaving a letter with firm friend, Anglican clergyman Basil Manthorpe. Tragedy strikes when a squirrel disrupts Fergus's automatic syringe. An even greater tragedy has yet to occur. Rev Manthorpe is killed when the automobile in which he is riding suffers brake failure and is struck by an eastbound train in Montreal West.
Two old books by Montreal authors, 31 May 2025. |
Being a gentleman of propriety, Falconer hands the letter to Rev Manthorpe's surviving brother, who in turn shares its incredible contents. The very next morning, the two men set off for the cavern in the company of Mackenzie, a medical doctor who had been another of Fergus's friends. They expect the worst, of course, but are not so fatalistic that they don't carry a capsule containing the restorative mixture.
Frontispiece |
Out of caution, Fergus is brought back to the Falconer home before the restorative serum is administered. He opens his eyes to Florence's daughter, also named Florence, who has an equally unforgettable face.
In his preface, Rev Pedley acknowledges his indebtedness to Edward Bellamy's Looking Backward:
Whatever opinion may be held of Bellamy’s views, no one can doubt the efficacy of his method in bringing these views to the notice of the world. To be sure, my dream is on a much narrower scale, and with a far less ambitious reach than his. That took in the entire sphere of human life; mine has to do with but a segment of that sphere. That contemplated a perfect social order; mine is content with an improved ecclesiastical situation. That beheld a new heaven and a new earth; mine looks for a Canada made better because a little more of heaven has entered into its life.The 1927 Canada encountered by Fergus is indeed better. Poverty has been eradicated and the roads are paved with pavement:
- By this time they had turned out of the main traffic thoroughfare into a smooth-paved and absolutely dustless road... (p 124)
- With amazement he looked upon miles of paved street... (p 126)
- The locality was not unknown to McCheyne, and he remembered what it used to be – the ill-paved streets... (p 138)
- On the outskirts of Montreal, but closely knitted to it by well-paved roads... (p 154)
- Park, and drive, and terrace, well-paved streets lined with trees... (p 156)
- And it looks as if there are well-paved streets. (p 190)
There are marvels of technology and engineering like the Winnipeg Express and the much-studied, never realized, Georgian Bay Ship Canal.
A steel structure somewhat resembling the Eiffel tower sits atop Mount Royal, while Winnipeg has a mountain of its own, built and paid for by an Irish-Canadian eccentric. Two hundred feet higher that Montreal's, its summit can be reached by something called the Spirodrome.
As far as I can tell, the novel enjoyed one printing, but with boards of different colours (green, red, and brown). As write this, four are listed for sale online, the least expensive being US$15.75.
Move quickly! The three others range in price between US$79.95 and US$150.00.
These advances were brought on by Presbyterians, Methodists, and Congregationalists coming together in a United Church of Canada. They even get Anglicans and Baptists to pitch in. With the squabbling amongst Protestants over, all are now able to focus on the betterment of men, women, and children. Catholics serve a useful purpose in providing friendly competition.
Looking Forward is indeed less ambitious than Looking Backward. Rev Pedley's imagination, despite its focus, is not nearly so rich and his prose makes for painful reading. This passage takes place not on the Winnipeg Express but in the engine room of the Saskatchewan, another airship, where Fergus encounters a man named Dennis Mulcavey:
Looking Forward is indeed less ambitious than Looking Backward. Rev Pedley's imagination, despite its focus, is not nearly so rich and his prose makes for painful reading. This passage takes place not on the Winnipeg Express but in the engine room of the Saskatchewan, another airship, where Fergus encounters a man named Dennis Mulcavey:
“I knew a man of that name. He was foreman for the Sands Company.”“Sure, sorr, it’s a foine mimory ye hev. That was my father, and he’s been did these twinty years.”“Yes,” said McCheyne, somewhat idiotically, "have a fine memory, for I do remember your father.”“It’s wonderful,” said the other, “but they tell me he was a foine man, and a smarrt wan, too.”“Yes, a very smart one.”The talk then turned upon the airship, the working of the engines, the liability to accident, and the time they were making on their trip, in all of which topics McCheyne took a deep interest, and won the respect of the men by the intelligent way in which he received their information.
I'm tempted to provide further examples, but won't. What I will provide is the ultimate spoiler in revealing that the novel ends with a declaration of love, followed by a marriage. The bride is Florence Falconer – not the Florence Falconer (née Atherton) who was the love of Fergus's life, rather her daughter, who we are told looks just like her matronly mother when a young woman:
“But I have heard that twenty-five years ago you felt like this towards my mother.”“Yes, exactly like this.”“So it is because you see my mother in me that you say you love me?”"Yes,” was the direct, honest reply.“Then,” said she, all lightness thrown aside and speaking in tones that trembled with emotion, “I am honoured beyond measure by such a love.”
The mother of the woman who accepts his marriage proposal will later be referred to as "the Florence of an earlier time."
I found this disturbing.
My wife is more dismissive: "It's written by a man."
I found this disturbing.
My wife is more dismissive: "It's written by a man."
The McCheyne/Falconer wedding is well-attended. Saskatchewan engine man Dennis Mulcavey is in attendance, as is the local Catholic priest:
McCheyne stretches out his hand, which is at once enclosed in a firm and friendly clasp. Then the eyes of the two men meet... and Fergus is conscious of the only pang that has marred this crowning day. As he looks into the young priest’s eyes he feels as if gazing one moment upon a parterre of flowers, there has the next moment been the sudden opening of a cleft, and he is looking down into a profound abyss where ice and fire are strangely intermingled; and he knows that he has had a momentary glimpse of the age-long mystery of the ecclesiastically ordained celibate life.A strange thing to include in an otherwise joyous and happy final scene, though it did serve to remind that Fergus's experiments and long hibernation would never have taken place had only his parents been willing to accept a Methodist as a daughter-in-law.
More on Looking Forward a week this Tuesday, the one hundredth anniversary of the United Church of Canada.
Trivia: Looking Forward follows The Street Called Straight as the second consecutive novel I've read to end in with a wedding. If You Want to See Your Wife Again..., the novel I tackled before these two, ends with a marriage proposal.
Object and Access: An attractive hardcover with olive boards and full-colour frontispiece by G. Horne Russell, my copy was purchased online or US$15.00 this past February from a Manitoba bookseller. It once belonged to Lady Inez Peterson sponsor of the Lady Inez Peterson Trophy.
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The Sherbrooke Daily Record, 4 September 1953 |
Move quickly! The three others range in price between US$79.95 and US$150.00.
Related posts:
Smart, that "rush to add"--you held my attention after all!
ReplyDeleteHow interesting to read of this imagined future Canada. I've not heard of the idea of the Georgian Bay canal system. And it was fun to imagine an Eiffel-Tower-ish structure on Mont Royal for a moment.
I was once paid to research the various proposals for towers on Mount Royal. No one wanted one more than Mayor Jean Drapeau. He clearly had a thing, going so far to press Charles de Gaulle to have the Eiffel Tower be dismantled and shipped across the Atlantic so that it might be used (temporarily) at Expo 67.
Deletehttps://www.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.75609/1
ReplyDeleteThank you, Anon, I should've mentioned that the book is available online... and for free!
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